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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Queen of the Air, by John Ruskin
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Queen of the Air
+
+Author: John Ruskin
+
+Release Date: June 17, 2004 [eBook #12641]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEEN OF THE AIR***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Julie C. Sparks
+
+
+
+THE QUEEN OF THE AIR
+
+Being a Study of the Greek Myths of Cloud and Storm
+
+BY
+
+JOHN RUSKIN, LL.D.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+I. ATHENA CHALINITIS.
+ (Athena in the Heavens.)
+Lecture on the Greek myths of Storm, given (partly) in University
+College, London, March 9, 1869.
+
+II. ATHENA KERAMITIS.
+ (Athena in the Earth.)
+Study, supplementary to the preceding lecture, of the supposed and actual
+relations of Athena to the vital force in material organism.
+
+III. ATHENA ERGANE.
+ (Athena in the Heart.)
+Various notes relating to the Conception of Athena as the Directress of
+the Imagination and Will.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+My days and strength have lately been much broken; and I never more felt
+the insufficiency of both than in preparing for the press the following
+desultory memoranda on a most noble subject. But I leave them now as
+they stand, for no time nor labor would be enough to complete them to my
+contentment; and I believe that they contain suggestions which may be
+followed with safety, by persons who are beginning to take interest in
+the aspects of mythology, which only recent investigation has removed
+from the region of conjecture into that of rational inquiry. I have
+some advantage, also, from my field work, in the interpretation of myths
+relating to natural phenomena; and I have had always near me, since we
+were at college together, a sure, and unweariedly kind, guide, in my
+friend Charles Newton, to whom we owe the finding of more treasure in
+mines of marble than, were it rightly estimated, all California could
+buy. I must not, however, permit the chance of his name being in any
+wise associated with my errors. Much of my work as been done obstinately
+in my own way; and he is never responsible for me, though he has often
+kept me right, or at least enabled me to advance in a new direction.
+Absolutely right no one can be in such matters; nor does a day pass
+without convincing every honest student of antiquity of some partial
+error, and showing him better how to think, and where to look. But I
+knew that there was no hope of my being able to enter with advantage on
+the fields of history opened by the splendid investigation of recent
+philologists, though I could qualify myself, by attention and sympathy,
+to understand, here and there, a verse of Homer's or Hesiod's, as the
+simple people did for whom they sang.
+
+Even while I correct these sheets for press, a lecture by Professor
+Tyndall has been put into my hands, which I ought to have heard last 16th
+January, but was hindered by mischance; and which, I now find, completes,
+in two important particulars, the evidence of an instinctive truth in
+ancient symbolism; showing, first, that the Greek conception of an
+ætherial element pervading space is justified by the closest reasoning of
+modern physicists; and, secondly, that the blue of the sky, hitherto
+thought to be caused by watery vapour, is, indeed, reflected from the
+divided air itself; so that the bright blue of the eyes of Athena, and
+the deep blue of her ægis, prove to be accurate mythic expressions of
+natural phenomena which it is an uttermost triumph of recent science to
+have revealed.
+
+Indeed, it would be difficult to imagine triumph more complete. To form,
+"within an experimental tube, a bit of more perfect sky than the sky
+itself!" here is magic of the finest sort! singularly reversed from that
+of old time, which only asserted its competency to enclose in bottles
+elemental forces that were--not of the sky.
+
+Let me, in thanking Professor Tyndall for the true wonder of this piece
+of work, ask his pardon, and that of all masters in physical science, for
+any words of mine, either in the following pages or elsewhere, that may
+ever seem to fail in the respect due to their great powers of thought, or
+in the admiration due to the far scope of their discovery. But I will be
+judged by themselves, if I have not bitter reason to ask them to teach us
+more than yet they have taught.
+
+This first day of May, 1869, I am writing where my work was begun
+thirty-five years ago, within sight of the snows of the higher Alps. In
+that half of the permitted life of man, I have seen strange evil brought
+upon every scene that I best loved, or tried to make beloved by others.
+The light which once flushed those pale summits with its rose at dawn,
+and purple at sunset, is now umbered and faint; the air which once inlaid
+the clefts of all their golden crags with azure is now defiled with
+languid coils of smoke, belched from worse than volcanic fires; their
+very glacier waves are ebbing, and their snows fading, as if hell had
+breathed on them; the waters that once sank at their feet into
+crystalline rest are now dimmed and foul, from deep to deep, and shore to
+shore. These are no careless words--they are accurately, horribly, true.
+I know what the Swiss lakes were; no pool of Alpine fountain at its
+source was clearer. This morning, on the Lake of Geneva, at half a mile
+from the beach, I could scarcely see my oar-blade a fathom deep.
+
+The light, the air, the waters, all defiled! How of the earth itself?
+Take this one fact for type of honour done by the modern Swiss to the
+earth of his native land. There used to be a little rock at the end of
+the avenue by the port of Neuchâtel; there, the last marble of the foot
+of Jura, sloping to the blue water, and (at this time of year) covered
+with bright pink tufts of Saponaria. I went, three days since, to gather
+a blossom at the place. The goodly native rock and its flowers were
+covered with the dust and refuse of the town; but, in the middle of the
+avenue, was a newly-constructed artificial rockery, with a fountain
+twisted through a spinning spout, and an inscription on one of its
+loose-tumbled stones,--
+
+ "Aux Botanistes,
+ Le club Jurassique,"
+
+Ah, masters of modern science, give me back my Athena out of your vials,
+and seal, if it may be, once more, Asmodeus therein. You have divided
+the elements, and united them; enslaved them upon the earth, and
+discerned them in the stars. Teach us now, but this of them, which is
+all that man need know,--that the Air is given to him for his life; and
+the Rain to his thirst, and for his baptism; and the Fire for warmth; and
+the Sun for sight; and the Earth for his Meat--and his Rest.
+
+VEVAY, May 1, 1869.
+
+
+
+
+THE QUEEN OF THE AIR.
+
+
+
+I.
+
+ATHENA CHALINITIS.*
+(Athena in the Heavens.)
+
+
+* "Athena the Restrainer." The name is given to her as having helped
+Bellerophon to bridle Pegasus, the flying cloud.
+
+
+LECTURE ON THE GREEK MYTHS OF STORM, GIVEN (PARTLY) IN UNIVERSITY
+ COLLEGE, LONDON, MARCH 9, 1869.
+
+
+1. I will not ask your pardon for endeavoring to interest you in the
+subject of Greek Mythology; but I must ask your permission to approach
+it in a temper differing from that in which it is frequently treated.
+We cannot justly interpret the religion of any people, unless we are
+prepared to admit that we ourselves, as well as they, are liable to
+error in matters of faith; and that the convictions of others, however
+singular, may in some points have been well founded, while our own,
+however reasonable, may be in some particulars mistaken. You must
+forgive me, therefore, for not always distinctively calling the creeds
+of the past "superstition," and the creeds of the present day "religion;"
+as well as for assuming that a faith now confessed may sometimes be
+superficial, and that a faith long forgotten may once have been sincere.
+It is the task of the Divine to condemn the errors of antiquity, and of
+the philologists to account for them; I will only pray you to read, with
+patience, and human sympathy, the thoughts of men who lived without blame
+in a darkness they could not dispel; and to remember that, whatever
+charge of folly may justly attach to the saying, "There is no God," the
+folly is prouder, deeper, and less pardonable, in saying, "There is no
+God but for me."
+
+2. A myth, in its simplest definition, is a story with a meaning attached
+to it other than it seems to have at first; and the fact that it has such
+a meaning is generally marked by some of its circumstances being
+extraordinary, or, in the common use of the word, unnatural. Thus if I
+tell you that Hercules killed a water-serpent in the lake of Lerna, and
+if I mean, and you understand, nothing more than that fact, the story,
+whether true or false, is not a myth. But if by telling you this, I mean
+that Hercules purified the stagnation of many streams from deadly
+miasmata, my story, however simple, is a true myth; only, as, if I leftit
+in that simplicity, you would probably look for nothing beyond, it will
+be wise in me to surprise your attention by adding some singular
+circumstance; for instance, that the water-snake had several heads, which
+revived as fast as they were killed, and which poisoned even the foot
+that trod upon them as they slept. And in proportion to the fulness of
+intended meaning I shall probably multiply and refine upon these
+improbabilities; as, suppose, if, instead of desiring only to tell you
+that Hercules purified a marsh, I wished you to understand that he
+contended with the venom and vapor of envy and evil ambition, whether in
+other men's souls or in his own, and choked that malaria only by supreme
+toil,--I might tell you that this serpent was formed by the goddess whose
+pride was in the trial of Hercules; and that its place of abode as by a
+palm-tree; and that for every head of it that was cut off, two rose up
+with renewed life; and that the hero found at last that he could not kill
+the creature at all by cutting its heads off or crushing them, but only
+by burning them down; and that the midmost of them could not be killed
+even that way, but had to be buried alive. Only in proportion as I mean
+more, I shall certainly appear more absurd in my statement; and at last
+when I get unendurably significant, all practical persons will agree that
+I was talking mere nonsense from the beginning, and never meant anything
+at all.
+
+3. It is just possible, however, also, that the story-teller may all
+along have meant nothing but what he said; and that, incredible as the
+events may appear, he himself literally believed--and expected you also
+to believe--all this about Hercules, without any latent moral or history
+whatever. And it is very necessary, in reading traditions of this kind,
+to determine, first of all, whether you are listening to a simple person,
+who is relating what, at all events, he believes to be true, (and may,
+therefore, possibly have been so to some extent), or to a reserved
+philosopher, who is veiling a theory of the universe under the grotesque
+of a fairy tale. It is, in general, more likely that the first
+supposition should be the right one: simple and credulous persons are,
+perhaps fortunately, more common than philosophers; and it is of the
+highest importance that you should take their innocent testimony as it
+was meant, and not efface, under the graceful explanation which your
+cultivated ingenuity may suggest, either the evidence their story may
+contain (such as it is worth) of an extraordinary event having really
+taken place, or the unquestionable light which it will cast upon the
+character of the person by whom it was frankly believed. And to deal
+with Greek religion honestly, you must at once understand that this
+literal belief was, in the mind of the general people, as deeply rooted
+as ours in the legends of our own sacred book; and that a basis of
+unmiraculous event was as little suspected, and an explanatory symbolism
+as rarely traced, by them, as by us.
+
+You must, therefore, observe that I deeply degrade the position which
+such a myth as that just referred to occupied in the Greek mind, by
+comparing it (for fear of offending you) to our story of St. George and
+the Dragon. Still, the analogy is perfect in minor respects; and though
+it fails to give you any notion of the Greek faith, it will exactly
+illustrate the manner in which faith laid hold of its objects.
+
+4. This story of Hercules and the Hydra, then, was to the general Greek
+mind, in its best days, a tale about a real hero and a real monster. Not
+one in a thousand knew anything of the way in which the story had arisen,
+any more than the English peasant generally is aware of the plebeian
+original of St. George; or supposes that there were once alive in the
+world, with sharp teeth and claws, real, and very ugly, flying dragons.
+On the other hand, few persons traced any moral or symbolical meaning in
+the story, and the average Greek was as far from imagining any
+interpretation like that I have just given you, as an average Englishman
+is from seeing is St. George the Red Cross Knight of Spenser, or in the
+Dragon the Spirit of Infidelity. But, for all that, there was a certain
+undercurrent of consciousness in all minds that the figures meant more
+than they at first showed; and, according to each man's own faculties of
+sentiment, he judged and read them; just as a Knight of the Garter reads
+more in the jewel on his collar than the George and Dragon of a
+public-house expresses to the host or to his customers. Thus, to the
+mean person the myth always meant little; to the noble person, much; and
+the greater their familiarity with it, the more contemptible it became to
+one, and the more sacred to the other; until vulgar commentators
+explained it entirely away, while Virgil made the crowning glory of his
+choral hymn to Hercules.
+
+ "Around thee, powerless to infect thy soul,
+ Rose, in his crested crowd, the Lerna worm."
+
+ "Non te rationis egentem
+ Lernæus turbâ capitum circumstetit anguis."
+
+And although, in any special toil of the hero's life, the moral
+interpretation was rarely with definiteness attached to the event, yet
+in the whole course of the life, not only for a symbolical meaning, but
+the warrant for the existence of a real spiritual power, was apprehended
+of all men. Hercules was no dead hero, to be remembered only as a victor
+over monsters of the past--harmless now as slain. He was the perpetual
+type and mirror of heroism, and its present and living aid against every
+ravenous form of human trial and pain.
+
+5. But, if we seek to know more than this and to ascertain the manner in
+which the story first crystallized into its shape, we shall find
+ourselves led back generally to one or other of two sources--either to
+actual historical events, represented by the fancy under figures
+personifying them; or else to natural phenomena similarly endowed with
+life by the imaginative power usually more or less under the influence of
+terror. The historical myths we must leave the masters of history to
+follow; they, and the events they record, being yet involved in great,
+though attractive and penetrable, mystery. But the stars, and hills, and
+storms are with us now, as they were with others of old; and it only
+needs that we look at them with the earnestness of those childish eyes to
+understand the first words spoken of them by the children of men, and
+then, in all the most beautiful and enduring myths, we shall find, not
+only a literal story of a real person, not only a parallel imagery of
+moral principle, but an underlying worship of natural phenomena, out of
+which both have sprung, and in which both forever remain rooted. Thus,
+from the real sun, rising and setting,--from the real atmosphere, calm in
+its dominion of unfading blue, and fierce in its descent of tempest,--the
+Greek forms first the idea of two entirely personal and corporal gods,
+whose limbs are clothes in divine flesh, and whose brows are crowned with
+divine beauty; yet so real that the quiver rattles at their shoulder, and
+the chariot bends beneath their weight. And, on the other hand,
+collaterally with these corporeal images, and never for one instant
+separated from them, he conceives also two omnipresent spiritual
+influences, as the sun, with a constant fire, whatever in humanity is
+skilful and wise; and the other, like the living air, breathes the calm
+of heavenly fortitude, and strength of righteous anger, into every human
+breast that is pure and brave.
+
+6. Now, therefore, in nearly every myth of importance, and certainly in
+every one of those which I shall speak to-night, you have to discern
+these three structural parts,--the root and the two branches: the root,
+in physical existence, sun, or sky, or cloud, or sea; then the personal
+incarnation of that, becoming a trusted and companionable deity, with
+whom you may walk hand in hand, as a child with its brother or its
+sister; and, lastly, the moral significance of the image, which is in all
+the great myths eternally and beneficently true.
+
+7. The great myths; that is to say, myths made by great people. For the
+first plain fact about myth-making is one which has been most strangely
+lost sight of,--that you cannot make a myth unless you have something to
+make it of. You cannot tell a secret which you don't know. If the myth
+is about the sky, it must have been made by somebody who has looked at
+the sky. If the myth is about justice and fortitude, it must have been
+made by someone who knew what it was to be just or patient. According to
+the quantity of understanding in the person will be the quantity of
+significance in his fable; and the myth of a simple and ignorant race
+must necessarily mean little, because a simple and ignorant race have
+little to mean. So the great question in reading a story is always, not
+what wild hunter dreamed, or what childish race first dreaded it; but
+what wise man first perfectly told, and what strong people first
+perfectly lived by it. And the real meaning of any myth is that which it
+has at the noblest age of the nation among whom it is current. The
+farther back you pierce, the less significance you will find, until you
+come to the first narrow thought, which, indeed, contains the germ of the
+accomplished tradition; but only as the seed contains the flower. As the
+intelligence and passion of the race develop, they cling to and nourish
+their beloved and sacred legend; leaf by leaf it expands under the touch
+of more pure affections, and more delicate imagination, until at last the
+perfect fable burgeons out into symmetry of milky stem and honied bell.
+
+8. But through whatever changes it may pass, remember that our right
+reading of it is wholly dependent on the materials we have in our own
+minds for an intelligent answering sympathy. If it first arose among a
+people who dwelt under stainless skies, and measures their journeys by
+ascending and declining stars, we certainly cannot read their story, if
+we have never seen anything above us in the day but smoke, nor anything
+around us in the night but candles. If the tale goes on to change clouds
+or planets into living creatures,--to invest them with fair forms and
+inflame them with mighty passions,--we can only understand the story of
+the human-hearted things, in so far as we ourselves take pleasure in the
+perfectness of visible form, or can sympathize, by an effort of
+imagination, with the strange people who had other loves than those of
+wealth, and other interests than those of commerce. And, lastly, if the
+myth complete itself to the fulfilled thoughts of the nation, by
+attributing to the gods, whom they have carved out of their fantasy,
+continual presence with their own souls; and their every effort for good
+is finally guided by the sense of the companionship, the praise, and the
+pure will of immortals, we shall be able to follow them into this last
+circle of their faith only in the degree in which the better parts of our
+own beings have been also stirred by the aspects of nature, or
+strengthened by her laws. It may be easy to prove that the ascent of
+Apollo in his chariot signifies nothing but the rising of the sun. But
+what does the sunrise itself signify to us? If only languid return to
+frivolous amusement, or fruitless labor, it will, indeed, not be easy for
+us to conceive the power, over a Greek, of the name of Apollo. But if,
+fir us also, as for the Greek, the sunrise means daily restoration to the
+sense of passionate gladness and of perfect life--if it means the
+thrilling of new strength through every nerve,--the shedding over us of a
+better peace than the peace of night, in the power of the dawn,--and the
+purging of evil vision and fear by the baptism of its dew;--if the sun
+itself is an influence, to us also, of spiritual good--and becomes thus
+in reality, not in imagination, to us also, a spiritual power,--we may
+then soon over-pass the narrow limit of conception which kept that power
+impersonal, and rise with the Greek to the thought of an angel who
+rejoiced as a strong man to run his course, whose voice calling to life
+and to labor rang round the earth, and whose going forth was to the ends
+of heaven.
+
+9. The time, then, at which I shall take up for you, as well as I can
+decipher it, the traditions of the gods of Greece, shall be near the
+beginning of its central and formed faith,--about 500 B.C.,--a faith of
+which the character is perfectly represented by Pindar and Æschylus, who
+are both of them outspokenly religious, and entirely sincere men; while
+we may always look back to find the less developed thought of the
+preceding epoch given by Homer, in a more occult, subtle,
+half-instinctive, and involuntary way.
+
+10. Now, at that culminating period of the Greek religion, we find,
+under one governing Lord of all things, four subordinate elemental
+forces, and four spiritual powers living in them and commanding them.
+The elements are of course the well-known four of the ancient world,--
+the earth, the waters, the fire, and the air; and the living powers of
+them are Demeter, the Latin Ceres; Poseidon, the Latin Neptune; Apollo,
+who has retained always his Greek name; and Athena, the Latin Minerva.
+Each of these are descended from, or changed from, more ancient, and
+therefore more mystic, deities of the earth and heaven, and of a finer
+element of æther supposed to be beyond the heavens;* but at this time
+we find the four quite definite, both in their kingdoms and in their
+personalities. They are the rulers of the earth that we tread upon, and
+the air that we breathe; and are with us closely, in their vivid
+humanity, as the dust that they animate, and the winds that they bridle.
+I shall briefly define for you the range of their separate dominions, and
+then follow, as far as we have time, the most interesting of the legends
+which relate to the queen of the air.
+
+
+* And by modern science now also asserted, and with probability argued,
+to exist.
+
+
+11. The rule of the first spirit, Demeter, the earth mother, is over the
+earth, first, as the origin of all life,--the dust from whence we were
+taken; secondly, as the receiver of all things back at last into silence
+--"Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return." And, therefore, as
+the most tender image of this appearing and fading life, in the birth and
+fall of flowers, her daughter Proserpine plays in the fields of Sicily,
+and thence is torn away into darkness, and becomes the Queen of Fate--not
+merely of death, but of the gloom which closes over and ends, not beauty
+only, but sin, and chiefly of sins the sin against the life she gave; so
+that she is, in her highest power, Persephone, the avenger and purifier
+of blood--"The voice of thy brother's blood cries to me out of the
+ground." Then, side by side with this queen of the earth, we find a
+demigod of agriculture by the plough--the lord of grain, or of the thing
+ground by the mill. And it is a singular proof of the simplicity of
+Greek character at this noble time, that of all representations left to
+us of their deities by their art, few are so frequent, and none perhaps
+so beautiful, as the symbol of this spirit of agriculture.
+
+12. Then the dominant spirit of the element water is Neptune, but
+subordinate to him are myriads of other water spirits, of whom Nereus is
+the chief, with Palæmon, and Leucothea, the "white lady" of the sea; and
+Thetis, and nymphs innumerable who, like her, could "suffer a sea
+change," while the river deities had each independent power, according
+to the preciousness of their streams to the cities fed by them,--the
+"fountain Arethuse, and thou, honoured flood, smooth sliding Mincius,
+crowned with vocal reeds." And, spiritually, this king of the waters is
+lord of the strength and daily flow of human life--he gives it material
+force and victory; which as the meaning of the dedication of the hair, as
+the sign of the strength of life, to the river or the native land.
+
+13. Demeter, then, over the earth, and its giving and receiving of life.
+Neptune over the waters, and the flow and force of life,--always among
+the Greeks typified by the horse, which was to them as a crested
+sea-wave, animated and bridled. Then the third element, fire, has set
+over it two powers: over earthly fire, the assistant of human labor, is
+set Hephæstus, lord of all labor in which is the flush and the sweat of
+the brow; and over heavenly fire, the source of day, is set Apollo, the
+spirit of all kindling, purifying, and illuminating intellectual wisdom,
+each of these gods having also their subordinate or associated powers,--
+servant, or sister, or companion muse.
+
+14. Then, lastly, we come to the myth which is to be our subject of
+closer inquiry,--the story of Athena and of the deities subordinate to
+her. This great goddess, the Neith of the Egyptians, the Athena or
+Athenaia of the Greeks, and, with broken power, half usurped by Mars,
+the Minerva of the Latins, is, physically, the queen of the air; having
+supreme power both over its blessing of calm, and wrath of storm; and,
+spiritually, she is the queen of the breath of man, first of the bodily
+breathing which is life to his blood, and strength to his arm in battle;
+and then of the mental breathing, or inspiration, which is his moral
+health and habitual wisdom; wisdom of conduct and of the heart, as
+opposed to the wisdom of imagination and the brain; moral, as distinct
+from intellectual; inspired, as distinct from illuminated.
+
+15. By a singular and fortunate, though I believe wholly accidental,
+coincidence, the heart-virtue, of which she is the spirit, was separated
+by the ancients into four divisions, which have since obtained acceptance
+from all men as rightly discerned, and have received, as if from the
+quarters of the four winds of which Athena is the natural queen, the name
+of "Cardinal" virtues: namely, Prudence (the right seeing, and
+foreseeing, of events through darkness); Justice (the righteous bestowal
+of favor and of indignation); Fortitude (patience under trial by pain);
+and Temperance (patience under trial by pleasure). With respect to these
+four virtues, the attributes of Athena are all distinct. In her
+prudence, or sight in darkness, she is "Glaukopis," "owl-eyed."* In her
+justice, which is the dominant virtue, she wears two robes, one of light,
+and one of darkness; the robe of light, saffron color, or the color of
+the daybreak, falls to her feet, covering her wholly with favor and
+love,--the calm of the sky in blessing; it is embroidered along its edge
+with her victory over the giants (the troublous powers of the earth), and
+the likeness of it was woven yearly by the Athenian maidens and carried
+to the temple of their own Athena, not to the Parthenon, that was the
+temple of all the world's Athena,--but this they carried to the temple of
+their own only one who loved them, and stayed with them always. Then her
+robe of indignation is worn on her breast and left arm only, fringed with
+fatal serpents, and fastened with Gorgonian cold, turning men to stone;
+physically, the lightning and hail of chastisement by storm. Then in her
+fortitude she wears the crested and unstooping hemlet;** and lastly, in
+her temperance, she is the queen of maidenhood--stainless as the air of
+heaven.
+
+
+* There are many other meanings in the epithet; see farther on, §91, pp.
+133, 134.
+** I am compelled, for clearness' sake, to mark only one meaning at a
+time. Athena's helmet is sometimes a mask, sometimes a sign of anger,
+sometimes of the highest light of æther; but I cannot speak of all this
+at once.
+
+
+16. But all these virtues mass themselves in the Greek mind into the two
+main ones,--of Justice, or noble passion, and Fortitude, or noble
+patience; and of these, the chief powers of Athena, the Greeks have
+divinely written for them, and for all men after them, two mighty songs,
+--one, of the Menis,* Mens, passion, or zeal, of Athena, breathed into a
+mortal whose name is "Ache of heart," and whose short life is only the
+incarnate brooding and burst of storm; and the other is of the foresight
+and fortitude of Athena, maintained by her in the heart of a mortal whose
+name is given to him from a longer grief, Odysseus, the full of sorrow,
+the much enduring, and the long-suffering.
+
+
+* This first word of the Iliad, Menis, afterwards passes into the Latin
+Mens; is the root of the Latin name for Athena, "Minerva," and so the
+root of the English "mind."
+
+
+17. The minor expressions by the Greeks in word, in symbol, and in
+religious service, of this faith, are so many and so beautiful, that I
+hope some day to gather at least a few of them into a separate body of
+evidence respecting the power of Athena, and of its relations to the
+ethical conception of the Homeric poems, or, rather, to their ethical
+nature; for they are not conceived didactically, but are didactic in
+their essence, as all good art is. There is an increasing insensibility
+to this character, and even an open denial of it, among us now which is
+one of the most curious errors of modernism,--the peculiar and judicial
+blindness of an age which, having long practised art and poetry for the
+sake of pleasure only, has become incapable of reading their language
+when they were both didactic; and also, having been itself accustomed to
+a professedly didactic teaching, which yet, for private interests,
+studiously avoids collision with every prevalent vice of its day (and
+especially with avarice), has become equally dead to the intensely
+ethical conceptions of a race which habitually divided all men into two
+broad classes of worthy or worthless,--good, and good for nothing. And
+even the celebrated passage of Horace about the Iliad is now misread or
+disbelieved, as if it were impossible that the Iliad could be instructive
+because it is not like a sermon. Horce does not say that it is like a
+sermon, and would have been still less likely to say so if he ever had
+had the advantage of hearing a sermon. "I have been reading that story
+of Troy again" (thus he writes to a noble youth of Rome whom he cared
+for), "quietly at Præneste, while you have been busy at Rome; and truly
+I think that what is base and what is noble, and what useful and useless,
+may be better learned from that, than from all Chrysippus' and Crantor's
+talk put together."* Which is profoundly true, not of the Iliad only,
+but of all other great art whatsoever; for all pieces of such art are
+didactic in the purest way, indirectly and occultly, so that, first, you
+shall only be bettered by them if you are already hard at work in
+bettering yourself; and when you are bettered by them, it shall be partly
+with a general acceptance of their influence, so constant and subtile
+that you shall be no more conscious of it than of the healthy digestion
+of food; and partly by a gift of unexpected truth, which you shall only
+find by slow mining for it,--which is withheld on purpose, and
+close-locked, that you may not get it till you have forged the key of it
+in a furnace of your own heating. And this withholding of their meaning
+is continual, and confessed, in the great poets. Thus Pindar says of
+himself: "There is many an arrow in my quiver, full of speech to the
+wise, but, for the many, they need interpreters." And neither Pindar,
+nor Æschylus, nor Hesiod, nor Homer, nor any of the greater poets or
+teachers of any nation or time, ever spoke but with intentional
+reservation; nay, beyond this, there is often a meaning which they
+themselves cannot interpert [sic],--which it may be for ages long after
+them to intrepert [sic],--in what they said, so far as it recorded true
+imaginative vision. For all the greatest myths have been seen by the men
+who tell them, involuntarily and passively,--seen by them with as great
+distinctness (and in some respects, though not in all, under conditions
+as far beyond the control of their will) as a dream sent to any of us by
+night when we dream clearest; and it is this veracity of vision that
+could not be refused, and of moral that could not be foreseen, which in
+modern historical inquiry has been left wholly out of account; being
+indeed the thing which no merely historical investigator can understand,
+or even believe; for it belongs exclusively to the creative or artistic
+group of men, and can only be interpreted by those of their race, who
+themselves in some measure also see visions and dream dreams.
+
+
+* Note, once for all, that unless when there is question about some
+particular expression, I never translate literally, but give the real
+force of what is said, as I best can, freely.
+
+
+So that you may obtain a more truthful idea of the nature of Greek
+religion and legend from the poems of Keats, and the nearly as beautiful,
+and, in general grasp of subject, far more powerful, recent work of
+Morris, than from frigid scholarship, however extensive. Not that the
+poet's impressions or renderings of things are wholly true, but their
+truth is vital, not formal. They are like sketches from the life by
+Reynolds or Gainsborough, which may be demonstrably inaccurate or
+imaginary in many traits, and indistinct in others, yet will be in the
+deepest sense like, and true; while the work of historical analysis is
+too often weak with loss, through the very labor of its miniature
+touches, or useless in clumsy and vapid veracity of externals, and
+complacent security of having done all that is required for the portrait,
+when it has measured the breadth of the forehead and the length of the
+nose.
+
+18. The first of requirements, then, for the right reading of myths, is
+the understanding of the nature of all true vision by noble persons;
+namely, that it is founded on constant laws common to all human nature;
+that it perceives, however darkly, things which are for all ages true;
+that we can only understand it so far as we have some perception of the
+same truth; and that its fulness is developed and manifested more and
+more by the reverberation of it from minds of the same mirror-temper, in
+succeeding ages. You will understand Homer better by seeing his
+reflection in Dante, as you may trace new forms and softer colors in a
+hillside, redoubled by a lake.
+
+I shall be able partly to show you, even to-night, how much, in the
+Homeric vision of Athena, has been made clearer by the advance of time,
+being thus essentially and eternally true; but I must in the outset
+indicate the relation to that central thought of the imagery of the
+inferior deities of storm.
+
+19. And first I will take the myth of Æolus (the "sage Hippotades" of
+Milton), as it is delivered pure by Homer from the early times.
+
+Why do you suppose Milton calls him "sage"? One does not usually think
+of the winds as very thoughtful or deliberate powers. But hear Homer:
+"Then we came to the Æolian island, and there dwelt Æolus Hippotades,
+dear to the deathless gods; there he dwelt in a floating island, and
+round it was a wall of brass that could not be broken; and the smooth
+rock of it ran up sheer. To whom twelve children were born in the sacred
+chambers,--six daughters and six strong sons; and they dwell foreer with
+their beloved father and their mother, strict in duty; and with them are
+laid up a thousand benefits; and the misty house around them rings with
+fluting all the day long." Now, you are to note first, in this
+description, the wall of brass and the sheer rock. You will find,
+throughout the fables of the tempest-group, that the brazen wall and the
+precipice (occurring in another myth as the brazen tower of Danaë) are
+always connected with the idea of the towering cloud lighted by the sun,
+here truly described as a floating island. Secondly, you hear that all
+treasures were laid up in them; therefore, you know this Æolus is lord of
+the beneficent winds ("he bringeth the wind out of his treasuries"); and
+presently afterwards Homer calls him the "steward" of the winds, the
+master of the store-house of them. And this idea of gifts and
+preciousness in the winds of heaven is carried out in the well-known
+sequel of the fable: Æolus gives them to Ulysses, all but one, bound in
+leathern bags, with a glittering cord of silver; and so like bags of
+treasure that the sailors think they are so, and open them to see. And
+when Ulysses is thus driven back to Æolus, and prays him again to help
+him, note the deliberate words of the king's refusal,--"Did I not," says
+he, "send thee on thy way heartily, that thou mightest reach thy country,
+thy home, and whatever is dear to thee? It is not lawful for me again
+to send forth favorably on his journey a man hated by the happy gods."
+This idea of the beneficence of Æolus remains to the latest times, though
+Virgil, by adopting the vulgar change of the cloud island into Lipari,
+has lost it a little; but even when it is finally explained away by
+Diodorus, Æolus is still a kind-hearted monarch, who lived on the coast
+of Sorrento, invented the use of sails, and established a system of storm
+signals.
+
+20. Another beneficent storm-power, Boreas, occupies an important place
+in early legend, and a singularly principal one in art; and I wish I
+could read to you a passage of Plato about the legend of Boreas and
+Oreithyia,* and the breeze and shade of the Ilissus--notwithstannding its
+severe reflection upon persons who waste their time on mythological
+studies; but I must go on at once to the fable with which you are all
+generally familiar, that of the Harpies.
+
+
+* Translated by Max Müller in the opening of his essay on "Comparative
+Mythology."--Chips from a German Workshop, vol. ii.
+
+
+This is always connected with that of Boreas or the north wind, because
+the two sons of Boreas are enemies of the Harpies, and drive them away
+into frantic flight. The myth in its first literal form means only the
+battle between the fair north wind and the foul south one: the two
+Harpies, "Stormswift" and "Swiftfoot," are the sisters of the rainbow;
+that is to say, they are the broken drifts of the showery south wind, and
+the clear north wind drives them back; but they quickly take a deeper and
+more malignant significance. You know the short, violent, spiral gusts
+that lift the dust before coming rain: the Harpies get identified first
+with these, and then with more violent whirlwinds, and so they are called
+"Harpies," "the Snatchers," and are thought of as entirely destructive;
+their manner of destroying being twofold,--by snatching away, and by
+defiling and polluting. This is a month in which you may really see a
+small Harpy at her work almost whenever you choose. The first time that
+there is threatening of rain after two or three days of fine weather,
+leave your window well open to the street, and some books or papers on
+the table; and if you do not, in a little while, know what the Harpies
+mean, and how they snatch, and how they defile, I'll give up my Greek
+myths.
+
+21. That is the physical meaning. It is now easy to find the mental
+one. You must all have felt the expression of ignoble anger in those
+fitful gusts of storm. There is a sense of provocation in their thin
+and senseless fury, wholly different from the nobler anger of the greater
+tempests. Also, they seem useless and unnatural, and the Greek thinks of
+them always as vile in malice, and opposed, therefore, to the Sons of
+Boreas, who are kindly winds, that fill sails, and wave harvests,--full
+of bracing health and happy impulses. From this lower and merely greater
+terror, always associated with their whirling motion, which is indeed
+indicative of the most destructive winds; and they are thus related to
+the nobler tempests, as Charybdis to the sea; they are devouring and
+desolating, making all things disappear that come in their grasp; and so,
+spiritually, they are the gusts of vexatious, fretful, lawless passion,
+vain and overshadowing, discontented and lamenting, meager and insane,--
+spirits of wasted energy, and wandering disease, and unappeased famine,
+and unsatisfied hope. So you have, on the one side, the winds of
+prosperity and health, on the other, of ruin and sickness. Understand
+that, once, deeply,--any who have ever known the weariness of vain
+desires, the pitiful, unconquerable, coiling and recoiling famine and
+thirst of heart,--and you will know what was in the sound of the Harpy
+Celæno's shriek from her rock; and why, in the seventh circle of the
+"Inferno," the Harpies make their nests in the warped branches of the
+trees that are the souls of suicides.
+
+22. Now you must always be prepared to read Greek legends as you trace
+threads through figures on a silken damask: the same thread runs through
+the web, but it makes part of different figures. Joined with other
+colors you hardly recognize it, and in different lights it is dark or
+light. Thus the Greek fables blend and cross curiously in different
+directions, till they knit themselves into an arabesque where sometimes
+you cannot tell black from purple, nor blue from emerald--they being all
+the truer for this, because the truths of emotion they represent are
+interwoven in the same way, but all the more difficult to read, and to
+explain in any order. Thus the Harpies, as they represent vain desire,
+are connected with the Sirens, who are the spirits of constant desire; so
+that it is difficult sometimes in early art to know which are meant, both
+being represented alike as birds with women's heads; only the Sirens are
+the great constant desires--the infinite sicknesses of heart--which,
+rightly placed, give life, and wrongly placed, waste it away; so that
+there are two groups of Sirens, one noble and saving, as the other is
+fatal. But there are no animating or saving Harpies; their nature is
+always vexing and full of weariness, and thus they are curiously
+connected with the whole group of legends about Tantalus.
+
+33.* We all know what it is to be tantalized; but we do not often think
+of asking what Tantalus was tantalized for--what he had done, to be
+forever kept hungry in sight of food. Well; he had not been condemned to
+this merely for being a glutton. By Dante the same punishment is
+assigned to simple gluttony, to purge it away; but the sins of Tantalus
+were of a much wider and more mysterious kind. There are four great sins
+attributed to him: one, stealing the food of the gods to give it to men;
+another, sacrificing his son to feed the gods themselves (it may remind
+you for a moment of what I was telling you of the earthly character of
+Demeter, that, while the other gods all refuse, she, dreaming about her
+lost daughter, eats part of the shoulder of Pelops before she knows what
+she is doing); another sin is, telling the secrets of the gods; and only
+the fourth--stealing the golden dog of Pandareos--is connected with
+gluttony. The special sense of this myth is marked by Pandareos
+receiving the happy privilege of never being troubled with indigestion;
+the dog, in general, however mythically represents all utter senseless
+and carnal desires; mainly that of gluttony; and in the mythic sense of
+Hades--that is to say, so far as it represents spiritual ruin in this
+life, and not a literal hell--the dog Cerberus as its gatekeeper--with
+this special marking of his character of sensual passion, that he fawns
+on all those who descend, but rages against all who would return (the
+Virgilian "facilis descendus" being a later recognition of this mythic
+character of Hades); the last labor of Hercules is the dragging him up
+to the light; and in some sort he represents the voracity or devouring
+of Hades itself; and the mediæval representation of the mouth of hell
+perpetuates the same thought. Then, also, the power of evil passion
+is partly associated with the red and scorching light of Sirius, as
+opposed to the pure light of the sun: he is the dog-star of ruin; and
+hence the continual Homeric dwelling upon him, and comparison of the
+flame of anger to his swarthy light; only, in his scorching, it is
+thirst, not hunger, over which he rules physically; so that the fable
+of Icarius, his first master, corresponds, among the Greeks, to the
+legend of the drunkenness of Noah.
+
+
+* Printer's error: should be 23.
+
+
+The story of Actæon, the raging death of Hecuba, and the tradition of
+the white dog which ate part of Hercules' first sacrifice, and so gave
+name to the Cynosarges, are all various phases of the same thought,--the
+Greek notion of the dog being throughout confused between its serviceable
+fidelity, its watchfulness, its foul voracity, shamelessness, and deadly
+madness, while with the curious reversal or recoil of the meaning which
+attaches itself to nearly every great myth,--and which we shall presently
+see notably exemplified in the relations of the serpent to Athena,--the
+dog becomes in philosophy a type of severity and abstinence.
+
+24. It would carry us too far aside were I to tell you the story of
+Pandareos' dog--or rather of Jupiter's dog, for Pandareos was its
+guardian only; all that bears on our present purpose is that the guardian
+of this golden dog had three daughters, one of whom was subject to the
+power of the Sirens, and is turned into a nightingale; and the other two
+were subject to the power of the Harpies, and this was what happened to
+them: They were very beautiful, and they were beloved by the gods in
+their youth, and all the great goddesses were anxious to bring them up
+rightly. Of all types of young ladies' education, there is nothing so
+splendid as that of the younger daughters of Pandareos. They have
+literally the four greatest goddesses for their governesses. Athena
+teaches them domestic accomplishments, how to weave, and sew, and the
+like; Artemis teaches them to hold themselves up straight; Hera, how to
+behave proudly and oppressively to company; and Aphrodite, delightful
+governess, feeds them with cakes and honey all day long. All goes well,
+until just the time when they are going to be brought out; then there is
+a great dispute whom they are to marry, and in the midst of it they are
+carried off by the Harpies, given by them to be slaves to the Furies, and
+never seen more. But of course there is nothing in Greek myths; and one
+never heard of such things as vain desires, and empty hopes, and clouded
+passions, defiling and snatching away the souls of maidens, in a London
+season.
+
+I have no time to trace for you any more harpy legends, though they are
+full of the most curious interest; but I may confirm for you my
+interpretation of this one, and prove its importance in the Greek mind,
+by noting that Polygnotus painted these maidens, in his great religious
+series of paintings at Delphi, crowned with flowers, and playing at dice;
+and that Penelope remembers them in her last fit of despair, just before
+the return of Ulysses, and prays bitterly that she may be snatched away
+at once into nothingness by the Harpies, like Pandareos' daughters,
+rather than be tormented longer by her deferred hope, and anguish of
+disappointed love.
+
+25. I have hitherto spoken only of deities of the winds. We pass now to
+a far more important group, the deities of cloud. Both of these are
+subordinate to the ruling power of the air, as the demigods of the
+fountains and minor seas are to the great deep; but, as the
+cloud-firmament detaches itself more from the air, and has a wider range
+of ministry than the minor streams and seas, the highest cloud deity,
+Hermes, has a rank more equal with Athena than Nereus or Proteus with
+Neptune; and there is greater difficulty in tracing his character,
+because his physical dominion over the clouds can, of course, be asserted
+only where clouds are; and, therefore, scarcely at all in Egypt;* so that
+the changes which Hermes undergoes in becoming a Greek from an Egyptian
+and Phœnician god, are greater than in any other case of adopted
+tradition In Egypt Hermes is a deity of historical record, and a
+conductor of the dead to judgment; the Greeks take away much of this
+historical function, assigning it to the Muses; but, in investing him
+with the physical power over clouds, they give him that which the Muses
+disdain,--the power of concealment and of theft. The snatching away by
+the Harpies is with brute force; but the snatching away by the clouds
+is connected with the thought of hiding, and of making things seem to
+be what they are not; so that Hermes is the god of lying, as he is of
+mist; and yet with this ignoble function of making things vanish and
+disappear is connected the remnant of his grand Egyptian authority of
+leading away souls in the cloud of death (the actual dimness of sight
+caused by mortal wounds physically suggesting the darkness and descent
+of clouds, and continually being so described in the Iliad); while the
+sense of the need of guidance on the untrodden road follows necessarily.
+You cannot but remember how this thought of cloud guidance, and cloud
+receiving souls at death, has been elsewhere ratified.
+
+
+* I believe that the conclusions of recent scholarship are generally
+opposed to the Herodotean ideas of any direct acceptance by the Greeks
+of Egyptian myths: and very certainly, Greek art is developed by giving
+the veracity and simplicity of real life to Eastern savage grotesque; and
+not by softening the severity of pure Egyptian design. But it is of no
+consequence whether one conception was, or was not, in this case, derived
+from the other; my object is only to mark the essential difference
+between them.
+
+
+26. Without following that higher clue, I will pass to the lovely group
+of myths connected with the birth of Hermes on the Greek mountains. You
+know that the valley of Sparta is one of the noblest mountain ravines in
+the world, and that the western flank of it is formed by an unbroken
+chain of crags, forty miles long, rising, opposite Sparta, to a height of
+8,000 feet, and known as the chain of Taygetus. Now, the nymph from whom
+that mountain ridge is named was the mother of Lacedæmon; therefore the
+mythic ancestress of the Spartan race. She is the nymph Taygeta, and one
+of the seven stars of spring; one of those Pleiades of whom is the
+question to Job,--"Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or
+loose the bands of Orion?" "The sweet influences of Pleiades," of the
+stars of spring,--nowhere sweeter than among the pine-clad slopes of the
+hills of Sparta and Arcadia, when he snows of their higher summits,
+beneath the sunshine of April, fell into fountains, and rose into clouds;
+and in every ravine was a newly awakened voice of waters,--soft increase
+of whisper among its sacred stones; and on every crag its forming and
+fading veil of radiant cloud; temple above temple, of the divine marble
+that no tool can pollute, nor ruin undermine. And, therefore, beyond
+this central valley, this great Greek vase of Arcadia, on the "hollow"
+mountain, Cyllene, or "pregnant" mountain, called also "cold," because
+there the vapors rest,* and born of the eldest of those stars of spring,
+that Maia, from whom your own month of May has its name, bringing to you,
+in the green of her garlands, and the white of her hawthorn, the
+unrecognized symbols of the pastures and the wreathed snows of Arcadia,
+where long ago she was queen of stars: there, first cradled and wrapt in
+swaddling-clothes; then raised, in a moment of surprise, into his
+wandering power,--is born the shepherd of the clouds, winged-footed and
+deceiving,--blinding the eyes of Argus,--escaping from the grasp of
+Apollo--restless messenger between the highest sky and topmost earth--
+"the herald Mercury, new lighted on a heaven-kissing hill."
+
+
+* On the altar of Hermes on its summit, as on that of the Lacinian Hera,
+no wind ever stirred the ashes. By those altars, the Gods of Heaven were
+appeased, and all their storms at rest.
+
+
+27. Now, it will be wholly impossible, at present, to trace for you any
+of the minor Greek expressions of this thought, except only that Mercury,
+as the cloud shepherd, is especially called Eriophoros, the wool-bearer.
+You will recollect the name from the common woolly rush "eriophorum"
+which has a cloud of silky seed; and note also that he wears
+distinctively the flap cap, petasos, named from a word meaning "to
+expand;" which shaded from the sun, and is worn on journeys. You have
+the epithet of mountains "cloud-capped" as an established form with every
+poet, and the Mont Pilate of Lucerne is named from a Latin word
+signifying specially a woollen cap; but Mercury has, besides, a general
+Homeric epithet, curiously and intensely concentrated in meaning, "the
+profitable or serviceable by wool,"* that is to say, by shepherd wealth;
+hence, "pecuniarily," rich or serviceable, and so he passes at last into
+a general mercantile deity; while yet the cloud sense of the wool is
+retained by Homer always, so that he gives him this epithet when it would
+otherwise have been quite meaningless (in Iliad, xxiv. 440), when he
+drives Priam's chariot, and breathes force into his horses, precisely as
+we shall find Athena drive Diomed; and yet the serviceable and profitable
+sense--and something also of gentle and soothing character in the mere
+wool-softness, as used for dress, and religious rites--is retained also
+in the epithet, and thus the gentle and serviceable Hermes is opposed to
+the deceitful one.
+
+
+* I am convinced that the 'eri' in 'eriounios' is not intensitive, but
+retained from 'erion'; but even if I am wrong in thinking this, the
+mistake is of no consequence with respect to the general force of the
+term as meaning the profitableness of Hermes. Athena's epithet of
+'ageleia' has a parallel significance. [Transcriber's note: words inside
+single apostrophes are Greek, and use the Greek alphabet.]
+
+
+28. In connection with this driving of Priam's chariot, remember that
+as Autolycus is the son of Hermes the Deceiver, Myrtilus (the Auriga
+of the Stars) is the son of Hermes the Guide. The name Hermes itself
+means impulse; and he is especially the shepherd of the flocks of the
+sky, in driving, or guiding, or stealing them; and yet his great
+name, Argeiphontes, not only--as in different passages of the olden
+poets--means "Shining White," which is said of him as being himself the
+silver cloud lighted by the sun; but "Argus-killer," the killer of
+rightness, which is said of him as he veils the sky, and especially the
+stars, which are the eyes of Argus; or, literally, eyes of brightness,
+which Juno, who is, with Jupiter, part of the type of highest heaven,
+keeps in her peacock's train. We know that this interpretation is
+right, from a passage in which Euripides describes the shield of
+Hippomedon, which bore for his sign, "Argus the all-seeing, covered
+with eyes; open towards the rising of the stars and closed towards
+their setting."
+
+And thus Hermes becomes the spirit of the movement of the sky or
+firmament; not merely the fast flying of the transitory cloud, but the
+great motion of the heavens and stars themselves. Thus, in his highest
+power, he corresponds to the "primo mobile" of the later Italian
+philosophy, and, in his simplest, is the guide of all mysterious and
+cloudy movement, and of all successful subtleties. Perhaps the prettiest
+minor recognition of his character is when, on the night foray of Ulysses
+and Diomed, Ulysses wear the helmet stolen by Autolycus, the son of
+Hermes.
+
+29. The position in the Greek mind of Hermes as the lord of cloud is,
+however, more mystic and ideal than that of any other deity, just on
+account of the constant and real presence of the cloud itself under
+different forms, giving rise to all kinds of minor fables. The play of
+the Greek imagination in this direction is so wide and complex, that I
+cannot give you an outline of its range in my present limits. There is
+first a great series of storm-legends connected with the family of the
+historic Æolus centralized by the story of Athamas, with his two wives,
+"the Cloud," and the "White Goddess," ending in that of Phrixus and
+Helle, and of the golden fleece (which is only the cloud-burden of Hermes
+Eriophoros). With this, there is the fate of Salmoneus, and the
+destruction of the Glaucus by his own horses; all these minor myths of
+storm concentrating themselves darkly into the legend of Bellerophon and
+the Chimæra, in which there is an under story about the vain subduing of
+passion and treachery, and the end of life in fading melancholy,--which,
+I hope, not many of you could understand even were I to show it you (the
+merely physical meaning of the Chimæra is the cloud of volcanic lightning
+connected wholly with earth-fire, but resembling the heavenly cloud in
+its height and its thunder). Finally, in the Æolic group, there is the
+legend of Sisypus, which I mean to work out thoroughly by itself; its
+root is in the position of Corinth as ruling the isthmus and the two seas
+--the Corinthean Acropolis, two thousand feet high, being the centre of
+the crossing currents of the winds, and of the commerce of Greece.
+Therefore, Athena, and the fountain-cloud Pegasus, are more closely
+connected with Corinth than even with Athens in their material, though
+not in their moral, power; and Sisyphus founds the Isthmian games in
+connection with a melancholy story about the sea gods; but he himself is
+'kerdotos andron', the most "gaining" and subtle of men; who having the
+key of the Isthmus, becomes the type of transit, transfer, or trade, as
+such; and of the apparent gain from it, which is not gain; and this is
+the real meaning of his punishment in hell--eternal toil and recoil (the
+modern idol of capital being, indeed, the stone of Sisyphus with a
+vengeance, crushing in its recoil). But, throughout, the old ideas of
+the cloud power and cloud feebleness,--the deceit of its hiding,--and the
+emptiness of its banishing,--the Autolycus enchantment of making black
+seem white,--and the disappointed fury of Ixion (taking shadow for
+power), mingle in the moral meaning of this and its collateral legends;
+and give an aspect, at last, not only of foolish cunning, but of impiety
+or literal "idolatry," "imagination worship," to the dreams of avarice
+and injustice, until this notion of atheism and insolent blindness
+becomes principal; and the "Clouds" of Aristophanes, with the personified
+"just" and "unjust" sayings in the latter part of the play, foreshadow,
+almost feature by feature, in all that they were written to mock and to
+chastise, the worst elements of the impious "'dinos'" and tumult in men's
+thoughts, which have followed on their avarice in the present day, making
+them alike forsake the laws of their ancient gods, and misapprehended or
+reject the true words of their existing teachers.
+
+30. All this we have from the legends of the historic Æolus only; but,
+besides these, there is the beautiful story of Semele, the mother of
+Bacchus. She is the cloud with the strength of the vine in its bosom,
+consumed by the light which matures the fruit; the melting away of the
+cloud into the clean air at the fringe of its edges being exquisitely
+rendered by Pindar's epithet for her, Semele, "with the stretched-out
+hair" ('tauuetheira'.) Then there is the entire tradition of the
+Danaides, and of the tower of Danaë and golden shower; the birth of
+Perseus connecting this legend with that of the Gorgons and Graiæ, who
+are the true clouds of thunderous ruin and tempest. I must, in passing,
+mark for you that the form of the sword or sickle of Perseus, with which
+he kills Medusa, is another image of the whirling harpy vortex, and
+belongs especially to the sword of destruction or annihilation; whence it
+is given to the two angels who gather for destruction the evil harvest
+and evil vintage of the earth (Rev. xiv. 15). I will collect afterwards
+and complete what I have already written respecting the Pegasean and
+Gorgonian legends, noting here only what is necessary to explain the
+central myth of Athena herself, who represents the ambient air, which
+included all cloud, and rain, and dew, and darkness, and peace, and wrath
+of heaven. Let me now try to give you, however briefly, some distinct
+idea of the several agencies of this great goddess.
+
+31. I. She is the air giving life and health to all animals.
+ II. She is the air giving vegetative power to the earth.
+ III. She is the air giving motion to the sea, and rendering
+ navigation possible.
+ IV. She is the air nourishing artificial light, torch or lamplight;
+ as opposed to that of the sun, on one hand, and of consuming*
+ fire on the other.
+ V. She is the air conveying vibration of sound.
+
+
+* Not a scientific, but a very practical and expressive distinction.
+
+
+I will give you instances of her agency in all these functions.
+
+32. First, and chiefly, she is air as the spirit of life, giving
+vitality to the blood. Her psychic relation to the vital force in matter
+lies deeper, and we will examine it afterwards; but a great number of the
+most interesting passages in Homer regard her as flying over the earth in
+local and transitory strength, simply and merely the goddess of fresh
+air.
+
+It is curious that the British city which has somewhat saucily styled
+itself the Modern Athens is indeed more under her especial tutelage and
+favor in this respect than perhaps any other town in the island. Athena
+is first simply what in the Modern Athens you practically find her, the
+breeze of the mountain and the sea; and wherever she comes, there is
+purification, and health, and power. The sea-beach round this isle of
+ours is the frieze of our Parthenon; every wave that breaks on it
+thunders with Athena's voice; nay, wherever you throw your window wide
+open in the morning, you let in Athena, as wisdom and fresh air at the
+same instant; and whenever you draw a pure, long, full breath of right
+heaven, you take Athena into your heart, through your blood; and, with
+the blood, into the thoughts of your brain.
+
+Now, this giving of strength by the air, observe, is mechanical as well
+as chemical. You cannot strike a good blow but with your chest full;
+and, in hand to hand fighting, it is not the muscle that fails first, it
+is the breath; the longest-breathed will, on the average, be the victor,
+--not the strongest. Note how Shakespeare always leans on this. Of
+Mortimer, in "changing hardiment with great Glendower":
+
+"Three times they breathed, and three times did they drink,
+Upon agreement, of swift Severn's flood."
+
+And again, Hotspur, sending challenge to Prince Harry:
+
+ "That none might draw short breath to-day
+ But I and Harry Monmouth."
+
+Again, of Hamlet, before he receives his wound:
+
+ "He's fat, and scant of breath."
+
+Again, Orlando in the wrestling:
+
+ "Yes; I beseech your grace
+ I am not yet well breathed."
+
+Now, of all the people that ever lived, the Greeks knew best what breath
+meant, both in exercise and in battle, and therefore the queen of the air
+becomes to them at once the queen of bodily strength in war; not mere
+brutal muscular strength,--that belongs to Ares,--but the strength of
+young lives passed in pure air and swift exercise,--Camilla's virginal
+force, that "flies o'er the unbending corn, and skims along the main."
+
+33. Now I will rapidly give you two or three instances of her direct
+agency in this function. First, when she wants to make Penelope bright
+and beautiful; and to do away with the signs of her waiting and her
+grief. "Then Athena thought of another thing; she laid her into a deep
+sleep, and loosed all her limbs, and made her taller, and made her
+smoother, and fatter, and whiter than sawn ivory; and breathed ambrosial
+brightness over her face; and so she left her and went up to heaven."
+Fresh air and sound sleep at night, young ladies! You see you may have
+Athena for lady's maid whenever you choose. Next, hark how she gives
+strength to Achilles when he is broken with fasting and grief. Jupiter
+pities him and says to her, "'Daughter mine, are you forsaking your own
+soldier, and don't you care for Achilles any more? See how hungry and
+weak he is,--go and feed him with ambrosia.' So he urged the eager
+Athena; and she leaped down out of heaven like a harpy falcon,
+shrill-voiced; and she poured nectar and ambrosia, full of delight, into
+the breast of Achilles, that his limbs might not fail with famine; then
+she returned to the solid dome of her strong father." And then comes the
+great passage about Achilles arming--for which we have no time. But here
+is again Athena giving strength to the whole Greek army. She came as a
+falcon to Achilles, straight at him, a sudden drift of breeze; but to the
+army she must come widely, she sweeps around them all. "As when Jupiter
+spreads the purple rainbow over heaven, portending battle or cold storm,
+so Athena, wrapping herself round with a purple cloud, stooped to the
+Greek soldiers, and raised up each of them." Note that purple, in
+Homer's use of it, nearly always means "fiery," "full of light." It is
+the light of the rainbow, not the color of it, which Homer means you to
+think of.
+
+34. But the most curious passage of all, and fullest of meaning, is when
+she gives strength to Menelaus, that he may stand unwearied against
+Hector. He prays to her: "And blue-eyed Athena was glad that he prayed
+to her, first; and she gave him strength in his shoulders, and in his
+limbs, an she gave him the courage"--of what animal, do you suppose? Had
+it been Neptune or Mars, they would have given him the courage of a bull,
+or a lion; but Athena gives him the courage of the most fearless in
+attack of all creatures, small or great, and very small it is, but wholly
+incapable of terror,--she gives him the courage of a fly.
+
+35. Now this simile of Homer's is one of the best instances I can give
+you of the way in which great writers seize truths unconsciously which
+are for all time. It is only recent science which has completely shown
+the perfectness of this minute symbol of the power of Athena; proving
+that the insect's flight and breath are co-ordinated; that its wings are
+actually forcing-pumps, of which the stroke compels the thoracic
+respiration; and that it thus breathes and flies simultaneously by the
+action of the same muscles, so that respiration is carried on most
+vigorously during flight, "while the air-vessels, supplied by many pairs
+of lungs instead of one, traverse the organs of flight in far greater
+numbers than the capillary blood-vessels of our own system, and give
+enormous and untiring muscular power, a rapidity of action measured by
+thousands of strokes in the minute, and an endurance, by miles and hours
+of flight."*
+
+
+* Ormerod: "Natural History of Wasps."
+
+
+Homer could not have known this; neither that the buzzing of the fly
+was produced, as in a wind instrument, by a constant current of air
+through the trachea. But he had seen, and, doubtless, meant us to
+remember, the marvellous strength and swiftness of the insect's flight
+(the glance of the swallow itself is clumsy and slow compared to the
+darting of common house-flies at play); he probably attributed its
+murmur to the wings, but in this also there was a type of what we shall
+presently find recognized in the name of Pallas,--the vibratory power
+of the air to convey sound, while, as a purifying creature, the fly holds
+its place beside the old symbol of Athena in Egypt, the vulture; and as
+a venomous and tormenting creature has more than the strength of the
+serpent in proportion to its size, being thus entirely representative
+of the influence of the air both in purification and pestilence; and its
+courage is so notable that, strangely enough, forgetting Homer's simile,
+I happened to take the fly for an expression of the audacity of freedom
+in speaking of quite another subject.* Whether it should be called
+courage, or mere mechanical instinct, may be questioned, but assuredly
+no other animal, exposed to continual danger, is so absolutely without
+sign of fear.
+
+
+* See farther on, §148, pp. 154-156.
+
+
+36. You will, perhaps, have still patience to hear two instances, not of
+the communication as strength, but of the personal agency of Athena as
+the air. When she comes down to help Diomed against Ares, she does not
+come to fight instead of him, but she takes his charioteer's place.
+
+"She snatched the reins, she lashed with all her force,
+And full on Mars impelled the foaming horse."
+
+Ares is the first to cast his spear; then--note this--Pope says:
+
+ "Pallas opposed her hand, and caused to glance,
+ Far from the car, the strong immortal lance."
+
+She does not oppose her hand in the Greek--the wind could not meet the
+lance straight--she catches it in her hand, and throws it off. There is
+no instance in which a lance is so parried by a mortal hand in all the
+Iliad, and it is exactly the way the wind would parry it, catching it,
+and turning it aside. If there are any good rifleshots here, they know
+something about Athena's parrying; and in old times the English masters
+of feathered artillery knew more yet. Compare also the turning of
+Hector's lance from Achilles: Iliad, xx. 439.
+
+37. The last instance I will give you is as lovely as it is subtile.
+Throughout the Iliad, Athena is herself the will or Menis of Achilles.
+If he is to be calmed, it is she who calms him; if angered, it is she
+who inflames him. In the first quarrel with Atreides, when he stands at
+pause, with the great sword half drawn, "Athena came from heaven, and
+stood behind him and caught him by the yellow hair." Another god would
+have stayed his hand upon the hilt, but Athena only lifts his hair. "And
+he turned and knew her, and her dreadful eyes shone upon him." There is
+an exquisite tenderness in this laying her hand upon his hair, for it is
+the talisman of his life, vowed to his own Thessalian river if he ever
+returned to its shore, and cast upon Patroclus' pile, so ordaining that
+there should be no return.
+
+38. Secondly, Athena is the air giving vegetative impulse to the earth.
+She is the wind and the rain, and yet more the pure air itself, getting
+at the earth fresh turned by spade or plough, and, above all, feeding the
+fresh leaves; for though the Greeks knew nothing about carbonic acid,
+they did know that trees fed on the air.
+
+Now, note first in this, the myth of the air getting at ploughed land.
+You know I told you the Lord of all labor by which man lived was
+Hephæstus; therefore Athena adopts a child of his, and of the Earth,--
+Erichthonius,--literally, "the tearer up of the ground," who is the head
+(though not in direct line) of the kings of Attica; and, having adopted
+him, she gives him to be brought up by the three nymphs of the dew. Of
+these, Aglauros, the dweller in the fields, is the envy or malice of the
+earth; she answers nearly to the envy of Cain, the tiller of the ground,
+against his shepherd brother, in her own envy against her two sisters,
+Herse, the cloud dew, who is the beloved of the shepherd Mercury; and
+Pandrosos, the diffused dew, or dew of heaven. Literally, you have in
+this myth the words of the blessing of Esau: "Thy dwelling shall be of
+the fatness of the earth, and of the dew of heaven from above." Aglauros
+is for her envy turned into a black stone; and hers is one of the voices
+--the other being that of Cain--which haunts the circle of envy in the
+Purgatory:
+
+ "Io sono Aglauro, chi divenne sasso."
+
+But to her two sisters, with Erichthonius (or the hero Erectheus), is
+built the most sacred temple of Athena in Athens; the temple to their own
+dearest Athena--to her, and to the dew together; so that it was divided
+into two parts: one, the temple of Athena of the city, and the other that
+of the dew. And this expression of her power, as the air bringing the
+dew to the hill pastures, in the central temple of the central city of
+the heathen, dominant over the future intellectual world, is, of all the
+facts connected with her worship as the spirit of life, perhaps the most
+important. I have no time now to trace for you the hundredth part of the
+different ways in which it bears both upon natural beauty, and on the
+best order and happiness of men's lives. I hope to follow out some of
+these trains of thought in gathering together what I have to say about
+field herbage; but I must say briefly here that the great sign, to the
+Greeks, of the coming of spring in the pastures, was not, as with us, in
+the primrose, but in the various flowers of the asphodel tribe (of which
+I will give you some separate account presently); therefore it is that
+the earth answers with crocus flame to the cloud on Ida; and the power
+of Athena in eternal life is written by the light of the asphodel on the
+Elysian fields.
+
+But further, Athena is the air, not only to the lilies of the field, but
+to the leaves of the forest. We saw before the reason why Hermes is said
+to be the son of Maia, the eldest of the sister stars of spring. Those
+stars are called not only Pleiades, but Vergiliæ, from a word mingling
+the ideas of the turning or returning of springtime with the outpouring
+of rain. The mother of Vergil bearing the name of Maia, Vergil himself
+received his name from the seven stars; and he, forming first the mind of
+Dante, and through him that of Chaucer (besides whatever special minor
+influence came from the Pastorals and Georgics) became the fountainhead
+of all the best literary power connected with the love of vegetative
+nature among civilized races of men. Take the fact for what it is worth;
+still it is a strange seal of coincidence, in word and in reality, upon
+the Greek dream of the power over human life, and its purest thoughts, in
+the stars of spring. But the first syllable of the name of Vergil has
+relation also to another group of words, of which the English ones,
+virtue and virgin, bring down the force to modern days. It is a group
+containing mainly the idea of "spring," or increase of life in
+vegetation--the rising of the new branch of the tree out of the bud, and
+of the new leaf out of the ground. It involves, secondarily, the idea
+of greenness and of strength, but, primarily, that of living increase of
+a new rod from a stock, stem, or root ("There shall come forth a rod out
+of the stem of Jesse"); and chiefly the stem of certain plants--either of
+the rose tribe, as in the budding of the almond rod of Aaron; or of the
+olive tribe, which has triple significance in this symbolism, from the
+use of its oil for sacred anointing, for strength in the gymnasium, and
+for light. Hence, in numberless divided and reflected ways, it is
+connected with the power of Hercules and Athena: Hercules plants the wild
+olive, for its shade, on the course of Olympia, and it thenceforward
+gives the Olympic crown of consummate honor and rest; while the prize at
+the Panathenaic games is a vase of its oil (meaning encouragement to
+continuance of effort); and from the paintings on these Panathenaic vases
+we get the most precious clue to the entire character of Athena. Then to
+express its propagation by slips, the trees from which the oil was to be
+taken were called "Moriai," trees of division (being all descendents of
+the sacred one in the Erechtheum). And thus, in one direction, we get to
+the "children like olive plants round about thy table" and the olive
+grafting of St. Paul; while the use of the oil for anointing gives chief
+name to the rod itself of the stem of Jesse, and to all those who were by
+that name signed for his disciples first in Antioch. Remember, further,
+since that name was first given the influence of the symbol, both in
+extreme unction and in consecration of priests and kings to their "divine
+right;" and thing, if you can reach with any grasp of thought, what the
+influence on the earth has been, of those twisted branches whose leaves
+give gray bloom to the hillsides under every breeze that blows from the
+midland sea. But, above and beyond all, think how strange it is that the
+chief Agonia of humanity, and the chief giving of strength from heaven
+for its fulfilment, should have been under its night shadow in Palestine.
+
+39. Thirdly, Athena is the air in its power over the sea.
+
+On the earliest Panathenaic vase known--the "Burgon" vase in the British
+museum--Athena has a dolphin on her shield. The dolphin has two
+principal meanings in Greek symbolism. It means, first, the sea;
+secondarily, the ascending and descending course of any of the heavenly
+bodies from one sea horizon to another--the dolphins' arching rise and
+replunge (in a summer evening, out of calm sea, their black backs roll
+round with exactly the slow motion of a water-wheel; but I do not know
+how far Aristotle's exaggerated account of their leaping or their
+swiftness has any foundation) being taken as a type of the emergence
+of the sun or stars from the sea in the east, and plunging beneath in the
+west. Hence, Apollo, when in his personal power he crosses the sea,
+leading his Cretan colonists to Pytho, takes the form of a dolphin,
+becomes Apollo Delphinius, and names the founded colony "Delphi." The
+lovely drawing of the Delphic Apollo on the hydria of the Vatican (Le
+Normand and De Witte, vol. ii. p. 6) gives the entire conception of this
+myth. Again, the beautiful coins of Tarentum represent Taras coming to
+found the city, riding on a dolphin, whose leaps and plunges have partly
+the rage of the sea in them, and partly the spring of the horse, because
+the splendid riding of the Tarentines had made their name proverbial in
+Magna Græca. The story of Arion is a collateral fragment of the same
+thought; and, again, the plunge, before their transformation, of the
+ships of Æneas. Then, this idea of career upon, or conquest of, or by
+dolphin-like ships (compare the Merlin prophecy,
+
+ "They shall ride
+ Over ocean wide
+ With hempen bridle, ad horse of tree,")
+
+connects itself with the thought of undulation, and of the wave-power in
+the sea itself, which is always expressed by the serpentine bodies either
+of the sea-gods or of the sea-horse; and when Athena carries, as she does
+often in later work, a serpent for her shield-sign, it is not so much the
+repetition of her own ægis-snakes as the further expression of her power
+over the sea-wave; which, finally, Vergil gives in its perfect unity with
+her own anger, in the approach of the serpents against Laocoön from the
+sea; and then, finally, when her own storm-power is fully put forth on
+the ocean also, and the madness of the ægis-snake is give to the
+wave-snake, the sea-wave becomes the devouring hound at the waist of
+Scylla, and Athena takes Scylla for her helmet-crest; while yet her
+beneficent and essential power on the ocean, in making navigation
+possible, is commemorated in the Panathenaic festival by her peplus being
+carried to the Erechtheum suspended from the mast of a ship.
+
+In Plate cxv. of vol. ii, Le Normand, are given two sides of a vase,
+which, in rude and childish ways, assembles most of the principal
+thoughts regarding Athena in this relation. In the first, the sunrise is
+represented by the ascending chariot of Apollo, foreshortened; the light
+is supposed to blind the eyes, and no face of the god is seen (Turner, in
+the Ulysses and Polyphemus sunrise, loses the form of the god in light,
+giving the chariot-horses only; rendering in his own manner, after 2,200
+years of various fall and revival of the arts, precisely the same thought
+as the old Greek potter). He ascends out of the sea; but the sea itself
+has not yet caught the light. In the second design, Athena as the
+morning breeze, and Hermes as the morning cloud, fly over the sea before
+the sun. Hermes turns back his head; his face is unseen in the cloud, as
+Apollo's in the light; the grotesque appearance of an animal's face is
+only the cloud-phantasm modifying a frequent form of the hair of Hermes
+beneath the back of his cap. Under the morning breeze, the dolphins leap
+from the rippled sea, and their sides catch the light.
+
+The coins of the Lucanian Heracleia give a fair representation of the
+helmed Athena, as imagined in later Greek art, with the embossed Scylla.
+
+40. Fourthly, Athena is the air nourishing artificial light--unconsuming
+fire. Therefore, a lamp was always kept burning in the Erechtheum; and
+the torch-race belongs chiefly to her festival, of which the meaning is
+to show the danger of the perishing of the light even by excess of the
+air that nourishes it; and so that the race is not to the swift, but to
+the wise. The household use of her constant light is symbolized in the
+lovely passage in the Odyssey, where Ulysses and his son move the armor
+while the servants are shut in their chambers, and there is no one to
+hold the torches for them; but Athena herself, "having a golden lamp,"
+fills all the rooms with light. Her presence in war-strength with her
+favorite heroes is always shown by the "unwearied" fire hovering on their
+helmets and shields; and the image gradually becomes constant and
+accepted, both for the maintenance of household watchfulness, as in the
+parable of the ten virgins, or as the symbol of direct inspiration, in
+the rushing wind and divided flames of Pentecost; but together with this
+thought of unconsuming and constant fire, there is always mingled in the
+Greek mind the sense of the consuming by excess, as of the flame by the
+air, so also of the inspired creature by its own fire (thus, again, "the
+zeal of thine house hath eaten me up"--"my zeal hath consumed me, because
+of thine enemies," and the like); and especially Athena has this aspect
+towards the truly sensual and bodily strength; so that to Ares, who is
+himself insane and consuming, the opposite wisdom seems to be insane and
+consuming: "All we the other gods have thee against us, O Jove! when we
+would give grace to men; for thou hast begotten the maid without a mind--
+the mischievous creature, the doer of unseemly evil. All we obey thee,
+and are ruled by thee. Her only thou wilt not resist in anything she
+says or does, because thou didst bear her--consuming child as she is."
+
+41. Lastly, Athena is the air conveying vibration of sound.
+
+In all the loveliest representations in central Greek art of the birth
+of Athena, Apollo stands close to the sitting Jupiter, singing, with a
+deep, quiet joyfulness, to his lyre. The sun is always thought of as the
+master of time and rhythm, and as the origin of the composing and
+inventive discovery of melody; but the air, as the actual element and
+substance of the voice, the prolonging and sustaining power of it, and
+the symbol of its moral passion. Whatever in music is measured and
+designed belongs therefore to Apollo and the Muses; whatever is impulsive
+and passionate, to Athena; hence her constant strength a voice or cry (as
+when she aids the shout of Achilles) curiously opposed to the dumbness of
+Demeter. The Apolline lyre, therefore, is not so much the instrument
+producing sound, as its measurer and divider by length or tension of
+string into given notes; and I believe it is, in a double connection with
+its office as a measurer of time or motion and its relation to the
+transit of the sun in the sky, that Hermes forms it from the
+tortoise-shell, which is the image of the dappled concave of the cloudy
+sky. Thenceforward all the limiting or restraining modes of music belong
+to the Muses; but the more passionate music is wind music, as in the
+Doric flute. Then, when this inspired music becomes degraded in its
+passion, it sinks into the pipe of Pan, and the double pipe of Marsyas,
+and is then rejected by Athena. The myth which represents her doing so
+is that she invented the double pipe from hearing the hiss of the
+Gorgonian serpents; but when she played upon it, chancing to see her face
+reflected in water, she saw that it was distorted, whereupon she threw
+down the flute which Marsyas found. Then, the strife of Apollo and
+Marsyas represents the enduring contest between music in which the words
+and thought lead, and the lyre measures or melodizes them (which Pindar
+means when he calls his hymns "kings over the lyre"), and music in which
+the words are lost and the wind or impulse leads,--generally, therefore,
+between intellectual, and brutal, or meaningless, music. Therefore, when
+Apollo prevails, he flays Marsyas, taking the limit and external bond of
+his shape from him, which is death, without touching the mere muscular
+strength, yet shameful and dreadful in dissolution.
+
+42. And the opposition of these two kinds of sound is continually dwelt
+upon by the Greek philosophers, the real fact at the root of all music is
+the natural expression of a lofty passion for a right cause; that in
+proportion to the kingliness and force of any personality, the expression
+either of its joy or suffering becomes measured, chastened, calm, and
+capable of interpretation only by the majesty of ordered, beautiful, and
+worded sound. Exactly in proportion to the degree in which we become
+narrow in the cause and conception of our passions, incontinent in the
+utterance of them, feeble of perseverance in them, sullied or shameful in
+the indulgence of them, their expression by musical sound becomes broken,
+mean, fatuitous, and at last impossible; the measured waves of the air of
+heaven will not lend themselves to expression of ultimate vice, it must
+be forever sunk into discordance or silence. And since, as before
+stated, every work of right art has a tendency to reproduce the ethical
+state which first developed it, this, which of all the arts is most
+directly in power of discipline; the first, the simplest, the most
+effective of all instruments of moral instruction; while in the failure
+and betrayal of its functions, it becomes the subtlest aid of moral
+degradation. Music is thus, in her health, the teacher of perfect order,
+and is the voice of the obedience of angels, and the companion of the
+course of the spheres of heaven; and in her depravity she is also the
+teacher of perfect disorder and disobedience, and the Gloria in Excelsis
+becomes the Marseillaise. In the third section of this volume, I reprint
+two chapters from another essay of mine ("The Cestus of Aglaia"), on
+modesty or measure, and on liberty, containing further reference to music
+in her two powers; and I do this now, because, among the many monstrous
+and misbegotten fantasies which are the spawn of modern license, perhaps
+the most impishly opposite to the truth is the conception of music which
+has rendered possible the writing, by educated persons, and, more
+strangely yet, the tolerant criticism, of such words as these: "This so
+persuasive art is the only one that has no didactic efficacy, that
+engenders no emotions save such as are without issue on the side of moral
+truth, that expresses nothing of God, nothing of reason, nothing of human
+liberty." I will not give the author's name; the passage is quoted in
+the "Westminster Review" for last January [1869].
+
+43. I must also anticipate something of what I have to say respecting
+the relation of the power of Athena to organic life, so far as to note
+that her name, Pallas, probably refers to the quivering or vibration of
+the air; and to its power, whether as vital force, or communicated wave,
+over every kind of matter, in giving it vibratory movement; first, and
+most intense, in the voice and throat of the bird, which is the air
+incarnate; and so descending through the various orders of animal life to
+the vibrating and semi-voluntary murmur of the insect; and, lower still,
+to the hiss or quiver of the tail of the half-lunged snake and deaf
+adder; all these, nevertheless, being wholly under the rule of Athena as
+representing either breath or vital nervous power; and, therefore, also,
+in their simplicity, the "oaten pipe and pastoral song," which belong to
+her dominion over the asphodel meadows, and breathe on their banks of
+violets.
+
+Finally, is it not strange to think of the influence of this one power of
+Pallas in vibration (we shall see a singular mechanical energy of it
+presently in the serpent's motion), in the voices of war and peace? How
+much of the repose, how much of the wrath, folly, and misery of men, has
+literally depended on this one power of the air; on the sound of the
+trumpet and of the bell, on the lark's song, and the bee's murmur!
+
+44. Such is the general conception in the Greek mind of the physical
+power of Athena. The spiritual power associated with it is of two kinds:
+first, she is the Spirit of Life in material organism; not strength in
+the blood only, but formative energy in the clay; and, secondly, she is
+inspired and impulsive wisdom in human conduct and human art, giving the
+instinct of infallible decision, and of faultless invention.
+
+It is quite beyond the scope of my present purpose--and, indeed, will
+only be possible for me at all after marking the relative intention of
+the Apolline myths--to trace for you the Greek conception of Athena as
+the guide of moral passion. But I will at least endeavor, on some near
+occasion,* to define some of the actual truths respecting the vital force
+in created organism, and inventive fancy in the works of man, which are
+more or less expressed by the Greeks, under the personality of Athena.
+You would, perhaps, hardly bear with me if I endeavored further to show
+you--what is nevertheless perfectly true--the analogy between the
+spiritual power of Athena in her gentle ministry, yet irresistible anger,
+with the ministry of anther Spirit whom we also, holding for the
+universal power of life, are forbidden, at our worst peril, to quench or
+to grieve.
+
+
+* I have tried to do this in mere outline in the two following sections
+of this volume.
+
+
+45. But, I think, to-night, you should not let me close without
+requiring of me an answer on one vital point, namely, how far these
+imaginations of gods--which are vain to us--were vain to those who had
+no better trust? and what real belief the Greek had in these creations
+of his own spirit, practical and helpful to him in the sorrow of earth?
+I am able to answer you explicitly in this. The origin of his thoughts
+is often obscure, and we may err in endeavoring to account or their form
+of realization; but the effect of that realization on his life is not
+obscure at all. The Greek creed was, of course, different in its
+character, as our own creed is, according to the class of persons who
+held it. The common people's was quite literal, simple, and happy; their
+idea of Athena was as clear as a good Roman Catholic peasant's idea of
+the Madonna. In Athens itself, the centre of thought and refinement,
+Pisistratus obtained the reins of government through the ready belief of
+the populace that a beautiful woman, armed like Athena, was the goddess
+herself. Even at the close of the last century some of this simplicity
+remained among the inhabitants of the Greek islands; and when a pretty
+English lady first made her way into the grotto of Antiparos, she was
+surrounded, on her return, by all the women of the neighboring village,
+believing her to be divine, and praying her to heal them of their
+sicknesses.
+
+46. Then, secondly, the creed of the upper classes was more refined and
+spiritual, but quite as honest, and even more forcible in its effect on
+the life. You might imagine that the employment of the artifice just
+referred to implied utter unbelief in the persons contriving it; but it
+really meant only that the more worldly of them would play with a popular
+faith of their own purposes, as doubly-minded persons have often done
+since, all the while sincerely holding the same ideas themselves in a
+more abstract form; while the good and unworldly men, the true Greek
+heroes, lived by their faith as firmly as St. Louis, or the Cid, or the
+Chevalier Bayard.
+
+47. Then, thirdly, the faith of the poets and artists was, necessarily,
+less definite, being continually modified by the involuntary action of
+their own fancies; and by the necessity of presenting, in clear verbal or
+material form, things of which they had no authoritative knowledge.
+Their faith was, in some respects like Dante's or Milton's: firm in
+general conception, but not able to vouch for every detail in the forms
+they gave it; but they went considerably farther, even in that minor
+sincerity, than subsequent poets; and strove with all their might to be
+as near the truth as they could. Pindar says, quite simply, "I cannot
+think so-and-so of the gods. It must have been this way--it cannot have
+been that way--that the thing was done." And as late among the Latins as
+the days of Horace, this sincerity remains. Horace is just as true and
+simple in his religion as Wordsworth; but all power of understanding any
+of the honest classic poets has been taken away from most English
+gentlemen by the mechanical drill in verse-writing at school. Throughout
+the whole of their lives afterwards, they never can get themselves quit
+of the notion that all verses were written as an exercise, and that
+Minerva was only a convenient word for the last of a hexameter, and
+Jupiter for the last but one.
+
+48. It is impossible that any notion can be more fallacious or more
+misleading in its consequences. All great song, from the first day when
+human lips contrived syllables, has been sincere song. With deliberate
+didactic purpose the tragedians--with pure and native passion the lyrists
+--fitted their perfect words to their dearest faiths. "Operosa parvus
+carmina fingo." "I, little thing that I am, weave my laborious songs" as
+earnestly as the bee among the bells of thyme on the Matin mountains. Yes,
+and he dedicates his favorite pine to Diana, and he chants his autumnal
+hymn to the Faun that guards his fields, and he guides the noble youth and
+maids of Rome in their choir to Apollo, and he tells the farmer's little
+girl that the gods will love her, though she has only a handful of salt
+and meal to give them--just as earnestly as ever English gentleman taught
+Christian faith to English youth in England's truest days.
+
+49. Then, lastly, the creed of the philosophers of sages varied
+according to the character and knowledge of each; their relative
+acquaintance with the secrets of natural science, their intellectual and
+sectarian egotism, and their mystic or monastic tendencies, for there is
+a classic as well as a mediæval monasticism. They end in losing the life
+of Greece in play upon words; but we owe to their early thought some of
+the soundest ethics, and the foundation of the best practical laws, yet
+known to mankind.
+
+50. Such was the general vitality of the heathen creed in its strength.
+Of its direct influence on conduct, it is, as I said, impossible for me
+to speak now; only, remember always, in endeavoring to form a judgment of
+it, that what of good or right the heathens did, they did looking for no
+reward. The purest forms of our own religion have always consisted in
+sacrificing less things to win greater, time to win eternity, the world
+to win the skies. The order, "Sell that thou hast," is not given without
+the promise, "Thou shalt have treasure in heaven;" and well for the
+modern Christian if he accepts the alternative as his Master left it, and
+does not practically read the command and promise thus: "Sell that thou
+hast in the best market, and thou shalt have treasure in eternity also."
+But the poor Greeks of the great ages expected no reward from heaven but
+honor, and no reward from earth but rest; though, when, on those
+conditions, they patiently, and proudly, fulfilled their task of the
+granted day, an unreasoning instinct of an immortal benediction broke
+from their lips in song; and they, even they, had sometimes a prophet to
+tell them of a land "where there is sun alike by day and alike by night,
+where they shall need no more to trouble the earth by strength of hands
+for daily bread; but the ocean breezes blow around the blessed islands,
+and golden flowers burn on their bright trees for evermore."
+
+
+
+II.
+
+ATHENA KERAMITIS.*
+
+(Athena in the Earth.)
+
+
+* "Athena, fit for being made into pottery." I coin the expression as a
+counterpart of 'ge parthenia', "Clay intact."
+
+
+STUDY, SUPPLEMENTARY TO THE PRECEDING LECTURE, OF THE SUPPOSED AND
+ ACTUAL RELATIONS OF ATHENA TO THE VITAL FORCE IN MATERIAL ORGANISM
+
+
+51. It has been easy to decipher approximately the Greek conception of
+the physical power of Athena in cloud and sky, because we know ourselves
+what clouds and skies are, and what the force of the wind is in forming
+them. But it is not at all easy to trace the Greek thoughts about the
+power of Athena in giving life, because we do not ourselves know clearly
+what life is, or in what way the air is necessary to it, or what there
+is, besides the air, shaping the forms that it is put into. And it is
+comparatively of small consequence to find out what the Greeks thought
+or meant, until we have determined what we ourselves think, or mean, when
+we translate the Greek word for "breathing" into the Latin-English word
+"spirit."
+
+52. But it is of great consequence that you should fix in your minds--
+and hold, against the baseness of mere materialism on the one hand, and
+against the fallacies of controversial speculation on the other--the
+certain and practical sense of this word "spirit;" the sense in which you
+all know that its reality exists, as the power which shaped you into your
+shape, and by which you love and hate when you have received that shape.
+You need not fear, on the one hand, that either the sculpturing or the
+loving power can ever be beaten down by the philosophers into a metal, or
+evolved by them into a gas; but on the other hand, take care that you
+yourself, in trying to elevate your conception of it, do not lose its
+truth in a dream, or even in a word. Beware always of contending for
+words: you will find them not easy to grasp, if you know them in several
+languages. This very word, which is so solemn in your mouths, is one of
+the most doubtful. In Latin it means little more than breathing, and may
+mean merely accent; in French it is not breath, but wit, and our
+neighbors are therefore obliged, even in their most solemn expressions,
+to say "wit" when we say "ghost." In Greek, "pneuma," the word we
+translate "ghost," means either wind or breath, and the relative word
+"psyche" has, perhaps, a more subtle power; yet St. Paul's words
+"pneumatic body" and "psychic body" involve a difference in his mind
+which no words will explain. But in Greek and in English, and in Saxon
+and in Hebrew, and in every articulate tongue of humanity the "spirit of
+man" truly means his passion and virtue, and is stately according to the
+height of his conception, and stable according to the measure of his
+endurance.
+
+53. Endurance, or patience, that is the central sign of spirit; a
+constancy against the cold and agony of death; and as, physically, it is
+by the burning power of the air that the heat of the flesh is sustained,
+so this Athena, spiritually, is the queen of all glowing virtue, the
+unconsuming fire and inner lamp of life. And thus, as Hephæstus is lord
+of the fire of the hand, and Apollo of the fire of the brain, so Athena
+of the fire of the heart; and as Hercules wears for his chief armor the
+skin of the Nemean lion, his chief enemy, whom he slew; and Apollo has
+for his highest name "the Pythian," from his chief enemy, the Python
+slain; so Athena bears always on her breast the deadly face of her chief
+enemy slain, the Gorgonian cold, and venomous agony, that turns living
+men to stone.
+
+54. And so long as you have the fire of the heart within you, and know
+the reality of it, you need to be under no alarm as to the possibility
+of its chemical or mechanical analysis. The philosophers are very
+humorous in their ecstasy of hope about it; but the real interest of
+their discoveries in this direction is very small to humankind. It is
+quite true that the tympanum of the ear vibrates under sound, and that
+the surface of the water in a ditch vibrates too; but the ditch hears
+nothing for all that; and my hearing is still to me as blessed a mystery
+as ever, and the interval between the ditch and me quite as great. If
+the trembling sound in my ears was once of the marriage-bell which began
+my happiness, and is now of the passing-bell which ends it, the
+difference between those two sounds to me cannot be counted by the number
+of concussions. There have been some curious speculations lately as to
+the conveyance of mental consciousness by "brain-waves." What does it
+matter how it is conveyed? The consciousness itself is not a wave. It
+may be accompanied here or there by any quantity of quivers and shakes,
+up or down, of anything you can find in the universe that is shakable--
+what is that to me? My friend is dead, and my--according to modern views
+--vibratory sorrow is not one whit less, or less mysterious, to me, than
+my old quiet one.
+
+55. Beyond, and entirely unaffected by, any questionings of this kind,
+there are, therefore, two plain facts which we should all know: first,
+that there is a power which gives their several shapes to things, or
+capacities of feeling; and that we can increase or destroy both of these
+at our will. By care and tenderness, we can extend the range of lovely
+life in plants and animals; by our neglect and cruelty, we can arrest it,
+and bring pestilence in its stead. Again, by right discipline we can
+increase our strength of noble will and passion or destroy both. And
+whether these two forces are local conditions of the elements in which
+they appear, or are part of a great force in the universe, out of which
+they are taken, and to which they must be restored, is not of the
+slightest importance to us in dealing with them; neither is the manner
+of their connection with light and air. What precise meaning we ought to
+attach to expressions such as that of the prophecy to the four winds that
+the dry bones might be breathed upon, and might live, or why the presence
+of the vital power should be dependent on the chemical action of air, and
+its awful passing away materially signified by the rendering up of that
+breath or ghost, we cannot at present know, and need not at any time
+dispute. What we assuredly know is that the states of life and death are
+different, and the first more desirable than the other, and by effort
+attainable, whether we understand being "born of the spirit" to signify
+having the breath of heaven in our flesh, or its power in our hearts.
+
+56. As to its power on the body, I will endeavor to tell you, having
+been myself much led into studies involving necessary reference both to
+natural science and mental phenomena, what, at least, remains to us after
+science has done its worst; what the myth of Athena, as a formative and
+decisive power, a spirit of creation and volition, must eternally mean
+for all of us.
+
+57. It is now (I believe I may use the strong word) "ascertained" that
+heat and motion are fixed in quantity, and measurable in the portions
+that we deal with. We can measure portions of power, as we can measure
+portions of space; while yet, as far as we know, space may be infinite,
+and force infinite. There may be heat as much greater than the sun's, as
+the sun's heat is greater than a candle's: and force as much greater than
+the force by which the world swings, as that is greater than the force by
+which a cobweb trembles. Now, on hear and force, life is inseparably
+dependent; and I believe, also, on a form of substance, which the
+philosophers call "protoplasm." I wish they would use English instead of
+Greek words. When I want to know why a leaf is green, they tell me it is
+colored by "chlorophyll," which at first sounds very instructive; but if
+they would only say plainly that a leaf is colored green by a thing which
+is called "green leaf," we should see more precisely how far we had got.
+However, it is a curious fact that life is connected with a cellular
+structure called protoplasm, or in English, "first stuck together;"
+whence, conceivably through deuteroplasms, or second stickings, and
+tritoplasms, or third stickings,* we reach the highest plastic phase in
+the human pottery, which differs from common chinaware, primarily, by a
+measurable degree of heat, developed in breathing, which it borrows from
+the rest of the universe while it lives, and which it as certainly
+returns to the rest of the universe, when it dies.
+
+58. Again, with this heat certain assimilative powers are connected,
+which the tendency of recent discovery is to simplify more and more into
+modes of one force; or finally into mere motion, communicable in various
+states, but not destructible. We will assume that science has done its
+utmost; and that every chemical or animal force is demonstrably
+resolvable into heat or motion, reciprocally changing into each other.
+I would myself like better, in order of thought, to consider motion as a
+mode of heat than heat as a mode of motion; still, granting that we have
+got thus far, we have yet to ask, What is heat? or what is motion? What
+is this "primo mobile," this transitional power, in which all things
+live, and move, and have their being? It is by definition something
+different from matter, and we may call it as we choose, "first cause," or
+"first light," or "first heat;" but we can show no scientific proof of
+its not being personal, and coinciding with the ordinary conception of a
+supporting spirit in all things.
+
+59. Still, it is not advisable to apply the word "spirit" or "breathing"
+to it, while it is only enforcing chemical affinities; but, when the
+chemical affinities are brought under the influence of the air, and of
+the sun's heat, the formative force enters and entirely different phase.
+It does not now merely crystallize indefinite masses, but it gives to
+limited portions of matter the power of gathering, selectively, other
+elements proper to them, and binding those elements into their own
+peculiar and adopted form.
+
+This force, now properly called life, or breathing, or spirit, is
+continually creating its own shell of definite shape out of the wreck
+around it; and this is what I meant by saying, in the "Ethics of the
+Dust," "you may always stand by form against force." For the mere force
+of junction is not spirit; but the power that catches out of chaos
+charcoal, water, lime, or what not, and fastens them down into a given
+form, is properly called "spirit;" and we shall not diminish, but
+strengthen our conception of this creative energy by recognizing its
+presence in lower states of matter than our own; such recognition being
+enforced upon us by delight we instinctively receive from all the forms
+of matter which manifest it; and yet more, by the glorifying of those
+forms, in the parts of them that are most animated, with the colors that
+are pleasantest to our senses. The most familiar instance of this is the
+best, and also the most wonderful: the blossoming of plants.
+
+60. The spirit in the plant--that is to say, its power of gathering dead
+matter out of the wreck round it, and shaping it into its own chosen
+shape--is of course strongest at the moment of its flowering, for it then
+not only gathers, but forms, with the greatest energy.
+
+And where this life is in at full power, its form becomes invested with
+aspects that are chiefly delightful to our own human passions; namely, at
+first, with the loveliest outlines of shape; and, secondly, with the most
+brilliant phases of the primary colors, blue, yellow, and red or white,
+the unison of all; and, to make it all more strange, this time of
+peculiar and perfect glory is associated with relations of the plants or
+blossoms to each other, correspondent to the joy of love in human
+creatures, and having the same object in the continuance of the race.
+Only, with respect to plants, as animals, we are wrong in speaking as if
+the object of this strong life were only the bequeathing of itself. The
+flower is the end or proper object of the seed, not the seed of the
+flower. The reason for seeds is that flowers may be; not the reason of
+flowers that seeds may be. The flower itself is the creature which the
+spirit makes; only, in connection with its perfectness is placed the
+giving birth to its successor.
+
+61. The main fact then, about a flower is that it is part of the plant's
+form developed at the moment of its intensest life; and this inner
+rapture is usually marked externally for us by the flush of one or more
+of the primary colors. What the character of the flower shall be,
+depends entirely upon the portion of the plant into which this rapture of
+spirit has been put. Sometimes the life is put into its outer sheath,
+and then the outer sheath becomes white and pure, and full of strength
+and grace; sometimes the life is put into the common leaves, just under
+the blossom, and they become scarlet or purple; sometimes the life is put
+into the stalks of the flower and they flush blue; sometimes into its
+outer enclosure or calyx; mostly into its inner cup; but, in all cases,
+the presence of the strongest life is asserted by characters in which the
+human sight takes pleasure, and which seem prepared with distinct
+reference to us, or rather, bear, in being delightful, evidence of having
+been produced by the power of the same spirit as our own.
+
+62. And we are led to feel this still more strongly because all the
+distinctions of species,* both in plants and animals, appear to have
+similar connection with human character. Whatever the origin of species
+may be, or however those species, once formed, may be influenced by
+external accident, the groups into which birth or accident reduce them
+have distinct relation to the spirit of man. It is perfectly possible,
+and ultimately conceivable, that the crocodile and the lamb may have
+descended from the same ancestral atom of protoplasm; and that the
+physical laws of the operation of calcareous slime and of meadow grass,
+on that protoplasm, may in time have developed the opposite natures and
+aspects of the living frames but the practically important fact for us
+is the existence of a power which creates that calcareous earth itself,
+--which creates, that separately--and quartz, separately; and gold,
+separately; and charcoal, separately; and then so directs the relation
+of these elements as that the gold shall destroy the souls of men by
+being yellow; and the charcoal destroy their souls by being hard and
+bright; and the quartz represent to them an ideal purity; and the
+calcareous earth, soft, shall beget crocodiles, and dry and hard, sheep;
+and that the aspects and qualities of these two products, crocodiles and
+lambs, shall be, the one repellant to the spirit of man, the other
+attractive to it, in a quite inevitable way; representing to him states
+of moral evil and good; and becoming myths to him of destruction or
+redemption, and, in the most literal sense, "words" of God.
+
+
+* The facts on which I am about to dwell are in nowise antagonistic to
+the theories which Mr. Darwin's unwearied and unerring investigations are
+every day rendering more probable. The æsthetic relations of species are
+independent of their origin. Nevertheless, it has always seemed to me
+in what little work I have done upon organic forms, as if the species
+mocked us by their deliberate imitation of each other when they met; yet
+did not pass one into another.
+
+
+63. And the force of these facts cannot be escaped from by the thought
+that there are species innumerable, passing into each other by regular
+gradations, out of which we choose what we must love or dread, and say
+they were indeed prepared for us. Species are not innumerable; neither
+are they now connected by consistent gradation. They touch at certain
+points only; and even then are connected, when we examine them deeply,
+in a kind of reticulated way, not in chains, but in chequers; also,
+however connected, it is but by a touch of the extremities, as it were,
+and the characteristic form of the species is entirely individual. The
+rose nearly sinks into a grass in the sanguisorba; but the formative
+spirit does not the less clearly separate the ear of wheat from the
+dog-rose, and oscillate with tremulous constancy round the central forms
+of both, having each their due relation to the mind of man. The great
+animal kingdoms are connected in the same way. The bird through the
+penguin drops towards the fish, and the fish in the cetacean reascends
+to the mammal, yet there is no confusion of thought possible between the
+perfect forms of an eagle, a trout, and a war-horse, in their relations
+to the elements, and to man.
+
+64. Now we have two orders of animals to take some note of in connection
+with Athena, and one vast order of plants, which will illustrate this
+matter very sufficiently for us.
+
+The orders of animals are the serpent and the bird: the serpent, in which
+the breath or spirit is less than in any other creature, and the
+earth-power the greatest; the bird, in which the breath or spirit is more
+full than in any other creature, and the earth-power least.
+
+65. We will take the bird first. It is little more than a drift of the
+air in all its quills, it breathes through its whole frame and flesh and
+glows with air in its flying, like blown flames; it rests upon the air,
+subdues it, surpasses it, outraces it,--is the air, conscious of itself,
+conquering itself, ruling itself.
+
+Also, in the throat of the bird is given the voice of the air. All that
+in the wind itself is weak, wild, useless in sweetness, is knit together
+in its song. As we may imagine the wild form of the bird's wings, so the
+wild voice of the cloud into its ordered and commanded voice; unwearied,
+rippling through the clear heaven in its gladness, interpreting all
+intense passion through the soft spring nights, bursting into acclaim and
+rapture of choir at daybreak, or lisping and twittering among the boughs
+and hedges through heat of day, like little winds that only make the
+cowslip bells shake, and ruffle the petals of the wild rose.
+
+66. Also, upon the plumes of the bird are put the colors of the air; on
+these the gold of the cloud, that cannot be gathered by any covetousness;
+the rubies of the clouds, that are not the price of Athena, but are
+Athena; the vermillion of the cloud-bar, and the flame of the
+cloud-crest, and the snow of the cloud, and its shadow, and the melted
+blue of the deep wells of the sky,--all these, seized by the creating
+spirit, and woven by Athena herself into films and threads of plume; with
+wave on wave following and fading along breast, and throat, and opened
+wings, infinite as the dividing of the foam and the sifting of the
+sea-sand; even the white down of the cloud seeming to flutter up between
+the stronger plumes,--seen, but too soft for touch.
+
+And so the Spirit of the Air is put into, and upon, this created form;
+and it becomes, through twenty centuries, the symbol of divine help,
+descending, as the Fire, to speak but as the Dove, to bless.
+
+67. Next, in the serpent we approach the source of a group of myths,
+world-wide, founded on great and common human instincts, respecting which
+I must note one or two points which bear intimately on all our subject.
+For it seems to me that the scholars who are at present occupied in
+interpretation of human myths have most of them forgotten that there are
+any such thing as natural myths, and that the dark sayings of men may be
+both difficult to read, and not always worth reading. And, indeed, all
+guidance to the right sense of the human and variable myths will probably
+depend on our first getting at the sense of the natural and invariable
+ones. The dead hieroglyph may have meant this or that; the living
+hieroglyph means always the same; but remember, it is just as much a
+hieroglyph as the other; nay, more,--a "sacred or reserved sculpture," a
+thing with an inner language. The serpent crest of the king's crown, or
+of the god's, on the pillars of Egypt, is a mystery, but the serpent
+itself, gliding past the pillar's foot, is it less a mystery? Is there,
+indeed, no tongue, except the mute forked flash from its lips, in that
+running brook of horror on the ground?
+
+68. Why that horror? We all feel it, yet how imaginative it is, how
+disproportioned to the real strength of the creature! There is more
+poison in an ill-kept drain, in a pool of dish-washing at a cottage door,
+than in the deadliest asp of Nile. Every back yard which you look down
+into from the railway as it carries you out by Vauxhall or Deptford,
+holds its coiled serpent; all the walls of those ghastly suburbs are
+enclosures of tank temples for serpent worship; yet you feel no horror in
+looking down into them as you would if you saw the livid scales, and
+lifted head. There is more venom, mortal, inevitable, in a single word,
+sometimes, or in the gliding entrance of a wordless thought than ever
+"vanti Libia con sua rena." But that horror is of the myth, not of the
+creature. There are myriads lower than this, and more loathsome, in the
+scale of being; the links between dead matter and animation drift
+everywhere unseen. But it is the strength of the base element that is so
+dreadful in the serpent; it is the very omnipotence of the earth. That
+rivulet of smooth silver, how does it flow, think you? It literally rows
+on the earth, with every scale for an oar; it bites the dust with the
+ridges of its body. Watch it, when it moves slowly. A wave, but without
+wind! a current, but with no fall! all the body moving at the same
+instant, yet some of it to one side, some to another, or some forward,
+and the rest of the coil backwards, but all with the same calm will and
+equal way, no contraction, no extension; one soundless, causeless, march
+of sequent rings, and spectral processions of spotted dust, with
+dissolution in its fangs, dislocation in its coils. Startle it, the
+winding stream will become a twisted arrow; the wave of poisoned life
+will lash through the grass like a cast lance.* It scarcely breathes
+with its one lung (the other shriveled and abortive); it is passive
+to the sun and shade, and is cold or hot like a stone; yet "it can
+outclimb the monkey, outswim the fish, outleap the zebra, outwrestle the
+athlete, and crush the tiger."** It is a divine hieroglyph of the
+demoniac power of the earth, of the entire earthly nature. As the bird
+is the clothed power of the air, so this is the clothed power of the
+dust; as the bird is the symbol of the spirit of life, so this is the
+grasp and sting of death.
+
+
+* I cannot understand this swift forward motion of serpents. The seizure
+of prey by the constrictor, though invisibly swift, is quite simple in
+mechanism; it is simply the return to its coil of an opened watch-spring,
+and is just as instantaneous. But the steady and continuous motion,
+without a visible fulcrum (for the whole body moves at the same instant,
+and I have often seen even small snakes glide as fast as I could walk),
+seems to involve a vibration of the scales quite too rapid to be
+conceived. The motion of the crest and dorsal fin of the hippocampus,
+which is one of the intermediate types between serpent and fish, perhaps
+gives some resemblance of it, dimly visible, for the quivering turns the
+fin into a mere mist. The entrance of the two barbs of a bee's sting by
+alternate motion, "the teeth of one barb acting as a fulcrum for the
+other," must be something like the serpent motion on a small scale.
+** Richard Owen.
+
+
+69. Hence the continual change in the interpretation put upon it in
+various religions. As the worm of corruption, it is the mightiest of all
+adversaries of the gods--the special adversary of their light and
+creative power--Python against Apollo. As the power of the earth against
+the air, the giants are serpent-bodied in the Gigantomachia; but as the
+power of the earth upon the seed--consuming it into new life ("that which
+thou sowest is not quickened except it die")--serpents sustain the
+chariot of the spirit of agriculture.
+
+70. Yet on the other hand, there is a power in the earth to take away
+corruption, and to purify (hence the very fact of burial, and many uses
+of earth, only lately known): and in this sense the serpent is a healing
+spirit,--the representative of Æsculapius, and of Hygieia; and is a
+sacred earth-type in the temple of the native earth of Athens; so that
+its departure from the temple was a sign to the Athenians that they were
+to leave their homes. And then, lastly, as there is a strength and
+healing in the earth, no less than the strength of air, so there is
+conceived to be a wisdom of earth no less than a wisdom of the spirit;
+and when its deadly power is killed, its guiding power becomes true; so
+that the Python serpent is killed at Delphi, where yet the oracle is from
+the breath of the earth.
+
+71. You must remember, however, that in this, as in every other
+instance, I take the myth at its central time. This is only the meaning
+of the serpent to the Greek mind which could conceive an Athena. Its
+first meaning to the nascent eyes of men, and its continued influence
+over degraded races, are subjects of the most fearful mystery. Mr.
+Fergusson has just collected the principal evidence bearing on the matter
+in a work of very great value, and if you read his opening chapters, they
+will put you in possession of the circumstances needing chiefly to be
+considered. I cannot touch upon any of them here, except only to point
+out that, though the doctrine of the so-called "corruption of human
+nature," asserting that there is nothing but evil in humanity, is just
+as blasphemous and false as a doctrine of the corruption of physical
+nature would be, asserting there was nothing but evil in the earth,--
+there is yet the clearest evidence of a disease, plague, or cretinous
+imperfection of development, hitherto allowed to prevail against the
+greater part of the races of men; and this in monstrous ways, more full
+of mystery than the serpent-being itself. I have gathered for you
+tonight only instances of what is beautiful in Greek religion; but even
+in its best time there were deep corruptions in other phases of it, and
+degraded forms of many of its deities, all originating in a misunderstood
+worship of lower races, little less than these corrupted forms of
+devotion can be found, all having a strange and dreadful consistency with
+each other, and infecting Christianity, even at its strongest periods,
+with fatal terror of doctrine, and ghastliness of symbolic conception,
+passing through fear into frenzied grotesque, and thence into sensuality.
+
+In the Psalter of St. Louis itself, half of its letters are twisted
+snakes; there is scarcely a wreathed ornament, employed in Christian
+dress, or architecture, which cannot be traced back to the serpent's
+coil; and there is rarely a piece of monkish decorated writing in the
+world that is not tainted with some ill-meant vileness of grotesque,--
+nay, the very leaves of the twisted ivy-pattern of the fourteenth century
+can be followed back to wreaths for the foreheads of bacchanalian gods.
+And truly, it seems to me, as I gather in my mind the evidences of insane
+religion, degraded art, merciless war, sullen toil, detestable pleasure,
+and vain or vile hope, in which the nations of the world have lived since
+first they could bear record of themselves--it seems to me, I say, as if
+the race itself were still half-serpent, not extricated yet from its
+clay; a lacertine breed of bitterness--the glory of it emaciate with
+cruel hunger, and blotted on the leaf a glittering slime, and in the sand
+a useless furrow.
+
+72. There are no myths, therefore, by which the moral state and fineness
+of intelligence of different races can be so deeply tried or measured, as
+by those of the serpent and the bird; both of them having an especial
+relation to the kind of remorse for sin, or for the grief in fate, of
+which the national minds that spoke by them had been capable. The
+serpent and vulture are alike emblems of immortality and purification
+among races which desired to be immortal and pure; and as they recognize
+their own misery, the serpent becomes to them the scourge of the Furies,
+and the vulture finds its eternal prey in their breast. The bird long
+contests among the Egyptians with the still received serpent symbol of
+power. But the Draconian image of evil is established in the serpent
+Apap; while the bird's wings, with the globe, become part of a better
+symbol of deity, and the entire form of the vulture, as an emblem of
+purification, is associated with the earliest conception of Athena. In
+the type of the dove with the olive branch, the conception of the spirit
+of Athena in renewed life prevailing over ruin is embodied for the whole
+of futurity; while the Greeks, to whom, in a happier climate and higher
+life than that of Egypt, the vulture symbol of cleansing became
+unintelligible, took the eagle instead for their hieroglyph of supreme
+spiritual energy, and it thenceforward retains its hold on the human
+imagination, till it is established among Christian myths as the
+expression of the most exalted form of evangelistic teaching. The
+special relation of Athena to her favorite bird we will trace presently;
+the peacock of Hera, and dove of Aphrodite, are comparatively unimportant
+myths; but the bird power is soon made entirely human by the Greeks in
+their flying angel of victory (partially human, with modified meaning of
+evil, in the Harpy and Siren); and thenceforward it associates itself
+with the Hebrew cherubim, and has had the most singular influence on the
+Christian religion by giving its wings to render the conception of angels
+mysterious and untenable, and check rational endeavor to determine the
+nature of subordinate spiritual agency; while yet it has given to that
+agency a vague poetical influence of the highest value in its own
+imaginative way.
+
+73. But with the early serpent-worship there was associated another,
+that of the groves, of which you will also find the evidence exhaustively
+collected in Mr. Fergussen's work. This tree-worship may have taken a
+dark form when associated with the Draconian one; or opposed, as in
+Judea, to a purer faith; but in itself, I believe, it was always healthy,
+and though it retains little definite hieroglyphic power in subsequent
+religion, it becomes, instead of symbolic, real; the flowers and trees
+are themselves beheld and beloved with a half-worshipping delight, which
+is always noble and healthful.
+
+And it is among the most notable indications of the volition of the
+animating power that we find the ethical signs of good and evil set on
+these also, as well as upon animals; the venom of the serpent, and in
+some respects its image also, being associated even with the passionless
+growth of the leaf out of the ground; while the distinctions of species
+seem appointed with more definite ethical address to the intelligence of
+man as their material products become more useful to him.
+
+74. I can easily show this, and, at the same time, make clear the
+relation to other plants of the flowers which especially belong to
+Athena, by examining the natural myths in the groups of the plants which
+would be used at any country dinner, over which Athena would, in her
+simplest household authority, cheerfully rule here in England. Suppose
+Horace's favorite dish of beans, with the bacon; potatoes; some savory
+stuffing of onions and herbs, with the meat; celery, and a radish or
+two, with the cheese; nuts and apples for desert, and brown bread.
+
+75. The beans are, from earliest time, the most important and
+interesting of the seeds of the great tribe of plants from which came the
+Latin and French name for all kitchen vegetables,--things that are
+gathered with the hand--podded seeds that cannot be reaped, or beaten, or
+shaken down, but must be gathered green. "Leguminous" plants, all of
+them having flowers like butterflies, seeds in (frequently pendent) pods,
+--"lætum siliqua quassante legumen"--smooth and tender leaves, divided
+into many minor ones; strange adjuncts of tendril, for climbing (and
+sometimes of thorn); exquisitely sweet, yet pure scents of blossom, and
+almost always harmless, if not serviceable seeds. It is of all tribes
+of plants the most definite, its blossoms being entirely limited in their
+parts, and not passing into other forms. It is also the most usefully
+extended in range and scale; familiar in the height of the forest--
+acacia, laburnum, Judas-tree; familiar in the sown field--bean and vetch
+and pea; familiar in the pasture--in every form of clustered clover and
+sweet trefoil tracery; the most entirely serviceable and human of all
+orders of plants.
+
+76. Next, in the potato, we have the scarcely innocent underground stem
+of one of a tribe set aside for evil; having the deadly nightshade for
+its queen, and including the henbane, the witch's mandrake, and the worst
+natural curse of modern civilization--tobacco.* And the strange thing
+about this tribe is, that though thus set aside for evil, they are not a
+group distinctly separate from those that are happier in function. There
+is nothing in other tribes of plants like the form of the bean blossom;
+but there is another family of forms and structure closely connected with
+this venomous one. Examine the purple and yellow bloom of the common
+hedge nightshade; you will find it constructed exactly like some of the
+forms of the cyclamen; and, getting this clue, you will find at last the
+whole poisonous and terrible group to be--sisters of the primulas!
+
+
+* It is not easy to estimate the demoralizing effect on the youth of
+Europe of the cigar, in enabling them to pass their time happily in
+idleness.
+
+
+The nightshades are, in fact, primroses with a curse upon them; and a
+sign set in their petals, by which the deadly and condemned flowers may
+always be known from the innocent ones,--that the stamens of the
+nightshades are between the lobes, and of the primulas, opposite the
+lobes, of the corolla.
+
+77. Next, side by side, in the celery and radish, you have the two great
+groups of unbelled and cruciferous plants; alike in conditions of rank
+among herbs: both flowering in clusters; but the unbelled group, flat,
+the crucifers, in spires: both of them mean and poor in the blossom, and
+losing what beauty they have by too close crowding; both of them having
+the most curious influence on human character in the temperate zones of
+the earth, from the days of the parsley crown, and hemlock drink, and
+mocked Euripidean chervil, until now; but chiefly among the northern
+nations, being especially plants that are of some humble beauty, and (the
+crucifers) of endless use, when they are chosen and cultivated; but that
+run to wild waste, and are the signs of neglected ground, in their rank
+or ragged leaves and meagre stalks, and pursed or podded seed clusters.
+Capable, even under cultivation, of no perfect beauty, thought reaching
+some subdued delightfulness in the lady's smock and the wallflower; for
+the most part they have every floral quality meanly, and in vain,--they
+are white without purity; golden, without preciousness; redundant,
+without richness; divided, without fineness; massive, without strength;
+and slender, without grace. Yet think over that useful vulgarity of
+theirs; and of the relations of German and English peasant character to
+its food of kraut and cabbage (as of Arab character to its food of
+palm-fruit), and you will begin to feel what purposes of the forming
+spirit are in these distinctions of species.
+
+78. Next we take the nuts and apples,--the nuts representing one of the
+groups of catkined trees, whose blossoms are only tufts and dust; and the
+other, the rose tribe, in which fruit and flower alike have been the
+types to the highest races of men, of all passionate temptation, or pure
+delight, from the coveting of Eve to the crowing of the Madonna, above
+the
+
+ "Rosa sempiterna,
+ Che si dilata, rigrada, e ridole
+ Odor di lode al Sol."
+
+We have no time now for these, we must go on to the humblest group of
+all, yet the most wonderful, that of the grass which has given us our
+bread; and from that we will go back to the herbs.
+
+79. The vast family of plants which, under rain, make the earth green
+for man, and, under sunshine, give him bread, and, in their springing in
+the early year, mixed with their native flowers, have given us (far more
+than the new leaves of trees) the thought and word of "spring," divide
+themselves broadly into three great groups--the grasses, sedges, and
+rushes. The grasses are essentially a clothing for healthy and pure
+ground, watered by occasional rain, but in itself dry, and fit for all
+cultivated pasture and corn. They are distinctively plants with round
+and jointed stems, which have long green flexible leaves, and heads of
+seed, independently emerging from them. The sedges are essentially the
+clothing of waste and more or less poor or uncultivated soils, coarse in
+their structure, frequently triangular in stem--hence called "acute" by
+Virgil--and with their heads of seed not extricated from their leaves.
+Now, in both the sedges and grasses, the blossom has a common structure,
+though undeveloped in the sedges, but composed always of groups of double
+husks, which have mostly a spinous process in the centre, sometimes
+projecting into a long awn or beard; this central process being
+characteristic also of the ordinary leaves of mosses, as if a moss were
+a kind of ear of corn made permanently green on the ground, and with a
+new and distinct fructification. But the rushes differ wholly from the
+sedge and grass in their blossom structure. It is not a dual cluster,
+but a twice threefold one, so far separate from the grasses, and so
+closely connected with a higher order of plants, that I think you will
+find it convenient to group the rushes at once with that higher order,
+to which, if you will for the present let me give the general name of
+Drosidæ, or dew-plants, it will enable me to say what I have to say of
+them much more shortly and clearly.
+
+80. These Drosidæ, then, are plants delighting in interrupted moisture--
+or at certain seasons--into dry ground. They are not among water-plants,
+but the signs of water resting among dry places. Many of the true
+water-plants have triple blossoms, with a small triple calyx holding
+them; in the Drosidæ the floral spirit passes into the calyx also, and
+the entire flower becomes a six-rayed star, bursting out of the stem
+laterally, as if it were the first of flowers and had made its way to the
+light by force through the unwilling green. They are often required to
+retain moisture or nourishment for the future blossom through long times
+of drought; and this they do in bulbs under ground, of which some become
+a rude and simple, but most wholesome, food for man.
+
+81. So, now, observe, you are to divide the whole family of the herbs of
+the field into three great groups,--Drosidæ, Carices,* Gramineæ,--
+dew-plants, sedges, and grasses. Then the Drosidæ are divided into five
+great orders: lilies, asphodels, amaryllids, irids, and rushes. No
+tribes of flowers have had so great, so varied, or so healthy an
+influence on man as this great group of Drosidæ, depending, not so much
+on the whiteness of some of their blossoms, or the radiance of others, as
+on the strength and delicacy of the substance of their petals; enabling
+them to take forms of faultless elastic curvature, either in cups, as the
+crocus, or expanding bells, as the true lily, or heath-like bells, as the
+hyacinth, or bright and perfect stars, like the star of Bethlehem, or,
+when they are affected by the strange reflex of the serpent nature which
+forms the labiate group of all flowers, closing into forms of exquisitely
+fantastic symmetry in the gladiolus. Put by their side their Nereid
+sisters, the water-lilies, and you have them in the origin of the
+loveliest forms of ornamental design, and the most powerful floral myths
+yet recognized among human spirits, born by the streams of Ganges, Nile,
+Arno, and Avon.
+
+
+* I think Carex will be found ultimately better than Cyperus for the
+generic name, being the Vergilian word, and representing a larger
+sub-species.
+
+
+82. For consider a little what each of those five tribes* has been to
+the spirit of man. First, in their nobleness, the lilies gave the lily
+of the Annunciation; the asphodels, the flower of the Elysian fields; the
+irids, the fleur-de-lys of chivalry; and the amaryllids, Christ's lily of
+the field; while the rush, trodden always under foot, became the emblem
+of humility. Then take each of the tribes, and consider the extent of
+their lower influence. Perdita's "The crown imperial, lilies of all
+kinds," are the first tribe, which, giving the type of perfect purity in
+the Madonna's lily, have, by their lovely form, influenced the entire
+decorative design of Italian sacred art; while ornament design of war was
+continually enriched by the curves of the triple petals of the Florentine
+"giglio," and French fleur-de-lys; so that it is impossible to count
+their influence for good in the middle ages, partly as a symbol of
+womanly character, and partly of the utmost brightness and refinement of
+chivalry in the city which was the flower of cities.
+
+
+* Take this rough distinction of the four tribes: lilies, superior ovary,
+white seeds; asphodels, superior ovary, black seeds; irids, inferior
+ovary, style (typically) rising into central crest; amaryllids, inferior
+ovary, stamens (typically) joined in central cup. Then the rushes are a
+dark group, through which they stoop to the grasses.
+
+
+Afterwards, the group of the turban-lilies, or tulips, did some mischief
+(their splendid stains having made them the favorite caprice of
+florists); but they may be pardoned all such guilt for the pleasure they
+have given in cottage gardens, and are yet to give, when lowly life may
+again be possible among us; and the crimson bars of the tulips in their
+trim beds, with their likeness in crimson bars of morning above them, and
+its dew glittering heavy, globed in their glossy cups, may be loved
+better than the gray nettles of the ash heap, under gray sky, unveined by
+vermilion or by gold.
+
+83. The next great group, of the asphodels, divides itself also into two
+principal families: one, in which the flowers are like stars, and
+clustered characteristically in balls, though opening sometimes into
+looser heads; and the other, in which the flowers are in long bells,
+opening suddenly at the lips, and clustered in spires on a long stem, or
+drooping from it, when bent by their weight.
+
+The star-group, of the squills, garlics, and onions, has always caused me
+great wonder. I cannot understand why its beauty, and serviceableness,
+should have been associated with the rank scent which has been really
+among the most powerful means of degrading peasant life, and separating
+it from that of the higher classes.
+
+The belled group, of the hyacinth and convallaria, is as delicate as the
+other is coarse; the unspeakable azure light along the ground of the wood
+hyacinth in English spring; the grape hyacinth, which is in south France,
+as if a cluster of grapes and a hive of honey had been distilled and
+compressed together into one small boss of celled and beaded blue; the
+lilies of the valley everywhere, in each sweet and wild recess of rocky
+lands,--count the influences of these on childish and innocent life; then
+measure the mythic power of the hyacinth and asphodel as connected with
+Greek thoughts of immortality; finally take their useful and nourishing
+power in ancient and modern peasant life, and it will be strange if you
+do not feel what fixed relation exists between the agency of the creating
+spirit in these, and in us who live by them.
+
+84. It is impossible to bring into any tenable compass for our present
+purpose, even hints of the human influence of the two remaining orders of
+Amaryllids and Irids; only note this generally, that while these in
+northern countries share with the Primulas the fields of spring, it seems
+that in Greece, the primulaceæ are not an extended tribe, while the
+crocus, narcissus, and Amaryllis lutea, the "lily of the field" (I
+suspect also that the flower whose name we translate "violet" was in
+truth an iris) represented to the Greek the first coming of the breath of
+life on the renewed herbage; and became in his thoughts the true
+embroidery of the saffron robe of Athena. Later in the year, the
+dianthus (which, though belonging to an entirely different race of
+plants, has yet a strange look of being made out of the grasses by
+turning the sheath-membrane at the root of their leaves into a flower)
+seems to scatter, in multitudinous families, its crimson stars far and
+wide. But the golden lily and crocus, together with the asphodel, retain
+always the old Greek's fondest thoughts,--they are only "golden" flowers
+that are to burn on the trees, and float on the streams of paradise.
+
+85. I have but one tribe of plants more to note at our country feast--
+the savory herbs; but must go a little out of my way to come at them
+rightly. All flowers whose petals are fastened together, and most of
+those whose petals are loose, are best thought of first as a kind of cup
+or tube opening at the mouth. Sometimes the opening is gradual, as in
+the convolvulus or campanula; oftener there is a distinct change of
+direction between the tube and expanding lip, as in the primrose; or even
+a contraction under the lip, making the tube into a narrow-necked phial
+or vase, as in the heaths; but the general idea of a tube expanding into
+a quatrefoil, cinquefoil, or sixfoil, will embrace most of the forms.
+
+86. Now, it is easy to conceive that flowers of this kind, growing in
+close clusters, may, in process of time, have extended their outside
+petals rather than the interior ones (as the outer flowers of the
+clusters of many umbellifers actually do), and thus elongated and
+variously distorted forms have established themselves; then if the stalk
+is attached to the side instead of the base of the tube, its base becomes
+a spur, and thus all the grotesque forms of the mints, violets, and
+larkspurs, gradually might be composed. But, however this may be, there
+is one great tribe of plants separate from the rest, and of which the
+influence seems shed upon the rest, in different degrees; and these would
+give the impression, not so much of having been developed by change, as
+of being stamped with a character of their own, more or less serpentine
+or dragon-like. And I think you will find it convenient to call these
+generally Draconidæ; disregarding their present ugly botanical name which
+I do not care even to write once--you may take for their principal types
+the foxglove, snapdragon, and calceolaria; and you will find they all
+agree in a tendency to decorate themselves by spots, and with bosses or
+swollen places in their leaves, as if they had been touched by poison.
+The spot of the foxglove is especially strange, because it draws the
+color out of the tissue all around it, as if it had been stung, and as if
+the central color was really an inflamed spot, with paleness round. Then
+also they carry to its extreme the decoration by bulging or pouting out
+the petal,--often beautifully used by other flowers in a minor degree,
+like the beating out of bosses in hollow silver, as in the kalmia, beaten
+out apparently in each petal by the stamens instead of a hammer; or the
+borage, pouting towards; but the snapdragons and calceolarias carry it to
+its extreme.
+
+87. Then the spirit of these Draconidæ seems to pass more or less into
+other flowers, whose forms are properly pure vases; but it affects some
+of them slightly, others not at all. It never strongly affects the
+heaths; never once the roses; but it enters like an evil spirit into the
+buttercup, and turns it into a larkspur, with a black, spotted, grotesque
+centre, and a strange, broken blue, gorgeous and intense, yet impure,
+glittering on the surface as if it were strewn with broken glass, and
+stained or darkening irregularly into red. And then at last the serpent
+charm changes the ranunculus into monkshood, and makes it poisonous. It
+enters into the forget-me-not, and the star of heavenly turquoise is
+corrupted into the viper's bugloss, darkened with the same strange red as
+the larkspur, and fretted into a fringe of thorn; it enters, together
+with a strange insect-spirit, into the asphodels, and (though with a
+greater interval between the groups) they change to spotted orchideæ; it
+touches the poppy, it becomes a fumaria; the iris, and it pouts into a
+gladiolus; the lily, and it chequers itself into a snake's-head, and
+secretes in the deep of its bell, drops, not of venom indeed, but
+honey-dew, as if it were a healing serpent. For there is an Æsculapian
+as well as an evil serpentry among the Draconidæ, and the fairest of
+them, the "erba della Madonna" of Venice (Linaria Cymbalaria), descends
+from the ruins it delights into the herbage at their feet, and touches
+it; and behold, instantly, a vast group of herbs for healing,--all
+draconid in form,--spotted and crested, and from their lip-like corollas
+named "labiatæ;" full of various balm, and warm strength for healing, yet
+all of them without splendid honor or perfect beauty, "ground ives,"
+richest when crushed under the foot; the best sweetness and gentle
+brightness of the robes of the field,--thyme, and marjoram, and Euphrasy.
+
+88. And observe, again and again, with respect to all these divisions
+and powers of plants: it does not matter in the least by what
+concurrences of circumstance or necessity they may gradually have been
+developed; the concurrence of circumstance is itself the supreme and
+inexplicable fact. We always come at last to a formative cause, which
+directs the circumstance, and mode of meeting it. If you ask an ordinary
+botanist the reason of the form of the leaf, he will tell you that it is
+a "developed tubercle," and that its ultimate form "is owing to the
+directions of its vascular threads." But what directs its vascular
+threads? "They are seeking for something they want," he will probably
+answer. What made them want that? What made them seek for it thus?
+Seek for it, in five fibres or in three? Seek for it, in serration, or
+in sweeping curves? Seek for it, in servile tendrils, or impetuous
+spray? Seek for it, in woolen wrinkles rough with stings, or in glossy
+surfaces, green with pure strength, and winterless delight?
+
+89. There is no answer. But the sum of all is, that over the entire
+surface of the earth, and its waters, as influenced by the power of the
+air under solar light, there is developed a series of changing forms, in
+clouds, plants, and animals, all of which have reference in their action,
+or nature, to the human intelligence that perceives them; and on which,
+in their aspects of horror and beauty, and their qualities of good and
+evil, there is engraved a series of myths, or words of the forming power,
+which, according to the true passion and energy of the human race, they
+have been enabled to read into religion. And this forming power has been
+by all nations partly confused with the breath or air through which it
+acts, and partly understood as a creative wisdom, proceeding from the
+Supreme Deity; but entering into and inspiring all intelligences that
+work in harmony with Him. And whatever intellectual results may be in
+modern days obtained by regarding this effluence only as a motion of
+vibration, every formative human art hitherto, and the best states of
+human happiness and order, may have depended on the apprehension of its
+mystery (which is certain,) and of its personality, which is probable.
+
+90. Of its influence on the formative arts, I have a few words to say
+separately: my present business is only to interpret, as we are now
+sufficiently enabled to do, the external symbols of the myth under which
+it was represented by the Greeks as a goddess of counsel, taken first
+into that breast of their supreme Deity, then created out of his
+thoughts, and abiding closely beside him; always sharing and consummating
+his power.
+
+91. And in doing this we have first to note the meaning of the principal
+epithet applied to Athena, "Glaukopis," "with eyes full of light," the
+first syllable being connected, by its root, with words signifying sight,
+not with words signifying color. As far as I can trace the color
+perception of the Greeks, I find it all founded primarily on the degree
+of connection between color and light; the most important fact to them in
+the color of red being its connection with fire and sunshine; so that
+"purple" is, in its original sense, "fire-color," and the scarlet or
+orange, of dawn, more than any other fire-color. I was long puzzled by
+Homer's calling the sea purple; and misled into thinking he meant the
+color of cloud shadows on green sea; whereas he really means the gleaming
+blaze of the waves under wide light. Aristotle's idea (partly true) is
+that light, subdued by blackness, becomes red; and blackness, heated or
+lighted, also becomes red. Thus, a color may be called purple because it
+is light subdued (and so death is called "purple" or "shadowy" death); or
+else it may be called purple as being shade kindled with fire, and thus
+said of the lighted sea; or even of the sun itself, when it is thought of
+as a red luminary opposed to the whiteness of the moon: "purpureos inter
+soles, et candida lunæ sidera;" or of golden hair: "pro purpureo pœnam
+solvens scelerata capillo;" while both ideas are modified by the
+influence of an earlier form of the word, which has nothing to do with
+fire at all, but only with mixing or staining; and then, to make the
+whole group of thoughts inextricably complex, yet rich and subtle in
+proportion to their intricacy, the various rose and crimson colors of the
+murex dye,--the crimson and purple of the poppy, and fruit of the palm,--
+and the association of all these with the hue of blood,--partly direct,
+partly through a confusion between the word signifying "slaughter" and
+"palm-fruit color," mingle themselves in, and renew the whole nature of
+the old word; so that, in later literature, it means a different color,
+or emotion of color, in almost every place where it occurs; and cast
+forever around the reflection of all that has been dipped in its dyes.
+
+92. So that the world is really a liquid prism, and stream of opal. And
+then, last of all, to keep the whole history of it in the fantastic
+course of a dream, warped here and there into wild grotesque, we moderns,
+who have preferred to rule over coal-mines instead of the sea (and so
+have turned the everlasting lamp of Athena into a Davy's safety-lamp in
+the hand of Britannia, and Athenian heavenly lightning into British
+subterranean "damp"), have actually got our purple out of coal instead of
+the sea! And thus, grotesquely, we have had enforced on us the doubt
+that held the old word between blackness and fire, and have completed the
+shadow, and the fear of it, by giving it a name from battle, "Magenta."
+
+93. There is precisely a similar confusion between light and color in
+the word used for the blue of the eyes of Athena--a noble confusion,
+however, brought about by the intensity of the Greek sense that the
+heaven is light, more than it is blue. I was not thinking of this when I
+wrote in speaking of pictorial chiaroscuro, "The sky is not blue color
+merely: it is blue fire and cannot be painted" (Mod. P. iv. p. 36); but
+it was this that the Greeks chiefly felt of it, and so "Glaukopis"
+chiefly means gray-eyed: gray standing for a pale or luminous blue; but
+it only means "owl-eyed" in thought of the roundness and expansion, not
+from the color; this breath and brightness being, again, in their moral
+sense typical of the breadth, intensity, and singleness of the sight in
+prudence ("if thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of
+light"). Then the actual power of the bird to see in twilight enters
+into the type, and perhaps its general fineness of sense. "Before the
+human form was adopted, her (Athena's) proper symbol was the owl, a bird
+which seems to surpass all other creatures in acuteness of organic
+perception, its eye being calculated to observe objects which to all
+others are enveloped in darkness, its ear to hear sounds distinctly, and
+its nostrils to discriminate effluvia with such nicety that it has been
+deemed prophetic, from discovering the putridity of death even in the
+first stages of disease."*
+
+
+* Payne Knight in his "Inquiry into the Symbolical Language of Ancient
+Art," not trustworthy, being little more than a mass of conjectural
+memoranda, but the heap is suggestive, if well sifted.
+
+
+I cannot find anywhere an account of the first known occurrence of the
+type; but, in the early ones on Attic coins, the wide round eyes are
+clearly the principal things to be made manifest.
+
+94. There is yet, however, another color of great importance in the
+conception of Athena--the dark blue of her ægis. Just as the blue or
+gray of her eyes was conceived more as light than color, so her aegis was
+dark blue, because the Greeks thought of this tint more as shade than
+color, and, while they used various materials in ornamentation,
+lapislazuli, carbonate of copper, or, perhaps, smalt, with real enjoyment
+of the blue tint, it was yet in their minds as distinctly representative
+of darkness as scarlet was of light, and, therefore, anything dark,* but
+especially the color of heavy thunder-cloud, was described by the same
+term. The physical power of this darkness of the ægis, fringed with
+lightning, is given quite simply when Jupiter himself uses it to
+overshadow Ida and the Plain of Troy, and withdraws it at the prayer of
+Ajax for light; and again when he grants it to be worn for a time by
+Apollo, who is hidden by its cloud when he strikes down Patroclus; but
+its spiritual power is chiefly expressed by a word signifying deeper
+shadow,--the gloom of Erebus, or of our evening, which, when spoken of
+the ægis, signifies, not merely the indignation of Athena, but the entire
+hiding or withdrawal of her help, and beyond even this, her deadliest of
+all hostility,--the darkness by which she herself deceives and beguiles
+to final ruin those to whom she is wholly adverse; this contradiction of
+her own glory being the uttermost judgment upon human falsehood. Thus it
+is she who provokes Pandarus to the treachery which purposed to fulfil
+the rape of Helen by the murder of her husband in time of truce; and then
+the Greek king, holding his wounded brother's hand, prophesies against
+Troy the darkness of the ægis which shall be over all, and for ever.**
+
+
+* In the breastplate and shield of Atrides the serpents and bosses are
+all of this dark color, yet the serpents are said to be like rainbows;
+but through all this splendor and opposition of hue, I feel distinctly
+that the literal "splendor," with its relative shade, are prevalent in
+the conception; and that there is always a tendency to look through the
+hue to its cause. And in this feeling about color the Greeks are
+separated from the eastern nations, and from the best designers of
+Christian times. I cannot find that they take pleasure in color for its
+own sake; it may be in something more than color, or better; but it is
+not in the hue itself. When Homer describes cloud breaking from a
+mountain summit, the crags become visible in light, not color; he feels
+only their flashing out in bright edges and trenchant shadows; above, the
+"infinite," "unspeakable" æther is torn open--but not the blue of it. He
+has scarcely any abstract pleasure in blue, or green, or gold; but only
+in their shade or flame.
+
+I have yet to trace the causes of this (which will be a long task,
+belonging to art questions, not to mythological ones); but it is, I
+believe, much connected with the brooding of the shadow of death over
+the Greeks without any clear hope of immortality. The restriction of
+the color on their vases to dim red (or yellow) with black and white,
+is greatly connected with their sepulchral use, and with all the
+melancholy of Greek tragic thought; and in this gloom the failure of
+color-perception is partly noble, partly base: noble, in its earnestness,
+which raises the design of Greek vases as far above the designing of mere
+colorist nations like the Chinese, as men's thoughts are above
+children's; and yet it is partly base and earthly, and inherently
+defective in one human faculty; and I believe it was one cause of the
+perishing of their art so swiftly, for indeed there is no decline so
+sudden, or down to such utter loss and ludicrous depravity, as the fall
+of Greek design on its vases from the fifth to the third century B.C. On
+the other hand, the pure colored-gift, when employed for pleasure only,
+degrades in another direction; so that among the Indians, Chinese, and
+Japanese, all intellectual progress in art has been for ages rendered
+impossible by the prevalence of that faculty; and yet it is, as I have
+said again and again, the spiritual power of art; and its true brightness
+is the essential characteristic of all healthy schools.
+** 'eremnen Aigida pasi'.--Il. iv. 166.
+
+
+95. This, then, finally, was the perfect color-conception of Athena: the
+flesh, snow-white (the hands, feet, and face of marble, even when the
+statue was hewn roughly in wood); the eyes of keen pale blue, often in
+statues represented by jewels; the long robe to the feet, crocus-colored;
+and the ægis thrown over it of thunderous purple; the helmet golden (Il.
+v. 744.), and I suppose its crest also, as that of Achilles.
+
+If you think carefully of the meaning and character which is now enough
+illustrated for you in each of these colors, and remember that the
+crocus-color and the purple were both of them developments, in opposite
+directions, of the great central idea of fire-color, or scarlet, you will
+see that this form of the creative spirit of the earth is conceived as
+robed in the blue, and purple, and scarlet, the white, and the gold,
+which have been recognized for the sacred chords of colors, from the day
+when the cloud descended on a Rock more mighty than Ida.
+
+96. I have spoken throughout, hitherto, of the conception of Athena, as
+it is traceable in the Greek mind; not as it was rendered by Greek art.
+It is matter of extreme difficulty, requiring a sympathy at once
+affectionate and cautious, and a knowledge reaching the earliest springs
+of the religion of many lands, to discern through the imperfection, and,
+alas! more dimly yet, through the triumphs of formative art, what kind
+of thoughts they were that appointed for it the tasks of its childhood,
+and watched by the awakening of its strength.
+
+The religions passion is nearly always vividest when the art is weakest;
+and the technical skill only reaches its deliberate splendor when the
+ecstacy which gave it birth has passed away forever. It is as vain an
+attempt to reason out the visionary power or guiding influence of Athena
+in the Greek heart, from anything we now read, or possess, of the work of
+Phidias, as it would be for the disciples of some new religion to infer
+the spirit of Christianity from Titian's "Assumption." The effective
+vitality of the religious conception can be traced only through the
+efforts of trembling hands, and strange pleasures of untaught eyes; and
+the beauty of the dream can no more be found in the first symbols by
+which it is expressed, than a child's idea of fairy-land can be gathered
+from its pencil scrawl, or a girl's love for her broken doll explained by
+the defaced features. On the other hand, the Athena of Phidias was, in
+very fact, not so much the deity, as the darling of the Athenian people.
+Her magnificence represented their pride and fondness, more than their
+piety; and the great artist, in lavishing upon her dignities which might
+be ended abruptly by the pillage they provoked, resigned, apparently
+without regret, the awe of her ancient memory; and (with only the
+careless remonstrance of a workman too strong to be proud) even the
+perfectness of his own art. Rejoicing in the protection of their
+goddess, and in their own hour of glory, the people of Athena robed her,
+at their will, with the preciousness of ivory and gems; forgot or denied
+the darkness of the breastplate of judgment, and vainly bade its
+unappeasable serpents relax their coils in gold.
+
+97. It will take me many a day yet--if days, many or few, are given me--
+to disentangle in anywise the proud and practised disguises of religious
+creeds from the instinctive arts which, grotesquely and indecorously, yet
+with sincerity, strove to embody them, or to relate. But I think the
+reader, by help even of the imperfect indications already given to him,
+will be able to follow, with a continually increasing security, the
+vestiges of the Myth of Athena; and to reanimate its almost evanescent
+shade, by connecting it with the now recognized facts of existent nature
+which it, more or less dimly, reflected and foretold. I gather these
+facts together in brief.
+
+98. The deep of air that surrounds the earth enters into union with the
+earth at its surface, and with its waters, so as to be the apparent cause
+of their ascending into life. First, it warms them, and shades, at once,
+staying the heat of the sun's rays in its own body, but warding their
+force with its clouds. It warms and cools at once, with traffic of balm
+and frost; so that the white wreaths are withdrawn from the field of the
+Swiss peasant by the glow of Libyan rock. It gives its own strength to
+the sea; forms and fills every cell of its foam; sustains the precipices,
+and designs the valleys of its waves; gives the gleam to their moving
+under the night, and the white fire to their plains under sunrise; lifts
+their voices along the rocks, bears above them the spray of birds,
+pencils through them the dimpling of unfooted sands. It gathers out of
+them a portion in the hollow of its hand: dyes, with that, the hills into
+dark blue, and their glaciers with dying rose; inlays with that, for
+sapphire, the dome in which it has to set the cloud; shapes out of that
+the heavenly flocks: divides them, numbers, cherishes, bears them on its
+bosom, calls them to their journeys, waits by their rest; feeds from them
+the brooks that cease not, and strews with them the dews that cease. It
+spins and weaves their fleece into wild tapestry, rends it, and renews;
+and flits and flames, and whispers, among the golden threads, thrilling
+them with a plectrum of strange fire that traverses them to and fro, and
+is enclosed in them like life.
+
+It enters into the surface of the earth, subdues it, and falls together
+with it into fruitful dust, from which can be moulded flesh; it joins
+itself, in dew, to the substance of adamant, and becomes the green leaf
+out of the dry ground; it enters into the separated shapes of the earth
+it has tempered, commands the ebb and flow of the current of their life,
+fills their limbs with its own lightness, measures their existence by its
+indwelling pulse, moulds upon their lips the words by which one soul can
+be known to another; is to them the hearing of the ear, and the beating
+of the heart; and, passing away, leaves them to the peace that hears and
+moves no more.
+
+99. This was the Athena of the greatest people of the days of old. And
+opposite to the temple of this Spirit of the breath, and life-blood, of
+man and beast, stood, on the Mount of Justice, and near the chasm which
+was haunted by the goddess-Avengers, an altar to a God unknown,--
+proclaimed at last to them, as one who, indeed, gave to all men, life,
+and breath, and all things; and rain from heaven, filling their hearts
+with rain from heaven, filling their hearts with food and gladness; a God
+who had made of one blood all nations of men who dwell on the face of all
+the earth, and had determined the times of their fate, and the bounds of
+their habitation.
+
+100. We ourselves, fretted here in our narrow days, know less, perhaps,
+in very deed, than they, what manner of spirit we are of, or what manner
+of spirit we ignorantly worship. Have we, indeed, desired the Desire of
+all nations? and will the Master whom we meant to seem, and the Messenger
+in whom we thought we delighted, confirm, when He comes to His temple,--
+or not find in its midst,--the tables heavy with gold for bread, and the
+seats that are bought with the price of the dove? Or is our own land
+also to be left by its angered Spirit,--left among those, where sunshine
+vainly sweet, and passionate folly of storm, waste themselves in the
+silent places of knowledge that has passed away, and of tongues that have
+ceased?
+
+This only we may discern assuredly; this, every true light of science,
+every mercifully-granted power, every wisely-restricted thought, teach us
+more clearly day by day, that in the heavens above, and the earth
+beneath, there is one continual and omnipotent presence of help, and of
+peace, for all men who know that they live, and remember that they die.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+ATHENA ERGANE.*
+(Athena in the Heart.)
+
+
+* "Athena the worker, or having rule over work." The name was first give
+to her by the Athenians.
+
+
+VARIOUS NOTES RELATING TO THE CONCEPTION OF ATHENA AS THE DIRECTRESS OF
+ THE IMAGINATION AND WILL.
+
+
+101. I have now only a few words to say, bearing on what seems to me
+present need, respecting the third function of Athena, conceived as the
+directress of human passion, resolution, and labor.
+
+Few words, for I am not yet prepared to give accurate distinction between
+the intellectual rule of Athena and that of the Muses; but, broadly, the
+Muses, with their king, preside over meditative, historical, and poetic
+arts, whose end is the discovery of light or truth, and the creation of
+beauty; but Athena rules over moral passion, and practically useful art.
+She does not make men learned, but prudent and subtle; she does not teach
+them to make their work beautiful, but to make it right.
+
+In different places of my writings, and though many years of endeavor to
+define the laws of art, I have insisted on this rightness in work, and on
+its connection with virtue of character, in so many partial ways, that
+the impression left on the reader's mind--if, indeed, it was ever
+impressed at all--has been confused and uncertain. In beginning the
+series of my corrected works, I wish this principle (in my own mind the
+foundation of every other) to be made plain, if nothing else is; and will
+try, therefore, to make it so, as far as, by any effort, I can put it
+into unmistakable words. And, at first, here is a very simple statement
+of it, given lately in a lecture on the Architecture of the Valley of the
+Somme, which will be better read in this place than in its incidental
+connection with my account of the porches of Abbeville.
+
+102. I had used, in a preceding part of the lecture, the expression, "by
+what faults" this Gothic architecture fell. We continually speak thus of
+works of art. We talk of their faults and merits, as of virtues and
+vices. What do we mean by talking of the faults of a picture, or the
+merits of a piece of stone?
+
+The faults of a work of art are the faults of its workman, and its
+virtues his virtues.
+
+Great art is the expression of the mind of a great man, and mean art,
+that of the want of mind of a weak man. A foolish person builds
+foolishly, and a wise one, sensibly; a virtuous one, beautifully; and a
+vicious one, basely. If stone work is well put together, it means that a
+thoughtful man planned it, and a careful man cut it, and an honest man
+cemented it. If it has too much ornament, it means that its carver was
+too greedy of pleasure; if too little, that he was rude, or insensitive,
+or stupid, and the like. So that when once you have learned how to spell
+these most precious of all legends,--pictures and buildings,--you may
+read the characters of men, and of nations, in their art, as in a mirror;
+nay, as in a microscope, and magnified a hundredfold; for the character
+becomes passionate in the art, and intensifies itself in all its noblest
+or meanest delights. Nay, not only as in a microscope, but as under a
+scalpel, and in dissection; for a man may hide himself from you, or
+misrepresent himself to you every other way; but he cannot in his work:
+there, be sure, you have him to the inmost. All that he likes, all that
+he sees,--all that he can do,--his imagination, his affections, his
+perseverance, his impatience, his clumsiness, cleverness, everything is
+there. If the work is a cobweb, you know it was made by a spider; if a
+honey-comb, by a bee; a wormcast is thrown up by a worm, and a nest
+wreathed by a bird; and a house built by a man, worthily, if he is
+worthy, and ignobly if he is ignoble.
+
+And always, from the least to the greatest, as the made thing is good or
+bad, so is the maker of it.
+
+103. You will use this faculty of judgment more or less, whether you
+theoretically admit the principle or not. Take that floral gable;* you
+don't suppose the man who built Stonehenge could have built that, or that
+the man who built that, would have built Stonehenge? Do you think an old
+Roman would have liked such a piece of filigree work? or that Michael
+Angelo would have spent his time in twisting these stems of roses in and
+out? Or, of modern handicraftsmen, do you think a burglar, or a brute,
+or a pickpocket could have carved it? Could Bill Sykes have done it? or
+the Dodger, dexterous with finger and tool? You will find in the end,
+that no man could have done it but exactly the man who did it; and by
+looking close at it, you may, if you know your letters, read precisely
+the manner of man he was.
+
+
+* The elaborate pendiment above the central porch at the west end of
+Rouen Cathedral, pierced into a transparent web of tracery, and enriched
+with a border of "twisted eglantine."
+
+
+104. Now I must insist on this matter, for a grave reason. Of all facts
+concerning art, this is the one most necessary to be known, that, while
+manufacture is the work of hands only, art is the work of the whole
+spirit of man; and as that spirit is, so is the deed of it; and by
+whatever power of vice or virtue any art is produced, the same vice or
+virtue it reproduces and teaches. That which is born of evil begets
+evil; and that which is born of valor and honor, teaches valor and honor.
+All art is either infection or education. It must be one or other of
+these.
+
+105. This, I repeat, of all truths respecting art, is the one of which
+understanding is the most precious, and denial the most deadly. And I
+assert it the more, because it has of late been repeatedly, expressly,
+and with contumely, denied, and that by high authority; and I hold it one
+of the most sorrowful facts connected with the decline of the arts among
+us, that English gentlemen, of high standing as scholars and artists,
+should have been blinded into the acceptance, and betrayed into the
+assertion of a fallacy which only authority such as theirs could have
+rendered for an instant credible. For the contrary of it is written in
+the history of all great nations; it is the one sentence always inscribed
+on the steps of their thrones; the one concordant voice in which they
+speak to us out of their dust.
+
+All such nations first manifest themselves as a pure and beautiful animal
+race, with intense energy and imagination. They live lives of hardship
+by choice, and by grand instinct of manly discipline; they become fierce
+and irresistible soldiers; the nation is always its own army, and their
+king, or chief head of government, is always their first soldier.
+Pharaoh, or David, or Leonidas, or Valerius, or Barbarossa, or Coeur de
+Lion, or St. Louis, or Dandalo, or Frederick the Great,--Egyptian, Jew,
+Greek, Roman, German, English, French, Venetian,--that is inviolable law
+for them all; their king must be their first soldier, or they cannot be
+in progressive power. Then, after their great military period, comes the
+domestic period; in which, without betraying the discipline of war, they
+add to their great soldiership the delights and possessions of a delicate
+and tender home-life; and then, for all nations, is the time of their
+perfect art, which is the fruit, the evidence, the reward of their
+national idea of character, developed by the finished care of the
+occupations of peace. That is the history of all true art that ever was,
+or can be; palpably the history of it,--unmistakably,--written on the
+forehead of it in letters of light,--in tongues of fire, by which the
+seal of virtue is branded as deep as ever iron burnt into a convict's
+flesh the seal of crime. But always, hitherto, after the great period,
+has followed the day of luxury, and pursuit of the arts for pleasure
+only. And all has so ended.
+
+106. Thus far of Abbeville building. Now I have here asserted two
+things,--first, the foundation of art in moral character; next, the
+foundation of moral character in war. I must make both these assertions
+clearer, and prove them.
+
+First, of the foundation of art in moral character. Of course art-gift
+and amiability of disposition are two different things; for a good man
+is not necessarily a painter, nor does an eye for color necessarily imply
+an honest mind. But great art implies the union of both powers; it is
+the expression, by an art-gift, of a pure soul. If the gift is not
+there, we can have no art at all; and if the soul--and a right soul too--
+is not there, the art is bad, however dexterous.
+
+107. But also, remember, that the art-gift itself is only the result of
+the moral character of generations. A bad woman may have a sweet voice;
+but that sweetness of voice comes of the past morality of her race. That
+she can sing with it at all, she owes to the determination of laws of
+music by the morality of the past. Every act, every impulse, of virtue
+and vice, affects in any creature, face, voice, nervous power, and vigor
+and harmony of invention, at once. Perseverance in rightness of human
+conduct renders, after a certain number of generations, human art
+possible; every sin that clouds it, be it ever so little a one; and
+persistent vicious living and following of pleasure render, after a
+certain number of generations, all art impossible. Men are deceived by
+the long-suffering of the laws of nature, and mistake, in a nation, the
+reward of the virtue of its sires, for the issue of its own sins. The
+time of their visitation will come, and that inevitably; for, it is
+always true, that if the fathers have eaten sour grapes, the children's
+teeth are set on edge. And for the individual, as soon as you have
+learned to read, you may, as I said, know him to the heart's core,
+through his art. Let his art-gift be never so great, and cultivated to
+the height by the schools of a great race of men, and it is still but a
+tapestry thrown over his own being and inner soul; and the bearing of it
+will show, infallibly, whether it hangs on a man or on a skeleton. If
+you are dim-eyed, you may not see the difference in the fall of the folds
+at first, but learn how to look, and the folds themselves will become
+transparent, and you shall see through them the death's shape, or the
+divine one, making the tissue above it as a cloud of right, or as a
+winding-sheet.
+
+108. Then further, observe, I have said (and you will find it true, and
+that to the uttermost) that, as all lovely art is rooted in virtue, so it
+bares fruit of virtue, and is didactic in its own nature. It is often
+didactic also in actually expressed thought, as Giotto's, Michael
+Angelo's, Dürer's, and hundreds more; but that is not its special
+function; it is didactic chiefly by being beautiful; but beautiful with
+haunting thought, no less than with form, and full of myths that can be
+read only with the heart.
+
+For instance, at this moment there is open beside me as I write, a page
+of Persian manuscript, wrought with wreathed azure and gold, and soft
+green, and violet, and ruby and scarlet, into one field of pure
+resplendence. It is wrought to delight the eyes only; and does delight
+them; and the man who did it assuredly had eyes in his head; but not much
+more. It is not didactic art, but its author was happy; and it will do
+the good, and the harm, that mere pleasure can do. But, opposite me, is
+an early Turner drawing of the lake of Geneva, taken about two miles from
+Geneva, on the Lausanne road, with Mont Blanc in the distance. The old
+city is seen lying beyond the waveless waters, veiled with a sweet misty
+veil of Athena's weaving; a faint light of morning, peaceful exceedingly,
+and almost colorless, shed from behind the Voirons, increases into soft
+amber along the slope of the Salëve, and is just seen, and no more, on
+the fair warm fields of its summit, between the folds of a white cloud
+that rests upon the grass, but rises, high and tower-like, into the
+zenith of dawn above.
+
+109. There is not as much color in that low amber light upon the
+hillside as there is in the palest dead leaf. The lake is not blue, but
+gray in mist, passing into deep shadow beneath the Voirons' pines; a few
+dark clusters of leaves, a single white flower--scarcely seen--are all
+the gladness given to the rocks of the shore. One of the ruby spots of
+the eastern manuscript would give color enough for all the red that is in
+Turner's entire drawing. For the mere pleasure of the eye, there is not
+so much in all those lines of his, throughout the entire landscape, as in
+half an inch square of the Persian's page. What made him take pleasure
+in the low color that is only like the brown of a dead leaf? in the cold
+gray of dawn--in the one white flower among the rocks--in these--and no
+more than these?
+
+110. He took pleasure in them because he had been bred among English
+fields and hills; because the gentleness of a great race was in his
+heart, and its powers of thought in his brain; because he knew the
+stories of the Alps, and of the cities at their feet; because he had read
+the Homeric legends of the clouds, and beheld the gods of dawn, and the
+givers of dew to the fields; because he knew the faces of the crags, and
+the imagery of the passionate mountains, as a man knows the face of his
+friend; because he had in him the wonder and sorrow concerning life and
+death, which are the inheritance of the Gothic soul from the days of its
+first sea kings; and also the compassion and the joy that are woven into
+the innermost fabric of every great imaginative spirit, born now in
+countries that have lived by the Christian faith with any courage or
+truth. And the picture contains also, for us, just this which its maker
+had in him to give; and can convey it to us, just so far as we are of the
+temper in which it must be received. It is didactic if we are worthy to
+be taught, not otherwise. The pure heart, it will make more pure; the
+thoughtful, more thoughtful. It has in it no words for the reckless or
+the base.
+
+111. As I myself look at it, there is no fault nor folly of my life--and
+both have been many and great--that does not rise up against me, and take
+away my joy, and shorten my power of possession of sight, of
+understanding. And every past effort of my life, every gleam of
+rightness or good in it, is with me now, to help me in my grasp of this
+art, and its vision. So far as I can rejoice in, or interpret either, my
+power is owing to what of right there is in me. I dare to say it, that,
+because through all my life I have desired good, and not evil; because I
+have been kind to many; have wished to be kind to all; have wilfully
+injured none; and because I have loved much, and not selfishly;
+therefore, the morning light is yet visible to me on those hills, and
+you, who read, may trust my thought and word in such work as I have to do
+for you; and you will be glad afterwards that you have trusted them.
+
+112. Yet, remember,--I repeat it again and yet again,--that I may for
+once, if possible, make this thing assuredly clear: the inherited
+art-gift must be there, as well as the life in some poor measure, or
+rescued fragment, right. This art-gift of mine could not have been won
+by any work or by any conduct: it belongs to me by birthright, and came
+by Athena's will, from the air of English country villages, and Scottish
+hills. I will risk whatever charge of folly may come on me, for printing
+one of my many childish rhymes, written on a frosty day in Glen Farg,
+just north of Loch Leven. It bears date 1st January, 1828. I was born
+on the 8th of February, 1819; and al that I ever could be, and all that I
+cannot be, the weak little rhyme already shows.
+
+"Papa, how pretty those icicles are,
+That are seen so near,--that are seen so far;
+--Those dropping waters that come from the rocks
+And many a hole, like the haunt of a fox.
+That silvery stream that runs babbling along,
+Making a murmuring, dancing song.
+Those trees that stand waving upon the rock's side,
+And men, that, like specters, among them glide.
+And waterfalls that are heard from far,
+And come in sight when very near.
+And the water-wheel that turns slowly round,
+Grinding the corn that--requires to be ground,--
+
+(Political Economy of the future!)
+
+----And mountains at a distance seen,
+And rivers winding through the plain,
+And quarries with their craggy stones,
+And the wind among them moans."
+
+So foretelling Stones of Venice, and this essay on Athena.
+
+Enough now concerning myself.
+
+113. Of Turner's life, and of its good and evil, both great, but the
+good immeasurably the greater, his work is in all things a perfect and
+transparent evidence. His biography is simply, "He did this, nor will
+ever another do its like again." Yet read what I have said of him, as
+compared with the great Italians, in the passages taken from the "Cestus
+of Aglaia," farther on, §158, pp. 164, 165.
+
+114. This, then, is the nature of the connection between morals and art.
+Now, secondly, I have asserted the foundation of both these, at least
+hitherto, in war. The reason of this too manifest fact is, that, until
+now it has been impossible for any nation, except a warrior one, to fix
+its mind wholly on its men, instead of their possessions. Every great
+soldier nation thinks, necessarily, first of multiplying its bodies and
+souls of men, in good temper and strict discipline. As long as this is
+its political aim, it does not matter what it temporarily suffers, or
+loses, either in numbers or in wealth; its morality and its arts (if it
+have national art-gift) advance together; but so soon as it ceases to be
+a warrior nation, it thinks of its possessions instead of its men; and
+then the moral and poetic powers vanish together.
+
+115. It is thus, however, absolutely necessary to the virtue of war that
+it should be waged by personal strength, not by money or machinery. A
+nation that fights with a mercenary force, or with torpedoes instead of
+its own arms, is dying. Not but that there is more true courage in
+modern than even in ancient war; but this is, first, because all the
+remaining life of European nations is with a morbid intensity thrown into
+their soldiers; and, secondly, because their present heroism is the
+culmination of centuries of inbred and traditional valor, which Athena
+taught them by forcing them to govern the foam of the sea-wave and of the
+horse,--not the steam of kettles.
+
+116. And further, note this, which is vital to us in the present crisis:
+If war is to be made by money and machinery, the nation which is the
+largest and most covetous multitude will win. You may be as scientific
+as you choose; the mob that can pay more for sulphuric acid and gunpowder
+will at last poison its bullets, throw acid in your faces, and make an
+end of you; of itself, also, in good time, but of you first. And to the
+English people the choice of its fate is very near now. It may
+spasmodically defend its property with iron walls a fathom thick, a few
+years longer--a very few. No walls will defend either it, or its
+havings, against the multitude that is breeding and spreading faster than
+the clouds, over the habitable earth. We shall be allowed to live by
+small pedler's business, and iron-mongery--since we have chosen those for
+our line of life--as long as we are found useful black servants to the
+Americans, and are content to dig coals and sit in the cinders; and have
+still coals to dig,--they once exhausted, or got cheaper elsewhere, we
+shall be abolished. But if we think more wisely, while there is yet
+time, and set our minds again on multiplying Englishmen, and not on
+cheapening English wares, if we resolve to submit to wholesome laws of
+labor and economy, and setting our political squabbles aside, try how
+many strong creatures, friendly and faithful to each other, we can crowd
+into every spot of English dominion, neither poison nor iron will prevail
+against us; nor traffic, nor hatred; the noble nation will yet, by the
+grace of heaven, rule over the ignoble, and force of heart hold its own
+against fireballs.
+
+117. But there is yet a further reason for the dependence of the arts
+on war. The vice and injustice of the world are constantly springing
+anew, and are only to be subdued by battle; the keepers of order and law
+must always be soldiers. And now, going back to the myth of Athena, we
+see that though she is first a warrior maid, she detests war for its own
+sake; she arms Achilles and Ulysses in just quarrels, but she disarms
+Ares. She contends, herself, continually against disorder and
+convulsion, in the earth giants; she stands by Hercules' side in victory
+over all monstrous evil; in justice only she judges and makes war. But
+in this war of hers she is wholly implacable. She has little notion of
+converting criminals. There is no faculty of mercy in her when she has
+been resisted. Her word is only, "I will mock when your fear cometh."
+Note the words that follow: "when your fear cometh as desolation, and
+your destruction as a whirlwind;" for her wrath is of irresistible
+tempest: once roused, it is blind and deaf,--rabies--madness of anger--
+darkness of the Dies Iræ.
+
+And that is, indeed, the sorrowfullest fact we have to know about our own
+several lives. Wisdom never forgives. Whatever resistance we have
+offered to her loaw, she avenges forever; the lost hour can never be
+redeemed, and the accomplished wrong never atoned for. The best that can
+be done afterwards, but for that, had been better; the falsest of all the
+cries of peace, where there is no peace, is that of the pardon of sin, as
+the mob expect it. Wisdom can "put away" sin, but she cannot pardon it;
+and she is apt, in her haste, to put away the sinner as well, when the
+black ægis is on her breast.
+
+118. And this is also a fact we have to know about our national life,
+that it is ended as soon as it has lost the power of noble Anger. When
+it paints over, and apologizes for its pitiful criminalities; and endures
+its false weights, and its adulterated food; dares not to decide
+practically between good and evil, and can neither honor the one, nor
+smite the other, but sneers at the good, as if it were hidden evil, and
+consoles the evil with pious sympathy, and conserves it in the sugar of
+its leaden heart,--the end is come.
+
+119. The first sign, then, of Athena's presence with any people is that
+they become warriors, and that the chief thought of every man of them is
+to stand rightly in his rank, and not fail from his brother's side in
+battle. Wealth, and pleasure, and even love, are all, under Athena's
+orders, sacrificed to this duty of standing fast in the rank of war.
+
+But further: Athena presides over industry, as well as battle; typically,
+over women's industry; that brings comfort with pleasantness. Her word
+to us all is: "Be well exercised, and rightly clothed. Clothed, and in
+your right minds; not insane and in rags, nor in soiled fine clothes
+clutched from each other's shoulders. Fight and weave. Then I myself
+will answer for the course of the lance, and the colors of the loom."
+
+And now I will ask the reader to look with some care through these
+following passages respecting modern multitudes and their occupations,
+written long ago, but left in fragmentary form, in which they must now
+stay, and be of what use they can.
+
+120. It is not political economy to put a number of strong men down on
+an acre of ground, with no lodging, and nothing to eat. Nor is it
+political economy to build a city on good ground, and fill it with store
+of corn and treasure, and put a score of lepers to live in it. Political
+economy creates together the means of life, and the living persons who
+are to use them; and of both, the best and the most that it can, but
+imperatively the best, not the most. A few good and healthy men, rather
+than a multitude of diseased rogues; and a little real milk and wine
+rather than much chalk and petroleum; but the gist of the whole business
+is that the men and their property must both be produced together--not
+one to the loss of the other. Property must not be created in lands
+desolate by exile of their people, nor multiplied and depraved humanity,
+in lands barren of bread.
+
+121. Nevertheless, though the men and their possessions are to be
+increased at the same time, the first object of thought is always to be
+the multiplication of a worthy people. The strength of the nation is in
+its multitude, not in its territory; but only in its sound multitude. It
+is one thing, both in a man and a nation, to gain flesh, and another to
+be swollen with putrid humors. Not that multitude ever ought to be
+inconsistent with virtue. Two men should be wiser than one, and two
+thousand than two; nor do I know another so gross fallacy in the records
+of human stupidity as that excuse for neglect of crime by greatness of
+cities. As if the first purpose of congregation were not to devise laws
+and repress crimes! As if bees and wasps could live honestly in flocks--
+men, only in separate dens! As if it were easy to help one another on
+the opposite sides of a mountain, and impossible on the opposite sides of
+a street! But when the men are true and good, and stand shoulder to
+shoulder, the strength of any nation is in its quantity of life, not in
+its land nor gold. The more good men a state has, in proportion to its
+territory, the stronger the state. And as it has been the madness of
+economists to seek for gold instead of life, so it has been the madness
+of kings to seek for land instead of life. They want the town on the
+other side of the river, and seek it at the spear point; it never enters
+their stupid heads that to double the honest souls in the town on this
+side of the river would make them stronger kings; and that this doubling
+might be done by the ploughshare instead of the spear, and through
+happiness instead of misery.
+
+Therefore, in brief, this is the only object of all true policy and true
+economy: "utmost multitude of good men on every given space of ground"--
+imperatively always good, sound, honest men,--not a mob of white-faced
+thieves. So that, on the one hand all aristocracy is wrong which is
+inconsistent with numbers; and on the other all numbers are wrong which
+are inconsistent with breeding.
+
+122. Then, touching the accumulation of wealth for the maintenance of
+such men, observe, that you must never use the terms "money" and "wealth"
+as synonymous. Wealth consists of the good, and therefore useful, things
+in the possession of the nation; money is only the written or coined sign
+of the relative quantities of wealth in each person's possession. All
+money is a divisible title-deed, of immense importance as an expression
+of right to property, but absolutely valueless as property itself. Thus,
+supposing a nation isolated from all others, the money in its possession
+is, at its maximum value, worth all the property of the nation, and no
+more, because no more can be got for it. And the money of all nations
+is worth, at its maximum, the property of all nations, and no more, for
+no more can be got for it. Thus, every article of property produced
+increases, by its value, the value of all the money in the world, and
+every article of property destroyed, diminishes the value of all the
+money in the world. If ten men are cast away on a rock, with a thousand
+pounds in their pockets, and there is on the rock, neither food nor
+shelter, their money is worth simply nothing, for nothing is to be had
+for it. If they built ten huts, and recover a cask of biscuit from the
+wreck, then their thousand pounds, at its maximum value, is worth ten
+huts and a cask of biscuit. If they make their thousand pounds into two
+thousand by writing new notes, their two thousand pounds are still worth
+ten huts and a cask of biscuit. And the law of relative value is the
+same for all the world, and all the people in it, and all their property,
+as for ten men on a rock. Therefore, money is truly and finally lost in
+the degree in which its value is taken from it (ceasing in that degree to
+be money at all); and it is truly gained in the degree in which value is
+added to it. Thus, suppose the money coined by the nation be a fixed
+sum, and divided very minutely (say into francs and cents), and neither
+to be added to nor diminished. Then every grain of food and inch of
+lodging added to its possessions makes every cent in its pockets worth
+proportionally more, and every gain of food it consumes, and inch of roof
+it allows to fall to ruin, makes every cent in its pockets worth less;
+and this with mathematical precision. The immediate value of the money
+at particular times and places depends, indeed, on the humors of the
+possessors of property; but the nation is in the one case gradually
+getting richer, and will feel the pressure of poverty steadily everywhere
+relaxing, whatever the humors of individuals may be; and, in the other
+case, is gradually growing poorer, and the pressure of its poverty will
+every day tell more and more, in ways that it cannot explain, but will
+most bitterly feel.
+
+123. The actual quantity of money which it coins, in relation to its
+real property, is therefore only of consequence for convenience of
+exchange; but the proportion in which this quantity of money is divided
+among individuals expresses their various rights to greater or less
+proportions of the national property, and must not, therefore, be
+tampered with. The government may at any time, with perfect justice,
+double its issue of coinage, if it gives every man who has ten pounds in
+his pocket another ten pounds, and every man who had ten pence another
+ten pence; for it thus does not make any of them richer; it merely
+divides their counters for them into twice the number. But if it gives
+the newly-issued coins to other people, or keeps them itself, it simply
+robs the former holders to precisely that extent. This most important
+function of money, as a title-deed, on the non-violation of which all
+national soundness of commerce and peace of life depend, has been never
+rightly distinguished by economists from the quite unimportant function
+of money as a means of exchange. You can exchange goods--at some
+inconvenience, indeed, but you can still contrive to do it--without money
+at all; but you cannot maintain your claim to the savings of your past
+life without a document declaring the amount of them, which the nation
+and its government will respect.
+
+124. And as economists have lost sight of this great function of money
+in relation to individual rights, so they have equally lost sight of its
+function as a representative of good things. That, for every good thing
+produced, so much money is put into everybody's pocket, is the one simple
+and primal truth for the public to know, and for economists to teach.
+How many of them have taught it? Some have; but only incidentally; and
+others will say it is a truism. If it be, do the public know it? Does
+your ordinary English householder know that every costly dinner he gives
+has destroyed forever as much money as it is worth? Does every
+well-educated girl--do even the women in high political position--know
+that every fine dress they wear themselves, or cause to be worn, destroys
+precisely so much of the national money as the labor and material of it
+are worth? If this be a truism, it is one that needs proclaiming
+somewhat louder.
+
+125. That, then, is the relation of money and goods. So much goods, so
+much money; so little goods, so little money. But, as there is this true
+relation between money and "goods," or good things, so there is a false
+relation between money and "bads," or bad things. Many bad things will
+fetch a price in exchange; but they do not increase the wealth of the
+country. Good wine is wealth, drugged wine is not; good meat is wealth,
+putrid meat is not; good pictures are wealth, bad pictures are not. A
+thing is worth precisely what it can do for you; not what you choose to
+pay for it. You may pay a thousand pounds for a cracked pipkin, if you
+please; but you do not by that transaction make the cracked pipkin worth
+one that will hold water, nor that, nor any pipkin whatsoever, worth more
+than it was before you paid such sum for it. You may, perhaps, induce
+many potters to manufacture fissured pots, and many amateurs of clay to
+buy them; but the nation is, through the whole business so encouraged,
+rich by the addition to its wealth of so many potsherds,--and there an
+end. The thing is worth what it CAN do for you, not what you think it
+can; and most national luxuries, nowadays, are a form of potsherd,
+provided for the solace of a self-complacent Job, voluntary sedent on his
+ash-heap.
+
+126. And, also, so far as good things already exist, and have become
+media of exchange, the variations in their prices are absolutely
+indifferent to the nation. Whether Mr. A. buys a Titian from Mr. B. for
+twenty, or for two thousand, pounds, matters not sixpence to the national
+revenue; that is to say, it matters in nowise to the revenue whether Mr.
+A. has the picture, and Mr. B. the money, or Mr. B. the picture, and Mr.
+A. the money. Which of them will spend the money most wisely, and which
+of them will keep the picture most carefully, is, indeed, a matter of
+some importance; but this cannot be known by the mere fact of exchange.
+
+127. The wealth of a nation then, first, and its peace and well-being
+besides, depend on the number of persons it can employ in making good and
+useful things. I say its well-being also, for the character of men
+depends more on their occupations than on any teaching we can give them,
+or principles with which we can imbue them. The employment forms the
+habits of body and mind, and these are the constitution of the man,--the
+greater part of his moral or persistent nature, whatever effort, under
+special excitement, he may make to change or overcome them. Employment
+is the half, and the primal half, of education--it is the warp of it; and
+the fineness or the endurance of all subsequently woven pattern depends
+wholly on its straightness and strength. And, whatever difficulty there
+may be in tracing through past history the remoter connections of event
+and cause, one chain of sequence is always clear: the formation, namely,
+of the character of nations by their employments, and the determination
+of their final fate by their character. The moment, and the first
+direction of decisive revolutions, often depend on accident; but their
+persistent course, and their consequences, depend wholly on the nature of
+the people. The passing of the Reform Bill by the late English
+Parliament may have been more or less accidental; the results of the
+measure now rest on the character of the English people, as it has been
+developed by their recent interests, occupations, and habits of life.
+Whether, as a body, they employ their new powers for good or evil will
+depend, not on their facilities of knowledge, nor even on the general
+intelligence they may possess, but on the number of persons among them
+whom wholesome employments have rendered familiar with the duties, and
+modest in their estimate of the promises, of life.
+
+128. But especially in framing laws respecting the treatment or
+employment of improvident and more or less vicious persons, it is to be
+remembered that as men are not made heroes by the performance of an act
+of heroism, but must be brave before they can perform it, so they are not
+made villains by the commission of a crime, but were villains before they
+committed it; and the right of public interference with their conduct
+begins when they begin to corrupt themselves,--not merely at the moment
+when they have proved themselves hopelessly corrupt.
+
+All measures of reformation are effective in exact proportion to their
+timeliness: partial decay may be cut away and cleansed; incipient error
+corrected; but there is a point at which corruption can be no more
+stayed, nor wandering recalled. It has been the manner of modern
+philanthropy to remain passive until that precise period, and to leave
+the sick to perish, and the foolish to stray, while it spends itself in
+frantic exertions to raise the dead, and reform the dust.
+
+The recent direction of a great weight of public opinion against capital
+punishment is, I trust, the sign of an awakening perception that
+punishment is the last and worst instrument in the hands of the
+legislator for the prevention of crime. The true instruments of
+reformation are employment and reward; not punishment. Aid the willing,
+honour the virtuous, and compel the idle into occupation, and there will
+be no deed for the compelling of any into the great and last indolence of
+death.
+
+129. The beginning of all true reformation among the criminal classes
+depends on the establishment of institutions for their active employment,
+while their criminality is still unripe, and their feelings of
+self-respect, capacities of affection, and sense of justice, not
+altogether quenched. That those who are desirous of employment should
+always be able to find it, will hardly, at the present day, be disputed;
+but that those who are undesirous of employment should of all persons be
+the most strictly compelled to it, the public are hardly yet convinced;
+and they must be convinced. If the danger of the principal thoroughfares
+in their capital city, and the multiplication of crimes more ghastly than
+ever yet disgraced a nominal civilization, are not enough, they will not
+have to wait long before they receive sterner lessons. For our neglect
+of the lower orders has reached a point at which it begins to bear its
+necessary fruit, and every day makes the fields, not whiter, but more
+stable, to harvest.
+
+130. The general principles by which employment should be regulated may
+be briefly stated as follows:
+
+ I. There being three great classes of mechanical powers at our
+disposal, namely, (a) vital or muscular power; (b) natural mechanical
+power of wind, water, and electricity; and (c) artificially produced
+mechanical power; it is the first principle of economy to use all
+available vital power first, then the inexpensive natural forces, and
+only at last have recourse to artificial power. And this because it is
+always better for a man to work with his own hands to feed and clothe
+himself, than to stand idle while a machine works for him; and if he
+cannot by all the labor healthily possible to him feed and clothe
+himself, then it is better to use an inexpensive machine--as a windmill
+or watermill--than a costly one like a steam-engine, so long as we have
+natural force enough at our disposal. Whereas at present we continually
+hear economists regret that the water-power of the cascades or streams of
+a country should be lost, but hardly ever that the muscular power of its
+idle inhabitants should be lost; and, again, we see vast districts, as
+the south of Provence, where a strong wind* blows steadily all day long
+for six days out of seven throughout the year, without a windmill, while
+men are continually employed at a hundred miles to the north, in digging
+fuel to obtain artificial power. But the principal point of all to be
+kept in view is, that in every idle arm and shoulder throughout the
+country there is a certain quantity of force, equivalent to the force of
+so much fuel; and that it is mere insane waste to dig for coal for our
+force, while the vital force is unused, and not only unused, but in being
+so, corrupting and polluting itself. We waste our coal, and spoil our
+humanity at one and the same instant. Therefore, wherever there is an
+idle arm, always save coal with it, and the stores of England will last
+all the longer. And precisely the same argument answers the common one
+about "taking employment out of the hands of the industrious laborer."
+Why, what is "employment" but the putting out of vital force instead of
+mechanical force? We are continually in search of means to pull, to
+hammer, to fetch, to carry. We waste our future resources to get this
+strength, while we leave all the living fuel to burn itself out in mere
+pestiferous breath, and production of its variously noisome forms of
+ashes! Clearly, if we want fire for force, we want men for force first.
+The industrious hands must already have so much to do that they can do
+no more, or else we need not use machines to help them. Then use the
+idle hands first. Instead of dragging petroleum with a steam-engine, put
+it on a canal, and drag it with human arms and shoulders. Petroluem
+cannot possibly be in a hurry to arrive anywhere. We can always order
+that, and many other things, time enough before we want it. So, the
+carriage of everything which does not spoil by keeping may most
+wholesomely and safely be done by water-traction and sailing-vessels; and
+no healthier work can men be put to, nor better discipline, than such
+active porterage.
+
+
+* In order fully to utilize this natural power, we only require machinery
+to turn the variable into a constant velocity--no insurmountable
+difficulty.
+
+
+131. (2d.) In employing all the muscular power at our disposal we are to
+make the employments we choose as educational as possible; for a
+wholesome human employment is the first and best method of education,
+mental as well as bodily. A man taught to plough, row, or steer well,
+and a woman taught to cook properly, and make a dress neatly, are already
+educated in many essential moral habits. Labor considered as a
+discipline has hitherto been thought of only for criminals; but the real
+and noblest function of labor is to prevent crime, and not to be
+Reformatory, but Formatory.
+
+132. The third great principle of employment is, that whenever there is
+pressure of poverty to be met, all enforced occupation should be directed
+to the production of useful articles only; that is to say, of food, of
+simple clothing, of lodging, or of the means of conveying, distributing,
+and preserving these. It is yet little understood by economists, and not
+at all by the public, that the employment of persons in a useless
+business cannot relieve ultimate distress. The money given to employ
+riband-makers at Coventry is merely so much money withdrawn from what
+would have employed lace-makers at Honiton; or makers of something else,
+as useless, elsewhere. We must spend our money in some way, at some
+time, and it cannot at any time be spent without employing somebody. If
+we gamble it away, the person who wins it must spend it; if we lose it in
+a railroad speculation, it has gone into some one else's pockets, or
+merely gone to pay navies for making a useless embankment, instead of to
+pay riband or button makers for making useless ribands or buttons; we
+cannot lose it (unless by actually destroying it) without giving
+employment of some kind; and, therefore, whatever quantity of money
+exists, the relative quantity of employment must some day come out of it;
+but the distress of the nation signifies that the employments given have
+produced nothing that will support its existence. Men cannot live on
+ribands, or buttons, or velvet, or by going quickly from place to place;
+and every coin spent in useless ornament, or useless motion, is so much
+withdrawn from the national means of life. One of the most beautiful
+uses of railroads is to enable A to travel from the town of X to take
+away the business of B in the town of Y; while, in the mean time, B
+travels from the town of Y to take away A's business in the town of X.
+But the national wealth is not increased by these operations. Whereas
+every coin spent in cultivating ground, in repairing lodging, in making
+necessary and good roads, in preventing danger by sea or land, and in
+carriage of food or fuel where they are required, is so much absolute and
+direct gain to the whole nation. To cultivate land round Coventry makes
+living easier at Honiton, and every acre of sand gained from the sea in
+Lincolnshire, makes life easier all over England.
+
+4th, and lastly. Since for every idle person some one else must be
+working somewhere to provide him with clothes and food, and doing,
+therefore, double the quantity of work that would be enough for his own
+needs, it is only a matter of pure justice to compel the idle person to
+work for his maintenance himself. The conscription has been used in many
+countries to take away laborers who supported their families, from their
+useful work, and maintain them for purposes chiefly of military display
+at the public expense. Since this has been long endured by the most
+civilized nations, let it not be thought they would not much more gladly
+endure a conscription which should seize only the vicious and idle,
+already living by criminal procedures at the public expense; and which
+should discipline and educate them to labor which would not only maintain
+themselves, but be serviceable to the commonwealth. The question is
+simply this: we must feed the drunkard, vagabond, and thief; but shall we
+do so by letting them steal their food, and do no work for it? or shall
+we give them their food in appointed quantity, and enforce their doing
+work which shall be worth it, and which, in process of time, will redeem
+their own characters and make them happy and serviceable members of
+society?
+
+I find by me a violent little fragment of undelivered lecture, which puts
+this, perhaps, still more clearly. Your idle people (it says), as they
+are now, are not merely waste coal-beds. They are explosive coal-beds,
+which you pay a high annual rent for. You are keeping all these idle
+persons, remember, at far greater cost than if they were busy. Do you
+think a vicious person eats less than an honest one? or that it is
+cheaper to keep a bad man drunk, than a good man sober? There is, I
+suppose, a dim idea in the mind of the public, that they don't pay for
+the maintenance of people they don't employ. Those staggering rascals
+at the street corner, grouped around its splendid angle of public-house,
+we fancy that they are no servants of ours! that we pay them no wages!
+that no cash out of our pockets is spent over that beer-stained counter!
+
+Whose cash is it then they are spending? It is not got honestly by work.
+You know that much. Where do they get it from? Who has paid for their
+dinner and their pot? Those fellows can only live in one of two ways--by
+pillage or beggary. Their annual income by thieving comes out of the
+public pocket, you will admit. They are not cheaply fed, so far as they
+are fed by theft. But the rest of their living--all that they don't
+steal--they must beg. Not with success from you, you think. Wise, as
+benevolent, you never gave a penny in "indiscriminate charity." Well,
+I congratulate you on the freedom of your conscience from that sin, mine
+being bitterly burdened with the memory of many a sixpence given to
+beggars of whom I knew nothing but that they had pale faces and thin
+waists. But it is not that kind of street beggary that is the worst
+beggars' trade. Home alms which it is their worst degradation to
+receive. Those scamps know well enough that you and your wisdom are
+worth nothing to them. They won't beg of you. They will beg of their
+sisters, and mothers, and wives, and children, and of any one else who is
+enough ashamed of being of the same blood with them to pay to keep them
+out of sight. Every one of those blackguards is the bane of a family.
+That is the deadly "indiscriminate charity"--the charity which each
+household pays to maintain its own private curse.
+
+133. And you think that is no affair of yours? and that every family
+ought to watch over and subdue its own living plague? Put it to
+yourselves this way, then: suppose you knew every one of those families
+kept an idol in an inner room--a big-bellied bronze figure, to which
+daily sacrifice and oblation was made; at whose feet so much beer and
+brandy was poured out every morning on the ground; and before which,
+every night, good meat, enough for two men's keep, was set, and left,
+till it was putrid, and then carried out and thrown on the dunghill; you
+would put an end to that form of idolatry with your best diligence, I
+suppose. You would understand then that the beer, and brandy, and meat,
+were wasted; and that the burden imposed by each household on itself lay
+heavily through them on the whole community? But, suppose further, that
+this idol were not of silent and quiet bronze only, but an ingenious
+mechanism, wound up every morning, to run itself down into automatic
+blasphemies; that it struck and tore with its hands the people who set
+food before it; that it was anointed with poisonous unguents, and
+infected the air for miles round. You would interfere with the idolatry
+then, straightway? Will you not interfere with it now, when the
+infection that they venomous idol spreads is not merely death, but sin?
+
+134. So far the old lecture. Returning to cool English, the end of the
+matter is, that, sooner or later, we shall have to register our people;
+and to know how they live; and to make sure, if they are capable of work,
+that right work is given them to do.
+
+The different classes of work for which bodies of men could be
+consistently organized, might ultimately become numerous; these following
+divisions of occupation may all at once be suggested:
+
+ I. Road-making.--Good roads to be made, wherever needed, and kept in
+repair; and the annual loss on unfrequented roads, in spoiled horses,
+strained wheels, and time, done away with.
+
+ II. Bringing in of waste land.--All waste lands not necessary for
+public health, to be made accessible and gradually reclaimed; chiefly our
+wide and waste seashores. Not our mountains nor moorland. Our life
+depends on them, more than on the best arable we have.
+
+ III. Harbor-making.--The deficiencies of safe or convenient harborage
+in our smaller ports to be remedied; other harbors built at dangerous
+points of coast, and a disciplined body of men always kept in connection
+with the pilot and life-boat services. There is room for every order of
+intelligence in this work, and for a large body of superior officers.
+
+ IV. Porterage.--All heavy goods, not requiring speed in transit, to
+be carried (under preventative duty on transit, by railroad) by
+canal-boats, employing men for draught; and the merchant-shipping service
+extended by sea; so that no ships may be wrecked for want of hands, while
+there are idle ones in mischief on shore.
+
+ V. Repair of buildings.--A body of men in various trades to be kept
+at the disposal of the authorities in every large town, for repair of
+buildings, especially the houses of the poorer orders, who, if no such
+provision were made, could not employ workmen on their own houses, but
+would simply live with rent walls and roofs.
+
+ VI. Dressmaking.--Substantial dress, of standard material and kind,
+strong shoes, and stout bedding, to be manufactured for the poor, so as
+to render it unnecessary for them, unless by extremity of improvidence,
+to wear cast clothes, or be without sufficiency of clothing.
+
+ VII. Works of Art.--Schools to be established on thoroughly sound
+principles of manufacture, and use of materials, and with sample and, for
+given periods, unalterable modes of work; first, in pottery, and
+embracing gradually metal work, sculpture, and decorative painting; the
+two points insisted upon, in distinction from ordinary commercial
+establishments, being perfectness of material to the utmost attainable
+degree; and the production of everything by hand-work, for the special
+purpose of developing personal power and skill in the workman.
+
+The last two departments, and some subordinate branches of others, would
+include the service of women and children.
+
+I give now, for such further illustrations as they contain of the points
+I desire most to insist upon with respect both to education and
+employment, a portion of the series of notes published some time ago in
+the "Art Journal," on the opposition of Modesty and Liberty, and the
+unescapable law of wise restraint. I am sorry that they are written
+obscurely--and it may be thought affectedly; but the fact is, I have
+always had three different ways of writing: one, with the single view of
+making myself understood, in which I necessarily omit a great deal of
+what comes into my head; another, in which I say what I think ought to be
+said, in what I suppose to be the best words I can find for it (which is
+in reality an affected style--be it good or bad); and my third way of
+writing is to say all that comes into my head for my own pleasure, in the
+first words that come, retouching them afterward into (approximate)
+grammar. These notes for the "Art Journal" were so written; and I like
+them myself, of course; but ask the reader's pardon for their
+confusedness.
+
+135. "Sir, it cannot be better done."
+
+We will insist, with the reader's permission, on this comfortful saying
+of Albert Dürer's in order to find out, if we may, what Modesty is; which
+it will be well for painters, readers, and especially critics, to know,
+before going farther. What it is; or, rather, who she is, her fingers
+being among the deftest in laying the ground-threads of Aglaia's cestus.
+
+For this same opinion of Albert's is entertained by many other people
+respecting their own doings--a very prevalent opinion, indeed, I find it;
+and the answer itself, though rarely made with the Nuremberger's crushing
+decision, is nevertheless often enough intimated, with delicacy, by
+artists of all countries, in their various dialects. Neither can it
+always be held an entirely modest one, as it assuredly was in the man who
+would sometimes estimate a piece of his unconquerable work at only the
+worth of a plate of fruit, or a flask of wine--would have taken even one
+"fig for it," kindly offered; or given it royally for nothing, to show
+his hand to a fellow-king of his own, or any other craft--as Gainsborough
+gave the "Boy at the Stile" for a solo on the violin. An entirely modest
+saying, I repeat, in him--not always in us. For Modesty is "the
+measuring virtue," the virtue of modes or limits. She is, indeed, said
+to be only the third or youngest of the children of the cardinal virtue,
+Temperance; and apt to be despised, being more given to arithmetic, and
+other vulgar studies (Cinderella-like), than her elder sisters; but she
+is useful in the household, and arrives at great results with her
+yard-measure and slate-pencil--a pretty little Marchande des Modes,
+cutting her dress always according to the silk (if this be the proper
+feminine reading of "coat according to the cloth"), so that, consulting
+with her carefully of a morning, men get to know not only their income,
+but their in being--to know themselves, that is, in a gauger's manner,
+round, and up and down--surface and contents; what is in them and what
+may be got out of them; and in fine, their entire canon of weight and
+capacity. That yard-measure of Modesty's, lent to those who will use it,
+is a curious musical reed, and will go round and round waists that are
+slender enough, with latent melody in every joint of it, the dark root
+only being soundless, moist from the wave wherein
+
+ "Null' altra pianta che facesse fronda
+ O che 'n durasse, vi puote aver vita."*
+
+
+* "Purgatorio," i. 108, 109.
+
+
+But when the little sister herself takes it in hand, to measure things
+outside of us with, the joints shoot out in an amazing manner: the
+four-square walls even of celestial cities being measurable enough by
+that reed; and the way pointed to them, though only to be followed, or
+even seen, in the dim starlight shed down from worlds amidst which there
+is no name of Measure any more, though the reality of it always. For,
+indeed, to all true modesty the necessary business is not inlook, but
+outlook, and especially uplook: it is only her sister Shamefacedness, who
+is known by the drooping lashes--Modesty, quite otherwise, by her large
+eyes full of wonder; for she never contemns herself, nor is ashamed of
+herself, but forgets herself--at least until she has done something worth
+memory. It is easy to peep and potter about one's own deficiencies in a
+quiet immodest discontent; but Modesty is so pleased with other people's
+doings, that she has no leisure to lament her own: and thus, knowing the
+fresh feeling of contentment, unstained with thought of self, she does
+not fear being pleased, when there is cause, with her own rightness, as
+with another's, as with another's, saying calmly, "Be it mine or yours,
+or whose else's it may, it is no matter; this also is well." But the
+right to say such a thing depends on continual reverence and manifold
+sense of failure. If you have known yourself to have failed, you may
+trust, when it comes, the strange consciousness of success; if you have
+faithfully loved the noble work of others, you need not fear to speak
+with respect of things duly done, of your own.
+
+136. But the principal good that comes of art being followed in this
+reverent feeling is of it. Men who know their place can take it and
+keep it, be it low or high, contentedly and firmly, neither yielding
+nor grasping; and the harmony of hand and thought follows, rendering all
+great deeds of art possible--deeds in which the souls of men meet like
+the jewels in the windows of Aladdin's palace, the little gems and the
+large all equally pure, needing no cement but the fitting of facets;
+while the associative work of immodest men is all jointless, and astir
+with wormy ambition; putridly dissolute, and forever on the crawl: so
+that if it come together for a time, it can only be by metamorphosis
+through a flash of volcanic fire out of the vale of Siddim, vitrifying
+the clay of it, and fastening the slime, only to end in wilder
+scattering; according to the fate of those oldest, mightiest, immodestest
+of builders, of whom it is told in scorn, "They had brick for stone, and
+slime had they for mortar."
+
+137. The first function of Modesty, then, being this recognition of
+place, her second is the recognition of law, and delight in it, for the
+sake of law itself, whether her part be to assert it, or obey. For as it
+belongs to all immodesty to defy or deny law, and assert privilege and
+license, according to its own pleasure (it being therefore rightly called
+"insolent," that is, "custom-breaking," violating some usual and
+appointed order to attain for itself greater forwardness or power), so it
+is the habit of all modesty to love the constancy and "solemnity," or,
+literally, "accustomedness," of law, seeking first what are the solemn,
+appointed, inviolable customs and general orders of nature, and of the
+Master of nature, touching the matter in hand; and striving to put
+itself, as habitually and inviolably, in compliance with them. Out of
+which habit, once established, arises what is rightly called
+"conscience," nor "science" merely, but "with-science," a science "with
+us," such as only modest creatures can have--with or within them--and
+within all creation besides, every member of it, strong or weak,
+witnessing together, and joining in the happy consciousness that each
+one's work is good; the bee also being profoundly of that opinion; and
+the lark; and the swallow, in that noisy, but modestly upside-down, Babel
+of hers, under the eaves, with its unvolcanic slime for mortar; and the
+two ants who are asking of each other at the turn of that little
+ant's-foot-worn bath through the moss "lor via e lor fortuna;" and the
+builders also, who built yonder pile of cloud-marble in the west, and the
+gilder who gilded it, and is gone down behind it.
+
+138. But I think we shall better understand what we ought of the nature
+of Modesty, and of her opposite, by taking a simple instance of both, in
+the practice of that art of music which the wisest have agreed in
+thinking the first element of education; only I must ask the reader's
+patience with me through a parenthesis.
+
+Among the foremost men whose power has had to assert itself, though with
+conquest, yet with countless loss, through peculiarly English
+disadvantages of circumstance, are assuredly to be ranked together, both
+for honor, and for mourning, Thomas Bewick and George Cruikshank. There
+is, however, less cause for regret in the instance of Bewick. We may
+understand that it was well for us once to see what an entirely keen and
+true man's temper, could achieve, together, unhelped, but also unharmed,
+among the black bans and wolds of Tyne. But the genius of Cruikshank has
+been cast away in an utterly ghastly and lamentable manner: his superb
+line-work, worthy of any class of subject, and his powers of conception
+and composition, of which I cannot venture to estimate the range in their
+degraded application, having been condemned, by his fate, to be spent
+either in rude jesting, or in vain war with conditions of vice too low
+alike for record or rebuke, among the dregs of the British populace. Yet
+perhaps I am wrong in regretting even this: it may be an appointed lesson
+for futurity, that the art of the best English etcher in the nineteenth
+century, spent on illustrations of the lives of burglars and drunkards,
+should one day be seen in museums beneath Greek vases fretted with
+drawings of the wars of Troy, or side by side with Dürer's "Knight and
+Death."
+
+139. Be that as it may, I am at present glad to be able to refer to one
+of these perpetuations, by his strong hand, of such human character as
+our faultless British constitution occasionally produces in
+out-of-the-way corners. It is among his illustrations of the Irish
+Rebellion, and represents the pillage and destruction of a gentleman's
+house by the mob. They have made a heap in the drawing-room of the
+furniture and books, to set first fire to; and are tearing up the floor
+for its more easily kindled planks, the less busily-disposed meanwhile
+hacking round in rage, with axes, and smashing what they can with
+butt-ends of guns. I do not care to follow with words the ghastly truth
+of the picture into its detail; but the most expressive incident of the
+whole, and the one immediately to my purpose, is this, that one fellow
+has sat himself at the piano, on which, hitting down fiercely with his
+clenched fists, he plays, grinning, such tune as may be so producible, to
+which melody two of his companions, flourishing knotted sticks, dance,
+after their manner, on the top of the instrument.
+
+140. I think we have in this conception as perfect an instance as we
+require of the lowest supposable phase of immodest or licentious art in
+music; the "inner consciousness of good" being dim, even in the musician
+and his audience, and wholly unsympathized with, and unacknowledged by
+the Delphian, Vestal, and all other prophetic and cosmic powers. This
+represented scene came into my mind suddenly one evening, a few weeks
+ago, in contrast with another which I was watching in its reality;
+namely, a group of gentle school-girls, leaning over Mr. Charles Hallê,
+as he was playing a variation on "Home, Sweet Home." They had sustained
+with unwonted courage the glance of subdued indignation with which,
+having just closed a rippling melody of Sebastian Bach's (much like what
+one might fancy the singing of nightingales would be if they fed on honey
+instead of flies), he turned to the slight, popular air. But they had
+their own associations with it, and besought for, and obtained it, and
+pressed close, at first, in vain, to see what no glance could follow, the
+traversing of the fingers. They soon thought no more of seeing. The wet
+eyes, round-open, and the little scarlet upper lips, lifted, and drawn
+slightly together, in passionate glow of utter wonder, became
+picture-like, porcelain-like, in motionless joy, as the sweet multitude
+of low notes fell, in their timely infinities, like summer rain. Only
+La Robbia himself (nor even he, unless with tenderer use of color than is
+usual in his work) could have rendered some image of that listening.
+
+141. But if the reader can give due vitality in his fancy to these two
+scenes, he will have in them representative types, clear enough for all
+future purpose, of the several agencies of debased and perfect art. And
+the interval may easily and continuously be filled by mediate gradations.
+Between the entirely immodeset, unmeasured, and (in evil sense)
+unmannered, execution with the fist; and the entirely modest, measured,
+and (in the noblest sense) mannered, or moral'd execution with the
+finger; between the impatient and unpractised doing, containing in itself
+the witness of lasting impatience and idleness through all previous life,
+and the patient and practised doing, containing in itself the witness
+of self-restraint and unwearied toil through all previous life; between
+the expressed subject and sentiment of home violation, and the expressed
+subject and sentiment of home love; between the sympathy of audience,
+given in irreverent and contemptuous rage, joyless as the rabidness of a
+dog, and the sympathy of audience given in an almost appalled humility of
+intense, rapturous, and yet entirely reasoning and reasonable pleasure;
+between these two limits of octave, the reader will find he can class,
+according to its modesty, usefulness and grace, or becomingness, all
+other musical art. For although purity of purpose and fineness of
+execution by no means go together, degree to degree (since fine, and
+indeed all but the finest, work is often spent in the most wanton purpose
+--as in all our modern opera--and the rudest execution is again often
+joined with purest purpose, as in a mother's song to her child), still
+the entire accomplishment of music is only in the union of both. For the
+difference between that "all but" finest and "finest" is an infinite one;
+and besides this, however the power of the performer, once attained, may
+be afterwards misdirected, in slavery to popular passion or childishness,
+and spend itself, at its sweetest, in idle melodies, cold and ephemeral
+(like Michael Angelo's snow statue in the other art), or else in vicious
+difficulty and miserable noise--crackling of thorns under the pot of
+public sensuality--still, the attainment of this power, and the
+maintenance of it, involve always in the executant some virtue or courage
+of high kind; the understanding of which, and of the difference between
+the discipline which develops it and the disorderly efforts of the
+amateur, it will be one of our first businesses to estimate rightly. And
+though not indeed by degree to degree, yet in essential relation (as of
+winds to waves, the one being always the true cause of the other, though
+they are not necessarily of equal force at the same time,) we shall find
+vice in its varieties, with art-failure,--and virtue in its varieties,
+with art-success,--fall and rise together; the peasant-girl's song at her
+spinning-wheel, the peasant laborer's "to the oaks and rills,"--domestic
+music, feebly yet sensitively skilful,--music for the multitude, of
+beneficent or of traitorous power,--dance-melodies, pure and orderly, or
+foul and frantic,--march-music, blatant in mere fever of animal
+pugnacity, or majestic with force of national duty and memory,--
+song-music, reckless, sensual, sickly, slovenly, forgetful even of the
+foolish words it effaces with foolish noise,--or thoughtful, sacred,
+healthful, artful, forever sanctifying noble thought with separately
+distinguished loveliness of belonging sound,--all these families and
+graduations of good or evil, however mingled, follow, in so far as they
+are good, one constant law of virtue (or "life-strength," which is the
+literal meaning of the word, and its intended one, in wise men's mouths),
+and in so far as they are evil, are evil by outlawry and unvirtue, or
+death-weakness. Then, passing wholly beyond the domain of death, we may
+still imagine the ascendant nobleness of the art, through all the
+concordant life of incorrupt creatures, and a continually deeper harmony
+of "puissant words and murmurs made to bless," until we reach
+
+ "The undisturbed song of pure consent,
+ Aye sung before the sapphire-colored throne."
+
+142. And so far as the sister arts can be conceived to have place or
+office, their virtues are subject to a law absolutely the same as that of
+music, only extending its authority into more various conditions, owing
+to the introduction of a distinctly representative and historical power,
+which acts under logical as well as mathematical restrictions, and is
+capable of endlessly changeful fault, fallacy, and defeat, as well as of
+endlessly manifold victory.
+
+143. Next to Modesty, and her delight in measures, let us reflect a
+little on the character of her adversary, the Goddess of Liberty, and her
+delight in absence of measures, or in false ones. It is true that there
+are liberties and liberties. Yonder torrent, crystal-clear, and
+arrow-swift, with its spray leaping into the air like white troops of
+fawns, is free enough. Lost, presently, amidst bankless, boundless marsh
+--soaking in slow shallowness, as it will, hither and thither, listless
+among the poisonous reeds and unresisting slime--it is free also. We may
+choose which liberty we like,--the restraint of voiceful rock, or the
+dumb and edgeless shore of darkened sand. Of that evil liberty which men
+are now glorifying and proclaiming as essence of gospel to all the earth,
+and will presently, I suppose, proclaim also to the stars, with
+invitation to them out of their courses,--and of its opposite continence,
+which is the clasp and 'chrusee perone' of Aglaia's cestus, we must try
+to find out something true. For no quality of Art has been more powerful
+in its influence on public mind; none is more frequently the subject of
+popular praise, or the end of vulgar effort, than what we call "Freedom."
+It is necessary to determine the justice or injustice of this popular
+praise.
+
+144. I said, a little while ago, that the practical teaching of the
+masters of Art was summed by the O of Giotto. "You may judge my
+masterhood of craft," Giotto tells us, "by seeing that I can draw a
+circle unerringly." And we may safely believe him, understanding him to
+mean that, though more may be necessary to an artist than such a power,
+at least this power is necessary. The qualities of hand and eye needful
+to do this are the first conditions of artistic craft.
+
+145. Try to draw a circle yourself with the "free" hand, and with a
+single line. You cannot do it if your hand trembles, nor if it is in the
+common sense of the word "free." So far from being free, it must be as
+if it were fastened to an inflexible bar of steel. And yet it must move,
+under this necessary control, with perfect, untormented serenity of ease.
+
+146. That is the condition of all good work whatsoever. All freedom is
+error. Every line you lay down is either right or wrong; it may be
+timidly and awkwardly wrong, or fearlessly and impudently wrong. The
+aspect of the impudent wrongness is pleasurable to vulgar persons, and is
+what they commonly call "free" execution; the timid, tottering,
+hesitating wrongness is rarely so attractive; yet sometimes, if
+accompanied with good qualities, and right aims in other directions, it
+becomes in a manner charming, like the inarticulateness of a child; but,
+whatever the charm or manner of the error, there is but one question
+ultimately to be asked respecting every line you draw, Is it right or
+wrong? If right, it most assuredly is not a "free" line, but an
+intensely continent, restrained, and considered line; and the action of
+the hand in laying it is just as decisive, and just as "free," as the
+hand of a first-rate surgeon in a critical incision. A great operator
+told me that his hand could check itself within about the two-hundredth
+of an inch, in penetrating a membrane; and this, of course, without the
+help of sight, by sensation only. With help of sight, and in action on a
+substance which does not quiver or yield, a fine artist's line is
+measurable in its proposed direction to considerably less than the
+thousandth of an inch.
+
+A wide freedom, truly!
+
+147. The conditions of popular art which most foster the common ideas
+about freedom, are merely results of irregularly energetic effort by men
+imperfectly educated; these conditions being variously mingled with
+cruder mannerisms resulting from timidity, or actual imperfection of
+body. Northern hands and eyes are, of course, never so subtle as
+Southern; and in very cold countries, artistic execution is palsied. The
+effort to break through this timidity, or to refine the bluntness, may
+lead to a licentious impetuosity, or an ostentatious minuteness. Every
+man's manner has this kind of relation to some defect in his physical
+powers or modes of thought; so that in the greatest work there is no
+manner visible. It is at first uninteresting from its quietness; the
+majesty of restrained power only dawns gradually upon us, as we walk
+towards its horizon.
+
+There is, indeed, often great delightfulness in the innocent manners of
+artists who have real power and honesty, and draw in this way or that, as
+best they can, under such and such untoward circumstances of life. But
+the greater part of the looseness, flimsiness, or audacity of modern work
+is the expression of an inner spirit of license in mind and heart,
+connected, as I said, with the peculiar folly of this age, its hope of,
+and trust in, "liberty," of which we must reason a little in more general
+terms.
+
+148. I believe we can nowhere find a better type of a perfectly free
+creature than in the common house-fly. Nor free only, but brave; and
+irreverent to a degree which I think no human republican could by any
+philosophy exalt himself to. There is no courtesy in him; he does not
+care whether it is king or clown whom he teases; and in every step of his
+swift mechanical march, and in every pause of his resolute observation,
+there is one and the same expression of perfect egotism, perfect
+independence and self-confidence, and conviction of the world's having
+been made for flies. Strike at him with your hand, and to him, the
+mechanical fact and external aspect of the matter is, what to you it
+would be if an acre of red clay, ten feet thick, tore itself up from the
+ground in one massive field, hovered over you in the air for a second,
+and came crashing down with an aim. That is the external aspect of it;
+the inner aspect, to his fly's mind, is of a quite natural and
+unimportant occurrence--one of the momentary conditions of his active
+life. He steps out of the way of your hand, and alights on the back of
+it. You cannot terrify him, nor govern him, nor persuade him, nor
+convince him. He has his own positive opinion on all matters; not an
+unwise one, usually, for his own ends; and will ask no advice of yours.
+He has no work to do--no tyrannical instinct to obey. The earthworm has
+his digging; the bee her gathering and building; the spider her cunning
+network; the ant her treasury and accounts. All these are comparatively
+slaves, or people of vulgar business. But your fly, free in the air,
+free in the chamber--a black incarnation of caprice, wandering,
+investigating, flitting, flirting, feasting at his will, with rich
+variety of choice in feast, from the heaped sweets in the grocer's window
+to those of the butcher's back-yard, and from the galled place on your
+cab-horse's back, to the brown spot in the road, from which, as the hoof
+disturbs him, he rises with angry republican buzz--what freedom is like
+his?
+
+149. For captivity, again, perhaps your poor watch-dog is as sorrowful
+a type as you will easily find. Mine certainly is. The day is lovely,
+but I must write this, and cannot go out with him. He is chained in the
+yard because I do not like dogs in rooms, and the gardener does not like
+dogs in gardens. He has no books,--nothing but his own weary thoughts
+for company, and a group of those free flies, whom he snaps at, with
+sullen ill success. Such dim hope as he may have that I may take him out
+with me, will be, hour by hour, wearily disappointed; or, worse, darkened
+at once into a leaden despair by an authoritative "No"--too well
+understood. His fidelity only seals his fate; if he would not watch for
+me, he would be sent away, and go hunting with some happier master: but
+he watches, and is wise, and faithful, and miserable; and his high animal
+intellect only gives him the wistful powers of wonder, and sorrow, and
+desire, and affection, which embitter his captivity. Yet of the two,
+would we rather be watch-dog or fly?
+
+150. Indeed, the first point we have all to determine is not how free
+we are, but what kind of creatures we are. It is of small importance to
+any of us whether we get liberty; but of the greatest that we deserve it.
+Whether we can win it, fate must determine; but that we will be worthy of
+it we may ourselves determine; and the sorrowfullest fate of all that we
+can suffer is to have it without deserving it.
+
+151. I have hardly patience to hold my pen and go on writing, as I
+remember (I would that it were possible for a few consecutive instants to
+forget) the infinite follies of modern thought in this matter, centred in
+the notion that liberty is good for a man, irrespectively of the use he
+is likely to make of it. Folly unfathomable! unspeakable! unendurable to
+look in the full face of, as the laugh of a cretin. You will send your
+child, will you, into a room where the table is loaded with sweet wine
+and fruit--some poisoned, some not?--you will say to him, "Choose freely,
+my little child! It is so good for you to have freedom of choice; it
+forms your character--your individuality! If you take the wrong cup or
+the wrong berry, you will die before the day is over, but you will have
+acquired the dignity of a Free child?"
+
+152. You think that puts the case too sharply? I tell you, lover of
+liberty, there is no choice offered to you, but it is similarly between
+life and death. There is no act, nor option of act, possible, but the
+wrong deed or option has poison in it which will stay in your veins
+thereafter forever. Never more to all eternity can you be as you might
+have been had you not done that--chosen that. You have "formed your
+character," forsooth! No; if you have chosen ill, you have De-formed
+it, and that for ever! In some choices it had been better for you that
+a red-hot iron bar struck you aside, scarred and helpless, than that you
+had so chosen. "You will know better next time!" No. Next time will
+never come. Next time the choice will be in quite another aspect--
+between quite different things,--you, weaker than you were by the evil
+into which you have fallen; it, more doubtful than it was, by the
+increased dimness of your sight. No one ever gets wiser by doing wrong,
+nor stronger. You will get wiser and stronger only by doing right,
+whether forced or not; the prime, the one need is to do that, under
+whatever compulsion, until you can do it without compulsion. And then
+you are a Man.
+
+153. "What!" a wayward youth might perhaps answer, incredulously, "no
+one ever gets wiser by doing wrong? Shall I not know the world best by
+trying the wrong of it, and repenting? Have I not, even as it is,
+learned much by many of my errors?" Indeed, the effort by which
+partially you recovered yourself was precious; that part of your thought
+by which you discerned the error was precious. What wisdom and strength
+you kept, and rightly used, are rewarded; and in the pain and the
+repentance, and in the acquaintance with the aspects of folly and sin,
+you have learned something; how much less than you would have learned in
+right paths can never be told, but that it is less is certain. Your
+liberty of choice has simply destroyed for you so much life and strength
+never regainable. It is true, you now know the habits of swine, and the
+taste of husks; do you think your father could not have taught you to
+know better habits and pleasanter tastes, if you had stayed in his house;
+and that the knowledge you have lost would not have been more, as well as
+sweeter, than that you have gained? But "it so forms my individuality
+to be free!" Your individuality was given you by God, and in your race,
+and if you have any to speak of, you will want no liberty. You will want
+a den to work in, and peace, and light--no more,--in absolute need; if
+more, in anywise, it will still not be liberty, but direction,
+instruction, reproof, and sympathy. But if you have no individuality, if
+there is no true character nor true desire in you, then you will indeed
+want to be free. You will begin early, and, as a boy, desire to be a
+man; and, as a man, think yourself as good as every other. You will
+choose freely to eat, freely to drink, freely to stagger and fall,
+freely, at last, to curse yourself and die. Death is the only real
+freedom possible to us; and that is consummate freedom, permission for
+every particle in the rotting body to leave its neighbor particle, and
+shift for itself. You call it "corruption" in the flesh; but before it
+comes to that, all liberty is an equal corruption in mind. You ask for
+freedom of thought; but if you have not sufficient grounds for thought,
+you have no business to think; and if you have sufficient grounds, you
+have no business to think wrong. Only one thought is possible to you if
+you are wise--your liberty is geometrically proportionate to your folly.
+
+154. "But all this glory and activity of our age; what are they owing
+to, but to freedom of thought?" In a measure, they are owing--what good
+is in them--to the discovery of many lies, and the escape from the power
+of evil. Not to liberty, but to the deliverance from evil or cruel
+masters. Brave men have dared to examine lies which had long been
+taught, not because they were free-thinkers, but because they were such
+stern and close thinkers that the lie could no longer escape them. Of
+course the restriction of thought, or of its expression, by persecution,
+is merely a form of violence, justifiable or not, as other violence is,
+according to the character of the persons against whom it is exercised,
+and the divine and eternal laws which it vindicates or violates. We must
+not burn a man alive for saying that the Athanasian creed is
+ungrammatical, nor stop a bishop's salary because we are getting the
+worst of an argument with him; neither must we let drunken men howl in
+the public streets at night. There is much that is true in the part of
+Mr. Mill's essay on Liberty which treats of freedom of thought; some
+important truths are there beautifully expressed, but many, quite vital,
+are omitted; and the balance, therefore, is wrongly struck. The liberty
+of expression, with a great nation, would become like that in a
+well-educated company, in which there is indeed freedom of speech, but
+not of clamor; or like that in an orderly senate, in which men who
+deserve to be heard, are heard in due time, and under determined
+restrictions. The degree of liberty you can rightly grant to a number
+of men is in the inverse ratio of their desire for it; and a general
+hush, or call to order, would be often very desirable in this England of
+ours. For the rest, of any good or evil extent, it is impossible to say
+what measure is owing to restraint, and what to license where the right
+is balanced between them. I was not a little provoked one day, a summer
+or two since, in Scotland, because the Duke of Athol hindered me from
+examining the gneiss and slate junctions in Glen Tilt, at the hour
+convenient to me; but I saw them at last, and in quietness; and to the
+very restriction that annoyed me, owed, probably, the fact of their being
+in existence, instead of being blasted away by a mob-company; while the
+"free" paths and inlets of Loch Katrine and the Lake of Geneva are
+forever trampled down and destroyed, not by one duke, but by tens of
+thousands of ignorant tyrants.
+
+155. So, a Dean and Chapter may, perhaps, unjustifiably charge me
+twopence for seeing a cathedral; but your free mob pulls spire and all
+down about my ears, and I can see it no more forever. And even if I
+cannot get up to the granite junctions in the glen, the stream comes down
+from them pure to the Garry; but in Beddington Park I am stopped by the
+newly-erected fence of a building speculator; and the bright Wandel,
+divine of waters as Castaly, is filled by the free public with old shoes,
+obscene crockery, and ashes.
+
+156. In fine, the arguments for liberty may in general be summed in a
+few very simple forms, as follows:
+
+Misguiding is mischievous: therefore guiding is.
+
+If the blind lead the blind, both fall into the ditch: therefore, nobody
+should lead anybody.
+
+Lambs and fawns should be left free in the fields; much more bears and
+wolves.
+
+If a man's gun and shot are his own, he may fire in any direction he
+pleases.
+
+A fence across a road is inconvenient; much more one at the side of it.
+
+Babes should not be swaddled with their hands bound down to their sides:
+therefore they should be thrown out to roll in the kennels naked.
+
+None of these arguments are good, and the practical issues of them are
+worse. For there are certain eternal laws for human conduct which are
+quite clearly discernible by human reason. So far as these are
+discovered and obeyed, by whatever machinery or authority the obedience
+is procured, there follow life and strength. So far as they are
+disobeyed, by whatever good intention the disobedience is brought about,
+there follow ruin and sorrow. And the first duty of every man in the
+world is to find his true master, and, for his own good, submit to him;
+and to find his true inferior, and, for that inferior's good, conquer
+him. The punishment is sure, if we either refuse the reverence, or are
+too cowardly and indolent to enforce the compulsion. A base nation
+crucifies or poisons its wise men, and lets its fools rave and rot in the
+streets. A wise nation obeys the one, restrains the other, and cherishes
+all.
+
+157. The best examples of the results of wise normal evidence in Art
+will be found in whatever evidence remains respecting the lives of great
+Italian painters, though, unhappily, in eras of progress, but just in
+proportion to the admirableness and efficiency of the life, will be
+usually the scantiness of its history. The individualities and liberties
+which are causes of destruction may be recorded; but the loyal conditions
+of daily breath are never told. Because Leonardo made models of
+machines, dug canals, built fortifications, and dissipated half his
+art-power in capricious ingenuities, we have many anecdotes of him;--but
+no picture of importance on canvas, and only a few withered stains of one
+upon a wall. But because his pupil, or reputed pupil, Luini, labored in
+constant and successful simplicity, we have no anecdotes of him;--only
+hundreds of noble works. Luini is, perhaps, the best central type of the
+highly-trained Italian painter. He is the only man who entirely united
+the religious temper which was the spirit-life of art, with the physical
+power which was its bodily life. He joins the purity and passion of
+Angelico to the strength of Veronese: the two elements, poised in perfect
+balance, are so calmed and restrained, each by the other, that most of us
+lose the sense of both. The artist does not see the strength, by reason
+of the chastened spirit in which it is used: and the religious visionary
+does not recognize the passion, by reason of the frank human truth with
+which it is rendered. He is a man ten times greater than Leonardo;--a
+mighty colorist, while Leonardo was only a fine draughtsman in black,
+staining the chiaroscuro drawing, like a colored print: he perceived and
+rendered the delicatest types of human beauty that have been painted
+since the days of the Greeks, while Leonardo depraved his finer instincts
+by caricature, and remained to the end of his days the slave of an
+archaic smile: and he is a designer as frank, instinctive, and
+exhaustless as Tintoret, while Leonardo's design is only an agony of
+science, admired chiefly because it is painful, and capable of analysis
+in its best accomplishment. Luini has left nothing behind him that is
+not lovely; but of his life I believe hardly anything is known beyond
+remnants of tradition which murmur about Lugano and Saronno, and which
+remain ungleaned. This only is certain, that he was born in the
+loveliest district of North Italy, where hills, and streams, and air
+meet in softest harmonies. Child of the Alps, and of their divinest
+lake, he is taught, without doubt or dismay, a lofty religious creed, and
+a sufficient law of life, and of its mechanical arts. Whether lessoned
+by Leonardo himself, or merely one of many disciplined in the system of
+the Milanese school, he learns unerringly to draw, unerringly and
+enduringly to paint. His tasks are set him without question day by day,
+by men who are justly satisfied with his work, and who accept it without
+any harmful praise, or senseless blame. Place, scale, and subject are
+determined for him on the cloister wall or the church dome; as he is
+required, and for sufficient daily bread, and little more, he paints what
+he has been taught to design wisely, and has passion to realize
+gloriously: every touch he lays is eternal, every thought he conceives is
+beautiful and pure: his hand moves always in radiance of blessing; from
+day to day his life enlarges in power and peace; it passes away
+cloudlessly, the starry twilight remaining arched far against the night.
+
+158. Oppose to such a life as this that of a great painter amidst the
+elements of modern English liberty. Take the life of Turner, in whom the
+artistic energy and inherent love of beauty were at least as strong as in
+Luini: but, amidst the disorder and ghastliness of the lower streets of
+London, his instincts in early infancy were warped into toleration of
+evil, or even into delight in it. He gathers what he can of instruction
+by questioning and prying among half-informed masters; spells out some
+knowledge of classical fable; educates himself, by an admirable force, to
+the production of wildly majestic or pathetically tender and pure
+pictures, by which he cannot live. There is no one to judge them, or to
+command him: only some of the English upper classes hire him to paint
+their houses and parks, and destroy the drawings afterwards by the most
+wanton neglect. Tired of laboring carefully, without either reward or
+praise, he dashes out into various experimental and popular works--makes
+himself the servant of the lower public, and is dragged hither and
+thither at their will; while yet, helpless and guideless, he indulges his
+idiosyncrasies till they change into insanities; the strength of his soul
+increasing its sufferings, and giving force to its errors; all the
+purpose of life degenerating into instinct; and the web of his work
+wrought, at last, of beauties too subtle to be understood, his liberty,
+with vices too singular to be forgiven--all useless, because magnificent
+idiosyncrasy had become solitude, or contention, in the midst of a
+reckless populace, instead of submitting itself in loyal harmony to the
+Art-laws of an understanding nation. And the life passed away in
+darkness; and its final work, in all the best beauty of it, has already
+perished, only enough remaining to teach us what we have lost.
+
+159. These are the opposite effects of Law and of Liberty on men of the
+highest powers. In the case of inferiors the contrast is still more
+fatal: under strict law, they become the subordinate workers in great
+schools, healthily aiding, echoing, or supplying, with multitudinous
+force of hand, the mind of the leading masters: they are the nameless
+carvers of great architecture--stainers of glass--hammerers of iron--
+helpful scholars, whose work ranks round, if not with, their master's,
+and never disgraces it. But the inferiors under a system of license
+for the most part perish in miserable effort;* a few struggle into
+pernicious eminence--harmful alike to themselves and to all who admire
+them; many die of starvation; many insane, either in weakness of insolent
+egotism, like Haydon, or in a conscientious agony of beautiful purpose
+and warped power, like Blake. There is no probability of the persistence
+of a licentious school in any good accidentally discovered by them; there
+is an approximate certainty of their gathering, with acclaim, round any
+shadow of evil, and following it to whatever quarter of destruction it
+may lead.
+
+
+* As I correct this sheet for press, my "Pall Mall Gazette" of last
+Saturday, April 17, is lying on the table by me. I print a few lines out
+of it:
+
+ "AN ARTIST'S DEATH.--A sad story was told at an inquest held in St.
+Pancras last night by Dr. Lankester on the body of . . ., aged
+fifty-nine, a French artist who was found dead in his bed at his rooms in
+. . . Street. M. . . ., also an artist, said he had known the deceased
+for fifteen years. He once held a high position, and being anxious to
+make a name in the world, he five years ago commenced a large picture,
+which he hoped, when completed, to have in the gallery at Versailles; and
+with that view he sent a photograph of it to the French Emperor. He also
+had an idea of sending it to the English Royal Academy. He labored on
+this picture, neglecting other work which would have paid him well, and
+gradually sank lower and lower into poverty. His friends assisted him,
+but being absorbed in his great work, he did not heed their advice, and
+they left him. He was, however, assisted by the French Ambassador, and
+last Saturday, he (the witness) saw deceased, who was much depressed in
+spirits, as he expected the brokers to be put in possession for rent. He
+said his troubles were so great that he feared his brain would give way.
+The witness gave him a shilling for which he appeared very thankful. On
+Monday the witness called upon him, but received no answer to his knock.
+He went again on Tuesday, and entered the deceased's bedroom and found
+him dead. Dr. George Ross said that when called into the deceased he had
+been dead at least two days. The room was in a filthy, dirty condition,
+and the picture referred to--certainly a very fine one--was in that room.
+The post-mortem examination showed that the cause of death was fatty
+degeneration of the heart, the latter probably having ceased its action
+through the mental excitement of the deceased."
+
+
+160. Thus far the notes of Freedom. Now, lastly, here is some talk
+which I tried at the time to make intelligible; and with which I close
+this volume, because it will serve sufficiently to express the practical
+relation in which I think the art and imagination of the Greeks stand to
+our own; and will show the reader that my view of that relation is
+unchanged, from the first day on which I began to write, until now.
+
+
+***
+
+
+THE HERCULES OF CAMARINA.
+
+ADDRESS TO THE STUDENTS OF THE ART SCHOOL OF SOUTH LAMBERT, MARCH 15,
+1869.
+
+
+161. Among the photographers of Greek coins which present so many
+admirable subjects for your study, I must speak for the present of one
+only: the Hercules of Camarina. You have, represented by a Greek
+workman, in that coin, the face of a man and the skin of a lion's head.
+And the man's face is like a man's face, but the lion's skin is not like
+a lion's skin.
+
+162. Now there are some people who will tell you that Greek art is fine,
+because it is true; and because it carves men's faces as like men's as it
+can.
+
+And there are other people who will tell you that Greek art is fine,
+because it is not true; and carves a lion's skin so as to look not at all
+like a lion's skin.
+
+And you fancy that one or the other of these sets of people must be
+wrong, and are perhaps much puzzled to find out which you should believe.
+
+But neither of them are wrong, and you will have eventually to believe,
+or rather to understand and know, in reconciliation, the truths taught by
+each; but for the present, the teachers of the first group are those you
+must follow.
+
+It is they who tell you the deepest and usefullest truth, which involves
+all others in time. Greek art, and all other art, is fine when it makes
+a man's face as like a man's face as it can. Hold to that. All kinds of
+nonsense are talked to you, nowadays, ingeniously and irrelevantly about
+art. Therefore, for the most part of the day, shut your ears, and keep
+your eyes open: and understand primarily, what you may, I fancy, easily
+understand, that the greatest masters of all greatest schools--Phidias,
+Donatello, Titian, Velasquez, or Sir Joshua Reynolds--all tried to make
+human creatures as like human creatures as they could; and that anything
+less like humanity than their work, is not so good as theirs.
+
+Get that well driven into your heads; and don't let it out again, at your
+peril.
+
+163. Having got it well in, you may then further understand, safely,
+that three is a great deal of secondary work in pots, and pans, and
+floors, and carpets, and shawls, and architectural ornament, which ought
+essentially, to be unlike reality, and to depend for its charm on quite
+other qualities than imitative ones. But all such art is inferior and
+secondary--much of it more or less instinctive and animal, and a
+civilized human creature can only learn those principles rightly, by
+knowing those of great civilized art first--which is always the
+representation, to the utmost of its power, of whatever it has got to
+show--made to look as like the thing as possible. Go into the National
+Gallery, and look at the foot of Correggio's Venus there. Correggio
+made it as like a foot as he could, and you won't easily find anything
+liker. Now, you will find on any Greek vase something meant for a foot,
+or a hand, which is not at all like one. The Greek vase is a good thing
+in its way, but Correggio's picture is the best work.
+
+164. So, again, go into the Turner room of the National Gallery, and
+look at Turner's drawing of "Ivy Bridge." You will find the water in it
+is like real water, and the ducks in it are like real ducks. Then go
+into the British Museum, and look for an Egyptian landscape, and you will
+find the water in that constituted of blue zigzags, not at all like
+water; and ducks in the middle of it made of blue lines, looking not in
+the least as if they could stand stuffing with sage and onions. They are
+very good in their way, but Turner's are better.
+
+165. I will not pause to fence my general principle against what you
+perfectly well know of the due contradiction,--that a thing may be
+painted very like, yet painted ill. Rest content with knowing that it
+must be like, if it is painted well; and take this further general law:
+Imitation is like charity. When it is done for love it is lovely; when
+it is done for show, hateful.
+
+166. Well, then, this Greek coin is fine, first because the face is like
+a face. Perhaps you think there is something particularly handsome in
+the face, which you can't see in the photograph, or can't at present
+appreciate. But there is nothing of the kind. It is a very regular,
+quiet, commonplace sort of face; and any average English gentleman's, of
+good descent, would be far handsomer.
+
+167. Fix that in your heads also, therefore, that Greek faces are not
+particularly beautiful. Of that much nonsense against which you are to
+keep your ears shut, that which is talked to you of the Greek ideal of
+beauty is the absolutest. There is not a single instance of a very
+beautiful head left by the highest school of Greek art. On coins, there
+is even no approximately beautiful one. The Juno of Argos is a virago;
+the Athena of Athens grotesque, the Athena of Corinth is insipid; and of
+Thurium, sensual. The Siren Ligeia, and fountain of Arethusa, on the
+coins of Terina and Syracuse, are prettier, but totally without
+expression, and chiefly set off by their well-curled hair. You might
+have expected something subtle in Mercuries; but the Mercury of Ænus is
+a very stupid-looking fellow, in a cap like a bowl, with a knob on the
+top of it. The Bacchus of Thasos is a drayman with his hair pomatum'd.
+The Jupiter of Syracurse is, however, calm and refined; and the Apollo
+of Clazomenæ would have been impressive, if he had not come down to us,
+much flattened by friction. But on the whole, the merit of Greek coins
+does not primarily depend on beauty of features, nor even, in the period
+of highest art, that of the statues. You make take the Venus of Melos as
+a standard of beauty of the central Greek type. She has tranquil,
+regular, and lofty features; but could not hold her own for a moment
+against the beauty of a simple English girl, of pure race and kind heart.
+
+168. And the reason that Greek art, on the whole, bores you (and you
+know it does), is that you are always forced to look in it for something
+that is not there; but which may be seen every day, in real life, all
+round you; and which you are naturally disposed to delight in, and ought
+to delight in. For the Greek race was not at all one of exalted beauty,
+but only of general and healthy completeness of form. They were only,
+and could be only, beautiful in body to the degree that they were
+beautiful in soul (for you will find, when you read deeply into the
+matter, that the body is only the soul made visible). And the Greeks
+were indeed very good people, much better people than most of us think,
+or than many of us are; but there are better people alive now than the
+best of them, and lovelier people to be seen now than the loveliest of
+them.
+
+169. Then what are the merits of this Greek art, which make it so
+exemplary for you? Well, not that it is beautiful, but that it is
+Right.* All that it desires to do, it does, and all that it does, does
+well. You will find, as you advance in the knowledge of art, that its
+laws of self-restraint are very marvelous; that its peace of heart, and
+contentment in doing a simple thing, with only one or two qualities,
+restrictedly desired, and sufficiently attained, are a most wholesome
+element of education for you, as opposed to the wild writhing, and
+wrestling, and longing for the moon, and tilting at windmills, and agony
+of eyes, and torturing of fingers, and general spinning out of one's
+soul into fiddle-strings, which constitute the ideal life of a modern
+artist.
+
+
+* Compare above, §101.
+
+
+Also observe, there is an entire masterhood of its business up to the
+required point. A Greek does not reach after other people's strength,
+nor outreach his own. He never tries to paint before he can draw; he
+never tries to lay on flesh where there are no bones; and he never
+expects to find the bones of anything in his inner consciousness. Those
+are his first merits--sincere and innocent purpose, strong common-sense
+and principle, and all the strength that follows on that strength.
+
+170. But, secondly, Greek art is always exemplary in disposition of
+masses, which is a thing that in modern days students rarely look for,
+artists not enough, and the public never. But, whatever else Greek work
+may fail of, you may always be sure its masses are well placed, and their
+placing has been the object of the most subtle care. Look, for instance,
+at the inscription in front of this Hercules of the name of the town--
+Camarina. You can't read it, even though you may know Greek, without
+some pains; for the sculptor knew well enough that it mattered very
+little whether you read it or not, for the Camarina Hercules could tell
+his own story; but what did above all things matter was, that no K or A
+or M should come in a wrong place with respect to the outline of the
+head, and divert the eye from it, or spoil any of its lines. So the
+whole inscription is thrown into a sweeping curve of gradually
+diminishing size, continuing from the lion's paws, round the neck, up to
+the forehead, and answering a decorative purpose as completely as the
+curls of the mane opposite. Of these, again, you cannot change or
+displace one without mischief; they are almost as even in reticulation as
+a piece of basket-work; but each has a different form and a due relation
+to the rest, and if you set to work to draw that mane rightly, you will
+find that, whatever time you give to it, you can't get the tresses quite
+into their places, and that every tress out of its place does an injury.
+If you want to test your powers of accurate drawing, you may make that
+lion's mane your pons asinorum, I have never yet met with a student who
+didn't make an ass in a lion's skin of himself when he tried it.
+
+171. Granted, however, that these tresses may be finely placed, still
+they are not like a lion's mane. So we come back to the question,--if
+the face is to be like a man's face, why is not the lion's mane to be
+like a lion's mane? Well, because it can't be like a lion's mane without
+too much trouble,--and inconvenience after that, and poor success, after
+all. Too much trouble, in cutting the die into fine fringes and jags;
+inconvenience after that,--because, though you can easily stamp cheeks
+and foreheads smooth at a blow, you can't stamp projecting tresses fine
+at a blow, whatever pains you take with your die.
+
+So your Greek uses his common sense, wastes no time, uses no skill, and
+says to you, "Here is beautifully set tresses, which I have carefully
+designed and easily stamped. Enjoy them, and if you cannot understand
+that they mean lion's mane, heaven mend your wits."
+
+172. See, then, you have in this work well-founded knowledge, simple and
+right aims, thorough mastery of handicraft, splendid invention in
+arrangement, unerring common sense in treatment,--merits, these, I think,
+exemplary enough to justify our tormenting you a little with Greek art.
+But it has one merit more than these, the greatest of all. It always
+means something worth saying. Not merely worth saying for that time
+only, but for all time. What do you think this helmet of lion's hide is
+always given to Hercules for? You can't suppose it means only that he
+once killed a lion, and always carried its skin afterwards to show that
+he had, as Indian sportsmen sent home stuffed rugs, with claws at the
+corners, and a lump in the middle which one tumbles over every time one
+stirs the fire. What was this Nemean Lion, whose spoils were evermore to
+cover Hercules from the cold? Not merely a large specimen of Felis Leo,
+ranging the fields of Nemea, be sure of that. This Nemean cub was one of
+a bad litter. Born of Typhon and Echidna,--of the whirlwind and the
+snake,--Cerberus his brother, the Hydra of Lerna his sister,--it must
+have been difficult to get his hide off him. He had to be found in
+darkness, too, and dealt upon without weapons, by grip at the throat--
+arrows and club of no avail against him. What does all that mean?
+
+173. It means that the Nemean Lion is the first great adversary of life,
+whatever that may be--to Hercules, or to any of us, then or now. The
+first monster we have to strangle, or be destroyed by, fighting in the
+dark, and with none to help us, only Athena standing by to encourage with
+her smile. Every man's Nemean Lion lies in wait for him somewhere. The
+slothful man says, There is a lion in the path. He says well. The quiet
+unslothful man says the same, and knows it too. But they differ in their
+further reading of the text. The slothful man says, I shall be slain,
+and the unslothful, IT shall be. It is the first ugly and strong enemy
+that rises against us, all future victory depending on victory over that.
+Kill it; and through all the rest of your life, what was once dreadful is
+your armor, and you are clothed with that conquest for every other, and
+helmed with its crest of fortitude for evermore.
+
+Alas, we have most of us to walk bare-headed; but that is the meaning of
+the story of Nemea,--worth laying to heart and thinking of sometimes,
+when you see a dish garnished with parsley, which was the crown at the
+Nemean games.
+
+174. How far, then, have we got in our list of the merits of Greek art
+now?
+
+ Sound knowledge.
+ Simple aims.
+ Mastered craft.
+ Vivid invention.
+ Strong common sense.
+ And eternally true and wise meaning.
+
+Are these not enough? Here is one more, then, which will find favor, I
+should think, with the British Lion. Greek art is never frightened at
+anything; it is always cool.
+
+175. It differs essentially from all other art, past or present, in this
+incapability of being frightened. Half the power and imagination of
+every other school depend on a certain feverish terror mingling with
+their sense of beauty,--the feeling that a child has in a dark room, or
+a sick person in seeing ugly dreams. But the Greeks never have ugly
+dreams. They cannot draw anything ugly when they try. Sometimes they
+put themselves to their wits'-end to draw an ugly thing,--the Medusa's
+head, for instance,--but they can't do it, not they, because nothing
+frightens them. They widen the mouth, and grind the teeth, and puff the
+cheeks, and set the eyes a goggling; and the thing is only ridiculous
+after all, not the least dreadful, for there is no dread in their hearts.
+Pensiveness; amazement; often deepest grief and desolateness. All these;
+but terror never. Everlasting calm in the presence of all fate; and joy
+such as they could win, not indeed in a perfect beauty, but in beauty at
+perfect rest! A kind of art this, surely, to be looked at, and thought
+upon sometimes with profit, even in these latter days.
+
+176. To be looked at sometimes. Not continually, and never as a model
+for imitation. For you are not Greeks; but, for better or worse, English
+creatures; and cannot do, even if it were a thousand times better worth
+doing, anything well, except what your English hearts shall prompt, and
+your English skies teach you. For all good art is the natural utterance
+of its own people in its own day.
+
+But also, your own art is a better and brighter one than ever this Greek
+art was. Many motives, powers, and insights have been added to those
+elder ones. The very corruptions into which we have fallen are signs of
+a subtle life, higher than theirs was, and therefore more fearful in its
+faults and death. Christianity has neither superceded, nor, by itself,
+excelled heathenism; but it has added its own good, won also by many a
+Nemean contest in dark valleys, to all that was good and noble in
+heathenism; and our present thoughts and work, when they are right, are
+nobler than the heathen's. And we are not reverent enough to them,
+because we possess too much of them. That sketch of four cherub heads
+from and English girl, by Sir Joshua Reynolds, at Kensington, is an
+incomparably finer thing than ever the Greeks did. Ineffably tender in
+the touch, yet Herculean in power; innocent, yet exalted in feeling; pure
+in color as a pearl; reserved and decisive in design, as this Lion crest,
+--if it alone existed of such,--if it were a picture by Zeuxis, the only
+one left in the world, and you build a shrine for it, and were allowed to
+see it only seven days in a year, it alone would teach you all of art
+that you ever needed to know. But you do not learn from this or any
+other such work, because you have not reverence enough for them, and are
+trying to learn from all at once, and from a hundred other masters
+besides.
+
+177. Here, then, is the practical advice which I would venture to deduce
+from what I have tried to show you. Use Greek art as a first, not a
+final, teacher. Learn to draw carefully from Greek work; above all, to
+place forms correctly, and to use light and shade tenderly. Never allow
+yourselves black shadows. It is easy to make things look round and
+projecting; but the things to exercise yourselves in are the placing of
+the masses, and the modelling of the lights. It is an admirable exercise
+to take a pale wash of color for all the shadows, never reinforcing it
+everywhere, but drawing the statue as if it were in far distance, making
+all the darks one flat pale tint. Then model from those into the lights,
+rounding as well as you can, on those subtle conditions. In your chalk
+drawings, separate the lights from the darks at once all over; then
+reinforce the darks slightly where absolutely necessary, and put your
+whole strength on the lights and their limits. Then, when you have
+learned to draw thoroughly, take one master for your painting, as you
+would have done necessarily in old times by being put into his school
+(were I to choose for you, it should be among six men only--Titian,
+Correggio, Paul Veronese, Velasquez, Reynolds, or Holbein). If you are a
+landscapist, Turner must be your only guide (for no other great landscape
+painter has yet lived); and having chosen, do your best to understand
+your own chosen master, and obey him, and no one else, till you have
+strength to deal with the nature itself round you, and then, be your own
+master, and see with your own eyes. If you have got masterhood or sight
+in you, that is the way to make the most of them; and if you have
+neither, you will at least be sound in your work, prevented from immodest
+and useless effort, and protected from vulgar and fantastic error.
+
+And so I wish you all, good speed, and the favor of Hercules and of the
+Muses; and to those who shall best deserve them, the crown of Parsley
+first and then of the Laurel.
+
+
+
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+ <title>
+ The Queen of the Air, by John Ruskin
+ </title>
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Queen of the Air, by John Ruskin
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Queen of the Air
+
+Author: John Ruskin
+
+Release Date: June 17, 2004 [eBook #12641]
+Last Updated: February 12, 2019
+
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEEN OF THE AIR***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Julie C. Sparks
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE QUEEN OF THE AIR
+ </h1>
+ <h3>
+ Being a Study of the Greek Myths of Cloud and Storm
+ </h3>
+ <h2>
+ BY JOHN RUSKIN, LL.D.
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_TOC"> TABLE OF CONTENTS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> THE QUEEN OF THE AIR. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> I. &mdash; ATHENA CHALINITIS. (Athena in the
+ Heavens.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> II. &mdash; ATHENA KERAMITIS. (Athena in the
+ Earth.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> III. &mdash; ATHENA ERGANE. (Athena in the
+ Heart.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_TOC" id="link2H_TOC"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ TABLE OF CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ PREFACE <br /><br /> I. ATHENA CHALINITIS. <br /> (Athena in the Heavens.)
+ <br /> Lecture on the Greek myths of Storm, given (partly) in University
+ <br /> College, London, March 9, 1869. <br /><br /> II. ATHENA KERAMITIS.
+ <br /> (Athena in the Earth.) <br /> Study, supplementary to the preceding
+ lecture, of the supposed and actual <br /> relations of Athena to the vital
+ force in material organism. <br /><br /> III. ATHENA ERGANE. <br /> (Athena
+ in the Heart.) <br /> Various notes relating to the Conception of Athena as
+ the Directress of <br /> the Imagination and Will. <br /> <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ My days and strength have lately been much broken; and I never more felt
+ the insufficiency of both than in preparing for the press the following
+ desultory memoranda on a most noble subject. But I leave them now as they
+ stand, for no time nor labor would be enough to complete them to my
+ contentment; and I believe that they contain suggestions which may be
+ followed with safety, by persons who are beginning to take interest in the
+ aspects of mythology, which only recent investigation has removed from the
+ region of conjecture into that of rational inquiry. I have some advantage,
+ also, from my field work, in the interpretation of myths relating to
+ natural phenomena; and I have had always near me, since we were at college
+ together, a sure, and unweariedly kind, guide, in my friend Charles
+ Newton, to whom we owe the finding of more treasure in mines of marble
+ than, were it rightly estimated, all California could buy. I must not,
+ however, permit the chance of his name being in any wise associated with
+ my errors. Much of my work as been done obstinately in my own way; and he
+ is never responsible for me, though he has often kept me right, or at
+ least enabled me to advance in a new direction. Absolutely right no one
+ can be in such matters; nor does a day pass without convincing every
+ honest student of antiquity of some partial error, and showing him better
+ how to think, and where to look. But I knew that there was no hope of my
+ being able to enter with advantage on the fields of history opened by the
+ splendid investigation of recent philologists, though I could qualify
+ myself, by attention and sympathy, to understand, here and there, a verse
+ of Homer's or Hesiod's, as the simple people did for whom they sang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even while I correct these sheets for press, a lecture by Professor
+ Tyndall has been put into my hands, which I ought to have heard last 16th
+ January, but was hindered by mischance; and which, I now find, completes,
+ in two important particulars, the evidence of an instinctive truth in
+ ancient symbolism; showing, first, that the Greek conception of an
+ ætherial element pervading space is justified by the closest reasoning of
+ modern physicists; and, secondly, that the blue of the sky, hitherto
+ thought to be caused by watery vapour, is, indeed, reflected from the
+ divided air itself; so that the bright blue of the eyes of Athena, and the
+ deep blue of her ægis, prove to be accurate mythic expressions of natural
+ phenomena which it is an uttermost triumph of recent science to have
+ revealed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, it would be difficult to imagine triumph more complete. To form,
+ "within an experimental tube, a bit of more perfect sky than the sky
+ itself!" here is magic of the finest sort! singularly reversed from that
+ of old time, which only asserted its competency to enclose in bottles
+ elemental forces that were&mdash;not of the sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me, in thanking Professor Tyndall for the true wonder of this piece of
+ work, ask his pardon, and that of all masters in physical science, for any
+ words of mine, either in the following pages or elsewhere, that may ever
+ seem to fail in the respect due to their great powers of thought, or in
+ the admiration due to the far scope of their discovery. But I will be
+ judged by themselves, if I have not bitter reason to ask them to teach us
+ more than yet they have taught.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This first day of May, 1869, I am writing where my work was begun
+ thirty-five years ago, within sight of the snows of the higher Alps. In
+ that half of the permitted life of man, I have seen strange evil brought
+ upon every scene that I best loved, or tried to make beloved by others.
+ The light which once flushed those pale summits with its rose at dawn, and
+ purple at sunset, is now umbered and faint; the air which once inlaid the
+ clefts of all their golden crags with azure is now defiled with languid
+ coils of smoke, belched from worse than volcanic fires; their very glacier
+ waves are ebbing, and their snows fading, as if hell had breathed on them;
+ the waters that once sank at their feet into crystalline rest are now
+ dimmed and foul, from deep to deep, and shore to shore. These are no
+ careless words&mdash;they are accurately, horribly, true. I know what the
+ Swiss lakes were; no pool of Alpine fountain at its source was clearer.
+ This morning, on the Lake of Geneva, at half a mile from the beach, I
+ could scarcely see my oar-blade a fathom deep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The light, the air, the waters, all defiled! How of the earth itself? Take
+ this one fact for type of honour done by the modern Swiss to the earth of
+ his native land. There used to be a little rock at the end of the avenue
+ by the port of Neuchâtel; there, the last marble of the foot of Jura,
+ sloping to the blue water, and (at this time of year) covered with bright
+ pink tufts of Saponaria. I went, three days since, to gather a blossom at
+ the place. The goodly native rock and its flowers were covered with the
+ dust and refuse of the town; but, in the middle of the avenue, was a
+ newly-constructed artificial rockery, with a fountain twisted through a
+ spinning spout, and an inscription on one of its loose-tumbled stones,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Aux Botanistes,
+ Le club Jurassique,"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Ah, masters of modern science, give me back my Athena out of your vials,
+ and seal, if it may be, once more, Asmodeus therein. You have divided the
+ elements, and united them; enslaved them upon the earth, and discerned
+ them in the stars. Teach us now, but this of them, which is all that man
+ need know,&mdash;that the Air is given to him for his life; and the Rain
+ to his thirst, and for his baptism; and the Fire for warmth; and the Sun
+ for sight; and the Earth for his Meat&mdash;and his Rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VEVAY, May 1, 1869.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE QUEEN OF THE AIR.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I. ATHENA CHALINITIS.* (Athena in the Heavens.)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ * "Athena the Restrainer." The name is given to her as having helped
+ Bellerophon to bridle Pegasus, the flying cloud.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ LECTURE ON THE GREEK MYTHS OF STORM, GIVEN (PARTLY) IN UNIVERSITY COLLEGE,
+ LONDON, MARCH 9, 1869.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 1. I will not ask your pardon for endeavoring to interest you in the
+ subject of Greek Mythology; but I must ask your permission to approach it
+ in a temper differing from that in which it is frequently treated. We
+ cannot justly interpret the religion of any people, unless we are prepared
+ to admit that we ourselves, as well as they, are liable to error in
+ matters of faith; and that the convictions of others, however singular,
+ may in some points have been well founded, while our own, however
+ reasonable, may be in some particulars mistaken. You must forgive me,
+ therefore, for not always distinctively calling the creeds of the past
+ "superstition," and the creeds of the present day "religion;" as well as
+ for assuming that a faith now confessed may sometimes be superficial, and
+ that a faith long forgotten may once have been sincere. It is the task of
+ the Divine to condemn the errors of antiquity, and of the philologists to
+ account for them; I will only pray you to read, with patience, and human
+ sympathy, the thoughts of men who lived without blame in a darkness they
+ could not dispel; and to remember that, whatever charge of folly may
+ justly attach to the saying, "There is no God," the folly is prouder,
+ deeper, and less pardonable, in saying, "There is no God but for me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. A myth, in its simplest definition, is a story with a meaning attached
+ to it other than it seems to have at first; and the fact that it has such
+ a meaning is generally marked by some of its circumstances being
+ extraordinary, or, in the common use of the word, unnatural. Thus if I
+ tell you that Hercules killed a water-serpent in the lake of Lerna, and if
+ I mean, and you understand, nothing more than that fact, the story,
+ whether true or false, is not a myth. But if by telling you this, I mean
+ that Hercules purified the stagnation of many streams from deadly
+ miasmata, my story, however simple, is a true myth; only, as, if I leftit
+ in that simplicity, you would probably look for nothing beyond, it will be
+ wise in me to surprise your attention by adding some singular
+ circumstance; for instance, that the water-snake had several heads, which
+ revived as fast as they were killed, and which poisoned even the foot that
+ trod upon them as they slept. And in proportion to the fulness of intended
+ meaning I shall probably multiply and refine upon these improbabilities;
+ as, suppose, if, instead of desiring only to tell you that Hercules
+ purified a marsh, I wished you to understand that he contended with the
+ venom and vapor of envy and evil ambition, whether in other men's souls or
+ in his own, and choked that malaria only by supreme toil,&mdash;I might
+ tell you that this serpent was formed by the goddess whose pride was in
+ the trial of Hercules; and that its place of abode as by a palm-tree; and
+ that for every head of it that was cut off, two rose up with renewed life;
+ and that the hero found at last that he could not kill the creature at all
+ by cutting its heads off or crushing them, but only by burning them down;
+ and that the midmost of them could not be killed even that way, but had to
+ be buried alive. Only in proportion as I mean more, I shall certainly
+ appear more absurd in my statement; and at last when I get unendurably
+ significant, all practical persons will agree that I was talking mere
+ nonsense from the beginning, and never meant anything at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. It is just possible, however, also, that the story-teller may all along
+ have meant nothing but what he said; and that, incredible as the events
+ may appear, he himself literally believed&mdash;and expected you also to
+ believe&mdash;all this about Hercules, without any latent moral or history
+ whatever. And it is very necessary, in reading traditions of this kind, to
+ determine, first of all, whether you are listening to a simple person, who
+ is relating what, at all events, he believes to be true, (and may,
+ therefore, possibly have been so to some extent), or to a reserved
+ philosopher, who is veiling a theory of the universe under the grotesque
+ of a fairy tale. It is, in general, more likely that the first supposition
+ should be the right one: simple and credulous persons are, perhaps
+ fortunately, more common than philosophers; and it is of the highest
+ importance that you should take their innocent testimony as it was meant,
+ and not efface, under the graceful explanation which your cultivated
+ ingenuity may suggest, either the evidence their story may contain (such
+ as it is worth) of an extraordinary event having really taken place, or
+ the unquestionable light which it will cast upon the character of the
+ person by whom it was frankly believed. And to deal with Greek religion
+ honestly, you must at once understand that this literal belief was, in the
+ mind of the general people, as deeply rooted as ours in the legends of our
+ own sacred book; and that a basis of unmiraculous event was as little
+ suspected, and an explanatory symbolism as rarely traced, by them, as by
+ us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You must, therefore, observe that I deeply degrade the position which such
+ a myth as that just referred to occupied in the Greek mind, by comparing
+ it (for fear of offending you) to our story of St. George and the Dragon.
+ Still, the analogy is perfect in minor respects; and though it fails to
+ give you any notion of the Greek faith, it will exactly illustrate the
+ manner in which faith laid hold of its objects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. This story of Hercules and the Hydra, then, was to the general Greek
+ mind, in its best days, a tale about a real hero and a real monster. Not
+ one in a thousand knew anything of the way in which the story had arisen,
+ any more than the English peasant generally is aware of the plebeian
+ original of St. George; or supposes that there were once alive in the
+ world, with sharp teeth and claws, real, and very ugly, flying dragons. On
+ the other hand, few persons traced any moral or symbolical meaning in the
+ story, and the average Greek was as far from imagining any interpretation
+ like that I have just given you, as an average Englishman is from seeing
+ is St. George the Red Cross Knight of Spenser, or in the Dragon the Spirit
+ of Infidelity. But, for all that, there was a certain undercurrent of
+ consciousness in all minds that the figures meant more than they at first
+ showed; and, according to each man's own faculties of sentiment, he judged
+ and read them; just as a Knight of the Garter reads more in the jewel on
+ his collar than the George and Dragon of a public-house expresses to the
+ host or to his customers. Thus, to the mean person the myth always meant
+ little; to the noble person, much; and the greater their familiarity with
+ it, the more contemptible it became to one, and the more sacred to the
+ other; until vulgar commentators explained it entirely away, while Virgil
+ made the crowning glory of his choral hymn to Hercules.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Around thee, powerless to infect thy soul,
+ Rose, in his crested crowd, the Lerna worm."
+
+ "Non te rationis egentem
+ Lernæus turbâ capitum circumstetit anguis."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And although, in any special toil of the hero's life, the moral
+ interpretation was rarely with definiteness attached to the event, yet in
+ the whole course of the life, not only for a symbolical meaning, but the
+ warrant for the existence of a real spiritual power, was apprehended of
+ all men. Hercules was no dead hero, to be remembered only as a victor over
+ monsters of the past&mdash;harmless now as slain. He was the perpetual
+ type and mirror of heroism, and its present and living aid against every
+ ravenous form of human trial and pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. But, if we seek to know more than this and to ascertain the manner in
+ which the story first crystallized into its shape, we shall find ourselves
+ led back generally to one or other of two sources&mdash;either to actual
+ historical events, represented by the fancy under figures personifying
+ them; or else to natural phenomena similarly endowed with life by the
+ imaginative power usually more or less under the influence of terror. The
+ historical myths we must leave the masters of history to follow; they, and
+ the events they record, being yet involved in great, though attractive and
+ penetrable, mystery. But the stars, and hills, and storms are with us now,
+ as they were with others of old; and it only needs that we look at them
+ with the earnestness of those childish eyes to understand the first words
+ spoken of them by the children of men, and then, in all the most beautiful
+ and enduring myths, we shall find, not only a literal story of a real
+ person, not only a parallel imagery of moral principle, but an underlying
+ worship of natural phenomena, out of which both have sprung, and in which
+ both forever remain rooted. Thus, from the real sun, rising and setting,&mdash;from
+ the real atmosphere, calm in its dominion of unfading blue, and fierce in
+ its descent of tempest,&mdash;the Greek forms first the idea of two
+ entirely personal and corporal gods, whose limbs are clothes in divine
+ flesh, and whose brows are crowned with divine beauty; yet so real that
+ the quiver rattles at their shoulder, and the chariot bends beneath their
+ weight. And, on the other hand, collaterally with these corporeal images,
+ and never for one instant separated from them, he conceives also two
+ omnipresent spiritual influences, as the sun, with a constant fire,
+ whatever in humanity is skilful and wise; and the other, like the living
+ air, breathes the calm of heavenly fortitude, and strength of righteous
+ anger, into every human breast that is pure and brave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Now, therefore, in nearly every myth of importance, and certainly in
+ every one of those which I shall speak to-night, you have to discern these
+ three structural parts,&mdash;the root and the two branches: the root, in
+ physical existence, sun, or sky, or cloud, or sea; then the personal
+ incarnation of that, becoming a trusted and companionable deity, with whom
+ you may walk hand in hand, as a child with its brother or its sister; and,
+ lastly, the moral significance of the image, which is in all the great
+ myths eternally and beneficently true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. The great myths; that is to say, myths made by great people. For the
+ first plain fact about myth-making is one which has been most strangely
+ lost sight of,&mdash;that you cannot make a myth unless you have something
+ to make it of. You cannot tell a secret which you don't know. If the myth
+ is about the sky, it must have been made by somebody who has looked at the
+ sky. If the myth is about justice and fortitude, it must have been made by
+ someone who knew what it was to be just or patient. According to the
+ quantity of understanding in the person will be the quantity of
+ significance in his fable; and the myth of a simple and ignorant race must
+ necessarily mean little, because a simple and ignorant race have little to
+ mean. So the great question in reading a story is always, not what wild
+ hunter dreamed, or what childish race first dreaded it; but what wise man
+ first perfectly told, and what strong people first perfectly lived by it.
+ And the real meaning of any myth is that which it has at the noblest age
+ of the nation among whom it is current. The farther back you pierce, the
+ less significance you will find, until you come to the first narrow
+ thought, which, indeed, contains the germ of the accomplished tradition;
+ but only as the seed contains the flower. As the intelligence and passion
+ of the race develop, they cling to and nourish their beloved and sacred
+ legend; leaf by leaf it expands under the touch of more pure affections,
+ and more delicate imagination, until at last the perfect fable burgeons
+ out into symmetry of milky stem and honied bell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. But through whatever changes it may pass, remember that our right
+ reading of it is wholly dependent on the materials we have in our own
+ minds for an intelligent answering sympathy. If it first arose among a
+ people who dwelt under stainless skies, and measures their journeys by
+ ascending and declining stars, we certainly cannot read their story, if we
+ have never seen anything above us in the day but smoke, nor anything
+ around us in the night but candles. If the tale goes on to change clouds
+ or planets into living creatures,&mdash;to invest them with fair forms and
+ inflame them with mighty passions,&mdash;we can only understand the story
+ of the human-hearted things, in so far as we ourselves take pleasure in
+ the perfectness of visible form, or can sympathize, by an effort of
+ imagination, with the strange people who had other loves than those of
+ wealth, and other interests than those of commerce. And, lastly, if the
+ myth complete itself to the fulfilled thoughts of the nation, by
+ attributing to the gods, whom they have carved out of their fantasy,
+ continual presence with their own souls; and their every effort for good
+ is finally guided by the sense of the companionship, the praise, and the
+ pure will of immortals, we shall be able to follow them into this last
+ circle of their faith only in the degree in which the better parts of our
+ own beings have been also stirred by the aspects of nature, or
+ strengthened by her laws. It may be easy to prove that the ascent of
+ Apollo in his chariot signifies nothing but the rising of the sun. But
+ what does the sunrise itself signify to us? If only languid return to
+ frivolous amusement, or fruitless labor, it will, indeed, not be easy for
+ us to conceive the power, over a Greek, of the name of Apollo. But if, fir
+ us also, as for the Greek, the sunrise means daily restoration to the
+ sense of passionate gladness and of perfect life&mdash;if it means the
+ thrilling of new strength through every nerve,&mdash;the shedding over us
+ of a better peace than the peace of night, in the power of the dawn,&mdash;and
+ the purging of evil vision and fear by the baptism of its dew;&mdash;if
+ the sun itself is an influence, to us also, of spiritual good&mdash;and
+ becomes thus in reality, not in imagination, to us also, a spiritual
+ power,&mdash;we may then soon over-pass the narrow limit of conception
+ which kept that power impersonal, and rise with the Greek to the thought
+ of an angel who rejoiced as a strong man to run his course, whose voice
+ calling to life and to labor rang round the earth, and whose going forth
+ was to the ends of heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. The time, then, at which I shall take up for you, as well as I can
+ decipher it, the traditions of the gods of Greece, shall be near the
+ beginning of its central and formed faith,&mdash;about 500 B.C.,&mdash;a
+ faith of which the character is perfectly represented by Pindar and
+ Æschylus, who are both of them outspokenly religious, and entirely sincere
+ men; while we may always look back to find the less developed thought of
+ the preceding epoch given by Homer, in a more occult, subtle,
+ half-instinctive, and involuntary way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. Now, at that culminating period of the Greek religion, we find, under
+ one governing Lord of all things, four subordinate elemental forces, and
+ four spiritual powers living in them and commanding them. The elements are
+ of course the well-known four of the ancient world,&mdash; the earth, the
+ waters, the fire, and the air; and the living powers of them are Demeter,
+ the Latin Ceres; Poseidon, the Latin Neptune; Apollo, who has retained
+ always his Greek name; and Athena, the Latin Minerva. Each of these are
+ descended from, or changed from, more ancient, and therefore more mystic,
+ deities of the earth and heaven, and of a finer element of æther supposed
+ to be beyond the heavens;* but at this time we find the four quite
+ definite, both in their kingdoms and in their personalities. They are the
+ rulers of the earth that we tread upon, and the air that we breathe; and
+ are with us closely, in their vivid humanity, as the dust that they
+ animate, and the winds that they bridle. I shall briefly define for you
+ the range of their separate dominions, and then follow, as far as we have
+ time, the most interesting of the legends which relate to the queen of the
+ air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * And by modern science now also asserted, and with probability argued, to
+ exist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. The rule of the first spirit, Demeter, the earth mother, is over the
+ earth, first, as the origin of all life,&mdash;the dust from whence we
+ were taken; secondly, as the receiver of all things back at last into
+ silence &mdash;"Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return." And,
+ therefore, as the most tender image of this appearing and fading life, in
+ the birth and fall of flowers, her daughter Proserpine plays in the fields
+ of Sicily, and thence is torn away into darkness, and becomes the Queen of
+ Fate&mdash;not merely of death, but of the gloom which closes over and
+ ends, not beauty only, but sin, and chiefly of sins the sin against the
+ life she gave; so that she is, in her highest power, Persephone, the
+ avenger and purifier of blood&mdash;"The voice of thy brother's blood
+ cries to me out of the ground." Then, side by side with this queen of the
+ earth, we find a demigod of agriculture by the plough&mdash;the lord of
+ grain, or of the thing ground by the mill. And it is a singular proof of
+ the simplicity of Greek character at this noble time, that of all
+ representations left to us of their deities by their art, few are so
+ frequent, and none perhaps so beautiful, as the symbol of this spirit of
+ agriculture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Then the dominant spirit of the element water is Neptune, but
+ subordinate to him are myriads of other water spirits, of whom Nereus is
+ the chief, with Palæmon, and Leucothea, the "white lady" of the sea; and
+ Thetis, and nymphs innumerable who, like her, could "suffer a sea change,"
+ while the river deities had each independent power, according to the
+ preciousness of their streams to the cities fed by them,&mdash;the
+ "fountain Arethuse, and thou, honoured flood, smooth sliding Mincius,
+ crowned with vocal reeds." And, spiritually, this king of the waters is
+ lord of the strength and daily flow of human life&mdash;he gives it
+ material force and victory; which as the meaning of the dedication of the
+ hair, as the sign of the strength of life, to the river or the native
+ land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. Demeter, then, over the earth, and its giving and receiving of life.
+ Neptune over the waters, and the flow and force of life,&mdash;always
+ among the Greeks typified by the horse, which was to them as a crested
+ sea-wave, animated and bridled. Then the third element, fire, has set over
+ it two powers: over earthly fire, the assistant of human labor, is set
+ Hephæstus, lord of all labor in which is the flush and the sweat of the
+ brow; and over heavenly fire, the source of day, is set Apollo, the spirit
+ of all kindling, purifying, and illuminating intellectual wisdom, each of
+ these gods having also their subordinate or associated powers,&mdash;
+ servant, or sister, or companion muse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Then, lastly, we come to the myth which is to be our subject of closer
+ inquiry,&mdash;the story of Athena and of the deities subordinate to her.
+ This great goddess, the Neith of the Egyptians, the Athena or Athenaia of
+ the Greeks, and, with broken power, half usurped by Mars, the Minerva of
+ the Latins, is, physically, the queen of the air; having supreme power
+ both over its blessing of calm, and wrath of storm; and, spiritually, she
+ is the queen of the breath of man, first of the bodily breathing which is
+ life to his blood, and strength to his arm in battle; and then of the
+ mental breathing, or inspiration, which is his moral health and habitual
+ wisdom; wisdom of conduct and of the heart, as opposed to the wisdom of
+ imagination and the brain; moral, as distinct from intellectual; inspired,
+ as distinct from illuminated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. By a singular and fortunate, though I believe wholly accidental,
+ coincidence, the heart-virtue, of which she is the spirit, was separated
+ by the ancients into four divisions, which have since obtained acceptance
+ from all men as rightly discerned, and have received, as if from the
+ quarters of the four winds of which Athena is the natural queen, the name
+ of "Cardinal" virtues: namely, Prudence (the right seeing, and foreseeing,
+ of events through darkness); Justice (the righteous bestowal of favor and
+ of indignation); Fortitude (patience under trial by pain); and Temperance
+ (patience under trial by pleasure). With respect to these four virtues,
+ the attributes of Athena are all distinct. In her prudence, or sight in
+ darkness, she is "Glaukopis," "owl-eyed."* In her justice, which is the
+ dominant virtue, she wears two robes, one of light, and one of darkness;
+ the robe of light, saffron color, or the color of the daybreak, falls to
+ her feet, covering her wholly with favor and love,&mdash;the calm of the
+ sky in blessing; it is embroidered along its edge with her victory over
+ the giants (the troublous powers of the earth), and the likeness of it was
+ woven yearly by the Athenian maidens and carried to the temple of their
+ own Athena, not to the Parthenon, that was the temple of all the world's
+ Athena,&mdash;but this they carried to the temple of their own only one
+ who loved them, and stayed with them always. Then her robe of indignation
+ is worn on her breast and left arm only, fringed with fatal serpents, and
+ fastened with Gorgonian cold, turning men to stone; physically, the
+ lightning and hail of chastisement by storm. Then in her fortitude she
+ wears the crested and unstooping hemlet;** and lastly, in her temperance,
+ she is the queen of maidenhood&mdash;stainless as the air of heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * There are many other meanings in the epithet; see farther on, §91, pp.
+ 133, 134. ** I am compelled, for clearness' sake, to mark only one meaning
+ at a time. Athena's helmet is sometimes a mask, sometimes a sign of anger,
+ sometimes of the highest light of æther; but I cannot speak of all this at
+ once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. But all these virtues mass themselves in the Greek mind into the two
+ main ones,&mdash;of Justice, or noble passion, and Fortitude, or noble
+ patience; and of these, the chief powers of Athena, the Greeks have
+ divinely written for them, and for all men after them, two mighty songs,
+ &mdash;one, of the Menis,* Mens, passion, or zeal, of Athena, breathed
+ into a mortal whose name is "Ache of heart," and whose short life is only
+ the incarnate brooding and burst of storm; and the other is of the
+ foresight and fortitude of Athena, maintained by her in the heart of a
+ mortal whose name is given to him from a longer grief, Odysseus, the full
+ of sorrow, the much enduring, and the long-suffering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * This first word of the Iliad, Menis, afterwards passes into the Latin
+ Mens; is the root of the Latin name for Athena, "Minerva," and so the root
+ of the English "mind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. The minor expressions by the Greeks in word, in symbol, and in
+ religious service, of this faith, are so many and so beautiful, that I
+ hope some day to gather at least a few of them into a separate body of
+ evidence respecting the power of Athena, and of its relations to the
+ ethical conception of the Homeric poems, or, rather, to their ethical
+ nature; for they are not conceived didactically, but are didactic in their
+ essence, as all good art is. There is an increasing insensibility to this
+ character, and even an open denial of it, among us now which is one of the
+ most curious errors of modernism,&mdash;the peculiar and judicial
+ blindness of an age which, having long practised art and poetry for the
+ sake of pleasure only, has become incapable of reading their language when
+ they were both didactic; and also, having been itself accustomed to a
+ professedly didactic teaching, which yet, for private interests,
+ studiously avoids collision with every prevalent vice of its day (and
+ especially with avarice), has become equally dead to the intensely ethical
+ conceptions of a race which habitually divided all men into two broad
+ classes of worthy or worthless,&mdash;good, and good for nothing. And even
+ the celebrated passage of Horace about the Iliad is now misread or
+ disbelieved, as if it were impossible that the Iliad could be instructive
+ because it is not like a sermon. Horce does not say that it is like a
+ sermon, and would have been still less likely to say so if he ever had had
+ the advantage of hearing a sermon. "I have been reading that story of Troy
+ again" (thus he writes to a noble youth of Rome whom he cared for),
+ "quietly at Præneste, while you have been busy at Rome; and truly I think
+ that what is base and what is noble, and what useful and useless, may be
+ better learned from that, than from all Chrysippus' and Crantor's talk put
+ together."* Which is profoundly true, not of the Iliad only, but of all
+ other great art whatsoever; for all pieces of such art are didactic in the
+ purest way, indirectly and occultly, so that, first, you shall only be
+ bettered by them if you are already hard at work in bettering yourself;
+ and when you are bettered by them, it shall be partly with a general
+ acceptance of their influence, so constant and subtile that you shall be
+ no more conscious of it than of the healthy digestion of food; and partly
+ by a gift of unexpected truth, which you shall only find by slow mining
+ for it,&mdash;which is withheld on purpose, and close-locked, that you may
+ not get it till you have forged the key of it in a furnace of your own
+ heating. And this withholding of their meaning is continual, and
+ confessed, in the great poets. Thus Pindar says of himself: "There is many
+ an arrow in my quiver, full of speech to the wise, but, for the many, they
+ need interpreters." And neither Pindar, nor Æschylus, nor Hesiod, nor
+ Homer, nor any of the greater poets or teachers of any nation or time,
+ ever spoke but with intentional reservation; nay, beyond this, there is
+ often a meaning which they themselves cannot interpert [sic],&mdash;which
+ it may be for ages long after them to intrepert [sic],&mdash;in what they
+ said, so far as it recorded true imaginative vision. For all the greatest
+ myths have been seen by the men who tell them, involuntarily and
+ passively,&mdash;seen by them with as great distinctness (and in some
+ respects, though not in all, under conditions as far beyond the control of
+ their will) as a dream sent to any of us by night when we dream clearest;
+ and it is this veracity of vision that could not be refused, and of moral
+ that could not be foreseen, which in modern historical inquiry has been
+ left wholly out of account; being indeed the thing which no merely
+ historical investigator can understand, or even believe; for it belongs
+ exclusively to the creative or artistic group of men, and can only be
+ interpreted by those of their race, who themselves in some measure also
+ see visions and dream dreams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Note, once for all, that unless when there is question about some
+ particular expression, I never translate literally, but give the real
+ force of what is said, as I best can, freely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So that you may obtain a more truthful idea of the nature of Greek
+ religion and legend from the poems of Keats, and the nearly as beautiful,
+ and, in general grasp of subject, far more powerful, recent work of
+ Morris, than from frigid scholarship, however extensive. Not that the
+ poet's impressions or renderings of things are wholly true, but their
+ truth is vital, not formal. They are like sketches from the life by
+ Reynolds or Gainsborough, which may be demonstrably inaccurate or
+ imaginary in many traits, and indistinct in others, yet will be in the
+ deepest sense like, and true; while the work of historical analysis is too
+ often weak with loss, through the very labor of its miniature touches, or
+ useless in clumsy and vapid veracity of externals, and complacent security
+ of having done all that is required for the portrait, when it has measured
+ the breadth of the forehead and the length of the nose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. The first of requirements, then, for the right reading of myths, is
+ the understanding of the nature of all true vision by noble persons;
+ namely, that it is founded on constant laws common to all human nature;
+ that it perceives, however darkly, things which are for all ages true;
+ that we can only understand it so far as we have some perception of the
+ same truth; and that its fulness is developed and manifested more and more
+ by the reverberation of it from minds of the same mirror-temper, in
+ succeeding ages. You will understand Homer better by seeing his reflection
+ in Dante, as you may trace new forms and softer colors in a hillside,
+ redoubled by a lake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shall be able partly to show you, even to-night, how much, in the
+ Homeric vision of Athena, has been made clearer by the advance of time,
+ being thus essentially and eternally true; but I must in the outset
+ indicate the relation to that central thought of the imagery of the
+ inferior deities of storm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. And first I will take the myth of Æolus (the "sage Hippotades" of
+ Milton), as it is delivered pure by Homer from the early times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why do you suppose Milton calls him "sage"? One does not usually think of
+ the winds as very thoughtful or deliberate powers. But hear Homer: "Then
+ we came to the Æolian island, and there dwelt Æolus Hippotades, dear to
+ the deathless gods; there he dwelt in a floating island, and round it was
+ a wall of brass that could not be broken; and the smooth rock of it ran up
+ sheer. To whom twelve children were born in the sacred chambers,&mdash;six
+ daughters and six strong sons; and they dwell foreer with their beloved
+ father and their mother, strict in duty; and with them are laid up a
+ thousand benefits; and the misty house around them rings with fluting all
+ the day long." Now, you are to note first, in this description, the wall
+ of brass and the sheer rock. You will find, throughout the fables of the
+ tempest-group, that the brazen wall and the precipice (occurring in
+ another myth as the brazen tower of Danaë) are always connected with the
+ idea of the towering cloud lighted by the sun, here truly described as a
+ floating island. Secondly, you hear that all treasures were laid up in
+ them; therefore, you know this Æolus is lord of the beneficent winds ("he
+ bringeth the wind out of his treasuries"); and presently afterwards Homer
+ calls him the "steward" of the winds, the master of the store-house of
+ them. And this idea of gifts and preciousness in the winds of heaven is
+ carried out in the well-known sequel of the fable: Æolus gives them to
+ Ulysses, all but one, bound in leathern bags, with a glittering cord of
+ silver; and so like bags of treasure that the sailors think they are so,
+ and open them to see. And when Ulysses is thus driven back to Æolus, and
+ prays him again to help him, note the deliberate words of the king's
+ refusal,&mdash;"Did I not," says he, "send thee on thy way heartily, that
+ thou mightest reach thy country, thy home, and whatever is dear to thee?
+ It is not lawful for me again to send forth favorably on his journey a man
+ hated by the happy gods." This idea of the beneficence of Æolus remains to
+ the latest times, though Virgil, by adopting the vulgar change of the
+ cloud island into Lipari, has lost it a little; but even when it is
+ finally explained away by Diodorus, Æolus is still a kind-hearted monarch,
+ who lived on the coast of Sorrento, invented the use of sails, and
+ established a system of storm signals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. Another beneficent storm-power, Boreas, occupies an important place in
+ early legend, and a singularly principal one in art; and I wish I could
+ read to you a passage of Plato about the legend of Boreas and Oreithyia,*
+ and the breeze and shade of the Ilissus&mdash;notwithstannding its severe
+ reflection upon persons who waste their time on mythological studies; but
+ I must go on at once to the fable with which you are all generally
+ familiar, that of the Harpies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Translated by Max Müller in the opening of his essay on "Comparative
+ Mythology."&mdash;Chips from a German Workshop, vol. ii.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is always connected with that of Boreas or the north wind, because
+ the two sons of Boreas are enemies of the Harpies, and drive them away
+ into frantic flight. The myth in its first literal form means only the
+ battle between the fair north wind and the foul south one: the two
+ Harpies, "Stormswift" and "Swiftfoot," are the sisters of the rainbow;
+ that is to say, they are the broken drifts of the showery south wind, and
+ the clear north wind drives them back; but they quickly take a deeper and
+ more malignant significance. You know the short, violent, spiral gusts
+ that lift the dust before coming rain: the Harpies get identified first
+ with these, and then with more violent whirlwinds, and so they are called
+ "Harpies," "the Snatchers," and are thought of as entirely destructive;
+ their manner of destroying being twofold,&mdash;by snatching away, and by
+ defiling and polluting. This is a month in which you may really see a
+ small Harpy at her work almost whenever you choose. The first time that
+ there is threatening of rain after two or three days of fine weather,
+ leave your window well open to the street, and some books or papers on the
+ table; and if you do not, in a little while, know what the Harpies mean,
+ and how they snatch, and how they defile, I'll give up my Greek myths.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. That is the physical meaning. It is now easy to find the mental one.
+ You must all have felt the expression of ignoble anger in those fitful
+ gusts of storm. There is a sense of provocation in their thin and
+ senseless fury, wholly different from the nobler anger of the greater
+ tempests. Also, they seem useless and unnatural, and the Greek thinks of
+ them always as vile in malice, and opposed, therefore, to the Sons of
+ Boreas, who are kindly winds, that fill sails, and wave harvests,&mdash;full
+ of bracing health and happy impulses. From this lower and merely greater
+ terror, always associated with their whirling motion, which is indeed
+ indicative of the most destructive winds; and they are thus related to the
+ nobler tempests, as Charybdis to the sea; they are devouring and
+ desolating, making all things disappear that come in their grasp; and so,
+ spiritually, they are the gusts of vexatious, fretful, lawless passion,
+ vain and overshadowing, discontented and lamenting, meager and insane,&mdash;
+ spirits of wasted energy, and wandering disease, and unappeased famine,
+ and unsatisfied hope. So you have, on the one side, the winds of
+ prosperity and health, on the other, of ruin and sickness. Understand
+ that, once, deeply,&mdash;any who have ever known the weariness of vain
+ desires, the pitiful, unconquerable, coiling and recoiling famine and
+ thirst of heart,&mdash;and you will know what was in the sound of the
+ Harpy Celæno's shriek from her rock; and why, in the seventh circle of the
+ "Inferno," the Harpies make their nests in the warped branches of the
+ trees that are the souls of suicides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. Now you must always be prepared to read Greek legends as you trace
+ threads through figures on a silken damask: the same thread runs through
+ the web, but it makes part of different figures. Joined with other colors
+ you hardly recognize it, and in different lights it is dark or light. Thus
+ the Greek fables blend and cross curiously in different directions, till
+ they knit themselves into an arabesque where sometimes you cannot tell
+ black from purple, nor blue from emerald&mdash;they being all the truer
+ for this, because the truths of emotion they represent are interwoven in
+ the same way, but all the more difficult to read, and to explain in any
+ order. Thus the Harpies, as they represent vain desire, are connected with
+ the Sirens, who are the spirits of constant desire; so that it is
+ difficult sometimes in early art to know which are meant, both being
+ represented alike as birds with women's heads; only the Sirens are the
+ great constant desires&mdash;the infinite sicknesses of heart&mdash;which,
+ rightly placed, give life, and wrongly placed, waste it away; so that
+ there are two groups of Sirens, one noble and saving, as the other is
+ fatal. But there are no animating or saving Harpies; their nature is
+ always vexing and full of weariness, and thus they are curiously connected
+ with the whole group of legends about Tantalus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33.* We all know what it is to be tantalized; but we do not often think of
+ asking what Tantalus was tantalized for&mdash;what he had done, to be
+ forever kept hungry in sight of food. Well; he had not been condemned to
+ this merely for being a glutton. By Dante the same punishment is assigned
+ to simple gluttony, to purge it away; but the sins of Tantalus were of a
+ much wider and more mysterious kind. There are four great sins attributed
+ to him: one, stealing the food of the gods to give it to men; another,
+ sacrificing his son to feed the gods themselves (it may remind you for a
+ moment of what I was telling you of the earthly character of Demeter,
+ that, while the other gods all refuse, she, dreaming about her lost
+ daughter, eats part of the shoulder of Pelops before she knows what she is
+ doing); another sin is, telling the secrets of the gods; and only the
+ fourth&mdash;stealing the golden dog of Pandareos&mdash;is connected with
+ gluttony. The special sense of this myth is marked by Pandareos receiving
+ the happy privilege of never being troubled with indigestion; the dog, in
+ general, however mythically represents all utter senseless and carnal
+ desires; mainly that of gluttony; and in the mythic sense of Hades&mdash;that
+ is to say, so far as it represents spiritual ruin in this life, and not a
+ literal hell&mdash;the dog Cerberus as its gatekeeper&mdash;with this
+ special marking of his character of sensual passion, that he fawns on all
+ those who descend, but rages against all who would return (the Virgilian
+ "facilis descendus" being a later recognition of this mythic character of
+ Hades); the last labor of Hercules is the dragging him up to the light;
+ and in some sort he represents the voracity or devouring of Hades itself;
+ and the mediæval representation of the mouth of hell perpetuates the same
+ thought. Then, also, the power of evil passion is partly associated with
+ the red and scorching light of Sirius, as opposed to the pure light of the
+ sun: he is the dog-star of ruin; and hence the continual Homeric dwelling
+ upon him, and comparison of the flame of anger to his swarthy light; only,
+ in his scorching, it is thirst, not hunger, over which he rules
+ physically; so that the fable of Icarius, his first master, corresponds,
+ among the Greeks, to the legend of the drunkenness of Noah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Printer's error: should be 23.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of Actæon, the raging death of Hecuba, and the tradition of the
+ white dog which ate part of Hercules' first sacrifice, and so gave name to
+ the Cynosarges, are all various phases of the same thought,&mdash;the
+ Greek notion of the dog being throughout confused between its serviceable
+ fidelity, its watchfulness, its foul voracity, shamelessness, and deadly
+ madness, while with the curious reversal or recoil of the meaning which
+ attaches itself to nearly every great myth,&mdash;and which we shall
+ presently see notably exemplified in the relations of the serpent to
+ Athena,&mdash;the dog becomes in philosophy a type of severity and
+ abstinence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. It would carry us too far aside were I to tell you the story of
+ Pandareos' dog&mdash;or rather of Jupiter's dog, for Pandareos was its
+ guardian only; all that bears on our present purpose is that the guardian
+ of this golden dog had three daughters, one of whom was subject to the
+ power of the Sirens, and is turned into a nightingale; and the other two
+ were subject to the power of the Harpies, and this was what happened to
+ them: They were very beautiful, and they were beloved by the gods in their
+ youth, and all the great goddesses were anxious to bring them up rightly.
+ Of all types of young ladies' education, there is nothing so splendid as
+ that of the younger daughters of Pandareos. They have literally the four
+ greatest goddesses for their governesses. Athena teaches them domestic
+ accomplishments, how to weave, and sew, and the like; Artemis teaches them
+ to hold themselves up straight; Hera, how to behave proudly and
+ oppressively to company; and Aphrodite, delightful governess, feeds them
+ with cakes and honey all day long. All goes well, until just the time when
+ they are going to be brought out; then there is a great dispute whom they
+ are to marry, and in the midst of it they are carried off by the Harpies,
+ given by them to be slaves to the Furies, and never seen more. But of
+ course there is nothing in Greek myths; and one never heard of such things
+ as vain desires, and empty hopes, and clouded passions, defiling and
+ snatching away the souls of maidens, in a London season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have no time to trace for you any more harpy legends, though they are
+ full of the most curious interest; but I may confirm for you my
+ interpretation of this one, and prove its importance in the Greek mind, by
+ noting that Polygnotus painted these maidens, in his great religious
+ series of paintings at Delphi, crowned with flowers, and playing at dice;
+ and that Penelope remembers them in her last fit of despair, just before
+ the return of Ulysses, and prays bitterly that she may be snatched away at
+ once into nothingness by the Harpies, like Pandareos' daughters, rather
+ than be tormented longer by her deferred hope, and anguish of disappointed
+ love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. I have hitherto spoken only of deities of the winds. We pass now to a
+ far more important group, the deities of cloud. Both of these are
+ subordinate to the ruling power of the air, as the demigods of the
+ fountains and minor seas are to the great deep; but, as the
+ cloud-firmament detaches itself more from the air, and has a wider range
+ of ministry than the minor streams and seas, the highest cloud deity,
+ Hermes, has a rank more equal with Athena than Nereus or Proteus with
+ Neptune; and there is greater difficulty in tracing his character, because
+ his physical dominion over the clouds can, of course, be asserted only
+ where clouds are; and, therefore, scarcely at all in Egypt;* so that the
+ changes which Hermes undergoes in becoming a Greek from an Egyptian and
+ Phœnician god, are greater than in any other case of adopted tradition In
+ Egypt Hermes is a deity of historical record, and a conductor of the dead
+ to judgment; the Greeks take away much of this historical function,
+ assigning it to the Muses; but, in investing him with the physical power
+ over clouds, they give him that which the Muses disdain,&mdash;the power
+ of concealment and of theft. The snatching away by the Harpies is with
+ brute force; but the snatching away by the clouds is connected with the
+ thought of hiding, and of making things seem to be what they are not; so
+ that Hermes is the god of lying, as he is of mist; and yet with this
+ ignoble function of making things vanish and disappear is connected the
+ remnant of his grand Egyptian authority of leading away souls in the cloud
+ of death (the actual dimness of sight caused by mortal wounds physically
+ suggesting the darkness and descent of clouds, and continually being so
+ described in the Iliad); while the sense of the need of guidance on the
+ untrodden road follows necessarily. You cannot but remember how this
+ thought of cloud guidance, and cloud receiving souls at death, has been
+ elsewhere ratified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * I believe that the conclusions of recent scholarship are generally
+ opposed to the Herodotean ideas of any direct acceptance by the Greeks of
+ Egyptian myths: and very certainly, Greek art is developed by giving the
+ veracity and simplicity of real life to Eastern savage grotesque; and not
+ by softening the severity of pure Egyptian design. But it is of no
+ consequence whether one conception was, or was not, in this case, derived
+ from the other; my object is only to mark the essential difference between
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. Without following that higher clue, I will pass to the lovely group of
+ myths connected with the birth of Hermes on the Greek mountains. You know
+ that the valley of Sparta is one of the noblest mountain ravines in the
+ world, and that the western flank of it is formed by an unbroken chain of
+ crags, forty miles long, rising, opposite Sparta, to a height of 8,000
+ feet, and known as the chain of Taygetus. Now, the nymph from whom that
+ mountain ridge is named was the mother of Lacedæmon; therefore the mythic
+ ancestress of the Spartan race. She is the nymph Taygeta, and one of the
+ seven stars of spring; one of those Pleiades of whom is the question to
+ Job,&mdash;"Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the
+ bands of Orion?" "The sweet influences of Pleiades," of the stars of
+ spring,&mdash;nowhere sweeter than among the pine-clad slopes of the hills
+ of Sparta and Arcadia, when he snows of their higher summits, beneath the
+ sunshine of April, fell into fountains, and rose into clouds; and in every
+ ravine was a newly awakened voice of waters,&mdash;soft increase of
+ whisper among its sacred stones; and on every crag its forming and fading
+ veil of radiant cloud; temple above temple, of the divine marble that no
+ tool can pollute, nor ruin undermine. And, therefore, beyond this central
+ valley, this great Greek vase of Arcadia, on the "hollow" mountain,
+ Cyllene, or "pregnant" mountain, called also "cold," because there the
+ vapors rest,* and born of the eldest of those stars of spring, that Maia,
+ from whom your own month of May has its name, bringing to you, in the
+ green of her garlands, and the white of her hawthorn, the unrecognized
+ symbols of the pastures and the wreathed snows of Arcadia, where long ago
+ she was queen of stars: there, first cradled and wrapt in
+ swaddling-clothes; then raised, in a moment of surprise, into his
+ wandering power,&mdash;is born the shepherd of the clouds, winged-footed
+ and deceiving,&mdash;blinding the eyes of Argus,&mdash;escaping from the
+ grasp of Apollo&mdash;restless messenger between the highest sky and
+ topmost earth&mdash; "the herald Mercury, new lighted on a heaven-kissing
+ hill."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * On the altar of Hermes on its summit, as on that of the Lacinian Hera,
+ no wind ever stirred the ashes. By those altars, the Gods of Heaven were
+ appeased, and all their storms at rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Now, it will be wholly impossible, at present, to trace for you any of
+ the minor Greek expressions of this thought, except only that Mercury, as
+ the cloud shepherd, is especially called Eriophoros, the wool-bearer. You
+ will recollect the name from the common woolly rush "eriophorum" which has
+ a cloud of silky seed; and note also that he wears distinctively the flap
+ cap, petasos, named from a word meaning "to expand;" which shaded from the
+ sun, and is worn on journeys. You have the epithet of mountains
+ "cloud-capped" as an established form with every poet, and the Mont Pilate
+ of Lucerne is named from a Latin word signifying specially a woollen cap;
+ but Mercury has, besides, a general Homeric epithet, curiously and
+ intensely concentrated in meaning, "the profitable or serviceable by
+ wool,"* that is to say, by shepherd wealth; hence, "pecuniarily," rich or
+ serviceable, and so he passes at last into a general mercantile deity;
+ while yet the cloud sense of the wool is retained by Homer always, so that
+ he gives him this epithet when it would otherwise have been quite
+ meaningless (in Iliad, xxiv. 440), when he drives Priam's chariot, and
+ breathes force into his horses, precisely as we shall find Athena drive
+ Diomed; and yet the serviceable and profitable sense&mdash;and something
+ also of gentle and soothing character in the mere wool-softness, as used
+ for dress, and religious rites&mdash;is retained also in the epithet, and
+ thus the gentle and serviceable Hermes is opposed to the deceitful one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * I am convinced that the 'eri' in 'eriounios' is not intensitive, but
+ retained from 'erion'; but even if I am wrong in thinking this, the
+ mistake is of no consequence with respect to the general force of the term
+ as meaning the profitableness of Hermes. Athena's epithet of 'ageleia' has
+ a parallel significance. [Transcriber's note: words inside single
+ apostrophes are Greek, and use the Greek alphabet.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. In connection with this driving of Priam's chariot, remember that as
+ Autolycus is the son of Hermes the Deceiver, Myrtilus (the Auriga of the
+ Stars) is the son of Hermes the Guide. The name Hermes itself means
+ impulse; and he is especially the shepherd of the flocks of the sky, in
+ driving, or guiding, or stealing them; and yet his great name,
+ Argeiphontes, not only&mdash;as in different passages of the olden poets&mdash;means
+ "Shining White," which is said of him as being himself the silver cloud
+ lighted by the sun; but "Argus-killer," the killer of rightness, which is
+ said of him as he veils the sky, and especially the stars, which are the
+ eyes of Argus; or, literally, eyes of brightness, which Juno, who is, with
+ Jupiter, part of the type of highest heaven, keeps in her peacock's train.
+ We know that this interpretation is right, from a passage in which
+ Euripides describes the shield of Hippomedon, which bore for his sign,
+ "Argus the all-seeing, covered with eyes; open towards the rising of the
+ stars and closed towards their setting."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus Hermes becomes the spirit of the movement of the sky or
+ firmament; not merely the fast flying of the transitory cloud, but the
+ great motion of the heavens and stars themselves. Thus, in his highest
+ power, he corresponds to the "primo mobile" of the later Italian
+ philosophy, and, in his simplest, is the guide of all mysterious and
+ cloudy movement, and of all successful subtleties. Perhaps the prettiest
+ minor recognition of his character is when, on the night foray of Ulysses
+ and Diomed, Ulysses wear the helmet stolen by Autolycus, the son of
+ Hermes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. The position in the Greek mind of Hermes as the lord of cloud is,
+ however, more mystic and ideal than that of any other deity, just on
+ account of the constant and real presence of the cloud itself under
+ different forms, giving rise to all kinds of minor fables. The play of the
+ Greek imagination in this direction is so wide and complex, that I cannot
+ give you an outline of its range in my present limits. There is first a
+ great series of storm-legends connected with the family of the historic
+ Æolus centralized by the story of Athamas, with his two wives, "the
+ Cloud," and the "White Goddess," ending in that of Phrixus and Helle, and
+ of the golden fleece (which is only the cloud-burden of Hermes
+ Eriophoros). With this, there is the fate of Salmoneus, and the
+ destruction of the Glaucus by his own horses; all these minor myths of
+ storm concentrating themselves darkly into the legend of Bellerophon and
+ the Chimæra, in which there is an under story about the vain subduing of
+ passion and treachery, and the end of life in fading melancholy,&mdash;which,
+ I hope, not many of you could understand even were I to show it you (the
+ merely physical meaning of the Chimæra is the cloud of volcanic lightning
+ connected wholly with earth-fire, but resembling the heavenly cloud in its
+ height and its thunder). Finally, in the Æolic group, there is the legend
+ of Sisypus, which I mean to work out thoroughly by itself; its root is in
+ the position of Corinth as ruling the isthmus and the two seas &mdash;the
+ Corinthean Acropolis, two thousand feet high, being the centre of the
+ crossing currents of the winds, and of the commerce of Greece. Therefore,
+ Athena, and the fountain-cloud Pegasus, are more closely connected with
+ Corinth than even with Athens in their material, though not in their
+ moral, power; and Sisyphus founds the Isthmian games in connection with a
+ melancholy story about the sea gods; but he himself is 'kerdotos andron',
+ the most "gaining" and subtle of men; who having the key of the Isthmus,
+ becomes the type of transit, transfer, or trade, as such; and of the
+ apparent gain from it, which is not gain; and this is the real meaning of
+ his punishment in hell&mdash;eternal toil and recoil (the modern idol of
+ capital being, indeed, the stone of Sisyphus with a vengeance, crushing in
+ its recoil). But, throughout, the old ideas of the cloud power and cloud
+ feebleness,&mdash;the deceit of its hiding,&mdash;and the emptiness of its
+ banishing,&mdash;the Autolycus enchantment of making black seem white,&mdash;and
+ the disappointed fury of Ixion (taking shadow for power), mingle in the
+ moral meaning of this and its collateral legends; and give an aspect, at
+ last, not only of foolish cunning, but of impiety or literal "idolatry,"
+ "imagination worship," to the dreams of avarice and injustice, until this
+ notion of atheism and insolent blindness becomes principal; and the
+ "Clouds" of Aristophanes, with the personified "just" and "unjust" sayings
+ in the latter part of the play, foreshadow, almost feature by feature, in
+ all that they were written to mock and to chastise, the worst elements of
+ the impious "'dinos'" and tumult in men's thoughts, which have followed on
+ their avarice in the present day, making them alike forsake the laws of
+ their ancient gods, and misapprehended or reject the true words of their
+ existing teachers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. All this we have from the legends of the historic Æolus only; but,
+ besides these, there is the beautiful story of Semele, the mother of
+ Bacchus. She is the cloud with the strength of the vine in its bosom,
+ consumed by the light which matures the fruit; the melting away of the
+ cloud into the clean air at the fringe of its edges being exquisitely
+ rendered by Pindar's epithet for her, Semele, "with the stretched-out
+ hair" ('tauuetheira'.) Then there is the entire tradition of the Danaides,
+ and of the tower of Danaë and golden shower; the birth of Perseus
+ connecting this legend with that of the Gorgons and Graiæ, who are the
+ true clouds of thunderous ruin and tempest. I must, in passing, mark for
+ you that the form of the sword or sickle of Perseus, with which he kills
+ Medusa, is another image of the whirling harpy vortex, and belongs
+ especially to the sword of destruction or annihilation; whence it is given
+ to the two angels who gather for destruction the evil harvest and evil
+ vintage of the earth (Rev. xiv. 15). I will collect afterwards and
+ complete what I have already written respecting the Pegasean and Gorgonian
+ legends, noting here only what is necessary to explain the central myth of
+ Athena herself, who represents the ambient air, which included all cloud,
+ and rain, and dew, and darkness, and peace, and wrath of heaven. Let me
+ now try to give you, however briefly, some distinct idea of the several
+ agencies of this great goddess.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+31. I. She is the air giving life and health to all animals.
+ II. She is the air giving vegetative power to the earth.
+ III. She is the air giving motion to the sea, and rendering
+ navigation possible.
+ IV. She is the air nourishing artificial light, torch or lamplight;
+ as opposed to that of the sun, on one hand, and of consuming*
+ fire on the other.
+ V. She is the air conveying vibration of sound.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ * Not a scientific, but a very practical and expressive distinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will give you instances of her agency in all these functions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32. First, and chiefly, she is air as the spirit of life, giving vitality
+ to the blood. Her psychic relation to the vital force in matter lies
+ deeper, and we will examine it afterwards; but a great number of the most
+ interesting passages in Homer regard her as flying over the earth in local
+ and transitory strength, simply and merely the goddess of fresh air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is curious that the British city which has somewhat saucily styled
+ itself the Modern Athens is indeed more under her especial tutelage and
+ favor in this respect than perhaps any other town in the island. Athena is
+ first simply what in the Modern Athens you practically find her, the
+ breeze of the mountain and the sea; and wherever she comes, there is
+ purification, and health, and power. The sea-beach round this isle of ours
+ is the frieze of our Parthenon; every wave that breaks on it thunders with
+ Athena's voice; nay, wherever you throw your window wide open in the
+ morning, you let in Athena, as wisdom and fresh air at the same instant;
+ and whenever you draw a pure, long, full breath of right heaven, you take
+ Athena into your heart, through your blood; and, with the blood, into the
+ thoughts of your brain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, this giving of strength by the air, observe, is mechanical as well as
+ chemical. You cannot strike a good blow but with your chest full; and, in
+ hand to hand fighting, it is not the muscle that fails first, it is the
+ breath; the longest-breathed will, on the average, be the victor, &mdash;not
+ the strongest. Note how Shakespeare always leans on this. Of Mortimer, in
+ "changing hardiment with great Glendower":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Three times they breathed, and three times did they drink, Upon
+ agreement, of swift Severn's flood."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And again, Hotspur, sending challenge to Prince Harry:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "That none might draw short breath to-day
+ But I and Harry Monmouth."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Again, of Hamlet, before he receives his wound:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "He's fat, and scant of breath."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Again, Orlando in the wrestling:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Yes; I beseech your grace
+ I am not yet well breathed."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Now, of all the people that ever lived, the Greeks knew best what breath
+ meant, both in exercise and in battle, and therefore the queen of the air
+ becomes to them at once the queen of bodily strength in war; not mere
+ brutal muscular strength,&mdash;that belongs to Ares,&mdash;but the
+ strength of young lives passed in pure air and swift exercise,&mdash;Camilla's
+ virginal force, that "flies o'er the unbending corn, and skims along the
+ main."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33. Now I will rapidly give you two or three instances of her direct
+ agency in this function. First, when she wants to make Penelope bright and
+ beautiful; and to do away with the signs of her waiting and her grief.
+ "Then Athena thought of another thing; she laid her into a deep sleep, and
+ loosed all her limbs, and made her taller, and made her smoother, and
+ fatter, and whiter than sawn ivory; and breathed ambrosial brightness over
+ her face; and so she left her and went up to heaven." Fresh air and sound
+ sleep at night, young ladies! You see you may have Athena for lady's maid
+ whenever you choose. Next, hark how she gives strength to Achilles when he
+ is broken with fasting and grief. Jupiter pities him and says to her,
+ "'Daughter mine, are you forsaking your own soldier, and don't you care
+ for Achilles any more? See how hungry and weak he is,&mdash;go and feed
+ him with ambrosia.' So he urged the eager Athena; and she leaped down out
+ of heaven like a harpy falcon, shrill-voiced; and she poured nectar and
+ ambrosia, full of delight, into the breast of Achilles, that his limbs
+ might not fail with famine; then she returned to the solid dome of her
+ strong father." And then comes the great passage about Achilles arming&mdash;for
+ which we have no time. But here is again Athena giving strength to the
+ whole Greek army. She came as a falcon to Achilles, straight at him, a
+ sudden drift of breeze; but to the army she must come widely, she sweeps
+ around them all. "As when Jupiter spreads the purple rainbow over heaven,
+ portending battle or cold storm, so Athena, wrapping herself round with a
+ purple cloud, stooped to the Greek soldiers, and raised up each of them."
+ Note that purple, in Homer's use of it, nearly always means "fiery," "full
+ of light." It is the light of the rainbow, not the color of it, which
+ Homer means you to think of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34. But the most curious passage of all, and fullest of meaning, is when
+ she gives strength to Menelaus, that he may stand unwearied against
+ Hector. He prays to her: "And blue-eyed Athena was glad that he prayed to
+ her, first; and she gave him strength in his shoulders, and in his limbs,
+ an she gave him the courage"&mdash;of what animal, do you suppose? Had it
+ been Neptune or Mars, they would have given him the courage of a bull, or
+ a lion; but Athena gives him the courage of the most fearless in attack of
+ all creatures, small or great, and very small it is, but wholly incapable
+ of terror,&mdash;she gives him the courage of a fly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35. Now this simile of Homer's is one of the best instances I can give you
+ of the way in which great writers seize truths unconsciously which are for
+ all time. It is only recent science which has completely shown the
+ perfectness of this minute symbol of the power of Athena; proving that the
+ insect's flight and breath are co-ordinated; that its wings are actually
+ forcing-pumps, of which the stroke compels the thoracic respiration; and
+ that it thus breathes and flies simultaneously by the action of the same
+ muscles, so that respiration is carried on most vigorously during flight,
+ "while the air-vessels, supplied by many pairs of lungs instead of one,
+ traverse the organs of flight in far greater numbers than the capillary
+ blood-vessels of our own system, and give enormous and untiring muscular
+ power, a rapidity of action measured by thousands of strokes in the
+ minute, and an endurance, by miles and hours of flight."*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Ormerod: "Natural History of Wasps."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Homer could not have known this; neither that the buzzing of the fly was
+ produced, as in a wind instrument, by a constant current of air through
+ the trachea. But he had seen, and, doubtless, meant us to remember, the
+ marvellous strength and swiftness of the insect's flight (the glance of
+ the swallow itself is clumsy and slow compared to the darting of common
+ house-flies at play); he probably attributed its murmur to the wings, but
+ in this also there was a type of what we shall presently find recognized
+ in the name of Pallas,&mdash;the vibratory power of the air to convey
+ sound, while, as a purifying creature, the fly holds its place beside the
+ old symbol of Athena in Egypt, the vulture; and as a venomous and
+ tormenting creature has more than the strength of the serpent in
+ proportion to its size, being thus entirely representative of the
+ influence of the air both in purification and pestilence; and its courage
+ is so notable that, strangely enough, forgetting Homer's simile, I
+ happened to take the fly for an expression of the audacity of freedom in
+ speaking of quite another subject.* Whether it should be called courage,
+ or mere mechanical instinct, may be questioned, but assuredly no other
+ animal, exposed to continual danger, is so absolutely without sign of
+ fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * See farther on, §148, pp. 154-156.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36. You will, perhaps, have still patience to hear two instances, not of
+ the communication as strength, but of the personal agency of Athena as the
+ air. When she comes down to help Diomed against Ares, she does not come to
+ fight instead of him, but she takes his charioteer's place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She snatched the reins, she lashed with all her force, And full on Mars
+ impelled the foaming horse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ares is the first to cast his spear; then&mdash;note this&mdash;Pope says:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Pallas opposed her hand, and caused to glance,
+ Far from the car, the strong immortal lance."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ She does not oppose her hand in the Greek&mdash;the wind could not meet
+ the lance straight&mdash;she catches it in her hand, and throws it off.
+ There is no instance in which a lance is so parried by a mortal hand in
+ all the Iliad, and it is exactly the way the wind would parry it, catching
+ it, and turning it aside. If there are any good rifleshots here, they know
+ something about Athena's parrying; and in old times the English masters of
+ feathered artillery knew more yet. Compare also the turning of Hector's
+ lance from Achilles: Iliad, xx. 439.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37. The last instance I will give you is as lovely as it is subtile.
+ Throughout the Iliad, Athena is herself the will or Menis of Achilles. If
+ he is to be calmed, it is she who calms him; if angered, it is she who
+ inflames him. In the first quarrel with Atreides, when he stands at pause,
+ with the great sword half drawn, "Athena came from heaven, and stood
+ behind him and caught him by the yellow hair." Another god would have
+ stayed his hand upon the hilt, but Athena only lifts his hair. "And he
+ turned and knew her, and her dreadful eyes shone upon him." There is an
+ exquisite tenderness in this laying her hand upon his hair, for it is the
+ talisman of his life, vowed to his own Thessalian river if he ever
+ returned to its shore, and cast upon Patroclus' pile, so ordaining that
+ there should be no return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 38. Secondly, Athena is the air giving vegetative impulse to the earth.
+ She is the wind and the rain, and yet more the pure air itself, getting at
+ the earth fresh turned by spade or plough, and, above all, feeding the
+ fresh leaves; for though the Greeks knew nothing about carbonic acid, they
+ did know that trees fed on the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, note first in this, the myth of the air getting at ploughed land. You
+ know I told you the Lord of all labor by which man lived was Hephæstus;
+ therefore Athena adopts a child of his, and of the Earth,&mdash;
+ Erichthonius,&mdash;literally, "the tearer up of the ground," who is the
+ head (though not in direct line) of the kings of Attica; and, having
+ adopted him, she gives him to be brought up by the three nymphs of the
+ dew. Of these, Aglauros, the dweller in the fields, is the envy or malice
+ of the earth; she answers nearly to the envy of Cain, the tiller of the
+ ground, against his shepherd brother, in her own envy against her two
+ sisters, Herse, the cloud dew, who is the beloved of the shepherd Mercury;
+ and Pandrosos, the diffused dew, or dew of heaven. Literally, you have in
+ this myth the words of the blessing of Esau: "Thy dwelling shall be of the
+ fatness of the earth, and of the dew of heaven from above." Aglauros is
+ for her envy turned into a black stone; and hers is one of the voices
+ &mdash;the other being that of Cain&mdash;which haunts the circle of envy
+ in the Purgatory:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Io sono Aglauro, chi divenne sasso."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But to her two sisters, with Erichthonius (or the hero Erectheus), is
+ built the most sacred temple of Athena in Athens; the temple to their own
+ dearest Athena&mdash;to her, and to the dew together; so that it was
+ divided into two parts: one, the temple of Athena of the city, and the
+ other that of the dew. And this expression of her power, as the air
+ bringing the dew to the hill pastures, in the central temple of the
+ central city of the heathen, dominant over the future intellectual world,
+ is, of all the facts connected with her worship as the spirit of life,
+ perhaps the most important. I have no time now to trace for you the
+ hundredth part of the different ways in which it bears both upon natural
+ beauty, and on the best order and happiness of men's lives. I hope to
+ follow out some of these trains of thought in gathering together what I
+ have to say about field herbage; but I must say briefly here that the
+ great sign, to the Greeks, of the coming of spring in the pastures, was
+ not, as with us, in the primrose, but in the various flowers of the
+ asphodel tribe (of which I will give you some separate account presently);
+ therefore it is that the earth answers with crocus flame to the cloud on
+ Ida; and the power of Athena in eternal life is written by the light of
+ the asphodel on the Elysian fields.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But further, Athena is the air, not only to the lilies of the field, but
+ to the leaves of the forest. We saw before the reason why Hermes is said
+ to be the son of Maia, the eldest of the sister stars of spring. Those
+ stars are called not only Pleiades, but Vergiliæ, from a word mingling the
+ ideas of the turning or returning of springtime with the outpouring of
+ rain. The mother of Vergil bearing the name of Maia, Vergil himself
+ received his name from the seven stars; and he, forming first the mind of
+ Dante, and through him that of Chaucer (besides whatever special minor
+ influence came from the Pastorals and Georgics) became the fountainhead of
+ all the best literary power connected with the love of vegetative nature
+ among civilized races of men. Take the fact for what it is worth; still it
+ is a strange seal of coincidence, in word and in reality, upon the Greek
+ dream of the power over human life, and its purest thoughts, in the stars
+ of spring. But the first syllable of the name of Vergil has relation also
+ to another group of words, of which the English ones, virtue and virgin,
+ bring down the force to modern days. It is a group containing mainly the
+ idea of "spring," or increase of life in vegetation&mdash;the rising of
+ the new branch of the tree out of the bud, and of the new leaf out of the
+ ground. It involves, secondarily, the idea of greenness and of strength,
+ but, primarily, that of living increase of a new rod from a stock, stem,
+ or root ("There shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse"); and
+ chiefly the stem of certain plants&mdash;either of the rose tribe, as in
+ the budding of the almond rod of Aaron; or of the olive tribe, which has
+ triple significance in this symbolism, from the use of its oil for sacred
+ anointing, for strength in the gymnasium, and for light. Hence, in
+ numberless divided and reflected ways, it is connected with the power of
+ Hercules and Athena: Hercules plants the wild olive, for its shade, on the
+ course of Olympia, and it thenceforward gives the Olympic crown of
+ consummate honor and rest; while the prize at the Panathenaic games is a
+ vase of its oil (meaning encouragement to continuance of effort); and from
+ the paintings on these Panathenaic vases we get the most precious clue to
+ the entire character of Athena. Then to express its propagation by slips,
+ the trees from which the oil was to be taken were called "Moriai," trees
+ of division (being all descendents of the sacred one in the Erechtheum).
+ And thus, in one direction, we get to the "children like olive plants
+ round about thy table" and the olive grafting of St. Paul; while the use
+ of the oil for anointing gives chief name to the rod itself of the stem of
+ Jesse, and to all those who were by that name signed for his disciples
+ first in Antioch. Remember, further, since that name was first given the
+ influence of the symbol, both in extreme unction and in consecration of
+ priests and kings to their "divine right;" and thing, if you can reach
+ with any grasp of thought, what the influence on the earth has been, of
+ those twisted branches whose leaves give gray bloom to the hillsides under
+ every breeze that blows from the midland sea. But, above and beyond all,
+ think how strange it is that the chief Agonia of humanity, and the chief
+ giving of strength from heaven for its fulfilment, should have been under
+ its night shadow in Palestine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 39. Thirdly, Athena is the air in its power over the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the earliest Panathenaic vase known&mdash;the "Burgon" vase in the
+ British museum&mdash;Athena has a dolphin on her shield. The dolphin has
+ two principal meanings in Greek symbolism. It means, first, the sea;
+ secondarily, the ascending and descending course of any of the heavenly
+ bodies from one sea horizon to another&mdash;the dolphins' arching rise
+ and replunge (in a summer evening, out of calm sea, their black backs roll
+ round with exactly the slow motion of a water-wheel; but I do not know how
+ far Aristotle's exaggerated account of their leaping or their swiftness
+ has any foundation) being taken as a type of the emergence of the sun or
+ stars from the sea in the east, and plunging beneath in the west. Hence,
+ Apollo, when in his personal power he crosses the sea, leading his Cretan
+ colonists to Pytho, takes the form of a dolphin, becomes Apollo
+ Delphinius, and names the founded colony "Delphi." The lovely drawing of
+ the Delphic Apollo on the hydria of the Vatican (Le Normand and De Witte,
+ vol. ii. p. 6) gives the entire conception of this myth. Again, the
+ beautiful coins of Tarentum represent Taras coming to found the city,
+ riding on a dolphin, whose leaps and plunges have partly the rage of the
+ sea in them, and partly the spring of the horse, because the splendid
+ riding of the Tarentines had made their name proverbial in Magna Græca.
+ The story of Arion is a collateral fragment of the same thought; and,
+ again, the plunge, before their transformation, of the ships of Æneas.
+ Then, this idea of career upon, or conquest of, or by dolphin-like ships
+ (compare the Merlin prophecy,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "They shall ride
+ Over ocean wide
+ With hempen bridle, ad horse of tree,")
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ connects itself with the thought of undulation, and of the wave-power in
+ the sea itself, which is always expressed by the serpentine bodies either
+ of the sea-gods or of the sea-horse; and when Athena carries, as she does
+ often in later work, a serpent for her shield-sign, it is not so much the
+ repetition of her own ægis-snakes as the further expression of her power
+ over the sea-wave; which, finally, Vergil gives in its perfect unity with
+ her own anger, in the approach of the serpents against Laocoön from the
+ sea; and then, finally, when her own storm-power is fully put forth on the
+ ocean also, and the madness of the ægis-snake is give to the wave-snake,
+ the sea-wave becomes the devouring hound at the waist of Scylla, and
+ Athena takes Scylla for her helmet-crest; while yet her beneficent and
+ essential power on the ocean, in making navigation possible, is
+ commemorated in the Panathenaic festival by her peplus being carried to
+ the Erechtheum suspended from the mast of a ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Plate cxv. of vol. ii, Le Normand, are given two sides of a vase,
+ which, in rude and childish ways, assembles most of the principal thoughts
+ regarding Athena in this relation. In the first, the sunrise is
+ represented by the ascending chariot of Apollo, foreshortened; the light
+ is supposed to blind the eyes, and no face of the god is seen (Turner, in
+ the Ulysses and Polyphemus sunrise, loses the form of the god in light,
+ giving the chariot-horses only; rendering in his own manner, after 2,200
+ years of various fall and revival of the arts, precisely the same thought
+ as the old Greek potter). He ascends out of the sea; but the sea itself
+ has not yet caught the light. In the second design, Athena as the morning
+ breeze, and Hermes as the morning cloud, fly over the sea before the sun.
+ Hermes turns back his head; his face is unseen in the cloud, as Apollo's
+ in the light; the grotesque appearance of an animal's face is only the
+ cloud-phantasm modifying a frequent form of the hair of Hermes beneath the
+ back of his cap. Under the morning breeze, the dolphins leap from the
+ rippled sea, and their sides catch the light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The coins of the Lucanian Heracleia give a fair representation of the
+ helmed Athena, as imagined in later Greek art, with the embossed Scylla.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 40. Fourthly, Athena is the air nourishing artificial light&mdash;unconsuming
+ fire. Therefore, a lamp was always kept burning in the Erechtheum; and the
+ torch-race belongs chiefly to her festival, of which the meaning is to
+ show the danger of the perishing of the light even by excess of the air
+ that nourishes it; and so that the race is not to the swift, but to the
+ wise. The household use of her constant light is symbolized in the lovely
+ passage in the Odyssey, where Ulysses and his son move the armor while the
+ servants are shut in their chambers, and there is no one to hold the
+ torches for them; but Athena herself, "having a golden lamp," fills all
+ the rooms with light. Her presence in war-strength with her favorite
+ heroes is always shown by the "unwearied" fire hovering on their helmets
+ and shields; and the image gradually becomes constant and accepted, both
+ for the maintenance of household watchfulness, as in the parable of the
+ ten virgins, or as the symbol of direct inspiration, in the rushing wind
+ and divided flames of Pentecost; but together with this thought of
+ unconsuming and constant fire, there is always mingled in the Greek mind
+ the sense of the consuming by excess, as of the flame by the air, so also
+ of the inspired creature by its own fire (thus, again, "the zeal of thine
+ house hath eaten me up"&mdash;"my zeal hath consumed me, because of thine
+ enemies," and the like); and especially Athena has this aspect towards the
+ truly sensual and bodily strength; so that to Ares, who is himself insane
+ and consuming, the opposite wisdom seems to be insane and consuming: "All
+ we the other gods have thee against us, O Jove! when we would give grace
+ to men; for thou hast begotten the maid without a mind&mdash; the
+ mischievous creature, the doer of unseemly evil. All we obey thee, and are
+ ruled by thee. Her only thou wilt not resist in anything she says or does,
+ because thou didst bear her&mdash;consuming child as she is."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 41. Lastly, Athena is the air conveying vibration of sound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all the loveliest representations in central Greek art of the birth of
+ Athena, Apollo stands close to the sitting Jupiter, singing, with a deep,
+ quiet joyfulness, to his lyre. The sun is always thought of as the master
+ of time and rhythm, and as the origin of the composing and inventive
+ discovery of melody; but the air, as the actual element and substance of
+ the voice, the prolonging and sustaining power of it, and the symbol of
+ its moral passion. Whatever in music is measured and designed belongs
+ therefore to Apollo and the Muses; whatever is impulsive and passionate,
+ to Athena; hence her constant strength a voice or cry (as when she aids
+ the shout of Achilles) curiously opposed to the dumbness of Demeter. The
+ Apolline lyre, therefore, is not so much the instrument producing sound,
+ as its measurer and divider by length or tension of string into given
+ notes; and I believe it is, in a double connection with its office as a
+ measurer of time or motion and its relation to the transit of the sun in
+ the sky, that Hermes forms it from the tortoise-shell, which is the image
+ of the dappled concave of the cloudy sky. Thenceforward all the limiting
+ or restraining modes of music belong to the Muses; but the more passionate
+ music is wind music, as in the Doric flute. Then, when this inspired music
+ becomes degraded in its passion, it sinks into the pipe of Pan, and the
+ double pipe of Marsyas, and is then rejected by Athena. The myth which
+ represents her doing so is that she invented the double pipe from hearing
+ the hiss of the Gorgonian serpents; but when she played upon it, chancing
+ to see her face reflected in water, she saw that it was distorted,
+ whereupon she threw down the flute which Marsyas found. Then, the strife
+ of Apollo and Marsyas represents the enduring contest between music in
+ which the words and thought lead, and the lyre measures or melodizes them
+ (which Pindar means when he calls his hymns "kings over the lyre"), and
+ music in which the words are lost and the wind or impulse leads,&mdash;generally,
+ therefore, between intellectual, and brutal, or meaningless, music.
+ Therefore, when Apollo prevails, he flays Marsyas, taking the limit and
+ external bond of his shape from him, which is death, without touching the
+ mere muscular strength, yet shameful and dreadful in dissolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 42. And the opposition of these two kinds of sound is continually dwelt
+ upon by the Greek philosophers, the real fact at the root of all music is
+ the natural expression of a lofty passion for a right cause; that in
+ proportion to the kingliness and force of any personality, the expression
+ either of its joy or suffering becomes measured, chastened, calm, and
+ capable of interpretation only by the majesty of ordered, beautiful, and
+ worded sound. Exactly in proportion to the degree in which we become
+ narrow in the cause and conception of our passions, incontinent in the
+ utterance of them, feeble of perseverance in them, sullied or shameful in
+ the indulgence of them, their expression by musical sound becomes broken,
+ mean, fatuitous, and at last impossible; the measured waves of the air of
+ heaven will not lend themselves to expression of ultimate vice, it must be
+ forever sunk into discordance or silence. And since, as before stated,
+ every work of right art has a tendency to reproduce the ethical state
+ which first developed it, this, which of all the arts is most directly in
+ power of discipline; the first, the simplest, the most effective of all
+ instruments of moral instruction; while in the failure and betrayal of its
+ functions, it becomes the subtlest aid of moral degradation. Music is
+ thus, in her health, the teacher of perfect order, and is the voice of the
+ obedience of angels, and the companion of the course of the spheres of
+ heaven; and in her depravity she is also the teacher of perfect disorder
+ and disobedience, and the Gloria in Excelsis becomes the Marseillaise. In
+ the third section of this volume, I reprint two chapters from another
+ essay of mine ("The Cestus of Aglaia"), on modesty or measure, and on
+ liberty, containing further reference to music in her two powers; and I do
+ this now, because, among the many monstrous and misbegotten fantasies
+ which are the spawn of modern license, perhaps the most impishly opposite
+ to the truth is the conception of music which has rendered possible the
+ writing, by educated persons, and, more strangely yet, the tolerant
+ criticism, of such words as these: "This so persuasive art is the only one
+ that has no didactic efficacy, that engenders no emotions save such as are
+ without issue on the side of moral truth, that expresses nothing of God,
+ nothing of reason, nothing of human liberty." I will not give the author's
+ name; the passage is quoted in the "Westminster Review" for last January
+ 1869.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 43. I must also anticipate something of what I have to say respecting the
+ relation of the power of Athena to organic life, so far as to note that
+ her name, Pallas, probably refers to the quivering or vibration of the
+ air; and to its power, whether as vital force, or communicated wave, over
+ every kind of matter, in giving it vibratory movement; first, and most
+ intense, in the voice and throat of the bird, which is the air incarnate;
+ and so descending through the various orders of animal life to the
+ vibrating and semi-voluntary murmur of the insect; and, lower still, to
+ the hiss or quiver of the tail of the half-lunged snake and deaf adder;
+ all these, nevertheless, being wholly under the rule of Athena as
+ representing either breath or vital nervous power; and, therefore, also,
+ in their simplicity, the "oaten pipe and pastoral song," which belong to
+ her dominion over the asphodel meadows, and breathe on their banks of
+ violets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, is it not strange to think of the influence of this one power of
+ Pallas in vibration (we shall see a singular mechanical energy of it
+ presently in the serpent's motion), in the voices of war and peace? How
+ much of the repose, how much of the wrath, folly, and misery of men, has
+ literally depended on this one power of the air; on the sound of the
+ trumpet and of the bell, on the lark's song, and the bee's murmur!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 44. Such is the general conception in the Greek mind of the physical power
+ of Athena. The spiritual power associated with it is of two kinds: first,
+ she is the Spirit of Life in material organism; not strength in the blood
+ only, but formative energy in the clay; and, secondly, she is inspired and
+ impulsive wisdom in human conduct and human art, giving the instinct of
+ infallible decision, and of faultless invention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is quite beyond the scope of my present purpose&mdash;and, indeed, will
+ only be possible for me at all after marking the relative intention of the
+ Apolline myths&mdash;to trace for you the Greek conception of Athena as
+ the guide of moral passion. But I will at least endeavor, on some near
+ occasion,* to define some of the actual truths respecting the vital force
+ in created organism, and inventive fancy in the works of man, which are
+ more or less expressed by the Greeks, under the personality of Athena. You
+ would, perhaps, hardly bear with me if I endeavored further to show you&mdash;what
+ is nevertheless perfectly true&mdash;the analogy between the spiritual
+ power of Athena in her gentle ministry, yet irresistible anger, with the
+ ministry of anther Spirit whom we also, holding for the universal power of
+ life, are forbidden, at our worst peril, to quench or to grieve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * I have tried to do this in mere outline in the two following sections of
+ this volume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 45. But, I think, to-night, you should not let me close without requiring
+ of me an answer on one vital point, namely, how far these imaginations of
+ gods&mdash;which are vain to us&mdash;were vain to those who had no better
+ trust? and what real belief the Greek had in these creations of his own
+ spirit, practical and helpful to him in the sorrow of earth? I am able to
+ answer you explicitly in this. The origin of his thoughts is often
+ obscure, and we may err in endeavoring to account or their form of
+ realization; but the effect of that realization on his life is not obscure
+ at all. The Greek creed was, of course, different in its character, as our
+ own creed is, according to the class of persons who held it. The common
+ people's was quite literal, simple, and happy; their idea of Athena was as
+ clear as a good Roman Catholic peasant's idea of the Madonna. In Athens
+ itself, the centre of thought and refinement, Pisistratus obtained the
+ reins of government through the ready belief of the populace that a
+ beautiful woman, armed like Athena, was the goddess herself. Even at the
+ close of the last century some of this simplicity remained among the
+ inhabitants of the Greek islands; and when a pretty English lady first
+ made her way into the grotto of Antiparos, she was surrounded, on her
+ return, by all the women of the neighboring village, believing her to be
+ divine, and praying her to heal them of their sicknesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 46. Then, secondly, the creed of the upper classes was more refined and
+ spiritual, but quite as honest, and even more forcible in its effect on
+ the life. You might imagine that the employment of the artifice just
+ referred to implied utter unbelief in the persons contriving it; but it
+ really meant only that the more worldly of them would play with a popular
+ faith of their own purposes, as doubly-minded persons have often done
+ since, all the while sincerely holding the same ideas themselves in a more
+ abstract form; while the good and unworldly men, the true Greek heroes,
+ lived by their faith as firmly as St. Louis, or the Cid, or the Chevalier
+ Bayard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 47. Then, thirdly, the faith of the poets and artists was, necessarily,
+ less definite, being continually modified by the involuntary action of
+ their own fancies; and by the necessity of presenting, in clear verbal or
+ material form, things of which they had no authoritative knowledge. Their
+ faith was, in some respects like Dante's or Milton's: firm in general
+ conception, but not able to vouch for every detail in the forms they gave
+ it; but they went considerably farther, even in that minor sincerity, than
+ subsequent poets; and strove with all their might to be as near the truth
+ as they could. Pindar says, quite simply, "I cannot think so-and-so of the
+ gods. It must have been this way&mdash;it cannot have been that way&mdash;that
+ the thing was done." And as late among the Latins as the days of Horace,
+ this sincerity remains. Horace is just as true and simple in his religion
+ as Wordsworth; but all power of understanding any of the honest classic
+ poets has been taken away from most English gentlemen by the mechanical
+ drill in verse-writing at school. Throughout the whole of their lives
+ afterwards, they never can get themselves quit of the notion that all
+ verses were written as an exercise, and that Minerva was only a convenient
+ word for the last of a hexameter, and Jupiter for the last but one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 48. It is impossible that any notion can be more fallacious or more
+ misleading in its consequences. All great song, from the first day when
+ human lips contrived syllables, has been sincere song. With deliberate
+ didactic purpose the tragedians&mdash;with pure and native passion the
+ lyrists &mdash;fitted their perfect words to their dearest faiths.
+ "Operosa parvus carmina fingo." "I, little thing that I am, weave my
+ laborious songs" as earnestly as the bee among the bells of thyme on the
+ Matin mountains. Yes, and he dedicates his favorite pine to Diana, and he
+ chants his autumnal hymn to the Faun that guards his fields, and he guides
+ the noble youth and maids of Rome in their choir to Apollo, and he tells
+ the farmer's little girl that the gods will love her, though she has only
+ a handful of salt and meal to give them&mdash;just as earnestly as ever
+ English gentleman taught Christian faith to English youth in England's
+ truest days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 49. Then, lastly, the creed of the philosophers of sages varied according
+ to the character and knowledge of each; their relative acquaintance with
+ the secrets of natural science, their intellectual and sectarian egotism,
+ and their mystic or monastic tendencies, for there is a classic as well as
+ a mediæval monasticism. They end in losing the life of Greece in play upon
+ words; but we owe to their early thought some of the soundest ethics, and
+ the foundation of the best practical laws, yet known to mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 50. Such was the general vitality of the heathen creed in its strength. Of
+ its direct influence on conduct, it is, as I said, impossible for me to
+ speak now; only, remember always, in endeavoring to form a judgment of it,
+ that what of good or right the heathens did, they did looking for no
+ reward. The purest forms of our own religion have always consisted in
+ sacrificing less things to win greater, time to win eternity, the world to
+ win the skies. The order, "Sell that thou hast," is not given without the
+ promise, "Thou shalt have treasure in heaven;" and well for the modern
+ Christian if he accepts the alternative as his Master left it, and does
+ not practically read the command and promise thus: "Sell that thou hast in
+ the best market, and thou shalt have treasure in eternity also." But the
+ poor Greeks of the great ages expected no reward from heaven but honor,
+ and no reward from earth but rest; though, when, on those conditions, they
+ patiently, and proudly, fulfilled their task of the granted day, an
+ unreasoning instinct of an immortal benediction broke from their lips in
+ song; and they, even they, had sometimes a prophet to tell them of a land
+ "where there is sun alike by day and alike by night, where they shall need
+ no more to trouble the earth by strength of hands for daily bread; but the
+ ocean breezes blow around the blessed islands, and golden flowers burn on
+ their bright trees for evermore."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. &mdash; ATHENA KERAMITIS.* (Athena in the Earth.)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ * "Athena, fit for being made into pottery." I coin the expression as a
+ counterpart of 'ge parthenia', "Clay intact."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+STUDY, SUPPLEMENTARY TO THE PRECEDING LECTURE, OF THE SUPPOSED AND
+ ACTUAL RELATIONS OF ATHENA TO THE VITAL FORCE IN MATERIAL ORGANISM
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 51. It has been easy to decipher approximately the Greek conception of the
+ physical power of Athena in cloud and sky, because we know ourselves what
+ clouds and skies are, and what the force of the wind is in forming them.
+ But it is not at all easy to trace the Greek thoughts about the power of
+ Athena in giving life, because we do not ourselves know clearly what life
+ is, or in what way the air is necessary to it, or what there is, besides
+ the air, shaping the forms that it is put into. And it is comparatively of
+ small consequence to find out what the Greeks thought or meant, until we
+ have determined what we ourselves think, or mean, when we translate the
+ Greek word for "breathing" into the Latin-English word "spirit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 52. But it is of great consequence that you should fix in your minds&mdash;
+ and hold, against the baseness of mere materialism on the one hand, and
+ against the fallacies of controversial speculation on the other&mdash;the
+ certain and practical sense of this word "spirit;" the sense in which you
+ all know that its reality exists, as the power which shaped you into your
+ shape, and by which you love and hate when you have received that shape.
+ You need not fear, on the one hand, that either the sculpturing or the
+ loving power can ever be beaten down by the philosophers into a metal, or
+ evolved by them into a gas; but on the other hand, take care that you
+ yourself, in trying to elevate your conception of it, do not lose its
+ truth in a dream, or even in a word. Beware always of contending for
+ words: you will find them not easy to grasp, if you know them in several
+ languages. This very word, which is so solemn in your mouths, is one of
+ the most doubtful. In Latin it means little more than breathing, and may
+ mean merely accent; in French it is not breath, but wit, and our neighbors
+ are therefore obliged, even in their most solemn expressions, to say "wit"
+ when we say "ghost." In Greek, "pneuma," the word we translate "ghost,"
+ means either wind or breath, and the relative word "psyche" has, perhaps,
+ a more subtle power; yet St. Paul's words "pneumatic body" and "psychic
+ body" involve a difference in his mind which no words will explain. But in
+ Greek and in English, and in Saxon and in Hebrew, and in every articulate
+ tongue of humanity the "spirit of man" truly means his passion and virtue,
+ and is stately according to the height of his conception, and stable
+ according to the measure of his endurance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 53. Endurance, or patience, that is the central sign of spirit; a
+ constancy against the cold and agony of death; and as, physically, it is
+ by the burning power of the air that the heat of the flesh is sustained,
+ so this Athena, spiritually, is the queen of all glowing virtue, the
+ unconsuming fire and inner lamp of life. And thus, as Hephæstus is lord of
+ the fire of the hand, and Apollo of the fire of the brain, so Athena of
+ the fire of the heart; and as Hercules wears for his chief armor the skin
+ of the Nemean lion, his chief enemy, whom he slew; and Apollo has for his
+ highest name "the Pythian," from his chief enemy, the Python slain; so
+ Athena bears always on her breast the deadly face of her chief enemy
+ slain, the Gorgonian cold, and venomous agony, that turns living men to
+ stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 54. And so long as you have the fire of the heart within you, and know the
+ reality of it, you need to be under no alarm as to the possibility of its
+ chemical or mechanical analysis. The philosophers are very humorous in
+ their ecstasy of hope about it; but the real interest of their discoveries
+ in this direction is very small to humankind. It is quite true that the
+ tympanum of the ear vibrates under sound, and that the surface of the
+ water in a ditch vibrates too; but the ditch hears nothing for all that;
+ and my hearing is still to me as blessed a mystery as ever, and the
+ interval between the ditch and me quite as great. If the trembling sound
+ in my ears was once of the marriage-bell which began my happiness, and is
+ now of the passing-bell which ends it, the difference between those two
+ sounds to me cannot be counted by the number of concussions. There have
+ been some curious speculations lately as to the conveyance of mental
+ consciousness by "brain-waves." What does it matter how it is conveyed?
+ The consciousness itself is not a wave. It may be accompanied here or
+ there by any quantity of quivers and shakes, up or down, of anything you
+ can find in the universe that is shakable&mdash; what is that to me? My
+ friend is dead, and my&mdash;according to modern views &mdash;vibratory
+ sorrow is not one whit less, or less mysterious, to me, than my old quiet
+ one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 55. Beyond, and entirely unaffected by, any questionings of this kind,
+ there are, therefore, two plain facts which we should all know: first,
+ that there is a power which gives their several shapes to things, or
+ capacities of feeling; and that we can increase or destroy both of these
+ at our will. By care and tenderness, we can extend the range of lovely
+ life in plants and animals; by our neglect and cruelty, we can arrest it,
+ and bring pestilence in its stead. Again, by right discipline we can
+ increase our strength of noble will and passion or destroy both. And
+ whether these two forces are local conditions of the elements in which
+ they appear, or are part of a great force in the universe, out of which
+ they are taken, and to which they must be restored, is not of the
+ slightest importance to us in dealing with them; neither is the manner of
+ their connection with light and air. What precise meaning we ought to
+ attach to expressions such as that of the prophecy to the four winds that
+ the dry bones might be breathed upon, and might live, or why the presence
+ of the vital power should be dependent on the chemical action of air, and
+ its awful passing away materially signified by the rendering up of that
+ breath or ghost, we cannot at present know, and need not at any time
+ dispute. What we assuredly know is that the states of life and death are
+ different, and the first more desirable than the other, and by effort
+ attainable, whether we understand being "born of the spirit" to signify
+ having the breath of heaven in our flesh, or its power in our hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 56. As to its power on the body, I will endeavor to tell you, having been
+ myself much led into studies involving necessary reference both to natural
+ science and mental phenomena, what, at least, remains to us after science
+ has done its worst; what the myth of Athena, as a formative and decisive
+ power, a spirit of creation and volition, must eternally mean for all of
+ us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 57. It is now (I believe I may use the strong word) "ascertained" that
+ heat and motion are fixed in quantity, and measurable in the portions that
+ we deal with. We can measure portions of power, as we can measure portions
+ of space; while yet, as far as we know, space may be infinite, and force
+ infinite. There may be heat as much greater than the sun's, as the sun's
+ heat is greater than a candle's: and force as much greater than the force
+ by which the world swings, as that is greater than the force by which a
+ cobweb trembles. Now, on hear and force, life is inseparably dependent;
+ and I believe, also, on a form of substance, which the philosophers call
+ "protoplasm." I wish they would use English instead of Greek words. When I
+ want to know why a leaf is green, they tell me it is colored by
+ "chlorophyll," which at first sounds very instructive; but if they would
+ only say plainly that a leaf is colored green by a thing which is called
+ "green leaf," we should see more precisely how far we had got. However, it
+ is a curious fact that life is connected with a cellular structure called
+ protoplasm, or in English, "first stuck together;" whence, conceivably
+ through deuteroplasms, or second stickings, and tritoplasms, or third
+ stickings,* we reach the highest plastic phase in the human pottery, which
+ differs from common chinaware, primarily, by a measurable degree of heat,
+ developed in breathing, which it borrows from the rest of the universe
+ while it lives, and which it as certainly returns to the rest of the
+ universe, when it dies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 58. Again, with this heat certain assimilative powers are connected, which
+ the tendency of recent discovery is to simplify more and more into modes
+ of one force; or finally into mere motion, communicable in various states,
+ but not destructible. We will assume that science has done its utmost; and
+ that every chemical or animal force is demonstrably resolvable into heat
+ or motion, reciprocally changing into each other. I would myself like
+ better, in order of thought, to consider motion as a mode of heat than
+ heat as a mode of motion; still, granting that we have got thus far, we
+ have yet to ask, What is heat? or what is motion? What is this "primo
+ mobile," this transitional power, in which all things live, and move, and
+ have their being? It is by definition something different from matter, and
+ we may call it as we choose, "first cause," or "first light," or "first
+ heat;" but we can show no scientific proof of its not being personal, and
+ coinciding with the ordinary conception of a supporting spirit in all
+ things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 59. Still, it is not advisable to apply the word "spirit" or "breathing"
+ to it, while it is only enforcing chemical affinities; but, when the
+ chemical affinities are brought under the influence of the air, and of the
+ sun's heat, the formative force enters and entirely different phase. It
+ does not now merely crystallize indefinite masses, but it gives to limited
+ portions of matter the power of gathering, selectively, other elements
+ proper to them, and binding those elements into their own peculiar and
+ adopted form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This force, now properly called life, or breathing, or spirit, is
+ continually creating its own shell of definite shape out of the wreck
+ around it; and this is what I meant by saying, in the "Ethics of the
+ Dust," "you may always stand by form against force." For the mere force of
+ junction is not spirit; but the power that catches out of chaos charcoal,
+ water, lime, or what not, and fastens them down into a given form, is
+ properly called "spirit;" and we shall not diminish, but strengthen our
+ conception of this creative energy by recognizing its presence in lower
+ states of matter than our own; such recognition being enforced upon us by
+ delight we instinctively receive from all the forms of matter which
+ manifest it; and yet more, by the glorifying of those forms, in the parts
+ of them that are most animated, with the colors that are pleasantest to
+ our senses. The most familiar instance of this is the best, and also the
+ most wonderful: the blossoming of plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 60. The spirit in the plant&mdash;that is to say, its power of gathering
+ dead matter out of the wreck round it, and shaping it into its own chosen
+ shape&mdash;is of course strongest at the moment of its flowering, for it
+ then not only gathers, but forms, with the greatest energy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And where this life is in at full power, its form becomes invested with
+ aspects that are chiefly delightful to our own human passions; namely, at
+ first, with the loveliest outlines of shape; and, secondly, with the most
+ brilliant phases of the primary colors, blue, yellow, and red or white,
+ the unison of all; and, to make it all more strange, this time of peculiar
+ and perfect glory is associated with relations of the plants or blossoms
+ to each other, correspondent to the joy of love in human creatures, and
+ having the same object in the continuance of the race. Only, with respect
+ to plants, as animals, we are wrong in speaking as if the object of this
+ strong life were only the bequeathing of itself. The flower is the end or
+ proper object of the seed, not the seed of the flower. The reason for
+ seeds is that flowers may be; not the reason of flowers that seeds may be.
+ The flower itself is the creature which the spirit makes; only, in
+ connection with its perfectness is placed the giving birth to its
+ successor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 61. The main fact then, about a flower is that it is part of the plant's
+ form developed at the moment of its intensest life; and this inner rapture
+ is usually marked externally for us by the flush of one or more of the
+ primary colors. What the character of the flower shall be, depends
+ entirely upon the portion of the plant into which this rapture of spirit
+ has been put. Sometimes the life is put into its outer sheath, and then
+ the outer sheath becomes white and pure, and full of strength and grace;
+ sometimes the life is put into the common leaves, just under the blossom,
+ and they become scarlet or purple; sometimes the life is put into the
+ stalks of the flower and they flush blue; sometimes into its outer
+ enclosure or calyx; mostly into its inner cup; but, in all cases, the
+ presence of the strongest life is asserted by characters in which the
+ human sight takes pleasure, and which seem prepared with distinct
+ reference to us, or rather, bear, in being delightful, evidence of having
+ been produced by the power of the same spirit as our own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 62. And we are led to feel this still more strongly because all the
+ distinctions of species,* both in plants and animals, appear to have
+ similar connection with human character. Whatever the origin of species
+ may be, or however those species, once formed, may be influenced by
+ external accident, the groups into which birth or accident reduce them
+ have distinct relation to the spirit of man. It is perfectly possible, and
+ ultimately conceivable, that the crocodile and the lamb may have descended
+ from the same ancestral atom of protoplasm; and that the physical laws of
+ the operation of calcareous slime and of meadow grass, on that protoplasm,
+ may in time have developed the opposite natures and aspects of the living
+ frames but the practically important fact for us is the existence of a
+ power which creates that calcareous earth itself, &mdash;which creates,
+ that separately&mdash;and quartz, separately; and gold, separately; and
+ charcoal, separately; and then so directs the relation of these elements
+ as that the gold shall destroy the souls of men by being yellow; and the
+ charcoal destroy their souls by being hard and bright; and the quartz
+ represent to them an ideal purity; and the calcareous earth, soft, shall
+ beget crocodiles, and dry and hard, sheep; and that the aspects and
+ qualities of these two products, crocodiles and lambs, shall be, the one
+ repellant to the spirit of man, the other attractive to it, in a quite
+ inevitable way; representing to him states of moral evil and good; and
+ becoming myths to him of destruction or redemption, and, in the most
+ literal sense, "words" of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * The facts on which I am about to dwell are in nowise antagonistic to the
+ theories which Mr. Darwin's unwearied and unerring investigations are
+ every day rendering more probable. The æsthetic relations of species are
+ independent of their origin. Nevertheless, it has always seemed to me in
+ what little work I have done upon organic forms, as if the species mocked
+ us by their deliberate imitation of each other when they met; yet did not
+ pass one into another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 63. And the force of these facts cannot be escaped from by the thought
+ that there are species innumerable, passing into each other by regular
+ gradations, out of which we choose what we must love or dread, and say
+ they were indeed prepared for us. Species are not innumerable; neither are
+ they now connected by consistent gradation. They touch at certain points
+ only; and even then are connected, when we examine them deeply, in a kind
+ of reticulated way, not in chains, but in chequers; also, however
+ connected, it is but by a touch of the extremities, as it were, and the
+ characteristic form of the species is entirely individual. The rose nearly
+ sinks into a grass in the sanguisorba; but the formative spirit does not
+ the less clearly separate the ear of wheat from the dog-rose, and
+ oscillate with tremulous constancy round the central forms of both, having
+ each their due relation to the mind of man. The great animal kingdoms are
+ connected in the same way. The bird through the penguin drops towards the
+ fish, and the fish in the cetacean reascends to the mammal, yet there is
+ no confusion of thought possible between the perfect forms of an eagle, a
+ trout, and a war-horse, in their relations to the elements, and to man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 64. Now we have two orders of animals to take some note of in connection
+ with Athena, and one vast order of plants, which will illustrate this
+ matter very sufficiently for us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The orders of animals are the serpent and the bird: the serpent, in which
+ the breath or spirit is less than in any other creature, and the
+ earth-power the greatest; the bird, in which the breath or spirit is more
+ full than in any other creature, and the earth-power least.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 65. We will take the bird first. It is little more than a drift of the air
+ in all its quills, it breathes through its whole frame and flesh and glows
+ with air in its flying, like blown flames; it rests upon the air, subdues
+ it, surpasses it, outraces it,&mdash;is the air, conscious of itself,
+ conquering itself, ruling itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Also, in the throat of the bird is given the voice of the air. All that in
+ the wind itself is weak, wild, useless in sweetness, is knit together in
+ its song. As we may imagine the wild form of the bird's wings, so the wild
+ voice of the cloud into its ordered and commanded voice; unwearied,
+ rippling through the clear heaven in its gladness, interpreting all
+ intense passion through the soft spring nights, bursting into acclaim and
+ rapture of choir at daybreak, or lisping and twittering among the boughs
+ and hedges through heat of day, like little winds that only make the
+ cowslip bells shake, and ruffle the petals of the wild rose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 66. Also, upon the plumes of the bird are put the colors of the air; on
+ these the gold of the cloud, that cannot be gathered by any covetousness;
+ the rubies of the clouds, that are not the price of Athena, but are
+ Athena; the vermillion of the cloud-bar, and the flame of the cloud-crest,
+ and the snow of the cloud, and its shadow, and the melted blue of the deep
+ wells of the sky,&mdash;all these, seized by the creating spirit, and
+ woven by Athena herself into films and threads of plume; with wave on wave
+ following and fading along breast, and throat, and opened wings, infinite
+ as the dividing of the foam and the sifting of the sea-sand; even the
+ white down of the cloud seeming to flutter up between the stronger plumes,&mdash;seen,
+ but too soft for touch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the Spirit of the Air is put into, and upon, this created form; and
+ it becomes, through twenty centuries, the symbol of divine help,
+ descending, as the Fire, to speak but as the Dove, to bless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 67. Next, in the serpent we approach the source of a group of myths,
+ world-wide, founded on great and common human instincts, respecting which
+ I must note one or two points which bear intimately on all our subject.
+ For it seems to me that the scholars who are at present occupied in
+ interpretation of human myths have most of them forgotten that there are
+ any such thing as natural myths, and that the dark sayings of men may be
+ both difficult to read, and not always worth reading. And, indeed, all
+ guidance to the right sense of the human and variable myths will probably
+ depend on our first getting at the sense of the natural and invariable
+ ones. The dead hieroglyph may have meant this or that; the living
+ hieroglyph means always the same; but remember, it is just as much a
+ hieroglyph as the other; nay, more,&mdash;a "sacred or reserved
+ sculpture," a thing with an inner language. The serpent crest of the
+ king's crown, or of the god's, on the pillars of Egypt, is a mystery, but
+ the serpent itself, gliding past the pillar's foot, is it less a mystery?
+ Is there, indeed, no tongue, except the mute forked flash from its lips,
+ in that running brook of horror on the ground?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 68. Why that horror? We all feel it, yet how imaginative it is, how
+ disproportioned to the real strength of the creature! There is more poison
+ in an ill-kept drain, in a pool of dish-washing at a cottage door, than in
+ the deadliest asp of Nile. Every back yard which you look down into from
+ the railway as it carries you out by Vauxhall or Deptford, holds its
+ coiled serpent; all the walls of those ghastly suburbs are enclosures of
+ tank temples for serpent worship; yet you feel no horror in looking down
+ into them as you would if you saw the livid scales, and lifted head. There
+ is more venom, mortal, inevitable, in a single word, sometimes, or in the
+ gliding entrance of a wordless thought than ever "vanti Libia con sua
+ rena." But that horror is of the myth, not of the creature. There are
+ myriads lower than this, and more loathsome, in the scale of being; the
+ links between dead matter and animation drift everywhere unseen. But it is
+ the strength of the base element that is so dreadful in the serpent; it is
+ the very omnipotence of the earth. That rivulet of smooth silver, how does
+ it flow, think you? It literally rows on the earth, with every scale for
+ an oar; it bites the dust with the ridges of its body. Watch it, when it
+ moves slowly. A wave, but without wind! a current, but with no fall! all
+ the body moving at the same instant, yet some of it to one side, some to
+ another, or some forward, and the rest of the coil backwards, but all with
+ the same calm will and equal way, no contraction, no extension; one
+ soundless, causeless, march of sequent rings, and spectral processions of
+ spotted dust, with dissolution in its fangs, dislocation in its coils.
+ Startle it, the winding stream will become a twisted arrow; the wave of
+ poisoned life will lash through the grass like a cast lance.* It scarcely
+ breathes with its one lung (the other shriveled and abortive); it is
+ passive to the sun and shade, and is cold or hot like a stone; yet "it can
+ outclimb the monkey, outswim the fish, outleap the zebra, outwrestle the
+ athlete, and crush the tiger."** It is a divine hieroglyph of the demoniac
+ power of the earth, of the entire earthly nature. As the bird is the
+ clothed power of the air, so this is the clothed power of the dust; as the
+ bird is the symbol of the spirit of life, so this is the grasp and sting
+ of death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * I cannot understand this swift forward motion of serpents. The seizure
+ of prey by the constrictor, though invisibly swift, is quite simple in
+ mechanism; it is simply the return to its coil of an opened watch-spring,
+ and is just as instantaneous. But the steady and continuous motion,
+ without a visible fulcrum (for the whole body moves at the same instant,
+ and I have often seen even small snakes glide as fast as I could walk),
+ seems to involve a vibration of the scales quite too rapid to be
+ conceived. The motion of the crest and dorsal fin of the hippocampus,
+ which is one of the intermediate types between serpent and fish, perhaps
+ gives some resemblance of it, dimly visible, for the quivering turns the
+ fin into a mere mist. The entrance of the two barbs of a bee's sting by
+ alternate motion, "the teeth of one barb acting as a fulcrum for the
+ other," must be something like the serpent motion on a small scale. **
+ Richard Owen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 69. Hence the continual change in the interpretation put upon it in
+ various religions. As the worm of corruption, it is the mightiest of all
+ adversaries of the gods&mdash;the special adversary of their light and
+ creative power&mdash;Python against Apollo. As the power of the earth
+ against the air, the giants are serpent-bodied in the Gigantomachia; but
+ as the power of the earth upon the seed&mdash;consuming it into new life
+ ("that which thou sowest is not quickened except it die")&mdash;serpents
+ sustain the chariot of the spirit of agriculture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 70. Yet on the other hand, there is a power in the earth to take away
+ corruption, and to purify (hence the very fact of burial, and many uses of
+ earth, only lately known): and in this sense the serpent is a healing
+ spirit,&mdash;the representative of Æsculapius, and of Hygieia; and is a
+ sacred earth-type in the temple of the native earth of Athens; so that its
+ departure from the temple was a sign to the Athenians that they were to
+ leave their homes. And then, lastly, as there is a strength and healing in
+ the earth, no less than the strength of air, so there is conceived to be a
+ wisdom of earth no less than a wisdom of the spirit; and when its deadly
+ power is killed, its guiding power becomes true; so that the Python
+ serpent is killed at Delphi, where yet the oracle is from the breath of
+ the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 71. You must remember, however, that in this, as in every other instance,
+ I take the myth at its central time. This is only the meaning of the
+ serpent to the Greek mind which could conceive an Athena. Its first
+ meaning to the nascent eyes of men, and its continued influence over
+ degraded races, are subjects of the most fearful mystery. Mr. Fergusson
+ has just collected the principal evidence bearing on the matter in a work
+ of very great value, and if you read his opening chapters, they will put
+ you in possession of the circumstances needing chiefly to be considered. I
+ cannot touch upon any of them here, except only to point out that, though
+ the doctrine of the so-called "corruption of human nature," asserting that
+ there is nothing but evil in humanity, is just as blasphemous and false as
+ a doctrine of the corruption of physical nature would be, asserting there
+ was nothing but evil in the earth,&mdash; there is yet the clearest
+ evidence of a disease, plague, or cretinous imperfection of development,
+ hitherto allowed to prevail against the greater part of the races of men;
+ and this in monstrous ways, more full of mystery than the serpent-being
+ itself. I have gathered for you tonight only instances of what is
+ beautiful in Greek religion; but even in its best time there were deep
+ corruptions in other phases of it, and degraded forms of many of its
+ deities, all originating in a misunderstood worship of lower races, little
+ less than these corrupted forms of devotion can be found, all having a
+ strange and dreadful consistency with each other, and infecting
+ Christianity, even at its strongest periods, with fatal terror of
+ doctrine, and ghastliness of symbolic conception, passing through fear
+ into frenzied grotesque, and thence into sensuality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Psalter of St. Louis itself, half of its letters are twisted
+ snakes; there is scarcely a wreathed ornament, employed in Christian
+ dress, or architecture, which cannot be traced back to the serpent's coil;
+ and there is rarely a piece of monkish decorated writing in the world that
+ is not tainted with some ill-meant vileness of grotesque,&mdash; nay, the
+ very leaves of the twisted ivy-pattern of the fourteenth century can be
+ followed back to wreaths for the foreheads of bacchanalian gods. And
+ truly, it seems to me, as I gather in my mind the evidences of insane
+ religion, degraded art, merciless war, sullen toil, detestable pleasure,
+ and vain or vile hope, in which the nations of the world have lived since
+ first they could bear record of themselves&mdash;it seems to me, I say, as
+ if the race itself were still half-serpent, not extricated yet from its
+ clay; a lacertine breed of bitterness&mdash;the glory of it emaciate with
+ cruel hunger, and blotted on the leaf a glittering slime, and in the sand
+ a useless furrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 72. There are no myths, therefore, by which the moral state and fineness
+ of intelligence of different races can be so deeply tried or measured, as
+ by those of the serpent and the bird; both of them having an especial
+ relation to the kind of remorse for sin, or for the grief in fate, of
+ which the national minds that spoke by them had been capable. The serpent
+ and vulture are alike emblems of immortality and purification among races
+ which desired to be immortal and pure; and as they recognize their own
+ misery, the serpent becomes to them the scourge of the Furies, and the
+ vulture finds its eternal prey in their breast. The bird long contests
+ among the Egyptians with the still received serpent symbol of power. But
+ the Draconian image of evil is established in the serpent Apap; while the
+ bird's wings, with the globe, become part of a better symbol of deity, and
+ the entire form of the vulture, as an emblem of purification, is
+ associated with the earliest conception of Athena. In the type of the dove
+ with the olive branch, the conception of the spirit of Athena in renewed
+ life prevailing over ruin is embodied for the whole of futurity; while the
+ Greeks, to whom, in a happier climate and higher life than that of Egypt,
+ the vulture symbol of cleansing became unintelligible, took the eagle
+ instead for their hieroglyph of supreme spiritual energy, and it
+ thenceforward retains its hold on the human imagination, till it is
+ established among Christian myths as the expression of the most exalted
+ form of evangelistic teaching. The special relation of Athena to her
+ favorite bird we will trace presently; the peacock of Hera, and dove of
+ Aphrodite, are comparatively unimportant myths; but the bird power is soon
+ made entirely human by the Greeks in their flying angel of victory
+ (partially human, with modified meaning of evil, in the Harpy and Siren);
+ and thenceforward it associates itself with the Hebrew cherubim, and has
+ had the most singular influence on the Christian religion by giving its
+ wings to render the conception of angels mysterious and untenable, and
+ check rational endeavor to determine the nature of subordinate spiritual
+ agency; while yet it has given to that agency a vague poetical influence
+ of the highest value in its own imaginative way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 73. But with the early serpent-worship there was associated another, that
+ of the groves, of which you will also find the evidence exhaustively
+ collected in Mr. Fergussen's work. This tree-worship may have taken a dark
+ form when associated with the Draconian one; or opposed, as in Judea, to a
+ purer faith; but in itself, I believe, it was always healthy, and though
+ it retains little definite hieroglyphic power in subsequent religion, it
+ becomes, instead of symbolic, real; the flowers and trees are themselves
+ beheld and beloved with a half-worshipping delight, which is always noble
+ and healthful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it is among the most notable indications of the volition of the
+ animating power that we find the ethical signs of good and evil set on
+ these also, as well as upon animals; the venom of the serpent, and in some
+ respects its image also, being associated even with the passionless growth
+ of the leaf out of the ground; while the distinctions of species seem
+ appointed with more definite ethical address to the intelligence of man as
+ their material products become more useful to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 74. I can easily show this, and, at the same time, make clear the relation
+ to other plants of the flowers which especially belong to Athena, by
+ examining the natural myths in the groups of the plants which would be
+ used at any country dinner, over which Athena would, in her simplest
+ household authority, cheerfully rule here in England. Suppose Horace's
+ favorite dish of beans, with the bacon; potatoes; some savory stuffing of
+ onions and herbs, with the meat; celery, and a radish or two, with the
+ cheese; nuts and apples for desert, and brown bread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 75. The beans are, from earliest time, the most important and interesting
+ of the seeds of the great tribe of plants from which came the Latin and
+ French name for all kitchen vegetables,&mdash;things that are gathered
+ with the hand&mdash;podded seeds that cannot be reaped, or beaten, or
+ shaken down, but must be gathered green. "Leguminous" plants, all of them
+ having flowers like butterflies, seeds in (frequently pendent) pods,
+ &mdash;"lætum siliqua quassante legumen"&mdash;smooth and tender leaves,
+ divided into many minor ones; strange adjuncts of tendril, for climbing
+ (and sometimes of thorn); exquisitely sweet, yet pure scents of blossom,
+ and almost always harmless, if not serviceable seeds. It is of all tribes
+ of plants the most definite, its blossoms being entirely limited in their
+ parts, and not passing into other forms. It is also the most usefully
+ extended in range and scale; familiar in the height of the forest&mdash;
+ acacia, laburnum, Judas-tree; familiar in the sown field&mdash;bean and
+ vetch and pea; familiar in the pasture&mdash;in every form of clustered
+ clover and sweet trefoil tracery; the most entirely serviceable and human
+ of all orders of plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 76. Next, in the potato, we have the scarcely innocent underground stem of
+ one of a tribe set aside for evil; having the deadly nightshade for its
+ queen, and including the henbane, the witch's mandrake, and the worst
+ natural curse of modern civilization&mdash;tobacco.* And the strange thing
+ about this tribe is, that though thus set aside for evil, they are not a
+ group distinctly separate from those that are happier in function. There
+ is nothing in other tribes of plants like the form of the bean blossom;
+ but there is another family of forms and structure closely connected with
+ this venomous one. Examine the purple and yellow bloom of the common hedge
+ nightshade; you will find it constructed exactly like some of the forms of
+ the cyclamen; and, getting this clue, you will find at last the whole
+ poisonous and terrible group to be&mdash;sisters of the primulas!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * It is not easy to estimate the demoralizing effect on the youth of
+ Europe of the cigar, in enabling them to pass their time happily in
+ idleness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nightshades are, in fact, primroses with a curse upon them; and a sign
+ set in their petals, by which the deadly and condemned flowers may always
+ be known from the innocent ones,&mdash;that the stamens of the nightshades
+ are between the lobes, and of the primulas, opposite the lobes, of the
+ corolla.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 77. Next, side by side, in the celery and radish, you have the two great
+ groups of unbelled and cruciferous plants; alike in conditions of rank
+ among herbs: both flowering in clusters; but the unbelled group, flat, the
+ crucifers, in spires: both of them mean and poor in the blossom, and
+ losing what beauty they have by too close crowding; both of them having
+ the most curious influence on human character in the temperate zones of
+ the earth, from the days of the parsley crown, and hemlock drink, and
+ mocked Euripidean chervil, until now; but chiefly among the northern
+ nations, being especially plants that are of some humble beauty, and (the
+ crucifers) of endless use, when they are chosen and cultivated; but that
+ run to wild waste, and are the signs of neglected ground, in their rank or
+ ragged leaves and meagre stalks, and pursed or podded seed clusters.
+ Capable, even under cultivation, of no perfect beauty, thought reaching
+ some subdued delightfulness in the lady's smock and the wallflower; for
+ the most part they have every floral quality meanly, and in vain,&mdash;they
+ are white without purity; golden, without preciousness; redundant, without
+ richness; divided, without fineness; massive, without strength; and
+ slender, without grace. Yet think over that useful vulgarity of theirs;
+ and of the relations of German and English peasant character to its food
+ of kraut and cabbage (as of Arab character to its food of palm-fruit), and
+ you will begin to feel what purposes of the forming spirit are in these
+ distinctions of species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 78. Next we take the nuts and apples,&mdash;the nuts representing one of
+ the groups of catkined trees, whose blossoms are only tufts and dust; and
+ the other, the rose tribe, in which fruit and flower alike have been the
+ types to the highest races of men, of all passionate temptation, or pure
+ delight, from the coveting of Eve to the crowing of the Madonna, above the
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Rosa sempiterna,
+ Che si dilata, rigrada, e ridole
+ Odor di lode al Sol."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We have no time now for these, we must go on to the humblest group of all,
+ yet the most wonderful, that of the grass which has given us our bread;
+ and from that we will go back to the herbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 79. The vast family of plants which, under rain, make the earth green for
+ man, and, under sunshine, give him bread, and, in their springing in the
+ early year, mixed with their native flowers, have given us (far more than
+ the new leaves of trees) the thought and word of "spring," divide
+ themselves broadly into three great groups&mdash;the grasses, sedges, and
+ rushes. The grasses are essentially a clothing for healthy and pure
+ ground, watered by occasional rain, but in itself dry, and fit for all
+ cultivated pasture and corn. They are distinctively plants with round and
+ jointed stems, which have long green flexible leaves, and heads of seed,
+ independently emerging from them. The sedges are essentially the clothing
+ of waste and more or less poor or uncultivated soils, coarse in their
+ structure, frequently triangular in stem&mdash;hence called "acute" by
+ Virgil&mdash;and with their heads of seed not extricated from their
+ leaves. Now, in both the sedges and grasses, the blossom has a common
+ structure, though undeveloped in the sedges, but composed always of groups
+ of double husks, which have mostly a spinous process in the centre,
+ sometimes projecting into a long awn or beard; this central process being
+ characteristic also of the ordinary leaves of mosses, as if a moss were a
+ kind of ear of corn made permanently green on the ground, and with a new
+ and distinct fructification. But the rushes differ wholly from the sedge
+ and grass in their blossom structure. It is not a dual cluster, but a
+ twice threefold one, so far separate from the grasses, and so closely
+ connected with a higher order of plants, that I think you will find it
+ convenient to group the rushes at once with that higher order, to which,
+ if you will for the present let me give the general name of Drosidæ, or
+ dew-plants, it will enable me to say what I have to say of them much more
+ shortly and clearly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 80. These Drosidæ, then, are plants delighting in interrupted moisture&mdash;
+ or at certain seasons&mdash;into dry ground. They are not among
+ water-plants, but the signs of water resting among dry places. Many of the
+ true water-plants have triple blossoms, with a small triple calyx holding
+ them; in the Drosidæ the floral spirit passes into the calyx also, and the
+ entire flower becomes a six-rayed star, bursting out of the stem
+ laterally, as if it were the first of flowers and had made its way to the
+ light by force through the unwilling green. They are often required to
+ retain moisture or nourishment for the future blossom through long times
+ of drought; and this they do in bulbs under ground, of which some become a
+ rude and simple, but most wholesome, food for man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 81. So, now, observe, you are to divide the whole family of the herbs of
+ the field into three great groups,&mdash;Drosidæ, Carices,* Gramineæ,&mdash;
+ dew-plants, sedges, and grasses. Then the Drosidæ are divided into five
+ great orders: lilies, asphodels, amaryllids, irids, and rushes. No tribes
+ of flowers have had so great, so varied, or so healthy an influence on man
+ as this great group of Drosidæ, depending, not so much on the whiteness of
+ some of their blossoms, or the radiance of others, as on the strength and
+ delicacy of the substance of their petals; enabling them to take forms of
+ faultless elastic curvature, either in cups, as the crocus, or expanding
+ bells, as the true lily, or heath-like bells, as the hyacinth, or bright
+ and perfect stars, like the star of Bethlehem, or, when they are affected
+ by the strange reflex of the serpent nature which forms the labiate group
+ of all flowers, closing into forms of exquisitely fantastic symmetry in
+ the gladiolus. Put by their side their Nereid sisters, the water-lilies,
+ and you have them in the origin of the loveliest forms of ornamental
+ design, and the most powerful floral myths yet recognized among human
+ spirits, born by the streams of Ganges, Nile, Arno, and Avon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * I think Carex will be found ultimately better than Cyperus for the
+ generic name, being the Vergilian word, and representing a larger
+ sub-species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 82. For consider a little what each of those five tribes* has been to the
+ spirit of man. First, in their nobleness, the lilies gave the lily of the
+ Annunciation; the asphodels, the flower of the Elysian fields; the irids,
+ the fleur-de-lys of chivalry; and the amaryllids, Christ's lily of the
+ field; while the rush, trodden always under foot, became the emblem of
+ humility. Then take each of the tribes, and consider the extent of their
+ lower influence. Perdita's "The crown imperial, lilies of all kinds," are
+ the first tribe, which, giving the type of perfect purity in the Madonna's
+ lily, have, by their lovely form, influenced the entire decorative design
+ of Italian sacred art; while ornament design of war was continually
+ enriched by the curves of the triple petals of the Florentine "giglio,"
+ and French fleur-de-lys; so that it is impossible to count their influence
+ for good in the middle ages, partly as a symbol of womanly character, and
+ partly of the utmost brightness and refinement of chivalry in the city
+ which was the flower of cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Take this rough distinction of the four tribes: lilies, superior ovary,
+ white seeds; asphodels, superior ovary, black seeds; irids, inferior
+ ovary, style (typically) rising into central crest; amaryllids, inferior
+ ovary, stamens (typically) joined in central cup. Then the rushes are a
+ dark group, through which they stoop to the grasses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Afterwards, the group of the turban-lilies, or tulips, did some mischief
+ (their splendid stains having made them the favorite caprice of florists);
+ but they may be pardoned all such guilt for the pleasure they have given
+ in cottage gardens, and are yet to give, when lowly life may again be
+ possible among us; and the crimson bars of the tulips in their trim beds,
+ with their likeness in crimson bars of morning above them, and its dew
+ glittering heavy, globed in their glossy cups, may be loved better than
+ the gray nettles of the ash heap, under gray sky, unveined by vermilion or
+ by gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 83. The next great group, of the asphodels, divides itself also into two
+ principal families: one, in which the flowers are like stars, and
+ clustered characteristically in balls, though opening sometimes into
+ looser heads; and the other, in which the flowers are in long bells,
+ opening suddenly at the lips, and clustered in spires on a long stem, or
+ drooping from it, when bent by their weight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The star-group, of the squills, garlics, and onions, has always caused me
+ great wonder. I cannot understand why its beauty, and serviceableness,
+ should have been associated with the rank scent which has been really
+ among the most powerful means of degrading peasant life, and separating it
+ from that of the higher classes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The belled group, of the hyacinth and convallaria, is as delicate as the
+ other is coarse; the unspeakable azure light along the ground of the wood
+ hyacinth in English spring; the grape hyacinth, which is in south France,
+ as if a cluster of grapes and a hive of honey had been distilled and
+ compressed together into one small boss of celled and beaded blue; the
+ lilies of the valley everywhere, in each sweet and wild recess of rocky
+ lands,&mdash;count the influences of these on childish and innocent life;
+ then measure the mythic power of the hyacinth and asphodel as connected
+ with Greek thoughts of immortality; finally take their useful and
+ nourishing power in ancient and modern peasant life, and it will be
+ strange if you do not feel what fixed relation exists between the agency
+ of the creating spirit in these, and in us who live by them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 84. It is impossible to bring into any tenable compass for our present
+ purpose, even hints of the human influence of the two remaining orders of
+ Amaryllids and Irids; only note this generally, that while these in
+ northern countries share with the Primulas the fields of spring, it seems
+ that in Greece, the primulaceæ are not an extended tribe, while the
+ crocus, narcissus, and Amaryllis lutea, the "lily of the field" (I suspect
+ also that the flower whose name we translate "violet" was in truth an
+ iris) represented to the Greek the first coming of the breath of life on
+ the renewed herbage; and became in his thoughts the true embroidery of the
+ saffron robe of Athena. Later in the year, the dianthus (which, though
+ belonging to an entirely different race of plants, has yet a strange look
+ of being made out of the grasses by turning the sheath-membrane at the
+ root of their leaves into a flower) seems to scatter, in multitudinous
+ families, its crimson stars far and wide. But the golden lily and crocus,
+ together with the asphodel, retain always the old Greek's fondest
+ thoughts,&mdash;they are only "golden" flowers that are to burn on the
+ trees, and float on the streams of paradise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 85. I have but one tribe of plants more to note at our country feast&mdash;
+ the savory herbs; but must go a little out of my way to come at them
+ rightly. All flowers whose petals are fastened together, and most of those
+ whose petals are loose, are best thought of first as a kind of cup or tube
+ opening at the mouth. Sometimes the opening is gradual, as in the
+ convolvulus or campanula; oftener there is a distinct change of direction
+ between the tube and expanding lip, as in the primrose; or even a
+ contraction under the lip, making the tube into a narrow-necked phial or
+ vase, as in the heaths; but the general idea of a tube expanding into a
+ quatrefoil, cinquefoil, or sixfoil, will embrace most of the forms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 86. Now, it is easy to conceive that flowers of this kind, growing in
+ close clusters, may, in process of time, have extended their outside
+ petals rather than the interior ones (as the outer flowers of the clusters
+ of many umbellifers actually do), and thus elongated and variously
+ distorted forms have established themselves; then if the stalk is attached
+ to the side instead of the base of the tube, its base becomes a spur, and
+ thus all the grotesque forms of the mints, violets, and larkspurs,
+ gradually might be composed. But, however this may be, there is one great
+ tribe of plants separate from the rest, and of which the influence seems
+ shed upon the rest, in different degrees; and these would give the
+ impression, not so much of having been developed by change, as of being
+ stamped with a character of their own, more or less serpentine or
+ dragon-like. And I think you will find it convenient to call these
+ generally Draconidæ; disregarding their present ugly botanical name which
+ I do not care even to write once&mdash;you may take for their principal
+ types the foxglove, snapdragon, and calceolaria; and you will find they
+ all agree in a tendency to decorate themselves by spots, and with bosses
+ or swollen places in their leaves, as if they had been touched by poison.
+ The spot of the foxglove is especially strange, because it draws the color
+ out of the tissue all around it, as if it had been stung, and as if the
+ central color was really an inflamed spot, with paleness round. Then also
+ they carry to its extreme the decoration by bulging or pouting out the
+ petal,&mdash;often beautifully used by other flowers in a minor degree,
+ like the beating out of bosses in hollow silver, as in the kalmia, beaten
+ out apparently in each petal by the stamens instead of a hammer; or the
+ borage, pouting towards; but the snapdragons and calceolarias carry it to
+ its extreme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 87. Then the spirit of these Draconidæ seems to pass more or less into
+ other flowers, whose forms are properly pure vases; but it affects some of
+ them slightly, others not at all. It never strongly affects the heaths;
+ never once the roses; but it enters like an evil spirit into the
+ buttercup, and turns it into a larkspur, with a black, spotted, grotesque
+ centre, and a strange, broken blue, gorgeous and intense, yet impure,
+ glittering on the surface as if it were strewn with broken glass, and
+ stained or darkening irregularly into red. And then at last the serpent
+ charm changes the ranunculus into monkshood, and makes it poisonous. It
+ enters into the forget-me-not, and the star of heavenly turquoise is
+ corrupted into the viper's bugloss, darkened with the same strange red as
+ the larkspur, and fretted into a fringe of thorn; it enters, together with
+ a strange insect-spirit, into the asphodels, and (though with a greater
+ interval between the groups) they change to spotted orchideæ; it touches
+ the poppy, it becomes a fumaria; the iris, and it pouts into a gladiolus;
+ the lily, and it chequers itself into a snake's-head, and secretes in the
+ deep of its bell, drops, not of venom indeed, but honey-dew, as if it were
+ a healing serpent. For there is an Æsculapian as well as an evil serpentry
+ among the Draconidæ, and the fairest of them, the "erba della Madonna" of
+ Venice (Linaria Cymbalaria), descends from the ruins it delights into the
+ herbage at their feet, and touches it; and behold, instantly, a vast group
+ of herbs for healing,&mdash;all draconid in form,&mdash;spotted and
+ crested, and from their lip-like corollas named "labiatæ;" full of various
+ balm, and warm strength for healing, yet all of them without splendid
+ honor or perfect beauty, "ground ives," richest when crushed under the
+ foot; the best sweetness and gentle brightness of the robes of the field,&mdash;thyme,
+ and marjoram, and Euphrasy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 88. And observe, again and again, with respect to all these divisions and
+ powers of plants: it does not matter in the least by what concurrences of
+ circumstance or necessity they may gradually have been developed; the
+ concurrence of circumstance is itself the supreme and inexplicable fact.
+ We always come at last to a formative cause, which directs the
+ circumstance, and mode of meeting it. If you ask an ordinary botanist the
+ reason of the form of the leaf, he will tell you that it is a "developed
+ tubercle," and that its ultimate form "is owing to the directions of its
+ vascular threads." But what directs its vascular threads? "They are
+ seeking for something they want," he will probably answer. What made them
+ want that? What made them seek for it thus? Seek for it, in five fibres or
+ in three? Seek for it, in serration, or in sweeping curves? Seek for it,
+ in servile tendrils, or impetuous spray? Seek for it, in woolen wrinkles
+ rough with stings, or in glossy surfaces, green with pure strength, and
+ winterless delight?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 89. There is no answer. But the sum of all is, that over the entire
+ surface of the earth, and its waters, as influenced by the power of the
+ air under solar light, there is developed a series of changing forms, in
+ clouds, plants, and animals, all of which have reference in their action,
+ or nature, to the human intelligence that perceives them; and on which, in
+ their aspects of horror and beauty, and their qualities of good and evil,
+ there is engraved a series of myths, or words of the forming power, which,
+ according to the true passion and energy of the human race, they have been
+ enabled to read into religion. And this forming power has been by all
+ nations partly confused with the breath or air through which it acts, and
+ partly understood as a creative wisdom, proceeding from the Supreme Deity;
+ but entering into and inspiring all intelligences that work in harmony
+ with Him. And whatever intellectual results may be in modern days obtained
+ by regarding this effluence only as a motion of vibration, every formative
+ human art hitherto, and the best states of human happiness and order, may
+ have depended on the apprehension of its mystery (which is certain,) and
+ of its personality, which is probable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 90. Of its influence on the formative arts, I have a few words to say
+ separately: my present business is only to interpret, as we are now
+ sufficiently enabled to do, the external symbols of the myth under which
+ it was represented by the Greeks as a goddess of counsel, taken first into
+ that breast of their supreme Deity, then created out of his thoughts, and
+ abiding closely beside him; always sharing and consummating his power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 91. And in doing this we have first to note the meaning of the principal
+ epithet applied to Athena, "Glaukopis," "with eyes full of light," the
+ first syllable being connected, by its root, with words signifying sight,
+ not with words signifying color. As far as I can trace the color
+ perception of the Greeks, I find it all founded primarily on the degree of
+ connection between color and light; the most important fact to them in the
+ color of red being its connection with fire and sunshine; so that "purple"
+ is, in its original sense, "fire-color," and the scarlet or orange, of
+ dawn, more than any other fire-color. I was long puzzled by Homer's
+ calling the sea purple; and misled into thinking he meant the color of
+ cloud shadows on green sea; whereas he really means the gleaming blaze of
+ the waves under wide light. Aristotle's idea (partly true) is that light,
+ subdued by blackness, becomes red; and blackness, heated or lighted, also
+ becomes red. Thus, a color may be called purple because it is light
+ subdued (and so death is called "purple" or "shadowy" death); or else it
+ may be called purple as being shade kindled with fire, and thus said of
+ the lighted sea; or even of the sun itself, when it is thought of as a red
+ luminary opposed to the whiteness of the moon: "purpureos inter soles, et
+ candida lunæ sidera;" or of golden hair: "pro purpureo pœnam solvens
+ scelerata capillo;" while both ideas are modified by the influence of an
+ earlier form of the word, which has nothing to do with fire at all, but
+ only with mixing or staining; and then, to make the whole group of
+ thoughts inextricably complex, yet rich and subtle in proportion to their
+ intricacy, the various rose and crimson colors of the murex dye,&mdash;the
+ crimson and purple of the poppy, and fruit of the palm,&mdash; and the
+ association of all these with the hue of blood,&mdash;partly direct,
+ partly through a confusion between the word signifying "slaughter" and
+ "palm-fruit color," mingle themselves in, and renew the whole nature of
+ the old word; so that, in later literature, it means a different color, or
+ emotion of color, in almost every place where it occurs; and cast forever
+ around the reflection of all that has been dipped in its dyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 92. So that the world is really a liquid prism, and stream of opal. And
+ then, last of all, to keep the whole history of it in the fantastic course
+ of a dream, warped here and there into wild grotesque, we moderns, who
+ have preferred to rule over coal-mines instead of the sea (and so have
+ turned the everlasting lamp of Athena into a Davy's safety-lamp in the
+ hand of Britannia, and Athenian heavenly lightning into British
+ subterranean "damp"), have actually got our purple out of coal instead of
+ the sea! And thus, grotesquely, we have had enforced on us the doubt that
+ held the old word between blackness and fire, and have completed the
+ shadow, and the fear of it, by giving it a name from battle, "Magenta."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 93. There is precisely a similar confusion between light and color in the
+ word used for the blue of the eyes of Athena&mdash;a noble confusion,
+ however, brought about by the intensity of the Greek sense that the heaven
+ is light, more than it is blue. I was not thinking of this when I wrote in
+ speaking of pictorial chiaroscuro, "The sky is not blue color merely: it
+ is blue fire and cannot be painted" (Mod. P. iv. p. 36); but it was this
+ that the Greeks chiefly felt of it, and so "Glaukopis" chiefly means
+ gray-eyed: gray standing for a pale or luminous blue; but it only means
+ "owl-eyed" in thought of the roundness and expansion, not from the color;
+ this breath and brightness being, again, in their moral sense typical of
+ the breadth, intensity, and singleness of the sight in prudence ("if thine
+ eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light"). Then the actual
+ power of the bird to see in twilight enters into the type, and perhaps its
+ general fineness of sense. "Before the human form was adopted, her
+ (Athena's) proper symbol was the owl, a bird which seems to surpass all
+ other creatures in acuteness of organic perception, its eye being
+ calculated to observe objects which to all others are enveloped in
+ darkness, its ear to hear sounds distinctly, and its nostrils to
+ discriminate effluvia with such nicety that it has been deemed prophetic,
+ from discovering the putridity of death even in the first stages of
+ disease."*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Payne Knight in his "Inquiry into the Symbolical Language of Ancient
+ Art," not trustworthy, being little more than a mass of conjectural
+ memoranda, but the heap is suggestive, if well sifted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot find anywhere an account of the first known occurrence of the
+ type; but, in the early ones on Attic coins, the wide round eyes are
+ clearly the principal things to be made manifest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 94. There is yet, however, another color of great importance in the
+ conception of Athena&mdash;the dark blue of her ægis. Just as the blue or
+ gray of her eyes was conceived more as light than color, so her aegis was
+ dark blue, because the Greeks thought of this tint more as shade than
+ color, and, while they used various materials in ornamentation,
+ lapislazuli, carbonate of copper, or, perhaps, smalt, with real enjoyment
+ of the blue tint, it was yet in their minds as distinctly representative
+ of darkness as scarlet was of light, and, therefore, anything dark,* but
+ especially the color of heavy thunder-cloud, was described by the same
+ term. The physical power of this darkness of the ægis, fringed with
+ lightning, is given quite simply when Jupiter himself uses it to
+ overshadow Ida and the Plain of Troy, and withdraws it at the prayer of
+ Ajax for light; and again when he grants it to be worn for a time by
+ Apollo, who is hidden by its cloud when he strikes down Patroclus; but its
+ spiritual power is chiefly expressed by a word signifying deeper shadow,&mdash;the
+ gloom of Erebus, or of our evening, which, when spoken of the ægis,
+ signifies, not merely the indignation of Athena, but the entire hiding or
+ withdrawal of her help, and beyond even this, her deadliest of all
+ hostility,&mdash;the darkness by which she herself deceives and beguiles
+ to final ruin those to whom she is wholly adverse; this contradiction of
+ her own glory being the uttermost judgment upon human falsehood. Thus it
+ is she who provokes Pandarus to the treachery which purposed to fulfil the
+ rape of Helen by the murder of her husband in time of truce; and then the
+ Greek king, holding his wounded brother's hand, prophesies against Troy
+ the darkness of the ægis which shall be over all, and for ever.**
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * In the breastplate and shield of Atrides the serpents and bosses are all
+ of this dark color, yet the serpents are said to be like rainbows; but
+ through all this splendor and opposition of hue, I feel distinctly that
+ the literal "splendor," with its relative shade, are prevalent in the
+ conception; and that there is always a tendency to look through the hue to
+ its cause. And in this feeling about color the Greeks are separated from
+ the eastern nations, and from the best designers of Christian times. I
+ cannot find that they take pleasure in color for its own sake; it may be
+ in something more than color, or better; but it is not in the hue itself.
+ When Homer describes cloud breaking from a mountain summit, the crags
+ become visible in light, not color; he feels only their flashing out in
+ bright edges and trenchant shadows; above, the "infinite," "unspeakable"
+ æther is torn open&mdash;but not the blue of it. He has scarcely any
+ abstract pleasure in blue, or green, or gold; but only in their shade or
+ flame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have yet to trace the causes of this (which will be a long task,
+ belonging to art questions, not to mythological ones); but it is, I
+ believe, much connected with the brooding of the shadow of death over the
+ Greeks without any clear hope of immortality. The restriction of the color
+ on their vases to dim red (or yellow) with black and white, is greatly
+ connected with their sepulchral use, and with all the melancholy of Greek
+ tragic thought; and in this gloom the failure of color-perception is
+ partly noble, partly base: noble, in its earnestness, which raises the
+ design of Greek vases as far above the designing of mere colorist nations
+ like the Chinese, as men's thoughts are above children's; and yet it is
+ partly base and earthly, and inherently defective in one human faculty;
+ and I believe it was one cause of the perishing of their art so swiftly,
+ for indeed there is no decline so sudden, or down to such utter loss and
+ ludicrous depravity, as the fall of Greek design on its vases from the
+ fifth to the third century B.C. On the other hand, the pure colored-gift,
+ when employed for pleasure only, degrades in another direction; so that
+ among the Indians, Chinese, and Japanese, all intellectual progress in art
+ has been for ages rendered impossible by the prevalence of that faculty;
+ and yet it is, as I have said again and again, the spiritual power of art;
+ and its true brightness is the essential characteristic of all healthy
+ schools. ** 'eremnen Aigida pasi'.&mdash;Il. iv. 166.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 95. This, then, finally, was the perfect color-conception of Athena: the
+ flesh, snow-white (the hands, feet, and face of marble, even when the
+ statue was hewn roughly in wood); the eyes of keen pale blue, often in
+ statues represented by jewels; the long robe to the feet, crocus-colored;
+ and the ægis thrown over it of thunderous purple; the helmet golden (Il.
+ v. 744.), and I suppose its crest also, as that of Achilles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you think carefully of the meaning and character which is now enough
+ illustrated for you in each of these colors, and remember that the
+ crocus-color and the purple were both of them developments, in opposite
+ directions, of the great central idea of fire-color, or scarlet, you will
+ see that this form of the creative spirit of the earth is conceived as
+ robed in the blue, and purple, and scarlet, the white, and the gold, which
+ have been recognized for the sacred chords of colors, from the day when
+ the cloud descended on a Rock more mighty than Ida.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 96. I have spoken throughout, hitherto, of the conception of Athena, as it
+ is traceable in the Greek mind; not as it was rendered by Greek art. It is
+ matter of extreme difficulty, requiring a sympathy at once affectionate
+ and cautious, and a knowledge reaching the earliest springs of the
+ religion of many lands, to discern through the imperfection, and, alas!
+ more dimly yet, through the triumphs of formative art, what kind of
+ thoughts they were that appointed for it the tasks of its childhood, and
+ watched by the awakening of its strength.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The religions passion is nearly always vividest when the art is weakest;
+ and the technical skill only reaches its deliberate splendor when the
+ ecstacy which gave it birth has passed away forever. It is as vain an
+ attempt to reason out the visionary power or guiding influence of Athena
+ in the Greek heart, from anything we now read, or possess, of the work of
+ Phidias, as it would be for the disciples of some new religion to infer
+ the spirit of Christianity from Titian's "Assumption." The effective
+ vitality of the religious conception can be traced only through the
+ efforts of trembling hands, and strange pleasures of untaught eyes; and
+ the beauty of the dream can no more be found in the first symbols by which
+ it is expressed, than a child's idea of fairy-land can be gathered from
+ its pencil scrawl, or a girl's love for her broken doll explained by the
+ defaced features. On the other hand, the Athena of Phidias was, in very
+ fact, not so much the deity, as the darling of the Athenian people. Her
+ magnificence represented their pride and fondness, more than their piety;
+ and the great artist, in lavishing upon her dignities which might be ended
+ abruptly by the pillage they provoked, resigned, apparently without
+ regret, the awe of her ancient memory; and (with only the careless
+ remonstrance of a workman too strong to be proud) even the perfectness of
+ his own art. Rejoicing in the protection of their goddess, and in their
+ own hour of glory, the people of Athena robed her, at their will, with the
+ preciousness of ivory and gems; forgot or denied the darkness of the
+ breastplate of judgment, and vainly bade its unappeasable serpents relax
+ their coils in gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 97. It will take me many a day yet&mdash;if days, many or few, are given
+ me&mdash; to disentangle in anywise the proud and practised disguises of
+ religious creeds from the instinctive arts which, grotesquely and
+ indecorously, yet with sincerity, strove to embody them, or to relate. But
+ I think the reader, by help even of the imperfect indications already
+ given to him, will be able to follow, with a continually increasing
+ security, the vestiges of the Myth of Athena; and to reanimate its almost
+ evanescent shade, by connecting it with the now recognized facts of
+ existent nature which it, more or less dimly, reflected and foretold. I
+ gather these facts together in brief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 98. The deep of air that surrounds the earth enters into union with the
+ earth at its surface, and with its waters, so as to be the apparent cause
+ of their ascending into life. First, it warms them, and shades, at once,
+ staying the heat of the sun's rays in its own body, but warding their
+ force with its clouds. It warms and cools at once, with traffic of balm
+ and frost; so that the white wreaths are withdrawn from the field of the
+ Swiss peasant by the glow of Libyan rock. It gives its own strength to the
+ sea; forms and fills every cell of its foam; sustains the precipices, and
+ designs the valleys of its waves; gives the gleam to their moving under
+ the night, and the white fire to their plains under sunrise; lifts their
+ voices along the rocks, bears above them the spray of birds, pencils
+ through them the dimpling of unfooted sands. It gathers out of them a
+ portion in the hollow of its hand: dyes, with that, the hills into dark
+ blue, and their glaciers with dying rose; inlays with that, for sapphire,
+ the dome in which it has to set the cloud; shapes out of that the heavenly
+ flocks: divides them, numbers, cherishes, bears them on its bosom, calls
+ them to their journeys, waits by their rest; feeds from them the brooks
+ that cease not, and strews with them the dews that cease. It spins and
+ weaves their fleece into wild tapestry, rends it, and renews; and flits
+ and flames, and whispers, among the golden threads, thrilling them with a
+ plectrum of strange fire that traverses them to and fro, and is enclosed
+ in them like life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It enters into the surface of the earth, subdues it, and falls together
+ with it into fruitful dust, from which can be moulded flesh; it joins
+ itself, in dew, to the substance of adamant, and becomes the green leaf
+ out of the dry ground; it enters into the separated shapes of the earth it
+ has tempered, commands the ebb and flow of the current of their life,
+ fills their limbs with its own lightness, measures their existence by its
+ indwelling pulse, moulds upon their lips the words by which one soul can
+ be known to another; is to them the hearing of the ear, and the beating of
+ the heart; and, passing away, leaves them to the peace that hears and
+ moves no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 99. This was the Athena of the greatest people of the days of old. And
+ opposite to the temple of this Spirit of the breath, and life-blood, of
+ man and beast, stood, on the Mount of Justice, and near the chasm which
+ was haunted by the goddess-Avengers, an altar to a God unknown,&mdash;
+ proclaimed at last to them, as one who, indeed, gave to all men, life, and
+ breath, and all things; and rain from heaven, filling their hearts with
+ rain from heaven, filling their hearts with food and gladness; a God who
+ had made of one blood all nations of men who dwell on the face of all the
+ earth, and had determined the times of their fate, and the bounds of their
+ habitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 100. We ourselves, fretted here in our narrow days, know less, perhaps, in
+ very deed, than they, what manner of spirit we are of, or what manner of
+ spirit we ignorantly worship. Have we, indeed, desired the Desire of all
+ nations? and will the Master whom we meant to seem, and the Messenger in
+ whom we thought we delighted, confirm, when He comes to His temple,&mdash;
+ or not find in its midst,&mdash;the tables heavy with gold for bread, and
+ the seats that are bought with the price of the dove? Or is our own land
+ also to be left by its angered Spirit,&mdash;left among those, where
+ sunshine vainly sweet, and passionate folly of storm, waste themselves in
+ the silent places of knowledge that has passed away, and of tongues that
+ have ceased?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This only we may discern assuredly; this, every true light of science,
+ every mercifully-granted power, every wisely-restricted thought, teach us
+ more clearly day by day, that in the heavens above, and the earth beneath,
+ there is one continual and omnipotent presence of help, and of peace, for
+ all men who know that they live, and remember that they die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. &mdash; ATHENA ERGANE.* (Athena in the Heart.)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ * "Athena the worker, or having rule over work." The name was first give
+ to her by the Athenians.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+VARIOUS NOTES RELATING TO THE CONCEPTION OF ATHENA AS THE DIRECTRESS OF
+ THE IMAGINATION AND WILL.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 101. I have now only a few words to say, bearing on what seems to me
+ present need, respecting the third function of Athena, conceived as the
+ directress of human passion, resolution, and labor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few words, for I am not yet prepared to give accurate distinction between
+ the intellectual rule of Athena and that of the Muses; but, broadly, the
+ Muses, with their king, preside over meditative, historical, and poetic
+ arts, whose end is the discovery of light or truth, and the creation of
+ beauty; but Athena rules over moral passion, and practically useful art.
+ She does not make men learned, but prudent and subtle; she does not teach
+ them to make their work beautiful, but to make it right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In different places of my writings, and though many years of endeavor to
+ define the laws of art, I have insisted on this rightness in work, and on
+ its connection with virtue of character, in so many partial ways, that the
+ impression left on the reader's mind&mdash;if, indeed, it was ever
+ impressed at all&mdash;has been confused and uncertain. In beginning the
+ series of my corrected works, I wish this principle (in my own mind the
+ foundation of every other) to be made plain, if nothing else is; and will
+ try, therefore, to make it so, as far as, by any effort, I can put it into
+ unmistakable words. And, at first, here is a very simple statement of it,
+ given lately in a lecture on the Architecture of the Valley of the Somme,
+ which will be better read in this place than in its incidental connection
+ with my account of the porches of Abbeville.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 102. I had used, in a preceding part of the lecture, the expression, "by
+ what faults" this Gothic architecture fell. We continually speak thus of
+ works of art. We talk of their faults and merits, as of virtues and vices.
+ What do we mean by talking of the faults of a picture, or the merits of a
+ piece of stone?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The faults of a work of art are the faults of its workman, and its virtues
+ his virtues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great art is the expression of the mind of a great man, and mean art, that
+ of the want of mind of a weak man. A foolish person builds foolishly, and
+ a wise one, sensibly; a virtuous one, beautifully; and a vicious one,
+ basely. If stone work is well put together, it means that a thoughtful man
+ planned it, and a careful man cut it, and an honest man cemented it. If it
+ has too much ornament, it means that its carver was too greedy of
+ pleasure; if too little, that he was rude, or insensitive, or stupid, and
+ the like. So that when once you have learned how to spell these most
+ precious of all legends,&mdash;pictures and buildings,&mdash;you may read
+ the characters of men, and of nations, in their art, as in a mirror; nay,
+ as in a microscope, and magnified a hundredfold; for the character becomes
+ passionate in the art, and intensifies itself in all its noblest or
+ meanest delights. Nay, not only as in a microscope, but as under a
+ scalpel, and in dissection; for a man may hide himself from you, or
+ misrepresent himself to you every other way; but he cannot in his work:
+ there, be sure, you have him to the inmost. All that he likes, all that he
+ sees,&mdash;all that he can do,&mdash;his imagination, his affections, his
+ perseverance, his impatience, his clumsiness, cleverness, everything is
+ there. If the work is a cobweb, you know it was made by a spider; if a
+ honey-comb, by a bee; a wormcast is thrown up by a worm, and a nest
+ wreathed by a bird; and a house built by a man, worthily, if he is worthy,
+ and ignobly if he is ignoble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And always, from the least to the greatest, as the made thing is good or
+ bad, so is the maker of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 103. You will use this faculty of judgment more or less, whether you
+ theoretically admit the principle or not. Take that floral gable;* you
+ don't suppose the man who built Stonehenge could have built that, or that
+ the man who built that, would have built Stonehenge? Do you think an old
+ Roman would have liked such a piece of filigree work? or that Michael
+ Angelo would have spent his time in twisting these stems of roses in and
+ out? Or, of modern handicraftsmen, do you think a burglar, or a brute, or
+ a pickpocket could have carved it? Could Bill Sykes have done it? or the
+ Dodger, dexterous with finger and tool? You will find in the end, that no
+ man could have done it but exactly the man who did it; and by looking
+ close at it, you may, if you know your letters, read precisely the manner
+ of man he was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * The elaborate pendiment above the central porch at the west end of Rouen
+ Cathedral, pierced into a transparent web of tracery, and enriched with a
+ border of "twisted eglantine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 104. Now I must insist on this matter, for a grave reason. Of all facts
+ concerning art, this is the one most necessary to be known, that, while
+ manufacture is the work of hands only, art is the work of the whole spirit
+ of man; and as that spirit is, so is the deed of it; and by whatever power
+ of vice or virtue any art is produced, the same vice or virtue it
+ reproduces and teaches. That which is born of evil begets evil; and that
+ which is born of valor and honor, teaches valor and honor. All art is
+ either infection or education. It must be one or other of these.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 105. This, I repeat, of all truths respecting art, is the one of which
+ understanding is the most precious, and denial the most deadly. And I
+ assert it the more, because it has of late been repeatedly, expressly, and
+ with contumely, denied, and that by high authority; and I hold it one of
+ the most sorrowful facts connected with the decline of the arts among us,
+ that English gentlemen, of high standing as scholars and artists, should
+ have been blinded into the acceptance, and betrayed into the assertion of
+ a fallacy which only authority such as theirs could have rendered for an
+ instant credible. For the contrary of it is written in the history of all
+ great nations; it is the one sentence always inscribed on the steps of
+ their thrones; the one concordant voice in which they speak to us out of
+ their dust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All such nations first manifest themselves as a pure and beautiful animal
+ race, with intense energy and imagination. They live lives of hardship by
+ choice, and by grand instinct of manly discipline; they become fierce and
+ irresistible soldiers; the nation is always its own army, and their king,
+ or chief head of government, is always their first soldier. Pharaoh, or
+ David, or Leonidas, or Valerius, or Barbarossa, or Coeur de Lion, or St.
+ Louis, or Dandalo, or Frederick the Great,&mdash;Egyptian, Jew, Greek,
+ Roman, German, English, French, Venetian,&mdash;that is inviolable law for
+ them all; their king must be their first soldier, or they cannot be in
+ progressive power. Then, after their great military period, comes the
+ domestic period; in which, without betraying the discipline of war, they
+ add to their great soldiership the delights and possessions of a delicate
+ and tender home-life; and then, for all nations, is the time of their
+ perfect art, which is the fruit, the evidence, the reward of their
+ national idea of character, developed by the finished care of the
+ occupations of peace. That is the history of all true art that ever was,
+ or can be; palpably the history of it,&mdash;unmistakably,&mdash;written
+ on the forehead of it in letters of light,&mdash;in tongues of fire, by
+ which the seal of virtue is branded as deep as ever iron burnt into a
+ convict's flesh the seal of crime. But always, hitherto, after the great
+ period, has followed the day of luxury, and pursuit of the arts for
+ pleasure only. And all has so ended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 106. Thus far of Abbeville building. Now I have here asserted two things,&mdash;first,
+ the foundation of art in moral character; next, the foundation of moral
+ character in war. I must make both these assertions clearer, and prove
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First, of the foundation of art in moral character. Of course art-gift and
+ amiability of disposition are two different things; for a good man is not
+ necessarily a painter, nor does an eye for color necessarily imply an
+ honest mind. But great art implies the union of both powers; it is the
+ expression, by an art-gift, of a pure soul. If the gift is not there, we
+ can have no art at all; and if the soul&mdash;and a right soul too&mdash;
+ is not there, the art is bad, however dexterous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 107. But also, remember, that the art-gift itself is only the result of
+ the moral character of generations. A bad woman may have a sweet voice;
+ but that sweetness of voice comes of the past morality of her race. That
+ she can sing with it at all, she owes to the determination of laws of
+ music by the morality of the past. Every act, every impulse, of virtue and
+ vice, affects in any creature, face, voice, nervous power, and vigor and
+ harmony of invention, at once. Perseverance in rightness of human conduct
+ renders, after a certain number of generations, human art possible; every
+ sin that clouds it, be it ever so little a one; and persistent vicious
+ living and following of pleasure render, after a certain number of
+ generations, all art impossible. Men are deceived by the long-suffering of
+ the laws of nature, and mistake, in a nation, the reward of the virtue of
+ its sires, for the issue of its own sins. The time of their visitation
+ will come, and that inevitably; for, it is always true, that if the
+ fathers have eaten sour grapes, the children's teeth are set on edge. And
+ for the individual, as soon as you have learned to read, you may, as I
+ said, know him to the heart's core, through his art. Let his art-gift be
+ never so great, and cultivated to the height by the schools of a great
+ race of men, and it is still but a tapestry thrown over his own being and
+ inner soul; and the bearing of it will show, infallibly, whether it hangs
+ on a man or on a skeleton. If you are dim-eyed, you may not see the
+ difference in the fall of the folds at first, but learn how to look, and
+ the folds themselves will become transparent, and you shall see through
+ them the death's shape, or the divine one, making the tissue above it as a
+ cloud of right, or as a winding-sheet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 108. Then further, observe, I have said (and you will find it true, and
+ that to the uttermost) that, as all lovely art is rooted in virtue, so it
+ bares fruit of virtue, and is didactic in its own nature. It is often
+ didactic also in actually expressed thought, as Giotto's, Michael
+ Angelo's, Dürer's, and hundreds more; but that is not its special
+ function; it is didactic chiefly by being beautiful; but beautiful with
+ haunting thought, no less than with form, and full of myths that can be
+ read only with the heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For instance, at this moment there is open beside me as I write, a page of
+ Persian manuscript, wrought with wreathed azure and gold, and soft green,
+ and violet, and ruby and scarlet, into one field of pure resplendence. It
+ is wrought to delight the eyes only; and does delight them; and the man
+ who did it assuredly had eyes in his head; but not much more. It is not
+ didactic art, but its author was happy; and it will do the good, and the
+ harm, that mere pleasure can do. But, opposite me, is an early Turner
+ drawing of the lake of Geneva, taken about two miles from Geneva, on the
+ Lausanne road, with Mont Blanc in the distance. The old city is seen lying
+ beyond the waveless waters, veiled with a sweet misty veil of Athena's
+ weaving; a faint light of morning, peaceful exceedingly, and almost
+ colorless, shed from behind the Voirons, increases into soft amber along
+ the slope of the Salëve, and is just seen, and no more, on the fair warm
+ fields of its summit, between the folds of a white cloud that rests upon
+ the grass, but rises, high and tower-like, into the zenith of dawn above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 109. There is not as much color in that low amber light upon the hillside
+ as there is in the palest dead leaf. The lake is not blue, but gray in
+ mist, passing into deep shadow beneath the Voirons' pines; a few dark
+ clusters of leaves, a single white flower&mdash;scarcely seen&mdash;are
+ all the gladness given to the rocks of the shore. One of the ruby spots of
+ the eastern manuscript would give color enough for all the red that is in
+ Turner's entire drawing. For the mere pleasure of the eye, there is not so
+ much in all those lines of his, throughout the entire landscape, as in
+ half an inch square of the Persian's page. What made him take pleasure in
+ the low color that is only like the brown of a dead leaf? in the cold gray
+ of dawn&mdash;in the one white flower among the rocks&mdash;in these&mdash;and
+ no more than these?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 110. He took pleasure in them because he had been bred among English
+ fields and hills; because the gentleness of a great race was in his heart,
+ and its powers of thought in his brain; because he knew the stories of the
+ Alps, and of the cities at their feet; because he had read the Homeric
+ legends of the clouds, and beheld the gods of dawn, and the givers of dew
+ to the fields; because he knew the faces of the crags, and the imagery of
+ the passionate mountains, as a man knows the face of his friend; because
+ he had in him the wonder and sorrow concerning life and death, which are
+ the inheritance of the Gothic soul from the days of its first sea kings;
+ and also the compassion and the joy that are woven into the innermost
+ fabric of every great imaginative spirit, born now in countries that have
+ lived by the Christian faith with any courage or truth. And the picture
+ contains also, for us, just this which its maker had in him to give; and
+ can convey it to us, just so far as we are of the temper in which it must
+ be received. It is didactic if we are worthy to be taught, not otherwise.
+ The pure heart, it will make more pure; the thoughtful, more thoughtful.
+ It has in it no words for the reckless or the base.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 111. As I myself look at it, there is no fault nor folly of my life&mdash;and
+ both have been many and great&mdash;that does not rise up against me, and
+ take away my joy, and shorten my power of possession of sight, of
+ understanding. And every past effort of my life, every gleam of rightness
+ or good in it, is with me now, to help me in my grasp of this art, and its
+ vision. So far as I can rejoice in, or interpret either, my power is owing
+ to what of right there is in me. I dare to say it, that, because through
+ all my life I have desired good, and not evil; because I have been kind to
+ many; have wished to be kind to all; have wilfully injured none; and
+ because I have loved much, and not selfishly; therefore, the morning light
+ is yet visible to me on those hills, and you, who read, may trust my
+ thought and word in such work as I have to do for you; and you will be
+ glad afterwards that you have trusted them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 112. Yet, remember,&mdash;I repeat it again and yet again,&mdash;that I
+ may for once, if possible, make this thing assuredly clear: the inherited
+ art-gift must be there, as well as the life in some poor measure, or
+ rescued fragment, right. This art-gift of mine could not have been won by
+ any work or by any conduct: it belongs to me by birthright, and came by
+ Athena's will, from the air of English country villages, and Scottish
+ hills. I will risk whatever charge of folly may come on me, for printing
+ one of my many childish rhymes, written on a frosty day in Glen Farg, just
+ north of Loch Leven. It bears date 1st January, 1828. I was born on the
+ 8th of February, 1819; and al that I ever could be, and all that I cannot
+ be, the weak little rhyme already shows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Papa, how pretty those icicles are, That are seen so near,&mdash;that are
+ seen so far; &mdash;Those dropping waters that come from the rocks And
+ many a hole, like the haunt of a fox. That silvery stream that runs
+ babbling along, Making a murmuring, dancing song. Those trees that stand
+ waving upon the rock's side, And men, that, like specters, among them
+ glide. And waterfalls that are heard from far, And come in sight when very
+ near. And the water-wheel that turns slowly round, Grinding the corn that&mdash;requires
+ to be ground,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (Political Economy of the future!)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;&mdash;And mountains at a distance seen, And rivers winding through
+ the plain, And quarries with their craggy stones, And the wind among them
+ moans."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So foretelling Stones of Venice, and this essay on Athena.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Enough now concerning myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 113. Of Turner's life, and of its good and evil, both great, but the good
+ immeasurably the greater, his work is in all things a perfect and
+ transparent evidence. His biography is simply, "He did this, nor will ever
+ another do its like again." Yet read what I have said of him, as compared
+ with the great Italians, in the passages taken from the "Cestus of
+ Aglaia," farther on, §158, pp. 164, 165.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 114. This, then, is the nature of the connection between morals and art.
+ Now, secondly, I have asserted the foundation of both these, at least
+ hitherto, in war. The reason of this too manifest fact is, that, until now
+ it has been impossible for any nation, except a warrior one, to fix its
+ mind wholly on its men, instead of their possessions. Every great soldier
+ nation thinks, necessarily, first of multiplying its bodies and souls of
+ men, in good temper and strict discipline. As long as this is its
+ political aim, it does not matter what it temporarily suffers, or loses,
+ either in numbers or in wealth; its morality and its arts (if it have
+ national art-gift) advance together; but so soon as it ceases to be a
+ warrior nation, it thinks of its possessions instead of its men; and then
+ the moral and poetic powers vanish together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 115. It is thus, however, absolutely necessary to the virtue of war that
+ it should be waged by personal strength, not by money or machinery. A
+ nation that fights with a mercenary force, or with torpedoes instead of
+ its own arms, is dying. Not but that there is more true courage in modern
+ than even in ancient war; but this is, first, because all the remaining
+ life of European nations is with a morbid intensity thrown into their
+ soldiers; and, secondly, because their present heroism is the culmination
+ of centuries of inbred and traditional valor, which Athena taught them by
+ forcing them to govern the foam of the sea-wave and of the horse,&mdash;not
+ the steam of kettles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 116. And further, note this, which is vital to us in the present crisis:
+ If war is to be made by money and machinery, the nation which is the
+ largest and most covetous multitude will win. You may be as scientific as
+ you choose; the mob that can pay more for sulphuric acid and gunpowder
+ will at last poison its bullets, throw acid in your faces, and make an end
+ of you; of itself, also, in good time, but of you first. And to the
+ English people the choice of its fate is very near now. It may
+ spasmodically defend its property with iron walls a fathom thick, a few
+ years longer&mdash;a very few. No walls will defend either it, or its
+ havings, against the multitude that is breeding and spreading faster than
+ the clouds, over the habitable earth. We shall be allowed to live by small
+ pedler's business, and iron-mongery&mdash;since we have chosen those for
+ our line of life&mdash;as long as we are found useful black servants to
+ the Americans, and are content to dig coals and sit in the cinders; and
+ have still coals to dig,&mdash;they once exhausted, or got cheaper
+ elsewhere, we shall be abolished. But if we think more wisely, while there
+ is yet time, and set our minds again on multiplying Englishmen, and not on
+ cheapening English wares, if we resolve to submit to wholesome laws of
+ labor and economy, and setting our political squabbles aside, try how many
+ strong creatures, friendly and faithful to each other, we can crowd into
+ every spot of English dominion, neither poison nor iron will prevail
+ against us; nor traffic, nor hatred; the noble nation will yet, by the
+ grace of heaven, rule over the ignoble, and force of heart hold its own
+ against fireballs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 117. But there is yet a further reason for the dependence of the arts on
+ war. The vice and injustice of the world are constantly springing anew,
+ and are only to be subdued by battle; the keepers of order and law must
+ always be soldiers. And now, going back to the myth of Athena, we see that
+ though she is first a warrior maid, she detests war for its own sake; she
+ arms Achilles and Ulysses in just quarrels, but she disarms Ares. She
+ contends, herself, continually against disorder and convulsion, in the
+ earth giants; she stands by Hercules' side in victory over all monstrous
+ evil; in justice only she judges and makes war. But in this war of hers
+ she is wholly implacable. She has little notion of converting criminals.
+ There is no faculty of mercy in her when she has been resisted. Her word
+ is only, "I will mock when your fear cometh." Note the words that follow:
+ "when your fear cometh as desolation, and your destruction as a
+ whirlwind;" for her wrath is of irresistible tempest: once roused, it is
+ blind and deaf,&mdash;rabies&mdash;madness of anger&mdash; darkness of the
+ Dies Iræ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And that is, indeed, the sorrowfullest fact we have to know about our own
+ several lives. Wisdom never forgives. Whatever resistance we have offered
+ to her loaw, she avenges forever; the lost hour can never be redeemed, and
+ the accomplished wrong never atoned for. The best that can be done
+ afterwards, but for that, had been better; the falsest of all the cries of
+ peace, where there is no peace, is that of the pardon of sin, as the mob
+ expect it. Wisdom can "put away" sin, but she cannot pardon it; and she is
+ apt, in her haste, to put away the sinner as well, when the black ægis is
+ on her breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 118. And this is also a fact we have to know about our national life, that
+ it is ended as soon as it has lost the power of noble Anger. When it
+ paints over, and apologizes for its pitiful criminalities; and endures its
+ false weights, and its adulterated food; dares not to decide practically
+ between good and evil, and can neither honor the one, nor smite the other,
+ but sneers at the good, as if it were hidden evil, and consoles the evil
+ with pious sympathy, and conserves it in the sugar of its leaden heart,&mdash;the
+ end is come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 119. The first sign, then, of Athena's presence with any people is that
+ they become warriors, and that the chief thought of every man of them is
+ to stand rightly in his rank, and not fail from his brother's side in
+ battle. Wealth, and pleasure, and even love, are all, under Athena's
+ orders, sacrificed to this duty of standing fast in the rank of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But further: Athena presides over industry, as well as battle; typically,
+ over women's industry; that brings comfort with pleasantness. Her word to
+ us all is: "Be well exercised, and rightly clothed. Clothed, and in your
+ right minds; not insane and in rags, nor in soiled fine clothes clutched
+ from each other's shoulders. Fight and weave. Then I myself will answer
+ for the course of the lance, and the colors of the loom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now I will ask the reader to look with some care through these
+ following passages respecting modern multitudes and their occupations,
+ written long ago, but left in fragmentary form, in which they must now
+ stay, and be of what use they can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 120. It is not political economy to put a number of strong men down on an
+ acre of ground, with no lodging, and nothing to eat. Nor is it political
+ economy to build a city on good ground, and fill it with store of corn and
+ treasure, and put a score of lepers to live in it. Political economy
+ creates together the means of life, and the living persons who are to use
+ them; and of both, the best and the most that it can, but imperatively the
+ best, not the most. A few good and healthy men, rather than a multitude of
+ diseased rogues; and a little real milk and wine rather than much chalk
+ and petroleum; but the gist of the whole business is that the men and
+ their property must both be produced together&mdash;not one to the loss of
+ the other. Property must not be created in lands desolate by exile of
+ their people, nor multiplied and depraved humanity, in lands barren of
+ bread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 121. Nevertheless, though the men and their possessions are to be
+ increased at the same time, the first object of thought is always to be
+ the multiplication of a worthy people. The strength of the nation is in
+ its multitude, not in its territory; but only in its sound multitude. It
+ is one thing, both in a man and a nation, to gain flesh, and another to be
+ swollen with putrid humors. Not that multitude ever ought to be
+ inconsistent with virtue. Two men should be wiser than one, and two
+ thousand than two; nor do I know another so gross fallacy in the records
+ of human stupidity as that excuse for neglect of crime by greatness of
+ cities. As if the first purpose of congregation were not to devise laws
+ and repress crimes! As if bees and wasps could live honestly in flocks&mdash;
+ men, only in separate dens! As if it were easy to help one another on the
+ opposite sides of a mountain, and impossible on the opposite sides of a
+ street! But when the men are true and good, and stand shoulder to
+ shoulder, the strength of any nation is in its quantity of life, not in
+ its land nor gold. The more good men a state has, in proportion to its
+ territory, the stronger the state. And as it has been the madness of
+ economists to seek for gold instead of life, so it has been the madness of
+ kings to seek for land instead of life. They want the town on the other
+ side of the river, and seek it at the spear point; it never enters their
+ stupid heads that to double the honest souls in the town on this side of
+ the river would make them stronger kings; and that this doubling might be
+ done by the ploughshare instead of the spear, and through happiness
+ instead of misery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore, in brief, this is the only object of all true policy and true
+ economy: "utmost multitude of good men on every given space of ground"&mdash;
+ imperatively always good, sound, honest men,&mdash;not a mob of
+ white-faced thieves. So that, on the one hand all aristocracy is wrong
+ which is inconsistent with numbers; and on the other all numbers are wrong
+ which are inconsistent with breeding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 122. Then, touching the accumulation of wealth for the maintenance of such
+ men, observe, that you must never use the terms "money" and "wealth" as
+ synonymous. Wealth consists of the good, and therefore useful, things in
+ the possession of the nation; money is only the written or coined sign of
+ the relative quantities of wealth in each person's possession. All money
+ is a divisible title-deed, of immense importance as an expression of right
+ to property, but absolutely valueless as property itself. Thus, supposing
+ a nation isolated from all others, the money in its possession is, at its
+ maximum value, worth all the property of the nation, and no more, because
+ no more can be got for it. And the money of all nations is worth, at its
+ maximum, the property of all nations, and no more, for no more can be got
+ for it. Thus, every article of property produced increases, by its value,
+ the value of all the money in the world, and every article of property
+ destroyed, diminishes the value of all the money in the world. If ten men
+ are cast away on a rock, with a thousand pounds in their pockets, and
+ there is on the rock, neither food nor shelter, their money is worth
+ simply nothing, for nothing is to be had for it. If they built ten huts,
+ and recover a cask of biscuit from the wreck, then their thousand pounds,
+ at its maximum value, is worth ten huts and a cask of biscuit. If they
+ make their thousand pounds into two thousand by writing new notes, their
+ two thousand pounds are still worth ten huts and a cask of biscuit. And
+ the law of relative value is the same for all the world, and all the
+ people in it, and all their property, as for ten men on a rock. Therefore,
+ money is truly and finally lost in the degree in which its value is taken
+ from it (ceasing in that degree to be money at all); and it is truly
+ gained in the degree in which value is added to it. Thus, suppose the
+ money coined by the nation be a fixed sum, and divided very minutely (say
+ into francs and cents), and neither to be added to nor diminished. Then
+ every grain of food and inch of lodging added to its possessions makes
+ every cent in its pockets worth proportionally more, and every gain of
+ food it consumes, and inch of roof it allows to fall to ruin, makes every
+ cent in its pockets worth less; and this with mathematical precision. The
+ immediate value of the money at particular times and places depends,
+ indeed, on the humors of the possessors of property; but the nation is in
+ the one case gradually getting richer, and will feel the pressure of
+ poverty steadily everywhere relaxing, whatever the humors of individuals
+ may be; and, in the other case, is gradually growing poorer, and the
+ pressure of its poverty will every day tell more and more, in ways that it
+ cannot explain, but will most bitterly feel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 123. The actual quantity of money which it coins, in relation to its real
+ property, is therefore only of consequence for convenience of exchange;
+ but the proportion in which this quantity of money is divided among
+ individuals expresses their various rights to greater or less proportions
+ of the national property, and must not, therefore, be tampered with. The
+ government may at any time, with perfect justice, double its issue of
+ coinage, if it gives every man who has ten pounds in his pocket another
+ ten pounds, and every man who had ten pence another ten pence; for it thus
+ does not make any of them richer; it merely divides their counters for
+ them into twice the number. But if it gives the newly-issued coins to
+ other people, or keeps them itself, it simply robs the former holders to
+ precisely that extent. This most important function of money, as a
+ title-deed, on the non-violation of which all national soundness of
+ commerce and peace of life depend, has been never rightly distinguished by
+ economists from the quite unimportant function of money as a means of
+ exchange. You can exchange goods&mdash;at some inconvenience, indeed, but
+ you can still contrive to do it&mdash;without money at all; but you cannot
+ maintain your claim to the savings of your past life without a document
+ declaring the amount of them, which the nation and its government will
+ respect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 124. And as economists have lost sight of this great function of money in
+ relation to individual rights, so they have equally lost sight of its
+ function as a representative of good things. That, for every good thing
+ produced, so much money is put into everybody's pocket, is the one simple
+ and primal truth for the public to know, and for economists to teach. How
+ many of them have taught it? Some have; but only incidentally; and others
+ will say it is a truism. If it be, do the public know it? Does your
+ ordinary English householder know that every costly dinner he gives has
+ destroyed forever as much money as it is worth? Does every well-educated
+ girl&mdash;do even the women in high political position&mdash;know that
+ every fine dress they wear themselves, or cause to be worn, destroys
+ precisely so much of the national money as the labor and material of it
+ are worth? If this be a truism, it is one that needs proclaiming somewhat
+ louder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 125. That, then, is the relation of money and goods. So much goods, so
+ much money; so little goods, so little money. But, as there is this true
+ relation between money and "goods," or good things, so there is a false
+ relation between money and "bads," or bad things. Many bad things will
+ fetch a price in exchange; but they do not increase the wealth of the
+ country. Good wine is wealth, drugged wine is not; good meat is wealth,
+ putrid meat is not; good pictures are wealth, bad pictures are not. A
+ thing is worth precisely what it can do for you; not what you choose to
+ pay for it. You may pay a thousand pounds for a cracked pipkin, if you
+ please; but you do not by that transaction make the cracked pipkin worth
+ one that will hold water, nor that, nor any pipkin whatsoever, worth more
+ than it was before you paid such sum for it. You may, perhaps, induce many
+ potters to manufacture fissured pots, and many amateurs of clay to buy
+ them; but the nation is, through the whole business so encouraged, rich by
+ the addition to its wealth of so many potsherds,&mdash;and there an end.
+ The thing is worth what it CAN do for you, not what you think it can; and
+ most national luxuries, nowadays, are a form of potsherd, provided for the
+ solace of a self-complacent Job, voluntary sedent on his ash-heap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 126. And, also, so far as good things already exist, and have become media
+ of exchange, the variations in their prices are absolutely indifferent to
+ the nation. Whether Mr. A. buys a Titian from Mr. B. for twenty, or for
+ two thousand, pounds, matters not sixpence to the national revenue; that
+ is to say, it matters in nowise to the revenue whether Mr. A. has the
+ picture, and Mr. B. the money, or Mr. B. the picture, and Mr. A. the
+ money. Which of them will spend the money most wisely, and which of them
+ will keep the picture most carefully, is, indeed, a matter of some
+ importance; but this cannot be known by the mere fact of exchange.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 127. The wealth of a nation then, first, and its peace and well-being
+ besides, depend on the number of persons it can employ in making good and
+ useful things. I say its well-being also, for the character of men depends
+ more on their occupations than on any teaching we can give them, or
+ principles with which we can imbue them. The employment forms the habits
+ of body and mind, and these are the constitution of the man,&mdash;the
+ greater part of his moral or persistent nature, whatever effort, under
+ special excitement, he may make to change or overcome them. Employment is
+ the half, and the primal half, of education&mdash;it is the warp of it;
+ and the fineness or the endurance of all subsequently woven pattern
+ depends wholly on its straightness and strength. And, whatever difficulty
+ there may be in tracing through past history the remoter connections of
+ event and cause, one chain of sequence is always clear: the formation,
+ namely, of the character of nations by their employments, and the
+ determination of their final fate by their character. The moment, and the
+ first direction of decisive revolutions, often depend on accident; but
+ their persistent course, and their consequences, depend wholly on the
+ nature of the people. The passing of the Reform Bill by the late English
+ Parliament may have been more or less accidental; the results of the
+ measure now rest on the character of the English people, as it has been
+ developed by their recent interests, occupations, and habits of life.
+ Whether, as a body, they employ their new powers for good or evil will
+ depend, not on their facilities of knowledge, nor even on the general
+ intelligence they may possess, but on the number of persons among them
+ whom wholesome employments have rendered familiar with the duties, and
+ modest in their estimate of the promises, of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 128. But especially in framing laws respecting the treatment or employment
+ of improvident and more or less vicious persons, it is to be remembered
+ that as men are not made heroes by the performance of an act of heroism,
+ but must be brave before they can perform it, so they are not made
+ villains by the commission of a crime, but were villains before they
+ committed it; and the right of public interference with their conduct
+ begins when they begin to corrupt themselves,&mdash;not merely at the
+ moment when they have proved themselves hopelessly corrupt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All measures of reformation are effective in exact proportion to their
+ timeliness: partial decay may be cut away and cleansed; incipient error
+ corrected; but there is a point at which corruption can be no more stayed,
+ nor wandering recalled. It has been the manner of modern philanthropy to
+ remain passive until that precise period, and to leave the sick to perish,
+ and the foolish to stray, while it spends itself in frantic exertions to
+ raise the dead, and reform the dust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The recent direction of a great weight of public opinion against capital
+ punishment is, I trust, the sign of an awakening perception that
+ punishment is the last and worst instrument in the hands of the legislator
+ for the prevention of crime. The true instruments of reformation are
+ employment and reward; not punishment. Aid the willing, honour the
+ virtuous, and compel the idle into occupation, and there will be no deed
+ for the compelling of any into the great and last indolence of death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 129. The beginning of all true reformation among the criminal classes
+ depends on the establishment of institutions for their active employment,
+ while their criminality is still unripe, and their feelings of
+ self-respect, capacities of affection, and sense of justice, not
+ altogether quenched. That those who are desirous of employment should
+ always be able to find it, will hardly, at the present day, be disputed;
+ but that those who are undesirous of employment should of all persons be
+ the most strictly compelled to it, the public are hardly yet convinced;
+ and they must be convinced. If the danger of the principal thoroughfares
+ in their capital city, and the multiplication of crimes more ghastly than
+ ever yet disgraced a nominal civilization, are not enough, they will not
+ have to wait long before they receive sterner lessons. For our neglect of
+ the lower orders has reached a point at which it begins to bear its
+ necessary fruit, and every day makes the fields, not whiter, but more
+ stable, to harvest.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+130. The general principles by which employment should be regulated may
+be briefly stated as follows:
+
+ I. There being three great classes of mechanical powers at our
+disposal, namely, (a) vital or muscular power; (b) natural mechanical
+power of wind, water, and electricity; and (c) artificially produced
+mechanical power; it is the first principle of economy to use all
+available vital power first, then the inexpensive natural forces, and
+only at last have recourse to artificial power. And this because it is
+always better for a man to work with his own hands to feed and clothe
+himself, than to stand idle while a machine works for him; and if he
+cannot by all the labor healthily possible to him feed and clothe
+himself, then it is better to use an inexpensive machine&mdash;as a windmill
+or watermill&mdash;than a costly one like a steam-engine, so long as we have
+natural force enough at our disposal. Whereas at present we continually
+hear economists regret that the water-power of the cascades or streams of
+a country should be lost, but hardly ever that the muscular power of its
+idle inhabitants should be lost; and, again, we see vast districts, as
+the south of Provence, where a strong wind* blows steadily all day long
+for six days out of seven throughout the year, without a windmill, while
+men are continually employed at a hundred miles to the north, in digging
+fuel to obtain artificial power. But the principal point of all to be
+kept in view is, that in every idle arm and shoulder throughout the
+country there is a certain quantity of force, equivalent to the force of
+so much fuel; and that it is mere insane waste to dig for coal for our
+force, while the vital force is unused, and not only unused, but in being
+so, corrupting and polluting itself. We waste our coal, and spoil our
+humanity at one and the same instant. Therefore, wherever there is an
+idle arm, always save coal with it, and the stores of England will last
+all the longer. And precisely the same argument answers the common one
+about "taking employment out of the hands of the industrious laborer."
+Why, what is "employment" but the putting out of vital force instead of
+mechanical force? We are continually in search of means to pull, to
+hammer, to fetch, to carry. We waste our future resources to get this
+strength, while we leave all the living fuel to burn itself out in mere
+pestiferous breath, and production of its variously noisome forms of
+ashes! Clearly, if we want fire for force, we want men for force first.
+The industrious hands must already have so much to do that they can do
+no more, or else we need not use machines to help them. Then use the
+idle hands first. Instead of dragging petroleum with a steam-engine, put
+it on a canal, and drag it with human arms and shoulders. Petroluem
+cannot possibly be in a hurry to arrive anywhere. We can always order
+that, and many other things, time enough before we want it. So, the
+carriage of everything which does not spoil by keeping may most
+wholesomely and safely be done by water-traction and sailing-vessels; and
+no healthier work can men be put to, nor better discipline, than such
+active porterage.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ * In order fully to utilize this natural power, we only require machinery
+ to turn the variable into a constant velocity&mdash;no insurmountable
+ difficulty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 131. (2d.) In employing all the muscular power at our disposal we are to
+ make the employments we choose as educational as possible; for a wholesome
+ human employment is the first and best method of education, mental as well
+ as bodily. A man taught to plough, row, or steer well, and a woman taught
+ to cook properly, and make a dress neatly, are already educated in many
+ essential moral habits. Labor considered as a discipline has hitherto been
+ thought of only for criminals; but the real and noblest function of labor
+ is to prevent crime, and not to be Reformatory, but Formatory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 132. The third great principle of employment is, that whenever there is
+ pressure of poverty to be met, all enforced occupation should be directed
+ to the production of useful articles only; that is to say, of food, of
+ simple clothing, of lodging, or of the means of conveying, distributing,
+ and preserving these. It is yet little understood by economists, and not
+ at all by the public, that the employment of persons in a useless business
+ cannot relieve ultimate distress. The money given to employ riband-makers
+ at Coventry is merely so much money withdrawn from what would have
+ employed lace-makers at Honiton; or makers of something else, as useless,
+ elsewhere. We must spend our money in some way, at some time, and it
+ cannot at any time be spent without employing somebody. If we gamble it
+ away, the person who wins it must spend it; if we lose it in a railroad
+ speculation, it has gone into some one else's pockets, or merely gone to
+ pay navies for making a useless embankment, instead of to pay riband or
+ button makers for making useless ribands or buttons; we cannot lose it
+ (unless by actually destroying it) without giving employment of some kind;
+ and, therefore, whatever quantity of money exists, the relative quantity
+ of employment must some day come out of it; but the distress of the nation
+ signifies that the employments given have produced nothing that will
+ support its existence. Men cannot live on ribands, or buttons, or velvet,
+ or by going quickly from place to place; and every coin spent in useless
+ ornament, or useless motion, is so much withdrawn from the national means
+ of life. One of the most beautiful uses of railroads is to enable A to
+ travel from the town of X to take away the business of B in the town of Y;
+ while, in the mean time, B travels from the town of Y to take away A's
+ business in the town of X. But the national wealth is not increased by
+ these operations. Whereas every coin spent in cultivating ground, in
+ repairing lodging, in making necessary and good roads, in preventing
+ danger by sea or land, and in carriage of food or fuel where they are
+ required, is so much absolute and direct gain to the whole nation. To
+ cultivate land round Coventry makes living easier at Honiton, and every
+ acre of sand gained from the sea in Lincolnshire, makes life easier all
+ over England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4th, and lastly. Since for every idle person some one else must be working
+ somewhere to provide him with clothes and food, and doing, therefore,
+ double the quantity of work that would be enough for his own needs, it is
+ only a matter of pure justice to compel the idle person to work for his
+ maintenance himself. The conscription has been used in many countries to
+ take away laborers who supported their families, from their useful work,
+ and maintain them for purposes chiefly of military display at the public
+ expense. Since this has been long endured by the most civilized nations,
+ let it not be thought they would not much more gladly endure a
+ conscription which should seize only the vicious and idle, already living
+ by criminal procedures at the public expense; and which should discipline
+ and educate them to labor which would not only maintain themselves, but be
+ serviceable to the commonwealth. The question is simply this: we must feed
+ the drunkard, vagabond, and thief; but shall we do so by letting them
+ steal their food, and do no work for it? or shall we give them their food
+ in appointed quantity, and enforce their doing work which shall be worth
+ it, and which, in process of time, will redeem their own characters and
+ make them happy and serviceable members of society?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I find by me a violent little fragment of undelivered lecture, which puts
+ this, perhaps, still more clearly. Your idle people (it says), as they are
+ now, are not merely waste coal-beds. They are explosive coal-beds, which
+ you pay a high annual rent for. You are keeping all these idle persons,
+ remember, at far greater cost than if they were busy. Do you think a
+ vicious person eats less than an honest one? or that it is cheaper to keep
+ a bad man drunk, than a good man sober? There is, I suppose, a dim idea in
+ the mind of the public, that they don't pay for the maintenance of people
+ they don't employ. Those staggering rascals at the street corner, grouped
+ around its splendid angle of public-house, we fancy that they are no
+ servants of ours! that we pay them no wages! that no cash out of our
+ pockets is spent over that beer-stained counter!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whose cash is it then they are spending? It is not got honestly by work.
+ You know that much. Where do they get it from? Who has paid for their
+ dinner and their pot? Those fellows can only live in one of two ways&mdash;by
+ pillage or beggary. Their annual income by thieving comes out of the
+ public pocket, you will admit. They are not cheaply fed, so far as they
+ are fed by theft. But the rest of their living&mdash;all that they don't
+ steal&mdash;they must beg. Not with success from you, you think. Wise, as
+ benevolent, you never gave a penny in "indiscriminate charity." Well, I
+ congratulate you on the freedom of your conscience from that sin, mine
+ being bitterly burdened with the memory of many a sixpence given to
+ beggars of whom I knew nothing but that they had pale faces and thin
+ waists. But it is not that kind of street beggary that is the worst
+ beggars' trade. Home alms which it is their worst degradation to receive.
+ Those scamps know well enough that you and your wisdom are worth nothing
+ to them. They won't beg of you. They will beg of their sisters, and
+ mothers, and wives, and children, and of any one else who is enough
+ ashamed of being of the same blood with them to pay to keep them out of
+ sight. Every one of those blackguards is the bane of a family. That is the
+ deadly "indiscriminate charity"&mdash;the charity which each household
+ pays to maintain its own private curse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 133. And you think that is no affair of yours? and that every family ought
+ to watch over and subdue its own living plague? Put it to yourselves this
+ way, then: suppose you knew every one of those families kept an idol in an
+ inner room&mdash;a big-bellied bronze figure, to which daily sacrifice and
+ oblation was made; at whose feet so much beer and brandy was poured out
+ every morning on the ground; and before which, every night, good meat,
+ enough for two men's keep, was set, and left, till it was putrid, and then
+ carried out and thrown on the dunghill; you would put an end to that form
+ of idolatry with your best diligence, I suppose. You would understand then
+ that the beer, and brandy, and meat, were wasted; and that the burden
+ imposed by each household on itself lay heavily through them on the whole
+ community? But, suppose further, that this idol were not of silent and
+ quiet bronze only, but an ingenious mechanism, wound up every morning, to
+ run itself down into automatic blasphemies; that it struck and tore with
+ its hands the people who set food before it; that it was anointed with
+ poisonous unguents, and infected the air for miles round. You would
+ interfere with the idolatry then, straightway? Will you not interfere with
+ it now, when the infection that they venomous idol spreads is not merely
+ death, but sin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 134. So far the old lecture. Returning to cool English, the end of the
+ matter is, that, sooner or later, we shall have to register our people;
+ and to know how they live; and to make sure, if they are capable of work,
+ that right work is given them to do.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+The different classes of work for which bodies of men could be
+consistently organized, might ultimately become numerous; these following
+divisions of occupation may all at once be suggested:
+
+ I. Road-making.&mdash;Good roads to be made, wherever needed, and kept in
+repair; and the annual loss on unfrequented roads, in spoiled horses,
+strained wheels, and time, done away with.
+
+ II. Bringing in of waste land.&mdash;All waste lands not necessary for
+public health, to be made accessible and gradually reclaimed; chiefly our
+wide and waste seashores. Not our mountains nor moorland. Our life
+depends on them, more than on the best arable we have.
+
+ III. Harbor-making.&mdash;The deficiencies of safe or convenient harborage
+in our smaller ports to be remedied; other harbors built at dangerous
+points of coast, and a disciplined body of men always kept in connection
+with the pilot and life-boat services. There is room for every order of
+intelligence in this work, and for a large body of superior officers.
+
+ IV. Porterage.&mdash;All heavy goods, not requiring speed in transit, to
+be carried (under preventative duty on transit, by railroad) by
+canal-boats, employing men for draught; and the merchant-shipping service
+extended by sea; so that no ships may be wrecked for want of hands, while
+there are idle ones in mischief on shore.
+
+ V. Repair of buildings.&mdash;A body of men in various trades to be kept
+at the disposal of the authorities in every large town, for repair of
+buildings, especially the houses of the poorer orders, who, if no such
+provision were made, could not employ workmen on their own houses, but
+would simply live with rent walls and roofs.
+
+ VI. Dressmaking.&mdash;Substantial dress, of standard material and kind,
+strong shoes, and stout bedding, to be manufactured for the poor, so as
+to render it unnecessary for them, unless by extremity of improvidence,
+to wear cast clothes, or be without sufficiency of clothing.
+
+ VII. Works of Art.&mdash;Schools to be established on thoroughly sound
+principles of manufacture, and use of materials, and with sample and, for
+given periods, unalterable modes of work; first, in pottery, and
+embracing gradually metal work, sculpture, and decorative painting; the
+two points insisted upon, in distinction from ordinary commercial
+establishments, being perfectness of material to the utmost attainable
+degree; and the production of everything by hand-work, for the special
+purpose of developing personal power and skill in the workman.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The last two departments, and some subordinate branches of others, would
+ include the service of women and children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I give now, for such further illustrations as they contain of the points I
+ desire most to insist upon with respect both to education and employment,
+ a portion of the series of notes published some time ago in the "Art
+ Journal," on the opposition of Modesty and Liberty, and the unescapable
+ law of wise restraint. I am sorry that they are written obscurely&mdash;and
+ it may be thought affectedly; but the fact is, I have always had three
+ different ways of writing: one, with the single view of making myself
+ understood, in which I necessarily omit a great deal of what comes into my
+ head; another, in which I say what I think ought to be said, in what I
+ suppose to be the best words I can find for it (which is in reality an
+ affected style&mdash;be it good or bad); and my third way of writing is to
+ say all that comes into my head for my own pleasure, in the first words
+ that come, retouching them afterward into (approximate) grammar. These
+ notes for the "Art Journal" were so written; and I like them myself, of
+ course; but ask the reader's pardon for their confusedness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 135. "Sir, it cannot be better done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will insist, with the reader's permission, on this comfortful saying of
+ Albert Dürer's in order to find out, if we may, what Modesty is; which it
+ will be well for painters, readers, and especially critics, to know,
+ before going farther. What it is; or, rather, who she is, her fingers
+ being among the deftest in laying the ground-threads of Aglaia's cestus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this same opinion of Albert's is entertained by many other people
+ respecting their own doings&mdash;a very prevalent opinion, indeed, I find
+ it; and the answer itself, though rarely made with the Nuremberger's
+ crushing decision, is nevertheless often enough intimated, with delicacy,
+ by artists of all countries, in their various dialects. Neither can it
+ always be held an entirely modest one, as it assuredly was in the man who
+ would sometimes estimate a piece of his unconquerable work at only the
+ worth of a plate of fruit, or a flask of wine&mdash;would have taken even
+ one "fig for it," kindly offered; or given it royally for nothing, to show
+ his hand to a fellow-king of his own, or any other craft&mdash;as
+ Gainsborough gave the "Boy at the Stile" for a solo on the violin. An
+ entirely modest saying, I repeat, in him&mdash;not always in us. For
+ Modesty is "the measuring virtue," the virtue of modes or limits. She is,
+ indeed, said to be only the third or youngest of the children of the
+ cardinal virtue, Temperance; and apt to be despised, being more given to
+ arithmetic, and other vulgar studies (Cinderella-like), than her elder
+ sisters; but she is useful in the household, and arrives at great results
+ with her yard-measure and slate-pencil&mdash;a pretty little Marchande des
+ Modes, cutting her dress always according to the silk (if this be the
+ proper feminine reading of "coat according to the cloth"), so that,
+ consulting with her carefully of a morning, men get to know not only their
+ income, but their in being&mdash;to know themselves, that is, in a
+ gauger's manner, round, and up and down&mdash;surface and contents; what
+ is in them and what may be got out of them; and in fine, their entire
+ canon of weight and capacity. That yard-measure of Modesty's, lent to
+ those who will use it, is a curious musical reed, and will go round and
+ round waists that are slender enough, with latent melody in every joint of
+ it, the dark root only being soundless, moist from the wave wherein
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Null' altra pianta che facesse fronda
+ O che 'n durasse, vi puote aver vita."*
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ * "Purgatorio," i. 108, 109.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when the little sister herself takes it in hand, to measure things
+ outside of us with, the joints shoot out in an amazing manner: the
+ four-square walls even of celestial cities being measurable enough by that
+ reed; and the way pointed to them, though only to be followed, or even
+ seen, in the dim starlight shed down from worlds amidst which there is no
+ name of Measure any more, though the reality of it always. For, indeed, to
+ all true modesty the necessary business is not inlook, but outlook, and
+ especially uplook: it is only her sister Shamefacedness, who is known by
+ the drooping lashes&mdash;Modesty, quite otherwise, by her large eyes full
+ of wonder; for she never contemns herself, nor is ashamed of herself, but
+ forgets herself&mdash;at least until she has done something worth memory.
+ It is easy to peep and potter about one's own deficiencies in a quiet
+ immodest discontent; but Modesty is so pleased with other people's doings,
+ that she has no leisure to lament her own: and thus, knowing the fresh
+ feeling of contentment, unstained with thought of self, she does not fear
+ being pleased, when there is cause, with her own rightness, as with
+ another's, as with another's, saying calmly, "Be it mine or yours, or
+ whose else's it may, it is no matter; this also is well." But the right to
+ say such a thing depends on continual reverence and manifold sense of
+ failure. If you have known yourself to have failed, you may trust, when it
+ comes, the strange consciousness of success; if you have faithfully loved
+ the noble work of others, you need not fear to speak with respect of
+ things duly done, of your own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 136. But the principal good that comes of art being followed in this
+ reverent feeling is of it. Men who know their place can take it and keep
+ it, be it low or high, contentedly and firmly, neither yielding nor
+ grasping; and the harmony of hand and thought follows, rendering all great
+ deeds of art possible&mdash;deeds in which the souls of men meet like the
+ jewels in the windows of Aladdin's palace, the little gems and the large
+ all equally pure, needing no cement but the fitting of facets; while the
+ associative work of immodest men is all jointless, and astir with wormy
+ ambition; putridly dissolute, and forever on the crawl: so that if it come
+ together for a time, it can only be by metamorphosis through a flash of
+ volcanic fire out of the vale of Siddim, vitrifying the clay of it, and
+ fastening the slime, only to end in wilder scattering; according to the
+ fate of those oldest, mightiest, immodestest of builders, of whom it is
+ told in scorn, "They had brick for stone, and slime had they for mortar."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 137. The first function of Modesty, then, being this recognition of place,
+ her second is the recognition of law, and delight in it, for the sake of
+ law itself, whether her part be to assert it, or obey. For as it belongs
+ to all immodesty to defy or deny law, and assert privilege and license,
+ according to its own pleasure (it being therefore rightly called
+ "insolent," that is, "custom-breaking," violating some usual and appointed
+ order to attain for itself greater forwardness or power), so it is the
+ habit of all modesty to love the constancy and "solemnity," or, literally,
+ "accustomedness," of law, seeking first what are the solemn, appointed,
+ inviolable customs and general orders of nature, and of the Master of
+ nature, touching the matter in hand; and striving to put itself, as
+ habitually and inviolably, in compliance with them. Out of which habit,
+ once established, arises what is rightly called "conscience," nor
+ "science" merely, but "with-science," a science "with us," such as only
+ modest creatures can have&mdash;with or within them&mdash;and within all
+ creation besides, every member of it, strong or weak, witnessing together,
+ and joining in the happy consciousness that each one's work is good; the
+ bee also being profoundly of that opinion; and the lark; and the swallow,
+ in that noisy, but modestly upside-down, Babel of hers, under the eaves,
+ with its unvolcanic slime for mortar; and the two ants who are asking of
+ each other at the turn of that little ant's-foot-worn bath through the
+ moss "lor via e lor fortuna;" and the builders also, who built yonder pile
+ of cloud-marble in the west, and the gilder who gilded it, and is gone
+ down behind it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 138. But I think we shall better understand what we ought of the nature of
+ Modesty, and of her opposite, by taking a simple instance of both, in the
+ practice of that art of music which the wisest have agreed in thinking the
+ first element of education; only I must ask the reader's patience with me
+ through a parenthesis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the foremost men whose power has had to assert itself, though with
+ conquest, yet with countless loss, through peculiarly English
+ disadvantages of circumstance, are assuredly to be ranked together, both
+ for honor, and for mourning, Thomas Bewick and George Cruikshank. There
+ is, however, less cause for regret in the instance of Bewick. We may
+ understand that it was well for us once to see what an entirely keen and
+ true man's temper, could achieve, together, unhelped, but also unharmed,
+ among the black bans and wolds of Tyne. But the genius of Cruikshank has
+ been cast away in an utterly ghastly and lamentable manner: his superb
+ line-work, worthy of any class of subject, and his powers of conception
+ and composition, of which I cannot venture to estimate the range in their
+ degraded application, having been condemned, by his fate, to be spent
+ either in rude jesting, or in vain war with conditions of vice too low
+ alike for record or rebuke, among the dregs of the British populace. Yet
+ perhaps I am wrong in regretting even this: it may be an appointed lesson
+ for futurity, that the art of the best English etcher in the nineteenth
+ century, spent on illustrations of the lives of burglars and drunkards,
+ should one day be seen in museums beneath Greek vases fretted with
+ drawings of the wars of Troy, or side by side with Dürer's "Knight and
+ Death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 139. Be that as it may, I am at present glad to be able to refer to one of
+ these perpetuations, by his strong hand, of such human character as our
+ faultless British constitution occasionally produces in out-of-the-way
+ corners. It is among his illustrations of the Irish Rebellion, and
+ represents the pillage and destruction of a gentleman's house by the mob.
+ They have made a heap in the drawing-room of the furniture and books, to
+ set first fire to; and are tearing up the floor for its more easily
+ kindled planks, the less busily-disposed meanwhile hacking round in rage,
+ with axes, and smashing what they can with butt-ends of guns. I do not
+ care to follow with words the ghastly truth of the picture into its
+ detail; but the most expressive incident of the whole, and the one
+ immediately to my purpose, is this, that one fellow has sat himself at the
+ piano, on which, hitting down fiercely with his clenched fists, he plays,
+ grinning, such tune as may be so producible, to which melody two of his
+ companions, flourishing knotted sticks, dance, after their manner, on the
+ top of the instrument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 140. I think we have in this conception as perfect an instance as we
+ require of the lowest supposable phase of immodest or licentious art in
+ music; the "inner consciousness of good" being dim, even in the musician
+ and his audience, and wholly unsympathized with, and unacknowledged by the
+ Delphian, Vestal, and all other prophetic and cosmic powers. This
+ represented scene came into my mind suddenly one evening, a few weeks ago,
+ in contrast with another which I was watching in its reality; namely, a
+ group of gentle school-girls, leaning over Mr. Charles Hallê, as he was
+ playing a variation on "Home, Sweet Home." They had sustained with
+ unwonted courage the glance of subdued indignation with which, having just
+ closed a rippling melody of Sebastian Bach's (much like what one might
+ fancy the singing of nightingales would be if they fed on honey instead of
+ flies), he turned to the slight, popular air. But they had their own
+ associations with it, and besought for, and obtained it, and pressed
+ close, at first, in vain, to see what no glance could follow, the
+ traversing of the fingers. They soon thought no more of seeing. The wet
+ eyes, round-open, and the little scarlet upper lips, lifted, and drawn
+ slightly together, in passionate glow of utter wonder, became
+ picture-like, porcelain-like, in motionless joy, as the sweet multitude of
+ low notes fell, in their timely infinities, like summer rain. Only La
+ Robbia himself (nor even he, unless with tenderer use of color than is
+ usual in his work) could have rendered some image of that listening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 141. But if the reader can give due vitality in his fancy to these two
+ scenes, he will have in them representative types, clear enough for all
+ future purpose, of the several agencies of debased and perfect art. And
+ the interval may easily and continuously be filled by mediate gradations.
+ Between the entirely immodeset, unmeasured, and (in evil sense)
+ unmannered, execution with the fist; and the entirely modest, measured,
+ and (in the noblest sense) mannered, or moral'd execution with the finger;
+ between the impatient and unpractised doing, containing in itself the
+ witness of lasting impatience and idleness through all previous life, and
+ the patient and practised doing, containing in itself the witness of
+ self-restraint and unwearied toil through all previous life; between the
+ expressed subject and sentiment of home violation, and the expressed
+ subject and sentiment of home love; between the sympathy of audience,
+ given in irreverent and contemptuous rage, joyless as the rabidness of a
+ dog, and the sympathy of audience given in an almost appalled humility of
+ intense, rapturous, and yet entirely reasoning and reasonable pleasure;
+ between these two limits of octave, the reader will find he can class,
+ according to its modesty, usefulness and grace, or becomingness, all other
+ musical art. For although purity of purpose and fineness of execution by
+ no means go together, degree to degree (since fine, and indeed all but the
+ finest, work is often spent in the most wanton purpose &mdash;as in all
+ our modern opera&mdash;and the rudest execution is again often joined with
+ purest purpose, as in a mother's song to her child), still the entire
+ accomplishment of music is only in the union of both. For the difference
+ between that "all but" finest and "finest" is an infinite one; and besides
+ this, however the power of the performer, once attained, may be afterwards
+ misdirected, in slavery to popular passion or childishness, and spend
+ itself, at its sweetest, in idle melodies, cold and ephemeral (like
+ Michael Angelo's snow statue in the other art), or else in vicious
+ difficulty and miserable noise&mdash;crackling of thorns under the pot of
+ public sensuality&mdash;still, the attainment of this power, and the
+ maintenance of it, involve always in the executant some virtue or courage
+ of high kind; the understanding of which, and of the difference between
+ the discipline which develops it and the disorderly efforts of the
+ amateur, it will be one of our first businesses to estimate rightly. And
+ though not indeed by degree to degree, yet in essential relation (as of
+ winds to waves, the one being always the true cause of the other, though
+ they are not necessarily of equal force at the same time,) we shall find
+ vice in its varieties, with art-failure,&mdash;and virtue in its
+ varieties, with art-success,&mdash;fall and rise together; the
+ peasant-girl's song at her spinning-wheel, the peasant laborer's "to the
+ oaks and rills,"&mdash;domestic music, feebly yet sensitively skilful,&mdash;music
+ for the multitude, of beneficent or of traitorous power,&mdash;dance-melodies,
+ pure and orderly, or foul and frantic,&mdash;march-music, blatant in mere
+ fever of animal pugnacity, or majestic with force of national duty and
+ memory,&mdash; song-music, reckless, sensual, sickly, slovenly, forgetful
+ even of the foolish words it effaces with foolish noise,&mdash;or
+ thoughtful, sacred, healthful, artful, forever sanctifying noble thought
+ with separately distinguished loveliness of belonging sound,&mdash;all
+ these families and graduations of good or evil, however mingled, follow,
+ in so far as they are good, one constant law of virtue (or
+ "life-strength," which is the literal meaning of the word, and its
+ intended one, in wise men's mouths), and in so far as they are evil, are
+ evil by outlawry and unvirtue, or death-weakness. Then, passing wholly
+ beyond the domain of death, we may still imagine the ascendant nobleness
+ of the art, through all the concordant life of incorrupt creatures, and a
+ continually deeper harmony of "puissant words and murmurs made to bless,"
+ until we reach
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The undisturbed song of pure consent,
+ Aye sung before the sapphire-colored throne."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 142. And so far as the sister arts can be conceived to have place or
+ office, their virtues are subject to a law absolutely the same as that of
+ music, only extending its authority into more various conditions, owing to
+ the introduction of a distinctly representative and historical power,
+ which acts under logical as well as mathematical restrictions, and is
+ capable of endlessly changeful fault, fallacy, and defeat, as well as of
+ endlessly manifold victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 143. Next to Modesty, and her delight in measures, let us reflect a little
+ on the character of her adversary, the Goddess of Liberty, and her delight
+ in absence of measures, or in false ones. It is true that there are
+ liberties and liberties. Yonder torrent, crystal-clear, and arrow-swift,
+ with its spray leaping into the air like white troops of fawns, is free
+ enough. Lost, presently, amidst bankless, boundless marsh &mdash;soaking
+ in slow shallowness, as it will, hither and thither, listless among the
+ poisonous reeds and unresisting slime&mdash;it is free also. We may choose
+ which liberty we like,&mdash;the restraint of voiceful rock, or the dumb
+ and edgeless shore of darkened sand. Of that evil liberty which men are
+ now glorifying and proclaiming as essence of gospel to all the earth, and
+ will presently, I suppose, proclaim also to the stars, with invitation to
+ them out of their courses,&mdash;and of its opposite continence, which is
+ the clasp and 'chrusee perone' of Aglaia's cestus, we must try to find out
+ something true. For no quality of Art has been more powerful in its
+ influence on public mind; none is more frequently the subject of popular
+ praise, or the end of vulgar effort, than what we call "Freedom." It is
+ necessary to determine the justice or injustice of this popular praise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 144. I said, a little while ago, that the practical teaching of the
+ masters of Art was summed by the O of Giotto. "You may judge my masterhood
+ of craft," Giotto tells us, "by seeing that I can draw a circle
+ unerringly." And we may safely believe him, understanding him to mean
+ that, though more may be necessary to an artist than such a power, at
+ least this power is necessary. The qualities of hand and eye needful to do
+ this are the first conditions of artistic craft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 145. Try to draw a circle yourself with the "free" hand, and with a single
+ line. You cannot do it if your hand trembles, nor if it is in the common
+ sense of the word "free." So far from being free, it must be as if it were
+ fastened to an inflexible bar of steel. And yet it must move, under this
+ necessary control, with perfect, untormented serenity of ease.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 146. That is the condition of all good work whatsoever. All freedom is
+ error. Every line you lay down is either right or wrong; it may be timidly
+ and awkwardly wrong, or fearlessly and impudently wrong. The aspect of the
+ impudent wrongness is pleasurable to vulgar persons, and is what they
+ commonly call "free" execution; the timid, tottering, hesitating wrongness
+ is rarely so attractive; yet sometimes, if accompanied with good
+ qualities, and right aims in other directions, it becomes in a manner
+ charming, like the inarticulateness of a child; but, whatever the charm or
+ manner of the error, there is but one question ultimately to be asked
+ respecting every line you draw, Is it right or wrong? If right, it most
+ assuredly is not a "free" line, but an intensely continent, restrained,
+ and considered line; and the action of the hand in laying it is just as
+ decisive, and just as "free," as the hand of a first-rate surgeon in a
+ critical incision. A great operator told me that his hand could check
+ itself within about the two-hundredth of an inch, in penetrating a
+ membrane; and this, of course, without the help of sight, by sensation
+ only. With help of sight, and in action on a substance which does not
+ quiver or yield, a fine artist's line is measurable in its proposed
+ direction to considerably less than the thousandth of an inch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A wide freedom, truly!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 147. The conditions of popular art which most foster the common ideas
+ about freedom, are merely results of irregularly energetic effort by men
+ imperfectly educated; these conditions being variously mingled with cruder
+ mannerisms resulting from timidity, or actual imperfection of body.
+ Northern hands and eyes are, of course, never so subtle as Southern; and
+ in very cold countries, artistic execution is palsied. The effort to break
+ through this timidity, or to refine the bluntness, may lead to a
+ licentious impetuosity, or an ostentatious minuteness. Every man's manner
+ has this kind of relation to some defect in his physical powers or modes
+ of thought; so that in the greatest work there is no manner visible. It is
+ at first uninteresting from its quietness; the majesty of restrained power
+ only dawns gradually upon us, as we walk towards its horizon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is, indeed, often great delightfulness in the innocent manners of
+ artists who have real power and honesty, and draw in this way or that, as
+ best they can, under such and such untoward circumstances of life. But the
+ greater part of the looseness, flimsiness, or audacity of modern work is
+ the expression of an inner spirit of license in mind and heart, connected,
+ as I said, with the peculiar folly of this age, its hope of, and trust in,
+ "liberty," of which we must reason a little in more general terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 148. I believe we can nowhere find a better type of a perfectly free
+ creature than in the common house-fly. Nor free only, but brave; and
+ irreverent to a degree which I think no human republican could by any
+ philosophy exalt himself to. There is no courtesy in him; he does not care
+ whether it is king or clown whom he teases; and in every step of his swift
+ mechanical march, and in every pause of his resolute observation, there is
+ one and the same expression of perfect egotism, perfect independence and
+ self-confidence, and conviction of the world's having been made for flies.
+ Strike at him with your hand, and to him, the mechanical fact and external
+ aspect of the matter is, what to you it would be if an acre of red clay,
+ ten feet thick, tore itself up from the ground in one massive field,
+ hovered over you in the air for a second, and came crashing down with an
+ aim. That is the external aspect of it; the inner aspect, to his fly's
+ mind, is of a quite natural and unimportant occurrence&mdash;one of the
+ momentary conditions of his active life. He steps out of the way of your
+ hand, and alights on the back of it. You cannot terrify him, nor govern
+ him, nor persuade him, nor convince him. He has his own positive opinion
+ on all matters; not an unwise one, usually, for his own ends; and will ask
+ no advice of yours. He has no work to do&mdash;no tyrannical instinct to
+ obey. The earthworm has his digging; the bee her gathering and building;
+ the spider her cunning network; the ant her treasury and accounts. All
+ these are comparatively slaves, or people of vulgar business. But your
+ fly, free in the air, free in the chamber&mdash;a black incarnation of
+ caprice, wandering, investigating, flitting, flirting, feasting at his
+ will, with rich variety of choice in feast, from the heaped sweets in the
+ grocer's window to those of the butcher's back-yard, and from the galled
+ place on your cab-horse's back, to the brown spot in the road, from which,
+ as the hoof disturbs him, he rises with angry republican buzz&mdash;what
+ freedom is like his?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 149. For captivity, again, perhaps your poor watch-dog is as sorrowful a
+ type as you will easily find. Mine certainly is. The day is lovely, but I
+ must write this, and cannot go out with him. He is chained in the yard
+ because I do not like dogs in rooms, and the gardener does not like dogs
+ in gardens. He has no books,&mdash;nothing but his own weary thoughts for
+ company, and a group of those free flies, whom he snaps at, with sullen
+ ill success. Such dim hope as he may have that I may take him out with me,
+ will be, hour by hour, wearily disappointed; or, worse, darkened at once
+ into a leaden despair by an authoritative "No"&mdash;too well understood.
+ His fidelity only seals his fate; if he would not watch for me, he would
+ be sent away, and go hunting with some happier master: but he watches, and
+ is wise, and faithful, and miserable; and his high animal intellect only
+ gives him the wistful powers of wonder, and sorrow, and desire, and
+ affection, which embitter his captivity. Yet of the two, would we rather
+ be watch-dog or fly?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 150. Indeed, the first point we have all to determine is not how free we
+ are, but what kind of creatures we are. It is of small importance to any
+ of us whether we get liberty; but of the greatest that we deserve it.
+ Whether we can win it, fate must determine; but that we will be worthy of
+ it we may ourselves determine; and the sorrowfullest fate of all that we
+ can suffer is to have it without deserving it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 151. I have hardly patience to hold my pen and go on writing, as I
+ remember (I would that it were possible for a few consecutive instants to
+ forget) the infinite follies of modern thought in this matter, centred in
+ the notion that liberty is good for a man, irrespectively of the use he is
+ likely to make of it. Folly unfathomable! unspeakable! unendurable to look
+ in the full face of, as the laugh of a cretin. You will send your child,
+ will you, into a room where the table is loaded with sweet wine and fruit&mdash;some
+ poisoned, some not?&mdash;you will say to him, "Choose freely, my little
+ child! It is so good for you to have freedom of choice; it forms your
+ character&mdash;your individuality! If you take the wrong cup or the wrong
+ berry, you will die before the day is over, but you will have acquired the
+ dignity of a Free child?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 152. You think that puts the case too sharply? I tell you, lover of
+ liberty, there is no choice offered to you, but it is similarly between
+ life and death. There is no act, nor option of act, possible, but the
+ wrong deed or option has poison in it which will stay in your veins
+ thereafter forever. Never more to all eternity can you be as you might
+ have been had you not done that&mdash;chosen that. You have "formed your
+ character," forsooth! No; if you have chosen ill, you have De-formed it,
+ and that for ever! In some choices it had been better for you that a
+ red-hot iron bar struck you aside, scarred and helpless, than that you had
+ so chosen. "You will know better next time!" No. Next time will never
+ come. Next time the choice will be in quite another aspect&mdash; between
+ quite different things,&mdash;you, weaker than you were by the evil into
+ which you have fallen; it, more doubtful than it was, by the increased
+ dimness of your sight. No one ever gets wiser by doing wrong, nor
+ stronger. You will get wiser and stronger only by doing right, whether
+ forced or not; the prime, the one need is to do that, under whatever
+ compulsion, until you can do it without compulsion. And then you are a
+ Man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 153. "What!" a wayward youth might perhaps answer, incredulously, "no one
+ ever gets wiser by doing wrong? Shall I not know the world best by trying
+ the wrong of it, and repenting? Have I not, even as it is, learned much by
+ many of my errors?" Indeed, the effort by which partially you recovered
+ yourself was precious; that part of your thought by which you discerned
+ the error was precious. What wisdom and strength you kept, and rightly
+ used, are rewarded; and in the pain and the repentance, and in the
+ acquaintance with the aspects of folly and sin, you have learned
+ something; how much less than you would have learned in right paths can
+ never be told, but that it is less is certain. Your liberty of choice has
+ simply destroyed for you so much life and strength never regainable. It is
+ true, you now know the habits of swine, and the taste of husks; do you
+ think your father could not have taught you to know better habits and
+ pleasanter tastes, if you had stayed in his house; and that the knowledge
+ you have lost would not have been more, as well as sweeter, than that you
+ have gained? But "it so forms my individuality to be free!" Your
+ individuality was given you by God, and in your race, and if you have any
+ to speak of, you will want no liberty. You will want a den to work in, and
+ peace, and light&mdash;no more,&mdash;in absolute need; if more, in
+ anywise, it will still not be liberty, but direction, instruction,
+ reproof, and sympathy. But if you have no individuality, if there is no
+ true character nor true desire in you, then you will indeed want to be
+ free. You will begin early, and, as a boy, desire to be a man; and, as a
+ man, think yourself as good as every other. You will choose freely to eat,
+ freely to drink, freely to stagger and fall, freely, at last, to curse
+ yourself and die. Death is the only real freedom possible to us; and that
+ is consummate freedom, permission for every particle in the rotting body
+ to leave its neighbor particle, and shift for itself. You call it
+ "corruption" in the flesh; but before it comes to that, all liberty is an
+ equal corruption in mind. You ask for freedom of thought; but if you have
+ not sufficient grounds for thought, you have no business to think; and if
+ you have sufficient grounds, you have no business to think wrong. Only one
+ thought is possible to you if you are wise&mdash;your liberty is
+ geometrically proportionate to your folly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 154. "But all this glory and activity of our age; what are they owing to,
+ but to freedom of thought?" In a measure, they are owing&mdash;what good
+ is in them&mdash;to the discovery of many lies, and the escape from the
+ power of evil. Not to liberty, but to the deliverance from evil or cruel
+ masters. Brave men have dared to examine lies which had long been taught,
+ not because they were free-thinkers, but because they were such stern and
+ close thinkers that the lie could no longer escape them. Of course the
+ restriction of thought, or of its expression, by persecution, is merely a
+ form of violence, justifiable or not, as other violence is, according to
+ the character of the persons against whom it is exercised, and the divine
+ and eternal laws which it vindicates or violates. We must not burn a man
+ alive for saying that the Athanasian creed is ungrammatical, nor stop a
+ bishop's salary because we are getting the worst of an argument with him;
+ neither must we let drunken men howl in the public streets at night. There
+ is much that is true in the part of Mr. Mill's essay on Liberty which
+ treats of freedom of thought; some important truths are there beautifully
+ expressed, but many, quite vital, are omitted; and the balance, therefore,
+ is wrongly struck. The liberty of expression, with a great nation, would
+ become like that in a well-educated company, in which there is indeed
+ freedom of speech, but not of clamor; or like that in an orderly senate,
+ in which men who deserve to be heard, are heard in due time, and under
+ determined restrictions. The degree of liberty you can rightly grant to a
+ number of men is in the inverse ratio of their desire for it; and a
+ general hush, or call to order, would be often very desirable in this
+ England of ours. For the rest, of any good or evil extent, it is
+ impossible to say what measure is owing to restraint, and what to license
+ where the right is balanced between them. I was not a little provoked one
+ day, a summer or two since, in Scotland, because the Duke of Athol
+ hindered me from examining the gneiss and slate junctions in Glen Tilt, at
+ the hour convenient to me; but I saw them at last, and in quietness; and
+ to the very restriction that annoyed me, owed, probably, the fact of their
+ being in existence, instead of being blasted away by a mob-company; while
+ the "free" paths and inlets of Loch Katrine and the Lake of Geneva are
+ forever trampled down and destroyed, not by one duke, but by tens of
+ thousands of ignorant tyrants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 155. So, a Dean and Chapter may, perhaps, unjustifiably charge me twopence
+ for seeing a cathedral; but your free mob pulls spire and all down about
+ my ears, and I can see it no more forever. And even if I cannot get up to
+ the granite junctions in the glen, the stream comes down from them pure to
+ the Garry; but in Beddington Park I am stopped by the newly-erected fence
+ of a building speculator; and the bright Wandel, divine of waters as
+ Castaly, is filled by the free public with old shoes, obscene crockery,
+ and ashes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 156. In fine, the arguments for liberty may in general be summed in a few
+ very simple forms, as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Misguiding is mischievous: therefore guiding is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the blind lead the blind, both fall into the ditch: therefore, nobody
+ should lead anybody.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lambs and fawns should be left free in the fields; much more bears and
+ wolves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If a man's gun and shot are his own, he may fire in any direction he
+ pleases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fence across a road is inconvenient; much more one at the side of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Babes should not be swaddled with their hands bound down to their sides:
+ therefore they should be thrown out to roll in the kennels naked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ None of these arguments are good, and the practical issues of them are
+ worse. For there are certain eternal laws for human conduct which are
+ quite clearly discernible by human reason. So far as these are discovered
+ and obeyed, by whatever machinery or authority the obedience is procured,
+ there follow life and strength. So far as they are disobeyed, by whatever
+ good intention the disobedience is brought about, there follow ruin and
+ sorrow. And the first duty of every man in the world is to find his true
+ master, and, for his own good, submit to him; and to find his true
+ inferior, and, for that inferior's good, conquer him. The punishment is
+ sure, if we either refuse the reverence, or are too cowardly and indolent
+ to enforce the compulsion. A base nation crucifies or poisons its wise
+ men, and lets its fools rave and rot in the streets. A wise nation obeys
+ the one, restrains the other, and cherishes all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 157. The best examples of the results of wise normal evidence in Art will
+ be found in whatever evidence remains respecting the lives of great
+ Italian painters, though, unhappily, in eras of progress, but just in
+ proportion to the admirableness and efficiency of the life, will be
+ usually the scantiness of its history. The individualities and liberties
+ which are causes of destruction may be recorded; but the loyal conditions
+ of daily breath are never told. Because Leonardo made models of machines,
+ dug canals, built fortifications, and dissipated half his art-power in
+ capricious ingenuities, we have many anecdotes of him;&mdash;but no
+ picture of importance on canvas, and only a few withered stains of one
+ upon a wall. But because his pupil, or reputed pupil, Luini, labored in
+ constant and successful simplicity, we have no anecdotes of him;&mdash;only
+ hundreds of noble works. Luini is, perhaps, the best central type of the
+ highly-trained Italian painter. He is the only man who entirely united the
+ religious temper which was the spirit-life of art, with the physical power
+ which was its bodily life. He joins the purity and passion of Angelico to
+ the strength of Veronese: the two elements, poised in perfect balance, are
+ so calmed and restrained, each by the other, that most of us lose the
+ sense of both. The artist does not see the strength, by reason of the
+ chastened spirit in which it is used: and the religious visionary does not
+ recognize the passion, by reason of the frank human truth with which it is
+ rendered. He is a man ten times greater than Leonardo;&mdash;a mighty
+ colorist, while Leonardo was only a fine draughtsman in black, staining
+ the chiaroscuro drawing, like a colored print: he perceived and rendered
+ the delicatest types of human beauty that have been painted since the days
+ of the Greeks, while Leonardo depraved his finer instincts by caricature,
+ and remained to the end of his days the slave of an archaic smile: and he
+ is a designer as frank, instinctive, and exhaustless as Tintoret, while
+ Leonardo's design is only an agony of science, admired chiefly because it
+ is painful, and capable of analysis in its best accomplishment. Luini has
+ left nothing behind him that is not lovely; but of his life I believe
+ hardly anything is known beyond remnants of tradition which murmur about
+ Lugano and Saronno, and which remain ungleaned. This only is certain, that
+ he was born in the loveliest district of North Italy, where hills, and
+ streams, and air meet in softest harmonies. Child of the Alps, and of
+ their divinest lake, he is taught, without doubt or dismay, a lofty
+ religious creed, and a sufficient law of life, and of its mechanical arts.
+ Whether lessoned by Leonardo himself, or merely one of many disciplined in
+ the system of the Milanese school, he learns unerringly to draw,
+ unerringly and enduringly to paint. His tasks are set him without question
+ day by day, by men who are justly satisfied with his work, and who accept
+ it without any harmful praise, or senseless blame. Place, scale, and
+ subject are determined for him on the cloister wall or the church dome; as
+ he is required, and for sufficient daily bread, and little more, he paints
+ what he has been taught to design wisely, and has passion to realize
+ gloriously: every touch he lays is eternal, every thought he conceives is
+ beautiful and pure: his hand moves always in radiance of blessing; from
+ day to day his life enlarges in power and peace; it passes away
+ cloudlessly, the starry twilight remaining arched far against the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 158. Oppose to such a life as this that of a great painter amidst the
+ elements of modern English liberty. Take the life of Turner, in whom the
+ artistic energy and inherent love of beauty were at least as strong as in
+ Luini: but, amidst the disorder and ghastliness of the lower streets of
+ London, his instincts in early infancy were warped into toleration of
+ evil, or even into delight in it. He gathers what he can of instruction by
+ questioning and prying among half-informed masters; spells out some
+ knowledge of classical fable; educates himself, by an admirable force, to
+ the production of wildly majestic or pathetically tender and pure
+ pictures, by which he cannot live. There is no one to judge them, or to
+ command him: only some of the English upper classes hire him to paint
+ their houses and parks, and destroy the drawings afterwards by the most
+ wanton neglect. Tired of laboring carefully, without either reward or
+ praise, he dashes out into various experimental and popular works&mdash;makes
+ himself the servant of the lower public, and is dragged hither and thither
+ at their will; while yet, helpless and guideless, he indulges his
+ idiosyncrasies till they change into insanities; the strength of his soul
+ increasing its sufferings, and giving force to its errors; all the purpose
+ of life degenerating into instinct; and the web of his work wrought, at
+ last, of beauties too subtle to be understood, his liberty, with vices too
+ singular to be forgiven&mdash;all useless, because magnificent
+ idiosyncrasy had become solitude, or contention, in the midst of a
+ reckless populace, instead of submitting itself in loyal harmony to the
+ Art-laws of an understanding nation. And the life passed away in darkness;
+ and its final work, in all the best beauty of it, has already perished,
+ only enough remaining to teach us what we have lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 159. These are the opposite effects of Law and of Liberty on men of the
+ highest powers. In the case of inferiors the contrast is still more fatal:
+ under strict law, they become the subordinate workers in great schools,
+ healthily aiding, echoing, or supplying, with multitudinous force of hand,
+ the mind of the leading masters: they are the nameless carvers of great
+ architecture&mdash;stainers of glass&mdash;hammerers of iron&mdash;
+ helpful scholars, whose work ranks round, if not with, their master's, and
+ never disgraces it. But the inferiors under a system of license for the
+ most part perish in miserable effort;* a few struggle into pernicious
+ eminence&mdash;harmful alike to themselves and to all who admire them;
+ many die of starvation; many insane, either in weakness of insolent
+ egotism, like Haydon, or in a conscientious agony of beautiful purpose and
+ warped power, like Blake. There is no probability of the persistence of a
+ licentious school in any good accidentally discovered by them; there is an
+ approximate certainty of their gathering, with acclaim, round any shadow
+ of evil, and following it to whatever quarter of destruction it may lead.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+* As I correct this sheet for press, my "Pall Mall Gazette" of last
+Saturday, April 17, is lying on the table by me. I print a few lines out
+of it:
+
+ "AN ARTIST'S DEATH.&mdash;A sad story was told at an inquest held in St.
+Pancras last night by Dr. Lankester on the body of . . ., aged
+fifty-nine, a French artist who was found dead in his bed at his rooms in
+. . . Street. M. . . ., also an artist, said he had known the deceased
+for fifteen years. He once held a high position, and being anxious to
+make a name in the world, he five years ago commenced a large picture,
+which he hoped, when completed, to have in the gallery at Versailles; and
+with that view he sent a photograph of it to the French Emperor. He also
+had an idea of sending it to the English Royal Academy. He labored on
+this picture, neglecting other work which would have paid him well, and
+gradually sank lower and lower into poverty. His friends assisted him,
+but being absorbed in his great work, he did not heed their advice, and
+they left him. He was, however, assisted by the French Ambassador, and
+last Saturday, he (the witness) saw deceased, who was much depressed in
+spirits, as he expected the brokers to be put in possession for rent. He
+said his troubles were so great that he feared his brain would give way.
+The witness gave him a shilling for which he appeared very thankful. On
+Monday the witness called upon him, but received no answer to his knock.
+He went again on Tuesday, and entered the deceased's bedroom and found
+him dead. Dr. George Ross said that when called into the deceased he had
+been dead at least two days. The room was in a filthy, dirty condition,
+and the picture referred to&mdash;certainly a very fine one&mdash;was in that room.
+The post-mortem examination showed that the cause of death was fatty
+degeneration of the heart, the latter probably having ceased its action
+through the mental excitement of the deceased."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 160. Thus far the notes of Freedom. Now, lastly, here is some talk which I
+ tried at the time to make intelligible; and with which I close this
+ volume, because it will serve sufficiently to express the practical
+ relation in which I think the art and imagination of the Greeks stand to
+ our own; and will show the reader that my view of that relation is
+ unchanged, from the first day on which I began to write, until now.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ ***
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ THE HERCULES OF CAMARINA.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ ADDRESS TO THE STUDENTS OF THE ART SCHOOL OF SOUTH LAMBERT, MARCH 15,
+ 1869.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 161. Among the photographers of Greek coins which present so many
+ admirable subjects for your study, I must speak for the present of one
+ only: the Hercules of Camarina. You have, represented by a Greek workman,
+ in that coin, the face of a man and the skin of a lion's head. And the
+ man's face is like a man's face, but the lion's skin is not like a lion's
+ skin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 162. Now there are some people who will tell you that Greek art is fine,
+ because it is true; and because it carves men's faces as like men's as it
+ can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there are other people who will tell you that Greek art is fine,
+ because it is not true; and carves a lion's skin so as to look not at all
+ like a lion's skin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And you fancy that one or the other of these sets of people must be wrong,
+ and are perhaps much puzzled to find out which you should believe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But neither of them are wrong, and you will have eventually to believe, or
+ rather to understand and know, in reconciliation, the truths taught by
+ each; but for the present, the teachers of the first group are those you
+ must follow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is they who tell you the deepest and usefullest truth, which involves
+ all others in time. Greek art, and all other art, is fine when it makes a
+ man's face as like a man's face as it can. Hold to that. All kinds of
+ nonsense are talked to you, nowadays, ingeniously and irrelevantly about
+ art. Therefore, for the most part of the day, shut your ears, and keep
+ your eyes open: and understand primarily, what you may, I fancy, easily
+ understand, that the greatest masters of all greatest schools&mdash;Phidias,
+ Donatello, Titian, Velasquez, or Sir Joshua Reynolds&mdash;all tried to
+ make human creatures as like human creatures as they could; and that
+ anything less like humanity than their work, is not so good as theirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Get that well driven into your heads; and don't let it out again, at your
+ peril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 163. Having got it well in, you may then further understand, safely, that
+ three is a great deal of secondary work in pots, and pans, and floors, and
+ carpets, and shawls, and architectural ornament, which ought essentially,
+ to be unlike reality, and to depend for its charm on quite other qualities
+ than imitative ones. But all such art is inferior and secondary&mdash;much
+ of it more or less instinctive and animal, and a civilized human creature
+ can only learn those principles rightly, by knowing those of great
+ civilized art first&mdash;which is always the representation, to the
+ utmost of its power, of whatever it has got to show&mdash;made to look as
+ like the thing as possible. Go into the National Gallery, and look at the
+ foot of Correggio's Venus there. Correggio made it as like a foot as he
+ could, and you won't easily find anything liker. Now, you will find on any
+ Greek vase something meant for a foot, or a hand, which is not at all like
+ one. The Greek vase is a good thing in its way, but Correggio's picture is
+ the best work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 164. So, again, go into the Turner room of the National Gallery, and look
+ at Turner's drawing of "Ivy Bridge." You will find the water in it is like
+ real water, and the ducks in it are like real ducks. Then go into the
+ British Museum, and look for an Egyptian landscape, and you will find the
+ water in that constituted of blue zigzags, not at all like water; and
+ ducks in the middle of it made of blue lines, looking not in the least as
+ if they could stand stuffing with sage and onions. They are very good in
+ their way, but Turner's are better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 165. I will not pause to fence my general principle against what you
+ perfectly well know of the due contradiction,&mdash;that a thing may be
+ painted very like, yet painted ill. Rest content with knowing that it must
+ be like, if it is painted well; and take this further general law:
+ Imitation is like charity. When it is done for love it is lovely; when it
+ is done for show, hateful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 166. Well, then, this Greek coin is fine, first because the face is like a
+ face. Perhaps you think there is something particularly handsome in the
+ face, which you can't see in the photograph, or can't at present
+ appreciate. But there is nothing of the kind. It is a very regular, quiet,
+ commonplace sort of face; and any average English gentleman's, of good
+ descent, would be far handsomer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 167. Fix that in your heads also, therefore, that Greek faces are not
+ particularly beautiful. Of that much nonsense against which you are to
+ keep your ears shut, that which is talked to you of the Greek ideal of
+ beauty is the absolutest. There is not a single instance of a very
+ beautiful head left by the highest school of Greek art. On coins, there is
+ even no approximately beautiful one. The Juno of Argos is a virago; the
+ Athena of Athens grotesque, the Athena of Corinth is insipid; and of
+ Thurium, sensual. The Siren Ligeia, and fountain of Arethusa, on the coins
+ of Terina and Syracuse, are prettier, but totally without expression, and
+ chiefly set off by their well-curled hair. You might have expected
+ something subtle in Mercuries; but the Mercury of Ænus is a very
+ stupid-looking fellow, in a cap like a bowl, with a knob on the top of it.
+ The Bacchus of Thasos is a drayman with his hair pomatum'd. The Jupiter of
+ Syracurse is, however, calm and refined; and the Apollo of Clazomenæ would
+ have been impressive, if he had not come down to us, much flattened by
+ friction. But on the whole, the merit of Greek coins does not primarily
+ depend on beauty of features, nor even, in the period of highest art, that
+ of the statues. You make take the Venus of Melos as a standard of beauty
+ of the central Greek type. She has tranquil, regular, and lofty features;
+ but could not hold her own for a moment against the beauty of a simple
+ English girl, of pure race and kind heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 168. And the reason that Greek art, on the whole, bores you (and you know
+ it does), is that you are always forced to look in it for something that
+ is not there; but which may be seen every day, in real life, all round
+ you; and which you are naturally disposed to delight in, and ought to
+ delight in. For the Greek race was not at all one of exalted beauty, but
+ only of general and healthy completeness of form. They were only, and
+ could be only, beautiful in body to the degree that they were beautiful in
+ soul (for you will find, when you read deeply into the matter, that the
+ body is only the soul made visible). And the Greeks were indeed very good
+ people, much better people than most of us think, or than many of us are;
+ but there are better people alive now than the best of them, and lovelier
+ people to be seen now than the loveliest of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 169. Then what are the merits of this Greek art, which make it so
+ exemplary for you? Well, not that it is beautiful, but that it is Right.*
+ All that it desires to do, it does, and all that it does, does well. You
+ will find, as you advance in the knowledge of art, that its laws of
+ self-restraint are very marvelous; that its peace of heart, and
+ contentment in doing a simple thing, with only one or two qualities,
+ restrictedly desired, and sufficiently attained, are a most wholesome
+ element of education for you, as opposed to the wild writhing, and
+ wrestling, and longing for the moon, and tilting at windmills, and agony
+ of eyes, and torturing of fingers, and general spinning out of one's soul
+ into fiddle-strings, which constitute the ideal life of a modern artist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Compare above, §101.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Also observe, there is an entire masterhood of its business up to the
+ required point. A Greek does not reach after other people's strength, nor
+ outreach his own. He never tries to paint before he can draw; he never
+ tries to lay on flesh where there are no bones; and he never expects to
+ find the bones of anything in his inner consciousness. Those are his first
+ merits&mdash;sincere and innocent purpose, strong common-sense and
+ principle, and all the strength that follows on that strength.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 170. But, secondly, Greek art is always exemplary in disposition of
+ masses, which is a thing that in modern days students rarely look for,
+ artists not enough, and the public never. But, whatever else Greek work
+ may fail of, you may always be sure its masses are well placed, and their
+ placing has been the object of the most subtle care. Look, for instance,
+ at the inscription in front of this Hercules of the name of the town&mdash;
+ Camarina. You can't read it, even though you may know Greek, without some
+ pains; for the sculptor knew well enough that it mattered very little
+ whether you read it or not, for the Camarina Hercules could tell his own
+ story; but what did above all things matter was, that no K or A or M
+ should come in a wrong place with respect to the outline of the head, and
+ divert the eye from it, or spoil any of its lines. So the whole
+ inscription is thrown into a sweeping curve of gradually diminishing size,
+ continuing from the lion's paws, round the neck, up to the forehead, and
+ answering a decorative purpose as completely as the curls of the mane
+ opposite. Of these, again, you cannot change or displace one without
+ mischief; they are almost as even in reticulation as a piece of
+ basket-work; but each has a different form and a due relation to the rest,
+ and if you set to work to draw that mane rightly, you will find that,
+ whatever time you give to it, you can't get the tresses quite into their
+ places, and that every tress out of its place does an injury. If you want
+ to test your powers of accurate drawing, you may make that lion's mane
+ your pons asinorum, I have never yet met with a student who didn't make an
+ ass in a lion's skin of himself when he tried it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 171. Granted, however, that these tresses may be finely placed, still they
+ are not like a lion's mane. So we come back to the question,&mdash;if the
+ face is to be like a man's face, why is not the lion's mane to be like a
+ lion's mane? Well, because it can't be like a lion's mane without too much
+ trouble,&mdash;and inconvenience after that, and poor success, after all.
+ Too much trouble, in cutting the die into fine fringes and jags;
+ inconvenience after that,&mdash;because, though you can easily stamp
+ cheeks and foreheads smooth at a blow, you can't stamp projecting tresses
+ fine at a blow, whatever pains you take with your die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So your Greek uses his common sense, wastes no time, uses no skill, and
+ says to you, "Here is beautifully set tresses, which I have carefully
+ designed and easily stamped. Enjoy them, and if you cannot understand that
+ they mean lion's mane, heaven mend your wits."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 172. See, then, you have in this work well-founded knowledge, simple and
+ right aims, thorough mastery of handicraft, splendid invention in
+ arrangement, unerring common sense in treatment,&mdash;merits, these, I
+ think, exemplary enough to justify our tormenting you a little with Greek
+ art. But it has one merit more than these, the greatest of all. It always
+ means something worth saying. Not merely worth saying for that time only,
+ but for all time. What do you think this helmet of lion's hide is always
+ given to Hercules for? You can't suppose it means only that he once killed
+ a lion, and always carried its skin afterwards to show that he had, as
+ Indian sportsmen sent home stuffed rugs, with claws at the corners, and a
+ lump in the middle which one tumbles over every time one stirs the fire.
+ What was this Nemean Lion, whose spoils were evermore to cover Hercules
+ from the cold? Not merely a large specimen of Felis Leo, ranging the
+ fields of Nemea, be sure of that. This Nemean cub was one of a bad litter.
+ Born of Typhon and Echidna,&mdash;of the whirlwind and the snake,&mdash;Cerberus
+ his brother, the Hydra of Lerna his sister,&mdash;it must have been
+ difficult to get his hide off him. He had to be found in darkness, too,
+ and dealt upon without weapons, by grip at the throat&mdash; arrows and
+ club of no avail against him. What does all that mean?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 173. It means that the Nemean Lion is the first great adversary of life,
+ whatever that may be&mdash;to Hercules, or to any of us, then or now. The
+ first monster we have to strangle, or be destroyed by, fighting in the
+ dark, and with none to help us, only Athena standing by to encourage with
+ her smile. Every man's Nemean Lion lies in wait for him somewhere. The
+ slothful man says, There is a lion in the path. He says well. The quiet
+ unslothful man says the same, and knows it too. But they differ in their
+ further reading of the text. The slothful man says, I shall be slain, and
+ the unslothful, IT shall be. It is the first ugly and strong enemy that
+ rises against us, all future victory depending on victory over that. Kill
+ it; and through all the rest of your life, what was once dreadful is your
+ armor, and you are clothed with that conquest for every other, and helmed
+ with its crest of fortitude for evermore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alas, we have most of us to walk bare-headed; but that is the meaning of
+ the story of Nemea,&mdash;worth laying to heart and thinking of sometimes,
+ when you see a dish garnished with parsley, which was the crown at the
+ Nemean games.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 174. How far, then, have we got in our list of the merits of Greek art
+ now?
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Sound knowledge.
+ Simple aims.
+ Mastered craft.
+ Vivid invention.
+ Strong common sense.
+ And eternally true and wise meaning.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Are these not enough? Here is one more, then, which will find favor, I
+ should think, with the British Lion. Greek art is never frightened at
+ anything; it is always cool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 175. It differs essentially from all other art, past or present, in this
+ incapability of being frightened. Half the power and imagination of every
+ other school depend on a certain feverish terror mingling with their sense
+ of beauty,&mdash;the feeling that a child has in a dark room, or a sick
+ person in seeing ugly dreams. But the Greeks never have ugly dreams. They
+ cannot draw anything ugly when they try. Sometimes they put themselves to
+ their wits'-end to draw an ugly thing,&mdash;the Medusa's head, for
+ instance,&mdash;but they can't do it, not they, because nothing frightens
+ them. They widen the mouth, and grind the teeth, and puff the cheeks, and
+ set the eyes a goggling; and the thing is only ridiculous after all, not
+ the least dreadful, for there is no dread in their hearts. Pensiveness;
+ amazement; often deepest grief and desolateness. All these; but terror
+ never. Everlasting calm in the presence of all fate; and joy such as they
+ could win, not indeed in a perfect beauty, but in beauty at perfect rest!
+ A kind of art this, surely, to be looked at, and thought upon sometimes
+ with profit, even in these latter days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 176. To be looked at sometimes. Not continually, and never as a model for
+ imitation. For you are not Greeks; but, for better or worse, English
+ creatures; and cannot do, even if it were a thousand times better worth
+ doing, anything well, except what your English hearts shall prompt, and
+ your English skies teach you. For all good art is the natural utterance of
+ its own people in its own day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But also, your own art is a better and brighter one than ever this Greek
+ art was. Many motives, powers, and insights have been added to those elder
+ ones. The very corruptions into which we have fallen are signs of a subtle
+ life, higher than theirs was, and therefore more fearful in its faults and
+ death. Christianity has neither superceded, nor, by itself, excelled
+ heathenism; but it has added its own good, won also by many a Nemean
+ contest in dark valleys, to all that was good and noble in heathenism; and
+ our present thoughts and work, when they are right, are nobler than the
+ heathen's. And we are not reverent enough to them, because we possess too
+ much of them. That sketch of four cherub heads from and English girl, by
+ Sir Joshua Reynolds, at Kensington, is an incomparably finer thing than
+ ever the Greeks did. Ineffably tender in the touch, yet Herculean in
+ power; innocent, yet exalted in feeling; pure in color as a pearl;
+ reserved and decisive in design, as this Lion crest, &mdash;if it alone
+ existed of such,&mdash;if it were a picture by Zeuxis, the only one left
+ in the world, and you build a shrine for it, and were allowed to see it
+ only seven days in a year, it alone would teach you all of art that you
+ ever needed to know. But you do not learn from this or any other such
+ work, because you have not reverence enough for them, and are trying to
+ learn from all at once, and from a hundred other masters besides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 177. Here, then, is the practical advice which I would venture to deduce
+ from what I have tried to show you. Use Greek art as a first, not a final,
+ teacher. Learn to draw carefully from Greek work; above all, to place
+ forms correctly, and to use light and shade tenderly. Never allow
+ yourselves black shadows. It is easy to make things look round and
+ projecting; but the things to exercise yourselves in are the placing of
+ the masses, and the modelling of the lights. It is an admirable exercise
+ to take a pale wash of color for all the shadows, never reinforcing it
+ everywhere, but drawing the statue as if it were in far distance, making
+ all the darks one flat pale tint. Then model from those into the lights,
+ rounding as well as you can, on those subtle conditions. In your chalk
+ drawings, separate the lights from the darks at once all over; then
+ reinforce the darks slightly where absolutely necessary, and put your
+ whole strength on the lights and their limits. Then, when you have learned
+ to draw thoroughly, take one master for your painting, as you would have
+ done necessarily in old times by being put into his school (were I to
+ choose for you, it should be among six men only&mdash;Titian, Correggio,
+ Paul Veronese, Velasquez, Reynolds, or Holbein). If you are a landscapist,
+ Turner must be your only guide (for no other great landscape painter has
+ yet lived); and having chosen, do your best to understand your own chosen
+ master, and obey him, and no one else, till you have strength to deal with
+ the nature itself round you, and then, be your own master, and see with
+ your own eyes. If you have got masterhood or sight in you, that is the way
+ to make the most of them; and if you have neither, you will at least be
+ sound in your work, prevented from immodest and useless effort, and
+ protected from vulgar and fantastic error.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so I wish you all, good speed, and the favor of Hercules and of the
+ Muses; and to those who shall best deserve them, the crown of Parsley
+ first and then of the Laurel.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Queen of the Air, by John Ruskin
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Queen of the Air
+
+Author: John Ruskin
+
+Release Date: June 17, 2004 [eBook #12641]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEEN OF THE AIR***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Julie C. Sparks
+
+
+
+THE QUEEN OF THE AIR
+
+Being a Study of the Greek Myths of Cloud and Storm
+
+BY
+
+JOHN RUSKIN, LL.D.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+I. ATHENA CHALINITIS.
+ (Athena in the Heavens.)
+Lecture on the Greek myths of Storm, given (partly) in University
+College, London, March 9, 1869.
+
+II. ATHENA KERAMITIS.
+ (Athena in the Earth.)
+Study, supplementary to the preceding lecture, of the supposed and actual
+relations of Athena to the vital force in material organism.
+
+III. ATHENA ERGANE.
+ (Athena in the Heart.)
+Various notes relating to the Conception of Athena as the Directress of
+the Imagination and Will.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+My days and strength have lately been much broken; and I never more felt
+the insufficiency of both than in preparing for the press the following
+desultory memoranda on a most noble subject. But I leave them now as
+they stand, for no time nor labor would be enough to complete them to my
+contentment; and I believe that they contain suggestions which may be
+followed with safety, by persons who are beginning to take interest in
+the aspects of mythology, which only recent investigation has removed
+from the region of conjecture into that of rational inquiry. I have
+some advantage, also, from my field work, in the interpretation of myths
+relating to natural phenomena; and I have had always near me, since we
+were at college together, a sure, and unweariedly kind, guide, in my
+friend Charles Newton, to whom we owe the finding of more treasure in
+mines of marble than, were it rightly estimated, all California could
+buy. I must not, however, permit the chance of his name being in any
+wise associated with my errors. Much of my work as been done obstinately
+in my own way; and he is never responsible for me, though he has often
+kept me right, or at least enabled me to advance in a new direction.
+Absolutely right no one can be in such matters; nor does a day pass
+without convincing every honest student of antiquity of some partial
+error, and showing him better how to think, and where to look. But I
+knew that there was no hope of my being able to enter with advantage on
+the fields of history opened by the splendid investigation of recent
+philologists, though I could qualify myself, by attention and sympathy,
+to understand, here and there, a verse of Homer's or Hesiod's, as the
+simple people did for whom they sang.
+
+Even while I correct these sheets for press, a lecture by Professor
+Tyndall has been put into my hands, which I ought to have heard last 16th
+January, but was hindered by mischance; and which, I now find, completes,
+in two important particulars, the evidence of an instinctive truth in
+ancient symbolism; showing, first, that the Greek conception of an
+aetherial element pervading space is justified by the closest reasoning of
+modern physicists; and, secondly, that the blue of the sky, hitherto
+thought to be caused by watery vapour, is, indeed, reflected from the
+divided air itself; so that the bright blue of the eyes of Athena, and
+the deep blue of her aegis, prove to be accurate mythic expressions of
+natural phenomena which it is an uttermost triumph of recent science to
+have revealed.
+
+Indeed, it would be difficult to imagine triumph more complete. To form,
+"within an experimental tube, a bit of more perfect sky than the sky
+itself!" here is magic of the finest sort! singularly reversed from that
+of old time, which only asserted its competency to enclose in bottles
+elemental forces that were--not of the sky.
+
+Let me, in thanking Professor Tyndall for the true wonder of this piece
+of work, ask his pardon, and that of all masters in physical science, for
+any words of mine, either in the following pages or elsewhere, that may
+ever seem to fail in the respect due to their great powers of thought, or
+in the admiration due to the far scope of their discovery. But I will be
+judged by themselves, if I have not bitter reason to ask them to teach us
+more than yet they have taught.
+
+This first day of May, 1869, I am writing where my work was begun
+thirty-five years ago, within sight of the snows of the higher Alps. In
+that half of the permitted life of man, I have seen strange evil brought
+upon every scene that I best loved, or tried to make beloved by others.
+The light which once flushed those pale summits with its rose at dawn,
+and purple at sunset, is now umbered and faint; the air which once inlaid
+the clefts of all their golden crags with azure is now defiled with
+languid coils of smoke, belched from worse than volcanic fires; their
+very glacier waves are ebbing, and their snows fading, as if hell had
+breathed on them; the waters that once sank at their feet into
+crystalline rest are now dimmed and foul, from deep to deep, and shore to
+shore. These are no careless words--they are accurately, horribly, true.
+I know what the Swiss lakes were; no pool of Alpine fountain at its
+source was clearer. This morning, on the Lake of Geneva, at half a mile
+from the beach, I could scarcely see my oar-blade a fathom deep.
+
+The light, the air, the waters, all defiled! How of the earth itself?
+Take this one fact for type of honour done by the modern Swiss to the
+earth of his native land. There used to be a little rock at the end of
+the avenue by the port of Neuchatel; there, the last marble of the foot
+of Jura, sloping to the blue water, and (at this time of year) covered
+with bright pink tufts of Saponaria. I went, three days since, to gather
+a blossom at the place. The goodly native rock and its flowers were
+covered with the dust and refuse of the town; but, in the middle of the
+avenue, was a newly-constructed artificial rockery, with a fountain
+twisted through a spinning spout, and an inscription on one of its
+loose-tumbled stones,--
+
+ "Aux Botanistes,
+ Le club Jurassique,"
+
+Ah, masters of modern science, give me back my Athena out of your vials,
+and seal, if it may be, once more, Asmodeus therein. You have divided
+the elements, and united them; enslaved them upon the earth, and
+discerned them in the stars. Teach us now, but this of them, which is
+all that man need know,--that the Air is given to him for his life; and
+the Rain to his thirst, and for his baptism; and the Fire for warmth; and
+the Sun for sight; and the Earth for his Meat--and his Rest.
+
+VEVAY, May 1, 1869.
+
+
+
+
+THE QUEEN OF THE AIR.
+
+
+
+I.
+
+ATHENA CHALINITIS.*
+(Athena in the Heavens.)
+
+
+* "Athena the Restrainer." The name is given to her as having helped
+Bellerophon to bridle Pegasus, the flying cloud.
+
+
+LECTURE ON THE GREEK MYTHS OF STORM, GIVEN (PARTLY) IN UNIVERSITY
+ COLLEGE, LONDON, MARCH 9, 1869.
+
+
+1. I will not ask your pardon for endeavoring to interest you in the
+subject of Greek Mythology; but I must ask your permission to approach
+it in a temper differing from that in which it is frequently treated.
+We cannot justly interpret the religion of any people, unless we are
+prepared to admit that we ourselves, as well as they, are liable to
+error in matters of faith; and that the convictions of others, however
+singular, may in some points have been well founded, while our own,
+however reasonable, may be in some particulars mistaken. You must
+forgive me, therefore, for not always distinctively calling the creeds
+of the past "superstition," and the creeds of the present day "religion;"
+as well as for assuming that a faith now confessed may sometimes be
+superficial, and that a faith long forgotten may once have been sincere.
+It is the task of the Divine to condemn the errors of antiquity, and of
+the philologists to account for them; I will only pray you to read, with
+patience, and human sympathy, the thoughts of men who lived without blame
+in a darkness they could not dispel; and to remember that, whatever
+charge of folly may justly attach to the saying, "There is no God," the
+folly is prouder, deeper, and less pardonable, in saying, "There is no
+God but for me."
+
+2. A myth, in its simplest definition, is a story with a meaning attached
+to it other than it seems to have at first; and the fact that it has such
+a meaning is generally marked by some of its circumstances being
+extraordinary, or, in the common use of the word, unnatural. Thus if I
+tell you that Hercules killed a water-serpent in the lake of Lerna, and
+if I mean, and you understand, nothing more than that fact, the story,
+whether true or false, is not a myth. But if by telling you this, I mean
+that Hercules purified the stagnation of many streams from deadly
+miasmata, my story, however simple, is a true myth; only, as, if I leftit
+in that simplicity, you would probably look for nothing beyond, it will
+be wise in me to surprise your attention by adding some singular
+circumstance; for instance, that the water-snake had several heads, which
+revived as fast as they were killed, and which poisoned even the foot
+that trod upon them as they slept. And in proportion to the fulness of
+intended meaning I shall probably multiply and refine upon these
+improbabilities; as, suppose, if, instead of desiring only to tell you
+that Hercules purified a marsh, I wished you to understand that he
+contended with the venom and vapor of envy and evil ambition, whether in
+other men's souls or in his own, and choked that malaria only by supreme
+toil,--I might tell you that this serpent was formed by the goddess whose
+pride was in the trial of Hercules; and that its place of abode as by a
+palm-tree; and that for every head of it that was cut off, two rose up
+with renewed life; and that the hero found at last that he could not kill
+the creature at all by cutting its heads off or crushing them, but only
+by burning them down; and that the midmost of them could not be killed
+even that way, but had to be buried alive. Only in proportion as I mean
+more, I shall certainly appear more absurd in my statement; and at last
+when I get unendurably significant, all practical persons will agree that
+I was talking mere nonsense from the beginning, and never meant anything
+at all.
+
+3. It is just possible, however, also, that the story-teller may all
+along have meant nothing but what he said; and that, incredible as the
+events may appear, he himself literally believed--and expected you also
+to believe--all this about Hercules, without any latent moral or history
+whatever. And it is very necessary, in reading traditions of this kind,
+to determine, first of all, whether you are listening to a simple person,
+who is relating what, at all events, he believes to be true, (and may,
+therefore, possibly have been so to some extent), or to a reserved
+philosopher, who is veiling a theory of the universe under the grotesque
+of a fairy tale. It is, in general, more likely that the first
+supposition should be the right one: simple and credulous persons are,
+perhaps fortunately, more common than philosophers; and it is of the
+highest importance that you should take their innocent testimony as it
+was meant, and not efface, under the graceful explanation which your
+cultivated ingenuity may suggest, either the evidence their story may
+contain (such as it is worth) of an extraordinary event having really
+taken place, or the unquestionable light which it will cast upon the
+character of the person by whom it was frankly believed. And to deal
+with Greek religion honestly, you must at once understand that this
+literal belief was, in the mind of the general people, as deeply rooted
+as ours in the legends of our own sacred book; and that a basis of
+unmiraculous event was as little suspected, and an explanatory symbolism
+as rarely traced, by them, as by us.
+
+You must, therefore, observe that I deeply degrade the position which
+such a myth as that just referred to occupied in the Greek mind, by
+comparing it (for fear of offending you) to our story of St. George and
+the Dragon. Still, the analogy is perfect in minor respects; and though
+it fails to give you any notion of the Greek faith, it will exactly
+illustrate the manner in which faith laid hold of its objects.
+
+4. This story of Hercules and the Hydra, then, was to the general Greek
+mind, in its best days, a tale about a real hero and a real monster. Not
+one in a thousand knew anything of the way in which the story had arisen,
+any more than the English peasant generally is aware of the plebeian
+original of St. George; or supposes that there were once alive in the
+world, with sharp teeth and claws, real, and very ugly, flying dragons.
+On the other hand, few persons traced any moral or symbolical meaning in
+the story, and the average Greek was as far from imagining any
+interpretation like that I have just given you, as an average Englishman
+is from seeing is St. George the Red Cross Knight of Spenser, or in the
+Dragon the Spirit of Infidelity. But, for all that, there was a certain
+undercurrent of consciousness in all minds that the figures meant more
+than they at first showed; and, according to each man's own faculties of
+sentiment, he judged and read them; just as a Knight of the Garter reads
+more in the jewel on his collar than the George and Dragon of a
+public-house expresses to the host or to his customers. Thus, to the
+mean person the myth always meant little; to the noble person, much; and
+the greater their familiarity with it, the more contemptible it became to
+one, and the more sacred to the other; until vulgar commentators
+explained it entirely away, while Virgil made the crowning glory of his
+choral hymn to Hercules.
+
+ "Around thee, powerless to infect thy soul,
+ Rose, in his crested crowd, the Lerna worm."
+
+ "Non te rationis egentem
+ Lernaeus turba capitum circumstetit anguis."
+
+And although, in any special toil of the hero's life, the moral
+interpretation was rarely with definiteness attached to the event, yet
+in the whole course of the life, not only for a symbolical meaning, but
+the warrant for the existence of a real spiritual power, was apprehended
+of all men. Hercules was no dead hero, to be remembered only as a victor
+over monsters of the past--harmless now as slain. He was the perpetual
+type and mirror of heroism, and its present and living aid against every
+ravenous form of human trial and pain.
+
+5. But, if we seek to know more than this and to ascertain the manner in
+which the story first crystallized into its shape, we shall find
+ourselves led back generally to one or other of two sources--either to
+actual historical events, represented by the fancy under figures
+personifying them; or else to natural phenomena similarly endowed with
+life by the imaginative power usually more or less under the influence of
+terror. The historical myths we must leave the masters of history to
+follow; they, and the events they record, being yet involved in great,
+though attractive and penetrable, mystery. But the stars, and hills, and
+storms are with us now, as they were with others of old; and it only
+needs that we look at them with the earnestness of those childish eyes to
+understand the first words spoken of them by the children of men, and
+then, in all the most beautiful and enduring myths, we shall find, not
+only a literal story of a real person, not only a parallel imagery of
+moral principle, but an underlying worship of natural phenomena, out of
+which both have sprung, and in which both forever remain rooted. Thus,
+from the real sun, rising and setting,--from the real atmosphere, calm in
+its dominion of unfading blue, and fierce in its descent of tempest,--the
+Greek forms first the idea of two entirely personal and corporal gods,
+whose limbs are clothes in divine flesh, and whose brows are crowned with
+divine beauty; yet so real that the quiver rattles at their shoulder, and
+the chariot bends beneath their weight. And, on the other hand,
+collaterally with these corporeal images, and never for one instant
+separated from them, he conceives also two omnipresent spiritual
+influences, as the sun, with a constant fire, whatever in humanity is
+skilful and wise; and the other, like the living air, breathes the calm
+of heavenly fortitude, and strength of righteous anger, into every human
+breast that is pure and brave.
+
+6. Now, therefore, in nearly every myth of importance, and certainly in
+every one of those which I shall speak to-night, you have to discern
+these three structural parts,--the root and the two branches: the root,
+in physical existence, sun, or sky, or cloud, or sea; then the personal
+incarnation of that, becoming a trusted and companionable deity, with
+whom you may walk hand in hand, as a child with its brother or its
+sister; and, lastly, the moral significance of the image, which is in all
+the great myths eternally and beneficently true.
+
+7. The great myths; that is to say, myths made by great people. For the
+first plain fact about myth-making is one which has been most strangely
+lost sight of,--that you cannot make a myth unless you have something to
+make it of. You cannot tell a secret which you don't know. If the myth
+is about the sky, it must have been made by somebody who has looked at
+the sky. If the myth is about justice and fortitude, it must have been
+made by someone who knew what it was to be just or patient. According to
+the quantity of understanding in the person will be the quantity of
+significance in his fable; and the myth of a simple and ignorant race
+must necessarily mean little, because a simple and ignorant race have
+little to mean. So the great question in reading a story is always, not
+what wild hunter dreamed, or what childish race first dreaded it; but
+what wise man first perfectly told, and what strong people first
+perfectly lived by it. And the real meaning of any myth is that which it
+has at the noblest age of the nation among whom it is current. The
+farther back you pierce, the less significance you will find, until you
+come to the first narrow thought, which, indeed, contains the germ of the
+accomplished tradition; but only as the seed contains the flower. As the
+intelligence and passion of the race develop, they cling to and nourish
+their beloved and sacred legend; leaf by leaf it expands under the touch
+of more pure affections, and more delicate imagination, until at last the
+perfect fable burgeons out into symmetry of milky stem and honied bell.
+
+8. But through whatever changes it may pass, remember that our right
+reading of it is wholly dependent on the materials we have in our own
+minds for an intelligent answering sympathy. If it first arose among a
+people who dwelt under stainless skies, and measures their journeys by
+ascending and declining stars, we certainly cannot read their story, if
+we have never seen anything above us in the day but smoke, nor anything
+around us in the night but candles. If the tale goes on to change clouds
+or planets into living creatures,--to invest them with fair forms and
+inflame them with mighty passions,--we can only understand the story of
+the human-hearted things, in so far as we ourselves take pleasure in the
+perfectness of visible form, or can sympathize, by an effort of
+imagination, with the strange people who had other loves than those of
+wealth, and other interests than those of commerce. And, lastly, if the
+myth complete itself to the fulfilled thoughts of the nation, by
+attributing to the gods, whom they have carved out of their fantasy,
+continual presence with their own souls; and their every effort for good
+is finally guided by the sense of the companionship, the praise, and the
+pure will of immortals, we shall be able to follow them into this last
+circle of their faith only in the degree in which the better parts of our
+own beings have been also stirred by the aspects of nature, or
+strengthened by her laws. It may be easy to prove that the ascent of
+Apollo in his chariot signifies nothing but the rising of the sun. But
+what does the sunrise itself signify to us? If only languid return to
+frivolous amusement, or fruitless labor, it will, indeed, not be easy for
+us to conceive the power, over a Greek, of the name of Apollo. But if,
+fir us also, as for the Greek, the sunrise means daily restoration to the
+sense of passionate gladness and of perfect life--if it means the
+thrilling of new strength through every nerve,--the shedding over us of a
+better peace than the peace of night, in the power of the dawn,--and the
+purging of evil vision and fear by the baptism of its dew;--if the sun
+itself is an influence, to us also, of spiritual good--and becomes thus
+in reality, not in imagination, to us also, a spiritual power,--we may
+then soon over-pass the narrow limit of conception which kept that power
+impersonal, and rise with the Greek to the thought of an angel who
+rejoiced as a strong man to run his course, whose voice calling to life
+and to labor rang round the earth, and whose going forth was to the ends
+of heaven.
+
+9. The time, then, at which I shall take up for you, as well as I can
+decipher it, the traditions of the gods of Greece, shall be near the
+beginning of its central and formed faith,--about 500 B.C.,--a faith of
+which the character is perfectly represented by Pindar and AEschylus, who
+are both of them outspokenly religious, and entirely sincere men; while
+we may always look back to find the less developed thought of the
+preceding epoch given by Homer, in a more occult, subtle,
+half-instinctive, and involuntary way.
+
+10. Now, at that culminating period of the Greek religion, we find,
+under one governing Lord of all things, four subordinate elemental
+forces, and four spiritual powers living in them and commanding them.
+The elements are of course the well-known four of the ancient world,--
+the earth, the waters, the fire, and the air; and the living powers of
+them are Demeter, the Latin Ceres; Poseidon, the Latin Neptune; Apollo,
+who has retained always his Greek name; and Athena, the Latin Minerva.
+Each of these are descended from, or changed from, more ancient, and
+therefore more mystic, deities of the earth and heaven, and of a finer
+element of aether supposed to be beyond the heavens;* but at this time
+we find the four quite definite, both in their kingdoms and in their
+personalities. They are the rulers of the earth that we tread upon, and
+the air that we breathe; and are with us closely, in their vivid
+humanity, as the dust that they animate, and the winds that they bridle.
+I shall briefly define for you the range of their separate dominions, and
+then follow, as far as we have time, the most interesting of the legends
+which relate to the queen of the air.
+
+
+* And by modern science now also asserted, and with probability argued,
+to exist.
+
+
+11. The rule of the first spirit, Demeter, the earth mother, is over the
+earth, first, as the origin of all life,--the dust from whence we were
+taken; secondly, as the receiver of all things back at last into silence
+--"Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return." And, therefore, as
+the most tender image of this appearing and fading life, in the birth and
+fall of flowers, her daughter Proserpine plays in the fields of Sicily,
+and thence is torn away into darkness, and becomes the Queen of Fate--not
+merely of death, but of the gloom which closes over and ends, not beauty
+only, but sin, and chiefly of sins the sin against the life she gave; so
+that she is, in her highest power, Persephone, the avenger and purifier
+of blood--"The voice of thy brother's blood cries to me out of the
+ground." Then, side by side with this queen of the earth, we find a
+demigod of agriculture by the plough--the lord of grain, or of the thing
+ground by the mill. And it is a singular proof of the simplicity of
+Greek character at this noble time, that of all representations left to
+us of their deities by their art, few are so frequent, and none perhaps
+so beautiful, as the symbol of this spirit of agriculture.
+
+12. Then the dominant spirit of the element water is Neptune, but
+subordinate to him are myriads of other water spirits, of whom Nereus is
+the chief, with Palaemon, and Leucothea, the "white lady" of the sea; and
+Thetis, and nymphs innumerable who, like her, could "suffer a sea
+change," while the river deities had each independent power, according
+to the preciousness of their streams to the cities fed by them,--the
+"fountain Arethuse, and thou, honoured flood, smooth sliding Mincius,
+crowned with vocal reeds." And, spiritually, this king of the waters is
+lord of the strength and daily flow of human life--he gives it material
+force and victory; which as the meaning of the dedication of the hair, as
+the sign of the strength of life, to the river or the native land.
+
+13. Demeter, then, over the earth, and its giving and receiving of life.
+Neptune over the waters, and the flow and force of life,--always among
+the Greeks typified by the horse, which was to them as a crested
+sea-wave, animated and bridled. Then the third element, fire, has set
+over it two powers: over earthly fire, the assistant of human labor, is
+set Hephaestus, lord of all labor in which is the flush and the sweat of
+the brow; and over heavenly fire, the source of day, is set Apollo, the
+spirit of all kindling, purifying, and illuminating intellectual wisdom,
+each of these gods having also their subordinate or associated powers,--
+servant, or sister, or companion muse.
+
+14. Then, lastly, we come to the myth which is to be our subject of
+closer inquiry,--the story of Athena and of the deities subordinate to
+her. This great goddess, the Neith of the Egyptians, the Athena or
+Athenaia of the Greeks, and, with broken power, half usurped by Mars,
+the Minerva of the Latins, is, physically, the queen of the air; having
+supreme power both over its blessing of calm, and wrath of storm; and,
+spiritually, she is the queen of the breath of man, first of the bodily
+breathing which is life to his blood, and strength to his arm in battle;
+and then of the mental breathing, or inspiration, which is his moral
+health and habitual wisdom; wisdom of conduct and of the heart, as
+opposed to the wisdom of imagination and the brain; moral, as distinct
+from intellectual; inspired, as distinct from illuminated.
+
+15. By a singular and fortunate, though I believe wholly accidental,
+coincidence, the heart-virtue, of which she is the spirit, was separated
+by the ancients into four divisions, which have since obtained acceptance
+from all men as rightly discerned, and have received, as if from the
+quarters of the four winds of which Athena is the natural queen, the name
+of "Cardinal" virtues: namely, Prudence (the right seeing, and
+foreseeing, of events through darkness); Justice (the righteous bestowal
+of favor and of indignation); Fortitude (patience under trial by pain);
+and Temperance (patience under trial by pleasure). With respect to these
+four virtues, the attributes of Athena are all distinct. In her
+prudence, or sight in darkness, she is "Glaukopis," "owl-eyed."* In her
+justice, which is the dominant virtue, she wears two robes, one of light,
+and one of darkness; the robe of light, saffron color, or the color of
+the daybreak, falls to her feet, covering her wholly with favor and
+love,--the calm of the sky in blessing; it is embroidered along its edge
+with her victory over the giants (the troublous powers of the earth), and
+the likeness of it was woven yearly by the Athenian maidens and carried
+to the temple of their own Athena, not to the Parthenon, that was the
+temple of all the world's Athena,--but this they carried to the temple of
+their own only one who loved them, and stayed with them always. Then her
+robe of indignation is worn on her breast and left arm only, fringed with
+fatal serpents, and fastened with Gorgonian cold, turning men to stone;
+physically, the lightning and hail of chastisement by storm. Then in her
+fortitude she wears the crested and unstooping hemlet;** and lastly, in
+her temperance, she is the queen of maidenhood--stainless as the air of
+heaven.
+
+
+* There are many other meanings in the epithet; see farther on, sec. 91,
+pp. 133, 134.
+** I am compelled, for clearness' sake, to mark only one meaning at a
+time. Athena's helmet is sometimes a mask, sometimes a sign of anger,
+sometimes of the highest light of aether; but I cannot speak of all this
+at once.
+
+
+16. But all these virtues mass themselves in the Greek mind into the two
+main ones,--of Justice, or noble passion, and Fortitude, or noble
+patience; and of these, the chief powers of Athena, the Greeks have
+divinely written for them, and for all men after them, two mighty songs,
+--one, of the Menis,* Mens, passion, or zeal, of Athena, breathed into a
+mortal whose name is "Ache of heart," and whose short life is only the
+incarnate brooding and burst of storm; and the other is of the foresight
+and fortitude of Athena, maintained by her in the heart of a mortal whose
+name is given to him from a longer grief, Odysseus, the full of sorrow,
+the much enduring, and the long-suffering.
+
+
+* This first word of the Iliad, Menis, afterwards passes into the Latin
+Mens; is the root of the Latin name for Athena, "Minerva," and so the
+root of the English "mind."
+
+
+17. The minor expressions by the Greeks in word, in symbol, and in
+religious service, of this faith, are so many and so beautiful, that I
+hope some day to gather at least a few of them into a separate body of
+evidence respecting the power of Athena, and of its relations to the
+ethical conception of the Homeric poems, or, rather, to their ethical
+nature; for they are not conceived didactically, but are didactic in
+their essence, as all good art is. There is an increasing insensibility
+to this character, and even an open denial of it, among us now which is
+one of the most curious errors of modernism,--the peculiar and judicial
+blindness of an age which, having long practised art and poetry for the
+sake of pleasure only, has become incapable of reading their language
+when they were both didactic; and also, having been itself accustomed to
+a professedly didactic teaching, which yet, for private interests,
+studiously avoids collision with every prevalent vice of its day (and
+especially with avarice), has become equally dead to the intensely
+ethical conceptions of a race which habitually divided all men into two
+broad classes of worthy or worthless,--good, and good for nothing. And
+even the celebrated passage of Horace about the Iliad is now misread or
+disbelieved, as if it were impossible that the Iliad could be instructive
+because it is not like a sermon. Horce does not say that it is like a
+sermon, and would have been still less likely to say so if he ever had
+had the advantage of hearing a sermon. "I have been reading that story
+of Troy again" (thus he writes to a noble youth of Rome whom he cared
+for), "quietly at Praeneste, while you have been busy at Rome; and truly
+I think that what is base and what is noble, and what useful and useless,
+may be better learned from that, than from all Chrysippus' and Crantor's
+talk put together."* Which is profoundly true, not of the Iliad only,
+but of all other great art whatsoever; for all pieces of such art are
+didactic in the purest way, indirectly and occultly, so that, first, you
+shall only be bettered by them if you are already hard at work in
+bettering yourself; and when you are bettered by them, it shall be partly
+with a general acceptance of their influence, so constant and subtile
+that you shall be no more conscious of it than of the healthy digestion
+of food; and partly by a gift of unexpected truth, which you shall only
+find by slow mining for it,--which is withheld on purpose, and
+close-locked, that you may not get it till you have forged the key of it
+in a furnace of your own heating. And this withholding of their meaning
+is continual, and confessed, in the great poets. Thus Pindar says of
+himself: "There is many an arrow in my quiver, full of speech to the
+wise, but, for the many, they need interpreters." And neither Pindar,
+nor AEschylus, nor Hesiod, nor Homer, nor any of the greater poets or
+teachers of any nation or time, ever spoke but with intentional
+reservation; nay, beyond this, there is often a meaning which they
+themselves cannot interpert [sic],--which it may be for ages long after
+them to intrepert [sic],--in what they said, so far as it recorded true
+imaginative vision. For all the greatest myths have been seen by the men
+who tell them, involuntarily and passively,--seen by them with as great
+distinctness (and in some respects, though not in all, under conditions
+as far beyond the control of their will) as a dream sent to any of us by
+night when we dream clearest; and it is this veracity of vision that
+could not be refused, and of moral that could not be foreseen, which in
+modern historical inquiry has been left wholly out of account; being
+indeed the thing which no merely historical investigator can understand,
+or even believe; for it belongs exclusively to the creative or artistic
+group of men, and can only be interpreted by those of their race, who
+themselves in some measure also see visions and dream dreams.
+
+
+* Note, once for all, that unless when there is question about some
+particular expression, I never translate literally, but give the real
+force of what is said, as I best can, freely.
+
+
+So that you may obtain a more truthful idea of the nature of Greek
+religion and legend from the poems of Keats, and the nearly as beautiful,
+and, in general grasp of subject, far more powerful, recent work of
+Morris, than from frigid scholarship, however extensive. Not that the
+poet's impressions or renderings of things are wholly true, but their
+truth is vital, not formal. They are like sketches from the life by
+Reynolds or Gainsborough, which may be demonstrably inaccurate or
+imaginary in many traits, and indistinct in others, yet will be in the
+deepest sense like, and true; while the work of historical analysis is
+too often weak with loss, through the very labor of its miniature
+touches, or useless in clumsy and vapid veracity of externals, and
+complacent security of having done all that is required for the portrait,
+when it has measured the breadth of the forehead and the length of the
+nose.
+
+18. The first of requirements, then, for the right reading of myths, is
+the understanding of the nature of all true vision by noble persons;
+namely, that it is founded on constant laws common to all human nature;
+that it perceives, however darkly, things which are for all ages true;
+that we can only understand it so far as we have some perception of the
+same truth; and that its fulness is developed and manifested more and
+more by the reverberation of it from minds of the same mirror-temper, in
+succeeding ages. You will understand Homer better by seeing his
+reflection in Dante, as you may trace new forms and softer colors in a
+hillside, redoubled by a lake.
+
+I shall be able partly to show you, even to-night, how much, in the
+Homeric vision of Athena, has been made clearer by the advance of time,
+being thus essentially and eternally true; but I must in the outset
+indicate the relation to that central thought of the imagery of the
+inferior deities of storm.
+
+19. And first I will take the myth of AEolus (the "sage Hippotades" of
+Milton), as it is delivered pure by Homer from the early times.
+
+Why do you suppose Milton calls him "sage"? One does not usually think
+of the winds as very thoughtful or deliberate powers. But hear Homer:
+"Then we came to the AEolian island, and there dwelt AEolus Hippotades,
+dear to the deathless gods; there he dwelt in a floating island, and
+round it was a wall of brass that could not be broken; and the smooth
+rock of it ran up sheer. To whom twelve children were born in the sacred
+chambers,--six daughters and six strong sons; and they dwell foreer with
+their beloved father and their mother, strict in duty; and with them are
+laid up a thousand benefits; and the misty house around them rings with
+fluting all the day long." Now, you are to note first, in this
+description, the wall of brass and the sheer rock. You will find,
+throughout the fables of the tempest-group, that the brazen wall and the
+precipice (occurring in another myth as the brazen tower of Danae) are
+always connected with the idea of the towering cloud lighted by the sun,
+here truly described as a floating island. Secondly, you hear that all
+treasures were laid up in them; therefore, you know this AEolus is lord of
+the beneficent winds ("he bringeth the wind out of his treasuries"); and
+presently afterwards Homer calls him the "steward" of the winds, the
+master of the store-house of them. And this idea of gifts and
+preciousness in the winds of heaven is carried out in the well-known
+sequel of the fable: AEolus gives them to Ulysses, all but one, bound in
+leathern bags, with a glittering cord of silver; and so like bags of
+treasure that the sailors think they are so, and open them to see. And
+when Ulysses is thus driven back to AEolus, and prays him again to help
+him, note the deliberate words of the king's refusal,--"Did I not," says
+he, "send thee on thy way heartily, that thou mightest reach thy country,
+thy home, and whatever is dear to thee? It is not lawful for me again
+to send forth favorably on his journey a man hated by the happy gods."
+This idea of the beneficence of AEolus remains to the latest times, though
+Virgil, by adopting the vulgar change of the cloud island into Lipari,
+has lost it a little; but even when it is finally explained away by
+Diodorus, AEolus is still a kind-hearted monarch, who lived on the coast
+of Sorrento, invented the use of sails, and established a system of storm
+signals.
+
+20. Another beneficent storm-power, Boreas, occupies an important place
+in early legend, and a singularly principal one in art; and I wish I
+could read to you a passage of Plato about the legend of Boreas and
+Oreithyia,* and the breeze and shade of the Ilissus--notwithstannding its
+severe reflection upon persons who waste their time on mythological
+studies; but I must go on at once to the fable with which you are all
+generally familiar, that of the Harpies.
+
+
+* Translated by Max Mueller in the opening of his essay on "Comparative
+Mythology."--Chips from a German Workshop, vol. ii.
+
+
+This is always connected with that of Boreas or the north wind, because
+the two sons of Boreas are enemies of the Harpies, and drive them away
+into frantic flight. The myth in its first literal form means only the
+battle between the fair north wind and the foul south one: the two
+Harpies, "Stormswift" and "Swiftfoot," are the sisters of the rainbow;
+that is to say, they are the broken drifts of the showery south wind, and
+the clear north wind drives them back; but they quickly take a deeper and
+more malignant significance. You know the short, violent, spiral gusts
+that lift the dust before coming rain: the Harpies get identified first
+with these, and then with more violent whirlwinds, and so they are called
+"Harpies," "the Snatchers," and are thought of as entirely destructive;
+their manner of destroying being twofold,--by snatching away, and by
+defiling and polluting. This is a month in which you may really see a
+small Harpy at her work almost whenever you choose. The first time that
+there is threatening of rain after two or three days of fine weather,
+leave your window well open to the street, and some books or papers on
+the table; and if you do not, in a little while, know what the Harpies
+mean, and how they snatch, and how they defile, I'll give up my Greek
+myths.
+
+21. That is the physical meaning. It is now easy to find the mental
+one. You must all have felt the expression of ignoble anger in those
+fitful gusts of storm. There is a sense of provocation in their thin
+and senseless fury, wholly different from the nobler anger of the greater
+tempests. Also, they seem useless and unnatural, and the Greek thinks of
+them always as vile in malice, and opposed, therefore, to the Sons of
+Boreas, who are kindly winds, that fill sails, and wave harvests,--full
+of bracing health and happy impulses. From this lower and merely greater
+terror, always associated with their whirling motion, which is indeed
+indicative of the most destructive winds; and they are thus related to
+the nobler tempests, as Charybdis to the sea; they are devouring and
+desolating, making all things disappear that come in their grasp; and so,
+spiritually, they are the gusts of vexatious, fretful, lawless passion,
+vain and overshadowing, discontented and lamenting, meager and insane,--
+spirits of wasted energy, and wandering disease, and unappeased famine,
+and unsatisfied hope. So you have, on the one side, the winds of
+prosperity and health, on the other, of ruin and sickness. Understand
+that, once, deeply,--any who have ever known the weariness of vain
+desires, the pitiful, unconquerable, coiling and recoiling famine and
+thirst of heart,--and you will know what was in the sound of the Harpy
+Celaeno's shriek from her rock; and why, in the seventh circle of the
+"Inferno," the Harpies make their nests in the warped branches of the
+trees that are the souls of suicides.
+
+22. Now you must always be prepared to read Greek legends as you trace
+threads through figures on a silken damask: the same thread runs through
+the web, but it makes part of different figures. Joined with other
+colors you hardly recognize it, and in different lights it is dark or
+light. Thus the Greek fables blend and cross curiously in different
+directions, till they knit themselves into an arabesque where sometimes
+you cannot tell black from purple, nor blue from emerald--they being all
+the truer for this, because the truths of emotion they represent are
+interwoven in the same way, but all the more difficult to read, and to
+explain in any order. Thus the Harpies, as they represent vain desire,
+are connected with the Sirens, who are the spirits of constant desire; so
+that it is difficult sometimes in early art to know which are meant, both
+being represented alike as birds with women's heads; only the Sirens are
+the great constant desires--the infinite sicknesses of heart--which,
+rightly placed, give life, and wrongly placed, waste it away; so that
+there are two groups of Sirens, one noble and saving, as the other is
+fatal. But there are no animating or saving Harpies; their nature is
+always vexing and full of weariness, and thus they are curiously
+connected with the whole group of legends about Tantalus.
+
+33.* We all know what it is to be tantalized; but we do not often think
+of asking what Tantalus was tantalized for--what he had done, to be
+forever kept hungry in sight of food. Well; he had not been condemned to
+this merely for being a glutton. By Dante the same punishment is
+assigned to simple gluttony, to purge it away; but the sins of Tantalus
+were of a much wider and more mysterious kind. There are four great sins
+attributed to him: one, stealing the food of the gods to give it to men;
+another, sacrificing his son to feed the gods themselves (it may remind
+you for a moment of what I was telling you of the earthly character of
+Demeter, that, while the other gods all refuse, she, dreaming about her
+lost daughter, eats part of the shoulder of Pelops before she knows what
+she is doing); another sin is, telling the secrets of the gods; and only
+the fourth--stealing the golden dog of Pandareos--is connected with
+gluttony. The special sense of this myth is marked by Pandareos
+receiving the happy privilege of never being troubled with indigestion;
+the dog, in general, however mythically represents all utter senseless
+and carnal desires; mainly that of gluttony; and in the mythic sense of
+Hades--that is to say, so far as it represents spiritual ruin in this
+life, and not a literal hell--the dog Cerberus as its gatekeeper--with
+this special marking of his character of sensual passion, that he fawns
+on all those who descend, but rages against all who would return (the
+Virgilian "facilis descendus" being a later recognition of this mythic
+character of Hades); the last labor of Hercules is the dragging him up
+to the light; and in some sort he represents the voracity or devouring
+of Hades itself; and the mediaeval representation of the mouth of hell
+perpetuates the same thought. Then, also, the power of evil passion
+is partly associated with the red and scorching light of Sirius, as
+opposed to the pure light of the sun: he is the dog-star of ruin; and
+hence the continual Homeric dwelling upon him, and comparison of the
+flame of anger to his swarthy light; only, in his scorching, it is
+thirst, not hunger, over which he rules physically; so that the fable
+of Icarius, his first master, corresponds, among the Greeks, to the
+legend of the drunkenness of Noah.
+
+
+* Printer's error: should be 23.
+
+
+The story of Actaeon, the raging death of Hecuba, and the tradition of
+the white dog which ate part of Hercules' first sacrifice, and so gave
+name to the Cynosarges, are all various phases of the same thought,--the
+Greek notion of the dog being throughout confused between its serviceable
+fidelity, its watchfulness, its foul voracity, shamelessness, and deadly
+madness, while with the curious reversal or recoil of the meaning which
+attaches itself to nearly every great myth,--and which we shall presently
+see notably exemplified in the relations of the serpent to Athena,--the
+dog becomes in philosophy a type of severity and abstinence.
+
+24. It would carry us too far aside were I to tell you the story of
+Pandareos' dog--or rather of Jupiter's dog, for Pandareos was its
+guardian only; all that bears on our present purpose is that the guardian
+of this golden dog had three daughters, one of whom was subject to the
+power of the Sirens, and is turned into a nightingale; and the other two
+were subject to the power of the Harpies, and this was what happened to
+them: They were very beautiful, and they were beloved by the gods in
+their youth, and all the great goddesses were anxious to bring them up
+rightly. Of all types of young ladies' education, there is nothing so
+splendid as that of the younger daughters of Pandareos. They have
+literally the four greatest goddesses for their governesses. Athena
+teaches them domestic accomplishments, how to weave, and sew, and the
+like; Artemis teaches them to hold themselves up straight; Hera, how to
+behave proudly and oppressively to company; and Aphrodite, delightful
+governess, feeds them with cakes and honey all day long. All goes well,
+until just the time when they are going to be brought out; then there is
+a great dispute whom they are to marry, and in the midst of it they are
+carried off by the Harpies, given by them to be slaves to the Furies, and
+never seen more. But of course there is nothing in Greek myths; and one
+never heard of such things as vain desires, and empty hopes, and clouded
+passions, defiling and snatching away the souls of maidens, in a London
+season.
+
+I have no time to trace for you any more harpy legends, though they are
+full of the most curious interest; but I may confirm for you my
+interpretation of this one, and prove its importance in the Greek mind,
+by noting that Polygnotus painted these maidens, in his great religious
+series of paintings at Delphi, crowned with flowers, and playing at dice;
+and that Penelope remembers them in her last fit of despair, just before
+the return of Ulysses, and prays bitterly that she may be snatched away
+at once into nothingness by the Harpies, like Pandareos' daughters,
+rather than be tormented longer by her deferred hope, and anguish of
+disappointed love.
+
+25. I have hitherto spoken only of deities of the winds. We pass now to
+a far more important group, the deities of cloud. Both of these are
+subordinate to the ruling power of the air, as the demigods of the
+fountains and minor seas are to the great deep; but, as the
+cloud-firmament detaches itself more from the air, and has a wider range
+of ministry than the minor streams and seas, the highest cloud deity,
+Hermes, has a rank more equal with Athena than Nereus or Proteus with
+Neptune; and there is greater difficulty in tracing his character,
+because his physical dominion over the clouds can, of course, be asserted
+only where clouds are; and, therefore, scarcely at all in Egypt;* so that
+the changes which Hermes undergoes in becoming a Greek from an Egyptian
+and Phoenician god, are greater than in any other case of adopted
+tradition In Egypt Hermes is a deity of historical record, and a
+conductor of the dead to judgment; the Greeks take away much of this
+historical function, assigning it to the Muses; but, in investing him
+with the physical power over clouds, they give him that which the Muses
+disdain,--the power of concealment and of theft. The snatching away by
+the Harpies is with brute force; but the snatching away by the clouds
+is connected with the thought of hiding, and of making things seem to
+be what they are not; so that Hermes is the god of lying, as he is of
+mist; and yet with this ignoble function of making things vanish and
+disappear is connected the remnant of his grand Egyptian authority of
+leading away souls in the cloud of death (the actual dimness of sight
+caused by mortal wounds physically suggesting the darkness and descent
+of clouds, and continually being so described in the Iliad); while the
+sense of the need of guidance on the untrodden road follows necessarily.
+You cannot but remember how this thought of cloud guidance, and cloud
+receiving souls at death, has been elsewhere ratified.
+
+
+* I believe that the conclusions of recent scholarship are generally
+opposed to the Herodotean ideas of any direct acceptance by the Greeks
+of Egyptian myths: and very certainly, Greek art is developed by giving
+the veracity and simplicity of real life to Eastern savage grotesque; and
+not by softening the severity of pure Egyptian design. But it is of no
+consequence whether one conception was, or was not, in this case, derived
+from the other; my object is only to mark the essential difference
+between them.
+
+
+26. Without following that higher clue, I will pass to the lovely group
+of myths connected with the birth of Hermes on the Greek mountains. You
+know that the valley of Sparta is one of the noblest mountain ravines in
+the world, and that the western flank of it is formed by an unbroken
+chain of crags, forty miles long, rising, opposite Sparta, to a height of
+8,000 feet, and known as the chain of Taygetus. Now, the nymph from whom
+that mountain ridge is named was the mother of Lacedaemon; therefore the
+mythic ancestress of the Spartan race. She is the nymph Taygeta, and one
+of the seven stars of spring; one of those Pleiades of whom is the
+question to Job,--"Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or
+loose the bands of Orion?" "The sweet influences of Pleiades," of the
+stars of spring,--nowhere sweeter than among the pine-clad slopes of the
+hills of Sparta and Arcadia, when he snows of their higher summits,
+beneath the sunshine of April, fell into fountains, and rose into clouds;
+and in every ravine was a newly awakened voice of waters,--soft increase
+of whisper among its sacred stones; and on every crag its forming and
+fading veil of radiant cloud; temple above temple, of the divine marble
+that no tool can pollute, nor ruin undermine. And, therefore, beyond
+this central valley, this great Greek vase of Arcadia, on the "hollow"
+mountain, Cyllene, or "pregnant" mountain, called also "cold," because
+there the vapors rest,* and born of the eldest of those stars of spring,
+that Maia, from whom your own month of May has its name, bringing to you,
+in the green of her garlands, and the white of her hawthorn, the
+unrecognized symbols of the pastures and the wreathed snows of Arcadia,
+where long ago she was queen of stars: there, first cradled and wrapt in
+swaddling-clothes; then raised, in a moment of surprise, into his
+wandering power,--is born the shepherd of the clouds, winged-footed and
+deceiving,--blinding the eyes of Argus,--escaping from the grasp of
+Apollo--restless messenger between the highest sky and topmost earth--
+"the herald Mercury, new lighted on a heaven-kissing hill."
+
+
+* On the altar of Hermes on its summit, as on that of the Lacinian Hera,
+no wind ever stirred the ashes. By those altars, the Gods of Heaven were
+appeased, and all their storms at rest.
+
+
+27. Now, it will be wholly impossible, at present, to trace for you any
+of the minor Greek expressions of this thought, except only that Mercury,
+as the cloud shepherd, is especially called Eriophoros, the wool-bearer.
+You will recollect the name from the common woolly rush "eriophorum"
+which has a cloud of silky seed; and note also that he wears
+distinctively the flap cap, petasos, named from a word meaning "to
+expand;" which shaded from the sun, and is worn on journeys. You have
+the epithet of mountains "cloud-capped" as an established form with every
+poet, and the Mont Pilate of Lucerne is named from a Latin word
+signifying specially a woollen cap; but Mercury has, besides, a general
+Homeric epithet, curiously and intensely concentrated in meaning, "the
+profitable or serviceable by wool,"* that is to say, by shepherd wealth;
+hence, "pecuniarily," rich or serviceable, and so he passes at last into
+a general mercantile deity; while yet the cloud sense of the wool is
+retained by Homer always, so that he gives him this epithet when it would
+otherwise have been quite meaningless (in Iliad, xxiv. 440), when he
+drives Priam's chariot, and breathes force into his horses, precisely as
+we shall find Athena drive Diomed; and yet the serviceable and profitable
+sense--and something also of gentle and soothing character in the mere
+wool-softness, as used for dress, and religious rites--is retained also
+in the epithet, and thus the gentle and serviceable Hermes is opposed to
+the deceitful one.
+
+
+* I am convinced that the 'eri' in 'eriounios' is not intensitive, but
+retained from 'erion'; but even if I am wrong in thinking this, the
+mistake is of no consequence with respect to the general force of the
+term as meaning the profitableness of Hermes. Athena's epithet of
+'ageleia' has a parallel significance. [Transcriber's note: words inside
+single apostrophes are Greek, and use the Greek alphabet.]
+
+
+28. In connection with this driving of Priam's chariot, remember that
+as Autolycus is the son of Hermes the Deceiver, Myrtilus (the Auriga
+of the Stars) is the son of Hermes the Guide. The name Hermes itself
+means impulse; and he is especially the shepherd of the flocks of the
+sky, in driving, or guiding, or stealing them; and yet his great
+name, Argeiphontes, not only--as in different passages of the olden
+poets--means "Shining White," which is said of him as being himself the
+silver cloud lighted by the sun; but "Argus-killer," the killer of
+rightness, which is said of him as he veils the sky, and especially the
+stars, which are the eyes of Argus; or, literally, eyes of brightness,
+which Juno, who is, with Jupiter, part of the type of highest heaven,
+keeps in her peacock's train. We know that this interpretation is
+right, from a passage in which Euripides describes the shield of
+Hippomedon, which bore for his sign, "Argus the all-seeing, covered
+with eyes; open towards the rising of the stars and closed towards
+their setting."
+
+And thus Hermes becomes the spirit of the movement of the sky or
+firmament; not merely the fast flying of the transitory cloud, but the
+great motion of the heavens and stars themselves. Thus, in his highest
+power, he corresponds to the "primo mobile" of the later Italian
+philosophy, and, in his simplest, is the guide of all mysterious and
+cloudy movement, and of all successful subtleties. Perhaps the prettiest
+minor recognition of his character is when, on the night foray of Ulysses
+and Diomed, Ulysses wear the helmet stolen by Autolycus, the son of
+Hermes.
+
+29. The position in the Greek mind of Hermes as the lord of cloud is,
+however, more mystic and ideal than that of any other deity, just on
+account of the constant and real presence of the cloud itself under
+different forms, giving rise to all kinds of minor fables. The play of
+the Greek imagination in this direction is so wide and complex, that I
+cannot give you an outline of its range in my present limits. There is
+first a great series of storm-legends connected with the family of the
+historic AEolus centralized by the story of Athamas, with his two wives,
+"the Cloud," and the "White Goddess," ending in that of Phrixus and
+Helle, and of the golden fleece (which is only the cloud-burden of Hermes
+Eriophoros). With this, there is the fate of Salmoneus, and the
+destruction of the Glaucus by his own horses; all these minor myths of
+storm concentrating themselves darkly into the legend of Bellerophon and
+the Chimaera, in which there is an under story about the vain subduing of
+passion and treachery, and the end of life in fading melancholy,--which,
+I hope, not many of you could understand even were I to show it you (the
+merely physical meaning of the Chimaera is the cloud of volcanic lightning
+connected wholly with earth-fire, but resembling the heavenly cloud in
+its height and its thunder). Finally, in the AEolic group, there is the
+legend of Sisypus, which I mean to work out thoroughly by itself; its
+root is in the position of Corinth as ruling the isthmus and the two seas
+--the Corinthean Acropolis, two thousand feet high, being the centre of
+the crossing currents of the winds, and of the commerce of Greece.
+Therefore, Athena, and the fountain-cloud Pegasus, are more closely
+connected with Corinth than even with Athens in their material, though
+not in their moral, power; and Sisyphus founds the Isthmian games in
+connection with a melancholy story about the sea gods; but he himself is
+'kerdotos andron', the most "gaining" and subtle of men; who having the
+key of the Isthmus, becomes the type of transit, transfer, or trade, as
+such; and of the apparent gain from it, which is not gain; and this is
+the real meaning of his punishment in hell--eternal toil and recoil (the
+modern idol of capital being, indeed, the stone of Sisyphus with a
+vengeance, crushing in its recoil). But, throughout, the old ideas of
+the cloud power and cloud feebleness,--the deceit of its hiding,--and the
+emptiness of its banishing,--the Autolycus enchantment of making black
+seem white,--and the disappointed fury of Ixion (taking shadow for
+power), mingle in the moral meaning of this and its collateral legends;
+and give an aspect, at last, not only of foolish cunning, but of impiety
+or literal "idolatry," "imagination worship," to the dreams of avarice
+and injustice, until this notion of atheism and insolent blindness
+becomes principal; and the "Clouds" of Aristophanes, with the personified
+"just" and "unjust" sayings in the latter part of the play, foreshadow,
+almost feature by feature, in all that they were written to mock and to
+chastise, the worst elements of the impious "'dinos'" and tumult in men's
+thoughts, which have followed on their avarice in the present day, making
+them alike forsake the laws of their ancient gods, and misapprehended or
+reject the true words of their existing teachers.
+
+30. All this we have from the legends of the historic AEolus only; but,
+besides these, there is the beautiful story of Semele, the mother of
+Bacchus. She is the cloud with the strength of the vine in its bosom,
+consumed by the light which matures the fruit; the melting away of the
+cloud into the clean air at the fringe of its edges being exquisitely
+rendered by Pindar's epithet for her, Semele, "with the stretched-out
+hair" ('tauuetheira'.) Then there is the entire tradition of the
+Danaides, and of the tower of Danae and golden shower; the birth of
+Perseus connecting this legend with that of the Gorgons and Graiae, who
+are the true clouds of thunderous ruin and tempest. I must, in passing,
+mark for you that the form of the sword or sickle of Perseus, with which
+he kills Medusa, is another image of the whirling harpy vortex, and
+belongs especially to the sword of destruction or annihilation; whence it
+is given to the two angels who gather for destruction the evil harvest
+and evil vintage of the earth (Rev. xiv. 15). I will collect afterwards
+and complete what I have already written respecting the Pegasean and
+Gorgonian legends, noting here only what is necessary to explain the
+central myth of Athena herself, who represents the ambient air, which
+included all cloud, and rain, and dew, and darkness, and peace, and wrath
+of heaven. Let me now try to give you, however briefly, some distinct
+idea of the several agencies of this great goddess.
+
+31. I. She is the air giving life and health to all animals.
+ II. She is the air giving vegetative power to the earth.
+ III. She is the air giving motion to the sea, and rendering
+ navigation possible.
+ IV. She is the air nourishing artificial light, torch or lamplight;
+ as opposed to that of the sun, on one hand, and of consuming*
+ fire on the other.
+ V. She is the air conveying vibration of sound.
+
+
+* Not a scientific, but a very practical and expressive distinction.
+
+
+I will give you instances of her agency in all these functions.
+
+32. First, and chiefly, she is air as the spirit of life, giving
+vitality to the blood. Her psychic relation to the vital force in matter
+lies deeper, and we will examine it afterwards; but a great number of the
+most interesting passages in Homer regard her as flying over the earth in
+local and transitory strength, simply and merely the goddess of fresh
+air.
+
+It is curious that the British city which has somewhat saucily styled
+itself the Modern Athens is indeed more under her especial tutelage and
+favor in this respect than perhaps any other town in the island. Athena
+is first simply what in the Modern Athens you practically find her, the
+breeze of the mountain and the sea; and wherever she comes, there is
+purification, and health, and power. The sea-beach round this isle of
+ours is the frieze of our Parthenon; every wave that breaks on it
+thunders with Athena's voice; nay, wherever you throw your window wide
+open in the morning, you let in Athena, as wisdom and fresh air at the
+same instant; and whenever you draw a pure, long, full breath of right
+heaven, you take Athena into your heart, through your blood; and, with
+the blood, into the thoughts of your brain.
+
+Now, this giving of strength by the air, observe, is mechanical as well
+as chemical. You cannot strike a good blow but with your chest full;
+and, in hand to hand fighting, it is not the muscle that fails first, it
+is the breath; the longest-breathed will, on the average, be the victor,
+--not the strongest. Note how Shakespeare always leans on this. Of
+Mortimer, in "changing hardiment with great Glendower":
+
+"Three times they breathed, and three times did they drink,
+Upon agreement, of swift Severn's flood."
+
+And again, Hotspur, sending challenge to Prince Harry:
+
+ "That none might draw short breath to-day
+ But I and Harry Monmouth."
+
+Again, of Hamlet, before he receives his wound:
+
+ "He's fat, and scant of breath."
+
+Again, Orlando in the wrestling:
+
+ "Yes; I beseech your grace
+ I am not yet well breathed."
+
+Now, of all the people that ever lived, the Greeks knew best what breath
+meant, both in exercise and in battle, and therefore the queen of the air
+becomes to them at once the queen of bodily strength in war; not mere
+brutal muscular strength,--that belongs to Ares,--but the strength of
+young lives passed in pure air and swift exercise,--Camilla's virginal
+force, that "flies o'er the unbending corn, and skims along the main."
+
+33. Now I will rapidly give you two or three instances of her direct
+agency in this function. First, when she wants to make Penelope bright
+and beautiful; and to do away with the signs of her waiting and her
+grief. "Then Athena thought of another thing; she laid her into a deep
+sleep, and loosed all her limbs, and made her taller, and made her
+smoother, and fatter, and whiter than sawn ivory; and breathed ambrosial
+brightness over her face; and so she left her and went up to heaven."
+Fresh air and sound sleep at night, young ladies! You see you may have
+Athena for lady's maid whenever you choose. Next, hark how she gives
+strength to Achilles when he is broken with fasting and grief. Jupiter
+pities him and says to her, "'Daughter mine, are you forsaking your own
+soldier, and don't you care for Achilles any more? See how hungry and
+weak he is,--go and feed him with ambrosia.' So he urged the eager
+Athena; and she leaped down out of heaven like a harpy falcon,
+shrill-voiced; and she poured nectar and ambrosia, full of delight, into
+the breast of Achilles, that his limbs might not fail with famine; then
+she returned to the solid dome of her strong father." And then comes the
+great passage about Achilles arming--for which we have no time. But here
+is again Athena giving strength to the whole Greek army. She came as a
+falcon to Achilles, straight at him, a sudden drift of breeze; but to the
+army she must come widely, she sweeps around them all. "As when Jupiter
+spreads the purple rainbow over heaven, portending battle or cold storm,
+so Athena, wrapping herself round with a purple cloud, stooped to the
+Greek soldiers, and raised up each of them." Note that purple, in
+Homer's use of it, nearly always means "fiery," "full of light." It is
+the light of the rainbow, not the color of it, which Homer means you to
+think of.
+
+34. But the most curious passage of all, and fullest of meaning, is when
+she gives strength to Menelaus, that he may stand unwearied against
+Hector. He prays to her: "And blue-eyed Athena was glad that he prayed
+to her, first; and she gave him strength in his shoulders, and in his
+limbs, an she gave him the courage"--of what animal, do you suppose? Had
+it been Neptune or Mars, they would have given him the courage of a bull,
+or a lion; but Athena gives him the courage of the most fearless in
+attack of all creatures, small or great, and very small it is, but wholly
+incapable of terror,--she gives him the courage of a fly.
+
+35. Now this simile of Homer's is one of the best instances I can give
+you of the way in which great writers seize truths unconsciously which
+are for all time. It is only recent science which has completely shown
+the perfectness of this minute symbol of the power of Athena; proving
+that the insect's flight and breath are co-ordinated; that its wings are
+actually forcing-pumps, of which the stroke compels the thoracic
+respiration; and that it thus breathes and flies simultaneously by the
+action of the same muscles, so that respiration is carried on most
+vigorously during flight, "while the air-vessels, supplied by many pairs
+of lungs instead of one, traverse the organs of flight in far greater
+numbers than the capillary blood-vessels of our own system, and give
+enormous and untiring muscular power, a rapidity of action measured by
+thousands of strokes in the minute, and an endurance, by miles and hours
+of flight."*
+
+
+* Ormerod: "Natural History of Wasps."
+
+
+Homer could not have known this; neither that the buzzing of the fly
+was produced, as in a wind instrument, by a constant current of air
+through the trachea. But he had seen, and, doubtless, meant us to
+remember, the marvellous strength and swiftness of the insect's flight
+(the glance of the swallow itself is clumsy and slow compared to the
+darting of common house-flies at play); he probably attributed its
+murmur to the wings, but in this also there was a type of what we shall
+presently find recognized in the name of Pallas,--the vibratory power
+of the air to convey sound, while, as a purifying creature, the fly holds
+its place beside the old symbol of Athena in Egypt, the vulture; and as
+a venomous and tormenting creature has more than the strength of the
+serpent in proportion to its size, being thus entirely representative
+of the influence of the air both in purification and pestilence; and its
+courage is so notable that, strangely enough, forgetting Homer's simile,
+I happened to take the fly for an expression of the audacity of freedom
+in speaking of quite another subject.* Whether it should be called
+courage, or mere mechanical instinct, may be questioned, but assuredly
+no other animal, exposed to continual danger, is so absolutely without
+sign of fear.
+
+
+* See farther on, sec. 148, pp. 154-156.
+
+
+36. You will, perhaps, have still patience to hear two instances, not of
+the communication as strength, but of the personal agency of Athena as
+the air. When she comes down to help Diomed against Ares, she does not
+come to fight instead of him, but she takes his charioteer's place.
+
+"She snatched the reins, she lashed with all her force,
+And full on Mars impelled the foaming horse."
+
+Ares is the first to cast his spear; then--note this--Pope says:
+
+ "Pallas opposed her hand, and caused to glance,
+ Far from the car, the strong immortal lance."
+
+She does not oppose her hand in the Greek--the wind could not meet the
+lance straight--she catches it in her hand, and throws it off. There is
+no instance in which a lance is so parried by a mortal hand in all the
+Iliad, and it is exactly the way the wind would parry it, catching it,
+and turning it aside. If there are any good rifleshots here, they know
+something about Athena's parrying; and in old times the English masters
+of feathered artillery knew more yet. Compare also the turning of
+Hector's lance from Achilles: Iliad, xx. 439.
+
+37. The last instance I will give you is as lovely as it is subtile.
+Throughout the Iliad, Athena is herself the will or Menis of Achilles.
+If he is to be calmed, it is she who calms him; if angered, it is she
+who inflames him. In the first quarrel with Atreides, when he stands at
+pause, with the great sword half drawn, "Athena came from heaven, and
+stood behind him and caught him by the yellow hair." Another god would
+have stayed his hand upon the hilt, but Athena only lifts his hair. "And
+he turned and knew her, and her dreadful eyes shone upon him." There is
+an exquisite tenderness in this laying her hand upon his hair, for it is
+the talisman of his life, vowed to his own Thessalian river if he ever
+returned to its shore, and cast upon Patroclus' pile, so ordaining that
+there should be no return.
+
+38. Secondly, Athena is the air giving vegetative impulse to the earth.
+She is the wind and the rain, and yet more the pure air itself, getting
+at the earth fresh turned by spade or plough, and, above all, feeding the
+fresh leaves; for though the Greeks knew nothing about carbonic acid,
+they did know that trees fed on the air.
+
+Now, note first in this, the myth of the air getting at ploughed land.
+You know I told you the Lord of all labor by which man lived was
+Hephaestus; therefore Athena adopts a child of his, and of the Earth,--
+Erichthonius,--literally, "the tearer up of the ground," who is the head
+(though not in direct line) of the kings of Attica; and, having adopted
+him, she gives him to be brought up by the three nymphs of the dew. Of
+these, Aglauros, the dweller in the fields, is the envy or malice of the
+earth; she answers nearly to the envy of Cain, the tiller of the ground,
+against his shepherd brother, in her own envy against her two sisters,
+Herse, the cloud dew, who is the beloved of the shepherd Mercury; and
+Pandrosos, the diffused dew, or dew of heaven. Literally, you have in
+this myth the words of the blessing of Esau: "Thy dwelling shall be of
+the fatness of the earth, and of the dew of heaven from above." Aglauros
+is for her envy turned into a black stone; and hers is one of the voices
+--the other being that of Cain--which haunts the circle of envy in the
+Purgatory:
+
+ "Io sono Aglauro, chi divenne sasso."
+
+But to her two sisters, with Erichthonius (or the hero Erectheus), is
+built the most sacred temple of Athena in Athens; the temple to their own
+dearest Athena--to her, and to the dew together; so that it was divided
+into two parts: one, the temple of Athena of the city, and the other that
+of the dew. And this expression of her power, as the air bringing the
+dew to the hill pastures, in the central temple of the central city of
+the heathen, dominant over the future intellectual world, is, of all the
+facts connected with her worship as the spirit of life, perhaps the most
+important. I have no time now to trace for you the hundredth part of the
+different ways in which it bears both upon natural beauty, and on the
+best order and happiness of men's lives. I hope to follow out some of
+these trains of thought in gathering together what I have to say about
+field herbage; but I must say briefly here that the great sign, to the
+Greeks, of the coming of spring in the pastures, was not, as with us, in
+the primrose, but in the various flowers of the asphodel tribe (of which
+I will give you some separate account presently); therefore it is that
+the earth answers with crocus flame to the cloud on Ida; and the power
+of Athena in eternal life is written by the light of the asphodel on the
+Elysian fields.
+
+But further, Athena is the air, not only to the lilies of the field, but
+to the leaves of the forest. We saw before the reason why Hermes is said
+to be the son of Maia, the eldest of the sister stars of spring. Those
+stars are called not only Pleiades, but Vergiliae, from a word mingling
+the ideas of the turning or returning of springtime with the outpouring
+of rain. The mother of Vergil bearing the name of Maia, Vergil himself
+received his name from the seven stars; and he, forming first the mind of
+Dante, and through him that of Chaucer (besides whatever special minor
+influence came from the Pastorals and Georgics) became the fountainhead
+of all the best literary power connected with the love of vegetative
+nature among civilized races of men. Take the fact for what it is worth;
+still it is a strange seal of coincidence, in word and in reality, upon
+the Greek dream of the power over human life, and its purest thoughts, in
+the stars of spring. But the first syllable of the name of Vergil has
+relation also to another group of words, of which the English ones,
+virtue and virgin, bring down the force to modern days. It is a group
+containing mainly the idea of "spring," or increase of life in
+vegetation--the rising of the new branch of the tree out of the bud, and
+of the new leaf out of the ground. It involves, secondarily, the idea
+of greenness and of strength, but, primarily, that of living increase of
+a new rod from a stock, stem, or root ("There shall come forth a rod out
+of the stem of Jesse"); and chiefly the stem of certain plants--either of
+the rose tribe, as in the budding of the almond rod of Aaron; or of the
+olive tribe, which has triple significance in this symbolism, from the
+use of its oil for sacred anointing, for strength in the gymnasium, and
+for light. Hence, in numberless divided and reflected ways, it is
+connected with the power of Hercules and Athena: Hercules plants the wild
+olive, for its shade, on the course of Olympia, and it thenceforward
+gives the Olympic crown of consummate honor and rest; while the prize at
+the Panathenaic games is a vase of its oil (meaning encouragement to
+continuance of effort); and from the paintings on these Panathenaic vases
+we get the most precious clue to the entire character of Athena. Then to
+express its propagation by slips, the trees from which the oil was to be
+taken were called "Moriai," trees of division (being all descendents of
+the sacred one in the Erechtheum). And thus, in one direction, we get to
+the "children like olive plants round about thy table" and the olive
+grafting of St. Paul; while the use of the oil for anointing gives chief
+name to the rod itself of the stem of Jesse, and to all those who were by
+that name signed for his disciples first in Antioch. Remember, further,
+since that name was first given the influence of the symbol, both in
+extreme unction and in consecration of priests and kings to their "divine
+right;" and thing, if you can reach with any grasp of thought, what the
+influence on the earth has been, of those twisted branches whose leaves
+give gray bloom to the hillsides under every breeze that blows from the
+midland sea. But, above and beyond all, think how strange it is that the
+chief Agonia of humanity, and the chief giving of strength from heaven
+for its fulfilment, should have been under its night shadow in Palestine.
+
+39. Thirdly, Athena is the air in its power over the sea.
+
+On the earliest Panathenaic vase known--the "Burgon" vase in the British
+museum--Athena has a dolphin on her shield. The dolphin has two
+principal meanings in Greek symbolism. It means, first, the sea;
+secondarily, the ascending and descending course of any of the heavenly
+bodies from one sea horizon to another--the dolphins' arching rise and
+replunge (in a summer evening, out of calm sea, their black backs roll
+round with exactly the slow motion of a water-wheel; but I do not know
+how far Aristotle's exaggerated account of their leaping or their
+swiftness has any foundation) being taken as a type of the emergence
+of the sun or stars from the sea in the east, and plunging beneath in the
+west. Hence, Apollo, when in his personal power he crosses the sea,
+leading his Cretan colonists to Pytho, takes the form of a dolphin,
+becomes Apollo Delphinius, and names the founded colony "Delphi." The
+lovely drawing of the Delphic Apollo on the hydria of the Vatican (Le
+Normand and De Witte, vol. ii. p. 6) gives the entire conception of this
+myth. Again, the beautiful coins of Tarentum represent Taras coming to
+found the city, riding on a dolphin, whose leaps and plunges have partly
+the rage of the sea in them, and partly the spring of the horse, because
+the splendid riding of the Tarentines had made their name proverbial in
+Magna Graeca. The story of Arion is a collateral fragment of the same
+thought; and, again, the plunge, before their transformation, of the
+ships of AEneas. Then, this idea of career upon, or conquest of, or by
+dolphin-like ships (compare the Merlin prophecy,
+
+ "They shall ride
+ Over ocean wide
+ With hempen bridle, ad horse of tree,")
+
+connects itself with the thought of undulation, and of the wave-power in
+the sea itself, which is always expressed by the serpentine bodies either
+of the sea-gods or of the sea-horse; and when Athena carries, as she does
+often in later work, a serpent for her shield-sign, it is not so much the
+repetition of her own aegis-snakes as the further expression of her power
+over the sea-wave; which, finally, Vergil gives in its perfect unity with
+her own anger, in the approach of the serpents against Laocooen from the
+sea; and then, finally, when her own storm-power is fully put forth on
+the ocean also, and the madness of the aegis-snake is give to the
+wave-snake, the sea-wave becomes the devouring hound at the waist of
+Scylla, and Athena takes Scylla for her helmet-crest; while yet her
+beneficent and essential power on the ocean, in making navigation
+possible, is commemorated in the Panathenaic festival by her peplus being
+carried to the Erechtheum suspended from the mast of a ship.
+
+In Plate cxv. of vol. ii, Le Normand, are given two sides of a vase,
+which, in rude and childish ways, assembles most of the principal
+thoughts regarding Athena in this relation. In the first, the sunrise is
+represented by the ascending chariot of Apollo, foreshortened; the light
+is supposed to blind the eyes, and no face of the god is seen (Turner, in
+the Ulysses and Polyphemus sunrise, loses the form of the god in light,
+giving the chariot-horses only; rendering in his own manner, after 2,200
+years of various fall and revival of the arts, precisely the same thought
+as the old Greek potter). He ascends out of the sea; but the sea itself
+has not yet caught the light. In the second design, Athena as the
+morning breeze, and Hermes as the morning cloud, fly over the sea before
+the sun. Hermes turns back his head; his face is unseen in the cloud, as
+Apollo's in the light; the grotesque appearance of an animal's face is
+only the cloud-phantasm modifying a frequent form of the hair of Hermes
+beneath the back of his cap. Under the morning breeze, the dolphins leap
+from the rippled sea, and their sides catch the light.
+
+The coins of the Lucanian Heracleia give a fair representation of the
+helmed Athena, as imagined in later Greek art, with the embossed Scylla.
+
+40. Fourthly, Athena is the air nourishing artificial light--unconsuming
+fire. Therefore, a lamp was always kept burning in the Erechtheum; and
+the torch-race belongs chiefly to her festival, of which the meaning is
+to show the danger of the perishing of the light even by excess of the
+air that nourishes it; and so that the race is not to the swift, but to
+the wise. The household use of her constant light is symbolized in the
+lovely passage in the Odyssey, where Ulysses and his son move the armor
+while the servants are shut in their chambers, and there is no one to
+hold the torches for them; but Athena herself, "having a golden lamp,"
+fills all the rooms with light. Her presence in war-strength with her
+favorite heroes is always shown by the "unwearied" fire hovering on their
+helmets and shields; and the image gradually becomes constant and
+accepted, both for the maintenance of household watchfulness, as in the
+parable of the ten virgins, or as the symbol of direct inspiration, in
+the rushing wind and divided flames of Pentecost; but together with this
+thought of unconsuming and constant fire, there is always mingled in the
+Greek mind the sense of the consuming by excess, as of the flame by the
+air, so also of the inspired creature by its own fire (thus, again, "the
+zeal of thine house hath eaten me up"--"my zeal hath consumed me, because
+of thine enemies," and the like); and especially Athena has this aspect
+towards the truly sensual and bodily strength; so that to Ares, who is
+himself insane and consuming, the opposite wisdom seems to be insane and
+consuming: "All we the other gods have thee against us, O Jove! when we
+would give grace to men; for thou hast begotten the maid without a mind--
+the mischievous creature, the doer of unseemly evil. All we obey thee,
+and are ruled by thee. Her only thou wilt not resist in anything she
+says or does, because thou didst bear her--consuming child as she is."
+
+41. Lastly, Athena is the air conveying vibration of sound.
+
+In all the loveliest representations in central Greek art of the birth
+of Athena, Apollo stands close to the sitting Jupiter, singing, with a
+deep, quiet joyfulness, to his lyre. The sun is always thought of as the
+master of time and rhythm, and as the origin of the composing and
+inventive discovery of melody; but the air, as the actual element and
+substance of the voice, the prolonging and sustaining power of it, and
+the symbol of its moral passion. Whatever in music is measured and
+designed belongs therefore to Apollo and the Muses; whatever is impulsive
+and passionate, to Athena; hence her constant strength a voice or cry (as
+when she aids the shout of Achilles) curiously opposed to the dumbness of
+Demeter. The Apolline lyre, therefore, is not so much the instrument
+producing sound, as its measurer and divider by length or tension of
+string into given notes; and I believe it is, in a double connection with
+its office as a measurer of time or motion and its relation to the
+transit of the sun in the sky, that Hermes forms it from the
+tortoise-shell, which is the image of the dappled concave of the cloudy
+sky. Thenceforward all the limiting or restraining modes of music belong
+to the Muses; but the more passionate music is wind music, as in the
+Doric flute. Then, when this inspired music becomes degraded in its
+passion, it sinks into the pipe of Pan, and the double pipe of Marsyas,
+and is then rejected by Athena. The myth which represents her doing so
+is that she invented the double pipe from hearing the hiss of the
+Gorgonian serpents; but when she played upon it, chancing to see her face
+reflected in water, she saw that it was distorted, whereupon she threw
+down the flute which Marsyas found. Then, the strife of Apollo and
+Marsyas represents the enduring contest between music in which the words
+and thought lead, and the lyre measures or melodizes them (which Pindar
+means when he calls his hymns "kings over the lyre"), and music in which
+the words are lost and the wind or impulse leads,--generally, therefore,
+between intellectual, and brutal, or meaningless, music. Therefore, when
+Apollo prevails, he flays Marsyas, taking the limit and external bond of
+his shape from him, which is death, without touching the mere muscular
+strength, yet shameful and dreadful in dissolution.
+
+42. And the opposition of these two kinds of sound is continually dwelt
+upon by the Greek philosophers, the real fact at the root of all music is
+the natural expression of a lofty passion for a right cause; that in
+proportion to the kingliness and force of any personality, the expression
+either of its joy or suffering becomes measured, chastened, calm, and
+capable of interpretation only by the majesty of ordered, beautiful, and
+worded sound. Exactly in proportion to the degree in which we become
+narrow in the cause and conception of our passions, incontinent in the
+utterance of them, feeble of perseverance in them, sullied or shameful in
+the indulgence of them, their expression by musical sound becomes broken,
+mean, fatuitous, and at last impossible; the measured waves of the air of
+heaven will not lend themselves to expression of ultimate vice, it must
+be forever sunk into discordance or silence. And since, as before
+stated, every work of right art has a tendency to reproduce the ethical
+state which first developed it, this, which of all the arts is most
+directly in power of discipline; the first, the simplest, the most
+effective of all instruments of moral instruction; while in the failure
+and betrayal of its functions, it becomes the subtlest aid of moral
+degradation. Music is thus, in her health, the teacher of perfect order,
+and is the voice of the obedience of angels, and the companion of the
+course of the spheres of heaven; and in her depravity she is also the
+teacher of perfect disorder and disobedience, and the Gloria in Excelsis
+becomes the Marseillaise. In the third section of this volume, I reprint
+two chapters from another essay of mine ("The Cestus of Aglaia"), on
+modesty or measure, and on liberty, containing further reference to music
+in her two powers; and I do this now, because, among the many monstrous
+and misbegotten fantasies which are the spawn of modern license, perhaps
+the most impishly opposite to the truth is the conception of music which
+has rendered possible the writing, by educated persons, and, more
+strangely yet, the tolerant criticism, of such words as these: "This so
+persuasive art is the only one that has no didactic efficacy, that
+engenders no emotions save such as are without issue on the side of moral
+truth, that expresses nothing of God, nothing of reason, nothing of human
+liberty." I will not give the author's name; the passage is quoted in
+the "Westminster Review" for last January [1869].
+
+43. I must also anticipate something of what I have to say respecting
+the relation of the power of Athena to organic life, so far as to note
+that her name, Pallas, probably refers to the quivering or vibration of
+the air; and to its power, whether as vital force, or communicated wave,
+over every kind of matter, in giving it vibratory movement; first, and
+most intense, in the voice and throat of the bird, which is the air
+incarnate; and so descending through the various orders of animal life to
+the vibrating and semi-voluntary murmur of the insect; and, lower still,
+to the hiss or quiver of the tail of the half-lunged snake and deaf
+adder; all these, nevertheless, being wholly under the rule of Athena as
+representing either breath or vital nervous power; and, therefore, also,
+in their simplicity, the "oaten pipe and pastoral song," which belong to
+her dominion over the asphodel meadows, and breathe on their banks of
+violets.
+
+Finally, is it not strange to think of the influence of this one power of
+Pallas in vibration (we shall see a singular mechanical energy of it
+presently in the serpent's motion), in the voices of war and peace? How
+much of the repose, how much of the wrath, folly, and misery of men, has
+literally depended on this one power of the air; on the sound of the
+trumpet and of the bell, on the lark's song, and the bee's murmur!
+
+44. Such is the general conception in the Greek mind of the physical
+power of Athena. The spiritual power associated with it is of two kinds:
+first, she is the Spirit of Life in material organism; not strength in
+the blood only, but formative energy in the clay; and, secondly, she is
+inspired and impulsive wisdom in human conduct and human art, giving the
+instinct of infallible decision, and of faultless invention.
+
+It is quite beyond the scope of my present purpose--and, indeed, will
+only be possible for me at all after marking the relative intention of
+the Apolline myths--to trace for you the Greek conception of Athena as
+the guide of moral passion. But I will at least endeavor, on some near
+occasion,* to define some of the actual truths respecting the vital force
+in created organism, and inventive fancy in the works of man, which are
+more or less expressed by the Greeks, under the personality of Athena.
+You would, perhaps, hardly bear with me if I endeavored further to show
+you--what is nevertheless perfectly true--the analogy between the
+spiritual power of Athena in her gentle ministry, yet irresistible anger,
+with the ministry of anther Spirit whom we also, holding for the
+universal power of life, are forbidden, at our worst peril, to quench or
+to grieve.
+
+
+* I have tried to do this in mere outline in the two following sections
+of this volume.
+
+
+45. But, I think, to-night, you should not let me close without
+requiring of me an answer on one vital point, namely, how far these
+imaginations of gods--which are vain to us--were vain to those who had
+no better trust? and what real belief the Greek had in these creations
+of his own spirit, practical and helpful to him in the sorrow of earth?
+I am able to answer you explicitly in this. The origin of his thoughts
+is often obscure, and we may err in endeavoring to account or their form
+of realization; but the effect of that realization on his life is not
+obscure at all. The Greek creed was, of course, different in its
+character, as our own creed is, according to the class of persons who
+held it. The common people's was quite literal, simple, and happy; their
+idea of Athena was as clear as a good Roman Catholic peasant's idea of
+the Madonna. In Athens itself, the centre of thought and refinement,
+Pisistratus obtained the reins of government through the ready belief of
+the populace that a beautiful woman, armed like Athena, was the goddess
+herself. Even at the close of the last century some of this simplicity
+remained among the inhabitants of the Greek islands; and when a pretty
+English lady first made her way into the grotto of Antiparos, she was
+surrounded, on her return, by all the women of the neighboring village,
+believing her to be divine, and praying her to heal them of their
+sicknesses.
+
+46. Then, secondly, the creed of the upper classes was more refined and
+spiritual, but quite as honest, and even more forcible in its effect on
+the life. You might imagine that the employment of the artifice just
+referred to implied utter unbelief in the persons contriving it; but it
+really meant only that the more worldly of them would play with a popular
+faith of their own purposes, as doubly-minded persons have often done
+since, all the while sincerely holding the same ideas themselves in a
+more abstract form; while the good and unworldly men, the true Greek
+heroes, lived by their faith as firmly as St. Louis, or the Cid, or the
+Chevalier Bayard.
+
+47. Then, thirdly, the faith of the poets and artists was, necessarily,
+less definite, being continually modified by the involuntary action of
+their own fancies; and by the necessity of presenting, in clear verbal or
+material form, things of which they had no authoritative knowledge.
+Their faith was, in some respects like Dante's or Milton's: firm in
+general conception, but not able to vouch for every detail in the forms
+they gave it; but they went considerably farther, even in that minor
+sincerity, than subsequent poets; and strove with all their might to be
+as near the truth as they could. Pindar says, quite simply, "I cannot
+think so-and-so of the gods. It must have been this way--it cannot have
+been that way--that the thing was done." And as late among the Latins as
+the days of Horace, this sincerity remains. Horace is just as true and
+simple in his religion as Wordsworth; but all power of understanding any
+of the honest classic poets has been taken away from most English
+gentlemen by the mechanical drill in verse-writing at school. Throughout
+the whole of their lives afterwards, they never can get themselves quit
+of the notion that all verses were written as an exercise, and that
+Minerva was only a convenient word for the last of a hexameter, and
+Jupiter for the last but one.
+
+48. It is impossible that any notion can be more fallacious or more
+misleading in its consequences. All great song, from the first day when
+human lips contrived syllables, has been sincere song. With deliberate
+didactic purpose the tragedians--with pure and native passion the lyrists
+--fitted their perfect words to their dearest faiths. "Operosa parvus
+carmina fingo." "I, little thing that I am, weave my laborious songs" as
+earnestly as the bee among the bells of thyme on the Matin mountains. Yes,
+and he dedicates his favorite pine to Diana, and he chants his autumnal
+hymn to the Faun that guards his fields, and he guides the noble youth and
+maids of Rome in their choir to Apollo, and he tells the farmer's little
+girl that the gods will love her, though she has only a handful of salt
+and meal to give them--just as earnestly as ever English gentleman taught
+Christian faith to English youth in England's truest days.
+
+49. Then, lastly, the creed of the philosophers of sages varied
+according to the character and knowledge of each; their relative
+acquaintance with the secrets of natural science, their intellectual and
+sectarian egotism, and their mystic or monastic tendencies, for there is
+a classic as well as a mediaeval monasticism. They end in losing the life
+of Greece in play upon words; but we owe to their early thought some of
+the soundest ethics, and the foundation of the best practical laws, yet
+known to mankind.
+
+50. Such was the general vitality of the heathen creed in its strength.
+Of its direct influence on conduct, it is, as I said, impossible for me
+to speak now; only, remember always, in endeavoring to form a judgment of
+it, that what of good or right the heathens did, they did looking for no
+reward. The purest forms of our own religion have always consisted in
+sacrificing less things to win greater, time to win eternity, the world
+to win the skies. The order, "Sell that thou hast," is not given without
+the promise, "Thou shalt have treasure in heaven;" and well for the
+modern Christian if he accepts the alternative as his Master left it, and
+does not practically read the command and promise thus: "Sell that thou
+hast in the best market, and thou shalt have treasure in eternity also."
+But the poor Greeks of the great ages expected no reward from heaven but
+honor, and no reward from earth but rest; though, when, on those
+conditions, they patiently, and proudly, fulfilled their task of the
+granted day, an unreasoning instinct of an immortal benediction broke
+from their lips in song; and they, even they, had sometimes a prophet to
+tell them of a land "where there is sun alike by day and alike by night,
+where they shall need no more to trouble the earth by strength of hands
+for daily bread; but the ocean breezes blow around the blessed islands,
+and golden flowers burn on their bright trees for evermore."
+
+
+
+II.
+
+ATHENA KERAMITIS.*
+
+(Athena in the Earth.)
+
+
+* "Athena, fit for being made into pottery." I coin the expression as a
+counterpart of 'ge parthenia', "Clay intact."
+
+
+STUDY, SUPPLEMENTARY TO THE PRECEDING LECTURE, OF THE SUPPOSED AND
+ ACTUAL RELATIONS OF ATHENA TO THE VITAL FORCE IN MATERIAL ORGANISM
+
+
+51. It has been easy to decipher approximately the Greek conception of
+the physical power of Athena in cloud and sky, because we know ourselves
+what clouds and skies are, and what the force of the wind is in forming
+them. But it is not at all easy to trace the Greek thoughts about the
+power of Athena in giving life, because we do not ourselves know clearly
+what life is, or in what way the air is necessary to it, or what there
+is, besides the air, shaping the forms that it is put into. And it is
+comparatively of small consequence to find out what the Greeks thought
+or meant, until we have determined what we ourselves think, or mean, when
+we translate the Greek word for "breathing" into the Latin-English word
+"spirit."
+
+52. But it is of great consequence that you should fix in your minds--
+and hold, against the baseness of mere materialism on the one hand, and
+against the fallacies of controversial speculation on the other--the
+certain and practical sense of this word "spirit;" the sense in which you
+all know that its reality exists, as the power which shaped you into your
+shape, and by which you love and hate when you have received that shape.
+You need not fear, on the one hand, that either the sculpturing or the
+loving power can ever be beaten down by the philosophers into a metal, or
+evolved by them into a gas; but on the other hand, take care that you
+yourself, in trying to elevate your conception of it, do not lose its
+truth in a dream, or even in a word. Beware always of contending for
+words: you will find them not easy to grasp, if you know them in several
+languages. This very word, which is so solemn in your mouths, is one of
+the most doubtful. In Latin it means little more than breathing, and may
+mean merely accent; in French it is not breath, but wit, and our
+neighbors are therefore obliged, even in their most solemn expressions,
+to say "wit" when we say "ghost." In Greek, "pneuma," the word we
+translate "ghost," means either wind or breath, and the relative word
+"psyche" has, perhaps, a more subtle power; yet St. Paul's words
+"pneumatic body" and "psychic body" involve a difference in his mind
+which no words will explain. But in Greek and in English, and in Saxon
+and in Hebrew, and in every articulate tongue of humanity the "spirit of
+man" truly means his passion and virtue, and is stately according to the
+height of his conception, and stable according to the measure of his
+endurance.
+
+53. Endurance, or patience, that is the central sign of spirit; a
+constancy against the cold and agony of death; and as, physically, it is
+by the burning power of the air that the heat of the flesh is sustained,
+so this Athena, spiritually, is the queen of all glowing virtue, the
+unconsuming fire and inner lamp of life. And thus, as Hephaestus is lord
+of the fire of the hand, and Apollo of the fire of the brain, so Athena
+of the fire of the heart; and as Hercules wears for his chief armor the
+skin of the Nemean lion, his chief enemy, whom he slew; and Apollo has
+for his highest name "the Pythian," from his chief enemy, the Python
+slain; so Athena bears always on her breast the deadly face of her chief
+enemy slain, the Gorgonian cold, and venomous agony, that turns living
+men to stone.
+
+54. And so long as you have the fire of the heart within you, and know
+the reality of it, you need to be under no alarm as to the possibility
+of its chemical or mechanical analysis. The philosophers are very
+humorous in their ecstasy of hope about it; but the real interest of
+their discoveries in this direction is very small to humankind. It is
+quite true that the tympanum of the ear vibrates under sound, and that
+the surface of the water in a ditch vibrates too; but the ditch hears
+nothing for all that; and my hearing is still to me as blessed a mystery
+as ever, and the interval between the ditch and me quite as great. If
+the trembling sound in my ears was once of the marriage-bell which began
+my happiness, and is now of the passing-bell which ends it, the
+difference between those two sounds to me cannot be counted by the number
+of concussions. There have been some curious speculations lately as to
+the conveyance of mental consciousness by "brain-waves." What does it
+matter how it is conveyed? The consciousness itself is not a wave. It
+may be accompanied here or there by any quantity of quivers and shakes,
+up or down, of anything you can find in the universe that is shakable--
+what is that to me? My friend is dead, and my--according to modern views
+--vibratory sorrow is not one whit less, or less mysterious, to me, than
+my old quiet one.
+
+55. Beyond, and entirely unaffected by, any questionings of this kind,
+there are, therefore, two plain facts which we should all know: first,
+that there is a power which gives their several shapes to things, or
+capacities of feeling; and that we can increase or destroy both of these
+at our will. By care and tenderness, we can extend the range of lovely
+life in plants and animals; by our neglect and cruelty, we can arrest it,
+and bring pestilence in its stead. Again, by right discipline we can
+increase our strength of noble will and passion or destroy both. And
+whether these two forces are local conditions of the elements in which
+they appear, or are part of a great force in the universe, out of which
+they are taken, and to which they must be restored, is not of the
+slightest importance to us in dealing with them; neither is the manner
+of their connection with light and air. What precise meaning we ought to
+attach to expressions such as that of the prophecy to the four winds that
+the dry bones might be breathed upon, and might live, or why the presence
+of the vital power should be dependent on the chemical action of air, and
+its awful passing away materially signified by the rendering up of that
+breath or ghost, we cannot at present know, and need not at any time
+dispute. What we assuredly know is that the states of life and death are
+different, and the first more desirable than the other, and by effort
+attainable, whether we understand being "born of the spirit" to signify
+having the breath of heaven in our flesh, or its power in our hearts.
+
+56. As to its power on the body, I will endeavor to tell you, having
+been myself much led into studies involving necessary reference both to
+natural science and mental phenomena, what, at least, remains to us after
+science has done its worst; what the myth of Athena, as a formative and
+decisive power, a spirit of creation and volition, must eternally mean
+for all of us.
+
+57. It is now (I believe I may use the strong word) "ascertained" that
+heat and motion are fixed in quantity, and measurable in the portions
+that we deal with. We can measure portions of power, as we can measure
+portions of space; while yet, as far as we know, space may be infinite,
+and force infinite. There may be heat as much greater than the sun's, as
+the sun's heat is greater than a candle's: and force as much greater than
+the force by which the world swings, as that is greater than the force by
+which a cobweb trembles. Now, on hear and force, life is inseparably
+dependent; and I believe, also, on a form of substance, which the
+philosophers call "protoplasm." I wish they would use English instead of
+Greek words. When I want to know why a leaf is green, they tell me it is
+colored by "chlorophyll," which at first sounds very instructive; but if
+they would only say plainly that a leaf is colored green by a thing which
+is called "green leaf," we should see more precisely how far we had got.
+However, it is a curious fact that life is connected with a cellular
+structure called protoplasm, or in English, "first stuck together;"
+whence, conceivably through deuteroplasms, or second stickings, and
+tritoplasms, or third stickings,* we reach the highest plastic phase in
+the human pottery, which differs from common chinaware, primarily, by a
+measurable degree of heat, developed in breathing, which it borrows from
+the rest of the universe while it lives, and which it as certainly
+returns to the rest of the universe, when it dies.
+
+58. Again, with this heat certain assimilative powers are connected,
+which the tendency of recent discovery is to simplify more and more into
+modes of one force; or finally into mere motion, communicable in various
+states, but not destructible. We will assume that science has done its
+utmost; and that every chemical or animal force is demonstrably
+resolvable into heat or motion, reciprocally changing into each other.
+I would myself like better, in order of thought, to consider motion as a
+mode of heat than heat as a mode of motion; still, granting that we have
+got thus far, we have yet to ask, What is heat? or what is motion? What
+is this "primo mobile," this transitional power, in which all things
+live, and move, and have their being? It is by definition something
+different from matter, and we may call it as we choose, "first cause," or
+"first light," or "first heat;" but we can show no scientific proof of
+its not being personal, and coinciding with the ordinary conception of a
+supporting spirit in all things.
+
+59. Still, it is not advisable to apply the word "spirit" or "breathing"
+to it, while it is only enforcing chemical affinities; but, when the
+chemical affinities are brought under the influence of the air, and of
+the sun's heat, the formative force enters and entirely different phase.
+It does not now merely crystallize indefinite masses, but it gives to
+limited portions of matter the power of gathering, selectively, other
+elements proper to them, and binding those elements into their own
+peculiar and adopted form.
+
+This force, now properly called life, or breathing, or spirit, is
+continually creating its own shell of definite shape out of the wreck
+around it; and this is what I meant by saying, in the "Ethics of the
+Dust," "you may always stand by form against force." For the mere force
+of junction is not spirit; but the power that catches out of chaos
+charcoal, water, lime, or what not, and fastens them down into a given
+form, is properly called "spirit;" and we shall not diminish, but
+strengthen our conception of this creative energy by recognizing its
+presence in lower states of matter than our own; such recognition being
+enforced upon us by delight we instinctively receive from all the forms
+of matter which manifest it; and yet more, by the glorifying of those
+forms, in the parts of them that are most animated, with the colors that
+are pleasantest to our senses. The most familiar instance of this is the
+best, and also the most wonderful: the blossoming of plants.
+
+60. The spirit in the plant--that is to say, its power of gathering dead
+matter out of the wreck round it, and shaping it into its own chosen
+shape--is of course strongest at the moment of its flowering, for it then
+not only gathers, but forms, with the greatest energy.
+
+And where this life is in at full power, its form becomes invested with
+aspects that are chiefly delightful to our own human passions; namely, at
+first, with the loveliest outlines of shape; and, secondly, with the most
+brilliant phases of the primary colors, blue, yellow, and red or white,
+the unison of all; and, to make it all more strange, this time of
+peculiar and perfect glory is associated with relations of the plants or
+blossoms to each other, correspondent to the joy of love in human
+creatures, and having the same object in the continuance of the race.
+Only, with respect to plants, as animals, we are wrong in speaking as if
+the object of this strong life were only the bequeathing of itself. The
+flower is the end or proper object of the seed, not the seed of the
+flower. The reason for seeds is that flowers may be; not the reason of
+flowers that seeds may be. The flower itself is the creature which the
+spirit makes; only, in connection with its perfectness is placed the
+giving birth to its successor.
+
+61. The main fact then, about a flower is that it is part of the plant's
+form developed at the moment of its intensest life; and this inner
+rapture is usually marked externally for us by the flush of one or more
+of the primary colors. What the character of the flower shall be,
+depends entirely upon the portion of the plant into which this rapture of
+spirit has been put. Sometimes the life is put into its outer sheath,
+and then the outer sheath becomes white and pure, and full of strength
+and grace; sometimes the life is put into the common leaves, just under
+the blossom, and they become scarlet or purple; sometimes the life is put
+into the stalks of the flower and they flush blue; sometimes into its
+outer enclosure or calyx; mostly into its inner cup; but, in all cases,
+the presence of the strongest life is asserted by characters in which the
+human sight takes pleasure, and which seem prepared with distinct
+reference to us, or rather, bear, in being delightful, evidence of having
+been produced by the power of the same spirit as our own.
+
+62. And we are led to feel this still more strongly because all the
+distinctions of species,* both in plants and animals, appear to have
+similar connection with human character. Whatever the origin of species
+may be, or however those species, once formed, may be influenced by
+external accident, the groups into which birth or accident reduce them
+have distinct relation to the spirit of man. It is perfectly possible,
+and ultimately conceivable, that the crocodile and the lamb may have
+descended from the same ancestral atom of protoplasm; and that the
+physical laws of the operation of calcareous slime and of meadow grass,
+on that protoplasm, may in time have developed the opposite natures and
+aspects of the living frames but the practically important fact for us
+is the existence of a power which creates that calcareous earth itself,
+--which creates, that separately--and quartz, separately; and gold,
+separately; and charcoal, separately; and then so directs the relation
+of these elements as that the gold shall destroy the souls of men by
+being yellow; and the charcoal destroy their souls by being hard and
+bright; and the quartz represent to them an ideal purity; and the
+calcareous earth, soft, shall beget crocodiles, and dry and hard, sheep;
+and that the aspects and qualities of these two products, crocodiles and
+lambs, shall be, the one repellant to the spirit of man, the other
+attractive to it, in a quite inevitable way; representing to him states
+of moral evil and good; and becoming myths to him of destruction or
+redemption, and, in the most literal sense, "words" of God.
+
+
+* The facts on which I am about to dwell are in nowise antagonistic to
+the theories which Mr. Darwin's unwearied and unerring investigations are
+every day rendering more probable. The aesthetic relations of species are
+independent of their origin. Nevertheless, it has always seemed to me
+in what little work I have done upon organic forms, as if the species
+mocked us by their deliberate imitation of each other when they met; yet
+did not pass one into another.
+
+
+63. And the force of these facts cannot be escaped from by the thought
+that there are species innumerable, passing into each other by regular
+gradations, out of which we choose what we must love or dread, and say
+they were indeed prepared for us. Species are not innumerable; neither
+are they now connected by consistent gradation. They touch at certain
+points only; and even then are connected, when we examine them deeply,
+in a kind of reticulated way, not in chains, but in chequers; also,
+however connected, it is but by a touch of the extremities, as it were,
+and the characteristic form of the species is entirely individual. The
+rose nearly sinks into a grass in the sanguisorba; but the formative
+spirit does not the less clearly separate the ear of wheat from the
+dog-rose, and oscillate with tremulous constancy round the central forms
+of both, having each their due relation to the mind of man. The great
+animal kingdoms are connected in the same way. The bird through the
+penguin drops towards the fish, and the fish in the cetacean reascends
+to the mammal, yet there is no confusion of thought possible between the
+perfect forms of an eagle, a trout, and a war-horse, in their relations
+to the elements, and to man.
+
+64. Now we have two orders of animals to take some note of in connection
+with Athena, and one vast order of plants, which will illustrate this
+matter very sufficiently for us.
+
+The orders of animals are the serpent and the bird: the serpent, in which
+the breath or spirit is less than in any other creature, and the
+earth-power the greatest; the bird, in which the breath or spirit is more
+full than in any other creature, and the earth-power least.
+
+65. We will take the bird first. It is little more than a drift of the
+air in all its quills, it breathes through its whole frame and flesh and
+glows with air in its flying, like blown flames; it rests upon the air,
+subdues it, surpasses it, outraces it,--is the air, conscious of itself,
+conquering itself, ruling itself.
+
+Also, in the throat of the bird is given the voice of the air. All that
+in the wind itself is weak, wild, useless in sweetness, is knit together
+in its song. As we may imagine the wild form of the bird's wings, so the
+wild voice of the cloud into its ordered and commanded voice; unwearied,
+rippling through the clear heaven in its gladness, interpreting all
+intense passion through the soft spring nights, bursting into acclaim and
+rapture of choir at daybreak, or lisping and twittering among the boughs
+and hedges through heat of day, like little winds that only make the
+cowslip bells shake, and ruffle the petals of the wild rose.
+
+66. Also, upon the plumes of the bird are put the colors of the air; on
+these the gold of the cloud, that cannot be gathered by any covetousness;
+the rubies of the clouds, that are not the price of Athena, but are
+Athena; the vermillion of the cloud-bar, and the flame of the
+cloud-crest, and the snow of the cloud, and its shadow, and the melted
+blue of the deep wells of the sky,--all these, seized by the creating
+spirit, and woven by Athena herself into films and threads of plume; with
+wave on wave following and fading along breast, and throat, and opened
+wings, infinite as the dividing of the foam and the sifting of the
+sea-sand; even the white down of the cloud seeming to flutter up between
+the stronger plumes,--seen, but too soft for touch.
+
+And so the Spirit of the Air is put into, and upon, this created form;
+and it becomes, through twenty centuries, the symbol of divine help,
+descending, as the Fire, to speak but as the Dove, to bless.
+
+67. Next, in the serpent we approach the source of a group of myths,
+world-wide, founded on great and common human instincts, respecting which
+I must note one or two points which bear intimately on all our subject.
+For it seems to me that the scholars who are at present occupied in
+interpretation of human myths have most of them forgotten that there are
+any such thing as natural myths, and that the dark sayings of men may be
+both difficult to read, and not always worth reading. And, indeed, all
+guidance to the right sense of the human and variable myths will probably
+depend on our first getting at the sense of the natural and invariable
+ones. The dead hieroglyph may have meant this or that; the living
+hieroglyph means always the same; but remember, it is just as much a
+hieroglyph as the other; nay, more,--a "sacred or reserved sculpture," a
+thing with an inner language. The serpent crest of the king's crown, or
+of the god's, on the pillars of Egypt, is a mystery, but the serpent
+itself, gliding past the pillar's foot, is it less a mystery? Is there,
+indeed, no tongue, except the mute forked flash from its lips, in that
+running brook of horror on the ground?
+
+68. Why that horror? We all feel it, yet how imaginative it is, how
+disproportioned to the real strength of the creature! There is more
+poison in an ill-kept drain, in a pool of dish-washing at a cottage door,
+than in the deadliest asp of Nile. Every back yard which you look down
+into from the railway as it carries you out by Vauxhall or Deptford,
+holds its coiled serpent; all the walls of those ghastly suburbs are
+enclosures of tank temples for serpent worship; yet you feel no horror in
+looking down into them as you would if you saw the livid scales, and
+lifted head. There is more venom, mortal, inevitable, in a single word,
+sometimes, or in the gliding entrance of a wordless thought than ever
+"vanti Libia con sua rena." But that horror is of the myth, not of the
+creature. There are myriads lower than this, and more loathsome, in the
+scale of being; the links between dead matter and animation drift
+everywhere unseen. But it is the strength of the base element that is so
+dreadful in the serpent; it is the very omnipotence of the earth. That
+rivulet of smooth silver, how does it flow, think you? It literally rows
+on the earth, with every scale for an oar; it bites the dust with the
+ridges of its body. Watch it, when it moves slowly. A wave, but without
+wind! a current, but with no fall! all the body moving at the same
+instant, yet some of it to one side, some to another, or some forward,
+and the rest of the coil backwards, but all with the same calm will and
+equal way, no contraction, no extension; one soundless, causeless, march
+of sequent rings, and spectral processions of spotted dust, with
+dissolution in its fangs, dislocation in its coils. Startle it, the
+winding stream will become a twisted arrow; the wave of poisoned life
+will lash through the grass like a cast lance.* It scarcely breathes
+with its one lung (the other shriveled and abortive); it is passive
+to the sun and shade, and is cold or hot like a stone; yet "it can
+outclimb the monkey, outswim the fish, outleap the zebra, outwrestle the
+athlete, and crush the tiger."** It is a divine hieroglyph of the
+demoniac power of the earth, of the entire earthly nature. As the bird
+is the clothed power of the air, so this is the clothed power of the
+dust; as the bird is the symbol of the spirit of life, so this is the
+grasp and sting of death.
+
+
+* I cannot understand this swift forward motion of serpents. The seizure
+of prey by the constrictor, though invisibly swift, is quite simple in
+mechanism; it is simply the return to its coil of an opened watch-spring,
+and is just as instantaneous. But the steady and continuous motion,
+without a visible fulcrum (for the whole body moves at the same instant,
+and I have often seen even small snakes glide as fast as I could walk),
+seems to involve a vibration of the scales quite too rapid to be
+conceived. The motion of the crest and dorsal fin of the hippocampus,
+which is one of the intermediate types between serpent and fish, perhaps
+gives some resemblance of it, dimly visible, for the quivering turns the
+fin into a mere mist. The entrance of the two barbs of a bee's sting by
+alternate motion, "the teeth of one barb acting as a fulcrum for the
+other," must be something like the serpent motion on a small scale.
+** Richard Owen.
+
+
+69. Hence the continual change in the interpretation put upon it in
+various religions. As the worm of corruption, it is the mightiest of all
+adversaries of the gods--the special adversary of their light and
+creative power--Python against Apollo. As the power of the earth against
+the air, the giants are serpent-bodied in the Gigantomachia; but as the
+power of the earth upon the seed--consuming it into new life ("that which
+thou sowest is not quickened except it die")--serpents sustain the
+chariot of the spirit of agriculture.
+
+70. Yet on the other hand, there is a power in the earth to take away
+corruption, and to purify (hence the very fact of burial, and many uses
+of earth, only lately known): and in this sense the serpent is a healing
+spirit,--the representative of AEsculapius, and of Hygieia; and is a
+sacred earth-type in the temple of the native earth of Athens; so that
+its departure from the temple was a sign to the Athenians that they were
+to leave their homes. And then, lastly, as there is a strength and
+healing in the earth, no less than the strength of air, so there is
+conceived to be a wisdom of earth no less than a wisdom of the spirit;
+and when its deadly power is killed, its guiding power becomes true; so
+that the Python serpent is killed at Delphi, where yet the oracle is from
+the breath of the earth.
+
+71. You must remember, however, that in this, as in every other
+instance, I take the myth at its central time. This is only the meaning
+of the serpent to the Greek mind which could conceive an Athena. Its
+first meaning to the nascent eyes of men, and its continued influence
+over degraded races, are subjects of the most fearful mystery. Mr.
+Fergusson has just collected the principal evidence bearing on the matter
+in a work of very great value, and if you read his opening chapters, they
+will put you in possession of the circumstances needing chiefly to be
+considered. I cannot touch upon any of them here, except only to point
+out that, though the doctrine of the so-called "corruption of human
+nature," asserting that there is nothing but evil in humanity, is just
+as blasphemous and false as a doctrine of the corruption of physical
+nature would be, asserting there was nothing but evil in the earth,--
+there is yet the clearest evidence of a disease, plague, or cretinous
+imperfection of development, hitherto allowed to prevail against the
+greater part of the races of men; and this in monstrous ways, more full
+of mystery than the serpent-being itself. I have gathered for you
+tonight only instances of what is beautiful in Greek religion; but even
+in its best time there were deep corruptions in other phases of it, and
+degraded forms of many of its deities, all originating in a misunderstood
+worship of lower races, little less than these corrupted forms of
+devotion can be found, all having a strange and dreadful consistency with
+each other, and infecting Christianity, even at its strongest periods,
+with fatal terror of doctrine, and ghastliness of symbolic conception,
+passing through fear into frenzied grotesque, and thence into sensuality.
+
+In the Psalter of St. Louis itself, half of its letters are twisted
+snakes; there is scarcely a wreathed ornament, employed in Christian
+dress, or architecture, which cannot be traced back to the serpent's
+coil; and there is rarely a piece of monkish decorated writing in the
+world that is not tainted with some ill-meant vileness of grotesque,--
+nay, the very leaves of the twisted ivy-pattern of the fourteenth century
+can be followed back to wreaths for the foreheads of bacchanalian gods.
+And truly, it seems to me, as I gather in my mind the evidences of insane
+religion, degraded art, merciless war, sullen toil, detestable pleasure,
+and vain or vile hope, in which the nations of the world have lived since
+first they could bear record of themselves--it seems to me, I say, as if
+the race itself were still half-serpent, not extricated yet from its
+clay; a lacertine breed of bitterness--the glory of it emaciate with
+cruel hunger, and blotted on the leaf a glittering slime, and in the sand
+a useless furrow.
+
+72. There are no myths, therefore, by which the moral state and fineness
+of intelligence of different races can be so deeply tried or measured, as
+by those of the serpent and the bird; both of them having an especial
+relation to the kind of remorse for sin, or for the grief in fate, of
+which the national minds that spoke by them had been capable. The
+serpent and vulture are alike emblems of immortality and purification
+among races which desired to be immortal and pure; and as they recognize
+their own misery, the serpent becomes to them the scourge of the Furies,
+and the vulture finds its eternal prey in their breast. The bird long
+contests among the Egyptians with the still received serpent symbol of
+power. But the Draconian image of evil is established in the serpent
+Apap; while the bird's wings, with the globe, become part of a better
+symbol of deity, and the entire form of the vulture, as an emblem of
+purification, is associated with the earliest conception of Athena. In
+the type of the dove with the olive branch, the conception of the spirit
+of Athena in renewed life prevailing over ruin is embodied for the whole
+of futurity; while the Greeks, to whom, in a happier climate and higher
+life than that of Egypt, the vulture symbol of cleansing became
+unintelligible, took the eagle instead for their hieroglyph of supreme
+spiritual energy, and it thenceforward retains its hold on the human
+imagination, till it is established among Christian myths as the
+expression of the most exalted form of evangelistic teaching. The
+special relation of Athena to her favorite bird we will trace presently;
+the peacock of Hera, and dove of Aphrodite, are comparatively unimportant
+myths; but the bird power is soon made entirely human by the Greeks in
+their flying angel of victory (partially human, with modified meaning of
+evil, in the Harpy and Siren); and thenceforward it associates itself
+with the Hebrew cherubim, and has had the most singular influence on the
+Christian religion by giving its wings to render the conception of angels
+mysterious and untenable, and check rational endeavor to determine the
+nature of subordinate spiritual agency; while yet it has given to that
+agency a vague poetical influence of the highest value in its own
+imaginative way.
+
+73. But with the early serpent-worship there was associated another,
+that of the groves, of which you will also find the evidence exhaustively
+collected in Mr. Fergussen's work. This tree-worship may have taken a
+dark form when associated with the Draconian one; or opposed, as in
+Judea, to a purer faith; but in itself, I believe, it was always healthy,
+and though it retains little definite hieroglyphic power in subsequent
+religion, it becomes, instead of symbolic, real; the flowers and trees
+are themselves beheld and beloved with a half-worshipping delight, which
+is always noble and healthful.
+
+And it is among the most notable indications of the volition of the
+animating power that we find the ethical signs of good and evil set on
+these also, as well as upon animals; the venom of the serpent, and in
+some respects its image also, being associated even with the passionless
+growth of the leaf out of the ground; while the distinctions of species
+seem appointed with more definite ethical address to the intelligence of
+man as their material products become more useful to him.
+
+74. I can easily show this, and, at the same time, make clear the
+relation to other plants of the flowers which especially belong to
+Athena, by examining the natural myths in the groups of the plants which
+would be used at any country dinner, over which Athena would, in her
+simplest household authority, cheerfully rule here in England. Suppose
+Horace's favorite dish of beans, with the bacon; potatoes; some savory
+stuffing of onions and herbs, with the meat; celery, and a radish or
+two, with the cheese; nuts and apples for desert, and brown bread.
+
+75. The beans are, from earliest time, the most important and
+interesting of the seeds of the great tribe of plants from which came the
+Latin and French name for all kitchen vegetables,--things that are
+gathered with the hand--podded seeds that cannot be reaped, or beaten, or
+shaken down, but must be gathered green. "Leguminous" plants, all of
+them having flowers like butterflies, seeds in (frequently pendent) pods,
+--"laetum siliqua quassante legumen"--smooth and tender leaves, divided
+into many minor ones; strange adjuncts of tendril, for climbing (and
+sometimes of thorn); exquisitely sweet, yet pure scents of blossom, and
+almost always harmless, if not serviceable seeds. It is of all tribes
+of plants the most definite, its blossoms being entirely limited in their
+parts, and not passing into other forms. It is also the most usefully
+extended in range and scale; familiar in the height of the forest--
+acacia, laburnum, Judas-tree; familiar in the sown field--bean and vetch
+and pea; familiar in the pasture--in every form of clustered clover and
+sweet trefoil tracery; the most entirely serviceable and human of all
+orders of plants.
+
+76. Next, in the potato, we have the scarcely innocent underground stem
+of one of a tribe set aside for evil; having the deadly nightshade for
+its queen, and including the henbane, the witch's mandrake, and the worst
+natural curse of modern civilization--tobacco.* And the strange thing
+about this tribe is, that though thus set aside for evil, they are not a
+group distinctly separate from those that are happier in function. There
+is nothing in other tribes of plants like the form of the bean blossom;
+but there is another family of forms and structure closely connected with
+this venomous one. Examine the purple and yellow bloom of the common
+hedge nightshade; you will find it constructed exactly like some of the
+forms of the cyclamen; and, getting this clue, you will find at last the
+whole poisonous and terrible group to be--sisters of the primulas!
+
+
+* It is not easy to estimate the demoralizing effect on the youth of
+Europe of the cigar, in enabling them to pass their time happily in
+idleness.
+
+
+The nightshades are, in fact, primroses with a curse upon them; and a
+sign set in their petals, by which the deadly and condemned flowers may
+always be known from the innocent ones,--that the stamens of the
+nightshades are between the lobes, and of the primulas, opposite the
+lobes, of the corolla.
+
+77. Next, side by side, in the celery and radish, you have the two great
+groups of unbelled and cruciferous plants; alike in conditions of rank
+among herbs: both flowering in clusters; but the unbelled group, flat,
+the crucifers, in spires: both of them mean and poor in the blossom, and
+losing what beauty they have by too close crowding; both of them having
+the most curious influence on human character in the temperate zones of
+the earth, from the days of the parsley crown, and hemlock drink, and
+mocked Euripidean chervil, until now; but chiefly among the northern
+nations, being especially plants that are of some humble beauty, and (the
+crucifers) of endless use, when they are chosen and cultivated; but that
+run to wild waste, and are the signs of neglected ground, in their rank
+or ragged leaves and meagre stalks, and pursed or podded seed clusters.
+Capable, even under cultivation, of no perfect beauty, thought reaching
+some subdued delightfulness in the lady's smock and the wallflower; for
+the most part they have every floral quality meanly, and in vain,--they
+are white without purity; golden, without preciousness; redundant,
+without richness; divided, without fineness; massive, without strength;
+and slender, without grace. Yet think over that useful vulgarity of
+theirs; and of the relations of German and English peasant character to
+its food of kraut and cabbage (as of Arab character to its food of
+palm-fruit), and you will begin to feel what purposes of the forming
+spirit are in these distinctions of species.
+
+78. Next we take the nuts and apples,--the nuts representing one of the
+groups of catkined trees, whose blossoms are only tufts and dust; and the
+other, the rose tribe, in which fruit and flower alike have been the
+types to the highest races of men, of all passionate temptation, or pure
+delight, from the coveting of Eve to the crowing of the Madonna, above
+the
+
+ "Rosa sempiterna,
+ Che si dilata, rigrada, e ridole
+ Odor di lode al Sol."
+
+We have no time now for these, we must go on to the humblest group of
+all, yet the most wonderful, that of the grass which has given us our
+bread; and from that we will go back to the herbs.
+
+79. The vast family of plants which, under rain, make the earth green
+for man, and, under sunshine, give him bread, and, in their springing in
+the early year, mixed with their native flowers, have given us (far more
+than the new leaves of trees) the thought and word of "spring," divide
+themselves broadly into three great groups--the grasses, sedges, and
+rushes. The grasses are essentially a clothing for healthy and pure
+ground, watered by occasional rain, but in itself dry, and fit for all
+cultivated pasture and corn. They are distinctively plants with round
+and jointed stems, which have long green flexible leaves, and heads of
+seed, independently emerging from them. The sedges are essentially the
+clothing of waste and more or less poor or uncultivated soils, coarse in
+their structure, frequently triangular in stem--hence called "acute" by
+Virgil--and with their heads of seed not extricated from their leaves.
+Now, in both the sedges and grasses, the blossom has a common structure,
+though undeveloped in the sedges, but composed always of groups of double
+husks, which have mostly a spinous process in the centre, sometimes
+projecting into a long awn or beard; this central process being
+characteristic also of the ordinary leaves of mosses, as if a moss were
+a kind of ear of corn made permanently green on the ground, and with a
+new and distinct fructification. But the rushes differ wholly from the
+sedge and grass in their blossom structure. It is not a dual cluster,
+but a twice threefold one, so far separate from the grasses, and so
+closely connected with a higher order of plants, that I think you will
+find it convenient to group the rushes at once with that higher order,
+to which, if you will for the present let me give the general name of
+Drosidae, or dew-plants, it will enable me to say what I have to say of
+them much more shortly and clearly.
+
+80. These Drosidae, then, are plants delighting in interrupted moisture--
+or at certain seasons--into dry ground. They are not among water-plants,
+but the signs of water resting among dry places. Many of the true
+water-plants have triple blossoms, with a small triple calyx holding
+them; in the Drosidae the floral spirit passes into the calyx also, and
+the entire flower becomes a six-rayed star, bursting out of the stem
+laterally, as if it were the first of flowers and had made its way to the
+light by force through the unwilling green. They are often required to
+retain moisture or nourishment for the future blossom through long times
+of drought; and this they do in bulbs under ground, of which some become
+a rude and simple, but most wholesome, food for man.
+
+81. So, now, observe, you are to divide the whole family of the herbs of
+the field into three great groups,--Drosidae, Carices,* Gramineae,--
+dew-plants, sedges, and grasses. Then the Drosidae are divided into five
+great orders: lilies, asphodels, amaryllids, irids, and rushes. No
+tribes of flowers have had so great, so varied, or so healthy an
+influence on man as this great group of Drosidae, depending, not so much
+on the whiteness of some of their blossoms, or the radiance of others, as
+on the strength and delicacy of the substance of their petals; enabling
+them to take forms of faultless elastic curvature, either in cups, as the
+crocus, or expanding bells, as the true lily, or heath-like bells, as the
+hyacinth, or bright and perfect stars, like the star of Bethlehem, or,
+when they are affected by the strange reflex of the serpent nature which
+forms the labiate group of all flowers, closing into forms of exquisitely
+fantastic symmetry in the gladiolus. Put by their side their Nereid
+sisters, the water-lilies, and you have them in the origin of the
+loveliest forms of ornamental design, and the most powerful floral myths
+yet recognized among human spirits, born by the streams of Ganges, Nile,
+Arno, and Avon.
+
+
+* I think Carex will be found ultimately better than Cyperus for the
+generic name, being the Vergilian word, and representing a larger
+sub-species.
+
+
+82. For consider a little what each of those five tribes* has been to
+the spirit of man. First, in their nobleness, the lilies gave the lily
+of the Annunciation; the asphodels, the flower of the Elysian fields; the
+irids, the fleur-de-lys of chivalry; and the amaryllids, Christ's lily of
+the field; while the rush, trodden always under foot, became the emblem
+of humility. Then take each of the tribes, and consider the extent of
+their lower influence. Perdita's "The crown imperial, lilies of all
+kinds," are the first tribe, which, giving the type of perfect purity in
+the Madonna's lily, have, by their lovely form, influenced the entire
+decorative design of Italian sacred art; while ornament design of war was
+continually enriched by the curves of the triple petals of the Florentine
+"giglio," and French fleur-de-lys; so that it is impossible to count
+their influence for good in the middle ages, partly as a symbol of
+womanly character, and partly of the utmost brightness and refinement of
+chivalry in the city which was the flower of cities.
+
+
+* Take this rough distinction of the four tribes: lilies, superior ovary,
+white seeds; asphodels, superior ovary, black seeds; irids, inferior
+ovary, style (typically) rising into central crest; amaryllids, inferior
+ovary, stamens (typically) joined in central cup. Then the rushes are a
+dark group, through which they stoop to the grasses.
+
+
+Afterwards, the group of the turban-lilies, or tulips, did some mischief
+(their splendid stains having made them the favorite caprice of
+florists); but they may be pardoned all such guilt for the pleasure they
+have given in cottage gardens, and are yet to give, when lowly life may
+again be possible among us; and the crimson bars of the tulips in their
+trim beds, with their likeness in crimson bars of morning above them, and
+its dew glittering heavy, globed in their glossy cups, may be loved
+better than the gray nettles of the ash heap, under gray sky, unveined by
+vermilion or by gold.
+
+83. The next great group, of the asphodels, divides itself also into two
+principal families: one, in which the flowers are like stars, and
+clustered characteristically in balls, though opening sometimes into
+looser heads; and the other, in which the flowers are in long bells,
+opening suddenly at the lips, and clustered in spires on a long stem, or
+drooping from it, when bent by their weight.
+
+The star-group, of the squills, garlics, and onions, has always caused me
+great wonder. I cannot understand why its beauty, and serviceableness,
+should have been associated with the rank scent which has been really
+among the most powerful means of degrading peasant life, and separating
+it from that of the higher classes.
+
+The belled group, of the hyacinth and convallaria, is as delicate as the
+other is coarse; the unspeakable azure light along the ground of the wood
+hyacinth in English spring; the grape hyacinth, which is in south France,
+as if a cluster of grapes and a hive of honey had been distilled and
+compressed together into one small boss of celled and beaded blue; the
+lilies of the valley everywhere, in each sweet and wild recess of rocky
+lands,--count the influences of these on childish and innocent life; then
+measure the mythic power of the hyacinth and asphodel as connected with
+Greek thoughts of immortality; finally take their useful and nourishing
+power in ancient and modern peasant life, and it will be strange if you
+do not feel what fixed relation exists between the agency of the creating
+spirit in these, and in us who live by them.
+
+84. It is impossible to bring into any tenable compass for our present
+purpose, even hints of the human influence of the two remaining orders of
+Amaryllids and Irids; only note this generally, that while these in
+northern countries share with the Primulas the fields of spring, it seems
+that in Greece, the primulaceae are not an extended tribe, while the
+crocus, narcissus, and Amaryllis lutea, the "lily of the field" (I
+suspect also that the flower whose name we translate "violet" was in
+truth an iris) represented to the Greek the first coming of the breath of
+life on the renewed herbage; and became in his thoughts the true
+embroidery of the saffron robe of Athena. Later in the year, the
+dianthus (which, though belonging to an entirely different race of
+plants, has yet a strange look of being made out of the grasses by
+turning the sheath-membrane at the root of their leaves into a flower)
+seems to scatter, in multitudinous families, its crimson stars far and
+wide. But the golden lily and crocus, together with the asphodel, retain
+always the old Greek's fondest thoughts,--they are only "golden" flowers
+that are to burn on the trees, and float on the streams of paradise.
+
+85. I have but one tribe of plants more to note at our country feast--
+the savory herbs; but must go a little out of my way to come at them
+rightly. All flowers whose petals are fastened together, and most of
+those whose petals are loose, are best thought of first as a kind of cup
+or tube opening at the mouth. Sometimes the opening is gradual, as in
+the convolvulus or campanula; oftener there is a distinct change of
+direction between the tube and expanding lip, as in the primrose; or even
+a contraction under the lip, making the tube into a narrow-necked phial
+or vase, as in the heaths; but the general idea of a tube expanding into
+a quatrefoil, cinquefoil, or sixfoil, will embrace most of the forms.
+
+86. Now, it is easy to conceive that flowers of this kind, growing in
+close clusters, may, in process of time, have extended their outside
+petals rather than the interior ones (as the outer flowers of the
+clusters of many umbellifers actually do), and thus elongated and
+variously distorted forms have established themselves; then if the stalk
+is attached to the side instead of the base of the tube, its base becomes
+a spur, and thus all the grotesque forms of the mints, violets, and
+larkspurs, gradually might be composed. But, however this may be, there
+is one great tribe of plants separate from the rest, and of which the
+influence seems shed upon the rest, in different degrees; and these would
+give the impression, not so much of having been developed by change, as
+of being stamped with a character of their own, more or less serpentine
+or dragon-like. And I think you will find it convenient to call these
+generally Draconidae; disregarding their present ugly botanical name which
+I do not care even to write once--you may take for their principal types
+the foxglove, snapdragon, and calceolaria; and you will find they all
+agree in a tendency to decorate themselves by spots, and with bosses or
+swollen places in their leaves, as if they had been touched by poison.
+The spot of the foxglove is especially strange, because it draws the
+color out of the tissue all around it, as if it had been stung, and as if
+the central color was really an inflamed spot, with paleness round. Then
+also they carry to its extreme the decoration by bulging or pouting out
+the petal,--often beautifully used by other flowers in a minor degree,
+like the beating out of bosses in hollow silver, as in the kalmia, beaten
+out apparently in each petal by the stamens instead of a hammer; or the
+borage, pouting towards; but the snapdragons and calceolarias carry it to
+its extreme.
+
+87. Then the spirit of these Draconidae seems to pass more or less into
+other flowers, whose forms are properly pure vases; but it affects some
+of them slightly, others not at all. It never strongly affects the
+heaths; never once the roses; but it enters like an evil spirit into the
+buttercup, and turns it into a larkspur, with a black, spotted, grotesque
+centre, and a strange, broken blue, gorgeous and intense, yet impure,
+glittering on the surface as if it were strewn with broken glass, and
+stained or darkening irregularly into red. And then at last the serpent
+charm changes the ranunculus into monkshood, and makes it poisonous. It
+enters into the forget-me-not, and the star of heavenly turquoise is
+corrupted into the viper's bugloss, darkened with the same strange red as
+the larkspur, and fretted into a fringe of thorn; it enters, together
+with a strange insect-spirit, into the asphodels, and (though with a
+greater interval between the groups) they change to spotted orchideae; it
+touches the poppy, it becomes a fumaria; the iris, and it pouts into a
+gladiolus; the lily, and it chequers itself into a snake's-head, and
+secretes in the deep of its bell, drops, not of venom indeed, but
+honey-dew, as if it were a healing serpent. For there is an AEsculapian
+as well as an evil serpentry among the Draconidae, and the fairest of
+them, the "erba della Madonna" of Venice (Linaria Cymbalaria), descends
+from the ruins it delights into the herbage at their feet, and touches
+it; and behold, instantly, a vast group of herbs for healing,--all
+draconid in form,--spotted and crested, and from their lip-like corollas
+named "labiatae;" full of various balm, and warm strength for healing, yet
+all of them without splendid honor or perfect beauty, "ground ives,"
+richest when crushed under the foot; the best sweetness and gentle
+brightness of the robes of the field,--thyme, and marjoram, and Euphrasy.
+
+88. And observe, again and again, with respect to all these divisions
+and powers of plants: it does not matter in the least by what
+concurrences of circumstance or necessity they may gradually have been
+developed; the concurrence of circumstance is itself the supreme and
+inexplicable fact. We always come at last to a formative cause, which
+directs the circumstance, and mode of meeting it. If you ask an ordinary
+botanist the reason of the form of the leaf, he will tell you that it is
+a "developed tubercle," and that its ultimate form "is owing to the
+directions of its vascular threads." But what directs its vascular
+threads? "They are seeking for something they want," he will probably
+answer. What made them want that? What made them seek for it thus?
+Seek for it, in five fibres or in three? Seek for it, in serration, or
+in sweeping curves? Seek for it, in servile tendrils, or impetuous
+spray? Seek for it, in woolen wrinkles rough with stings, or in glossy
+surfaces, green with pure strength, and winterless delight?
+
+89. There is no answer. But the sum of all is, that over the entire
+surface of the earth, and its waters, as influenced by the power of the
+air under solar light, there is developed a series of changing forms, in
+clouds, plants, and animals, all of which have reference in their action,
+or nature, to the human intelligence that perceives them; and on which,
+in their aspects of horror and beauty, and their qualities of good and
+evil, there is engraved a series of myths, or words of the forming power,
+which, according to the true passion and energy of the human race, they
+have been enabled to read into religion. And this forming power has been
+by all nations partly confused with the breath or air through which it
+acts, and partly understood as a creative wisdom, proceeding from the
+Supreme Deity; but entering into and inspiring all intelligences that
+work in harmony with Him. And whatever intellectual results may be in
+modern days obtained by regarding this effluence only as a motion of
+vibration, every formative human art hitherto, and the best states of
+human happiness and order, may have depended on the apprehension of its
+mystery (which is certain,) and of its personality, which is probable.
+
+90. Of its influence on the formative arts, I have a few words to say
+separately: my present business is only to interpret, as we are now
+sufficiently enabled to do, the external symbols of the myth under which
+it was represented by the Greeks as a goddess of counsel, taken first
+into that breast of their supreme Deity, then created out of his
+thoughts, and abiding closely beside him; always sharing and consummating
+his power.
+
+91. And in doing this we have first to note the meaning of the principal
+epithet applied to Athena, "Glaukopis," "with eyes full of light," the
+first syllable being connected, by its root, with words signifying sight,
+not with words signifying color. As far as I can trace the color
+perception of the Greeks, I find it all founded primarily on the degree
+of connection between color and light; the most important fact to them in
+the color of red being its connection with fire and sunshine; so that
+"purple" is, in its original sense, "fire-color," and the scarlet or
+orange, of dawn, more than any other fire-color. I was long puzzled by
+Homer's calling the sea purple; and misled into thinking he meant the
+color of cloud shadows on green sea; whereas he really means the gleaming
+blaze of the waves under wide light. Aristotle's idea (partly true) is
+that light, subdued by blackness, becomes red; and blackness, heated or
+lighted, also becomes red. Thus, a color may be called purple because it
+is light subdued (and so death is called "purple" or "shadowy" death); or
+else it may be called purple as being shade kindled with fire, and thus
+said of the lighted sea; or even of the sun itself, when it is thought of
+as a red luminary opposed to the whiteness of the moon: "purpureos inter
+soles, et candida lunae sidera;" or of golden hair: "pro purpureo poenam
+solvens scelerata capillo;" while both ideas are modified by the
+influence of an earlier form of the word, which has nothing to do with
+fire at all, but only with mixing or staining; and then, to make the
+whole group of thoughts inextricably complex, yet rich and subtle in
+proportion to their intricacy, the various rose and crimson colors of the
+murex dye,--the crimson and purple of the poppy, and fruit of the palm,--
+and the association of all these with the hue of blood,--partly direct,
+partly through a confusion between the word signifying "slaughter" and
+"palm-fruit color," mingle themselves in, and renew the whole nature of
+the old word; so that, in later literature, it means a different color,
+or emotion of color, in almost every place where it occurs; and cast
+forever around the reflection of all that has been dipped in its dyes.
+
+92. So that the world is really a liquid prism, and stream of opal. And
+then, last of all, to keep the whole history of it in the fantastic
+course of a dream, warped here and there into wild grotesque, we moderns,
+who have preferred to rule over coal-mines instead of the sea (and so
+have turned the everlasting lamp of Athena into a Davy's safety-lamp in
+the hand of Britannia, and Athenian heavenly lightning into British
+subterranean "damp"), have actually got our purple out of coal instead of
+the sea! And thus, grotesquely, we have had enforced on us the doubt
+that held the old word between blackness and fire, and have completed the
+shadow, and the fear of it, by giving it a name from battle, "Magenta."
+
+93. There is precisely a similar confusion between light and color in
+the word used for the blue of the eyes of Athena--a noble confusion,
+however, brought about by the intensity of the Greek sense that the
+heaven is light, more than it is blue. I was not thinking of this when I
+wrote in speaking of pictorial chiaroscuro, "The sky is not blue color
+merely: it is blue fire and cannot be painted" (Mod. P. iv. p. 36); but
+it was this that the Greeks chiefly felt of it, and so "Glaukopis"
+chiefly means gray-eyed: gray standing for a pale or luminous blue; but
+it only means "owl-eyed" in thought of the roundness and expansion, not
+from the color; this breath and brightness being, again, in their moral
+sense typical of the breadth, intensity, and singleness of the sight in
+prudence ("if thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of
+light"). Then the actual power of the bird to see in twilight enters
+into the type, and perhaps its general fineness of sense. "Before the
+human form was adopted, her (Athena's) proper symbol was the owl, a bird
+which seems to surpass all other creatures in acuteness of organic
+perception, its eye being calculated to observe objects which to all
+others are enveloped in darkness, its ear to hear sounds distinctly, and
+its nostrils to discriminate effluvia with such nicety that it has been
+deemed prophetic, from discovering the putridity of death even in the
+first stages of disease."*
+
+
+* Payne Knight in his "Inquiry into the Symbolical Language of Ancient
+Art," not trustworthy, being little more than a mass of conjectural
+memoranda, but the heap is suggestive, if well sifted.
+
+
+I cannot find anywhere an account of the first known occurrence of the
+type; but, in the early ones on Attic coins, the wide round eyes are
+clearly the principal things to be made manifest.
+
+94. There is yet, however, another color of great importance in the
+conception of Athena--the dark blue of her aegis. Just as the blue or
+gray of her eyes was conceived more as light than color, so her aegis was
+dark blue, because the Greeks thought of this tint more as shade than
+color, and, while they used various materials in ornamentation,
+lapislazuli, carbonate of copper, or, perhaps, smalt, with real enjoyment
+of the blue tint, it was yet in their minds as distinctly representative
+of darkness as scarlet was of light, and, therefore, anything dark,* but
+especially the color of heavy thunder-cloud, was described by the same
+term. The physical power of this darkness of the aegis, fringed with
+lightning, is given quite simply when Jupiter himself uses it to
+overshadow Ida and the Plain of Troy, and withdraws it at the prayer of
+Ajax for light; and again when he grants it to be worn for a time by
+Apollo, who is hidden by its cloud when he strikes down Patroclus; but
+its spiritual power is chiefly expressed by a word signifying deeper
+shadow,--the gloom of Erebus, or of our evening, which, when spoken of
+the aegis, signifies, not merely the indignation of Athena, but the entire
+hiding or withdrawal of her help, and beyond even this, her deadliest of
+all hostility,--the darkness by which she herself deceives and beguiles
+to final ruin those to whom she is wholly adverse; this contradiction of
+her own glory being the uttermost judgment upon human falsehood. Thus it
+is she who provokes Pandarus to the treachery which purposed to fulfil
+the rape of Helen by the murder of her husband in time of truce; and then
+the Greek king, holding his wounded brother's hand, prophesies against
+Troy the darkness of the aegis which shall be over all, and for ever.**
+
+
+* In the breastplate and shield of Atrides the serpents and bosses are
+all of this dark color, yet the serpents are said to be like rainbows;
+but through all this splendor and opposition of hue, I feel distinctly
+that the literal "splendor," with its relative shade, are prevalent in
+the conception; and that there is always a tendency to look through the
+hue to its cause. And in this feeling about color the Greeks are
+separated from the eastern nations, and from the best designers of
+Christian times. I cannot find that they take pleasure in color for its
+own sake; it may be in something more than color, or better; but it is
+not in the hue itself. When Homer describes cloud breaking from a
+mountain summit, the crags become visible in light, not color; he feels
+only their flashing out in bright edges and trenchant shadows; above, the
+"infinite," "unspeakable" aether is torn open--but not the blue of it. He
+has scarcely any abstract pleasure in blue, or green, or gold; but only
+in their shade or flame.
+
+I have yet to trace the causes of this (which will be a long task,
+belonging to art questions, not to mythological ones); but it is, I
+believe, much connected with the brooding of the shadow of death over
+the Greeks without any clear hope of immortality. The restriction of
+the color on their vases to dim red (or yellow) with black and white,
+is greatly connected with their sepulchral use, and with all the
+melancholy of Greek tragic thought; and in this gloom the failure of
+color-perception is partly noble, partly base: noble, in its earnestness,
+which raises the design of Greek vases as far above the designing of mere
+colorist nations like the Chinese, as men's thoughts are above
+children's; and yet it is partly base and earthly, and inherently
+defective in one human faculty; and I believe it was one cause of the
+perishing of their art so swiftly, for indeed there is no decline so
+sudden, or down to such utter loss and ludicrous depravity, as the fall
+of Greek design on its vases from the fifth to the third century B.C. On
+the other hand, the pure colored-gift, when employed for pleasure only,
+degrades in another direction; so that among the Indians, Chinese, and
+Japanese, all intellectual progress in art has been for ages rendered
+impossible by the prevalence of that faculty; and yet it is, as I have
+said again and again, the spiritual power of art; and its true brightness
+is the essential characteristic of all healthy schools.
+** 'eremnen Aigida pasi'.--Il. iv. 166.
+
+
+95. This, then, finally, was the perfect color-conception of Athena: the
+flesh, snow-white (the hands, feet, and face of marble, even when the
+statue was hewn roughly in wood); the eyes of keen pale blue, often in
+statues represented by jewels; the long robe to the feet, crocus-colored;
+and the aegis thrown over it of thunderous purple; the helmet golden (Il.
+v. 744.), and I suppose its crest also, as that of Achilles.
+
+If you think carefully of the meaning and character which is now enough
+illustrated for you in each of these colors, and remember that the
+crocus-color and the purple were both of them developments, in opposite
+directions, of the great central idea of fire-color, or scarlet, you will
+see that this form of the creative spirit of the earth is conceived as
+robed in the blue, and purple, and scarlet, the white, and the gold,
+which have been recognized for the sacred chords of colors, from the day
+when the cloud descended on a Rock more mighty than Ida.
+
+96. I have spoken throughout, hitherto, of the conception of Athena, as
+it is traceable in the Greek mind; not as it was rendered by Greek art.
+It is matter of extreme difficulty, requiring a sympathy at once
+affectionate and cautious, and a knowledge reaching the earliest springs
+of the religion of many lands, to discern through the imperfection, and,
+alas! more dimly yet, through the triumphs of formative art, what kind
+of thoughts they were that appointed for it the tasks of its childhood,
+and watched by the awakening of its strength.
+
+The religions passion is nearly always vividest when the art is weakest;
+and the technical skill only reaches its deliberate splendor when the
+ecstacy which gave it birth has passed away forever. It is as vain an
+attempt to reason out the visionary power or guiding influence of Athena
+in the Greek heart, from anything we now read, or possess, of the work of
+Phidias, as it would be for the disciples of some new religion to infer
+the spirit of Christianity from Titian's "Assumption." The effective
+vitality of the religious conception can be traced only through the
+efforts of trembling hands, and strange pleasures of untaught eyes; and
+the beauty of the dream can no more be found in the first symbols by
+which it is expressed, than a child's idea of fairy-land can be gathered
+from its pencil scrawl, or a girl's love for her broken doll explained by
+the defaced features. On the other hand, the Athena of Phidias was, in
+very fact, not so much the deity, as the darling of the Athenian people.
+Her magnificence represented their pride and fondness, more than their
+piety; and the great artist, in lavishing upon her dignities which might
+be ended abruptly by the pillage they provoked, resigned, apparently
+without regret, the awe of her ancient memory; and (with only the
+careless remonstrance of a workman too strong to be proud) even the
+perfectness of his own art. Rejoicing in the protection of their
+goddess, and in their own hour of glory, the people of Athena robed her,
+at their will, with the preciousness of ivory and gems; forgot or denied
+the darkness of the breastplate of judgment, and vainly bade its
+unappeasable serpents relax their coils in gold.
+
+97. It will take me many a day yet--if days, many or few, are given me--
+to disentangle in anywise the proud and practised disguises of religious
+creeds from the instinctive arts which, grotesquely and indecorously, yet
+with sincerity, strove to embody them, or to relate. But I think the
+reader, by help even of the imperfect indications already given to him,
+will be able to follow, with a continually increasing security, the
+vestiges of the Myth of Athena; and to reanimate its almost evanescent
+shade, by connecting it with the now recognized facts of existent nature
+which it, more or less dimly, reflected and foretold. I gather these
+facts together in brief.
+
+98. The deep of air that surrounds the earth enters into union with the
+earth at its surface, and with its waters, so as to be the apparent cause
+of their ascending into life. First, it warms them, and shades, at once,
+staying the heat of the sun's rays in its own body, but warding their
+force with its clouds. It warms and cools at once, with traffic of balm
+and frost; so that the white wreaths are withdrawn from the field of the
+Swiss peasant by the glow of Libyan rock. It gives its own strength to
+the sea; forms and fills every cell of its foam; sustains the precipices,
+and designs the valleys of its waves; gives the gleam to their moving
+under the night, and the white fire to their plains under sunrise; lifts
+their voices along the rocks, bears above them the spray of birds,
+pencils through them the dimpling of unfooted sands. It gathers out of
+them a portion in the hollow of its hand: dyes, with that, the hills into
+dark blue, and their glaciers with dying rose; inlays with that, for
+sapphire, the dome in which it has to set the cloud; shapes out of that
+the heavenly flocks: divides them, numbers, cherishes, bears them on its
+bosom, calls them to their journeys, waits by their rest; feeds from them
+the brooks that cease not, and strews with them the dews that cease. It
+spins and weaves their fleece into wild tapestry, rends it, and renews;
+and flits and flames, and whispers, among the golden threads, thrilling
+them with a plectrum of strange fire that traverses them to and fro, and
+is enclosed in them like life.
+
+It enters into the surface of the earth, subdues it, and falls together
+with it into fruitful dust, from which can be moulded flesh; it joins
+itself, in dew, to the substance of adamant, and becomes the green leaf
+out of the dry ground; it enters into the separated shapes of the earth
+it has tempered, commands the ebb and flow of the current of their life,
+fills their limbs with its own lightness, measures their existence by its
+indwelling pulse, moulds upon their lips the words by which one soul can
+be known to another; is to them the hearing of the ear, and the beating
+of the heart; and, passing away, leaves them to the peace that hears and
+moves no more.
+
+99. This was the Athena of the greatest people of the days of old. And
+opposite to the temple of this Spirit of the breath, and life-blood, of
+man and beast, stood, on the Mount of Justice, and near the chasm which
+was haunted by the goddess-Avengers, an altar to a God unknown,--
+proclaimed at last to them, as one who, indeed, gave to all men, life,
+and breath, and all things; and rain from heaven, filling their hearts
+with rain from heaven, filling their hearts with food and gladness; a God
+who had made of one blood all nations of men who dwell on the face of all
+the earth, and had determined the times of their fate, and the bounds of
+their habitation.
+
+100. We ourselves, fretted here in our narrow days, know less, perhaps,
+in very deed, than they, what manner of spirit we are of, or what manner
+of spirit we ignorantly worship. Have we, indeed, desired the Desire of
+all nations? and will the Master whom we meant to seem, and the Messenger
+in whom we thought we delighted, confirm, when He comes to His temple,--
+or not find in its midst,--the tables heavy with gold for bread, and the
+seats that are bought with the price of the dove? Or is our own land
+also to be left by its angered Spirit,--left among those, where sunshine
+vainly sweet, and passionate folly of storm, waste themselves in the
+silent places of knowledge that has passed away, and of tongues that have
+ceased?
+
+This only we may discern assuredly; this, every true light of science,
+every mercifully-granted power, every wisely-restricted thought, teach us
+more clearly day by day, that in the heavens above, and the earth
+beneath, there is one continual and omnipotent presence of help, and of
+peace, for all men who know that they live, and remember that they die.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+ATHENA ERGANE.*
+(Athena in the Heart.)
+
+
+* "Athena the worker, or having rule over work." The name was first give
+to her by the Athenians.
+
+
+VARIOUS NOTES RELATING TO THE CONCEPTION OF ATHENA AS THE DIRECTRESS OF
+ THE IMAGINATION AND WILL.
+
+
+101. I have now only a few words to say, bearing on what seems to me
+present need, respecting the third function of Athena, conceived as the
+directress of human passion, resolution, and labor.
+
+Few words, for I am not yet prepared to give accurate distinction between
+the intellectual rule of Athena and that of the Muses; but, broadly, the
+Muses, with their king, preside over meditative, historical, and poetic
+arts, whose end is the discovery of light or truth, and the creation of
+beauty; but Athena rules over moral passion, and practically useful art.
+She does not make men learned, but prudent and subtle; she does not teach
+them to make their work beautiful, but to make it right.
+
+In different places of my writings, and though many years of endeavor to
+define the laws of art, I have insisted on this rightness in work, and on
+its connection with virtue of character, in so many partial ways, that
+the impression left on the reader's mind--if, indeed, it was ever
+impressed at all--has been confused and uncertain. In beginning the
+series of my corrected works, I wish this principle (in my own mind the
+foundation of every other) to be made plain, if nothing else is; and will
+try, therefore, to make it so, as far as, by any effort, I can put it
+into unmistakable words. And, at first, here is a very simple statement
+of it, given lately in a lecture on the Architecture of the Valley of the
+Somme, which will be better read in this place than in its incidental
+connection with my account of the porches of Abbeville.
+
+102. I had used, in a preceding part of the lecture, the expression, "by
+what faults" this Gothic architecture fell. We continually speak thus of
+works of art. We talk of their faults and merits, as of virtues and
+vices. What do we mean by talking of the faults of a picture, or the
+merits of a piece of stone?
+
+The faults of a work of art are the faults of its workman, and its
+virtues his virtues.
+
+Great art is the expression of the mind of a great man, and mean art,
+that of the want of mind of a weak man. A foolish person builds
+foolishly, and a wise one, sensibly; a virtuous one, beautifully; and a
+vicious one, basely. If stone work is well put together, it means that a
+thoughtful man planned it, and a careful man cut it, and an honest man
+cemented it. If it has too much ornament, it means that its carver was
+too greedy of pleasure; if too little, that he was rude, or insensitive,
+or stupid, and the like. So that when once you have learned how to spell
+these most precious of all legends,--pictures and buildings,--you may
+read the characters of men, and of nations, in their art, as in a mirror;
+nay, as in a microscope, and magnified a hundredfold; for the character
+becomes passionate in the art, and intensifies itself in all its noblest
+or meanest delights. Nay, not only as in a microscope, but as under a
+scalpel, and in dissection; for a man may hide himself from you, or
+misrepresent himself to you every other way; but he cannot in his work:
+there, be sure, you have him to the inmost. All that he likes, all that
+he sees,--all that he can do,--his imagination, his affections, his
+perseverance, his impatience, his clumsiness, cleverness, everything is
+there. If the work is a cobweb, you know it was made by a spider; if a
+honey-comb, by a bee; a wormcast is thrown up by a worm, and a nest
+wreathed by a bird; and a house built by a man, worthily, if he is
+worthy, and ignobly if he is ignoble.
+
+And always, from the least to the greatest, as the made thing is good or
+bad, so is the maker of it.
+
+103. You will use this faculty of judgment more or less, whether you
+theoretically admit the principle or not. Take that floral gable;* you
+don't suppose the man who built Stonehenge could have built that, or that
+the man who built that, would have built Stonehenge? Do you think an old
+Roman would have liked such a piece of filigree work? or that Michael
+Angelo would have spent his time in twisting these stems of roses in and
+out? Or, of modern handicraftsmen, do you think a burglar, or a brute,
+or a pickpocket could have carved it? Could Bill Sykes have done it? or
+the Dodger, dexterous with finger and tool? You will find in the end,
+that no man could have done it but exactly the man who did it; and by
+looking close at it, you may, if you know your letters, read precisely
+the manner of man he was.
+
+
+* The elaborate pendiment above the central porch at the west end of
+Rouen Cathedral, pierced into a transparent web of tracery, and enriched
+with a border of "twisted eglantine."
+
+
+104. Now I must insist on this matter, for a grave reason. Of all facts
+concerning art, this is the one most necessary to be known, that, while
+manufacture is the work of hands only, art is the work of the whole
+spirit of man; and as that spirit is, so is the deed of it; and by
+whatever power of vice or virtue any art is produced, the same vice or
+virtue it reproduces and teaches. That which is born of evil begets
+evil; and that which is born of valor and honor, teaches valor and honor.
+All art is either infection or education. It must be one or other of
+these.
+
+105. This, I repeat, of all truths respecting art, is the one of which
+understanding is the most precious, and denial the most deadly. And I
+assert it the more, because it has of late been repeatedly, expressly,
+and with contumely, denied, and that by high authority; and I hold it one
+of the most sorrowful facts connected with the decline of the arts among
+us, that English gentlemen, of high standing as scholars and artists,
+should have been blinded into the acceptance, and betrayed into the
+assertion of a fallacy which only authority such as theirs could have
+rendered for an instant credible. For the contrary of it is written in
+the history of all great nations; it is the one sentence always inscribed
+on the steps of their thrones; the one concordant voice in which they
+speak to us out of their dust.
+
+All such nations first manifest themselves as a pure and beautiful animal
+race, with intense energy and imagination. They live lives of hardship
+by choice, and by grand instinct of manly discipline; they become fierce
+and irresistible soldiers; the nation is always its own army, and their
+king, or chief head of government, is always their first soldier.
+Pharaoh, or David, or Leonidas, or Valerius, or Barbarossa, or Coeur de
+Lion, or St. Louis, or Dandalo, or Frederick the Great,--Egyptian, Jew,
+Greek, Roman, German, English, French, Venetian,--that is inviolable law
+for them all; their king must be their first soldier, or they cannot be
+in progressive power. Then, after their great military period, comes the
+domestic period; in which, without betraying the discipline of war, they
+add to their great soldiership the delights and possessions of a delicate
+and tender home-life; and then, for all nations, is the time of their
+perfect art, which is the fruit, the evidence, the reward of their
+national idea of character, developed by the finished care of the
+occupations of peace. That is the history of all true art that ever was,
+or can be; palpably the history of it,--unmistakably,--written on the
+forehead of it in letters of light,--in tongues of fire, by which the
+seal of virtue is branded as deep as ever iron burnt into a convict's
+flesh the seal of crime. But always, hitherto, after the great period,
+has followed the day of luxury, and pursuit of the arts for pleasure
+only. And all has so ended.
+
+106. Thus far of Abbeville building. Now I have here asserted two
+things,--first, the foundation of art in moral character; next, the
+foundation of moral character in war. I must make both these assertions
+clearer, and prove them.
+
+First, of the foundation of art in moral character. Of course art-gift
+and amiability of disposition are two different things; for a good man
+is not necessarily a painter, nor does an eye for color necessarily imply
+an honest mind. But great art implies the union of both powers; it is
+the expression, by an art-gift, of a pure soul. If the gift is not
+there, we can have no art at all; and if the soul--and a right soul too--
+is not there, the art is bad, however dexterous.
+
+107. But also, remember, that the art-gift itself is only the result of
+the moral character of generations. A bad woman may have a sweet voice;
+but that sweetness of voice comes of the past morality of her race. That
+she can sing with it at all, she owes to the determination of laws of
+music by the morality of the past. Every act, every impulse, of virtue
+and vice, affects in any creature, face, voice, nervous power, and vigor
+and harmony of invention, at once. Perseverance in rightness of human
+conduct renders, after a certain number of generations, human art
+possible; every sin that clouds it, be it ever so little a one; and
+persistent vicious living and following of pleasure render, after a
+certain number of generations, all art impossible. Men are deceived by
+the long-suffering of the laws of nature, and mistake, in a nation, the
+reward of the virtue of its sires, for the issue of its own sins. The
+time of their visitation will come, and that inevitably; for, it is
+always true, that if the fathers have eaten sour grapes, the children's
+teeth are set on edge. And for the individual, as soon as you have
+learned to read, you may, as I said, know him to the heart's core,
+through his art. Let his art-gift be never so great, and cultivated to
+the height by the schools of a great race of men, and it is still but a
+tapestry thrown over his own being and inner soul; and the bearing of it
+will show, infallibly, whether it hangs on a man or on a skeleton. If
+you are dim-eyed, you may not see the difference in the fall of the folds
+at first, but learn how to look, and the folds themselves will become
+transparent, and you shall see through them the death's shape, or the
+divine one, making the tissue above it as a cloud of right, or as a
+winding-sheet.
+
+108. Then further, observe, I have said (and you will find it true, and
+that to the uttermost) that, as all lovely art is rooted in virtue, so it
+bares fruit of virtue, and is didactic in its own nature. It is often
+didactic also in actually expressed thought, as Giotto's, Michael
+Angelo's, Duerer's, and hundreds more; but that is not its special
+function; it is didactic chiefly by being beautiful; but beautiful with
+haunting thought, no less than with form, and full of myths that can be
+read only with the heart.
+
+For instance, at this moment there is open beside me as I write, a page
+of Persian manuscript, wrought with wreathed azure and gold, and soft
+green, and violet, and ruby and scarlet, into one field of pure
+resplendence. It is wrought to delight the eyes only; and does delight
+them; and the man who did it assuredly had eyes in his head; but not much
+more. It is not didactic art, but its author was happy; and it will do
+the good, and the harm, that mere pleasure can do. But, opposite me, is
+an early Turner drawing of the lake of Geneva, taken about two miles from
+Geneva, on the Lausanne road, with Mont Blanc in the distance. The old
+city is seen lying beyond the waveless waters, veiled with a sweet misty
+veil of Athena's weaving; a faint light of morning, peaceful exceedingly,
+and almost colorless, shed from behind the Voirons, increases into soft
+amber along the slope of the Saleve, and is just seen, and no more, on
+the fair warm fields of its summit, between the folds of a white cloud
+that rests upon the grass, but rises, high and tower-like, into the
+zenith of dawn above.
+
+109. There is not as much color in that low amber light upon the
+hillside as there is in the palest dead leaf. The lake is not blue, but
+gray in mist, passing into deep shadow beneath the Voirons' pines; a few
+dark clusters of leaves, a single white flower--scarcely seen--are all
+the gladness given to the rocks of the shore. One of the ruby spots of
+the eastern manuscript would give color enough for all the red that is in
+Turner's entire drawing. For the mere pleasure of the eye, there is not
+so much in all those lines of his, throughout the entire landscape, as in
+half an inch square of the Persian's page. What made him take pleasure
+in the low color that is only like the brown of a dead leaf? in the cold
+gray of dawn--in the one white flower among the rocks--in these--and no
+more than these?
+
+110. He took pleasure in them because he had been bred among English
+fields and hills; because the gentleness of a great race was in his
+heart, and its powers of thought in his brain; because he knew the
+stories of the Alps, and of the cities at their feet; because he had read
+the Homeric legends of the clouds, and beheld the gods of dawn, and the
+givers of dew to the fields; because he knew the faces of the crags, and
+the imagery of the passionate mountains, as a man knows the face of his
+friend; because he had in him the wonder and sorrow concerning life and
+death, which are the inheritance of the Gothic soul from the days of its
+first sea kings; and also the compassion and the joy that are woven into
+the innermost fabric of every great imaginative spirit, born now in
+countries that have lived by the Christian faith with any courage or
+truth. And the picture contains also, for us, just this which its maker
+had in him to give; and can convey it to us, just so far as we are of the
+temper in which it must be received. It is didactic if we are worthy to
+be taught, not otherwise. The pure heart, it will make more pure; the
+thoughtful, more thoughtful. It has in it no words for the reckless or
+the base.
+
+111. As I myself look at it, there is no fault nor folly of my life--and
+both have been many and great--that does not rise up against me, and take
+away my joy, and shorten my power of possession of sight, of
+understanding. And every past effort of my life, every gleam of
+rightness or good in it, is with me now, to help me in my grasp of this
+art, and its vision. So far as I can rejoice in, or interpret either, my
+power is owing to what of right there is in me. I dare to say it, that,
+because through all my life I have desired good, and not evil; because I
+have been kind to many; have wished to be kind to all; have wilfully
+injured none; and because I have loved much, and not selfishly;
+therefore, the morning light is yet visible to me on those hills, and
+you, who read, may trust my thought and word in such work as I have to do
+for you; and you will be glad afterwards that you have trusted them.
+
+112. Yet, remember,--I repeat it again and yet again,--that I may for
+once, if possible, make this thing assuredly clear: the inherited
+art-gift must be there, as well as the life in some poor measure, or
+rescued fragment, right. This art-gift of mine could not have been won
+by any work or by any conduct: it belongs to me by birthright, and came
+by Athena's will, from the air of English country villages, and Scottish
+hills. I will risk whatever charge of folly may come on me, for printing
+one of my many childish rhymes, written on a frosty day in Glen Farg,
+just north of Loch Leven. It bears date 1st January, 1828. I was born
+on the 8th of February, 1819; and al that I ever could be, and all that I
+cannot be, the weak little rhyme already shows.
+
+"Papa, how pretty those icicles are,
+That are seen so near,--that are seen so far;
+--Those dropping waters that come from the rocks
+And many a hole, like the haunt of a fox.
+That silvery stream that runs babbling along,
+Making a murmuring, dancing song.
+Those trees that stand waving upon the rock's side,
+And men, that, like specters, among them glide.
+And waterfalls that are heard from far,
+And come in sight when very near.
+And the water-wheel that turns slowly round,
+Grinding the corn that--requires to be ground,--
+
+(Political Economy of the future!)
+
+----And mountains at a distance seen,
+And rivers winding through the plain,
+And quarries with their craggy stones,
+And the wind among them moans."
+
+So foretelling Stones of Venice, and this essay on Athena.
+
+Enough now concerning myself.
+
+113. Of Turner's life, and of its good and evil, both great, but the
+good immeasurably the greater, his work is in all things a perfect and
+transparent evidence. His biography is simply, "He did this, nor will
+ever another do its like again." Yet read what I have said of him, as
+compared with the great Italians, in the passages taken from the "Cestus
+of Aglaia," farther on, sec. 158, pp. 164, 165.
+
+114. This, then, is the nature of the connection between morals and art.
+Now, secondly, I have asserted the foundation of both these, at least
+hitherto, in war. The reason of this too manifest fact is, that, until
+now it has been impossible for any nation, except a warrior one, to fix
+its mind wholly on its men, instead of their possessions. Every great
+soldier nation thinks, necessarily, first of multiplying its bodies and
+souls of men, in good temper and strict discipline. As long as this is
+its political aim, it does not matter what it temporarily suffers, or
+loses, either in numbers or in wealth; its morality and its arts (if it
+have national art-gift) advance together; but so soon as it ceases to be
+a warrior nation, it thinks of its possessions instead of its men; and
+then the moral and poetic powers vanish together.
+
+115. It is thus, however, absolutely necessary to the virtue of war that
+it should be waged by personal strength, not by money or machinery. A
+nation that fights with a mercenary force, or with torpedoes instead of
+its own arms, is dying. Not but that there is more true courage in
+modern than even in ancient war; but this is, first, because all the
+remaining life of European nations is with a morbid intensity thrown into
+their soldiers; and, secondly, because their present heroism is the
+culmination of centuries of inbred and traditional valor, which Athena
+taught them by forcing them to govern the foam of the sea-wave and of the
+horse,--not the steam of kettles.
+
+116. And further, note this, which is vital to us in the present crisis:
+If war is to be made by money and machinery, the nation which is the
+largest and most covetous multitude will win. You may be as scientific
+as you choose; the mob that can pay more for sulphuric acid and gunpowder
+will at last poison its bullets, throw acid in your faces, and make an
+end of you; of itself, also, in good time, but of you first. And to the
+English people the choice of its fate is very near now. It may
+spasmodically defend its property with iron walls a fathom thick, a few
+years longer--a very few. No walls will defend either it, or its
+havings, against the multitude that is breeding and spreading faster than
+the clouds, over the habitable earth. We shall be allowed to live by
+small pedler's business, and iron-mongery--since we have chosen those for
+our line of life--as long as we are found useful black servants to the
+Americans, and are content to dig coals and sit in the cinders; and have
+still coals to dig,--they once exhausted, or got cheaper elsewhere, we
+shall be abolished. But if we think more wisely, while there is yet
+time, and set our minds again on multiplying Englishmen, and not on
+cheapening English wares, if we resolve to submit to wholesome laws of
+labor and economy, and setting our political squabbles aside, try how
+many strong creatures, friendly and faithful to each other, we can crowd
+into every spot of English dominion, neither poison nor iron will prevail
+against us; nor traffic, nor hatred; the noble nation will yet, by the
+grace of heaven, rule over the ignoble, and force of heart hold its own
+against fireballs.
+
+117. But there is yet a further reason for the dependence of the arts
+on war. The vice and injustice of the world are constantly springing
+anew, and are only to be subdued by battle; the keepers of order and law
+must always be soldiers. And now, going back to the myth of Athena, we
+see that though she is first a warrior maid, she detests war for its own
+sake; she arms Achilles and Ulysses in just quarrels, but she disarms
+Ares. She contends, herself, continually against disorder and
+convulsion, in the earth giants; she stands by Hercules' side in victory
+over all monstrous evil; in justice only she judges and makes war. But
+in this war of hers she is wholly implacable. She has little notion of
+converting criminals. There is no faculty of mercy in her when she has
+been resisted. Her word is only, "I will mock when your fear cometh."
+Note the words that follow: "when your fear cometh as desolation, and
+your destruction as a whirlwind;" for her wrath is of irresistible
+tempest: once roused, it is blind and deaf,--rabies--madness of anger--
+darkness of the Dies Irae.
+
+And that is, indeed, the sorrowfullest fact we have to know about our own
+several lives. Wisdom never forgives. Whatever resistance we have
+offered to her loaw, she avenges forever; the lost hour can never be
+redeemed, and the accomplished wrong never atoned for. The best that can
+be done afterwards, but for that, had been better; the falsest of all the
+cries of peace, where there is no peace, is that of the pardon of sin, as
+the mob expect it. Wisdom can "put away" sin, but she cannot pardon it;
+and she is apt, in her haste, to put away the sinner as well, when the
+black aegis is on her breast.
+
+118. And this is also a fact we have to know about our national life,
+that it is ended as soon as it has lost the power of noble Anger. When
+it paints over, and apologizes for its pitiful criminalities; and endures
+its false weights, and its adulterated food; dares not to decide
+practically between good and evil, and can neither honor the one, nor
+smite the other, but sneers at the good, as if it were hidden evil, and
+consoles the evil with pious sympathy, and conserves it in the sugar of
+its leaden heart,--the end is come.
+
+119. The first sign, then, of Athena's presence with any people is that
+they become warriors, and that the chief thought of every man of them is
+to stand rightly in his rank, and not fail from his brother's side in
+battle. Wealth, and pleasure, and even love, are all, under Athena's
+orders, sacrificed to this duty of standing fast in the rank of war.
+
+But further: Athena presides over industry, as well as battle; typically,
+over women's industry; that brings comfort with pleasantness. Her word
+to us all is: "Be well exercised, and rightly clothed. Clothed, and in
+your right minds; not insane and in rags, nor in soiled fine clothes
+clutched from each other's shoulders. Fight and weave. Then I myself
+will answer for the course of the lance, and the colors of the loom."
+
+And now I will ask the reader to look with some care through these
+following passages respecting modern multitudes and their occupations,
+written long ago, but left in fragmentary form, in which they must now
+stay, and be of what use they can.
+
+120. It is not political economy to put a number of strong men down on
+an acre of ground, with no lodging, and nothing to eat. Nor is it
+political economy to build a city on good ground, and fill it with store
+of corn and treasure, and put a score of lepers to live in it. Political
+economy creates together the means of life, and the living persons who
+are to use them; and of both, the best and the most that it can, but
+imperatively the best, not the most. A few good and healthy men, rather
+than a multitude of diseased rogues; and a little real milk and wine
+rather than much chalk and petroleum; but the gist of the whole business
+is that the men and their property must both be produced together--not
+one to the loss of the other. Property must not be created in lands
+desolate by exile of their people, nor multiplied and depraved humanity,
+in lands barren of bread.
+
+121. Nevertheless, though the men and their possessions are to be
+increased at the same time, the first object of thought is always to be
+the multiplication of a worthy people. The strength of the nation is in
+its multitude, not in its territory; but only in its sound multitude. It
+is one thing, both in a man and a nation, to gain flesh, and another to
+be swollen with putrid humors. Not that multitude ever ought to be
+inconsistent with virtue. Two men should be wiser than one, and two
+thousand than two; nor do I know another so gross fallacy in the records
+of human stupidity as that excuse for neglect of crime by greatness of
+cities. As if the first purpose of congregation were not to devise laws
+and repress crimes! As if bees and wasps could live honestly in flocks--
+men, only in separate dens! As if it were easy to help one another on
+the opposite sides of a mountain, and impossible on the opposite sides of
+a street! But when the men are true and good, and stand shoulder to
+shoulder, the strength of any nation is in its quantity of life, not in
+its land nor gold. The more good men a state has, in proportion to its
+territory, the stronger the state. And as it has been the madness of
+economists to seek for gold instead of life, so it has been the madness
+of kings to seek for land instead of life. They want the town on the
+other side of the river, and seek it at the spear point; it never enters
+their stupid heads that to double the honest souls in the town on this
+side of the river would make them stronger kings; and that this doubling
+might be done by the ploughshare instead of the spear, and through
+happiness instead of misery.
+
+Therefore, in brief, this is the only object of all true policy and true
+economy: "utmost multitude of good men on every given space of ground"--
+imperatively always good, sound, honest men,--not a mob of white-faced
+thieves. So that, on the one hand all aristocracy is wrong which is
+inconsistent with numbers; and on the other all numbers are wrong which
+are inconsistent with breeding.
+
+122. Then, touching the accumulation of wealth for the maintenance of
+such men, observe, that you must never use the terms "money" and "wealth"
+as synonymous. Wealth consists of the good, and therefore useful, things
+in the possession of the nation; money is only the written or coined sign
+of the relative quantities of wealth in each person's possession. All
+money is a divisible title-deed, of immense importance as an expression
+of right to property, but absolutely valueless as property itself. Thus,
+supposing a nation isolated from all others, the money in its possession
+is, at its maximum value, worth all the property of the nation, and no
+more, because no more can be got for it. And the money of all nations
+is worth, at its maximum, the property of all nations, and no more, for
+no more can be got for it. Thus, every article of property produced
+increases, by its value, the value of all the money in the world, and
+every article of property destroyed, diminishes the value of all the
+money in the world. If ten men are cast away on a rock, with a thousand
+pounds in their pockets, and there is on the rock, neither food nor
+shelter, their money is worth simply nothing, for nothing is to be had
+for it. If they built ten huts, and recover a cask of biscuit from the
+wreck, then their thousand pounds, at its maximum value, is worth ten
+huts and a cask of biscuit. If they make their thousand pounds into two
+thousand by writing new notes, their two thousand pounds are still worth
+ten huts and a cask of biscuit. And the law of relative value is the
+same for all the world, and all the people in it, and all their property,
+as for ten men on a rock. Therefore, money is truly and finally lost in
+the degree in which its value is taken from it (ceasing in that degree to
+be money at all); and it is truly gained in the degree in which value is
+added to it. Thus, suppose the money coined by the nation be a fixed
+sum, and divided very minutely (say into francs and cents), and neither
+to be added to nor diminished. Then every grain of food and inch of
+lodging added to its possessions makes every cent in its pockets worth
+proportionally more, and every gain of food it consumes, and inch of roof
+it allows to fall to ruin, makes every cent in its pockets worth less;
+and this with mathematical precision. The immediate value of the money
+at particular times and places depends, indeed, on the humors of the
+possessors of property; but the nation is in the one case gradually
+getting richer, and will feel the pressure of poverty steadily everywhere
+relaxing, whatever the humors of individuals may be; and, in the other
+case, is gradually growing poorer, and the pressure of its poverty will
+every day tell more and more, in ways that it cannot explain, but will
+most bitterly feel.
+
+123. The actual quantity of money which it coins, in relation to its
+real property, is therefore only of consequence for convenience of
+exchange; but the proportion in which this quantity of money is divided
+among individuals expresses their various rights to greater or less
+proportions of the national property, and must not, therefore, be
+tampered with. The government may at any time, with perfect justice,
+double its issue of coinage, if it gives every man who has ten pounds in
+his pocket another ten pounds, and every man who had ten pence another
+ten pence; for it thus does not make any of them richer; it merely
+divides their counters for them into twice the number. But if it gives
+the newly-issued coins to other people, or keeps them itself, it simply
+robs the former holders to precisely that extent. This most important
+function of money, as a title-deed, on the non-violation of which all
+national soundness of commerce and peace of life depend, has been never
+rightly distinguished by economists from the quite unimportant function
+of money as a means of exchange. You can exchange goods--at some
+inconvenience, indeed, but you can still contrive to do it--without money
+at all; but you cannot maintain your claim to the savings of your past
+life without a document declaring the amount of them, which the nation
+and its government will respect.
+
+124. And as economists have lost sight of this great function of money
+in relation to individual rights, so they have equally lost sight of its
+function as a representative of good things. That, for every good thing
+produced, so much money is put into everybody's pocket, is the one simple
+and primal truth for the public to know, and for economists to teach.
+How many of them have taught it? Some have; but only incidentally; and
+others will say it is a truism. If it be, do the public know it? Does
+your ordinary English householder know that every costly dinner he gives
+has destroyed forever as much money as it is worth? Does every
+well-educated girl--do even the women in high political position--know
+that every fine dress they wear themselves, or cause to be worn, destroys
+precisely so much of the national money as the labor and material of it
+are worth? If this be a truism, it is one that needs proclaiming
+somewhat louder.
+
+125. That, then, is the relation of money and goods. So much goods, so
+much money; so little goods, so little money. But, as there is this true
+relation between money and "goods," or good things, so there is a false
+relation between money and "bads," or bad things. Many bad things will
+fetch a price in exchange; but they do not increase the wealth of the
+country. Good wine is wealth, drugged wine is not; good meat is wealth,
+putrid meat is not; good pictures are wealth, bad pictures are not. A
+thing is worth precisely what it can do for you; not what you choose to
+pay for it. You may pay a thousand pounds for a cracked pipkin, if you
+please; but you do not by that transaction make the cracked pipkin worth
+one that will hold water, nor that, nor any pipkin whatsoever, worth more
+than it was before you paid such sum for it. You may, perhaps, induce
+many potters to manufacture fissured pots, and many amateurs of clay to
+buy them; but the nation is, through the whole business so encouraged,
+rich by the addition to its wealth of so many potsherds,--and there an
+end. The thing is worth what it CAN do for you, not what you think it
+can; and most national luxuries, nowadays, are a form of potsherd,
+provided for the solace of a self-complacent Job, voluntary sedent on his
+ash-heap.
+
+126. And, also, so far as good things already exist, and have become
+media of exchange, the variations in their prices are absolutely
+indifferent to the nation. Whether Mr. A. buys a Titian from Mr. B. for
+twenty, or for two thousand, pounds, matters not sixpence to the national
+revenue; that is to say, it matters in nowise to the revenue whether Mr.
+A. has the picture, and Mr. B. the money, or Mr. B. the picture, and Mr.
+A. the money. Which of them will spend the money most wisely, and which
+of them will keep the picture most carefully, is, indeed, a matter of
+some importance; but this cannot be known by the mere fact of exchange.
+
+127. The wealth of a nation then, first, and its peace and well-being
+besides, depend on the number of persons it can employ in making good and
+useful things. I say its well-being also, for the character of men
+depends more on their occupations than on any teaching we can give them,
+or principles with which we can imbue them. The employment forms the
+habits of body and mind, and these are the constitution of the man,--the
+greater part of his moral or persistent nature, whatever effort, under
+special excitement, he may make to change or overcome them. Employment
+is the half, and the primal half, of education--it is the warp of it; and
+the fineness or the endurance of all subsequently woven pattern depends
+wholly on its straightness and strength. And, whatever difficulty there
+may be in tracing through past history the remoter connections of event
+and cause, one chain of sequence is always clear: the formation, namely,
+of the character of nations by their employments, and the determination
+of their final fate by their character. The moment, and the first
+direction of decisive revolutions, often depend on accident; but their
+persistent course, and their consequences, depend wholly on the nature of
+the people. The passing of the Reform Bill by the late English
+Parliament may have been more or less accidental; the results of the
+measure now rest on the character of the English people, as it has been
+developed by their recent interests, occupations, and habits of life.
+Whether, as a body, they employ their new powers for good or evil will
+depend, not on their facilities of knowledge, nor even on the general
+intelligence they may possess, but on the number of persons among them
+whom wholesome employments have rendered familiar with the duties, and
+modest in their estimate of the promises, of life.
+
+128. But especially in framing laws respecting the treatment or
+employment of improvident and more or less vicious persons, it is to be
+remembered that as men are not made heroes by the performance of an act
+of heroism, but must be brave before they can perform it, so they are not
+made villains by the commission of a crime, but were villains before they
+committed it; and the right of public interference with their conduct
+begins when they begin to corrupt themselves,--not merely at the moment
+when they have proved themselves hopelessly corrupt.
+
+All measures of reformation are effective in exact proportion to their
+timeliness: partial decay may be cut away and cleansed; incipient error
+corrected; but there is a point at which corruption can be no more
+stayed, nor wandering recalled. It has been the manner of modern
+philanthropy to remain passive until that precise period, and to leave
+the sick to perish, and the foolish to stray, while it spends itself in
+frantic exertions to raise the dead, and reform the dust.
+
+The recent direction of a great weight of public opinion against capital
+punishment is, I trust, the sign of an awakening perception that
+punishment is the last and worst instrument in the hands of the
+legislator for the prevention of crime. The true instruments of
+reformation are employment and reward; not punishment. Aid the willing,
+honour the virtuous, and compel the idle into occupation, and there will
+be no deed for the compelling of any into the great and last indolence of
+death.
+
+129. The beginning of all true reformation among the criminal classes
+depends on the establishment of institutions for their active employment,
+while their criminality is still unripe, and their feelings of
+self-respect, capacities of affection, and sense of justice, not
+altogether quenched. That those who are desirous of employment should
+always be able to find it, will hardly, at the present day, be disputed;
+but that those who are undesirous of employment should of all persons be
+the most strictly compelled to it, the public are hardly yet convinced;
+and they must be convinced. If the danger of the principal thoroughfares
+in their capital city, and the multiplication of crimes more ghastly than
+ever yet disgraced a nominal civilization, are not enough, they will not
+have to wait long before they receive sterner lessons. For our neglect
+of the lower orders has reached a point at which it begins to bear its
+necessary fruit, and every day makes the fields, not whiter, but more
+stable, to harvest.
+
+130. The general principles by which employment should be regulated may
+be briefly stated as follows:
+
+ I. There being three great classes of mechanical powers at our
+disposal, namely, (a) vital or muscular power; (b) natural mechanical
+power of wind, water, and electricity; and (c) artificially produced
+mechanical power; it is the first principle of economy to use all
+available vital power first, then the inexpensive natural forces, and
+only at last have recourse to artificial power. And this because it is
+always better for a man to work with his own hands to feed and clothe
+himself, than to stand idle while a machine works for him; and if he
+cannot by all the labor healthily possible to him feed and clothe
+himself, then it is better to use an inexpensive machine--as a windmill
+or watermill--than a costly one like a steam-engine, so long as we have
+natural force enough at our disposal. Whereas at present we continually
+hear economists regret that the water-power of the cascades or streams of
+a country should be lost, but hardly ever that the muscular power of its
+idle inhabitants should be lost; and, again, we see vast districts, as
+the south of Provence, where a strong wind* blows steadily all day long
+for six days out of seven throughout the year, without a windmill, while
+men are continually employed at a hundred miles to the north, in digging
+fuel to obtain artificial power. But the principal point of all to be
+kept in view is, that in every idle arm and shoulder throughout the
+country there is a certain quantity of force, equivalent to the force of
+so much fuel; and that it is mere insane waste to dig for coal for our
+force, while the vital force is unused, and not only unused, but in being
+so, corrupting and polluting itself. We waste our coal, and spoil our
+humanity at one and the same instant. Therefore, wherever there is an
+idle arm, always save coal with it, and the stores of England will last
+all the longer. And precisely the same argument answers the common one
+about "taking employment out of the hands of the industrious laborer."
+Why, what is "employment" but the putting out of vital force instead of
+mechanical force? We are continually in search of means to pull, to
+hammer, to fetch, to carry. We waste our future resources to get this
+strength, while we leave all the living fuel to burn itself out in mere
+pestiferous breath, and production of its variously noisome forms of
+ashes! Clearly, if we want fire for force, we want men for force first.
+The industrious hands must already have so much to do that they can do
+no more, or else we need not use machines to help them. Then use the
+idle hands first. Instead of dragging petroleum with a steam-engine, put
+it on a canal, and drag it with human arms and shoulders. Petroluem
+cannot possibly be in a hurry to arrive anywhere. We can always order
+that, and many other things, time enough before we want it. So, the
+carriage of everything which does not spoil by keeping may most
+wholesomely and safely be done by water-traction and sailing-vessels; and
+no healthier work can men be put to, nor better discipline, than such
+active porterage.
+
+
+* In order fully to utilize this natural power, we only require machinery
+to turn the variable into a constant velocity--no insurmountable
+difficulty.
+
+
+131. (2d.) In employing all the muscular power at our disposal we are to
+make the employments we choose as educational as possible; for a
+wholesome human employment is the first and best method of education,
+mental as well as bodily. A man taught to plough, row, or steer well,
+and a woman taught to cook properly, and make a dress neatly, are already
+educated in many essential moral habits. Labor considered as a
+discipline has hitherto been thought of only for criminals; but the real
+and noblest function of labor is to prevent crime, and not to be
+Reformatory, but Formatory.
+
+132. The third great principle of employment is, that whenever there is
+pressure of poverty to be met, all enforced occupation should be directed
+to the production of useful articles only; that is to say, of food, of
+simple clothing, of lodging, or of the means of conveying, distributing,
+and preserving these. It is yet little understood by economists, and not
+at all by the public, that the employment of persons in a useless
+business cannot relieve ultimate distress. The money given to employ
+riband-makers at Coventry is merely so much money withdrawn from what
+would have employed lace-makers at Honiton; or makers of something else,
+as useless, elsewhere. We must spend our money in some way, at some
+time, and it cannot at any time be spent without employing somebody. If
+we gamble it away, the person who wins it must spend it; if we lose it in
+a railroad speculation, it has gone into some one else's pockets, or
+merely gone to pay navies for making a useless embankment, instead of to
+pay riband or button makers for making useless ribands or buttons; we
+cannot lose it (unless by actually destroying it) without giving
+employment of some kind; and, therefore, whatever quantity of money
+exists, the relative quantity of employment must some day come out of it;
+but the distress of the nation signifies that the employments given have
+produced nothing that will support its existence. Men cannot live on
+ribands, or buttons, or velvet, or by going quickly from place to place;
+and every coin spent in useless ornament, or useless motion, is so much
+withdrawn from the national means of life. One of the most beautiful
+uses of railroads is to enable A to travel from the town of X to take
+away the business of B in the town of Y; while, in the mean time, B
+travels from the town of Y to take away A's business in the town of X.
+But the national wealth is not increased by these operations. Whereas
+every coin spent in cultivating ground, in repairing lodging, in making
+necessary and good roads, in preventing danger by sea or land, and in
+carriage of food or fuel where they are required, is so much absolute and
+direct gain to the whole nation. To cultivate land round Coventry makes
+living easier at Honiton, and every acre of sand gained from the sea in
+Lincolnshire, makes life easier all over England.
+
+4th, and lastly. Since for every idle person some one else must be
+working somewhere to provide him with clothes and food, and doing,
+therefore, double the quantity of work that would be enough for his own
+needs, it is only a matter of pure justice to compel the idle person to
+work for his maintenance himself. The conscription has been used in many
+countries to take away laborers who supported their families, from their
+useful work, and maintain them for purposes chiefly of military display
+at the public expense. Since this has been long endured by the most
+civilized nations, let it not be thought they would not much more gladly
+endure a conscription which should seize only the vicious and idle,
+already living by criminal procedures at the public expense; and which
+should discipline and educate them to labor which would not only maintain
+themselves, but be serviceable to the commonwealth. The question is
+simply this: we must feed the drunkard, vagabond, and thief; but shall we
+do so by letting them steal their food, and do no work for it? or shall
+we give them their food in appointed quantity, and enforce their doing
+work which shall be worth it, and which, in process of time, will redeem
+their own characters and make them happy and serviceable members of
+society?
+
+I find by me a violent little fragment of undelivered lecture, which puts
+this, perhaps, still more clearly. Your idle people (it says), as they
+are now, are not merely waste coal-beds. They are explosive coal-beds,
+which you pay a high annual rent for. You are keeping all these idle
+persons, remember, at far greater cost than if they were busy. Do you
+think a vicious person eats less than an honest one? or that it is
+cheaper to keep a bad man drunk, than a good man sober? There is, I
+suppose, a dim idea in the mind of the public, that they don't pay for
+the maintenance of people they don't employ. Those staggering rascals
+at the street corner, grouped around its splendid angle of public-house,
+we fancy that they are no servants of ours! that we pay them no wages!
+that no cash out of our pockets is spent over that beer-stained counter!
+
+Whose cash is it then they are spending? It is not got honestly by work.
+You know that much. Where do they get it from? Who has paid for their
+dinner and their pot? Those fellows can only live in one of two ways--by
+pillage or beggary. Their annual income by thieving comes out of the
+public pocket, you will admit. They are not cheaply fed, so far as they
+are fed by theft. But the rest of their living--all that they don't
+steal--they must beg. Not with success from you, you think. Wise, as
+benevolent, you never gave a penny in "indiscriminate charity." Well,
+I congratulate you on the freedom of your conscience from that sin, mine
+being bitterly burdened with the memory of many a sixpence given to
+beggars of whom I knew nothing but that they had pale faces and thin
+waists. But it is not that kind of street beggary that is the worst
+beggars' trade. Home alms which it is their worst degradation to
+receive. Those scamps know well enough that you and your wisdom are
+worth nothing to them. They won't beg of you. They will beg of their
+sisters, and mothers, and wives, and children, and of any one else who is
+enough ashamed of being of the same blood with them to pay to keep them
+out of sight. Every one of those blackguards is the bane of a family.
+That is the deadly "indiscriminate charity"--the charity which each
+household pays to maintain its own private curse.
+
+133. And you think that is no affair of yours? and that every family
+ought to watch over and subdue its own living plague? Put it to
+yourselves this way, then: suppose you knew every one of those families
+kept an idol in an inner room--a big-bellied bronze figure, to which
+daily sacrifice and oblation was made; at whose feet so much beer and
+brandy was poured out every morning on the ground; and before which,
+every night, good meat, enough for two men's keep, was set, and left,
+till it was putrid, and then carried out and thrown on the dunghill; you
+would put an end to that form of idolatry with your best diligence, I
+suppose. You would understand then that the beer, and brandy, and meat,
+were wasted; and that the burden imposed by each household on itself lay
+heavily through them on the whole community? But, suppose further, that
+this idol were not of silent and quiet bronze only, but an ingenious
+mechanism, wound up every morning, to run itself down into automatic
+blasphemies; that it struck and tore with its hands the people who set
+food before it; that it was anointed with poisonous unguents, and
+infected the air for miles round. You would interfere with the idolatry
+then, straightway? Will you not interfere with it now, when the
+infection that they venomous idol spreads is not merely death, but sin?
+
+134. So far the old lecture. Returning to cool English, the end of the
+matter is, that, sooner or later, we shall have to register our people;
+and to know how they live; and to make sure, if they are capable of work,
+that right work is given them to do.
+
+The different classes of work for which bodies of men could be
+consistently organized, might ultimately become numerous; these following
+divisions of occupation may all at once be suggested:
+
+ I. Road-making.--Good roads to be made, wherever needed, and kept in
+repair; and the annual loss on unfrequented roads, in spoiled horses,
+strained wheels, and time, done away with.
+
+ II. Bringing in of waste land.--All waste lands not necessary for
+public health, to be made accessible and gradually reclaimed; chiefly our
+wide and waste seashores. Not our mountains nor moorland. Our life
+depends on them, more than on the best arable we have.
+
+ III. Harbor-making.--The deficiencies of safe or convenient harborage
+in our smaller ports to be remedied; other harbors built at dangerous
+points of coast, and a disciplined body of men always kept in connection
+with the pilot and life-boat services. There is room for every order of
+intelligence in this work, and for a large body of superior officers.
+
+ IV. Porterage.--All heavy goods, not requiring speed in transit, to
+be carried (under preventative duty on transit, by railroad) by
+canal-boats, employing men for draught; and the merchant-shipping service
+extended by sea; so that no ships may be wrecked for want of hands, while
+there are idle ones in mischief on shore.
+
+ V. Repair of buildings.--A body of men in various trades to be kept
+at the disposal of the authorities in every large town, for repair of
+buildings, especially the houses of the poorer orders, who, if no such
+provision were made, could not employ workmen on their own houses, but
+would simply live with rent walls and roofs.
+
+ VI. Dressmaking.--Substantial dress, of standard material and kind,
+strong shoes, and stout bedding, to be manufactured for the poor, so as
+to render it unnecessary for them, unless by extremity of improvidence,
+to wear cast clothes, or be without sufficiency of clothing.
+
+ VII. Works of Art.--Schools to be established on thoroughly sound
+principles of manufacture, and use of materials, and with sample and, for
+given periods, unalterable modes of work; first, in pottery, and
+embracing gradually metal work, sculpture, and decorative painting; the
+two points insisted upon, in distinction from ordinary commercial
+establishments, being perfectness of material to the utmost attainable
+degree; and the production of everything by hand-work, for the special
+purpose of developing personal power and skill in the workman.
+
+The last two departments, and some subordinate branches of others, would
+include the service of women and children.
+
+I give now, for such further illustrations as they contain of the points
+I desire most to insist upon with respect both to education and
+employment, a portion of the series of notes published some time ago in
+the "Art Journal," on the opposition of Modesty and Liberty, and the
+unescapable law of wise restraint. I am sorry that they are written
+obscurely--and it may be thought affectedly; but the fact is, I have
+always had three different ways of writing: one, with the single view of
+making myself understood, in which I necessarily omit a great deal of
+what comes into my head; another, in which I say what I think ought to be
+said, in what I suppose to be the best words I can find for it (which is
+in reality an affected style--be it good or bad); and my third way of
+writing is to say all that comes into my head for my own pleasure, in the
+first words that come, retouching them afterward into (approximate)
+grammar. These notes for the "Art Journal" were so written; and I like
+them myself, of course; but ask the reader's pardon for their
+confusedness.
+
+135. "Sir, it cannot be better done."
+
+We will insist, with the reader's permission, on this comfortful saying
+of Albert Duerer's in order to find out, if we may, what Modesty is; which
+it will be well for painters, readers, and especially critics, to know,
+before going farther. What it is; or, rather, who she is, her fingers
+being among the deftest in laying the ground-threads of Aglaia's cestus.
+
+For this same opinion of Albert's is entertained by many other people
+respecting their own doings--a very prevalent opinion, indeed, I find it;
+and the answer itself, though rarely made with the Nuremberger's crushing
+decision, is nevertheless often enough intimated, with delicacy, by
+artists of all countries, in their various dialects. Neither can it
+always be held an entirely modest one, as it assuredly was in the man who
+would sometimes estimate a piece of his unconquerable work at only the
+worth of a plate of fruit, or a flask of wine--would have taken even one
+"fig for it," kindly offered; or given it royally for nothing, to show
+his hand to a fellow-king of his own, or any other craft--as Gainsborough
+gave the "Boy at the Stile" for a solo on the violin. An entirely modest
+saying, I repeat, in him--not always in us. For Modesty is "the
+measuring virtue," the virtue of modes or limits. She is, indeed, said
+to be only the third or youngest of the children of the cardinal virtue,
+Temperance; and apt to be despised, being more given to arithmetic, and
+other vulgar studies (Cinderella-like), than her elder sisters; but she
+is useful in the household, and arrives at great results with her
+yard-measure and slate-pencil--a pretty little Marchande des Modes,
+cutting her dress always according to the silk (if this be the proper
+feminine reading of "coat according to the cloth"), so that, consulting
+with her carefully of a morning, men get to know not only their income,
+but their in being--to know themselves, that is, in a gauger's manner,
+round, and up and down--surface and contents; what is in them and what
+may be got out of them; and in fine, their entire canon of weight and
+capacity. That yard-measure of Modesty's, lent to those who will use it,
+is a curious musical reed, and will go round and round waists that are
+slender enough, with latent melody in every joint of it, the dark root
+only being soundless, moist from the wave wherein
+
+ "Null' altra pianta che facesse fronda
+ O che 'n durasse, vi puote aver vita."*
+
+
+* "Purgatorio," i. 108, 109.
+
+
+But when the little sister herself takes it in hand, to measure things
+outside of us with, the joints shoot out in an amazing manner: the
+four-square walls even of celestial cities being measurable enough by
+that reed; and the way pointed to them, though only to be followed, or
+even seen, in the dim starlight shed down from worlds amidst which there
+is no name of Measure any more, though the reality of it always. For,
+indeed, to all true modesty the necessary business is not inlook, but
+outlook, and especially uplook: it is only her sister Shamefacedness, who
+is known by the drooping lashes--Modesty, quite otherwise, by her large
+eyes full of wonder; for she never contemns herself, nor is ashamed of
+herself, but forgets herself--at least until she has done something worth
+memory. It is easy to peep and potter about one's own deficiencies in a
+quiet immodest discontent; but Modesty is so pleased with other people's
+doings, that she has no leisure to lament her own: and thus, knowing the
+fresh feeling of contentment, unstained with thought of self, she does
+not fear being pleased, when there is cause, with her own rightness, as
+with another's, as with another's, saying calmly, "Be it mine or yours,
+or whose else's it may, it is no matter; this also is well." But the
+right to say such a thing depends on continual reverence and manifold
+sense of failure. If you have known yourself to have failed, you may
+trust, when it comes, the strange consciousness of success; if you have
+faithfully loved the noble work of others, you need not fear to speak
+with respect of things duly done, of your own.
+
+136. But the principal good that comes of art being followed in this
+reverent feeling is of it. Men who know their place can take it and
+keep it, be it low or high, contentedly and firmly, neither yielding
+nor grasping; and the harmony of hand and thought follows, rendering all
+great deeds of art possible--deeds in which the souls of men meet like
+the jewels in the windows of Aladdin's palace, the little gems and the
+large all equally pure, needing no cement but the fitting of facets;
+while the associative work of immodest men is all jointless, and astir
+with wormy ambition; putridly dissolute, and forever on the crawl: so
+that if it come together for a time, it can only be by metamorphosis
+through a flash of volcanic fire out of the vale of Siddim, vitrifying
+the clay of it, and fastening the slime, only to end in wilder
+scattering; according to the fate of those oldest, mightiest, immodestest
+of builders, of whom it is told in scorn, "They had brick for stone, and
+slime had they for mortar."
+
+137. The first function of Modesty, then, being this recognition of
+place, her second is the recognition of law, and delight in it, for the
+sake of law itself, whether her part be to assert it, or obey. For as it
+belongs to all immodesty to defy or deny law, and assert privilege and
+license, according to its own pleasure (it being therefore rightly called
+"insolent," that is, "custom-breaking," violating some usual and
+appointed order to attain for itself greater forwardness or power), so it
+is the habit of all modesty to love the constancy and "solemnity," or,
+literally, "accustomedness," of law, seeking first what are the solemn,
+appointed, inviolable customs and general orders of nature, and of the
+Master of nature, touching the matter in hand; and striving to put
+itself, as habitually and inviolably, in compliance with them. Out of
+which habit, once established, arises what is rightly called
+"conscience," nor "science" merely, but "with-science," a science "with
+us," such as only modest creatures can have--with or within them--and
+within all creation besides, every member of it, strong or weak,
+witnessing together, and joining in the happy consciousness that each
+one's work is good; the bee also being profoundly of that opinion; and
+the lark; and the swallow, in that noisy, but modestly upside-down, Babel
+of hers, under the eaves, with its unvolcanic slime for mortar; and the
+two ants who are asking of each other at the turn of that little
+ant's-foot-worn bath through the moss "lor via e lor fortuna;" and the
+builders also, who built yonder pile of cloud-marble in the west, and the
+gilder who gilded it, and is gone down behind it.
+
+138. But I think we shall better understand what we ought of the nature
+of Modesty, and of her opposite, by taking a simple instance of both, in
+the practice of that art of music which the wisest have agreed in
+thinking the first element of education; only I must ask the reader's
+patience with me through a parenthesis.
+
+Among the foremost men whose power has had to assert itself, though with
+conquest, yet with countless loss, through peculiarly English
+disadvantages of circumstance, are assuredly to be ranked together, both
+for honor, and for mourning, Thomas Bewick and George Cruikshank. There
+is, however, less cause for regret in the instance of Bewick. We may
+understand that it was well for us once to see what an entirely keen and
+true man's temper, could achieve, together, unhelped, but also unharmed,
+among the black bans and wolds of Tyne. But the genius of Cruikshank has
+been cast away in an utterly ghastly and lamentable manner: his superb
+line-work, worthy of any class of subject, and his powers of conception
+and composition, of which I cannot venture to estimate the range in their
+degraded application, having been condemned, by his fate, to be spent
+either in rude jesting, or in vain war with conditions of vice too low
+alike for record or rebuke, among the dregs of the British populace. Yet
+perhaps I am wrong in regretting even this: it may be an appointed lesson
+for futurity, that the art of the best English etcher in the nineteenth
+century, spent on illustrations of the lives of burglars and drunkards,
+should one day be seen in museums beneath Greek vases fretted with
+drawings of the wars of Troy, or side by side with Duerer's "Knight and
+Death."
+
+139. Be that as it may, I am at present glad to be able to refer to one
+of these perpetuations, by his strong hand, of such human character as
+our faultless British constitution occasionally produces in
+out-of-the-way corners. It is among his illustrations of the Irish
+Rebellion, and represents the pillage and destruction of a gentleman's
+house by the mob. They have made a heap in the drawing-room of the
+furniture and books, to set first fire to; and are tearing up the floor
+for its more easily kindled planks, the less busily-disposed meanwhile
+hacking round in rage, with axes, and smashing what they can with
+butt-ends of guns. I do not care to follow with words the ghastly truth
+of the picture into its detail; but the most expressive incident of the
+whole, and the one immediately to my purpose, is this, that one fellow
+has sat himself at the piano, on which, hitting down fiercely with his
+clenched fists, he plays, grinning, such tune as may be so producible, to
+which melody two of his companions, flourishing knotted sticks, dance,
+after their manner, on the top of the instrument.
+
+140. I think we have in this conception as perfect an instance as we
+require of the lowest supposable phase of immodest or licentious art in
+music; the "inner consciousness of good" being dim, even in the musician
+and his audience, and wholly unsympathized with, and unacknowledged by
+the Delphian, Vestal, and all other prophetic and cosmic powers. This
+represented scene came into my mind suddenly one evening, a few weeks
+ago, in contrast with another which I was watching in its reality;
+namely, a group of gentle school-girls, leaning over Mr. Charles Halle,
+as he was playing a variation on "Home, Sweet Home." They had sustained
+with unwonted courage the glance of subdued indignation with which,
+having just closed a rippling melody of Sebastian Bach's (much like what
+one might fancy the singing of nightingales would be if they fed on honey
+instead of flies), he turned to the slight, popular air. But they had
+their own associations with it, and besought for, and obtained it, and
+pressed close, at first, in vain, to see what no glance could follow, the
+traversing of the fingers. They soon thought no more of seeing. The wet
+eyes, round-open, and the little scarlet upper lips, lifted, and drawn
+slightly together, in passionate glow of utter wonder, became
+picture-like, porcelain-like, in motionless joy, as the sweet multitude
+of low notes fell, in their timely infinities, like summer rain. Only
+La Robbia himself (nor even he, unless with tenderer use of color than is
+usual in his work) could have rendered some image of that listening.
+
+141. But if the reader can give due vitality in his fancy to these two
+scenes, he will have in them representative types, clear enough for all
+future purpose, of the several agencies of debased and perfect art. And
+the interval may easily and continuously be filled by mediate gradations.
+Between the entirely immodeset, unmeasured, and (in evil sense)
+unmannered, execution with the fist; and the entirely modest, measured,
+and (in the noblest sense) mannered, or moral'd execution with the
+finger; between the impatient and unpractised doing, containing in itself
+the witness of lasting impatience and idleness through all previous life,
+and the patient and practised doing, containing in itself the witness
+of self-restraint and unwearied toil through all previous life; between
+the expressed subject and sentiment of home violation, and the expressed
+subject and sentiment of home love; between the sympathy of audience,
+given in irreverent and contemptuous rage, joyless as the rabidness of a
+dog, and the sympathy of audience given in an almost appalled humility of
+intense, rapturous, and yet entirely reasoning and reasonable pleasure;
+between these two limits of octave, the reader will find he can class,
+according to its modesty, usefulness and grace, or becomingness, all
+other musical art. For although purity of purpose and fineness of
+execution by no means go together, degree to degree (since fine, and
+indeed all but the finest, work is often spent in the most wanton purpose
+--as in all our modern opera--and the rudest execution is again often
+joined with purest purpose, as in a mother's song to her child), still
+the entire accomplishment of music is only in the union of both. For the
+difference between that "all but" finest and "finest" is an infinite one;
+and besides this, however the power of the performer, once attained, may
+be afterwards misdirected, in slavery to popular passion or childishness,
+and spend itself, at its sweetest, in idle melodies, cold and ephemeral
+(like Michael Angelo's snow statue in the other art), or else in vicious
+difficulty and miserable noise--crackling of thorns under the pot of
+public sensuality--still, the attainment of this power, and the
+maintenance of it, involve always in the executant some virtue or courage
+of high kind; the understanding of which, and of the difference between
+the discipline which develops it and the disorderly efforts of the
+amateur, it will be one of our first businesses to estimate rightly. And
+though not indeed by degree to degree, yet in essential relation (as of
+winds to waves, the one being always the true cause of the other, though
+they are not necessarily of equal force at the same time,) we shall find
+vice in its varieties, with art-failure,--and virtue in its varieties,
+with art-success,--fall and rise together; the peasant-girl's song at her
+spinning-wheel, the peasant laborer's "to the oaks and rills,"--domestic
+music, feebly yet sensitively skilful,--music for the multitude, of
+beneficent or of traitorous power,--dance-melodies, pure and orderly, or
+foul and frantic,--march-music, blatant in mere fever of animal
+pugnacity, or majestic with force of national duty and memory,--
+song-music, reckless, sensual, sickly, slovenly, forgetful even of the
+foolish words it effaces with foolish noise,--or thoughtful, sacred,
+healthful, artful, forever sanctifying noble thought with separately
+distinguished loveliness of belonging sound,--all these families and
+graduations of good or evil, however mingled, follow, in so far as they
+are good, one constant law of virtue (or "life-strength," which is the
+literal meaning of the word, and its intended one, in wise men's mouths),
+and in so far as they are evil, are evil by outlawry and unvirtue, or
+death-weakness. Then, passing wholly beyond the domain of death, we may
+still imagine the ascendant nobleness of the art, through all the
+concordant life of incorrupt creatures, and a continually deeper harmony
+of "puissant words and murmurs made to bless," until we reach
+
+ "The undisturbed song of pure consent,
+ Aye sung before the sapphire-colored throne."
+
+142. And so far as the sister arts can be conceived to have place or
+office, their virtues are subject to a law absolutely the same as that of
+music, only extending its authority into more various conditions, owing
+to the introduction of a distinctly representative and historical power,
+which acts under logical as well as mathematical restrictions, and is
+capable of endlessly changeful fault, fallacy, and defeat, as well as of
+endlessly manifold victory.
+
+143. Next to Modesty, and her delight in measures, let us reflect a
+little on the character of her adversary, the Goddess of Liberty, and her
+delight in absence of measures, or in false ones. It is true that there
+are liberties and liberties. Yonder torrent, crystal-clear, and
+arrow-swift, with its spray leaping into the air like white troops of
+fawns, is free enough. Lost, presently, amidst bankless, boundless marsh
+--soaking in slow shallowness, as it will, hither and thither, listless
+among the poisonous reeds and unresisting slime--it is free also. We may
+choose which liberty we like,--the restraint of voiceful rock, or the
+dumb and edgeless shore of darkened sand. Of that evil liberty which men
+are now glorifying and proclaiming as essence of gospel to all the earth,
+and will presently, I suppose, proclaim also to the stars, with
+invitation to them out of their courses,--and of its opposite continence,
+which is the clasp and 'chrusee perone' of Aglaia's cestus, we must try
+to find out something true. For no quality of Art has been more powerful
+in its influence on public mind; none is more frequently the subject of
+popular praise, or the end of vulgar effort, than what we call "Freedom."
+It is necessary to determine the justice or injustice of this popular
+praise.
+
+144. I said, a little while ago, that the practical teaching of the
+masters of Art was summed by the O of Giotto. "You may judge my
+masterhood of craft," Giotto tells us, "by seeing that I can draw a
+circle unerringly." And we may safely believe him, understanding him to
+mean that, though more may be necessary to an artist than such a power,
+at least this power is necessary. The qualities of hand and eye needful
+to do this are the first conditions of artistic craft.
+
+145. Try to draw a circle yourself with the "free" hand, and with a
+single line. You cannot do it if your hand trembles, nor if it is in the
+common sense of the word "free." So far from being free, it must be as
+if it were fastened to an inflexible bar of steel. And yet it must move,
+under this necessary control, with perfect, untormented serenity of ease.
+
+146. That is the condition of all good work whatsoever. All freedom is
+error. Every line you lay down is either right or wrong; it may be
+timidly and awkwardly wrong, or fearlessly and impudently wrong. The
+aspect of the impudent wrongness is pleasurable to vulgar persons, and is
+what they commonly call "free" execution; the timid, tottering,
+hesitating wrongness is rarely so attractive; yet sometimes, if
+accompanied with good qualities, and right aims in other directions, it
+becomes in a manner charming, like the inarticulateness of a child; but,
+whatever the charm or manner of the error, there is but one question
+ultimately to be asked respecting every line you draw, Is it right or
+wrong? If right, it most assuredly is not a "free" line, but an
+intensely continent, restrained, and considered line; and the action of
+the hand in laying it is just as decisive, and just as "free," as the
+hand of a first-rate surgeon in a critical incision. A great operator
+told me that his hand could check itself within about the two-hundredth
+of an inch, in penetrating a membrane; and this, of course, without the
+help of sight, by sensation only. With help of sight, and in action on a
+substance which does not quiver or yield, a fine artist's line is
+measurable in its proposed direction to considerably less than the
+thousandth of an inch.
+
+A wide freedom, truly!
+
+147. The conditions of popular art which most foster the common ideas
+about freedom, are merely results of irregularly energetic effort by men
+imperfectly educated; these conditions being variously mingled with
+cruder mannerisms resulting from timidity, or actual imperfection of
+body. Northern hands and eyes are, of course, never so subtle as
+Southern; and in very cold countries, artistic execution is palsied. The
+effort to break through this timidity, or to refine the bluntness, may
+lead to a licentious impetuosity, or an ostentatious minuteness. Every
+man's manner has this kind of relation to some defect in his physical
+powers or modes of thought; so that in the greatest work there is no
+manner visible. It is at first uninteresting from its quietness; the
+majesty of restrained power only dawns gradually upon us, as we walk
+towards its horizon.
+
+There is, indeed, often great delightfulness in the innocent manners of
+artists who have real power and honesty, and draw in this way or that, as
+best they can, under such and such untoward circumstances of life. But
+the greater part of the looseness, flimsiness, or audacity of modern work
+is the expression of an inner spirit of license in mind and heart,
+connected, as I said, with the peculiar folly of this age, its hope of,
+and trust in, "liberty," of which we must reason a little in more general
+terms.
+
+148. I believe we can nowhere find a better type of a perfectly free
+creature than in the common house-fly. Nor free only, but brave; and
+irreverent to a degree which I think no human republican could by any
+philosophy exalt himself to. There is no courtesy in him; he does not
+care whether it is king or clown whom he teases; and in every step of his
+swift mechanical march, and in every pause of his resolute observation,
+there is one and the same expression of perfect egotism, perfect
+independence and self-confidence, and conviction of the world's having
+been made for flies. Strike at him with your hand, and to him, the
+mechanical fact and external aspect of the matter is, what to you it
+would be if an acre of red clay, ten feet thick, tore itself up from the
+ground in one massive field, hovered over you in the air for a second,
+and came crashing down with an aim. That is the external aspect of it;
+the inner aspect, to his fly's mind, is of a quite natural and
+unimportant occurrence--one of the momentary conditions of his active
+life. He steps out of the way of your hand, and alights on the back of
+it. You cannot terrify him, nor govern him, nor persuade him, nor
+convince him. He has his own positive opinion on all matters; not an
+unwise one, usually, for his own ends; and will ask no advice of yours.
+He has no work to do--no tyrannical instinct to obey. The earthworm has
+his digging; the bee her gathering and building; the spider her cunning
+network; the ant her treasury and accounts. All these are comparatively
+slaves, or people of vulgar business. But your fly, free in the air,
+free in the chamber--a black incarnation of caprice, wandering,
+investigating, flitting, flirting, feasting at his will, with rich
+variety of choice in feast, from the heaped sweets in the grocer's window
+to those of the butcher's back-yard, and from the galled place on your
+cab-horse's back, to the brown spot in the road, from which, as the hoof
+disturbs him, he rises with angry republican buzz--what freedom is like
+his?
+
+149. For captivity, again, perhaps your poor watch-dog is as sorrowful
+a type as you will easily find. Mine certainly is. The day is lovely,
+but I must write this, and cannot go out with him. He is chained in the
+yard because I do not like dogs in rooms, and the gardener does not like
+dogs in gardens. He has no books,--nothing but his own weary thoughts
+for company, and a group of those free flies, whom he snaps at, with
+sullen ill success. Such dim hope as he may have that I may take him out
+with me, will be, hour by hour, wearily disappointed; or, worse, darkened
+at once into a leaden despair by an authoritative "No"--too well
+understood. His fidelity only seals his fate; if he would not watch for
+me, he would be sent away, and go hunting with some happier master: but
+he watches, and is wise, and faithful, and miserable; and his high animal
+intellect only gives him the wistful powers of wonder, and sorrow, and
+desire, and affection, which embitter his captivity. Yet of the two,
+would we rather be watch-dog or fly?
+
+150. Indeed, the first point we have all to determine is not how free
+we are, but what kind of creatures we are. It is of small importance to
+any of us whether we get liberty; but of the greatest that we deserve it.
+Whether we can win it, fate must determine; but that we will be worthy of
+it we may ourselves determine; and the sorrowfullest fate of all that we
+can suffer is to have it without deserving it.
+
+151. I have hardly patience to hold my pen and go on writing, as I
+remember (I would that it were possible for a few consecutive instants to
+forget) the infinite follies of modern thought in this matter, centred in
+the notion that liberty is good for a man, irrespectively of the use he
+is likely to make of it. Folly unfathomable! unspeakable! unendurable to
+look in the full face of, as the laugh of a cretin. You will send your
+child, will you, into a room where the table is loaded with sweet wine
+and fruit--some poisoned, some not?--you will say to him, "Choose freely,
+my little child! It is so good for you to have freedom of choice; it
+forms your character--your individuality! If you take the wrong cup or
+the wrong berry, you will die before the day is over, but you will have
+acquired the dignity of a Free child?"
+
+152. You think that puts the case too sharply? I tell you, lover of
+liberty, there is no choice offered to you, but it is similarly between
+life and death. There is no act, nor option of act, possible, but the
+wrong deed or option has poison in it which will stay in your veins
+thereafter forever. Never more to all eternity can you be as you might
+have been had you not done that--chosen that. You have "formed your
+character," forsooth! No; if you have chosen ill, you have De-formed
+it, and that for ever! In some choices it had been better for you that
+a red-hot iron bar struck you aside, scarred and helpless, than that you
+had so chosen. "You will know better next time!" No. Next time will
+never come. Next time the choice will be in quite another aspect--
+between quite different things,--you, weaker than you were by the evil
+into which you have fallen; it, more doubtful than it was, by the
+increased dimness of your sight. No one ever gets wiser by doing wrong,
+nor stronger. You will get wiser and stronger only by doing right,
+whether forced or not; the prime, the one need is to do that, under
+whatever compulsion, until you can do it without compulsion. And then
+you are a Man.
+
+153. "What!" a wayward youth might perhaps answer, incredulously, "no
+one ever gets wiser by doing wrong? Shall I not know the world best by
+trying the wrong of it, and repenting? Have I not, even as it is,
+learned much by many of my errors?" Indeed, the effort by which
+partially you recovered yourself was precious; that part of your thought
+by which you discerned the error was precious. What wisdom and strength
+you kept, and rightly used, are rewarded; and in the pain and the
+repentance, and in the acquaintance with the aspects of folly and sin,
+you have learned something; how much less than you would have learned in
+right paths can never be told, but that it is less is certain. Your
+liberty of choice has simply destroyed for you so much life and strength
+never regainable. It is true, you now know the habits of swine, and the
+taste of husks; do you think your father could not have taught you to
+know better habits and pleasanter tastes, if you had stayed in his house;
+and that the knowledge you have lost would not have been more, as well as
+sweeter, than that you have gained? But "it so forms my individuality
+to be free!" Your individuality was given you by God, and in your race,
+and if you have any to speak of, you will want no liberty. You will want
+a den to work in, and peace, and light--no more,--in absolute need; if
+more, in anywise, it will still not be liberty, but direction,
+instruction, reproof, and sympathy. But if you have no individuality, if
+there is no true character nor true desire in you, then you will indeed
+want to be free. You will begin early, and, as a boy, desire to be a
+man; and, as a man, think yourself as good as every other. You will
+choose freely to eat, freely to drink, freely to stagger and fall,
+freely, at last, to curse yourself and die. Death is the only real
+freedom possible to us; and that is consummate freedom, permission for
+every particle in the rotting body to leave its neighbor particle, and
+shift for itself. You call it "corruption" in the flesh; but before it
+comes to that, all liberty is an equal corruption in mind. You ask for
+freedom of thought; but if you have not sufficient grounds for thought,
+you have no business to think; and if you have sufficient grounds, you
+have no business to think wrong. Only one thought is possible to you if
+you are wise--your liberty is geometrically proportionate to your folly.
+
+154. "But all this glory and activity of our age; what are they owing
+to, but to freedom of thought?" In a measure, they are owing--what good
+is in them--to the discovery of many lies, and the escape from the power
+of evil. Not to liberty, but to the deliverance from evil or cruel
+masters. Brave men have dared to examine lies which had long been
+taught, not because they were free-thinkers, but because they were such
+stern and close thinkers that the lie could no longer escape them. Of
+course the restriction of thought, or of its expression, by persecution,
+is merely a form of violence, justifiable or not, as other violence is,
+according to the character of the persons against whom it is exercised,
+and the divine and eternal laws which it vindicates or violates. We must
+not burn a man alive for saying that the Athanasian creed is
+ungrammatical, nor stop a bishop's salary because we are getting the
+worst of an argument with him; neither must we let drunken men howl in
+the public streets at night. There is much that is true in the part of
+Mr. Mill's essay on Liberty which treats of freedom of thought; some
+important truths are there beautifully expressed, but many, quite vital,
+are omitted; and the balance, therefore, is wrongly struck. The liberty
+of expression, with a great nation, would become like that in a
+well-educated company, in which there is indeed freedom of speech, but
+not of clamor; or like that in an orderly senate, in which men who
+deserve to be heard, are heard in due time, and under determined
+restrictions. The degree of liberty you can rightly grant to a number
+of men is in the inverse ratio of their desire for it; and a general
+hush, or call to order, would be often very desirable in this England of
+ours. For the rest, of any good or evil extent, it is impossible to say
+what measure is owing to restraint, and what to license where the right
+is balanced between them. I was not a little provoked one day, a summer
+or two since, in Scotland, because the Duke of Athol hindered me from
+examining the gneiss and slate junctions in Glen Tilt, at the hour
+convenient to me; but I saw them at last, and in quietness; and to the
+very restriction that annoyed me, owed, probably, the fact of their being
+in existence, instead of being blasted away by a mob-company; while the
+"free" paths and inlets of Loch Katrine and the Lake of Geneva are
+forever trampled down and destroyed, not by one duke, but by tens of
+thousands of ignorant tyrants.
+
+155. So, a Dean and Chapter may, perhaps, unjustifiably charge me
+twopence for seeing a cathedral; but your free mob pulls spire and all
+down about my ears, and I can see it no more forever. And even if I
+cannot get up to the granite junctions in the glen, the stream comes down
+from them pure to the Garry; but in Beddington Park I am stopped by the
+newly-erected fence of a building speculator; and the bright Wandel,
+divine of waters as Castaly, is filled by the free public with old shoes,
+obscene crockery, and ashes.
+
+156. In fine, the arguments for liberty may in general be summed in a
+few very simple forms, as follows:
+
+Misguiding is mischievous: therefore guiding is.
+
+If the blind lead the blind, both fall into the ditch: therefore, nobody
+should lead anybody.
+
+Lambs and fawns should be left free in the fields; much more bears and
+wolves.
+
+If a man's gun and shot are his own, he may fire in any direction he
+pleases.
+
+A fence across a road is inconvenient; much more one at the side of it.
+
+Babes should not be swaddled with their hands bound down to their sides:
+therefore they should be thrown out to roll in the kennels naked.
+
+None of these arguments are good, and the practical issues of them are
+worse. For there are certain eternal laws for human conduct which are
+quite clearly discernible by human reason. So far as these are
+discovered and obeyed, by whatever machinery or authority the obedience
+is procured, there follow life and strength. So far as they are
+disobeyed, by whatever good intention the disobedience is brought about,
+there follow ruin and sorrow. And the first duty of every man in the
+world is to find his true master, and, for his own good, submit to him;
+and to find his true inferior, and, for that inferior's good, conquer
+him. The punishment is sure, if we either refuse the reverence, or are
+too cowardly and indolent to enforce the compulsion. A base nation
+crucifies or poisons its wise men, and lets its fools rave and rot in the
+streets. A wise nation obeys the one, restrains the other, and cherishes
+all.
+
+157. The best examples of the results of wise normal evidence in Art
+will be found in whatever evidence remains respecting the lives of great
+Italian painters, though, unhappily, in eras of progress, but just in
+proportion to the admirableness and efficiency of the life, will be
+usually the scantiness of its history. The individualities and liberties
+which are causes of destruction may be recorded; but the loyal conditions
+of daily breath are never told. Because Leonardo made models of
+machines, dug canals, built fortifications, and dissipated half his
+art-power in capricious ingenuities, we have many anecdotes of him;--but
+no picture of importance on canvas, and only a few withered stains of one
+upon a wall. But because his pupil, or reputed pupil, Luini, labored in
+constant and successful simplicity, we have no anecdotes of him;--only
+hundreds of noble works. Luini is, perhaps, the best central type of the
+highly-trained Italian painter. He is the only man who entirely united
+the religious temper which was the spirit-life of art, with the physical
+power which was its bodily life. He joins the purity and passion of
+Angelico to the strength of Veronese: the two elements, poised in perfect
+balance, are so calmed and restrained, each by the other, that most of us
+lose the sense of both. The artist does not see the strength, by reason
+of the chastened spirit in which it is used: and the religious visionary
+does not recognize the passion, by reason of the frank human truth with
+which it is rendered. He is a man ten times greater than Leonardo;--a
+mighty colorist, while Leonardo was only a fine draughtsman in black,
+staining the chiaroscuro drawing, like a colored print: he perceived and
+rendered the delicatest types of human beauty that have been painted
+since the days of the Greeks, while Leonardo depraved his finer instincts
+by caricature, and remained to the end of his days the slave of an
+archaic smile: and he is a designer as frank, instinctive, and
+exhaustless as Tintoret, while Leonardo's design is only an agony of
+science, admired chiefly because it is painful, and capable of analysis
+in its best accomplishment. Luini has left nothing behind him that is
+not lovely; but of his life I believe hardly anything is known beyond
+remnants of tradition which murmur about Lugano and Saronno, and which
+remain ungleaned. This only is certain, that he was born in the
+loveliest district of North Italy, where hills, and streams, and air
+meet in softest harmonies. Child of the Alps, and of their divinest
+lake, he is taught, without doubt or dismay, a lofty religious creed, and
+a sufficient law of life, and of its mechanical arts. Whether lessoned
+by Leonardo himself, or merely one of many disciplined in the system of
+the Milanese school, he learns unerringly to draw, unerringly and
+enduringly to paint. His tasks are set him without question day by day,
+by men who are justly satisfied with his work, and who accept it without
+any harmful praise, or senseless blame. Place, scale, and subject are
+determined for him on the cloister wall or the church dome; as he is
+required, and for sufficient daily bread, and little more, he paints what
+he has been taught to design wisely, and has passion to realize
+gloriously: every touch he lays is eternal, every thought he conceives is
+beautiful and pure: his hand moves always in radiance of blessing; from
+day to day his life enlarges in power and peace; it passes away
+cloudlessly, the starry twilight remaining arched far against the night.
+
+158. Oppose to such a life as this that of a great painter amidst the
+elements of modern English liberty. Take the life of Turner, in whom the
+artistic energy and inherent love of beauty were at least as strong as in
+Luini: but, amidst the disorder and ghastliness of the lower streets of
+London, his instincts in early infancy were warped into toleration of
+evil, or even into delight in it. He gathers what he can of instruction
+by questioning and prying among half-informed masters; spells out some
+knowledge of classical fable; educates himself, by an admirable force, to
+the production of wildly majestic or pathetically tender and pure
+pictures, by which he cannot live. There is no one to judge them, or to
+command him: only some of the English upper classes hire him to paint
+their houses and parks, and destroy the drawings afterwards by the most
+wanton neglect. Tired of laboring carefully, without either reward or
+praise, he dashes out into various experimental and popular works--makes
+himself the servant of the lower public, and is dragged hither and
+thither at their will; while yet, helpless and guideless, he indulges his
+idiosyncrasies till they change into insanities; the strength of his soul
+increasing its sufferings, and giving force to its errors; all the
+purpose of life degenerating into instinct; and the web of his work
+wrought, at last, of beauties too subtle to be understood, his liberty,
+with vices too singular to be forgiven--all useless, because magnificent
+idiosyncrasy had become solitude, or contention, in the midst of a
+reckless populace, instead of submitting itself in loyal harmony to the
+Art-laws of an understanding nation. And the life passed away in
+darkness; and its final work, in all the best beauty of it, has already
+perished, only enough remaining to teach us what we have lost.
+
+159. These are the opposite effects of Law and of Liberty on men of the
+highest powers. In the case of inferiors the contrast is still more
+fatal: under strict law, they become the subordinate workers in great
+schools, healthily aiding, echoing, or supplying, with multitudinous
+force of hand, the mind of the leading masters: they are the nameless
+carvers of great architecture--stainers of glass--hammerers of iron--
+helpful scholars, whose work ranks round, if not with, their master's,
+and never disgraces it. But the inferiors under a system of license
+for the most part perish in miserable effort;* a few struggle into
+pernicious eminence--harmful alike to themselves and to all who admire
+them; many die of starvation; many insane, either in weakness of insolent
+egotism, like Haydon, or in a conscientious agony of beautiful purpose
+and warped power, like Blake. There is no probability of the persistence
+of a licentious school in any good accidentally discovered by them; there
+is an approximate certainty of their gathering, with acclaim, round any
+shadow of evil, and following it to whatever quarter of destruction it
+may lead.
+
+
+* As I correct this sheet for press, my "Pall Mall Gazette" of last
+Saturday, April 17, is lying on the table by me. I print a few lines out
+of it:
+
+ "AN ARTIST'S DEATH.--A sad story was told at an inquest held in St.
+Pancras last night by Dr. Lankester on the body of . . ., aged
+fifty-nine, a French artist who was found dead in his bed at his rooms in
+. . . Street. M. . . ., also an artist, said he had known the deceased
+for fifteen years. He once held a high position, and being anxious to
+make a name in the world, he five years ago commenced a large picture,
+which he hoped, when completed, to have in the gallery at Versailles; and
+with that view he sent a photograph of it to the French Emperor. He also
+had an idea of sending it to the English Royal Academy. He labored on
+this picture, neglecting other work which would have paid him well, and
+gradually sank lower and lower into poverty. His friends assisted him,
+but being absorbed in his great work, he did not heed their advice, and
+they left him. He was, however, assisted by the French Ambassador, and
+last Saturday, he (the witness) saw deceased, who was much depressed in
+spirits, as he expected the brokers to be put in possession for rent. He
+said his troubles were so great that he feared his brain would give way.
+The witness gave him a shilling for which he appeared very thankful. On
+Monday the witness called upon him, but received no answer to his knock.
+He went again on Tuesday, and entered the deceased's bedroom and found
+him dead. Dr. George Ross said that when called into the deceased he had
+been dead at least two days. The room was in a filthy, dirty condition,
+and the picture referred to--certainly a very fine one--was in that room.
+The post-mortem examination showed that the cause of death was fatty
+degeneration of the heart, the latter probably having ceased its action
+through the mental excitement of the deceased."
+
+
+160. Thus far the notes of Freedom. Now, lastly, here is some talk
+which I tried at the time to make intelligible; and with which I close
+this volume, because it will serve sufficiently to express the practical
+relation in which I think the art and imagination of the Greeks stand to
+our own; and will show the reader that my view of that relation is
+unchanged, from the first day on which I began to write, until now.
+
+
+***
+
+
+THE HERCULES OF CAMARINA.
+
+ADDRESS TO THE STUDENTS OF THE ART SCHOOL OF SOUTH LAMBERT, MARCH 15,
+1869.
+
+
+161. Among the photographers of Greek coins which present so many
+admirable subjects for your study, I must speak for the present of one
+only: the Hercules of Camarina. You have, represented by a Greek
+workman, in that coin, the face of a man and the skin of a lion's head.
+And the man's face is like a man's face, but the lion's skin is not like
+a lion's skin.
+
+162. Now there are some people who will tell you that Greek art is fine,
+because it is true; and because it carves men's faces as like men's as it
+can.
+
+And there are other people who will tell you that Greek art is fine,
+because it is not true; and carves a lion's skin so as to look not at all
+like a lion's skin.
+
+And you fancy that one or the other of these sets of people must be
+wrong, and are perhaps much puzzled to find out which you should believe.
+
+But neither of them are wrong, and you will have eventually to believe,
+or rather to understand and know, in reconciliation, the truths taught by
+each; but for the present, the teachers of the first group are those you
+must follow.
+
+It is they who tell you the deepest and usefullest truth, which involves
+all others in time. Greek art, and all other art, is fine when it makes
+a man's face as like a man's face as it can. Hold to that. All kinds of
+nonsense are talked to you, nowadays, ingeniously and irrelevantly about
+art. Therefore, for the most part of the day, shut your ears, and keep
+your eyes open: and understand primarily, what you may, I fancy, easily
+understand, that the greatest masters of all greatest schools--Phidias,
+Donatello, Titian, Velasquez, or Sir Joshua Reynolds--all tried to make
+human creatures as like human creatures as they could; and that anything
+less like humanity than their work, is not so good as theirs.
+
+Get that well driven into your heads; and don't let it out again, at your
+peril.
+
+163. Having got it well in, you may then further understand, safely,
+that three is a great deal of secondary work in pots, and pans, and
+floors, and carpets, and shawls, and architectural ornament, which ought
+essentially, to be unlike reality, and to depend for its charm on quite
+other qualities than imitative ones. But all such art is inferior and
+secondary--much of it more or less instinctive and animal, and a
+civilized human creature can only learn those principles rightly, by
+knowing those of great civilized art first--which is always the
+representation, to the utmost of its power, of whatever it has got to
+show--made to look as like the thing as possible. Go into the National
+Gallery, and look at the foot of Correggio's Venus there. Correggio
+made it as like a foot as he could, and you won't easily find anything
+liker. Now, you will find on any Greek vase something meant for a foot,
+or a hand, which is not at all like one. The Greek vase is a good thing
+in its way, but Correggio's picture is the best work.
+
+164. So, again, go into the Turner room of the National Gallery, and
+look at Turner's drawing of "Ivy Bridge." You will find the water in it
+is like real water, and the ducks in it are like real ducks. Then go
+into the British Museum, and look for an Egyptian landscape, and you will
+find the water in that constituted of blue zigzags, not at all like
+water; and ducks in the middle of it made of blue lines, looking not in
+the least as if they could stand stuffing with sage and onions. They are
+very good in their way, but Turner's are better.
+
+165. I will not pause to fence my general principle against what you
+perfectly well know of the due contradiction,--that a thing may be
+painted very like, yet painted ill. Rest content with knowing that it
+must be like, if it is painted well; and take this further general law:
+Imitation is like charity. When it is done for love it is lovely; when
+it is done for show, hateful.
+
+166. Well, then, this Greek coin is fine, first because the face is like
+a face. Perhaps you think there is something particularly handsome in
+the face, which you can't see in the photograph, or can't at present
+appreciate. But there is nothing of the kind. It is a very regular,
+quiet, commonplace sort of face; and any average English gentleman's, of
+good descent, would be far handsomer.
+
+167. Fix that in your heads also, therefore, that Greek faces are not
+particularly beautiful. Of that much nonsense against which you are to
+keep your ears shut, that which is talked to you of the Greek ideal of
+beauty is the absolutest. There is not a single instance of a very
+beautiful head left by the highest school of Greek art. On coins, there
+is even no approximately beautiful one. The Juno of Argos is a virago;
+the Athena of Athens grotesque, the Athena of Corinth is insipid; and of
+Thurium, sensual. The Siren Ligeia, and fountain of Arethusa, on the
+coins of Terina and Syracuse, are prettier, but totally without
+expression, and chiefly set off by their well-curled hair. You might
+have expected something subtle in Mercuries; but the Mercury of AEnus is
+a very stupid-looking fellow, in a cap like a bowl, with a knob on the
+top of it. The Bacchus of Thasos is a drayman with his hair pomatum'd.
+The Jupiter of Syracurse is, however, calm and refined; and the Apollo
+of Clazomenae would have been impressive, if he had not come down to us,
+much flattened by friction. But on the whole, the merit of Greek coins
+does not primarily depend on beauty of features, nor even, in the period
+of highest art, that of the statues. You make take the Venus of Melos as
+a standard of beauty of the central Greek type. She has tranquil,
+regular, and lofty features; but could not hold her own for a moment
+against the beauty of a simple English girl, of pure race and kind heart.
+
+168. And the reason that Greek art, on the whole, bores you (and you
+know it does), is that you are always forced to look in it for something
+that is not there; but which may be seen every day, in real life, all
+round you; and which you are naturally disposed to delight in, and ought
+to delight in. For the Greek race was not at all one of exalted beauty,
+but only of general and healthy completeness of form. They were only,
+and could be only, beautiful in body to the degree that they were
+beautiful in soul (for you will find, when you read deeply into the
+matter, that the body is only the soul made visible). And the Greeks
+were indeed very good people, much better people than most of us think,
+or than many of us are; but there are better people alive now than the
+best of them, and lovelier people to be seen now than the loveliest of
+them.
+
+169. Then what are the merits of this Greek art, which make it so
+exemplary for you? Well, not that it is beautiful, but that it is
+Right.* All that it desires to do, it does, and all that it does, does
+well. You will find, as you advance in the knowledge of art, that its
+laws of self-restraint are very marvelous; that its peace of heart, and
+contentment in doing a simple thing, with only one or two qualities,
+restrictedly desired, and sufficiently attained, are a most wholesome
+element of education for you, as opposed to the wild writhing, and
+wrestling, and longing for the moon, and tilting at windmills, and agony
+of eyes, and torturing of fingers, and general spinning out of one's
+soul into fiddle-strings, which constitute the ideal life of a modern
+artist.
+
+
+* Compare above, sec. 101.
+
+
+Also observe, there is an entire masterhood of its business up to the
+required point. A Greek does not reach after other people's strength,
+nor outreach his own. He never tries to paint before he can draw; he
+never tries to lay on flesh where there are no bones; and he never
+expects to find the bones of anything in his inner consciousness. Those
+are his first merits--sincere and innocent purpose, strong common-sense
+and principle, and all the strength that follows on that strength.
+
+170. But, secondly, Greek art is always exemplary in disposition of
+masses, which is a thing that in modern days students rarely look for,
+artists not enough, and the public never. But, whatever else Greek work
+may fail of, you may always be sure its masses are well placed, and their
+placing has been the object of the most subtle care. Look, for instance,
+at the inscription in front of this Hercules of the name of the town--
+Camarina. You can't read it, even though you may know Greek, without
+some pains; for the sculptor knew well enough that it mattered very
+little whether you read it or not, for the Camarina Hercules could tell
+his own story; but what did above all things matter was, that no K or A
+or M should come in a wrong place with respect to the outline of the
+head, and divert the eye from it, or spoil any of its lines. So the
+whole inscription is thrown into a sweeping curve of gradually
+diminishing size, continuing from the lion's paws, round the neck, up to
+the forehead, and answering a decorative purpose as completely as the
+curls of the mane opposite. Of these, again, you cannot change or
+displace one without mischief; they are almost as even in reticulation as
+a piece of basket-work; but each has a different form and a due relation
+to the rest, and if you set to work to draw that mane rightly, you will
+find that, whatever time you give to it, you can't get the tresses quite
+into their places, and that every tress out of its place does an injury.
+If you want to test your powers of accurate drawing, you may make that
+lion's mane your pons asinorum, I have never yet met with a student who
+didn't make an ass in a lion's skin of himself when he tried it.
+
+171. Granted, however, that these tresses may be finely placed, still
+they are not like a lion's mane. So we come back to the question,--if
+the face is to be like a man's face, why is not the lion's mane to be
+like a lion's mane? Well, because it can't be like a lion's mane without
+too much trouble,--and inconvenience after that, and poor success, after
+all. Too much trouble, in cutting the die into fine fringes and jags;
+inconvenience after that,--because, though you can easily stamp cheeks
+and foreheads smooth at a blow, you can't stamp projecting tresses fine
+at a blow, whatever pains you take with your die.
+
+So your Greek uses his common sense, wastes no time, uses no skill, and
+says to you, "Here is beautifully set tresses, which I have carefully
+designed and easily stamped. Enjoy them, and if you cannot understand
+that they mean lion's mane, heaven mend your wits."
+
+172. See, then, you have in this work well-founded knowledge, simple and
+right aims, thorough mastery of handicraft, splendid invention in
+arrangement, unerring common sense in treatment,--merits, these, I think,
+exemplary enough to justify our tormenting you a little with Greek art.
+But it has one merit more than these, the greatest of all. It always
+means something worth saying. Not merely worth saying for that time
+only, but for all time. What do you think this helmet of lion's hide is
+always given to Hercules for? You can't suppose it means only that he
+once killed a lion, and always carried its skin afterwards to show that
+he had, as Indian sportsmen sent home stuffed rugs, with claws at the
+corners, and a lump in the middle which one tumbles over every time one
+stirs the fire. What was this Nemean Lion, whose spoils were evermore to
+cover Hercules from the cold? Not merely a large specimen of Felis Leo,
+ranging the fields of Nemea, be sure of that. This Nemean cub was one of
+a bad litter. Born of Typhon and Echidna,--of the whirlwind and the
+snake,--Cerberus his brother, the Hydra of Lerna his sister,--it must
+have been difficult to get his hide off him. He had to be found in
+darkness, too, and dealt upon without weapons, by grip at the throat--
+arrows and club of no avail against him. What does all that mean?
+
+173. It means that the Nemean Lion is the first great adversary of life,
+whatever that may be--to Hercules, or to any of us, then or now. The
+first monster we have to strangle, or be destroyed by, fighting in the
+dark, and with none to help us, only Athena standing by to encourage with
+her smile. Every man's Nemean Lion lies in wait for him somewhere. The
+slothful man says, There is a lion in the path. He says well. The quiet
+unslothful man says the same, and knows it too. But they differ in their
+further reading of the text. The slothful man says, I shall be slain,
+and the unslothful, IT shall be. It is the first ugly and strong enemy
+that rises against us, all future victory depending on victory over that.
+Kill it; and through all the rest of your life, what was once dreadful is
+your armor, and you are clothed with that conquest for every other, and
+helmed with its crest of fortitude for evermore.
+
+Alas, we have most of us to walk bare-headed; but that is the meaning of
+the story of Nemea,--worth laying to heart and thinking of sometimes,
+when you see a dish garnished with parsley, which was the crown at the
+Nemean games.
+
+174. How far, then, have we got in our list of the merits of Greek art
+now?
+
+ Sound knowledge.
+ Simple aims.
+ Mastered craft.
+ Vivid invention.
+ Strong common sense.
+ And eternally true and wise meaning.
+
+Are these not enough? Here is one more, then, which will find favor, I
+should think, with the British Lion. Greek art is never frightened at
+anything; it is always cool.
+
+175. It differs essentially from all other art, past or present, in this
+incapability of being frightened. Half the power and imagination of
+every other school depend on a certain feverish terror mingling with
+their sense of beauty,--the feeling that a child has in a dark room, or
+a sick person in seeing ugly dreams. But the Greeks never have ugly
+dreams. They cannot draw anything ugly when they try. Sometimes they
+put themselves to their wits'-end to draw an ugly thing,--the Medusa's
+head, for instance,--but they can't do it, not they, because nothing
+frightens them. They widen the mouth, and grind the teeth, and puff the
+cheeks, and set the eyes a goggling; and the thing is only ridiculous
+after all, not the least dreadful, for there is no dread in their hearts.
+Pensiveness; amazement; often deepest grief and desolateness. All these;
+but terror never. Everlasting calm in the presence of all fate; and joy
+such as they could win, not indeed in a perfect beauty, but in beauty at
+perfect rest! A kind of art this, surely, to be looked at, and thought
+upon sometimes with profit, even in these latter days.
+
+176. To be looked at sometimes. Not continually, and never as a model
+for imitation. For you are not Greeks; but, for better or worse, English
+creatures; and cannot do, even if it were a thousand times better worth
+doing, anything well, except what your English hearts shall prompt, and
+your English skies teach you. For all good art is the natural utterance
+of its own people in its own day.
+
+But also, your own art is a better and brighter one than ever this Greek
+art was. Many motives, powers, and insights have been added to those
+elder ones. The very corruptions into which we have fallen are signs of
+a subtle life, higher than theirs was, and therefore more fearful in its
+faults and death. Christianity has neither superceded, nor, by itself,
+excelled heathenism; but it has added its own good, won also by many a
+Nemean contest in dark valleys, to all that was good and noble in
+heathenism; and our present thoughts and work, when they are right, are
+nobler than the heathen's. And we are not reverent enough to them,
+because we possess too much of them. That sketch of four cherub heads
+from and English girl, by Sir Joshua Reynolds, at Kensington, is an
+incomparably finer thing than ever the Greeks did. Ineffably tender in
+the touch, yet Herculean in power; innocent, yet exalted in feeling; pure
+in color as a pearl; reserved and decisive in design, as this Lion crest,
+--if it alone existed of such,--if it were a picture by Zeuxis, the only
+one left in the world, and you build a shrine for it, and were allowed to
+see it only seven days in a year, it alone would teach you all of art
+that you ever needed to know. But you do not learn from this or any
+other such work, because you have not reverence enough for them, and are
+trying to learn from all at once, and from a hundred other masters
+besides.
+
+177. Here, then, is the practical advice which I would venture to deduce
+from what I have tried to show you. Use Greek art as a first, not a
+final, teacher. Learn to draw carefully from Greek work; above all, to
+place forms correctly, and to use light and shade tenderly. Never allow
+yourselves black shadows. It is easy to make things look round and
+projecting; but the things to exercise yourselves in are the placing of
+the masses, and the modelling of the lights. It is an admirable exercise
+to take a pale wash of color for all the shadows, never reinforcing it
+everywhere, but drawing the statue as if it were in far distance, making
+all the darks one flat pale tint. Then model from those into the lights,
+rounding as well as you can, on those subtle conditions. In your chalk
+drawings, separate the lights from the darks at once all over; then
+reinforce the darks slightly where absolutely necessary, and put your
+whole strength on the lights and their limits. Then, when you have
+learned to draw thoroughly, take one master for your painting, as you
+would have done necessarily in old times by being put into his school
+(were I to choose for you, it should be among six men only--Titian,
+Correggio, Paul Veronese, Velasquez, Reynolds, or Holbein). If you are a
+landscapist, Turner must be your only guide (for no other great landscape
+painter has yet lived); and having chosen, do your best to understand
+your own chosen master, and obey him, and no one else, till you have
+strength to deal with the nature itself round you, and then, be your own
+master, and see with your own eyes. If you have got masterhood or sight
+in you, that is the way to make the most of them; and if you have
+neither, you will at least be sound in your work, prevented from immodest
+and useless effort, and protected from vulgar and fantastic error.
+
+And so I wish you all, good speed, and the favor of Hercules and of the
+Muses; and to those who shall best deserve them, the crown of Parsley
+first and then of the Laurel.
+
+
+
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