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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50235 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50235)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Rousseau and Romanticism, by Irving Babbitt
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Rousseau and Romanticism
-
-
-Author: Irving Babbitt
-
-
-
-Release Date: October 16, 2015 [eBook #50235]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROUSSEAU AND ROMANTICISM***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
-
-
-
-ROUSSEAU AND ROMANTICISM
-
-by
-
-IRVING BABBITT
-
-Professor of French Literature in Harvard University
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Boston and New York
-Houghton Mifflin Company
-
-The Riverside Press Cambridge
-
-
-
-
- _L’imagination dispose de tout._
-
- PASCAL
-
- _Le bon sens est le maître de la vie humaine._
-
- BOSSUET
-
- _L’homme est un être immense, en quelque sorte, qui peut
- exister partiellement, mais dont l’existence est d’autant plus
- délicieuse qu’elle est plus entière et plus pleine._
-
- JOUBERT
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- INTRODUCTION ix
-
- I. THE TERMS CLASSIC AND ROMANTIC 1
-
- II. ROMANTIC GENIUS 32
-
- III. ROMANTIC IMAGINATION 70
-
- IV. ROMANTIC MORALITY: THE IDEAL 114
-
- V. ROMANTIC MORALITY: THE REAL 187
-
- VI. ROMANTIC LOVE 220
-
- VII. ROMANTIC IRONY 240
-
- VIII. ROMANTICISM AND NATURE 268
-
- IX. ROMANTIC MELANCHOLY 306
-
- X. THE PRESENT OUTLOOK 353
-
- APPENDIX--CHINESE PRIMITIVISM 395
-
- BIBLIOGRAPHY 399
-
- INDEX 421
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-Many readers will no doubt be tempted to exclaim on seeing my title:
-“Rousseau and no end!” The outpour of books on Rousseau had indeed in
-the period immediately preceding the war become somewhat portentous.[1]
-This preoccupation with Rousseau is after all easy to explain. It is
-his somewhat formidable privilege to represent more fully than any
-other one person a great international movement. To attack Rousseau or
-to defend him is most often only a way of attacking or defending this
-movement.
-
-It is from this point of view at all events that the present work is
-conceived. I have not undertaken a systematic study of Rousseau’s life
-and doctrines. The appearance of his name in my title is justified,
-if at all, simply because he comes at a fairly early stage in the
-international movement the rise and growth of which I am tracing, and
-has on the whole supplied me with the most significant illustrations of
-it. I have already put forth certain views regarding this movement in
-three previous volumes.[2] Though each one of these volumes attempts to
-do justice to a particular topic, it is at the same time intended to be
-a link in a continuous argument. I hope that I may be allowed to speak
-here with some frankness of the main trend of this argument both on its
-negative and on its positive, or constructive, side.
-
-Perhaps the best key to both sides of my argument is found in the
-lines of Emerson I have taken as epigraph for “Literature and the
-American College”:
-
- There are two laws discrete
- Not reconciled,--
- Law for man, and law for thing;
- The last builds town and fleet,
- But it runs wild,
- And doth the man unking.
-
-On its negative side my argument is directed against this undue
-emphasis on the “law for thing,” against the attempt to erect on
-naturalistic foundations a complete philosophy of life. I define two
-main forms of naturalism--on the one hand, utilitarian and scientific
-and, on the other, emotional naturalism. The type of romanticism I am
-studying is inseparably bound up with emotional naturalism.
-
-This type of romanticism encouraged by the naturalistic movement is
-only one of three main types I distinguish and I am dealing for the
-most part with only one aspect of it. But even when thus circumscribed
-the subject can scarcely be said to lack importance; for if I am right
-in my conviction as to the unsoundness of a Rousseauistic philosophy of
-life, it follows that the total tendency of the Occident at present is
-away from rather than towards civilization.
-
-On the positive side, my argument aims to reassert the “law for man,”
-and its special discipline against the various forms of naturalistic
-excess. At the very mention of the word discipline I shall be set down
-in certain quarters as reactionary. But does it necessarily follow
-from a plea for the human law that one is a reactionary or in general
-a traditionalist? An American writer of distinction was once heard to
-remark that he saw in the world to-day but two classes of persons,--the
-mossbacks and the mountebanks, and that for his part he preferred to
-be a mossback. One should think twice before thus consenting to seem a
-mere relic of the past. The ineffable smartness of our young radicals
-is due to the conviction that, whatever else they may be, they are the
-very pink of modernity. Before sharing their conviction it might be
-well to do a little preliminary defining of such terms as modern and
-the modern spirit. It may then turn out that the true difficulty with
-our young radicals is not that they are too modern but that they are
-not modern enough. For, though the word modern is often and no doubt
-inevitably used to describe the more recent or the most recent thing,
-this is not its sole use. It is not in this sense alone that the word
-is used by writers like Goethe and Sainte-Beuve and Renan and Arnold.
-What all these writers mean by the modern spirit is the positive and
-critical spirit, the spirit that refuses to take things on authority.
-This is what Renan means, for example, when he calls Petrarch the
-“founder of the modern spirit in literature,” or Arnold when he
-explains why the Greeks of the great period seem more modern to us than
-the men of the Middle Ages.[3]
-
-Now what I have myself tried to do is to be thoroughly modern in this
-sense. I hold that one should not only welcome the efforts of the
-man of science at his best to put the natural law on a positive and
-critical basis, but that one should strive to emulate him in one’s
-dealings with the human law; and so become a complete positivist. My
-main objection to the movement I am studying is that it has failed to
-produce complete positivists. Instead of facing honestly the emergency
-created by its break with the past the leaders of this movement have
-inclined to deny the duality of human nature, and then sought to
-dissimulate this mutilation of man under a mass of intellectual and
-emotional sophistry. The proper procedure in refuting these incomplete
-positivists is not to appeal to some dogma or outer authority but
-rather to turn against them their own principles. Thus Diderot, a
-notable example of the incomplete positivist and a chief source of
-naturalistic tendency, says that “everything is experimental in man.”
-Now the word experimental has somewhat narrowed in meaning since the
-time of Diderot. If one takes the saying to mean that everything in man
-is a matter of experience one should accept it unreservedly and then
-plant oneself firmly on the facts of experience that Diderot and other
-incomplete positivists have refused to recognize.
-
-The man who plants himself, not on outer authority but on experience,
-is an individualist. To be modern in the sense I have defined is not
-only to be positive and critical, but also--and this from the time of
-Petrarch--to be individualistic. The establishment of a sound type
-of individualism is indeed the specifically modern problem. It is
-right here that the failure of the incomplete positivist, the man who
-is positive only according to the natural law, is most conspicuous.
-What prevails in the region of the natural law is endless change and
-relativity; therefore the naturalistic positivist attacks all the
-traditional creeds and dogmas for the very reason that they aspire to
-fixity. Now all the ethical values of civilization have been associated
-with these fixed beliefs; and so it has come to pass that with their
-undermining by naturalism the ethical values themselves are in danger
-of being swept away in the everlasting flux. Because the individual
-who views life positively must give up unvarying creeds and dogmas
-“anterior, exterior, and superior” to himself, it has been assumed
-that he must also give up standards. For standards imply an element of
-oneness somewhere, with reference to which it is possible to measure
-the mere manifoldness and change. The naturalistic individualist,
-however, refuses to recognize any such element of oneness. His own
-private and personal self is to be the measure of all things and this
-measure itself, he adds, is constantly changing. But to stop at this
-stage is to be satisfied with the most dangerous of half-truths.
-Thus Bergson’s assertion that “life is a perpetual gushing forth of
-novelties” is in itself only a dangerous half-truth of this kind. The
-constant element in life is, no less than the element of novelty and
-change, a matter of observation and experience. As the French have it,
-the more life changes the more it is the same thing.
-
-If, then, one is to be a sound individualist, an individualist with
-human standards--and in an age like this that has cut loose from its
-traditional moorings, the very survival of civilization would seem to
-hinge on its power to produce such a type of individualist--one must
-grapple with what Plato terms the problem of the One and the Many.
-My own solution of this problem, it may be well to point out, is not
-purely Platonic. Because one can perceive immediately an element
-of unity in things, it does not follow that one is justified in
-establishing a world of essences or entities or “ideas” above the flux.
-To do this is to fall away from a positive and critical into a more
-or less speculative attitude; it is to risk setting up a metaphysic
-of the One. Those who put exclusive emphasis on the element of change
-in things are in no less obvious danger of falling away from the
-positive and critical attitude into a metaphysic of the Many.[4] This
-for example is the error one finds in the contemporary thinkers who
-seem to have the cry, thinkers like James and Bergson and Dewey and
-Croce. They are very far from satisfying the requirements of a complete
-positivism; they are seeking rather to build up their own intoxication
-with the element of change into a complete view of life, and so are
-turning their backs on one whole side of experience in a way that often
-reminds one of the ancient Greek sophists. The history of philosophy
-since the Greeks is to a great extent the history of the clashes of the
-metaphysicians of the One and the metaphysicians of the Many. In the
-eyes of the complete positivist this history therefore reduces itself
-largely to a monstrous logomachy.
-
-Life does not give here an element of oneness and there an element of
-change. It gives a _oneness that is always changing_. The oneness and
-the change are inseparable. Now if what is stable and permanent is felt
-as real, the side of life that is always slipping over into something
-else or vanishing away entirely is, as every student of psychology
-knows, associated rather with the feeling of illusion. If a man
-attends solely to this side of life he will finally come, like Leconte
-de Lisle, to look upon it as a “torrent of mobile chimeras,” as an
-“endless whirl of vain appearances.” To admit that the oneness of life
-and the change are inseparable is therefore to admit that such reality
-as man can know positively is inextricably mixed up with illusion.
-Moreover man does not observe the oneness that is always changing from
-the outside; he is a part of the process, he is himself a oneness that
-is always changing. Though imperceptible at any particular moment, the
-continuous change that is going on leads to differences--those, let us
-say, between a human individual at the age of six weeks and the same
-individual at the age of seventy--which are sufficiently striking: and
-finally this human oneness that is always changing seems to vanish
-away entirely. From all this it follows that an enormous element
-of illusion--and this is a truth the East has always accepted more
-readily than the West--enters into the idea of personality itself. If
-the critical spirit is once allowed to have its way, it will not rest
-content until it has dissolved life into a mist of illusion. Perhaps
-the most positive and critical account of man in modern literature is
-that of Shakespeare:
-
- We are such stuff
- As dreams are made on, and our little life
- Is rounded with a sleep.
-
-But, though strictly considered, life is but a web of illusion and a
-dream within a dream, it is a dream that needs to be managed with the
-utmost discretion, if it is not to turn into a nightmare. In other
-words, however much life may mock the metaphysician, the problem of
-conduct remains. There is always the unity at the heart of the change;
-it is possible, however, to get at this real and abiding element and
-so at the standards with reference to which the dream of life may be
-rightly managed only through a veil of illusion. The problem of the
-One and the Many, the ultimate problem of thought, can therefore be
-solved only by a right use of illusion. In close relation to illusion
-and the questions that arise in connection with it is all that we
-have come to sum up in the word imagination. The use of this word, at
-least in anything like its present extension, is, one should note,
-comparatively recent. Whole nations and periods of the past can
-scarcely be said to have had any word corresponding to imagination in
-this extended sense. Yet the thinkers of the past have treated, at
-times profoundly, under the head of fiction or illusion the questions
-that we should treat under the head of imagination.[5] In the “Masters
-of Modern French Criticism” I was above all preoccupied with the
-problem of the One and the Many and the failure of the nineteenth
-century to deal with it adequately. My effort in this present work is
-to show that this failure can be retrieved only by a deeper insight
-into the imagination and its all-important rôle in both literature
-and life. Man is cut off from immediate contact with anything abiding
-and therefore worthy to be called real, and condemned to live in an
-element of fiction or illusion, but he may, I have tried to show, lay
-hold with the aid of the imagination on the element of oneness that
-is inextricably blended with the manifoldness and change and to just
-that extent may build up a sound model for imitation. One tends to
-be an individualist with true standards, to put the matter somewhat
-differently, only in so far as one understands the relation between
-appearance and reality--what the philosophers call the epistemological
-problem. This problem, though it cannot be solved abstractly and
-metaphysically, can be solved practically and in terms of actual
-conduct. Inasmuch as modern philosophy has failed to work out any such
-solution, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that modern philosophy is
-bankrupt, not merely from Kant, but from Descartes.
-
-The supreme maxim of the ethical positivist is: By their fruits shall
-ye know them. If I object to a romantic philosophy it is because I do
-not like its fruits. I infer from its fruits that this philosophy has
-made a wrong use of illusion. “All those who took the romantic promises
-at their face value,” says Bourget, “rolled in abysses of despair and
-ennui.”[6] If any one still holds, as many of the older romanticists
-held, that it is a distinguished thing to roll in abysses of despair
-and ennui, he should read me no further. He will have no sympathy with
-my point of view. If any one, on the other hand, accepts my criterion
-but denies that Rousseauistic living has such fruits, it has been my
-aim so to accumulate evidence that he will be confronted with the task
-of refuting not a set of theories but a body of facts. My whole method,
-let me repeat, is experimental, or it might be less ambiguous to say if
-the word were a fortunate one, experiential. The illustrations I have
-given of any particular aspect of the movement are usually only a small
-fraction of those I have collected--themselves no doubt only a fraction
-of the illustrations that might be collected from printed sources. M.
-Maigron’s investigation[7] into the fruits of romantic living suggests
-the large additions that might be made to these printed sources from
-manuscript material.
-
-My method indeed is open in one respect to grave misunderstanding.
-From the fact that I am constantly citing passages from this or that
-author and condemning the tendency for which these passages stand,
-the reader will perhaps be led to infer a total condemnation of the
-authors so quoted. But the inference may be very incorrect. I am
-not trying to give rounded estimates of individuals--delightful and
-legitimate as that type of criticism is--but to trace main currents as
-a part of my search for a set of principles to oppose to naturalism.
-I call attention for example to the Rousseauistic and primitivistic
-elements in Wordsworth but do not assert that this is the whole
-truth about Wordsworth. One’s views as to the philosophical value
-of Rousseauism must, however, weigh heavily in a total judgment of
-Wordsworth. Criticism is such a difficult art because one must not
-only have principles but must apply them flexibly and intuitively. No
-one would accuse criticism at present of lacking flexibility. It has
-grown so flexible in fact as to become invertebrate. One of my reasons
-for practicing the present type of criticism, is the conviction that
-because of a lack of principles the type of criticism that aims at
-rounded estimates of individuals is rapidly ceasing to have any meaning.
-
-I should add that if I had attempted rounded estimates they would often
-have been more favorable than might be gathered from my comments here
-and elsewhere on the romantic leaders. One is justified in leaning
-towards severity in the laying down of principles, but should nearly
-always incline to indulgence in the application of them. In a sense one
-may say with Goethe that the excellencies are of the individual, the
-defects of the age. It is especially needful to recall distinctions
-of this kind in the case of Rousseau himself and my treatment of him.
-M. Lanson has dwelt on the strange duality of Rousseau’s nature.
-“The writer,” he says, “is a poor dreamy creature who approaches
-action only with alarm and with every manner of precaution, and who
-understands the applications of his boldest doctrines in a way to
-reassure conservatives and satisfy opportunists. But the work for its
-part detaches itself from the author, lives its independent life,
-and, heavily charged with revolutionary explosives which neutralize
-the moderate and conciliatory elements Rousseau has put into it for
-his own satisfaction, it exasperates and inspires revolt and fires
-enthusiasms and irritates hatreds; it is the mother of violence, the
-source of all that is uncompromising, it launches the simple souls
-who give themselves up to its strange virtue upon the desperate quest
-of the absolute, an absolute to be realized now by anarchy and now by
-social despotism.”[8] I am inclined to discover in the Rousseau who,
-according to M. Lanson, is merely timorous, a great deal of shrewdness
-and at times something even better than shrewdness. The question is
-not perhaps very important, for M. Lanson is surely right in affirming
-that the Rousseau who has moved the world--and that for reasons I shall
-try to make plain--is Rousseau the extremist and foe of compromise;
-and so it is to this Rousseau that as a student of main tendencies I
-devote almost exclusive attention. I am not, however, seeking to make
-a scapegoat even of the radical and revolutionary Rousseau. One of
-my chief objections, indeed, to Rousseauism, as will appear in the
-following pages, is that it encourages the making of scapegoats.
-
-If I am opposed to Rousseauism because of its fruits in experience, I
-try to put what I have to offer as a substitute on the same positive
-basis. Now experience is of many degrees: first of all one’s purely
-personal experience, an infinitesimal fragment; and then the experience
-of one’s immediate circle, of one’s time and country, of the near past
-and so on in widening circles. The past which as dogma the ethical
-positivist rejects, as experience he not only admits but welcomes. He
-can no more dispense with it indeed than the naturalistic positivist
-can dispense with his laboratory. He insists moreover on including
-the remoter past in his survey. Perhaps the most pernicious of all
-the conceits fostered by the type of progress we owe to science is
-the conceit that we have outgrown this older experience. One should
-endeavor, as Goethe says, to oppose to the aberrations of the hour, the
-masses of universal history. There are special reasons just now why
-this background to which one appeals should not be merely Occidental.
-An increasing material contact between the Occident and the Far East
-is certain. We should be enlightened by this time as to the perils
-of material contact between men and bodies of men who have no deeper
-understanding. Quite apart from this consideration the experience of
-the Far East completes and confirms in a most interesting way that of
-the Occident. We can scarcely afford to neglect it if we hope to work
-out a truly ecumenical wisdom to oppose to the sinister one-sidedness
-of our current naturalism. Now the ethical experience of the Far East
-may be summed up for practical purposes in the teachings and influence
-of two men, Confucius and Buddha.[9] To know the Buddhistic and
-Confucian teachings in their true spirit is to know what is best and
-most representative in the ethical experience of about half the human
-race for over seventy generations.
-
-A study of Buddha and Confucius suggests, as does a study of the great
-teachers of the Occident, that under its bewildering surface variety
-human experience falls after all into a few main categories. I myself
-am fond of distinguishing three levels on which a man may experience
-life--the naturalistic, the humanistic, and the religious. Tested by
-its fruits Buddhism at its best confirms Christianity. Submitted to the
-same test Confucianism falls in with the teaching of Aristotle and in
-general with that of all those who from the Greeks down have proclaimed
-decorum and the law of measure. This is so obviously true that
-Confucius has been called the Aristotle of the East. Not only has the
-Far East had in Buddhism a great religious movement and in Confucianism
-a great humanistic movement, it has also had in early Taoism[10] a
-movement that in its attempts to work out naturalistic equivalents of
-humanistic or religious insight, offers almost startling analogies to
-the movement I am here studying.
-
-Thus both East and West have not only had great religious and
-humanistic disciplines which when tested by their fruits confirm one
-another, bearing witness to the element of oneness, the constant
-element in human experience, but these disciplines have at times
-been conceived in a very positive spirit. Confucius indeed, though a
-moral realist, can scarcely be called a positivist; he aimed rather
-to attach men to the past by links of steel. He reminds us in this as
-in some other ways of the last of the great Tories in the Occident,
-Dr. Johnson. Buddha on the other hand was an individualist. He wished
-men to rest their belief neither on his authority[11] nor on that
-of tradition.[12] No one has ever made a more serious effort to put
-religion on a positive and critical basis. It is only proper that I
-acknowledge my indebtedness to the great Hindu positivist: my treatment
-of the problem of the One and the Many, for example, is nearer to
-Buddha than to Plato. Yet even if the general thesis be granted that it
-is desirable to put the “law for man” on a positive and critical basis,
-the question remains whether the more crying need just now is for
-positive and critical humanism or for positive and critical religion.
-I have discussed this delicate and difficult question more fully in my
-last chapter, but may give at least one reason here for inclining to
-the humanistic solution. I have been struck in my study of the past
-by the endless self-deception to which man is subject when he tries
-to pass too abruptly from the naturalistic to the religious level.
-The world, it is hard to avoid concluding, would have been a better
-place if more persons had made sure they were human before setting
-out to be superhuman; and this consideration would seem to apply with
-special force to a generation like the present that is wallowing in
-the trough of naturalism. After all to be a good humanist is merely to
-be moderate and sensible and decent. It is much easier for a man to
-deceive himself and others regarding his supernatural lights than it is
-regarding the degree to which he is moderate and sensible and decent.
-
-The past is not without examples of a positive and critical humanism. I
-have already mentioned Aristotle. If by his emphasis on the mediatory
-virtues he reminds one of Confucius, by his positive method and
-intensely analytical temper he reminds one rather of Buddha. When
-Aristotle rises to the religious level and discourses of the “life of
-vision” he is very Buddhistic. When Buddha for his part turns from the
-religious life to the duties of the layman he is purely Aristotelian.
-Aristotle also deals positively with the natural law. He is indeed a
-complete positivist, and not, like the man of the nineteenth century,
-positive according to the natural law alone. The Aristotle that
-should specially concern us, however, is the positive and critical
-humanist--the Aristotle, let us say, of the “Ethics” and “Politics” and
-“Poetics.” Just as I have called the point of view of the scientific
-and utilitarian naturalist Baconian,[13] and that of the emotional
-naturalist Rousseauistic, so I would term the point of view that I
-am myself seeking to develop Aristotelian. Aristotle has laid down
-once for all the principle that should guide the ethical positivist.
-“Truth,” he says, “in matters of moral action is judged from facts and
-from actual life. … So what we should do is to examine the preceding
-statements [of Solon and other wise men] by referring them to facts
-and to actual life, and when they harmonize with facts we may accept
-them, when they are at variance with them conceive of them as mere
-theories.”[14]
-
-It is in this sense alone that I aspire to be called an Aristotelian;
-for one risks certain misunderstandings in using the name of
-Aristotle.[15] The authority of this great positivist has been invoked
-innumerable times throughout the ages as a substitute for direct
-observation. Aristotle was not only the prop and mainstay of dogma
-for centuries during the Middle Ages, but dogmatic Aristotelianism
-survived to no small extent, especially in literature, throughout the
-neo-classical period. It was no doubt natural enough that the champions
-of the modern spirit should have rejected Aristotle along with the
-traditional order of which he had been made a support. Yet if they had
-been more modern they might have seen in him rather a chief precursor.
-They might have learned from him how to have standards and at the same
-time not be immured in dogma. As it is, those who call themselves
-modern have come to adopt a purely exploratory attitude towards life.
-“On desperate seas long wont to roam,” they have lost more and more
-the sense of what is normal and central in human experience. But to
-get away from what is normal and central is to get away from wisdom.
-My whole argument on the negative side, if I may venture on a final
-summing up, is that the naturalistic movement in the midst of which
-we are still living had from the start this taint of eccentricity. I
-have tried to show in detail the nature of the aberration. As for the
-results, they are being written large in disastrous events. On its
-constructive side, my argument, if it makes any appeal at all, will
-be to those for whom the symbols through which the past has received
-its wisdom have become incredible, and who, seeing at the same time
-that the break with the past that took place in the eighteenth century
-was on unsound lines, hold that the remedy for the partial positivism
-that is the source of this unsoundness, is a more complete positivism.
-Nothing is more perilous than to be only half critical. This is to
-risk being the wrong type of individualist--the individualist who has
-repudiated outer control without achieving inner control. “People mean
-nowadays by a philosopher,” says Rivarol, “not the man who learns the
-great art of mastering his passions or adding to his insight, but
-the man who has cast off prejudices without acquiring virtues.” That
-view of philosophy has not ceased to be popular. The whole modern
-experiment is threatened with breakdown simply because it has not been
-sufficiently modern. One should therefore not rest content until one
-has, with the aid of the secular experience of both the East and the
-West, worked out a point of view so modern that, compared with it, that
-of our young radicals will seem antediluvian.
-
-
-
-
-ROUSSEAU AND ROMANTICISM
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE TERMS CLASSIC AND ROMANTIC
-
-
-The words classic and romantic, we are often told, cannot be defined
-at all, and even if they could be defined, some would add, we should
-not be much profited. But this inability or unwillingness to define may
-itself turn out to be only one aspect of a movement that from Rousseau
-to Bergson has sought to discredit the analytical intellect--what
-Wordsworth calls “the false secondary power by which we multiply
-distinctions.” However, those who are with Socrates rather than with
-Rousseau or Wordsworth in this matter, will insist on the importance
-of definition, especially in a chaotic era like the present; for
-nothing is more characteristic of such an era than its irresponsible
-use of general terms. Now to measure up to the Socratic standard, a
-definition must not be abstract and metaphysical, but experimental;
-it must not, that is, reflect our opinion of what a word should mean,
-but what it actually has meant. Mathematicians may be free at times
-to frame their own definitions, but in the case of words like classic
-and romantic, that have been used innumerable times, and used not in
-one but in many countries, such a method is inadmissible. One must
-keep one’s eye on actual usage. One should indeed allow for a certain
-amount of freakishness in this usage. Beaumarchais, for example, makes
-classic synonymous with barbaric.[16] One may disregard an occasional
-aberration of this kind, but if one can find only confusion and
-inconsistency in all the main uses of words like classic and romantic,
-the only procedure for those who speak or write in order to be
-understood is to banish the words from their vocabulary.
-
-Now to define in a Socratic way two things are necessary: one must
-learn to see a common element in things that are apparently different
-and also to discriminate between things that are apparently similar.
-A Newton, to take the familiar instance of the former process, saw a
-common element in the fall of an apple and the motion of a planet;
-and one may perhaps without being a literary Newton discover a common
-element in all the main uses of the word romantic as well as in all
-the main uses of the word classic; though some of the things to which
-the word romantic in particular has been applied seem, it must be
-admitted, at least as far apart as the fall of an apple and the motion
-of a planet. The first step is to perceive the something that connects
-two or more of these things apparently so diverse, and then it may be
-found necessary to refer this unifying trait itself back to something
-still more general, and so on until we arrive, not indeed at anything
-absolute--the absolute will always elude us--but at what Goethe calls
-the original or underlying phenomenon (_Urphänomen_). A fruitful source
-of false definition is to take as primary in a more or less closely
-allied group of facts what is actually secondary--for example, to fix
-upon the return to the Middle Ages as the central fact in romanticism,
-whereas this return is only symptomatic; it is very far from being the
-original phenomenon. Confused and incomplete definitions of romanticism
-have indeed just that origin--they seek to put at the centre something
-that though romantic is not central but peripheral, and so the whole
-subject is thrown out of perspective.
-
-My plan then is to determine to the best of my ability, in connection
-with a brief historical survey, the common element in the various uses
-of the words classic and romantic; and then, having thus disposed of
-the similarities, to turn to the second part of the art of defining
-and deal, also historically, with the differences. For my subject is
-not romanticism in general, but only a particular type of romanticism,
-and this type of romanticism needs to be seen as a recoil, not from
-classicism in general, but from a particular type of classicism.
-
-
-I
-
-The word romantic when traced historically is found to go back to
-the old French _roman_ of which still elder forms are _romans_ and
-_romant_. These and similar formations derive ultimately from the
-mediæval Latin adverb _romanice_. _Roman_ and like words meant
-originally the various vernaculars derived from Latin, just as the
-French still speak of these vernaculars as _les langues romanes_;
-and then the word _roman_ came to be applied to tales written in the
-various vernaculars, especially in old French. Now with what features
-of these tales were people most struck? The reply to this question is
-found in a passage of a fifteenth-century Latin manuscript:[17] “From
-the reading of certain romantics, that is, books of poetry composed in
-French on military deeds which are for the most part fictitious.”[18]
-Here the term romantic is applied to books that we should still
-call romantic and for the very same reason, namely, because of the
-predominance in these books of the element of fiction over reality.
-
-In general a thing is romantic when, as Aristotle would say, it is
-wonderful rather than probable; in other words, when it violates the
-normal sequence of cause and effect in favor of adventure. Here is
-the fundamental contrast between the words classic and romantic which
-meets us at the outset and in some form or other persists in all the
-uses of the word down to the present day. A thing is romantic when it
-is strange, unexpected, intense, superlative, extreme, unique,[19]
-etc. A thing is classical, on the other hand, when it is not unique,
-but representative of a class. In this sense medical men may speak
-correctly of a classic case of typhoid fever, or a classic case of
-hysteria. One is even justified in speaking of a classic example of
-romanticism. By an easy extension of meaning a thing is classical when
-it belongs to a high class or to the best class.
-
-The type of romanticism referred to in the fifteenth-century manuscript
-was, it will be observed, the spontaneous product of the popular
-imagination of the Middle Ages. We may go further and say that the
-uncultivated human imagination in all times and places is romantic in
-the same way. It hungers for the thrilling and the marvellous and is,
-in short, incurably melodramatic. All students of the past know how,
-when the popular imagination is left free to work on actual historical
-characters and events, it quickly introduces into these characters
-and events the themes of universal folk-lore, and makes a ruthless
-sacrifice of reality to the love of melodramatic surprise. For example,
-the original nucleus of historical fact has almost disappeared in the
-lurid melodramatic tale “Les quatre fils Aymon,” which has continued,
-as presented in the “Bibliothèque Bleue,” to appeal to the French
-peasant down to our own times. Those who look with alarm on recent
-attacks upon romanticism should therefore be comforted. All children,
-nearly all women and the vast majority of men always have been, are
-and probably always will be romantic. This is true even of a classical
-period like the second half of the seventeenth century in France.
-Boileau is supposed to have killed the vogue of the interminable
-romances of the early seventeenth century which themselves continue
-the spirit of the mediæval romances. But recent investigations have
-shown that the vogue of these romances continued until well on into the
-eighteenth century. They influenced the imagination of Rousseau, the
-great modern romancer.
-
-But to return to the history of the word romantic. The first printed
-examples of the word in any modern tongue are, it would seem, to be
-found in English. The Oxford Dictionary cites the following from F.
-Greville’s “Life of Sidney” (written before 1628, published in 1652):
-“Doe not his Arcadian romantics live after him?”--meaning apparently
-ideas or features suggestive of romance. Of extreme interest is the
-use of the word in Evelyn’s “Diary” (3 August, 1654): “Were Sir Guy’s
-grot improved as it might be, it were capable of being made a most
-romantic and pleasant place.” The word is not only used in a favorable
-sense, but it is applied to nature; and it is this use of the word in
-connection with outer nature that French and German literatures are
-going to derive later from England. Among the early English uses of
-the word romantic may be noted: “There happened this extraordinary
-case--one of the most romantique that ever I heard in my life and could
-not have believed,”[20] etc. “Most other authors that I ever read
-either have wild romantic tales wherein they strain Love and Honor to
-that ridiculous height that it becomes burlesque,”[21] etc. The word
-becomes fairly common by the year 1700 and thousands of examples could
-be collected from English writers in the eighteenth century. Here are
-two early eighteenth-century instances:
-
- “The gentleman I am married to made love to me in rapture but
- it was the rapture of a Christian and a man of Honor, not a
- romantic hero or a whining coxcomb.”[22]
-
- Whether the charmer sinner it or saint it
- If folly grow romantick I must paint it.[23]
-
-The early French and German uses of the word romantic seem to derive
-from England. One important point is to be noted as to France. Before
-using the word _romantique_ the French used the word _romanesque_ in
-the sense of wild, unusual, adventurous--especially in matters of
-sentiment, and they have continued to employ _romanesque_ alongside
-_romantique_, which is now practically used only of the romantic
-school. A great deal of confusion is thus avoided into which we fall
-in English from having only the one word romantic, which must do duty
-for both _romantique_ and _romanesque_. An example of _romantique_
-is found in French as early as 1675;[24] but the word owed its vogue
-practically to the anglomania that set in about the middle of the
-eighteenth century. The first very influential French example of the
-word is appropriately found in Rousseau in the Fifth Promenade (1777):
-“The shores of the Lake of Bienne are more wild and romantic than those
-of the Lake of Geneva.” The word _romantique_ was fashionable in France
-especially as applied to scenery from about the year 1785, but without
-any thought as yet of applying it to a literary school.
-
-In Germany the word _romantisch_ as an equivalent of the French
-_romanesque_ and modern German _romanhaft_, appears at the end of
-the seventeenth century and plainly as a borrowing from the French.
-Heidigger, a Swiss, used it several times in his “Mythoscopia
-romantica,”[25] an attack on romances and the wild and vain imaginings
-they engender. According to Heidigger the only resource against
-romanticism in this sense is religion. In Germany as in France the
-association of romantic with natural scenery comes from England,
-especially from the imitations and translations of Thomson’s “Seasons.”
-
-In the second half of the eighteenth century the increasingly favorable
-use of words like Gothic and enthusiastic as well as the emergence of
-words like sentimental and picturesque are among the symptoms of a new
-movement, and the fortunes of the word romantic were more or less bound
-up with this movement. Still, apart from its application to natural
-scenery, the word is as yet far from having acquired a favorable
-connotation if we are to believe an essay by John Foster on the
-“Application of the Epithet Romantic” (1805). Foster’s point of view is
-not unlike that of Heidigger. Romantic, he says, had come to be used
-as a term of vague abuse, whereas it can be used rightly only of the
-ascendancy of imagination over judgment, and is therefore synonymous
-with such words as wild, visionary, extravagant. “A man possessing
-so strong a judgment and so subordinate a fancy as Dean Swift would
-hardly have been made romantic … if he had studied all the books in Don
-Quixote’s library.” It is not, Foster admits, a sign of high endowment
-for a youth to be too coldly judicial, too deaf to the blandishments of
-imaginative illusion. Yet in general a man should strive to bring his
-imagination under the control of sound reason. But how is it possible
-thus to prevail against the deceits of fancy? Right knowing, he asserts
-very un-Socratically, is not enough to ensure right doing. At this
-point Foster changes from the tone of a literary essay to that of a
-sermon, and, maintaining a thesis somewhat similar to that of Pascal in
-the seventeenth century and Heidigger in the eighteenth, he concludes
-that a man’s imagination will run away with his judgment or reason
-unless he have the aid of divine grace.
-
-
-II
-
-When Foster wrote his essay there was no question as yet in England
-of a romantic school. Before considering how the word came to be
-applied to a particular movement we need first to bring out more
-fully certain broad conflicts of tendency during the seventeenth and
-eighteenth centuries, conflicts that are not sufficiently revealed
-by the occasional uses during this period of the word romantic. In
-the contrast Foster established between judgment and imagination he
-is merely following a long series of neo-classical critics and this
-contrast not only seemed to him and these critics, but still seems
-to many, the essential contrast between classicism and romanticism.
-We shall be helped in understanding how judgment (or reason) and
-imagination came thus to be sharply contrasted if we consider briefly
-the changes in the meaning of the word wit during the neo-classical
-period, and also if we recollect that the contrast between judgment and
-imagination is closely related to the contrast the French are so fond
-of establishing between the general sense (_le sens commun_) and the
-private sense or sense of the individual (_le sens propre_).
-
-In the sixteenth century prime emphasis was put not upon common sense,
-but upon wit or conceit or ingenuity (in the sense of quickness of
-imagination). The typical Elizabethan strove to excel less by judgment
-than by invention, by “high-flying liberty of conceit”; like Falstaff
-he would have a brain “apprehensive, quick, forgetive, full of
-nimble, fiery, and delectable shapes.” Wit at this time, it should
-be remembered, was synonymous not only with imagination but with
-intellect (in opposition to will). The result of the worship of wit in
-this twofold sense was a sort of intellectual romanticism. Though its
-origins are no doubt mediæval, it differs from the ordinary romanticism
-of the Middle Ages to which I have already referred in being thus
-concerned with thought rather than with action. Towards the end of the
-Renaissance and in the early seventeenth century especially, people
-were ready to pursue the strange and surprising thought even at the
-risk of getting too far away from the workings of the normal mind.
-Hence the “points” and “conceits” that spread, as Lowell put it, like
-a “cutaneous eruption” over the face of Europe; hence the Gongorists,
-and Cultists, the Marinists and Euphuists, the _précieux_ and the
-“metaphysical” poets. And then came the inevitable swing away from all
-this fantasticality towards common sense. A demand arose for something
-that was less rare and “precious” and more representative.
-
-This struggle between the general sense and the sense of the individual
-stands out with special clearness in France. A model was gradually
-worked out by aid of the classics, especially the Latin classics, as
-to what man should be. Those who were in the main movement of the time
-elaborated a great convention, that is they _came together_ about
-certain things. They condemned in the name of their convention those
-who were too indulgent of their private sense, in other words, too
-eccentric in their imaginings. A Théophile, for example, fell into
-disesteem for refusing to restrain his imagination, for asserting the
-type of “spontaneity” that would have won him favor in any romantic
-period.[26]
-
-The swing away from intellectual romanticism can also be traced in
-the changes that took place in the meaning of the word wit in both
-France and England. One of the main tasks of the French critics of the
-seventeenth century and of English critics, largely under the lead of
-the French, was to distinguish between true and false wit. The work
-that would have been complimented a little earlier as “witty” and
-“conceited” is now censured as fantastic and far-fetched, as lacking in
-judicial control over the imagination, and therefore in general appeal.
-The movement away from the sense of the individual towards common sense
-goes on steadily from the time of Malherbe to that of Boileau. Balzac
-attacks Ronsard for his individualistic excess, especially for his
-audacity in inventing words without reference to usage. Balzac himself
-is attacked by Boileau for his affectation, for his straining to say
-things differently from other people. In so far his wit was not true
-but false. La Bruyère, in substantial accord with Boileau, defines
-false wit as wit which is lacking in good sense and judgment and “in
-which the imagination has too large a share.”[27]
-
-What the metaphysical poets in England understood by wit, according
-to Dr. Johnson, was the pursuit of their thoughts to their last
-ramifications, and in this pursuit of the singular and the novel they
-lost the “grandeur of generality.” This imaginative quest of rarity
-led to the same recoil as in France, to a demand for common sense and
-judgment. The opposite extreme from the metaphysical excess is reached
-when the element of invention is eliminated entirely from wit and it is
-reduced, as it is by Pope, to rendering happily the general sense--
-
- What oft was thought but ne’er so well expressed.
-
-Dr. Johnson says that the decisive change in the meaning of the word
-wit took place about the time of Cowley. Important evidences of this
-change and also of the new tendency to depreciate the imagination
-is also found in certain passages of Hobbes. Hobbes identifies the
-imagination with the memory of outer images and so looks on it as
-“decaying sense.”[28] “They who observe similitudes,” he remarks
-elsewhere, making a distinction that was to be developed by Locke and
-accepted by Addison, “in case they be such as are but rarely observed
-by others are said to have a good wit; by which, in this occasion, is
-meant a good fancy” (wit has here the older meaning). “But they who
-distinguish and observe differences,” he continues, “are said to have
-a good judgment. Fancy without the help of judgment is not worthy of
-commendation, whereas judgment is commended for itself without the help
-of fancy. Indeed without steadiness and direction to some end, a great
-fancy is one kind of madness.” “Judgment without fancy,” he concludes,
-“is wit” (this anticipates the extreme neo-classical use of the word
-wit), “but fancy without judgment, not.”
-
-Dryden betrays the influence of Hobbes when he says of the period of
-incubation of his “Rival Ladies”: “Fancy was yet in its first work,
-moving the sleeping images of things towards the light, there to be
-distinguished and either chosen or rejected by judgment.” Fancy or
-imagination (the words were still synonymous), as conceived by the
-English neo-classicists, often shows a strange vivacity for a faculty
-that is after all only “decaying sense.” “Fancy without judgment,”
-says Dryden, “is a hot-mouthed jade without a curb.” “Fancy,” writes
-Rymer in a similar vein, “leaps and frisks, and away she’s gone; whilst
-reason rattles the chain and follows after.” The following lines of
-Mulgrave are typical of the neo-classical notion of the relation
-between fancy and judgment:
-
- As all is dullness when the Fancy’s bad,
- So without Judgment, Fancy is but mad.
- Reason is that substantial, useful part
- Which gains the Head, while t’ other wins the Heart.[29]
-
-The opposition established by the neo-classicist in passages of this
-kind is too mechanical. Fancy and judgment do not seem to coöperate
-but to war with one another. In case of doubt the neo-classicist is
-always ready to sacrifice fancy to the “substantial, useful part,”
-and so he seems too negative and cool and prosaic in his reason, and
-this is because his reason is so largely a protest against a previous
-romantic excess. What had been considered genius in the time of the
-“metaphysicals” had too often turned out to be only oddity. With this
-warning before them men kept their eyes fixed very closely on the
-model of normal human nature that had been set up, and imitated it
-very literally and timorously. A man was haunted by the fear that he
-might be “monstrous,” and so, as Rymer put it, “satisfy nobody’s maggot
-but his own.” Correctness thus became a sort of tyranny. We suffer to
-the present day from this neo-classical failure to work out a sound
-conception of the imagination in its relation to good sense. Because
-the neo-classicist held the imagination lightly as compared with
-good sense the romantic rebels, were led to hold good sense lightly
-as compared with imagination. The romantic view in short is too much
-the neo-classical view turned upside down; and, as Sainte-Beuve says,
-nothing resembles a hollow so much as a swelling.
-
-
-III
-
-Because the classicism against which romanticism rebelled was
-inadequate it does not follow that every type of classicism suffers
-from a similar inadequacy. The great movement away from imaginative
-unrestraint towards regularity and good sense took place in the main
-under French auspices. In general the French have been the chief
-exponents of the classic spirit in modern times. They themselves feel
-this so strongly that a certain group in France has of late years
-inclined to use interchangeably the words classicist and nationalist.
-But this is a grave confusion, for if the classic spirit is anything
-at all it is in its essence not local and national, but universal
-and human. To be sure, any particular manifestation of classicism
-will of necessity contain elements that are less universal, elements
-that reflect merely a certain person or persons, or a certain age and
-country. This is a truth that we scarcely need to have preached to us;
-for with the growth of the historical method we have come to fix our
-attention almost exclusively on these local and relative elements. The
-complete critic will accept the historical method but be on his guard
-against its excess. He will see an element in man that is set above the
-local and the relative; he will learn to detect this abiding element
-through all the flux of circumstance; in Platonic language, he will
-perceive the One in the Many.
-
-Formerly, it must be admitted, critics were not historical enough.
-They took to be of the essence of classicism what was merely its local
-coloring, especially the coloring it received from the French of the
-seventeenth century. If we wish to distinguish between essence and
-accident in the classic spirit we must get behind the French of the
-seventeenth century, behind the Italians of the sixteenth century who
-laid the foundations of neo-classical theory, behind the Romans who
-were the immediate models of most neo-classicists, to the source of
-classicism in Greece. Even in Greece the classic spirit is very much
-implicated in the local and the relative, yet in the life of no other
-people perhaps does what is universal in man shine forth more clearly
-from what is only local and relative. We still need, therefore, to
-return to Greece, not merely for the best practice, but for the best
-theory of classicism; for this is still found in spite of all its
-obscurities and incompleteness in the Poetics of Aristotle. If we have
-recourse to this treatise, however, it must be on condition that we do
-not, like the critics of the Renaissance, deal with it in an abstract
-and dogmatic way (the form of the treatise it must be confessed gave
-them no slight encouragement), but in a spirit akin to Aristotle’s own
-as revealed in the total body of his writings--a spirit that is at its
-best positive and experimental.
-
-Aristotle not only deals positively and experimentally with the natural
-order and with man so far as he is a part of this order, but he deals
-in a similar fashion with a side of man that the modern positivist
-often overlooks. Like all the great Greeks Aristotle recognizes that
-man is the creature of two laws: he has an ordinary or natural self
-of impulse and desire and a human self that is known practically as a
-power of control over impulse and desire. If man is to become human he
-must not let impulse and desire run wild, but must oppose to everything
-excessive in his ordinary self, whether in thought or deed or emotion,
-the law of measure. This insistence on restraint and proportion is
-rightly taken to be of the essence not merely of the Greek spirit but
-of the classical spirit in general. The norm or standard that is to set
-bounds to the ordinary self is got at by different types of classicists
-in different ways and described variously: for example, as the human
-law, or the better self, or reason (a word to be discussed more fully
-later), or nature. Thus when Boileau says, “Let nature be your only
-study,” he does not mean outer nature, nor again the nature of this or
-that individual, but representative human nature. Having decided what
-is normal either for man or some particular class of men the classicist
-takes this normal “nature” for his model and proceeds to imitate it.
-Whatever accords with the model he has thus set up he pronounces
-natural or probable, whatever on the other hand departs too far from
-what he conceives to be the normal type or the normal sequence of cause
-and effect he holds to be “improbable” and unnatural or even, if it
-attains an extreme of abnormality, “monstrous.” Whatever in conduct
-or character is duly restrained and proportionate with reference to
-the model is said to observe decorum. Probability and decorum are
-identical in some of their aspects and closely related in all.[30]
-To recapitulate, a general nature, a core of normal experience, is
-affirmed by all classicists. From this central affirmation derives the
-doctrine of imitation, and from imitation in turn the doctrines of
-probability and decorum.
-
-But though all classicists are alike in insisting on nature, imitation,
-probability and decorum, they differ widely, as I have already
-intimated, in what they understand by these terms. Let us consider
-first what Aristotle and the Greeks understand by them. The first point
-to observe is that according to Aristotle one is to get his general
-nature not on authority or second hand, but is to disengage it directly
-for himself from the jumble of particulars that he has before his eyes.
-He is not, says Aristotle, to imitate things as they are, but as they
-ought to be. Thus conceived imitation is a creative act. Through all
-the welter of the actual one penetrates to the real and so succeeds
-without ceasing to be individual in suggesting the universal. Poetry
-that is imitative in this sense is, according to Aristotle, more
-“serious” and “philosophical” than history. History deals merely with
-what has happened, whereas poetry deals with what may happen according
-to probability or necessity. Poetry, that is, does not portray life
-literally but extricates the deeper or ideal truth from the flux of
-circumstance. One may add with Sydney that if poetry is thus superior
-to history in being more serious and philosophical it resembles history
-and is superior to philosophy in being concrete.
-
-The One that the great poet or artist perceives in the Many and that
-gives to his work its high seriousness is not a fixed absolute. In
-general the model that the highly serious man (ὁ σπουδαῖος) imitates
-and that keeps his ordinary self within the bounds of decorum is not
-to be taken as anything finite, as anything that can be formulated
-once for all. This point is important for on it hinges every right
-distinction not merely between the classic and the romantic, but
-between the classic and the pseudo-classic. Romanticism has claimed
-for itself a monopoly of imagination and infinitude, but on closer
-examination, as I hope to show later, this claim, at least so far as
-genuine classicism is concerned, will be found to be quite unjustified.
-For the present it is enough to say that true classicism does not
-rest on the observance of rules or the imitation of models but on an
-immediate insight into the universal. Aristotle is especially admirable
-in the account he gives of this insight and of the way it may manifest
-itself in art and literature. One may be rightly imitative, he says,
-and so have access to a superior truth and give others access to it
-only by being a master of illusion. Though the great poet “breathes
-immortal air,” though he sees behind the shows of sense a world of
-more abiding relationships, he can convey his vision not directly but
-only imaginatively. Aristotle, one should observe, does not establish
-any hard and fast opposition between judgment and imagination, an
-opposition that pervades not only the neo-classical movement but also
-the romantic revolt from it. He simply affirms a supersensuous order
-which one can perceive only with the help of fiction. The best art,
-says Goethe in the true spirit of Aristotle, gives us the “illusion
-of a higher reality.” This has the advantage of being experimental.
-It is merely a statement of what one feels in the presence of a great
-painting, let us say, or in reading a great poem.
-
-
-IV
-
-After this attempt to define briefly with the help of the Greeks the
-classical spirit in its essence we should be prepared to understand
-more clearly the way in which this spirit was modified in neo-classical
-times, especially in France. The first thing that strikes one about
-the classicism of this period is that it does not rest on immediate
-perception like that of the Greeks but on outer authority. The merely
-dogmatic and traditional classicist gave a somewhat un-Greek meaning
-to the doctrines of nature and imitation. Why imitate nature directly,
-said Scaliger, when we have in Virgil a second nature? Imitation thus
-came to mean the imitation of certain outer models and the following
-of rules based on these models. Now it is well that one who aims at
-excellence in any field should begin by a thorough assimilation of the
-achievements of his great predecessors in this field. Unfortunately
-the neo-classical theorist tended to impose a multitude of precepts
-that were based on what was external rather than on what was vital
-in the practice of his models. In so far the lesson of form that the
-great ancients can always teach any one who approaches them in the
-right spirit degenerated into formalism. This formalistic turn given
-to the doctrine of imitation was felt from the outset to be a menace
-to originality; to be incompatible, and everything hinges at last on
-this point, with the spontaneity of the imagination. There was an
-important reaction headed by men like Boileau, within the neo-classical
-movement itself, against the oppression of the intuitive side of human
-nature by mere dogma and authority, above all against the notion that
-“regularity” is in itself any guarantee of literary excellence. A
-school of rules was succeeded by a school of taste. Yet even to the
-end the neo-classicist was too prone to reject as unnatural or even
-monstrous everything that did not fit into one of the traditional
-pigeon-holes. One must grant, indeed, that much noble work was achieved
-under the neo-classical dispensation, work that shows a genuine insight
-into the universal, but it is none the less evident that the view of
-the imagination held during this period has a formalistic taint.
-
-This taint in neo-classicism is due not merely to its dogmatic and
-mechanical way of dealing with the doctrine of imitation but also to
-the fact that it had to reconcile classical with Christian dogma; and
-the two antiquities, classical and Christian, if interpreted vitally
-and in the spirit, were in many respects divergent and in some respects
-contradictory. The general outcome of the attempts at reconciliation
-made by the literary casuists of Italy and France was that Christianity
-should have a monopoly of truth and classicism a monopoly of fiction.
-For the true classicist, it will be remembered, the two things are
-inseparable--he gets at his truth through a veil of fiction. Many of
-the neo-classicists came to conceive of art as many romanticists were
-to conceive of it later as a sort of irresponsible game or play, but
-they were, it must be confessed, very inferior to the romanticists
-in the spontaneity of their fiction. They went for this fiction as
-for everything else to the models, and this meant in practice that
-they employed the pagan myths, not as imaginative symbols of a higher
-reality--it is still possible to employ them in that way--but merely in
-Boileau’s phrase as “traditional ornaments” (_ornements reçus_). The
-neo-classicist to be sure might so employ his “fiction” as to inculcate
-a moral; in that case he is only too likely to give us instead of
-the living symbol, dead allegory; instead of high seriousness, its
-caricature, didacticism. The traditional stock of fiction became at
-last so intolerably trite as to be rejected even by some of the late
-neo-classicists. “The rejection and contempt of fiction,” said Dr.
-Johnson (who indulged in it himself on occasion) “is rational and
-manly.” But to reject fiction in the larger sense is to miss the true
-driving power in human nature--the imagination. Before concluding,
-however, that Dr. Johnson had no notion of the rôle of the imagination
-one should read his attack on the theory of the three unities[31] which
-was later to be turned to account by the romanticists.
-
-Now the three unities may be defended on an entirely legitimate
-ground--on the ground namely that they make for concentration, a prime
-virtue in the drama; but the grounds on which they were actually
-imposed on the drama, especially in connection with the Quarrel of
-the Cid, illustrate the corruption of another main classical doctrine,
-that of probability or verisimilitude. In his dealings with probability
-as in his dealings with imitation, the neo-classical formalist did
-not allow sufficiently for the element of illusion. What he required
-from the drama in the name of probability was not the “illusion of a
-higher reality,” but strict logic or even literal deception. He was
-not capable of a poetic faith, not willing to suspend his disbelief
-on passing from the world of ordinary fact to the world of artistic
-creation. Goethe was thinking especially of the neo-classical French
-when he said: “As for the French, they will always be arrested by their
-reason. They do not recognize that the imagination has its own laws
-which are and always must be problematic for the reason.”
-
-It was also largely under French influence that the doctrine of
-decorum, which touches probability at many points, was turned aside
-from its true meaning. Decorum is in a way the peculiar doctrine of the
-classicist, is in Milton’s phrase “the grand masterpiece to observe.”
-The doctrines of the universal and the imitation of the universal go
-deeper indeed than decorum, so much deeper that they are shared by
-classicism with religion. The man who aspires to live religiously must
-no less than the humanist look to some model set above his ordinary
-self and imitate it. But though the classicist at his best meditates,
-he does not, like the seeker after religious perfection, see in
-meditation an end in itself but rather a support for the mediatory
-virtues, the virtues of the man who would live to the best advantage
-in this world rather than renounce it; and these virtues may be said
-to be summed up in decorum. For the best type of Greek humanist,
-a Sophocles let us say, decorum was a vital and immediate thing.
-But there enters into decorum even from the time of the Alexandrian
-Greeks, and still more into French neo-classical decorum, a marked
-element of artificiality. The all-roundness and fine symmetry, the
-poise and dignity that come from working within the bounds of the
-human law, were taken to be the privilege not of man in general but of
-a special social class. Take for instance verbal decorum: the French
-neo-classicists assumed that if the speech of poetry is to be noble and
-highly serious it must coincide with the speech of the aristocracy. As
-Nisard puts it, they confused nobility of language with the language of
-the nobility. Decorum was thus more or less merged with etiquette, so
-that the standards of the stage and of literature in general came to
-coincide, as Rousseau complains, with those of the drawing-room. More
-than anything else this narrowing of decorum marks the decline from the
-classic to the pseudo-classic, from form to formalism.
-
-While condemning pseudo-decorum one should remember that even a
-Greek would have seen something paradoxical in a poem like Goethe’s
-“Hermann und Dorothea” and its attempt to invest with epic grandeur the
-affairs of villagers and peasants. After all, dignity and elevation
-and especially the opportunity for important action, which is the
-point on which the classicist puts prime emphasis, are normally
-though not invariably associated with a high rather than with a mean
-social estate. In general one should insist that the decorum worked
-out under French auspices was far from being merely artificial. The
-French gentleman (_honnête homme_) of the seventeenth century often
-showed a moderation and freedom from over-emphasis, an exquisite tact
-and urbanity that did not fall too far short of his immediate model,
-Horace, and related him to the all-round man of the Greeks (καλὸς
-κἀγαθός). To be sure an ascetic Christian like Pascal sees in decorum
-a disguise of one’s ordinary self rather than a real curb upon it, and
-feels that the gap is not sufficiently wide between even the best type
-of the man of the world and the mere worldling. One needs, however, to
-be very austere to disdain the art of living that has been fostered
-by decorum from the Greeks down. Something of this art of living
-survives even in a Chesterfield, who falls far short of the best type
-of French gentleman and reminds one very remotely indeed of a Pericles.
-Chesterfield’s half-jesting definition of decorum as the art of
-combining the useful appearances of virtue with the solid satisfactions
-of vice points the way to its ultimate corruption. Talleyrand, who
-marks perhaps this last stage, was defined by Napoleon as “a silk
-stocking filled with mud.” In some of its late exemplars decorum had
-actually become, as Rousseau complains, the “mask of hypocrisy” and the
-“varnish of vice.”
-
-One should not however, like Rousseau and the romanticists, judge of
-decorum by what it degenerated into. Every doctrine of genuine worth is
-disciplinary and men in the mass do not desire discipline. “Most men,”
-says Aristotle, “would rather live in a disorderly than in a sober
-manner.” But most men do not admit any such preference--that would be
-crude and inartistic. They incline rather to substitute for the reality
-of discipline some art of going through the motions. Every great
-doctrine is thus in constant peril of passing over into some hollow
-semblance or even, it may be, into some mere caricature of itself. When
-one wishes therefore to determine the nature of decorum one should
-think of a Milton, let us say, and not of a Talleyrand or even of a
-Chesterfield.
-
-Milton imitated the models, like any other neo-classicist, but his
-imitation was not, in Joubert’s phrase, that of one book by another
-book, but of one soul by another soul. His decorum is therefore
-imaginative; and it is the privilege of the imagination to give
-the sense of spaciousness and infinitude. On the other hand, the
-unimaginative way in which many of the neo-classicists held their
-main tenets--nature, imitation, probability, decorum--narrowed unduly
-the scope of the human spirit and appeared to close the gates of
-the future. “Art and diligence have now done their best,” says Dr.
-Johnson of the versification of Pope, “and what shall be added will be
-the effort of tedious toil and needless curiosity.” Nothing is more
-perilous than thus to seem to confine man in some pinfold; there is
-something in him that refuses to acquiesce in any position as final;
-he is in Nietzsche’s phrase the being who must always surpass himself.
-The attempt to oppose external and mechanical barriers to the freedom
-of the spirit will create in the long run an atmosphere of stuffiness
-and smugness, and nothing is more intolerable than smugness. Men were
-guillotined in the French Revolution, as Bagehot suggests, simply
-because either they or their ancestors had been smug. Inert acceptance
-of tradition and routine will be met sooner or later by the cry of
-Faust: _Hinaus ins Freie!_
-
-Before considering the value of the method chosen by Rousseau and
-the romanticists for breaking up the “tiresome old heavens” and
-escaping from smugness and stuffiness, one should note that the lack
-of originality and genius which they lamented in the eighteenth
-century--especially in that part of it known as the Enlightenment--was
-not due entirely to pseudo-classic formalism. At least two other main
-currents entered into the Enlightenment: first the empirical and
-utilitarian current that goes back to Francis Bacon, and some would
-say to Roger Bacon; and secondly the rationalistic current that goes
-back to Descartes. English empiricism gained international vogue in
-the philosophy of Locke, and Locke denies any supersensuous element
-in human nature to which one may have access with the aid of the
-imagination or in any other way. Locke’s method of precise naturalistic
-observation is in itself legitimate; for man is plainly subject to
-the natural law. What is not truly empirical is to bring the whole
-of human nature under this law. One can do this only by piecing out
-precise observation and experiment with dogmatic rationalism. One side
-of Locke may therefore be properly associated with the father of modern
-rationalists, Descartes. The attempt of the rationalist to lock up
-life in some set of formulæ produces in the imaginative man a feeling
-of oppression. He gasps for light and air. The very tracing of cause
-and effect and in general the use of the analytical faculties--and
-this is to fly to the opposite extreme--came to be condemned by the
-romanticists as inimical to the imagination. Not only do they make
-endless attacks on Locke, but at times they assail even Newton for
-having mechanized life, though Newton’s comparison of himself to a
-child picking up pebbles on the seashore would seem to show that he had
-experienced “the feeling infinite.”
-
-The elaboration of science into a closed system with the aid of logic
-and pure mathematics is as a matter of fact to be associated with
-Descartes rather than with Newton. Neither Newton nor Descartes, one
-scarcely needs add, wished to subject man entirely to the natural law
-and the nexus of physical causes; they were not in short determinists.
-Yet the superficial rationalism of the Enlightenment was in the main
-of Cartesian origin. This Cartesian influence ramifies in so many
-directions and is related at so many points to the literary movement,
-and there has been so much confusion about this relationship, that we
-need to pause here to make a few distinctions.
-
-Perhaps what most strikes one in the philosophy of Descartes is its
-faith in logic and abstract reasoning and the closely allied processes
-of mathematical demonstration. Anything that is not susceptible of
-clear proof in this logical and almost mathematical sense is to
-be rejected. Now this Cartesian notion of clearness is fatal to a
-true classicism. The higher reality, the true classicist maintains,
-cannot be thus demonstrated; it can only be grasped, and then never
-completely, through a veil of imaginative illusion. Boileau is reported
-to have said that Descartes had cut the throat of poetry; and this
-charge is justified in so far as the Cartesian requires from poetry
-a merely logical clearness. This conception of clearness was also
-a menace to the classicism of the seventeenth century which rested
-in the final analysis not on logic but on tradition. This appeared
-very clearly in the early phases of the quarrel between ancients and
-moderns when literary Cartesians like Perrault and Fontenelle attacked
-classical dogma in the name of reason. In fact one may ask if any
-doctrine has ever appeared so fatal to every form of tradition--not
-merely literary but also religious and political--as Cartesianism.
-The rationalist of the eighteenth century was for dismissing as
-“prejudice” everything that could not give a clear account of itself
-in the Cartesian sense. This riot of abstract reasoning (_la raison
-raisonnante_) that prepared the way for the Revolution has been
-identified by Taine and others with the classic spirit. A more vicious
-confusion has seldom gained currency in criticism. It is true that
-the French have mixed a great deal of logic with their conception of
-the classic spirit, but that is because they have mixed a great deal
-of logic with everything. I have already mentioned their tendency to
-substitute a logical for an imaginative verisimilitude; and strenuously
-logical classicists may be found in France from Chapelain to
-Brunetière. Yet the distinction that should keep us from confusing mere
-logic with the classic spirit was made by a Frenchman who was himself
-violently logical and also a great geometrician--Pascal. One should
-keep distinct, says Pascal, the _esprit de géométrie_ and the _esprit
-de finesse_. The _esprit de finesse_ is not, like the _esprit de
-géométrie_, abstract, but very concrete.[32] So far as a man possesses
-the _esprit de finesse_ he is enabled to judge correctly of the
-ordinary facts of life and of the relationships between man and man.
-But these judgments rest upon such a multitude of delicate perceptions
-that he is frequently unable to account for them logically. It is to
-intuitive good sense and not to the _esprit de géométrie_ that the
-gentleman (_honnête homme_) of the neo-classical period owed his fine
-tact. Pascal himself finally took a stand against reason as understood
-both by the Cartesian and by the man of the world. Unaided reason
-he held is unable to prevail against the deceits of the imagination;
-it needs the support of intuition--an intuition that he identifies
-with grace, thus making it inseparable from the most austere form of
-Christianity. The “heart,” he says, and this is the name he gives to
-intuition, “has reasons of which the reason knows nothing.” A Plato or
-an Aristotle would not have understood this divorce between reason and
-intuition.[33]
-
-Pascal seems to get his insight only by flouting ordinary good sense.
-He identifies this insight with a type of theological dogma of which
-good sense was determined to be rid; and so it tended to get rid of
-the insight along with the dogma. Classical dogma also seemed at times
-to be in opposition to the intuitive good sense of the man of the
-world. The man of the world therefore often inclined to assail both
-the classical and the Christian tradition in the name of good sense,
-just as the Cartesian inclined to assail these traditions in the name
-of abstract reason. Perhaps the best exponent of anti-traditional good
-sense in the seventeenth century was Molière. He vindicated nature,
-and by nature he still meant in the main normal human nature, from
-arbitrary constraints of every kind whether imposed by an ascetic
-Christianity or by a narrow and pedantic classicism. Unfortunately
-Molière is too much on the side of the opposition. He does not seem
-to put his good sense into the service of some positive insight of
-his own. Good sense may be of many degrees according to the order of
-facts of which it has a correct perception. The order of facts in human
-nature that Molière’s good sense perceived is not the highest and so
-this good sense appears at times too ready to justify the bourgeois
-against the man who has less timid and conventional views. So at
-least Rousseau thought when he made his famous attack on Molière.[34]
-Rousseau assailed Molière in the name of instinct as Pascal would have
-assailed him in the name of insight, and fought sense with sensibility.
-The hostility of Rousseau to Molière, according to M. Faguet, is that
-of a romantic Bohemian to a philistine of genius.[35] One hesitates to
-call Molière a philistine, but one may at least grant M. Faguet that
-Molière’s good sense is not always sufficiently inspired.
-
-I have been trying to build up a background that will make clear
-why the reason of the eighteenth century (whether we understand
-by reason logic or good sense) had come to be superficial and
-therefore oppressive to the imagination. It is only with reference
-to this “reason” that one can understand the romantic revolt. But
-neo-classical reason itself can be understood only with reference to
-its background--as a recoil namely from a previous romantic excess.
-This excess was manifested not only in the intellectual romanticism of
-which I have already spoken, but in the cult of the romantic deed that
-had flourished in the Middle Ages. This cult and the literature that
-reflected it continued to appeal, even to the cultivated, well on into
-the neo-classical period. It was therefore felt necessary to frame a
-definition of reason that should be a rebuke to the extravagance and
-improbability of the mediæval romances. When men became conscious
-in the eighteenth century of the neo-classical meagerness on the
-imaginative side they began to look back with a certain envy to the
-free efflorescence of fiction in the Middle Ages. They began to ask
-themselves with Hurd whether the reason and correctness they had won
-were worth the sacrifice of a “world of fine fabling.”[36] We must not,
-however, like Heine and many others, look on the romantic movement as
-merely a return to the Middle Ages. We have seen that the men of the
-Middle Ages themselves understood by romance not simply their own kind
-of speech and writing in contrast with what was written in Latin, but
-a kind of writing in which the pursuit of strangeness and adventure
-predominated. This pursuit of strangeness and adventure will be found
-to predominate in all types of romanticism. The type of romanticism,
-however, which came in towards the end of the eighteenth century
-did not, even when professedly mediæval, simply revert to the older
-types. It was primarily not a romanticism of thought or of action,
-the types we have encountered thus far, but a romanticism of feeling.
-The beginnings of this emotional romanticism antedate considerably
-the application of the word romantic to a particular literary school.
-Before considering how the word came to be thus applied we shall need
-to take a glance at eighteenth-century sentimentalism, especially at
-the plea for genius and originality that, from about the middle of the
-century on, were opposed to the tameness and servile imitation of the
-neo-classicists.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-ROMANTIC GENIUS
-
-
-Romanticism, it has been remarked, is all that is not Voltaire. The
-clash between Rousseau and Voltaire is indeed not merely the clash
-between two men, it is the clash between two incompatible views of
-life. Voltaire is the end of the old world, as Goethe has put it,
-Rousseau the beginning of the new.
-
-One is not to suppose, however, that Voltaire was a consistent champion
-of the past. He is indeed with all his superficial clearness one of the
-most incoherent of writers. At the same time that he defended classical
-tradition he attacked Christian tradition, spreading abroad a spirit of
-mockery and irreverence that tended to make every traditional belief
-impossible. The “reason” to which he appeals has all the shallowness
-that I have noticed in the “reason” of the eighteenth century. Though
-he does not fall into the Cartesian excess of abstract reasoning, and
-though the good sense that he most often understands by reason is
-admirably shrewd within certain bounds, he nevertheless falls very
-far short of the standards of a true classicism. He delights in the
-philosophy of Locke and has little sense for Greek philosophy or for
-the higher aspects of Greek literature. He is quite lacking in the
-quality of imagination that is needful if one is to communicate with
-what is above the ordinary rational level. So far from being capable of
-high seriousness, he is scarcely capable of ordinary seriousness. And
-so the nobility, elegance, imitation, and decorum that he is constantly
-preaching have about them a taint of formalism. Perhaps this taint
-appears most conspicuously in his conception of decorum. A man may be
-willing to impose restrictions on his ordinary self--and every type of
-decorum is restrictive--if he is asked to do so for some adequate end.
-The end of the decorum that an Aristotle, for example, would impose is
-that one may become more human and therefore, as he endeavors to show
-in a highly positive fashion, happier. The only art and literature that
-will please a man who has thus become human through the observance of
-true decorum is an art and literature that are themselves human and
-decorous. Voltaire for his part wishes to subject art and literature
-to an elaborate set of restrictions in the name of decorum, but these
-restrictions are not joined to any adequate end. The only reward he
-holds out to those who observe all these restrictions is “the merit
-of difficulty overcome.” At bottom, like so many of the Jesuits from
-whom he received his education, he looks upon art as a game--a very
-ingenious and complicated game. The French muse he compares to a
-person executing a difficult clog dance on a tight rope, and he argues
-from this comparison, not that the French muse should assume a less
-constrained posture, but that she should on the contrary be exemplary
-to the nations. No wonder the romanticists and even Dr. Johnson
-demurred at Voltaire’s condemnation of Shakespeare in the name of this
-type of decorum.
-
-Voltaire is therefore, in spite of all his dazzling gifts, one of
-the most compromising advocates of classicism. Pope also had eminent
-merits, but from the truly classical point of view he is about as
-inadequate as Voltaire; and this is important to remember because
-English romanticism tends to be all that is not Pope. The English
-romanticists revolted especially from the poetic diction of which Pope
-was one of the chief sources, and poetic diction, with its failure
-to distinguish between nobility of language and the language of the
-nobility, is only an aspect of artificial decorum. However, the revolt
-from poetic diction and decorum in general is not the central aspect of
-the great movement that resulted in the eclipse of the wit and man of
-the world and in the emergence of the original genius. What the genius
-wanted was spontaneity, and spontaneity, as he understood it, involves
-a denial, not merely of decorum, but of something that, as I have said,
-goes deeper than decorum--namely the doctrine of imitation. According
-to Voltaire genius is only judicious imitation. According to Rousseau
-the prime mark of genius is refusal to imitate. The movement away from
-imitation, however, had already got well started before it thus came
-to a picturesque head in the clash between Rousseau and Voltaire, and
-if we wish to understand this movement we need to take a glance at its
-beginnings--especially in England.
-
-There are reasons why this supposed opposition between imitation and
-genius should have been felt in England more keenly than elsewhere. The
-doctrine of imitation in its neo-classical form did not get established
-there until about the time of Dryden. In the meanwhile England had had
-a great creative literature in which the freedom and spontaneity of the
-imagination had not been cramped by a too strict imitation of models.
-Dryden himself, though he was doing more than any one else to promote
-the new correctness that was coming in from France, felt that this
-correctness was no equivalent for the Elizabethan inspiration. The
-structure that he and his contemporaries were erecting might be more
-regular, but lacked the boldness and originality of that reared by the
-“giant race before the flood”:
-
- Our age was cultivated thus at length;
- But what we gained in skill we lost in strength.
- Our builders were with want of genius cursed;
- The second temple was not like the first.[37]
-
-This contrast between the imitator and the inspired original was
-developed by Addison in a paper (“Spectator,” 160) that was destined
-to be used against the very school to which he himself belonged.
-For Addison was in his general outlook a somewhat tame Augustan.
-Nevertheless he exalts the “natural geniuses” who have something
-“nobly wild and extravagant” in them above the geniuses who have been
-“refined by conversation, reflection and the reading of the most polite
-authors”; who have “formed themselves by rules and submitted the
-greatness of their natural talents to the corrections and restraints of
-art.” “The great danger in these latter kind of geniuses, is lest they
-cramp their own abilities too much by imitation, and form themselves
-altogether upon models, without giving full play to their own natural
-parts. An imitation of the best authors is not to compare with a good
-original; and I believe we may observe that very few writers make an
-extraordinary figure in the world, who have not something in their way
-of thinking or expressing themselves that is peculiar to them, and
-entirely their own.”
-
-Another main influence that was making against the doctrine of
-imitation was also largely of English origin. This was the idea of
-progress through scientific observation and experiment. As a result
-of this type of positivism, discovery was being added to discovery.
-Science was kindling man’s imagination and opening up before him what
-he really craves, the vista of an endless advance. Why should not
-literature likewise do something new and original instead of sticking
-forever in the same rut of imitation? In its Greek form the doctrine
-of imitation was, as I have tried to show, not only flexible and
-progressive, but in its own way, positive and experimental. But in
-modern times the two main forms of imitation, the classical and the
-Christian, have worked within the limits imposed by tradition and
-traditional models. The imitation of models, the Christian imitation
-of Christ, let us say, or the classical imitation of Horace, may
-indeed be a very vital thing, the imitation of one soul by another
-soul; but when carried out in this vital way, the two main forms of
-imitation tend to clash, and the compromise between them, as I have
-already said, resulted in a good deal of formalism. By its positive
-and critical method science was undermining every traditional belief.
-Both the Christian and the classical formalists would have been the
-first to deny that the truths of imitation for which they stood could
-be divorced from tradition and likewise put on a positive and critical
-basis. The fact is indubitable in any case that the discrediting of
-tradition has resulted in a progressive lapse from the religious and
-the humanistic to the naturalistic level. An equally indubitable fact
-is that scientific or rationalistic naturalism tended from the early
-eighteenth century to produce emotional naturalism, and that both forms
-of naturalism were hostile to the doctrine of imitation.
-
-The trend away from the doctrine of imitation towards emotional
-naturalism finds revolutionary expression in the literary field in such
-a work as Young’s “Conjectures on Original Composition” (1759). Addison
-had asserted, as we have seen, the superiority of what is original in
-a man, of what comes to him spontaneously, over what he acquires by
-conscious effort and culture. Young, a personal friend of Addison’s,
-develops this contrast between the “natural” and the “artificial” to
-its extreme consequences. “Modern writers,” he says, “have a choice
-to make. … They may soar in the regions of liberty, or move in the
-soft fetters of easy imitation.” “An original may be said to be of a
-vegetable nature; it rises spontaneously from the vital root of genius;
-it grows, it is not made; imitations are often a sort of manufacture,
-wrought up by those mechanics, art and labor, out of preëxistent
-materials not their own.” “We may as well grow good by another’s
-virtue, or fat by another’s food, as famous by another’s thought.”
-One evidence that we are still living in the movement of which Young
-is one of the initiators is that his treatise will not only seem to
-most of us a very spirited piece of writing--that it certainly is--but
-doctrinally sound. And yet it is only one of those documents very
-frequent in literary history which lack intrinsic soundness, but which
-can be explained if not justified as a recoil from an opposite extreme.
-The unsoundness of Young’s work comes out clearly if one compares
-it with the treatise on the “Sublime” attributed to Longinus which
-is not a mere protest against a previous excess, but a permanently
-acceptable treatment of the same problem of genius and inspiration.
-Longinus exalts genius, but is at the same time regardful of culture
-and tradition, and even emphasizes the relation between inspiration and
-the imitation of models. Young insinuates, on the contrary, that one
-is aided in becoming a genius by being brainless and ignorant. “Some
-are pupils of nature only, nor go further to school.” “Many a genius
-probably there has been which could neither write nor read.” It follows
-almost inevitably from these premises that genius flourishes most in
-the primitive ages of society before originality has been crushed
-beneath the superincumbent weight of culture and critics have begun
-their pernicious activities. Young did not take this step himself, but
-it was promptly taken by others on the publication of the Ossianic
-poems (1762). Ossian is at once added to the list of great originals
-already enumerated by Addison--Homer, Pindar, the patriarchs of the
-Old Testament and Shakespeare (whom Young like the later romanticists
-opposes to Pope). “Poetry,” says Diderot, summing up a whole movement,
-“calls for something enormous, barbaric and savage.”
-
-This exaltation of the virtues of the primitive ages is simply
-the projection into a mythical past of a need that the man of the
-eighteenth century feels in the present--the need to let himself
-go. This is what he understands by his “return to nature.” A whole
-revolution is implied in this reinterpretation of the word nature.
-To follow nature in the classical sense is to imitate what is normal
-and representative in man and so to become decorous. To be natural in
-the new sense one must begin by getting rid of imitation and decorum.
-Moreover, for the classicist, nature and reason are synonymous. The
-primitivist, on the other hand, means by nature the spontaneous play
-of impulse and temperament, and inasmuch as this liberty is hindered
-rather than helped by reason, he inclines to look on reason, not as the
-equivalent but as the opposite of nature.
-
-If one is to understand this development, one should note carefully
-how certain uses of the word reason, not merely by the neo-classicists
-but by the anti-traditionalists, especially in religion, tended to
-produce this denial of reason. It is a curious fact that some of those
-who were attacking the Christian religion in the name of reason, were
-themselves aware that mere reason, whether one understood by the word
-abstract reasoning or uninspired good sense, does not satisfy, that
-in the long run man is driven either to rise higher or to sink lower
-than reason. St. Evremond, for example, prays nature to deliver man
-from the doubtful middle state in which she has placed him--either
-to “lift him up to angelic radiance,” or else to “sink him to the
-instinct of simple animals.”[38] Since the ascending path, the path
-that led to angelic radiance, seemed to involve the acceptance of
-a mass of obsolete dogma, man gradually inclined to sink below the
-rational level and to seek to recover the “instinct of simple animals.”
-Another and still more fundamental fact that some of the rationalists
-perceived and that militated against their own position, is that the
-dominant element in man is not reason, but imagination, or if one
-prefers, the element of illusion. “Illusion,” said Voltaire himself,
-“is the queen of the human heart.” The great achievement of tradition
-at its best was to be at once a limit and a support to both reason
-and imagination and so to unite them in a common allegiance. In the
-new movement, at the same time that reason was being encouraged by
-scientific method to rise up in revolt against tradition, imagination
-was being fascinated and drawn to the naturalistic level by scientific
-discovery and the vista of an endless advance that it opened up. A main
-problem, therefore, for the student of this movement is to determine
-what forms of imaginative activity are possible on the naturalistic
-level. A sort of understanding was reached on this point by different
-types of naturalists in the course of the eighteenth century. One
-form of imagination, it was agreed, should be displayed in science,
-another form in art and literature.[39] The scientific imagination
-should be controlled by judgment and work in strict subordination to
-the facts. In art and literature, on the other hand, the imagination
-should be free. Genius and originality are indeed in strict ratio to
-this freedom. “In the fairy land of fancy,” says Young, “genius may
-wander wild; there it has a creative power, and may reign arbitrarily
-over its own empire of chimeras.” (The empire of chimeras was later to
-become the tower of ivory.) This sheer indiscipline of the literary
-imagination might seem in contrast with the discipline of the
-scientific imagination an inferiority; but such was not the view of the
-partisans of original genius. Kant, indeed, who was strongly influenced
-in his “Critique of Æsthetic Judgment” by these English theorists,[40]
-inclined to deny genius to the man of science for the very reason that
-his imagination is so strictly controlled. The fact would seem to be
-that a great scientist, a Newton let us say, has as much right to be
-accounted a genius as Shakespeare. The inferiority of the genius of a
-Newton compared with that of a Shakespeare lies in a certain coldness.
-Scientific genius is thus cold because it operates in a region less
-relevant to man than poetic genius; it is, in Bagehot’s phrase, more
-remote from the “hearth of the soul.”
-
-The scientific and the literary imagination are indeed not quite so
-sharply contrasted by most of the theorists as might be inferred
-from what I have said; most of them do not admit that the literary
-imagination should be entirely free to wander in its own “empire of
-chimeras.” Even literary imagination, they maintain, should in some
-measure be under the surveillance of judgment or taste. One should
-observe, however, that the judgment or taste that is supposed to
-control or restrict genius is not associated with the imagination.
-On the contrary, imagination is associated entirely with the element
-of novelty in things, which means, in the literary domain, with the
-expansive eagerness of a man to get his own uniqueness uttered. The
-genius for the Greek, let us remind ourselves, was not the man who was
-in this sense unique, but the man who perceived the universal; and as
-the universal can be perceived only with the aid of the imagination,
-it follows that genius may be defined as imaginative perception of the
-universal. The universal thus conceived not only gives a centre and
-purpose to the activity of the imagination, but sets bounds to the free
-expansion of temperament and impulse, to what came to be known in the
-eighteenth century as nature.
-
-Kant, who denies genius to the man of science on grounds I have already
-mentioned, is unable to associate genius in art or literature with this
-strict discipline of the imagination to a purpose. The imagination
-must be free and must, he holds, show this freedom not by working
-but by playing. At the same time Kant had the cool temper of a man
-of the Enlightenment, and looked with the utmost disapproval on the
-aberrations that had marked in Germany the age of original genius (_die
-Geniezeit_). He was not in the new sense of the word nor indeed in any
-sense, an enthusiast. And so he wished the reason, or judgment, to
-keep control over the imagination without disturbing its free play;
-art is to have a purpose which is at the same time not a purpose. The
-distinctions by which he works out the supposed relationship between
-judgment and imagination are at once difficult and unreal. One can
-indeed put one’s finger here more readily perhaps than elsewhere on the
-central impotence of the whole Kantian system. Once discredit tradition
-and outer authority and then set up as a substitute a reason that is
-divorced from the imagination and so lacks the support of supersensuous
-insight, and reason will prove unable to maintain its hegemony. When
-the imagination has ceased to pull in accord with the reason in the
-service of a reality that is set above them both, it is sure to become
-the accomplice of expansive impulse, and mere reason is not strong
-enough to prevail over this union of imagination and desire. Reason
-needs some driving power behind it, a driving power that, when working
-in alliance with the imagination, it gets from insight. To suppose
-that man will long rest content with mere naked reason as his guide
-is to forget that “illusion is the queen of the human heart”; it is
-to revive the stoical error. Schiller, himself a Kantian, felt this
-rationalistic rigor and coldness of his master, and so sought, while
-retaining the play theory of art, to put behind the cold reason of
-Kant the driving power it lacked; for this driving power he looked not
-to a supersensuous reality, not to insight in short, but to emotion.
-He takes appropriately the motto for his “Æsthetic Letters” from
-Rousseau: _Si c’est la raison qui fait l’homme, c’est le sentiment qui
-le conduit_. He retains Kant’s play theory of art without even so much
-offset to this play as is implied in Kant’s “purposiveness without
-purpose.” The nobility of Schiller’s intentions is beyond question.
-At the same time, by encouraging the notion that it is possible to
-escape from neo-classical didacticism only by eliminating masculine
-purpose from art, he opens the way for the worst perversions of the
-æsthete, above all for the divorce of art from ethical reality. In art,
-according to Schiller, both imagination and feeling should be free and
-spontaneous, and the result of all this freedom, as he sees it, will be
-perfectly “ideal.” His suspicion of a purpose is invincible. As soon as
-anything has a purpose it ceases to be æsthetic and in the same measure
-suffers a loss of dignity. Thus the æsthetic moment of the lion, he
-says, is when he roars not with any definite design, but out of sheer
-lustiness, and for the pure pleasure of roaring.
-
-One may assume safely the æsthetic attitude, or what amounts to the
-same thing, allow one’s self to be guided by feeling, only on the
-assumption that feeling is worthy of trust. As appears in the very
-motto he took for his “Æsthetic Letters” Schiller was helped to this
-faith in man’s native goodness by Rousseau. We need to pause for a
-moment at this point and consider the background of this belief which
-finds not only in Schiller but in Rousseau himself, with whom it is
-usually associated, a rather late expression. The movement that took
-its rise in the eighteenth century involves, we should recollect, a
-break not with one but with two traditions--the classical and the
-Christian. If the plea for genius and originality is to be largely
-explained as a protest against the mechanical imitation and artificial
-decorum of a certain type of classicist, the assertion of man’s natural
-goodness is to be understood rather as a rebound from the doctrine of
-total depravity that was held by the more austere type of Christian.
-This doctrine had even in the early centuries of the faith awakened
-certain protests like that of Pelagius, but for an understanding of
-the Rousseauistic protest one does not need to go behind the great
-deistic movement of the early eighteenth century. God, instead of
-being opposed to nature, is conceived by the deist as a power that
-expresses his goodness and loveliness through nature. The oppressive
-weight of fear that the older theology had laid upon the human spirit
-is thus gradually lifted. Man begins to discover harmonies instead
-of discords in himself and outer nature. He not only sees virtue
-in instinct but inclines to turn virtue itself into a “sense,” or
-instinct. And this means in practice to put emotional expansion in the
-place of spiritual concentration at the basis of life and morals. In
-studying this drift towards an æsthetic or sentimental morality one
-may most conveniently take one’s point of departure in certain English
-writers of deistic tendency, especially in Shaftesbury and his disciple
-Hutcheson. Considered purely as an initiator, Shaftesbury is probably
-more important than Rousseau. His influence ramifies out in every
-direction, notably into Germany.
-
-The central achievement of Shaftesbury from a purely psychological
-point of view may be said to be his transformation of conscience from
-an inner check into an expansive emotion. He is thus enabled to set
-up an æsthetic substitute not merely for traditional religion but for
-traditional humanism. He undermines insidiously decorum, the central
-doctrine of the classicist, at the very time that he seems to be
-defending it. For decorum also implies a control upon the expansive
-instincts of human nature, and Shaftesbury is actually engaged in
-rehabilitating “nature,” and insinuating that it does not need any
-control. He attains this expansiveness by putting æsthetic in the
-place of spiritual perception, and so merging more or less completely
-the good and the true with the beautiful. He thus points the way very
-directly to Rousseau’s rejection of both inner and outer control
-in the name of man’s natural goodness. Once accept Shaftesbury’s
-transformation of conscience and one is led almost inevitably to look
-on everything that is expansive as natural or vital and on everything
-that restricts expansion as conventional or artificial. Villers wrote
-to Madame de Staël (4 May, 1803): “The fundamental and creative idea
-of all your work has been to show primitive, incorruptible, naïve,
-passionate nature in conflict with the barriers and shackles of
-conventional life. … Note that this is also the guiding idea of the
-author of ‘Werther.’” This contrast between nature and convention is
-indeed almost the whole of Rousseauism. In permitting his expansive
-impulses to be disciplined by either humanism or religion man has
-fallen away from nature much as in the old theology he has fallen
-away from God, and the famous “return to nature” means in practice
-the emancipation of the ordinary or temperamental self that had been
-thus artificially controlled. This throwing off of the yoke of both
-Christian and classical discipline in the name of temperament is the
-essential aspect of the movement in favor of original genius. The
-genius does not look to any pattern that is set above his ordinary
-spontaneous ego and imitate it. On the contrary, he attains to the
-self-expression that other men, intimidated by convention, weakly
-forego.
-
-In thus taking a stand for self-expression, the original genius is in
-a sense on firm ground--at least so far as the mere rationalist or
-the late and degenerate classicist is concerned. No conventions are
-final, no rules can set arbitrary limits to creation. Reality cannot be
-locked up in any set of formulæ. The element of change and novelty in
-things, as the romanticists are never tired of repeating, is at once
-vital and inexhaustible. Wherever we turn, we encounter, as a romantic
-authority, Jacob Boehme, declares, “abysmal, unsearchable and infinite
-multiplicity.” Perhaps not since the beginning of the world have two
-men or indeed two leaves or two blades of grass been exactly alike.
-Out of a thousand men shaving, as Dr. Johnson himself remarked, no
-two will shave in just the same way. A person carries his uniqueness
-even into his thumbprint--as a certain class in the community has
-learned to its cost. But though all things are ineffably different
-they are at the same time ineffably alike. And this oneness in things
-is, no less than the otherwiseness, a matter of immediate perception.
-This universal implication of the one in the many is found even more
-marked than elsewhere in the heart of the individual. Each man has
-his idiosyncrasy (literally his “private mixture”). But in addition
-to his complexion, his temperamental or private self, every man has
-a self that he possesses in common with other men. Even the man who
-is most filled with his own uniqueness, or “genius,” a Rousseau, for
-example, assumes this universal self in every word he utters. “Jove
-nods to Jove behind us as we talk.” The word character, one may note,
-is ambiguous, inasmuch as it may refer either to the idiosyncratic or
-to the universal human element in a man’s dual nature. For example, an
-original genius like William Blake not only uses the word character
-in a different sense from Aristotle--he cannot even understand the
-Aristotelian usage. “Aristotle,” he complains, “says characters are
-either good or bad; now Goodness or Badness has nothing to do with
-Character. An apple tree, a pear tree, a horse, a lion are Characters;
-but a good apple tree or a bad is an apple tree still, etc.” But
-character as Aristotle uses the word implies something that man
-possesses and that a horse or tree does not possess--the power namely
-to deliberate and choose. A man has a good or bad character, he is
-ethical or unethical, as one may say from the Greek word for character
-in this sense (ἦθος), according to the quality of his choice as it
-appears in what he actually does. This distinction between a man’s
-private, peculiar character (χαρακτήρ) and the character he possesses
-when judged with reference to something more general than his own
-complexion is very similar to the French distinction between the _sens
-propre_ and the _sens commun_.
-
-The general sense or norm that is opposed to mere temperament and
-impulse may rest upon the ethos of a particular time and country--the
-traditional habits and customs that the Rousseauist is wont to dismiss
-as “artificial”--or it may rest in varying degrees upon immediate
-perception. For example, the Ismene and Antigone of Sophocles are
-both ethical; but Ismene would abide by the law of the state, whereas
-Antigone opposes to this law something still more universal--the
-“unwritten laws of heaven.” This insight of Antigone into a moral order
-that is set not only above her ordinary self but above the convention
-of her time and country is something very immediate, something
-achieved, as I shall try to show more fully later, with the aid of the
-imagination.
-
-It is scarcely necessary to add that such a perfect example of the
-ethical imagination as one finds in Antigone--the imagination that
-works concentric with the human law--is rare. In actual life for
-one Antigone who obeys the “unwritten laws of heaven” there will
-be a thousand Ismenes who will be guided in their moral choices by
-the law of the community. This law, the convention of a particular
-place and time, is always but a very imperfect image, a mere shadow
-indeed of the unwritten law which being above the ordinary rational
-level is, in a sense to be explained later, infinite and incapable
-of final formulation. And yet men are forced if only on practical
-grounds to work out some approximation to this law as a barrier to the
-unchained appetites of the individual. The elements that enter into
-any particular attempt to circumscribe the individual in the interests
-of the community are very mixed and in no small measure relative. Yet
-the things that any group of men have come together about--their
-conventions in the literal meaning of the word--even the tabus of a
-savage tribe, are sure to reflect, however inadequately, the element
-of oneness in man, the element which is opposed to expansive impulse,
-and which is no less real, no less a matter of immediate experience,
-than the element of irreducible difference. The general sense therefore
-should never be sacrificed lightly to the sense of the individual.
-Tabu, however inferior it may be to insight, deserves to rank higher
-after all than mere temperament.[41]
-
-The original genius proceeds upon the opposite assumption. Everything
-that limits temperamental expansion is dismissed as either artificial
-or mechanical; everything on the contrary that makes for the
-emancipation of temperament, and so for variety and difference, he
-welcomes as vital, dynamic, creative. Now, speaking not metaphysically
-but practically and experimentally, man may, as I have said, follow two
-main paths: he may develop his ethical self--the self that lays hold
-of unity--or he may put his main emphasis on the element within him
-and without him that is associated with novelty and change. In direct
-proportion as he turns his attention to the infinite manifoldness of
-things he experiences wonder; if on the other hand he attends to the
-unity that underlies the manifoldness and that likewise transcends him,
-he experiences awe. As a man grows religious, awe comes more and more
-to take the place in him of wonder. The humanist is less averse from
-the natural order and its perpetual gushing forth of novelties than the
-man who is religious, yet even the humanist refuses to put his final
-emphasis on wonder (his motto is rather _nil admirari_). To illustrate
-concretely, Dr. Johnson can scarcely conceal his disdain for the
-wonderful, but being a genuinely religious spirit, is very capable of
-awe. Commenting on Yalden’s line
-
- Awhile th’ Almighty wondering stood,
-
-Dr. Johnson remarks: “He ought to have remembered that Infinite
-Knowledge can never wonder. All wonder is the effect of novelty upon
-Ignorance.” Granted the justness of the remark, Johnson seems inclined
-at times to forget how wide is the gap in this respect between us
-and the Almighty and therefore to be unduly hostile to the element
-of wonder. To take the opposite case, it is not easy to discover in
-either the personality or writings of Poe an atom of awe or reverence.
-On the other hand he both experiences wonder and seeks in his art
-to be a pure wondersmith. It is especially important to determine a
-man’s attitude towards himself in this matter of awe and wonder, in
-other words to determine whether he is taken up first of all with that
-element in his own nature which makes him incomprehensibly like other
-men or with that element which makes him incomprehensibly different
-from them. A man, the wise have always insisted, should look with
-reverence but not with wonder on himself. Rousseau boasts that if not
-better than other men, he is at least different. By this gloating
-sense of his own otherwiseness he may be said to have set the tone for
-a whole epoch. Chateaubriand, for instance, is quite overcome by his
-own uniqueness and wonderfulness. At the most ordinary happenings he
-exclaims, as Sainte-Beuve points out, that such things happen only to
-him. Hugo again is positively stupefied at the immensity of his own
-genius. The theatricality that one feels in so much of the art of this
-period arises from the eagerness of the genius to communicate to others
-something of the amazement that he feels at himself. René’s first
-concern is to inspire wonder even in the women who love him. “Céluta
-felt that she was going to fall upon the bosom of this man as one falls
-into an abyss.”
-
-In thus putting such an exclusive emphasis on wonder the Rousseauistic
-movement takes on a regressive character. For if life begins in
-wonder it culminates in awe. To put “the budding rose above the rose
-full-blown” may do very well for a mood, but as an habitual attitude
-it implies that one is more interested in origins than in ends; and
-this means in practice to look backward and downward instead of forward
-and up. The conscious analysis that is needed if one is to establish
-orderly sequences and relationships and so work out a kingdom of ends
-is repudiated by the Rousseauist because it diminishes wonder, because
-it interferes with the creative impulse of genius as it gushes up
-spontaneously from the depths of the unconscious. The whole movement is
-filled with the praise of ignorance and of those who still enjoy its
-inappreciable advantages--the savage, the peasant and above all the
-child. The Rousseauist may indeed be said to have discovered the poetry
-of childhood of which only traces can be found in the past, but at what
-would seem at times a rather heavy sacrifice of rationality. Rather
-than consent to have the bloom taken off things by analysis one should,
-as Coleridge tells us, _sink back_ to the devout state of childlike
-wonder. However, to grow ethically is not to sink back but to struggle
-painfully forward. To affirm the contrary is to set up the things that
-are below the ordinary rational level as a substitute for the things
-that are above it, and at the same time to proclaim one’s inability to
-mature. The romanticist, it is true, is wont to oppose to the demand
-for maturity Christ’s praise of the child. But Christ evidently praises
-the child not because of his capacity for wonder but because of his
-freedom from sin, and it is of the essence of Rousseauism to deny the
-very existence of sin--at least in the Christian sense of the word.
-One may also read in the New Testament that when one has ceased to be
-a child one should give up childish things, and this is a saying that
-no primitivist, so far as I am aware, has ever quoted. On the contrary,
-he is ready to assert that what comes to the child spontaneously is
-superior to the deliberate moral effort of the mature man. The speeches
-of all the sages are, according to Maeterlinck, outweighed by the
-unconscious wisdom of the passing child. Wordsworth hails a child of
-six as “Mighty Prophet! Seer blest!” (It is only fair to Coleridge
-to say that he refused to follow Wordsworth into this final abyss of
-absurdity.[42]) In much the same way Hugo pushes his adoration of
-the child to the verge of what has been termed “solemn silliness”
-(_niaiserie solennelle_).
-
-To set up the spontaneity of the child as a substitute for insight,
-to identify wonder with awe, romance with religion, is to confuse the
-very planes of being. There would appear to be a confusion of this kind
-in what Carlyle takes to be his own chief discovery, in his “natural
-supernaturalism.”[43] The natural order we must grant Carlyle is
-unfathomable, but it is not therefore awful, only wonderful. A movement
-of charity belongs as Pascal says to an entirely different order.[44]
-
-The spiritual order to which Pascal refers lifts a man so far as he
-perceives it out of his ordinary self and draws him to an ethical
-centre. But the Rousseauist tends, as I have said, to repudiate
-the very idea of an ethical centre along with the special forms in
-which it had got itself embedded. Every attempt, whether humanistic
-or religious, to set up some such centre, to oppose a unifying and
-centralizing principle to expansive impulse, seems to him arbitrary
-and artificial. He does not discriminate between the ethical norm or
-centre that a Sophocles grasps intuitively and the centrality that the
-pseudo-classicist hopes to achieve by mechanical imitation. He argues
-from his underlying assumption that the principle of variation is alone
-vital, that one’s genius and originality are in pretty direct ratio
-to one’s eccentricity in the literal meaning of the word; and he is
-therefore ready to affirm his singularity or difference in the face of
-whatever happens to be established. This attitude, it is worth noting,
-is quite unlike that of the humorist in the old English sense of the
-word, who indulges his bent and is at the same time quite unconcerned
-with any central model that he should imitate and with reference to
-which he should discipline his oddities. The idiosyncrasy of the
-Rousseauist is not, like that of the humorist, genial, but defiant.
-He is strangely self-conscious in his return to the unconscious. In
-everything, from his vocabulary to the details of his dress, he is
-eager to emphasize his departure from the norm. Hence the persistent
-pose and theatricality in so many of the leaders of this movement, in
-Rousseau himself, for instance, or in Chateaubriand and Byron. As for
-the lesser figures in the movement their “genius” is often chiefly
-displayed in their devices for calling attention to themselves as the
-latest and most marvellous births of time; it is only one aspect in
-short of an art in which the past century, whatever its achievement in
-the other arts, has easily surpassed all its predecessors--the art of
-advertising.
-
-One needs always to return, however, if one is to understand the
-romantic notion of genius, to a consideration of the pseudo-classic
-decorum against which it is a protest. The gentleman or man of the
-world (_honnête homme_) was not, like the original genius, anxious
-to advertise himself, to call attention to his own special note
-of originality, since his primary concern was with an entirely
-different problem, with the problem, namely, not of expressing but
-of humanizing himself; and he could humanize himself, he felt, only
-by constant reference to the accepted standard of what the normal
-man should be. He refused to “pride himself on anything”; he was
-fearful of over-emphasis, because the first of virtues in his eyes
-was a sense of proportion. The total symmetry of life to which the
-best type of classicist refers back his every impulse, he apprehends
-intuitively with the aid of his imagination. The symmetry to which the
-pseudo-classicist refers back his impulses has ceased to be imaginative
-and has become a mere conformity to an outer code or even to the rules
-of etiquette; and so, instead of a deep imaginative insight, he gets
-mere elegance or polish. The unity that a purely external decorum of
-this kind imposes on life degenerates into a tiresome sameness. It
-seems an unwarranted denial of the element of wonder and surprise.
-“Boredom was born one day of uniformity,” said La Motte Houdard, who
-was himself a pseudo-classicist; whereas variety as everybody knows
-is the spice of life. The romanticist would break up the smooth and
-tiresome surface of artificial decorum by the pursuit of strangeness.
-If he can only get his thrill he cares little whether it is probable,
-whether it bears any relation, that is, to normal human experience.
-This sacrifice of the probable to the surprising appears, as I said
-at the outset, in all types of romanticism--whether of action or
-thought or feeling. The genuine classicist always puts his main
-stress on design or structure; whereas the main quest of every type
-of romanticist is rather for the intense and vivid and arresting
-detail. Take, for instance, the intellectual romanticism that prevailed
-especially in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. In
-the “witty and conceited” poets of this period the intellect is engaged
-in a more or less irresponsible vagabondage with the imagination as its
-free accomplice. The conceits by which a poet of this type displays his
-“ingenuity” (genius) are not structural, are not, that is, referred
-back to any centre. They stand forth each separately and sharply from
-the surface of the style (hence known to the French as “points”), and
-so arrest the reader by their novelty. Their rareness and preciousness,
-however, are intended to startle the intellect alone. They do not
-have and are not intended to have any power of sensuous suggestion.
-The Rousseauistic romanticist, on the other hand, so far from being
-“metaphysical,” strives to be concrete even at the risk of a certain
-materialism of style, of turning his metaphors into mere images. Like
-the intellectual romanticist, though in a different way, he wishes to
-break up the smooth and monotonous surface of life and style, and so he
-sets up the cult of the picturesque. To understand this cult one needs
-to remember the opposite extreme of artificial symmetry. One needs to
-recall, for example, the neo-classicist who complained of the stars
-in heaven because they were not arranged in symmetrical patterns, or
-various other neo-classicists who attacked mountains because of their
-rough and irregular shapes, because of their refusal to submit to the
-rule and compass. When beauty is conceived in so mechanical a fashion
-some one is almost certain to wish to “add strangeness” to it.
-
-The cult of the picturesque is closely associated with the cult of
-local color. Here as elsewhere romantic genius is, in contradistinction
-to classical genius which aims at the “grandeur of generality,” the
-genius of wonder and surprise. According to Buffon, who offers the
-rare spectacle of a man of science who is at the same time a theorist
-of the grand manner, genius is shown in the architectonic gift--in
-the power so to unify a subject as to keep its every detail in proper
-subordination to the whole. Any mere wantoning of the imagination
-in the pursuit of either the precious or the picturesque is to be
-severely repressed if one is to attain to the grandeur of generality.
-Buffon is truly classic in relating genius to design. Unfortunately
-he verges towards the pseudo-classic in his distrust of color, of the
-precise word and the vivid descriptive epithet. The growing verbal
-squeamishness that so strikes one towards the end of the neo-classic
-period is one outcome of artificial decorum, of confusing nobility of
-language with the language of the nobility. There was an increasing
-fear of the trivial word that might destroy the illusion of the grand
-manner, and also of the technical term that should be too suggestive
-of specialization. All terms were to be avoided that were not readily
-intelligible to a lady or gentleman in the drawing-room. And so it
-came to pass that by the end of the eighteenth century the grand
-manner, or elevated style, had come to be largely an art of ingenious
-circumlocution, and Buffon gives some countenance to this conception of
-classic dignity and representativeness when he declares that one should
-describe objects “only by the most general terms.” At all events the
-reply of the romantic genius to this doctrine is the demand for local
-color, for the concrete and picturesque phrase. The general truth at
-which the classicist aims the Rousseauist dismisses as identical with
-the gray and the academic, and bends all his efforts to the rendering
-of the vivid and unique detail. Of the readiness of the romantic genius
-to show (or one is tempted to say) to advertise his originality by
-trampling verbal decorum under foot along with every other kind of
-decorum, I shall have more to say later. He is ready to employ not only
-the homely and familiar word that the pseudo-classicist had eschewed
-as “low,” but words so local and technical as to be unintelligible to
-ordinary readers. Chateaubriand deals so specifically with the North
-American Indian and his environment that the result, according to
-Sainte-Beuve, is a sort of “tattooing” of his style. Hugo bestows a
-whole dictionary of architectural terms upon the reader in his “Nôtre
-Dame,” and of nautical terms in his “Toilers of the Sea.” In order to
-follow some of the passages in Balzac’s “César Birotteau,” one needs
-to be a lawyer or a professional accountant, and it has been said that
-in order to do justice to a certain description in Zola one would need
-to be a pork-butcher. In this movement towards a highly specialized
-vocabulary one should note a coöperation, as so often elsewhere,
-between the two wings of the naturalistic movement--the scientific and
-the emotional. The Rousseauist is, like the scientist, a specialist--he
-specializes in his own sensations. He goes in quest of emotional
-thrills for their own sake, just as Napoleon’s generals, according to
-Sainte-Beuve, waged war without any ulterior aim but for the sheer lust
-of conquest. The vivid images and picturesque details are therefore
-not sufficiently structural; each one tends to thrust itself forward
-without reference to the whole and to demand attention for its own sake.
-
-The pursuit of the unrelated thrill without reference to its
-motivation or probability leads in the romantic movement to a sort of
-descent--often, it is true, a rapturous and lyrical descent--from the
-dramatic to the melodramatic. It is possible to trace this one-sided
-emphasis on wonder not merely in vocabulary but in the increasing
-resort to the principle of contrast. One suspects, for example, that
-Rousseau exaggerates the grotesqueness of his youthful failure as a
-musical composer at Lausanne in order that his success in the same
-rôle before the king and all the ladies of the court at Versailles may
-“stick more fiery off.” The contrast that Chateaubriand establishes
-between the two banks of the Mississippi at the beginning of his
-“Atala” is so complete as to put some strain on verisimilitude. One
-may note in this same description, as a somewhat different way of
-sacrificing the probable to the picturesque, the bears drunk on wild
-grapes and reeling on the branches of the elms. To prove that it was
-possible on some particular occasion to look down the vista of a forest
-glade on the lower Mississippi and see it closed by a drunken bear does
-not meet the difficulty at all. For art has to do, as was remarked long
-ago, not with the possible but the probable; and a bear in this posture
-is a possible but scarcely a probable bear.
-
-To return to the principle of contrast: Hugo dilates upon his puniness
-as an infant (“abandoned by everybody, even by his mother”) in order
-to make his later achievement seem still more stupendous.[45] The
-use of the antithesis as the auxiliary of surprise, the abrupt and
-thrilling passage from light to shade or the contrary, finds perhaps
-its culminating expression in Hugo. A study of this one figure as it
-appears in his words and ideas, in his characters and situations and
-subjects, would show that he is the most melodramatic genius for whom
-high rank has ever been claimed in literature. The suddenness of Jean
-Valjean’s transformation from a convict into a saint may serve as a
-single instance of Hugo’s readiness to sacrifice verisimilitude to
-surprise in his treatment of character.
-
-Closely allied to the desire to break up the monotonous surface of
-“good form” by the pointed and picturesque style in writing is the rise
-of the pointed and picturesque style in dress. A man may advertise
-his genius and originality (in the romantic sense of these terms) by
-departing from the accepted modes of costume as well as from the
-accepted modes of speech. Gautier’s scarlet waistcoat at the first
-performance of Hernani is of the same order as his flamboyant epithets,
-his riot of local color, and was at least as effective in achieving
-the main end of his life--to be, in his own phrase, the “terror of the
-sleek, baldheaded bourgeois.” In assuming the Armenian garb to the
-astonishment of the rustics of Motiers-Travers, Rousseau anticipates
-not merely Gautier but innumerable other violators of conventional
-correctness: here as elsewhere he deserves to rank as the classic
-instance, one is tempted to say, of romantic eccentricity. La Bruyère,
-an exponent of the traditional good-breeding against which Rousseauism
-is a protest, says that the gentleman allows himself to be dressed by
-his tailor. He wishes to be neither ahead of the mode nor behind it,
-being reluctant as he is in all things to oppose his private sense to
-the general sense. His point of view in the matter of dress is not so
-very remote from that of a genuine classicism, whereas the enthusiast
-who recently went about the streets of New York (until taken in by
-the police) garbed as a contemporary of Pericles is no less plainly a
-product of Rousseauistic revolt.
-
-Chateaubriand’s relation to Rousseauism in this matter calls for
-special comment. He encouraged, and to some extent held, the belief
-that to show genius and originality one must be irregular and
-tempestuous in all things, even in the arrangement of one’s hair. At
-the same time he preached reason. His heart, in short, was romantic,
-his head classical. Both as a classicist and a romanticist he was ready
-to repudiate on the one hand his master Rousseau, and on the other
-his own disciples. As a romantic genius he wished to regard himself
-as unique and so unrelated to Rousseau. At the same time he also
-looked upon it as a sort of insolence for any of his own followers to
-aspire to such a lonely preëminence in grief as René. As a classicist
-he saw that great art aims at the normal and the representative, and
-that it is therefore absurd for people to pattern themselves on such
-morbid and exceptional characters as René and Childe Harold. Most
-of the romanticists indeed showed themselves very imitative even in
-their attempts at uniqueness, and the result was a second or third
-hand, or as one is tempted to say, a stale eccentricity. In their mere
-following of the mode many of the French romanticists of 1830 were
-ready to impose a painful discipline upon themselves[46] in order to
-appear abnormal, in order, for instance, to acquire a livid Byronic
-complexion. Some of those who wished to seem elegiac like Lamartine
-rather than to emulate the violent and histrionic revolt of the Conrads
-and Laras actually succeeded, we are told, in giving themselves
-consumption (hence the epithet _école poitrinaire_).
-
-In outer and visible freakishness the French romanticists of 1830
-probably bore away the palm, though in inner and spiritual remoteness
-from normal human experience they can scarcely vie with the early
-German romanticists. And this is doubtless due to the fact that in
-France there was a more definite outer standard from which to advertise
-their departure, and also to the fact that the revolt against this
-standard was so largely participated in by the painters and by writers
-like Gautier who were also interested in painting. Chateaubriand
-writes of the romantic painters (and the passage will also serve to
-illustrate his attitude towards his own disciples): “[These artists]
-rig themselves up as comic sketches, as grotesques, as caricatures.
-Some of them wear frightful mustaches, one would suppose that they
-are going forth to conquer the world--their brushes are halberds,
-their paint-scratchers sabres; others have enormous beards and hair
-that puffs out or hangs down their shoulders; they smoke a cigar
-volcanically. These cousins of the rainbow, to use a phrase of our old
-Régnier, have their heads filled with deluges, seas, rivers, forests,
-cataracts, tempests, or it may be with slaughters, tortures and
-scaffolds. One finds among them human skulls, foils, mandolins, helmets
-and dolmans. … They aim to form a separate species between the ape and
-the satyr; they give you to understand that the secrecy of the studio
-has its dangers and that there is no safety for the models.”
-
-These purely personal eccentricities that so marked the early stages in
-the warfare between the Bohemian and the philistine have as a matter
-of fact diminished in our own time. Nowadays a man of the distinction
-of Disraeli or even of Bulwer-Lytton[47] would scarcely affect, as
-they did, the flamboyant style in dress. But the underlying failure
-to discriminate between the odd and the original has persisted and has
-worked out into even extremer consequences. One may note, as I have
-said, even in the early figures in the movement a tendency to play to
-the gallery, a something that suggests the approach of the era of the
-lime-light and the big headline. Rousseau himself has been called the
-father of yellow journalists. There is an unbroken development from
-the early exponents of original genius down to cubists, futurists and
-post-impressionists and the corresponding schools in literature. The
-partisans of expression as opposed to form in the eighteenth century
-led to the fanatics of expression in the nineteenth and these have
-led to the maniacs of expression of the twentieth. The extremists in
-painting have got so far beyond Cézanne, who was regarded not long ago
-as one of the wildest of innovators, that Cézanne is, we are told, “in
-a fair way to achieve the unhappy fate of becoming a classic.” Poe
-was fond of quoting a saying of Bacon’s that “there is no excellent
-beauty that hath not some strangeness in the proportion.” This saying
-became known in France through Baudelaire’s rendering of Poe and was
-often ascribed to Poe himself. It was taken to mean that the stranger
-one became the nearer one was getting to perfect beauty. And if we
-grant this view of beauty we must admit that some of the decadents
-succeeded in becoming very beautiful indeed. But the more the element
-of proportion in beauty is sacrificed to strangeness the more the
-result will seem to the normal man to be, not beauty at all, but rather
-an esoteric cult of ugliness. The romantic genius therefore denounces
-the normal man as a philistine and at the same time, since he cannot
-please him, seeks at least to shock him and so capture his attention
-by the very violence of eccentricity.
-
-The saying I have quoted from Bacon is perhaps an early example of the
-inner alliance between things that superficially often seem remote--the
-scientific spirit and the spirit of romance. Scientific discovery has
-given a tremendous stimulus to wonder and curiosity, has encouraged a
-purely exploratory attitude towards life and raised an overwhelming
-prepossession in favor of the new as compared with the old. Baconian
-and Rousseauist evidently come together by their primary emphasis on
-novelty. The movement towards a more and more eccentric conception
-of art and literature has been closely allied in practice with the
-doctrine of progress--and that from the very dawn of the so-called
-Quarrel of Ancients and Moderns. It is scarcely possible to exaggerate
-the havoc that has been wrought by the transfer of the belief that
-the latest thing is the best--a belief that is approximately true
-of automobiles--from the material order to an entirely different
-realm.[48] The very heart of the classical message, one cannot repeat
-too often, is that one should aim first of all not to be original,
-but to be human, and that to be human one needs to look up to a sound
-model and imitate it. The imposition of form and proportion upon one’s
-expansive impulses which results from this process of imitation is,
-in the true sense of that much abused word, culture. Genuine culture
-is difficult and disciplinary. The mediation that it involves between
-the conflicting claims of form and expression requires the utmost
-contention of spirit. We have here a clue to the boundless success
-of the Rousseauistic doctrine of spontaneity, of the assertion that
-genius resides in the region of the primitive and unconscious and is
-hindered rather than helped by culture. It is easier to be a genius
-on Rousseauistic lines than to be a man on the terms imposed by the
-classicist. There is a fatal facility about creation when its quality
-is not tested by some standard set above the creator’s temperament;
-and the same fatal facility appears in criticism when the critic does
-not test creation by some standard set above both his own temperament
-and that of the creator. The romantic critic as a matter of fact
-confines his ambition to receiving so keen an impression from genius,
-conceived as something purely temperamental, that when this creative
-expression is passed through his temperament it will issue forth as a
-fresh expression. Taste, he holds, will thus tend to become one with
-genius, and criticism, instead of being cold and negative like that of
-the neo-classicist, will itself grow creative.[49] But the critic who
-does not get beyond this stage will have gusto, zest, relish, what you
-will, he will not have taste. For taste involves a difficult mediation
-between the element of uniqueness in both critic and creator and that
-which is representative and human. Once eliminate this human standard
-that is set above the temperament of the creator and make of the critic
-in turn a mere pander to “genius” and it is hard to see what measure
-of a man’s excellence is left save his intoxication with himself; and
-this measure would scarcely seem to be trustworthy. “Every ass that’s
-romantic,” says Wolseley in his Preface to “Valentinian” (1686)
-“believes he’s inspired.”
-
-An important aspect of the romantic theory of genius remains to be
-considered. This theory is closely associated in its rise and growth
-with the theory of the master faculty or ruling passion. A man can
-do that for which he has a genius without effort, whereas no amount
-of effort can avail to give a man that for which he has no native
-aptitude.[50] Buffon affirmed in opposition to this view that genius is
-only a capacity for taking pains or, as an American recently put it, is
-ten per cent inspiration and ninety per cent perspiration. This notion
-of genius not only risks running counter to the observed facts as to
-the importance of the native gift but it does not bring out as clearly
-as it might the real point at issue. Even though genius were shown
-to be ninety per cent inspiration a man should still, the classicist
-would insist, fix his attention on the fraction that is within his
-power. Thus Boileau says in substance at the outset of his “Art of
-Poetry” that a poet needs to be born under a propitious star. Genius
-is indispensable, and not merely genius in general but genius for the
-special kind of poetry in which he is to excel. Yet granting all this,
-he says to the poetical aspirant, bestir yourself! The mystery of grace
-will always be recognized in any view of life that gets at all beneath
-the surface. Yet it is still the better part to turn to the feasibility
-of works. The view of genius as merely a temperamental overflow is as
-a matter of fact only a caricature of the doctrine of grace. It suits
-the spiritual indolence of the creator who seeks to evade the more
-difficult half of his problem--which is not merely to create but to
-humanize his creation. Hawthorne, for example, is according to Mr.
-Brownell, too prone (except in the “Scarlet Letter”) to get away from
-the clear sunlight of normal human experience into a region of somewhat
-crepuscular symbolism, and this is because he yielded too complacently
-and fatalistically to what he conceived to be his genius. The theory
-of genius is perhaps the chief inheritance of the New England
-transcendentalists from romanticism. Hawthorne was more on his guard
-against the extreme implications of the theory than most other members
-of this group. It remains to be seen how much the exaltation of genius
-and depreciation of culture that marks one whole side of Emerson will
-in the long run tell against his reputation. The lesser New England men
-showed a rare incapacity to distinguish between originality and mere
-freakishness either in themselves or in others.
-
-It is fair to say that in lieu of the discipline of culture the
-romantic genius has often insisted on the discipline of technique;
-and this has been especially true in a country like France with its
-persistent tradition of careful workmanship. Gautier, for example,
-would have one’s “floating dream sealed”[51] in the hardest and most
-resisting material, that can only be mastered by the perfect craftsman;
-and he himself, falling into a confusion of the arts, tries to display
-such a craftsmanship by painting and carving with words. Flaubert,
-again, refines upon the technique of writing to a point where it
-becomes not merely a discipline but a torture. But if a man is to
-be a romantic genius in the fullest sense he must, it should seem,
-repudiate even the discipline of technique as well as the discipline of
-culture in favor of an artless spontaneity. For after all the genius
-is only the man who retains the virtues of the child, and technical
-proficiency is scarcely to be numbered among these virtues. The German
-romanticists already prefer the early Italian painters because of their
-naïveté and divine awkwardness to the later artiste who had a more
-conscious mastery of their material. The whole Pre-Raphaelite movement
-is therefore only one aspect of Rousseau’s return to nature. To later
-primitivists the early Italians themselves seem far too deliberate.
-They would recover the spontaneity displayed in the markings on
-Alaskan totem poles or in the scratchings of the caveman on the
-flint. A prerequisite to pure genius, if we are to judge by their own
-productions, is an inability to draw. The futurists in their endeavor
-to convey symbolically their own “soul” or “vision”--a vision be it
-noted of pure flux and motion--deny the very conditions of time and
-space that determine the special technique of painting; and inasmuch
-as to express one’s “soul” means for these moderns, as it did for the
-“genius” of the eighteenth century, to express the ineffable difference
-between themselves and others, the symbolizing of this soul to which
-they have sacrificed both culture and technique remains a dark mystery.
-
-An eccentricity so extreme as to be almost or quite indistinguishable
-from madness is then the final outcome of the revolt of the original
-genius from the regularity of the eighteenth century. The eighteenth
-century had, one must confess, become too much like the Happy Valley
-from which Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia, sought an egress. It was fair
-to the eye and satisfied all man’s ordinary needs, but it seemed at the
-same time to hem him in oppressively, and limit unduly his horizons.
-For the modern man, as for the prince in Johnson’s tale, a regular
-round of assured felicities has counted for nought as compared with the
-passion for the open; though now that he has tasted strange adventures,
-the modern man will scarcely decide at the end, like the prince, to
-“return to Abyssinia.” I have already spoken of the rationalistic and
-pseudo-classic elements in the eighteenth century that the romantic
-rebels found so intolerable. It is impossible to follow “reason,” they
-said in substance, and also to slake one’s thirst for the “infinite”;
-it is impossible to conform and imitate and at the same time to be free
-and original and spontaneous. Above all it is impossible to submit
-to the yoke of either reason or imitation and at the same time to be
-imaginative. This last assertion will always be the main point at issue
-in any genuine debate between classicist and romanticist. The supreme
-thing in life, the romanticist declares, is the creative imagination,
-and it can be restored to its rights only by repudiating imitation. The
-imagination is supreme the classicist grants but adds that to imitate
-rightly is to make the highest use of the imagination. To understand
-all that is implied in this central divergence between classicist
-and romanticist we shall need to study in more detail the kind of
-imaginative activity that has been encouraged in the whole movement
-extending from the rise of the original genius in the eighteenth
-century to the present day.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-ROMANTIC IMAGINATION
-
-
-I have already spoken of the contrast established by the theorists of
-original genius in the eighteenth century between the different types
-of imagination--especially between the literary and the scientific
-imagination. According to these theorists, it will be remembered, the
-scientific imagination should be strictly subordinated to judgment,
-whereas the literary imagination, freed from the shackles of imitation,
-should be at liberty to wander wild in its own empire of chimeras,
-or, at all events, should be far less sharply checked by judgment.
-It is easy to follow the extension of these English views of genius
-and imagination into the France of Rousseau and Diderot, and then
-the elaboration of these same views, under the combined influence of
-both France and England, in Germany. I have tried to show that Kant,
-especially in his “Critique of Judgment,” and Schiller in his “Æsthetic
-Letters” (1795) prepare the way for the conception of the creative
-imagination that is at the very heart of the romantic movement.
-According to this romantic conception, as we have seen, the imagination
-is to be free, not merely from outer formalistic constraint, but from
-all constraint whatever. This extreme romantic emancipation of the
-imagination was accompanied by an equally extreme emancipation of the
-emotions. Both kinds of emancipation are, as I have tried to show,
-a recoil partly from neo-classical judgment--a type of judgment
-which seemed to oppress all that is creative and spontaneous in man
-under a weight of outer convention; partly, from the reason of the
-Enlightenment, a type of reason that was so logical and abstract that
-it seemed to mechanize the human spirit, and to be a denial of all
-that is immediate and intuitive. The neo-classical judgment, with its
-undue unfriendliness to the imagination, is itself a recoil, let us
-remember, from the imaginative extravagance of the “metaphysicals,” the
-intellectual romanticists of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries,
-and also, if we take a sufficiently wide view, from the Quixotic type
-of romanticism, the romanticism of action, that we associate with the
-Middle Ages.
-
-Now not only are men governed by their imaginations (the imagination,
-as Pascal says, disposes of everything), but the type of imagination
-by which most men are governed may be defined in the widest sense
-of the word as romantic. Nearly every man cherishes his dream, his
-conceit of himself as he would like to be, a sort of “ideal” projection
-of his own desires, in comparison with which his actual life seems
-a hard and cramping routine. “Man must conceive himself what he is
-not,” as Dr. Johnson says, “for who is pleased with what he is?” The
-ample habitation that a man rears for his fictitious or “ideal” self
-often has some slight foundation in fact, but the higher he rears
-it the more insecure it becomes, until finally, like Perrette in
-the fable, he brings the whole structure down about his ears by the
-very gesture of his dream. “We all of us,” La Fontaine concludes in
-perhaps the most delightful account of the romantic imagination in
-literature, “wise as well as foolish, indulge in daydreams. There is
-nothing sweeter. A flattering illusion carries away our spirits. All
-the wealth in the world is ours, all honors and all women,”[52] etc.
-When Johnson descants on the “dangerous prevalence of imagination,”[53]
-and warns us to stick to “sober probability,” what he means is the
-dangerous prevalence of day-dreaming. The retreat of the Rousseauist
-into some “land of chimeras” or tower of ivory assumes forms almost
-incredibly complex and subtle, but at bottom the ivory tower is only
-one form of man’s ineradicable longing to escape from the oppression
-of the actual into some land of heart’s desire, some golden age of
-fancy. As a matter of fact, Rousseau’s imaginative activity often
-approaches very closely to the delights of day-dreaming as described
-by La Fontaine. He was never more imaginative, he tells us, than
-when on a walking-trip--especially when the trip had no definite
-goal, or at least when he could take his time in reaching it. The
-_Wanderlust_ of body and spirit could then be satisfied together.
-Actual vagabondage seemed to be an aid to the imagination in its escape
-from verisimilitude. One should note especially Rousseau’s account of
-his early wandering from Lyons to Paris and the airy structures that
-he raised on his anticipations of what he might find there. Inasmuch
-as he was to be attached at Paris to the Swiss Colonel Godard, he
-already traced for himself in fancy, in spite of his short-sightedness,
-a career of military glory. “I had read that Marshal Schomberg was
-short-sighted, why shouldn’t Marshal Rousseau be so too?” In the
-meanwhile, touched by the sight of the groves and brooks, “I felt in
-the midst of my glory that my heart was not made for so much turmoil,
-and soon without knowing how, I found myself once more among my beloved
-pastorals, renouncing forever the toils of Mars.”
-
-Thus alongside the real world and in more or less sharp opposition to
-it, Rousseau builds up a fictitious world, that _pays des chimères_,
-which is alone, as he tells us, worthy of habitation. To study his
-imaginative activity is simply to study the new forms that he gives
-to what I have called man’s ineradicable longing for some Arcadia,
-some land of heart’s desire. Goethe compares the illusions that man
-nourishes in his breast to the population of statues in ancient Rome
-which were almost as numerous as the population of living men. The
-important thing from the point of view of sanity is that a man should
-not blur the boundaries between the two populations, that he should not
-cease to discriminate between his fact and his fiction. If he confuses
-what he dreams himself to be with what he actually is, he has already
-entered upon the pathway of madness. It was, for example, natural
-for a youth like Rousseau who was at once romantic and musical, to
-dream that he was a great composer; but actually to set up as a great
-composer and to give the concert at Lausanne, shows an unwillingness to
-discriminate between his fictitious and his real world that is plainly
-pathological. If not already a megalomaniac, he was even then on the
-way to megalomania.
-
-To wander through the world as though it were an Arcadia or enchanted
-vision contrived for one’s especial benefit is an attitude of
-childhood--especially of imaginative childhood. “Wherever children
-are,” says Novalis, “there is the golden age.” As the child grows and
-matures there is a more or less painful process of adjustment between
-his “vision” and the particular reality in which he is placed. A little
-sense gets knocked into his head, and often, it must be confessed, a
-good deal of the imagination gets knocked out. As Wordsworth complains,
-the vision fades into the light of common day. The striking fact about
-Rousseau is that, far more than Wordsworth, he held fast to his vision.
-He refused to adjust it to an unpalatable reality. During the very
-years when the ordinary youth is forced to subordinate his luxurious
-imaginings to some definite discipline he fell under the influence of
-Madame de Warens who encouraged rather than thwarted his Arcadian bent.
-Later, when almost incurably confirmed in his penchant for revery, he
-came into contact with the refined society of Paris, an environment
-requiring so difficult an adjustment that no one we are told could
-accomplish the feat unless he had been disciplined into the appropriate
-habits from the age of six. He is indeed the supreme example of the
-unadjusted man, of the original genius whose imagination has never
-suffered either inner or outer constraint, who is more of an Arcadian
-dreamer at sixty perhaps than he was at sixteen. He writes to the
-Bailli de Mirabeau (31 January, 1767):
-
- “The fatigue of thinking becomes every day more painful to me.
- I love to dream, but freely, allowing my mind to wander without
- enslaving myself to any subject. … This idle and contemplative
- life which you do not approve and which I do not excuse,
- becomes to me daily more delicious; to wander alone endlessly
- and ceaselessly among the trees and rocks about my dwelling,
- to muse or rather to be as irresponsible as I please, and as
- you say, to go wool-gathering; … finally to give myself up
- unconstrainedly to my fantasies which, thank heaven, are all
- within my power: that, sir, is for me the supreme enjoyment,
- than which I can imagine nothing superior in this world for a
- man at my age and in my condition.”
-
-Rousseau, then, owes his significance not only to the fact that he was
-supremely imaginative in an age that was disposed to deny the supremacy
-of the imagination, but to the fact that he was imaginative in a
-particular way. A great multitude since his time must be reckoned among
-his followers, not because they have held certain ideas but because
-they have exhibited a similar quality of imagination. In seeking to
-define this quality of imagination we are therefore at the very heart
-of our subject.
-
-It is clear from what has already been said that Rousseau’s imagination
-was in a general way Arcadian, and this, if not the highest, is perhaps
-the most prevalent type of imagination. In surveying the literature of
-the world one is struck not only by the universality of the pastoral
-or idyllic element, but by the number of forms it has assumed--forms
-ranging from the extreme of artificiality and conventionalism to the
-purest poetry. The very society against the artificiality of which
-Rousseau’s whole work is a protest is itself in no small degree a
-pastoral creation. Various elements indeed entered into the life of
-the drawing-room as it came to be conceived towards the beginning
-of the seventeenth century. The Marquise de Rambouillet and others
-who set out at this time to live in the grand manner were in so
-far governed either by genuine or by artificial decorum. But at the
-same time that the creators of _le grand monde_ were aiming to be
-more “decent” than the men and women of the sixteenth century, they
-were patterning themselves upon the shepherds and shepherdesses of
-D’Urfé’s interminable pastoral “l’Astrée.” They were seeking to create
-a sort of enchanted world from which the harsh cares of ordinary life
-were banished and where they might be free, like true Arcadians, to
-discourse of love. This discourse of love was associated with what
-I have defined as intellectual romanticism. In spite of the attacks
-by the exponents of humanistic good sense (Molière, Boileau, etc.)
-on this drawing-room affectation, it lingered on and still led in
-the eighteenth century, as Rousseau complained, to “inconceivable
-refinements.”[54] At the same time we should recollect that there is
-a secret bond between all forms of Arcadian dreaming. Not only was
-Rousseau fascinated, like the early _précieux_ and _précieuses_, by
-D’Urfé’s pastoral, but he himself appealed by his renewal of the main
-pastoral theme of love to the descendants of these former Arcadians
-in the polite society of his time. The love of Rousseau is associated
-not like that of the _précieux_, with the intellect, but with the
-emotions, and so he substitutes for a “wire-drawn and super-subtilized
-gallantry,” the ground-swell of elemental passion.[55] Moreover, the
-definitely primitivistic coloring that he gave to his imaginative
-renewal of the pastoral dream appealed to an age that was reaching the
-last stages of over-refinement. Primitivism is, strictly speaking,
-nothing new in the world. It always tends to appear in periods of
-complex civilization. The charms of the simple life and of a return
-to nature were celebrated especially during the Alexandrian period
-of Greek literature for the special delectation no doubt of the most
-sophisticated members of this very sophisticated society. “Nothing,” as
-Dr. Santayana says, “is farther from the common people than the corrupt
-desire to be primitive.” Primitivistic dreaming was also popular
-in ancient Rome at its most artificial moment. The great ancients,
-however, though enjoying the poetry of the primitivistic dream, were
-not the dupes of this dream. Horace, for example, lived at the most
-artificial moment of Rome when primitivistic dreaming was popular as
-it had been at Alexandria. He descants on the joys of the simple life
-in a well-known ode. One should not therefore hail him, like Schiller,
-as the founder of the sentimental school “of which he has remained the
-unsurpassed model.”[56] For the person who plans to return to nature
-in Horace’s poem is the old usurer Alfius, who changes his mind at
-the last moment and puts out his mortgages again. In short, the final
-attitude of the urbane Horace towards the primitivistic dream--it could
-hardly be otherwise--is ironical.
-
-Rousseau seems destined to remain the supreme example, at least in the
-Occident, of the man who takes the primitivistic dream seriously, who
-attempts to set up primitivism as a philosophy and even as a religion.
-Rousseau’s account of his sudden illumination on the road from Paris
-to Vincennes is famous: the scales, he tells us, fell from his eyes
-even as they had from the eyes of Paul on the road to Damascus, and
-he saw how man had fallen from the felicity of his primitive estate;
-how the blissful ignorance in which he had lived at one with himself
-and harmless to his fellows had been broken by the rise of intellectual
-self-consciousness and the resulting progress in the sciences and
-arts. Modern students of Rousseau have, under the influence of James,
-taken this experience on the road to Vincennes to be an authentic
-case of conversion,[57] but this is merely one instance of our modern
-tendency to confound the subrational with the superrational. What one
-finds in this alleged conversion when one looks into it, is a sort of
-“subliminal uprush” of the Arcadian memories of his youth, especially
-of his life at Annecy and Les Charmettes, and at the same time the
-contrast between these Arcadian memories and the hateful constraints
-he had suffered at Paris in his attempts to adjust himself to an
-uncongenial environment.
-
-We can trace even more clearly perhaps the process by which the
-Arcadian dreamer comes to set up as a seer, in Rousseau’s relation of
-the circumstances under which he came to compose his “Discourse on the
-Origins of Inequality.” He goes off on a sort of picnic with Thérèse
-into the forest of St. Germain and gives himself up to imagining the
-state of primitive man. “Plunged in the forest,” he says, “I sought
-and found there the image of primitive times of which I proudly
-drew the history; I swooped down on the little falsehoods of men; I
-ventured to lay bare their nature, to follow the progress of time and
-of circumstances which have disfigured it, and comparing artificial
-man (_l’homme de l’homme_) with natural man, to show in his alleged
-improvement the true source of his miseries. My soul, exalted by these
-sublime contemplations, rose into the presence of the Divinity. Seeing
-from this vantage point that the blind pathway of prejudices followed
-by my fellows was also that of their errors, misfortunes and crimes, I
-cried out to them in a feeble voice that they could not hear: Madmen,
-who are always complaining of nature, know that all your evils come
-from yourselves alone.”
-
-The golden age for which the human heart has an ineradicable longing
-is here presented not as poetical, which it certainly is, but as a
-“state of nature” from which man has actually fallen. The more or less
-innocent Arcadian dreamer is being transformed into the dangerous
-Utopist. He puts the blame of the conflict and division of which he is
-conscious in himself upon the social conventions that set bounds to
-his temperament and impulses; once get rid of these purely artificial
-restrictions and he feels that he will again be at one with himself and
-“nature.” With such a vision of nature as this it is not surprising
-that every constraint is unendurable to Rousseau, that he likes, as
-Berlioz was to say of himself later, to “make all barriers crack.”
-He is ready to shatter all the forms of civilized life in favor of
-something that never existed, of a state of nature that is only the
-projection of his own temperament and its dominant desires upon the
-void. His programme amounts in practice to the indulgence of infinite
-indeterminate desire, to an endless and aimless vagabondage of the
-emotions with the imagination as their free accomplice.
-
-This longing of the highly sophisticated person to get back to the
-primitive and naïve and unconscious, or what amounts to the same
-thing, to shake off the trammels of tradition and reason in favor of
-free and passionate self-expression, underlies, as I have pointed out,
-the conception of original genius which itself underlies the whole
-modern movement. A book reflecting the primitivistic trend of the
-eighteenth century, and at the same time pointing the way, as we shall
-see presently, to the working out of the fundamental primitivistic
-contrast between the natural and the artificial in the romanticism
-of the early nineteenth century, is Schiller’s “Essay on Simple and
-Sentimental Poetry.” The poetry that does not “look before or after,”
-that is free from self-questioning and self-consciousness, and has a
-childlike spontaneity, Schiller calls simple or naïve. The poet, on the
-other hand, who is conscious of his fall from nature and who, from the
-midst of his sophistication, longs to be back once more at his mother’s
-bosom, is sentimental. Homer and his heroes, for example, are naïve;
-Werther, who yearns in a drawing-room for the Homeric simplicity, is
-sentimental. The longing of the modern man for nature, says Schiller,
-is that of the sick man for health. It is hard to see in Schiller’s
-“nature” anything more than a development of Rousseau’s primitivistic
-Arcadia. To be sure, Schiller warns us that, in order to recover the
-childlike and primitive virtues still visible in the man of genius,
-we must not renounce culture. We must not seek to revert lazily to
-an Arcadia, but must struggle forward to an Elysium. Unfortunately
-Schiller’s Elysium has a strange likeness to Rousseau’s Arcadia; and
-that is because Schiller’s own conception of life is, in the last
-analysis, overwhelmingly sentimental. His most Elysian conception,
-that of a purely æsthetic Greece, a wonderland of unalloyed beauty, is
-also a bit of Arcadian sentimentalizing. Inasmuch as Rousseau’s state
-of nature never existed outside of dreamland, the Greek who is simple
-or naïve in this sense is likewise a myth. He has no real counterpart
-either in the Homeric age or any other age of Greece. It is hard to
-say which is more absurd, to make the Greeks naïve, or to turn Horace
-into a sentimentalist. One should note how this romantic perversion
-of the Greeks for which Schiller is largely responsible is related
-to his general view of the imagination. We have seen that in the
-“Æsthetic Letters” he maintains that if the imagination is to conceive
-the ideal it must be free; and that to be free it must be emancipated
-from purpose and engage in a sort of play. If the imagination has to
-subordinate itself to a real object it ceases in so far to be free.
-Hence the more ideal the imagination the farther it gets away from a
-real object. By his theory of the imagination, Schiller thus encourages
-that opposition between the ideal and the real which figures so largely
-in romantic psychology. A man may consent to adjust a mere dream to
-the requirements of the real, but when his dream is promoted to the
-dignity of an ideal it is plain that he will be less ready to make
-the sacrifice. Schiller’s Greece is very ideal in the sense I have
-just defined. It hovers before the imagination as a sort of Golden
-Age of pure beauty, a land of chimeras that is alone worthy of the
-æsthete’s habitation. As an extreme type of the romantic Hellenist,
-one may take Hölderlin, who was a disciple at once of Schiller and of
-Rousseau. He begins by urging emancipation from every form of outer
-and traditional control in the name of spontaneity. “Boldly forget,”
-he cries in the very accents of Rousseau, “what you have inherited and
-won--all laws and customs--and like new-born babes lift up your eyes
-to godlike nature.” Hölderlin has been called a “Hellenizing Werther,”
-and Werther, one should recollect, is only a German Saint-Preux, who is
-in turn, according to Rousseau’s own avowal, only an idealized image
-of Rousseau. The nature that Hölderlin worships and which is, like the
-nature of Rousseau, only an Arcadian intoxication of the imagination,
-he associates with a Greece which is, like the Greece of Schiller,
-a dreamland of pure beauty. He longs to escape into this dreamland
-from an actual world that seems to him intolerably artificial. The
-contrast between his “ideal” Greece and reality is so acute as to make
-all attempt at adjustment out of the question. As a result of this
-maladjustment his whole being finally gave way and he lingered on for
-many years in madness.
-
-The acuteness of the opposition between the ideal and the real in
-Hölderlin recalls Shelley, who was also a romantic Hellenist, and at
-the same time perhaps the most purely Rousseauistic of the English
-romantic poets. But Shelley was also a political dreamer, and here one
-should note two distinct phases in his dream: a first phase that is
-filled with the hope of transforming the real world into an Arcadia[58]
-through revolutionary reform; and then a phase of elegiac disillusion
-when the gap between reality and his ideal refuses to be bridged.[59]
-Something of the same radiant political hope and the same disillusion
-is found in Wordsworth. In the first flush of his revolutionary
-enthusiasm, France seemed to him to be “standing on the top of golden
-hours” and pointing the way to a new birth of human nature:
-
- Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive,
- But to be young was very heaven! O times,
- In which the meagre stale forbidding ways
- Of custom, law and statute, took at once
- The attraction of a country in romance!
-
-When it became evident that the actual world and Utopia did not
-coincide after all, when the hard sequences of cause and effect that
-bind the present inexorably to the past refused to yield to the
-creations of the romantic imagination, what ensued in Wordsworth
-was not so much an awakening to true wisdom as a transformation of
-the pastoral dream. The English Lake Country became for him in some
-measure as it was later to be for Ruskin, the ivory tower into which
-he retreated from the oppression of the real. He still continued to
-see, if not the general order of society, at least the denizens of his
-chosen retreat through the Arcadian mist, and contrasted their pastoral
-felicity with the misery of men “barricadoed in the walls of cities.” I
-do not mean to disparage the poetry of humble life or to deny that many
-passages may be cited from Wordsworth that justify his reputation as an
-inspired teacher: I wish merely to point out here and elsewhere what is
-specifically romantic in the quality of his imagination.
-
-After all it is to Rousseau himself even more than to his German or
-English followers that one needs to turn for the best examples of
-the all-pervasive conflict between the ideal and the actual. The
-psychology of this conflict is revealed with special clearness in the
-four letters that he wrote to M. de Malesherbes, and into which he has
-perhaps put more of himself than into any other similar amount of his
-writing. His natural indolence and impatience at the obligations and
-constraints of life were, he avows to M. de Malesherbes, increased
-by his early reading. At the age of eight he already knew Plutarch
-by heart and had read “all novels” and shed tears over them, he adds
-“by the pailful.” Hence was formed his “heroic and romantic taste”
-which filled him with aversion for everything that did not resemble
-his dreams. He had hoped at first to find the equivalent of these
-dreams among actual men, but after painful disillusions he had come
-to look with disdain on his age and his contemporaries. “I withdrew
-more and more from human society and created for myself a society
-in my imagination, a society that charmed me all the more in that I
-could cultivate it without peril or effort and that it was always at
-my call and such as I required it.” He associated this dream society
-with the forms of outer nature. The long walks in particular that he
-took during his stay at the Hermitage were, he tells us, filled with
-a “continual delirium” of this kind. “I peopled nature with beings
-according to my heart. … I created for myself a golden age to suit my
-fancy.” It is not unusual for a man thus to console himself for his
-poverty in the real relations of life by accumulating a huge hoard of
-fairy gold. Where the Rousseauist goes beyond the ordinary dreamer is
-in his proneness to regard his retirement into some land of chimeras as
-a proof of his nobility and distinction. Poetry and life he feels are
-irreconcilably opposed to each other, and he for his part is on the
-side of poetry and the “ideal.” Goethe symbolized the hopelessness of
-this conflict in the suicide of the young Werther. But though Werther
-died, his creator continued to live, and more perhaps than any other
-figure in the whole Rousseauistic movement perceived the peril of this
-conception of poetry and the ideal. He saw phantasts all about him who
-refused to be reconciled to the gap between the infinitude of their
-longing and the platitude of their actual lot. Perhaps no country and
-time ever produced more such phantasts than Germany of the Storm and
-Stress and romantic periods--partly no doubt because it did not offer
-any proper outlet for the activity of generous youths. Goethe himself
-had been a phantast, and so it was natural in works like his “Tasso”
-that he should show himself specially preoccupied with the problem
-of the poet and his adjustment to life. About the time that he wrote
-this play, he was, as he tells us, very much taken up with thoughts of
-“Rousseau and his hypochondriac misery.” Rousseau for his part felt
-a kinship between himself and Tasso, and Goethe’s Tasso certainly
-reminds us very strongly of Rousseau. Carried away by his Arcadian
-imaginings, Tasso violates the decorum that separates him from the
-princess with whom he has fallen in love. As a result of the rebuffs
-that follow, his dream changes into a nightmare, until he finally falls
-like Rousseau into wild and random suspicion and looks on himself as
-the victim of a conspiracy. In opposition to Tasso is the figure of
-Antonio, the man of the world, whose imagination does not run away with
-his sense of fact, and who is therefore equal to the “demands of the
-day.” The final reconciliation between Tasso and Antonio, if not very
-convincing dramatically, symbolizes at least what Goethe achieved in
-some measure in his own life. There were moments, he declares, when
-he might properly look upon himself as mad, like Rousseau. He escaped
-from this world of morbid brooding, this giddy downward gazing into
-the bottomless pit of the romantic heart against which he utters a
-warning in Tasso, by his activity at the court of Weimar, by classical
-culture, by scientific research. Goethe carries the same problem of
-reconciling the ideal to the real a stage further in his “Wilhelm
-Meister.” The more or less irresponsible and Bohemian youth that we
-see at the beginning learns by renunciation and self-limitation to
-fit into a life of wholesome activity. Goethe saw that the remedy for
-romantic dreaming is work, though he is open to grave criticism, as I
-shall try to show elsewhere, for his unduly naturalistic conception of
-work. But the romanticists as a rule did not wish work in any sense and
-so, attracted as they were by the free artistic life of Meister at the
-beginning, they looked upon his final adjustment to the real as a base
-capitulation to philistinism. Novalis described the book as a “Candide
-directed against poetry,” and set out to write a counterblast in
-“Heinrich von Ofterdingen.” This apotheosis of pure poetry, as he meant
-it to be, is above all an apotheosis of the wildest vagabondage of the
-imagination. Novalis did not, however, as a result of the conflict
-between the ideal and the real, show any signs of going mad like
-Hölderlin, or of simply fading from life like his friend Wackenroder.
-Like E. T. A. Hoffmann and a certain number of other phantasts he had
-a distinct gift for leading a dual life--for dividing himself into
-a prosaic self which went one way, and a poetical self which went
-another.
-
-This necessary and fatal opposition between poetry and prose the
-romanticist saw typified in “Don Quixote,” and of course he sided with
-the idealism of the knight against the philistine good sense of Sancho
-Panza; and so for the early romanticists as well as for those who were
-of their spiritual posterity,--Heine, for example, and Flaubert,--“Don
-Quixote” was a book to evoke not laughter but tears.
-
-To the romantic conception of the ideal can be traced the increasing
-lack of understanding between the poet, or in general the creator, and
-the public during the past century. Many neo-classical writers may,
-like Boileau, have shown an undue reverence for what they conceived to
-be the general sense of their time, but to measure one’s inspiration
-by one’s remoteness from this general sense is surely a far more
-dangerous error; and yet one was encouraged to do this very thing by
-the views of original genius that were held in the eighteenth century.
-Certain late neo-classicists lacked imagination and were at the same
-time always harping on good sense. It was therefore assumed that to
-insist on good sense was necessarily proof of a lack of imagination.
-Because the attempt to achieve the universal had led to a stale and
-lifeless imitation it was assumed that a man’s genius consists in
-his uniqueness, in his unlikeness to other men. Now nothing is more
-private and distinctive in a man than his feelings, so that to be
-unique meant practically for Rousseau and his followers to be unique
-in feeling. Feeling alone they held was vital and immediate. As a
-matter of fact the element in a man’s nature that he possesses in
-common with other men is also something that he _senses_, something
-that is in short intuitive and immediate. But good sense the genius
-identifies with lifeless convention and so measures his originality by
-the distance of his emotional and imaginative recoil from it. Of this
-warfare between sense and sensibility that begins in the eighteenth
-century, the romantic war between the poet and the philistine is only
-the continuation. This war has been bad for both artist and public. If
-the artist has become more and more eccentric, it must be confessed
-that the good sense of the public against which he has protested
-has been too flatly utilitarian. The poet who reduces poetry to the
-imaginative quest of strange emotional adventure, and the plain
-citizen who does not aspire beyond a reality that is too literal and
-prosaic, both suffer; but the æsthete suffers the more severely--so
-much so that I shall need to revert to this conception of poetry in
-my treatment of romantic melancholy. It leads at last to a contrast
-between the ideal and the real such as is described by Anatole France
-in his account of Villiers de l’Isle Adam. “For thirty years,” says M.
-France, “Villiers wandered around in cafés at night, fading away like
-a shadow at the first glimmer of dawn. … His poverty, the frightful
-poverty of cities, had so put its stamp on him and fashioned him so
-thoroughly that he resembled those vagabonds, who, dressed in black,
-sleep on park benches. He had the livid complexion with red blotches,
-the glassy eye, the bowed back of the poor; and yet I am not sure we
-should call him unhappy, for he lived in a perpetual dream and that
-dream was radiantly golden. … His dull eyes contemplated within himself
-dazzling spectacles. He passed through the world like a somnambulist
-seeing nothing of what we see and seeing things that it is not given
-us to behold. Out of the commonplace spectacle of life he succeeded in
-creating an ever fresh ecstasy. On those ignoble café tables in the
-midst of the odor of beer and tobacco, he poured forth floods of purple
-and gold.”
-
-This notion that literal failure is ideal success, and conversely, has
-been developed in a somewhat different form by Rostand in his “Cyrano
-de Bergerac.” By his refusal to compromise or adjust himself to things
-as they are, Cyrano’s real life has become a series of defeats. He is
-finally forced from life by a league of all the mediocrities whom his
-idealism affronts. His discomfiture is taken to show, not that he is
-a Quixotic extremist, but that he is the superior of the successful
-Guise, the man who has stooped to compromise, the French equivalent
-of the Antonio whom Goethe finally came to prefer to Tasso. Rostand’s
-“Chanticleer” is also an interesting study of romantic idealism and
-of the two main stages through which it passes--the first stage when
-one relates one’s ideal to the real; the second, when one discovers
-that the ideal and the real are more or less hopelessly dissevered.
-Chanticleer still maintains his idealistic pose even after he has
-discovered that the sun is not actually made to rise by his crowing.
-In this hugging of his illusion in defiance of reality Chanticleer
-is at the opposite pole from Johnson’s astronomer in “Rasselas” who
-thinks that he has control of the weather, but when disillusioned is
-humbly thankful at having escaped from this “dangerous prevalence
-of imagination,” and entered once more into the domain of “sober
-probability.”
-
-The problem, then, of the genius or the artist versus the philistine
-has persisted without essential modification from the eighteenth
-century to the present day--from the suicide of Chatterton, let us
-say, to the suicide of John Davidson. The man of imagination spurns
-in the name of his “ideal” the limits imposed upon it by a dull
-respectability, and then his ideal turns out only too often to lack
-positive content and to amount in practice to the expansion of infinite
-indeterminate desire. What the idealist opposes to the real is not only
-something that does not exist, but something that never can exist. The
-Arcadian revery which should be allowed at most as an occasional solace
-from the serious business of living is set up as a substitute for
-living. The imaginative and emotional dalliance of the Rousseauistic
-romanticist may assume a bewildering variety of forms. We have already
-seen in the case of Hölderlin how easily Rousseau’s dream of a state
-of nature passes over--and that in spite of Rousseau’s attacks on
-the arts--into the dream of a paradise of pure beauty. The momentous
-matter is not that a man’s imagination and emotions go out towards
-this or that particular haven of refuge in the future or in the past,
-in the East or in the West, but that his primary demand on life is for
-some haven of refuge; that he longs to be away from the here and now
-and their positive demands on his character and will. Poe may sing of
-“the glory that was Greece and the grandeur that was Rome,” but he
-is not therefore a classicist. With the same wistfulness innumerable
-romanticists have looked towards the Middle Ages. So C. E. Norton
-says that Ruskin was a white-winged anachronism,[60] that he should
-have been born in the thirteenth century. But one may surmise that a
-man with Ruskin’s special quality of imagination would have failed
-to adjust himself to the actual life of the thirteenth or any other
-century. Those who put their Arcadia in the Middle Ages or some other
-period of the past have at least this advantage over those who put it
-in the present, they are better protected against disillusion. The man
-whose Arcadia is distant from him merely in space may decide to go and
-see for himself, and the results of this overtaking of one’s dream are
-somewhat uncertain. The Austrian poet Lenau, for example, actually
-took a trip to his primitive paradise that he had imagined somewhere
-in the neighborhood of Pittsburgh. Perhaps it is not surprising that
-he finally died mad. The disenchantment of Chateaubriand in his quest
-for a Rousseauistic Arcadia in America and for Arcadian savages I
-describe later. In his journey into the wilderness Chateaubriand
-reveals himself as a spiritual lotos-eater no less surely than the man
-who takes flight into what is superficially most remote from the virgin
-forest--into some palace of art. His attitude towards America does not
-differ psychically from that of many early romanticists towards Italy.
-Italy was their land of heart’s desire, the land that filled them with
-ineffable longing (_Sehnsucht nach Italien_), a palace of art that,
-like the Latin Quarter of later Bohemians, had some points of contact
-with Mohammed’s paradise. A man may even develop a romantic longing for
-the very period against which romanticism was originally a protest and
-be ready to “fling his cap for polish and for Pope.” One should add
-that the romantic Eldorado is not necessarily rural. Lamb’s attitude
-towards London is almost as romantic as that of Wordsworth towards the
-country. Dr. Johnson cherished urban life because of its centrality.
-Lamb’s imaginative dalliance, on the other hand, is stimulated by the
-sheer variety and wonder of the London streets as another’s might be
-by the mountains or the sea.[61] Lamb could also find an Elysium of
-unmixed æsthetic solace in the literature of the past--especially in
-Restoration Comedy.
-
-The essence of the mood is always the straining of the imagination away
-from the here and now, from an actuality that seems paltry and faded
-compared to the radiant hues of one’s dream. The classicist, according
-to A. W. Schlegel,[62] is for making the most of the present, whereas
-the romanticist hovers between recollection and hope. In Shelleyan
-phrase he “looks before and after and pines for what is not.” He
-inclines like the Byronic dandy, Barbey d’Aurevilly, to take for his
-mottoes the words “Too late” and “Nevermore.”
-
-Nostalgia, the term that has come to be applied to the infinite
-indeterminate longing of the romanticist--his never-ending quest
-after the ever-fleeting object of desire--is not, from the point of
-view of strict etymology, well-chosen. Romantic nostalgia is not
-“homesickness,” accurately speaking, but desire to get away from
-home. Odysseus in Homer suffers from true nostalgia. The Ulysses of
-Tennyson, on the other hand, is nostalgic in the romantic sense when he
-leaves home “to sail beyond the sunset.” Ovid, as Goethe points out,
-is highly classical even in his melancholy. The longing from which
-he suffers in his exile is very determinate: he longs to get back to
-Rome, the centre of the world. Ovid indeed sums up the classic point
-of view when he says that one cannot desire the unknown (_ignoti
-nulla cupido_).[63] The essence of nostalgia is the desire for the
-unknown. “I was burning with desire,” says Rousseau, “without any
-definite object.” One is filled with a desire to fly one knows not
-whither, to be off on a journey into the blue distance.[64] Music is
-exalted by the romanticists above all other arts because it is the
-most nostalgic, the art that is most suggestive of the hopeless gap
-between the “ideal” and the “real.” “Music,” in Emerson’s phrase,
-“pours on mortals its beautiful disdain.” “Away! away!” cries Jean Paul
-to Music. “Thou speakest of things which throughout my endless life I
-have found not, and shall not find.” In musical and other nostalgia,
-the feelings receive a sort of infinitude from the coöperation of the
-imagination; and this infinitude, this quest of something that must
-ever elude one, is at the same time taken to be the measure of one’s
-idealism. The symmetry and form that the classicist gains from working
-within bounds are no doubt excellent, but then the willingness to work
-within bounds betokens a lack of aspiration. If the primitivist is
-ready, as some one has complained, to turn his back on the bright forms
-of Olympus and return to the ancient gods of chaos and of night, the
-explanation is to be sought in this idea of the infinite. It finally
-becomes a sort of Moloch to which he is prepared to sacrifice most
-of the values of civilized life. The chief fear of the classicist is
-to be thought monstrous. The primitivist on the contrary is inclined
-to see a proof of superior amplitude of spirit in mere grotesqueness
-and disproportion. The creation of monsters is, as Hugo says, a
-“satisfaction due to the infinite.”[65]
-
-The breaking down by the emotional romanticist of the barriers that
-separate not merely the different literary genres but the different
-arts is only another aspect of his readiness to follow the lure
-of the infinite. The title of a recent bit of French decadent
-verse--“Nostalgia in Blue Minor”--would already have been perfectly
-intelligible to a Tieck or a Novalis. The Rousseauist--and that from a
-very early stage in the movement--does not hesitate to pursue his ever
-receding dream across all frontiers, not merely those that separate art
-from art, but those that divide flesh from spirit and even good from
-evil, until finally he arrives like Blake at a sort of “Marriage of
-Heaven and Hell.” When he is not breaking down barriers in the name of
-the freedom of the imagination he is doing so in the name of what he is
-pleased to term love.
-
- “The ancient art and poetry,” says A. W. Schlegel, “rigorously
- separate things which are dissimilar; the romantic delights
- in indissoluble mixtures. All contrarieties: nature and art,
- poetry and prose, seriousness and mirth, recollection and
- anticipation, spirituality and sensuality, terrestrial and
- celestial, life and death, are by it blended together in the
- most intimate combination. As the oldest lawgivers delivered
- their mandatory instructions and prescriptions in measured
- melodies; as this is fabulously ascribed to Orpheus, the first
- softener of the yet untamed race of mortals; in like manner
- the whole of the ancient poetry and art is, as it were a
- _rhythmical nomos_ (law), an harmonious promulgation of the
- permanently established legislation of a world submitted to a
- beautiful order, and reflecting in itself the eternal images of
- things. Romantic poetry, on the other hand, is the expression
- of the secret attraction to a chaos which lies concealed in
- the very bosom of the ordered universe, and is perpetually
- striving after new and marvellous births; the life-giving
- spirit of primal love broods here anew on the face of the
- waters. The former is more simple, clear, and like to nature in
- the self-existent perfection of her separate works; the latter,
- notwithstanding its fragmentary appearance, approaches more to
- the secret of the universe. For Conception can only comprise
- each object separately, but nothing in truth can ever exist
- separately and by itself; Feeling perceives all in all at one
- and the same time.”[66]
-
-Note the assumption here that the clear-cut distinctions of classicism
-are merely abstract and intellectual, and that the only true unity is
-the unity of feeling.
-
-In passages of this kind A. W. Schlegel is little more than the
-popularizer of the ideas of his brother Friedrich. Perhaps no one in
-the whole romantic movement showed a greater genius for confusion than
-Friedrich Schlegel; no one, in Nietzsche’s phrase, had a more intimate
-knowledge of all the bypaths to chaos. Now it is from the German group
-of which Friedrich Schlegel was the chief theorist that romanticism
-as a distinct and separate movement takes its rise. We may therefore
-pause appropriately at this point to consider briefly how the epithet
-romantic of which I have already sketched the early history came to
-be applied to a distinct school. In the latter part of the eighteenth
-century, it will be remembered, romantic had become a fairly frequent
-word in English and also (under English influence) a less frequent,
-though not rare word, in French and German; it was often used favorably
-in all these countries as applied to nature, and usually indeed in
-this sense in France and Germany; but in England, when applied to
-human nature and as the equivalent of the French _romanesque_, it had
-ordinarily an unfavorable connotation; it signified the “dangerous
-prevalence of imagination” over “sober probability,” as may be seen
-in Foster’s essay “On the Epithet Romantic.” One may best preface a
-discussion of the next step--the transference of the word to a distinct
-movement--by a quotation from Goethe’s Conversations with Eckermann (21
-March, 1830):
-
- “This division of poetry into classic and romantic,” says
- Goethe, “which is to-day diffused throughout the whole world
- and has caused so much argument and discord, comes originally
- from Schiller and me. It was my principle in poetry always to
- work objectively. Schiller on the contrary wrote nothing that
- was not subjective; he thought his manner good, and to defend
- it he wrote his article on naïve and sentimental poetry. … The
- Schlegels got hold of this idea, developed it and little by
- little it has spread throughout the whole world. Everybody is
- talking of romanticism and classicism. Fifty years ago nobody
- gave the matter a thought.”
-
-One statement in this passage of Goethe’s is perhaps open to
-question--that concerning the obligation of the Schlegels, or rather
-Friedrich Schlegel, to Schiller’s treatise. A comparison of the date
-of publication of the treatise on “Naïve and Sentimental Poetry” with
-the date of composition of Schlegel’s early writings would seem to
-show that some of Schlegel’s distinctions, though closely related to
-those of Schiller, do not derive from them so immediately as Goethe
-seems to imply.[67] Both sets of views grow rather inevitably out
-of a primitivistic or Rousseauistic conception of “nature” that had
-been epidemic in Germany ever since the Age of Genius. We need also
-to keep in mind certain personal traits of Schlegel if we are to
-understand the development of his theories about literature and art.
-He was romantic, not only by his genius for confusion, but also one
-should add, by his tendency to oscillate violently between extremes.
-For him as for Rousseau there was “no intermediary term between
-everything and nothing.” One should note here another meaning that
-certain romanticists give to the word “ideal”--Hazlitt, for example,
-when he says that the “ideal is always to be found in extremes.”
-Every imaginable extreme, the extreme of reaction as well as the
-extreme of radicalism, goes with romanticism; every genuine mediation
-between extremes is just as surely unromantic. Schlegel then was very
-idealistic in the sense I have just defined. Having begun as an extreme
-partisan of the Greeks, conceived in Schiller’s fashion as a people
-that was at once harmonious and instinctive, he passes over abruptly to
-the extreme of revolt against every form of classicism, and then after
-having posed in works like his “Lucinde” as a heaven-storming Titan
-who does not shrink at the wildest excess of emotional unrestraint,
-he passes over no less abruptly to Catholicism and its rigid outer
-discipline. This last phase of Schlegel has at least this much in
-common with his phase of revolt, that it carried with it a cult of the
-Middle Ages. The delicate point to determine about Friedrich Schlegel
-and many other romanticists is why they finally came to place their
-land of heart’s desire in the Middle Ages rather than in Greece. In
-treating this question one needs to take at least a glance at the
-modification that Herder (whose influence on German romanticism is very
-great) gave to the primitivism of Rousseau. Cultivate your genius,
-Rousseau said in substance, your ineffable difference from other men,
-and look back with longing to the ideal moment of this genius--the age
-of childhood, when your spontaneous self was not as yet cramped by
-conventions or “sicklied o’er by the pale cast of thought.” Cultivate
-your national genius, Herder said in substance, and look back wistfully
-at the golden beginnings of your nationality when it was still naïve
-and “natural,” when poetry instead of being concocted painfully by
-individuals was still the unconscious emanation of the folk. Herder
-indeed expands primitivism along these lines into a whole philosophy
-of history. The romantic notion of the origin of the epic springs
-out of this soil, a notion that is probably at least as remote from
-the facts as the neo-classical notion--and that is saying a great
-deal. Any German who followed Herder in the extension that he gave
-to Rousseau’s views about genius and spontaneity could not only see
-the folk soul mirrored at least as naïvely in the “Nibelungenlied” as
-in the “Iliad,” but by becoming a mediæval enthusiast he could have
-the superadded pleasure of indulging not merely personal but racial
-and national idiosyncrasy. Primitivistic mediævalism is therefore an
-important ingredient, especially in the case of Germany, in romantic
-nationalism--the type that has flourished beyond all measure during
-the past century. Again, though one might, like Hölderlin, cherish an
-infinite longing for the Greeks, the Greeks themselves, at least the
-Greeks of Schiller, did not experience longing; but this fact came
-to be felt more and more by F. Schlegel and other romanticists as an
-inferiority, showing as it did that they were content with the finite.
-As for the neo-classicists who were supposed to be the followers of
-the Greeks, their case was even worse; they not only lacked aspiration
-and infinitude, but were sunk in artificiality, and had moreover become
-so analytical that they must perforce see things in “disconnection
-dead and spiritless.” The men of the Middle Ages, on the other hand,
-as F. Schlegel saw them, were superior to the neo-classicists in being
-naïve; their spontaneity and unity of feeling had not yet suffered
-from artificiality, or been disintegrated by analysis.[68] At the same
-time they were superior to the Greeks in having aspiration and the
-sense of the infinite. The very irregularity of their art testified to
-this infinitude. It is not uncommon in the romantic movement thus to
-assume that because one has very little form one must therefore have
-a great deal of “soul.” F. Schlegel so extended his definition of the
-mediæval spirit as to make it include writers like Shakespeare and
-Cervantes, who seemed to him to be vital and free from formalism. The
-new nationalism was also made to turn to the profit of the Middle Ages.
-Each nation in shaking off the yoke of classical imitation and getting
-back to its mediæval past, was recovering what was primitive in its own
-genius, was substituting what was indigenous for what was alien to it.
-
-The person who did more than any one else to give international
-currency to the views of the Schlegels about classic and romantic and
-to their primitivistic mediævalism was Madame de Staël in her book
-on Germany. It was with special reference to Madame de Staël and her
-influence that Daunou wrote the following passage in his introduction
-to La Harpe, a passage that gives curious evidence of the early
-attitude of French literary conservatives towards the new school:
-
- “One of the services that he [La Harpe] should render nowadays
- is to fortify young people against vain and gothic doctrines
- which would reduce the fine arts to childhood if they could
- ever gain credit in the land of Racine and Voltaire. La Harpe
- uttered a warning against these doctrines when he discovered
- the first germs of them in the books of Diderot, Mercier and
- some other innovators. Yet these writers were far from having
- professed fully the barbaric or childish system which has been
- taught and developed among us for a few years past; it is of
- foreign origin; it had no name in our language and the name
- that has been given to it is susceptible in fact of no precise
- meaning. Romanticism, for thus it is called, was imported
- into our midst along with Kantism, with mysticism and other
- doctrines of the same stamp which collectively might be named
- obscurantism. These are words which La Harpe was happy enough
- not to hear. He was accustomed to too much clearness in his
- ideas and expression to use such words or even to understand
- them. He did not distinguish two literatures. The literature
- that nature and society have created for us and which for three
- thousand years past has been established and preserved and
- reproduced by masterpieces appeared to him alone worthy of a
- Frenchman of the eighteenth century. He did not foresee that it
- would be reduced some day to being only a particular kind of
- literature, tolerated or reproved under the name of classic,
- and that its noblest productions would be put on the same level
- as the formless sketches of uncultivated genius and untried
- talents. Yet more than once decadence has thus been taken for
- an advance, and a retrograde movement for progress. Art is so
- difficult. It is quicker to abandon it and to owe everything to
- your genius. … Because perfection calls for austere toil you
- maintain that it is contrary to nature. This is a system that
- suits at once indolence and vanity. Is anything more needed to
- make it popular, especially when it has as auxiliary an obscure
- philosophy which is termed transcendent or transcendental? That
- is just the way sound literature fell into decline beginning
- with the end of the first century of the Christian era. It
- became extinct only to revive after a long period of darkness
- and barbarism; and that is how it will fall into decline again
- if great examples and sage lessons should ever lose their
- authority.”
-
-The general public in England became at least vaguely aware of the new
-movement with the translation of Madame de Staël’s “Germany” (1813)
-and A. W. Schlegel’s “Dramatic Art and Literature” (1815). Byron wrote
-in his reply to Bowles (1821): “Schlegel and Madame de Staël have
-endeavored to reduce poetry to _two_ systems, classical and romantic.
-The effect is only beginning.”
-
-The distinction between classic and romantic worked out by the
-Schlegels and spread abroad by Madame de Staël was, then, largely
-associated with a certain type of mediævalism. Nevertheless one cannot
-insist too strongly that the new school deserved to be called romantic,
-not because it was mediæval, but because it displayed a certain quality
-of imagination in its mediævalism. The longing for the Middle Ages is
-merely a very frequent form of nostalgia, and nostalgia I have defined
-as the pursuit of pure illusion. No doubt a man may be mediæval in
-his leanings and yet very free from nostalgia. He may, for example,
-prefer St. Thomas Aquinas to any modern philosopher on grounds that are
-the very reverse of romantic; and in the attitude of any particular
-person towards the Middle Ages, romantic and unromantic elements may
-be mingled in almost any conceivable proportion; and the same may be
-said of any past epoch that one prefers to the present. Goethe, for
-instance, as has been remarked, took flight from his own reality,
-but he did not, like the romanticists, take flight from all reality.
-The classical world in which Goethe dwelt in imagination during his
-latter years, in the midst of a very unclassical environment, was to
-some extent at least real, though one can discern even in the case of
-Goethe the danger of a classicism that is too aloof from the here
-and now. But the mediævalist, in so far as he is romantic, does not
-turn to a mediæval reality from a real but distasteful present. Here
-as elsewhere his first requirement is not that his “vision” should be
-true, but that it should be rich and radiant; and the more “ideal” the
-vision becomes in this sense, the wider the gap that opens between
-poetry and life.
-
-We are thus brought back to the problem of the romantic imagination or,
-one may term it, the eccentric imagination. The classical imagination,
-I have said, is not free thus to fly off at a tangent, to wander wild
-in some empire of chimeras. It has a centre, it is at work in the
-service of reality. With reference to this real centre, it is seeking
-to disengage what is normal and representative from the welter of the
-actual. It does not evade the actual, but does select from it and seek
-to impose upon it something of the proportion and symmetry of the
-model to which it is looking up and which it is imitating. To say that
-the classicist (and I am speaking of the classicist at his best) gets
-at his reality with the aid of the imagination is but another way of
-saying that he perceives his reality only through a veil of illusion.
-The creator of this type achieves work in which illusion and reality
-are inseparably blended, work which gives the “illusion of a higher
-reality.”
-
-Proportionate and decorous in this sense æsthetic romanticism can in
-no wise be, but it does not follow that the only art of which the
-Rousseauist is capable is an art of idyllic dreaming. Schiller makes a
-remark about Rousseau that goes very nearly to the heart of the matter:
-he is either, says Schiller, dwelling on the delights of nature or
-else avenging her. He is either, that is, idyllic or satirical. Now
-Rousseau himself says that he was not inclined to satire and in a sense
-this is true. He would have been incapable of lampooning Voltaire in
-the same way that Voltaire lampooned him, though one might indeed wish
-to be lampooned by Voltaire rather than to be presented as Rousseau
-has presented certain persons in his “Confessions.” In all that large
-portion of Rousseau’s writing, however, in which he portrays the
-polite society of his time and shows how colorless and corrupt it is
-compared with his pastoral dream (for his “nature,” as I have said, is
-only a pastoral dream) he is highly satirical. In general, he is not
-restrained, at least in the “Confessions,” from the trivial and even
-the ignoble detail by any weak regard for decorum. At best decorum
-seems to him a hollow convention, at worst the “varnish of vice” and
-the “mask of hypocrisy.” Every reader of the “Confessions” must be
-struck by the presence, occasionally on the same page, of passages
-that look forward to Lamartine, and of other passages that seem an
-anticipation rather of Zola. The passage in which Rousseau relates
-how he was abruptly brought to earth from his “angelic loves”[69] is
-typical. In short Rousseau oscillates between an Arcadian vision that
-is radiant but unreal, and a photographic and literal and often sordid
-reality. He does not so use his imagination as to disengage the real
-from the welter of the actual and so achieve something that strikes one
-still as nature but a selected and ennobled nature.[70] “It is a very
-odd circumstance,” says Rousseau, “that my imagination is never more
-agreeably active than when my outer conditions are the least agreeable,
-and that, on the contrary, it is less cheerful when everything is
-cheerful about me. My poor head cannot subordinate itself to things. It
-cannot embellish, it wishes to create. Real objects are reflected in
-it at best such as they are; it can adorn only imaginary objects. If I
-wish to paint the springtime I must be in winter,” etc.
-
-This passage may be said to foreshadow the two types of art and
-literature that have been prevalent since Rousseau--romantic art and
-the so-called realistic art that tended to supplant it towards the
-middle of the nineteenth century.[71] This so-called realism does not
-represent any fundamental change of direction as compared with the
-earlier romanticism; it is simply, as some one has put it, romanticism
-going on all fours. The extreme of romantic unreality has always tended
-to produce a sharp recoil. As the result of the wandering of the
-imagination in its own realm of chimeras, one finally comes to feel
-the need of refreshing one’s sense of fact; and the more trivial the
-fact, the more certain one is that one’s feet are once more planted
-on _terra firma_. Don Quixote is working for the triumph of Sancho
-Panza. Besides this tendency of one extreme to produce the other,
-there are special reasons that I shall point out more fully later for
-the close relationship of the romanticism and the so-called realism
-of the nineteenth century. They are both merely different aspects of
-naturalism. What binds together realism and romanticism is their
-common repudiation of decorum as something external and artificial.
-Once get rid of decorum, or what amounts to the same thing, the
-whole body of “artificial” conventions, and what will result is,
-according to the romanticist, Arcadia. But what actually emerges with
-the progressive weakening of the principle of restraint is _la bête
-humaine_. The Rousseauist begins by walking through the world as though
-it were an enchanted garden, and then with the inevitable clash between
-his ideal and the real he becomes morose and embittered. Since men
-have turned out not to be indiscriminately good he inclines to look
-upon them as indiscriminately bad and to portray them as such. At
-the bottom of much so-called realism therefore is a special type of
-satire, a satire that is the product of violent emotional disillusion.
-The collapse of the Revolution of 1848 produced a plentiful crop of
-disillusion of this kind. No men had ever been more convinced of the
-loftiness of their idealism than the Utopists of this period, or failed
-more ignominiously when put to the test. All that remained, many
-argued, was to turn from an ideal that had proved so disappointing
-to the real, and instead of dreaming about human nature to observe
-men as coolly, in Flaubert’s phrase, as though they were mastodons or
-crocodiles. But what lurks most often behind this pretence to a cold
-scientific impassiveness in observing human nature is a soured and
-cynical emotionalism and a distinctly romantic type of imagination. The
-imagination is still idealistic, still straining, that is, away from
-the real, only its idealism has undergone a strange inversion; instead
-of exaggerating the loveliness it exaggerates the ugliness of human
-nature; it finds a sort of morose satisfaction in building for itself
-not castles but dungeons in Spain. What I am saying applies especially
-to the French realists who are more logical in their disillusion than
-the men of other nations. They often establish the material environment
-of their heroes with photographic literalness, but in their dealings
-with what should be the specifically human side of these characters
-they often resemble Rousseau at his worst: they put pure logic into the
-service of pure emotion, and this is a way of achieving, not the real,
-but a maximum of unreality. The so-called realistic writers abound in
-extreme examples of the romantic imagination. The peasants of Zola
-are not real, they are an hallucination. If a man is thus to let his
-imagination run riot, he might, as Lemaître complains, have imagined
-something more agreeable.
-
-The same kinship between realism and romanticism might be brought out
-in a writer whom Zola claimed as his master--Balzac. I do not refer
-to the side of Balzac that is related to what the French call _le
-bas romantisme_--his lapses into the weird and the melodramatic, his
-occasional suggestions of the claptrap of Anne Radcliffe and the Gothic
-romance--but to his general thesis and his handling of it. Balzac’s
-attitude towards the society of his time is, like the attitude of
-Rousseau towards the society of his time, satirical, but on entirely
-different grounds: he would show the havoc wrought in this society
-by its revolutionary emancipation from central control of the kind
-that had been provided traditionally by the monarchy and the Catholic
-Church, and the consequent disruption of the family by the violent and
-egoistic expansion of the individual along the lines of his ruling
-passion. But Balzac’s imagination is not on the side of his thesis;
-not, that is, on the side of the principle of control; on the contrary,
-it revels in its vision of a world in which men are overstepping all
-ethical bounds in their quest of power and pleasure, of a purely
-naturalistic world that is governed solely by the law of cunning and
-the law of force. His imagination is so fascinated by this vision that,
-like the imagination of Rousseau, though in an entirely different way,
-he simply parts company with reality. Judged by the ultimate quality of
-his imagination, and this, let me repeat, is always the chief thing to
-consider in a creative artist, Balzac is a sort of inverted idealist.
-Compared with the black fictions he conjures up in his painting of
-Paris, the actual Paris seems pale and insipid. His Paris is not real
-in short, but an hallucination--a lurid land of heart’s desire. As
-Leslie Stephen puts it, for Balzac Paris is hell, but then hell is the
-only place worth living in. The empire of chimeras over which he holds
-sway is about as far on one side of reality as George Sand’s kingdom of
-dreams is on the other. George Sand, more perhaps than any other writer
-of her time, continues Rousseau in his purely idyllic manner. Her
-idealized peasants are not any further from the truth and are certainly
-more agreeable than the peasants of Balzac, who foreshadow the peasants
-of Zola.
-
-The writer, however, who shows the conflict between the romantic
-imagination and the real better than either Balzac or Zola, better
-than any other writer perhaps of the modern French movement, is
-Flaubert. The fondness of this founder of realism for reality may be
-inferred from a passage in one of his letters to George Sand: “I
-had in my very youth a complete presentiment of life. It was like a
-sickly kitchen smell escaping from a basement window.” In his attitude
-towards the society of his time, he is, in the same sense, but in
-a far greater degree than Rousseau, satirical. The stupidity and
-mediocrity of the bourgeois are his target, just as Rousseau’s target
-is the artificiality of the drawing-room. At the same time that he
-shrinks back with nausea from this reality, Flaubert is like Gautier
-“full of nostalgias,” even the nostalgia of the Middle Ages. “I am a
-Catholic,” he exclaims, “I have in my heart something of the green
-ooze of the Norman Cathedrals.” Yet he cannot acquiesce in a mediæval
-or any other dream. Even Rousseau says that he was “tormented at times
-by the nothingness of his chimeras.” Flaubert was tormented far more
-by the nothingness of his. Perhaps indeed the predominant flavor in
-Flaubert’s writing as a whole is that of an acrid disillusion. He
-portrays satirically the real and at the same time mocks at the ideal
-that he craves emotionally and imaginatively (this is only one of the
-innumerable forms assumed by the Rousseauistic warfare between the head
-and the heart). He oscillates rapidly between the pole of realism as
-he conceives it, and the pole of romance, and so far as any serious
-philosophy is concerned, is left suspended in the void. Madame Bovary
-is the very type of the Rousseauistic idealist, misunderstood in virtue
-of her exquisite faculty of feeling. She aspires to a “love beyond
-all loves,” an infinite satisfaction that her commonplace husband and
-environment quite deny her. At bottom Flaubert’s heart is with Madame
-Bovary. “I am Madame Bovary,” he exclaims. Yet he exposes pitilessly
-the “nothingness of her chimeras,” and pursues her to the very dregs
-of her disillusion. I have already mentioned Flaubert’s cult for
-“Don Quixote.” His intellectual origins were all there, he says; he
-had known it by heart even when a boy. It has been said that “Madame
-Bovary” bears the same relationship to æsthetic romanticism that “Don
-Quixote” does to the romanticism of actual adventure of the Middle
-Ages. Yet “Don Quixote” is the most genial, “Madame Bovary” the least
-genial of masterpieces. This difference comes out no less clearly in
-a comparison of M. Homais with Sancho Panza than in a comparison of
-Madame Bovary with the Knight, and is so fundamental as to throw doubt
-on the soundness of the whole analogy.
-
-In M. Homais and like figures Flaubert simply means to symbolize
-contemporary life and the immeasurable abyss of platitude in which
-it is losing itself through its lack of imagination and ideal. Yet
-this same platitude exercises on him a horrid fascination. For his
-execration of the philistine is the nearest approach in his idealism to
-a positive content, to an escape from sheer emptiness and unreality.
-This execration must therefore be cherished if he is to remain
-convinced of his own superiority. “If it were not for my indignation,”
-he confesses in one place, “I should fall flat.” Unfortunately we come
-to resemble what we habitually contemplate. “By dint of railing at
-idiots,” says Flaubert, “one runs the risk of becoming idiotic one’s
-self.”
-
-In his discourse on the “Immortality of the Soul” (1659) Henry More
-speaks of “that imagination which is most free, such as we use in
-romantic inventions.” The price that the romantic imagination pays
-for its freedom should by this time be obvious: the freer it becomes
-the farther it gets away from reality. We have seen that the special
-form of unreality encouraged by the æsthetic romanticism of Rousseau
-is the dream of the simple life, the return to a nature that never
-existed, and that this dream made its special appeal to an age that
-was suffering from an excess of artificiality and conventionalism.
-Before entering upon the next stage of our subject it might be well to
-consider for a moment wherein the facts of primitive life, so far as
-we can ascertain them, differ from Rousseau’s dream of primitive life;
-why we are justified in assuming that the noble savage of Rousseau, or
-the Greek of Schiller, or Hölderlin, or the man of the Middle Ages of
-Novalis never had any equivalent in reality. More or less primitive men
-have existed and still exist and have been carefully studied. Some of
-them actually recall by various traits, their gentleness, for example,
-Rousseau’s aboriginal man, and the natural pity that is supposed to
-guide him. Why then will any one familiar with the facts of aboriginal
-life smile when Rousseau speaks of the savage “attached to no place,
-having no prescribed task, obeying no one, having no other law than his
-own will,”[72] and therefore displaying independence and initiative?
-The answer is of course that genuine savages are, with the possible
-exception of children, the most conventional and imitative of beings.
-What one takes to be natural in them is often the result of a long and,
-in the Rousseauistic sense, artificial discipline. The tendency to
-take for pure and unspoiled nature what is in fact a highly modified
-nature is one that assumes many forms. “When you see,” says Rousseau,
-“in the happiest people in the world bands of peasants regulate the
-affairs of state under an oak-tree and always behave sensibly, can
-you keep from despising the refinements of other nations which make
-themselves illustrious and miserable with so much art and mystery?”
-Rousseau is viewing these peasants through the Arcadian glamour. In
-much the same way Emerson saw a proof of the consonance of democracy
-with human nature in the working of the New England town-meeting. But
-both Rousseau’s Swiss and Emerson’s New Englanders had been moulded by
-generations of austere religious discipline and so throw little light
-on the relation of democracy to human nature in itself.
-
-A somewhat similar illusion is that of the man who journeys into a
-far country and enjoys in the highest degree the sense of romantic
-strangeness. He has escaped from the convention of his own society and
-is inclined to look on the men and women he meets in the foreign land
-as Arcadian apparitions. But these men and women have not escaped from
-_their_ convention. On the contrary, what most delights him in them
-(for example, what most delighted Lafcadio Hearn in the Japanese) may
-be the result of an extraordinarily minute and tyrannical discipline
-imposed in the name of the general sense upon the impulses of the
-individual.
-
-The relation of convention to primitive life is so well understood
-nowadays that the Rousseauist has reversed his argument. Since
-primitive folk (let us say the Bushmen of Australia) are more
-conventional than the Parisian and Londoner we may infer that at some
-time in the future when the ideal is at last achieved upon earth,
-conventions will have disappeared entirely. But this is simply to
-transfer the Golden Age from the past to the future, and also to miss
-the real problem: for there is a real problem--perhaps indeed the
-gravest of all problems--involved in the relation of the individual to
-convention. If we are to grasp the nature of this problem we should
-perceive first of all that the significant contrast is not that between
-conditions more or less primitive and civilization, but that between a
-civilization that does not question its conventions and a civilization
-that has on the contrary grown self-conscious and critical. Thus the
-Homeric Greeks, set up by Schiller as exemplars of the simple life,
-were plainly subject to the conventions of an advanced civilization.
-The Periclean Greeks were also highly civilized, but unlike the Homeric
-Greeks, were becoming self-conscious and critical. In the same way
-the European thirteenth century, in some respects the most civilized
-that the world has seen, was governed by a great convention that
-imposed very strict limits upon the liberty of the individual. The
-critical spirit was already awake and tugging at the leashes of the
-outer authority that confined it, but it did not actually break them.
-Dante and St. Thomas Aquinas did not, for example, inquire into the
-basis of the mediæval convention in the same way that Socrates and the
-sophists inquired into the traditional opinions of Greece. But in the
-eighteenth century, especially in France, and from that time down to
-the present day, the revolt against convention has assumed proportions
-quite comparable to anything that took place in ancient Greece. Perhaps
-no other age has witnessed so many individuals who were, like Berlioz,
-eager to make all traditional barriers crack in the interest of their
-“genius” and its full expression. The state of nature in the name of
-which Rousseau himself assailed convention, though in itself only a
-chimera, a mere Arcadian projection upon the void, did indeed tend in a
-rationalistic pseudo-classic age, to new forms of imaginative activity.
-In the form that concerns us especially the imagination is free to give
-its magic and glamour and infinitude to the emancipated emotions. This
-type of romanticism did not result in any recovery of the supposed
-primitive virtues, but it did bring about a revaluation of the received
-notions of morality that can scarcely be studied too carefully.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-ROMANTIC MORALITY: THE IDEAL
-
-
-The period that began in the late eighteenth century and in the midst
-of which we are still living has witnessed an almost unparalleled
-triumph, as I have just said, of the sense of the individual (_sens
-propre_) over the general sense of mankind (_sens commun_). Even
-the collectivistic schemes that have been opposed to individualism
-during this period are themselves, judged by traditional standards,
-violently individualistic. Now the word individualism needs as much
-as any other general term to be treated Socratically: we need in the
-interests of our present subject to discriminate between different
-varieties of individualism. Perhaps as good a working classification
-as any is to distinguish three main varieties: a man may wish to act,
-or think, or feel, differently from other men, and those who are
-individualistic in any one of these three main ways may have very
-little in common with one another. To illustrate concretely, Milton’s
-plea in his “Areopagitica” for freedom of conscience makes above all
-for individualism of action. (_La foi qui n’agit pas est-ce une foi
-sincère?_) Pierre Bayle, on the other hand, pleads in his Dictionary
-and elsewhere for tolerance, not so much because he wishes to act or
-feel in his own way as because he wishes to think his own thoughts.
-Rousseau is no less obviously ready to subordinate both thought and
-action to sensibility. His message is summed up once for all in the
-exclamation of Faust, “Feeling is all.” He urges war on the general
-sense only because of the restrictions it imposes on the free expansion
-of his emotions and the enhancing of these emotions by his imagination.
-
-Now the warfare that Rousseau and the individualists of feeling have
-waged on the general sense has meant in practice a warfare on two great
-traditions, the classical and the Christian. I have already pointed out
-that these two traditions, though both holding the idea of imitation,
-were not entirely in accord with one another, that the imitation of
-Horace differs widely from the imitation of Christ. Yet their diverging
-from one another is as nothing compared with their divergence from
-the individualism of the primitivist. For the man who imitates Christ
-in any traditional sense this world is not an Arcadian dream but a
-place of trial and probation. “Take up your cross and follow me.” The
-following of this great exemplar required that the instinctive self,
-which Rousseau would indulge, should be either sternly rebuked or else
-mortified utterly. So far from Nature and God being one, the natural
-man is so corrupt, according to the more austere Christian, that the
-gap between him and the divine can be traversed only by a miracle of
-grace. He should therefore live in fear and trembling as befits a being
-upon whom rests the weight of the divine displeasure. “It is an humble
-thing to be a man.” Humility indeed is, in the phrase of Jeremy Taylor,
-the special ornament and jewel of the Christian religion, and one is
-tempted to add, of all religion in so far as it is genuine. Genuine
-religion must always have in some form the sense of a deep inner cleft
-between man’s ordinary self and the divine. But some Christians were
-more inclined from the start, as we can see in the extreme forms of
-the doctrine of grace, to push their humility to an utter despair of
-human nature. The historical explanation of this despair is obvious:
-it is a sharp rebound from the pagan riot; an excessive immersion in
-this world led to an excess of otherworldliness. At the same time
-the conviction as to man’s helplessness was instilled into those,
-who, like St. Augustine, had witnessed in some of its phases the slow
-disintegration of the Roman Empire. Human nature had gone bankrupt;
-and for centuries it needed to be administered, if I may continue the
-metaphor, in receivership. The doctrine of grace was admirably adapted
-to this end.
-
-The pagan riot from which the church reacted so sharply, was not,
-however, the whole of the ancient civilization. I have already said
-that there was at the heart of this civilization at its best a great
-idea--the idea of proportionateness. The ancients were in short
-not merely naturalistic but humanistic, and the idea of proportion
-is just as fundamental in humanism as is humility in religion.
-Christianity, one scarcely need add, incorporated within itself,
-however disdainfully, many humanistic elements from Greek and Roman
-culture. Yet it is none the less true that in his horror at the pagan
-worldliness the Christian tended to fly into the opposite extreme of
-unworldliness, and in this clash between naturalism and supernaturalism
-the purely human virtues of mediation were thrust more or less into the
-background. Yet by its very defect on the humanistic side the doctrine
-of grace was perhaps all the better fitted for the administration of
-human nature in receivership. For thus to make man entirely distrustful
-of himself and entirely dependent on God, meant in practice to make
-him entirely dependent on the Church. Man became ignorant and fanatical
-in the early Christian centuries, but he also became humble, and
-in the situation then existing that was after all the main thing.
-The Church as receiver for human nature was thus enabled to rescue
-civilization from the wreck of pagan antiquity and the welter of the
-barbarian invasions. But by the very fact that the bases of life in
-this world gradually grew more secure man became less otherworldly.
-He gradually recovered some degree of confidence in himself. He gave
-increasing attention to that side of himself that the ascetic Christian
-had repressed. The achievements of the thirteenth century which mark
-perhaps the culmination of Christian civilization were very splendid
-not only from a religious but also from a humanistic point of view. But
-although the critical spirit was already beginning to awake, it did
-not at that time, as I have already said, actually break away from the
-tutelage of the Church.
-
-This emancipation of human nature from theological restraint took place
-in far greater measure at the Renaissance. Human nature showed itself
-tired of being treated as a bankrupt, of being governed from without
-and from above. It aspired to become autonomous. There was in so far
-a strong trend in many quarters towards individualism. This rupture
-with external authority meant very diverse things in practice. For
-some who, in Lionardo’s phrase, had caught a glimpse of the antique
-symmetry it meant a revival of genuine humanism; for others it meant
-rather a revival of the pagan and naturalistic side of antiquity. Thus
-Rabelais, in his extreme opposition to the monkish ideal, already
-proclaims, like Rousseau, the intrinsic excellence of man, while
-Calvin and others attempted to revive the primitive austerity of
-Christianity that had been corrupted by the formalism of Rome. In
-short, naturalistic, humanistic, and religious elements are mingled in
-almost every conceivable proportion in the vast and complex movement
-known as the Renaissance; all these elements indeed are often mingled
-in the same individual. The later Renaissance finally arrived at what
-one is tempted to call the Jesuitical compromise. There was a general
-revamping of dogma and outer authority, helped forward by a society
-that had taken alarm at the excesses of the emancipated individual.
-If the individual consented to surrender his moral autonomy, the
-Church for its part consented to make religion comparatively easy and
-pleasant for him, to adapt it by casuistry and other devices to a human
-nature that was determined once for all to take a less severe and
-ascetic view of life. One might thus live inwardly to a great extent
-on the naturalistic level while outwardly going through the motions
-of a profound piety. There is an unmistakable analogy between the
-hollowness of a religion of this type and the hollowness that one feels
-in so much neo-classical decorum. There is also a formalistic taint
-in the educational system worked out by the Jesuits--a system in all
-respects so ingenious and in some respects so admirable. The Greek and
-especially the Latin classics are taught in such a way as to become
-literary playthings rather than the basis of a philosophy of life; a
-humanism is thus encouraged that is external and rhetorical rather than
-vital, and this humanism is combined with a religion that tends to
-stress submission to outer authority at the expense of inwardness and
-individuality. The reproach has been brought against this system that
-it is equally unfitted to form a pagan hero or a Christian saint. The
-reply to it was Rousseau’s educational naturalism--his exaltation of
-the spontaneity and genius of the child.
-
-Voltaire says that every Protestant is a Pope when he has his Bible
-in his hand. But in practice Protestantism has been very far from
-encouraging so complete a subordination of the general sense to the
-sense of the individual. In the period that elapsed between the first
-forward push of individualism in the Renaissance and the second forward
-push in the eighteenth century, each important Protestant group worked
-out its creed or convention and knew how to make it very uncomfortable
-for any one of its members who rebelled against its authority.
-Protestant education was also, like that of the Jesuits, an attempt to
-harmonize Christian and classical elements.
-
-I have already spoken elsewhere of what was menacing all these
-attempts, Protestant as well as Catholic, to revive the principle
-of authority, to put the general sense once more on a traditional
-and dogmatic basis and impose it on the sense of the individual. The
-spirit of free scientific enquiry in the Renaissance had inspired great
-naturalists like Kepler and Galileo, and had had its prophet in Bacon.
-So far from suffering any setback in the seventeenth century, science
-had been adding conquest to conquest. The inordinate self-confidence
-of the modern man would seem to be in large measure an outcome of this
-steady advance of scientific discovery, just as surely as the opposite,
-the extreme humility that appears in the doctrine of grace, reflects
-the despair of those who had witnessed the disintegration of the
-Roman Empire. The word humility, if used at all nowadays, means that
-one has a mean opinion of one’s self in comparison with other men, and
-not that one perceives the weakness and nothingness of human nature in
-itself in comparison with what is above it. But it is not merely the
-self-confidence inspired by science that has undermined the traditional
-disciplines, humanistic and religious, and the attempts to mediate
-between them on a traditional basis; it is not merely that science
-has fascinated man’s imagination, stimulated his wonder and curiosity
-beyond all bounds and drawn him away from the study of his own nature
-and its special problems to the study of the physical realm. What has
-been even more decisive in the overthrow of the traditional disciplines
-is that science has won its triumphs not by accepting dogma and
-tradition but by repudiating them, by dealing with the natural law, not
-on a traditional but on a positive and critical basis. The next step
-that might logically have been taken, one might suppose, would have
-been to put the human law likewise on a positive and critical basis. On
-the contrary the very notion that man is subject to two laws has been
-obscured. The truths of humanism and religion, being very much bound
-up with certain traditional forms, have been rejected along with these
-forms as obsolescent prejudice, and the attempt has been made to treat
-man as entirely the creature of the natural law. This means in practice
-that instead of dying to his ordinary self, as the austere Christian
-demands, or instead of imposing a law of decorum upon his ordinary
-self, as the humanist demands, man has only to develop his ordinary
-self freely.
-
-At the beginning, then, of the slow process that I have been tracing
-down in briefest outline from mediæval Christianity, we find a pure
-supernaturalism; at the end, a pure naturalism. If we are to understand
-the relationship of this naturalism to the rise of a romantic morality,
-we need to go back, as we have done in our study of original genius,
-to the England of the early eighteenth century. Perhaps the most
-important intermediary stage in the passage from a pure supernaturalism
-to a pure naturalism is the great deistic movement which flourished
-especially in the England of this period. Deism indeed is no new
-thing. Deistic elements may be found even in the philosophy of the
-Middle Ages. But for practical purposes one does not need in one’s
-study of deism to go behind English thinkers like Shaftesbury and his
-follower Hutcheson. Shaftesbury is a singularly significant figure.
-He is not only the authentic precursor of innumerable naturalistic
-moralists in England, France, and Germany, but one may also trace
-in his writings the connection between modern naturalistic morality
-and ancient naturalistic morality in its two main forms--Stoic and
-Epicurean. The strict Christian supernaturalist had maintained that the
-divine can be known to man only by the outer miracle of revelation,
-supplemented by the inner miracle of grace. The deist maintains, on
-the contrary, that God reveals himself also through outer nature which
-he has fitted exquisitely to the needs of man, and that inwardly man
-may be guided aright by his unaided thoughts and feelings (according
-to the predominance of thought or feeling the deist is rationalistic
-or sentimental). Man, in short, is naturally good and nature herself
-is beneficent and beautiful. The deist finally pushes this harmony in
-God and man and nature so far that the three are practically merged.
-At a still more advanced stage God disappears, leaving only nature
-and man as a modification of nature, and the deist gives way to the
-pantheist who may also be either rationalistic or emotional. The
-pantheist differs above all from the deist in that he would dethrone
-man from his privileged place in creation, which means in practice that
-he denies final causes. He no longer believes, for example, like that
-sentimental deist and disciple of Rousseau, Bernardin de St. Pierre,
-that Providence has arranged everything in nature with an immediate eye
-to man’s welfare; that the markings on the melon, for instance, “seem
-to show that it is destined for the family table.”[73]
-
-Rousseau himself, though eschewing this crude appeal to final causes,
-scarcely got in theory at least beyond the stage of emotional deism.
-The process I have been describing is illustrated better in some
-aspects by Diderot who began as a translator of Shaftesbury and who
-later got so far beyond mere deism that he anticipates the main ideas
-of the modern evolutionist and determinist. Diderot is at once an
-avowed disciple of Bacon, a scientific utilitarian in short, and also
-a believer in the emancipation of the emotions. Rousseau’s attack
-on science is profoundly significant for other reasons, but it is
-unfortunate in that it obscures the connection that is so visible in
-Diderot between the two sides of the naturalistic movement. If men had
-not been so heartened by scientific progress they would have been less
-ready, we may be sure, to listen to Rousseau when he affirmed that they
-were naturally good. There was another reason why men were eager to
-be told that they were naturally good and that they could therefore
-trust the spontaneous overflow of their emotions. This reason is to be
-sought in the inevitable recoil from the opposite doctrine of total
-depravity and the mortal constraint that it had put on the instincts of
-the natural man. I have said that many churchmen, notably the Jesuits,
-sought to dissimulate the full austerity of Christian doctrine and
-thus retain their authority over a world that was moving away from
-austerity and so threatening to escape them. But other Catholics,
-notably the Jansenists, as well as Protestants like the Calvinists,
-were for insisting to the full on man’s corruption and for seeking to
-maintain on this basis what one is tempted to call a theological reign
-of terror. One whole side of Rousseau’s religion can be understood
-only as a protest against the type of Christianity that is found in a
-Pascal or a Jonathan Edwards. The legend of the abyss that Pascal saw
-always yawning at his side has at least a symbolical value. It is the
-wont of man to oscillate violently between extremes, and each extreme
-is not only bad in itself but even worse by the opposite extreme that
-it engenders. From a God who is altogether fearful, men are ready to
-flee to a God who is altogether loving, or it might be more correct to
-say altogether lovely. “Listen, my children,” said Mother Angélique of
-Port-Royal to her nuns a few hours before her death, “listen well to
-what I say. Most people do not know what death is, and never give the
-matter a thought. But my worst forebodings were as nothing compared
-with the terrors now upon me.” In deliberate opposition to such
-expressions of the theological terror, Rousseau imagined the elaborate
-complacency and self-satisfaction of the dying Julie, whose end was
-not only calm but æsthetic (_le dernier jour de sa vie en fut aussi le
-plus charmant_).
-
-A sensible member of Edwards’s congregation at Northampton might
-conceivably have voted with the majority to dismiss him, not only
-because he objected to this spiritual terrorism in itself, but
-also because he saw the opposite extreme that it would help to
-precipitate--the boundless sycophancy of human nature from which we are
-now suffering.
-
-The effusiveness, then, that began to appear in the eighteenth century
-is one sign of the progress of naturalism, which is itself due to
-the new confidence inspired in man by scientific discovery coupled
-with a revulsion from the austerity of Christian dogma. This new
-effusiveness is also no less palpably a revulsion from the excess of
-artificial decorum and this revulsion was in turn greatly promoted by
-the rapid increase in power and influence at this time of the middle
-class. Reserve is traditionally aristocratic. The plebeian is no less
-traditionally expansive. It cannot be said that the decorous reserve
-of the French aristocracy that had been more or less imitated by other
-European aristocracies was in all respects commendable. According to
-this decorum a man should not love his wife, or if he did, should be
-careful not to betray the fact in public. It was also good “form”
-to live apart from one’s children and bad form to display one’s
-affection for them. The protest against a decorum that repressed even
-the domestic emotions may perhaps best be followed in the rise of the
-middle class drama. According to strict neo-classic decorum only the
-aristocracy had the right to appear in tragedy, whereas the man of the
-middle class was relegated to comedy and the man of the people to
-farce. The intermediate types of play that multiply in the eighteenth
-century (_drame bourgeois_, _comédie larmoyante_, etc.) are the reply
-of the plebeian to this classification. He is beginning to insist that
-his emotions too shall be taken seriously. But at the same time he is,
-under the influence of the new naturalistic philosophy, so bent on
-affirming his own goodness that in getting rid of artificial decorum
-he gets rid of true decorum likewise and so strikes at the very root
-of the drama. For true drama in contradistinction to mere melodrama
-requires in the background a scale of ethical values, or what amounts
-to the same thing, a sense of what is normal and representative and
-decorous, and the quality of the characters is revealed by their
-responsible choices good or bad with reference to some ethical scale,
-choices that the characters reveal by their actions and not by any
-explicit moralizing. But in the middle class drama there is little
-action in this sense: no one _wills_ either his goodness or badness,
-but appears more or less as the creature of accident or fate (in a very
-un-Greek sense), or of a defective social order; and so instead of
-true dramatic conflict and proper motivation one tends to get domestic
-tableaux in which the characters weep in unison. For it is understood
-not only that man (especially the bourgeois) is good but that the
-orthodox way for this goodness to manifest itself is to overflow
-through the eyes. Perhaps never before or since have tears been shed
-with such a strange facility. At no other time have there been so many
-persons who, with streaming eyes, called upon heaven and earth to bear
-witness to their innate excellence. A man would be ashamed, says La
-Bruyère, speaking from the point of view of _l’honnête homme_ and
-his decorum, to display his emotions at the theatre. By the time of
-Diderot he would have been ashamed not to display them. It had become
-almost a requirement of good manners to weep and sob in public. At the
-performance of the “Père de Famille” in 1769 we are told that every
-handkerchief was in use. The Revolution seems to have raised doubts as
-to the necessary connection between tearfulness and goodness. The “Père
-de Famille” was hissed from the stage in 1811. Geoffroy commented in
-his feuilleton: “We have learned by a fatal experience that forty years
-of declamation and fustian about sensibility, humanity and benevolence,
-have served only to prepare men’s hearts for the last excesses of
-barbarism.”
-
-The romanticist indulged in the luxury of grief and was not incapable
-of striking an attitude. But as a rule he disdained the facile
-lachrymosity of the man of feeling as still too imitative and
-conventional. For his part, he has that within which passes show. To
-estimate a play solely by its power to draw tears is, as Coleridge
-observes, to measure it by a virtue that it possesses in common with
-the onion; and Chateaubriand makes a similar observation. Yet one
-should not forget that the romantic emotionalist derives directly from
-the man of feeling. One may indeed study the transition from the one
-to the other in Chateaubriand himself. For example, in his early work
-the “Natchez” he introduces a tribe of Sioux Indians who are still
-governed by the natural pity of Rousseau, as they prove by weeping on
-the slightest occasion. Lamartine again is close to Rousseau when he
-expatiates on the “genius” that is to be found in a tear; and Musset
-is not far from Diderot when he exclaims, “Long live the melodrama at
-which Margot wept” (_Vive le mélodrame où Margot a pleuré_).
-
-Though it is usual to associate this effusiveness with Rousseau it
-should be clear from my brief sketch of the rise of the forces that
-were destined to overthrow the two great traditions--the Christian
-tradition with its prime emphasis on humility and the classical with
-its prime emphasis on decorum--that Rousseau had many forerunners. It
-would be easy enough, for example, to cite from English literature
-of the early eighteenth-century domestic tableaux[74] that look
-forward equally to the middle class drama and to Rousseau’s picture
-of the virtues of Julie as wife and mother. Yet Rousseau, after all,
-deserves his preëminent position as the arch-sentimentalist by the
-very audacity of his revolt in the name of feeling from both humility
-and decorum. Never before and probably never since has a man of such
-undoubted genius shown himself so lacking in humility and decency
-(to use the old-fashioned synonym for decorum) as Rousseau in the
-“Confessions.” Rousseau feels himself so good that he is ready as he
-declares to appear before the Almighty at the sound of the trump of
-the last judgment, with the book of his “Confessions” in his hand,
-and there to issue a challenge to the whole human race: “Let a single
-one assert to Thee if he dare: I am better than that man.” As Horace
-Walpole complains he meditates a gasconade for the end of the world.
-It is possible to maintain with M. Lemaître that Rousseau’s character
-underwent a certain purification as he grew older, but never at any
-time, either at the beginning or at the end, is it possible, as M.
-Lemaître admits, to detect an atom of humility--an essential lack that
-had already been noted by Burke.
-
-The affront then that Rousseau puts upon humility at the very opening
-of his “Confessions” has like so much else in his life and writings
-a symbolical value. He also declares war in the same passage in the
-name of what he conceives to be his true self--that is his emotional
-self--against decorum or decency. I have already spoken of one of
-the main objections to decorum: it keeps one tame and conventional
-and interferes with the explosion of original genius. Another and
-closely allied grievance against decorum is implied in Rousseau’s
-opening assertion in the Confessions that his aim is to show a man
-in all the truth of his nature, and human nature can be known in
-its truth only, it should seem, when stripped of its last shred of
-reticence. Rousseau therefore already goes on the principle recently
-proclaimed by the Irish Bohemian George Moore, that the only thing a
-man should be ashamed of is of being ashamed. If the first objection to
-decorum--that it represses original genius--was urged especially by the
-romanticists, the second objection--that decorum interferes with truth
-to nature--was urged especially by the so-called realists of the later
-nineteenth century (and realism of this type is, as has been said, only
-romanticism going on all fours). Between the Rousseauistic conception
-of nature and that of the humanist the gap is especially wide. The
-humanist maintains that man attains to the truth of his nature only by
-imposing decorum upon his ordinary self. The Rousseauist maintains that
-man attains to this truth only by the free expansion of his ordinary
-self. The humanist fears to let his ordinary self unfold freely at the
-expense of decorum lest he merit some such comment as that made on
-the “Confessions” by Madame de Boufflers who had been infatuated with
-Rousseau during his lifetime: that it was the work not of a man but of
-an unclean animal.[75]
-
-The passages of the “Confessions” that deserve this verdict do not, it
-is hardly necessary to add, reflect directly Rousseau’s moral ideal.
-In his dealings with morality as elsewhere he is, to come back to
-Schiller’s distinction, partly idyllic and partly satirical. He is
-satiric in his attitude towards the existing forms--forms based upon
-the Christian tradition that man is naturally sinful and that he needs
-therefore the discipline of fear and humility, or else forms based upon
-the classical tradition that man is naturally one-sided and that he
-needs therefore to be disciplined into decorum and proportionateness.
-He is idyllic in the substitutes that he would offer for these
-traditional forms. The substitutes are particularly striking in their
-refusal to allow any place for fear. Fear, according to Ovid, created
-the first Gods, and religion has been defined by an old English poet
-as the “mother of form and fear.” Rousseau would put in the place of
-form a fluid emotionalism, and as for fear, he would simply cast it
-out entirely, a revulsion, as I have pointed out, from the excessive
-emphasis on fear in the more austere forms of Christianity. Be
-“natural,” Rousseau says, and eschew priests and doctors, and you will
-be emancipated from fear.
-
-Rousseau’s expedient for getting rid of man’s sense of his own
-sinfulness on which fear and humility ultimately rest is well known.
-Evil, says Rousseau, foreign to man’s constitution, is introduced into
-it from without. The burden of guilt is thus conveniently shifted upon
-society. Instead of the old dualism between good and evil in the breast
-of the individual, a new dualism is thus set up between an artificial
-and corrupt society and “nature.” For man, let me repeat, has,
-according to Rousseau, fallen from nature in somewhat the same way as
-in the old theology he fell from God, and it is here that the idyllic
-element comes in, for, let us remind ourselves once more, Rousseau’s
-nature from which man has fallen is only an Arcadian dream.
-
-The assertion of man’s natural goodness is plainly something very
-fundamental in Rousseau, but there is something still more fundamental,
-and that is the shifting of dualism itself, the virtual denial of a
-struggle between good and evil in the breast of the individual. That
-deep inner cleft in man’s being on which religion has always put so
-much emphasis is not genuine. Only get away from an artificial society
-and back to nature and the inner conflict which is but a part of the
-artificiality will give way to beauty and harmony. In a passage in his
-“Supplément au voyage de Bougainville,” Diderot puts the underlying
-thesis of the new morality almost more clearly than Rousseau: “Do
-you wish to know in brief the tale of almost all our woe? There once
-existed a natural man; there has been introduced within this man an
-artificial man and there has arisen in the cave a civil war which lasts
-throughout life.”
-
-The denial of the reality of the “civil war in the cave” involves an
-entire transformation of the conscience. The conscience ceases to be
-a power that sits in judgment on the ordinary self and inhibits its
-impulses. It tends so far as it is recognized at all, to become itself
-an instinct and an emotion. Students of the history of ethics scarcely
-need to be told that this transformation of the conscience was led up
-to by the English deists, especially by Shaftesbury and his disciple
-Hutcheson.[76] Shaftesbury and Hutcheson are already æsthetic in all
-senses of the word; æsthetic in that they tend to base conduct upon
-feeling, and æsthetic in that they incline to identify the good and
-the beautiful. Conscience is ceasing for both of them to be an inner
-check on the impulses of the individual and becoming a moral _sense_, a
-sort of expansive instinct for doing good to others. Altruism, as thus
-conceived, is opposed by them to the egoism of Hobbes and his followers.
-
-But for the full implications of this transformation of conscience
-and for æsthetic morality in general one needs to turn to Rousseau.
-Most men according to Rousseau are perverted by society, but there
-are a few in whom the voice of “nature” is still strong and who, to
-be good and at the same time beautiful, have only to let themselves
-go. These, to use a term that came to have in the eighteenth century
-an almost technical meaning, are the “beautiful souls.” The _belle
-âme_ is practically indistinguishable from the _âme sensible_ and has
-many points in common with the original genius. Those whose souls are
-beautiful are a small transfigured band in the midst of a philistine
-multitude. They are not to be judged by the same rules as those of
-less exquisite sensibility. “There are unfortunates too privileged to
-follow the common pathway.”[77] The beautiful soul is unintelligible
-to those of coarser feelings. His very superiority, his preternatural
-fineness of sensation, thus predestines him to suffering. We are here
-at the root of romantic melancholy as will appear more fully later.
-
-The most important aspect of the whole conception is, however, the
-strictly ethical--the notion that the beautiful soul has only to be
-instinctive and temperamental to merit the praise that has in the past
-been awarded only to the purest spirituality. “As for Julie,” says
-Rousseau, “who never had any other guide but her heart and could have
-no surer guide, she gives herself up to it without scruple, and to do
-right, has only to do all that it asks of her.”[78] Virtue indeed,
-according to Rousseau, is not merely an instinct but a passion and
-even a voluptuous passion, moving in the same direction as other
-passions, only superior to them in vehemence. “Cold reason has never
-done anything illustrious; and you can triumph over the passions only
-by opposing them to one another. When the passion of virtue arises, it
-dominates everything and holds everything in equipoise.”[79]
-
-This notion of the soul that is spontaneously beautiful and therefore
-good made an especial appeal to the Germans and indeed is often
-associated with Germany more than with any other land.[80] But examples
-of moral æstheticism are scarcely less frequent elsewhere from
-Rousseau to the present. No one, for example, was ever more convinced
-of the beauty of his own soul than Renan. “Morality,” says Renan, “has
-been conceived up to the present in a very narrow spirit, as obedience
-to a law, as an inner struggle between opposite laws. As for me, I
-declare that when I do good I obey no one, I fight no battle and win no
-victory. The cultivated man has only to follow the delicious incline of
-his inner impulses.”[81] Therefore, as he says elsewhere, “Be beautiful
-and then do at each moment whatever your heart may inspire you to do.
-This is the whole of morality.”[82]
-
-The doctrine of the beautiful soul is at once a denial and a parody
-of the doctrine of grace; a denial because it rejects original sin;
-a parody because it holds that the beautiful soul acts aright, not
-through any effort of its own but because nature acts in it and through
-it even as a man in a state of grace acts aright not through any merit
-of his own but because God acts in him and through him. The man who
-saw everything from the angle of grace was, like the beautiful soul or
-the original genius, inclined to look upon himself as exceptional and
-superlative. Bunyan entitles the story of his own inner life “Grace
-abounding to the chief of sinners.” But Bunyan flatters himself. It
-is not easy to be chief in such a lively competition. Humility and
-pride were evidently in a sort of grapple with one another in the
-breast of the Jansenist who declared that God had killed three men
-in order to compass his salvation. In the case of the beautiful soul
-the humility disappears, but the pride remains. He still looks upon
-himself as superlative but superlative in goodness. If all men were
-like himself, Renan declares, it would be appropriate to say of them:
-Ye are Gods and sons of the most high.[83] The partisan of grace holds
-that works are of no avail compared with the gratuitous and unmerited
-illumination from above. The beautiful soul clings to his belief in
-his own innate excellence, no matter how flagrant the contradiction
-may be between this belief and his deeds. One should not fail to note
-some approximation to the point of view of the beautiful soul in those
-forms of Christianity in which the sense of sin is somewhat relaxed
-and the inner light very much emphasized--for example among the German
-pietists and the quietists of Catholic countries.[84] We even hear of
-persons claiming to be Christians who as the result of debauchery have
-experienced a spiritual awakening (_Dans la brute assoupie, un ange se
-réveille_). But such doctrines are mere excrescences and eccentricities
-in the total history of Christianity. Even in its extreme insistence
-on grace, Christianity has always tended to supplement rather than
-contradict the supreme maxim of humanistic morality as enunciated by
-Cicero: “The whole praise of virtue is in action.” The usual result
-of the doctrine of grace when sincerely held is to make a man feel
-desperately sinful at the same time that he is less open to reproach
-than other men in his actual behavior. The beautiful soul on the
-other hand can always take refuge in his feelings from his real
-delinquencies. According to Joubert, Chateaubriand was not disturbed
-by actual lapses in his conduct because of his persuasion of his own
-innate rectitude.[85] “Her conduct was reprehensible,” says Rousseau
-of Madame de Warens, “but her heart was pure.” It does not matter
-what you do if only through it all you preserve the sense of your own
-loveliness. Indeed the more dubious the act the more copious would
-seem to be the overflow of fine sentiments to which it stimulates
-the beautiful soul. Rousseau dilates on his “warmth of heart,” his
-“keenness of sensibility,” his “innate benevolence for his fellow
-creatures,” his “ardent love for the great, the true, the beautiful,
-the just,” on the “melting feeling, the lively and sweet emotion that
-he experiences at the sight of everything that is virtuous, generous
-and lovely,” and concludes: “And so my third child was put into the
-foundling hospital.”
-
-If we wish to see the psychology of Rousseau writ large we should turn
-to the French Revolution. That period abounds in persons whose goodness
-is in theory so superlative that it overflows in a love for all men,
-but who in practice are filled like Rousseau in his later years with
-universal suspicion. There was indeed a moment in the Revolution when
-the madness of Rousseau became epidemic, when suspicion was pushed
-to such a point that men became “suspect of being suspect.” One of
-the last persons to see Rousseau alive at Ermenonville was Maximilien
-Robespierre. He was probably a more thoroughgoing Rousseauist than
-any other of the Revolutionary leaders. Perhaps no passage that could
-be cited illustrates with more terrible clearness the tendency of the
-new morality to convert righteousness into self-righteousness than
-the following from his last speech before the Convention at the very
-height of the Reign of Terror. Himself devoured by suspicion, he is
-repelling the suspicion that he wishes to erect his own power on the
-ruins of the monarchy. The idea, he says, that “he can descend to the
-infamy of the throne will appear probable only to those perverse beings
-who have not even the right to believe in virtue. But why speak of
-virtue? Doubtless virtue is a natural passion. But how could they be
-familiar with it, these venal spirits who never yielded access to aught
-save cowardly and ferocious passions? … Yet virtue exists as you can
-testify, feeling and pure souls; it exists, that tender, irresistible,
-imperious passion, torment and delight of magnanimous hearts, that
-profound horror of tyranny, that compassionate zeal for the oppressed,
-that sacred love for one’s country, that still more sublime and
-sacred love for humanity, without which a great revolution is only a
-glittering crime that destroys another crime; it exists, that generous
-ambition to found on earth the first Republic of the world; that egoism
-of undegenerate men who find a celestial voluptuousness in the calm of
-a pure conscience and the ravishing spectacle of public happiness(!).
-You feel it at this moment burning in your souls. I feel it in mine.
-But how could our vile calumniators have any notion of it?” etc.
-
-In Robespierre and other revolutionary leaders one may study the
-implications of the new morality--the attempt to transform virtue into
-a natural passion--not merely for the individual but for society. M.
-Rod entitled his play on Rousseau “The Reformer.” Both Rousseau and his
-disciple Robespierre were reformers in the modern sense,--that is they
-are concerned not with reforming themselves, but other men. Inasmuch
-as there is no conflict between good and evil in the breast of the
-beautiful soul he is free to devote all his efforts to the improvement
-of mankind, and he proposes to achieve this great end by diffusing the
-spirit of brotherhood. All the traditional forms that stand in the way
-of this free emotional expansion he denounces as mere “prejudices,”
-and inclines to look on those who administer these forms as a gang of
-conspirators who are imposing an arbitrary and artificial restraint on
-the natural goodness of man and so keeping it from manifesting itself.
-With the final disappearance of the prejudices of the past and those
-who base their usurped authority upon them, the Golden Age will be
-ushered in at last; everybody will be boundlessly self-assertive and
-at the same time temper this self-assertion by an equally boundless
-sympathy for others, whose sympathy and self-assertion likewise know no
-bounds. The world of Walt Whitman will be realized, a world in which
-there is neither inferior nor superior but only comrades. This vision
-(such for example as appears at the end of Shelley’s “Prometheus”) of
-a humanity released from all evil artificially imposed from without,
-a humanity “where all things flow to all, as rivers to the sea” and
-“whose nature is its own divine control,” is the true religion of the
-Rousseauist. It is this image of a humanity glorified through love
-that he sets up for worship in the sanctuary left vacant by “the great
-absence of God.”
-
-This transformation of the Arcadian dreamer into the Utopist is due
-in part, as I have already suggested, to the intoxication produced
-in the human spirit by the conquests of science. One can discern the
-coöperation of Baconian and Rousseauist from a very early stage of the
-great humanitarian movement in the midst of which we are still living.
-Both Baconian and Rousseauist are interested not in the struggle
-between good and evil in the breast of the individual, but in the
-progress of mankind as a whole. If the Rousseauist hopes to promote
-the progress of society by diffusing the spirit of brotherhood the
-Baconian or utilitarian hopes to achieve the same end by perfecting
-its machinery. It is scarcely necessary to add that these two main
-types of humanitarianism may be contained in almost any proportion in
-any particular person. By his worship of man in his future material
-advance, the Baconian betrays no less surely than the Rousseauist his
-faith in man’s natural goodness. This lack of humility is especially
-conspicuous in those who have sought to develop the positive
-observations of science into a closed system with the aid of logic and
-pure mathematics. Pascal already remarked sarcastically of Descartes
-that he had no need of God except to give an initial fillip to his
-mechanism. Later the mechanist no longer grants the need of the initial
-fillip. According to the familiar anecdote, La Place when asked by
-Napoleon in the course of an explanation of his “Celestial Mechanics”
-where God came in, replied that he had no need of a God in his system.
-As illustrating the extreme of humanitarian arrogance one may take
-the following from the physicist and mathematician, W. K. Clifford:
-“The dim and shadowy outlines of the superhuman deity fade slowly from
-before us; and as the mist of his presence floats aside, we perceive
-with greater and greater clearness the shape of a yet grander and
-nobler figure--of Him who made all gods and shall unmake them. From
-the dim dawn of history and from the inmost depths of every soul the
-face of our father Man looks out upon us with the fire of eternal youth
-in his eyes and says, ‘Before Jehovah was, I am.’” The fire, one is
-tempted to say, of eternal lust! Clifford is reported to have once hung
-by his toes from the cross-bar of a weathercock on a church-tower. As
-a bit of intellectual acrobatics the passage I have just quoted has
-some analogy with this posture. Further than this, man’s intoxication
-with himself is not likely to go. The attitude of Clifford is even more
-extreme in its way than that of Jonathan Edwards in his. However, there
-are already signs that the man of science is becoming, if not humble,
-at least a trifle less arrogant.
-
-One can imagine the Rousseauist interrupting at this point to remark
-that one of his chief protests has always been against the mechanical
-and utilitarian and in general the scientific attitude towards life.
-This is true. Something has already been said about this protest and
-it will be necessary to say more about it later. Yet Rousseauist and
-Baconian agree, as I have said, in turning away from the “civil war in
-the cave” to humanity in the lump. They agree in being more or less
-rebellious towards the traditional forms that put prime emphasis on
-the “civil war in the cave”--whether the Christian tradition with its
-humility or the classical with its decorum. No wonder Prometheus was
-the great romantic hero. Prometheus was at once a rebel, a lover of man
-and a promoter of man’s material progress. We have been living for over
-a century in what may be termed an age of Promethean individualism.
-
-The Rousseauist especially feels an inner kinship with Prometheus and
-other Titans. He is fascinated by every form of insurgency. Cain and
-Satan are both romantic heroes. To meet the full romantic requirement,
-however, the insurgent must also be tender-hearted. He must show an
-elemental energy in his explosion against the established order and
-at the same time a boundless sympathy for the victims of it. One of
-Hugo’s poems tells of a Mexican volcano, that in sheer disgust at
-the cruelty of the members of the Inquisition, spits lava upon them.
-This compassionate volcano symbolizes in both of its main aspects
-the romantic ideal. Hence the enormous international popularity
-of Schiller’s “Robbers.” One may find innumerable variants of the
-brigand Karl Moor who uses his plunder “to support meritorious young
-men at college.” The world into which we enter from the very dawn of
-romanticism is one of “glorious rascals,” and “beloved vagabonds.”
-
- “Sublime convicts,” says M. Lasserre, “idlers of genius,
- angelic female poisoners, monsters inspired by God, sincere
- comedians, virtuous courtesans, metaphysical mountebanks,
- faithful adulterers, form only one half--the sympathetic half
- of humanity according to romanticism. The other half, the
- wicked half, is manufactured by the same intellectual process
- under the suggestion of the same revolutionary instinct.
- It comprises all those who hold or stand for a portion of
- any discipline whatsoever, political, religious, moral or
- intellectual--kings, ministers, priests, judges, soldiers,
- policemen, husbands and critics.”[86]
-
-The Rousseauist is ever ready to discover beauty of soul in any one
-who is under the reprobation of society. The figure of the courtesan
-rehabilitated through love that has enjoyed such popularity during the
-past hundred years goes back to Rousseau himself.[87] The underlying
-assumption of romantic morality is that the personal virtues, the
-virtues that imply self-control, count as naught compared with the
-fraternal spirit and the readiness to sacrifice one’s self for
-others. This is the ordinary theme of the Russian novel in which
-one finds, as Lemaître remarks, “the Kalmuck exaggerations of our
-French romantic ideas.” For example Sonia in “Crime and Punishment”
-is glorified because she prostitutes herself to procure a livelihood
-for her family. One does not however need to go to Russia for what is
-scarcely less the assumption of contemporary America. If it can only
-be shown that a person is sympathetic we are inclined to pardon him
-his sins of unrestraint, his lack, for example, of common honesty.
-As an offset to the damaging facts brought out at the investigation
-of the sugar trust, the defense sought to establish that the late H.
-O. Havemeyer was a beautiful soul. It was testified that he could
-never hear little children sing without tears coming into his eyes.
-His favorite song, some one was unkind enough to suggest, was “little
-drops of water, little grains of sand.” The newspapers again reported
-not long ago that a notorious Pittsburg grafter had petitioned for
-his release from the penitentiary on the grounds that he wished to
-continue his philanthropic activities among the poor. Another paragraph
-that appeared recently in the daily press related that a burglar while
-engaged professionally in a house at Los Angeles discovered that the
-lady of the house had a child suffering from croup, and at once came to
-her aid, explaining that he had six children of his own. No one could
-really think amiss of this authentic descendant of Schiller’s Karl
-Moor. For love, according to the Rousseauist, is not the fulfillment
-of the law but a substitute for it. In “Les Misérables” Hugo contrasts
-Javert who stands for the old order based on obedience to the law
-with the convict Jean Valjean who stands for the new regeneration of
-man through love and self-sacrifice. When Javert awakens to the full
-ignominy of his rôle he does the only decent thing--he commits suicide.
-Hugo indeed has perhaps carried the new evangel of sympathy as a
-substitute for all the other virtues further than any one else and with
-fewer weak concessions to common sense. Sultan Murad, Hugo narrates,
-was “sublime.” He had his eight brothers strangled, caused his uncle to
-be sawn in two between two planks, opened one after the other twelve
-children to find a stolen apple, shed an ocean of blood and “sabred the
-world.” One day while passing in front of a butcher-shop he saw a pig
-bleeding to death, tormented by flies and with the sun beating upon
-its wound. Touched by pity, the Sultan pushes the pig into the shade
-with his foot and with an “enormous and superhuman gesture” drives away
-the flies. When Murad dies the pig appears before the Almighty and,
-pleading for him against the accusing host of his victims, wins his
-pardon. Moral: “A succored pig outweighs a world oppressed”[88] (_Un
-pourceau secouru vaut un monde égorgé_).
-
-This subordination of all the other values of life to sympathy is
-achieved only at the expense of the great humanistic virtue--decorum
-or a sense of proportion. Now not to possess a sense of proportion is,
-however this lack may be manifested, to be a pedant; and, if there is
-ever a humanistic reaction, Hugo, one of the chief products of the age
-of original genius, will scarcely escape the charge of pedantry. But
-true religion also insists on a hierarchy of the virtues. Burke speaks
-at least as much from a religious as from a humanistic point of view
-when he writes:
-
- “The greatest crimes do not arise so much from a want of
- feeling for others as from an over-sensibility for ourselves
- and an over-indulgence to our own desires. … They [the
- ‘philosophes’] explode or render odious or contemptible that
- class of virtues which restrain the appetite. These are at
- least nine out of ten of the virtues. In the place of all
- this they substitute a virtue which they call humanity or
- benevolence. By these means their morality has no idea in it
- of restraint or indeed of a distinct and settled principle of
- any kind. When their disciples are thus left free and guided
- only by present feeling, they are no longer to be depended
- on for good and evil. The men who to-day snatch the worst
- criminals from justice will murder the most innocent persons
- to-morrow.”[89]
-
-The person who seeks to get rid of ninety per cent of the virtues in
-favor of an indiscriminate sympathy does not simply lose his scale of
-values. He arrives at an inverted scale of values. For the higher the
-object for which one feels sympathy the more the idea of obligation
-is likely to intrude--the very thing the Rousseauist is seeking to
-escape. One is more irresponsible and therefore more spontaneous in the
-Rousseauistic sense in lavishing one’s pity on a dying pig. Medical
-men have given a learned name to the malady of those who neglect the
-members of their own family and gush over animals (zoöphilpsychosis).
-But Rousseau already exhibits this “psychosis.” He abandoned his five
-children one after the other, but had we are told an unspeakable
-affection for his dog.[90]
-
-Rousseau’s contemporary, Sterne, is supposed to have lavished a
-somewhat disproportionate emotion upon an ass. But the ass does
-not really come into his own until a later stage of the movement.
-Nietzsche has depicted the leaders of the nineteenth century as
-engaged in a veritable onolatry or ass-worship. The opposition between
-neo-classicist and Rousseauist is indeed symbolized in a fashion by
-their respective attitude towards the ass. Neo-classical decorum
-was, it should be remembered, an all-pervading principle. It imposed
-a severe hierarchy, not only upon objects, but upon the words that
-express these objects. The first concern of the decorous person was to
-avoid lowness, and the ass he looked upon as hopelessly low--so low
-as to be incapable of ennoblement even by a resort to periphrasis.
-Homer therefore was deemed by Vida to have been guilty of outrageous
-indecorum in comparing Ajax to an ass. The partisans of Homer sought
-indeed to prove that the ass was in the time of Homer a “noble” animal
-or at least that the word ass was “noble.” But the stigma put upon
-Homer by Vida--reinforced as it was by the similar attacks of Scaliger
-and others--remained.
-
-The rehabilitation of the ass by the Rousseauist is at once a protest
-against an unduly squeamish decorum, and a way of proclaiming the new
-principle of unbounded expansive sympathy. In dealing with both words
-and what they express, one should show a democratic inclusiveness.
-Something has already been said of the war the romanticist waged in
-the name of local color against the impoverishment of vocabulary by
-the neo-classicists. But the romantic warfare against the aristocratic
-squeamishness of the neo-classic vocabulary goes perhaps even deeper.
-Take, for instance, Wordsworth’s view as to the proper language of
-poetry. Poetical decorum had become by the end of the eighteenth
-century a mere varnish of conventional elegance. Why should mere
-polite prejudice, so Wordsworth reasoned, and the “gaudiness and inane
-phraseology” in which it resulted be allowed to interfere with the
-“spontaneous overflow of powerful emotion”? And so he proceeds to set
-up a view of poetry that is only the neo-classical view turned upside
-down. For the proper subjects and speech of poetry he would turn from
-the highest class of society to the lowest, from the aristocrat to
-the peasant. The peasant is more poetical than the aristocrat because
-he is closer to nature, for Wordsworth as he himself avows, is less
-interested in the peasant for his own sake than because he sees in him
-a sort of emanation of the landscape.[91]
-
-One needs to keep all this background in mind if one wishes to
-understand the full significance of a poem like “Peter Bell.”
-Scaliger blames Homer because he stoops to mention in his description
-of Zeus something so trivial as the eyebrows. Wordsworth seeks to
-bestow poetical dignity and seriousness on the “long left ear” of an
-ass.[92] The ass is thus exalted one scarcely need add, because of
-his compassionateness. The hard heart of Peter Bell is at last melted
-by the sight of so much goodness. He aspires to be like the ass and
-finally achieves his wish.
-
-The French romanticists, Hugo, for instance, make an attack on decorum
-somewhat similar to that of Wordsworth. Words formerly lived, says
-Hugo, divided up into castes. Some had the privilege of mounting into
-the king’s coaches at Versailles, whereas others were relegated to
-the rabble. I came along and clapped a red liberty cap on the old
-dictionary. I brought about a literary ’93,[93] etc. Hugo’s attack
-on decorum is also combined with an even more violent assertion than
-Wordsworth’s of the ideal of romantic morality--the supremacy of pity.
-He declares in the “Legend of the Ages” that an ass that takes a step
-aside to avoid crushing a toad is “holier than Socrates and greater
-than Plato.”[94] For this and similar utterances Hugo deserves to be
-placed very nearly if not quite at the head of romantic onolaters.
-
-We have said that the tremendous burden put upon sympathy in romantic
-morality is a result of the assumption that the “civil war in the cave”
-is artificial and that therefore the restraining virtues (according
-to Burke ninety per cent of the virtues) which imply this warfare
-are likewise artificial. If the civil war in the cave should turn
-out to be not artificial but a fact of the gravest import, the whole
-spiritual landscape would change immediately. Romantic morality would
-in that case be not a reality but a mirage. We need at all events to
-grasp the central issue firmly. Humanism and religion have always
-asserted in some form or other the dualism of the human spirit. A man’s
-spirituality is in inverse ratio to his immersion in temperament. The
-whole movement from Rousseau to Bergson is, on the other hand, filled
-with the glorification of instinct. To become spiritual the beautiful
-soul needs only to expand along the lines of temperament and with this
-process the cult of pity or sympathy does not interfere. The romantic
-moralist tends to favor expansion on the ground that it is vital,
-creative, infinite, and to dismiss whatever seems to set bounds to
-expansion as something inert, mechanical, finite. In its onslaughts on
-the veto power whether within or without the breast of the individual
-it is plain that no age has ever approached the age of original
-genius in the midst of which we are still living. Goethe defines the
-devil as the spirit that always says no, and Carlyle celebrates his
-passage from darkness to light as an escape from the Everlasting Nay
-to the Everlasting Yea. We rarely pause to consider what a reversal
-of traditional wisdom is implied in such conceptions. In the past,
-the spirit that says no has been associated rather with the divine.
-Socrates tells us that the counsels of his “voice” were always
-negative, never positive.[95] According to the ancient Hindu again the
-divine is the “inner check.” God, according to Aristotle, is pure Form.
-In opposition to all this emphasis on the restricting and limiting
-power, the naturalist, whether scientific or emotional, sets up a
-program of formless, fearless expansion; which means in practice that
-he recognizes no bounds either to intellectual or emotional curiosity.
-
-I have said that it is a part of the psychology of the original genius
-to offer the element of wonder and surprise awakened by the perpetual
-novelty, the infinite otherwiseness of things, as a substitute for
-the awe that is associated with their infinite oneness; or rather to
-refuse to discriminate between these two infinitudes and so to confound
-the two main directions of the human spirit, its religious East, as
-one may say, with its West of wonder and romance. This confusion may
-be illustrated by the romantic attitude towards what is perhaps the
-most Eastern of all Eastern lands,--India. The materials for the study
-of India in the Occident were accumulated by Englishmen towards the
-end of the eighteenth century, but the actual interpretation of this
-material is due largely to German romanticists, notably to Friedrich
-Schlegel.[96] Alongside the romantic Hellenist and the romantic
-mediævalist we find the romantic Indianist. It is to India even more
-than to Spain that one needs to turn, says Friedrich Schlegel, for the
-supremely romantic[97]--that is, the wildest and most unrestrained
-luxuriance of imagination. Now in a country so vast and so ancient as
-India you can find in some place or at some period or other almost
-anything you like. If, for example, W. B. Yeats waxes enthusiastic
-over Tagore we may be sure that there is in the work of Tagore
-something akin to æsthetic romanticism. But if we take India at the top
-of her achievement in the early Buddhistic movement, let us say, we
-shall find something very different. The early Buddhistic movement in
-its essential aspects is at the extreme opposite pole from romanticism.
-The point is worth making because certain misinterpretations that
-still persist both of Buddhism and other movements in India can
-be traced ultimately to the bad twist that was given to the whole
-subject by romanticists like the Schlegels. The educated Frenchman,
-for instance, gets his ideas of India largely from certain poems of
-Leconte de Lisle who reflects the German influence. But the sense of
-universal and meaningless flux that pervades these poems without any
-countervailing sense of a reality behind the shows of nature is a
-product of romanticism, working in coöperation with science, and is
-therefore antipodal to the absorption of the true Hindu in the oneness
-of things. We are told, again, that Schopenhauer was a Buddhist. Did
-he not have an image of Buddha in his bedroom? But no doctrine perhaps
-is more remote from the genuine doctrine of Buddha than that of this
-soured and disillusioned romanticist. The nature of true Buddhism and
-its opposition to all forms of romanticism is worth dwelling on for
-a moment. Buddha not only asserted the human law with unusual power
-but he also did what, in the estimation of some, needs doing in our
-own day--he put this law, not on a traditional, but on a positive and
-critical basis. This spiritual positivism of Buddha is, reduced to its
-simplest terms, a psychology of desire. Not only is the world outside
-of man in a constant state of flux and change, but there is an element
-within man that is in constant flux and change also and makes itself
-felt practically as an element of expansive desire. What is unstable in
-him longs for what is unstable in the outer world. But he may escape
-from the element of flux and change, nay he must aspire to do so, if
-he wishes to be released from sorrow. This is to substitute the noble
-for the ignoble craving. The permanent or ethical element in himself
-towards which he should strive to move is known to him practically as a
-power of inhibition or inner check upon expansive desire. Vital impulse
-(_élan vital_) may be subjected to vital control (_frein vital_). Here
-is the Buddhist equivalent of the “civil war in the cave” that the
-romanticist denies. Buddha does not admit a soul in man in the sense
-that is often given to the word, but on this opposition between vital
-impulse and vital control as a psychological fact he puts his supreme
-emphasis. The man who drifts supinely with the current of desire is
-guilty according to Buddha of the gravest of all vices--spiritual or
-moral indolence (_pamāda_). He on the contrary who curbs or reins in
-his expansive desires is displaying the chief of all the virtues,
-spiritual vigilance or strenuousness (_appamāda_). The man who is
-spiritually strenuous has entered upon the “path.” The end of this
-path and the goal of being cannot be formulated in terms of the finite
-intellect, any more than the ocean can be put into a cup. But progress
-on the path may be known by its fruits--negatively by the extinction of
-the expansive desires (the literal meaning of Nirvâna), positively by
-an increase in peace, poise, centrality.
-
-A man’s rank in the scale of being is, then, according to the Buddhist
-determined by the quality of his desires; and it is within his power to
-determine whether he shall let them run wild or else control them to
-some worthy end. We hear of the fatalistic East, but no doctrine was
-ever less fatalistic than that of Buddha. No one ever put so squarely
-upon the individual what the individual is ever seeking to evade--the
-burden of moral responsibility. “Self is the lord of self. Who else
-can be the lord? … You yourself must make the effort. The Buddhas are
-only teachers.”[98] But does not all this emphasis on self, one may
-ask, tend to hardness and indifference towards others, towards the
-undermining of that compassion to which the romantic moralist is ready
-to sacrifice all the other virtues? Buddha may be allowed to speak for
-himself: “Even as a mother cherishes her child, her only child, so let
-a man cultivate a boundless love towards all beings.”[99] Buddha thus
-seems to fulfil Pascal’s requirement for a great man: he unites in
-himself opposite virtues and occupies all the space between them.
-
-Enough has been said to make plain that the infinite indeterminate
-desire of the romanticist and the Buddhist repression of desire are the
-most different things conceivable. Chateaubriand it has been said was
-an “invincibly restless soul,” a soul of desire (_une âme de désir_),
-but these phrases are scarcely more applicable to him than to many
-other great romanticists. They are fitly symbolized by the figures that
-pace to and fro in the Hall of Eblis and whose hearts are seen through
-their transparent bosoms to be lapped in the flames of unquenchable
-longing. The romanticist indeed bases, as I have said, on the very
-intensity of his longing his claims to be an idealist and even a
-mystic. William Blake, for example, has been proclaimed a true mystic.
-The same term has also been applied to Buddha. Without pretending to
-have fathomed completely so unfathomable a being as Buddha or even the
-far less unfathomable William Blake, one may nevertheless assert with
-confidence that Buddha and Blake stand for utterly incompatible views
-of life. If Blake is a mystic then Buddha must be something else. To
-be assured on this point one needs only to compare the “Marriage of
-Heaven and Hell” with the “Dhammapada,” an anthology of some of the
-most authentic and authoritative material in early Buddhism. “He who
-desires but acts not, breeds pestilence. … The road of excess leads
-to the palace of wisdom,” says Blake. “Even in heavenly pleasures he
-finds no satisfaction; the disciple who is fully awakened delights
-only in the destruction of all desires. … Good is restraint in all
-things,” says Buddha. Buddha would evidently have dismissed Blake as
-a madman, whereas Blake would have looked on Buddhism as the ultimate
-abomination. My own conviction is that Buddha was a genuine sage well
-worthy of the homage rendered him by multitudes of men for more than
-twenty-four centuries, whereas Blake was only a romantic æsthete who
-was moving in his imaginative activity towards madness and seems at the
-end actually to have reached the goal.
-
-I have been going thus far afield to ancient India and to Buddha, not
-that I might, like a recent student of Buddhism, enjoy “the strangeness
-of the intellectual landscape,” but on the contrary that I might
-suggest that there is a centre of normal human experience and that
-Buddhism, at least in its ethical aspects, is nearer to this centre
-than æsthetic romanticism. Buddha might perhaps marvel with more
-reason at our strangeness than we at his. Buddha’s assertion of man’s
-innate moral laziness in particular accords more closely with what
-most of us have experienced than Rousseau’s assertion of man’s natural
-goodness. This conception of the innate laziness of man seems to me
-indeed so central that I am going to put it at the basis of the point
-of view I am myself seeking to develop, though this point of view is
-not primarily Buddhistic. This conception has the advantage of being
-positive rather than dogmatic. It works out in practice very much like
-the original sin of the Christian theologian. The advantage of starting
-with indolence rather than sin is that many men will admit that they
-are morally indolent who will not admit that they are sinful. For
-theological implications still cluster thickly about the word sin, and
-these persons are still engaged more or less consciously in the great
-naturalistic revolt against theology.
-
-The spiritual positivist then will start from a fact of immediate
-perception--from the presence namely in the breast of the individual
-of a principle of vital control (_frein vital_), and he will measure
-his spiritual strenuousness or spiritual sloth by the degree to which
-he exercises or fails to exercise this power. In accordance with the
-keenness of a man’s perception of a specially human order that is
-known practically as a curb upon his ordinary self, he may be said to
-possess insight. The important thing is that the insight should not
-be sophisticated, that a man should not fall away from it into some
-phantasmagoria of the intellect or emotions. A man sometimes builds up
-a whole system of metaphysics as a sort of screen between himself and
-his obligations either to himself or others. Mrs. Barbauld suspected
-that Coleridge’s philosophy was only a mask for indolence. Carlyle’s
-phrase for Coleridge was even harsher: “putrescent indolence,” a phrase
-that might be applied with more justice perhaps to Rousseau. One may
-learn from Rousseau the art of sinking to the region of instinct that
-is below the rational level instead of struggling forward to the
-region of insight that is above it, and at the same time passing for a
-sublime enthusiast; the art of looking backwards and downwards, and at
-the same time enjoying the honor that belongs only to those who look
-forwards and up. We need not wonder at the warm welcome that this new
-art received. I have said that that man has always been accounted a
-benefactor who has substituted for the reality of spiritual discipline
-some ingenious art of going through the motions and that the decorum of
-the neo-classical period had largely sunk to this level. Even in the
-most decorous of modern ages, that of Louis XIV, it was very common, as
-every student of the period knows, for men to set up as personages in
-the grand manner and at the same time behind the façade of conventional
-dignity to let their appetites run riot. It would have been perfectly
-legitimate at the end of the eighteenth century to attack in the name
-of true decorum a decorum that had become the “varnish of vice” and
-“mask of hypocrisy.” What Rousseau actually opposed to pseudo-decorum
-was perhaps the most alluring form of sham spirituality that the
-world has ever seen--a method not merely of masking but of glorifying
-one’s spiritual indolence. “You wish to have the pleasures of vice
-and the honor of virtue,” wrote Julie to Saint-Preux in a moment of
-unusual candor. The Rousseauist may indulge in the extreme of psychic
-unrestraint and at the same time pose as a perfect idealist or even, if
-one is a Chateaubriand, as a champion of religion. Chateaubriand’s life
-according to Lemaître was a “magnificent series of attitudes.”
-
-I do not mean to assert that the Rousseauist is always guilty of the
-pose and theatricality of which there is more than a suggestion in
-Chateaubriand. There is, however, much in the Rousseauistic view of
-life that militates against a complete moral honesty. “Of all the men I
-have known,” says Rousseau, “he whose character derives most completely
-from his temperament alone is Jean-Jacques.”[100] The ugly things that
-have a way of happening when impulse is thus left uncontrolled do
-not, as we have seen, disturb the beautiful soul in his complacency.
-He can always point an accusing finger at something or somebody else.
-The faith in one’s natural goodness is a constant encouragement to
-evade moral responsibility. To accept responsibility is to follow the
-line of maximum effort, whereas man’s secret desire is to follow, if
-not the line of least, at all events the line of lesser resistance.
-The endless twisting and dodging and proneness to look for scapegoats
-that results is surely the least reputable aspect of human nature.
-Rousseau writes to Madame de Francueil (20 April, 1751) that it was
-her class, the class of the rich, that was responsible for his having
-had to abandon his children. With responsibility thus shifted from
-one’s self to the rich, the next step is inevitable, namely to start a
-crusade against the members of a class which, without any warrant from
-“Nature,” oppresses its brothers, the members of other classes, and
-forces them into transgression. A man may thus dodge his duties as a
-father, and at the same time pose as a paladin of humanity. Rousseau is
-very close here to our most recent agitators. If a working girl falls
-from chastity, for example, do not blame her, blame her employer. She
-would have remained a model of purity if he had only added a dollar or
-two a week to her wage. With the progress of the new morality every
-one has become familiar with the type of the perfect idealist who is
-ready to pass laws for the regulation of everybody and everything
-except himself, and who knows how to envelop in a mist of radiant words
-schemes the true driving power of which is the desire to confiscate
-property.
-
-The tendency to make of society the universal scapegoat is not, one
-scarcely needs add, to be ascribed entirely to the romantic moralist.
-It is only one aspect of the denial of the human law, of the assumption
-that because man is partly subject to the natural law he is entirely
-subject to it; and in this dehumanizing of man the rationalist has
-been at least as guilty as the emotionalist. If the Rousseauist hopes
-to find a substitute for all the restraining virtues in sympathy, the
-rationalistic naturalist, who is as a rule utilitarian with a greater
-or smaller dash of pseudo-science, hopes to find a substitute for these
-same virtues in some form of machinery. The legislative mill to which
-our “uplifters” are so ready to resort, is a familiar example. If our
-modern society continues to listen to those who are seeking to persuade
-it that it is possible to find mechanical or emotional equivalents for
-self-control, it is likely, as Rousseau said of himself, to show a
-“great tendency to degenerate.”
-
-The fact on which the moral positivist would rest his effort to
-rehabilitate self-control is, as I have said, the presence in man of
-a restraining, informing and centralizing power that is anterior to
-both intellect and emotion. Such a power, it must be freely granted, is
-not present equally in all persons; in some it seems scarcely to exist
-at all. When released from outer control, they are simply unchained
-temperaments; whereas in others this superrational perception seems to
-be singularly vivid and distinct. This is the psychological fact that
-underlies what the theologian would term the mystery of grace.
-
-Rousseau himself was not quite so temperamental as might be inferred
-from what has been said about his evasion of ethical effort. There were
-moments when the dualism of the spirit came home to him, moments when
-he perceived that the conscience is not itself an expansive emotion
-but rather a judgment and a check upon expansive emotion. Yet his
-general readiness to subordinate his ethical self to his sensibility is
-indubitable. Hence the absence in his personality and writing of the
-note of masculinity. There is indeed much in his make-up that reminds
-one less of a man than of a high-strung impressionable woman. Woman,
-most observers would agree, is more natural in Rousseau’s sense, that
-is, more temperamental, than man. One should indeed always temper
-these perilous comparisons of the sexes with the remark of La Fontaine
-that in this matter he knew a great many men who were women. Now to be
-temperamental is to be extreme, and it is in this sense perhaps that
-the female of the species may be said to be “fiercer than the male.”
-Rousseau’s failure to find “any intermediary term between everything
-and nothing” would seem to be a feminine rather than a masculine
-trait. Decorum in the case of women, even more perhaps than in the
-case of men, tends to be a mere conformity to what is established
-rather than the immediate perception of a law of measure and proportion
-that sets bounds to the expansive desires. “Women believe innocent
-everything that they dare,” says Joubert, whom no one will accuse of
-being a misogynist. Those who are thus temperamental have more need
-than others of outer guidance. “His feminine nature,” says C. E. Norton
-of Ruskin, “needed support such as it never got.”[101]
-
-If women are more temperamental than men it is only fair to add that
-they have a greater fineness of temperament. Women, says Joubert again,
-are richer in native virtues, men in acquired virtues. At times when
-men are slack in acquiring virtues in the truly ethical sense--and
-some might maintain that the present is such a time--the women may
-be not only men’s equals but their superiors. Rousseau had this
-feminine fineness of temperament. He speaks rightly of his “exquisite
-faculties.” He also had no inconsiderable amount of feminine charm. The
-numerous members of the French aristocracy whom he fascinated may be
-accepted as competent witnesses on this point. The mingling of sense
-and spirit that pervades Rousseau, his pseudo-Platonism as I have
-called it elsewhere, is also a feminine rather than a masculine trait.
-
-There is likewise something feminine in Rousseau’s preference for
-illusion. Illusion is the element in which woman even more than man
-would seem to live and move and have her being. It is feminine and
-also romantic to prefer to a world of sharp definition a world of magic
-and suggestiveness. W. Bagehot (it will be observed that in discussing
-this delicate topic I am prone to take refuge behind authorities)
-attributes the triumph of an art of shifting illusion over an art
-of clear and firm outlines to the growing influence of women.[102]
-Woman’s being is to that of man, we are told, as is moonlight unto
-sunlight--and the moon is the romantic orb. The whole of German romance
-in particular is bathed in moonshine.[103]
-
-The objection of the classicist to the so-called enlightenment of the
-eighteenth century is that it did not have in it sufficient light. The
-primitivists on the contrary felt that it had too much light--that the
-light needed to be tempered by darkness. Even the moon is too effulgent
-for the author of “Hymns to the Night.” No movement has ever avowed
-more openly its partiality for the dim and the crepuscular. The German
-romanticists have been termed “twilight men.” What many of them admire
-in woman as in children and plants, is her unconsciousness and freedom
-from analysis--an admiration that is also a tribute in its way to the
-“night side” of nature.[104]
-
-Discussions of the kind in which I have been indulging regarding the
-unlikeness of woman and man are very dreary unless one puts at least
-equal emphasis on their fundamental likeness. Woman, before being
-woman, is a human being and so subject to the same law as man. So far
-as men and women both take on the yoke of this law, they move towards
-a common centre. So far as they throw it off and live temperamentally,
-there tends to arise the most odious of all forms of warfare--that
-between the sexes. The dictates of the human law are only too likely
-to yield in the case of both men and women to the rush of outer
-impressions and the tumult of the desires within. This is what La
-Rochefoucauld means when he says that “the head is always the dupe of
-the heart.” Nevertheless feeling is even more likely to prevail over
-judgment in woman than it is in man. To be judicial indeed to the
-point of hardness and sternness has always been held to be unfeminine.
-It is almost woman’s prerogative to err on the side of sympathy.
-But even woman cannot be allowed to substitute sympathy for true
-conscience--that is for the principle of control. In basing conduct
-on feeling Rousseau may be said to have founded a new sophistry.
-The ancient sophist at least made man the measure of all things. By
-subordinating judgment to sensibility Rousseau may be said to have made
-woman the measure of all things.
-
-The affirmation of a human law must ultimately rest on the perception
-of a something that is set above the flux upon which the flux itself
-depends--on what Aristotle terms an unmoved mover. Otherwise conscience
-becomes a part of the very flux and element of change it is supposed
-to control. In proportion as he escapes from outer control man must
-be conscious of some such unmoved mover if he is to oppose a definite
-aim or purpose to the indefinite expansion of his desires. Having some
-such firm centre he may hope to carry through to a fortunate conclusion
-the “civil war in the cave.” He may, as the wise are wont to express
-it, build himself an island in the midst of the flood. The romantic
-moralist, on the other hand, instead of building himself an island is
-simply drifting with the stream. For feeling not only shifts from man
-to man, it is continually shifting in the same man; so that morality
-becomes a matter of mood, and romanticism here as elsewhere might be
-defined as the despotism of mood. At the time of doing anything, says
-Mrs. Shelley, Shelley deemed himself right; and Rousseau says that
-in the act of abandoning his own children he felt “like a member of
-Plato’s republic.”
-
-The man who makes self-expression and not self-control his primary
-endeavor becomes subject to every influence, “the very slave of
-circumstance and impulse borne by every breath.”[105] This is what it
-means in practice no longer to keep a firm hand on the rudder of one’s
-personality, but to turn one’s self over to “nature.” The partisan
-of expression becomes the thrall of his impressions so that the whole
-Rousseauistic conception may be termed indifferently impressionistic or
-expressionistic. For the beautiful soul in order to express himself has
-to indulge his emotions instead of hardening and bracing them against
-the shock of circumstance. The very refinement of sensibility which
-constitutes in his own eyes his superiority to the philistine makes him
-quiver responsive to every outer influence; he finally becomes subject
-to changes in the weather, or in Rousseau’s own phrase, the “vile
-plaything of the atmosphere and seasons.”
-
-This rapid shifting of mood in the romanticist, in response to
-inner impulse or outer impression, is almost too familiar to need
-illustration. Here is an example that may serve for a thousand from
-that life-long devotee of the great god Whim--Hector Berlioz. When at
-Florence, Berlioz relates in his Memoirs, he received a letter from
-the mother of Camille, the woman he loved, informing him of Camille’s
-marriage to another. “In two minutes my plans were laid. I must hurry
-to Paris to kill two guilty women and one innocent man; for, this act
-of justice done, I too must die.” Accordingly he loads his pistols,
-supplies himself with a disguise as a lady’s maid, so as to be able
-to penetrate into the guilty household, and puts into his pockets
-“two little bottles, one of strychnine, the other of laudanum.”
-While awaiting the departure of the diligence he “rages up and down
-the streets of Florence like a mad dog.” Later, as the diligence is
-traversing a wild mountain road, he suddenly lets out a “‘Ha’! so
-hoarse, so savage, so diabolic that the startled driver bounded aside
-as if he had indeed a demon for his fellow-traveller.” But on reaching
-Nice he is so enchanted by the climate and environment that he not
-only forgets his errand, but spends there “the twenty happiest days” of
-his life! There are times, one must admit, when it is an advantage to
-be temperamental.
-
-In this exaltation of environmental influences one should note
-again the coöperation of Rousseauist and Baconian, of emotional and
-scientific naturalist. Both are prone to look upon man as being made by
-natural forces and not as making himself. To deal with the substitutes
-that Rousseauist and Baconian have proposed for traditional morality,
-is in fact to make a study of the varieties--and they are numerous--of
-naturalistic fatalism. The upshot of the whole movement is to discredit
-moral effort on the part of the individual. Why should a man believe
-in the efficacy of this effort, why should he struggle to acquire
-character if he is convinced that he is being moulded like putty by
-influences beyond his control--the influence of climate, for example?
-Both science and romanticism have vied with one another in making of
-man a mere stop on which Nature may play what tune she will. The Æolian
-harp enjoyed an extraordinary popularity as a romantic symbol. The man
-of science for his part is ready to draw up statistical tables showing
-what season of the year is most productive of suicide and what type of
-weather impels bank-cashiers most irresistibly to embezzlement. A man
-on a mountain top, according to Rousseau, enjoys not only physical but
-spiritual elevation, and when he descends to the plain the altitude
-of his mind declines with that of his body. Ruskin’s soul, says C. E.
-Norton, “was like an Æolian harp, its strings quivering musically in
-serene days under the touch of the soft air, but as the clouds gathered
-and the winds arose, vibrating in the blast with a tension that might
-break the sounding board itself.” It is not surprising Ruskin makes
-other men as subject to “skyey influences” as himself. “The mountains
-of the earth are,” he says, “its natural cathedrals. True religion can
-scarcely be achieved away from them. The curate or hermit of the field
-and fen, however simple his life or painful his lodging, does not often
-attain the spirit of the hill pastor or recluse: we may find in him a
-decent virtue or a contented ignorance, rarely the _prophetic vision or
-the martyr’s passion_.” The corruptions of Romanism “are traceable for
-the most part to lowland prelacy.”[106]
-
-Is then the Rousseauist totally unable to regulate his impressions?
-It is plain that he cannot control them from within because the whole
-idea of a vital control of this kind is, as we have seen, foreign to
-the psychology of the beautiful soul. Yet it is, according to Rousseau,
-possible to base morality on the senses--on outer perception that
-is--and at the same time get the equivalent of a free-will based on
-inner perception. He was so much interested in this subject that he
-had planned to devote to it a whole treatise to be entitled “Sensitive
-morality or the materialism of the sage.” A man cannot resist an outer
-impression but he may at least get out of its way and put himself in
-the way of another impression that will impel him to the desired course
-of conduct. “The soul may then be put or maintained in the state most
-favorable to virtue.” “Climates, seasons, sounds, colors, darkness,
-light, the elements, food, noise, silence, movement, rest, everything,
-acts on our physical frame.” By a proper adjustment of all these outer
-elements we may govern in their origins the feelings by which we allow
-ourselves to be dominated.[107]
-
-Rousseau’s ideas about sensitive morality are at once highly chimerical
-and highly significant. Here as elsewhere one may say with Amiel
-that nothing of Rousseau has been lost. His point of view has an
-inner kinship with that of the man of science who asserts that man is
-necessarily the product of natural forces, but that one may at least
-modify the natural forces. For example, moral effort on the part of
-the individual cannot overcome heredity. It is possible, however, by
-schemes of eugenics to regulate heredity. The uneasy burden of moral
-responsibility is thus lifted from the individual, and the moralist
-in the old-fashioned sense is invited to abdicate in favor of the
-biologist. It would be easy enough to trace similar assumptions in the
-various forms of socialism and other “isms” almost innumerable of the
-present hour.
-
-Perhaps the problem to which I have already alluded may as well be
-faced here. How does it happen that Rousseau who attacked both science
-and literature as the chief sources of human degeneracy should be an
-arch-æsthete, the authentic ancestor of the school of art for art’s
-sake and at the same time by his sensitive (or æsthetic) morality play
-into the hands of the scientific determinist? If one is to enter deeply
-into the modern movement one needs to consider both wherein scientific
-and emotional naturalists clash and wherein they agree. The two types
-of naturalists agree in their virtual denial of a superrational realm.
-They clash above all in their attitude towards what is on the rational
-level. The scientific naturalist is assiduously analytical. Rousseau,
-on the other hand, or rather one whole side of Rousseau, is hostile
-to analysis. The arts and sciences are attacked because they are the
-product of reflection. “The man who reflects is a depraved animal,”
-because he has fallen away from the primitive spontaneous unity of
-his being. Rousseau is the first of the great anti-intellectualists.
-By assailing both rationalism and pseudo-classic decorum in the name
-of instinct and emotion he appealed to men’s longing to get away
-from the secondary and the derivative to the immediate. True decorum
-satisfies the craving for immediacy because it contains within itself
-an element of superrational perception. The “reason” of a Plato or an
-Aristotle also satisfies the craving for immediacy because it likewise
-contains within itself an element of superrational perception. A reason
-or a decorum of this kind ministers to another deep need of human
-nature--the need to lose itself in a larger whole. Once eliminate the
-superrational perception and reason sinks to the level of rationalism,
-consciousness becomes mere self-consciousness. It is difficult, as
-St. Evremond said, for man to remain in the long run in this doubtful
-middle state. Having lost the unity of insight, he will long for the
-unity of instinct. Hence the paradox that this most self-conscious
-of all movements is filled with the praise of the unconscious. It
-abounds in persons who, like Walt Whitman, would turn and live with the
-animals, or who, like Novalis, would fain strike root into the earth
-with the plant. Animals[108] and plants are not engaged in any moral
-struggle, they are not inwardly divided against themselves.
-
-Here is the source of the opposition between the abstract and
-analytical head, deadly to the sense of unity, and the warm immediate
-heart that unifies life with the aid of the imagination--an opposition
-that assumes so many forms from Rousseau to Bergson. The Rousseauist
-always betrays himself by arraigning in some form or other, “the false
-secondary power by which we multiply distinctions.” One should indeed
-remember that there were obscurantists before Rousseau. Pascal also
-arrays the heart against the head; but his heart is at the farthest
-remove from that of Rousseau; it stands for a superrational perception.
-Christians like Pascal may indulge with comparative impunity in a
-certain amount of obscurantism. For they have submitted to a tradition
-that supplies them with distinctions between good and evil and at the
-same time controls their imagination. But for the individualist who
-has broken with tradition to deny his head in the name of his heart is
-a deadly peril. He above all persons should insist that the power by
-which we multiply distinctions, though secondary, is not false--that
-the intellect, of however little avail in itself, is invaluable when
-working in coöperation with the imagination in the service of either
-inner or outer perception. It is only through the analytical head and
-its keen discriminations that the individualist can determine whether
-the unity and infinitude towards which his imagination is reaching (and
-it is only through the imagination that one can have the sense of unity
-and infinitude) is real or merely chimerical. Need I add that in making
-these distinctions between imagination, intellect, feeling, etc.,
-I am not attempting to divide man up into more or less watertight
-compartments, into hard and fast “faculties,” but merely to express,
-however imperfectly, certain obscure and profound facts of experience?
-
-The varieties of what one may term the rationalistic error, of the
-endeavor of the intellect to emancipate itself from perception and
-set up as an independent power, are numerous. The variety that was
-perhaps formerly most familiar was that of the theologian who sought
-to formulate intellectually what must ever transcend formulation. The
-forms of the rationalistic error that concern our present subject can
-be traced back for the most part to Descartes, the father of modern
-philosophy, and are indeed implicit in his famous identification
-of thought and being (_Je pense, donc je suis_). The dogmatic and
-arrogant rationalism that denies both what is above and what is below
-itself, both the realm of awe and the realm of wonder, which prevailed
-among the Cartesians of the Enlightenment, combined, as I have said,
-with pseudo-classic decorum to produce that sense of confinement and
-smugness against which the original genius protested. Man will always
-crave a view of life to which perception lends immediacy and the
-imagination infinitude. A view of life like that of the eighteenth
-century that reduces unduly the rôle of both imagination and perception
-will always seem to him unvital and mechanical. “The Bounded,” says
-Blake, “is loathed by its possessor. The same dull round even of a
-Universe would soon become a Mill with complicated wheels.”
-
-The mechanizing of life against which the romanticist protested may
-as I said be largely associated with the influence of Descartes. It
-is not however the whole truth about Descartes to say that he forgot
-the purely instrumental rôle of the intellect and encouraged it to
-set up as an independent power. As a matter of fact he also used the
-intellect as an instrument in the service of outer perception. Taking
-as his point of departure the precise observations that science was
-accumulating, he sought to formulate mathematically the natural law.
-Now the more one reduces nature to a problem of space and movement,
-the more one is enabled to measure nature; and the method of exact
-measurement may be justified, if not on metaphysical, at least on
-practical grounds. It helps one, if not to understand natural forces,
-at least to control them. It thereby increases man’s power and
-ministers to utility. In a word, the intellect when thus pressed into
-the service of outer perception makes for material efficiency. In a
-sense science becomes scientific only in proportion as it neglects
-the qualitative differences between phenomena, e.g. between light and
-sound, and treats them solely from the point of view of quantity. But
-the penalty that science pays for this quantitative method is a heavy
-one. The farther it gets away from the warm immediacy of perception
-the less real it becomes; for that only is real to a man that he
-immediately perceives. Perfectly pure science tends to become a series
-of abstract mathematical formulæ without any real content. By his
-resort to such a method, the man of science is in constant danger of
-becoming a mere rationalist. At bottom he is ignorant of the reality
-that lies behind natural phenomena; he must even be ignorant of it,
-for it lays hold upon the infinite, and so must elude a finite being
-like man. But the desire to conceal his own ignorance from himself and
-others, the secret push for power and prestige that lies deep down in
-the breast of the man of science as in that of every other man, impels
-him to attach an independent value to the operations of the intellect
-that have only an instrumental value in the service of outer perception
-and to conceive that he has locked up physical nature in his formulæ.
-The man of science thus falls victim to a special form of metaphysical
-illusion. The gravity of the error of the scientific intellectualist is
-multiplied tenfold when he conceives that his formulæ cover not merely
-the natural law but the human law as well, when he strives, like Taine,
-to convert man himself into a “walking theorem,” a “living geometry.”
-This denial of every form of spontaneity was rightly felt by the
-romanticists to be intolerable.
-
-Goethe contrasts the smug satisfaction of Wagner in his dead formulæ
-that give only what is external and secondary, with Faust’s fierce
-craving for immediacy and therefore his impatience with an analysis
-that gives only the dry bones from which the vital breath has departed.
-Wagner is a philistine because he is not tormented by the thirst for
-the infinite. Faust, on the other hand, reaches out beyond the mere
-intellect towards the spirit that is behind the shows of nature, but
-this spirit appears to him and reduces him to despair by declaring that
-he is trying to grasp something that is not only infinite but alien to
-him. Instead of turning from this alien spirit to the spirit that is
-relevant to man, a spirit that sets bounds to every inordinate craving,
-including the inordinate craving for knowledge (_libido sciendi_),
-Faust gives himself to the devil in what was, in the time of the
-youthful Goethe, the newest fashion: he becomes a Rousseauist. Instead
-of striking into the ascending path of insight, he descends to the
-level of impulse. Seen from this level the power by which we multiply
-distinctions seems to him, as it was to seem later to Wordsworth, not
-merely secondary but false, and so definition yields to indiscriminate
-feeling (_Gefühl ist alles_). In general the Rousseauistic reply to the
-Cartesian attempt to identify thought and being is the identification
-of being with emotion (_je sens donc je suis_).
-
-The Mephistopheles of Goethe has often been taken as a symbol of
-the iconoclastic and Voltairian side of the eighteenth century. The
-rationalists assailed the traditional forms that imply a superrational
-realm as mere “prejudice,” and, failing to find in insight a substitute
-for these discarded forms, they succumbed in turn to the emotionalists.
-A “reason” that is not grounded in insight will always seem to men
-intolerably cold and negative and will prove unable to withstand the
-assault of the primary passions. The reason of a Plato or an Aristotle
-is on a different footing altogether because, as I have said, it
-includes an element of inner perception. One may note here that the
-difficulties of the present subject arise in no small degree from the
-ambiguities that cluster about the word reason. It may not only mean
-the imaginative insight[109] of a Plato and the abstract reasoning
-of a Descartes but is often employed by the classicist himself as
-a synonym of good sense. Good sense may be defined as a correct
-perception of the ordinary facts of life and of their relation to one
-another. It may be of very many grades, corresponding to the infinite
-diversity of the facts to be perceived. A man may evidently have good
-sense in dealing with one order of facts, and quite lack it in dealing
-with some different order of facts. As the result of long observation
-and experience of a multitude of minute relationships, of the facts
-that ordinarily follow one another or coexist in some particular field,
-a man’s knowledge of this field becomes at last, as it were, automatic
-and unconscious. A sea captain for example acquires at last an
-intuitive knowledge of the weather, the broker, an intuitive knowledge
-of stocks. The good sense or practical judgment of the sea captain in
-his particular calling and of the broker in his is likely to be greater
-than that of less experienced persons. One cannot, however, assert that
-a man’s good sense is always in strict ratio to his experience. Some
-persons seem to have an innate gift for seeing things as they are,
-others a gift equally innate for seeing things as they are not.
-
-Again the field in which one displays one’s good sense or practical
-judgment may fall primarily under either the human law or the natural
-law, may belong in Aristotelian phrase to the domain either of the
-probable or of the necessary. To take a homely illustration, a
-man is free to choose the temperature of his bath, but only within
-the limits of natural necessity--in this case the temperature at
-which water freezes and that at which water boils. He will show his
-practical judgment by choosing water that is neither too hot nor too
-cold and this so far as he is concerned will be the golden mean. Here
-as elsewhere the golden mean is nothing mechanical, but may vary
-not only from individual to individual but in the same individual
-according to his age, the state of his health, etc. In determining what
-conforms to the golden mean or law of measure there must always be a
-mediation between the particular instance and the general principle,
-and it is here that intuition is indispensable. But even so there is
-a centre of normal human experience, and the person who is too far
-removed from it ceases to be probable. Aged persons may exist who find
-bathing in ice-water beneficial, but they are not representative.
-Now creative art, in distinct ratio to its dignity, deals not with
-what may happen in isolated cases but with what happens according to
-probability or necessity. It is this preoccupation with the universal
-that as Aristotle says makes poetry a more serious and philosophical
-thing than history. There enters indeed into true art an element of
-vital novelty and surprise. But the more cultivated the audience to
-which the creator addresses himself the more will it insist that the
-surprise be not won at the expense of motivation. It will demand that
-characters and incidents be not freakish, not too remote from the
-facts that normally follow one another or coexist, whether in nature
-or human nature. One needs, in short, to deal with both art and life
-from some ethical centre. The centre with reference to which one has
-good sense may be only the ethos of one’s time and country, but if
-one’s good sense has, as in the case of the great poets, the support
-of the imagination, it may pass beyond to something more abiding. “Of
-Pope’s intellectual character,” says Dr. Johnson, “the constituent and
-fundamental principle was good sense, a prompt and intuitive perception
-of consonance and propriety. He saw immediately of his own conceptions
-what was to be chosen, and what to be rejected.” One may grant all this
-and at the same time feel the difference between the “reason” of a Pope
-and the reason of a Sophocles.
-
-Good sense of the kind Dr. Johnson describes and decorum are not
-strictly speaking synonymous. To be decorous not only must one have
-a correct perception of what to do, but one must actually be able to
-do it; and this often requires a long and difficult training. We have
-seen that Rousseau’s spite against eighteenth-century Paris was largely
-due to the fact that he had not acquired young enough the habits that
-would have made it possible for him to conform to its convention.
-“I affected,” says Rousseau with singular candor, “to despise the
-politeness I did not know how to practice.” As a matter of fact he had
-never adjusted himself to the decorum and good sense of any community.
-His attitude towards life was fundamentally Bohemian. But a person who
-was sensible and decorous according to the standards of some other
-country might have emphasized the differences between his good sense
-and decorum and the good sense and decorum of eighteenth-century Paris.
-The opponents of the traditional order in the eighteenth century
-were fond of introducing some Persian or Chinese to whom this order
-seemed no true order at all but only “prejudice” or “abuse.” The
-conclusion would seem to be that because the good sense and decorum
-of one time and country do not coincide exactly with those of another
-time and country, therefore good sense and decorum themselves have
-in them no universal element, and are entirely implicated in the
-shifting circumstances of time and place. But behind the ethos of
-any particular country, that of Greece, for instance, there are, as
-Antigone perceived, the “unwritten laws of heaven,” and something of
-this permanent order is sure to shine through even the most imperfect
-convention. Though no convention is final, though man and all he
-establishes are subject to the law of change, it is therefore an
-infinitely delicate and perilous task to break with convention. One
-can make this break only in favor of insight; which is much as if one
-should say that the only thing that may safely be opposed to common
-sense is a commoner sense, or if one prefers, a common sense that is
-becoming more and more imaginative. Even so, the wiser the man, one
-may surmise, the less likely he will be to indulge in a violent and
-theatrical rupture with his age, after the fashion of Rousseau. He will
-like Socrates remember the counsel of the Delphian oracle to follow
-the “usage of the city,”[110] and while striving to gain a firmer hold
-upon the human law and to impose a more strenuous discipline upon his
-ordinary self, he will so far as possible conform to what he finds
-established. A student of the past cannot help being struck by the fact
-that men are found scattered through different times and countries and
-living under very different conventions who are nevertheless in virtue
-of their insight plainly moving towards a common centre. So much so
-that the best books of the world seem to have been written, as Emerson
-puts it, by one all-wise, all-seeing gentleman. A curious circumstance
-is that the writers who are most universal in virtue of their
-imaginative reason or inspired good sense, are likewise as a rule the
-writers who realized most intensely the life of their own age. No other
-Spanish writer, for example, has so much human appeal as Cervantes,
-and at the same time no other brings us so close to the heart of
-sixteenth-century Spain. In the writings attributed to Confucius one
-encounters, mixed up with much that is almost inconceivably remote from
-us, maxims that have not lost their validity to-day; maxims that are
-sure to be reaffirmed wherever and whenever men attain to the level of
-humanistic insight. In the oldest Buddhist documents again one finds
-along with a great deal that is very expressive of ancient India, and
-thus quite foreign to our idiosyncrasy, a good sense which is even more
-imaginative and inspired, and therefore more universal, than that of
-Confucius, and which is manifested, moreover, on the religious rather
-than on the humanistic level. We are dealing here with indubitable
-facts, and should plant ourselves firmly upon them as against those who
-would exaggerate either the constant or the variable elements in human
-nature.
-
-Enough has been said to show the ambiguities involved in the word
-reason. Reason may mean the abstract and geometrical reason of a
-Descartes, it may mean simply good sense, which may itself exist in
-very many grades ranging from an intuitive mastery of some particular
-field to the intuitive mastery of the ethos of a whole age, like the
-reason of a Pope. Finally reason may be imaginative and be thereby
-enabled to go beyond the convention of a particular time and country,
-and lay hold in varying degrees on “the unwritten laws of heaven.” I
-have already traced in some measure the process by which reason in
-the eighteenth century had come to mean abstract and geometrical (or
-as one may say Cartesian) reason or else unimaginative good sense.
-Cartesian reason was on the one hand being pressed into the service
-of science and its special order of perceptions; on the other hand it
-was being used frequently in coöperation with an unimaginative good
-sense to attack the traditional forms that imply a realm of insight
-which is above both abstract reason and ordinary good sense. Men were
-emboldened to use reason in this way because they were flushed not
-only by the increasing mastery of man over nature through science,
-but by the positive and anti-traditional method through which this
-mastery had been won. Both those who proclaimed and those who denied a
-superrational realm were at least agreed in holding that the faith in
-any such realm was inseparable from certain traditional forms. Pascal,
-for example, held not only that insight in religion is annexed to
-the acceptance of certain dogmas--and this offended the new critical
-spirit--but furthermore that insight could exist even in the orthodox
-only by a special divine gift or grace, and this offended man’s
-reviving confidence in himself. People were ready to applaud when a
-Voltaire declared it was time to “take the side of human nature against
-this sublime misanthropist.” The insight into the law of decorum on
-which classicism must ultimately rest was in much the same way held
-to be inseparable from the Græco-Roman tradition; and so the nature
-of classical insight as a thing apart from any tradition tended to
-be obscured in the endless bickerings of ancients and moderns. The
-classical traditionalists, however, were less prone than the Christian
-traditionalists (Jansenists, Jesuits and Protestants) to weaken their
-cause still further by wrangling among themselves.
-
-Inasmuch as both Christians and humanists failed to plant themselves
-on the fact of insight, the insight came more and more to be
-rejected along with the special forms from which it was deemed to be
-inseparable. As a result of this rejection “reason” was left to cope
-unaided with man’s impulses and expansive desires. Now Pascal saw
-rightly that the balance of power in such a conflict between reason
-and impulse was held by the imagination, and that if reason lacked
-the support of insight the imagination would side with the expansive
-desires and reason would succumb. Moreover the superrational insight,
-or “heart” as Pascal calls it, that can alone keep man from being
-thus overwhelmed, comes, as he holds, not through reason but through
-grace and is at times actually opposed to reason. (“The heart,” he
-says, “has reasons of which the reason knows nothing.”) Instead of
-protesting against the asceticism of this view as the true positivist
-would do, instead of insisting that reason and imagination may pull
-together harmoniously in the service of insight, the romantic moralist
-opposed to the superrational “heart” of the austere Christian a
-subrational “heart,” and this involved an attempt to base morality
-on the very element in human nature it is designed to restrain. The
-positivist will plant himself first of all on the fact of insight and
-will define it as the immediate perception of a something anterior
-to both thought and feeling, that is known practically as a power of
-control over both. The beautiful soul, as we have seen, has no place
-for any such power in his scheme of things, but hopes to satisfy all
-ethical elements simply by letting himself go. Rousseau (following
-Shaftesbury and Hutcheson) transforms conscience itself from an inner
-check into an expansive emotion. While thus corrupting conscience
-in its very essence he does not deny conscience. On the contrary he
-grows positively rhapsodic over conscience and other similar words.
-“Rousseau took wisdom from men’s souls,” says Joubert, “by talking to
-them of virtue.” In short, Rousseau displays the usual dexterity of the
-sophist in juggling with ill-defined general terms. If one calls for
-sharp definition one is at once dismissed as a mere rationalist who
-is retreating into a false secondary power from a warm immediacy. The
-traditional distinctions regarding good and bad were thus discarded
-at the same time that discredit was cast on the keen analysis with
-which it would have been possible to build up new distinctions--all
-in favor of an indiscriminate emotionalism. This discomfiture of both
-tradition and analysis in the field of the human law would not have
-been so easy if at the same time man’s active attention and effort had
-not been concentrated more and more on the field of the natural law.
-In that field imagination and the analytical intellect were actually
-pulling together in the service of perception with the result that man
-was constantly gaining in power and utility. Emotional romanticists and
-scientific utilitarians have thus, in spite of their surface clashes,
-cooperated during the past century in the dehumanizing of man.
-
-It is not enough to say of the representatives of both sides of this
-great naturalistic movement that they eliminate the veto power from
-human nature while continuing to use the old words, like virtue and
-conscience, that imply a veto power. We have seen that they actually
-attack the veto power as synonymous with evil. The devil is conceived
-as the spirit that always says no. A purely affirmative morality
-is almost necessarily an emotional morality. If there is no region
-of insight above the reason which is felt by the natural man as an
-element of vital control, and if cold reason, reason unsupported by
-insight, never has done anything illustrious, as Rousseau truly says,
-it follows that the only way to put driving power behind reason is to
-turn virtue into a passion,--a passion that differs from other passions
-merely in its greater imperiousness. For the beautiful soul virtue,
-as we have seen in the case of Robespierre, is not only a tender,
-imperious and voluptuous passion but even an intoxication. “I was,
-if not virtuous,” says Rousseau, “at least intoxicated with virtue.”
-In its extreme manifestations romantic morality is indeed only one
-aspect, and surely the most singular aspect, of the romantic cult of
-intoxication. No student of romanticism can fail to be struck by its
-pursuit of delirium, vertigo and intoxication for their own sake. It
-is important to see how all these things are closely related to one
-another and how they all derive from the attempt to put life on an
-emotional basis. To rest conscience, for example, on emotion is to rest
-it on what is always changing, not only from man to man but from moment
-to moment in the same man. “If,” as Shelley says, “nought is, but that
-it feels itself to be,” it will feel itself to be very different things
-at different times. No part of man is exempt from the region of flux
-and change. There is, as James himself points out, a kinship between
-such a philosophy of pure motion and vertigo. Faust after all is only
-consistent when having identified the spirit that says no, which is
-the true voice of conscience, with the devil, he proceeds to dedicate
-himself to vertigo (_dem Taumel weih’ ich mich_). Rousseau also, as
-readers of the “Confessions” will remember, deliberately courted
-giddiness by gazing down on a waterfall from the brink of a precipice
-(making sure first that the railing on which he leaned was good and
-strong). This naturalistic dizziness became epidemic among the Greeks
-at the critical moment of their break with traditional standards.
-“Whirl is King,” cried Aristophanes, “having driven out Zeus.” The
-modern sophist is even more a votary of the god Whirl than the Greek,
-for he has added to the mobility of an intellect that has no support in
-either tradition or insight the mobility of feeling. Many Rousseauists
-were, like Hazlitt, attracted to the French Revolution by its “grand
-whirling movements.”
-
-Even more significant than the cult of vertigo is the closely allied
-cult of intoxication. “Man being reasonable,” says Byron, with true
-Rousseauistic logic, “must therefore get drunk. The best of life is
-but intoxication.” The subrational and impulsive self of the man who
-has got drunk is not only released from the surveillance of reason
-in any sense of the word, but his imagination is at the same tune
-set free from the limitations of the real. If many Rousseauists have
-been rightly accused of being “lovers of delirium,” that is because
-in delirium the fancy is especially free to wander wild in its own
-empire of chimeras. To compose a poem, as Coleridge is supposed to have
-composed “Kubla Khan,” in an opium dream without any participation of
-his rational self is a triumph of romantic art. “I should have taken
-more opium when I wrote it,” said Friedrich Schlegel in explanation of
-the failure of his play “Alarcos.” What more specially concerns our
-present topic is the carrying over of this subrational “enthusiasm”
-into the field of ethical values, and this calls for certain careful
-distinctions. Genuine religion--whether genuine Christianity or genuine
-Buddhism--is plainly unfriendly in the highest degree to every form of
-intoxication. Buddhism, for example, not only prohibits the actual use
-of intoxicants but it pursues implacably all the subtler intoxications
-of the spirit. The attitude of the humanist towards intoxication is
-somewhat more complex. He recognizes how deep in man’s nature is the
-craving for some blunting of the sharp edge of his consciousness and
-at least a partial escape from reason and reality; and so he often
-makes a place on the recreative side of life for such moments of escape
-even if attained with the aid of wine. _Dulce est desipere in loco._
-Pindar, who displays so often in his verse the high seriousness of the
-ethical imagination, is simply observing the decorum of the occasion
-when he celebrates in a song for the end of a feast “the time when the
-wearisome cares of men have vanished from their reasons and on a wide
-sea of golden wealth we are all alike voyaging to some visionary shore.
-He that is penniless is then rich, and even they that are wealthy find
-their hearts expanding, when they are smitten by the arrows of the
-vine.” The true Greek, one scarcely needs add, put his final emphasis,
-as befitted a child of Apollo, not on intoxication but on the law of
-measure and sobriety--on preserving the integrity of his mind, to
-render literally the Greek word for the virtue that he perhaps prized
-the most.[111] One must indeed remember that alongside the Apollonian
-element in Greek life is the orgiastic or Dyonisiac element. But when
-Euripides sides imaginatively with the frenzy of Dionysus, as he does
-in his “Bacchae,” though ostensibly preaching moderation, we may affirm
-that he is falling away from what is best in the spirit of Hellas and
-revealing a kinship with the votaries of the god Whirl. The cult of
-intoxication has as a matter of fact appeared in all times and places
-where men have sought to get the equivalent of religious vision and the
-sense of oneness that it brings without rising above the naturalistic
-level. True religious vision is a process of concentration, the result
-of the imposition of the veto power upon the expansive desires of the
-ordinary self. The various naturalistic simulations of this vision
-are, on the contrary, expansive, the result of a more or less complete
-escape from the veto power, whether won with the aid of intoxicants or
-not. The emotional romanticists from Rousseau down have left no doubt
-as to the type of vision they represented. Rousseau dilates with a sort
-of fellow feeling on the deep potations that went on in the taverns
-of patriarchal Geneva.[112] Renan looks with disfavor on those who
-are trying to diminish drunkenness among the common people. He merely
-asks that this drunkenness “be gentle, amiable, accompanied by moral
-sentiments.” Perhaps this side of the movement is best summed up in the
-following passage of William James: “The sway of alcohol over mankind
-is unquestionably due to its power to stimulate the mystical faculties
-of human nature, usually crushed to earth by the cold facts and dry
-criticisms of the sober hour. Sobriety diminishes, discriminates and
-says no; drunkenness expands, unites, and says yes. It is, in fact, the
-great exciter of the _Yes_ function in man. It brings its votary from
-the chill periphery of things to the radiant core. It makes him for the
-moment one with truth.”[113]
-
-The American distiller who named one of his brands “Golden Dream
-Whiskey” was evidently too modest. If an adept in the new psychology he
-might have set up as a pure idealist, as the opener up of an especially
-radiant pathway to the “truth.”
-
-The primitivist then attacks sober discrimination as an obstacle both
-to warm immediacy of feeling and to unity. He tends to associate the
-emotional unity that he gains through intoxication with the unity of
-instinct which he so admires in the world of the subrational. “The
-romantic character,” says Ricarda Huch, “is more exposed to waste
-itself in debaucheries than any other; for only in intoxication,
-whether of love or wine, when the one half of its being, consciousness,
-is lulled to sleep, can it enjoy the bliss for which it envies every
-beast--the bliss of feeling itself one.”[114] The desires of the
-animal, however, work within certain definite limits. They are not,
-like those of the primitivist, inordinate, the explanation being that
-they are less stimulated than the desires of the primitivist by the
-imagination. Even if he gets rid of intellect and moral effort, the
-primitivist cannot attain the unity of instinct because he remains too
-imaginative; at the same time he proclaims and proclaims rightly that
-the imagination is the great unifying power--the power that can alone
-save us from viewing things in “disconnection dead and spiritless.”
-We should attend carefully at this point for we are coming to the
-heart of the great romantic sophism. The Rousseauist does not attain
-to the unity of the man whose impulses and desires are controlled and
-disciplined to some ethical centre. He does not, in spite of all his
-praise of the unconscious and of the “sublime animals,” attain to the
-unity of instinct. In what sense then may he be said to attain unity?
-The obvious reply is that he attains unity only in dreamland. For
-the nature to which he would return, one cannot repeat too often, is
-nothing real, but a mere nostalgic straining of the imagination away
-from the real. It is only in dreamland that one can rest unity on the
-expansive forces of personality that actually divide not only one
-individual from another but the same individual from himself. It is
-only in dreamland that, in the absence of both inner and outer control,
-“all things” will “flow to all, as rivers to the sea.” Such a unity
-will be no more than a dream unity, even though one term it the ideal
-and sophisticate in its favor all the traditional terms of religion and
-morality. A question that forces itself at every stage upon the student
-of this movement is: _What is the value of unity without reality?_
-For two things are equally indubitable: first, that romanticism on
-the philosophical side, is a protest in the name of unity against the
-disintegrating analysis of the eighteenth-century rationalist; second,
-that what the primitivist wants in exchange for analysis is not reality
-but illusion. Rousseau who inclines like other æsthetes to identify the
-true with the beautiful was, we are told, wont to exclaim: “There is
-nothing beautiful save that which is not”; a saying to be matched with
-that of “La Nouvelle Héloïse”: “The land of chimeras is alone worthy
-of habitation.” Similar utterances might be multiplied from French,
-English, and German romanticists.[115] To be sure, the word “reality”
-is perhaps the most slippery of all general terms. Certain recent
-votaries of the god Whirl, notably Bergson, have promised us that if
-we surrender to the flux we shall have a “vision” not only of unity
-but also of reality; and so they have transferred to the cult of their
-divinity all the traditional language of religion.
-
-We do not, however, need for the present to enter into a discussion as
-to the nature of reality, but simply to stick to strict psychological
-observation. From this point of view it is not hard to see that the
-primitivist makes his primary appeal not to man’s need for unity and
-reality but to a very different need. Byron has told us what this need
-is in his tale (“The Island”) of a ship’s crew that overpowered its
-officers and then set sail for Otaheite; what impelled these Arcadian
-mutineers was not the desire for a genuine return to aboriginal life
-with its rigid conventions, but
-
- The wish--which ages have not yet subdued
- In man--to have no master save his mood.
-
-Now to have no master save one’s mood is to be wholly temperamental.
-In Arcadia--the ideal of romantic morality--those who are wholly
-temperamental unite in sympathy and brotherly love. It remains to
-consider more fully what this triumph of temperament means in the real
-world.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-ROMANTIC MORALITY: THE REAL
-
-
-The fundamental thing in Rousseauistic morality is not, as we have
-seen, the assertion that man is naturally good, but the denial of
-the “civil war in the cave.” Though this denial is not complete in
-Rousseau himself, nothing is more certain than that his whole tendency
-is away from this form of dualism. The beautiful soul does the right
-thing not as a result of effort, but spontaneously, unconsciously and
-almost inevitably. In fact the beautiful soul can scarcely be said to
-be a voluntary agent at all. “Nature” acts in him and for him. This
-minimizing of moral struggle and deliberation and choice, this drift
-towards a naturalistic fatalism, as it may be termed, is a far more
-significant thing in Rousseau than his optimism. One may as a matter
-of fact eliminate dualism in favor of nature and at the same time look
-on nature as evil. This is precisely what one is likely to do if one
-sees no alternative to temperamental living, while judging those who
-live temperamentally not by their “ideal,” that is by their feeling of
-their own loveliness, but by what they actually do. One will become
-a realist in the sense that came to be attached to this word during
-the latter part of the nineteenth century. Rousseau himself is often
-realistic in this sense when he interrupts his Arcadian visions to
-tell us what actually occurred. In the “Confessions,” as I have said,
-passages that recall Lamartine alternate with passages that recall
-Zola, and the transition from one type of passage to the other is
-often disconcertingly sudden. In reading these realistic passages of
-Rousseau we are led to reflect that his “nature” is not, in practice,
-so remote from Taine’s nature as might at first appear. “What we
-call _nature_,” says Taine, “is this brood of secret passions, often
-maleficent, generally vulgar, always blind, which tremble and fret
-within us, ill-covered by the cloak of decency and reason under which
-we try to disguise them; we think we lead them and they lead us; we
-think our actions our own, they are theirs.”[116]
-
-The transition from an optimistic to a pessimistic naturalism can be
-followed with special clearness in the stages by which the sentimental
-drama of the eighteenth century passes over into the realistic drama of
-a later period. Petit de Julleville contrasts the beginning and the end
-of this development as follows: “[In the eighteenth century] to please
-the public you had to say to it: ‘You are all at least at bottom good,
-virtuous, full of feeling. Let yourselves go, follow your instincts;
-listen to nature and you will do the right thing spontaneously.’ How
-changed times are! Nowadays[117] any one who wishes to please, to be
-read and petted and admired, to pass for great and become very rich,
-should address men as follows: ‘You are a vile pack of rogues, and
-profligates, you have neither faith nor law; you are impelled by your
-instincts alone and these instincts are ignoble. Do not try though to
-mend matters, that would be of no use at all.’”[118]
-
-The connecting link between these different forms of the drama is
-naturalistic fatalism, the suppression of moral responsibility for
-either man’s goodness or badness. Strictly speaking, the intrusion of
-the naturalistic element into the realm of ethical values and the
-subversion by it of deliberation and choice and of the normal sequence
-of moral cause and effect is felt from the human point of view not as
-fate at all, but as chance. Emotional romanticism joins at this point
-with other forms of romanticism, which all show a proclivity to prefer
-to strict motivation, to probability in the Aristotelian sense, what is
-fortuitous and therefore wonderful. This is only another way of saying
-that the romanticist is moving away from the genuinely dramatic towards
-melodrama. Nothing is easier than to establish the connection between
-emotional romanticism and the prodigious efflorescence of melodrama,
-the irresponsible quest for thrills, that has marked the past century.
-What perhaps distinguishes this movement from any previous one is the
-attempt to invest what is at bottom a melodramatic view of life with
-philosophic and even religious significance. By suppressing the “civil
-war in the cave” one strikes at the very root of true drama. It does
-not then much matter from the dramatic point of view whether the burden
-of responsibility for good or evil of which you have relieved the
-individual is shifted upon “nature” or society. Shelley, for example,
-puts the blame for evil on society. “Prometheus Unbound,” in which he
-has developed his conception, is, judged as a play, only an ethereal
-melodrama. The unaccountable collapse of Zeus, a monster of unalloyed
-and unmotivated badness, is followed by the gushing forth in man of
-an equally unalloyed and unmotivated goodness. The whole genius of
-Hugo, again, as I have said in speaking of his use of antithesis, is
-melodramatic. His plays may be described as parvenu melodramas. They
-abound in every variety of startling contrast and strange happening,
-the whole pressed into the service of “problems” manifold and even of a
-philosophy of history. At the same time the poverty of ethical insight
-and true dramatic motivation is dissimulated under profuse lyrical
-outpourings and purple patches of local color. His Hernani actually
-glories in not being a responsible agent, but an “unchained and fatal
-force,”[119] and so more capable of striking astonishment into himself
-and others. Yet the admirers of Hugo would not only promote him to the
-first rank of poets, but would have us share his own belief that he is
-a seer and a prophet.
-
-It may be objected that the great dramatists of the past exalt this
-power of fate and thus diminish moral responsibility. But the very
-sharpest distinction must be drawn between the subrational fate of the
-emotional romanticist and the superrational fate of Greek tragedy.
-The fate of Æschylean tragedy, for instance, so far from undermining
-moral responsibility rather reinforces it. It is felt to be the
-revelation of a moral order of which man’s experience at any particular
-moment is only an infinitesimal fragment. It does not seem, like the
-subrational fate of the emotional romanticist, the intrusion into the
-human realm of an alien power whether friendly or unfriendly. This
-point might be established by a study of the so-called fate drama in
-Germany (_Schicksaltragödie_), which, though blackly pessimistic, is
-closely related to the optimistic sentimental drama of the eighteenth
-century.[120] The German fate drama is in its essence ignoble because
-its characters are specimens of sensitive morality--incapable, that is,
-of opposing a firm human purpose to inner impulse or outer impression.
-The fate that thus wells up from the depths of nature and overwhelms
-their wills is not only malign and ironical, but as Grillparzer says,
-makes human deeds seem only “throws of the dice in the blind night of
-chance.”[121] It would be easy to follow similar conceptions of fate
-down through later literature at least to the novels of Thomas Hardy.
-
-Some of the earlier exponents of the sentimental drama, like Diderot,
-were not so certain as one might expect that the discarding of
-traditional decorum in favor of “nature” would result practically in a
-reign of pure loveliness. At one moment Diderot urges men to get rid
-of the civil war in the cave in order that they may be Arcadian, like
-the savages of the South Sea, but at other moments--as in “Rameau’s
-Nephew”--he shows a somewhat closer grip on the problem of what will
-actually come to pass when a man throws off the conventions of a highly
-organized civilization and sets out to live temperamentally. Diderot
-sees clearly that he will be that least primitive of all beings, the
-Bohemian. Rameau’s nephew, in his irresponsibility and emotional
-instability, in the kaleidoscopic shiftings of his mood, anticipates
-all the romantic Bohemians and persons of “artistic temperament” who
-were to afflict the nineteenth century. But he is more than a mere
-æsthete. At moments we can discern in him the first lineaments of the
-superman, who knows no law save the law of might. One should recollect
-that the actual influence of Diderot in France fell in the second
-rather than in the first half of the nineteenth century--was upon the
-realists rather than upon the romanticists. The same men that had a
-cult for Diderot admired the Vautrins and the Rastignacs of Balzac and
-the Julien Sorel of Stendhal. These characters are little Napoleons.
-They live temperamentally in the midst of a highly organized society,
-but they set aside its conventions of right and wrong in favor, not of
-æsthetic enjoyment, but of power.
-
-The ideal of romantic morality, as was seen in the last chapter,
-is altruism. The real, it should be clear from the examples I have
-been citing, is always egoism. But egoism may assume very different
-forms. As to the main forms of egoism in men who have repudiated
-outer control without acquiring self-control we may perhaps revive
-profitably the old Christian classification of the three lusts--the
-lust of knowledge, the lust of sensation, and the lust of power.
-Goethe indeed may be said to have treated these three main ways of
-being temperamental in three of his early characters--the lust of
-knowledge in “Faust,” the lust of sensation in “Werther,” and the
-lust of power in “Götz.” If we view life solely from the naturalistic
-level and concern ourselves solely with the world of action, we are
-justified in neglecting, like Hobbes, the other lusts and putting
-supreme emphasis on the lust for power.[122] Professor F.J. Mather,
-Jr., has distinguished between “hard” and “soft” sentimentalists.[123]
-His distinction might perhaps be brought more closely into line with
-my own distinctions if I ventured to coin a word and to speak of hard
-and soft temperamentalists. The soft temperamentalist will prove unable
-to cope in the actual world with the hard temperamentalist, and is
-very likely to become his tool. Balzac has very appropriately made
-Lucien de Rubempré, the romantic poet and a perfect type of a soft
-temperamentalism, the tool of Vautrin, the superman.
-
-Here indeed is the supreme opposition between the ideal and the real
-in romantic morality. The ideal to which Rousseau invites us is either
-the primitivistic anarchy of the “Second Discourse,” in which egoism is
-tempered by “natural pity,” or else a state such as is depicted in the
-“Social Contract,” in which egoism is held in check by a disinterested
-“general will.” The preliminary to achieving either of these ideals is
-that the traditional checks on human nature should be removed. But in
-exact proportion as this programme of emancipation is carried out what
-emerges in the real world is not the mythical will to brotherhood, but
-the ego and its fundamental will to power. Give a bootblack half the
-universe, according to Carlyle, and he will soon be quarreling with
-the owner of the other half. He will if he is a very temperamental
-bootblack. Perhaps indeed all other evils in life may be reduced to the
-failure to check that something in man that is reaching out for more
-and ever for more. In a society in which the traditional inhibitions
-are constantly growing weaker, the conflict I have just sketched
-between the ideal and the real is becoming more and more acute. The
-soft temperamentalists are overflowing with beautiful professions
-of brotherly love, and at the same time the hard temperamentalists
-are reaching out for everything in sight; and inasmuch as the hard
-temperamentalists operate not in dreamland, but in the real world,
-they are only too plainly setting the tone. Very often, of course,
-the same temperamentalist has his hard and his soft side. The triumph
-of egoism over altruism in the relations between man and man is even
-more evident in the relations between nation and nation. The egoism
-that results from the inbreeding of temperament on a national scale
-runs in the case of the strong nations into imperialism.[124] We have
-not reflected sufficiently on the fact that the soft temperamentalist
-Rousseau is more than any other one person the father of _Kultur_;[125]
-and that the exponents of Kultur in our own day have been revealed as
-the hardest of hard temperamentalists.
-
-To understand the particular craving that is met by Rousseauistic
-idealism one would need to go with some care into the psychology of
-the half-educated man. The half-educated man may be defined as the man
-who has acquired a degree of critical self-consciousness sufficient
-to detach him from the standards of his time and place, but not
-sufficient to acquire the new standards that come with a more thorough
-cultivation. It was pointed out long ago that the characteristic of the
-half-educated man is that he is incurably restless; that he is filled
-with every manner of desire. In contrast with him the uncultivated man,
-the peasant, let us say, and the man of high cultivation have few and
-simple desires. Thus Socrates had fewer and simpler desires than the
-average Athenian. But what is most noteworthy about the half-educated
-man is not simply that he harbors many desires and is therefore
-incurably restless, but that these desires are so often incompatible.
-He craves various good things, but is not willing to pay the price--not
-willing to make the necessary renunciations. He pushes to an extreme
-what is after all a universal human proclivity--the wish to have one’s
-cake and eat it too. Thus, while remaining on the naturalistic level,
-he wishes to have blessings that accrue only to those who rise to the
-humanistic or religious levels. He wishes to live in “a universe with
-the lid off,” to borrow a happy phrase from the pragmatist, and at the
-same time to enjoy the peace and brotherhood that are the fruits of
-restraint. The moral indolence of the Rousseauist is such that he is
-unwilling to adjust himself to the truth of the human law; and though
-living naturalistically, he is loath to recognize that what actually
-prevails on the naturalistic level is the law of cunning and the law
-of force. He thus misses the reality of both the human and the natural
-law and in the pursuit of a vague Arcadian longing falls into sheer
-unreality. I am indeed overstating the case so far as Rousseau is
-concerned. He makes plain in the “Emile” that the true law of nature
-is not the law of love but the law of force. Emile is to be released
-from the discipline of the human law and given over to the discipline
-of nature; and this means in practice that he will have “to bow his
-neck beneath the hard yoke of physical necessity.” In so far the
-“nature” of Emile is no Arcadian dream. Where the Arcadian dreaming
-begins is when Rousseau assumes that an Emile who has learned the
-lesson of force from Nature herself, will not pass along this lesson
-to others, whether citizens of his own or some other country, but will
-rather display in his dealings with them an ideal fraternity. In the
-early stages of the naturalistic movement, in Hobbes and Shaftesbury,
-for example, egoism and altruism, the idea of power and the idea of
-sympathy, are more sharply contrasted than they are in Rousseau and the
-later romanticists. Shaftesbury assumes in human nature an altruistic
-impulse or will to brotherhood that will be able to cope successfully
-with the will to power that Hobbes declares to be fundamental. Many of
-the romanticists, as we have seen, combine the cult of power with the
-cult of brotherhood. Hercules, as in Shelley’s poem, is to bow down
-before Prometheus, the lover of mankind. The extreme example, however,
-is probably William Blake. He proclaims himself of the devil’s party,
-he glorifies a free expansion of energy, he looks upon everything that
-restricts this expansion as synonymous with evil. At the same time he
-pushes his exaltation of sympathy to the verge of the grotesque.[126]
-
-Such indeed is the jumble of incompatibles in Blake that he would
-rest an illimitable compassion on the psychology of the superman. For
-nothing is more certain than that the “Marriage of Heaven and Hell”
-is among other things a fairly complete anticipation of Nietzsche.
-The reasons are worth considering why the idea of power and the idea
-of sympathy which Blake and so many other romanticists hoped to unite
-have once more come to seem antipodal, why in the late stages of the
-movement one finds a Nietzsche and a Tolstoy, just as in its early
-stages one finds a Hobbes and a Shaftesbury. It is plain, first of
-all, that what brought the two cults together for a time was their
-common hatred of the past. With the triumph over the past fairly
-complete, the incompatibility of power and sympathy became increasingly
-manifest. Nietzsche’s attitude is that of a Prometheus whose sympathy
-for mankind has changed to disgust on seeing the use that they are
-actually making of their emancipation. Humanitarian sympathy seemed
-to him to be tending not merely to a subversion, but to an inversion
-of values, to a positive preference for the trivial and the ignoble.
-He looked with special loathing on that side of the movement that is
-symbolized in its homage to the ass. The inevitable flying apart of
-power and sympathy was further hastened in Nietzsche and others by
-the progress of evolution. Darwinism was dissipating the Arcadian
-mist through which nature had been viewed by Rousseau and his early
-followers. The gap is wide between Tennyson’s nature “red in tooth and
-claw” and the tender and pitiful nature of Wordsworth.[127] Nietzsche’s
-preaching of ruthlessness is therefore a protest against the sheer
-unreality of those who wish to be natural and at the same time
-sympathetic. But how are we to get a real scale of values to oppose to
-an indiscriminate sympathy? It is here that Nietzsche shows that he
-is caught in the same fatal coil of naturalism as the humanitarian.
-He accepts the naturalistic corruption of conscience which underlies
-all other naturalistic corruptions. “The will to overcome an emotion,”
-he says, “is ultimately only the will of another or of several other
-emotions.”[128] All he can do with this conception of conscience is
-to set over against the humanitarian suppression of values a scale
-of values based on force and not a true scale of values based on the
-degree to which one imposes or fails to impose on one’s temperamental
-self a human law of vital control. The opposition between a Nietzsche
-and a Tolstoy is therefore not specially significant; it is only that
-between the hard and the soft temperamentalist. To be sure Nietzsche
-can on occasion speak very shrewdly about the evils that have resulted
-from temperamentalism--especially from the passion for an untrammeled
-self-expression. But the superman himself is a most authentic
-descendant of the original genius in whom we first saw this passion
-dominant. The imagination of the superman, spurning every centre of
-control, traditional or otherwise, so coöperates with his impulses
-and desires as to give them “infinitude,” that is so as to make
-them reach out for more and ever for more. The result is a frenzied
-romanticism.[129]
-
-“Proportionateness is strange to us, let us confess it to ourselves,”
-says Nietzsche. “Our itching is really the itching for the infinite,
-the immeasurable.” How the humanitarian loses proportionateness is
-plain; it is by his readiness to sacrifice to sympathy the ninety
-per cent or so of the virtues that imply self-control. The superman
-would scarcely seem to redress the balance by getting rid of the same
-restraining virtues in favor of power. He simply oscillates wildly
-from the excess of which he is conscious in others or in himself into
-the opposite excess, at imminent peril in either case to the ethical
-basis of civilization. The patterns or models that the past had set
-up for imitation and with reference to which one might rein in his
-lusts and impose upon them proportionateness are rejected by every
-type of romantic expansionist, not only as Nietzsche says, because
-they do not satisfy the yearning for the infinite, but also, as we
-have seen, because they do not satisfy the yearning for unity and
-immediacy. Now so far as the forms of the eighteenth century were
-concerned the romantic expansionist had legitimate grounds for protest.
-But because the rationalism and artificial decorum of that period
-failed to satisfy, he goes on to attack the analytical intellect
-and decorum in general and this attack is entirely illegitimate. It
-may be affirmed on the contrary that the power by which we multiply
-distinctions is never so necessary as in an individualistic age, an age
-that has broken with tradition on the ground that it wishes to be more
-imaginative and immediate. There are various ways of being imaginative
-and immediate, and analysis is needed, not to build up some abstract
-system but to discriminate between the actual data of experience and
-so to determine which one of these ways it is expedient to follow if
-one wishes to become wise and happy. It is precisely at such moments
-of individualistic break with the past that the sophist stands ready
-to juggle with general terms, and the only protection against such
-juggling is to define these terms with the aid of the most unflinching
-analysis. Thus Bergson would have us believe that there are in France
-two main types of philosophy, a rationalistic type that goes back to
-Descartes and an intuitive type that goes back to Pascal,[130] and
-gives us to understand that, inasmuch as he is an intuitionist, he
-is in the line of descent from Pascal. Monstrous sophistries lurk in
-this simple assertion, sophistries which if they go uncorrected are
-enough to wreck civilization. The only remedy is to define the word
-intuition, to discriminate practically and by their fruits between
-subrational and superrational intuition. When analyzed and defined in
-this way subrational intuition will be found to be associated with
-vital impulse (_élan vital_) and superrational intuition with a power
-of vital control (_frein vital_) over this impulse; and furthermore
-it will be clear that this control must be exercised if men are to
-be drawn towards a common centre, not in dreamland, but in the real
-world. So far then from its being true that the man who analyzes must
-needs see things in disconnection dead and spiritless, it is only by
-analysis that he is, in an individualistic age, put on the pathway of
-true unity, and also of the rôle of the imagination in achieving this
-unity. For there is need to discriminate between the different types
-of imagination no less than between the different types of intuition.
-One will find through such analysis that the centre of normal human
-experience that is to serve as a check on impulse (so far at least as
-it is something distinct from the mere convention of one’s age and
-time) can be apprehended only with the aid of the imagination. This is
-only another way of saying that the reality that is set above one’s
-ordinary self is not a fixed absolute but can be glimpsed, if at all,
-only through a veil of illusion and is indeed inseparable from the
-illusion. This realm of insight cannot be finally formulated for the
-simple reason that it is anterior to formulæ. It must therefore from
-the point of view of an intellect it transcends seem infinite though in
-a very different sense from the outer infinite of expansive desire.
-
-This inner or human infinite, so far from being incompatible with
-decorum, is the source of true decorum. True decorum is only the
-pulling back and disciplining of impulse to the proportionateness that
-has been perceived with the aid of what one may term the ethical or
-generalizing imagination. To dismiss like the romantic expansionist
-everything that limits or restricts the lust of knowledge or of power
-or of sensation as arbitrary and artificial is to miss true decorum and
-at the same time to sink, as a Greek would say, from ethos to pathos.
-If one is to avoid this error one must, as Hamlet counsels, “in the
-very torrent, tempest, and (as I may say) whirlwind of passion, acquire
-and beget a temperance that may give it smoothness.” This is probably
-the best of all modern definitions of decorum simply because it is the
-most experimental. In general all that has been said about the ethical
-imagination is not to be taken as a fine-spun theory, but as an attempt
-however imperfect to give an account of actual experience.
-
-One may report from observation another trait of truly ethical art, art
-which is at once imaginative and decorous. It is not merely intense,
-as art that is imaginative at the expense of decorum may very well
-be,[131] it has a restrained and humanized intensity--intensity on a
-background of calm. The presence of the ethical imagination whether in
-art or life[132] is always known as an element of calm.
-
-In art that has the ethical quality, and I am again not setting up a
-metaphysical theory but reporting from observation, the calm that comes
-from imaginative insight into the universal is inextricably blended
-with an element of uniqueness--with a something that belongs to a
-particular time and place and individual. The truth to the universal,
-as Aristotle would say, gives the work verisimilitude and the truth
-to the particular satisfies man’s deep-seated craving for novelty;
-so that the best art unites the probable with the wonderful. But
-the probable, one cannot insist too often, is won no less than the
-wonderful with the aid of the imagination and so is of the very soul
-of art. The romanticist who is ready to sacrifice the probable to the
-wonderful and to look on the whole demand for verisimilitude as an
-academic superstition is prone to assume that he has a monopoly of
-soul and imagination. But the word soul is at least in as much need
-of Socratic definition as the word intuition. It is possible, for
-example, with the aid of the ethical imagination so to partake of the
-ultimate element of calm as to rise to the religious level. The man who
-has risen to this level has a soul, but it is a soul of peace. Both
-soul and imagination are also needed to achieve the fine adjustment
-and mediation of the humanist. It is not enough, however, to have a
-religious or a humanistic soul if one is to be a creator or even a
-fully equipped critic of art. For art rests primarily not on ethical
-but æsthetic perception. This perception itself varies widely according
-to the art involved. One may, for instance, be musically perceptive and
-at the same time lack poetic perception. To be a creator in any art
-one must possess furthermore the technique of this art--something that
-is more or less separable from its “soul” in any sense of the word. It
-is possible to put a wildly romantic soul into art, as has often been
-done in the Far East, and at the same time to be highly conventional
-or traditional in one’s technique. Writers like Mérimée, Renan, and
-Maupassant again are faithful in the main to the technique of French
-prose that was worked out during the classical period, but combine with
-this technique an utterly unclassical “soul.”
-
-Rules, especially perhaps rules as to what to avoid, may be of aid in
-acquiring technique, but are out of place in dealing with the soul of
-art. There one passes from rules to principles. The only rule, if we
-are to achieve art that has an ethical soul, is to view life with some
-degree of imaginative wholeness. Art that has technique without soul
-in either the classical or romantic sense, and so fails either to
-inspire elevation or awaken wonder, is likely to be felt as a barren
-virtuosity. The pseudo-classicist was often unduly minute in the rules
-he laid down for technique or outer form, as one may say, and then
-ignored the ethical imagination or inner form entirely, or else set up
-as a substitute mere didacticism. Since pseudo-classic work of this
-type plainly lacked soul and imagination, and since the romanticist
-felt and felt rightly that he himself had a soul and imagination, he
-concluded wrongly that soul and imagination are romantic monopolies.
-Like the pseudo-classicist, he inclines to identify high seriousness
-in art, something that can only come from the exercise of the ethical
-imagination at its best, with mere preaching, only he differs from
-the pseudo-classicist in insisting that preaching should be left to
-divines. One should insist, on the contrary, that the mark of genuinely
-ethical art, art that is highly serious, is that it is free from
-preaching. Sophocles is more ethical than Euripides for the simple
-reason that he views life with more imaginative wholeness. At the same
-time he is much less given to preaching than Euripides. He does not, as
-FitzGerald says, interrupt the action and the exhibition of character
-through action in order to “jaw philosophy.”
-
-It is not unusual for the modern artist to seek, like Euripides,
-to dissimulate the lack of true ethical purpose in his work by
-agitating various problems. But problems come and go, whereas human
-nature abides. One may agitate problems without number, and yet
-lack imaginative insight into the abiding element in human nature.
-Moreover, not being of the soul of art, the problem that one agitates
-is in danger of being a clogging intellectualism. Furthermore to seek
-in problems an equivalent for the definition and purpose that the
-ethical imagination alone can give is to renew, often in an aggravated
-form, the neo-classical error. The moralizing of the pseudo-classic
-dramatist, even though dull and misplaced, was usually sound enough in
-itself; whereas the moralizing of those who seek nowadays to use the
-stage as a pulpit, resting as it does on false humanitarian postulates,
-is in itself dubious. The problem play succeeds not infrequently in
-being at once dull and indecent.
-
-The problem play is often very superior in technique or outer form
-to the earlier romantic drama, but it still suffers from the same
-lack of inner form, inasmuch as its social purpose cannot take the
-place of true human purpose based on imaginative insight into the
-universal. The lack of inner form in so much modern drama and art in
-general can be traced to the original unsoundness of the break with
-pseudo-classic formalism. To a pseudo-classic art that lacked every
-kind of perceptiveness the Rousseauist opposed æsthetic perceptiveness,
-and it is something, one must admit, thus to have discovered the
-senses. But to his æsthetic perceptiveness he failed, as I have
-already said, to add ethical perceptiveness because of his inability
-to distinguish between ethical perceptiveness and mere didacticism,
-and so when asked to put ethical purpose into art he replied that
-art should be pursued for its own sake (_l’art pour l’art_) and
-that “beauty is its own excuse for being.” One should note here
-the transformation that this pure æstheticism brought about in the
-meaning of the word beauty itself. For the Greek beauty resided in
-proportion,[133] and proportion can be attained only with the aid of
-the ethical imagination. With the elimination of the ethical element
-from the soul of art the result is an imagination that is free to
-wander wild with the emancipated emotions. The result is likely to be
-art in which a lively æsthetic perceptiveness is not subordinated to
-any whole, art that is unstructural, however it may abound in vivid and
-picturesque details; and a one-sided art of this kind the romanticist
-does not hesitate to call beautiful. “If we let the reason sleep and
-are content to watch a succession of dissolving views,” says Mr. Elton
-of Shelley’s “Revolt of Islam,” “the poem is seen at once to overflow
-with beauty.”[134] Mere reason is not strictly speaking a sufficient
-remedy for this unstructural type of “beauty.” Thus Chateaubriand’s
-reason is on the side of proportion and all the classical virtues but
-his imagination is not (and we cannot repeat too often that it is what
-a man is imaginatively and not what he preaches that really counts).
-Instead of siding with his reason and aiding it to ethical perception
-Chateaubriand’s imagination is the free playmate of his emotions. “What
-did I care for all these futilities” (i.e. his functions as cabinet
-minister), he exclaims, “I who never cared for anything except for my
-dreams, and even then on condition that they should last only for a
-night.” When a man has once spoken in that vein sensible people will
-pay little heed to what he preaches; for they will be certain that the
-driving power of his work and personality is elsewhere. The imagination
-holds the balance of power between the reason and the perceptions
-of sense, and Chateaubriand’s imagination is plainly on the side of
-sensuous adventure. This vagabondage of the imagination appears
-especially in his imagistic trend, in his pursuit of the descriptive
-detail for its own sake. To set out like Chateaubriand to restore the
-monarchy and the Christian religion and instead to become the founder
-of “_l’école des images à tout prix_” is an especially striking form of
-the contrast in romantic morality between the ideal and the real.
-
-The attempt that we have been studying to divorce beauty from ethics
-led in the latter part of the eighteenth century to the rise of a
-nightmare subject,--æsthetics. Shaftesbury indeed, as we have seen
-already, anticipates the favorite romantic doctrine that beauty is
-truth and truth beauty, which means in practice to rest both truth and
-beauty upon a fluid emotionalism. Thus to deal æsthetically with truth
-is an error of the first magnitude, but it is also an error, though
-a less serious one, to see only the æsthetic element in beauty. For
-beauty to be complete must have not only æsthetic perceptiveness but
-order and proportion; and this brings us back again to the problem
-of the ethical imagination and the permanent model or pattern with
-reference to which it seeks to impose measure and proportion upon
-sensuous perception and expansive desire. We should not hesitate to
-say that beauty loses most of its meaning when divorced from ethics
-even though every æsthete in the world should arise and denounce us as
-philistines. To rest beauty upon feeling as the very name æsthetics
-implies, is to rest it upon what is ever shifting. Nor can we escape
-from this endless mobility with the aid of physical science, for
-physical science does not itself rise above the naturalistic flux.
-After eliminating from beauty the permanent pattern and the ethical
-imagination with the aid of which it is perceived, a man will be ready
-to term beautiful anything that reflects his ordinary or temperamental
-self. Diderot is a sentimentalist and so he sees as much beauty in the
-sentimentalist Richardson as in Homer. If a man is psychically restless
-he will see beauty only in motion. The Italian futurist Marinetti says
-that for him a rushing motor car is more beautiful than the Victory of
-Samothrace. A complete sacrifice of the principle of repose in beauty
-(which itself arises from the presence of the ethical imagination)
-to the suggesting of motion such as has been seen in certain recent
-schools, runs practically into a mixture of charlatanism and madness.
-“He that is giddy thinks the world goes round,” says Shakespeare,
-and the exponents of certain ultra-modern movements in painting are
-simply trying to paint their inner giddiness. As a matter of fact the
-pretension of the æsthete to have a purely personal vision of beauty
-and then treat as a philistine every one who does not accept it, is
-intolerable. Either beauty cannot be defined at all or we must say
-that only is beautiful which seems so to the right kind of man, and
-the right kind of man is plainly he whose total attitude towards life
-is correct, who views life with some degree of imaginative wholeness,
-which is only another way of saying that the problem of beauty is
-inseparable from the ethical problem. In an absolute sense nobody can
-see life steadily and see it whole; but we may at least move towards
-steadiness and wholeness. The æsthete is plainly moving in an opposite
-direction; he is becoming more and more openly a votary of the god
-Whirl. His lack of inner form is an error not of æsthetics but of
-general philosophy.
-
-The romantic imagination, the imagination that is not drawn back to
-any ethical centre and so is free to wander wild in its own empire of
-chimeras, has indeed a place in life. To understand what this place
-is one needs to emphasize the distinction between art that has high
-seriousness and art that is merely recreative. The serious moments of
-life are moments of tension, of concentration on either the natural or
-the human law. But Apollo cannot always be bending the bow. Man needs
-at times to relax, and one way of relaxing is to take refuge for a
-time in some land of chimeras, to follow the Arcadian gleam. He may
-then come back to the real world, the world of active effort, solaced
-and refreshed. But it is only with reference to some ethical centre
-that we may determine what art is soundly recreative, in what forms
-of adventure the imagination may innocently indulge. The romanticist
-should recollect that among other forms of adventure is what Ben Jonson
-terms “a bold adventure for hell”; and that a not uncommon nostalgia
-is what the French call _la nostalgie de la boue_--man’s nostalgia for
-his native mud. Because we are justified at times, as Lamb urges, in
-wandering imaginatively beyond “the diocese of strict conscience,” it
-does not follow that we may, like him, treat Restoration Comedy as a
-sort of fairyland; for Restoration Comedy is a world not of pure but of
-impure imagination.
-
-Lamb’s paradox, however, is harmless compared with what we have just
-been seeing in Chateaubriand. With a dalliant imagination that entitles
-him at best to play a recreative rôle, he sets up as a religious
-teacher. Michelet again has been described as an “entertainer who
-believes himself a prophet,” and this description fits many other
-Rousseauists. The æsthete who assumes an apocalyptic pose is an
-especially flagrant instance of the huddling together of incompatible
-desires. He wishes to sport with Amaryllis in the shade and at the same
-time enjoy the honors that belong only to the man who scorns delights
-and lives laborious days. For the exercise of the ethical imagination,
-it is hardly necessary to say, involves effort. Perhaps no one has
-ever surpassed Rousseau himself in the art of which I have already
-spoken,--that of giving to moral indolence a semblance of profound
-philosophy.
-
-One cannot indeed always affirm that the Rousseauist is by the quality
-of his imagination an entertainer pure and simple. His breaking down of
-barriers and running together of the planes of being results at times
-in ambiguous mixtures--gleams of insight that actually seem to minister
-to fleshliness. One may cite as an example the “voluptuous religiosity”
-that certain critics have discovered in Wagner.
-
-The romanticist will at once protest against the application of ethical
-standards to Wagner or any other musician. Music, he holds, is the
-most soulful of the arts and so the least subject to ethics. For the
-same reason it is the chief of arts and also--in view of the fact that
-romanticists have a monopoly of soul--the most romantic. One should not
-allow to pass unchallenged this notion that because music is filled
-with soul it is therefore subject to no ethical centre, but should be
-treated as a pure enchantment. The Greeks were as a matter of fact much
-concerned with the ethical quality of music. Certain musical modes, the
-Doric for example, had as they believed a virile “soul,” other modes
-like the Lydian had the contrary (“Lap me in soft Lydian airs”). For
-the very reason that music is the most appealing of the arts (song,
-says Aristotle, is the sweetest of all things) they were especially
-anxious that this art should be guarded from perversion.[135] Without
-attempting a full discussion of a difficult subject for which I have
-no competency, it will be enough to point out that the plain song that
-prevailed in Christian churches for over a thousand years evidently had
-a very different “soul,” a soul that inspired to prayer and peace, from
-much specifically romantic music that has a soul of restlessness, of
-infinite indeterminate desire. The result of the failure to recognize
-this distinction is very often a hybrid art. Berlioz showed a rather
-peculiar conception of religion when he took pride in the fact that his
-Requiem (!) Mass frightened one of the listeners into a fit.
-
-The ethical confusion that arises from the romantic cult of “soul” and
-the closely allied tendency towards a hybrid art--art that lacks high
-seriousness without being frankly recreative--may also be illustrated
-from the field of poetry. Many volumes have been published and are
-still being published on Browning as a philosophic and religious
-teacher. But Browning can pass as a prophet only with the half-educated
-person, the person who has lost traditional standards and has at the
-same time failed to work out with the aid of the ethical imagination
-some fresh scale of values and in the meanwhile lives impulsively and
-glorifies impulse. Like the half-educated person, Browning is capable
-of almost any amount of intellectual and emotional subtlety, and like
-the half-educated person he is deficient in inner form: that is he
-deals with experience impressionistically without reference to any
-central pattern or purpose.[136] It is enough that the separate moments
-of this experience should each stand forth like
-
- The quick sharp scratch
- And blue spurt of a lighted match.
-
-One may take as an illustration of this drift towards the melodramatic
-the “Ring and the Book.” The method of this poem is peripheral, that
-is, the action is viewed not from any centre but as refracted through
-the temperaments of the actors. The twelve monologues of which the
-poem is composed illustrate the tendency of romantic writing to run
-into some “song of myself” or “tale of my heart.” The “Ring and the
-Book” is not only off the centre, but is designed to raise a positive
-prejudice against everything that is central. Guido, for example, had
-observed decorum, had done all the conventional things and is horrible.
-Pompilia, the beautiful soul, had the great advantage of having had
-an indecorous start. Being the daughter of a drab, she is not kept
-from heeding the voice of nature. Caponsacchi again shows the beauty
-of his soul by violating the decorum of the priesthood. This least
-representative of priests wins our sympathy, not by his Christianity,
-but by his lyrical intensity:
-
- O lyric love, half angel and half bird,
- And all a wonder and a wild desire!
-
-Browning here escapes for once from the clogging intellectualism that
-makes nearly all the “Ring and the Book” an indeterminate blend of
-verse and prose, and achieves true poetry though not of the highest
-type. The hybrid character of his art, due partly to a lack of outer
-form, to a defective poetical technique, arises even more from a lack
-of inner form--from an attempt to give a semblance of seriousness to
-what is at bottom unethical. The aged Pope may well meditate on the
-revolution that is implied in the substitution of the morality of the
-beautiful soul for that of St. Augustine.[137] In seeming to accept
-this revolution Browning’s Pope comes near to breaking all records,
-even in the romantic movement, for paradox and indecorum.
-
-At bottom the war between humanist and romanticist is so irreconcilable
-because the one is a mediator and the other an extremist. Browning
-would have us admire his Pompilia because her love knows no limit;[138]
-but a secular love like hers must know a limit, must be decorous in
-short, if it is to be distinguished from mere emotional intensity.
-It is evident that the romantic ideal of art for art’s sake meant in
-the real world art for sensation’s sake. The glorification of a love
-knowing no limit, that a Browning or a Hugo sets up as a substitute for
-philosophy and even for religion, is therefore closely affiliated in
-practice with the _libido sentiendi_. “It is hard,” wrote Stendhal, in
-1817, “not to see what the nineteenth century desires. A love of strong
-emotions is its true character.” The romantic tendency to push every
-emotion to an extreme, regardless of decorum, is not much affected by
-what the romanticist preaches or by the problems he agitates. Doudan
-remarks of a mother who loses her child in Hugo’s “Nôtre Dame de
-Paris,” that “her rage after this loss has nothing to equal it in the
-roarings of a lioness or tigress who has been robbed of her young. She
-becomes vulgar by excess of despair. It is the saturnalia of maternal
-grief. You see that this woman belongs to a world in which neither the
-instincts nor the passions have that divine aroma which imposes on them
-some kind of measure--the dignity or decorum that contains a moral
-principle; … When the passions no longer have this check, they should
-be relegated to the menagerie along with leopards and rhinoceroses,
-and, strange circumstance, when the passions do recognize this check
-they produce more effect on the spectators than unregulated outbursts;
-they give evidence of more depth.” This superlativeness, as one may
-say, that Hugo displays in his picture of maternal grief is not
-confined to the emotional romanticist. It appears, for example, among
-the intellectual romanticists of the seventeenth century and affected
-the very forms of language. Molière and others ridiculed the adjectives
-and adverbs with which the _précieuses_ sought to express their special
-type of superlativeness and intensity (_extrêmement_, _furieusement_,
-_terriblement_, etc.). Alfred de Musset’s assertion that the chief
-difference between classicist and romanticist is found in the latter’s
-greater proneness to adjectives is not altogether a jest. It has been
-said that the pessimist uses few, the optimist many adjectives; but the
-use of adjectives and above all of superlatives would rather seem to
-grow with one’s expansiveness, and no movement was ever more expansive
-than that we are studying. Dante, according to Rivarol, is very sparing
-of adjectives. His sentence tends to maintain itself by the verb
-and substantive alone. In this as in other respects Dante is at the
-opposite pole from the expansionist.
-
-The romantic violence of expression is at once a proof of “soul” and
-a protest against the tameness and smugness of the pseudo-classicist.
-The human volcano must overflow at times in a lava of molten words.
-“Damnation!” cries Berlioz, “I could crush a red-hot iron between my
-teeth.”[139] The disproportion between the outer incident and the
-emotion that the Rousseauist expends on it is often ludicrous.[140]
-The kind of force that the man attains who sees in emotional intensity
-a mark of spiritual distinction, and deems moderation identical with
-mediocrity, is likely to be the force of delirium or fever. What one
-sees in “Werther,” says Goethe himself, is weakness seeking to give
-itself the prestige of strength; and this remark goes far. There is in
-some of the romanticists a suggestion not merely of spiritual but of
-physical anæmia.[141] Still the intensity is often that of a strong
-but unbridled spirit. Pleasure is pushed to the point where it runs
-over into pain, and pain to the point where it becomes an auxiliary
-of pleasure. The _âcre baiser_ of the “Nouvelle Héloïse” that so
-scandalized Voltaire presaged even more than a literary revolution. The
-poems of A. de Musset in particular contain an extraordinary perversion
-of the Christian doctrine of purification through suffering. There
-is something repellent to the genuine Christian as well as to the
-worldling in what one is tempted to call Musset’s Epicurean cult of
-pain.[142]
-
-Moments of superlative intensity whether of pleasure or pain must
-in the nature of the case be brief--mere spasms or paroxysms; and
-one might apply to the whole school the term paroxyst and spasmodist
-assumed by certain minor groups during the past century. The
-Rousseauist is in general loath to rein in his emotional vehemence, to
-impair the zest with which he responds to the solicitations of sense,
-by any reference to the “future and sum of time,” by any reference,
-that is, to an ethical purpose. He would enjoy his thrill pure and
-unalloyed, and this amounts in practice to the pursuit of the beautiful
-or sensation-crowded moment. Saint-Preux says of the days spent with
-Julie that a “sweet ecstasy” absorbed “their whole duration and
-gathered it together in a point like that of eternity. There was for
-me neither past nor future, and I enjoyed at one and the same time the
-delights of a thousand centuries.”[143] The superlativist one might
-suppose could go no further. But in the deliberate sacrifice of all
-ethical values to the beautiful moment Browning has perhaps improved
-even on Rousseau:
-
- Truth, that’s brighter than gem,
- Trust, that’s purer than pearl,--
- Brightest truth, purest trust in the universe--all were for me
- In the kiss of one girl.
-
-Browning entitles the poem from which I am quoting _Summum Bonum_. The
-supreme good it would appear is identical with the supreme thrill.
-
-I have already said enough to make clear that the title of this
-chapter and the last is in a way a misnomer. There is no such thing
-as romantic morality. The innovations in ethics that are due to
-romanticism reduce themselves on close scrutiny to a vast system of
-naturalistic camouflage. To understand how this camouflage has been
-so successful one needs to connect Rousseauism with the Baconian
-movement. Scientific progress had inspired man with a new confidence
-in himself at the same time that the positive and critical method
-by which it had been achieved detached him from the past and its
-traditional standards of good and evil. To break with tradition on
-sound lines one needs to apply the utmost keenness of analysis not
-merely to the natural but to the human law. But man’s analytical powers
-were very much taken up with the new task of mastering the natural
-law, so much so that he seemed incapable of further analytical effort,
-but longed rather for relaxation from his sustained concentration of
-intellect and imagination on the physical order. At the same time
-he was so elated by the progress he was making in this order that
-he was inclined to assume a similar advance on the moral plane and
-to believe that this advance could also be achieved collectively. A
-collective salvation of this kind without any need of a concentration
-of the intellect and imagination is precisely what was opened up to
-him by the Rousseauistic “ideal” of brotherhood. This “ideal,” as I
-have tried to show, was only a projection of the Arcadian imagination
-on the void. But in the abdication of analysis and critical judgment,
-which would have reduced it to a purely recreative rôle, this Arcadian
-dreaming was enabled to set up as a serious philosophy, and to expand
-into innumerable Utopias. Many who might have taken alarm at the
-humanitarian revolution in ethics were reassured by the very fervor
-with which its promoters continued to utter the old words--conscience,
-virtue, etc. No one puts more stress than Rousseau himself on
-conscience, while in the very act of transforming conscience from an
-inner check into an expansive emotion.
-
-We have seen that as a result of this transformation of conscience,
-temperament is emancipated from both inner and outer control and that
-this emancipation tends in the real world to the rise of two main
-types--the Bohemian and the superman, both unprimitive, inasmuch as
-primitive man is governed not by temperament but by convention; and
-that what actually tends to prevail in such a temperamental world
-in view of the superior “hardness” of the superman, is the law of
-cunning and the law of force. So far as the Rousseauists set up the
-mere emancipation of temperament as a serious philosophy, they are
-to be held responsible for the results of this emancipation whether
-displayed in the lust of power or the lust of sensation. But the
-lust of power and the lust of sensation, such as they appear, for
-example, in the so-called realism of the later nineteenth century, are
-not in themselves identical with romanticism. Many of the realists,
-like Flaubert, as I have already pointed out, are simply bitter and
-disillusioned Rousseauists who are expressing their nausea at the
-society that has actually arisen from the emancipation of temperament
-in themselves and others. The essence of Rousseauistic as of other
-romance, I may repeat, is to be found not in any mere fact, not even
-in the fact of sensation, but in a certain quality of the imagination.
-Rousseauism is, it is true, an emancipation of impulse, especially of
-the impulse of sex. Practically all the examples I have chosen of the
-tense and beautiful moment are erotic. But what one has even here, as
-the imagination grows increasingly romantic, is less the reality than
-the dream of the beautiful moment, an intensity that is achieved only
-in the tower of ivory. This point can be made clear only by a fuller
-study of the romantic conception of love.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-ROMANTIC LOVE
-
-
-What first strikes one in Rousseau’s attitude towards love is the
-separation, even wider here perhaps than elsewhere, between the ideal
-and the real. He dilates in the “Confessions” on the difference of
-the attachment that he felt when scarcely more than a boy for two
-young women of Geneva, Mademoiselle Vulson and Mademoiselle Goton. His
-attachment for the latter was real in a sense that Zola would have
-understood. His attachment for Mademoiselle Vulson reminds one rather
-of that of a mediæval knight for his lady. The same contrast runs
-through Rousseau’s life. “Seamstresses, chambermaids, shop-girls,” he
-says, “attracted me very little. I had to have fine ladies.”[144] So
-much for the ideal; the real was Thérèse Levasseur.
-
-We are not to suppose that Rousseau’s love even when most ideal is
-really exalted above the fleshly level. Byron indeed says of Rousseau
-that “his was not the love of living dame but of ideal beauty,” and
-if this were strictly true Rousseau might be accounted a Platonist.
-But any particular beautiful object is for Plato only a symbol or
-adumbration of a supersensuous beauty; so that an earthly love can be
-at best only a stepping-stone to the Uranian Aphrodite. The terrestrial
-and the heavenly loves are not in short run together, whereas the
-essence of Rousseauistic love is this very blending. “Rousseau,” says
-Joubert, “had a voluptuous mind. In his writings the soul is always
-mingled with the body and never distinct from it. No one has ever
-rendered more vividly the impression of the flesh touching the spirit
-and the delights of their marriage.” I need not, however, repeat here
-what I have said elsewhere[145] about this confusion of the planes of
-being, perhaps the most important aspect of romantic love.
-
-Though Rousseau is not a true Platonist in his treatment of love, he
-does, as I have said, recall at times the cult of the mediæval knight
-for his lady. One may even find in mediæval love something that is
-remotely related to Rousseau’s contrast between the ideal and the
-actual; for in its attitude towards woman as in other respects the
-Middle Ages tended to be extreme. Woman is either depressed below the
-human level as the favorite instrument of the devil in man’s temptation
-(_mulier hominis confusio_), or else exalted above this level as the
-mother of God. The figure of Mary blends sense and spirit in a way that
-is foreign to Plato and the ancients. As Heine says very profanely,
-the Virgin was a sort of heavenly _dame du comptoir_ whose celestial
-smile drew the northern barbarians into the Church. Sense was thus
-pressed into the service of spirit at the risk of a perilous confusion.
-The chivalric cult of the lady has obvious points of contact with the
-worship of the Madonna. The knight who is raised from one height of
-perfection to another by the light of his lady’s eyes is also pressing
-sense into the service of spirit with the same risk that the process
-may be reversed. The reversal actually takes place in Rousseau and his
-followers: spirit is pressed into the service of sense in such wise as
-to give to sense a sort of infinitude. Baudelaire pays his homage to a
-Parisian grisette in the form of a Latin canticle to the Virgin.[146]
-The perversion of mediæval love is equally though not quite so
-obviously present in many other Rousseauists.
-
-I have said that the Middle Ages inclined to the extreme; mediæval
-writers are, however, fond of insisting on “measure”; and this
-is almost inevitable in view of the large amount of classical,
-especially Aristotelian, survival throughout this period. But the two
-distinctively mediæval types, the saint and the knight, are neither
-of them mediators. They stand, however, on an entirely different
-footing as regards the law of measure. Not even Aristotle himself would
-maintain that the law of measure applies to saintliness, and in general
-to the religious realm. The saint in so far as he is saintly has
-undergone conversion, has in the literal sense of the word faced around
-and is looking in an entirely different direction from that to which
-the warnings “nothing too much” and “think as a mortal” apply. Very
-different psychic elements may indeed appear in any particular saint. A
-book has been published recently on the “Romanticism of St. Francis.”
-The truth seems to be that though St. Francis had his romantic side,
-he was even more religious than romantic. One may affirm with some
-confidence of another mediæval figure, Peter the Hermit, that he was,
-on the other hand, much more romantic than religious. For all the
-information we have tends to show that he was a very restless person
-and a man’s restlessness is ordinarily in inverse ratio to his religion.
-
-If the saint transcends in a way the law of measure, the knight on
-the other hand should be subject to it. For courage and the love of
-woman--his main interests in life--belong not to the religious but
-to the secular realm. But in his conception of love and courage the
-knight was plainly not a mediator but an extremist: he was haunted
-by the idea of adventure, of a love and courage that transcend the
-bounds not merely of the probable but of the possible. His imagination
-is romantic in the sense I have tried to define--it is straining,
-that is, beyond the confines of the real. Ruskin’s violent diatribe
-against Cervantes[147] for having killed “idealism” by his ridicule
-of these knightly exaggerations, is in itself absurd, but interesting
-as evidence of the quality of Ruskin’s own imagination. Like other
-romanticists I have cited, he seems to have been not unaware of his own
-kinship to Don Quixote. The very truth about either the mediæval or
-modern forms of romantic love--love which is on the secular level and
-at the same time sets itself above the law of measure--was uttered by
-Dr. Johnson in his comment on the heroic plays of Dryden: “By admitting
-the romantic omnipotence of love he has recommended as laudable and
-worthy of imitation that conduct which through all ages the good have
-censured as vicious and the bad have despised as foolish.”
-
-The man of the Middle Ages, however extravagant in his imaginings,
-was often no doubt terrestrial enough in his practice. The troubadour
-who addressed his high-flown fancies to some fair châtelaine (usually
-a married woman) often had relations in real life not unlike those
-of Rousseau with Thérèse Levasseur. Some such contrast indeed between
-the “ideal” and the “real” existed in the life of one of Rousseau’s
-favorite poets, Petrarch. The lover may, however, run together the
-ideal and the real. He may glorify some comparatively commonplace
-person, crown as queen of his heart some Dulcinea del Toboso. Hazlitt
-employs appropriately in describing his own passion for the vulgar
-daughter of a London boarding-house keeper the very words of Cervantes:
-“He had courted a statue, hunted the wind, cried aloud to the desert.”
-Hazlitt like other lovers of this type is in love not with a particular
-person but with his own dream. He is as one may say in love with love.
-No subject indeed illustrates like this of love the nostalgia, the
-infinite indeterminate desire of the romantic imagination. Something of
-this diffusive longing no doubt came into the world with Christianity.
-There is a wide gap between the sentence of St. Augustine that Shelley
-has taken as epigraph for his “Alastor”[148] and the spirit of the
-great Greek and Roman classics. Yet such is the abiding vitality of
-Greek mythology that one finds in Greece perhaps the best symbol of
-the romantic lover. Rousseau could not fail to be attracted by the
-story of Pygmalion and Galatea. His lyrical “monodrama” in poetical
-prose, “Pygmalion,” is important not only for its literary but for its
-musical influence. The Germans in particular (including the youthful
-Goethe) were fascinated. To the mature Goethe Rousseau’s account of the
-sculptor who became enamored of his own creation and breathed into it
-actual life by the sheer intensity of his desire seemed a delirious
-confusion of the planes of being, an attempt to drag ideal beauty down
-to the level of sensuous realization. But a passion thus conceived
-exactly satisfies the romantic requirement. For though the romanticist
-wishes to abandon himself to the rapture of love, he does not wish to
-transcend his own ego. The object with which Pygmalion is in love is
-after all only a projection of his own “genius.” But such an object is
-not in any proper sense an object at all. There is in fact no object in
-the romantic universe--only subject. This subjective love amounts in
-practice to a use of the imagination to enhance emotional intoxication,
-or if one prefers, to the pursuit of illusion for its own sake.
-
-This lack of definite object appears just as clearly in the German
-symbol of romantic love--the blue flower. The blue flower resolves
-itself at last, it will be remembered, into a fair feminine
-face[149]--a face that cannot, however, be overtaken. The color
-typifies the blue distance in which it always loses itself, “the
-never-ending quest after the ever-fleeting object of desire.” The
-object is thus elusive because, as I have said, it is not, properly
-speaking, an object at all but only a dalliance of the imagination
-with its own dream. Cats, says Rivarol, do not caress us, they caress
-themselves upon us. But though cats may suffer from what the new
-realist calls the egocentric predicament, they can scarcely vie in the
-subtle involutions of their egoism with the romantic lover. Besides
-creating the symbol of the blue flower, Novalis treats romantic love
-in his unfinished tale “The Disciples at Saïs.” He contemplated two
-endings to this tale--in the one, when the disciple lifts the veil
-of the inmost sanctuary of the temple at Saïs, Rosenblütchen (the
-equivalent of the blue flower) falls into his arms. In the second
-version what he sees when he lifts the mysterious veil is--“wonder of
-wonders--himself.” The two endings are in substance the same.
-
-The story of Novalis’s attachment for a fourteen-year-old girl, Sophie
-von Kühn, and of his plans on her death for a truly romantic suicide--a
-swooning away into the night--and then of the suddenness with which
-he transferred his dream to another maiden, Julie von Charpentier,
-is familiar. If Sophie had lived and Novalis had lived and they had
-wedded, he might conceivably have made her a faithful husband, but she
-would no longer have been the blue flower, the ideal. For one’s love
-is for something infinitely remote; it is as Shelley says, in what is
-perhaps the most perfect expression of romantic longing:
-
- The desire of the moth for the star,
- Of the night for the morrow,
- The devotion to something afar
- From the sphere of our sorrow.
-
-The sphere of Shelley’s sorrow at the time he wrote these lines to Mrs.
-Williams was Mary Godwin. In the time of Harriet Westbrook, Mary had
-been the “star.”
-
-The romantic lover often feigns in explanation of his nostalgia
-that in some previous existence he had been enamored of a nymph--an
-Egeria--or a woman transcending the ordinary mould--“some Lilith or
-Helen or Antigone.”[150] Shelley inquires eagerly in one of his letters
-about the new poem by Horace Smith, “The Nympholept.” In the somewhat
-unclassical sense that the term came to have in the romantic movement,
-Shelley is himself the perfect example of the nympholept. In this
-respect as in others, however, he merely continues Rousseau. “If it had
-not been for some memories of my youth and Madame d’Houdetot,” says
-Jean-Jacques, “the loves that I have felt and described would have been
-only with sylphids.”[151]
-
-Chateaubriand speaks with aristocratic disdain of Rousseau’s Venetian
-amours, but on the “ideal” side he is not only his follower but perhaps
-the supreme French example of nympholepsy. He describes his lady of
-dreams sometimes like Rousseau as the “sylphid,” sometimes as his
-“phantom of love.” He had been haunted by this phantom almost from his
-childhood. “Even then I glimpsed that to love and be loved in a way
-that was unknown to me was destined to be my supreme felicity. … As a
-result of the ardor of my imagination, my timidity and solitude, I did
-not turn to the outer world, but was thrown back upon myself. In the
-absence of a real object, I evoked by the power of my vague desires a
-phantom that was never to leave me.” To those who remember the closely
-parallel passages in Rousseau, Chateaubriand will seem to exaggerate
-the privilege of the original genius to look on himself as unique when
-he adds: “I do not know whether the history of the human heart offers
-another example of this nature.”[152] The pursuit of this phantom of
-love gives the secret key to Chateaubriand’s life. He takes refuge in
-the American wilderness in order that he may have in this primitive
-Arcadia a more spacious setting for his dream.[153]
-
-If one wishes to see how very similar these nympholeptic experiences
-are not only from individual to individual, but from country to
-country, one has only to compare the passages I have just been quoting
-from Chateaubriand with Shelley’s “Epipsychidion.” Shelley writes of
-his own youth:
-
- There was a Being whom my spirit oft
- Met on its visioned wanderings, far aloft,
- In the clear golden prime of my youth’s dawn,
- Upon the fairy isles of sunny lawn,
- Amid the enchanted mountains, and the caves
- Of divine sleep, and on the air-like waves
- Of wonder-level dream, whose tremulous floor
- Paved her light steps; on an imagined shore,
- Under the gray beak of some promontory
- She met me, robed in such exceeding glory,
- That I beheld her not, etc.
-
-At the time of writing “Epipsychidion” the magic vision happened to
-have coalesced for the moment with Emilia Viviani, though destined soon
-to flit elsewhere. Shelley invites his “soul’s sister,” the idyllic
-“she,” who is at bottom only a projection of his own imagination, to
-set sail with him for Arcady. “Epipsychidion,” indeed, might be used as
-a manual to illustrate the difference between mere Arcadian dreaming
-and a true Platonism.
-
-Chateaubriand is ordinarily and rightly compared with Byron rather
-than with Shelley. He is plainly, however, far more of a nympholept
-than Byron. Mr. Hilary, indeed, in Peacock’s “Nightmare Abbey” says
-to Mr. Cypress (Byron): “You talk like a Rosicrucian, who will love
-nothing but a sylph, who does not believe in the existence of a sylph,
-and who yet quarrels with the whole universe for not containing a
-sylph.”[154] Certain distinctions would have to be made if one were
-attempting a complete study of love in Byron; yet after all the love of
-Don Juan and Haidée is one that Sappho or Catullus or Burns would have
-understood; and these poets were not nympholepts. They were capable
-of burning with love, but not, as Rousseau says of himself, “without
-any definite object.”[155] Where Chateaubriand has some resemblance
-to Byron is in his actual libertinism. He is however nearer than
-Byron to the libertine of the eighteenth century--to the Lovelace who
-pushes the pursuit of pleasure to its final exasperation where it
-becomes associated with the infliction of pain. Few things are stranger
-than the blend in Chateaubriand of this Sadic fury[156] with the new
-romantic revery. Indeed almost every type of egotism that may manifest
-itself in the relations of the sexes and that pushed to the superlative
-pitch, will be found in this theoretical classicist and champion of
-Christianity. Perhaps no more frenzied cry has ever issued from human
-lips than that uttered by Atala[157] in describing her emotions when
-torn between her religious vow and her love for Chactas: “What dream
-did not arise in this heart overwhelmed with sorrow. At times in fixing
-my eyes upon you, I went so far as to form desires as insensate as
-they were guilty; at one moment I seemed to wish that you and I were
-the only living creatures upon the earth; and then again, feeling a
-divinity that held me back in my horrible transports, I seemed to want
-this divinity to be annihilated provided that clasped in your arms I
-should roll from abyss to abyss with the ruins of God and the world.”
-Longing is here pushed to a pitch where it passes over, as in Wagner’s
-“Tristan and Isolde,” into the desire for annihilation.
-
-Actual libertinism is no necessary concomitant of nympholeptic longing.
-There is a striking difference in this respect between Poe, for
-example, and his translator and disciple, Baudelaire. Nothing could be
-less suggestive of voluptuousness than Poe’s nostalgia. “His ecstasy,”
-says Stedman, “is that of the nympholept seeking an evasive being of
-whom he has glimpses by moonlight, starlight, even fenlight, but never
-by noonday.” The embodiments of his dream that flit through his tales
-and poems, enhanced his popularity with the ultra-romantic public in
-France. These strange apparitions nearly all of whom are epileptic,
-cataleptic, or consumptive made a natural appeal to a school that was
-known among its detractors as _l’école poitrinaire_. “Tender souls,”
-says Gautier, “were specially touched by Poe’s feminine figures, so
-vaporous, so transparent and of an almost spectral beauty.” Perhaps
-the nympholepsy of Gérard de Nerval is almost equally vaporous and
-ethereal. He pursued through various earthly forms the queen of Sheba
-whom he had loved in a previous existence and hanged himself at last
-with what he believed to be her garter: an interesting example of the
-relation between the extreme forms of the romantic imagination and
-madness.[158]
-
-The pursuit of a phantom of love through various earthly forms led
-in the course of the romantic movement to certain modifications
-in a famous legend--that of Don Juan. What is emphasized in the
-older Don Juan is not merely his libertinism but his impiety--the
-gratification of his appetite in deliberate defiance of God. He is
-animated by Satanic pride, by the lust of power as well as by the lust
-of sensation. In Molière’s treatment of the legend we can also see
-the beginnings of the philanthropic pose.[159] With the progress of
-Rousseauism Don Juan tends to become an “idealist,” to seek to satisfy
-in his amorous adventures not merely his senses but his “soul” and his
-thirst for the “infinite.”[160] Along with this idealistic Don Juan we
-also see appearing at a very early stage in the movement the exotic
-Don Juan who wishes to have a great deal of strangeness added to his
-beauty. In his affair with the “Floridiennes,” Chateaubriand shows the
-way to a long series of exotic lovers.
-
- I said to my heart between sleeping and waking,
- Thou wild thing that always art leaping or aching,
- What black, brown or fair, in what clime, in what nation,
- By turns has not taught thee a pit-a-pat-ation?
-
-These lines are so plainly meant for Pierre Loti that one learns
-with surprise that they were written about 1724 by the Earl of
-Peterborough.[161]
-
-Byron’s Don Juan is at times exotic in his tastes, but, as I have
-said, he is not on the whole very nympholeptic--much less so than the
-Don Juan of Alfred de Musset, for example. Musset indeed suggests in
-many respects a less masculine Byron--Mademoiselle Byron as he has
-been called. In one whole side of his art as well as his treatment
-of love he simply continues like Byron the eighteenth century. But
-far more than Byron he aspires to ideal and absolute passion; so that
-the Musset of the “Nuits” is rightly regarded as one of the supreme
-embodiments, and at the same time the chief martyr, of the romantic
-religion of love. The outcome of his affair with George Sand may
-symbolize fitly the wrecking of thousands of more obscure lives by this
-mortal chimera. Musset and George Sand sought to come together, yet
-what they each sought in love is what the original genius seeks in all
-things--self-expression. What Musset saw in George Sand was not the
-real woman but only his own dream. But George Sand was not content thus
-to reflect back passively to Musset his ideal. She was rather a Galatea
-whose ambition it was to create her own Pygmalion. “Your chimera is
-between us,” Musset exclaims; but his chimera was between them too.
-The more Titan and Titaness try to meet, the more each is driven back
-into the solitude of his own ego. They were in love with love rather
-than with one another: and to be thus in love with love means on the
-last analysis to be in love with one’s own emotions. “To love,” says
-Musset, “is the great point. What matters the mistress? What matters
-the flagon provided one have the intoxication?”[162] He then proceeds
-to carry a love of this quality up into the presence of God and to
-present it to him as his justification for having lived. The art of
-speaking in tones of religious consecration of what is in its essence
-egoistic has never been carried further than by the Rousseauistic
-romanticist. God is always appearing at the most unexpected
-moments.[163] The highest of which man is capable apparently is to put
-an uncurbed imagination into the service of an emancipated temperament.
-The credo that Perdican recites at the end of the second act of “On ne
-badine pas avec l’Amour”[164] throws light on this point. Men and women
-according to this credo are filled with every manner of vileness, yet
-there is something “sacred and sublime,” and that is the union of two
-of these despicable beings.
-
-The confusion of ethical values here is so palpable as scarcely to call
-for comment. It is precisely when men and women set out to love with
-this degree of imaginative and emotional unrestraint that they come
-to deserve all the opprobrious epithets Musset heaps upon them. This
-radiant apotheosis of love and the quagmire in which it actually lands
-one is, as I have said, the whole subject of “Madame Bovary.” I shall
-need to return to this particular disproportion between the ideal and
-the real when I take up the subject of romantic melancholy.
-
-The romantic lover who identifies the ideal with the superlative thrill
-is turning the ideal into something very transitory. If the _summum
-bonum_ is as Browning avers the “kiss of one girl,” the _summum bonum_
-is lost almost as soon as found. The beautiful moment may however be
-prolonged in revery. The romanticist may brood over it in the tower of
-ivory, and when thus enriched by being steeped in his temperament it
-may become more truly his own than it was in reality. “Objects make
-less impression upon me than my memory of them,” says Rousseau. He is
-indeed the great master of what has been termed the art of impassioned
-recollection. This art is far from being confined in its application
-to love, though it may perhaps be studied here to the best advantage.
-Rousseau, one should note, had very little intellectual memory, but
-an extraordinarily keen memory of images and sensations. He could
-not, as he tells us in the “Confessions,” learn anything by heart,
-but he could recall with perfect distinctness what he had eaten for
-breakfast about thirty years before. In general he recalls his past
-feelings with a clearness and detail that are perhaps more feminine
-than masculine. “He seems,” says Hazlitt, one of his chief disciples
-in the art of impassioned recollection, “to gather up the past moments
-of his being like drops of honey-dew to distil a precious liquor from
-them; his alternate pleasures and pains are the bead-roll that he tells
-over and piously worships; he makes a rosary of the flowers of hope
-and fancy that strewed his earliest years.”[165] This highly developed
-emotional memory is closely associated with the special quality of the
-romantic imagination--its cult of Arcadian illusion and the wistful
-backward glance to the vanished paradise of childhood and youth when
-illusion was most spontaneous. “Let me still recall [these memories],”
-says Hazlitt, “that they may breathe fresh life into me, and that I
-may live that birthday of thought and romantic pleasure over again!
-Talk of the ideal! This is the only true ideal--the heavenly tints
-of Fancy reflected in the bubbles that float upon the spring-tide of
-human life.”[166] Hazlitt converts criticism itself into an art of
-impassioned recollection. He loves to linger over the beautiful moments
-of his own literary life. The passing years have increased the richness
-of their temperamental refraction and bestowed upon them the “pathos of
-distance.” A good example is his account of the two years of his youth
-he spent in reading the “Confessions” and the “Nouvelle Héloïse,” and
-in shedding tears over them. “They were the happiest years of our life.
-We may well say of them, sweet is the dew of their memory and pleasant
-the balm of their recollection.”[167]
-
-Rousseau’s own Arcadian memories are usually not of reading, like
-Hazlitt’s, but of actual incidents, though he does not hesitate to
-alter these incidents freely, as in his account of his stay at Les
-Charmettes, and to accommodate them to his dream. He neglected the real
-Madame de Warens at the very time that he cherished his recollection of
-her because this recollection was the idealized image of his own youth.
-The yearning that he expresses at the beginning of his fragmentary
-Tenth Promenade, written only a few weeks before his death, is for this
-idyllic period rather than for an actual woman.[168] A happy memory,
-says Musset, repeating Rousseau, is perhaps more genuine than happiness
-itself. Possibly the three best known love poems of Lamartine, Musset,
-and Hugo respectively--“Le Lac,” “Souvenir,” and “La Tristesse
-d’Olympio,” all hinge upon impassioned recollection and derive very
-directly from Rousseau. Lamartine in particular has caught in the “Le
-Lac” the very cadence of Rousseau’s reveries.[169]
-
-Impassioned recollection may evidently be an abundant source of genuine
-poetry, though not, it must be insisted, of the highest poetry. The
-predominant rôle that it plays in Rousseau and many of his followers
-is simply a sign of an unduly dalliant imagination. Experience after
-all has other uses than to supply furnishings for the tower of ivory;
-it should control the judgment and guide the will; it is in short the
-necessary basis of conduct. The greater a man’s moral seriousness,
-the more he will be concerned with doing rather than dreaming (and
-I include right meditation among the forms of doing). He will also
-demand an art and literature that reflect this his main preoccupation.
-Between Wordsworth’s definition of poetry as “emotion recollected in
-tranquillity,” and Aristotle’s definition of poetry as the imitation
-of human action according to probability or necessity, a wide gap
-plainly opens. One may prefer Aristotle’s definition to that of
-Wordsworth and yet do justice to the merits of Wordsworth’s actual
-poetical performance. Nevertheless the tendency to put prime emphasis
-on feeling instead of action shown in the definition is closely related
-to Wordsworth’s failure not only in dramatic but in epic poetry, in all
-poetry in short that depends for its success on an element of plot and
-sustained narrative.
-
-A curious extension of the art of impassioned recollection should
-receive at least passing mention. It has been so extended as to lead
-to what one may term an unethical use of literature and history. What
-men have done in the past and the consequences of this doing should
-surely serve to throw some light on what men should do under similar
-circumstances in the present. But the man who turns his own personal
-experience into mere dalliance may very well assume a like dalliant
-attitude towards the larger experience of the race. This experience
-may merely provide him with pretexts for revery. This narcotic use of
-literature and history, this art of creating for one’s self an alibi as
-Taine calls it, is nearly as old as the romantic movement. The record
-of the past becomes a gorgeous pageant that lures one to endless
-imaginative exploration and lulls one to oblivion of everything except
-its variety and picturesqueness. It becomes everything in fact except a
-school of judgment. One may note in connection with this use of history
-the usual interplay between scientific and emotional naturalism.
-Both forms of naturalism tend to turn man into the mere product and
-plaything of physical forces--climate, heredity, and the like, over
-which his will has no control. Since literature and history have no
-meaning from the point of view of moral choice they may at least be
-made to yield the maximum of æsthetic satisfaction. Oscar Wilde argues
-in this wise for example in his dialogue “The Critic as Artist,” and
-concludes that since man has no moral freedom or responsibility, and
-cannot therefore be guided in his conduct by the past experience of the
-race, he may at least turn this experience into an incomparable “bower
-of dreams.” “The pain of Leopardi crying out against life becomes
-our pain. Theocritus blows on his pipe and we laugh with the lips of
-nymph and shepherd. In the wolf-skin of Pierre Vidal we flee before
-the hounds, and in the armor of Lancelot we ride from the bower of the
-queen. We have whispered the secret of our love beneath the cowl of
-Abelard, and in the stained raiment of Villon have put our shame into
-song,” etc.
-
-The assumption that runs through this passage that the mere æsthetic
-contemplation of past experience gives the equivalent of actual
-experience is found in writers of far higher standing than Wilde--in
-Renan, for instance. The æsthete would look on his dream as a
-substitute for the actual, and at the same time convert the actual
-into a dream. (_Die Welt wird Traum, der Traum wird Welt._) It is
-not easy to take such a programme of universal dreaming seriously.
-In the long run the dreamer himself does not find it easy to take it
-seriously. For his attempts to live his chimera result, as we have
-seen in the case of romantic love, in more or less disastrous defeat
-and disillusion. The disillusioned romanticist continues to cling to
-his dream, but intellectually, at least, he often comes at the same
-time to stand aloof from it. This subject of disillusion may best be
-considered, along with certain other important aspects of the movement,
-in connection with the singular phenomenon known as romantic irony.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-ROMANTIC IRONY
-
-
-The first romanticist who worked out a theory of irony was Friedrich
-Schlegel.[170] The attempt to put this theory into practice, after
-the fashion of Tieck’s plays, seemed and seemed rightly even to later
-representatives of the movement to be extravagant. Thus Hegel, who
-in his ideas on art continues in so many respects the Schlegels,
-repudiates irony. Formerly, says Heine, who is himself in any larger
-survey, the chief of German romantic ironists, when a man had said a
-stupid thing he had said it; now he can explain it away as “irony.”
-Nevertheless one cannot afford to neglect this early German theory.
-It derives in an interesting way from the views that the partisans
-of original genius had put forth regarding the rôle of the creative
-imagination. The imagination as we have seen is to be free to wander
-wild in its own empire of chimeras. Rousseau showed the possibilities
-of an imagination that is at once extraordinarily rich and also
-perfectly free in this sense. I have said that Kant believed like the
-original genius that the nobility of art depends on the free “play”
-of the imagination; though he adds that art should at the same time
-submit to a purpose that is not a purpose--whatever that may mean.
-Schiller in his “Æsthetic Letters” relaxed the rationalistic rigor of
-Kant in favor of feeling and associated even more emphatically the
-ideality and creativeness of art with its free imaginative play,
-its emancipation from specific aim. The personal friction that arose
-between the Schlegels and Schiller has perhaps obscured somewhat their
-general indebtedness to him. The Schlegelian irony in particular merely
-pushes to an extreme the doctrine that nothing must interfere with
-the imagination in its creative play. “The caprice of the poet,” as
-Friedrich Schlegel says, “suffers no law above itself.” Why indeed
-should the poet allow any restriction to be placed upon his caprice in
-a universe that is after all only a projection of himself? The play
-theory of art is here supplemented by the philosophy of Fichte.[171]
-In justice to him it should be said that though his philosophy may
-not rise above the level of temperament, he at least had a severe and
-stoical temperament, and if only for this reason his “transcendental
-ego” is far less obviously ego than that which appears in the irony
-of his romantic followers. When a man has taken possession of his
-transcendental ego, according to the Schlegels and Novalis, he looks
-down on his ordinary ego and stands aloof from it. His ordinary ego may
-achieve poetry but his transcendental ego must achieve the poetry of
-poetry. But there is in him something that may stand aloof even from
-this aloofness and so on indefinitely. Romantic irony joins here with
-what is perhaps the chief preoccupation of the German romanticists, the
-idea of the infinite or, as they term it, the striving for endlessness
-(_Unendlichkeitstreben_). Now, according to the romanticist, a man
-can show that he lays hold imaginatively upon the infinite only by
-expanding beyond what his age holds to be normal and central--its
-conventions in short; nay more, he must expand away from any centre he
-has himself achieved. For to hold fast to a centre of any kind implies
-the acceptance of limitations and to accept limitations is to be
-finite, and to be finite is, as Blake says, to become mechanical; and
-the whole of romanticism is a protest against the mechanizing of life.
-No man therefore deserves to rank as a transcendental egotist unless
-he has learned to mock not merely at the convictions of others but at
-his own, unless he has become capable of self-parody. “Objection,” says
-Nietzsche, “evasion, joyous distrust, and love of irony are signs of
-health; everything absolute belongs to pathology.”[172]
-
-One cannot repeat too often that what the romanticist always sees at
-the centre is either the mere rationalist or else the philistine; and
-he therefore inclines to measure his own distinction by his remoteness
-from any possible centre. Now thus to be always moving away from
-centrality is to be paradoxical, and romantic irony is, as Friedrich
-Schlegel says, identical with paradox. Irony, paradox and the idea of
-the infinite have as a matter of fact so many points of contact in
-romanticism that they may profitably be treated together.
-
-Friedrich Schlegel sought illustrious sponsors in the past for his
-theory of irony. Among others he invoked the Greeks and put himself in
-particular under the patronage of Socrates. But Greek irony always had
-a centre. The ironical contrast is between this centre and something
-that is less central. Take for example the so-called irony of Greek
-tragedy. The tragic character speaks and acts in darkness as to
-his impending doom, regarding which the spectator is comparatively
-enlightened. To take another example, the German romanticists
-were especially absurd in their attempts to set up Tieck as a new
-Aristophanes. For Aristophanes, however wild and irresponsible he may
-seem in the play of his imagination, never quite loses sight of his
-centre, a centre from which the comic spirit proceeds and to which it
-returns. Above all, however far he may push his mockery, he never mocks
-at his own convictions; he never, like Tieck, indulges in self-parody.
-A glance at the parabasis of almost any one of his plays will suffice
-to show that he was willing to lay himself open to the charge of
-being unduly didactic rather than to the charge of being aimless. The
-universe of Tieck, on the other hand, is a truly romantic universe: it
-has no centre, or what amounts to the same thing, it has at its centre
-that symbol of spiritual stagnation, the philistine, and his inability
-to rise above a dull didacticism. The romanticist cherishes the
-illusion that to be a spiritual vagrant is to be exalted on a pinnacle
-above the plain citizen. According to Professor Stuart P. Sherman, the
-Irish dramatist Synge indulges in gypsy laughter from the bushes,[173]
-a good description of romantic irony in general.
-
-The irony of Socrates, to take the most important example of Greek
-irony, is not of the centrifugal character. Socrates professes
-ignorance, and this profession seems very ironical, for it turns out
-that his ignorance is more enlightened, that is, more central than
-other men’s swelling conceit of knowledge. It does not follow that
-Socrates is insincere in his profession of ignorance; for though his
-knowledge may be as light in comparison with that of the ordinary
-Athenian, he sees that in comparison with true and perfect knowledge it
-is only darkness. For Socrates was no mere rationalist; he was a man of
-insight, one would even be tempted to say a mystic were it not for the
-corruption of the term mystic by the romanticists. This being the case
-he saw that man is by his very nature precluded from true and perfect
-knowledge. A path, however, opens up before him towards this knowledge,
-and this path he should seek to follow even though it is in a sense
-endless, even though beyond any centre he can attain within the bounds
-of his finite experience there is destined always to be something still
-more central. Towards the mere dogmatist, the man who thinks he has
-achieved some fixed and final centre, the attitude of Socrates is that
-of scepticism. This attitude implies a certain degree of detachment
-from the received beliefs and conventions of his time, and it is
-all the more important to distinguish here between Socrates and the
-romanticists because of the superficial likeness; and also because
-there is between the Rousseauists and some of the Greeks who lived
-about the time of Socrates a real likeness. Promethean individualism
-was already rife at that time, and on the negative side it resulted
-then as since in a break with tradition, and on the positive side in an
-oscillation between the cult of force and the exaltation of sympathy,
-between admiration for the strong man and compassion for the weak. It
-is hardly possible to overlook these Promethean elements in the plays
-of Euripides. Antisthenes and the cynics, again, who professed to
-derive from Socrates, established an opposition between “nature” and
-convention even more radical in some respects than that established
-by Rousseau. Moreover Socrates himself was perhaps needlessly
-unconventional and also unduly inclined to paradox--as when he
-suggested to the jury who tried him that as an appropriate punishment
-he should be supported at the public expense in the prytaneum. Yet in
-his inner spirit and in spite of certain minor eccentricities, Socrates
-was neither a superman nor a Bohemian, but a humanist. Now that the
-critical spirit was abroad and the traditional basis for conduct was
-failing, he was chiefly concerned with putting conduct on a positive
-and critical basis. In establishing this basis his constant appeal is
-to actual experience and the more homely this experience the more it
-seems to please him. While working out the new basis for conduct he
-continues to observe the existing laws and customs; or if he gets away
-from the traditional discipline it is towards a stricter discipline;
-if he repudiates in aught the common sense of his day, it is in
-favor of a commoner sense. One may say indeed that Socrates and the
-Rousseauists (who are in this respect like some of the sophists) are
-both moving away from convention but in opposite directions. What the
-romanticist opposes to convention is his “genius,” that is his unique
-and private self. What Socrates opposes to convention is his universal
-and ethical self. According to Friedrich Schlegel, a man can never be a
-philosopher but only become one; if at any time he thinks that he is a
-philosopher he ceases to become one. The romanticist is right in thus
-thinking that to remain fixed at any particular point is to stagnate.
-Man is, as Nietzsche says, the being who must always surpass himself,
-but he has--and this is a point that Nietzsche did not sufficiently
-consider--a choice of direction in his everlasting pilgrimage. The
-man who is moving away from some particular centre will always seem
-paradoxical to the man who remains at it, but he may be moving away
-from it in either the romantic or the ethical direction. In the first
-case he is moving from a more normal to a less normal experience,
-in the second case he is moving towards an experience that is more
-profoundly representative. The New Testament abounds in examples of the
-ethical paradox--what one may term the paradox of humility. (A man must
-lose his life to find it, etc.) It is possible, however, to push even
-this type of paradox too far, to push it to a point where it affronts
-not merely some particular convention but the good sense of mankind
-itself, and this is a far graver matter. Pascal falls into this excess
-when he says that sickness is the natural state of the Christian. As a
-result of its supreme emphasis on humility Christianity from the start
-inclined unduly perhaps towards this type of paradox. It is hardly
-worth while, as Goethe said, to live seventy years in this world if all
-that one learn here below is only folly in the sight of God.
-
-One of the most delicate of tasks is to determine whether a paradox
-occupies a position more or less central than the convention to which
-it is opposed. A somewhat similar problem is to determine which of
-two differing conventions has the greater degree of centrality. For
-one convention may as compared with another seem highly paradoxical.
-In 1870, it was announced at Peking that his Majesty the Emperor had
-had the good fortune to catch the small-pox. The auspiciousness of
-small-pox was part of the Chinese convention at this time, but to
-those of us who live under another convention it is a blessing we would
-willingly forego. But much in the Chinese convention, so far from being
-absurd, reflects the Confucian good sense, and if the Chinese decide to
-break with their convention, they should evidently consider long and
-carefully in which direction they are going to move--whether towards
-something more central, or something more eccentric.
-
-As to the direction in which Rousseau is moving and therefore as
-to the quality of his paradoxes there can be little question. His
-paradoxes--and he is perhaps the most paradoxical of writers--reduce
-themselves on analysis to the notion that man has suffered a loss of
-goodness by being civilized, by having had imposed on his unconscious
-and instinctive self some humanistic or religious discipline--e.g.,
-“The man who reflects is a depraved animal”; “True Christians are meant
-to be slaves”; decorum is only the “varnish of vice” or the “mask of
-hypocrisy.” Innumerable paradoxes of this kind will immediately occur
-to one as characteristic of Rousseau and his followers. These paradoxes
-may be termed in opposition to those of humility, the paradoxes of
-spontaneity. The man who holds them is plainly moving in an opposite
-direction not merely from the Christian but from the Socratic
-individualist. He is moving from the more representative to the less
-representative and not towards some deeper centre of experience,
-as would be the case if he were tending towards either humanism or
-religion. Wordsworth has been widely accepted not merely as a poet but
-as a religious teacher, and it is therefore important to note that his
-paradoxes are prevailingly of the Rousseauistic type. His verse is
-never more spontaneous or, as he would say, inevitable, than when it
-is celebrating the gospel of spontaneity. I have already pointed out
-some of the paradoxes that he opposes to pseudo-classic decorum: e.g.,
-his attempt to bestow poetical dignity and importance upon the ass,
-and to make of it a model of moral excellence, also to find poetry in
-an idiot boy and to associate sublimity with a pedlar in defiance of
-the ordinary character of pedlars. In general Wordsworth indulges in
-Rousseauistic paradoxes when he urges us to look to peasants for the
-true language of poetry and would have us believe that man is taught
-by “woods and rills” and not by contact with his fellow men. He pushes
-this latter paradox to a point that would have made even Rousseau
-“stare and gasp” when he asserts that
-
- One impulse from a vernal wood
- May teach you more of man
- Of moral evil and of good
- Than all the sages can.
-
-Another form of this same paradox that what comes from nature
-spontaneously is better than what can be acquired by conscious effort
-is found in his poem “Lucy Gray”:
-
- No mate, no comrade Lucy knew;
- She dwelt on a wide moor,
- The sweetest thing that ever grew
- Beside a human door!
-
-True maidenhood is made up of a thousand decorums; but this
-Rousseauistic maiden would have seemed too artificial if she had been
-reared in a house instead of “growing” out of doors; she might in
-that case have been a human being and not a “thing” and this would
-plainly have detracted from her spontaneity. Wordsworth’s paradoxes
-about children have a similar origin. A child who at the age of six
-is a “mighty prophet, seer blest,” is a highly improbable not to say
-impossible child. The “Nature” again of “Heart-Leap Well” which both
-feels and inspires pity is more remote from normal experience than the
-Nature “red in tooth and claw” of Tennyson. Wordsworth indeed would
-seem to have a penchant for paradox even when he is less obviously
-inspired by his naturalistic thesis.
-
-A study of Wordsworth’s life shows that he became progressively
-disillusioned regarding Rousseauistic spontaneity. He became less
-paradoxical as he grew older and in almost the same measure, one is
-tempted to say, less poetical. He returns gradually to the traditional
-forms until radicals come to look upon him as the “lost leader.” He
-finds it hard, however, to wean his imagination from its primitivistic
-Arcadias; so that what one finds, in writing like the “Ecclesiastical
-Sonnets,” is not imaginative fire but at best a sober intellectual
-conviction, an opposition between the head and the heart in short that
-suggests somewhat Chateaubriand and the “Genius of Christianity.”[174]
-If Wordsworth had lost faith in his revolutionary and naturalistic
-ideal, and had at the same time refused to return to the traditional
-forms, one might then have seen in his work something of the homeless
-hovering of the romantic ironist. If, on the other hand, he had
-worked away from the centre that the traditional forms give to life
-towards a more positive and critical centre, if, in other words,
-he had broken with the past not on Rousseauistic, but on Socratic
-lines, he would have needed an imagination of different quality, an
-imagination less idyllic and pastoral and more ethical than that he
-usually displays.[175] For the ethical imagination alone can guide one
-not indeed to any fixed centre but to an ever increasing centrality.
-We are here confronted once more with the question of the infinite
-which comes very close to the ultimate ground of difference between
-classicist and romanticist. The centre that one perceives with the
-aid of the classical imagination and that sets bounds to impulse and
-desire may, as I have already said, be defined in opposition to the
-outer infinite of expansion as the inner or human infinite. If we
-moderns, to repeat Nietzsche, are unable to attain proportionateness
-it is because “our itching is really the itching for the infinite,
-the immeasurable.” Thus to associate the infinite only with the
-immeasurable, to fail to perceive that the element of form and the curb
-it puts on the imagination are not external and artificial, but come
-from the very depths, is to betray the fact that one is a barbarian.
-Nietzsche and many other romanticists are capable on occasion of
-admiring the proportionateness that comes from allegiance to some
-centre. But after all the human spirit must be ever advancing, and
-its only motive powers, according to romantic logic, are wonder and
-curiosity; and so from the perfectly sound premise that man is the
-being who must always surpass himself, Nietzsche draws the perfectly
-unsound conclusion that the only way for man thus constantly to surpass
-himself and so show his infinitude is to spurn all limits and “live
-dangerously.” The Greeks themselves, according to Renan, will some
-day seem the “apostles of ennui,” for the very perfection of their
-form shows a lack of aspiration. To submit to form is to be static,
-whereas “romantic poetry,” says Friedrich Schlegel magnificently, is
-“universal progressive poetry.” Now the only effective counterpoise to
-the endless expansiveness that is implied in such a programme is the
-inner or human infinite of concentration. For it is perfectly true that
-there is something in man that is not satisfied with the finite and
-that, if he becomes stationary, he is at once haunted by the spectre
-of ennui. Man may indeed be defined as the insatiable animal; and the
-more imaginative he is the more insatiable he is likely to become, for
-it is the imagination that gives him access to the infinite in every
-sense of the word. In a way Baudelaire is right when he describes
-ennui as a “delicate monster” that selects as his prey the most highly
-gifted natures. Marguerite d’Angoulême already speaks of the “ennui
-proper to well-born spirits.” Now religion seeks no less than romance
-an escape from ennui. Bossuet is at one with Baudelaire when he
-dilates on that “inexorable ennui which is the very substance of human
-life.” But Bossuet and Baudelaire differ utterly in the remedies they
-propose for ennui. Baudelaire hopes to escape from ennui by dreaming
-of the superlative emotional adventure, by indulging in infinite,
-indeterminate desire, and becomes more and more restless in his quest
-for a something that at the end always eludes him. This infinite of
-nostalgia has nothing in common with the infinite of religion. No
-distinction is more important than that between the man who feels the
-divine discontent of religion, and the man who is suffering from
-mere romantic restlessness. According to religion man must seek the
-satisfaction that the finite fails to give by looking not without but
-within; and to look within he must in the literal sense of the word
-undergo conversion. A path will then be found to open up before him, a
-path of which he cannot see the end. He merely knows that to advance
-on this path is to increase in peace, poise, centrality; though beyond
-any calm he can attain is always a deeper centre of calm. The goal
-is at an infinite remove. This is the truth that St. Augustine puts
-theologically when he exclaims: “For thou hast made us for thyself
-and our heart is restless until it findeth peace in thee.”[176] One
-should insist that this question of the two infinites is not abstract
-and metaphysical but bears on what is most concrete and immediate
-in experience. If the inner and human infinite cannot be formulated
-intellectually, it can be known practically in its effect on life and
-conduct. Goethe says of Werther that he “treated his heart like a sick
-child; its every wish was granted it.” “My restless heart asked me
-for something else,” says Rousseau. “René,” says Chateaubriand, “was
-enchanted, tormented and, as it were, possessed by the demon of his
-heart.” Mr. Galsworthy speaks in a similar vein of “the aching for the
-wild, the passionate, the new, that never quite dies in a man’s heart.”
-But is there not deep down in the human breast another heart that is
-felt as a power of control over this romantic heart and can keep within
-due bounds “its aching for the wild, the passionate, the new.” This is
-the heart, it would seem, to which a man must hearken if he is not for
-a “little honey of romance” to abandon his “ancient wisdom and austere
-control.”
-
-The romantic corruption of the infinite here joins with the romantic
-corruption of conscience, the transformation of conscience from an
-inner check into an expansive emotion that I have already traced in
-Shaftesbury and Rousseau. But one should add that in some of its
-aspects this corruption of the idea of the infinite antedates the
-whole modern movement. At least the beginnings of it can be found in
-ancient Greece,--especially in that “delirious and diseased Greece”
-of which Joubert speaks--the Greece of the neo-Platonists. There is
-already in the neo-Platonic notion of the infinite a strong element
-of expansiveness. Aristotle and the older Greeks conceived of the
-infinite in this sense as bad. That something in human nature which
-is always reaching out for more--whether the more of sensation or of
-power or of knowledge--was, they held, to be strictly reined in and
-disciplined to the law of measure. All the furies lie in wait for the
-man who overextends himself. He is ripening for Nemesis. “Nothing too
-much.” “Think as a mortal.” “The half is better than the whole.” In his
-attitude towards man’s expansive self the Greek as a rule stands for
-mediation, and not like the more austere Christian, for renunciation.
-Yet Plato frequently and Aristotle at times mount from the humanistic
-to the religious level. One of the most impressive passages in
-philosophy is that in which Aristotle, perhaps the chief exponent of
-the law of measure, affirms that one who has really faced about and
-is moving towards the inner infinite needs no warning against excess:
-“We should not give heed,” he says, “to those who bid one think as
-a mortal, but so far as we can we should make ourselves immortal and
-do all with a view to a life in accord with the best Principle in
-us.”[177] (This Principle Aristotle goes on to say is a man’s true
-self.)
-
-The earlier Greek distinction between an outer and evil infinite
-of expansive desire and an inner infinite that is raised above the
-flux and yet rules it, is, in the Aristotelian phrase, its “unmoved
-mover,” became blurred, as I have said, during the Alexandrian period.
-The Alexandrian influence entered to some extent into Christianity
-itself and filtered through various channels down to modern times.
-Some of the romanticists went directly to the neo-Platonists,
-especially Plotinus. Still more were affected by Jacob Boehme, who
-himself had no direct knowledge of the Alexandrian theosophy. This
-theosophy appears nevertheless in combination with other elements in
-his writings. He appealed to the new school by his insistence on the
-element of appetency or desire, by his universal symbolizing, above
-all by his tendency to make of the divine an affirmative instead of a
-restrictive force--a something that pushes forward instead of holding
-back. The expansive elements are moderated in Boehme himself and in
-disciples like Law by genuinely religious elements--e.g., humility
-and the idea of conversion. What happens when the expansiveness is
-divorced from these elements, one may see in another English follower
-of Boehme--William Blake. To be both beautiful and wise one needs,
-according to Blake, only to be exuberant. The influence of Boehme
-blends in Blake with the new æstheticism. Jesus himself, he says, so
-far from being restrained “was all virtue, and acted from impulse not
-from rules.” This purely æsthetic and impulsive Jesus has been cruelly
-maligned, as we learn from the poem entitled the “Everlasting Gospel,”
-by being represented as humble and chaste. Religion itself thus becomes
-in Blake the mere sport of a powerful and uncontrolled imagination,
-and this we are told is mysticism. I have already contrasted with
-this type of mysticism something that goes under the same name and
-is yet utterly different--the mysticism of ancient India. Instead
-of conceiving of the divine in terms of expansion the Oriental sage
-defines it experimentally as the “inner check.” No more fundamental
-distinction perhaps can be made than that between those who associate
-the good with the yes-principle and those who associate it rather with
-the no-principle. But I need not repeat what I have said elsewhere on
-the romantic attempt to discredit the veto power. Let no one think
-that this contrast is merely metaphysical. The whole problem of evil
-is involved in it and all the innumerable practical consequences that
-follow from one’s attitude towards this problem. The passage in which
-Faust defines the devil as the “spirit that always says no” would seem
-to derive directly or indirectly from Boehme. According to Boehme
-good can be known only through evil. God therefore divides his will
-into two, the “yes” and the “no,” and so founds an eternal contrast
-to himself in order to enter into a struggle with it, and finally to
-discipline and assimilate it. The object of all manifested nature
-is the transforming of the will which says “no” into the will which
-says “yes.”[178] The opposition between good and evil tends to lose
-its reality when it thus becomes a sort of sham battle that God gets
-up with himself (without contraries is no progression, says Blake),
-or when, to take the form that the doctrine assumes in “Faust,” the
-devil appears as the necessary though unwilling instrument of man’s
-betterment. The recoil from the doctrine of total depravity was perhaps
-inevitable. What is sinister is that advantage has been taken of this
-recoil to tamper with the problem of evil itself. Partial evil we are
-told is universal good; or else evil is only good in the making. For
-a Rousseau or a Shelley it is something mysteriously imposed from
-without on a spotless human nature; for a Wordsworth it is something
-one may escape by contemplating the speargrass on the wall.[179] For a
-Novalis sin is a mere illusion of which a man should rid his mind if he
-aspires to become a “magic idealist.”[180] In spite of his quaint Tory
-prejudices Dr. Johnson is one of the few persons in recent times that
-one may term wise without serious qualification because he never dodges
-or equivocates in dealing with the problem of evil; he never fades away
-from the fact of evil into some theosophic or sentimental dream.
-
-The rise of a purely expansive view of life in the eighteenth century
-was marked by a great revival of enthusiasm. The chief grievance of
-the expansionist indeed against the no-principle is that it kills
-enthusiasm. But concentration no less than expansion may have its own
-type of enthusiasm. It is therefore imperative in an age that has
-repudiated the traditional sanctions and set out to walk by the inner
-light that all general terms and in particular the term enthusiasm
-should be protected by a powerful dialectic. Nothing is more perilous
-than an uncritical enthusiasm, since it is only by criticism that one
-may determine whether the enthusiast is a man who is moving towards
-wisdom or is a candidate for Bedlam. The Rousseauist, however, exalts
-enthusiasm at the same time that he depreciates discrimination.
-“Enthusiasm,” says Emerson, “is the height of man. It is the passage
-from the human to the divine.” It is only too characteristic of Emerson
-and of the whole school to which he belongs, to put forth statements of
-this kind without any dialectical protection. The type of enthusiasm
-to which Emerson’s praise might be properly applied, the type that
-has been defined as exalted peace, though extremely rare, actually
-exists. A commoner type of enthusiasm during the past century is that
-which has been defined as “the rapturous disintegration of civilized
-human nature.” When we have got our fingers well burned as a result of
-our failure to make the necessary discriminations, we may fly to the
-opposite extreme like the men of the early eighteenth century among
-whom, as is well known, enthusiasm had become a term of vituperation.
-This dislike of enthusiasm was the natural recoil from the uncritical
-following of the inner light by the fanatics of the seventeenth
-century. Shaftesbury attacks this older type of enthusiasm and at the
-same time prepares the way for the new emotional enthusiasm. One cannot
-say, however, that any such sharp separation of types appears in the
-revival of enthusiasm that begins about the middle of the eighteenth
-century, though some of those who were working for this revival felt
-the need of discriminating:
-
- That which concerns us therefore is to see
- What Species of Enthusiasts we be--
-
-says John Byrom in his poem on Enthusiasm. The different species,
-however,--the enthusiasm of the Evangelicals and Wesleyans, the
-enthusiasm of those who like Law and his disciple Byrom hearken back
-to Boehme, the enthusiasm of Rousseau and the sentimentalists, tend to
-run together. To “let one’s feelings run in soft luxurious flow,”[181]
-is, as Newman says, at the opposite pole from spirituality. Yet much of
-this mere emotional facility appears alongside of genuinely religious
-elements in the enthusiasm of the Methodist. One may get a notion of
-the jumble to which I refer by reading a book like Henry Brooke’s
-“Fool of Quality.” Brooke is at one and the same time a disciple of
-Boehme and Rousseau while being more or less affiliated with the
-Methodistic movement. The book indeed was revised and abridged by
-John Wesley himself and in this form had a wide circulation among his
-followers.[182]
-
-The enthusiasm that has marked the modern movement has plainly not been
-sufficiently critical. Perhaps the first discovery that any one will
-make who wishes to be at once critical and enthusiastic is that in a
-genuinely spiritual enthusiasm the inner light and the inner check
-are practically identical. He will find that if he is to rise above
-the naturalistic level he must curb constantly his expansive desires
-with reference to some centre that is set above the flux. Here let me
-repeat is the supreme rôle of the imagination. The man who has ceased
-to lean on outer standards can perceive his new standards or centre of
-control only through its aid. I have tried to show that to aim at such
-a centre is not to be stagnant and stationary but on the contrary to
-be at once purposeful and progressive. To assert that the creativeness
-of the imagination is incompatible with centrality or, what amounts to
-the same thing, with purpose, is to assert that the creativeness of
-the imagination is incompatible with reality or at least such reality
-as man may attain. Life is at best a series of illusions; the whole
-office of philosophy is to keep it from degenerating into a series
-of delusions. If we are to keep it from thus degenerating we need to
-grasp above all the difference between the eccentric and the concentric
-imagination. To look for serious guidance to an imagination that owes
-allegiance to nothing above itself, is to run the risk of taking some
-cloud bank for terra firma. The eccentric imagination may give access
-to the “infinite,” but it is an infinite empty of content and therefore
-an infinite not of peace but of restlessness. Can any one maintain
-seriously that there is aught in common between the “striving for
-endlessness” of the German romanticists and the supreme and perfect
-Centre that Dante glimpses at the end of the “Divine Comedy” and in the
-presence of which he becomes dumb?
-
-We are told to follow the gleam, but the counsel is somewhat ambiguous.
-The gleam that one follows may be that which is associated with the
-concentric imagination and which gives steadiness and informing
-purpose, or it may be the romantic will o’ the wisp. One may, as I
-have said, in recreative moments allow one’s imagination to wander
-without control, but to take these wanderings seriously is to engage
-in a sort of endless pilgrimage in the void. The romanticist is
-constantly yielding to the “spell” of this or the “lure” of that, or
-the “call” of some other thing. But when the wonder and strangeness
-that he is chasing are overtaken, they at once cease to be wondrous
-and strange, while the gleam is already dancing over some other object
-on the distant horizon. For nothing is in itself romantic, it is only
-imagining that makes it so. Romanticism is the pursuit of the element
-of illusion in things for its own sake; it is in short the cherishing
-of glamour. The word glamour introduced into literary usage from
-popular Scotch usage by Walter Scott itself illustrates this tendency.
-Traced etymologically, it turns out to be the same word as grammar. In
-an illiterate age to know how to write at all was a weird and magical
-accomplishment,[183] but in an educated age, nothing is so drearily
-unromantic, so lacking in glamour as grammar.
-
-The final question that arises in connection with this subject is
-whether one may quell the mere restlessness of one’s spirit and impose
-upon it an ethical purpose. “The man who has no definite end is lost,”
-says Montaigne. The upshot of the romantic supposition that purpose is
-incompatible with the freedom of the imagination is a philosophy like
-that of Nietzsche. He can conceive of nothing beyond whirling forever
-on the wheel of change (“the eternal recurrence”) without any goal or
-firm refuge that is set above the flux. He could not help doubting
-at times whether happiness was to be found after all in mere endless,
-purposeless mutation.
-
- Have _I_ still a goal? A haven towards which _my_ sail is set?
- A good wind? Ah, he only who knoweth _whither_ he saileth,
- knoweth what wind is good, and a fair wind for him.
-
- What still remaineth to me? A heart weary and flippant; an
- unstable will; fluttering wings; a broken backbone.
-
- …
-
- _Where_ is _my_ home? For it do I ask and seek, and have
- sought, but have not found it. O eternal everywhere, O eternal
- nowhere, O eternal--in vain.[184]
-
-To allow one’s self to revolve passively on the wheel of change
-(_samsāra_) seemed to the Oriental sage the acme of evil. An old Hindu
-writer compares the man who does not impose a firm purpose upon the
-manifold solicitations of sense to a charioteer who fails to rein
-in his restless steeds[185]--a comparison suggested independently
-to Ricarda Huch by the lives of the German romanticists. In the
-absence of central control, the parts of the self tend to pull each
-in a different way. It is not surprising that in so centrifugal a
-movement, at least on the human and spiritual level, one should find
-so many instances of disintegrated and multiple personality. The
-fascination that the phenomenon of the double (_Doppelgängerei_) had
-for Hoffmann and other German romanticists is well known.[186] It may
-well be that some such disintegration of the self takes place under
-extreme emotional stress.[187] We should not fail to note here the
-usual coöperation between the emotional and the scientific naturalist.
-Like the romanticist, the scientific psychologist is more interested
-in the abnormal than in the normal. According to the Freudians, the
-personality that has become incapable of any conscious aim is not left
-entirely rudderless. The guidance that it is unable to give itself is
-supplied to it by some “wish,” usually obscene, from the sub-conscious
-realm of dreams. The Freudian then proceeds to develop what may be true
-of the hysterical degenerate into a complete view of life.
-
-Man is in danger of being deprived of every last scrap and vestige of
-his humanity by this working together of romanticism and science. For
-man becomes human only in so far as he exercises moral choice. He must
-also enter upon the pathway of ethical purpose if he is to achieve
-happiness. “Moods,” says Novalis, “undefined emotions, not defined
-emotions and feelings, give happiness.” The experience of life shows
-so plainly that this is not so that the romanticist is tempted to
-seek shelter once more from his mere vagrancy of spirit in the outer
-discipline he has abandoned. “To such unsettled ones as thou, seemeth
-at last even a prisoner blessed. Didst thou ever see how captured
-criminals sleep? They sleep quietly, they enjoy their new security. …
-Beware in the end lest a narrow faith capture thee, a hard rigorous
-delusion! For now everything that is narrow and fixed seduceth and
-tempteth thee.”[188]
-
-Various reasons have been given for romantic conversions to
-Catholicism--for example, the desire for confession (though the
-Catholic does not, like the Rousseauist, confess himself from the
-housetops), the æsthetic appeal of Catholic rites and ceremonies, etc.
-The sentence of Nietzsche puts us on the track of still another reason.
-The affinity of certain romantic converts for the Church is that of the
-jelly-fish for the rock. It is appropriate that Friedrich Schlegel,
-the great apostle of irony, should after a career as a heaven-storming
-Titan end by submitting to this most rigid of all forms of outer
-authority.
-
-For it should now be possible to return after our digression on paradox
-and the idea of the infinite and the perils of aimlessness, to romantic
-irony with a truer understanding of its significance. Like so much
-else in this movement it is an attempt to give to a grave psychic
-weakness the prestige of strength--unless indeed one conceives the
-superior personality to be the one that lacks a centre and principle of
-control. Man it has usually been held should think lightly of himself
-but should have some conviction for which he is ready to die. The
-romantic ironist, on the other hand, is often morbidly sensitive about
-himself, but is ready to mock at his own convictions. Rousseau was no
-romantic ironist, but the root of self-parody is found nevertheless
-in his saying that his heart and his head did not seem to belong to
-the same individual. Everything of course is a matter of degree. What
-poor mortal can say that he is perfectly at one with himself? Friedrich
-Schlegel is not entirely wrong when he discovers elements of irony
-based on an opposition between the head and the heart in writers like
-Ariosto and Cervantes, who love the very mediæval tales that they are
-treating in a spirit of mockery. Yet the laughter of Cervantes is not
-gypsy laughter. He is one of those who next to Shakespeare deserve the
-praise of having dwelt close to the centre of human nature and so can
-in only a minor degree be ranked with the romantic ironists.
-
-In the extreme type of romantic ironist not only are intellect and
-emotion at loggerheads but action often belies both: he thinks one
-thing and feels another and does still a third. The most ironical
-contrast of all is that between the romantic “ideal” and the actual
-event. The whole of romantic morality is from this point of view, as
-I have tried to show, a monstrous series of ironies. The pacifist,
-for example, has been disillusioned so often that he should by this
-time be able to qualify as a romantic ironist, to look, that is, with
-a certain aloofness on his own dream. The crumbling of the ideal is
-often so complete indeed when put to the test that irony is at times,
-we may suppose, a merciful alternative to madness. When disillusion
-overtakes the uncritical enthusiast, when he finds that he has taken
-some cloud bank for terra firma, he continues to cling to his dream,
-but at the same time wishes to show that he is no longer the dupe of
-it; and so “hot baths of sentiment,” as Jean Paul says of his novels,
-“are followed by cold douches of irony.” The true German master of
-the genre is, however, Heine. Every one knows with what coldness his
-head came to survey the enthusiasms of his heart, whether in love or
-politics. One may again measure the havoc that life had wrought with
-Renan’s ideals if one compares the tone of his youthful “Future of
-Science” with the irony of his later writings. He compliments Jesus by
-ascribing to him an ironical detachment similar to his own. Jesus, he
-says, has that mark of the superior nature--the power to rise above
-his own dream and to smile down upon it. Anatole France, who is even
-more completely detached from his own dreams than his master Renan,
-sums up the romantic emancipation of imagination and sensibility from
-any definite centre when he says that life should have as its supreme
-witnesses irony and pity.
-
-Irony is on the negative side, it should be remembered, a way of
-affirming one’s escape from traditional and conventional control, of
-showing the supremacy of mood over decorum. “There are poems old and
-new which throughout breathe the divine breath of irony. … Within lives
-the poet’s mood that surveys all, rising infinitely above everything
-finite, even above his own art, virtue or genius.”[189] Decorum is for
-the classicist the grand masterpiece to observe because it is only
-thus he can show that he has a genuine centre set above his own ego;
-it is only by the allegiance of his imagination to this centre that
-he can give the illusion of a higher reality. The romantic ironist
-shatters the illusion wantonly. It is as though he would inflict upon
-the reader the disillusion from which he has himself suffered. By his
-swift passage from one mood to another (_Stimmungsbrechung_) he shows
-that he is subject to no centre. The effect is often that of a sudden
-breaking of the spell of poetry by an intrusion of the poet’s ego. Some
-of the best examples are found in that masterpiece of romantic irony,
-“Don Juan.”[190]
-
-Closely allied to the irony of emotional disillusion is a certain type
-of misanthropy. You form an ideal of man that is only an Arcadian dream
-and then shrink back from man when you find that he does not correspond
-to your ideal. I have said that the romantic lover does not love a
-real person but only a projection of his mood. This substitution of
-illusion for reality often appears in the relations of the romanticist
-with other persons. Shelley, for example, begins by seeing in Elizabeth
-Hitchener an angel of light and then discovers that she is instead a
-“brown demon.” He did not at any time see the real Elizabeth Hitchener.
-She merely reflects back to him two of his own moods. The tender
-misanthropy of the Rousseauist is at the opposite pole from that of a
-Swift, which is the misanthropy of naked intellect. Instead of seeing
-human nature through an Arcadian haze he saw it without any illusion at
-all. His irony is like that of Socrates, the irony of intellect. Its
-bitterness and cruelty arise from the fact that his intellect does not,
-like the intellect of Socrates, have the support of insight. Pascal
-would have said that Swift saw man’s misery without at the same time
-seeing his grandeur. For man’s grandeur is due to his infinitude and
-this infinitude cannot be perceived directly, but only through a veil
-of illusion; only, that is, through a right use of the imagination.
-Literary distinctions of this kind must of course be used cautiously.
-Byron’s irony is prevailingly sentimental, but along with this romantic
-element he has much irony and satire that Swift would have understood
-perfectly.
-
-The misanthropist of the Rousseauistic or Byronic type has a resource
-that was denied to Swift. Having failed to find companionship among men
-he can flee to nature. Rousseau relates how when he had taken refuge on
-St. Peter’s Island he “exclaimed at times with deep emotion: Oh nature,
-oh my mother, here I am under your protection alone. Here is no adroit
-and rascally man to interpose between you and me.”[191] Few aspects of
-romanticism are more important than this attempt to find companionship
-and consolation in nature.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-ROMANTICISM AND NATURE
-
-
-One of the most disquieting features of the modern movement is
-the vagueness and ambiguity of its use of the word nature and the
-innumerable sophistries that have resulted. One can sympathize at
-times with Sir Leslie Stephen’s wish that the word might be suppressed
-entirely. This looseness of definition may be said to begin with
-the very rise of naturalism in the Renaissance, and indeed to go
-back to the naturalists of Greek and Roman antiquity.[192] Even
-writers like Rabelais and Molière are not free from the suspicion
-of juggling dangerously on occasion with the different meanings of
-the word nature. But the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were
-not merely naturalistic, they were also humanistic, and what they
-usually meant by nature, as I have pointed out, was the conception
-of normal, representative human nature that they had worked out with
-the aid of the ancients. There is undeniably an element of narrowness
-and artificiality in this conception of nature, and a resulting
-unfriendliness, as appears in Pope’s definition of wit, towards
-originality and invention. In his “Art of Poetry” Boileau says, “Let
-nature be your sole study.” What he means by nature appears a few lines
-later: “Study the court and become familiar with the town.” To this
-somewhat conventionalized human nature the original genius opposed,
-as we have seen, the cult of primitive nature. A whole revolution is
-implied in Byron’s line:
-
- I love not man the less, but nature more.
-
-Any study of this topic must evidently turn on the question how far at
-different times and by different schools of thought the realm of man
-and the realm of nature (as Byron uses the word) have been separated
-and in what way, and also how far they have been run together and in
-what way. For there may be different ways of running together man
-and nature. Ruskin’s phrase the “pathetic fallacy” is unsatisfactory
-because it fails to recognize this fact. The man who is guilty of the
-pathetic fallacy sees in nature emotions that are not really there but
-only in himself. Extreme examples of this confusion abound in Ruskin’s
-own writings. Now the ancients also ran man and nature together, but in
-an entirely different way. The Greek we are told never saw the oak tree
-without at the same time seeing the dryad. There is in this and similar
-associations a sort of overflow of the human realm upon the forms of
-outer nature whereas the Rousseauist instead of bestowing imaginatively
-upon the oak tree a conscious life and an image akin to his own and
-so lifting it up to his level, would, if he could, become an oak tree
-and so enjoy its unconscious and vegetative felicity. The Greek, one
-may say, humanized nature; the Rousseauist naturalizes man. Rousseau’s
-great discovery was revery; and revery is just this imaginative melting
-of man into outer nature. If the ancients failed to develop in a marked
-degree this art of revery, it was not because they lacked naturalists.
-Both Stoics and Epicureans, the two main varieties of naturalists
-with which classical antiquity was familiar, inclined to affirm the
-ultimate identity of the human and the natural order. But both Stoics
-and Epicureans would have found it hard to understand the indifference
-to the intellect and its activities that Rousseauistic revery implies.
-The Stoics to be sure employed the intellect on an impossible and
-disheartening task--that of founding on the natural order virtues that
-the natural order does not give. The Epicureans remind one rather in
-much of their intellectual activity of the modern man of science. But
-the Epicurean was less prone than the man of science to look on man
-as the mere passive creature of environment. The views of the man of
-science about the springs of conduct often seem to coincide rather
-closely with those of Rousseau about “sensitive morality.” Geoffroy
-Saint-Hilaire says that when reclining on the banks of the Nile he felt
-awakening within himself the instincts of the crocodile. The point of
-view is Rousseauistic perhaps rather than genuinely scientific. An
-Epicurus or a Lucretius would, we are probably safe in assuming, have
-been disquieted by any such surrender to the subrational, by any such
-encroachment of the powers of the unconscious upon conscious control.
-
-It is hard as a matter of fact to find in the ancients anything
-resembling Rousseauistic revery, even when they yield to the pastoral
-mood. Nature interests them as a rule less for its own sake than as
-a background for human action; and when they are concerned primarily
-with nature, it is a nature that has been acted upon by man. They
-have a positive shrinking from wild and uncultivated nature. “The
-green pastures and golden slopes of England,” says Lowell, “are
-sweeter both to the outward and to the inward eye that the hand of man
-has immemorially cared for and caressed them.” This is an attitude
-towards nature that an ancient would have understood perfectly. One
-may indeed call it the Virgilian attitude from the ancient who has
-perhaps expressed it most happily. The man who lives in the grand
-manner may indeed wish to impose on nature some of the fine proportion
-and symmetry of which he is conscious in himself and he may then from
-our modern point of view carry the humanizing of nature too far. “Let
-us sing of woods,” says Virgil, “but let the woods be worthy of a
-consul.” This line has sometimes been taken to be a prophecy of the
-Park of Versailles. We may sympathize up to a certain point with the
-desire to introduce a human symmetry into nature (such as appears, for
-instance, in the Italian garden), but the peril is even greater here
-than elsewhere of confounding the requirements of a real with those of
-an artificial decorum. I have already mentioned the neo-classicist who
-complained that the stars in heaven were not arranged in sufficiently
-symmetrical patterns.
-
-What has been said should make clear that though both humanist and
-Rousseauist associate man with nature it is in very different ways,
-and that there is therefore an ambiguity in the expression “pathetic
-fallacy.” It remains to show that men may not only associate themselves
-with nature in different ways but that they may likewise differ in
-their ways of asserting man’s separateness from nature. The chief
-distinction to be made here is that between the humanist and the
-supernaturalist. Some sense of the gap between man and the “outworld”
-is almost inevitable and forces itself at times even upon those most
-naturalistically inclined:
-
- Nor will I praise a cloud however bright,
- Disparaging Man’s gifts and proper food--
- Grove, isle, with every shape of sky-built dome,
- Though clad in colors beautiful and pure,
- Find in the heart of man no natural home.[193]
-
-The Wordsworth who speaks here is scarcely the Wordsworth of Tintern
-Abbey or the Wordsworth whose “daily teachers had been woods and
-rills.” He reminds us rather of Socrates who gave as his reason for
-going so rarely into the country, delightful as he found it when once
-there, that he did not learn from woods and rills but from the “men
-in the cities.” This sense of the separateness of the human and the
-natural realm may be carried much further--to a point where an ascetic
-distrust of nature begins to appear. Something of this ascetic distrust
-is seen for example in the following lines from Cardinal Newman:
-
- There strayed awhile amid the woods of Dart
- One who could love them, but who durst not love;
- A vow had bound him ne’er to give his heart
- To streamlet bright or soft secluded grove.[194]
-
-The origins of this latter attitude towards nature are to be sought in
-mediæval Christianity rather than in classical antiquity. No man who
-knows the facts would assert for a moment that the man of the Middle
-Ages was incapable of looking on nature with other feelings than
-those of ascetic distrust. It is none the less true that the man of
-the Middle Ages often saw in nature not merely something alien but a
-positive temptation and peril of the spirit. In his attitude towards
-nature as in other respects Petrarch is usually accounted the first
-modern. He did what no man of the mediæval period is supposed to have
-done before him, or indeed what scarcely any man of classical antiquity
-did: he ascended a mountain out of sheer curiosity and simply to enjoy
-the prospect. But those who tell of his ascent of Mt. Ventoux sometimes
-forget to add that the passage of Saint Augustine[195] that occurred
-to him at the top reflects the distrust of the more austere Christian
-towards the whole natural order. Petrarch is at once more ascetic and
-more romantic in his attitude towards nature than the Greek or Roman.
-
-Traces of Petrarch’s taste for solitary and even for wild nature are
-to be found throughout the Renaissance and the seventeenth century.
-But the recoil from supernaturalism that took place at this time led
-rather, as I have remarked, to a revival of the Græco-Roman humanism
-with something more of artifice and convention, and to an even more
-marked preference[196] of the town to the country. An age that aims
-first of all at urbanity must necessarily be more urban than rural in
-its predilections. It was a sort of condescension for the neo-classical
-humanist to turn from the central model he was imitating to mere
-unadorned nature, and even then he felt that he must be careful not
-to condescend too far. Even when writing pastorals he was warned by
-Scaliger to avoid details that are too redolent of the real country;
-he should indulge at most in an “urbane rusticity.” Wild nature the
-neo-classicist finds simply repellent. Mountains he looks upon as
-“earth’s dishonor and encumbering load.” The Alps were regarded as
-the place where Nature swept up the rubbish of the earth to clear
-the plains of Lombardy. “At last,” says a German traveller of the
-seventeenth century, “we left the horrible and wearisome mountains and
-the beautiful flat landscape was joyfully welcomed.” The taste for
-mountain scenery is associated no doubt to some extent, as has been
-suggested, with the increasing ease and comfort of travel that has come
-with the progress of the utilitarian movement. It is scarcely necessary
-to point the contrast between the Switzerland of which Evelyn tells in
-his diary[197] and the Switzerland in which one may go by funicular to
-the top of the Jungfrau.
-
-Those who in the eighteenth century began to feel the need of less
-trimness in nature and human nature were not it is true entirely
-without neo-classic predecessors. They turned at times to painting--as
-the very word picturesque testifies--for the encouragement they failed
-to find in literature. A landscape was picturesque when it seemed
-like a picture[198] and it might be not merely irregular but savage
-if it were to seem like some of the pictures of Salvator Rosa. This
-association of even wildness with art is very characteristic of
-eighteenth-century sentimentalism. It is a particular case of that
-curious blending in this period of the old principle of the imitation
-of models with the new principle of spontaneity. There was a moment
-when a man needed to show a certain taste for wildness if he was to be
-conventionally correct. “The fops,” says Taine, describing Rousseau’s
-influence on the drawing-rooms, “dreamt between two madrigals of the
-happiness of sleeping naked in the virgin forest.” The prince in
-Goethe’s “Triumph of Sensibility” has carried with him on his travels
-canvas screens so painted that when placed in position they give him
-the illusion of being in the midst of a wild landscape. This taste for
-artificial wildness can however best be studied in connection with the
-increasing vogue in the eighteenth century of the English garden as
-compared either with the Italian garden or the French garden in the
-style of Le Nôtre.[199] As a relief from the neo-classical symmetry,
-nature was broken up, often at great expense, into irregular and
-unexpected aspects. Some of the English gardens in France and Germany
-were imitated directly from Rousseau’s famous description of this
-method of dealing with the landscape in the “Nouvelle Héloïse.”[200]
-Artificial ruins were often placed in the English garden as a further
-aid to those who wished to wander imaginatively from the beaten path,
-and also as a provocative of the melancholy that was already held to
-be distinguished. Towards the end of the century this cult of ruins
-was widespread. The veritable obsession with ruins that one finds in
-Chateaubriand is not unrelated to this sentimental fashion, though
-it arises even more perhaps from the real ruins that had been so
-plentifully supplied by the Revolution.
-
-Rousseau himself, it should hardly be necessary to say, stands for far
-more than an artificial wildness. Instead of imposing decorum on nature
-like the neo-classicist, he preached constantly the elimination of
-decorum from man. Man should flee from that “false taste for grandeur
-which is not made for him” and which “poisons his pleasures,”[201]
-to nature. Now “it is on the summits of mountains, in the depths of
-forests, on deserted islands that nature reveals her most potent
-charms.”[202] The man of feeling finds the savage and deserted nook
-filled with beauties that seem horrible to the mere worldling.[203]
-Rousseau indeed did not crave the ultimate degree of wildness even
-in the Alps. He did not get beyond what one may term the middle zone
-of Alpine scenery--scenery that may be found around the shores of
-Lake Leman. He was inclined to find the most appropriate setting for
-the earthly paradise in the neighborhood of Vevey. Moreover, others
-about the same time and more or less independently of his influence
-were opposing an even more primitive nature to the artificialities of
-civilization. The mountains of “Ossian” are, as has been said, mere
-blurs, yet the new delight in mountains is due in no small measure
-throughout Europe to the Ossianic influence.
-
-The instinct for getting away from the beaten track, for exploration
-and discovery, has of course been highly developed at other epochs,
-notably at the Renaissance. Much of the romantic interest in the wild
-and waste places of the earth did not go much beyond what might have
-been felt in Elizabethan England. Many of the Rousseauists, Wordsworth
-and Chateaubriand for example, not only read eagerly the older books
-of travel but often the same books. The fascination of penetrating to
-regions “where foot of man hath ne’er or rarely been,” is perennial.
-It was my privilege a few years ago to listen to Sir Ernest Shackleton
-speak of his expedition across the Antarctic continent and of the
-thrill that he and the members of his party felt when they saw rising
-before them day after day mountain peaks that no human eye had ever
-gazed upon. The emotion was no doubt very similar to that of “stout
-Cortez” when he first “stared at the Pacific.” Chateaubriand must
-have looked forward to similar emotions when he planned his trip to
-North America in search of the North West Passage. But the passion for
-actual exploration which is a form of the romanticism of action is very
-subordinate in the case of Chateaubriand to emotional romanticism. He
-went into the wilderness first of all not to make actual discoveries
-but to affirm his freedom from conventional restraint, and at the same
-time to practice the new art of revery. His sentiments on getting
-into what was then the virgin forest to the west of Albany were very
-different we may assume from those of the early pioneers of America.
-“When,” he says, “after passing the Mohawk I entered woods which
-had never felt the axe, I was seized by a sort of intoxication of
-independence: I went from tree to tree, to right and left, saying to
-myself, ‘Here are no more roads or cities or monarchy or republic
-or presidents or kings or men.’ And in order to find out if I was
-restored to my original rights I did various wilful things that made
-my guide furious. In his heart he believed me mad.” The disillusion
-that followed is also one that the early pioneers would have had some
-difficulty in understanding. For he goes on to relate that while he
-was thus rejoicing in his escape from conventional life to pure nature
-he suddenly bumped up against a shed, and under the shed he saw his
-first savages--a score of them both men and women. A little Frenchman
-named M. Violet, “bepowdered and befrizzled, with an apple-green coat,
-drugget waistcoat and muslin frill and cuffs, was scraping on a pocket
-fiddle” and teaching the Indians to dance to the tune of Madelon
-Friquet. M. Violet, it seemed, had remained behind on the departure
-from New York of Rochambeau’s forces at the time of the American
-Revolution, and had set up as dancing-master among the savages. He
-was very proud of the nimbleness of his pupils and always referred to
-them as “ces messieurs sauvages et ces dames sauvagesses.” “Was it not
-a crushing circumstance for a disciple of Rousseau,” Chateaubriand
-concludes, “this introduction to savage life by a ball that the
-ex-scullion of General Rochambeau was giving to Iroquois? I felt very
-much like laughing, but I was at the same time cruelly humiliated.”
-
-In America, as elsewhere, Chateaubriand’s chief concern is not
-with any outer fact or activity, but with his own emotions and the
-enhancement of these emotions by his imagination. In him as in many
-other romanticists the different elements of Rousseauism--Arcadian
-longing, the pursuit of the dream woman, the aspiration towards the
-“infinite” (often identified with God)--appear at times more or less
-separately and then again almost inextricably blended with one another
-and with the cult of nature. It may be well to consider more in detail
-these various elements of Rousseauism and their relation to nature in
-about the order I have mentioned. The association of Arcadian longing
-with nature is in part an outcome of the conflict between the ideal and
-the real. The romantic idealist finds that men do not understand him:
-his “vision” is mocked and his “genius” is unrecognized. The result
-is the type of sentimental misanthropy of which I spoke at the end of
-the last chapter. He feels, as Lamartine says, that there is nothing
-in common between the world and him. Lamartine adds, however, “But
-nature is there who invites you and loves you.” You will find in her
-the comprehension and companionship that you have failed to find in
-society. And nature will seem a perfect companion to the Rousseauist
-in direct proportion as she is uncontaminated by the presence of man.
-Wordsworth has described the misanthropy that supervened in many people
-on the collapse of the revolutionary idealism. He himself overcame
-it, though there is more than a suggestion in the manner of his own
-retirement into the hills of a man who retreats into an Arcadian dream
-from actual defeat. The suggestion of defeat is much stronger in
-Ruskin’s similar retirement. Ruskin doubtless felt in later life, like
-Rousseau, that if he had failed to get on with men “it was less his
-fault than theirs.”[204] Perhaps emotional misanthropy and the worship
-of wild nature are nowhere more fully combined than in Byron. He
-gives magnificent expression to the most untenable of paradoxes--that
-one escapes from solitude by eschewing human haunts in favor of some
-wilderness.[205] In these haunts, he says, he became like a “falcon
-with clipped wing,” but found in nature the kindest of mothers.
-
- Oh! she is fairest in her features wild,
- Where nothing polished dare pollute her path:
- To me by day or night she ever smiled
- Though I have marked her when none other hath
- And sought her more and more, and loved her best in wrath.[206]
-
-He not only finds companionship in nature but at the same time partakes
-of her infinitude--an infinitude, one should note, of feeling:
-
- I live not in myself, but I become
- Portion of that around me; and to me
- High mountains are a feeling, but the hum
- Of human cities torture.[207]
-
-In his less misanthropic moods the Rousseauist sees in wild nature
-not only a refuge from society, but also a suitable setting for his
-companionship with the ideal mate, for what the French term _la
-solitude à deux_.
-
- Oh! that the Desert were my dwelling-place
- With one fair Spirit for my minister,
- That I might all forget the human race
- And, hating no one, love but only her![208]
-
-The almost innumerable passages in the romantic movement that celebrate
-this Arcadian companionship in the wilderness merely continue in a
-sense the pastoral mood that must be as old as human nature itself.
-But in the past the pastoral mood has been comparatively placid.
-It has not been associated in any such degree with misanthropy and
-wildness, with nympholeptic longing and the thirst for the infinite.
-The scene that Chateaubriand has imagined between Chactas and Atala in
-the primeval forest, is surely the stormiest of Arcadias; so stormy
-indeed that it would have been unintelligible to Theocritus. It is
-not certain that it would have been intelligible to Shakespeare, who
-like the other Elizabethans felt at times that he too had been born
-in Arcadia. The Arcadian of the past was much less inclined to sink
-down to the subrational and to merge his personality in the landscape.
-Rousseau describes with a charm that has scarcely been surpassed by
-any of his disciples, the reveries in which he thus descends below
-the level of his rational self. Time, no longer broken up by the
-importunate intellect and its analysis, is then felt by him in its
-unbroken flow; the result is a sort of “eternal present that leaves
-no sense of emptiness.” Of such a moment of revery Rousseau says,
-anticipating Faust, that he “would like it to last forever.” Bergson
-in his conception of the _summum bonum_ as a state in which time is
-no longer cut up into artificial segments but is perceived in its
-continuous stream as a “present that endures,”[209] has done little
-more than repeat Rousseau. The sight and sound of water seem to have
-been a special aid to revery in Rousseau’s case. His accounts of the
-semi-dissolution of his conscious self that he enjoyed while drifting
-idly on the Lake of Bienne are justly celebrated. Lamartine’s soul was,
-like that of Rousseau, lulled by “the murmur of waters.” Nothing again
-is more Rousseauistic than the desire Arnold attributes to Maurice de
-Guérin--the desire “to be borne on forever down an enchanted stream.”
-That too is why certain passages of Shelley are so near in spirit to
-Rousseau--for example, the boat revery in “Prometheus Unbound” in which
-an Arcadian nature and the dream companion mingle to the strains of
-music in a way that is supremely romantic.[210]
-
-The association of nature with Arcadian longing and the pursuit of
-the dream woman is even less significant than its association with
-the idea of the infinite. For as a result of this latter association
-the nature cult often assumes the aspect of a religion. The various
-associations may indeed as I have said be very much blended or else
-may run into one another almost insensibly. No better illustration of
-this blending can be found perhaps than in Chateaubriand--especially
-in that compendium of Rousseauistic psychology, his “René.” The soul
-of René, one learns, was too great to adjust itself to the society of
-men. He found that he would have to contract his life if he put himself
-on their level. Men, for their part, treated him as a dreamer, and so
-he is forced more and more by his increasing disgust for them into
-solitude. Now René rests the sense of his superiority over other men
-on two things: first, on his superlative capacity to feel grief;[211]
-secondly, on his thirst for the infinite. “What is finite,” he says,
-“has no value for me.” What is thus pushing him beyond all bounds is
-“an unknown good of which the instinct pursues me.” “I began to ask
-myself what I desired. I did not know but I thought all of a sudden
-that the woods would be delicious to me!” What he found in this quest
-for the mystical something that was to fill the abyss of his existence
-was the dream woman. “I went down into the valley, I strode upon the
-mountain, summoning with all the force of my desire the ideal object
-of a future flame; I embraced this object in the winds; I thought
-that I heard it in the moanings of the river. All was this phantom of
-the imagination--both the stars in heaven and the very principle of
-life in the universe.” I have already quoted a very similar passage
-and pointed out the equivalent in Shelley. No such close equivalent
-could be found in Byron, and Wordsworth, it is scarcely necessary to
-say, offers no equivalent at all. If one reads on, however, one finds
-passages that are Byronic and others that are Wordsworthian. Paganism,
-Chateaubriand complains, by seeing in nature only certain definite
-forms--fauns and satyrs and nymphs--had banished from it both God and
-the infinite. But Christianity expelled these thronging figures in
-turn and restored to the grottoes their silence and to the woods their
-revery. The true God thus became visible in his works and bestowed
-upon them his own immensity. What Chateaubriand understands by God and
-the infinite appears in the following description of the region near
-Niagara seen by moonlight. The passage is Byronic as a whole with a
-Wordsworthian touch at the end. “The grandeur, the amazing melancholy
-of this picture cannot be expressed in human language; the fairest
-night of Europe can give no conception of it. In vain in our cultivated
-fields does the imagination seek to extend itself. It encounters on
-every hand the habitations of men; but in these savage regions the soul
-takes delight in plunging into an ocean of forests, in hovering over
-the gulf of cataracts, in meditating on the shores of lakes and rivers
-and, so to speak, in finding itself alone in the presence of God.” The
-relation between wild and solitary nature and the romantic idea of the
-infinite is here obvious. It is an aid to the spirit in throwing off
-its limitations and so in feeling itself “free.”[212]
-
-A greater spiritual elevation it is sometimes asserted is found in
-Wordsworth’s communings with nature than in those of Rousseau and
-Chateaubriand. The difference perhaps is less one of spirit than
-of temperament. In its abdication of the intellectual and critical
-faculties, in its semi-dissolution of the conscious self, the
-revery of Wordsworth does not differ from that of Rousseau[213] and
-Chateaubriand, but the erotic element is absent. In the “Genius of
-Christianity” Chateaubriand gives a magnificent description of sunset
-at sea and turns the whole picture into a proof of God. Elsewhere he
-tells us that it was “not God alone that I contemplated on the waters
-in the splendor of his works. I saw an unknown woman and the miracle
-of her smile. … I should have sold eternity for one of her caresses.
-I imagined that she was palpitating behind that veil of the universe
-that hid her from my eyes,” etc. Wordsworth was at least consistently
-religious in his attitude towards the landscape: he did not see in it
-at one moment God, and at another an unknown woman and the miracle of
-her smile. At the same time his idea of spirituality is very remote
-from the traditional conception. Formerly spirituality was held to be a
-process of recollection, of gathering one’s self in, that is, towards
-the centre and not of diffusive emotion; so that when a man wished
-to pray he retired into his closet, and did not, like a Wordsworth
-or a Rousseau, fall into an inarticulate ecstasy before the wonders
-of nature. As for the poets of the past, they inclined as a rule to
-look on nature as an incentive not to religion but to love. Keble,
-following Wordsworth, protests on this ground against Aristophanes, and
-Catullus and Horace and Theocritus. He might have lengthened the list
-almost indefinitely. Chateaubriand bids us in our devotional moods to
-betake ourselves “to the religious forest.” La Fontaine is at least
-as near to normal human experience and also at least as poetical when
-he warns “fair ones” to “fear the depths of the woods and their vast
-silence.”[214]
-
-No one would question that Wordsworth has passages of great ethical
-elevation. But in some of these passages he simply renews the error
-of the Stoics who also display at times great ethical elevation; he
-ascribes to the natural order virtues that the natural order does not
-give. This error persists to some extent even when he is turning away,
-as in the “Ode to Duty,” from the moral spontaneity of the Rousseauist.
-It is not quite clear that the law of duty in the breast of man is the
-same law that preserves “the stars from wrong.” His earlier assertion
-that the light of setting suns and the mind of man are identical in
-their essence is at best highly speculative, at least as speculative
-as the counter assertion of Sir Thomas Browne that “there is surely a
-piece of divinity in us; something that was before the elements, and
-owes no homage unto the sun.” Furthermore this latter sense of the gap
-between man and nature seems to be more fully justified by its fruits
-in life and conduct, and this is after all the only test that counts in
-the long run.
-
-One of the reasons why pantheistic revery has been so popular is that
-it seems to offer a painless substitute for genuine spiritual effort.
-In its extreme exponents, a Rousseau or a Walt Whitman, it amounts to a
-sort of ecstatic animality that sets up as a divine illumination. Even
-in its milder forms it encourages one to assume a tone of consecration
-in speaking of experiences that are æsthetic rather than truly
-religious. “’Tis only heaven that’s given away,” sings Lowell; “’Tis
-only God may be had for the asking.” God and heaven are accorded by
-Lowell with such strange facility because he identifies them with the
-luxurious enjoyment of a “day in June.” When pushed to a certain point
-the nature cult always tends towards sham spirituality.
-
- Oh World as God has made it
- --All is beauty,
- And knowing this is love, and
- Love is duty.
-
-It seems to follow from these verses of Browning, perhaps the most
-flaccid spiritually in the English language, that to go out and mix
-one’s self up with the landscape is the same as doing one’s duty. As
-a method of salvation this is even easier and more æsthetic than that
-of the Ancient Mariner, who, it will be remembered, is relieved of the
-burden of his transgression by admiring the color of water-snakes!
-
-The nature cult arose at a time when the traditional religious
-symbols were becoming incredible. Instead of working out new and
-firm distinctions between good and evil, the Rousseauist seeks to
-discredit all precise distinctions whether new or old, in favor of mere
-emotional intoxication. The passage to which I have already alluded,
-in which Faust breaks down the scruples of Marguerite by proclaiming
-the supremacy of feeling, surpasses even the lines I have cited from
-Browning as an example of sham spirituality:
-
- _Marguerite_:
-
- Dost thou believe in God?
-
- _Faust_:
-
- My darling, who dares say,
- Yes, I in God believe?
- Question or priest or sage, and they
- Seem, in the answer you receive,
- To mock the questioner.
-
- _Marguerite_:
-
- Then thou dost not believe?
-
- _Faust_:
-
- Sweet one! my meaning do not misconceive!
- Him who dare name
- And who proclaim,
- Him I believe?
- Who that can feel,
- His heart can steel
- To say: I believe him not?
- The All-embracer,
- All-sustainer,
- Holds and sustains he not
- Thee, me, himself?
- Lifts not the Heaven its dome above?
- Doth not the firm-set earth beneath us lie?
- And beaming tenderly with looks of love
- Climb not the everlasting stars on high?
- Do I not gaze into thine eyes?
- Nature’s impenetrable agencies,
- Are they not thronging on thy heart and brain,
- Viewless, or visible to mortal ken,
- Around thee weaving their mysterious chain?
- Fill thence thy heart, how large soe’er it be;
- And in the feeling when thou utterly art blest,
- Then call it what thou wilt--
- Call it Bliss! Heart! Love! God!
- I have no name for it!
- Feeling is all;
- Name is but sound and smoke
- Shrouding the glow of heaven.[215]
-
-The upshot of this enthusiasm that overflows all boundaries and spurns
-definition as mere smoke that veils its heavenly glow is the seduction
-of a poor peasant girl. Such is the romantic contrast between the
-“ideal” and the “real.”
-
-Those to whom I may seem to be treating the nature cult with
-undue severity should remember that I am treating it only in its
-pseudo-religious aspect. In its proper place all this refining on
-man’s relation to the “outworld” may be legitimate and delightful;
-but that place is secondary. My quarrel is only with the æsthete who
-assumes an apocalyptic pose and gives forth as a profound philosophy
-what is at best only a holiday or week-end view of existence. No
-distinction is more important for any one who wishes to maintain a
-correct scale of values than that between what is merely recreative and
-what ministers to leisure. There are times when we may properly seek
-solace and renewal in nature, when we may invite both our souls and our
-bodies to loaf. The error is to look on these moments of recreation
-and relief from concentration on some definite end as in themselves
-the consummation of wisdom. Rousseau indeed assumes that his art of
-mixing himself up with the landscape is identical with leisure; like
-innumerable disciples he confuses revery with meditation--a confusion
-so grave that I shall need to revert to it later. He parodies subtly
-what is above the ordinary rational level in terms of what is below it.
-He thus brings under suspicion the most necessary of all truths--that
-the kingdom of heaven is within us.
-
-The first place always belongs to action and purpose and not to mere
-idling, even if it be like that of the Rousseauist transcendental
-idling. The man who makes a deliberate choice and then plans his life
-with reference to it is less likely than the aimless man to be swayed
-by every impulse and impression. The figures of Raphael according to
-Hazlitt have always “a set, determined, voluntary character,” they
-“want that wild uncertainty of expression which is connected with the
-accidents of nature and the changes of the elements.” And Hazlitt
-therefore concludes rightly that Raphael has “nothing romantic about
-him.” The distinction is so important that it might be made the
-basis for a comparison between the painting of the Renaissance and
-some of the important schools of the nineteenth century. Here again
-no sensible person would maintain that the advantage is all on one
-side. Romanticism gave a great impulse to landscape painting and to
-the painting of man in the landscape. Few romantic gains are more
-indubitable. One may prefer the best work of the Barbizon school for
-example to the contemporary product in French literature. But even here
-it must be insisted that painting from which man is absent or in which
-he is more or less subordinated to the landscape is not the highest
-type of painting. Turner, one of the greatest masters of landscape,
-was almost incapable of painting the human figure. Ruskin is therefore
-indulging in romantic paradox when he puts Turner in the same class
-as Shakespeare. Turner’s vision of life as compared with that of
-Shakespeare is not central but peripheral.
-
-The revolution that has resulted from the triumph of naturalistic over
-humanistic tendencies in painting extends down to the minutest details
-of technique; it has meant the subordination of design--the imposition,
-that is, on one’s material of a firm central purpose--to light and
-color; and this in painting corresponds to the literary pursuit of
-glamour and illusion for their own sake. It has meant in general a
-tendency to sacrifice all the other elements of painting to the capture
-of the vivid and immediate impression. And this corresponds to the
-readiness of the writer to forego decorum in favor of intensity. The
-choice that is involved, including a choice of technique, according
-as one is a naturalist or a humanist, is brought out by Mr. Kenyon Cox
-in his comparison of two paintings of hermits,[216] one by Titian and
-one by John Sargent: the impressionistic and pantheistic hermit of
-Sargent is almost entirely merged in the landscape; he is little more
-than a pretext for a study of the accidents of light. The conception
-of Titian’s St. Jerome in the Desert is perhaps even more humanistic
-than religious. The figure of the saint on which everything converges
-is not merely robust, it is even a bit robustious. The picture affirms
-in its every detail the superior importance of man and his purposes to
-his natural environment. So far as their inner life is concerned the
-two hermits are plainly moving in opposite directions. An appropriate
-motto for Sargent’s hermit would be the following lines that I take
-from a French symbolist, but the equivalent of which can be found in
-innumerable other Rousseauists:
-
- _Je voudrais me confondre avec les chases, tordre_
- _Mes bras centre la pierre et les fraîches écorces,_
- _Etre l’arbre, le mur, le pollen et le sel,_
- _Et me dissoudre au fond de l’être universel._
-
-This is to push the reciprocity between man and nature to a point
-where the landscape is not only a state of the soul but the soul is
-a state of the landscape; just as in Shelley’s Ode, Shelley becomes
-the West Wind and the West Wind becomes Shelley.[217] The changes in
-the romantic soul are appropriately mirrored in the changes of the
-seasons. In Tieck’s “Genoveva,” for example, Golo’s love blossoms in
-the springtime, the sultry summer impels him to sinful passion, the
-autumn brings grief and repentance, and in winter avenging judgment
-overtakes the offender and casts him into the grave.[218] Autumn
-is perhaps even more than springtime the favorite season of the
-Rousseauist. The movement is filled with souls who like the hero of
-Poe’s “Ulalume” have reached the October of their sensations. Some
-traces of this sympathetic relation between man and nature may indeed
-be found in the literature of the past. The appropriateness of the
-setting in the “Prometheus Bound” of Æschylus would scarcely seem to
-be an accident. The storm in “Lear” may also be instanced. But as I
-have already said occidental man did not before Rousseau show much
-inclination to mingle with the landscape. The parallelism that Pater
-establishes in “Marius the Epicurean” between the moods of the hero and
-the shifting aspects of nature is felt as a distinct anachronism. If we
-wish to find any early approximations to the subtleties and refinements
-of the Rousseauist in his dealings with nature we need to turn to the
-Far East--especially to the Taoist movement in China.[219] As a result
-of the Taoist influence China had from a very early period poets and
-painters for whom the landscape is very plainly a state of the soul.
-
-Pantheistic revery of the kind I have been describing leads inevitably
-to a special type of symbolism. The Rousseauist reads into nature
-unutterable love. He sees shining through its finite forms the light of
-the infinite. The Germans especially set out to express symbolically
-the relationship between the love and infinitude that they saw in
-nature and the kindred elements in themselves. Any one who has
-attempted to thread his way through the German theories of the symbol
-will feel that he has, like Wordsworth’s shepherd, “been in the heart
-of many thousand mists.” But in view of the importance of the subject
-it is necessary to venture for a moment into this metaphysical murk.
-Schelling’s “Nature Philosophy” is perhaps the most ambitious of all
-the German attempts to run together symbolically the human spirit and
-phenomenal nature. “What we call nature,” says Schelling, “is a poem
-that lies hidden in a secret wondrous writing”; if the riddle could be
-revealed we should recognize in nature “the Odyssey of the Spirit.”
-“There looks out through sensuous objects as through a half-transparent
-mist the world of phantasy for which we long.” “All things are only a
-garment of the world of spirit.” “To be romantic,” says Uhland, “is
-to have an inkling of the infinite in appearances.” “Beauty,” says
-Schelling in similar vein, “is a finite rendering of the infinite.” Now
-the infinite and the finite can only be thus brought together through
-the medium of the symbol. Therefore, as A. W. Schlegel says, “beauty
-is a symbolical representation of the infinite. All poetry is an
-everlasting symbolizing.”
-
-This assertion is in an important sense true. Unfortunately there
-remains the ambiguity that I have already pointed out in the word
-“infinite.” No one would give a high rating to a certain type of
-allegory that flourished in neo-classical times as also in a somewhat
-different form during the Middle Ages. It is a cold intellectual
-contrivance in which the imagination has little part and which
-therefore fails to suggest the infinite in any sense. But to
-universalize the particular in the classical sense is to give access
-imaginatively to the human infinite that is set above nature. Every
-successful humanistic creation is more or less symbolical. Othello is
-not merely a jealous man; he is also a symbol of jealousy. Some of the
-myths of Plato again are imaginative renderings of a supersensuous
-realm to which man has no direct access. They are symbolical
-representations of an infinite that the romanticist leaves out of
-his reckoning. The humanistic and spiritual symbols that abound in
-the religion and poetry of the past, are then, it would seem, very
-different from the merely æsthetic symbolizing of a Schelling. For
-Schelling is one of the chief of those who from Shaftesbury down have
-tended to identify beauty and truth and to make both purely æsthetic.
-But a symbol that is purely æsthetic, that is in other words purely a
-matter of feeling, rests on what is constantly changing not only from
-man to man but in the same man. Romantic symbolism, therefore, though
-it claims at one moment to be scientific (especially in Germany) and at
-another moment to have a religious value, is at bottom the symbolizing
-of mood. Both the imagination and the emotion that enter into the
-romantic symbol are undisciplined. The results of such a symbolism do
-not meet the demand of the genuine man of science for experimental
-proof, they do not again satisfy the test of universality imposed by
-those who believe in a distinctively human realm that is set above
-nature. The nature philosophy of a Schelling leads therefore on the one
-hand to sham science and on the other to sham philosophy and religion.
-
-The genuine man of science has as a matter of fact repudiated the
-speculations of Schelling and other romantic physicists as fantastic.
-He may also be counted on to look with suspicion on the speculations
-of a Bergson who, more perhaps than any living Rousseauist, reminds
-one of the German romantic philosophers. One idea has however lingered
-in the mind even of the genuine man of science as a result of all this
-romantic theorizing--namely that man has access to the infinite only
-through nature. Thus Professor Henry Fairfield Osborn said in a recent
-address to the students of Columbia University:
-
- I would not for a moment take advantage of the present
- opportunity to discourage the study of human nature and of
- the humanities, but for what is called the best opening for
- a constructive career give me nature. The ground for my
- preference is that human nature is an exhaustible fountain
- of research; Homer understood it well; Solomon fathomed
- it; Shakespeare divined it, both normal and abnormal;
- the modernists have been squeezing out the last drops of
- abnormality. Nature, studied since Aristotle’s time, is
- still full to the brim; no perceptible falling of its tides
- is evident from any point at which it is attacked, from
- nebulæ to protoplasm; it is always wholesome, refreshing and
- invigorating. Of the two most creative literary artists of our
- time, Maeterlinck, jaded with human abnormality, comes back to
- the bee and the flowers and the “blue bird,” with a delicious
- renewal of youth, while Rostand turns to the barnyard.
-
-The romanticists acted from the start, following here in the wake of
-the pseudo-classicists, on Professor Osborn’s assumption that normal
-human nature is something that may be bottled up once for all and put
-by on a shelf, though they would have been pained to learn from him
-that even abnormal human nature may also be bottled up and put by in
-the same fashion. Sophistries of this kind should perhaps be pardoned
-in the man of science when so many men who are supposed to stand for
-letters have shown him the way. Great literature is an imaginative and
-symbolical interpretation of an infinite that is accessible only to
-those who possess in some degree the same type of imagination. A writer
-like Maeterlinck, whom Professor Osborn takes to be representative of
-literature in general, is merely a late exponent of a movement that
-from the start turned away from this human infinite towards pantheistic
-revery.
-
-The imagination is, as Coleridge says, the great unifying power; it
-draws together things that are apparently remote. But its analogies to
-be of value should surely have validity apart from the mere shifting
-mood of the man who perceives them. Otherwise he simply wrests some
-outer object from the chain of cause and effect of which it is actually
-a part, and incorporates it arbitrarily into his own private dream.
-Wordsworth is not sparing of homely detail in his account of his
-leech-gatherer; but at a given moment in this poem the leech-gatherer
-undergoes a strange transformation; he loses all verisimilitude as a
-leech-gatherer and becomes a romantic symbol, a mere projection, that
-is, of the poet’s own broodings. To push this symbolizing of mood
-beyond a certain point is incipient hallucination. We are told that
-when the asylum at Charenton was shelled in the Franco-Prussian War
-of 1870, the lunatics saw reflected in the bursting bombs, each in
-a different way, his own madness. One took the bombs to be a link in
-the plot of his enemies against him, etc. It is hard to consider the
-symbolizing and visions of the extreme romanticist, such as those of
-William Blake, without thinking at times of Charenton.
-
-What I have said of the romantic symbol is true in some degree of
-the romantic metaphor, for the symbol and even the myth are often
-only a developed metaphor. The first part of the romantic metaphor,
-the image or impression that has been received from the outer world,
-is often admirably fresh and vivid.[220] But the second part of the
-metaphor when the analogy involved is that between some fact of outer
-perception and the inner life of man is often vague and misty; for the
-inner life in which the romanticist takes interest is not the life
-he possesses in common with other men but what is most unique in his
-own emotions--his mood in short. That is why the metaphor and still
-more the symbol in so far as they are romantic are always in danger of
-becoming unintelligible, since it is not easy for one man to enter into
-another’s mood. Men accord a ready welcome to metaphors and symbols
-that instead of expressing something more or less individual have a
-real relevancy to their common nature. Tribulation, for example, means
-literally the beating out of grain on the threshing floor. The man
-who first saw the analogy between this process and certain spiritual
-experiences established a legitimate link between nature and human
-nature, between sense and the supersensuous. Language is filled with
-words and expressions of this kind which have become so current that
-their metaphorical and symbolical character has been forgotten and
-which have at the same time ceased to be vivid and concrete and become
-abstract.
-
-The primitivistic fallacies of the German romanticists in their
-dealings with the symbol and metaphor appear in various forms in
-French romanticism and even more markedly in its continuation known
-as the symbolistic movement. What is exasperating in many of the
-poets of this school is that they combine the pretence to a vast
-illumination with the utmost degree of spiritual and intellectual
-emptiness and vagueness. Like the early German romanticists they mix
-up flesh and spirit in nympholeptic longing and break down and blur
-all the boundaries of being in the name of the infinite. Of this inner
-formlessness and anarchy the chaos of the _vers libre_ (in which they
-were also anticipated by the Germans) is only an outer symptom.[221]
-
-If the Rousseauistic primitivist recognizes the futility of his
-symbolizing, and consents to become a passive register of outer
-perception, if for example he proclaims himself an imagist, he at least
-has the merit of frankness, but in that case he advertises by the very
-name he has assumed the bankruptcy of all that is most worth while in
-poetry.
-
-But to return to romanticism and nature. It should be plain from what
-has already been said that the romanticist tends to make of nature the
-mere plaything of his mood. When Werther’s mood is cheerful, nature
-smiles at him benignly. When his mood darkens she becomes for him “a
-devouring monster.” When it grows evident to the romanticist that
-nature does not alter with his alteration, he chides her at times for
-her impassibility; or again he seeks to be impassible like her, even if
-he can be so only at the expense of his humanity. This latter attitude
-is closely connected with the dehumanizing of man by science that is
-reflected in a whole literature during the last half of the nineteenth
-century--for instance, in so-called “impassive” writers like Flaubert
-and Leconte de Lisle.
-
-The causal sequences that had been observed in the physical realm
-were developed more and more during this period with the aid of pure
-mathematics and the mathematical reason (_esprit de géométrie_) into an
-all-embracing system. For the earlier romanticists nature had at least
-been a living presence whether benign or sinister. For the mathematical
-determinist she tends to become a soulless, pitiless mechanism against
-which man is helpless.[222] This conception of nature is so important
-that I shall need to revert to it in my treatment of melancholy.
-
-The man who has accepted the universe of the mechanist or determinist
-is not always gloomy. But men in general felt the need of some relief
-from the deterministic obsession. Hence the success of the philosophy
-of Bergson and similar philosophies. The glorification of impulse
-(_élan vital_) that Bergson opposes to the mechanizing of life is in
-its main aspects, as I have already indicated, simply a return to
-the spontaneity of Rousseau. His plan of escape from deterministic
-science is at bottom very much like Rousseau’s plan of escape from
-the undue rationalism of the Enlightenment. As a result of these
-eighteenth-century influences, nature had, according to Carlyle, become
-a mere engine, a system of cogs and pulleys. He therefore hails Novalis
-as an “anti-mechanist,” a “deep man,” because of the way of deliverance
-that he teaches from this nightmare. “I owe him somewhat.” What Carlyle
-owed to Novalis many moderns have owed to Bergson, but it is not yet
-clear that either Novalis or Bergson are “deep men.”
-
-The mechanistic view of nature, whether held pessimistically or
-optimistically, involving as it does factors that are infinite
-and therefore beyond calculation, cannot furnish proofs that will
-satisfy the true positivist: he is inclined to dismiss it as a mere
-phantasmagoria of the intellect. The Rousseauistic view of nature, on
-the other hand, whether held optimistically or pessimistically, is
-even less capable of satisfying the standards of the positivist and
-must be dismissed as a mere phantasmagoria of the emotions. The fact
-is that we do not know and can never know what nature is in herself.
-The mysterious mother has shrouded herself from us in an impenetrable
-veil of illusion. But though we cannot know nature absolutely we can
-pick up a practical and piecemeal knowledge of nature not by dreaming
-but by doing. The man of action can within certain limits have his way
-with nature. Now the men who have acted during the past century have
-been the men of science and the utilitarians who have been turning
-to account the discoveries of science. The utilitarians have indeed
-derived such potent aid from science that they have been able to stamp
-their efforts on the very face of the landscape. The romanticists have
-not ceased to protest against this scientific utilizing of nature as
-a profanation. But inasmuch as these protests have come from men who
-have stood not for work but for revery they have for the most part
-been futile. This is not the least of the ironic contrasts that abound
-in this movement between the ideal and the real. No age ever grew so
-ecstatic over natural beauty as the nineteenth century, at the same
-time no age ever did so much to deface nature. No age ever so exalted
-the country over the town, and no age ever witnessed such a crowding
-into urban centres.
-
-A curious study might be made of this ironic contrast as it appears
-in the early romantic crusade against railways. One of the romantic
-grievances against the railway is that it does not encourage
-vagabondage: it has a definite goal and gets to it so far as possible
-in a straight line. Yet in spite of Wordsworth’s protesting sonnet the
-Windermere railway was built. Ruskin’s wrath at railways was equally
-vain. In general, sentiment is not of much avail when pitted against
-industrial advance. The papers announced recently that one of the
-loveliest cascades in the California Sierras had suddenly disappeared
-as a result of the diversion of its water to a neighboring power-plant.
-The same fate is overtaking Niagara itself. It is perhaps symbolic
-that a quarry has made a hideous gash in the hillside on the shores of
-Rydal Mere right opposite Wordsworth’s house.
-
-If the man of science and the utilitarian do not learn what nature
-is in herself they learn at least to adjust themselves to forces
-outside themselves. The Rousseauist, on the other hand, does not in
-his “communion” with nature adjust himself to anything. He is simply
-communing with his own mood. Rousseau chose appropriately as title for
-the comedy that was his first literary effort “Narcissus or the Lover
-of Himself.” The nature over which the Rousseauist is bent in such rapt
-contemplation plays the part of the pool in the legend of Narcissus. It
-renders back to him his own image. He sees in nature what he himself
-has put there. The Rousseauist transfuses himself into nature in much
-the same way that Pygmalion transfuses himself into his statue. Nature
-is dead, as Rousseau says, unless animated by the fires of love. “Make
-no mistake,” says M. Masson, “the nature that Jean-Jacques worships
-is only a projection of Jean-Jacques. He has poured himself forth
-so complacently upon it that he can always find himself and cherish
-himself in it.” And M. Masson goes on and quotes from a curious and
-little-known fragment of Rousseau: “Beloved solitude,” Rousseau sighs,
-“beloved solitude, where I still pass with pleasure the remains of
-a life given over to suffering. Forest with stunted trees, marshes
-without water, broom, reeds, melancholy heather, inanimate objects,
-you who can neither speak to me nor hear me, what secret charm brings
-me back constantly into your midst? Unfeeling and dead things, this
-charm is not in you; it could not be there. It is in my own heart which
-wishes to refer back everything to itself.”[223] Coleridge plainly only
-continues Rousseau when he writes:
-
- O Lady! we receive but what we give,
- And in our life alone does nature live:[224]
- Ours is her wedding-garment, ours her shroud!
- And would we aught behold, of higher worth,
- Than that inanimate cold world allow’d
- To the poor loveless ever-anxious crowd,
- Ah! from the soul itself must issue forth
- A light, a glory, a fair luminous cloud
- Enveloping the Earth.
-
-The fair luminous cloud is no other than the Arcadian imagination. “The
-light that never was on sea or land, the consecration and the poet’s
-dream” of which Wordsworth speaks, is likewise as appears very plainly
-from the context,[225] Arcadian. He should once, Wordsworth writes,
-have wished to see Peele Castle bathed in the Arcadian light, but now
-that he has escaped by sympathy for his fellow-men from the Arcadian
-aloofness, he is willing that it should be painted in storm. Mere
-storminess, one should recollect, is not in itself an assurance that
-one has turned from the romantic dream to reality. One finds in this
-movement, if nowhere else, as I remarked apropos of Chateaubriand, the
-stormy Arcadia.
-
-It is not through the Arcadian imagination that one moves towards
-reality. This does not much matter if what one seeks in a “return to
-nature” is merely recreation. I cannot repeat too often that I have no
-quarrel with the nature cult when it remains recreative but only when
-it sets up as a substitute for philosophy and religion. This involves
-a confusion between the two main directions of the human spirit, a
-confusion as I have said in a previous chapter between the realm of
-awe and the region of wonder. Pascal exaggerates somewhat when he says
-the Bible never seeks to prove religion from the “wonders” of nature.
-But this remark is true to the total spirit of the Bible. A knowledge
-of the flowers of the Holy Land is less necessary for an understanding
-of the gospel narrative than one might suppose from Renan.[226] Renan
-is simply seeking to envelop Jesus so far as possible in an Arcadian
-atmosphere. In so doing he is following in the footsteps of the great
-father of sentimentalists. According to M. Masson, Jesus, as depicted
-by Jean-Jacques, becomes “a sort of grand master of the Golden Age.”
-
-Here as elsewhere the Rousseauist is seeking to identify the Arcadian
-view of life with wisdom. The result is a series of extraordinarily
-subtle disguises for egoism. We think we see the Rousseauist prostrate
-before the ideal woman or before nature or before God himself, but
-when we look more closely we see that he is only (as Sainte-Beuve said
-of Alfred de Vigny) “in perpetual adoration before the holy sacrament
-of himself.” The fact that he finds in nature only what he has put
-there seems to be for Rousseau himself a source of satisfaction. But
-the poem of Coleridge I have just quoted, in which he proclaims that so
-far as nature is concerned “we receive but what we give,” is entitled
-“Ode to Dejection.” One of man’s deepest needs would seem to be for
-genuine communion, for a genuine escape, that is, from his ordinary
-self. The hollowness of the Rousseauistic communion with nature as
-well as other Rousseauistic substitutes for genuine communion is
-indissolubly bound up with the subject of romantic melancholy.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-ROMANTIC MELANCHOLY
-
-
-Rousseau and his early followers--especially perhaps his early French
-followers--were very much preoccupied with the problem of happiness.
-Now in a sense all men--even those who renounce the world and mortify
-the flesh--aim at happiness. The important point to determine is what
-any particular person means by happiness and how he hopes to attain it.
-It should be plain from all that has been said that the Rousseauist
-seeks happiness in the free play of the emotions. The “Influence of
-the Passions on Happiness” is the significant title of one of Madame
-de Staël’s early treatises. The happiness that the Rousseauist seeks
-involves not merely a free play of feeling but--what is even more
-important--a free play of the imagination. Feeling acquires a sort
-of infinitude as a result of this coöperation of the imagination,
-and so the romanticist goes, as we have seen, in quest of the thrill
-superlative, as appears so clearly in his nympholepsy, his pursuit of
-the “impossible she.” But the more imaginative this quest for emotional
-happiness grows the more it tends to become a mere nostalgia. Happiness
-is achieved so far as it is achieved at all in dreamland. Rousseau says
-of himself: _Mon plus constant bonheur fut en songe_. Every finite
-satisfaction by the very fact that it is finite leaves him unsatisfied.
-René says that he had exhausted solitude as he had exhausted society:
-they had both failed to satisfy his insatiable desires. René plainly
-takes his insatiableness to be the badge of his spiritual distinction.
-To submit to any circumscribing of one’s desires is to show that
-one has no sense of infinitude and so to sink to the level of the
-philistine.
-
-But does one become happy by being nostalgic and hyperæsthetic, by
-burning with infinite indeterminate desire? We have here perhaps the
-chief irony and contradiction in the whole movement. The Rousseauist
-seeks happiness and yet on his own showing, his mode of seeking it
-results, not in happiness but in wretchedness. One finds indeed figures
-in the nineteenth century, a Browning, for example, who see in life
-first of all an emotional adventure and then carry this adventure
-through to the end with an apparently unflagging gusto. One may affirm
-nevertheless that a movement which began by asserting the goodness
-of man and the loveliness of nature ended by producing the greatest
-literature of despair the world has ever seen. No movement has perhaps
-been so prolific of melancholy as emotional romanticism. To follow it
-from Rousseau down to the present day is to run through the whole gamut
-of gloom.[227]
-
- Infections of unutterable sadness,
- Infections of incalculable madness,
- Infections of incurable despair.
-
-According to a somewhat doubtful authority, Ninon de Lenclos, “the
-joy of the spirit measures its force.” When the romanticist on the
-other hand discovers that his ideal of happiness works put into actual
-unhappiness he does not blame his ideal. He simply assumes that the
-world is unworthy of a being so exquisitely organized as himself, and
-so shrinks back from it and enfolds himself in his sorrow as he would
-in a mantle. Since the superlative bliss that he craves eludes him
-he will at least be superlative in woe. So far from being a mark of
-failure this woe measures his spiritual grandeur. “A great soul,” as
-René says, “must contain more grief than a small one.” The romantic
-poets enter into a veritable competition with one another as to who
-shall be accounted the most forlorn. The victor in this competition
-is awarded the palm not merely for poetry but wisdom. In the words of
-Arnold:
-
- Amongst us one
- Who most has suffered, takes dejectedly
- His seat upon the intellectual throne;
- And all his store of sad experience he
- Lays bare of wretched days.
- Tells us his misery’s birth and growth and signs,
- And how the dying spark of hope was fed,
- And how the breast was soothed, and how the head,
- And all his hourly varied anodynes.
-
- This for our wisest! and we others pine,
- And wish the long unhappy dream would end,
- And waive all claim to bliss, and try to bear;
- With close-lipped patience for our only friend,
- Sad patience, too near neighbor to despair.
-
-Though Arnold may in this poem, as some one has complained, reduce the
-muse to the rôle of hospital nurse, he is, like his master Senancour,
-free from the taint of theatricality. He does not as he said of Byron
-make “a pageant of his bleeding heart”; and the Byronic pose has a
-close parallel in the pose of Chateaubriand. An Irish girl at London
-once told Chateaubriand that “he carried his heart in a sling.” He
-himself said that he had a soul of the kind “the ancients called a
-sacred malady.”
-
-Chateaubriand, to be sure, had his cheerful moments and many of them.
-His sorrows he bestowed upon the public. Herein he was a true child
-of Jean-Jacques. We are told by eye-witnesses how heartily Rousseau
-enjoyed many aspects of his life at Motiers-Travers. On his own
-showing, he was plunged during this period in almost unalloyed misery.
-Froude writes of Carlyle: “It was his peculiarity that if matters were
-well with himself, it never occurred to him that they could be going
-ill with any one else; and, on the other hand, if he was uncomfortable,
-he required everybody to be uncomfortable along with him.” We can
-follow clear down to Gissing the assumption in some form or other that
-“art must be the mouthpiece of misery.” This whole question as to the
-proper function of art goes to the root of the debate between the
-classicist and the Rousseauist. “All these poets,” Goethe complains to
-Eckermann of the romanticists of 1830, “write as though they were ill,
-and as though the whole world were a hospital. … Every one of them in
-writing tries to be more desolate than all the others. This is really
-an abuse of poetry which has been given to make man satisfied with the
-world and with his lot. But the present generation is afraid of all
-solid energy; its mind is at ease and sees poetry only in weakness. I
-have found a good expression to vex these gentlemen. I am going to call
-their poetry hospital poetry.”[228]
-
-Now Goethe is here, like Chateaubriand, mocking to some degree his own
-followers. When he suffered from a spiritual ailment of any kind he got
-rid of it by inoculating others with it; and it was in this way, as we
-learn from his Autobiography, that he got relief from the _Weltschmerz_
-of “Werther.” But later in life Goethe was classical not merely in
-precept like Chateaubriand, but to some extent in practice. The best of
-the poetry of his maturity tends like that of the ancients to elevate
-and console.
-
-The contrast between classic and romantic poetry in this matter of
-melancholy is closely bound up with the larger contrast between
-imitation and spontaneity. Homer is the greatest of poets, according
-to Aristotle, because he does not entertain us with his own person but
-is more than any other poet an imitator. The romantic poet writes, on
-the other hand, as Lamartine says he wrote, solely for the “relief of
-his heart.” He pours forth himself--his most intimate and private self;
-above all, his anguish and his tears. In his relation to his reader, as
-Musset tells us in a celebrated image,[229] he is like the pelican who
-rends and lacerates his own flesh to provide nourishment for his young
-(_Pour toute nourriture il apporte son cœur_):
-
- _Les plus désespérés sont les chants les plus beaux,_
- _Et j’en sais d’immortels qui sont de purs sanglots._[230]
-
-To make of poetry a spontaneous overflow of powerful emotion, usually
-of sorrowful emotion, is what the French understand by lyricism (_le
-lyrisme_); and it may be objected that it is not fair to compare an
-epic poet like Homer with a lyricist like Musset. Let us then take for
-our comparison the poet whom the ancients themselves looked upon as
-the supreme type of the lyricist--Pindar. He is superbly imaginative,
-“sailing,” as Gray tells us, “with supreme dominion through the azure
-deep of air,” but his imagination is not like that of Musset in the
-service of sensibility. He does not bestow his own emotions upon us
-but is rather in the Aristotelian sense an imitator. He is indeed at
-the very opposite pole from Rousseau and the “apostles of affliction.”
-“Let a man,” he says, “not darken delight in his life.” “Disclose not
-to strangers our burden of care; this at least shall I advise thee.
-Therefore is it fitting to show openly to all the folk the fair and
-pleasant things allotted us; but if any baneful misfortune sent of
-heaven befalleth man, it is seemly to shroud this in darkness.”[231]
-And one should also note Pindar’s hostility towards that other great
-source of romantic lyricism--nostalgia (“The desire of the moth for
-the star”), and the closely allied pursuit of the strange and the
-exotic. He tells of the condign punishment visited by Apollo upon the
-girl Coronis who became enamoured of “a strange man from Arcadia,” and
-adds: “She was in love with things remote--that passion which many ere
-now have felt. For among men, there is a foolish company of those who,
-putting shame on what they have at home, cast their glances afar, and
-pursue idle dreams in hopes that shall not be fulfilled.”[232]
-
-We are not to suppose that Pindar was that most tiresome and
-superficial of all types--the professional optimist who insists on
-inflicting his “gladness” upon us. “The immortals,” he says, “apportion
-to man two sorrows for every boon they grant.”[233] In general the
-Greek whom Kipling sings and whom we already find in Schiller--the
-Greek who is an incarnation of the “joy of life unquestioned, the
-everlasting wondersong of youth”[234]--is a romantic myth. We read
-in the Iliad:[235] “Of all the creatures that breathe or crawl upon
-the earth, none is more wretched than man.” Here is the “joy of life
-unquestioned” in Homer. Like Homer the best of the later Greeks
-and Romans face unflinchingly the facts of life and these facts do
-not encourage a thoughtless elation. Their melancholy is even more
-concerned with the lot of man in general than with their personal and
-private grief. The quality of this melancholy is rendered in Tennyson’s
-line on Virgil, one of the finest in nineteenth century English poetry:
-
- Thou majestic in thy sadness at the doubtful doom of human kind.[236]
-
-One should indeed not fail to distinguish between the note of
-melancholy in a Homer or a Virgil and the melancholy of the ancients,
-whether Stoic or Epicurean, who had experienced the hopelessness and
-helplessness of a pure naturalism in dealing with ultimate problems.
-The melancholy of the Stoic is the melancholy of the man who associates
-with the natural order a “virtue” that the natural order does not give,
-and so is tempted to exclaim at last with Brutus, that he had thought
-virtue a thing and had found that it was only a word. The melancholy of
-the Epicurean is that of the man who has tasted the bitter sediment
-(_amari aliquid_) in the cup of pleasure. It is not difficult to
-discover modern equivalents of both Stoic and Epicurean melancholy.
-“One should seek,” says Sainte-Beuve, “in the pleasures of René the
-secret of his _ennuis_,” and so far as this is true Chateaubriand is
-on much the same level as some Roman voluptuary who suffered from
-the _tædium vitæ_ in the time of Tiberius or Nero.[237] But though
-the Roman decadent gave himself up to the pursuit of sensation and
-often of violent and abnormal sensation he was less prone than a
-Chateaubriand to associate this pursuit with the “infinite”; and so he
-was less nostalgic and hyperæsthetic. His Epicureanism was therefore
-less poetical no doubt, but on the other hand he did not set up mere
-romantic restlessness as a sort of substitute for religion. It was
-probably easier therefore for him to feel the divine discontent and
-so turn to real religion than it would have been if he had, like the
-Rousseauist, complicated his Epicureanism with sham spirituality.
-
-To say that the melancholy even of the decadent ancient is less
-nostalgic is perhaps only another way of saying what I have said about
-the melancholy of the ancients in general--that it is not so purely
-personal. It derives less from his very private and personal illusions
-and still less from his very private and personal disillusions. In
-its purely personal quality romantic melancholy is indeed inseparable
-from the whole conception of original genius. The genius sets out not
-merely to be unique but unique in feeling, and the sense uniqueness in
-feeling speedily passes over into that of uniqueness in suffering--on
-the principle no doubt laid down by Horace Walpole that life, which is
-a comedy for those who think, is a tragedy for those who feel. To be
-a beautiful soul, to preserve one’s native goodness of feeling among
-men who have been perverted by society, is to be the elect of nature
-and yet this election turns out as Rousseau tells us to be a “fatal
-gift of heaven.” It is only the disillusioned romanticist, however,
-who assumes this elegiac tone. We need to consider what he means by
-happiness while he still seeks for it in the actual world and not in
-the _pays des chimères_. Rousseau tells us that he based the sense
-of his own worth on the fineness of his powers of perception. Why
-should nature have endowed him with such exquisite faculties[238] if
-he was not to have a satisfaction commensurate with them, if he was
-“to die without having lived”? We have here the psychological origins
-of the right to happiness that the romanticists were to proclaim.
-“We spend on the passions,” says Joubert, “the stuff that has been
-given us for happiness.” The Rousseauist hopes to find his happiness
-in the passions themselves. Romantic happiness does not involve any
-moral effort and has been defined in its extreme forms as a “monstrous
-dream of passive enjoyment.” Flaubert has made a study of the right to
-happiness thus understood in his “Madame Bovary.” Madame Bovary, who
-is very commonplace in other respects, feels exquisitely; and inasmuch
-as her husband had no such fineness the right to happiness meant for
-her, as it did for so many other “misunderstood” women, the right
-to extra-marital adventure. One should note the germs of melancholy
-that lurk in the quest of the superlative moment even if the quest is
-relatively successful. Suppose Saint-Preux had succeeded in compressing
-into a single instant “the delights of a thousand centuries”; and so
-far as outer circumstances are concerned had had to pay no penalty. The
-nearer the approach to a superhuman intensity of feeling the greater is
-likely to be the ensuing languor. The ordinary round of life seems pale
-and insipid compared with the exquisite and fugitive moment. One seems
-to one’s self to have drained the cup of life at a draught and save
-perhaps for impassioned recollection of the perfect moment to have no
-reason for continuing to live. One’s heart is “empty and swollen”[239]
-and one is haunted by thoughts of suicide.
-
-This sense of having exhausted life[240] and the accompanying
-temptation to suicide that are such striking features of the malady
-of the age are not necessarily associated with any outer enjoyment at
-all. One may devour life in revery and then the melancholy arises from
-the disproportion between the dream and the fact. The revery that thus
-consumes life in advance is not necessarily erotic. What may be termed
-the cosmic revery of a Senancour or an Amiel[241] has very much the
-same effect.
-
-The atony and aridity of which the sufferer from romantic melancholy
-complains may have other sources besides the depression that follows
-upon the achieving of emotional intensity whether in revery or in fact;
-it may also be an incident in the warfare between head and heart that
-assumes so many forms among the spiritual posterity of Jean-Jacques.
-The Rousseauist seeks happiness in emotional spontaneity and this
-spontaneity seems to be killed by the head which stands aloof and
-dissects and analyzes. Perhaps the best picture of the emotionalist
-who is thus incapacitated for a frank surrender to his own emotions
-is the “Adolphe” of Benjamin Constant (a book largely reminiscent of
-Constant’s actual affair with Madame de Staël).
-
-Whether the victim of romantic melancholy feels or analyzes he
-is equally incapable of action. He who faces resolutely the rude
-buffetings of the world is gradually hardened against them. The
-romantic movement is filled with the groans of those who have evaded
-action and at the same time become highly sensitive and highly
-self-conscious. The man who thrills more exquisitely to pleasure than
-another will also thrill more exquisitely to pain; nay, pleasure itself
-in its extreme is allied to pain;[242] so that to be hyperæsthetic is
-not an unmixed advantage especially if it be true, as Pindar says,
-that the Gods bestow two trials on a man for every boon. Perhaps the
-deepest bitterness is found, not in those who make a pageant of their
-bleeding hearts, but in those who, like Leconte de Lisle[243] and
-others (_les impassibles_), disdain to make a show of themselves to the
-mob, and so dissimulate their quivering sensibility under an appearance
-of impassibility; or, like Stendhal, under a mask of irony that “is
-imperceptible to the vulgar.”
-
-Stendhal aims not at emotional intensity only, but also glorifies the
-lust for power. He did as much as any one in his time to promote the
-ideal of the superman. Yet even if the superman has nerves of steel,
-as seems to have been the case with Stendhal’s favorite, Napoleon, and
-acts on the outer world with a force of which the man in search of a
-sensation is quite incapable, he does not act upon himself, he remains
-ethically passive. This ethical passivity is the trait common to all
-those who incline to live purely on the naturalistic level--whether
-they sacrifice the human law and its demands for measure to the lust
-of knowledge or the lust of sensation or the lust of power. The man
-who neglects his ethical self and withdraws into his temperamental or
-private self, must almost necessarily have the sense of isolation,
-of remoteness from other men. We return here to the psychology of
-the original genius to whom it was a tame and uninteresting thing
-to be simply human and who, disdaining to seem to others a being of
-the same clay as themselves, wished to be in their eyes either an
-angel or a demon--above all a demon.[244] René does not, as I have
-said,[245] want even the woman who loves him to feel at one with him,
-but rather to be at once astonished and appalled. He exercises upon
-those who approach him a malign fascination; for he not only lives
-in misery himself as in his natural element, but communicates this
-misery to those who approach him. He is like one of those fair trees
-under which one cannot sit without perishing. Moreover René disavows
-all responsibility for thus being a human Upas-tree. Moral effort is
-unavailing, for it was all written in the book of fate. The victim of
-romantic melancholy is at times tender and elegiac, at other times he
-sets up as a heaven-defying Titan. This latter pose became especially
-common in France around 1830 when the influence of Byron had been added
-to that of Chateaubriand. Under the influence of these two writers a
-whole generation of youth became “things of dark imaginings,”[246]
-predestined to a blight that was at the same time the badge of their
-superiority. One wished like René to have an “immense, solitary and
-stormy soul,” and also, like a Byronic hero, to have a diabolical glint
-in the eye and a corpse-like complexion,[247] and so seem the “blind
-and deaf agent of funereal mysteries.”[248] “It was possible to believe
-everything about René except the truth.” The person who delights in
-being as mysterious as this easily falls into mystification. Byron
-himself we are told was rather flattered by the rumor that he had
-committed at least one murder. Baudelaire, it has been said, displayed
-his moral gangrene as a warrior might display honorable wounds. This
-flaunting of his own perversity was part of the literary attitude he
-had inherited from the “Satanic School.”
-
-When the romanticist is not posing as the victim of fate he poses
-as the victim of society. Both ways of dodging moral responsibility
-enter into the romantic legend of the _poète maudit_. Nobody loves
-a poet. His own mother according to Baudelaire utters a malediction
-upon him.[249] That is because the poet feels so exquisitely that he
-is at once odious and unintelligible to the ordinary human pachyderm.
-Inasmuch as the philistine is not too sensitive to act he has a great
-advantage over the poet in the real world and often succeeds in driving
-him from it and indeed from life itself. This inferiority in action is
-a proof of the poet’s ideality. “His gigantic wings,” as Baudelaire
-says, “keep him from walking.” He has, in Coleridgean phrase, fed on
-“honey dew and drunk the milk of paradise,”[250] and so can scarcely
-be expected to submit to a diet of plain prose. It is hardly necessary
-to say that great poets of the past have not been at war with their
-public in this way. The reason is that they were less taken up with
-the uttering of their own uniqueness; they were, without ceasing to be
-themselves, servants of the general sense.
-
-Chatterton became for the romanticists a favorite type of the _poète
-maudit_, and his suicide a symbol of the inevitable defeat of the
-“ideal” by the “real.” The first performance of Vigny’s Chatterton
-(1835) with its picture of the implacable hatred of the philistine
-for the artist was received by the romantic youth of Paris with
-something akin to delirium. As Gautier says in his well-known account
-of this performance one could almost hear in the night the crack of
-the solitary pistols. The ordinary man of letters, says Vigny in
-his preface to this play, is sure of success, even the great writer
-may get a hearing, but the poet, a being who is on a far higher
-level than either, can look forward only to “perpetual martyrdom and
-immolation.” He comes into the world to be a burden to others; his
-native sensibility is so intimate and profound that it “has plunged
-him from childhood into involuntary ecstasies, interminable reveries,
-infinite inventions. Imagination possesses him above all … it sweeps
-his faculties heavenward as irresistibly as the balloon carries up
-its car.” From that time forth he is more or less cut off from normal
-contact with his fellow-men. “His sensibility has become too keen;
-what only grazes other men wounds him until he bleeds.” He is thrown
-back more and more upon himself and becomes a sort of living volcano,
-“consumed by secret ardors and inexplicable languors,” and incapable
-of self-guidance. Such is the poet. From his first appearance he is
-an outlaw. Let all your tears and all your pity be for him. If he is
-finally forced to suicide not he but society is to blame. He is like
-the scorpion that cruel boys surround with live coals and that is
-finally forced to turn his sting upon himself. Society therefore owes
-it to itself to see that this exquisite being is properly pensioned and
-protected by government, to the end that idealism may not perish from
-the earth. M. Thiers who was prime minister at that time is said to
-have received a number of letters from young poets, the general tenor
-of which was: “A position or I’ll kill myself.”[251]
-
-A circumstance that should interest Americans is that Poe as
-interpreted by Baudelaire came to hold for a later generation of
-romanticists the place that Chatterton had held for the romanticists
-of 1830. Poe was actually murdered, says Baudelaire--and there is an
-element of truth in the assertion along with much exaggeration--by
-this great gas-lighted barbarity (i.e., America). All his inner and
-spiritual life whether drunkard’s or poet’s, was one constant effort to
-escape from this antipathetic atmosphere “in which,” Baudelaire goes on
-to say, “the impious love of liberty has given birth to a new tyranny,
-the tyranny of the beasts, a zoöcracy”; and in this human zoo a being
-with such a superhuman fineness of sensibility as Poe was of course at
-a hopeless disadvantage. In general our elation at Poe’s recognition in
-Europe should be tempered by the reflection that this recognition is
-usually taken as a point of departure for insulting America. Poe is
-about the only hyperæsthetic romanticist we have had, and he therefore
-fell in with the main European tendency that comes down from the
-eighteenth century. Villiers de l’Isle-Adam, whom I have already cited
-as an extreme example of romantic idealism, was one of Poe’s avowed
-followers; but Villiers is also related by his æsthetic and “diabolic”
-Catholicism to Chateaubriand; and the religiosity of Chateaubriand
-itself derives from the religiosity of Rousseau.
-
-Hitherto I have been studying for the most part only one main type of
-modern melancholy. This type even in a Chateaubriand or a Byron and
-still more in their innumerable followers may seem at once superficial
-and theatrical. It often does not get beyond that Epicurean toying with
-sorrow, that luxury of grief, which was not unknown even to classical
-antiquity.[252] The despair of Chateaubriand is frequently only a
-disguise of his love of literary glory, and Chesterton is inclined to
-see in the Byronic gloom an incident of youth and high spirits.[253]
-But this is not the whole story even in Byron and Chateaubriand. To
-find what is both genuine and distinctive in romantic melancholy we
-need to enlarge a little further on the underlying difference between
-the classicist and the Rousseauist. The Rousseauist, as indeed the
-modern man in general, is more preoccupied with his separate and
-private self than the classicist. Modern melancholy has practically
-always this touch of isolation not merely because of the proneness
-of the “genius” to dwell on his own uniqueness, but also because of
-the undermining of the traditional communions by critical analysis.
-The noblest form of the “malady of the age” is surely that which
-supervened upon the loss of religious faith. This is what distinguishes
-the sadness of an Arnold or a Senancour from that of a Gray. The
-“Elegy” belongs to the modern movement by the humanitarian note, the
-sympathetic interest in the lowly, but in its melancholy it does
-not go much beyond the milder forms of classical meditation on the
-inevitable sadness of life--what one may term pensiveness. Like the
-other productions of the so-called graveyard school, it bears a direct
-relation to Milton’s “Il Penseroso.” It is well to retain Gray’s own
-distinction. “Mine is a white Melancholy, or rather Leucocholy for the
-most part,” he wrote to Richard West in 1742, “but there is another
-sort, black indeed, which I have now and then felt.” Gray did not
-experience the more poignant sadness, one may suspect, without some
-loss of the “trembling hope” that is the final note of the “Elegy.” No
-forlornness is greater than that of the man who has known faith and
-then lost it. Renan writes of his own break with the Church:
-
- The fish of Lake Baikal, we are told, have spent thousands
- of years in becoming fresh-water fish after being salt-water
- fish. I had to go through my transition in a few weeks. Like an
- enchanted circle Catholicism embraces the whole of life with so
- much strength that when one is deprived of it everything seems
- insipid. I was terribly lost. The universe produced upon me
- the impression of a cold and arid desert. For the moment that
- Christianity was not the truth, all the rest appeared to me
- indifferent, frivolous, barely worthy of interest. The collapse
- of my life upon itself left in me a feeling of emptiness
- like that which follows an attack of fever or an unhappy
- love-affair.[254]
-
-The forlornness at the loss of faith is curiously combined in many of
-the romanticists with the mood of revolt. This type of romanticist
-heaps reproaches on a God in whose existence he no longer believes
-(as in Leconte de Lisle’s “Quaïn,” itself related to Byron’s “Cain”).
-He shakes his fist at an empty heaven, or like Alfred de Vigny (in
-his _Jardin des Oliviers_) assumes towards this emptiness an attitude
-of proud disdain. He is loath to give up this grandiose defiance of
-divinity if only because it helps to save him from subsiding into
-platitude. A somewhat similar mood appears in the “Satanic” Catholics
-who continue to cling to religion simply because it adds to the gusto
-of sinning.[255] A Barbey succeeded in combining the rôle of Byronic
-Titan with that of champion of the Church. But in general the romantic
-Prometheus spurns the traditional forms of communion whether classical
-or Christian. He is so far as everything established is concerned
-enormously centrifugal, but he hopes to erect on the ruins of the past
-the new religion of human brotherhood. Everything in this movement from
-Shaftesbury down hinges on the rôle that is thus assigned to sympathy:
-if it can really unite men who are at the same time indulging each to
-the utmost his own “genius” or idiosyncrasy there is no reason why one
-should not accept romanticism as a philosophy of life.
-
-But nowhere else perhaps is the clash more violent between the theory
-and the fact. No movement is so profuse in professions of brotherhood
-and none is so filled with the aching sense of solitude. “Behold me
-then alone upon the earth,” is the sentence with which Rousseau begins
-his last book;[256] and he goes on to marvel that he, the “most loving
-of men,” had been forced more and more into solitude. “I am in the
-world as though in a strange planet upon which I have fallen from the
-one that I inhabited.”[257] When no longer subordinated to something
-higher than themselves both the head and the heart (in the romantic
-sense) not only tend to be opposed to one another, but also, each in
-its own way, to isolate. Empedocles was used not only by Arnold but by
-other victims[258] of romantic melancholy, as a symbol of intellectual
-isolation: by his indulgence in the “imperious lonely thinking power”
-Empedocles has broken the warm bonds of sympathy with his fellows:
-
- thou art
- A living man no more, Empedocles!
- Nothing but a devouring flame of thought,--
- But a naked eternally restless mind!
-
-His leaping into Ætna typifies his attempt to escape from his
-loneliness by a fiery union with nature herself.
-
-According to religion one should seek to unite with a something that
-is set above both man and nature, whether this something is called
-God as in Christianity or simply the Law as in various philosophies
-of the Far East.[259] The most severe penalty visited on the man who
-transgresses is that he tends to fall away from this union. This is
-the element of truth in the sentence of Diderot that Rousseau took as
-a personal affront: “Only the wicked man is alone.” Rousseau asserted
-in reply, anticipating Mark Twain,[260] that “on the contrary only
-the good man is alone.” Now in a sense Rousseau is right. “Most men
-are bad,” as one of the seven sages of Greece remarked, and any one
-who sets out to follow a very strenuous virtue is likely to have few
-companions on the way. Rousseau is also right in a sense when he says
-that the wicked man needs to live in society so that he may have
-opportunity to practice his wickedness. Yet Rousseau fails to face the
-main issue: solitude is above all a psychic thing. A man may frequent
-his fellows and suffer none the less acutely, like Poe’s “Man of the
-Crowd,” from a ghastly isolation. And conversely one may be like the
-ancient who said that he was never less alone than when he was alone.
-
-Hawthorne, who was himself a victim of solitude, brooded a great deal
-on this whole problem, especially, as may be seen in the “Scarlet
-Letter” and elsewhere, on the isolating effects of sin. He perceived
-the relation of the problem to the whole trend of religious life in
-New England. The older Puritans had a sense of intimacy with God and
-craved no other companionship. With the weakening of their faith the
-later Puritans lost the sense of a divine companionship, but retained
-their aloofness from men. Hawthorne’s own solution of the problem
-of solitude, so far as he offers any, is humanitarian. Quicken your
-sympathies. Let the man who has taken as his motto _Excelsior_[261]
-be warned. Nothing will console him on the bleak heights either of
-knowledge or of power for the warm contact with the dwellers in the
-valley. Faust, who is a symbol of the solitude of knowledge, seeks to
-escape from his forlornness by recovering this warm contact. That the
-inordinate quest of power also leads to solitude is beyond question.
-Napoleon, the very type of the superman, must in the nature of the case
-have been very solitary.[262] His admirer Nietzsche wrote one day: “I
-have forty-three years behind me and am as alone as if I were a child.”
-Carlyle, whose “hero” derives like the superman from the original
-genius[263] of the eighteenth century, makes the following entry in his
-diary: “My isolation, my feeling of loneliness, unlimitedness (much
-meant by this) what tongue shall say? Alone, alone!”[264]
-
-It cannot be granted, however, that one may escape by love, as the
-Rousseauist understands the word, from the loneliness that arises from
-the unlimited quest either of knowledge or power. For Rousseauistic
-love is also unlimited whether one understands by love either passion
-or a diffusive sympathy for mankind at large. “What solitudes are these
-human bodies,” Musset exclaimed when fresh from his affair with George
-Sand. Wordsworth cultivated a love for the lowly that quite overflowed
-the bounds of neo-classic selection. It is a well-known fact that the
-lowly did not altogether reciprocate. “A desolate-minded man, ye kna,”
-said an old inn-keeper of the Lakes to Canon Rawnsley, “’Twas potry as
-did it.” If Wordsworth writes so poignantly of solitude one may infer
-that it is because he himself had experienced it.[265] Nor would it be
-difficult to show that the very philanthropic Ruskin was at least as
-solitary as Carlyle with his tirades against philanthropy.
-
-I have spoken of the isolating effects of sin, but sin is scarcely the
-right word to apply to most of the romanticists. The solitude of which
-so many of them complain does, however, imply a good deal of spiritual
-inertia. Now to be spiritually inert, as I have said elsewhere, is
-to be temperamental, to indulge unduly the lust for knowledge or
-sensation or power without imposing on these lusts some centre or
-principle of control set above the ordinary self. The man who wishes
-to fly off on the tangent of his own temperament and at the same time
-enjoy communion on any except the purely material level is harboring
-incompatible desires. For temperament is what separates. A sense of
-unlimitedness (“much meant by this” as Carlyle says) and of solitude
-are simply the penalties visited upon the eccentric individualist. If
-we are to unite on the higher levels with other men we must look in
-another direction than the expansive outward striving of temperament:
-we must in either the humanistic or religious sense undergo conversion.
-We must pull back our temperaments with reference to the model that
-we are imitating, just as, in Aristotle’s phrase, one might pull
-back and straighten out a crooked stick.[266] Usually the brake on
-temperament is supplied by the ethos, the convention of one’s age and
-country. I have tried to show elsewhere that the whole programme of
-the eccentric individualist is to get rid of this convention, whatever
-it may be, without developing some new principle of control. The
-eccentric individualist argues that to accept control, to defer to some
-centre as the classicist demands, is to cease to be himself. But are
-restrictions upon temperament so fatal to a man’s being himself? The
-reply hinges upon the definition of the word self, inasmuch as man is
-a dual being. If a man is to escape from his isolation he must, I have
-said, aim at some goal set above his ordinary self which is at the
-same time his unique and separate self. But because this goal is set
-above his ordinary self, it is not therefore necessarily set above his
-total personality. The limitations that he imposes on his ordinary
-self may be the necessary condition of his entering into possession of
-his ethical self, the self that he possesses in common with other men.
-Aristotle says that if a man wishes to achieve happiness he must be a
-true lover of himself. It goes without saying that he means the ethical
-self. The author of a recent book on Ibsen says that Ibsen’s message to
-the world is summed up in the line:
-
- This above all,--to thine own self be true.
-
-It is abundantly plain from the context, however, that Polonius is a
-decayed Aristotelian and not a precursor of Ibsen. The self to which
-Aristotle would have a man be true is at the opposite pole from the
-self that Ibsen and the original geniuses are so eager to get uttered.
-
-To impose the yoke of one’s human self upon one’s temperamental
-self is, in the Aristotelian sense, to work. Aristotle conceives of
-happiness in terms of work. All types of temperamentalists, on the
-other hand, are from the human point of view, passive. The happiness
-that they crave is a passive happiness. A man may pursue power with the
-energy of a Napoleon and yet remain ethically passive. He may absorb
-whole encyclopædias and remain ethically passive. He may expand his
-sympathies until, like Schiller, he is ready to “bestow a kiss upon
-the whole world” and yet remain ethically passive. A man ceases to
-be ethically passive only when he begins to work in the Aristotelian
-sense, that is when he begins to put the brake on temperament and
-impulse, and in the same degree he tends to become ethically efficient.
-By his denial of the dualism of the spirit, Rousseau discredited this
-inner working, so that inwardness has come to seem synonymous with mere
-subjectivity; and to be subjective in the Rousseauistic sense is to be
-diffusive, to lack purpose and concentration, to lose one’s self in a
-shoreless sea of revery.
-
-The utilitarian intervenes at this point and urges the romanticist,
-since he has failed to work inwardly, at least to work outwardly.
-Having missed the happiness of ethical efficiency he may in this way
-find the happiness of material efficiency, and at the same time serve
-the world. This is the solution of the problem of happiness that Goethe
-offers at the end of the Second Faust, and we may affirm without
-hesitation that it is a sham solution. To work outwardly and in the
-utilitarian sense, without the inner working that can alone save from
-ethical anarchy is to stimulate rather than repress the most urgent
-of all the lusts--the lust of power. It is only too plain that the
-unselective sympathy or joy in service with which Goethe would complete
-Faust’s utilitarian activity is not in itself a sufficient counterpoise
-to the will to power, unless indeed we assume with Rousseau that one
-may control expansive impulses by opposing them to one another.
-
-A terrible danger thus lurks in the whole modern programme: it is a
-programme that makes for a formidable mechanical efficiency and so
-tends to bring into an ever closer material contact men who remain
-ethically centrifugal. The reason why the humanitarian and other
-schemes of communion that have been set up during the last century
-have failed is that they do not, like the traditional schemes, set
-any bounds to mere expansiveness, or, if one prefers, they do not
-involve any conversion. And so it is not surprising that the feeling
-of emptiness[267] or unlimitedness and isolation should be the special
-mark of the melancholy of this period. René complains of his “moral
-solitude”;[268] but strictly speaking his solitude is the reverse of
-moral. Only by cultivating his human self and by the unceasing effort
-that this cultivation involves does a man escape from his nightmare of
-separateness and so move in some measure towards happiness. But the
-happiness of which René dreams is unethical--something very private and
-personal and egoistic. Nothing is easier than to draw the line from
-René to Baudelaire and later decadents--for instance to Des Esseintes,
-the hero of Huysmans’s novel “A Rebours,”[269] who is typical of the
-last exaggerations of the movement. Des Esseintes cuts himself off as
-completely as possible from other men and in the artificial paradise
-he has devised gives himself up to the quest of strange and violent
-sensation; but his dream of happiness along egoistic lines turns into
-a nightmare,[270] his palace of art becomes a hell. Lemaître is quite
-justified in saying of Des Esseintes that he is only René or Werther
-brought up to date--“a played-out and broken-down Werther who has
-a malady of the nerves, a deranged stomach and eighty years more of
-literature to the bad.”[271]
-
-Emotional romanticism was headed from the start towards this bankruptcy
-because of its substitution for ethical effort of a mere lazy floating
-on the stream of mood and temperament. I have said that Buddhism
-saw in this ethical indolence the root of all evil. Christianity in
-its great days was preoccupied with the same problem. To make this
-point clear it will be necessary to add to what I have said about
-classical and romantic melancholy a few words about melancholy in the
-Middle Ages. In a celebrated chapter of his “Genius of Christianity”
-(_Le Vague des passions_) Chateaubriand seeks to give to the malady
-of the age Christian and mediæval origins. This was his pretext,
-indeed, for introducing René into an apology for Christianity and so,
-as Sainte-Beuve complained, administering poison in a sacred wafer.
-Chateaubriand begins by saying that the modern man is melancholy
-because, without having had experience himself, he is at the same
-time overwhelmed by the second-hand experience that has been heaped
-up in the books and other records of an advanced civilization; and so
-he suffers from a precocious disillusion; he has the sense of having
-exhausted life before he has enjoyed it. There is nothing specifically
-Christian in this disillusion and above all nothing mediæval. But
-Chateaubriand goes on to say that from the decay of the pagan world
-and the barbarian invasions the human spirit received an impression
-of sadness and possibly a tinge of misanthropy which has never been
-completely effaced. Those that were thus wounded and estranged from
-their fellow-men took refuge formerly in monasteries, but now that
-this resource has failed them, they are left in the world without being
-of it and so they “become the prey of a thousand chimeras.” Then is
-seen the rise of that guilty melancholy which the passions engender
-when, left without definite object, they prey upon themselves in a
-solitary heart.[272]
-
-The _vague des passions_, the expansion of infinite indeterminate
-desire, that Chateaubriand here describes may very well be related to
-certain sides of Christianity--especially to what may be termed its
-neo-Platonic side. Yet Christianity at its best has shown itself a
-genuine religion, in other words, it has dealt sternly and veraciously
-with the facts of human nature. It has perceived clearly how a man may
-move towards happiness and how on the other hand he tends to sink into
-despair; or what amounts to the same thing, it has seen the supreme
-importance of spiritual effort and the supreme danger of spiritual
-sloth. The man who looked on himself as cut off from God and so ceased
-to strive was according to the mediæval Christian the victim of
-_acedia_. This sluggishness and slackness of spirit, this mere drifting
-and abdication of will, may, as Chaucer’s parson suggests, be the crime
-against the Holy Ghost itself. It would in fact not be hard to show
-that what was taken by the Rousseauist to be the badge of spiritual
-distinction was held by the mediæval Christian to be the chief of all
-the deadly sins.
-
-The victim of _acedia_ often looked upon himself, like the victim of
-the malady of the age, as foredoomed. But though the idea of fate
-enters at times into mediæval melancholy, the man of the Middle Ages
-could scarcely so detach himself from the community as to suffer
-from that sense of loneliness which is the main symptom of romantic
-melancholy. This forlornness was due not merely to the abrupt
-disappearance of the older forms of communion, but to the failure of
-the new attempts at communion. When one gets beneath the surface of
-the nineteenth century one finds that it was above all a period of
-violent disillusions, and it is especially after violent disillusion
-that a man feels himself solitary and forlorn. I have said that the
-special mark of the half-educated man is his harboring of incompatible
-desires. The new religions or unifications of life that appeared
-during the nineteenth century made an especially strong appeal to the
-half-educated man because it seemed to him that by accepting some one
-of these he could enjoy the benefits of communion and at the same time
-not have to take on the yoke of any serious discipline; that he could,
-in the language of religion, achieve salvation without conversion. When
-a communion on these lines turns out to be not a reality, but a sham,
-and its disillusioned votary feels solitary and forlorn, he is ready to
-blame everybody and everything except himself.
-
-A few specific illustrations will help us to understand how romantic
-solitude, which was created by the weakening of the traditional
-communions, was enhanced by the collapse of various sham communions.
-Let us return for a moment to that eminent example of romantic
-melancholy and disillusion, Alfred de Vigny. His “Chatterton” deals
-with the fatal misunderstanding of the original genius by other men.
-“Moïse” deals more specifically with the problem of his solitude. The
-genius is so eminent and unique, says Vigny, speaking for himself from
-behind the mask of the Hebrew prophet, that he is quite cut off from
-ordinary folk who feel that they have nothing in common with him.[273]
-This forlornness of the genius is not the sign of some capital error in
-his philosophy. On the contrary it is the sign of his divine election,
-and so Moses blames God for his failure to find happiness.[274] If
-the genius is cut off from communion with men he cannot hope for
-companionship with God because he has grown too sceptical. Heaven is
-empty and in any case dumb; and so in the poem to which I have already
-referred (_Le Mont des Oliviers_) Vigny assumes the mask of Jesus
-himself to express this desolateness, and concludes that the just man
-will oppose a haughty and Stoic disdain to the divine silence.[275]
-
-All that is left for the genius is to retire into his ivory tower--a
-phrase appropriately applied for the first time to Vigny.[276] In the
-ivory tower he can at least commune with nature and the ideal woman.
-But Vigny came at a time when the Arcadian glamour was being dissipated
-from nature. Partly under scientific influence she was coming to seem
-not a benign but a cold and impassive power, a collection of cruel
-and inexorable laws. I have already mentioned this mood that might
-be further illustrated from Taine and so many others towards the
-middle of the nineteenth century.[277] “I am called a ‘mother,’” Vigny
-makes Nature say, “and I am a tomb.”[278] (“La Maison du Berger”);
-and so in the _Maison roulante_, or sort of Arcadia on wheels that he
-has imagined, he must seek his chief solace with the ideal feminine
-companion. But woman herself turns out to be treacherous; and, assuming
-the mask of Samson (“La Colère de Samson”), Vigny utters a solemn
-malediction upon the eternal Delilah (_Et, plus ou moins, la Femme
-est toujours Dalila_). Such is the disillusion that comes from having
-sought an ideal communion in a liaison with a Parisian actress.[279]
-
-Now that every form of communion has failed, all that is left it
-would seem is to die in silence and solitude like the wolf (“La Mort
-du Loup”). Vigny continues to hold, however, like the author of the
-“City of Dreadful Night,” that though men may not meet in their joys,
-they may commune after a fashion in their woe. He opposes to heartless
-nature and her “vain splendors” the religion of pity, “the majesty of
-human sufferings.”[280] Towards the end when Vigny feels the growing
-prestige of science, he holds out the hope that a man may to a certain
-extent escape from the solitude of his own ego into some larger whole
-by contributing his mite to “progress.” But the symbol of this
-communion[281] that he has chosen--that of the shipwrecked and sinking
-mariner who consigns his geographical discoveries to a bottle in the
-hope that it may be washed up on some civilized shore--is itself of a
-singular forlornness.
-
-Vigny has a concentration and power of philosophical reflection that
-is rare among the romanticists. George Sand is inferior to him in
-this respect but she had a richer and more generous nature, and is
-perhaps even more instructive in her life and writings for the student
-of romantic melancholy. After the loss of the religious faith of her
-childhood she became an avowed Rousseauist. She attacks a society
-that seems to her to stand in the way of the happiness of which she
-dreams--the supreme emotional intensity to be achieved in an ideal
-love. In celebrating passion and the rights of passion she is lyrical
-in the two main modes of the Rousseauist--she is either tender and
-elegiac, or else stormy and Titanic. But when she attempts to practice
-with Musset this religion of love, the result is violent disillusion.
-In the forlornness that follows upon the collapse of her sham communion
-she meditates suicide. “Ten years ago,” she wrote in 1845 to Mazzini,
-“I was in Switzerland; I was still in the age of tempests; I made up
-my mind even then to meet you, if I should resist the temptation to
-suicide which pursued me upon the glaciers.” And then gradually a new
-faith dawned upon her; she substituted for the religion of love the
-religion of human brotherhood. She set up as an object of worship
-humanity in its future progress; and then, like so many other dreamers,
-she suffered a violent disillusion in the Revolution of 1848. The
-radiant abstraction she had been worshipping had been put to the test
-and she discovered that there entered into the actual make-up of the
-humanity she had so idealized “a large number of knaves, a very large
-number of lunatics, and an immense number of fools.” What is noteworthy
-in George Sand is that she not only saved the precious principle of
-faith from these repeated shipwrecks but towards the end of her life
-began to put it on a firmer footing. Like Goethe she worked out to some
-extent, in opposition to romanticism, a genuinely ethical point of view.
-
-This latter development can best be studied in her correspondence with
-Flaubert. She urges him to exercise his will, and he replies that he
-is as “fatalistic as a Turk.” His fatalism, however, was not oriental
-but scientific or pseudo-scientific. I have already cited his demand
-that man be studied “objectively” just as one would study “a mastodon
-or a crocodile.” Flaubert refused to see any connection between this
-determinism and his own gloom or between George Sand’s assertion
-of will and her cheerfulness. It was simply, he held, a matter of
-temperament, and there is no doubt some truth in this contention.
-“You at the first leap mount to heaven,” he says, “while I, poor
-devil, am glued to the earth as though by leaden soles.” And again:
-“In spite of your great sphinx eyes you have always seen the world as
-through a golden mist,” whereas “I am constantly dissecting; and when
-I have finally discovered the corruption in anything that is supposed
-to be pure, the gangrene in its fairest parts, then I raise my head
-and laugh.” Yet George Sand’s cheerfulness is also related to her
-perception of a power in man to work upon himself--a power that sets
-him apart from other animals. To enter into this region of ethical
-effort is to escape from the whole fatal circle of naturalism, and at
-the same time to show some capacity to mature--a rare achievement among
-the romanticists. The contrast is striking here between George Sand
-and Hugo, who, as the ripe fruit of his meditations, yields nothing
-better than the apotheosis of Robespierre and Marat. “I wish to see
-man as he is,” she writes to Flaubert. “He is not good or bad: he is
-good and bad. But he is something else besides: being good and bad he
-has an inner force which leads him to be very bad and a little good,
-or very good and a little bad. I have often wondered,” she adds, “why
-your ‘Education Sentimentale’ was so ill received by the public, and
-the reason, as it seems to me, is that its characters are passive--that
-they do not act upon themselves.” But the Titaness of the period of
-“Lélia” can scarcely be said to have acted upon herself, so that she is
-justified in writing: “I cannot forget that my personal victory over
-despair is the work of my will, and of a new way of understanding life
-which is the exact opposite of the one I held formerly.” How different
-is the weary cry of Flaubert: “I am like a piece of clock work, what
-I am doing to-day I shall be doing to-morrow; I did exactly the same
-thing yesterday; I was exactly the same man ten years ago.”
-
-The correspondence of Flaubert and George Sand bears interestingly on
-another of the sham religions of the nineteenth century--the religion
-of art. Art is for Flaubert not merely a religion but a fanaticism. He
-preaches abstinence, renunciation and mortification of the flesh in the
-name of art. He excommunicates those who depart from artistic orthodoxy
-and speaks of heretics and disbelievers in art with a ferocity worthy
-of a Spanish inquisitor. Ethical beauty such as one finds in the
-Greeks at their best resides in order and proportion; it is not a thing
-apart but the outcome of some harmonious whole. Beauty in the purely
-æsthetic and unethical sense that Flaubert gives to the word is little
-more than the pursuit of illusion. The man who thus treats beauty as
-a thing apart, who does not refer back his quest of the exquisite to
-some ethical centre will spend his life Ixion-like embracing phantoms.
-“O Art, Art,” exclaims Flaubert, “bitter deception, nameless phantom,
-which gleams and lures us to our ruin!” He speaks elsewhere of “the
-chimera of style which is wearing him out soul and body.” Attaching as
-he did an almost religious importance to his quest of the exquisite
-he became like so many other Rousseauists not merely æsthetic but
-hyperæsthetic. He complains in his old age: “My sensibility is sharper
-than a razor’s edge; the creaking of a door, the face of a bourgeois,
-an absurd statement set my heart to throbbing and completely upset me.”
-Hardly anywhere else, indeed, will one find such accents of bitterness,
-such melancholy welling up unbidden from the very depths of the heart,
-as in the devotees of art for art’s sake--Flaubert, Leconte de Lisle,
-Théophile Gautier.
-
-George Sand takes Flaubert to task with admirable tact for his failure
-to subordinate art to something higher than itself. “Talent imposes
-duties; and art for art’s sake is an empty word.” As she grew older she
-says she came more and more to put truth above beauty, and goodness
-before strength. “I have reflected a great deal on what is _true_,
-and in this search for truth, the sentiment of my ego has gradually
-disappeared.” The truth on which she had reflected was what she herself
-calls total truth (_le vrai total_), not merely truth according to
-the natural law, which received such exclusive emphasis towards the
-middle of the nineteenth century as to lead to the rise of another
-sham religion--the religion of science. “You have a better sense for
-total truth,” she tells one of her correspondents “than Sainte-Beuve,
-Renan and Littré. They have fallen into the German rut: therein lies
-their weakness.” And Flaubert writes to George Sand: “What amazes and
-delights me is the strength of your whole personality, not that of the
-brain alone.”
-
-Furthermore the holding of the human law that made possible this
-rounded development, this growth towards total truth, was a matter not
-of tradition but of immediate perception. George Sand had succeeded,
-as Taine says, in making the difficult transition from an hereditary
-faith to a personal conviction. Now this perception of the human law is
-something very different from the pantheistic revery in which George
-Sand was also an adept. To look on revery as the equivalent of vision
-in the Aristotelian sense, as Rousseau and so many of his followers
-have done, is to fall into sham spirituality. Maurice de Guérin falls
-into sham spirituality when he exclaims “Oh! this contact of nature
-and the soul would engender an ineffable voluptuousness, a prodigious
-love of heaven and of God.” I am not asserting that George Sand herself
-discriminated sharply between ethical and æsthetic perception or that
-she is to be rated as a very great sage at any time. Yet she owes her
-recovery of serenity after suffering shock upon shock of disillusion to
-her having exercised in some degree what she terms “the contemplative
-sense wherein resides invincible faith” (_le sens contemplatif où
-réside la foi invincible_), and the passages that bear witness to her
-use of this well-nigh obsolete sense are found in her correspondence.
-
-Wordsworth lauds in true Rousseauistic fashion a “wise passiveness.”
-But to be truly contemplative is not to be passive at all, but to be
-“energetic” in Aristotle’s sense, or strenuous in Buddha’s sense. It
-is a matter of no small import that the master analyst of the East and
-the master analyst of the West are at one in their solution of the
-supreme problem of ethics--the problem of happiness. For there can
-be no doubt that the energy[282] in which the doctrine of Aristotle
-culminates is the same as the “strenuousness”[283] on which Buddha puts
-his final emphasis. The highest good they both agree is a contemplative
-_working_. It is by thus working according to the human law that one
-rises above the naturalistic level. The scientific rationalists of
-the nineteenth century left no place for this true human spontaneity
-when they sought to subject man entirely to the “law for thing.” This
-scientific determinism was responsible for a great deal of spiritual
-depression and _acedia_, especially in France during the second half
-of the nineteenth century.[284] But even if science is less dogmatic
-and absolute one needs to consider why it does not deserve to be given
-the supreme and central place in life, why it cannot in short take the
-place of humanism and religion, and the working according to the human
-law that they both enjoin.
-
-A man may indeed effect through science a certain escape from himself,
-and this is very salutary so far as it goes; he has to discipline
-himself to an order that is quite independent of his own fancies and
-emotions. He becomes objective in short, but objective according to
-the natural and not according to the human law. Objectivity of this
-kind gives control over natural forces but it does not supply the
-purpose for which these forces are to be used. It gives the airship,
-for instance, but does not determine whether the airship is to go on
-some beneficent errand or is to scatter bombs on women and children.
-Science does not even set right limits to the faculty that it chiefly
-exercises--the intellect. In itself it stimulates rather than curbs one
-of the three main lusts to which human nature is subject--the lust of
-knowledge. Renan, who makes a religion of science, speaks of “sacred
-curiosity.” But this is even more dangerous than the opposite excess
-of the ascetic Christian who denounces all curiosity as vain. The man
-of science avers indeed that he does subordinate his knowledge to an
-adequate aim, namely the progress of humanity. But the humanity of the
-Baconian is only an intellectual abstraction just as the humanity of
-the Rousseauist is only an emotional dream. George Sand found, as we
-have seen, that the passage from one’s dream of humanity to humanity
-in the concrete involved a certain disillusion. The scientific or
-rationalistic humanitarian is subject to similar disillusions.[285]
-Science not only fails to set proper limits to the activity of the
-intellect, but one must also note a curious paradox in its relation
-to the second of the main lusts to which man is subject, the lust
-for emotion (_libido sentiendi_). The prime virtue of science is to
-be unemotional and at the same time keenly analytical. Now protracted
-and unemotional analysis finally creates a desire, as Renan says, for
-the opposite pole, “the kisses of the naïve being,” and in general
-for a frank surrender to the emotions. Science thus actually prepares
-clients for the Rousseauist.[286] The man of science is also flattered
-by the Rousseauistic notion that conscience and virtue are themselves
-only forms of emotion. He is thus saved from anything so distasteful as
-having to subordinate his own scientific discipline to some superior
-religious or humanistic discipline. He often oscillates between the
-rationalistic and the emotional pole not only in other things but also
-in his cult of humanity. But if conscience is merely an emotion there
-is a cult that makes a more potent appeal to conscience than the cult
-of humanity itself and that is the cult of country. One is here at the
-root of the most dangerous of all the sham religions of the modern
-age--the religion of country, the frenzied nationalism that is now
-threatening to make an end of civilization itself.
-
-Both emotional nationalism and emotional internationalism go
-back to Rousseau, but in his final emphasis he is an emotional
-nationalist;[287] and that is because he saw that patriotic “virtue” is
-a more potent intoxicant than the love of humanity. The demonstration
-came in the French Revolution which began as a great international
-movement on emotional lines and ended in imperialism and Napoleon
-Bonaparte. It is here that the terrible peril of a science that is
-pursued as an end in itself becomes manifest. It disciplines man and
-makes him efficient on the naturalistic level, but leaves him ethically
-undisciplined. Now in the absence of ethical discipline the lust
-for knowledge and the lust for feeling count very little, at least
-practically, compared with the third main lust of human nature--the
-lust for power. Hence the emergence of that most sinister of all types,
-the efficient megalomaniac. The final use of a science that has thus
-become a tool of the lust for power is in Burke’s phrase to “improve
-the mystery of murder.”
-
-This union of material efficiency and ethical unrestraint, though
-in a way the upshot of the whole movement we have been studying, is
-especially marked in the modern German. Goethe as I have pointed
-out is ready to pardon Faust for grave violations of the moral law
-because of work which, so far from being ethical, is, in view of the
-ruin in which it involves the rustic pair, Baucis and Philemon, under
-suspicion of being positively unethical. Yet Goethe was far from being
-a pure utilitarian and he had reacted more than most Germans of his
-time from Rousseauism. Rousseau is glorified by Germans as a chief
-source of their _Kultur_, as I have already pointed out. Now _Kultur_
-when analyzed breaks up into two very different things--scientific
-efficiency and emotionalism or what the Germans (and unfortunately not
-the Germans alone) term “idealism.” There is no question about the
-relation of this idealism to the stream of tendency of which Rousseau
-is the chief representative. By his corruption of conscience Rousseau
-made it possible to identify character with temperament. It was easy
-for Fichte and others to take the next step and identify national
-character with national temperament. The Germans according to Fichte
-are all beautiful souls, the elect of nature. If they have no special
-word for character it is because to be a German and have character are
-synonymous. Character is something that gushes up from the primordial
-depths of the German’s being without any conscious effort on his
-part.[288] The members of a whole national group may thus flatter one
-another and inbreed their national “genius” in the romantic sense, and
-feel all the while that they are ecstatic “idealists”; yet as a result
-of the failure to refer their genius back to some ethical centre, to
-work, in other words, according to the human law, they may, so far as
-the members of other national groups are concerned, remain in a state
-of moral solitude.
-
-Everything thus hinges on the meaning of the word work. In the abstract
-and metaphysical sense man can know nothing of unity. He may, however,
-by working in the human sense, by imposing, that is, due limits on his
-expansive desires, close up in some measure the gap in his own nature
-(the “civil war in the cave”) and so tend to become inwardly one. He
-may hope in the same way to escape from the solitude of his own ego,
-for the inner unity that he achieves through work is only an entering
-into possession of his ethical self, the self that he possesses in
-common with other men. Thus to work ethically is not only to become
-more unified and happy but also to move away from what is less
-permanent towards what is more permanent and therefore more peaceful
-in his total nature; so that the problem of happiness and the problem
-of peace turn out at last to be inseparable.
-
-Souls, says Emerson, never meet; and it is true that a man never quite
-escapes from his solitude. That does not make the choice of direction
-any the less important. An infinite beckons to him on either hand. The
-one inspires the divine discontent, the other romantic restlessness.
-If instead of following the romantic lure he heeds the call from the
-opposite direction, he will not indeed attain to any perfect communion
-but he will be less solitary. Strictly speaking a man is never happy in
-the sense of being completely satisfied with the passing moment,[289]
-or never, Dr. Johnson would add, except when he is drunk. The happiness
-of the sober and waking man resides, it may be, not in his content with
-the present moment but in the very effort that marks his passage from a
-lower to a higher ethical level.
-
-The happiness of which Rousseau dreamed, it has been made plain, was
-not this active and ethical happiness, but rather the passive enjoyment
-of the beautiful moment--the moment that he would like to have last
-forever. After seeking for the beautiful moment in the intoxication of
-love, he turned as we have seen to pantheistic revery. “As long as it
-lasts,” he says of a moment of this kind, “one is self-sufficing like
-God.” Yes, but it does not last, and when he wakes from his dream of
-communion with nature, he is still solitary, still the prisoner of
-his ego. The pantheistic dreamer is passive in every sense. He is not
-working either according to the human or according to the natural law,
-and so is not gaining either in material or in ethical efficiency.
-In a world such as that in which we live this seems too much like
-picnicking on a battlefield. Rousseau could on occasion speak shrewdly
-on this point. He wrote to a youthful enthusiast who wished to come
-and live with him at Montmorency: “The first bit of advice I should
-like to give you is not to indulge in the taste you say you have for
-the contemplative life and which is only an indolence of the spirit
-reprehensible at every age and especially at yours. Man is not made to
-meditate but to act.”
-
-The contemplative life is then, according to Rousseau, the opposite
-of action. But to contemplate is according to an Aristotle or a
-Buddha to engage in the most important form of action, the form that
-leads to happiness. To identify leisure and the contemplative life
-with pantheistic revery, as Rousseau does, is to fall into one of
-the most vicious of confusions. Perhaps indeed the most important
-contrast one can reach in a subject of this kind is that between a
-wise strenuousness and a more or less wise passiveness, between the
-spiritual athlete and the cosmic loafer, between a Saint Paul, let us
-say, and a Walt Whitman.
-
-The spiritual idling and drifting of the Rousseauist would be less
-sinister if it did not coexist in the world of to-day with an intense
-material activity. The man who seeks happiness by work according to the
-natural law is to be rated higher than the man who seeks happiness in
-some form of emotional intoxication (including pantheistic revery).
-He is not left unarmed, a helpless dreamer in the battle of life. The
-type of efficiency he is acquiring also helps him to keep at bay man’s
-great enemy, ennui. An Edison, we may suppose, who is drawn ever onward
-by the lure of wonder and curiosity and power, has little time to be
-bored. It is surely better to escape from the boredom of life after the
-fashion of Edison than after the fashion of Baudelaire.[290]
-
-I have already pointed out, however, the peril in a one-sided working
-of this kind. It makes man efficient without making him ethical. It
-stimulates rather than corrects a fearless, formless expansion on the
-human level. This inordinate reaching out beyond bounds is, as the
-great Greek poets saw with such clearness, an invitation to Nemesis.
-The misery that results from unrestraint, from failure to work
-according to the human law, is something different from mere pain and
-far more to be dreaded; just as the happiness that results from a right
-working according to the human law is something different from mere
-pleasure and far more worthy of pursuit.
-
-The present alliance between emotional romanticists and
-utilitarians[291] is a veritable menace to civilization itself. It
-does not follow, as I said in a previous chapter, because revery or
-“intuition of the creative flux” cannot take the place of leisure or
-meditation, that one must therefore condemn it utterly. It may like
-other forms of romanticism have a place on the recreative side of
-life. What finally counts is work according to either the human or
-the natural law, but man cannot always be working. He needs moments
-of relief from tension and concentration and even, it should seem, of
-semi-oblivion of his conscious self. As one of the ways of winning such
-moments of relaxation and partial forgetfulness much may be said for
-revery. In general one must grant the solace and rich source of poetry
-that is found in communion with nature even though the final emphasis
-be put on communion with man. It is no small thing to be, as Arnold
-says Wordsworth was, a “priest of the wonder and bloom of the world.”
-One cannot however grant the Wordsworthian that to be a priest of
-wonder is necessarily to be also a priest of wisdom. Thus to promote to
-the supreme and central place something that is legitimate in its own
-degree, but secondary, is to risk starting a sham religion.
-
-Those who have sought to set up a cult of love or beauty or science or
-humanity or country are open to the same objections as the votaries
-of nature. However important each of these things may be in its own
-place, it cannot properly be put in the supreme and central place for
-the simple reason that it does not involve any adequate conversion
-or discipline of man’s ordinary self to some ethical centre. I have
-tried to show that the sense of solitude or forlornness that is so
-striking a feature of romantic melancholy arises not only from a loss
-of hold on the traditional centres, but also from the failure of
-these new attempts at communion to keep their promises. The number of
-discomfitures of this kind in the period that has elapsed since the
-late eighteenth century, suggests that this period was even more than
-most periods an age of sophistry. Every age has had its false teachers,
-but possibly no age ever had so many dubious moralists as this, an
-incomparable series of false prophets from Rousseau himself down to
-Nietzsche and Tolstoy. It remains to sum up in a closing chapter the
-results of my whole inquiry and at the same time to discuss somewhat
-more specifically the bearing of my whole point of view, especially the
-idea of work according to the human law, upon the present situation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE PRESENT OUTLOOK
-
-
-It has been my endeavor throughout this book to show that classic and
-romantic art, though both at their best highly imaginative, differ in
-the quality of the imagination. I pointed out in my first chapter that
-in his recoil from the intellectual romanticism of the Renaissance
-and the mediæval romanticism of actual adventure the neo-classicist
-came to rest his literary faith on “reason” (by which he meant either
-ordinary good sense or abstract reasoning), and then opposed this
-reason or judgment to imagination. This supposed opposition between
-reason and imagination was accepted by the romantic rebels against
-neo-classicism and has been an endless source of confusion to the
-present day. Though both neo-classicists and romanticists achieved much
-admirable work, work which is likely to have a permanent appeal, it
-is surely no small matter that they both failed on the whole to deal
-adequately with the imagination and its rôle whether in literature
-or life. Thus Dryden attributes the immortality of the Æneid to its
-being “a well-weighed judicious poem. Whereas poems which are produced
-by the vigor of imagination only have a gloss upon them at the first
-which time wears off, the works of judgment are like the diamond; the
-more they are polished, the more lustre they receive.”[292] Read on
-and you will find that Dryden thus stresses judgment by way of protest
-against the Cavalier Marini and the imaginative unrestraint that he
-and other intellectual romanticists display. Dryden thus obscures the
-fact that what gives the immortalizing touch to the Æneid is not mere
-judgment but imagination--a certain quality of imagination. Even the
-reader who is to enter properly into the spirit of Virgil needs more
-than judgment--he needs to possess in some measure the same quality
-of imagination. The romantic answer to the neo-classic distrust of
-the imagination was the apotheosis of the imagination, but without
-sufficient discrimination as to its quality, and this led only too
-often to an anarchy of the imagination--an anarchy associated, as we
-have seen, in the case of the Rousseauist, with emotion rather than
-with thought or action.
-
-The modern world has thus tended to oscillate between extremes in its
-attitude towards the imagination, so that we still have to turn to
-ancient Greece for the best examples of works in which the imagination
-is at once disciplined and supreme. Aristotle, I pointed out, is doing
-little more than give an account of this Greek practice when he says
-that the poet ranks higher than the historian because he achieves a
-more general truth, but that he can achieve this more general truth
-only by being a master of illusion. Art in which the illusion is not
-disciplined to the higher reality counts at best on the recreative
-side of life. “Imagination,” says Poe, “feeling herself for once
-unshackled, roamed at will among the ever-changing wonders of a shadowy
-and unstable land.”[293] To take seriously the creations of this type
-of imagination is to be on the way towards madness. Every madhouse,
-indeed, has inmates who are very imaginative in the fashion Poe here
-describes. We must not confuse the concentric or ethical with the
-eccentric imagination if we are to define rightly the terms classic
-and romantic or indeed to attain to sound criticism at all. My whole
-aim has been to show that a main stream of emotional sophistry that
-takes its rise in the eighteenth century and flows down through the
-nineteenth involves just such a confusion.
-
-The general distinction between the two types of imagination would seem
-sufficiently clear. To apply the distinction concretely is, it must be
-admitted, a task infinitely difficult and delicate, a task that calls
-for the utmost degree of the _esprit de finesse_. In any particular
-case there enters an element of vital novelty. The relation of this
-vital novelty to the ethical or permanent element in life is something
-that cannot be determined by any process of abstract reasoning or by
-any rule of thumb; it is a matter of immediate perception. The art of
-the critic is thus hedged about with peculiar difficulties. It does not
-follow that Aristotle himself because he has laid down sound principles
-in his Poetics, would always have been right in applying them. Our
-evidence on this point is as a matter of fact somewhat scanty.
-
-Having thus admitted the difficulty of the undertaking we may ourselves
-attempt a few concrete illustrations of how sound critical standards
-tended to suffer in connection with the romantic movement. Leaving
-aside for the moment certain larger aspects of the ethical imagination
-that I am going to discuss presently, let us confine ourselves to
-poetry. Inasmuch as the ethical imagination does not in itself give
-poetry but wisdom, various cases may evidently arise: a man may be wise
-without being poetical; he may be poetical without being wise; he may
-be both wise and poetical.
-
-We may take as an example of the person who was wise without being
-poetical Dr. Johnson. Though most persons would grant that Dr. Johnson
-was not poetical, it is well to remember that this generalization has
-only the approximate truth that a literary generalization can have. The
-lines on Levet have been inserted and rightly in anthologies. If not on
-the whole poetical, Johnson was, as Boswell says, eminently fitted to
-be a “majestic teacher of moral and religious wisdom.” Few men have had
-a firmer grasp on the moral law or been freer from the various forms of
-sophistry that tend to obscure it. Unlike Socrates, however, of whom he
-reminds us at times by his ethical realism, Johnson rests his insight
-not on a positive but on a traditional basis. To say that Johnson
-was truly religious is only another way of saying that he was truly
-humble, and one of the reasons for his humility was his perception
-of the ease with which illusion in man passes over into delusion,
-and even into madness. His chapter on the “Dangerous Prevalence of
-Imagination” in “Rasselas” not only gives the key to that work but to
-much else in his writings. What he opposes to this dangerous prevalence
-of imagination is not a different type of imagination but the usual
-neo-classical reason or judgment or “sober probability.” His defence
-of wisdom against the gathering naturalistic sophistries of his time
-is therefore somewhat lacking in imaginative prestige. He seemed to
-be opposing innovation on purely formalistic and traditional grounds
-in an age which was more and more resolutely untraditional and which
-was determined above all to emancipate the imagination from its
-strait-jacket of formalism. Keats would not have hesitated to rank
-Johnson among those who “blasphemed the bright Lyrist to his face.”
-
-Keats himself may serve as a type of the new imaginative spontaneity
-and of the new fullness and freshness of sensuous perception. If
-Johnson is wise without being poetical, Keats is poetical without being
-wise, and here again we need to remember that distinctions of this
-kind are only approximately true. Keats has written lines that have
-high seriousness. He has written other lines which without being wise
-seem to lay claim to wisdom--notably the lines in which, following
-Shaftesbury and other æsthetes, he identifies truth and beauty; an
-identification that was disproved for practical purposes at least as
-far back as the Trojan War. Helen was beautiful, but was neither good
-nor true. In general, however, Keats’s poetry is not sophistical. It
-is simply delightfully recreative. There are signs that Keats himself
-would not have been content in the long run with a purely recreative
-rôle--to be “the idle singer of an empty day.” Whether he would ever
-have achieved genuine ethical purpose is a question. In working out a
-wise view of life he did not, like Dante, have the support of a great
-and generally accepted tradition. It is not certain again that he would
-ever have developed the critical keenness that enabled a Sophocles to
-work out a wise view of life in a less traditional age than that of
-Dante. The evidence is rather that Keats would have succumbed, to his
-own poetical detriment, to some of the forms of sham wisdom current in
-his day, especially the new humanitarian evangel.[294]
-
-In any case we may contrast Sophocles and Dante with Keats as examples
-of poets who were not merely poetical but wise--wise in the relative
-and imperfect sense in which it is vouchsafed to mortals to achieve
-wisdom. Sophocles and Dante are not perhaps more poetical than
-Keats--it is not easy to be more poetical than Keats. As Tennyson says,
-“there is something magic and of the innermost soul of poetry in almost
-everything he wrote.” Yet Sophocles and Dante are not only superior
-to Keats, but in virtue of the presence of the ethical imagination in
-their work, superior not merely in degree but in kind. Not that even
-Sophocles and Dante maintain themselves uniformly on the level of
-the ethical imagination. There are passages in Dante which are less
-imaginative than theological. Passages of this kind are even more
-numerous in Milton, a poet who on the whole is highly serious.[295] It
-is in general easy to be didactic, hard to achieve ethical insight.
-
-If Keats is highly imaginative and poetic without on the whole rising
-to high seriousness or sinking to sophistry, Shelley, on the other
-hand, illustrates in his imaginative activity the confusion of values
-that was so fostered by romanticism. Here again I do not wish to be too
-absolute. Shelley has passages especially in his “Adonais” that are
-on a high level. Yet nothing is more certain than that the quality of
-his imagination is on the whole not ethical but Arcadian or pastoral.
-In the name of his Arcadia conceived as the “ideal” he refuses to
-face the facts of life. I have already spoken of the flimsiness of his
-“Prometheus Unbound” as a solution of the problem of evil. What is
-found in this play is the exact opposite of imaginative concentration
-on the human law. The imagination wanders irresponsibly in a region
-quite outside of normal human experience. We are hindered from enjoying
-the gorgeous iridescences of Shelley’s cloudland by Shelley’s own
-evident conviction that it is not a cloudland, an “intense inane,” but
-a true empyrean of the spirit. And our irritation at Shelley’s own
-confusion is further increased by the long train of his indiscreet
-admirers. Thus Professor C.H. Herford writes in the “Cambridge History
-of English Literature” that what Shelley has done in the “Prometheus
-Unbound,” is to give “magnificent expression to the faith of Plato and
-of Christ”![296] Such a statement in such a place is a veritable danger
-signal, an indication of some grave spiritual bewilderment in the
-present age. To show the inanity of these attempts to make a wise man
-of Shelley it is enough to compare him not with Plato and Christ, but
-with the poet whom he set out at once to continue and contradict--with
-Æschylus. The “Prometheus Bound” has the informing ethical imagination
-that the “Prometheus Unbound” lacks, and so in its total structure
-belongs to an entirely different order of art. Shelley, indeed, has
-admirable details. The romanticism of nympholeptic longing may almost
-be said to culminate, at least in England, in the passage I have
-already cited (“My soul is an enchanted boat”). There is no reason why
-in recreative moods one should not imagine one’s soul an enchanted
-boat and float away in a musical rapture with the ideal dream companion
-towards Arcady. But to suppose that revery of this kind has anything to
-do with the faith of Plato and of Christ, is to fall from illusion into
-dangerous delusion.
-
-We may doubt whether if Shelley had lived longer he would ever have
-risen above emotional sophistry and become more ethical in the quality
-of his imagination. Such a progress from emotional sophistry to ethical
-insight we actually find in Goethe; and this is the last and most
-complex case we have to consider. Johnson, I have said, is wise without
-being poetical and Keats poetical without being wise; Sophocles is
-both poetical and wise, whereas Shelley is poetical, but with a taint
-of sophistry or sham wisdom. No such clear-cut generalization can be
-ventured about Goethe. I have already quoted Goethe’s own judgment
-on his “Werther” as weakness seeking to give itself the prestige of
-strength, and perhaps it would be possible to instance from his early
-writings even worse examples of a morbid emotionalism (e.g. “Stella”).
-How about “Faust” itself? Most Germans will simply dismiss such a
-question as profane. With Hermann Grimm they are ready to pronounce
-“Faust” the greatest work of the greatest poet of all times, and of
-all peoples. Yet it is not easy to overlook the sophistical element
-in both parts of “Faust.” I have already commented on those passages
-that would seem especially sophistical: the passage in which the devil
-is defined as the spirit that always says no strikes at the very root
-of any proper distinction between good and evil. The passage again in
-which Faust breaks down all precise discrimination in favor of mere
-emotional intoxication is an extreme example of the Rousseauistic
-art of “making madness beautiful.” The very conclusion of the whole
-poem, with its setting up of work according to the natural law as a
-substitute for work according to the human law, is an egregious piece
-of sham wisdom. The result of work according to the human law, of
-ethical efficiency in short, is an increasing serenity; and it is not
-clear that Faust is much calmer at the end of the poem than he is at
-the beginning. According to Dr. Santayana he is ready to carry into
-heaven itself his romantic restlessness--his desperate and feverish
-attempts to escape from ennui.[297] Perhaps this is not the whole truth
-even in regard to “Faust”; and still less can we follow Dr. Santayana
-when he seems to discover in the whole work of Goethe only romantic
-restlessness. At the very time when Goethe was infecting others with
-the wild expansiveness of the new movement, he himself was beginning
-to strike out along an entirely different path. He writes in his
-Journal as early as 1778: “A more definite feeling of limitation and
-in consequence of true broadening.” Goethe here glimpses the truth
-that lies at the base of both humanism and religion. He saw that the
-romantic disease was the imaginative and emotional straining towards
-the unlimited (_Hang zum Unbegrenzten_), and in opposition to this
-unrestraint he was never tired of preaching the need of working within
-boundaries. It may be objected that Goethe is in somewhat the same
-case here as Rousseau: that the side of his work which has imaginative
-and emotional driving power and has therefore moved the world is of an
-entirely different order. We may reply that Goethe is at times both
-poetical and wise. Furthermore in his maxims and conversations where
-he does not rise to the poetical level, he displays a higher quality of
-wisdom than Rousseau. At his best he shows an ethical realism worthy
-of Dr. Johnson, though in his attitude towards tradition he is less
-Johnsonian than Socratic. Like Socrates he saw on what terms a break
-with the past may be safely attempted. “Anything that emancipates the
-spirit,” he says, “without a corresponding growth in self-mastery, is
-pernicious.” We may be sure that if the whole modern experiment fails
-it will be because of the neglect of the truth contained in this maxim.
-Goethe also saw that a sound individualism must be rightly imaginative.
-He has occasional hints on the rôle of illusion in literature and life
-that go far beneath the surface.
-
-Though the mature Goethe, then, always stands for salvation by work,
-it is not strictly correct to say that it is work only according
-to the natural law. In Goethe at his best the imagination accepts
-the limitations imposed not merely by the natural, but also by the
-human law. However, we must admit that the humanistic Goethe has had
-few followers either in Germany or elsewhere, whereas innumerable
-persons have escaped from the imaginative unrestraint of the emotional
-romanticist, as Goethe himself likewise did, by the discipline of
-science.
-
-The examples I have chosen should suffice to show how my distinction
-between two main types of imagination--the ethical type that gives
-high seriousness to creative writing and the Arcadian or dalliant
-type that does not raise it above the recreative level--works out in
-practice. Some such distinction is necessary if we are to understand
-the imagination in its relation to the human law. But in order to
-grasp the present situation firmly we need also to consider the
-imagination in its relation to the natural law. I have just said that
-most men have escaped from the imaginative anarchy of the emotional
-romanticist through science. Now the man of science at his best is
-like the humanist at his best, at once highly imaginative and highly
-critical. By this coöperation of imagination and intellect they are
-both enabled to concentrate effectively on the facts, though on facts
-of a very different order. The imagination reaches out and perceives
-likenesses and analogies whereas the power in man that separates
-and discriminates and traces causes and effects tests in turn these
-likenesses and analogies as to their reality: for we can scarcely
-repeat too often that though the imagination gives unity it does not
-give reality. If we were all Aristotles or even Goethes we might
-concentrate imaginatively on both laws, and so be both scientific and
-humanistic: but as a matter of fact the ordinary man’s capacity for
-concentration is limited. After a spell of concentration on either law
-he aspires to what Aristotle calls “relief from tension.” Now the very
-conditions of modern life require an almost tyrannical concentration
-on the natural law. The problems that have been engaging more and more
-the attention of the Occident since the rise of the great Baconian
-movement have been the problems of power and speed and utility. The
-enormous mass of machinery that has been accumulated in the pursuit of
-these ends requires the closest attention and concentration if it is
-to be worked efficiently. At the same time the man of the West is not
-willing to admit that he is growing in power alone, he likes to think
-that he is growing also in wisdom. Only by keeping this situation in
-mind can we hope to understand how emotional romanticism has been
-able to develop into a vast system of sham spirituality. I have said
-that the Rousseauist wants unity without reality. If we are to move
-towards reality, the imagination must be controlled by the power
-of discrimination and the Rousseauist has repudiated this power as
-“false and secondary.” But a unity that lacks reality can scarcely be
-accounted wise. The Baconian, however, accepts this unity gladly. He
-has spent so much energy in working according to the natural law that
-he has no energy left for work according to the human law. By turning
-to the Rousseauist he can get the “relief from tension” that he needs
-and at the same time enjoy the illusion of receiving a vast spiritual
-illumination. Neither Rousseauist nor Baconian carry into the realm
-of the human law the keen analysis that is necessary to distinguish
-between genuine insight and some mere phantasmagoria of the emotions.
-I am speaking especially, of course, of the interplay of Rousseauistic
-and Baconian elements that appear in certain recent philosophies like
-that of Bergson. According to Bergson one becomes spiritual by throwing
-overboard both thought and action, and this is a very convenient notion
-of spirituality for those who wish to devote both thought and action to
-utilitarian and material ends. It is hard to see in Bergson’s intuition
-of the creative flux and perception of real duration anything more
-than the latest form of Rousseau’s transcendental idling. To work with
-something approaching frenzy according to the natural law and to be
-idle according to the human law must be accounted a rather one-sided
-view of life. The price the man of to-day has paid for his increase
-in power is, it should seem, an appalling superficiality in dealing
-with the law of his own nature. What brings together Baconian and
-Rousseauist in spite of their surface differences is that they are both
-intent on the element of novelty. But if wonder is associated with the
-Many, wisdom is associated with the One. Wisdom and wonder are moving
-not in the same but in opposite directions. The nineteenth century may
-very well prove to have been the most wonderful and the least wise
-of centuries. The men of this period--and I am speaking of course of
-the main drift--were so busy being wonderful that they had no time,
-apparently, to be wise. Yet their extreme absorption in wonder and the
-manifoldness of things can scarcely be commended unless it can be shown
-that happiness also results from all this revelling in the element
-of change. The Rousseauist is not quite consistent on this point. At
-times he bids us boldly set our hearts on the transitory. _Aimez_,
-says Vigny, _ce que jamais on ne verra deux fois_. But the Rousseauist
-strikes perhaps a deeper chord when looking forth on a world of flux he
-utters the anguished exclamation of Leconte de Lisle: _Qu’est-ce que
-tout cela qui n’est pas éternel?_ Even as one swallow, says Aristotle,
-does not make a spring, so no short time is enough to determine whether
-a man deserves to be called happy. The weakness of the romantic pursuit
-of novelty and wonder and in general of the philosophy of the beautiful
-moment--whether the erotic moment[298] or the moment of cosmic
-revery--is that it does not reckon sufficiently with the something
-deep down in the human breast that craves the abiding. To pin one’s
-hope of happiness to the fact that “the world is so full of a number of
-things” is an appropriate sentiment for a “Child’s Garden of Verse.”
-For the adult to maintain an exclusive Bergsonian interest in “the
-perpetual gushing forth of novelties” would seem to betray an inability
-to mature. The effect on a mature observer of an age so entirely turned
-from the One to the Many as that in which we are living must be that of
-a prodigious peripheral richness joined to a great central void.
-
-What leads the man of to-day to work with such energy according to
-the natural law and to be idle according to the human law is his
-intoxication with material success. A consideration that should
-therefore touch him is that in the long run not merely spiritual
-success or happiness, but material prosperity depend on an entirely
-different working. Let me revert here for a moment to my previous
-analysis: to work according to the human law is simply to rein in one’s
-impulses. Now the strongest of all the impulses is the will to power.
-The man who does not rein in his will to power and is at the same time
-very active according to the natural law is in a fair way to become
-an efficient megalomaniac. Efficient megalomania, whether developed
-in individuals of the same group or in whole national groups in their
-relations with one another, must lead sooner or later to war. The
-efficient megalomaniacs will proceed to destroy one another along with
-the material wealth to which they have sacrificed everything else; and
-then the meek, if there are any meek left, will inherit the earth.
-
-“If I am to judge by myself,” said an eighteenth-century Frenchman,
-“man is a stupid animal.” Man is not only a stupid animal in spite
-of his conceit of his own cleverness but we are here at the source
-of his stupidity. The source is the moral indolence that Buddha with
-his almost infallible sagacity defined long ago. In spite of the fact
-that his spiritual and in the long run his material success hinge on
-his ethical effort, man persists in dodging this effort, in seeking to
-follow the line of least or lesser resistance. An energetic material
-working does not mend but aggravate the failure to work ethically and
-is therefore especially stupid. Just this combination has in fact led
-to the crowning stupidity of the ages--the Great War. No more delirious
-spectacle has ever been witnessed than that of hundreds of millions
-of human beings using a vast machinery of scientific efficiency to
-turn life into a hell for one another. It is hard to avoid concluding
-that we are living in a world that has gone wrong on first principles,
-a world that, in spite of all the warnings of the past, has allowed
-itself to be caught once more in the terrible naturalistic trap. The
-dissolution of civilization with which we are threatened is likely to
-be worse in some respects than that of Greece or Rome in view of the
-success that has been attained in “perfecting the mystery of murder.”
-Various traditional agencies are indeed still doing much to chain
-up the beast in man. Of these the chief is no doubt the Church. But
-the leadership of the Occident is no longer here. The leaders have
-succumbed in greater or less degree to naturalism[299] and so have been
-tampering with the moral law. That the brutal imperialist who brooks
-no obstacle to his lust for dominion has been tampering with this law
-goes without saying; but the humanitarian, all adrip with brotherhood
-and profoundly convinced of the loveliness of his own soul, has been
-tampering with it also, and in a more dangerous way for the very
-reason that it is less obvious. This tampering with the moral law, or
-what amounts to the same thing, this overriding of the veto power in
-man, has been largely a result, though not a necessary result, of the
-rupture with the traditional forms of wisdom. The Baconian naturalist
-repudiated the past because he wished to be more positive and critical,
-to plant himself upon the facts. Yet the veto power is itself a
-fact,--the weightiest with which man has to reckon. The Rousseauistic
-naturalist threw off traditional control because he wished to be more
-imaginative. Yet without the veto power the imagination falls into
-sheer anarchy. Both Baconian and Rousseauist were very impatient of
-any outer authority that seemed to stand between them and their own
-perceptions. Yet the veto power is nothing abstract, nothing that one
-needs to take on hearsay, but is very immediate. The naturalistic
-leaders may be proved wrong without going beyond their own principles,
-and their wrongness is of a kind to wreck civilization.
-
-I have no quarrel, it is scarcely necessary to add, either with the man
-of science or the romanticist when they keep in their proper place.
-As soon however as they try, whether separately or in unison, to set
-up some substitute for humanism or religion, they should be at once
-attacked, the man of science for not being sufficiently positive and
-critical, the romanticist for not being rightly imaginative.
-
-This brings us back to the problem of the ethical imagination--the
-imagination that has accepted the veto power--which I promised a
-moment ago to treat in its larger aspects. This problem is indeed
-in a peculiar sense the problem of civilization itself. A curious
-circumstance should be noted here: a civilization that rests on dogma
-and outer authority cannot afford to face the whole truth about the
-imagination and its rôle. A civilization in which dogma and outer
-authority have been undermined by the critical spirit, not only can
-but must do this very thing if it is to continue at all. Man, a being
-ever changing and living in a world of change, is, as I said at the
-outset, cut off from immediate access to anything abiding and therefore
-worthy to be called real, and condemned to live in an element of
-fiction or illusion. Yet civilization must rest on the recognition
-of something abiding. It follows that the truths on the survival of
-which civilization depends cannot be conveyed to man directly but
-only through imaginative symbols. It seems hard, however, for man to
-analyze critically this disability under which he labors, and, facing
-courageously the results of his analysis, to submit his imagination
-to the necessary control. He consents to limit his expansive desires
-only when the truths that are symbolically true are presented to him as
-literally true. The salutary check upon his imagination is thus won at
-the expense of the critical spirit. The pure gold of faith needs, it
-should seem, if it is to gain currency, to be alloyed with credulity.
-But the civilization that results from humanistic or religious control
-tends to produce the critical spirit. Sooner or later some Voltaire
-utters his fatal message:
-
- _Les prêtres ne sont pas ce qu’un vain peuple pense;_
- _Nôtre crédulité fait toute leur science._
-
-The emancipation from credulous belief leads to an anarchic
-individualism that tends in turn to destroy civilization. There is some
-evidence in the past that it is not quite necessary to run through this
-cycle. Buddha, for example, was very critical; he had a sense of the
-flux and evanescence of all things and so of universal illusion keener
-by far than that of Anatole France; at the same time he had ethical
-standards even sterner than those of Dr. Johnson. This is a combination
-that the Occident has rarely seen and that it perhaps needs to see. At
-the very end of his life Buddha uttered words that deserve to be the
-Magna Charta of the true individualist: “Therefore, O Ananda, be ye
-lamps unto yourselves. Be ye refuges unto yourselves. Look to no outer
-refuge. Hold fast as a refuge unto the Law (_Dhamma_).”[300] A man may
-safely go into himself if what he finds there is not, like Rousseau,
-his own emotions, but like Buddha, the law of righteousness.
-
-Men were induced to follow Rousseau in his surrender to the emotions,
-it will be remembered, because that seemed the only alternative to a
-hard and dry rationalism. The rationalists of the Enlightenment were
-for the most part Cartesians, but Kant himself is in his main trend a
-rationalist. The epithet critical usually applied to his philosophy is
-therefore a misnomer. For to solve the critical problem--the relation
-between appearance and reality--it is necessary to deal adequately with
-the rôle of the imagination and this Kant has quite failed to do.[301]
-Modern philosophy is in general so unsatisfactory because it has raised
-the critical problem without carrying it through; it is too critical
-to receive wisdom through the traditional channels and not critical
-enough to achieve insight, and so has been losing more and more its
-human relevancy, becoming in the words of one of its recent votaries,
-a “narrow and unfruitful eccentricity.” The professional philosophers
-need to mend their ways and that speedily if the great world is not
-to pass them disdainfully by and leave them to play their mysterious
-little game among themselves. We see one of the most recent groups, the
-new realists, flat on their faces before the man of science--surely an
-undignified attitude for a philosopher. It is possible to look on the
-kind of knowledge that science gives as alone real only by dodging the
-critical problem--the problem as to the trustworthiness of the human
-instrument through which all knowledge is received--and it would be
-easy to show, if this were the place to go into the more technical
-aspects of the question, that the new realists have been doing just
-this--whether through sheer naïveté or metaphysical despair I am unable
-to say. The truly critical observer is unable to discover anything
-real in the absolute sense since everything is mixed with illusion.
-In this absolute sense the man of science must ever be ignorant of
-the reality behind the shows of nature. The new realist is, however,
-justified relatively in thinking that the only thing real in the view
-of life that has prevailed of late has been its working according to
-the natural law and the fruits of this working. The self-deception
-begins when he assumes that there can be no other working. What I have
-myself been opposing to naturalistic excess, such as appears in the
-new realism, is insight; but insight is in itself only a word, and
-unless it can be shown to have its own working and its own fruits,
-entirely different from those of work according to the natural law, the
-positivist at all events will have none of it.
-
-The positivist will not only insist upon fruits, but will rate
-these fruits themselves according to their bearing upon his main
-purpose. Life, says Bergson, can have no purpose in the human sense
-of the word.[302] The positivist will reply to Bergson and to the
-Rousseauistic drifter in general, in the words of Aristotle, that the
-end is the chief thing of all and that the end of ends is happiness. To
-the Baconian who wants work and purpose but according to the natural
-law alone, the complete positivist will reply that happiness cannot be
-shown to result from this one-sided working; that in itself it affords
-no escape from the misery of moral solitude, that we move towards true
-communion and so towards peace and happiness only by work according
-to the human law. Now the more individualistic we are, I have been
-saying, the more we must depend for the apprehension of this law on
-the imagination, the imagination, let me hasten to add, supplemented
-by the intellect. It is not enough to put the brakes on the natural
-man--and that is what work according to the human law means--we must
-do it intelligently. Right knowing must here as elsewhere precede
-right doing. Even a Buddha admitted that at one period in his life
-he had not been intelligent in his self-discipline. I need only to
-amplify here what I have said in a previous chapter about the proper
-use of the “false secondary power” by those who wish to be either
-religious or humanistic in a positive fashion. They will employ their
-analytical faculties, not in building up some abstract system, but in
-discriminating between the actual data of experience with a view to
-happiness, just as the man of science at his best employs the same
-faculties in discriminating between the data of experience with a view
-to power and utility.
-
-I have pointed out another important use of the analytical intellect in
-its relation to the imagination. Since the imagination by itself gives
-unity but does not give reality, it is possible to discover whether a
-unification of life has reality only by subjecting it to the keenest
-analysis. Otherwise what we take to be wisdom may turn out to be only
-an empty dream. To take as wise something that is unreal is to fall
-into sophistry. For a man like Rousseau whose imagination was in its
-ultimate quality not ethical at all but overwhelmingly idyllic to set
-up as an inspired teacher was to become an arch-sophist. Whether or not
-he was sincere in his sophistry is a question which the emotionalist
-is very fond of discussing, but which the sensible person will dismiss
-as somewhat secondary. Sophistry of all kinds always has a powerful
-ally in man’s moral indolence. It is so pleasant to let one’s self go
-and at the same time deem one’s self on the way to wisdom. We need to
-keep in mind the special quality of Rousseau’s sophistry if we wish to
-understand a very extraordinary circumstance during the past century.
-During this period men were moving steadily towards the naturalistic
-level, where the law of cunning and the law of force prevail, and
-at the same time had the illusion--or at least multitudes had the
-illusion--that they were moving towards peace and brotherhood. The
-explanation is found in the endless tricks played upon the uncritical
-and still more upon the half-critical by the Arcadian imagination.
-
-The remedy is not only a more stringent criticism, but, as I have
-tried to make plain in this whole work, in an age of sophistry, like
-the present, criticism itself amounts largely to that art of inductive
-defining which it is the great merit of Socrates, according to
-Aristotle,[303] to have devised and brought to perfection. Sophistry
-flourishes, as Socrates saw, on the confused and ambiguous use of
-general terms; and there is an inexhaustible source of such ambiguities
-and confusions in the very duality of human nature. The word nature
-itself may serve as an illustration. We may take as a closely allied
-example the word progress. Man may progress according to either the
-human or the natural law. Progress according to the natural law has
-been so rapid since the rise of the Baconian movement that it has
-quite captivated man’s imagination and stimulated him to still further
-concentration and effort along naturalistic lines. The very magic
-of the word progress seems to blind him to the failure to progress
-according to the human law. The more a word refers to what is above the
-strictly material level, the more it is subject to the imagination and
-therefore to sophistication. It is not easy to sophisticate the word
-horse, it is only too easy to sophisticate the word justice. One may
-affirm, indeed, not only that man is governed by his imagination but
-that in all that belongs to his own special domain _the imagination
-itself is governed by words_.[304]
-
-We should not therefore surrender our imaginations to a general term
-until it has been carefully defined, and to define it carefully we
-need usually to practice upon it what Socrates would call a dichotomy.
-I have just been dichotomizing or “cutting in two” the word progress.
-When the two main types of progress, material and moral, have been
-discriminated in their fruits, the positivist will proceed to rate
-these fruits according to their relevancy to his main goal--the goal
-of happiness. The person who is thus fortified by a Socratic dialectic
-will be less ready to surrender his imagination to the first sophist
-who urges him to be “progressive.” He will wish to make sure first that
-he is not progressing towards the edge of a precipice.
-
-Rousseau would have us get rid of analysis in favor of the “heart.”
-No small part of my endeavor in this work and elsewhere has been to
-show the different meanings that may attach to the term heart (and the
-closely allied terms “soul” and “intuition”)--meanings that are a world
-apart, when tested by their fruits. Heart may refer to outer perception
-and the emotional self or to inner perception and the ethical self. The
-heart of Pascal is not the heart of Rousseau. With this distinction
-once obliterated the way is open for the Rousseauistic corruption of
-such words as virtue and conscience, and this is to fling wide the door
-to every manner of confusion. The whole vocabulary that is properly
-applicable only to the supersensuous realm is then transferred to the
-region of the subrational. The impulsive self proceeds to cover its
-nakedness with all these fair phrases as it would with a garment. A
-recent student of war-time psychology asks: “Is it that the natural
-man in us has been masquerading as the spiritual man by hiding himself
-under splendid words--courage, patriotism, justice--and now he rises up
-and glares at us with blood-red eyes?” That is precisely what has been
-happening.
-
-But after all the heart in any sense of the word is controlled by
-the imagination, so that a still more fundamental dichotomy, perhaps
-the most fundamental of all, is that of the imagination itself. We
-have seen how often the Arcadian dreaming of the emotional naturalist
-has been labelled the “ideal.” Our views of this type of imagination
-will therefore determine our views of much that now passes current
-as idealism. Now the term idealist may have a sound meaning: it may
-designate the man who is realistic according to the human law. But
-to be an idealist in Shelley’s sense or that of innumerable other
-Rousseauists is to fall into sheer unreality. This type of idealist
-shrinks from the sharp discriminations of the critic: they are like
-the descent of a douche of ice-water upon his hot illusions. But it
-is pleasanter, after all, to be awakened by a douche of ice-water
-than by an explosion of dynamite under the bed; and that has been the
-frequent fate of the romantic idealist. It is scarcely safe to neglect
-any important aspect of reality in favor of one’s private dream, even
-if this dream be dubbed the ideal. The aspect of reality that one is
-seeking to exclude finally comes crashing through the walls of the
-ivory tower and abolishes the dream and at times the dreamer.
-
-The transformation of the Arcadian dreamer into the Utopist is a
-veritable menace to civilization. The ends that the Utopist proposes
-are often in themselves desirable and the evils that he denounces are
-real. But when we come to scrutinize critically his means, what we
-find is not a firm grip on the ascertained facts of human nature but
-what Bagehot calls the feeble idealities of the romantic imagination.
-Moreover various Utopists may come together as to what they wish to
-destroy, which is likely to include the whole existing social order;
-but what they wish to erect on the ruins of this order will be found
-to be not only in dreamland, but in different dreamlands. For with the
-elimination of the veto power from personality--the only power that can
-pull men back to some common centre--the ideal will amount to little
-more than the projection of this or that man’s temperament upon the
-void. In a purely temperamental world an affirmative reply may be given
-to the question of Euryalus in Virgil: “Is each man’s God but his own
-fell desire?” (_An sua cuique deus fit dira cupido?_)
-
-The task of the Socratic critic at the present time is, then, seen
-to consist largely in stripping idealistic disguises from egoism, in
-exposing what I have called sham spirituality. If the word spirituality
-means anything, it must imply, it should seem, some degree of escape
-from the ordinary self, an escape that calls in turn for effort
-according to the human law. Even when he is not an open and avowed
-advocate of a “wise passiveness,” the Rousseauistic idealist is only
-too manifestly not making any such effort--it would interfere with his
-passion for self-expression which is even more deeply rooted in him
-than his passion for saving society. He inclines like Rousseau to
-look upon every constraint[305] whether from within or from without
-as incompatible with liberty. A right definition of liberty is almost
-as important as a right definition of imagination and derives from
-it very directly. Where in our anarchical age will such a definition
-be found, a definition that is at once modern and in accord with the
-psychological facts? “A man has only to declare himself free,” says
-Goethe, “and he will at once feel himself dependent. If he ventures to
-declare himself dependent, he will feel himself free.” In other words
-he is not free to do whatever he pleases unless he wishes to enjoy the
-freedom of the lunatic, but only to adjust himself to the reality of
-either the natural or the human law. A progressive adjustment to the
-human law gives ethical efficiency, and this is the proper corrective
-of material efficiency, and not love alone as the sentimentalist is so
-fond of preaching. Love is another word that cries aloud for Socratic
-treatment.
-
-A liberty that means only emancipation from outer control will result,
-I have tried to show, in the most dangerous form of anarchy--anarchy
-of the imagination. On the degree of our perception of this fact will
-hinge the soundness of our use of another general term--democracy.
-We should beware above all of surrendering our imaginations to this
-word until it has been hedged about on every side with discriminations
-that have behind them all the experience of the past with this form
-of government. Only in this way may the democrat know whether he is
-aiming at anything real or merely dreaming of the golden age. Here as
-elsewhere there are pitfalls manifold for the uncritical enthusiast. A
-democracy that produces in sufficient numbers sound individualists who
-look up imaginatively to standards set above their ordinary selves, may
-well deserve enthusiasm. A democracy, on the other hand, that is not
-rightly imaginative, but is impelled by vague emotional intoxications,
-may mean all kinds of lovely things in dreamland, but in the real world
-it will prove an especially unpleasant way of returning to barbarism.
-It is a bad sign that Rousseau, who is more than any other one person
-the father of radical democracy, is also the first of the great
-anti-intellectualists.
-
-Enough has been said to show the proper rôle of the secondary power
-of analysis that the Rousseauist looks upon with so much disfavor. It
-is the necessary auxiliary of the art of defining that can alone save
-us in an untraditional age from receiving some mere phantasmagoria of
-the intellect or emotions as a radiant idealism. A Socratic dialectic
-of this kind is needed at such a time not only to dissipate sophistry
-but as a positive support to wisdom. I have raised the question in
-my Introduction whether the wisdom that is needed just now should be
-primarily humanistic or religious. The preference I have expressed
-for a positive and critical humanism I wish to be regarded as very
-tentative. In the dark situation that is growing up in the Occident,
-all genuine humanism and religion, whether on a traditional or a
-critical basis, should be welcome. I have pointed out that traditional
-humanism and religion conflict in certain respects, that it is
-difficult to combine the imitation of Horace with the imitation of
-Christ. This problem does not disappear entirely when humanism and
-religion are dealt with critically and is indeed one of the most
-obscure that the thinker has to face. The honest thinker, whatever his
-own preference, must begin by admitting that though religion can get
-along without humanism, humanism cannot get along without religion.
-The reason has been given by Burke in pointing out the radical defect
-of Rousseau: the whole ethical life of man has its root in humility.
-As humility diminishes, conceit or vain imagining rushes in almost
-automatically to take its place. Under these circumstances decorum, the
-supreme virtue of the humanist, is in danger of degenerating into some
-art of going through the motions. Such was only too often the decorum
-of the French drawing-room, and such we are told, has frequently been
-the decorum of the Chinese humanist. Yet the decorum of Confucius
-himself was not only genuine but he has put the case for the humanist
-with his usual shrewdness. “I venture to ask about death,” one of his
-disciples said to him. “While you do not know life,” Confucius replied,
-“how can you know about death?”[306]
-
-The solution of this problem as to the relation between humanism and
-religion, so far as a solution can be found, lies in looking upon them
-both as only different stages in the same path. Humanism should have
-in it an element of religious insight: it is possible to be a humble
-and meditative humanist. The type of the man of the world who is not
-a mere worldling is not only attractive in itself but has actually
-been achieved in the West, though not perhaps very often, from the
-Greeks down. Chinese who should be in a position to know affirm again
-that, alongside many corrupt mandarins, a certain number of true
-Confucians[307] have been scattered through the centuries from the time
-of the sage to the present.
-
-If humanism may be religious, religion may have its humanistic side. I
-have said, following Aristotle, that the law of measure does not apply
-to the religious life, but this saying is not to be understood in an
-absolute sense. Buddha is continually insisting on the middle path in
-the religious life itself. The resulting urbanity in Buddha and his
-early followers in India is perhaps the closest approach that that very
-unhumanistic land has ever made to humanism.
-
-It is right here in this joining of humanism and religion that
-Aristotle, at least the Aristotle that has come down to us, does not
-seem altogether adequate. He fails to bring out sufficiently the
-bond between the meditative or religious life that he describes at
-the end of his “Ethics” and the humanistic life or life of mediation
-to which most of this work is devoted. An eminent French authority
-on Aristotle,[308] complains that this separation of the two lives
-encouraged the ascetic excess of the Middle Ages, the undue spurning
-of the world in favor of mystic contemplation. I am struck rather
-by the danger of leaving the humanistic life without any support in
-religion. In a celebrated passage,[309] Aristotle says that the
-“magnanimous” man or ideal gentleman sees all things including himself
-proportionately: he puts himself neither too high nor too low. And
-this is no doubt true so far as other men are concerned. But does the
-magnanimous man put human nature itself in its proper place? Does he
-feel sufficiently its nothingness and helplessness, its dependence on
-a higher power? No one, indeed, who gets beyond words and outer forms
-would maintain that humility is a Christian monopoly. Pindar is far
-more humble[310] than Aristotle, as humble, one might almost maintain,
-as the austere Christian.
-
-A humanism sufficiently grounded in humility is not only desirable
-at all times but there are reasons for thinking that it would be
-especially desirable to-day. In the first place, it would so far as
-the emotional naturalist is concerned raise a clear-cut issue. The
-naturalist of this type denies rather than corrupts humanism. He is the
-foe of compromise and inclines to identify mediation and mediocrity.
-On the other hand, he corrupts rather than denies religion, turning
-meditation into pantheistic revery and in general setting up a subtle
-parody of what is above the ordinary rational level in terms of the
-subrational. On their own showing Rousseau and his followers are
-extremists,[311] and even more effective perhaps than to attack them
-directly for their sham religion would be to maintain against them that
-thus to violate the law of measure is to cease to be human.
-
-Furthermore, a critical humanism would appear to be the proper
-corrective of the other main forms of naturalistic excess at the
-present time--the one-sided devotion to physical science. What keeps
-the man of science from being himself a humanist is not his science but
-his pseudo-science, and also the secret push for power and prestige
-that he shares with other men. The reasons for putting humanistic
-truth above scientific truth are not metaphysical but very practical:
-the discipline that helps a man to self-mastery is found to have a
-more important bearing on his happiness than the discipline that helps
-him to a mastery of physical nature. If scientific discipline is not
-supplemented by a truly humanistic or religious discipline the result
-is unethical science, and unethical science is perhaps the worst
-monster that has yet been turned loose on the race. Man in spite of
-what I have termed his stupidity, his persistent evasion of the main
-issue, the issue of his own happiness, will awaken sooner or later
-to the fearful evil he has already suffered from a science that has
-arrogated to itself what does not properly belong to it; and then
-science may be as unduly depreciated as it has, for the past century
-or two, been unduly magnified; so that in the long run it is in the
-interest of science itself to keep in its proper place, which is below
-both humanism and religion.
-
-It would be possible to frame in the name of insight an indictment
-against science that would make the indictment Rousseau has framed
-against it in the name of instinct seem mild. The critical humanist,
-however, will leave it to others to frame such an indictment. Nothing
-is more foreign to his nature than every form of obscurantism. He
-is ready indeed to point out that the man of science has in common
-with him at least one important idea--the idea of habit, though its
-scientific form seems to him very incomplete. One may illustrate from
-perhaps the best known recent treatment of the subject, that of James
-in his “Psychology.” It is equally significant that the humanist can
-agree with nearly every line of James’s chapter on habit and that
-he disagrees very gravely with James in his total tendency. That is
-because James shows himself, as soon as he passes from the naturalistic
-to the humanistic level, wildly romantic. Even when dealing with the
-“Varieties of Religious Experience” he is plainly more preoccupied
-with the intensity than with the centrality of this experience.[312]
-He is obsessed with the idea that comes down to him straight from the
-age of original genius that to be at the centre is to be commonplace.
-In a letter to C. E. Norton (June 30, 1904) James praises Ruskin’s
-Letters and adds: “Mere sanity is the most philistine and at bottom
-unessential of a man’s attributes.” “Mere sanity” is not to be thus
-dismissed, because to lack sanity is to be headed towards misery and
-even madness. “Ruskin’s,” says Norton, who was in a position to know,
-“was essentially one of the saddest of lives.”[313] Is a man to live
-one of the saddest of lives merely to gratify romantic lovers of the
-vivid and picturesque like James?
-
-However, if the man of science holds fast to the results reached by
-James and others regarding habit and at the same time avoids James’s
-romantic fallacies he might perceive the possibility of extending the
-idea of habit beyond the naturalistic level; and the way would then
-be open for an important coöperation between him and the humanist.
-Humanists themselves, it must be admitted, even critical humanists,
-have diverged somewhat in their attitude towards habit, and that from
-the time of Socrates and Aristotle. I have been dwelling thus far on
-the indispensableness of a keen Socratic dialectic and of the right
-knowledge it brings for those who aspire to be critical humanists.
-But does right knowing in itself suffice to ensure right doing?
-Socrates and Plato with their famous identification of knowledge and
-virtue would seem to reply in the affirmative. Aristotle has the
-immediate testimony of consciousness on his side when he remarks
-simply regarding this identification: The facts are otherwise.[314]
-No experience is sadder or more universal than that of the failure
-of right knowledge to secure right performance: so much so that the
-austere Christian has been able to maintain with some plausibility
-that all the knowledge in the world is of no avail without a special
-divine succor. Now the Aristotelian agrees with the Christian that mere
-knowledge is insufficient: conversion is also necessary. He does not
-incline, however, like the austere Christian to look for conversion to
-“thunderclaps and visible upsets of grace.” Without denying necessarily
-these pistol-shot transformations of human nature he conceives of
-man’s turning away from his ordinary self--and here he is much nearer
-in temper to the man of science--as a gradual process. This gradual
-conversion the Aristotelian hopes to achieve by work according to
-the human law. Now right knowledge though it supplies the norm, is
-not in itself this working, which consists in the actual pulling back
-of impulse. But an act of this kind to be effective must be repeated.
-A habit is thus formed until at last the new direction given to the
-natural man becomes automatic and unconscious. The humanistic worker
-may thus acquire at last the spontaneity in right doing that the
-beautiful soul professes to have received as a free gift from “nature.”
-Confucius narrates the various stages of knowledge and moral effort
-through which he had passed from the age of fifteen and concludes: “At
-seventy I could follow what my heart desired without transgressing the
-law of measure.”[315]
-
-The keener the observer the more likely he is to be struck by the
-empire of habit. Habit, as Wellington said, is ten times nature, and
-is indeed so obviously a second nature that many of the wise have
-suspected that nature herself is only a first habit.[316] Now Aristotle
-who is open to criticism, it may be, on the side of humility, still
-remains incomparable among the philosophers of the world for his
-treatment of habit on the humanistic level. Any one who wishes to learn
-how to become moderate and sensible and decent can do no better even at
-this late day than to steep himself in the “Nicomachean Ethics.”
-
-One of the ultimate contrasts that presents itself in a subject of
-this kind is that between habit as conceived by Aristotle and nature
-as conceived by Rousseau. The first great grievance of the critical
-humanist against Rousseau is that he set out to be an individualist
-and at the same time attacked analysis, which is indispensable if
-one is to be a sound individualist. The second great grievance of the
-humanist is that Rousseau sought to discredit habit which is necessary
-if right analysis is to be made effective. “The only habit the child
-should be allowed to form,” says Rousseau, “is that of forming no
-habit.”[317] How else is the child to follow his bent or genius and
-so arrive at full self-expression? The point I am bringing up is of
-the utmost gravity, for Rousseau is by common consent the father of
-modern education. To eliminate from education the idea of a progressive
-adjustment to a human law, quite apart from temperament, may be to
-imperil civilization itself. For civilization (another word that is
-sadly in need of Socratic defining) may be found to consist above all
-in an orderly transmission of right habits; and the chief agency for
-securing such a transmission must always be education, by which I mean
-far more of course than mere formal schooling.
-
-Rousseau’s repudiation of habit is first of all, it should be pointed
-out, perfectly chimerical. The trait of the child to which the sensible
-educator will give chief attention is not his spontaneity, but his
-proneness to imitate. In the absence of good models the child will
-imitate bad ones, and so, long before the age of intelligent choice and
-self-determination, become the prisoner of bad habits. Men, therefore,
-who aim at being civilized must come together, work out a convention
-in short, regarding the habits they wish transmitted to the young.
-A great civilization is in a sense only a great convention. A sane
-individualist does not wish to escape from convention in itself;
-he merely remembers that no convention is final--that it is always
-possible to improve the quality of the convention in the midst of which
-he is living, and that it should therefore be held flexibly. He would
-oppose no obstacles to those who are rising above the conventional
-level, but would resist firmly those who are sinking beneath it. It
-is much easier to determine practically whether one has to do with an
-ascent or a descent (even though the descent be rapturous like that
-of the Rousseauist) than our anarchical individualists are willing to
-acknowledge.
-
-The notion that in spite of the enormous mass of experience that has
-been accumulated in both East and West we are still without light as
-to the habits that make for moderation and good sense and decency, and
-that education is therefore still purely a matter of exploration and
-experiment is one that may be left to those who are suffering from an
-advanced stage of naturalistic intoxication--for example, to Professor
-John Dewey and his followers. From an ethical point of view a child has
-the right to be born into a cosmos, and not, as is coming to be more
-and more the case under such influences, pitch-forked into chaos. But
-the educational radical, it may be replied, does stress the idea of
-habit; and it is true that he would have the young acquire the habits
-that make for material efficiency. This, however, does not go beyond
-Rousseau who came out very strongly for what we should call nowadays
-vocational training.[318] It is the adjustment to the human law against
-which Rousseau and all the Rousseauists are recalcitrant.
-
-Self-expression and vocational training combined in various
-proportions and tempered by the spirit of “service,” are nearly the
-whole of the new education. But I have already said that it is not
-possible to extract from any such compounding of utilitarian and
-romantic elements, with the resulting material efficiency and ethical
-inefficiency, a civilized view of life. It is right here indeed in
-the educational field that concerted opposition to the naturalistic
-conspiracy against civilization is most likely to be fruitful. If
-the present generation--and I have in mind especially American
-conditions--cannot come to a working agreement about the ethical
-training it wishes given the young, if it allows the drift towards
-anarchy on the human level to continue, it will show itself, however
-ecstatic it may be over its own progressiveness and idealism, both
-cowardly and degenerate. It is very stupid, assuming that it is not
-very hypocritical, to denounce _Kultur_, and then to adopt educational
-ideas that work out in much the same fashion as _Kultur_, and have
-indeed the same historical derivation.
-
-The dehumanizing influences I have been tracing are especially to be
-deprecated in higher education. The design of higher education, so far
-as it deserves the name, is to produce leaders, and on the quality of
-the leadership must depend more than on any other single factor the
-success or failure of democracy. I have already quoted Aristotle’s
-saying that “most men would rather live in a disorderly than in a
-sober manner.” This does not mean much more than that most men would
-like to live temperamentally, to follow each his own bent and then
-put the best face on the matter possible. Most men, says Goethe in a
-similar vein, prefer error to truth because truth imposes limitations
-and error does not. It is well also to recall Aristotle’s saying that
-“the multitude is incapable of making distinctions.”[319] Now my whole
-argument is that to be sound individualists we must not only make the
-right distinctions but submit to them until they become habitual.
-Does it follow that the whole experiment in which we are engaged is
-foredoomed to failure? Not quite--though the obstacles to success are
-somewhat greater than our democratic enthusiasts suspect. The most
-disreputable aspect of human nature, I have said, is its proneness to
-look for scapegoats; and my chief objection to the movement I have
-been studying is that more perhaps than any other in history it has
-encouraged the evasion of moral responsibility and the setting up of
-scapegoats. But as an offset to this disreputable aspect of man, one
-may note a creditable trait: he is very sensitive to the force of a
-right example. If the leaders of a community look up to a sound model
-and work humanistically with reference to it, all the evidence goes to
-show that they will be looked up to and imitated in turn by enough of
-the rank and file to keep that community from lapsing into barbarism.
-Societies always decay from the top. It is therefore not enough, as
-the humanitarian would have us believe, that our leaders should act
-vigorously on the outer world and at the same time be filled with the
-spirit of “service.” Purely expansive leaders of this kind we have
-seen who have the word humanity always on their lips and are at the
-same time ceasing to be human. “That wherein the superior man cannot
-be equalled,” says Confucius, “is simply this--his work which other
-men cannot see.”[320] It is this inner work and the habits that result
-from it that above all humanize a man and make him exemplary to the
-multitude. To perform this work he needs to look to a centre and a
-model.
-
-We are brought back here to the final gap that opens between classicist
-and romanticist. To look to a centre according to the romanticist
-is at the best to display “reason,” at the worst to be smug and
-philistine. To look to a true centre is, on the contrary, according
-to the classicist, to grasp the abiding human element through all the
-change in which it is implicated, and this calls for the highest use
-of the imagination. The abiding human element exists, even though it
-cannot be exhausted by dogmas and creeds, is not subject to rules and
-refuses to be locked up in formulæ. A knowledge of it results from
-experience,--experience vivified by the imagination. To do justice to
-writing which has this note of centrality we ourselves need to be in
-some measure experienced and imaginative. Writing that is romantic,
-writing in which the imagination is not disciplined to a true centre
-is best enjoyed while we are young. The person who is as much taken by
-Shelley at forty as he was at twenty has, one may surmise, failed to
-grow up. Shelley himself wrote to John Gisborne (October 22, 1821): “As
-to real flesh and blood, you know that I do not deal in those articles;
-you might as well go to a ginshop for a leg of mutton as expect
-anything human or earthly from me.” The mature man is likely to be
-dissatisfied with poetry so unsubstantial as this even as an intoxicant
-and still more when it is offered to him as the “ideal.” The very mark
-of genuinely classical work, on the other hand, is that it yields its
-full meaning only to the mature. Young and old are, as Cardinal Newman
-says, affected very differently by the words of some classic author,
-such as Homer or Horace. “Passages, which to a boy are but rhetorical
-commonplaces, neither better nor worse than a hundred others which any
-clever writer might supply … at length come home to him, when long
-years have passed, and he has had experience of life, and pierce him,
-as if he had never before known them, with their sad earnestness and
-vivid exactness. Then he comes to understand how it is that lines, the
-birth of some chance morning or evening at an Ionian festival or among
-the Sabine hills, have lasted generation after generation for thousands
-of years, with a power over the mind and a charm which the current
-literature of his own day, with all its obvious advantages, is utterly
-unable to rival.”
-
-In the poets whom Newman praises the imagination is, as it were,
-centripetal. The neo-classic proneness to oppose good sense to
-imagination, and the romantic proneness to oppose imagination to good
-sense, have at least this justification, that in many persons, perhaps
-in most persons, the two actually conflict, but surely the point to
-emphasize is that they may come together, that good sense may be
-imaginative and imagination sensible. If imagination is not sensible,
-as is plainly the case in Victor Hugo, for example, we may suspect a
-lack of the universal and ethical quality. All men, even great poets,
-are more or less immersed in their personal conceit and in the zones of
-illusion peculiar to their age. But there is the question of degree.
-The poets to whom the world has finally accorded its suffrage have not
-been megalomaniacs; they have not threatened like Hugo to outbellow
-the thunder or pull comets around by the tail.[321] Bossuet’s saying
-that “good sense is the master of human life” does not contradict but
-complete Pascal’s saying that “the imagination disposes of everything,”
-provided only due stress be laid on the word human. It would not be
-easy to live a more imaginative life than Hugo, but his imagination was
-so unrestrained that we may ask whether he lived a very human life,
-whether he was not rather, in Tennyson’s phrase, a “weird Titan.” Man
-realizes that immensity of his being of which Joubert speaks only in so
-far as he ceases to be the thrall of his own ego. This human breadth he
-achieves not by throwing off but by taking on limitations, and what he
-limits is above all his imagination. The reason why he should strive
-for a life that is thus increasingly full and complete is simply,
-as Joubert suggests, that it is more delectable, that it is found
-practically to make for happiness.
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX
-
-CHINESE PRIMITIVISM
-
-
-Perhaps the closest approach in the past to the movement of which
-Rousseau is the most important single figure is the early Taoist
-movement in China. Taoism, especially in its popular aspects, became
-later something very different, and what I say is meant to apply above
-all to the period from about 550 to 200 B.C. The material for the
-Taoism of this period will be found in convenient form in the volume
-of Léon Wieger (1913)--_Les Pères du Système taoïste_ (Chinese texts
-with French translations of Lao-tzŭ, Lieh-tzŭ and Chuang-tzŭ). The Tao
-Tê King of Lao-tzŭ is a somewhat enigmatical document of only a few
-thousand words, but plainly primitivistic in its general trend. The
-phrase that best sums up its general spirit is that of Wordsworth--a
-“wise passiveness.” The unity at which it aims is clearly of the
-pantheistic variety, the unity that is obtained by breaking down
-discrimination and affirming the “identity of contradictories,” and
-that encourages a reversion to origins, to the state of nature and the
-simple life. According to the Taoist the Chinese fell from the simple
-life into artificiality about the time of the legendary Yellow Emperor,
-Hoang-ti (27th century B.C.). The individual also should look back
-to beginnings and seek to be once more like the new-born child[322]
-or, according to Chuang-tzŭ, like the new-born calf.[323] It is in
-Chuang-tzŭ indeed that the doctrine develops its full naturalistic and
-primitivistic implications. Few writers in either East or West have
-set forth more entertainingly what one may term the Bohemian attitude
-towards life. He heaps ridicule upon Confucius and in the name of
-spontaneity attacks his doctrine of humanistic imitation.[324] He
-sings the praises of the unconscious,[325] even when obtained through
-intoxication,[326] and extols the morality of the beautiful soul.[327]
-He traces the fall of mankind from nature into artifice in a fashion
-that anticipates very completely both Rousseau’s Discourse on the Arts
-and Sciences[328] and that on the Origin of Inequality.[329] See also
-the amusing passage in which the brigand Chi, child of nature and
-champion of the weak against the oppressions of government, paints
-a highly Rousseauistic picture of man’s fall from his primitive
-felicity.[330] Among the things that are contrary to nature and purely
-conventional, according to Chuang-tzŭ and the Taoists, are, not only
-the sciences and arts and attempts to discriminate between good and
-bad taste,[331] but likewise government and statecraft,[332] virtue
-and moral standards.[333] To the artificial music of the Confucians,
-the Taoists oppose a natural music that offers startling analogies to
-the most recent programmatic and descriptive tendencies of Occidental
-music.[334] See especially Chuang-tzŭ’s programme for a cosmic symphony
-in three movements[335]--the _Pipes of Pan_ as one is tempted to call
-it. This music that is supposed to reflect in all its mystery and
-magic the infinite creative processes of nature is very close to the
-primitivistic music (“L’arbre vu du côté des racines”) with which
-Hugo’s satyr strikes panic into the breasts of the Olympians.
-
-The Taoist notion of following nature is closely related, as in other
-naturalistic movements, to the idea of fate whether in its stoical
-or epicurean form.[336] From the references in Chuang-tzŭ[337]
-and elsewhere to various sects and schools we see that Taoism was
-only a part of a great stream of naturalistic and primitivistic
-tendency. China abounded at that time in pacifists,[338] in apostles
-of brotherly love, and as we should say nowadays Tolstoyans. A true
-opposite to the egoistic Yang-chu was the preacher of pure altruism
-and indiscriminate sympathy, Mei-ti. Mencius said that if the ideas
-of either of these extremists prevailed the time would come, not only
-when wolves would devour men, but men would devour one another.[339]
-In opposing discrimination and ethical standards to the naturalists,
-Mencius and the Confucian humanists were fighting for civilization.
-Unfortunately there is some truth in the Taoist charge that the
-standards of the Confucians are too literal, that in their defence of
-the principle of imitation they did not allow sufficiently for the
-element of flux and relativity and illusion in things--an element for
-which the Taoists had so keen a sense that they even went to the point
-of suppressing the difference between sleeping and waking[340] and
-life and death.[341] To reply properly to the Taoist relativist the
-Confucians would have needed to work out a sound conception of the rôle
-of the imagination--the universal key to human nature--and this they
-do not seem to have done. One is inclined to ask whether this is the
-reason for China’s failure to achieve a great ethical art like that of
-the drama and the epic of the Occident at their best. The Taoists were
-richly imaginative but along romantic lines. We should not fail to note
-the Taoist influence upon Li Po and other Bohemian and bibulous poets
-of the Tang dynasty, or the relation of Taoism to the rise of a great
-school of landscape painting at about the same time. We should note
-also the Taoist element in “Ch’an” Buddhism (the “Zen” Buddhism[342] of
-Japan), some knowledge of which is needed for an understanding of whole
-periods of Japanese and Chinese art.
-
-In these later stages, however, the issues are less clear-cut than
-in the original struggle between Taoists and Confucians. The total
-impression one has of early Taoism is that it is a main manifestation
-of an age of somewhat sophistical individualism. Ancient Chinese
-individualism ended like that of Greece at about the same time in
-disaster. After a period of terrible convulsions (the era of the
-“Fighting States”), the inevitable man on horseback appeared from the
-most barbaric of these states and “put the lid” on everybody. Shi
-Hwang-ti, the new emperor, had many of the scholars put to death and
-issued an edict that the writings of the past, especially the Confucian
-writings, should be destroyed (213 B.C.). Though the emperor behaved
-like a man who took literally the Taoist views as to the blessings of
-ignorance, it is not clear from our chief authority, the historian
-Ssŭ-ma Ch’ien, that he acted entirely or indeed mainly under Taoist
-influence.
-
-It is proper to add that though Lao-tzŭ proclaims that the soft is
-superior to the hard, a doctrine that should appeal to the Occidental
-sentimentalist, one does not find in him or in the other Taoists the
-equivalent of the extreme emotional expansiveness of the Rousseauist.
-There are passages, especially in Lao-tzŭ, that in their emphasis on
-concentration and calm are in line with the ordinary wisdom of the
-East; and even where the doctrine is unmistakably primitivistic the
-emotional quality is often different from that of the corresponding
-movement in the West.
-
-
-
-
-BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
-
-My only justification for these very unsystematic bibliographical notes
-is that, bringing together as they do under one cover material somewhat
-scattered and inaccessible to most readers, they may help to add to
-the number, now unfortunately very small, of those who have earned
-the right to have an opinion about romanticism as an international
-movement. A list of this kind is a fragment of a fragment. I have
-given, for example, only a fraction of the books on Rousseau and
-scarcely any of the books, thousands in numbers, which without being
-chiefly on Rousseau, contain important passages on him. I may cite
-almost at random as instances of this latter class, the comparison
-between Burke and Rousseau in the fifth volume of Lecky’s _History of
-the Eighteenth Century_; the stanzas on Rousseau in the third canto
-of _Childe Harold_; the passage on Rousseau in Hazlitt’s essay on the
-_Past and Future_ (_Table Talk_).
-
-The only period that I have covered with any attempt at fullness is
-that from about 1795 to 1840. Books that seem to me to possess literary
-distinction or to deal authoritatively with some aspect of the subject
-I have marked with a star. I make no claim, however, to have read
-all the books I have listed, and my rating will no doubt often be
-questioned in the case of those I have read.
-
-I have not as a rule mentioned articles in periodicals. The files of
-the following special publications may often be consulted with profit.
-Those that have current bibliographies I have marked with a dagger.
-
-† _Revue d’Histoire littéraire de la France._--† _Annales
-romantiques._--† _Revue germanique_ (Eng. and German).
-
-† _Englische Studien_--_Anglia_.--† _Mitteilungen über Englische
-Sprache und Literatur_ (Beiblatt zur Anglia).--† _Archiv für
-das Studium der neueren Sprachen_ (_Herrigs Archiv_).--†
-_Zeitschrift für französische Sprache und Literatur_--_Kritischer
-Jahresbericht der romanischen Philologie_--_Germanisch-Romanische
-Monatschrift_--_Euphorion_ (German lit.).--† _Zeitschrift für deutsches
-Altertum und deutsche Literatur._
-
-_Publications of the Modern Language Association of America._--†
-_Modern Language Notes_ (Baltimore).--_Modern Philology_
-(Chicago).--_The Journal of English and Germanic Philology_ (Urbana,
-Ill.).--† _Studies in Philology_ (Univ. of North Car.).--† _The Modern
-Language Review_ (Cambridge, Eng.).
-
-Works that are international in scope and that fall either wholly
-or in part in the romantic period are as follows: L. P. Betz: ✱ _La
-Littérature Comparée, Essai bibliographique_, 2e éd. augmentée,
-1904.--A. Sayous: _Le XVIIIe siècle à l’étranger_, 2 vols. 1861.--H.
-Hettner: ✱ _Literaturgeschichte des 18. Jahr._ 1872. 6 vols. 5th edn.
-1909. (Still standard.)--G. Brandes: ✱ _Main Currents in 19th Century
-Literature_, 6 vols. 1901 ff. Originally given as lectures in Danish at
-the University of Copenhagen and trans. into German, 1872 ff. (Often
-marred by political “tendency.”)--T. Süpfle: _Geschichte des deutschen
-Kultureinflusses auf Frankreich_, 2 vols. 1886-90.--V. Rossel: _Hist.
-de la litt. fr. hors de France_. 2e éd. 1897.--C. E. Vaughan: _The
-Romantic Revolt_, 1900.--T. S. Omond: _The Romantic Triumph_, 1900. (A
-somewhat colorless book.)
-
-
-ENGLISH FIELD
-
-✱ _The Cambridge History of English Literature_, vols. X, XI, XII, 1913
-ff. (Excellent bibliographies.)--See also articles and bibliographies
-in ✱ _Dictionary of National Biography_, Chambers _Encyclopædia of
-English Literature_ (new edn.) and _Encyclopædia Britannica_ (11th
-edn.).
-
-L. Stephen: ✱ _History of English Thought in the 18th Century_, 1876.
-(To be consulted for the deistic prelude to emotional naturalism. The
-author’s horizons are often limited by his utilitarian outlook.)--T.
-S. Seccombe: _The Age of Johnson_, 1900.--E. Bernbaum’s _English
-Poets of the 18th Century_, 1918. (An anthology so arranged as
-to illustrate the growth of sentimentalism.)--W. L. Phelps: _The
-Beginnings of the English Romantic Movement_, 1893.--H. A. Beers: _A
-History of English Romanticism in the 18th Century_, 1898. _A History
-of English Romanticism in the 19th Century_, 1901. (Both vols. are
-agreeably written but start from a very inadequate definition of
-romanticism.)--C. H. Herford: _The Age of Wordsworth_, 1897.--G.
-Saintsbury: _Nineteenth Century Literature_, 1896.--A. Symons: _The
-Romantic Movement in English Poetry_, 1909. (Ultra-romantic in
-outlook.)--W. J. Courthope: _History of English Poetry_, vols. V and
-VI, 1911.--O. Elton: ✱ _A Survey of English Literature, 1780-1830_,
-1912. (A distinguished treatment of the period, at once scholarly and
-literary. The point of view is on the whole romantic, as appears in the
-use of such general terms as “beauty” and the “infinite.”)--H. Richter:
-_Geschichte der englischen Romantik_, 1911 ff.--W. A. Neilson: _The
-Essentials of Poetry_, 1912. (The point of view appears in a passage
-like the following, pp. 192-93: According to Arnold high seriousness
-“is the final criterion of a great poet. One might suggest it as a more
-fit criterion for a great divine. … The element for which Arnold was
-groping when he seized on the σπουδή of Aristotle was not seriousness
-but intensity.”)--P. E. More: ✱ _The Drift of Romanticism_ (_Shelburne
-Essays, Eighth Series_), 1913. (Deals also with the international
-aspects of the movement, especially in the essay on Nietzsche. The
-point of view has much in common with my own.)
-
-George Lillo: _The London Merchant_; or _The History of George
-Barnwell_, 1731. _Fatal Curiosity_, 1737. Both plays ed. with intro.
-by A. W. Ward, 1906. (Bibliography.)--E. Bernbaum: _The Drama of
-Sensibility, 1696-1780_, 1915.
-
-=S. Richardson=, 1689-1761: _Novels_, ed. L. Stephen, 12 vols. 1883.
-
-D. Diderot: _Eloge de R._, 1761. Reprinted in _Œuvres complètes_, vol.
-v.--J. Jusserand: _Le Roman Anglais_, 1886.--J. O. E. Donner: _R. in
-der deutschen Romantik_, 1896.--W. L. Cross: _The Development of the
-English Novel_ (chap. II, “The 18th Century Realists”), 1899.--J.
-Texte: ✱ _J.-J. Rousseau et les Origines du Cosmopolitisme littéraire_.
-Eng. trans. by J.W. Matthews, 1899.--C. L. Thomson: _Samuel Richardson:
-a Biographical and Critical Study_, 1900.--A. Dobson: _S. R._, 1902.
-
-=L. Sterne=, 1713-68: Collected Works, ed. G. Saintsbury, 6 vols. 1894.
-Ed. W. L. Cross, 12 vols. 1904.
-
-P. Fitzgerald: _Life of S._, 2 vols. 1864. 3d edn. 1906.--P. Stapfer:
-_Laurence Sterne_, 1870.--H. D. Traill: _Sterne_, 1882.--L. Stephen:
-_Sterne. Hours in a Library_, vol. III, 1892.--J. Czerny: _Sterne,
-Hippel, und Jean Paul_, 1904.--H. W. Thayer: _L. S. in Germany_,
-1905.--P. E. More: _Shelburne Essays_, 3d Series, 1905.--W. L. Cross:
-_The Life and Times of L. S._, 1909.--W. Sichel: ✱ _Sterne_, 1910.--L.
-Melville: _The Life and Letters of L. S._, 2 vols. 1911.--F. B. Barton:
-_Etude sur l’influence de S. en France au XVIIIe siècle_, 1911.
-
-Henry Mackenzie: _The Man of Feeling_, 1771.--Horace Walpole: _The
-Castle of Otranto_, 1765.--Clara Reeve: _The Champion of Virtue_, 1777.
-Title changed to _The Old English Baron_ in later edns.--Thomas Amory:
-_Life of John Buncle, Esq._, 4 vols. 1756-66. New edn. (with intro.
-by E. A. Baker), 1904.--Henry Brooke: _The Fool of Quality_, 5 vols.
-1766-70. Ed. E. A. Baker, 1906.--William Beckford: _An Arabian Tale_
-[_Vathek_], 1786. In French, 1787. Ed. R. Garnett, 1893.--L. Melville:
-_The Life and Letters of William Beckford_, 1910.--P. E. More: _W. B._,
-in _The Drift of Romanticism_, 1913.
-
-=Edward Young=, 1683-1765: _Works_, 6 vols. 1757-78. _Poetical Works_
-(Aldine Poets), 1858.--George Eliot: _The Poet Y._, in _Essays_, 2d
-edn. 1884.--W. Thomas: _Le poète E. Y._, 1901.--J. L. Kind: _E. Y. in
-Germany_, 1906.--H. C. Shelley: _The Life and Letters of E. Y._, 1914.
-
-=James Macpherson=, 1736-96: _Fingal_, 1762. _Temora_, 1763. _The Works
-of Ossian_, ed. W. Sharp, 1896.--For bibliography of Ossian and the
-Ossianic controversy see _Lowndes’s Bibliographer’s Manual_, part VI,
-1861.--J. S. Smart: ✱ _James Macpherson_, 1905.
-
-Thomas Percy: _Reliques of Ancient English Poetry_, 3 vols. 1765. Ed.
-H. B. Wheatley, 3 vols. 1876 and 1891.--A. C. C. Gaussen: _Percy,
-Prelate and Poet_, 1908.
-
-=Thomas Chatterton=, 1752-70: _Complete Poetical Works_, ed. with
-intro. and bibliography by H. D. Roberts, 2 vols. 1906. _Poetical
-Works_, with intro. by Sir S. Lee, 2 vols. 1906-09.--A. de Vigny:
-_Chatterton_. Drame, 1835--D. Masson: _Chatterton_ in _Essays_,
-1856.--T. Watts-Dunton: Introduction to poems of C., in _Ward’s English
-Poets_.--C. E. Russell: _Thomas Chatterton_, 1909.--J. H. Ingram: _The
-True Chatterton_, 1910.
-
-Thomas Warton: _The History of English Poetry_, 1774-88.--C. Rinaker:
-_Thomas Warton_, 1916.--Joseph Warton: _Essay on the Genius and
-Writings of Pope_, 2 vols. 1756-82.--Paul-Henri Mallet: _Introduction
-à l’Hist. de Dannemarc_, 2 vols. 1755-56--F. E. Farley: _Scandinavian
-Influence on the English Romantic Movement_, 1903 (Bibliography).--R.
-Hurd: _Letters on Chivalry and Romance_, 1762; ed. E. J. Morley, 1911.
-
-=W. Godwin=, 1756-1836: _Political Justice_, 1793. _Caleb Williams_,
-1794.
-
-C. K. Paul: _W. G., his Friends and Contemporaries_, 2 vols 1876.--W.
-Hazlitt: _W. G._, in _The Spirit of the Age_, 1902.--L. Stephen: _W.
-G.’s Novels. Studies of a Biographer_, vol. III, 1902.--P. Ramus:
-_W. G. der Theoretiker des kommunistischen Anarchismus_, 1907.--H.
-Saitzeff: _W. G. und die Anfänge des Anarchismus im xviii Jahrhundert_,
-1907.--Helene Simon: _W. G. und Mary Wollstonecraft_, 1909.--H.
-Roussin: _W. G._, 1912.
-
-=R. Burns=, 1759-96: _The Complete Poetical Works_, ed. J. L.
-Robertson, 3 vols. 1896.--J. C. Ewing: _Selected List of the Works of
-R. B., and of Books upon his Life and Writings_, 1899.
-
-W. Wordsworth: _Letter to a Friend of R. Burns_, 1816.--T. Carlyle:
-_Burns_, 1828. Rptd. 1854. _On Heroes and Hero-Worship_, 1841.--J.
-G. Lockhart: _Life of R. Burns_, 1828.--H. A. Taine: _Histoire de la
-Littérature Anglaise_, vol. III, 1863-64.--J. C. Shairp: _R. Burns_,
-1879.--R. L. Stevenson: _Familiar Studies of Men and Books_, 1882.--M.
-Arnold: _Essays in Criticism, Second Series_, 1888.--A. Angellier: ✱
-_R. Burns: la vie et les œuvres_, 2 vols. 1893.--T. F. Henderson: _R.
-Burns_, 1904.--W. A. Neilson: _Burns: How to Know Him_, 1917.
-
-=W. Blake=, 1759-1827: _The Poetical Works_, ed. with an intro. and
-textual notes by J. Sampson, 1913.
-
-A. Gilchrist: _Life of B._, 2 vols. 1863. New edn. 1906.--A.
-C. Swinburne: _W. B._, 1868. New edn. 1906.--A. T. Story: _W.
-B._, 1893.--J. Thomson (B.V.): _Essay on the Poems of W. B._, in
-_Biographical and Critical Studies_, 1896.--W. B. Yeats: _Ideas of Good
-and Evil_, 1903.--F. Benoit: _Un Maître de l’Art. B. le Visionnaire_,
-1906.--P. E. More: _Shelburne Essays, Fourth Series_, 1906.--P. Berger:
-_W. B._, 1907.--S. A. Brooke: _Studies in Poetry_, 1907.--E. J. Ellis:
-_The Real B., a Portrait Biography_, 1907.--B. de Selincourt: _W.
-B._, 1909.--G. Saintsbury: _A History of English Prosody_, vol. III,
-1910.--J. H. Wicksteed: _B.’s Vision of the Book of Job_, 1910.--H. C.
-Beeching: _B.’s Religious Lyrics, Essays and Studies by Members of the
-Eng. Association_, vol. III, 1912.--A. G. B. Russell: _The Engravings
-of W. B._, 1912.
-
-=W. Wordsworth=, 1770-1850: _Poetical Works_, ed. T. Hutchinson, 1904.
-_Poems_, chosen and edited by M. Arnold, 1879. _Prose Works_, ed. W.
-Knight, 2 vols. 1896. _Wordsworth’s Literary Criticism_, ed. N. C.
-Smith, 1905.
-
-W. Hazlitt: _The Spirit of the Age_, 1825.--C. Wordsworth: _Memoirs of
-W. W._, 2 vols. 1851.--T.B. Macaulay: _Critical and Historical Essays_,
-1852.--J. R. Lowell: _Among my Books_, 1870.--R. H. Hutton: _Essays
-Theological and Literary_, 2 vols. 1871.--J. C. Shairp: _W._, 1872.--S.
-A. Brooke: _Theology in the English Poets_, 1874. 10th edn. 1907.--E.
-Dowden: _Studies in Literature_, 1878. _New Studies in Literature_,
-1895.--W. Bagehot: _Literary Studies_, 1879.--F. W. H. Myers: _W._,
-1881.--J. H. Shorthouse: _On the Platonism of W._, 1882.--W. A. Knight:
-_Memorials of Coleorton_, 2 vols. 1887. _Letters of the Wordsworth
-Family from 1787 to 1855_, 1907.--M. Arnold: ✱ _Essays in Criticism,
-Second Series_, 1888.--P. Bourget: _Etudes et Portraits_, vol. II,
-1888.--W. H. Pater: _Appreciations_, 1889.--L. Stephen: _Hours
-in a Library_, vol. II, 1892. _Studies of a Biographer_, vol. I,
-1898.--Dorothy Wordsworth: _Journals_, ed. W. Knight, 2 vols, 1897.--E.
-Legouis: ✱ _The Early Life of W., 1770-98_. Trans. by J.W. Matthews,
-1897.--E. Yarnall: _W. and the Coleridges_, 1899.--W. A. Raleigh: _W._,
-1903.--K. Bömig: _W. W. im Urteile seiner Zeit_, 1906.--A. C. Bradley:
-_Eng. Poetry and German Philosophy in the Age of W._, 1909.--M.
-Reynolds: _The Treatment of Nature in Eng. Poetry between Pope and
-W._, 1909. (Bibliography.)--L. Cooper: _A Concordance to the Poems of
-W. W._, 1911.--E. S. Robertson: _Wordsworthshire. An Introduction to a
-Poet’s Country_, 1911.
-
-=W. Scott=, 1771-1832: _Poetical Works_, ed. J. L. Robertson, 1904.
-_The Waverly Novels_ (Oxford edn.), 25 vols. 1912. _The Miscellaneous
-Prose Works_, 30 vols. 1834-71.
-
-W. Hazlitt: _The Spirit of the Age_, 1825.--J. G. Lockhart: ✱ _Memoirs
-of the Life of Sir W. S. Baronet_, 2 vols. 1837-38.--T. Carlyle: _Sir
-W.S._, 1838.--G. Grant: _Life of Sir W. S._, 1849.--L. Stephen: _Hours
-in a Library_, vol. I, 1874. _The Story of S.’s Ruin, Studies of a
-Biographer_, vol. II, 1898.--R. H. Hutton: _Sir W. S._, 1876.--W.
-Bagehot: _The Waverley Novels in Literary Studies_, vol. II, 1879.--G.
-Smith: _Sir W. S._, in _Ward’s English Poets_, vol. IV, 1883.--R.
-L. Stevenson: _A Gossip on Romance_ in _Memories and Portraits_,
-1887.--J. Veitch: _The Feeling for Nature in Scottish Poetry_, 2 vols.
-1887. Vol. II. _History and Poetry of the Scottish Border_. 2d edn.
-2 vols. 1893.--C.D. Yonge: _Life of Sir W.S._ (bibliography by J.P.
-Anderson), 1888.--V. Waille: _Le Romantisme de Manzoni_, 1890.--A.
-Lang: _Life and Letters of J.G. Lockhart_, 2 vols. 1896. _L. and the
-Border Minstrelsy_, 1910.--F.T. Palgrave: _Landscape in Poetry_,
-1896.--A.A. Jack: _Essays on the Novel as illustrated by S. and Miss
-Austen_, 1897.--G. Saintsbury: _Sir W.S._, 1897.--L. Maigron: ✱ _Le
-Roman historique à l’époque romantique. Essai sur l’influence de W.S._,
-1898.--W.L. Cross: _Development of the English Novel_, 1899.--M.
-Dotti: _Delle derivazioni nei Promessi sposi di A. Manzoni dai Romanzi
-di W.S._, 1900.--W.H. Hudson: _Sir W.S._, 1901.--W.S. Crockett: _The
-Scott Country_, 1902. _Footsteps of S._, 1907. _The Scott Originals_,
-1912.--A. Ainger: _S. Lectures and Essays_, vol. I. 1905.--A.S.G.
-Canning: _History in S.’s Novels_, 1905. _Sir W.S. studied in Eight
-Novels_, 1910.--G. Agnoli: _Gli Albori del romanzo storico in Italia e
-i primi imitatori di W.S._, 1906.--C.A. Young: _The Waverley Novels_,
-1907.--G. Wyndham: _Sir W.S._, 1908.--F.A. MacCunn: _Sir W.S.’s
-friends_, 1909.
-
-=S. T. Coleridge=, 1772-1831: _Dramatic Works_, ed. D. Coleridge, 1852.
-_Poetical Works_, ed. with biographical intro. by J.D. Campbell, 1893.
-_Complete Poetical Works_, ed. E.H. Coleridge, 2 vols. 1912. _Prose
-Works_, 6 vols. in _Bohn’s Library_, 1865 ff.--_Biographia Literaria_,
-ed. with his æsthetical essays by I. Shawcross, 2 vols. 1907. _Anima
-Poetae_, ed. E.H. Coleridge, 1895. C.’s _Literary Criticism_, with
-intro. by J.W. Mackail, 1908. _Biographia epistalaris_, ed. A. Tumbull,
-2 vols. 1911.
-
-W. Hazlitt: _Mr. C._, in _The Spirit of the Age_, 1825.--T. Allsop:
-_Letters, Conversations, and Recollections of S.T.C._, 2 vols.
-1836.--T. Carlyle: _Life of John Sterling_ (part I, chap, VIII),
-1851.--Sara Coleridge: _Memoirs and Letters of Sara Coleridge_, 2
-vols. 1873.--H.D. Traill: _Coleridge_, 1884.--A. Brandl: _S.T.C.
-und die englishe Romantik_, 1886. Eng. trans. by Lady Eastlake,
-1887.--W. Pater: _Coleridge. Appreciations_, 1889.--T. De Quincey:
-_S.T.C._, 1889.--L. Stephen: _Coleridge, Hours in a Library_, vol.
-III, 1892.--J.D. Campbell: _S.T.C._, 1894. 2d edn.; 1896.--E. Dowden:
-_C. as a Poet. New Studies in Literature_, 1895.--E.V. Lucas: _Charles
-Lamb and the Lloyds_, 1898.--R.H. Shepherd: _The Bibliography of C._,
-1900.--C. Cestre: _La Révolution française et les poètes anglais
-(1789-1809)_, 1906.--J. Aynard: _La vie d’un poète_. _Coleridge_,
-1907.--A.A. Helmholtz: _The Indebtedness of S.T.C. to A.W. Schlegel_,
-1907.--A.A. Jack and A.C. Bradley: _Short Bibliography of C._, 1912.
-
-=C. Lamb=, 1775-1834: _Life and Works_, ed. A. Ainger, 12 vols.
-1899-1900. _The Works of Charles and Mary L._, ed. E.V. Lucas, 7 vols.
-1903-05. _The Works in Prose and Verse of Charles and Mary L._, ed. T.
-Hutchinson, 2 vols. 1908. _The Letters of C.L._ Intro, by H.H. Harper,
-5 vols. 1907. _Dramatic Essays of C.L._, ed. B. Matthews, 1891.
-
-G. Gilfillan: _C.L._, vol. II, 1857.--B.W. Proctor: _C.L._, 1866.--P.
-Fitzgerald: _C.L._, 1866.--A. Ainger: _C.L., a Biography_, 1882.
-_Lectures and Essays_, vol. II, 1905.--W. Pater: _C.L. Appreciations_,
-1889.--E.V. Lucas: _Bernard Barton and his Friends_, 1893. _C.L. and
-the Lloyds_, 1898. _The Life of C.L._, 2 vols. 1905.--F. Harrison: _L.
-and Keats_, 1899.--G.E. Woodberry: _C.L._, 1900.--H. Paul: _C.L. Stray
-Leaves_, 1906.
-
-=W. Hazlitt=, 1778-1830: _Works_, edd. A.R. Waller and A. Glover, 12
-vols. and index, 1902-06.
-
-L. Hunt: _Autobiography_, 3 vols. 1850.--W. C. Hazlitt: _Memoirs of W.
-H._, 2 vols. 1867. _Four Generations of a Literary Family_, 2 vols.
-1897. _Lamb and H._, 1899.--G. Saintsbury: _H. Essays in English
-Literature (1780-1860)_, 1890.--L. Stephen: _Hours in a Library_, vol.
-II, 1892.--A. Birrell: _W. H._, 1902.--P. E. More: _The Shelburne
-Essays, Second Series_, 1905.--J. Douady: _Vie de W. H._, 1907.--_Liste
-chronologique des œuvres de W. H._, 1906.
-
-=Lord Byron=, 1788-1824: _The Works of Lord B._, ed. by R. H. Coleridge
-and R. E. Prothero, 13 vols. 1898-1904. _Complete Poetical Works_, ed.
-with intro., etc., by P. E. More, 1905.--_Poetry of B._, chosen and
-arranged by M. Arnold, 1881.
-
-S. E. Brydges: _Letters on the Character and Poetical Genius of Lord
-B._, 1824.--T. Medwin: _Journal of the Conversations of Lord B._,
-1824.--L. Hunt: _Lord B. and Some of his Contemporaries_, 3 vols.
-1828.--J. Galt: _The Life of Lord B._, 1830, 1908.--V. E. P. Chasles:
-_Vie et influence de B. sur son époque_, 1850.--T. B. Macaulay: _Lord
-B._, 1853.--H. Beyle: _Lord B. en Italie_, in _Racine et Shakespeare_,
-1824.--K. Elze: _Lord B._, 1870.--H. von Treitschke: _Lord B. und
-der Radicalismus_, in _Historische und politische Aufsätze_, vol. I,
-1871.--E. Castelar: _Vida de Lord B._, 1873.--A. C. Swinburne: B.,
-in _Essays and Studies_, 1875.--C. Cant: _Lord B. and his Works_,
-1883.--J. C. Jeaffreson: _The Real Lord B._, 2 vols. 1883.--M. Arnold:
-✱ _Essays in Criticism, Second Series_, 1888.--R. Noel: _Life of
-B._ (bibliography by J. P. Anderson), 1890.--O. Schmidt: _Rousseau
-und B._, 1890.--S. Singheimer: _Goethe und Lord B._, 1894.--K.
-Bleibtreu: _B. der Übermensch_, 1897. _Das Byron-Geheimnis_, 1912.--R.
-Ackermann: _Lord B._, 1901.--F. Melchior: _Heines Verhältnis zu Lord
-B._, 1902.--G. K. Chesterton: _The Optimism of B., in Twelve Types_,
-1902.--E. Koeppel: _Lord B._, 1903.--J. C. Collins: _The Works of Lord
-B., in Studies in Poetry and Criticism_, 1905.--W. E. Leonard: _B.
-and Byronism in America_, 1905.--M. Eimer: _Lord B. und die Kunst_,
-1907.--E. Estève: ✱ _B. et le romantisme français_, 1907.--J. Calcaño:
-_Tres Poetas pesimistas del siglo xix_ (_Lord B., Shelley, Leopardi_),
-1907.--P. H. Churchman: _B. and Espronoeda_, 1909.--R. Edgcumbe: B.;
-_The Last Phase_, 1909.--B. Miller: _Leigh Hunt’s Relations with B._,
-1910.--C. M. Fuess: _Lord B. as a Satirist in Verse_, 1912.--E. C.
-Mayne: B., 2 vols. 1912.
-
-=T. De Quincey=, 1785-1859. _Select Essays_, ed. D. Masson, 2 vols.
-1888. _Collected Writings_, ed. D. Masson, 14 vols. 1889-90. _Literary
-Criticism_, ed. H. Darbishire, 1909.
-
-A. H. Japp: _T. De Q.: His Life and Writings._. 2 vols. 1877. New
-edn. 1890. _De Q. Memorials_, 2 vols. 1891.--S. H. Hodgson: _Outcast
-Essays_, 1881.--D. Masson: _T. De Q._, 1881.--G. Saintsbury: _De Q.
-Essays in English Literature (1780-1860)_, 1890.--L. Stephen: _Hours in
-a Library._ New edn. vol. I. 1892.--J. Hogg: _De Q. and his Friends_,
-1895.--A. Barine: _Névrosés: De Q._, etc., 1898.--A. Birrell: _Essays
-about Men, Women and Books_, 1901.--H. S. Salt: _De Q._, 1904.--J. A.
-Green: _T. De Q.: a Bibliography_, 1908.
-
-=P. B. Shelley=, 1792-1822: _Complete Poetical Works_, ed. T.
-Hutchinson, 1904. _Prose Works_, 4 vols. Ed. H. B. Forman, 1880.
-_Prose Works_, ed. R. H. Shepherd, 2 vols. 1888, 1912. _S.’s Literary
-Criticism_, ed. J. Shawcross, 1909. _Letters to Elizabeth Hitchener_,
-ed. B. Dobell, 1909. The _Letters of S._, ed. R. Ingpen, 2 vols. 1909.
-New edn. 1912.
-
-L. Hunt: _Lord Byron and his Contemporaries_, 1828.--T. Medwin: _The
-Shelley Papers_, 1833. _Life of S._, 2 vols. 1847. Ed. H. B. Forman,
-1913.--T. J. Hogg: _Life of S._, 2 vols. 1858. Ed. E. Dowden, 1906.--E.
-J. Trelawny: _Recollections of the Last Days of S. and Byron_, 1858.
-Ed. E. Dowden, 1906.--D. Masson: _Wordsworth, S., Keats, and other
-Essays_, 1874.--J. A. Symonds: _S._, 1878.--J. Todhunter: _A Study
-of S._, 1880.--_Shelley Society Publications_, 1884-88.--F. Rabbe:
-_S._, 1887.--J. C. Jeaffreson: _The Real S._, 2 vols. 1885.--E.
-Dowden: _Life of S._, 2 vols. 1886. Revised and condensed, 1896.--W.
-Sharp: _Life of S._, 1887.--M. Arnold: ✱ _Essays in Criticism, Second
-Series_, 1888.--F. S. Ellis: _A Lexical Concordance to the Poetical
-Works of S._, 1892.--W. Bagehot: _Literary Studies_. New edn., vol. I,
-1895.--H. Richter: _P. B. S._, 1898.--W. B. Yeats: _The Philosophy of
-S.’s Poetry_, 1903.--S. A. Brooke: _The Lyrics of S._, etc. _Studies
-in Poetry_, 1907.--E. S. Bates: _A Study of S.’s Drama The Cenci_,
-1908.--F. Thompson: _S._, 1909.--A. C. Bradley: _S.’s View of Poetry_,
-in _Oxford Lectures on Poetry_, 1909. _Short Bibliography of S._,
-English Association Leaflet, no. 23, 1912.--A. Clutton-Brock: _S.,
-the Man and the Poet_, 1910.--P. E. More: _S._, in _Shelburne Essays,
-Seventh Series_, 1910.--A. H. Koszul: _La Jeunesse de Shelley_,
-1910.--H. R. Angeli: _S. and his Friends in Italy_, 1911.--F. E.
-Schelling: _The English Lyric_, 1913.--H. N. Brailsford: _S. and
-Godwin_, 1913.--R. Ingpen: _S. in England_, 2 vols. 1917.
-
-=J. Keats=, 1795-1821: _Poetical Works_, ed. with an intro., etc.,
-by H. B. Forman, 1906. _Poems_, ed. Sir S. Colvin, 2 vols. 1915.
-_Letters._ Complete revised edn., ed. H. B. Forman, 1895. _Keats
-Letters, Papers and other Relics_, ed. G. C. Williamson, 1914.
-
-M. Arnold: _Selections from K.’s Poems_, with _Introduction_, in
-_Ward’s English Poets_, vol. IV, 1880. Also in ✱ _Essays in Criticism,
-Second Series_, 1888.--A. C. Swinburne: _Miscellanies_, 1886.--W. M.
-Rossetti: _Life of J. K._ (bibliography by J. P. Anderson), 1887.--S.
-Colvin: _K._, 1887.--W. Watson: _Excursions in Criticism_, 1893.--J.
-Texte: _K. et le neo-hellénisme dans la poésie anglaise_ in _Etudes
-de littérature européenne_, 1898.--P. E. More: _Shelburne Essays,
-Fourth Series_, 1906.--S. A. Brooke: _Studies in Poetry_, 1907.--A. E.
-Hancock: _J. K._, 1908.--A. C. Bradley: _The Letters of K._, in _Oxford
-Lectures on Poetry_, 1909.--L. Wolff: _An Essay on K.’s Treatment of
-the Heroic Rhythm and Blank Verse_, 1909. _J. K., sa vie et son œuvre_,
-1910.--J. W. Mackail: _Lectures on Poetry_, 1912.--Sir S. Colvin: ✱
-_Life of J. K._, 1917.
-
-
-FRENCH FIELD
-
-Bibliography: G. Lanson: ✱ _Manuel bibliographique de la litt. fr.
-moderne, 1500-1900_, vols. III and IV. Nouvelle éd. revue et complétée,
-1915.--H. P. Thieme: _Guide bibliographique de la litt. fr. de
-1800-1906_, 1907.--Asselineau: _Bibliographie romantique_, 3d edn.,
-1873. Histories of French Literature: D. Nisard: _Histoire de la litt.
-fr._, 4 vols. 1844-61. (For N.’s type of classicism see my _Masters
-of Mod. Fr. Crit._, pp. 87 ff.)--F. Brunetière: _Manuel de l’histoire
-de la litt. fr._, 1899.--G. Lanson: ✱ _Histoire de la litt. fr._ 11th
-edn. 1909.--C. H. C. Wright: _A History of Fr. Lit._ (bibliography),
-1912.--C.-M. Des Granges: _Histoire illustrée de la litt. fr._, 1915.
-
-Eighteenth century: F. Baldensperger: _Lénore de Bürger dans la litt.
-fr._, in _Etudes d’hist. litt._ 1e série, 1907. _Young et ses Nuits
-en France_, _ibid._--J. Reboul: _Un grand précurseur des romantiques,
-Ramond (1755-1827)_, 1911.--D. Mornet: _Le romantisme en Fr. au XVIIIe
-siècle_, 1912.--P. van Tieghem: _Ossian en Fr._, 2 vols. 1917.
-
-E. Bersot: _Etudes sur le XVIIIe siècle_, 1855. _Hist. des idées
-morales et politiques en Fr. au XVIIIe siècle_, 2 vols. 1865-67.--H.
-Taine: ✱ _L’Ancien Régime_, 1876. Vol. I of _Les Origines de la Fr.
-contemporaine_.--E. Faguet: ✱ _XVIIIe siècle_, 1892.--Rocafort: _Les
-Doctrines litt. de l’Encyclopédie_, 1890.--G. Lanson: _Le Rôle de
-l’expérience dans la formation de la philosophie du XVIIIe siècle_,
-1910.
-
-Abbé Prévost: _Manon Lescaut_, 1731.--Harrisse: _Bibliographie et Notes
-pour servir à l’hist. de Manon Lescaut_, 1875. _L’Abbé Prévost: hist.
-de sa vie et de ses œuvres_, 1896.--Heilborn: _Abbé Prévost und seine
-Beziehungen zur deutschen Lit._, 1897.
-
-_Œuvres complètes de Gessner_, trad. par Huber, 3 vols. 1768. H.
-Heis: _Studien aber einige Beziehungen zwischen der deutschen und der
-französischen Lit. im XVII. Jahr._ I. _Der Uebersetzer und Vermittler
-Huber_, 1909.
-
-G. Lanson: ✱ _Nivelle de La Chaussée et la comédie larmoyante_, 1887.
-2d edn. 1903.--E. Lintilhac: _Beaumarchais et ses œuvres_, 1887.--L.
-Béclard: _Sébastien Mercier_, 1903.--Günther: _L’œuvre dramatique de
-Sedaine_, 1908.--F. Gaiffe: _Etude sur le drame en Fr. au XVIIIe
-siècle_, 1910.
-
-=J.-J. Rousseau=, 1712-1778: _Discours sur les sciences et les arts_,
-1750. _Discours sur l’origine et les fondements de l’inégalité_, 1755.
-_Nouvelle Héloïse_, 1761. _Emile_, 1762. _Le contrat social_, 1762.
-Ed. Dreyfus-Brisác, 1896. Ed. Beaulavon, 1903. 2 éd. revue, 1914.
-_Confessions_, 1782-88. Ed. A. van Beyer, 1914. ✱ _The Political
-Writings of R._, ed. with intro., etc. by C. E. Vaughan, 2 vols. 1915.
-(Excellent work on the text. The estimate of the political influence
-seems to me to lack penetration.) Collected works: Ed. Petitain, 22
-vols. 1819-20. Ed. Musset-Pathay, 23 vols. 1823-26. Ed. Hachette, 13
-vols. 1887. (No good collected ed. as yet.)
-
-Streckeisen-Moultou: _Œuvres et Correspondance inédites de J.-J. R._,
-1861. _J.-J. R., ses amis et ses ennemis_ (Lettres à R.), 1865.: E.
-Asse: _Bibliographie de J.-J. R._ [no date]. For current bibliography
-see ✱ _Annales de la Société J.-J. Rousseau_, 1905 ff. _Extraits de
-J.-J. R._ publiés avec intro. p. L. Brunel. 3e éd. 1896.--_Morceaux
-choisis de J.-J. R._ avec intro. etc., p. D. Mornet, 1911.
-
-Studies (chiefly biographical): Musset-Pathay: _Histoire de la Vie
-et des Ouvrages de J.-J. R._, 2 vols. 1821.--Gaberel: _R. et les
-Génevois_, 1858.--H. Beaudoin: _La Vie et les Œuvres de J.-J. R._, 2
-vols. 1891 (bibliography).--F. Mugnier: _Mme. de Warens et J.-J. R._,
-1891.--F. Macdonald: _Studies in the France of Voltaire and R._, 1895.
-_J.-J. R., a New Criticism_, 2 vols. 1906. (The evidence offered as to
-the tampering with the memoirs of Mad. d’Epinay is of value. The work
-is in general uncritical.)--E. Ritter: ✱ _La famille et la jeunesse
-de J.-J. R._, 1896.--Stoppolini: _Le donne nella vita di G.-G. R._,
-1898.--E. Rod: _L’affaire J.-J. R._, 1906.--Comte de Girardin: ✱
-_Iconographie de J.-J. R._, 1908. _Iconographie des Œuvres de J.-J.
-R._, 1910.--H. Buffenoir: _Les Portraits de J.-J. R._--E. Faguet: _Vie
-de R._, 1912.--G. Gran: _J.-J. R._, 1912.
-
-Hume: _Exposé succint de la contestation qui s’est élevée entre M. Hume
-et M. Rousseau_, 1766.--Dussaulx: _De mes rapports avec J.-J. R._,
-1798.--Comte d’Escherny: _Mélanges de littérature_, etc., 1811.--D.
-Guillaume: _J.-J. R. à Motiers_, 1865.--Metzger: _J.-J. R. à l’île
-Saint-Pierre_, 1875. _La conversion de Mme. Warens_, 1887. _Une
-poignée de documents inédits sur Mme. Warens_, 1888. _Pensées de Mme.
-Warens_, 1888. _Les dernières années de Mme. Warens_ [no date]. G.
-Desnoiresterres: _Voltaire et J.-J. R._ (vol. VI of ✱ _Voltaire et la
-société fr. au XVIIIe siècle_) 2e éd. 1875.--G. Maugras: _Voltaire
-et J.-J. R._, 1886.--F. Berthoud: _J.-J. R. au Val de Travers_,
-1881. _J.-J. R. et le pasteur de Montmollin_, 1884.--T. de Saussure:
-_J.-J. R. à Venise, notes et documents_, recueillis par Victor
-Ceresole 1885.--P. J. Möbius: ✱ _J.-J. R.’s Krankheitsgeschichte_,
-1889.--Chatelain: _La Folie de J.-J. R._, 1890.--F. Mugnier: _Nouvelles
-Lettres de Mme. Warens_, 1900.--A. de Montaigu: _Démêlés du Comte
-Montaigu et de son secrétaire J.-J. R._, 1904.--B. de Saint-Pierre:
-_La Vie et les Ouvrages de J.-J. R._, éd. critique p. par M. Souriau,
-1907.--C. Collins: _J.-J. R. in England_, 1908.--A. Rey: _J.-J. R.
-dans la vallée de Montmorency_, 1909.--D. Cabanès: _Le Cabinet secret
-de l’histoire_, 3e série, 1909.--F. Girardet: _La Mort de J.-J. R._,
-1909.--P.-P. Plan: _R. raconté par les gazettes de son temps_, 1913.
-
-General Studies (chiefly critical): Bersot: _Etudes sur le XVIIIe
-siècle_, t. II, 1855.--J. Morley: ✱ _R._, 1873. 2d edn. 2 vols.,
-1886--Saint-Marc Girardin: _J.-J. R., sa vie et ses œuvres_,
-1874.--H.-F. Amiel: _Caractéristique générale de R._, in _J.-J. R.
-jugé par les Génevois d’aujourd’hui_, 1878.--Mahrenholtz: _J.-J. R.’s
-Leben_, 1889.--Chuquet: _J.-J. R._, 1893.--H. Höffding: _R. und seine
-Philosophie_, 1897.--J.-F. Nourrisson: _J.-J. R. et le Rousseauisme_,
-1903.--Brédif: _Du Caractère intellectuel et moral de J.-J. R._,
-1906.--J. Lemaître: _J.-J. R._, 1907.--L. Claretie: _J.-J. R. et
-ses amis_, 1907.--L. Ducros: _J.-J. R. (1712-57)_, 1908. _J.-J. R.
-(1757-65)_, 1917.--B. Bouvier: _J.-J. R._, 1912.
-
-Special Studies (chiefly critical): Sainte-Beuve: ✱ _Lundis_, t. II
-(_R. et Mme. de Franqueville_), 1850; t. III (_les Confessions_),
-1850; t. XV (_Œuvres et Correspondance inédites_), 1861. _Nouveaux
-Lundis_, t. IX (_Mad. de Verdelin_), 1865.--J. R. Lowell: _R. and
-the Sentimentalists, in Lit. Essays_, II, 1867.--Brunetière: _Etudes
-critiques_, t. III (1886) et IV (1890).--C. Borgeaud: _J.-J. R.’s
-Religionsphilosophie_, 1883.--A. Jansen: _R. als Musiker_, 1884.
-_R. als Botaniker_, 1885.--Espinas: _Le système de R._, 1895.--T.
-Davidson: _J.-J. R. and Education according to Nature_, 1898.--M.
-Liepmann: _Die Rechtsphilosophie des J.-J. R._ 1898.--F. Haymann:
-_J.-J. R.’s Sozial-Philosophie_, 1898.--P. E. Merriam: _History of
-the Theory of Sovereignty since R._, 1900.--E. Duffau: _La profession
-de foi du Vicaire Savoyard_, 1900.--J. L. Windenberger: _Essai sur le
-Système de politique étrangère de J.-J. R._, 1900.--A. Pougin: _J.-J.
-R. musicien_, 1901.--G. Schumann: _Religion und Religion-Erziehung
-bei R._, 1902.--Faguet: _Politique comparée de Montesquieu, Voltaire
-et R._, 1902.--M. Gascheau: _Les Idées économiques chez quelques
-philosophes du XVIIIe siècle_, 1903.--Grand-Carteret: _La Montagne à
-travers les âges_, 1903.--Albalat: _Le Travail du Style enseigné par
-les corrections manuscrites des grands écrivains_, 1903.--A. Geikie:
-_Landscape in History and other Essays_, 1905.--B. Lassudrie-Duchesne:
-_J.-J. R. et le Droit des gens_, 1906.--G. del Vecchio: _Su la teoria
-del Contratto Sociale_, 1906.--P. E. More: _Shelburne Essays_, VI
-(_Studies in Religious Dualism_), 1909.--D. Mornet: _Le sentiment
-de la nature en France, de J.-J. R. à B. de S. Pierre_, 1907.--L.
-Gignoux: _Le théâtre de J.-J. R._, 1909.--H. Rodet: _Le Contrat Social
-et les idées politiques de J.-J. R._, 1909.--A. Schinz: _J.-J. R., a
-Forerunner of Pragmatism_, 1909.--G. Fusseder: _Beiträge zur Kenntnis
-der Sprache R.’s_, 1909.--J.-J. Tiersot: _R._, 1912 (_Les Maîtres de
-la Musique_).--G. Vallette: _J.-J. R. Génevois_, 1911.--E. Faguet: _R.
-contre Molière_, 1912. _Les Amies de R._, 1912. _R. Artiste_, 1913. _R.
-Penseur_, 1913.
-
-Sources: Dom Cajot: _Les Plagiats de J.-J. R. de Genève sur
-l’Education_, 1765.--J. Vuy: _Origine des ideés politiques de
-J.-J. R._, 1878.--G. Krüger: _Emprunts de J.-J. R. dans son
-premier Discours_, 1891.--J. Texte: ✱ _J.-J. R. et les origines du
-Cosmopolitisme littéraire au XVIIIe siècle_, 1895.--C. Culcasi: _Degli
-influssi italiani nell’ opera di J.-J. R._--G. Chinni: _Le fonti dell’
-Emile de J.-J. R._, 1908.--D. Villey: _L’influence de Montaigne sur les
-idées pédagogiques de Locke et de R._, 1911.
-
-Reputation and Influence: Mme. de Staël: _Lettres sur le caractère et
-les ouvrages de J.-J. R._, 1788.--Mercier: _De J.-J. R. considéré comme
-l’un des premiers auteurs de la Révolution_, 1791.--Kramer: _A.-H.
-Francke, J.-J. R., H. Pestalozzi_, 1854.--E. Schmidt: _Richardson,
-Rousseau und Goethe_, 1875.--Dietrich: _Kant et R._, 1878.--Nolen:
-_Kant et J.-J. R._, 1880.--O. Schmidt: _R. et Byron_, 1887.--Pinloche:
-_La réforme de l’éducation en Allemagne au XVIIIe siècle, Basedow
-et le philanthropinisme_, 1889. _Pestalozzi et l’éducation populaire
-moderne_, 1891.--Lévy-Bruhl: _L’Allemagne depuis Leibnitz_, 1890.
-_La Philosophie de Jacobi_, 1894.--J. Grand-Carteret: _J.-J. R.
-jugé par les Français d’aujourd’hui_, 1890.--R. Fester: _R. und
-die deutsche Geschichtsphilosophie_, 1890.--H. Gössgen: _R. und
-Basedow_, 1891.--C. H. Lincoln: _J.-J. R. and the French Revolution_,
-1898.--A. Chalybans: _J.-J. R.’s Einfluss auf die französische
-Revolution und die Socialdemokratie_, 1899.--V. Delbos: _Essai sur
-la formation de la philosophie pratique de Kant_, 1903.--C. Cestre:
-_La Révolution française et les Poètes anglais_, 1906.--P. Lasserre:
-✱ _Le Romantisme français_, 1907.--Natorp: _Gesammelte Abhandlungen
-zur Sozialpädagogik_, erste Abteilung: _Historisches (Pestalozzi
-et R.)_, 1907.--M. Schiff: _Editions et traductions italiennes des
-œuvres de J.-J. R._, 1908.--H. Buffenoir: _Le Prestige de J.-J.
-R._, 1909.--E. Champion: _J.-J. R. et la Révolution française_,
-1910 (superficial).--A. Meynier: _J.-J. R. révolutionnaire_, 1913
-(superficial).--_Revue de métaphysique et de morale_, May, 1912.
-Symposium on R. and his influence by E. Boutroux, B. Bosanquet, J.
-Jaurès, etc. For similar symposium (by G. Lanson, H. Höffding, E.
-Gosse, etc.) see _Annales de la Soc. J.-J. R._, VIII (1912). For
-symposium by Italian writers see _Per il IIo centenario di G. G. R.
-(Studi pubblicati dalla Rivista pedagogica)_, 1913.--P. M. Masson: ✱
-_La Religion de J.-J. R._, 3 vols. 1917. (A storehouse of information
-for the growth of deism and religious sentimentalism in France in the
-18th century. Unfortunately the author is himself confused as to the
-difference between genuine religion and mere religiosity.)
-
-=D. Diderot=, 1713-84: _Œuvres_, p. par Assézat et Tourneux, 20 vols.
-1875-79. _Diderot. Extraits_, avec intro., etc., par J. Texte, 1909
-(excellent). _Pages choisies de D._, p. avec intro. par G. Pellissier,
-1909 (excellent).
-
-Naigeon: _Mémoire sur la vie et les ouvrages de D._, 1798. _Mémoires
-de Mme. de Vandeul_, 1830.--Sainte-Beuve: _Portraits litt._, I (1830).
-_Lundis_, III, (1851).--Rosenkranz: _D.’s Leben und Werke_, 2 vols.
-1866.--E. Scherer: ✱ _D._, 1880.--Caro: _La fin du Dix-huitième
-Siècle_, t. I, 1880.--E. Faguet: _Dix-huitième Siècle_, 1892.--J.
-Morley: ✱ _Diderot and the Encyclopædists_, 2 vols. 1891.--L. Ducros:
-_D., l’homme et l’écrivain_, 1894.--J. Reinach: _D._, 1894.--A.
-Collignon: _D., sa vie, ses œuvres, sa correspondance_, 1895.--Bersot:
-_Etudes sur le Dix-huitième Siècle_, t. II, 1855.--Brunetière: _Etudes
-critiques_, t. II. _Les Salons de D._, 1880.--J. Bédier: _Le Paradoxe
-sur le Comédien est-il de D.? Etudes Critiques_, 1903.
-
-=Bernardin de Saint-Pierre=, 1737-1814: _Etudes de la nature_, 3
-vols. 1784; 4 vols. 1787 (4th vol. contains _Paul et Virginie_); éd.
-augmentée, 5 vols. 1792. _œuvres complètes_, p. par Aimé Martin, 12
-vols. 1818-20. Supplément, 1823. _Correspondance_, p. par A. Martin, 3
-vols. 1826.--A. Barine: _B. de Saint-Pierre_, 1891.--F. Maury: _Etude
-sur la vie et les œuvres de B. de Saint-Pierre_, 1892.
-
-Nineteenth Century: A. Nettement: _Histoire de la litt. fr. sous le
-gouvernement de juillet_, 2 vols. 1854.--A. Michiels: _Histoire des
-idées lit. en Fr._, 2 vols. 1842.--G. Pellissier: ✱ _Le mouvement
-litt. au XIXe siècle_. (Eng. trans.) 6th edn. 1900.--E. Faguet: _Le
-XIXe siècle_, 1887. ✱ _Politiques et Moralistes du XIXe siècle_, 3
-vols. 1891-99.--F. Brunetière: ✱ _L’Evolution de la poésie lyrique
-en Fr. au XIXe siècle_, 2 vols. 1894.--C. Le Goffie: _La Litt. fr.
-au XIXe siècle_, 1910.--F. Strowski: _Histoire de la litt. fr. au
-XIXe siècle_, 1911. Important material bearing on the romantic period
-will also be found in the critical essays of G. Planche, D. Nisard,
-Sainte-Beuve, A. Vinet, E. Scherer, Barbey d’Aurevilly, H. Taine, E.
-Montégut, F. Brunetière, P. Bourget, E. Biré, E. Faguet, J. Lemaître,
-G. Larroumet, G. Pellissier, R. Doumic, etc. For fuller information
-see bibliography of my _Masters of Mod. Fr. Crit._, 395 ff. For tables
-of contents of the different volumes of these and other critics see
-Thieme: _Guide bibliographique_, 499 ff.
-
-History, Critical Studies and Special Topics: Stendhal: _Racine
-et Shakespeare_, 1823.--D. Sauvageot: _Le Romantisme_ (t. VIII de
-_L’Hist. de la Litt. fr._, publiée sous la direction de Petit de
-Julleville).--T. Gautier: _Hist. du Romantisme_, 1874.--Fournier:
-_Souvenirs poétiques de l’Ecole Romantique_, 1880.--R. Bazin:
-_Victor Pavie_, 1886.--T. Pavie: _Victor Pavie, sa jeunesse, ses
-relations littéraires_, 1887.--L. Derôme: _Les éditions originales
-des romantiques_, 2 vols. 1887.--G. Allais: _Quelques vues générales
-sur le Romantisme fr._ 1897.--J. Texte: _L’influence allemande dans
-le Romantisme fr._, in _Etudes de litt. européenne_, 1898.--E. Asse:
-_Les petits romantiques_, 1900.--E. Dubedout: _Le sentiment chrétien
-dans la poésie romantique_, 1901.--Le Roy: _L’Aube du théâtre
-romantique_, 1902.--R. Canat: _Du sentiment de la solitude morale
-chez les romantiques et les parnassiens_, 1904.--E. Barat: _Le style
-poétique et la révolution romantique_, 1904.--H. Lardanchet: _Les
-enfants perdus du romantisme_, 1905.--A. Cassagne: _La théorie de l’art
-pour l’art en France_, 1906.--E. Kircher: _Philosophie der Romantik_,
-1906.--E. Estève: ✱ _Byron et le Romantisme fr._, 1907.--Lasserre:
-✱ _Le Romantisme fr._, 1907. (A very drastic attack on Rousseau and
-the whole Rousseauistic tendency.)--L. Séché: _Le Cénacle de La Muse
-Fr. (1823-27)_, 1908.--E. Seillière: _Le Mal romantique, essai sur
-l’impérialisme irrationnel_, 1908. (One of about 18 vols. in which S.
-attacks the underlying postulates of the Rousseauist. Like the other
-leaders of the crusade against romanticism in France, S. seems to me
-unsound on the constructive side.)--A. Pavie: _Médaillons romantiques_,
-1909.--W. Küchler: _Französische Romantik_, 1909.--C. Lecigne: _Le
-Fléau romantique_, 1909.--P. Lafond: _L’Aube romantique_, 1910.--L.
-Maigron: ✱ _Le Romantisme et les mœurs_, 1910. _Le Romantisme et
-la mode_, 1911.--G. Michaut: _Sur le Romantisme, une poignée de
-définitions_ (extraits du _Globe_) in _Pages de critique et d’hist.
-litt._, 1910.--J. Marsan: _La Bataille romantique_, 1912.--P. van
-Tieghem: _Le Mouvement romantique_, 1912.--G. Pellissier: _Le Réalisme
-du romantisme_, 1912.--A. Bisi: _L’Italie et le romantisme français_,
-1914.--C. Maurras: _L’Avenir de l’intelligence._ 2e éd. 1917.--L.
-Rosenthal: _Du Romantisme au réalisme_, 1918.
-
-A. Jullien: _Le Romantisme et l’éditeur Renduel_, 1897.--P. Nebout: _Le
-Drame romantique_, 1897.--F. Baldensperger: ✱ _Goethe en France_, 1904.
-_Bibliographie critique de Goethe en France_, 1907.--C. Latreille:
-_La Fin du théâtre romantique et François Ponsard_, 1899.--R. Canat:
-_La renaissance de la Grèce antique (1820-50)_, 1911.--G. Gendarme
-de Bévotte: _La Légende de Don Juan_, 2 vols. 1911.--L. Séché: _Le
-Cénacle de Joseph Delorme_, 2 vols. 1912.--J. L. Borgerhoff: _Le
-théâtre anglais à Paris sous la Restauration_, 1913.--M. Souriau: _De
-la convention dans la tragédie classique et dans le drame romantique_,
-1885.
-
-Anthologies: _Anthologie des poètes fr. du XIXe siècle_ (Lemerre), 4
-vols. 1887-88.--_French Lyrics of the Nineteenth Century_, ed. by G.
-N. Henning, 1913. (An excellent selection.)--_The Romantic Movement in
-French Literature_, traced by a series of texts selected and edited by
-H. F. Stewart and A. Tilley, 1910.
-
-The Press: _La Muse Française_, 1823-24. Reprinted with intro. by J.
-Marsan, 2 vols. 1907-09.--P. F. Dubois: _Fragments litt._, articles
-extraits du _Globe_, 2 vols. 1879.--T. Ziessing: _“Le Globe” de 1824 à
-1830, considéré dans ses rapports avec l’école romantique_, 1881.--F.
-Davis: _French Romanticism and the Press, “The Globe”_, 1906.--C. M.
-Desgranges: ✱ _Le Romantisme et la critique, la presse litt. sous la
-Restauration_, 1907.
-
-B. Constant: _Adolphe_, 1816; avec préface de Sainte-Beuve, 1867; de
-P. Bourget, 1888; d’A. France, 1889.--Sainte-Beuve: _Portraits litt._,
-1844. _Lundis_, XI (sur _Adolphe_); _Nouveaux Lundis_, I, 1862.--E.
-Faguet: _Politiques et Moralistes_, 1re série, 1891.--G. Rudler: _La
-jeunesse de B. Constant (1767-94)_, 1909. _Bibliographie critique des
-œuvres de B. C._, 1908.--J. Ettlinger: _B. C., der Roman eines Lebens_,
-1909.
-
-=Madame de Staël=, 1766-1817: _De la littérature_, 1801. Delphine,
-1802. _Corinne_, 1807. _De l’Allemagne_, 1814. _Œuvres complètes_, 3
-vols. 1836.
-
-Biography: Mme. Necker de Saussure: _Notice en tête de l’édition des
-Œuvres_, 1820.--Mme. Lenormant: _Mme. de S. et la grande duchesse
-Louise_, 1862. _Mme. Récamier_, 1872.--A. Stevens: _Mme. de S._, 2
-vols. 1881.--D’Haussonville: _Le Salon de Mme. Necker_, 1882.--Lady
-Blennerhassett: ✱ _Mme. de S. et son temps_, traduit de l’allemand p.
-A. Dietrich, 3 vols. 1890.--A. Sorel: _Mme. de S._, 1890.--Dejob: _Mme.
-de S. et l’Italie_, 1890.--E. Ritter: _Notes sur Mme. de S._, 1899.--P.
-Gautier: _Mme. de S. et Napoléon_, 1903.
-
-Critical Studies: Sainte-Beuve: _Portraits Littéraires_, t. III, 1836.
-_Portraits de Femmes_, 1844. _Nouveaux Lundis_, t. II, 1862.--Vinet:
-_Etudes sur la litt. française. Mme. de S. et Chateaubriand_, 1849. New
-edn. published by P. Sirven, 1911.--Faguet: _Politiques et Moralistes_,
-1891.--F. Brunetière: _Evolution de la Critique_, 1892.--U. Mengin:
-_L’Italie des Romantiques_, 1902.--Maria-Teresa Porta: _Mme. de S. e
-l’Italia (bibliographia)_, 1909.--G. Muoni: _Ludovico di Breme e le
-prime polemiche intorno a Mme. de S. ed al Romanticismo in Italia_.--E.
-G. Jaeck: _Mme. de S. and the Spread of German Literature_, 1915.--P.
-Kohler: _Mme. de S. et la Suisse_, 1916.--R. C. Whitford: _Mme. de S.’s
-Reputation in England_, 1918.
-
-=François René de Chateaubriand=, 1768-1848. _Essai sur les
-Révolutions_, 1797.--Atala, 1801. _Le Génie du Christianisme_,
-1802. _René_, 1802. _Les Martyrs_, 1809. _Mémoires d’Outre-Tombe_,
-1849-50; éd. Biré, 6 vols. 1898-1901. _œuvres complètes_, 12 vols.
-1859-61. _Correspondance générale_, p. par L. Thomas, vols. I-IV,
-1912-13.--Rocheblave: _Pages choisies de C._, 1896.--V. Giraud:
-_Mémoires d’Outre-Tombe: Pages choisies_, 1912.
-
-Biography: Vinet: _Etudes sur la litt. française. Mme. de Staël et
-C._, 1849. New edn. published by P. Sirven, 1911.--A. France: _Lucile
-de Chateaubriand_, 1879.--A. Bardoux: _Mme. de Beaumont_, 1884. _Mme.
-de Custine_, 1888. _Mme. de Duras_, 1898.--F. Saulnier: _Lucile de
-Chateaubriand_, 1885.--G. Pailhès: _Mme. de C._, 1887. _Mme. de C.,
-lettres inédites à Clausel de Coussergues_, 1888. _C., sa femme et ses
-amis_, 1896. _Du nouveau sur Joubert, C._, etc., 1900.--J. Bédier: _C.
-en Amérique_, 1899. _Etudes critiques_, 1903.--E. Biré: _Les dernières
-années de C. (1830-48)_, 1902.--A. Le Braz: _Au pays d’exil de C._,
-1909.--A. Beaunier: _Trois amies de C._, 1910.--A. Cassagne: _La vie
-politique de C._, 1911.
-
-Critical Studies: Sainte-Beuve: _Portraits Contemporains_, t. I, 1834,
-1844. _Lundis_, ts. I, II, 1850; X, 1854. _Nouveaux Lundis_, t. III,
-1862. ✱ _C. et son groupe littéraire sous l’Empire_, 1848.
-
-Villemain: _C._, 1853.--Comte de Marcellus: _C. et son temps_,
-1859.--P. Bourget: _C._, in _Etudes et Portraits_, 1889.--C. Maurras:
-_Trois idées politiques (C., Michelet, Sainte-Beuve)_, 1898.--F.
-Gansen: _Le rapport de V. Hugo à C._, 1900.--Lady Blennerhassett:
-_Die Romantik und die Restaurationsepoche in Frankreich, C._,
-1903.--E. Dick: _Plagiats de C._, 1905.--G. Daub: _Der Parallelismus
-zwischen C. und Lamartine_, 1909.--E. Michel: _C., interprétation
-médico-psychologique de son caractère_, 1911.--Portiquet: _C. et
-l’hystérie_, 1911.--V. Giraud: _Nouvelles études sur C._, 1912.--J.
-Lemaître: _C._, 1912.--G. Chinard: ✱ _L’Exotisme américain dans l’œuvre
-de C._, 1918. (This volume with its two predecessors: _L’Exotisme
-américain au XVIe siècle_ (1911), and _L’Amérique et le rêve exotique
-au XVIIe et au XVIIIe siècle_ (1913) is an important repertory of
-material for the legend of the “noble savage” and allied topics.)
-
-=E. P. de Senancour=, 1770-1846: _Rêveries_, 1798, 1800. Ed. critique,
-pub. par J. Merlant, vol. I, 1911. _Obermann_, 1804, 2d edn. with
-preface by Sainte-Beuve, 1833.--J. Levallois: _Un précurseur,
-Senancour_, 1897.--A. S. Tornudd: _S._, 1898--J. Troubat: _Essais
-critiques_, 1902.--J. Merlant: _S., poète, penseur religieux et
-publiciste_, 1907.--R. Bouyer: _Un contemporain de Beethoven, Obermann
-précurseur et musicien_, 1907.--G. Michaut: _S., ses amis et ses
-ennemis_, 1909.
-
-=Charles Nodier=, 1783-1844: _Œuvres_, 13 vols. 1832-41
-(incomplete).--S. de Lovenjoul: _Bibliographie et critique_, 1902.
-_Œuvres choisies de N._ Notices p. A. Cazes, 1914.--Sainte-Beuve:
-_Portraits littér._, I, 1840.--P. Mérimée: _Portraits histor. et
-littér._, 1874.--E. Montégut: _Nos morts contemp._, I, II, 1884.--M.
-Salomon: _C. N. et le groupe romantique d’après des documents inédits_,
-1908.--J. Marsan: _Notes sur C. N., documents inédits, lettres_, 1912.
-
-=Alphonse de Lamartine=, 1790-1869: _Méditations poétiques_, 1820.
-_Nouvelles méditations poétiques_, 1823. _Harmonies poétiques et
-religieuses_, 1832. _Jocelyn_, 1836. _Œuvres complètes_, 41 vols.
-1860-66. _Œuvres_ (éd. Lemerre), 12 vols. 1885-87. _Correspondance_, p.
-par V. de Lamartine, 6 vols. 1872-75.
-
-Biographical and General Studies: F. Falconnet: _A. de L._,
-1840.--Chapuys-Montlaville: _L._, 1843.--E. de Mirecourt: _L._,
-1853.--E. Ollivier: _L._, 1874.--H. de Lacretelle: _L. et ses
-amis_, 1878.--P. Bourget: _L._, in _Etudes et Portraits_, 1889.--De
-Pomairols: _L._, 1889.--Baron de Chamborand de Périssat: _L. inconnu_,
-1891.--F. Reyssié: _La jeunesse de L._, 1892.--Deschanel: _L._,
-1893.--A. France: _L’Elvire de L._, 1893.--R. Doumic: _Elvire à
-Aix-les-Bains_, in _Etudes sur la litt. française_, 6e série, 1909.
-_L._, 1912.--Zyromski: _L. poète lyrique_, 1897.--Larroumet: _L._, in
-_Nouvelles études de litt. et d’art_, 1899.--L. Séché: _L. de 1816
-à 1830_, 1905. _Le Roman d’Elvire_, 1909. _Les amitiés de L., 1re
-série_, 1911.--E. Sugier: _L._, 1910.--P.-M. Masson: _L._, 1911.--P. de
-Lacretelle: _Les origines et la jeunesse de L._, 1911.
-
-Critical Studies: G. Planche: _Portraits littéraires_, t. I, 1836.
-_Nouveaux Portraits_, 1854.--Sainte-Beuve: ✱ _Lundis_, ts. I, IV,
-X, 1849-54. _Portraits contemporains_, t. I, 1832-39.--J. Lemaître:
-_Les Contemporains_, 6e série, 1896.--E. Faguet: _XIXe siècle_,
-1897--Brunetière: _L’évolution de la poésie lyrique en France au XIXe
-siècle_, 1894.--A. Roux: _La question de Jocelyn_, 1897.--M. Citoleux:
-_La poésie philosophique au XIXe siècle, L._, 1905.--C. Maréchal:
-_Le véritable Voyage en Orient de L._, 1908.--P. de Lacretelle: _Les
-origines et la jeunesse de L._, 1911.--L. Séché: _Les Amitiés de L._,
-1912.--R. Doumic: _L._, 1912.--H. R. Whitehouse: _The Life of L._, 2
-vols. 1918.
-
-=Alfred de Vigny=, 1797-1863: _Eloa_, 1824. _Poèmes antiques et
-modernes_, 1826. _Cinq-Mars_, 1826. _Chatterton_, 1835. _Les
-Destinées_, 1864. _Œuvres_ (Lemerre), 8 vols. 1883-85. _Le Journal
-d’un poète_, p. par L. Ratisbonne, 1867. _La Correspondance d’A. de
-V._, 1906 (incomplete).--S. de Lovenjoul: _Les Lundis d’un chercheur_,
-1894.--E. Asse: _A. de V. et les éditions originales de ses poésies_,
-1895.--J. Langlais: _Essai de bibliographie de A. de V._, 1905.
-
-Biography: L. Séché: _A. de V. et son temps_ [no date].--E. Dupuy:
-_La Jeunesse des Romantiques_, 1905. _A. de V., ses amitiés, son rôle
-littéraire_, 2 vols. 1912.
-
-Critical Studies: Sainte-Beuve: _Portraits littéraires_, t. III, 1844.
-_Nouveaux Lundis_, t. VI, 1863.--Barbey d’Aurevilly: _Les Œuvres et
-les Hommes_, III, 1862.--A. France: _A. de V._, 1868.--P. Bourget:
-_Etudes et Portraits_, 1889.--Brunetière: _L’évolution de la poésie
-lyrique_, 1894.--Faguet: _XIXe siècle_, 1897.--Paléologue: _A. de
-V._, 1891.--Dorison: _A. de V. poète, philosophe_, 1891.--J. Lemaître:
-_Contemporains_, VII, 1899.--E. Sakellaridès: _A. de V., auteur
-dramatique_, 1902.--Marabail: _De l’influence de l’esprit militaire
-sur A. de V._, 1905.--H. Schmack: _A. de V.’s Stello und Chatterton_,
-1905.--P.-M. Masson: _A. de V._, 1908.--P. Buhle: _A. de V.’s biblische
-Gedichte und ihre Quellen_, 1909.--E. Lauvrière: _A. de V._, 1910.--F.
-Baldensperger: _A. de V._, 1912.--L. Séché: _A. de V._, 2 vols.
-1914.--A. Desvoyes: _A. de V. d’après son œuvre_, 1914.--J. Aicard: _A.
-de V._ 1914.
-
-=Victor Hugo=, 1802-85: _Œuvres complètes_, ed. _ne varietur d’après
-les manuscrits originaux_, 48 vols. 1880-85. _Œuvres inédites_, 14
-vols. 1886-1902. _Correspondence (1815-84)_, 2 vols. 1896. _Lettres à
-la fiancée (1820-22)_, 1901.
-
-Biography: Mme. Victor Hugo: _V. H. raconté par un témoin de sa
-vie_, 2 vols. 1863.--E. Biré: _V. H. avant 1830_, 1883. _V. H. après
-1830_, 2 vols. 1891. _V. H. après 1852_, 1894.--G. Larroumet: _La
-maison de V. H., impressions de Guernsey_, 1895.--A. Jullien: _Le
-Romantisme et l’éditeur Renduel_, 1897.--A. Barbou: _La Vie de V. H._,
-1902.--G. Simon: _L’Enfance de V. H._, 1904.--E. Dupuy: _La Jeunesse
-des Romantiques_, 1905.--C. Maréchal: _Lamennais et V. H._, 1906.--L.
-Séché: _Le Cénacle de Joseph Delorme._ I, _V. H. et les Poètes._
-II, _V. H. et les artistes_, 1912.--L. Guimbaud: _V. H. et Juliette
-Drouet_, 1914.
-
-Critical Studies: G. Planche: _Portraits littéraires_, ts. I, II, 1836.
-_Nouveaux Portraits littéraires_, t. I, 1854.--Barbey d’Aurevilly: _Les
-Misérables de M. Victor Hugo_, 1862.--Sainte-Beuve: _Portraits litt._,
-t, I (1827); t. II (1840); t. III (1829); _Portraits contemporains_,
-t. I (1830-35).--Rémusat: _Critiques et études littéraires du passé
-et du présent_, 2e éd., 1857.--E. Zola: _Nos auteurs dramatiques_,
-1881. _Documents littéraires_, 1881.--A. C. Swinburne: _Essay on
-V. H._, 1886.--E. Dupuy: _V. H., l’homme et le poète_, 1887.--G.
-Duval: _Dictionnaire des métaphores de V. H._, 1888.--P. Bourget: _V.
-H._, in _Etudes et Portraits_, 1889.--Nisard: _Essais sur l’école
-Romantique_, 1891.--L. Mabilleau: _V. H._, 1893.--C. Renouvier: _V.
-H., le poète_, 1893. _V. H., le philosophe_, 1900.--A. Ricard: _Mgr.
-de Miollis, évêque de Digne_, 1893.--Brunetière: _L’évolution de la
-poésie lyrique_, 1894. _Les époques du théâtre français_, 1892.--A.
-Blanchard: _Le théâtre de V. H. et la parodie_, 1894.--Morel Fatio:
-_L’Histoire dans Ruy Blas_, in _Etudes sur l’Espagne, 1re série_,
-1895.--A. J. Theys: _Métrique de V. H._, 1896.--M. Souriau: _La préface
-de Cromwell_, 1897. _Les idées morales de V. H._, 1908.--A. Rochette:
-_L’Alexandrin chez V. H._, 1899 and 1911.--F. Ganser: _Beiträge zur
-Beurteilung des Verhältnisses von V. H. zu Chateaubriand_, 1900.--E.
-Rigal: _V. H. poète épique_, 1900.--P. Stapfer: _V. H. et la grande
-poésie satirique en France_, 1901.--T. Gautier: _V.H._, 1902.--P.
-and V. Glachant: _Essai critique sur le théâtre de V. H., Drames
-en vers. Drames en prose_, 2 vols., 1902 and 1903.--P. Levin: _V.
-H._, 1902.--_Leçons faites à l’Ecole Normale sous la direction de F.
-Brunetière_, 2 vols. 1902.--F. Gregh: _Etude sur V. H._, 1902.--H.
-Peltier: _La philosophie de V. H._, 1904.--H. Galletti: _L’opera di
-V.H. nella letteratura italiana_, 1904.--E. Huguet: _La couleur, la
-lumière et l’ombre dans les métaphores de V. H._, 1905.--L. Lucchetti:
-_Les images dans les œuvres de V. H._, 1907.--P. Bastier: _V. H. und
-seine Zeit._, 1908.--Maria Valente: _V. H. e la lirica italiana_,
-1908.--A. Guiard: _La fonction du poète, étude sur V. H._, 1910.
-_Virgile et V. H._, 1910.--C. Grillet: _La Bible dans V. H._, 1910.--P.
-Berret: _Le moyen âge européen dans La Légende des Siècles_, 1911.--A.
-Rochette: _L’Alexandrin chez V. H._, 1911.--P. Dubois: _V. H. Ses Idées
-religieuses de 1802-25_, 1913.
-
-H. Berlioz: _Correspondance inédite (1819-68)_, pub. par D. Bernard,
-1879. _Lettres intimes_, pub. par Ch. Gounod, 1882. _Berlioz; les
-années romantiques (1819-42), Correspondance_, pub. par J. Tiersot,
-1907.--A. Boschot: _La Jeunesse d’un romantique, H. Berlioz (1803-31)_,
-1906. _Un romantique sous Louis Philippe, Berlioz (1831-42)_, 1908. _Le
-Crépuscule d’un romantique, Berlioz (1842-69)_, 1913.
-
-=Alexandre Dumas=, 1803-70: _Henri III et sa cour_, 1829. _Antony_,
-1831. _Les Trois Mousquetaires_, 1844. _Le Comte de Monte Cristo_,
-1844-45.
-
-J. Janin: _A.D._, 1871.--B. Matthews: In _Fr. Dramatists of the 19th
-cent._ , 1881.--B. de Bury: _A. D._, 1885.--E. Courmeaux: _A. D._,
-1886.--J. J. Weiss: _Le théâtre et les mœurs_, 3e éd. 1889.--H.
-Parigot: _Le drame d’ A. D._, 1898. _A. D._, 1901.--H. Lecomte: _A.
-D._, 1903.--J. Lemaître: _Impressions de théâtre_, t. III (1890), IV
-(’95), VIII (’95), IX (’96).--R. Doumic: _De Scribe à Ibsen_, 1896;
-also in _Hommes et idées du XIXe Siècle_, 1903.
-
-=George Sand=, 1804-76: _Indiana_, 1832. _Lélia_, 1833. _Jacques_,
-1834. _Consuelo_, 1842-43. _La petite Fadette_, 1849. _Histoire
-de ma vie_, 4 vols. 1854-55.--_Correspondance_, 6 vols. 1882-84.
-_Correspondance de G. S. et d’ A. de Musset_, p. par F. Decori, 1904.
-_Œuvres complètes_ (éd. C. Lévy), 105 vols.--S. de Lovenjoul: _Etude
-bibliographique sur les œuvres de G. S._, 1868.
-
-Biography: H. Lapaire and F. Roz: _La bonne dame de Nohant_,
-1897.--Ageorges: _G. S. paysan_, 1901.--A. Le Roy: _G. S. et ses amis_,
-1903.--H. Harrisse: _Derniers moments et obsèques de G. S., souvenirs
-d’un ami_, 1905.--A. Séché and J. Bertaut: _La vie anecdotique et
-pittoresque des grands écrivains, G. S._, 1909.
-
-Critical Studies: G. Planche: _Portraits littéraires_, t. II, 1836.
-_Nouveaux Portraits littéraires_, t. II, 1854.--Sainte-Beuve: ✱
-_Lundis_, t. I, 1850. _Portraits Contemporains_, 1832.--E. Caro: _G.
-S._, 1887.--P. Bourget: _Etudes et Portraits_, 1889.--J. Lemaître:
-_Les Contemporains_, t. IV, 1889. _Impressions de théâtre_, ts. I, IV,
-1888-92.--Marillier: _La sensibilité et l’imagination chez G. S._,
-1896.--W. Karénine: _G. S._, 3 vols. 1899-1912.--R. Doumic: _G. S._,
-1909.--L. Buis: _Les théories sociales de G. S._, 1910.--E. Moselly:
-_G. S._, 1911.
-
-=Gérard de Nerval=, 1808-55: _Œuvres compl._, 5 vols. 1868. M.
-Tourneux: _G. de N._, 1867.--T. Gautier: _Portr. et souvenirs
-littér._, 1875.--Arvède Barine: _Les Névrosés_, 1898.--Mlle.
-Cartier: _Un intermédiaire entre la France et l’Allemagne, G. de
-N._, 1904.--Gauthier-Ferrières: _G. de N., la vie et l’œuvre_,
-1906.--J. Marsan: _G. de N., lettres inédites_, 1909.--_Correspondance
-(1830-55)_, p. par J. Marsan, 1911.--A. Marie: _G. de N._, 1915.
-
-=Alfred de Musset=, 1810-57: _Œuvres Complètes_ (Charpentier),
-10 vols. 1866, 10 vols. (Lemerre), 1886. 9 vols. p. par E. Biré,
-1907-08.--Rocheblave: _Lettres de George Sand à Musset et à
-Sainte-Beuve_, 1897.--_Correspondance de George Sand et d’A. de M._,
-p. par F. Decori, 1904.--_Correspondance d’A. de M._, p. par L. Séché,
-1907.--S. de Lovenjoul: _Etude critique et bibliographique des œuvres
-d’A. de M._, 1867.--M. Clouard: _Bibliographie des œuvres d’A. de M._,
-1883.
-
-Biography: G. Sand: _Elle et Lui_, 1859.--P. de Musset: _Lui et Elle_,
-1859. _Biographie d’A. de M._, 1877.--Louise Colet: _Lui_, 1859.--S. de
-Lovenjoul: _La véritable histoire de Elle et Lui_, 1897.--P. Mariéton:
-_Une histoire d’amour, George Sand et A. de M._, 1897.--E. Lefébure:
-_L’état psychique d’A. de M._, 1897.--E. Faguet: _Amours d’hommes de
-lettres_, 1906.--L. Séché: _A. de M._, 1907. _La Jeunesse dorée sous
-Louis-Philippe_, 1910.
-
-Critical Studies: Sainte-Beuve: _Portraits Contemporains_, t. II,
-1833. ✱ _Lundis_, I., 1850, XIII, 1857.--D. Nisard: _Etudes d’hist. et
-de lit._, 1859. _Mélanges d’hist. et de lit._, 1868.--P. Lindau: _A.
-de M._, 1876.--H. James: _Fr. Poets and Novelists_, 1878.--D’Ancona:
-_A. de M. e l’Italia_, in _Varieta Storiche e Letterarie_, 2 vols.
-1883-85.--J. Lemaître: _Impr. de théâtre_, I, II (’88), VII (’93), IX
-(’96), X (’98).--Arvède Barine: _A. de M._, 1893.--L. P. Betz: _H.
-Heine und A. de M._, 1897.--L. Lafoscade: _Le théâtre d’A. de M._,
-1901.--G. Crugnola: _A. de M. e la sua opera_, 2 vols. 1902-03.--J.
-d’Aquitaine: _A. de M., l’œuvre, le poète_, 1907.--Gauthier-Ferrières:
-_M., la vie de M., l’œuvre, M. et son temps_, 1909.--M. Donnay: _A. de
-M._, 1914.--C. L. Maurras: ✱ _Les Amants de Venise_, Nou. éd., 1917.
-
-=Théophile Gautier=, 1811-72: _Les Jeune-France_, 1833. _Mlle. de
-Maupin_, 1836-36. _Emaux et Camées_, 1852. _Histoire du romantisme_,
-1874. _Œuvres Compl._ (éd. Charpentier). 37 vols. 1883.--M. Tourneux:
-_T. G., sa bibliographie_, 1876.--S. de Lovenjoul: _Histoire des œuvres
-de T. G._, 2 vols. 1887.
-
-Sainte-Beuve: _Premiers Lundis_, t. II, 1838. _Portraits
-Contemporains_, II. 1846. _Nouveaux Lundis_, VI, 1863.--Barbey
-d’Aurevilly: _Les Œuvres et les Hommes_, 1865.--Baudelaire: _L’Art
-romantique_, 1874.--E. Feydeau: _T. G., souvenirs intimes_, 1874.--H.
-James: _Fr. Poets and Novelists_, 1878.--E. Bergerat: _T. G._,
-1880.--M. Du Camp: _T. G._, 1890.--E. Richet: _T. G., l’homme, la vie
-et l’œuvre_, 1893.
-
-
-GERMAN FIELD
-
-Bibliography: Goedeke: ✱ _Grundriss zur Geschichte der deutschen
-Dichtung_, 2 edn. vol. VI, 1898.--R. M. Meyer: _Grundriss der neuren
-deutschen Literaturgeschichte_, 2 edn. 1907.--A. Bartels: _Handbuch
-zur Geschichte der deutschen Literatur_, 2 edn. 1909.--_Jahresberichte
-für neuere deutsche Literaturgeschichte_, 1892 ff. (bibliographical
-notes on romanticism by O. F. Walzel).
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-General Studies: H. Heine: ✱ _Die romantische Schule_, 1836. Eng.
-trans, in _Bohn’s Library_. (Filled with political “tendency.” A
-brilliant attack on romanticism by a romanticist.)--J. v. Eichendorff:
-_Ueber die ethische und religiöse Bedeutung der neuren romantischen
-Poesie in Deutschland_, 1847.--J. Schmidt: _Geschichte der Romantik im
-Zeitalter der Reformation und der Revolution_, 2 vols. 1848-50.--H.
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-mit Goethe und Schiller_.--R. Haym: ✱ _Die romantische Schule_,
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-treatment.)--Ricarda Huch: ✱ _Blütezeit der Romantik_, 1899. ✱
-_Ausbreitung und Verfall der Romantik_, 1902. (Attractively written.
-The point of view, like that of practically all Germans, is very
-romantic.)--Marie Joachimi: _Die Weltanschauung der deutschen
-Romantik_, 1905.--O. F. Walzel: ✱ _Deutsche Romantik_, 3 edn. 1912.--R.
-M. Wernaer: _Romanticism and the Romantic School in Germany_, 1909.
-(The outlook, which professes to be humanistic, seems to me in the
-main that of the beautiful soul.)--A. Farinelli: _Il romanticismo in
-Germania_, 1911. (Simply reeks with the “infinite” in the romantic
-sense. “Sono, ahimè, stoffa di ribelle anch’io.” Useful bibliographical
-notes.)--A. W. Porterfield: _An Outline of German Romanticism_, 1914.
-(Of no importance from the point of view of ideas. The bibliography is
-useful.)--J. Bab: _Fortinbras, oder der Kampf des 19. Jahr. mil dem
-Geist der Romantik_, 1912. (An attack on romanticism.)
-
-See also A. Kobersteim: _Geschichte der deutschen Nationalliteratur_,
-vol. IV, pp. 543-955, 1873.--G. G. Gervinus: _Geschichte der deutschen
-Dichtung_, vol. V, pp. 631-816, 1874.--R. M. Meyer: _Die deutsche
-Literatur des 19. Jahr._, pp. 1-243, 1898.--R. v. Gottschall:
-_Die deutsche Nationalliteratur des 19. Jahr._, vol. I, 1901.--K.
-Francke: _A History of German Literature_, 1901. (The point of view
-is sociological rather than literary.)--W. Scherer: _Geschichte der
-deutschen Literatur_, pp. 614-720, 1908.--C. Thomas: _A History of
-German Literature_, pp. 328-76, 1909.--J. G. Robertson: _Outlines
-of the History of German Literature_, pp. 178-253, 1911.--A. Biese:
-_Deutsche Literaturgeschichte_, vol. II, pp. 288-693, 1912.
-
-Anthologies: _Stürmer und Dränger_. An anthology ed. by A. Sauer.
-_Deutsche Nat. Lit._, vols. 79, 80, 81, 1883.--_Sturm und Drang.
-Dichtungen aus der Geniezeit_, ed. by Karl Freye.--A. Spiess: _Die
-deutschen Romantiker_, 1903. (Poetry and prose.)--F. Oppeln-Bronikowski
-and L. Jacobowski: _Die blaue Blume. Eine Anthologie romantischer
-Lyrik_, 1908.
-
-Philosophy: L. Noack: _Schelling und die Philosophie der Romantik_,
-2 vols. 1859.--E. Grucker: _François Hemsterhuis, sa vie et ses
-œuvres_, 1866.--E. Meyer: _Der Philosoph F. Hemsterhuis_, 1893.--W.
-Dilthey: ✱ _Leben Schleiermachers_, 1870.--J. Royce: _The Spirit of
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-1894.--H. Höffding: _A History of Modern Philosophy_ (bk. VIII: _The
-Philosophy of Romanticism_), 1900.--R. Burck: _H. Steffens, Ein Beitrag
-zur Philosophie der Romantik_, 1906.--W. Windelband: _Geschichte der
-neuren Philosophie_, 4 edn. 2 vols. 1907 (Eng. trans.).
-
-Music and painting: H. Riemann: ✱ _Geschichte der Musik seit
-Beethoven_, 1800-1900, pp. 106-356, 1901.--D. G. Mason: _The Romantic
-Composers_, 1906.--E. Istel: ✱ _Die Blütezeit der musikalischen
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-die Romantik_, 1909.--R. Muther: _Geschichte der Malerei_, 3 vols.
-(vol. III for romantic period in Germany and other countries), 1909.
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-Special Topics (18th and 19th Centuries): L. Friedländer: _Ueber die
-Entstehung und Entwickelung des Gefühls für das Romantische in der
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-Allemagne_, 1890.--S. Lublinski: _Die Frühzeit der Romantik_, 1899.--T.
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-19. Jahr._ 1906.--M. Joachimi-Dege: _Deutsche Shakespeare-Probleme
-im 18. Jahr. und im Zeitalter der Romantik_, 1907.--E. Vierling:
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-_Märchen-Dichtung der Romantiker_, 1909.--F. Brüggemann: _Die Ironie
-als entwicklungsgeschichtliches Moment_, 1909.--O. F. Walzel: _Das
-Prometheussymbol von Shaftesbury zu Goethe_, 1910.--F. Strich: _Die
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-geistige Kultur in Deutschland am Ende des 18. Jahr._ 1909.--R.
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-der Romantik_, 1910.--J. E. Spenlé: _Rahel, Mme. Varnhagen v. Ense.
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-ästhetische Immoralismus_, 1911.--E. Mürmig: _Calderon und die ältere
-deutsche Romantik_, 1912.--G. Gabetti: _Il dramma di Z. Werner_,
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-vols. 1877-99.--Joret: _Herder_, 1876.--R. Haym: _Herder nach seinem
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-æsthetic treatises of S. in _Bohn’s Library_.) Collected works, ed.
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-=Friedrich Leopold, Freiherr von Hardenberg (Novalis)=, 1772-1801:
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-Weisheit und Sprache der Indier_, 1808. _Sämt. Werke_, 15 vols.
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-1800. (New edn. ed. by R. Frank, 1907.)--I. Rouge: _F. Schlegel et
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-Geistesgeschichte_, 1916.
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-betrachtet_, 1899.--K. Hassler: _L. T.’s Jugendroman William Lovell und
-der Paysan perverti_, 1902.--H. Günther: _Romantische Kritik und Satire
-bei L. T._, 1907.--G. H. Danton: _The Nature Sense in the Writings of
-L. T._, 1907.--F. Brüggemann: _Die Ironie in T.’s William Lovell und
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-Wackenroder (Phantasien über die Kunst)_, ed. J. Minor in _Deutsche
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-=Friedrich Baron de La Motte Fouqué=, 1777-1843: _Undine_, 1811.
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-seiner Persönlichkeit und seinen Werken_, 1908.--C. Schaeffer: _Die
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-Günther: _Die Entwickelung der novellistischen Kompositionstechnik K.’s
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-und seine Quellen_, 1908.--K. Bode: _Die Bearbeitung der Vorlagen in
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-J. P. Anderson), 1888.--T. Odinga: _Ueber die Einflüsse der Romantik
-auf H. H._, 1891.--T. Gautier: _Portraits et souvenirs littéraires_,
-pp. 103-28, 1892.--L. P. Betz: _Die französische Litteratur im Urteile
-H. H.’s._, 1897. _H. H. und A. de Musset_, 1897.--J. Legras: _H. H.,
-Poète_, 1897.--G. M. C. Brandes: _Ludwig Börne und H. H._, 2n ed.
-1898.--O. zur Linde: _H. H. und die deutsche Romantik_, 1899.--F.
-Melchior: _H. H.’s Verhältnis zu Lord Byron_, 1903.--E. A. Schalles:
-_H.’s Verhältnis zu Shakespeare_, 1904.--A. W. Fischer: _Ueber die
-volkstümlichen Elemente in den Gedichten H.’s_, 1905.--W. Ochsenbein:
-_Die Aufnahme Lord Byrons in Deutschland und sein Einfluss auf den
-jungen H._, 1905.--R. M. Meyer: _Der Dichter des Romanzero in Gestalten
-und Probleme_, pp. 151-63, 1905.--A. Bartels: _H. H.: Auch ein
-Denkmal_, 1906.--H. Reu: _H. H. und die Bibel_, 1909.--C. Puetzfeld:
-_H. H.’s Verhältnis zur Religion_, 1912.
-
-=Nikolaus Lenau=, 1802-50: _Sämt. Werke_, ed. A. Grüss [no year].--A.
-X. Schurz: _L.’s Leben_, 2 vols. 1855.--L. A. Frankl: _Zur Biographie
-L.’s._, 1885.--T. S. Baker: _L. and Young Germany in America_,
-1897.--L. Roustan: _L. et son temps_, 1898.--J. Saly Stern: _La vie
-d’un poète, essai sur L._, 1902.--A. W. Ernst: _L.’s Frauengestalten_,
-1902.--T. Gesky: _L. als Naturdichter_, 1902.--C. v. Klenze: _Treatment
-of Nature in the Works of N. L._, 1903.--L. Reynaud: _N. L., poète
-lyrique_, 1905.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] See, for example, in vol. IX of the _Annales de la Société
-Jean-Jacques Rousseau_ the bibliography (pp. 87-276) for 1912--the year
-of the bicentenary.
-
-[2] _Literature and the American College_ (1908); _The New Laokoon_
-(1910); _The Masters of Modern French Criticism_ (1912).
-
-[3] See his Oxford address _On the Modern Element in Literature_.
-
-[4] These two tendencies in Occidental thought go back respectively at
-least as far as Parmenides and Heraclitus.
-
-[5] In his _World as Imagination_ (1916) E. D. Fawcett, though
-ultra-romantic and unoriental in his point of view, deals with a
-problem that has always been the special preoccupation of the Hindu.
-A Hindu, however, would have entitled a similar volume _The World
-as Illusion_ (māyā). Aristotle has much to say of fiction in his
-_Poetics_ but does not even use the word imagination (φαντασία). In the
-_Psychology_, where he discusses the imagination, he assigns not to it,
-but to mind or reason the active and creative rôle (νοῦς ποιητικός).
-It is especially the notion of the _creative_ imagination that is
-recent. The earliest example of the phrase that I have noted in French
-is in Rousseau’s description of his erotic reveries at the Hermitage
-(_Confessions_, Livre IX).
-
-[6] Essay on Flaubert in _Essais de Psychologie contemporaine_.
-
-[7] _Le Romantisme et les mœurs_ (1910).
-
-[8] _Annales de la Société Jean-Jacques Rousseau_, VIII, 30-31.
-
-[9] I should perhaps say that in the case of Buddha I have been able to
-consult the original Pāli documents. In the case of Confucius and the
-Chinese I have had to depend on translations.
-
-[10] See appendix on Chinese primitivism.
-
-[11] See, for example, _Majjhima_ (Pāli Text Society), I, 265. Later
-Buddhism, especially Mahāyāna Buddhism, fell away from the positive and
-critical spirit of the founder into mythology and metaphysics.
-
-[12] Buddha expressed on many occasions his disdain for the _Vedas_,
-the great traditional authority of the Hindus.
-
-[13] I have explained the reasons for giving this place to Bacon in
-chapter II of _Literature and the American College_.
-
-[14] _Eth. Nic._, 1179 a.
-
-[15] I scarcely need remind the reader that the extant Aristotelian
-writings which have repelled so many by their form were almost
-certainly not meant for publication. For the problems raised by these
-writings as well as for the mystery in the method of their early
-transmission see R. Shute, _History of the Aristotelian Writings_
-(1888). The writings which Aristotle prepared for publication and
-which Cicero describes as a “golden stream of speech” (_Acad._ II,
-38, 119) have, with the possible exception of the recently recovered
-_Constitution of Athens_, been lost.
-
-[16] See his _Essai sur le genre dramatique sérieux_.
-
-[17] Quoted in Grimm’s Dictionary.
-
-[18] Ex lectione quorundam romanticorum, i.e. librorum compositorum
-in gallico poeticorum de gestis militaribus, in quibus maxima pars
-fabulosa est.
-
-[19] Perhaps the most romantic lines in English are found in one of
-Camillo’s speeches in _The Winter’s Tale_ (IV, 4):
-
- a wild dedication of yourselves
- To unpath’d waters, undream’d shores.
-
-This “wild dedication” is, it should be noted, looked upon by Camillo
-with disfavor.
-
-[20] _Pepys’s Diary_, 13 June, 1666.
-
-[21] Thomas Shadwell, Preface to the _Sullen Lovers_, 1668.
-
-[22] _Spectator_, 142, by Steele.
-
-[23] Pope, 2d Epistle, _Of the Character of Women_.
-
-[24] Cf. _Revue d’hist. litt._, XVIII, 440. For the Early French
-history of the word, see also the article _Romantique_ by A. François
-in _Annales de la Soc. J.-J. Rousseau_, V, 199-236.
-
-[25] First edition, 1698; second edition, 1732.
-
-[26] Cf. his _Elégie à une dame_.
-
- Mon âme, imaginant, n’a point la patience
- De bien polir les vers et ranger la science.
- La règle me déplaît, j’écris confusément:
- Jamais un bon esprit ne fait rien qu’aisément.
- …
- Je veux faire des vers qui ne soient pas contraints
- …
- Chercher des lieux secrets où rein ne me déplaise,
- Méditer à loisir, rêver tout à mon aise,
- Employer toute une heure à me mirer dans l’eau,
- Ouïr, comme en songeant, la course d’un ruisseau.
- Ecrire dans un bois, m’interrompre, me taire,
- Composer un quatrain sans songer à le faire.
-
-[27] _Caractères_, ch. V.
-
-[28] His psychology of the memory and imagination is still
-Aristotelian. Cf. E. Wallace, _Aristotle’s Psychology_, Intr.,
-lxxxvi-cvii.
-
-[29] _An Essay upon Poetry_ (1682).
-
-[30] The French Academy discriminates in its _Sentiments sur le Cid_
-between two types of probability, “ordinary” and “extraordinary.”
-Probability in general is more especially reserved for action. In the
-domain of action “ordinary” probability and decorum run very close
-together. It is, for example, both indecorous and improbable that
-Chimène in the _Cid_ should marry her father’s murderer.
-
-[31] In his _Preface_ to Shakespeare.
-
-[32] For a similar distinction in Aristotle see _Eth. Nic._, 1143 b.
-
-[33] The Platonic and Aristotelian reason or mind (νοῦς) contains an
-element of intuition.
-
-[34] In his _Lettre à d’Alembert sur les spectacles_.
-
-[35] _Rousseau contre Molière_, 238.
-
-[36] _Letters on Chivalry and Romance._
-
-[37] See verses prefixed to Congreve’s _Double-Dealer_.
-
-[38]
-
- Change l’état douteux dans lequel tu nous ranges,
- Nature élève-nous à la clarté des anges,
- Ou nous abaisse au sens des simples animaux.
-
- _Sonnet_ (1657?).
-
-[39] See, for example, A. Gerard’s _Essay on Genius_ (1774), _passim_.
-
-[40] The English translation of this part of the _Critique of
-Judgment_, edited by J. C. Meredith, is useful for its numerous
-illustrative passages from these theorists (Young, Gerard, Duff, etc.).
-
-[41] Mrs. Katharine Fullerton Gerould has dealt interestingly with this
-point in an article in the _Unpopular Review_ (October, 1914) entitled
-_Tabu and Temperament_.
-
-[42] See _Biographia literaria_, ch. XXII.
-
-[43] This message came to him in any case straight from German
-romanticism. See Walzel, _Deutsche Romantik_, 22, 151.
-
-[44] “De tous les corps et esprits, on n’en saurait tirer un
-mouvement de vraie charité; cela est impossible, et d’un autre ordre,
-surnaturel.” _Penseés_, Article XVII. “Charité,” one should recollect,
-here has its traditional meaning--the love, not of man, but of God.
-
-[45] See poem, _Ce siècle avait deux ans_ in the _Feuilles d’Automne_.
-
-[46] For amusing details, see L. Maigron, _Le Romantisme et la mode_
-(1911), ch. V.
-
-[47] For Disraeli see Wilfrid Ward, _Men and Matters_, 54 ff. Of
-Bulwer-Lytton at Nice about 1850 Princess von Racowitza writes
-as follows in her _Autobiography_ (p. 46): “His fame was at its
-zenith. He seemed to me antediluvian, with his long dyed curls and
-his old-fashioned dress … with long coats reaching to the ankles,
-knee-breeches, and long colored waistcoats. Also, he appeared always
-with a young lady who adored him, and who was followed by a man
-servant carrying a harp. She sat at his feet and appeared as he did
-in the costume of 1830, with long flowing curls called _Anglaises_.
-… In society, however, people ran after him tremendously, and spoilt
-him in every possible way. He read aloud from his own works, and, in
-especially poetic passages, his ‘Alice’ accompanied him with arpeggios
-on the harp.”
-
-[48] See essay by Kenyon Cox on _The Illusion of Progress_, in his
-_Artist and Public_.
-
-[49] See _Creative Criticism_ by J. E. Spingarn, and my article on
-_Genius and Taste_, reviewing this book, in the _Nation_ (New York), 7
-Feb., 1918.
-
-[50] One should note here as elsewhere points of contact between
-scientific and emotional naturalism. Take, for example, the educational
-theory that has led to the setting up of the elective system. The
-general human discipline embodied in the fixed curriculum is to be
-discarded in order that the individual may be free to work along the
-lines of his bent or “genius.” In a somewhat similar way scientific
-naturalism encourages the individual to sacrifice the general human
-discipline to a specialty.
-
-[51] See his poem _L’Art_ in _Emaux et Camées_.
-
-[52]
-
- Quel esprit ne bat la campagne?
- Qui ne fait châteaux en Espagne?
- Picrochole, Pyrrhus, la laitière, enfin tous,
- Autant les sages que les fous
- Chacun songe en veillant; il n’est rien de plus doux.
- Une flatteuse erreur emporte alors nos âmes;
- Tout le bien du monde est à nous,
- Tous les honneurs, toutes les femmes.
- Quand je suis seul, je fais au plus brave un défi,
- Je m’écarte, je vais détrôner le sophi;
- On m’élit roi, mon peuple m’aime;
- Les diadèmes vont sur ma tête pleuvant:
- Quelque accident fait-il que je rentre en moi-même,
- Je suis gros Jean comme devant.
-
-[53] _Rasselas_, ch. XLIV.
-
-[54] _Nouvelle Héloïse_, Pt. II, Lettre XVII.
-
-[55] Rostand has hit off this change in the Balcony Scene of his
-_Cyrano de Bergerac_.
-
-[56] Essay on _Simple and Sentimental Poetry_.
-
-[57] The life of Rousseau by Gerhard Gran is written from this point of
-view.
-
-[58]
-
- The world’s great age begins anew,
- The golden years return, etc.
-
- _Hellas_, vv. 1060 ff.
-
-[59] For an excellent analysis of Shelley’s idealism see Leslie
-Stephen’s _Godwin and Shelley_ in his _Hours in a Library_.
-
-[60] _Letters_, II, 292.
-
-[61] See his letter to Wordsworth, 30 January, 1801.
-
-[62] _Dramatic Art and Literature_, ch. I.
-
-[63] Cf. Voltaire: On ne peut désirer ce qu’on ne connaît pas.
-(_Zaïre_.)
-
-[64] Cf. Sainte-Beuve, _Causeries du lundi_. XV, 371: “Le romantique
-a la nostalgie, comme Hamlet; il cherche ce qu’il n’a pas, et jusque
-par delà les nuages; il rêve, il vit dans les songes. Au dix-neuvième
-siècle, il adore le moyen âge; au dix-huitième, il est déjà
-révolutionnaire avec Rousseau,” etc. Cf. also T. Gautier as quoted in
-the _Journal des Goncourt_, II, 51: “Nous ne sommes pas Français, nous
-autres, nous tenons à d’autres races. Nous sommes pleins de nostalgies.
-Et puis quand à la nostalgie d’un pays se joint la nostalgie d’un
-temps … comme vous par exemple du dix-huitième siècle … comme moi de
-la Venise de Casanova, avec embranchement sur Chypre, oh! alors, c’est
-complet.”
-
-[65] See article _Goût_ in _Postscriptum de ma vie_.
-
-[66] Schlegel’s _Dramatic Art and Literature_, Lecture XXII.
-
-[67] For a discussion of this point see I. Rouge: _F. Schlegel et la
-Genèse du romantisme allemand_, 48 ff.
-
-[68] For a development of this point of view see the essay of Novalis:
-_Christianity or Europe_.
-
-[69] _Confessions_, Livre IX (1756).
-
-[70] This is Goethe’s very classical definition of genius: Du nur,
-Genius, mehrst in der Natur die Natur.
-
-[71] Greek literature, after it had lost the secret of selection and
-the grand manner, as was the case during the Alexandrian period, also
-tended to oscillate from the pole of romance to the pole of so-called
-realism--from the _Argonautica_ of Apollonius of Rhodes, let us say, to
-the _Mimes_ of Herondas.
-
-[72] _Emile_, Livre II.
-
-[73] _Etudes de la nature._
-
-[74] See, for example, _Tatler_, 17 November, 31 December, 1709 (by
-Steele).
-
-[75] See her letter to Gustavus III, King of Sweden, cited in _Gustave
-III et la cour de France_, II, 402, par A. Geffroy.
-
-[76] See Hastings Rashdall: _Is Conscience an Emotion?_ (1914),
-especially ch. I. Cf. _Nouvelle Héloïse_. (Pt. VI, Lettre VII):
-“Saint-Preux fait de la conscience morale un sentiment, et non pas un
-jugement.”
-
-[77] _Nouvelle Héloïse_, Pt. V, Lettre II.
-
-[78] _Ibid._
-
-[79] _Ibid._, Pt. IV, Lettre XII.
-
-[80] Schiller’s definition is well known: “A beautiful soul we call
-a state where the moral sentiment has taken possession of all the
-emotions to such a degree that it may unhesitatingly commit the
-guidance of life to instinct,” etc. (_On Grace and Dignity._) Cf.
-Madame de Staël: “La vertu devient alors une impulsion involontaire,
-un mouvement qui passe dans le sang, et vous entraîne irrésistiblement
-comme les passions les plus impérieuses.” (_De la Littérature: Discours
-préliminàire._)
-
-[81] _Avenir de la Science_, 354.
-
-[82] _Ibid._, 179-180.
-
-[83] _Avenir de la Science_, 476.
-
-[84] Madame de Warens felt the influence of German pietism in her
-youth. See _La Jeunesse de J.-J. Rousseau_ par E. Ritter; ch. XIII.
-
-[85] _Lettre à M. Molé_ (21 October, 1803).
-
-[86] _Le romantisme français_, 215.
-
-[87] See _Les Amours de Milord Bomston_ at the end of _La Nouvelle
-Héloïse_.
-
-[88] _Sultan Mourad_ in _La Légende des Siècles_.
-
-[89] _Correspondence_, III, 213 (June, 1791). The date of this letter
-should be noted. Several of the worst terrorists of the French
-Revolution began by introducing bills for the abolition of capital
-punishment.
-
-[90] See Burton’s _Hume_, II, 309 (note 2).
-
-This sentimental trait did not escape the authors of the _Anti-Jacobin_:
-
- Sweet child of sickly Fancy--Her of yore
- From her lov’d France Rousseau to exile bore;
- And while midst lakes and mountains wild he ran
- Full of himself and shunn’d the haunts of man,
- Taught her o’er each lone vale and Alpine steep
- To lisp the stories of his wrongs and weep;
- Taught her to cherish still in either eye
- Of tender tears a plentiful supply,
- And pour them in the brooks that babbled by--
- Taught her to mete by rule her feelings strong,
- False by degrees and delicately wrong,
- For the crush’d Beetle, _first_--the widow’d Dove,
- And all the warbled sorrows of the grove,
- _Next_ for poor suff’ring Guilt--and _last_ of all,
- For Parents, Friends, or King and Country’s fall.
-
-[91]
-
- Shepherds, dwellers in the valleys, men
- Whom I already loved;--not verily
- For their own sakes, but for the fields and hills
- Where was their occupation and abode.
-
- _Michael_
-
-[92]
-
- Once more the Ass, with motion dull,
- Upon the pivot of his skull
- Turned round his long left ear.
-
-“The bard who soars to elegize an ass” and the “laureate of the
-long-eared kind” (_English Bards and Scotch Reviewers_) is, however,
-not Wordsworth but Coleridge. See his poem _To a Young Ass, its mother
-being tethered near it_.
-
-[93] See the poem _Acte d’accusation_ in _Les Contemplations_.
-
-[94] _Le Crapaud_ in _La Légende des Siècles_.
-
-[95] See _Apology_ 31D.
-
-[96] His _Language and Wisdom of the Hindus_ appeared in 1808.
-
-[97] See _Jugendschriften_, ed. by J. Minor, II, 362.
-
-[98] _Dhammapada._
-
-[99] _Sutta-Nipāta_, v. 149 (_Metta-sutta_).
-
-[100] _Second Dialogue._
-
-[101] _Letters_, II, 298. For Ruskin and Rousseau see _Ibid._ I, 360:
-“[Ruskin] said that great parts of _Les Confessions_ were so true to
-himself that he felt as if Rousseau must have transmigrated into his
-body.”
-
-[102] “If a poet wishes an atmosphere of indistinct illusion and of
-moving shadow, he must use the romantic style. … Women, such as we know
-them, such as they are likely to be, ever prefer a delicate unreality
-to a true or firm art.” Essay on _Pure, Ornate, and Grotesque Art in
-English Poetry_ (1864).
-
-[103] “Die Romanze auf einem Pferde” utters the following lines in the
-Prologue to Tieck’s _Kaiser Octavianus_:
-
- Mondbeglänzte Zaubernacht,
- Die den Sinn gefangen hält,
- Wundervolle Märchenwelt
- Steig’ auf in der alten Pracht.
-
-A special study might be made of the rôle of the moon in Chateaubriand
-and Coleridge--even if one is not prepared like Carlyle to dismiss
-Coleridge’s philosophy as “bottled moonshine.”
-
-[104] O. Walzel points out that as soon as the women in H. von Kleist’s
-plays become conscious they fall into error (_Deutsche Romantik_, 3.
-Auflage, 147).
-
-[105] Byron, _Sardanapalus_, IV, 5. Cf. Rousseau, _Neuvième Promenade_:
-“Dominé par mes sens, quoi que je puisse faire, je n’ai jamais pu
-résister à leurs impressions, et, tant que l’objet agit sur eux, mon
-cœur ne cesse d’en être affecté.” Cf. also Musset, _Rolla_:
-
- Ce n’était pas Rolla qui gouvernait sa vie,
- C’étaient ses passions; il les laissait aller
- Comme un pâtre assoupi regarde l’eau couler.
-
-[106] _Modern Painters_, Part V, ch. XX.
-
-[107] _Confessions_, Pt. II, Livre IX (1756).
-
-[108]
-
- With nature never do _they_ wage
- A foolish strife; they see
- A happy youth and their old age
- Is beautiful and free.
-
- Wordsworth: _The Fountain_.
-
-[109] The phrase imaginative insight is, I believe, true to the spirit
-of Plato at his best, but it is certainly not true to his terminology.
-Plato puts the imagination (φαντασία) not only below intuitive
-reason (νοῦς) and discursive reason or understanding (διάνοια), but
-even below outer perception (πίστις). He recognizes indeed that it
-may reflect the operations of the understanding and even the higher
-reason as well as the impressions of sense. This notion of a superior
-intellectual imagination was carried much further by Plotinus and
-the neo-Platonists. Even the intellectual imagination is, however,
-conceived of as passive. Perhaps no Greek thinker, not even Plato,
-makes as clear as he might that reason gets its intuition of reality
-and the One with the aid of the imagination and, as it were, through
-a veil of illusion, that, in Joubert’s phrase, “l’illusion est une
-partie inté, grante de la réalité” (_Pensées_, Titre XI, XXXIX).
-Joubert again distinguishes (_ibid._, Titre III, XLVII, LI) between
-“l’imaginative” which is passive and “l’imagination” which is active
-and creative (“l’œil de l’âme”). In its failure to bring out with
-sufficient explicitness this _creative_ rôle of the imagination and in
-the stubborn intellectualism that this failure implies is to be found,
-if anywhere, the weak point in the cuirass of Greek philosophy.
-
-[110] See Xenophon, _Memorabilia_, IV, 16, 3.
-
-[111] Σωφροσύνη.
-
-[112] See his _Lettre à d’Alembert_.
-
-[113] _Varieties of Religious Experience_, 387.
-
-[114] _Blütezeit der Romantik_, 126.
-
-[115] “Parfaite illusion, réalité parfaite” (Alfred de Vigny). “Die
-Welt wird Traum, der Traum wird Welt” (Novalis). “This sort of dreaming
-existence is the best; he who quits it to go in search of realities
-generally barters repose for repeated disappointments and vain regrets”
-(Hazlitt).
-
-[116] _Lit. Ang._, IV, 130.
-
-[117] About 1885.
-
-[118] _Le Théâtre en France_, 304.
-
-[119]
-
- Je suis une force qui va!
- Agent aveugle et sourd de mystères funèbres.
-
-[120] E.g., Lillo’s _Fatal Curiosity_ (1736) had a marked influence on
-the rise of the German fate tragedy.
-
-[121]
-
- Wo ist der, der sagen dürfe,
- So will ich’s, so sei’s gemacht,
- Unser Taten sind nur Würfe
- In des Zufalls blinde Nacht.
-
- _Die Ahnfrau._
-
-[122] “So that in the first place, I put for a general inclination of
-all mankind, a perpetual and restless desire of Power after power, that
-ceaseth only in Death.” _Leviathan_, Part I, ch. XI.
-
-[123] See _Unpopular Review_, October, 1915.
-
-[124] E. Seillière has been tracing, in _Le Mal romantique_ and
-other volumes, the relation between Rousseauism and what he terms an
-“irrational imperialism.” His point of view is on the constructive side
-very different from mine.
-
-[125] The best account of Rousseau’s German influence is still that of
-H. Hettner in his _Literaturgeschichte des 18. Jahrhunderts_. Compared
-with Rousseau’s German influence, says Professor Paul Hensel in his
-_Rousseau_ (1907), “his influence in France seems almost trifling.” In
-Germany “Rousseau became the basis not of a guillotine but of a new
-culture (Kultur). … We have drawn his spirit over to us, we have made
-it our own.” (121.) See also Professor Eugen Kühnemann, _Vom Weltreich
-des deutschen Geistes_ (1914), 54-62, and _passim_. German idealism is,
-according to Kühnemann, the monument that does the greatest honor to
-Rousseau.
-
-[126]
-
- A robin redbreast in a cage
- Puts all Heaven in a rage.
- …
- He who shall hurt the little wren
- Shall never be belov’d by men.
- He who the ox to wrath has mov’d
- Shall never be by woman lov’d.
- …
- Kill not the moth nor butterfly,
- For the Last Judgment draweth nigh.
-
- _Auguries of Innocence._
-
-[127] See _Hart-Leap Well_.
-
-[128] _Beyond Good and Evil_, ch. IV.
-
-[129] “Out into distant futures, which no dream hath yet seen, into
-warmer souths than ever sculptor conceived. … Let this love be your new
-nobility,--the undiscovered in the remotest seas,” etc. (_Thus Spake
-Zarathustra_, translated by Thomas Common, 240, 248.)
-
-[130] “On trouverait, en rétablissant les anneaux intermédiaires de
-la chaîne, qu’à Pascal se rattachent les doctrines modernes qui font
-passer en première ligne la connaissance immédiate, l’intuition, la vie
-intérieure, comme à Descartes … se rattachent plus particulièrement les
-philosophies de la raison pure.” _La Science française_ (1915), I, 17.
-
-[131] Cf. Tennyson:
-
- Fantastic beauty, such as lurks
- In some wild poet when he works
- Without a conscience or an aim--
-
-[132] Addison writes:
-
- ’Twas then great Marlbro’s mighty soul was proved,
- That, in the shock of changing hosts unmoved,
- Amidst confusion, horror, and despair,
- Examin’d all the dreadful scenes of war;
- In peaceful thought the field of death survey’d.
-
-So far as Marlborough deserved this praise he was a general in the
-grand manner.
-
-[133] “Beauty resides in due proportion and order,” says Aristotle
-(_Poetics_, ch. VII).
-
-[134] _A Survey of English Literature, 1780-1830_ (1912), II, 191.
-
-[135] Confucius and the Chinese sages were if anything even more
-concerned than Plato or Aristotle with the ethical quality of music.
-
-[136] Like Bishop Blougram’s his “interest’s on the dangerous edge of
-things.”
-
-[137]
-
- Does he take inspiration from the church,
- Directly make her rule his law of life?
- Not he: his own mere impulse guides the man.
- …
- Such is, for the Augustine that was once,
- This Canon Caponsacchi we see now.
-
- X, 1911-28.
-
-[138] See X, 1367-68.
-
-[139] Letter to Joseph d’Ortigue, January 19, 1833.
-
-[140] Here is an extreme example from Maigron’s manuscript collection
-(_Le Romantisme et les mœurs_, 153). A youth forced to be absent
-three weeks from the woman he loves writes to her as follows: “Trois
-semaines, mon amour, trois semaines loin de toi! … Oh! Dieu m’a maudit!
-… Hier j’ai erré toute l’après-midi comme une bête fauve, une bête
-traquée. … Dans la forêt, j’ai hurlé, hurlé comme un démon … je me suis
-roulé par terre … j’ai broyé sous mes dents des branches que mes mains
-avaient arrachées. … Alors, de rage, j’ai pris ma main entre mes dents;
-j’ai serré, serré convulsivement; le sang a jailli et j’ai craché au
-ciel le morceau de chair vive … j’aurais voulu lui cracher mon cœur.”
-
-[141] Maxime Du Camp asserts in his _Souvenirs littéraires_ (I, 118)
-that this anæmia was due in part to the copious blood-letting to which
-the physicians of the time, disciples of Broussais, were addicted.
-
-[142] This perversion was not unknown to classical antiquity. Cf.
-Seneca, _To Lucilius_, XCIX: “Quid turpius quam captare in ipso luctu
-voluptatem; et inter lacrymas quoque, quod juvet, quærere?”
-
-[143] _Nouvelle Héloïse_, Pt. III, Lettre VI.
-
-[144] _Confessions_, Livre IV.
-
-[145] _The New Laokoon_, ch. V.
-
-[146] _Franciscae meæ laudes_, in _Les Fleurs du mal_.
-
-[147] _Architecture and Painting_, Lecture II. This diatribe may have
-been suggested by Byron’s _Don Juan_, Canto XIII, IX-XI:
-
- Cervantes smiled Spain’s chivalry away:
- A single laugh demolished the right arm
- Of his own country, etc.
-
-[148] “Nondum amabam, et amare amabam, quærebam quid amarem, amans
-amare.”
-
-[149] Cf. Shelley’s _Alastor_:
-
- Two eyes,
- Two starry eyes, hung in the gloom of thought
- And seemed with their serene and azure smiles
- To beckon.
-
-[150] “Some of us have in a prior existence been in love with an
-Antigone, and that makes us find no full content in any mortal tie.”
-Shelley to John Gisborne, October 22, 1821.
-
-[151] _Confessions_, Livre XI (1761).
-
-[152] _Mémoires d’Outre-Tombe_, November, 1817.
-
-[153] “Je me faisais une félicité de réaliser avec ma sylphide mes
-courses fantastiques dans les forêts du Nouveau Monde.”
-
-_Mémoires d’Outre-Tombe_, December, 1821.
-
-[154] Peacock has in mind _Childe Harold_, canto IV, CXXI ff.
-
-[155] Rousseau plans to make a nympholept of his ideal pupil, Emile:
-“Il faut que je sois le plus maladroit des hommes si je ne le rends
-d’avance passionné sans savoir de quoi”, etc. _Emile_, Liv. IV.
-
-[156] Cf. René’s letter to Céluta in _Les Natchez_: “Je vous ai tenue
-sur ma poitrine au milieu du désert, dans les vents de l’orage,
-lorsque, après vous avoir portée de l’autre côté d’un torrent, j’aurais
-voulu vous poignarder pour fixer le bonheur dans votre sein, et pour me
-punir de vous avoir donné ce bonheur.”
-
-[157] The romantic lover, it should be observed, creates his dream
-companion even less that he may adore her than that she may adore him.
-
-[158] Walter Bagehot has made an interesting study of the romantic
-imagination in his essay on a figure who reminds one in some respects
-of Gérard de Nerval--Hartley Coleridge.
-
-[159] Don Juan bids his servant give a coin to the beggar not for the
-love of God but for the love of humanity.
-
-[160]
-
- Demandant aux forêts, à la mer, à la plaine,
- Aux brises du matin, à toute heure, à tout lieu,
- La femme de son âme et de son premier voeu!
- Prenant pour fiancée un rêve, une ombre vaine,
- Et fouillant dans le cœur d’une hécatombe humaine,
- Prêtre désespéré, pour y trouver son Dieu.
-
- A. de Musset, _Namouna_.
-
-“Don Juan avait en lui cet amour pour la femme idéale; il a couru le
-monde serrant et brisant de dépit dans ses bras toutes les imparfaites
-images qu’il croyait un moment aimer; et il est mort épuisé de fatigue,
-consumé de son insatiable amour.” Prévost-Paradol, _Lettres_, 149.
-
-[161] See Scott’s (2d) edition of Swift, XIII, 310.
-
-[162]
-
- Aimer c’est le grand point. Qu’importe la maîtresse?
- Qu’importe le flacon pourvu qu’on ait l’ivresse?
-
-[163] It has been said that in the novels of George Sand when a lady
-wishes to change her lover God is always there to facilitate the
-transfer.
-
-[164] “Tous les hommes sont menteurs, inconstants, faux, bavards,
-hypocrites, orgueilleux ou lâches, méprisables et sensuels; toutes
-les femmes sont perfides, artificieuses, vaniteuses, curieuses et
-dépravées; le monde n’est qu’un égout sans fond où les phoques les
-plus informes rampent et se tordent sur des montagnes de fange; mais
-il y a au monde une chose sainte et sublime, c’est l’union de deux de
-ces êtres si imparfaits et si affreux. On est souvent trompé en amour;
-souvent blessé et souvent malheureux; mais on aime et quand on est sur
-le bord de sa tombe, on se retourne pour regarder en arrière, et on se
-dit: J’ai souffert souvent, je me suis trompé quelquefois, mais j’ai
-aimé. C’est moi qui ai vécu, et non pas un être factice créé par mon
-orgueil et mon ennui.” (The last sentence is taken from a letter of
-George Sand to Musset.) _On ne badine pas avec l’Amour_, II, 5.
-
-[165] _Table-Talk. On the Past and Future._
-
-[166] _The Plain Speaker. On Reading Old Books._
-
-[167] _The Round Table. On the Character of Rousseau._
-
-[168] “Aujourd’hui, jour de Pâques fleuries, il y a précisément
-cinquante ans de ma première connaissance avec Madame de Warens.”
-
-[169] Even on his death-bed the hero of Browning’s _Confessions_ gives
-himself up to impassionated recollection:
-
- How sad and bad and mad it was--
- But then, how it was sweet.
-
-In his _Stances à Madame Lullin_ Voltaire is at least as poetical and
-nearer to normal experience:
-
- Quel mortel s’est jamais flatté
- D’un rendez-vous à l’agonie?
-
-[170] See especially _Lyceum fragment_, no. 108.
-
-[171] A well-known example of the extreme to which the romanticists
-pushed their Fichtean solipsism is the following from the _William
-Lovell_ of the youthful Tieck: “Having gladly escaped from anxious
-fetters, I now advance boldly through life, absolved from those irksome
-duties which were the inventions of cowardly fools. Virtue is, only
-because I am; it is but a reflection of my inner self. What care I for
-forms whose dim lustre I have myself brought forth? Let vice and virtue
-wed. They are only shadows in the mist,” etc.
-
-[172] _Beyond Good and Evil_, ch. IV.
-
-[173] _On Contemporary Literature_, 206. The whole passage is excellent.
-
-[174] M. Legouis makes a similar remark in the _Cambridge History of
-English Literature_ XI, 108.
-
-[175] I scarcely need say that Wordsworth is at times genuinely
-ethical, but he is even more frequently only didactic. The _Excursion_,
-as M. Legouis says, is a “long sermon against pessimism.”
-
-[176] “Quia fecisti nos ad te et inquietum est cor nostrum, donec
-requiescat in te.”
-
-[177] _Eth. Nic._, 1177 b.
-
-[178] Cf. the chapter on _William Law and the Mystics_ in _Cambridge
-History of English Literature_, IX, 341-67; also the bibliography of
-Boehme, _ibid._, 560-74.
-
-[179] See _Excursion_, I, VV. 943 ff.
-
-[180] In his attitude towards sin Novalis continues Rousseau and
-anticipates the main positions of the Christian Scientist.
-
-[181]
-
- Prune thou thy words,
- The thoughts control
- That o’er thee swell and throng.
- They will condense within the soul
- And change to purpose strong.
- But he who lets his feelings run
- In soft, luxurious flow,
- Shrinks when hard service must be done
- And faints at every foe.
-
-[182] Wesley had no liking for Boehme and cut out from Brooke’s book
-the theosophy that had this origin.
-
-[183] Writing was often associated with magic formulæ. Hence γράμμα
-also gave Fr. “grimoire.”
-
-[184] _Thus Spake Zarathustra_, LXIX (The Shadow to Zarathustra).
-
-[185] _Katha-Upanishad._ The passage is paraphrased as follows by P. E.
-More in his _Century of Indian Epigrams_:
-
- Seated within this body’s car
- The silent Self is driven afar,
- And the five senses at the pole
- Like steeds are tugging restive of control.
-
- And if the driver lose his way,
- Or the reins sunder, who can say
- In what blind paths, what pits of fear
- Will plunge the chargers in their mad career?
-
- Drive well, O mind, use all thy art,
- Thou charioteer!--O feeling Heart,
- Be thou a bridle firm and strong!
- For the Lord rideth and the way is long.
-
-[186] See Brandes: _The Romantic School in Germany_, ch. XI.
-
-[187] Alfred de Musset saw his double in the stress of his affair with
-George Sand (see _Nuit de Décembre_), Jean Valjean (_Les Misérables_)
-sees his double in the stress of his conversion. Peter Bell also sees
-his double at the emotional crisis in Wordsworth’s poem of that name.
-
-[188] _Thus Spake Zarathustra_, LXIX.
-
-[189] F. Schlegel: _Lyceumfragment_, no. 42.
-
-[190] E.g., canto III, CVII-CXI.
-
-[191] _Confessions_, Livre XII (1765).
-
-[192] Cf. Th. Gomperz, _Greek Thinkers_, I, 402.
-
-[193] Wordsworth: _Miscellaneous Sonnets_, XII.
-
-[194] In much the same spirit the Japanese hermit, Kamo Chōmei
-(thirteenth century), expresses the fear that he may forget Buddha
-because of his fondness for the mountains and the moon.--See article on
-nature in Japan by M. Revon in _Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics_.
-
-[195] _Confessions_, Bk. X, ch. IX.
-
-[196] Cf. Cicero: “Urbem, urbem, mi Rufe, cole et in ista luce vive.”
-(_Ad Fam._, II, 22.)
-
-[197] March 23, 1646.
-
-[198] It was especially easy for the poets to go for their landscapes
-to the painters because according to the current theory poetry was
-itself a form of painting (_ut pictura poesis_). Thus Thomson writes in
-_The Castle of Indolence_:
-
- Sometimes the pencil, in cool airy halls,
- Bade the gay bloom of vernal landskips rise,
- Or autumn’s varied shades embrown the walls:
- Now the black tempest strikes the astonish’d eyes;
- Now down the steep the flashing torrent flies;
- The trembling sun now plays o’er ocean blue,
- And now rude mountains frown amid the skies;
- Whate’er _Lorrain_ light touch’d with softening hue,
- Or savage _Rosa_ dash’d, or learned _Poussin_ drew.
-
- (C. I, st. 38.)
-
-[199]
-
- Disparaissez, monuments du génie,
- Pares, jardins immortels, que Le Nôtre a plantés;
- De vos dehors pompeux l’exacte symmétrie,
- Etonne vainement mes regards attristés.
- J’aime bien mieux ce désordre bizarre,
- Et la variété de ces riches tableaux
- Que disperse l’Anglais d’une main moins avare.
-
-Bertin, 19e Elégie of _Les Amours_.
-
-[200] Pt. IV, Lettre XI.
-
-[201] _Nouvelle Héloïse_, Pt. IV, Lettre XI.
-
-[202] _Ibid._
-
-[203] _Ibid._, Pt. IV, Lettre XVII.
-
-[204] _Confessions_, Livre V (1732).
-
-[205] See especially _Childe Harold_, canto II, XXV ff.
-
-[206] _Ibid._, canto II, XXXVII.
-
-[207] _Ibid._, canto III, LXXII.
-
-[208] _Ibid._, canto IV, CLXXVII.
-
-[209] See _La Perception du changement_, 30.
-
-[210] ASIA
-
- My soul is an enchanted boat,
- Which like a sleeping swan, doth float
- Upon the silver waves of thy sweet singing;
- And thine doth like an angel sit
- Beside a helm conducting it,
- Whilst all the winds with melody are ringing.
- It seems to float ever, for ever
- Upon that many-winding river,
- Between mountains, woods, abysses,
- A paradise of wildernesses!
- …
- Meanwhile thy spirit lifts its pinions
- In music’s most serene dominions;
- Catching the winds that fan that happy heaven.
- And we sail on away, afar,
- Without a course, without a star,
- But by the instinct of sweet music driven;
- Till through Elysian garden islets
- By thee, most beautiful of pilots,
- Where never mortal pinnace glided
- The boat of my desire is guided;
- Realms where the air we breathe is love--
-
- _Prometheus Unbound_, Act II, Sc. V.
-
-[211] “Si tu souffres plus qu’un autre des choses de la vie, il ne faut
-pas t’en étonner; une grande âme doit contenir plus de douleurs qu’une
-petite.”
-
-[212] Cf. Shelley, _Julian and Maddalo_:
-
- I love all waste
- And solitary places; where we taste
- The pleasure of believing what we see
- Is boundless, as we wish our souls to be.
-
-[213] Cf. for example, the passage of Rousseau in the seventh
-_Promenade_ (“Je sens des extases, des ravissements inexprimables à
-me fondre pour ainsi dire dans le système des êtres,” etc.) with the
-revery described by Wordsworth in _The Excursion_, I, 200-218.
-
-[214] O belles, craignez le fond des bois, et leur vaste silence.
-
-[215] _Faust_ (Miss Swanwick’s translation).
-
-[216] _Artist and Public_, 134 ff.
-
-[217]
-
- Make me thy lyre, even as the forest is:
- What if my leaves are falling like its own!
- The tumult of thy mighty harmonies
-
- Will take from both a deep, autumnal tone,
- Sweet though in sadness. Be thou, Spirit fierce,
- My spirit! Be thou me, impetuous one!
- Drive my dead thoughts over the universe
- Like withered leaves, etc.
-
-Cf. Lamartine:
-
- Quand la feuille des bois tombe dans la prairie,
- Le vent du soir s’élève et l’arrache aux vallons;
- Et moi, je suis semblable à la feuille flétrie;
- Emportez-moi comme elle, orageux aquilons.
-
- _L’Isolement._
-
-[218] Cf. Hettner, _Romantische Schule_, 156.
-
-[219] See appendix on Chinese primitivism.
-
-[220] G. Duval has written a _Dictionnaire des métaphores de Victor
-Hugo_, and G. Lucchetti a work on _Les Images dans les œuvres de Victor
-Hugo_. So far as the ethical values are concerned, the latter title is
-alone justified. Hugo is, next to Chateaubriand, the great imagist.
-
-[221] The French like to think of the symbolists as having rendered
-certain services to their versification. Let us hope that they did,
-though few things are more perilous than this transfer of the idea of
-progress to the literary and artistic domain. Decadent Rome, as we
-learn from the younger Pliny and others, simply swarmed with poets who
-also no doubt indulged in many strange experiments. All this poetical
-activity, as we can see only too plainly at this distance, led nowhere.
-
-[222] Grant Allen writes of the laws of nature in _Magdalen Tower_:
-
- They care not any whit for pain or pleasure,
- That seems to us the sum and end of all,
- Dumb force and barren number are their measure,
- What shall be shall be, tho’ the great earth fall,
- They take no heed of man or man’s deserving,
- Reck not what happy lives they make or mar,
- Work out their fatal will unswerv’d, unswerving,
- And know not that they are!
-
-[223] Fragment de l’_Art de jouir_, quoted by P.-M. Masson in _La
-Religion de J.-J. Rousseau_, II, 228.
-
-[224] If nature merely reflects back to a man his own image, it follows
-that Coleridge’s celebrated distinction between fancy and imagination
-has little value, inasmuch as he rests his proof of the unifying
-power of the imagination, in itself a sound idea, on the union the
-imagination effects between man and outer nature--and this union is on
-his own showing fanciful.
-
-[225] If I had had this consecration Wordsworth says, addressing Peele
-Castle,
-
- I would have planted thee, thou hoary Pile,
- Amid a world how different from this!
- Beside a sea that could not cease to smile;
- On tranquil land, beneath a sky of bliss.
- …
- A Picture had it been of lasting ease,
- _Elysian quiet, without toil or strife_, etc.
-
-_Elegiac Stanzas suggested by a picture of Peele Castle in a storm._
-
-[226] Cf. Doudan, _Lettres_, IV, 216: “J’ai parcouru le _Saint-Paul_
-de Renan. Je n’ai jamais vu dans un théologien une si grande
-connaissance de la flore orientale. C’est un paysagiste bien supérieur
-à Saint-Augustin et à Bossuet. Il sème des résédas, des anémones, des
-pâquerettes pour recueillir l’incrédulité.”
-
-[227] In his _Mal romantique_ (1908) E. Seillière labels the
-generations that have elapsed since the rise of Rousseauism as follows:
-
- 1. Sensibility (_Nouvelle Héloïse_, 1761).
-
- 2. Weltschmerz (Schiller’s _Æsthetic Letters_, 1795).
-
- 3. Mal du siècle (Hugo’s _Hernani_, 1830).
-
- 4. Pessimism (vogue of Schopenhauer and Stendhal, 1865).
-
- 5. Neurasthenia (culmination of _fin de siècle_ movement, 1900).
-
-[228] _Eckermann_, September 24, 1827.
-
-[229] See _La Nuit de Mai_.
-
-[230] These lines are inscribed on the statue of Musset in front of the
-Théâtre Français. Cf. Shelley:
-
- Our sweetest songs are those that tell of saddest thought.
-
-[231] Translation by J. E. Sandys of fragment cited in Stobæus, _Flor._
-CIX, I.
-
-[232] _Pythian Odes_, III, 20 ff.
-
-[233] _Pythian Odes_, III, 81-82.
-
-[234] _Song of the Banjo_, in the _Seven Seas_.
-
-[235] XVII, 446-47.
-
-[236] A brief survey of melancholy among the Greeks will be found in
-Professor S. H. Butcher’s _Some Aspects of the Greek Genius_.
-
-[237] The exasperated quest of novelty is one of the main traits
-both of the ancient and the modern victim of ennui. See Seneca, _De
-Tranquillitate animi_: “Fastidio illis esse cœpit vita, et ipse mundus;
-et subit illud rabidorum deliciarum: quousque eadem?” (Cf. La Fontaine:
-Il me faut du nouveau, n’en fût-il plus au monde.)
-
-[238] “A quoi bon m’avoir fait naître avec des facultés exquises pour
-les laisser jusqu’à la fin sans emploi? Le sentiment de mon prix
-interne en me donnant celui de cette injustice m’en dédommageait en
-quelque sorte, et me faisait verser des larmes que j’aimais a laisser
-couler.” _Confessions._ Livre IX (1756).
-
-[239] _Nouvelle Héloise_, Pt. VI, Lettre VIII.
-
-[240] “Encore enfant par la tête, vous êtes déjà vieux par le cœur.”
-_Ibid._
-
-[241] See the examples quoted in Arnold: _Essays in Criticism_, Second
-Series, 305-06.
-
-[242] This is the thought of Keats’s _Ode to Melancholy_:
-
- Ay, in the very temple of Delight
- Veil’d Melancholy has her sovran shrine,
- Though seen of none save him whose strenuous tongue
- Can burst Joy’s grape against his palate fine.
-
-Cf. Chateaubriand: _Essai sur les Révolutions_, Pt. II, ch. LVIII: “Ces
-jouissances sont trop poignantes: telle est notre faiblesse, que les
-plaisirs exquis deviennent des douleurs,” etc.
-
-[243] See his sonnet _Les Montreurs_. This type of Rousseauist is
-anticipated by “Milord” Bomston in _La Nouvelle Héloïse_. Rousseau
-directed the engraver to depict him with “un maintien grave et stoïque
-sous lequel il cache avec peine une extrême sensibilité.”
-
-[244] “Qui es-tu? À coup sûr tu n’es pas un être pétri du même limon et
-animé de la même vie que nous! Tu es un ange ou un démon mais tu n’es
-pas une créature humaine. … Pourquoi habiter parmi nous, qui ne pouvons
-te suffire ni te comprendre?” G. Sand, _Lélia_, I, 11.
-
-[245] See p. 51.
-
-[246] See _Lara_, XVIII, XIX, perhaps the best passage that can be
-quoted for the Byronic hero.
-
-[247] Cf. Gautier, _Histoire du romantisme_: “Il était de mode
-alors dans l’école romantique d’être pâle, livide, verdâtre, un peu
-cadavéreux, s’il était possible. Cela donnait l’air fatal, byronien,
-giaour, dévoré par les passions et les remords.”
-
-[248] Hugo, _Hernani_.
-
-[249]
-
- Lorsque, par un décret des puissances suprêmes,
- Le Poète apparaît dans ce monde ennuyé,
- Sa mère épouvantée et pleine de blasphèmes
- Crispe ses poings vers Dieu, qui la prend en pitié.
-
- _Fleurs du mal: Bénédiction._
-
-Cf. _Nouvelle Héloïse_, Pt. III, Lettre XXVI:
-
-“Ciel inexorable! … O ma mère, pourquoi vous donna-t-il un fils dans sa
-colère?”
-
-[250] Coleridge has a side that relates him to the author of _Les
-Fleurs du mal_. In his _Pains of Sleep_ he describes a dream in which
-he felt
-
- Desire with loathing strangely mix’d,
- _On wild or hateful objects fix’d_.
-
-[251] Keats according to Shelley was an example of the _poète maudit_.
-“The poor fellow” he says “was literally hooted from the stage of
-life.” Keats was as a matter of fact too sturdy to be snuffed out by an
-article and had less of the quivering Rousseauistic sensibility than
-Shelley himself. Cf. letter of Shelley to Mrs. Shelley (Aug. 7, 1820):
-“Imagine my despair of good, imagine how it is possible that one of
-so weak and sensitive a nature as mine can run further the gauntlet
-through this hellish society of men.”
-
-[252] Euripides speaks of the Χάρις γόων in his Ἱκέτιδες (Latin,
-“dolendi voluptas”; German, “die Wonne der Wehmut”).
-
-[253] Chesterton is anticipated in this paradox by Wordsworth:
-
- In youth we love the darksome lawn
- Brushed by the owlet’s wing.
- Then Twilight is preferred to Dawn
- And autumn to the spring.
- Sad fancies do we then affect
- In luxury of disrespect
- To our own prodigal excess
- Of too familiar happiness.
-
- _Ode to Lycoris._
-
-[254] _Souvenirs d’enfance et de jeunesse_, 329-30.
-
-[255] “[Villiers] était de cette famille des néo-catholiques
-littéraires dont Chateaubriand est le père commun, et qui a produit
-Barbey d’Aurevilly, Baudelaire et plus récemment M. Joséphin Peladan.
-Ceux-là ont goûté par-dessus tout dans la religion les charmes du
-péché, la grandeur du sacrilège, et leur sensualisme a caressé les
-dogmes qui ajoutaient aux voluptés la suprême volupté de se perdre.” A.
-France, _Vie Littéraire_, III, 121.
-
-[256] _Première Promenade._
-
-[257] _Ibid._
-
-[258] E.g., Hölderlin and Jean Polonius.
-
-[259] A striking passage on solitude will be found in the _Laws of
-Manu_, IV, 240-42. (“Alone a being is born: alone he goes down to
-death.” His kin forsake him at the grave; his only hope then is in the
-companionship of the Law of righteousness [Dharma]. “With the Law as
-his companion he crosses the darkness difficult to cross.”)
-
-[260] “Be good and you will be lonely.”
-
-[261] In the poem by the Swiss poet C. Didier from which Longfellow’s
-poem seems to be derived, the youth who persists in scaling the heights
-in spite of all warnings is Byron!
-
- Et Byron … disparaît aux yeux du pâtre épouvanté.
-
-(See E. Estève, _Byron en France_, 147).
-
-[262] In the _Mémoires d’Outre-Tombe_ Chateaubriand quotes from the
-jottings of Napoleon on the island of Elba. “Mon cœur se refuse aux
-joies communes comme à la douleur ordinaire.” He says of Napoleon
-elsewhere in the same work: “Au fond il ne tenait à rien: homme
-solitaire, il se suffisait; le malheur ne fit que le rendre au désert
-de sa vie.”
-
-[263] The solitude of the “genius” is already marked in Blake:
-
- O! why was I born with a different face?
- Why was I not born like the rest of my race?
- When I look, each one starts; when I speak, I offend;
- Then I’m silent and passive and lose every friend.
-
-[264] Froude’s _Carlyle_, II, 377.
-
-[265] No finer lines on solitude are found in English than those in
-which Wordsworth relates how from his room at Cambridge he could look
-out on
-
- The antechapel where the statue stood
- Of Newton with his prism and silent face,
- The marble index of a mind for ever
- Voyaging through strange seas of thought alone.
-
- (_Prelude_ III, 61-63.)
-
-Cf. also the line in the Sonnet on Milton:
-
- His soul was like a star and dwelt apart.
-
-[266] _Eth. Nic._, 1109 b.
-
-[267] James Thomson in _The City of Dreadful Night_ says that he would
-have entered hell
-
- gratified to gain
- That positive eternity of pain
- Instead of this insufferable inane.
-
-[268] R. Canat has taken this phrase as the title of his treatment of
-the subject: _La Solitude morale dans le mouvement romantique_.
-
-[269] Decadent Rome had the equivalent of Des Esseintes. Seneca (_To
-Lucilius_, CXXII) speaks of those who seek to affirm their originality
-and attract attention to themselves by doing everything differently
-from other people and, “ut ita dicam, _retro vivunt_.”
-
-[270] Tennyson has traced this change of the æsthetic dream into a
-nightmare in his _Palace of Art_.
-
-[271] _Contemporains_, I, 332.
-
-[272] _Génie du Christianisme_, Pt. II, Livre III, ch. IX.
-
-[273]
-
- L’orage est dans ma voix, l’éclair est sur ma bouche;
- Aussi, loin de m’aimer, voilà qu’ils tremblent tous,
- Et quand j’ouvre les bras, on tombe à mes genoux.
-
-[274]
-
- Que vous ai-je donc fait pour être votre élu?
- …
- Hélas! je suis, Seigneur, puissant et solitaire,
- Laissez-moi m’endormir du sommeil de la terre!
-
-[275]
-
- Le juste opposera le dédain à l’absence
- Et ne répondra plus que par un froid silence
- Au silence éternel de la Divinité.
-
-[276] See Sainte-Beuve’s poetical epistle _A. M. Villemain_ (_Pensées
-d’Août 1837_).
-
-[277] See _Masters of Modern French Criticism_, 233, 238.
-
-[278] Wordsworth writes
-
- A piteous lot it were to flee from man
- Yet not rejoice in Nature.
-
- (_Excursion_, IV, 514.)
-
-This lot was Vigny’s:
-
- Ne me laisse jamais seul avec la Nature
- Car je la connais trop pour n’en avoir pas peur.
-
-[279] Madame Dorval.
-
-[280] _La Maison du Berger._ Note that in Wordsworth the “still sad
-music of humanity” is very closely associated with nature.
-
-[281] _La Bouteille à la Mer._
-
-[282] See Book IX of the _Nicomachean Ethics_.
-
-[283] “All salutary conditions have their root in strenuousness”
-(appamāda), says Buddha.
-
-[284] See _Masters of Modern French Criticism_, Essay on Taine,
-_passim_. Paul Bourget in his _Essais de Psychologie contemporaine_ (2
-vols.) has followed out during this period the survivals of the older
-romantic melancholy and their reinforcement by scientific determinism.
-
-[285] “Le pauvre M. Arago, revenant un jour de l’Hôtel de Ville en 1848
-après une épouvantable émeute, disait tristement à l’un de ses aides
-de camp au ministère de la marine: ‘En vérité ces gens-là ne sont pas
-raisonnables.’” Doudan, _Lettres_, IV, 338.
-
-[286] See Preface (pp. viii-ix) to his _Souvenirs d’enfance et de
-jeunesse_ and my comment in _The New Laokoon_, 207-08.
-
-[287] Most of the political implications of the point of view I am
-developing I am reserving for a volume I have in preparation to be
-entitled _Democracy and Imperialism_. Some of my conclusions will be
-found in two articles in the (New York) _Nation: The Breakdown of
-Internationalism_ (June 17 and 24, 1915), and _The Political Influence
-of Rousseau_ (Jan. 18, 1917).
-
-[288] _Reden an die deutsche Nation_, XII.
-
-[289] I should perhaps allow for the happiness that may be experienced
-in moments of supernormal consciousness--something quite distinct from
-emotional or other intoxication. Fairly consistent testimony as to
-moments of this kind is found in the records of the past from the early
-Buddhists down to Tennyson.
-
-[290] I scarcely need say that I am speaking of the man of science only
-in so far as he is purely naturalistic in his point of view. There may
-enter into the total personality of Edison or any particular man of
-science other and very different elements.
-
-[291] M. René Berthelot has written a book on pragmatism and similar
-tendencies in contemporary philosophy entitled _Un Romantisme
-utilitaire_. I have not read it but the title alone is worth more than
-most books on the subject I have read.
-
-[292] _Dedication of the Æneis_ (1697).
-
-[293] _Adventure of one Hans Pfaal._
-
-[294] His attempt to rewrite _Hyperion_ from a humanitarian point of
-view is a dismal failure.
-
-[295] There is also a strong idyllic element in _Paradise Lost_ as
-Rousseau (_Emile_, V) and Schiller (_Essay on Naïve and Sentimental
-Poetry_) were among the first to point out. Critics may be found even
-to-day who, like Tennyson, prefer the passages which show a richly
-pastoral imagination to the passages where the ethical imagination
-is required but where it does not seem to prevail sufficiently over
-theology.
-
-[296] XII, 74.
-
-[297] _Three Philosophical Poets_, 188.
-
-[298] After telling of the days when “il n’y avait pour moi ni passé
-ni avenir et je goûtais à la fois les délices de mille siècles,”
-Saint-Preux concludes: “Hélas! vous avez disparu comme un éclair. Cette
-éternité de bonheur ne fut qu’un instant de ma vie. Le temps a repris
-sa lenteur dans les moments de mon désespoir, et l’ennui mesure par
-longues années le reste infortuné de mes jours” (_Nouvelle Héloïse_,
-Pt. III, Lettre VI).
-
-[299] The Church, so far as it has become humanitarian, has itself
-succumbed to naturalism.
-
-[300] _Sutta of the Great Decease._
-
-[301] If a man recognizes the supreme rôle of fiction or illusion in
-life while proceeding in other respects on Kantian principles, he
-will reach results similar to the “As-if Philosophy” (_Philosophie
-des Als Ob_) of Vaihinger, a leading authority on Kant and co-editor
-of the _Kantstudien_. This work, though not published until 1911, was
-composed, the author tells us in his preface, as early as 1875-78. It
-will be found to anticipate very strikingly pragmatism and various
-other isms in which philosophy has been proclaiming so loudly of late
-its own bankruptcy.
-
-[302] “C’est en vain qu’on voudrait assigner à la vie un but, au sens
-humain du mot.” _L’Evolution créatrice_, 55.
-
-[303] _Metaphysics_, 1078 b.
-
-[304] In the beginning was the Word! To seek to substitute, like Faust,
-the Deed for the Word is to throw discrimination to the winds. The
-failure to discriminate as to the _quality_ of the deed is responsible
-for the central sophistry of _Faust_ (see p. 331) and perhaps of our
-modern life in general.
-
-[305] “J’adore la liberté; j’abhorre la gêne, la peine,
-l’assujettissement.” _Confessions_, Livre I.
-
-[306] _Analects_, XI, CXI. Cf. _ibid._, VI, CXX: “To give one’s self
-earnestly to the duties due to men, and while respecting spiritual
-beings, to keep aloof from them, may be called wisdom.” Much that has
-passed current as religion in all ages has made its chief appeal, not
-to awe but to wonder; and like many humanists Confucius was somewhat
-indifferent to the marvellous. “The subjects on which the Master did
-not talk were: extraordinary things, feats of strength, disorder and
-spiritual beings” (_ibid._, VII, CXX).
-
-[307] One of the last Chinese, I am told, to measure up to the
-Confucian standard was Tsêng Kuo-fan (1811-1872) who issued forth
-from poverty, trained a peasant soldiery and, more than any other one
-person, put down the Taiping Rebellion.
-
-[308] See J. Barthélemy Saint-Hilaire’s Introduction to his translation
-of the _Nicomachean Ethics_, p. cxlix.
-
-[309] _Eth. Nic._, 1122-25.
-
-[310] I have in mind such passages as _P._, VIII, 76-78, 92-96; _N._,
-VI, 1-4; _N._, XI, 13-16.
-
-[311] “II n’y eut jamais pour moi d’intermédiaire entre tout et rien.”
-_Confessions_, Livre VII.
-
-[312] Some wag, it will be remembered, suggested as an alternative
-title for this work: _Wild Religions I have known_.
-
-[313] _Letters_, II, 298; cf. _ibid._, 291: “I have never known a life
-less wisely controlled or less helped by the wisdom of others than his.
-The whole retrospect of it is pathetic; waste, confusion, ruin of one
-of the most gifted and sweetest natures the world ever knew.”
-
-[314] _Nic. Eth._, 1145 b. The opposition between Socrates or Plato
-and Aristotle, when put thus baldly, is a bit misleading. Socrates
-emphasized the importance of practice (μελέτη) in the acquisition of
-virtue, and Plato has made much of habit in the _Laws_.
-
-[315] _Analects_, II, CIV.
-
-[316] This belief the Oriental has embodied in the doctrine of Karma.
-
-[317] “La seule habitude qu’on doit laisser prendre à l’enfant est de
-n’en contractor aucune.” _Emile_, Livre I.
-
-[318] Emile was to be trained to be a cabinet-maker.
-
-[319] _Eth. Nic._, 1172 b.
-
-[320] _Doctrine of the Mean_ (c. XXXIII, v. 2).
-
-[321] See his poem _Ibo_ in _Les Contemplations_.
-
-[322] La. 55, p. 51. (In my references La. stands for Lao-tzŭ, Li. for
-Lieh-tzŭ, Ch. for Chuang-tzŭ. The first number gives the chapter; the
-second number the page in Wieger’s edition.)
-
-[323] Ch. 22 C, p. 391.
-
-[324] Ch. 12 n, p. 305.
-
-[325] Ch. 11 D, p. 291. Ibid. 15, p. 331. See also Li. 31, p. 113.
-
-[326] Ch. 19 B, p. 357.
-
-[327] Ch. 19 L, p. 365.
-
-[328] Ch. 10, pp. 279-80.
-
-[329] Ch. 9, pp. 274-75.
-
-[330] Ch. 29, pp. 467 ff.
-
-[331] Ch. 2, p. 223.
-
-[332] La. 27, p. 37.
-
-[333] Ch. 8 A, p. 271.
-
-[334] Li. 5, p. 143.
-
-[335] Ch. 14 C, p. 321.
-
-[336] For an extreme form of Epicureanism see the ideas of Yang-chu,
-Li. 7, pp. 165 ff. For stoical apathy see Ch. 6 C., p. 253. For fate
-see Li. 6, p. 165, Ch. 6 K, p. 263.
-
-[337] Ch. 33, pp. 499 ff.
-
-[338] Ch. 33 C, p. 503.
-
-[339] Bk. III, Part 2, ch. 9.
-
-[340] Li. 3, p. 111. Ch. 24, pp. 225-27.
-
-[341] Ch. 6 E, p. 255.
-
-[342] See _The Religion of the Samurai: a Study of Zen Philosophy_
-(1913) by Kaiten Nukariya (himself a Zenist), p. 23.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX OF NAMES
-
-
- Abelard, 238.
-
- Addison, 12, 35, 37, 38, 202 _n._
-
- Æschylus, 292, 359.
-
- Ajax, 144.
-
- Allen, Grant, 299 _n._
-
- Amiel, 315.
-
- Ananda, 370.
-
- Angélique, Mother, 123.
-
- d’Angoulême, Marguerite, 251.
-
- Antisthenes, 244.
-
- Apollonius of Rhodes, 104.
-
- Aquinas, St. Thomas, 101, 112.
-
- Arago, 244 _n._
-
- Ariosto, 264.
-
- Aristophanes, 181, 243, 285.
-
- Aristotle, xv _n._, xix, xxi, xxii, 4, 12 _n._, 15-19, 24, 28
- _n._, 29, 33, 47, 148, 166, 171, 173, 202, 205 _n._, 211, 222,
- 237, 253, 254, 295, 329, 330, 343, 349, 354, 355, 363, 365,
- 372, 374, 381, 382, 385, 386, 389, 390.
-
- Arnold, Matthew, xi, 281, 308, 315 _n._, 323, 325, 351.
-
- Augustine, St., 116, 213, 224, 252, 273, 304 _n._
-
-
- Bacon, F., xxi _n._, 26, 63, 64, 119, 122.
-
- Bacon, Roger, 26.
-
- Bagehot, W., 25, 41, 159, 231 _n._, 377.
-
- Balzac, 11, 58, 106, 107, 192, 193.
-
- Barbauld, Mrs., 154.
-
- Barbey d’Aurevilly, 92, 324.
-
- Baudelaire, 63, 222, 230, 251, 319, 321, 324 _n._, 332, 350.
-
- Bayle, Pierre, 114.
-
- Beaumarchais, 2.
-
- Bergson, Henri, xii, xiii, 1, 147, 167, 186, 200, 281, 295,
- 300, 364, 372.
-
- Berlioz, 79, 112, 162, 211, 215.
-
- Berthelot, René, 350 _n._
-
- Bertin, Edouard, 275 _n._
-
- Blake, William, 47, 94, 152, 168, 196, 197, 242, 254-256, 297,
- 327 _n._
-
- Boehme, Jacob, 46, 254, 255, 258.
-
- Boileau, 5, 11, 16, 20, 21, 27, 66, 76, 87, 268.
-
- Bossuet, 251, 304 _n._, 392.
-
- Boswell, 356.
-
- Boufflers, Mme. de, 129.
-
- Bourget, Paul, xvi, 343 _n._
-
- Bowles, Samuel, 101.
-
- Brandes, G., 262 _n._
-
- Brooke, Henry, 258.
-
- Broussais, 215 _n._
-
- Browne, Sir Thomas, 286.
-
- Brownell, W. C., 67.
-
- Browning, Robert, 211-213, 216, 217, 234, 236 _n._, 287, 307.
-
- Brunetière, F., 28.
-
- Buddha, xix-xxi, 149-153, 272 _n._, 343, 349, 367, 370, 372,
- 381.
-
- Buffon, 56, 57, 66.
-
- Bulwer-Lytton, 62.
-
- Bunyan, 133.
-
- Burke, Edmund, 128, 142, 147, 346, 380.
-
- Burns, Robert, 229.
-
- Burton, 143 _n._
-
- Butcher, S. H., 312 _n._
-
- Byrom, John, 257, 258.
-
- Byron, 54, 101, 161 _n._, 181, 186, 220, 223 _n._, 228, 229,
- 232, 266, 269, 280, 283, 308, 318, 322, 324, 327 _n._
-
-
- Calvin, 118.
-
- Canat, R., 332 _n._
-
- Carlyle, 52, 53, 147, 154, 159 _n._, 193, 300, 309, 327-329.
-
- Catullus, 229, 285.
-
- Cervantes, 99, 176, 223, 224, 264.
-
- Cézanne, 63.
-
- Chapelain, 28.
-
- Charpentier, Julie von, 226.
-
- Chateaubriand, 50, 54, 57, 58, 60, 61, 91, 126, 134, 151, 155,
- 159 _n._, 206, 207, 209, 227-229, 232, 249, 252, 276-278, 281,
- 283-285, 297 _n._, 304, 309, 310, 313, 316 _n._, 318, 322, 324
- _n._, 327 _n._, 333, 334.
-
- Chatterton, 90, 320, 321.
-
- Chaucer, 334.
-
- Chesterfield, 24, 25.
-
- Chesterton, G., 322.
-
- Christ (Jesus), 36, 52, 115, 254, 265, 304, 336, 359, 360, 379.
-
- Cicero, xxii, 134, 273 _n._
-
- Clifford, W. K., 138, 139.
-
- Coleridge, Hartley, 231 _n._
-
- Coleridge, Samuel T., 51, 52, 126, 146 _n._, 154, 159 _n._,
- 181, 296, 303, 305, 319 _n._
-
- Common, T., 198 _n._
-
- Confucius, xix-xxi, 176, 211 _n._, 380, 386, 390.
-
- Congreve, 35 _n._
-
- Constant, Benjamin, 316.
-
- Cortez, F., 277.
-
- Cowley, 12.
-
- Cox, Kenyon, 64 _n._, 291.
-
- Croce, Benedetto, xiii.
-
-
- Dante, 112, 215, 259, 357, 358.
-
- Daunou, 99.
-
- Davidson, John, 90.
-
- Descartes, xvi, 26, 27, 138, 168, 169, 172, 176, 200.
-
- Dewey, John, xiii, 388.
-
- Diderot, xi, xii, 38, 70, 100, 122, 126, 130, 191, 192, 326.
-
- Didier, C., 327 _n._
-
- Disraeli, 62.
-
- Dorval, Mme., 337 _n._
-
- Doudan, 214, 304 _n._, 344 _n._
-
- Dryden, 13, 34, 223, 353, 354.
-
- Du Camp, M., 215 _n._
-
- Duff, 40 _n._
-
- D’Urfé, 76.
-
- Duval, G., 297 _n._
-
-
- Eckermann, 96, 309.
-
- Edison, 350.
-
- Edwards, Jonathan, 123, 124, 139.
-
- Elton, O., 206.
-
- Emerson, R. W., x, 67, 93, 111, 176, 257, 348.
-
- Epicurus, 270.
-
- Euripides, 183, 204, 244, 322 _n._
-
- Evelyn, 6, 274.
-
-
- Faguet, E., 30.
-
- Fawcett, E. D., xv _n._
-
- Fichte, 241, 347.
-
- FitzGerald, 204.
-
- Flaubert, xvi _n._, 67, 87, 105, 107-109, 218, 299, 314,
- 339-342.
-
- Fontenelle, 27.
-
- Foster, John, 8, 9, 96.
-
- France, A., 88, 265, 324 _n._, 370.
-
- Francis, St., 222.
-
- François, A. F., 7 _n._
-
- Francueil, Mme. de, 155.
-
- Froude, 309, 327 _n._
-
-
- Galileo, 119.
-
- Galsworthy, John, 252.
-
- Gautier, T., 60, 61, 67, 93 _n._, 108, 230, 318 _n._, 320, 341.
-
- Geffroy, A., 129 _n._
-
- Gerard, A., 40 _n._
-
- Gérard de Nerval, 230, 231 _n._
-
- Gerould, Katherine F., 49 _n._
-
- Gisborne, John, 227 _n._, 391.
-
- Gissing, George, 309.
-
- Godard, Colonel, 73.
-
- Godwin, Mary, 226.
-
- Goethe, xi, xvii, xviii, 2, 19, 22, 23, 32, 73, 85, 86, 89, 92,
- 96, 101, 103 _n._, 147, 170, 171, 192, 215, 224, 246, 252, 275,
- 309, 310, 331, 339, 346, 360-363, 378, 389.
-
- Gomperz, Th., 268 _n._
-
- Gran, Gerhard, 78 _n._
-
- Gray, 311, 323.
-
- Greville, F., 6.
-
- Grillparzer, 191.
-
- Grimm, H., 360.
-
- Guérin, M. de, 281, 342.
-
- Gustavus III, 129.
-
-
- Hardy, T., 191.
-
- Havemeyer, H. O., 141.
-
- Hawthorne, N., 67, 326, 327.
-
- Hazlitt, 97, 181, 186 _n._, 224, 235, 236, 289.
-
- Hearn, Lafcadio, 111.
-
- Heidigger, 7, 8.
-
- Heine, 31, 221, 265.
-
- Hensel, P., 194 _n._
-
- Heraclitus, xiii _n._
-
- Herder, 97, 98.
-
- Herford, C. H., 359.
-
- Herondas, 104.
-
- Hettner, H., 194 _n._, 292 _n._
-
- Hitchener, Elizabeth, 266.
-
- Hobbes, 12, 13, 131, 192, 196, 197.
-
- Hoffmann, E. T. A., 86, 262.
-
- Hölderlin, 81, 82, 86, 90, 98, 110, 325 _n._
-
- Homer, 38, 80, 92, 144, 146, 208, 295, 311, 312, 391.
-
- Horace, 24, 36, 77, 81, 115, 285, 379, 391.
-
- d’Houdetot, Mme., 227.
-
- Huch, Ricarda, 184, 261.
-
- Hugo, 50, 52, 57, 59, 94, 140-142, 146, 189, 190, 213, 214,
- 236, 297 _n._, 307 _n._, 318 _n._, 340, 392, 393.
-
- Hurd, 31.
-
- Hutcheson, 44, 121, 131, 179.
-
- Huysmans, 332.
-
-
- Ibsen, H., 330.
-
-
- James, W., xiii, 78, 181, 183, 384.
-
- Johnson, Dr. Samuel, xx, 12, 21, 25, 33, 46, 50, 69, 71, 72,
- 91, 174, 223, 256, 348, 356, 357, 360, 362, 370.
-
- Jonson, Ben, 209.
-
- Joubert, 134, 158, 172 _n._, 179, 221, 253, 314, 393.
-
-
- Kamo Chōmei, 272 _n._
-
- Kant, xvi, 40, 42, 43, 70, 370.
-
- Keats, 316 _n._, 321 _n._, 357, 358, 360.
-
- Keble, 285.
-
- Kepler, 119.
-
- Kipling, 312.
-
- Kleist, H. von, 160 _n._
-
- Kühn, Sophie von, 226.
-
- Kühnemann, E., 194 _n._
-
-
- La Bruyère, 11, 125.
-
- La Fontaine, 71, 72, 157, 285, 313 _n._
-
- La Harpe, 100.
-
- Lamartine, 61, 103, 126, 187, 236, 279, 281, 292 _n._, 310.
-
- Lamb, Charles, 91, 92, 209.
-
- La Motte Houdard, 55.
-
- Lanson, Gustave, xvii, xviii.
-
- La Place, 138.
-
- La Rochefoucauld, 160.
-
- Lasserre, Pierre, 140.
-
- Law, 258.
-
- Leconte de Lisle, xiv, 149, 299, 317, 324, 341, 365.
-
- Legouis, E., 249 _n._, 250 _n._
-
- Lemaître, Jules, 106, 127, 141, 155, 332.
-
- Lenau, 91.
-
- Lenclos, Ninon de, 307.
-
- Le Nôtre, 275.
-
- Leopardi, 238.
-
- Levasseur, Thérèse, 78, 220, 224.
-
- Levet, 356.
-
- Lillo, 190 _n._
-
- Lionardo da Vinci, 117.
-
- Littré, 234.
-
- Locke, 12, 26, 32.
-
- Longfellow, H. W., 327 _n._
-
- Longinus, 37.
-
- Lorrain, C., 274 _n._
-
- Loti, Pierre, 232.
-
- Louis XIV, 154.
-
- Lowell, J. R., 10, 270, 286, 287.
-
- Lucchetti, G., 297 _n._
-
- Lucretius, 270.
-
-
- Maeterlinck, 52, 295, 296.
-
- Maigron, L., xvi, 61 _n._, 215 _n._
-
- Malherbe, 11.
-
- Malesherbes, de, 84.
-
- Manu, 326 _n._
-
- Marat, 340.
-
- Marinetti, 208.
-
- Marini, Cavalier, 353.
-
- Marlborough, 202 _n._
-
- Mary, the Virgin, 221, 222.
-
- Masson, P. M., 302, 303 _n._, 304.
-
- Mather, F. J., Jr., 192.
-
- Maupassant, 203.
-
- Mazzini, 338.
-
- Mercier, 100.
-
- Meredith, J. C., 40 _n._
-
- Mérimée, P., 203.
-
- Michelet, 209.
-
- Milton, 22, 25, 114, 323, 328 _n._, 358.
-
- Mirabeau, Bailli de, 74.
-
- Mohammed, 91.
-
- Molière, 29, 30, 76, 214, 231, 268.
-
- Montaigne, 260.
-
- Moore, George, 128.
-
- More, Henry, 109.
-
- More, Paul Elmer, 261 _n._
-
- Mulgrave, 13.
-
- Musset, A. de, 126, 161 _n._, 214, 216, 231 _n._, 232-234, 236,
- 262 _n._, 310, 311, 328, 338.
-
-
- Napoleon, 24, 58, 138, 317, 327, 330, 346.
-
- Nero, 313.
-
- Newman, Cardinal, 258, 272, 391, 392.
-
- Newton, 2, 26, 27, 41.
-
- Nietzsche, 25, 95, 144, 197-199, 242, 245, 246, 250, 260, 263,
- 327, 352.
-
- Nisard, D., 23.
-
- Norton, C. E., 90, 158, 163, 384.
-
- Novalis, 74, 86, 94, 99 _n._, 110, 166, 186 _n._, 226, 241,
- 256, 262, 300.
-
-
- d’Ortigue, J., 215 _n._
-
- Osborn, Henry Fairfield, 295, 296.
-
- Ossian, 38, 276.
-
- Ovid, 92, 129.
-
-
- Parmenides, xiii _n._
-
- Pascal, 8, 24, 28-30, 53, 71, 123, 138, 151, 167, 177, 178,
- 200, 246, 266, 304, 375, 393.
-
- Pater, W., 292.
-
- Paul, St., 78, 349.
-
- Peacock, 229.
-
- Peladan, Joséphin, 324 _n._
-
- Pepys, 6 _n._
-
- Pericles, 24, 60.
-
- Perrault, 27.
-
- Peterborough, Earl of, 232.
-
- Peter the Hermit, 222.
-
- Petit de Julleville, 188.
-
- Petrarch, xi, xii, 224, 273.
-
- Pindar, 38, 182, 311, 316, 382.
-
- Plato, xiii, xx, 29, 146, 161, 166, 171, 211 _n._, 220, 221,
- 253, 294, 359, 360, 385.
-
- Pliny, the Younger, 298 _n._
-
- Plotinus, 171 _n._, 254.
-
- Plutarch, 84.
-
- Poe, E. A., 50, 63, 230, 292, 321, 326, 354, 355.
-
- Polonius, Jean, 325 _n._
-
- Pope, 6 _n._, 12, 25, 33, 34, 38, 91, 174, 177, 268.
-
- Poussin, 274 _n._
-
- Prévost-Paradol, 231 _n._
-
-
- Rabelais, 117, 268.
-
- Racine, 100.
-
- Racowitza, Princess von, 62 _n._
-
- Radcliffe, Anne, 106.
-
- Rambouillet, Marquise de, 75.
-
- Raphael, 289, 290.
-
- Rashdall, Hastings, 131 _n._
-
- Rawnsley, Canon, 328.
-
- Régnier, M., 62.
-
- Renan, xi, 133, 183, 203, 238, 251, 265, 304, 323, 342, 344,
- 345.
-
- Revon, M., 272 _n._
-
- Richardson, 208.
-
- Richter, Jean Paul, 93, 264.
-
- Ritter, E., 134 _n._
-
- Rivarol, xxiii, 215, 225.
-
- Robespierre, M., 135, 136, 180, 340.
-
- Rochambeau, 278.
-
- Ronsard, 11.
-
- Rosa, Salvator, 274.
-
- Rostand, 76 _n._, 89, 295.
-
- Rouge, I., 96 _n._
-
- Rousseau, ix, xv _n._, xvii, xviii, 1, 5, 7, 23-25, 30, 32, 34,
- 43-45, 47, 50, 54, 58, 60, 61, 63, 68, 70, 72-82, 85-87, 90,
- 93, 97, 98, 102-104, 106-108, 110-112, 114, 115, 117, 119, 122,
- 123, 126-132, 135, 136, 140, 143, 144, 147, 153-158, 160-167,
- 174, 175, 179-181, 183, 185, 187, 188, 193-197, 210, 216, 218,
- 220, 221, 224, 227, 229, 234, 236, 245, 247, 248, 253, 256,
- 258, 263, 267, 269, 270, 275, 278, 279, 281, 282, 284-286, 289,
- 292, 300, 302, 303, 305-307, 309, 314, 317 _n._, 322, 325, 326,
- 330, 331, 342, 345-349, 352, 358 _n._, 361, 362, 364, 370, 373,
- 375, 377, 379, 380, 382, 383, 386-388.
-
- Ruskin, 83, 90, 158, 163, 164, 269, 279, 290, 301, 328, 384.
-
- Rymer, T., 13, 14.
-
-
- Sainte-Beuve, xi, 14, 50, 57, 58, 93 _n._, 305, 313, 333, 336,
- 342.
-
- Saint-Evremond, 39, 166.
-
- Saint-Hilaire, Geoffroy, 270.
-
- Saint-Hilaire, J. Barthélemy, 381 _n._
-
- Saint-Pierre, B. de, 122.
-
- Sand, George, 107, 232, 233 _n._, 262 _n._, 318 _n._, 328,
- 338-342, 344.
-
- Sandys, J. E., 311 _n._
-
- Santayana, G., 77, 361.
-
- Sappho, 229.
-
- Sargent, John, 291.
-
- Scaliger, 19, 144, 146, 273.
-
- Schelling, 293-295.
-
- Schiller, 43, 44, 70, 77, 80-82, 96-98, 102, 110, 112, 129, 132
- _n._, 140, 141, 241, 307 _n._, 312, 330, 358 _n._
-
- Schlegel, A. W., 92, 94-97, 101, 149, 241, 293.
-
- Schlegel, F., 95-99, 148, 149, 182, 241, 242, 245, 251, 263-265
- _n._
-
- Schomberg, Marshal, 73.
-
- Schopenhauer, 149, 307 _n._
-
- Scott, Walter, 232 _n._, 260.
-
- Seillière, E., 194 _n._, 307 _n._
-
- Senancour, 308, 315, 323.
-
- Seneca, 216 _n._, 313 _n._, 332 _n._
-
- Shackleton, Sir Ernest, 277.
-
- Shadwell, T., 6 _n._
-
- Shaftesbury, 44, 45, 121, 122, 131, 179, 196, 197, 207, 253,
- 257, 294, 324, 357.
-
- Shakespeare, 21 _n._, 33, 38, 41, 99, 208, 264, 281, 290, 295.
-
- Shelley, 82, 137, 161, 180, 196, 206, 224, 225 _n._-228, 256,
- 266, 282-284 _n._, 291, 310 _n._, 321 _n._, 358-360, 376, 391.
-
- Shelley, Mrs., 161, 321 _n._
-
- Sherman, Stuart P., 243.
-
- Shute, R., xxii _n._
-
- Sidney, Sir Phillip, 6, 18.
-
- Smith, Horace, 227.
-
- Socrates, 1, 112, 146, 147, 175, 195, 242-245, 266, 272, 356,
- 362, 374, 375, 385.
-
- Solomon, 295.
-
- Solon, xxi.
-
- Sophocles, 23, 48, 53, 174, 204, 358, 360.
-
- Spingarn, J. E., 65 _n._
-
- Staël, Mme. de, 45, 99, 101, 132 _n._, 306, 316.
-
- Stedman, E. C., 230.
-
- Steele, 6 _n._, 127 _n._
-
- Stendhal, 192, 213, 307 _n._, 317.
-
- Stephen, Leslie, 82 _n._, 107, 258.
-
- Sterne, L., 144.
-
- Stobæus, 311 _n._
-
- Swanwick, Miss, 288 _n._
-
- Swift, 8, 266, 267.
-
- Synge, 243.
-
-
- Tagore, 149.
-
- Taine, 28, 89, 170, 188, 237, 275, 337, 343 _n._
-
- Talleyrand, 24, 25.
-
- Tasso, 85, 89.
-
- Taylor, Jeremy, 115.
-
- Tennyson, 92, 197, 202 _n._, 312, 332 _n._, 348 _n._, 358, 393.
-
- Theocritus, 238, 281, 285.
-
- Thiers, 321.
-
- Thomson, James (author of _The Seasons_), 8, 274 _n._
-
- Thomson, James (“B.V.”), 332 _n._
-
- Tiberius, 313.
-
- Tieck, 94, 159 _n._, 241 _n._, 243, 292.
-
- Titian, 291.
-
- Tolstoy, 197, 198, 352.
-
- Tsêng Kuo-fan, 381 _n._
-
- Turner, 290.
-
- Twain, Mark, 326.
-
-
- Uhland, 293.
-
-
- Vaihinger, H., 370.
-
- Vida, 144.
-
- Vidal, Pierre, 238.
-
- Vigny, A. de., 186 _n._, 305, 320, 324, 335-338, 365.
-
- Villemain, 336 _n._
-
- Villers, 45.
-
- Villiers de l’Isle Adam, 88, 322, 324 _n._
-
- Villon, 238.
-
- Violet, 278.
-
- Virgil, 19, 271, 312, 354, 377.
-
- Viviani, Emilia, 228.
-
- Voltaire, 32-34, 39, 93 _n._, 100, 103, 119, 177, 216, 236
- _n._, 369.
-
-
- Wackenroder, 86.
-
- Wagner, 170, 210, 230.
-
- Wallace, E., 12 _n._
-
- Walpole, H., 127, 314.
-
- Walzel, O. F., 52 _n._, 160 _n._
-
- Ward, Wilfrid, 62 _n._
-
- Warens, Mme. de, 74, 134 _n._, 135, 236.
-
- Wellington, 386.
-
- Wesley, John, 258.
-
- West, Richard, 323.
-
- Westbrook, Harriet, 226.
-
- Whitman, Walt, 137, 166, 286, 349.
-
- Wilde, Oscar, 238.
-
- Williams, Mrs., 226.
-
- Wolseley, R., 65.
-
- Wordsworth, xvii, 1, 52, 74, 83, 91, 92 _n._, 145, 146, 166
- _n._, 171, 197, 237, 247-250 _n._, 256, 262 _n._, 272, 277,
- 279, 283-285, 293, 296, 301-303, 322 _n._, 328, 337 _n._, 343,
- 351.
-
-
- Xenophon, 175 _n._
-
-
- Yalden, 50.
-
- Yeats, W. B., 149.
-
- Young, E., 37, 38, 40.
-
-
- Zola, 58, 103, 106, 107, 187, 220.
-
-
-
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-<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Rousseau and Romanticism, by Irving Babbitt</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world 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
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-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Rousseau and Romanticism</p>
-<p>Author: Irving Babbitt</p>
-<p>Release Date: October 16, 2015 [eBook #50235]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROUSSEAU AND ROMANTICISM***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h3>E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">ROUSSEAU<br />
-AND ROMANTICISM</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">BY<br />
-IRVING BABBITT</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><i>Professor of French Literature in Harvard University</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter titlepage" style="width: 100px;">
-<img src="images/titlepage.jpg" width="100" height="130" alt="(logo of Riverside Press)" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="titlepage">BOSTON AND NEW YORK<br />
-HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY<br />
-The Riverside Press Cambridge</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p><i>L’imagination dispose de tout.</i></p>
-
-<p class="right">PASCAL</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p><i>Le bon sens est le maître de la vie humaine.</i></p>
-
-<p class="right">BOSSUET</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p><i>L’homme est un être immense, en quelque sorte, qui peut exister
-partiellement, mais dont l’existence est d’autant plus délicieuse
-qu’elle est plus entière et plus pleine.</i></p>
-
-<p class="right">JOUBERT</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td></td><td><a href="#INTRODUCTION"><span class="smcap">Introduction</span></a></td><td class="tdr">ix</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">I.</td><td><a href="#CHAPTER_I"><span class="smcap">The Terms Classic and Romantic</span></a></td><td class="tdr">1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">II.</td><td><a href="#CHAPTER_II"><span class="smcap">Romantic Genius</span></a></td><td class="tdr">32</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">III.</td><td><a href="#CHAPTER_III"><span class="smcap">Romantic Imagination</span></a></td><td class="tdr"> 70</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">IV.</td><td><a href="#CHAPTER_IV"><span class="smcap">Romantic Morality: The Ideal</span></a></td><td class="tdr">114</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">V.</td><td><a href="#CHAPTER_V"><span class="smcap">Romantic Morality: The Real</span></a></td><td class="tdr">187</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">VI.</td><td><a href="#CHAPTER_VI"><span class="smcap">Romantic Love</span></a></td><td class="tdr">220</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">VII.</td><td><a href="#CHAPTER_VII"><span class="smcap">Romantic Irony</span></a></td><td class="tdr">240</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">VIII.</td><td><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII"><span class="smcap">Romanticism and Nature</span></a></td><td class="tdr">268</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">IX.</td><td><a href="#CHAPTER_IX"><span class="smcap">Romantic Melancholy</span></a></td><td class="tdr">306</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">X.</td><td><a href="#CHAPTER_X"><span class="smcap">The Present Outlook</span></a></td><td class="tdr">353</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td><td><a href="#APPENDIX"><span class="smcap">Appendix&mdash;Chinese Primitivism</span></a></td><td class="tdr">395</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td><td><a href="#BIBLIOGRAPHY"><span class="smcap">Bibliography</span></a></td><td class="tdr">399</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td><td><a href="#INDEX_OF_NAMES"><span class="smcap">Index</span></a></td><td class="tdr">421</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="INTRODUCTION" id="INTRODUCTION"></a>INTRODUCTION</h2>
-
-<p>Many readers will no doubt be tempted to exclaim on seeing
-my title: “Rousseau and no end!” The outpour of books on
-Rousseau had indeed in the period immediately preceding the
-war become somewhat portentous.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> This preoccupation with
-Rousseau is after all easy to explain. It is his somewhat formidable
-privilege to represent more fully than any other one
-person a great international movement. To attack Rousseau
-or to defend him is most often only a way of attacking or
-defending this movement.</p>
-
-<p>It is from this point of view at all events that the present
-work is conceived. I have not undertaken a systematic study
-of Rousseau’s life and doctrines. The appearance of his name
-in my title is justified, if at all, simply because he comes at a
-fairly early stage in the international movement the rise and
-growth of which I am tracing, and has on the whole supplied
-me with the most significant illustrations of it. I have already
-put forth certain views regarding this movement in three previous
-volumes.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> Though each one of these volumes attempts
-to do justice to a particular topic, it is at the same time intended
-to be a link in a continuous argument. I hope that I
-may be allowed to speak here with some frankness of the main
-trend of this argument both on its negative and on its positive,
-or constructive, side.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the best key to both sides of my argument is found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span>
-in the lines of Emerson I have taken as epigraph for “Literature
-and the American College”:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">There are two laws discrete</div>
-<div class="verse">Not reconciled,&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Law for man, and law for thing;</div>
-<div class="verse">The last builds town and fleet,</div>
-<div class="verse">But it runs wild,</div>
-<div class="verse">And doth the man unking.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On its negative side my argument is directed against this undue
-emphasis on the “law for thing,” against the attempt to erect on
-naturalistic foundations a complete philosophy of life. I define
-two main forms of naturalism&mdash;on the one hand, utilitarian
-and scientific and, on the other, emotional naturalism. The
-type of romanticism I am studying is inseparably bound up
-with emotional naturalism.</p>
-
-<p>This type of romanticism encouraged by the naturalistic
-movement is only one of three main types I distinguish and I
-am dealing for the most part with only one aspect of it. But
-even when thus circumscribed the subject can scarcely be said
-to lack importance; for if I am right in my conviction as to the
-unsoundness of a Rousseauistic philosophy of life, it follows
-that the total tendency of the Occident at present is away from
-rather than towards civilization.</p>
-
-<p>On the positive side, my argument aims to reassert the “law
-for man,” and its special discipline against the various forms
-of naturalistic excess. At the very mention of the word discipline
-I shall be set down in certain quarters as reactionary. But
-does it necessarily follow from a plea for the human law that
-one is a reactionary or in general a traditionalist? An American
-writer of distinction was once heard to remark that he saw in
-the world to-day but two classes of persons,&mdash;the mossbacks
-and the mountebanks, and that for his part he preferred to be
-a mossback. One should think twice before thus consenting to
-seem a mere relic of the past. The ineffable smartness of our
-young radicals is due to the conviction that, whatever else<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span>
-they may be, they are the very pink of modernity. Before
-sharing their conviction it might be well to do a little preliminary
-defining of such terms as modern and the modern spirit.
-It may then turn out that the true difficulty with our young
-radicals is not that they are too modern but that they are not
-modern enough. For, though the word modern is often and no
-doubt inevitably used to describe the more recent or the most
-recent thing, this is not its sole use. It is not in this sense alone
-that the word is used by writers like Goethe and Sainte-Beuve
-and Renan and Arnold. What all these writers mean by the
-modern spirit is the positive and critical spirit, the spirit that
-refuses to take things on authority. This is what Renan means,
-for example, when he calls Petrarch the “founder of the modern
-spirit in literature,” or Arnold when he explains why the
-Greeks of the great period seem more modern to us than the
-men of the Middle Ages.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
-
-<p>Now what I have myself tried to do is to be thoroughly
-modern in this sense. I hold that one should not only welcome
-the efforts of the man of science at his best to put the natural
-law on a positive and critical basis, but that one should strive
-to emulate him in one’s dealings with the human law; and so
-become a complete positivist. My main objection to the movement
-I am studying is that it has failed to produce complete
-positivists. Instead of facing honestly the emergency created
-by its break with the past the leaders of this movement have
-inclined to deny the duality of human nature, and then sought
-to dissimulate this mutilation of man under a mass of intellectual
-and emotional sophistry. The proper procedure in refuting
-these incomplete positivists is not to appeal to some dogma or
-outer authority but rather to turn against them their own principles.
-Thus Diderot, a notable example of the incomplete
-positivist and a chief source of naturalistic tendency, says
-that “everything is experimental in man.” Now the word
-experimental has somewhat narrowed in meaning since the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</a></span>
-time of Diderot. If one takes the saying to mean that everything
-in man is a matter of experience one should accept it
-unreservedly and then plant oneself firmly on the facts of
-experience that Diderot and other incomplete positivists have
-refused to recognize.</p>
-
-<p>The man who plants himself, not on outer authority but on
-experience, is an individualist. To be modern in the sense I
-have defined is not only to be positive and critical, but also&mdash;and
-this from the time of Petrarch&mdash;to be individualistic.
-The establishment of a sound type of individualism is indeed
-the specifically modern problem. It is right here that the failure
-of the incomplete positivist, the man who is positive only
-according to the natural law, is most conspicuous. What prevails
-in the region of the natural law is endless change and
-relativity; therefore the naturalistic positivist attacks all the
-traditional creeds and dogmas for the very reason that they
-aspire to fixity. Now all the ethical values of civilization have
-been associated with these fixed beliefs; and so it has come to
-pass that with their undermining by naturalism the ethical
-values themselves are in danger of being swept away in the
-everlasting flux. Because the individual who views life positively
-must give up unvarying creeds and dogmas “anterior,
-exterior, and superior” to himself, it has been assumed that he
-must also give up standards. For standards imply an element
-of oneness somewhere, with reference to which it is possible to
-measure the mere manifoldness and change. The naturalistic
-individualist, however, refuses to recognize any such element of
-oneness. His own private and personal self is to be the measure
-of all things and this measure itself, he adds, is constantly
-changing. But to stop at this stage is to be satisfied with the
-most dangerous of half-truths. Thus Bergson’s assertion that
-“life is a perpetual gushing forth of novelties” is in itself only
-a dangerous half-truth of this kind. The constant element in life
-is, no less than the element of novelty and change, a matter of
-observation and experience. As the French have it, the more life
-changes the more it is the same thing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>If, then, one is to be a sound individualist, an individualist
-with human standards&mdash;and in an age like this that has cut
-loose from its traditional moorings, the very survival of civilization
-would seem to hinge on its power to produce such a
-type of individualist&mdash;one must grapple with what Plato
-terms the problem of the One and the Many. My own solution
-of this problem, it may be well to point out, is not purely
-Platonic. Because one can perceive immediately an element of
-unity in things, it does not follow that one is justified in establishing
-a world of essences or entities or “ideas” above the
-flux. To do this is to fall away from a positive and critical into a
-more or less speculative attitude; it is to risk setting up a metaphysic
-of the One. Those who put exclusive emphasis on the
-element of change in things are in no less obvious danger of
-falling away from the positive and critical attitude into a metaphysic
-of the Many.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> This for example is the error one finds
-in the contemporary thinkers who seem to have the cry, thinkers
-like James and Bergson and Dewey and Croce. They are
-very far from satisfying the requirements of a complete positivism;
-they are seeking rather to build up their own intoxication
-with the element of change into a complete view of life, and so
-are turning their backs on one whole side of experience in a way
-that often reminds one of the ancient Greek sophists. The
-history of philosophy since the Greeks is to a great extent the
-history of the clashes of the metaphysicians of the One and the
-metaphysicians of the Many. In the eyes of the complete positivist
-this history therefore reduces itself largely to a monstrous
-logomachy.</p>
-
-<p>Life does not give here an element of oneness and there an
-element of change. It gives a <i>oneness that is always changing</i>.
-The oneness and the change are inseparable. Now if what is
-stable and permanent is felt as real, the side of life that is
-always slipping over into something else or vanishing away<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[xiv]</a></span>
-entirely is, as every student of psychology knows, associated
-rather with the feeling of illusion. If a man attends solely to
-this side of life he will finally come, like Leconte de Lisle,
-to look upon it as a “torrent of mobile chimeras,” as an “endless
-whirl of vain appearances.” To admit that the oneness
-of life and the change are inseparable is therefore to admit
-that such reality as man can know positively is inextricably
-mixed up with illusion. Moreover man does not observe the
-oneness that is always changing from the outside; he is a part
-of the process, he is himself a oneness that is always changing.
-Though imperceptible at any particular moment, the continuous
-change that is going on leads to differences&mdash;those, let us
-say, between a human individual at the age of six weeks and the
-same individual at the age of seventy&mdash;which are sufficiently
-striking: and finally this human oneness that is always changing
-seems to vanish away entirely. From all this it follows that
-an enormous element of illusion&mdash;and this is a truth the East
-has always accepted more readily than the West&mdash;enters into
-the idea of personality itself. If the critical spirit is once allowed
-to have its way, it will not rest content until it has
-dissolved life into a mist of illusion. Perhaps the most positive
-and critical account of man in modern literature is that of
-Shakespeare:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent5">We are such stuff</div>
-<div class="verse">As dreams are made on, and our little life</div>
-<div class="verse">Is rounded with a sleep.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But, though strictly considered, life is but a web of illusion
-and a dream within a dream, it is a dream that needs to be
-managed with the utmost discretion, if it is not to turn into
-a nightmare. In other words, however much life may mock the
-metaphysician, the problem of conduct remains. There is always
-the unity at the heart of the change; it is possible, however,
-to get at this real and abiding element and so at the
-standards with reference to which the dream of life may be
-rightly managed only through a veil of illusion. The problem of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[xv]</a></span>
-the One and the Many, the ultimate problem of thought, can
-therefore be solved only by a right use of illusion. In close
-relation to illusion and the questions that arise in connection
-with it is all that we have come to sum up in the word imagination.
-The use of this word, at least in anything like its present
-extension, is, one should note, comparatively recent. Whole
-nations and periods of the past can scarcely be said to have
-had any word corresponding to imagination in this extended
-sense. Yet the thinkers of the past have treated, at times profoundly,
-under the head of fiction or illusion the questions that
-we should treat under the head of imagination.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> In the “Masters
-of Modern French Criticism” I was above all preoccupied
-with the problem of the One and the Many and the failure of
-the nineteenth century to deal with it adequately. My effort
-in this present work is to show that this failure can be retrieved
-only by a deeper insight into the imagination and its all-important
-rôle in both literature and life. Man is cut off from
-immediate contact with anything abiding and therefore worthy
-to be called real, and condemned to live in an element of fiction
-or illusion, but he may, I have tried to show, lay hold with the
-aid of the imagination on the element of oneness that is inextricably
-blended with the manifoldness and change and to just
-that extent may build up a sound model for imitation. One tends
-to be an individualist with true standards, to put the matter
-somewhat differently, only in so far as one understands the
-relation between appearance and reality&mdash;what the philosophers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[xvi]</a></span>
-call the epistemological problem. This problem, though
-it cannot be solved abstractly and metaphysically, can be solved
-practically and in terms of actual conduct. Inasmuch as modern
-philosophy has failed to work out any such solution, it is
-hard to avoid the conclusion that modern philosophy is bankrupt,
-not merely from Kant, but from Descartes.</p>
-
-<p>The supreme maxim of the ethical positivist is: By their
-fruits shall ye know them. If I object to a romantic philosophy
-it is because I do not like its fruits. I infer from its fruits that
-this philosophy has made a wrong use of illusion. “All those
-who took the romantic promises at their face value,” says
-Bourget, “rolled in abysses of despair and ennui.”<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> If any one
-still holds, as many of the older romanticists held, that it is a
-distinguished thing to roll in abysses of despair and ennui, he
-should read me no further. He will have no sympathy with my
-point of view. If any one, on the other hand, accepts my criterion
-but denies that Rousseauistic living has such fruits, it has
-been my aim so to accumulate evidence that he will be confronted
-with the task of refuting not a set of theories but a body
-of facts. My whole method, let me repeat, is experimental, or
-it might be less ambiguous to say if the word were a fortunate
-one, experiential. The illustrations I have given of any particular
-aspect of the movement are usually only a small fraction
-of those I have collected&mdash;themselves no doubt only a fraction
-of the illustrations that might be collected from printed
-sources. M. Maigron’s investigation<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> into the fruits of romantic
-living suggests the large additions that might be made to these
-printed sources from manuscript material.</p>
-
-<p>My method indeed is open in one respect to grave misunderstanding.
-From the fact that I am constantly citing passages
-from this or that author and condemning the tendency for
-which these passages stand, the reader will perhaps be led to
-infer a total condemnation of the authors so quoted. But the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[xvii]</a></span>
-inference may be very incorrect. I am not trying to give rounded
-estimates of individuals&mdash;delightful and legitimate as that
-type of criticism is&mdash;but to trace main currents as a part of my
-search for a set of principles to oppose to naturalism. I call
-attention for example to the Rousseauistic and primitivistic
-elements in Wordsworth but do not assert that this is the whole
-truth about Wordsworth. One’s views as to the philosophical
-value of Rousseauism must, however, weigh heavily in a total
-judgment of Wordsworth. Criticism is such a difficult art
-because one must not only have principles but must apply
-them flexibly and intuitively. No one would accuse criticism at
-present of lacking flexibility. It has grown so flexible in fact as
-to become invertebrate. One of my reasons for practicing the
-present type of criticism, is the conviction that because of a
-lack of principles the type of criticism that aims at rounded
-estimates of individuals is rapidly ceasing to have any meaning.</p>
-
-<p>I should add that if I had attempted rounded estimates
-they would often have been more favorable than might be
-gathered from my comments here and elsewhere on the romantic
-leaders. One is justified in leaning towards severity in the
-laying down of principles, but should nearly always incline to
-indulgence in the application of them. In a sense one may say
-with Goethe that the excellencies are of the individual, the
-defects of the age. It is especially needful to recall distinctions
-of this kind in the case of Rousseau himself and my treatment
-of him. M. Lanson has dwelt on the strange duality of Rousseau’s
-nature. “The writer,” he says,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[xviii]</a></span> “is a poor dreamy creature
-who approaches action only with alarm and with every
-manner of precaution, and who understands the applications
-of his boldest doctrines in a way to reassure conservatives and
-satisfy opportunists. But the work for its part detaches itself
-from the author, lives its independent life, and, heavily charged
-with revolutionary explosives which neutralize the moderate
-and conciliatory elements Rousseau has put into it for his own
-satisfaction, it exasperates and inspires revolt and fires enthusiasms
-and irritates hatreds; it is the mother of violence, the
-source of all that is uncompromising, it launches the simple
-souls who give themselves up to its strange virtue upon the
-desperate quest of the absolute, an absolute to be realized
-now by anarchy and now by social despotism.”<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> I am inclined
-to discover in the Rousseau who, according to M. Lanson, is
-merely timorous, a great deal of shrewdness and at times something
-even better than shrewdness. The question is not perhaps
-very important, for M. Lanson is surely right in affirming that
-the Rousseau who has moved the world&mdash;and that for reasons
-I shall try to make plain&mdash;is Rousseau the extremist and foe
-of compromise; and so it is to this Rousseau that as a student
-of main tendencies I devote almost exclusive attention. I am
-not, however, seeking to make a scapegoat even of the radical
-and revolutionary Rousseau. One of my chief objections, indeed,
-to Rousseauism, as will appear in the following pages, is that
-it encourages the making of scapegoats.</p>
-
-<p>If I am opposed to Rousseauism because of its fruits in
-experience, I try to put what I have to offer as a substitute on
-the same positive basis. Now experience is of many degrees:
-first of all one’s purely personal experience, an infinitesimal
-fragment; and then the experience of one’s immediate circle,
-of one’s time and country, of the near past and so on in widening
-circles. The past which as dogma the ethical positivist rejects,
-as experience he not only admits but welcomes. He can
-no more dispense with it indeed than the naturalistic positivist
-can dispense with his laboratory. He insists moreover on
-including the remoter past in his survey. Perhaps the most
-pernicious of all the conceits fostered by the type of progress we
-owe to science is the conceit that we have outgrown this older
-experience. One should endeavor, as Goethe says, to oppose to
-the aberrations of the hour, the masses of universal history.
-There are special reasons just now why this background to
-which one appeals should not be merely Occidental. An increasing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">[xix]</a></span>
-material contact between the Occident and the Far East is
-certain. We should be enlightened by this time as to the perils
-of material contact between men and bodies of men who have
-no deeper understanding. Quite apart from this consideration
-the experience of the Far East completes and confirms in a
-most interesting way that of the Occident. We can scarcely
-afford to neglect it if we hope to work out a truly ecumenical
-wisdom to oppose to the sinister one-sidedness of our current
-naturalism. Now the ethical experience of the Far East may
-be summed up for practical purposes in the teachings and
-influence of two men, Confucius and Buddha.<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> To know the
-Buddhistic and Confucian teachings in their true spirit is to
-know what is best and most representative in the ethical experience
-of about half the human race for over seventy generations.</p>
-
-<p>A study of Buddha and Confucius suggests, as does a study
-of the great teachers of the Occident, that under its bewildering
-surface variety human experience falls after all into a few
-main categories. I myself am fond of distinguishing three levels
-on which a man may experience life&mdash;the naturalistic, the
-humanistic, and the religious. Tested by its fruits Buddhism
-at its best confirms Christianity. Submitted to the same test
-Confucianism falls in with the teaching of Aristotle and in
-general with that of all those who from the Greeks down have
-proclaimed decorum and the law of measure. This is so obviously
-true that Confucius has been called the Aristotle of the
-East. Not only has the Far East had in Buddhism a great
-religious movement and in Confucianism a great humanistic
-movement, it has also had in early Taoism<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> a movement that
-in its attempts to work out naturalistic equivalents of humanistic
-or religious insight, offers almost startling analogies to
-the movement I am here studying.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">[xx]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Thus both East and West have not only had great religious
-and humanistic disciplines which when tested by their fruits
-confirm one another, bearing witness to the element of oneness,
-the constant element in human experience, but these
-disciplines have at times been conceived in a very positive
-spirit. Confucius indeed, though a moral realist, can scarcely
-be called a positivist; he aimed rather to attach men to the past
-by links of steel. He reminds us in this as in some other ways
-of the last of the great Tories in the Occident, Dr. Johnson.
-Buddha on the other hand was an individualist. He wished
-men to rest their belief neither on his authority<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> nor on that
-of tradition.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> No one has ever made a more serious effort to
-put religion on a positive and critical basis. It is only proper
-that I acknowledge my indebtedness to the great Hindu positivist:
-my treatment of the problem of the One and the Many,
-for example, is nearer to Buddha than to Plato. Yet even if the
-general thesis be granted that it is desirable to put the “law
-for man” on a positive and critical basis, the question remains
-whether the more crying need just now is for positive and
-critical humanism or for positive and critical religion. I have
-discussed this delicate and difficult question more fully in my
-last chapter, but may give at least one reason here for inclining
-to the humanistic solution. I have been struck in my study of
-the past by the endless self-deception to which man is subject
-when he tries to pass too abruptly from the naturalistic to the
-religious level. The world, it is hard to avoid concluding, would
-have been a better place if more persons had made sure they
-were human before setting out to be superhuman; and this
-consideration would seem to apply with special force to a generation
-like the present that is wallowing in the trough of
-naturalism. After all to be a good humanist is merely to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxi" id="Page_xxi">[xxi]</a></span>
-moderate and sensible and decent. It is much easier for a man
-to deceive himself and others regarding his supernatural lights
-than it is regarding the degree to which he is moderate and
-sensible and decent.</p>
-
-<p>The past is not without examples of a positive and critical
-humanism. I have already mentioned Aristotle. If by his
-emphasis on the mediatory virtues he reminds one of Confucius,
-by his positive method and intensely analytical temper
-he reminds one rather of Buddha. When Aristotle rises to the
-religious level and discourses of the “life of vision” he is very
-Buddhistic. When Buddha for his part turns from the religious
-life to the duties of the layman he is purely Aristotelian.
-Aristotle also deals positively with the natural law. He is
-indeed a complete positivist, and not, like the man of the
-nineteenth century, positive according to the natural law alone.
-The Aristotle that should specially concern us, however, is the
-positive and critical humanist&mdash;the Aristotle, let us say, of
-the “Ethics” and “Politics” and “Poetics.” Just as I have
-called the point of view of the scientific and utilitarian naturalist
-Baconian,<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> and that of the emotional naturalist Rousseauistic,
-so I would term the point of view that I am myself seeking
-to develop Aristotelian. Aristotle has laid down once for all the
-principle that should guide the ethical positivist. “Truth,” he
-says, “in matters of moral action is judged from facts and from
-actual life. … So what we should do is to examine the preceding
-statements [of Solon and other wise men] by referring
-them to facts and to actual life, and when they harmonize
-with facts we may accept them, when they are at variance
-with them conceive of them as mere theories.”<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
-
-<p>It is in this sense alone that I aspire to be called an Aristotelian;
-for one risks certain misunderstandings in using the name
-of Aristotle.<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> The authority of this great positivist has been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxii" id="Page_xxii">[xxii]</a></span>
-invoked innumerable times throughout the ages as a substitute
-for direct observation. Aristotle was not only the prop and
-mainstay of dogma for centuries during the Middle Ages, but
-dogmatic Aristotelianism survived to no small extent, especially
-in literature, throughout the neo-classical period. It was
-no doubt natural enough that the champions of the modern
-spirit should have rejected Aristotle along with the traditional
-order of which he had been made a support. Yet if they had
-been more modern they might have seen in him rather a chief
-precursor. They might have learned from him how to have
-standards and at the same time not be immured in dogma.
-As it is, those who call themselves modern have come to adopt
-a purely exploratory attitude towards life. “On desperate seas
-long wont to roam,” they have lost more and more the sense of
-what is normal and central in human experience. But to get
-away from what is normal and central is to get away from wisdom.
-My whole argument on the negative side, if I may venture
-on a final summing up, is that the naturalistic movement
-in the midst of which we are still living had from the start this
-taint of eccentricity. I have tried to show in detail the nature
-of the aberration. As for the results, they are being written
-large in disastrous events. On its constructive side, my argument,
-if it makes any appeal at all, will be to those for whom
-the symbols through which the past has received its wisdom
-have become incredible, and who, seeing at the same time that
-the break with the past that took place in the eighteenth century
-was on unsound lines, hold that the remedy for the partial
-positivism that is the source of this unsoundness, is a more
-complete positivism. Nothing is more perilous than to be only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiii" id="Page_xxiii">[xxiii]</a></span>
-half critical. This is to risk being the wrong type of individualist&mdash;the
-individualist who has repudiated outer control without
-achieving inner control. “People mean nowadays by a
-philosopher,” says Rivarol, “not the man who learns the great
-art of mastering his passions or adding to his insight, but the
-man who has cast off prejudices without acquiring virtues.”
-That view of philosophy has not ceased to be popular. The
-whole modern experiment is threatened with breakdown
-simply because it has not been sufficiently modern. One should
-therefore not rest content until one has, with the aid of the
-secular experience of both the East and the West, worked out
-a point of view so modern that, compared with it, that of our
-young radicals will seem antediluvian.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiv" id="Page_xxiv">[xxiv]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>ROUSSEAU
-AND ROMANTICISM</h1>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE TERMS CLASSIC AND ROMANTIC</span></h2>
-
-<p>The words classic and romantic, we are often told, cannot
-be defined at all, and even if they could be defined,
-some would add, we should not be much profited. But
-this inability or unwillingness to define may itself turn
-out to be only one aspect of a movement that from Rousseau
-to Bergson has sought to discredit the analytical
-intellect&mdash;what Wordsworth calls “the false secondary
-power by which we multiply distinctions.” However,
-those who are with Socrates rather than with Rousseau
-or Wordsworth in this matter, will insist on the importance
-of definition, especially in a chaotic era like the
-present; for nothing is more characteristic of such an
-era than its irresponsible use of general terms. Now to
-measure up to the Socratic standard, a definition must
-not be abstract and metaphysical, but experimental;
-it must not, that is, reflect our opinion of what a word
-should mean, but what it actually has meant. Mathematicians
-may be free at times to frame their own definitions,
-but in the case of words like classic and romantic,
-that have been used innumerable times, and used not in
-one but in many countries, such a method is inadmissible.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-One must keep one’s eye on actual usage. One should
-indeed allow for a certain amount of freakishness in this
-usage. Beaumarchais, for example, makes classic synonymous
-with barbaric.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> One may disregard an occasional
-aberration of this kind, but if one can find only confusion
-and inconsistency in all the main uses of words like
-classic and romantic, the only procedure for those who
-speak or write in order to be understood is to banish the
-words from their vocabulary.</p>
-
-<p>Now to define in a Socratic way two things are necessary:
-one must learn to see a common element in things
-that are apparently different and also to discriminate
-between things that are apparently similar. A Newton,
-to take the familiar instance of the former process, saw
-a common element in the fall of an apple and the motion
-of a planet; and one may perhaps without being a literary
-Newton discover a common element in all the main
-uses of the word romantic as well as in all the main
-uses of the word classic; though some of the things to
-which the word romantic in particular has been applied
-seem, it must be admitted, at least as far apart as the fall
-of an apple and the motion of a planet. The first step is
-to perceive the something that connects two or more of
-these things apparently so diverse, and then it may be
-found necessary to refer this unifying trait itself back
-to something still more general, and so on until we arrive,
-not indeed at anything absolute&mdash;the absolute
-will always elude us&mdash;but at what Goethe calls the
-original or underlying phenomenon (<i>Urphänomen</i>).
-A fruitful source of false definition is to take as primary
-in a more or less closely allied group of facts what is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-actually secondary&mdash;for example, to fix upon the return
-to the Middle Ages as the central fact in romanticism,
-whereas this return is only symptomatic; it is
-very far from being the original phenomenon. Confused
-and incomplete definitions of romanticism have
-indeed just that origin&mdash;they seek to put at the centre
-something that though romantic is not central but
-peripheral, and so the whole subject is thrown out of
-perspective.</p>
-
-<p>My plan then is to determine to the best of my ability,
-in connection with a brief historical survey, the common
-element in the various uses of the words classic and
-romantic; and then, having thus disposed of the similarities,
-to turn to the second part of the art of defining and
-deal, also historically, with the differences. For my subject
-is not romanticism in general, but only a particular
-type of romanticism, and this type of romanticism needs
-to be seen as a recoil, not from classicism in general, but
-from a particular type of classicism.</p>
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p>The word romantic when traced historically is found
-to go back to the old French <i>roman</i> of which still elder
-forms are <i>romans</i> and <i>romant</i>. These and similar formations
-derive ultimately from the mediæval Latin adverb
-<i>romanice</i>. <i>Roman</i> and like words meant originally the
-various vernaculars derived from Latin, just as the
-French still speak of these vernaculars as <i>les langues romanes</i>;
-and then the word <i>roman</i> came to be applied to
-tales written in the various vernaculars, especially in
-old French. Now with what features of these tales
-were people most struck? The reply to this question<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-is found in a passage of a fifteenth-century Latin manuscript:<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>
-“From the reading of certain romantics, that is,
-books of poetry composed in French on military deeds
-which are for the most part fictitious.”<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> Here the term
-romantic is applied to books that we should still call
-romantic and for the very same reason, namely, because
-of the predominance in these books of the element of
-fiction over reality.</p>
-
-<p>In general a thing is romantic when, as Aristotle
-would say, it is wonderful rather than probable; in
-other words, when it violates the normal sequence of
-cause and effect in favor of adventure. Here is the fundamental
-contrast between the words classic and romantic
-which meets us at the outset and in some form
-or other persists in all the uses of the word down to the
-present day. A thing is romantic when it is strange, unexpected,
-intense, superlative, extreme, unique,<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> etc. A
-thing is classical, on the other hand, when it is not unique,
-but representative of a class. In this sense medical men
-may speak correctly of a classic case of typhoid fever, or
-a classic case of hysteria. One is even justified in speaking
-of a classic example of romanticism. By an easy extension
-of meaning a thing is classical when it belongs
-to a high class or to the best class.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The type of romanticism referred to in the fifteenth-century
-manuscript was, it will be observed, the spontaneous
-product of the popular imagination of the Middle
-Ages. We may go further and say that the uncultivated
-human imagination in all times and places is romantic in
-the same way. It hungers for the thrilling and the marvellous
-and is, in short, incurably melodramatic. All students
-of the past know how, when the popular imagination is
-left free to work on actual historical characters and
-events, it quickly introduces into these characters and
-events the themes of universal folk-lore, and makes a
-ruthless sacrifice of reality to the love of melodramatic
-surprise. For example, the original nucleus of historical
-fact has almost disappeared in the lurid melodramatic
-tale “Les quatre fils Aymon,” which has continued, as
-presented in the “Bibliothèque Bleue,” to appeal to the
-French peasant down to our own times. Those who look
-with alarm on recent attacks upon romanticism should
-therefore be comforted. All children, nearly all women
-and the vast majority of men always have been, are and
-probably always will be romantic. This is true even of a
-classical period like the second half of the seventeenth
-century in France. Boileau is supposed to have killed the
-vogue of the interminable romances of the early seventeenth
-century which themselves continue the spirit
-of the mediæval romances. But recent investigations
-have shown that the vogue of these romances continued
-until well on into the eighteenth century. They influenced
-the imagination of Rousseau, the great modern
-romancer.</p>
-
-<p>But to return to the history of the word romantic.
-The first printed examples of the word in any modern<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-tongue are, it would seem, to be found in English. The
-Oxford Dictionary cites the following from F. Greville’s
-“Life of Sidney” (written before 1628, published in
-1652): “Doe not his Arcadian romantics live after him?”&mdash;meaning
-apparently ideas or features suggestive of
-romance. Of extreme interest is the use of the word in
-Evelyn’s “Diary” (3 August, 1654): “Were Sir Guy’s
-grot improved as it might be, it were capable of being
-made a most romantic and pleasant place.” The word is
-not only used in a favorable sense, but it is applied to
-nature; and it is this use of the word in connection with
-outer nature that French and German literatures are
-going to derive later from England. Among the early
-English uses of the word romantic may be noted: “There
-happened this extraordinary case&mdash;one of the most
-romantique that ever I heard in my life and could not
-have believed,”<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> etc. “Most other authors that I ever
-read either have wild romantic tales wherein they strain
-Love and Honor to that ridiculous height that it becomes
-burlesque,”<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> etc. The word becomes fairly common by
-the year 1700 and thousands of examples could be collected
-from English writers in the eighteenth century.
-Here are two early eighteenth-century instances:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The gentleman I am married to made love to me in rapture but
-it was the rapture of a Christian and a man of Honor, not a romantic
-hero or a whining coxcomb.”<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Whether the charmer sinner it or saint it</div>
-<div class="verse">If folly grow romantick I must paint it.<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The early French and German uses of the word romantic
-seem to derive from England. One important point is
-to be noted as to France. Before using the word <i>romantique</i>
-the French used the word <i>romanesque</i> in the sense
-of wild, unusual, adventurous&mdash;especially in matters
-of sentiment, and they have continued to employ <i>romanesque</i>
-alongside <i>romantique</i>, which is now practically used
-only of the romantic school. A great deal of confusion
-is thus avoided into which we fall in English from having
-only the one word romantic, which must do duty for both
-<i>romantique</i> and <i>romanesque</i>. An example of <i>romantique</i>
-is found in French as early as 1675;<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> but the word owed
-its vogue practically to the anglomania that set in about
-the middle of the eighteenth century. The first very influential
-French example of the word is appropriately
-found in Rousseau in the Fifth Promenade (1777): “The
-shores of the Lake of Bienne are more wild and romantic
-than those of the Lake of Geneva.” The word <i>romantique</i>
-was fashionable in France especially as applied to scenery
-from about the year 1785, but without any thought as
-yet of applying it to a literary school.</p>
-
-<p>In Germany the word <i>romantisch</i> as an equivalent of
-the French <i>romanesque</i> and modern German <i>romanhaft</i>,
-appears at the end of the seventeenth century and plainly
-as a borrowing from the French. Heidigger, a Swiss, used
-it several times in his “Mythoscopia romantica,”<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> an
-attack on romances and the wild and vain imaginings
-they engender. According to Heidigger the only resource
-against romanticism in this sense is religion. In Germany<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-as in France the association of romantic with natural
-scenery comes from England, especially from the imitations
-and translations of Thomson’s “Seasons.”</p>
-
-<p>In the second half of the eighteenth century the increasingly
-favorable use of words like Gothic and enthusiastic
-as well as the emergence of words like sentimental
-and picturesque are among the symptoms of a
-new movement, and the fortunes of the word romantic
-were more or less bound up with this movement. Still,
-apart from its application to natural scenery, the word
-is as yet far from having acquired a favorable connotation
-if we are to believe an essay by John Foster on the
-“Application of the Epithet Romantic” (1805). Foster’s
-point of view is not unlike that of Heidigger. Romantic,
-he says, had come to be used as a term of vague abuse,
-whereas it can be used rightly only of the ascendancy of
-imagination over judgment, and is therefore synonymous
-with such words as wild, visionary, extravagant. “A man
-possessing so strong a judgment and so subordinate a
-fancy as Dean Swift would hardly have been made
-romantic … if he had studied all the books in Don
-Quixote’s library.” It is not, Foster admits, a sign of
-high endowment for a youth to be too coldly judicial, too
-deaf to the blandishments of imaginative illusion. Yet
-in general a man should strive to bring his imagination
-under the control of sound reason. But how is it possible
-thus to prevail against the deceits of fancy? Right knowing,
-he asserts very un-Socratically, is not enough to
-ensure right doing. At this point Foster changes from
-the tone of a literary essay to that of a sermon, and,
-maintaining a thesis somewhat similar to that of Pascal
-in the seventeenth century and Heidigger in the eighteenth,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-he concludes that a man’s imagination will run
-away with his judgment or reason unless he have the aid
-of divine grace.</p>
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>When Foster wrote his essay there was no question as
-yet in England of a romantic school. Before considering
-how the word came to be applied to a particular movement
-we need first to bring out more fully certain broad
-conflicts of tendency during the seventeenth and eighteenth
-centuries, conflicts that are not sufficiently revealed
-by the occasional uses during this period of the word
-romantic. In the contrast Foster established between
-judgment and imagination he is merely following a long
-series of neo-classical critics and this contrast not only
-seemed to him and these critics, but still seems to many,
-the essential contrast between classicism and romanticism.
-We shall be helped in understanding how judgment
-(or reason) and imagination came thus to be sharply contrasted
-if we consider briefly the changes in the meaning
-of the word wit during the neo-classical period, and also
-if we recollect that the contrast between judgment and
-imagination is closely related to the contrast the French
-are so fond of establishing between the general sense
-(<i>le sens commun</i>) and the private sense or sense of the
-individual (<i>le sens propre</i>).</p>
-
-<p>In the sixteenth century prime emphasis was put not
-upon common sense, but upon wit or conceit or ingenuity
-(in the sense of quickness of imagination). The typical
-Elizabethan strove to excel less by judgment than by
-invention, by “high-flying liberty of conceit”; like Falstaff
-he would have a brain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span> “apprehensive, quick, forgetive,
-full of nimble, fiery, and delectable shapes.” Wit
-at this time, it should be remembered, was synonymous
-not only with imagination but with intellect (in opposition
-to will). The result of the worship of wit in this
-twofold sense was a sort of intellectual romanticism.
-Though its origins are no doubt mediæval, it differs
-from the ordinary romanticism of the Middle Ages to
-which I have already referred in being thus concerned
-with thought rather than with action. Towards the end
-of the Renaissance and in the early seventeenth century
-especially, people were ready to pursue the strange
-and surprising thought even at the risk of getting too
-far away from the workings of the normal mind. Hence
-the “points” and “conceits” that spread, as Lowell put
-it, like a “cutaneous eruption” over the face of Europe;
-hence the Gongorists, and Cultists, the Marinists and
-Euphuists, the <i>précieux</i> and the “metaphysical” poets.
-And then came the inevitable swing away from all this
-fantasticality towards common sense. A demand arose
-for something that was less rare and “precious” and
-more representative.</p>
-
-<p>This struggle between the general sense and the sense
-of the individual stands out with special clearness in
-France. A model was gradually worked out by aid of the
-classics, especially the Latin classics, as to what man
-should be. Those who were in the main movement of the
-time elaborated a great convention, that is they <i>came
-together</i> about certain things. They condemned in the
-name of their convention those who were too indulgent
-of their private sense, in other words, too eccentric in
-their imaginings. A Théophile, for example, fell into disesteem
-for refusing to restrain his imagination, for asserting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-the type of “spontaneity” that would have won him
-favor in any romantic period.<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></p>
-
-<p>The swing away from intellectual romanticism can
-also be traced in the changes that took place in the meaning
-of the word wit in both France and England. One
-of the main tasks of the French critics of the seventeenth
-century and of English critics, largely under the
-lead of the French, was to distinguish between true and
-false wit. The work that would have been complimented
-a little earlier as “witty” and “conceited” is now censured
-as fantastic and far-fetched, as lacking in judicial
-control over the imagination, and therefore in general
-appeal. The movement away from the sense of the individual
-towards common sense goes on steadily from the
-time of Malherbe to that of Boileau. Balzac attacks
-Ronsard for his individualistic excess, especially for his
-audacity in inventing words without reference to usage.
-Balzac himself is attacked by Boileau for his affectation,
-for his straining to say things differently from
-other people. In so far his wit was not true but false.
-La Bruyère, in substantial accord with Boileau, defines
-false wit as wit which is lacking in good sense and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-judgment and “in which the imagination has too large
-a share.”<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p>
-
-<p>What the metaphysical poets in England understood
-by wit, according to Dr. Johnson, was the pursuit of their
-thoughts to their last ramifications, and in this pursuit
-of the singular and the novel they lost the “grandeur of
-generality.” This imaginative quest of rarity led to the
-same recoil as in France, to a demand for common sense
-and judgment. The opposite extreme from the metaphysical
-excess is reached when the element of invention is
-eliminated entirely from wit and it is reduced, as it is by
-Pope, to rendering happily the general sense&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">What oft was thought but ne’er so well expressed.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dr. Johnson says that the decisive change in the meaning
-of the word wit took place about the time of Cowley.
-Important evidences of this change and also of the new
-tendency to depreciate the imagination is also found in
-certain passages of Hobbes. Hobbes identifies the imagination
-with the memory of outer images and so looks on
-it as “decaying sense.”<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> “They who observe similitudes,”
-he remarks elsewhere, making a distinction that was to be
-developed by Locke and accepted by Addison, “in case
-they be such as are but rarely observed by others are said
-to have a good wit; by which, in this occasion, is meant a
-good fancy” (wit has here the older meaning). “But they
-who distinguish and observe differences,” he continues,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-“are said to have a good judgment. Fancy without
-the help of judgment is not worthy of commendation,
-whereas judgment is commended for itself without the
-help of fancy. Indeed without steadiness and direction to
-some end, a great fancy is one kind of madness.” “Judgment
-without fancy,” he concludes, “is wit” (this anticipates
-the extreme neo-classical use of the word wit), “but
-fancy without judgment, not.”</p>
-
-<p>Dryden betrays the influence of Hobbes when he
-says of the period of incubation of his “Rival Ladies”:
-“Fancy was yet in its first work, moving the sleeping
-images of things towards the light, there to be distinguished
-and either chosen or rejected by judgment.”
-Fancy or imagination (the words were still synonymous),
-as conceived by the English neo-classicists, often shows
-a strange vivacity for a faculty that is after all only
-“decaying sense.” “Fancy without judgment,” says
-Dryden, “is a hot-mouthed jade without a curb.”
-“Fancy,” writes Rymer in a similar vein, “leaps and
-frisks, and away she’s gone; whilst reason rattles the
-chain and follows after.” The following lines of Mulgrave
-are typical of the neo-classical notion of the relation
-between fancy and judgment:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">As all is dullness when the Fancy’s bad,</div>
-<div class="verse">So without Judgment, Fancy is but mad.</div>
-<div class="verse">Reason is that substantial, useful part</div>
-<div class="verse">Which gains the Head, while t’ other wins the Heart.<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The opposition established by the neo-classicist in
-passages of this kind is too mechanical. Fancy and judgment
-do not seem to coöperate but to war with one another.
-In case of doubt the neo-classicist is always ready
-to sacrifice fancy to the “substantial, useful part,” and
-so he seems too negative and cool and prosaic in his
-reason, and this is because his reason is so largely a protest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-against a previous romantic excess. What had been
-considered genius in the time of the “metaphysicals”
-had too often turned out to be only oddity. With this
-warning before them men kept their eyes fixed very
-closely on the model of normal human nature that had
-been set up, and imitated it very literally and timorously.
-A man was haunted by the fear that he might be “monstrous,”
-and so, as Rymer put it, “satisfy nobody’s maggot
-but his own.” Correctness thus became a sort of
-tyranny. We suffer to the present day from this neo-classical
-failure to work out a sound conception of the
-imagination in its relation to good sense. Because the
-neo-classicist held the imagination lightly as compared
-with good sense the romantic rebels, were led to hold good
-sense lightly as compared with imagination. The romantic
-view in short is too much the neo-classical view turned
-upside down; and, as Sainte-Beuve says, nothing resembles
-a hollow so much as a swelling.</p>
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>Because the classicism against which romanticism rebelled
-was inadequate it does not follow that every type
-of classicism suffers from a similar inadequacy. The great
-movement away from imaginative unrestraint towards
-regularity and good sense took place in the main under
-French auspices. In general the French have been the
-chief exponents of the classic spirit in modern times.
-They themselves feel this so strongly that a certain group
-in France has of late years inclined to use interchangeably
-the words classicist and nationalist. But this is a grave
-confusion, for if the classic spirit is anything at all it is in
-its essence not local and national, but universal and human.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-To be sure, any particular manifestation of classicism
-will of necessity contain elements that are less
-universal, elements that reflect merely a certain person or
-persons, or a certain age and country. This is a truth that
-we scarcely need to have preached to us; for with the
-growth of the historical method we have come to fix our
-attention almost exclusively on these local and relative
-elements. The complete critic will accept the historical
-method but be on his guard against its excess. He will
-see an element in man that is set above the local and
-the relative; he will learn to detect this abiding element
-through all the flux of circumstance; in Platonic language,
-he will perceive the One in the Many.</p>
-
-<p>Formerly, it must be admitted, critics were not historical
-enough. They took to be of the essence of classicism
-what was merely its local coloring, especially the coloring
-it received from the French of the seventeenth century.
-If we wish to distinguish between essence and accident
-in the classic spirit we must get behind the French of the
-seventeenth century, behind the Italians of the sixteenth
-century who laid the foundations of neo-classical theory,
-behind the Romans who were the immediate models of
-most neo-classicists, to the source of classicism in Greece.
-Even in Greece the classic spirit is very much implicated
-in the local and the relative, yet in the life of no other
-people perhaps does what is universal in man shine forth
-more clearly from what is only local and relative. We
-still need, therefore, to return to Greece, not merely for
-the best practice, but for the best theory of classicism; for
-this is still found in spite of all its obscurities and incompleteness
-in the Poetics of Aristotle. If we have recourse
-to this treatise, however, it must be on condition that we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-do not, like the critics of the Renaissance, deal with it in
-an abstract and dogmatic way (the form of the treatise it
-must be confessed gave them no slight encouragement),
-but in a spirit akin to Aristotle’s own as revealed in the
-total body of his writings&mdash;a spirit that is at its best
-positive and experimental.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle not only deals positively and experimentally
-with the natural order and with man so far as he is a part
-of this order, but he deals in a similar fashion with a side
-of man that the modern positivist often overlooks. Like
-all the great Greeks Aristotle recognizes that man is the
-creature of two laws: he has an ordinary or natural self
-of impulse and desire and a human self that is known practically
-as a power of control over impulse and desire. If
-man is to become human he must not let impulse and
-desire run wild, but must oppose to everything excessive
-in his ordinary self, whether in thought or deed or emotion,
-the law of measure. This insistence on restraint and
-proportion is rightly taken to be of the essence not merely
-of the Greek spirit but of the classical spirit in general.
-The norm or standard that is to set bounds to the ordinary
-self is got at by different types of classicists in different
-ways and described variously: for example, as the
-human law, or the better self, or reason (a word to be discussed
-more fully later), or nature. Thus when Boileau
-says, “Let nature be your only study,” he does not mean
-outer nature, nor again the nature of this or that individual,
-but representative human nature. Having decided
-what is normal either for man or some particular class of
-men the classicist takes this normal “nature” for his
-model and proceeds to imitate it. Whatever accords with
-the model he has thus set up he pronounces natural or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-probable, whatever on the other hand departs too far
-from what he conceives to be the normal type or the
-normal sequence of cause and effect he holds to be “improbable”
-and unnatural or even, if it attains an extreme
-of abnormality, “monstrous.” Whatever in conduct or
-character is duly restrained and proportionate with reference
-to the model is said to observe decorum. Probability
-and decorum are identical in some of their aspects and
-closely related in all.<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> To recapitulate, a general nature,
-a core of normal experience, is affirmed by all classicists.
-From this central affirmation derives the doctrine of imitation,
-and from imitation in turn the doctrines of probability
-and decorum.</p>
-
-<p>But though all classicists are alike in insisting on
-nature, imitation, probability and decorum, they differ
-widely, as I have already intimated, in what they understand
-by these terms. Let us consider first what Aristotle
-and the Greeks understand by them. The first point to
-observe is that according to Aristotle one is to get his
-general nature not on authority or second hand, but is
-to disengage it directly for himself from the jumble of
-particulars that he has before his eyes. He is not, says
-Aristotle, to imitate things as they are, but as they ought
-to be. Thus conceived imitation is a creative act. Through
-all the welter of the actual one penetrates to the real and
-so succeeds without ceasing to be individual in suggesting
-the universal. Poetry that is imitative in this sense is,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-according to Aristotle, more “serious” and “philosophical”
-than history. History deals merely with what has
-happened, whereas poetry deals with what may happen
-according to probability or necessity. Poetry, that is, does
-not portray life literally but extricates the deeper or ideal
-truth from the flux of circumstance. One may add with
-Sydney that if poetry is thus superior to history in being
-more serious and philosophical it resembles history and is
-superior to philosophy in being concrete.</p>
-
-<p>The One that the great poet or artist perceives in the
-Many and that gives to his work its high seriousness is
-not a fixed absolute. In general the model that the highly
-serious man (ὁ σπουδαῖος) imitates and that keeps his ordinary
-self within the bounds of decorum is not to be
-taken as anything finite, as anything that can be formulated
-once for all. This point is important for on it hinges
-every right distinction not merely between the classic
-and the romantic, but between the classic and the pseudo-classic.
-Romanticism has claimed for itself a monopoly
-of imagination and infinitude, but on closer examination,
-as I hope to show later, this claim, at least so far as genuine
-classicism is concerned, will be found to be quite
-unjustified. For the present it is enough to say that true
-classicism does not rest on the observance of rules or the
-imitation of models but on an immediate insight into the
-universal. Aristotle is especially admirable in the account
-he gives of this insight and of the way it may manifest
-itself in art and literature. One may be rightly imitative,
-he says, and so have access to a superior truth and give
-others access to it only by being a master of illusion.
-Though the great poet “breathes immortal air,” though
-he sees behind the shows of sense a world of more abiding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-relationships, he can convey his vision not directly but
-only imaginatively. Aristotle, one should observe, does
-not establish any hard and fast opposition between judgment
-and imagination, an opposition that pervades not
-only the neo-classical movement but also the romantic
-revolt from it. He simply affirms a supersensuous order
-which one can perceive only with the help of fiction. The
-best art, says Goethe in the true spirit of Aristotle, gives
-us the “illusion of a higher reality.” This has the advantage
-of being experimental. It is merely a statement of
-what one feels in the presence of a great painting, let us
-say, or in reading a great poem.</p>
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>After this attempt to define briefly with the help of the
-Greeks the classical spirit in its essence we should be prepared
-to understand more clearly the way in which this
-spirit was modified in neo-classical times, especially in
-France. The first thing that strikes one about the classicism
-of this period is that it does not rest on immediate
-perception like that of the Greeks but on outer authority.
-The merely dogmatic and traditional classicist gave a
-somewhat un-Greek meaning to the doctrines of nature
-and imitation. Why imitate nature directly, said Scaliger,
-when we have in Virgil a second nature? Imitation thus
-came to mean the imitation of certain outer models and
-the following of rules based on these models. Now it is
-well that one who aims at excellence in any field should
-begin by a thorough assimilation of the achievements of
-his great predecessors in this field. Unfortunately the neo-classical
-theorist tended to impose a multitude of precepts
-that were based on what was external rather than on what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-was vital in the practice of his models. In so far the lesson
-of form that the great ancients can always teach any one
-who approaches them in the right spirit degenerated into
-formalism. This formalistic turn given to the doctrine of
-imitation was felt from the outset to be a menace to originality;
-to be incompatible, and everything hinges at last
-on this point, with the spontaneity of the imagination.
-There was an important reaction headed by men like
-Boileau, within the neo-classical movement itself, against
-the oppression of the intuitive side of human nature by
-mere dogma and authority, above all against the notion
-that “regularity” is in itself any guarantee of literary
-excellence. A school of rules was succeeded by a school of
-taste. Yet even to the end the neo-classicist was too prone
-to reject as unnatural or even monstrous everything that
-did not fit into one of the traditional pigeon-holes. One
-must grant, indeed, that much noble work was achieved
-under the neo-classical dispensation, work that shows a
-genuine insight into the universal, but it is none the less
-evident that the view of the imagination held during this
-period has a formalistic taint.</p>
-
-<p>This taint in neo-classicism is due not merely to its dogmatic
-and mechanical way of dealing with the doctrine
-of imitation but also to the fact that it had to reconcile
-classical with Christian dogma; and the two antiquities,
-classical and Christian, if interpreted vitally and in
-the spirit, were in many respects divergent and in some
-respects contradictory. The general outcome of the attempts
-at reconciliation made by the literary casuists
-of Italy and France was that Christianity should have a
-monopoly of truth and classicism a monopoly of fiction.
-For the true classicist, it will be remembered, the two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-things are inseparable&mdash;he gets at his truth through a
-veil of fiction. Many of the neo-classicists came to conceive
-of art as many romanticists were to conceive of it
-later as a sort of irresponsible game or play, but they were,
-it must be confessed, very inferior to the romanticists in
-the spontaneity of their fiction. They went for this fiction
-as for everything else to the models, and this meant in
-practice that they employed the pagan myths, not as
-imaginative symbols of a higher reality&mdash;it is still possible
-to employ them in that way&mdash;but merely in Boileau’s
-phrase as “traditional ornaments” (<i>ornements reçus</i>).
-The neo-classicist to be sure might so employ his
-“fiction” as to inculcate a moral; in that case he is only
-too likely to give us instead of the living symbol, dead
-allegory; instead of high seriousness, its caricature, didacticism.
-The traditional stock of fiction became at
-last so intolerably trite as to be rejected even by some of
-the late neo-classicists. “The rejection and contempt of
-fiction,” said Dr. Johnson (who indulged in it himself on
-occasion) “is rational and manly.” But to reject fiction
-in the larger sense is to miss the true driving power in
-human nature&mdash;the imagination. Before concluding,
-however, that Dr. Johnson had no notion of the rôle of
-the imagination one should read his attack on the theory
-of the three unities<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> which was later to be turned to account
-by the romanticists.</p>
-
-<p>Now the three unities may be defended on an entirely
-legitimate ground&mdash;on the ground namely that they
-make for concentration, a prime virtue in the drama;
-but the grounds on which they were actually imposed
-on the drama, especially in connection with the Quarrel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-of the Cid, illustrate the corruption of another main
-classical doctrine, that of probability or verisimilitude.
-In his dealings with probability as in his dealings with
-imitation, the neo-classical formalist did not allow sufficiently
-for the element of illusion. What he required
-from the drama in the name of probability was not the
-“illusion of a higher reality,” but strict logic or even literal
-deception. He was not capable of a poetic faith, not
-willing to suspend his disbelief on passing from the world
-of ordinary fact to the world of artistic creation. Goethe
-was thinking especially of the neo-classical French when
-he said: “As for the French, they will always be arrested
-by their reason. They do not recognize that the imagination
-has its own laws which are and always must be
-problematic for the reason.”</p>
-
-<p>It was also largely under French influence that the
-doctrine of decorum, which touches probability at many
-points, was turned aside from its true meaning. Decorum
-is in a way the peculiar doctrine of the classicist, is in
-Milton’s phrase “the grand masterpiece to observe.” The
-doctrines of the universal and the imitation of the universal
-go deeper indeed than decorum, so much deeper
-that they are shared by classicism with religion. The man
-who aspires to live religiously must no less than the
-humanist look to some model set above his ordinary self
-and imitate it. But though the classicist at his best meditates,
-he does not, like the seeker after religious perfection,
-see in meditation an end in itself but rather a support
-for the mediatory virtues, the virtues of the man
-who would live to the best advantage in this world rather
-than renounce it; and these virtues may be said to be
-summed up in decorum. For the best type of Greek<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-humanist, a Sophocles let us say, decorum was a vital
-and immediate thing. But there enters into decorum even
-from the time of the Alexandrian Greeks, and still more
-into French neo-classical decorum, a marked element of
-artificiality. The all-roundness and fine symmetry, the
-poise and dignity that come from working within the
-bounds of the human law, were taken to be the privilege
-not of man in general but of a special social class. Take
-for instance verbal decorum: the French neo-classicists
-assumed that if the speech of poetry is to be noble and
-highly serious it must coincide with the speech of the
-aristocracy. As Nisard puts it, they confused nobility of
-language with the language of the nobility. Decorum
-was thus more or less merged with etiquette, so that the
-standards of the stage and of literature in general came
-to coincide, as Rousseau complains, with those of the
-drawing-room. More than anything else this narrowing
-of decorum marks the decline from the classic to the
-pseudo-classic, from form to formalism.</p>
-
-<p>While condemning pseudo-decorum one should remember
-that even a Greek would have seen something paradoxical
-in a poem like Goethe’s “Hermann und Dorothea”
-and its attempt to invest with epic grandeur the
-affairs of villagers and peasants. After all, dignity and
-elevation and especially the opportunity for important
-action, which is the point on which the classicist puts
-prime emphasis, are normally though not invariably
-associated with a high rather than with a mean social
-estate. In general one should insist that the decorum
-worked out under French auspices was far from being
-merely artificial. The French gentleman (<i>honnête homme</i>)
-of the seventeenth century often showed a moderation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-and freedom from over-emphasis, an exquisite tact and
-urbanity that did not fall too far short of his immediate
-model, Horace, and related him to the all-round man
-of the Greeks (καλὸς κἀγαθός). To be sure an ascetic
-Christian like Pascal sees in decorum a disguise of one’s
-ordinary self rather than a real curb upon it, and feels
-that the gap is not sufficiently wide between even the
-best type of the man of the world and the mere worldling.
-One needs, however, to be very austere to disdain the art
-of living that has been fostered by decorum from the
-Greeks down. Something of this art of living survives
-even in a Chesterfield, who falls far short of the best
-type of French gentleman and reminds one very remotely
-indeed of a Pericles. Chesterfield’s half-jesting definition
-of decorum as the art of combining the useful appearances
-of virtue with the solid satisfactions of vice points the
-way to its ultimate corruption. Talleyrand, who marks
-perhaps this last stage, was defined by Napoleon as “a
-silk stocking filled with mud.” In some of its late exemplars
-decorum had actually become, as Rousseau complains,
-the “mask of hypocrisy” and the “varnish of
-vice.”</p>
-
-<p>One should not however, like Rousseau and the romanticists,
-judge of decorum by what it degenerated into.
-Every doctrine of genuine worth is disciplinary and
-men in the mass do not desire discipline. “Most men,”
-says Aristotle, “would rather live in a disorderly than
-in a sober manner.” But most men do not admit any
-such preference&mdash;that would be crude and inartistic.
-They incline rather to substitute for the reality of discipline
-some art of going through the motions. Every
-great doctrine is thus in constant peril of passing over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-into some hollow semblance or even, it may be, into some
-mere caricature of itself. When one wishes therefore to
-determine the nature of decorum one should think of a
-Milton, let us say, and not of a Talleyrand or even of
-a Chesterfield.</p>
-
-<p>Milton imitated the models, like any other neo-classicist,
-but his imitation was not, in Joubert’s phrase, that
-of one book by another book, but of one soul by another
-soul. His decorum is therefore imaginative; and it is the
-privilege of the imagination to give the sense of spaciousness
-and infinitude. On the other hand, the unimaginative
-way in which many of the neo-classicists held their main
-tenets&mdash;nature, imitation, probability, decorum&mdash;narrowed
-unduly the scope of the human spirit and appeared
-to close the gates of the future. “Art and diligence have
-now done their best,” says Dr. Johnson of the versification
-of Pope, “and what shall be added will be the effort
-of tedious toil and needless curiosity.” Nothing is more
-perilous than thus to seem to confine man in some pinfold;
-there is something in him that refuses to acquiesce
-in any position as final; he is in Nietzsche’s phrase the
-being who must always surpass himself. The attempt to
-oppose external and mechanical barriers to the freedom
-of the spirit will create in the long run an atmosphere of
-stuffiness and smugness, and nothing is more intolerable
-than smugness. Men were guillotined in the French
-Revolution, as Bagehot suggests, simply because either
-they or their ancestors had been smug. Inert acceptance
-of tradition and routine will be met sooner or later by the
-cry of Faust: <i>Hinaus ins Freie!</i></p>
-
-<p>Before considering the value of the method chosen
-by Rousseau and the romanticists for breaking up the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-“tiresome old heavens” and escaping from smugness
-and stuffiness, one should note that the lack of originality
-and genius which they lamented in the eighteenth century&mdash;especially
-in that part of it known as the Enlightenment&mdash;was
-not due entirely to pseudo-classic formalism.
-At least two other main currents entered into the
-Enlightenment: first the empirical and utilitarian current
-that goes back to Francis Bacon, and some would say to
-Roger Bacon; and secondly the rationalistic current that
-goes back to Descartes. English empiricism gained international
-vogue in the philosophy of Locke, and Locke
-denies any supersensuous element in human nature to
-which one may have access with the aid of the imagination
-or in any other way. Locke’s method of precise naturalistic
-observation is in itself legitimate; for man is plainly
-subject to the natural law. What is not truly empirical
-is to bring the whole of human nature under this law.
-One can do this only by piecing out precise observation
-and experiment with dogmatic rationalism. One side of
-Locke may therefore be properly associated with the
-father of modern rationalists, Descartes. The attempt
-of the rationalist to lock up life in some set of formulæ
-produces in the imaginative man a feeling of oppression.
-He gasps for light and air. The very tracing of cause and
-effect and in general the use of the analytical faculties&mdash;and
-this is to fly to the opposite extreme&mdash;came to be
-condemned by the romanticists as inimical to the imagination.
-Not only do they make endless attacks on Locke,
-but at times they assail even Newton for having mechanized
-life, though Newton’s comparison of himself to a
-child picking up pebbles on the seashore would seem to
-show that he had experienced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span> “the feeling infinite.”</p>
-
-<p>The elaboration of science into a closed system with the
-aid of logic and pure mathematics is as a matter of fact
-to be associated with Descartes rather than with Newton.
-Neither Newton nor Descartes, one scarcely needs add,
-wished to subject man entirely to the natural law and the
-nexus of physical causes; they were not in short determinists.
-Yet the superficial rationalism of the Enlightenment
-was in the main of Cartesian origin. This Cartesian
-influence ramifies in so many directions and is related at
-so many points to the literary movement, and there has
-been so much confusion about this relationship, that we
-need to pause here to make a few distinctions.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps what most strikes one in the philosophy of
-Descartes is its faith in logic and abstract reasoning and
-the closely allied processes of mathematical demonstration.
-Anything that is not susceptible of clear proof in this
-logical and almost mathematical sense is to be rejected.
-Now this Cartesian notion of clearness is fatal to a true
-classicism. The higher reality, the true classicist maintains,
-cannot be thus demonstrated; it can only be
-grasped, and then never completely, through a veil of
-imaginative illusion. Boileau is reported to have said that
-Descartes had cut the throat of poetry; and this charge
-is justified in so far as the Cartesian requires from poetry
-a merely logical clearness. This conception of clearness
-was also a menace to the classicism of the seventeenth
-century which rested in the final analysis not on logic
-but on tradition. This appeared very clearly in the early
-phases of the quarrel between ancients and moderns
-when literary Cartesians like Perrault and Fontenelle
-attacked classical dogma in the name of reason. In fact
-one may ask if any doctrine has ever appeared so fatal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-to every form of tradition&mdash;not merely literary but
-also religious and political&mdash;as Cartesianism. The rationalist
-of the eighteenth century was for dismissing
-as “prejudice” everything that could not give a clear
-account of itself in the Cartesian sense. This riot of
-abstract reasoning (<i>la raison raisonnante</i>) that prepared
-the way for the Revolution has been identified by Taine
-and others with the classic spirit. A more vicious confusion
-has seldom gained currency in criticism. It is true
-that the French have mixed a great deal of logic with
-their conception of the classic spirit, but that is because
-they have mixed a great deal of logic with everything.
-I have already mentioned their tendency to substitute
-a logical for an imaginative verisimilitude; and strenuously
-logical classicists may be found in France from
-Chapelain to Brunetière. Yet the distinction that should
-keep us from confusing mere logic with the classic spirit
-was made by a Frenchman who was himself violently
-logical and also a great geometrician&mdash;Pascal. One
-should keep distinct, says Pascal, the <i>esprit de géométrie</i>
-and the <i>esprit de finesse</i>. The <i>esprit de finesse</i> is not, like
-the <i>esprit de géométrie</i>, abstract, but very concrete.<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> So
-far as a man possesses the <i>esprit de finesse</i> he is enabled
-to judge correctly of the ordinary facts of life and of the
-relationships between man and man. But these judgments
-rest upon such a multitude of delicate perceptions that
-he is frequently unable to account for them logically.
-It is to intuitive good sense and not to the <i>esprit de
-géométrie</i> that the gentleman (<i>honnête homme</i>) of the neo-classical
-period owed his fine tact. Pascal himself finally
-took a stand against reason as understood both by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-Cartesian and by the man of the world. Unaided reason
-he held is unable to prevail against the deceits of the
-imagination; it needs the support of intuition&mdash;an
-intuition that he identifies with grace, thus making it
-inseparable from the most austere form of Christianity.
-The “heart,” he says, and this is the name he gives to
-intuition, “has reasons of which the reason knows nothing.”
-A Plato or an Aristotle would not have understood
-this divorce between reason and intuition.<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a></p>
-
-<p>Pascal seems to get his insight only by flouting ordinary
-good sense. He identifies this insight with a type of
-theological dogma of which good sense was determined
-to be rid; and so it tended to get rid of the insight along
-with the dogma. Classical dogma also seemed at times
-to be in opposition to the intuitive good sense of the man
-of the world. The man of the world therefore often inclined
-to assail both the classical and the Christian tradition
-in the name of good sense, just as the Cartesian
-inclined to assail these traditions in the name of abstract
-reason. Perhaps the best exponent of anti-traditional
-good sense in the seventeenth century was Molière. He
-vindicated nature, and by nature he still meant in the
-main normal human nature, from arbitrary constraints
-of every kind whether imposed by an ascetic Christianity
-or by a narrow and pedantic classicism. Unfortunately
-Molière is too much on the side of the opposition. He does
-not seem to put his good sense into the service of some
-positive insight of his own. Good sense may be of many
-degrees according to the order of facts of which it has a
-correct perception. The order of facts in human nature<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-that Molière’s good sense perceived is not the highest and
-so this good sense appears at times too ready to justify
-the bourgeois against the man who has less timid and
-conventional views. So at least Rousseau thought when
-he made his famous attack on Molière.<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> Rousseau assailed
-Molière in the name of instinct as Pascal would
-have assailed him in the name of insight, and fought
-sense with sensibility. The hostility of Rousseau to Molière,
-according to M. Faguet, is that of a romantic
-Bohemian to a philistine of genius.<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> One hesitates to
-call Molière a philistine, but one may at least grant M.
-Faguet that Molière’s good sense is not always sufficiently
-inspired.</p>
-
-<p>I have been trying to build up a background that will
-make clear why the reason of the eighteenth century
-(whether we understand by reason logic or good sense)
-had come to be superficial and therefore oppressive to
-the imagination. It is only with reference to this “reason”
-that one can understand the romantic revolt. But neo-classical
-reason itself can be understood only with reference
-to its background&mdash;as a recoil namely from a previous
-romantic excess. This excess was manifested not
-only in the intellectual romanticism of which I have already
-spoken, but in the cult of the romantic deed that
-had flourished in the Middle Ages. This cult and the literature
-that reflected it continued to appeal, even to the
-cultivated, well on into the neo-classical period. It was
-therefore felt necessary to frame a definition of reason
-that should be a rebuke to the extravagance and improbability
-of the mediæval romances. When men became<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-conscious in the eighteenth century of the neo-classical
-meagerness on the imaginative side they began to look
-back with a certain envy to the free efflorescence of fiction
-in the Middle Ages. They began to ask themselves with
-Hurd whether the reason and correctness they had won
-were worth the sacrifice of a “world of fine fabling.”<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>
-We must not, however, like Heine and many others,
-look on the romantic movement as merely a return
-to the Middle Ages. We have seen that the men of the
-Middle Ages themselves understood by romance not simply
-their own kind of speech and writing in contrast with
-what was written in Latin, but a kind of writing in
-which the pursuit of strangeness and adventure predominated.
-This pursuit of strangeness and adventure
-will be found to predominate in all types of romanticism.
-The type of romanticism, however, which came
-in towards the end of the eighteenth century did not,
-even when professedly mediæval, simply revert to the
-older types. It was primarily not a romanticism of
-thought or of action, the types we have encountered thus
-far, but a romanticism of feeling. The beginnings of this
-emotional romanticism antedate considerably the application
-of the word romantic to a particular literary
-school. Before considering how the word came to be thus
-applied we shall need to take a glance at eighteenth-century
-sentimentalism, especially at the plea for genius and
-originality that, from about the middle of the century
-on, were opposed to the tameness and servile imitation
-of the neo-classicists.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROMANTIC GENIUS</span></h2>
-
-<p>Romanticism, it has been remarked, is all that is not
-Voltaire. The clash between Rousseau and Voltaire is
-indeed not merely the clash between two men, it is the
-clash between two incompatible views of life. Voltaire
-is the end of the old world, as Goethe has put it, Rousseau
-the beginning of the new.</p>
-
-<p>One is not to suppose, however, that Voltaire was a
-consistent champion of the past. He is indeed with all his
-superficial clearness one of the most incoherent of writers.
-At the same time that he defended classical tradition he
-attacked Christian tradition, spreading abroad a spirit
-of mockery and irreverence that tended to make every
-traditional belief impossible. The “reason” to which he
-appeals has all the shallowness that I have noticed in the
-“reason” of the eighteenth century. Though he does not
-fall into the Cartesian excess of abstract reasoning, and
-though the good sense that he most often understands
-by reason is admirably shrewd within certain bounds, he
-nevertheless falls very far short of the standards of a true
-classicism. He delights in the philosophy of Locke and has
-little sense for Greek philosophy or for the higher aspects
-of Greek literature. He is quite lacking in the quality
-of imagination that is needful if one is to communicate
-with what is above the ordinary rational level. So far from
-being capable of high seriousness, he is scarcely capable
-of ordinary seriousness. And so the nobility, elegance,
-imitation, and decorum that he is constantly preaching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-have about them a taint of formalism. Perhaps this taint
-appears most conspicuously in his conception of decorum.
-A man may be willing to impose restrictions on his ordinary
-self&mdash;and every type of decorum is restrictive&mdash;if
-he is asked to do so for some adequate end. The end of the
-decorum that an Aristotle, for example, would impose is
-that one may become more human and therefore, as he
-endeavors to show in a highly positive fashion, happier.
-The only art and literature that will please a man who
-has thus become human through the observance of true
-decorum is an art and literature that are themselves
-human and decorous. Voltaire for his part wishes to subject
-art and literature to an elaborate set of restrictions
-in the name of decorum, but these restrictions are not
-joined to any adequate end. The only reward he holds
-out to those who observe all these restrictions is “the
-merit of difficulty overcome.” At bottom, like so many
-of the Jesuits from whom he received his education, he
-looks upon art as a game&mdash;a very ingenious and complicated
-game. The French muse he compares to a person
-executing a difficult clog dance on a tight rope, and he
-argues from this comparison, not that the French muse
-should assume a less constrained posture, but that she
-should on the contrary be exemplary to the nations. No
-wonder the romanticists and even Dr. Johnson demurred
-at Voltaire’s condemnation of Shakespeare in the name
-of this type of decorum.</p>
-
-<p>Voltaire is therefore, in spite of all his dazzling gifts,
-one of the most compromising advocates of classicism.
-Pope also had eminent merits, but from the truly classical
-point of view he is about as inadequate as Voltaire; and
-this is important to remember because English romanticism<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-tends to be all that is not Pope. The English
-romanticists revolted especially from the poetic diction
-of which Pope was one of the chief sources, and poetic
-diction, with its failure to distinguish between nobility
-of language and the language of the nobility, is only an
-aspect of artificial decorum. However, the revolt from
-poetic diction and decorum in general is not the central
-aspect of the great movement that resulted in the eclipse
-of the wit and man of the world and in the emergence of
-the original genius. What the genius wanted was spontaneity,
-and spontaneity, as he understood it, involves
-a denial, not merely of decorum, but of something that,
-as I have said, goes deeper than decorum&mdash;namely the
-doctrine of imitation. According to Voltaire genius is
-only judicious imitation. According to Rousseau the
-prime mark of genius is refusal to imitate. The movement
-away from imitation, however, had already got
-well started before it thus came to a picturesque head
-in the clash between Rousseau and Voltaire, and if we
-wish to understand this movement we need to take a
-glance at its beginnings&mdash;especially in England.</p>
-
-<p>There are reasons why this supposed opposition between
-imitation and genius should have been felt in
-England more keenly than elsewhere. The doctrine of
-imitation in its neo-classical form did not get established
-there until about the time of Dryden. In the meanwhile
-England had had a great creative literature in which the
-freedom and spontaneity of the imagination had not been
-cramped by a too strict imitation of models. Dryden himself,
-though he was doing more than any one else to promote
-the new correctness that was coming in from France,
-felt that this correctness was no equivalent for the Elizabethan<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-inspiration. The structure that he and his contemporaries
-were erecting might be more regular, but
-lacked the boldness and originality of that reared by the
-“giant race before the flood”:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Our age was cultivated thus at length;</div>
-<div class="verse">But what we gained in skill we lost in strength.</div>
-<div class="verse">Our builders were with want of genius cursed;</div>
-<div class="verse">The second temple was not like the first.<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This contrast between the imitator and the inspired
-original was developed by Addison in a paper (“Spectator,”
-160) that was destined to be used against the
-very school to which he himself belonged. For Addison
-was in his general outlook a somewhat tame Augustan.
-Nevertheless he exalts the “natural geniuses” who have
-something “nobly wild and extravagant” in them above
-the geniuses who have been “refined by conversation, reflection
-and the reading of the most polite authors”;
-who have “formed themselves by rules and submitted
-the greatness of their natural talents to the corrections
-and restraints of art.” “The great danger in these latter
-kind of geniuses, is lest they cramp their own abilities
-too much by imitation, and form themselves altogether
-upon models, without giving full play to their own natural
-parts. An imitation of the best authors is not to compare
-with a good original; and I believe we may observe that
-very few writers make an extraordinary figure in the
-world, who have not something in their way of thinking
-or expressing themselves that is peculiar to them, and
-entirely their own.”</p>
-
-<p>Another main influence that was making against the
-doctrine of imitation was also largely of English origin.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-This was the idea of progress through scientific observation
-and experiment. As a result of this type of positivism,
-discovery was being added to discovery. Science was
-kindling man’s imagination and opening up before him
-what he really craves, the vista of an endless advance.
-Why should not literature likewise do something new
-and original instead of sticking forever in the same rut of
-imitation? In its Greek form the doctrine of imitation
-was, as I have tried to show, not only flexible and progressive,
-but in its own way, positive and experimental.
-But in modern times the two main forms of imitation,
-the classical and the Christian, have worked within the
-limits imposed by tradition and traditional models. The
-imitation of models, the Christian imitation of Christ,
-let us say, or the classical imitation of Horace, may indeed
-be a very vital thing, the imitation of one soul by
-another soul; but when carried out in this vital way, the
-two main forms of imitation tend to clash, and the compromise
-between them, as I have already said, resulted
-in a good deal of formalism. By its positive and critical
-method science was undermining every traditional belief.
-Both the Christian and the classical formalists would
-have been the first to deny that the truths of imitation
-for which they stood could be divorced from tradition
-and likewise put on a positive and critical basis. The fact
-is indubitable in any case that the discrediting of tradition
-has resulted in a progressive lapse from the religious
-and the humanistic to the naturalistic level. An equally
-indubitable fact is that scientific or rationalistic naturalism
-tended from the early eighteenth century to produce
-emotional naturalism, and that both forms of naturalism
-were hostile to the doctrine of imitation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The trend away from the doctrine of imitation towards
-emotional naturalism finds revolutionary expression in
-the literary field in such a work as Young’s “Conjectures
-on Original Composition” (1759). Addison had asserted,
-as we have seen, the superiority of what is original in a
-man, of what comes to him spontaneously, over what he
-acquires by conscious effort and culture. Young, a personal
-friend of Addison’s, develops this contrast between
-the “natural” and the “artificial” to its extreme consequences.
-“Modern writers,” he says, “have a choice to
-make. … They may soar in the regions of liberty, or
-move in the soft fetters of easy imitation.” “An original
-may be said to be of a vegetable nature; it rises spontaneously
-from the vital root of genius; it grows, it is
-not made; imitations are often a sort of manufacture,
-wrought up by those mechanics, art and labor, out of
-preëxistent materials not their own.” “We may as well
-grow good by another’s virtue, or fat by another’s food,
-as famous by another’s thought.” One evidence that we
-are still living in the movement of which Young is one
-of the initiators is that his treatise will not only seem
-to most of us a very spirited piece of writing&mdash;that it
-certainly is&mdash;but doctrinally sound. And yet it is only
-one of those documents very frequent in literary history
-which lack intrinsic soundness, but which can be explained
-if not justified as a recoil from an opposite
-extreme. The unsoundness of Young’s work comes out
-clearly if one compares it with the treatise on the “Sublime”
-attributed to Longinus which is not a mere protest
-against a previous excess, but a permanently acceptable
-treatment of the same problem of genius and
-inspiration. Longinus exalts genius, but is at the same<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-time regardful of culture and tradition, and even emphasizes
-the relation between inspiration and the imitation
-of models. Young insinuates, on the contrary,
-that one is aided in becoming a genius by being brainless
-and ignorant. “Some are pupils of nature only, nor
-go further to school.” “Many a genius probably there
-has been which could neither write nor read.” It follows
-almost inevitably from these premises that genius flourishes
-most in the primitive ages of society before originality
-has been crushed beneath the superincumbent weight
-of culture and critics have begun their pernicious activities.
-Young did not take this step himself, but it was
-promptly taken by others on the publication of the Ossianic
-poems (1762). Ossian is at once added to the list
-of great originals already enumerated by Addison&mdash;Homer,
-Pindar, the patriarchs of the Old Testament and
-Shakespeare (whom Young like the later romanticists
-opposes to Pope). “Poetry,” says Diderot, summing up
-a whole movement, “calls for something enormous, barbaric
-and savage.”</p>
-
-<p>This exaltation of the virtues of the primitive ages is
-simply the projection into a mythical past of a need that
-the man of the eighteenth century feels in the present&mdash;the
-need to let himself go. This is what he understands by
-his “return to nature.” A whole revolution is implied in
-this reinterpretation of the word nature. To follow nature
-in the classical sense is to imitate what is normal and
-representative in man and so to become decorous. To be
-natural in the new sense one must begin by getting rid
-of imitation and decorum. Moreover, for the classicist,
-nature and reason are synonymous. The primitivist, on
-the other hand, means by nature the spontaneous play<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-of impulse and temperament, and inasmuch as this liberty
-is hindered rather than helped by reason, he inclines
-to look on reason, not as the equivalent but as the
-opposite of nature.</p>
-
-<p>If one is to understand this development, one should
-note carefully how certain uses of the word reason, not
-merely by the neo-classicists but by the anti-traditionalists,
-especially in religion, tended to produce this denial
-of reason. It is a curious fact that some of those who were
-attacking the Christian religion in the name of reason,
-were themselves aware that mere reason, whether one
-understood by the word abstract reasoning or uninspired
-good sense, does not satisfy, that in the long run man is
-driven either to rise higher or to sink lower than reason.
-St. Evremond, for example, prays nature to deliver man
-from the doubtful middle state in which she has placed
-him&mdash;either to “lift him up to angelic radiance,” or else
-to “sink him to the instinct of simple animals.”<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> Since
-the ascending path, the path that led to angelic radiance,
-seemed to involve the acceptance of a mass of obsolete
-dogma, man gradually inclined to sink below the rational
-level and to seek to recover the “instinct of simple animals.”
-Another and still more fundamental fact that
-some of the rationalists perceived and that militated
-against their own position, is that the dominant element
-in man is not reason, but imagination, or if one prefers,
-the element of illusion. “Illusion,” said Voltaire himself,
-“is the queen of the human heart.” The great achievement
-of tradition at its best was to be at once a limit and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-a support to both reason and imagination and so to unite
-them in a common allegiance. In the new movement, at
-the same time that reason was being encouraged by scientific
-method to rise up in revolt against tradition, imagination
-was being fascinated and drawn to the naturalistic
-level by scientific discovery and the vista of an endless
-advance that it opened up. A main problem, therefore,
-for the student of this movement is to determine what
-forms of imaginative activity are possible on the naturalistic
-level. A sort of understanding was reached on this
-point by different types of naturalists in the course of
-the eighteenth century. One form of imagination, it was
-agreed, should be displayed in science, another form in
-art and literature.<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> The scientific imagination should be
-controlled by judgment and work in strict subordination
-to the facts. In art and literature, on the other hand, the
-imagination should be free. Genius and originality are
-indeed in strict ratio to this freedom. “In the fairy land
-of fancy,” says Young, “genius may wander wild; there
-it has a creative power, and may reign arbitrarily over its
-own empire of chimeras.” (The empire of chimeras was
-later to become the tower of ivory.) This sheer indiscipline
-of the literary imagination might seem in contrast
-with the discipline of the scientific imagination an inferiority;
-but such was not the view of the partisans of
-original genius. Kant, indeed, who was strongly influenced
-in his “Critique of Æsthetic Judgment” by these
-English theorists,<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> inclined to deny genius to the man of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-science for the very reason that his imagination is so
-strictly controlled. The fact would seem to be that a
-great scientist, a Newton let us say, has as much right
-to be accounted a genius as Shakespeare. The inferiority
-of the genius of a Newton compared with that of a
-Shakespeare lies in a certain coldness. Scientific genius is
-thus cold because it operates in a region less relevant
-to man than poetic genius; it is, in Bagehot’s phrase,
-more remote from the “hearth of the soul.”</p>
-
-<p>The scientific and the literary imagination are indeed
-not quite so sharply contrasted by most of the theorists
-as might be inferred from what I have said; most of them
-do not admit that the literary imagination should be
-entirely free to wander in its own “empire of chimeras.”
-Even literary imagination, they maintain, should in some
-measure be under the surveillance of judgment or taste.
-One should observe, however, that the judgment or taste
-that is supposed to control or restrict genius is not associated
-with the imagination. On the contrary, imagination
-is associated entirely with the element of novelty in
-things, which means, in the literary domain, with the
-expansive eagerness of a man to get his own uniqueness
-uttered. The genius for the Greek, let us remind ourselves,
-was not the man who was in this sense unique, but the man
-who perceived the universal; and as the universal can be
-perceived only with the aid of the imagination, it follows
-that genius may be defined as imaginative perception of
-the universal. The universal thus conceived not only gives
-a centre and purpose to the activity of the imagination,
-but sets bounds to the free expansion of temperament
-and impulse, to what came to be known in the eighteenth
-century as nature.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Kant, who denies genius to the man of science on
-grounds I have already mentioned, is unable to associate
-genius in art or literature with this strict discipline of the
-imagination to a purpose. The imagination must be free
-and must, he holds, show this freedom not by working
-but by playing. At the same time Kant had the
-cool temper of a man of the Enlightenment, and looked
-with the utmost disapproval on the aberrations that had
-marked in Germany the age of original genius (<i>die Geniezeit</i>).
-He was not in the new sense of the word nor indeed
-in any sense, an enthusiast. And so he wished the reason,
-or judgment, to keep control over the imagination without
-disturbing its free play; art is to have a purpose which
-is at the same time not a purpose. The distinctions by
-which he works out the supposed relationship between
-judgment and imagination are at once difficult and unreal.
-One can indeed put one’s finger here more readily
-perhaps than elsewhere on the central impotence of
-the whole Kantian system. Once discredit tradition and
-outer authority and then set up as a substitute a reason
-that is divorced from the imagination and so lacks the
-support of supersensuous insight, and reason will prove
-unable to maintain its hegemony. When the imagination
-has ceased to pull in accord with the reason in the service
-of a reality that is set above them both, it is sure to
-become the accomplice of expansive impulse, and mere
-reason is not strong enough to prevail over this union of
-imagination and desire. Reason needs some driving power
-behind it, a driving power that, when working in alliance
-with the imagination, it gets from insight. To suppose
-that man will long rest content with mere naked reason
-as his guide is to forget that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span> “illusion is the queen of the
-human heart”; it is to revive the stoical error. Schiller,
-himself a Kantian, felt this rationalistic rigor and coldness
-of his master, and so sought, while retaining the play
-theory of art, to put behind the cold reason of Kant the
-driving power it lacked; for this driving power he looked
-not to a supersensuous reality, not to insight in short,
-but to emotion. He takes appropriately the motto for his
-“Æsthetic Letters” from Rousseau: <i>Si c’est la raison qui
-fait l’homme, c’est le sentiment qui le conduit</i>. He retains
-Kant’s play theory of art without even so much offset
-to this play as is implied in Kant’s “purposiveness without
-purpose.” The nobility of Schiller’s intentions is beyond
-question. At the same time, by encouraging the
-notion that it is possible to escape from neo-classical
-didacticism only by eliminating masculine purpose from
-art, he opens the way for the worst perversions of the
-æsthete, above all for the divorce of art from ethical
-reality. In art, according to Schiller, both imagination
-and feeling should be free and spontaneous, and the
-result of all this freedom, as he sees it, will be perfectly
-“ideal.” His suspicion of a purpose is invincible. As soon
-as anything has a purpose it ceases to be æsthetic and
-in the same measure suffers a loss of dignity. Thus the
-æsthetic moment of the lion, he says, is when he roars
-not with any definite design, but out of sheer lustiness,
-and for the pure pleasure of roaring.</p>
-
-<p>One may assume safely the æsthetic attitude, or what
-amounts to the same thing, allow one’s self to be guided
-by feeling, only on the assumption that feeling is worthy of
-trust. As appears in the very motto he took for his “Æsthetic
-Letters” Schiller was helped to this faith in man’s
-native goodness by Rousseau. We need to pause for a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-moment at this point and consider the background of
-this belief which finds not only in Schiller but in Rousseau
-himself, with whom it is usually associated, a rather
-late expression. The movement that took its rise in the
-eighteenth century involves, we should recollect, a break
-not with one but with two traditions&mdash;the classical
-and the Christian. If the plea for genius and originality
-is to be largely explained as a protest against the mechanical
-imitation and artificial decorum of a certain
-type of classicist, the assertion of man’s natural goodness
-is to be understood rather as a rebound from the doctrine
-of total depravity that was held by the more austere type
-of Christian. This doctrine had even in the early centuries
-of the faith awakened certain protests like that of
-Pelagius, but for an understanding of the Rousseauistic
-protest one does not need to go behind the great deistic
-movement of the early eighteenth century. God, instead
-of being opposed to nature, is conceived by the deist as a
-power that expresses his goodness and loveliness through
-nature. The oppressive weight of fear that the older
-theology had laid upon the human spirit is thus gradually
-lifted. Man begins to discover harmonies instead of
-discords in himself and outer nature. He not only sees
-virtue in instinct but inclines to turn virtue itself into a
-“sense,” or instinct. And this means in practice to put
-emotional expansion in the place of spiritual concentration
-at the basis of life and morals. In studying this
-drift towards an æsthetic or sentimental morality one
-may most conveniently take one’s point of departure
-in certain English writers of deistic tendency, especially
-in Shaftesbury and his disciple Hutcheson. Considered
-purely as an initiator, Shaftesbury is probably more important<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-than Rousseau. His influence ramifies out in
-every direction, notably into Germany.</p>
-
-<p>The central achievement of Shaftesbury from a purely
-psychological point of view may be said to be his transformation
-of conscience from an inner check into an
-expansive emotion. He is thus enabled to set up an
-æsthetic substitute not merely for traditional religion but
-for traditional humanism. He undermines insidiously
-decorum, the central doctrine of the classicist, at the
-very time that he seems to be defending it. For decorum
-also implies a control upon the expansive instincts of
-human nature, and Shaftesbury is actually engaged in
-rehabilitating “nature,” and insinuating that it does not
-need any control. He attains this expansiveness by putting
-æsthetic in the place of spiritual perception, and so
-merging more or less completely the good and the true
-with the beautiful. He thus points the way very directly
-to Rousseau’s rejection of both inner and outer control in
-the name of man’s natural goodness. Once accept Shaftesbury’s
-transformation of conscience and one is led almost
-inevitably to look on everything that is expansive as
-natural or vital and on everything that restricts expansion
-as conventional or artificial. Villers wrote to Madame
-de Staël (4 May, 1803): “The fundamental and creative
-idea of all your work has been to show primitive, incorruptible,
-naïve, passionate nature in conflict with the
-barriers and shackles of conventional life. … Note that
-this is also the guiding idea of the author of ‘Werther.’”
-This contrast between nature and convention is indeed
-almost the whole of Rousseauism. In permitting his expansive
-impulses to be disciplined by either humanism or
-religion man has fallen away from nature much as in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-old theology he has fallen away from God, and the famous
-“return to nature” means in practice the emancipation
-of the ordinary or temperamental self that had
-been thus artificially controlled. This throwing off of the
-yoke of both Christian and classical discipline in the
-name of temperament is the essential aspect of the movement
-in favor of original genius. The genius does not
-look to any pattern that is set above his ordinary spontaneous
-ego and imitate it. On the contrary, he attains
-to the self-expression that other men, intimidated by
-convention, weakly forego.</p>
-
-<p>In thus taking a stand for self-expression, the original
-genius is in a sense on firm ground&mdash;at least so far as
-the mere rationalist or the late and degenerate classicist
-is concerned. No conventions are final, no rules can set
-arbitrary limits to creation. Reality cannot be locked up
-in any set of formulæ. The element of change and novelty
-in things, as the romanticists are never tired of
-repeating, is at once vital and inexhaustible. Wherever
-we turn, we encounter, as a romantic authority, Jacob
-Boehme, declares, “abysmal, unsearchable and infinite
-multiplicity.” Perhaps not since the beginning of the
-world have two men or indeed two leaves or two blades
-of grass been exactly alike. Out of a thousand men shaving,
-as Dr. Johnson himself remarked, no two will shave
-in just the same way. A person carries his uniqueness
-even into his thumbprint&mdash;as a certain class in the community
-has learned to its cost. But though all things are
-ineffably different they are at the same time ineffably
-alike. And this oneness in things is, no less than the otherwiseness,
-a matter of immediate perception. This universal
-implication of the one in the many is found even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-more marked than elsewhere in the heart of the individual.
-Each man has his idiosyncrasy (literally his “private
-mixture”). But in addition to his complexion, his temperamental
-or private self, every man has a self that he
-possesses in common with other men. Even the man who
-is most filled with his own uniqueness, or “genius,” a
-Rousseau, for example, assumes this universal self in
-every word he utters. “Jove nods to Jove behind us as we
-talk.” The word character, one may note, is ambiguous,
-inasmuch as it may refer either to the idiosyncratic or
-to the universal human element in a man’s dual nature.
-For example, an original genius like William Blake not
-only uses the word character in a different sense from
-Aristotle&mdash;he cannot even understand the Aristotelian
-usage. “Aristotle,” he complains, “says characters are
-either good or bad; now Goodness or Badness has nothing
-to do with Character. An apple tree, a pear tree, a
-horse, a lion are Characters; but a good apple tree or a
-bad is an apple tree still, etc.” But character as Aristotle
-uses the word implies something that man possesses and
-that a horse or tree does not possess&mdash;the power namely
-to deliberate and choose. A man has a good or bad character,
-he is ethical or unethical, as one may say from the
-Greek word for character in this sense (ἦθος), according
-to the quality of his choice as it appears in what he
-actually does. This distinction between a man’s private,
-peculiar character (χαρακτήρ) and the character he possesses
-when judged with reference to something more
-general than his own complexion is very similar to the
-French distinction between the <i>sens propre</i> and the <i>sens
-commun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The general sense or norm that is opposed to mere<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-temperament and impulse may rest upon the ethos of
-a particular time and country&mdash;the traditional habits
-and customs that the Rousseauist is wont to dismiss as
-“artificial”&mdash;or it may rest in varying degrees upon
-immediate perception. For example, the Ismene and
-Antigone of Sophocles are both ethical; but Ismene would
-abide by the law of the state, whereas Antigone opposes
-to this law something still more universal&mdash;the “unwritten
-laws of heaven.” This insight of Antigone into a
-moral order that is set not only above her ordinary self
-but above the convention of her time and country is
-something very immediate, something achieved, as I shall
-try to show more fully later, with the aid of the imagination.</p>
-
-<p>It is scarcely necessary to add that such a perfect
-example of the ethical imagination as one finds in Antigone&mdash;the
-imagination that works concentric with the
-human law&mdash;is rare. In actual life for one Antigone
-who obeys the “unwritten laws of heaven” there will be
-a thousand Ismenes who will be guided in their moral
-choices by the law of the community. This law, the convention
-of a particular place and time, is always but a very
-imperfect image, a mere shadow indeed of the unwritten
-law which being above the ordinary rational level is, in a
-sense to be explained later, infinite and incapable of final
-formulation. And yet men are forced if only on practical
-grounds to work out some approximation to this law as a
-barrier to the unchained appetites of the individual. The
-elements that enter into any particular attempt to circumscribe
-the individual in the interests of the community
-are very mixed and in no small measure relative.
-Yet the things that any group of men have come together<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-about&mdash;their conventions in the literal meaning of the
-word&mdash;even the tabus of a savage tribe, are sure to
-reflect, however inadequately, the element of oneness in
-man, the element which is opposed to expansive impulse,
-and which is no less real, no less a matter of immediate
-experience, than the element of irreducible difference.
-The general sense therefore should never be sacrificed
-lightly to the sense of the individual. Tabu, however
-inferior it may be to insight, deserves to rank higher
-after all than mere temperament.<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a></p>
-
-<p>The original genius proceeds upon the opposite assumption.
-Everything that limits temperamental expansion is
-dismissed as either artificial or mechanical; everything
-on the contrary that makes for the emancipation of
-temperament, and so for variety and difference, he welcomes
-as vital, dynamic, creative. Now, speaking not
-metaphysically but practically and experimentally, man
-may, as I have said, follow two main paths: he may develop
-his ethical self&mdash;the self that lays hold of unity&mdash;or
-he may put his main emphasis on the element within
-him and without him that is associated with novelty and
-change. In direct proportion as he turns his attention to
-the infinite manifoldness of things he experiences wonder;
-if on the other hand he attends to the unity that underlies
-the manifoldness and that likewise transcends him,
-he experiences awe. As a man grows religious, awe comes
-more and more to take the place in him of wonder. The
-humanist is less averse from the natural order and its
-perpetual gushing forth of novelties than the man who is
-religious, yet even the humanist refuses to put his final<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-emphasis on wonder (his motto is rather <i>nil admirari</i>).
-To illustrate concretely, Dr. Johnson can scarcely conceal
-his disdain for the wonderful, but being a genuinely
-religious spirit, is very capable of awe. Commenting
-on Yalden’s line</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Awhile th’ Almighty wondering stood,</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dr. Johnson remarks: “He ought to have remembered
-that Infinite Knowledge can never wonder. All wonder is
-the effect of novelty upon Ignorance.” Granted the justness
-of the remark, Johnson seems inclined at times to
-forget how wide is the gap in this respect between us and
-the Almighty and therefore to be unduly hostile to the
-element of wonder. To take the opposite case, it is not
-easy to discover in either the personality or writings of
-Poe an atom of awe or reverence. On the other hand he
-both experiences wonder and seeks in his art to be a pure
-wondersmith. It is especially important to determine a
-man’s attitude towards himself in this matter of awe and
-wonder, in other words to determine whether he is taken
-up first of all with that element in his own nature which
-makes him incomprehensibly like other men or with that
-element which makes him incomprehensibly different
-from them. A man, the wise have always insisted, should
-look with reverence but not with wonder on himself.
-Rousseau boasts that if not better than other men, he is
-at least different. By this gloating sense of his own otherwiseness
-he may be said to have set the tone for a whole
-epoch. Chateaubriand, for instance, is quite overcome by
-his own uniqueness and wonderfulness. At the most ordinary
-happenings he exclaims, as Sainte-Beuve points out,
-that such things happen only to him. Hugo again is positively<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-stupefied at the immensity of his own genius.
-The theatricality that one feels in so much of the art of
-this period arises from the eagerness of the genius to
-communicate to others something of the amazement
-that he feels at himself. René’s first concern is to inspire
-wonder even in the women who love him. “Céluta felt
-that she was going to fall upon the bosom of this man as
-one falls into an abyss.”</p>
-
-<p>In thus putting such an exclusive emphasis on wonder
-the Rousseauistic movement takes on a regressive character.
-For if life begins in wonder it culminates in awe.
-To put “the budding rose above the rose full-blown” may
-do very well for a mood, but as an habitual attitude it
-implies that one is more interested in origins than in ends;
-and this means in practice to look backward and downward
-instead of forward and up. The conscious analysis
-that is needed if one is to establish orderly sequences
-and relationships and so work out a kingdom of ends
-is repudiated by the Rousseauist because it diminishes
-wonder, because it interferes with the creative impulse of
-genius as it gushes up spontaneously from the depths of
-the unconscious. The whole movement is filled with the
-praise of ignorance and of those who still enjoy its inappreciable
-advantages&mdash;the savage, the peasant and above
-all the child. The Rousseauist may indeed be said to have
-discovered the poetry of childhood of which only traces
-can be found in the past, but at what would seem at times
-a rather heavy sacrifice of rationality. Rather than consent
-to have the bloom taken off things by analysis one
-should, as Coleridge tells us, <i>sink back</i> to the devout state
-of childlike wonder. However, to grow ethically is not
-to sink back but to struggle painfully forward. To affirm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-the contrary is to set up the things that are below the
-ordinary rational level as a substitute for the things that
-are above it, and at the same time to proclaim one’s
-inability to mature. The romanticist, it is true, is wont to
-oppose to the demand for maturity Christ’s praise of the
-child. But Christ evidently praises the child not because
-of his capacity for wonder but because of his freedom
-from sin, and it is of the essence of Rousseauism to deny
-the very existence of sin&mdash;at least in the Christian
-sense of the word. One may also read in the New Testament
-that when one has ceased to be a child one should
-give up childish things, and this is a saying that no primitivist,
-so far as I am aware, has ever quoted. On the
-contrary, he is ready to assert that what comes to the
-child spontaneously is superior to the deliberate moral
-effort of the mature man. The speeches of all the sages
-are, according to Maeterlinck, outweighed by the unconscious
-wisdom of the passing child. Wordsworth hails
-a child of six as “Mighty Prophet! Seer blest!” (It is
-only fair to Coleridge to say that he refused to follow
-Wordsworth into this final abyss of absurdity.<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a>) In
-much the same way Hugo pushes his adoration of the
-child to the verge of what has been termed “solemn silliness”
-(<i>niaiserie solennelle</i>).</p>
-
-<p>To set up the spontaneity of the child as a substitute
-for insight, to identify wonder with awe, romance with
-religion, is to confuse the very planes of being. There
-would appear to be a confusion of this kind in what
-Carlyle takes to be his own chief discovery, in his “natural
-supernaturalism.”<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> The natural order we must grant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-Carlyle is unfathomable, but it is not therefore awful,
-only wonderful. A movement of charity belongs as Pascal
-says to an entirely different order.<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a></p>
-
-<p>The spiritual order to which Pascal refers lifts a man
-so far as he perceives it out of his ordinary self and draws
-him to an ethical centre. But the Rousseauist tends, as
-I have said, to repudiate the very idea of an ethical centre
-along with the special forms in which it had got itself
-embedded. Every attempt, whether humanistic or religious,
-to set up some such centre, to oppose a unifying
-and centralizing principle to expansive impulse, seems to
-him arbitrary and artificial. He does not discriminate
-between the ethical norm or centre that a Sophocles
-grasps intuitively and the centrality that the pseudo-classicist
-hopes to achieve by mechanical imitation. He
-argues from his underlying assumption that the principle
-of variation is alone vital, that one’s genius and
-originality are in pretty direct ratio to one’s eccentricity
-in the literal meaning of the word; and he is therefore
-ready to affirm his singularity or difference in the face of
-whatever happens to be established. This attitude, it is
-worth noting, is quite unlike that of the humorist in the
-old English sense of the word, who indulges his bent and
-is at the same time quite unconcerned with any central
-model that he should imitate and with reference to which
-he should discipline his oddities. The idiosyncrasy of
-the Rousseauist is not, like that of the humorist, genial,
-but defiant. He is strangely self-conscious in his return
-to the unconscious. In everything, from his vocabulary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-to the details of his dress, he is eager to emphasize his
-departure from the norm. Hence the persistent pose and
-theatricality in so many of the leaders of this movement,
-in Rousseau himself, for instance, or in Chateaubriand
-and Byron. As for the lesser figures in the movement
-their “genius” is often chiefly displayed in their
-devices for calling attention to themselves as the latest
-and most marvellous births of time; it is only one aspect
-in short of an art in which the past century, whatever its
-achievement in the other arts, has easily surpassed all its
-predecessors&mdash;the art of advertising.</p>
-
-<p>One needs always to return, however, if one is to understand
-the romantic notion of genius, to a consideration
-of the pseudo-classic decorum against which it is a protest.
-The gentleman or man of the world (<i>honnête homme</i>)
-was not, like the original genius, anxious to advertise
-himself, to call attention to his own special note of originality,
-since his primary concern was with an entirely
-different problem, with the problem, namely, not of
-expressing but of humanizing himself; and he could humanize
-himself, he felt, only by constant reference to the
-accepted standard of what the normal man should be.
-He refused to “pride himself on anything”; he was fearful
-of over-emphasis, because the first of virtues in his
-eyes was a sense of proportion. The total symmetry of
-life to which the best type of classicist refers back his
-every impulse, he apprehends intuitively with the aid of
-his imagination. The symmetry to which the pseudo-classicist
-refers back his impulses has ceased to be
-imaginative and has become a mere conformity to an
-outer code or even to the rules of etiquette; and so, instead
-of a deep imaginative insight, he gets mere elegance or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-polish. The unity that a purely external decorum of this
-kind imposes on life degenerates into a tiresome sameness.
-It seems an unwarranted denial of the element of
-wonder and surprise. “Boredom was born one day of
-uniformity,” said La Motte Houdard, who was himself
-a pseudo-classicist; whereas variety as everybody knows
-is the spice of life. The romanticist would break up the
-smooth and tiresome surface of artificial decorum by the
-pursuit of strangeness. If he can only get his thrill he
-cares little whether it is probable, whether it bears
-any relation, that is, to normal human experience. This
-sacrifice of the probable to the surprising appears, as I
-said at the outset, in all types of romanticism&mdash;whether
-of action or thought or feeling. The genuine classicist
-always puts his main stress on design or structure;
-whereas the main quest of every type of romanticist is
-rather for the intense and vivid and arresting detail.
-Take, for instance, the intellectual romanticism that
-prevailed especially in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth
-centuries. In the “witty and conceited” poets of
-this period the intellect is engaged in a more or less
-irresponsible vagabondage with the imagination as its
-free accomplice. The conceits by which a poet of this
-type displays his “ingenuity” (genius) are not structural,
-are not, that is, referred back to any centre. They
-stand forth each separately and sharply from the surface
-of the style (hence known to the French as “points”),
-and so arrest the reader by their novelty. Their rareness
-and preciousness, however, are intended to startle the
-intellect alone. They do not have and are not intended to
-have any power of sensuous suggestion. The Rousseauistic
-romanticist, on the other hand, so far from being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span> “metaphysical,”
-strives to be concrete even at the risk of a
-certain materialism of style, of turning his metaphors
-into mere images. Like the intellectual romanticist,
-though in a different way, he wishes to break up the
-smooth and monotonous surface of life and style, and
-so he sets up the cult of the picturesque. To understand
-this cult one needs to remember the opposite extreme of
-artificial symmetry. One needs to recall, for example, the
-neo-classicist who complained of the stars in heaven because
-they were not arranged in symmetrical patterns,
-or various other neo-classicists who attacked mountains
-because of their rough and irregular shapes, because of
-their refusal to submit to the rule and compass. When
-beauty is conceived in so mechanical a fashion some one
-is almost certain to wish to “add strangeness” to it.</p>
-
-<p>The cult of the picturesque is closely associated with
-the cult of local color. Here as elsewhere romantic genius
-is, in contradistinction to classical genius which aims at
-the “grandeur of generality,” the genius of wonder and
-surprise. According to Buffon, who offers the rare spectacle
-of a man of science who is at the same time a theorist
-of the grand manner, genius is shown in the architectonic
-gift&mdash;in the power so to unify a subject as to keep
-its every detail in proper subordination to the whole.
-Any mere wantoning of the imagination in the pursuit of
-either the precious or the picturesque is to be severely
-repressed if one is to attain to the grandeur of generality.
-Buffon is truly classic in relating genius to design.
-Unfortunately he verges towards the pseudo-classic in
-his distrust of color, of the precise word and the vivid
-descriptive epithet. The growing verbal squeamishness
-that so strikes one towards the end of the neo-classic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-period is one outcome of artificial decorum, of confusing
-nobility of language with the language of the nobility.
-There was an increasing fear of the trivial word that
-might destroy the illusion of the grand manner, and also
-of the technical term that should be too suggestive of
-specialization. All terms were to be avoided that were
-not readily intelligible to a lady or gentleman in the
-drawing-room. And so it came to pass that by the end of
-the eighteenth century the grand manner, or elevated
-style, had come to be largely an art of ingenious circumlocution,
-and Buffon gives some countenance to this conception
-of classic dignity and representativeness when he
-declares that one should describe objects “only by the
-most general terms.” At all events the reply of the romantic
-genius to this doctrine is the demand for local color,
-for the concrete and picturesque phrase. The general
-truth at which the classicist aims the Rousseauist dismisses
-as identical with the gray and the academic, and
-bends all his efforts to the rendering of the vivid and
-unique detail. Of the readiness of the romantic genius to
-show (or one is tempted to say) to advertise his originality
-by trampling verbal decorum under foot along with
-every other kind of decorum, I shall have more to say
-later. He is ready to employ not only the homely and
-familiar word that the pseudo-classicist had eschewed as
-“low,” but words so local and technical as to be unintelligible
-to ordinary readers. Chateaubriand deals so
-specifically with the North American Indian and his
-environment that the result, according to Sainte-Beuve,
-is a sort of “tattooing” of his style. Hugo bestows a
-whole dictionary of architectural terms upon the reader
-in his “Nôtre Dame,” and of nautical terms in his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-“Toilers of the Sea.” In order to follow some of the passages
-in Balzac’s “César Birotteau,” one needs to be a
-lawyer or a professional accountant, and it has been said
-that in order to do justice to a certain description in
-Zola one would need to be a pork-butcher. In this movement
-towards a highly specialized vocabulary one should
-note a coöperation, as so often elsewhere, between the
-two wings of the naturalistic movement&mdash;the scientific
-and the emotional. The Rousseauist is, like the scientist,
-a specialist&mdash;he specializes in his own sensations. He
-goes in quest of emotional thrills for their own sake, just
-as Napoleon’s generals, according to Sainte-Beuve, waged
-war without any ulterior aim but for the sheer lust of
-conquest. The vivid images and picturesque details are
-therefore not sufficiently structural; each one tends to
-thrust itself forward without reference to the whole and
-to demand attention for its own sake.</p>
-
-<p>The pursuit of the unrelated thrill without reference
-to its motivation or probability leads in the romantic
-movement to a sort of descent&mdash;often, it is true, a rapturous
-and lyrical descent&mdash;from the dramatic to the
-melodramatic. It is possible to trace this one-sided emphasis
-on wonder not merely in vocabulary but in the
-increasing resort to the principle of contrast. One suspects,
-for example, that Rousseau exaggerates the grotesqueness
-of his youthful failure as a musical composer
-at Lausanne in order that his success in the same rôle
-before the king and all the ladies of the court at Versailles
-may “stick more fiery off.” The contrast that
-Chateaubriand establishes between the two banks of the
-Mississippi at the beginning of his “Atala” is so complete
-as to put some strain on verisimilitude. One may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-note in this same description, as a somewhat different
-way of sacrificing the probable to the picturesque, the
-bears drunk on wild grapes and reeling on the branches
-of the elms. To prove that it was possible on some particular
-occasion to look down the vista of a forest glade
-on the lower Mississippi and see it closed by a drunken
-bear does not meet the difficulty at all. For art has to do,
-as was remarked long ago, not with the possible but the
-probable; and a bear in this posture is a possible but
-scarcely a probable bear.</p>
-
-<p>To return to the principle of contrast: Hugo dilates
-upon his puniness as an infant (“abandoned by everybody,
-even by his mother”) in order to make his later
-achievement seem still more stupendous.<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> The use of the
-antithesis as the auxiliary of surprise, the abrupt and
-thrilling passage from light to shade or the contrary, finds
-perhaps its culminating expression in Hugo. A study of
-this one figure as it appears in his words and ideas, in his
-characters and situations and subjects, would show that
-he is the most melodramatic genius for whom high rank
-has ever been claimed in literature. The suddenness of
-Jean Valjean’s transformation from a convict into a saint
-may serve as a single instance of Hugo’s readiness to
-sacrifice verisimilitude to surprise in his treatment of
-character.</p>
-
-<p>Closely allied to the desire to break up the monotonous
-surface of “good form” by the pointed and picturesque
-style in writing is the rise of the pointed and picturesque
-style in dress. A man may advertise his genius
-and originality (in the romantic sense of these terms) by
-departing from the accepted modes of costume as well as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-from the accepted modes of speech. Gautier’s scarlet
-waistcoat at the first performance of Hernani is of the
-same order as his flamboyant epithets, his riot of local
-color, and was at least as effective in achieving the
-main end of his life&mdash;to be, in his own phrase, the “terror
-of the sleek, baldheaded bourgeois.” In assuming
-the Armenian garb to the astonishment of the rustics
-of Motiers-Travers, Rousseau anticipates not merely
-Gautier but innumerable other violators of conventional
-correctness: here as elsewhere he deserves to rank as
-the classic instance, one is tempted to say, of romantic
-eccentricity. La Bruyère, an exponent of the traditional
-good-breeding against which Rousseauism is a protest,
-says that the gentleman allows himself to be dressed by
-his tailor. He wishes to be neither ahead of the mode nor
-behind it, being reluctant as he is in all things to oppose
-his private sense to the general sense. His point of view
-in the matter of dress is not so very remote from that of
-a genuine classicism, whereas the enthusiast who recently
-went about the streets of New York (until taken in by
-the police) garbed as a contemporary of Pericles is no
-less plainly a product of Rousseauistic revolt.</p>
-
-<p>Chateaubriand’s relation to Rousseauism in this matter
-calls for special comment. He encouraged, and to some
-extent held, the belief that to show genius and originality
-one must be irregular and tempestuous in all things, even
-in the arrangement of one’s hair. At the same time he
-preached reason. His heart, in short, was romantic, his
-head classical. Both as a classicist and a romanticist
-he was ready to repudiate on the one hand his master
-Rousseau, and on the other his own disciples. As a romantic
-genius he wished to regard himself as unique and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-so unrelated to Rousseau. At the same time he also
-looked upon it as a sort of insolence for any of his own
-followers to aspire to such a lonely preëminence in grief
-as René. As a classicist he saw that great art aims at the
-normal and the representative, and that it is therefore
-absurd for people to pattern themselves on such morbid
-and exceptional characters as René and Childe Harold.
-Most of the romanticists indeed showed themselves very
-imitative even in their attempts at uniqueness, and the
-result was a second or third hand, or as one is tempted to
-say, a stale eccentricity. In their mere following of the
-mode many of the French romanticists of 1830 were ready
-to impose a painful discipline upon themselves<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> in order
-to appear abnormal, in order, for instance, to acquire a
-livid Byronic complexion. Some of those who wished to
-seem elegiac like Lamartine rather than to emulate the
-violent and histrionic revolt of the Conrads and Laras
-actually succeeded, we are told, in giving themselves consumption
-(hence the epithet <i>école poitrinaire</i>).</p>
-
-<p>In outer and visible freakishness the French romanticists
-of 1830 probably bore away the palm, though in
-inner and spiritual remoteness from normal human
-experience they can scarcely vie with the early German
-romanticists. And this is doubtless due to the fact that in
-France there was a more definite outer standard from
-which to advertise their departure, and also to the fact
-that the revolt against this standard was so largely
-participated in by the painters and by writers like
-Gautier who were also interested in painting. Chateaubriand
-writes of the romantic painters (and the passage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-will also serve to illustrate his attitude towards his own
-disciples): “[These artists] rig themselves up as comic
-sketches, as grotesques, as caricatures. Some of them
-wear frightful mustaches, one would suppose that they
-are going forth to conquer the world&mdash;their brushes are
-halberds, their paint-scratchers sabres; others have
-enormous beards and hair that puffs out or hangs down
-their shoulders; they smoke a cigar volcanically. These
-cousins of the rainbow, to use a phrase of our old Régnier,
-have their heads filled with deluges, seas, rivers,
-forests, cataracts, tempests, or it may be with slaughters,
-tortures and scaffolds. One finds among them human
-skulls, foils, mandolins, helmets and dolmans. … They
-aim to form a separate species between the ape and
-the satyr; they give you to understand that the secrecy
-of the studio has its dangers and that there is no safety
-for the models.”</p>
-
-<p>These purely personal eccentricities that so marked
-the early stages in the warfare between the Bohemian
-and the philistine have as a matter of fact diminished in
-our own time. Nowadays a man of the distinction of
-Disraeli or even of Bulwer-Lytton<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> would scarcely affect,
-as they did, the flamboyant style in dress. But the underlying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-failure to discriminate between the odd and the
-original has persisted and has worked out into even
-extremer consequences. One may note, as I have said,
-even in the early figures in the movement a tendency
-to play to the gallery, a something that suggests the
-approach of the era of the lime-light and the big headline.
-Rousseau himself has been called the father of
-yellow journalists. There is an unbroken development
-from the early exponents of original genius down to
-cubists, futurists and post-impressionists and the corresponding
-schools in literature. The partisans of expression
-as opposed to form in the eighteenth century led to the
-fanatics of expression in the nineteenth and these have
-led to the maniacs of expression of the twentieth. The
-extremists in painting have got so far beyond Cézanne,
-who was regarded not long ago as one of the wildest of
-innovators, that Cézanne is, we are told, “in a fair way
-to achieve the unhappy fate of becoming a classic.” Poe
-was fond of quoting a saying of Bacon’s that “there is
-no excellent beauty that hath not some strangeness in
-the proportion.” This saying became known in France
-through Baudelaire’s rendering of Poe and was often
-ascribed to Poe himself. It was taken to mean that the
-stranger one became the nearer one was getting to perfect
-beauty. And if we grant this view of beauty we must
-admit that some of the decadents succeeded in becoming
-very beautiful indeed. But the more the element of proportion
-in beauty is sacrificed to strangeness the more
-the result will seem to the normal man to be, not beauty
-at all, but rather an esoteric cult of ugliness. The romantic
-genius therefore denounces the normal man as a
-philistine and at the same time, since he cannot please<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-him, seeks at least to shock him and so capture his
-attention by the very violence of eccentricity.</p>
-
-<p>The saying I have quoted from Bacon is perhaps an
-early example of the inner alliance between things that
-superficially often seem remote&mdash;the scientific spirit
-and the spirit of romance. Scientific discovery has given
-a tremendous stimulus to wonder and curiosity, has encouraged
-a purely exploratory attitude towards life and
-raised an overwhelming prepossession in favor of the
-new as compared with the old. Baconian and Rousseauist
-evidently come together by their primary emphasis
-on novelty. The movement towards a more and more
-eccentric conception of art and literature has been closely
-allied in practice with the doctrine of progress&mdash;and
-that from the very dawn of the so-called Quarrel of
-Ancients and Moderns. It is scarcely possible to exaggerate
-the havoc that has been wrought by the transfer of
-the belief that the latest thing is the best&mdash;a belief that
-is approximately true of automobiles&mdash;from the material
-order to an entirely different realm.<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> The very heart of
-the classical message, one cannot repeat too often, is that
-one should aim first of all not to be original, but to be
-human, and that to be human one needs to look up to a
-sound model and imitate it. The imposition of form and
-proportion upon one’s expansive impulses which results
-from this process of imitation is, in the true sense of that
-much abused word, culture. Genuine culture is difficult
-and disciplinary. The mediation that it involves between
-the conflicting claims of form and expression requires
-the utmost contention of spirit. We have here a clue to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-the boundless success of the Rousseauistic doctrine of
-spontaneity, of the assertion that genius resides in the
-region of the primitive and unconscious and is hindered
-rather than helped by culture. It is easier to be a genius
-on Rousseauistic lines than to be a man on the terms
-imposed by the classicist. There is a fatal facility about
-creation when its quality is not tested by some standard
-set above the creator’s temperament; and the same
-fatal facility appears in criticism when the critic does
-not test creation by some standard set above both his
-own temperament and that of the creator. The romantic
-critic as a matter of fact confines his ambition to receiving
-so keen an impression from genius, conceived as something
-purely temperamental, that when this creative
-expression is passed through his temperament it will issue
-forth as a fresh expression. Taste, he holds, will thus
-tend to become one with genius, and criticism, instead
-of being cold and negative like that of the neo-classicist,
-will itself grow creative.<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> But the critic who does not
-get beyond this stage will have gusto, zest, relish, what
-you will, he will not have taste. For taste involves a
-difficult mediation between the element of uniqueness in
-both critic and creator and that which is representative
-and human. Once eliminate this human standard
-that is set above the temperament of the creator and
-make of the critic in turn a mere pander to “genius”
-and it is hard to see what measure of a man’s excellence
-is left save his intoxication with himself; and this measure
-would scarcely seem to be trustworthy. “Every ass
-that’s romantic,” says Wolseley in his Preface to “Valentinian”
-(1686)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span> “believes he’s inspired.”</p>
-
-<p>An important aspect of the romantic theory of genius
-remains to be considered. This theory is closely associated
-in its rise and growth with the theory of the master
-faculty or ruling passion. A man can do that for which
-he has a genius without effort, whereas no amount of
-effort can avail to give a man that for which he has no
-native aptitude.<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> Buffon affirmed in opposition to this
-view that genius is only a capacity for taking pains or, as
-an American recently put it, is ten per cent inspiration
-and ninety per cent perspiration. This notion of genius
-not only risks running counter to the observed facts as
-to the importance of the native gift but it does not bring
-out as clearly as it might the real point at issue. Even
-though genius were shown to be ninety per cent inspiration
-a man should still, the classicist would insist, fix his
-attention on the fraction that is within his power. Thus
-Boileau says in substance at the outset of his “Art of
-Poetry” that a poet needs to be born under a propitious
-star. Genius is indispensable, and not merely genius in
-general but genius for the special kind of poetry in which
-he is to excel. Yet granting all this, he says to the poetical
-aspirant, bestir yourself! The mystery of grace will
-always be recognized in any view of life that gets at all
-beneath the surface. Yet it is still the better part to turn
-to the feasibility of works. The view of genius as merely
-a temperamental overflow is as a matter of fact only a
-caricature of the doctrine of grace. It suits the spiritual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-indolence of the creator who seeks to evade the more
-difficult half of his problem&mdash;which is not merely to
-create but to humanize his creation. Hawthorne, for
-example, is according to Mr. Brownell, too prone (except
-in the “Scarlet Letter”) to get away from the clear sunlight
-of normal human experience into a region of somewhat
-crepuscular symbolism, and this is because he
-yielded too complacently and fatalistically to what he
-conceived to be his genius. The theory of genius is perhaps
-the chief inheritance of the New England transcendentalists
-from romanticism. Hawthorne was more
-on his guard against the extreme implications of the
-theory than most other members of this group. It remains
-to be seen how much the exaltation of genius and depreciation
-of culture that marks one whole side of Emerson
-will in the long run tell against his reputation. The lesser
-New England men showed a rare incapacity to distinguish
-between originality and mere freakishness either
-in themselves or in others.</p>
-
-<p>It is fair to say that in lieu of the discipline of culture
-the romantic genius has often insisted on the discipline of
-technique; and this has been especially true in a country
-like France with its persistent tradition of careful workmanship.
-Gautier, for example, would have one’s “floating
-dream sealed”<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> in the hardest and most resisting
-material, that can only be mastered by the perfect craftsman;
-and he himself, falling into a confusion of the arts,
-tries to display such a craftsmanship by painting and
-carving with words. Flaubert, again, refines upon the
-technique of writing to a point where it becomes not
-merely a discipline but a torture. But if a man is to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-a romantic genius in the fullest sense he must, it should
-seem, repudiate even the discipline of technique as well
-as the discipline of culture in favor of an artless spontaneity.
-For after all the genius is only the man who
-retains the virtues of the child, and technical proficiency
-is scarcely to be numbered among these virtues. The
-German romanticists already prefer the early Italian
-painters because of their naïveté and divine awkwardness
-to the later artiste who had a more conscious mastery
-of their material. The whole Pre-Raphaelite movement
-is therefore only one aspect of Rousseau’s return to nature.
-To later primitivists the early Italians themselves
-seem far too deliberate. They would recover the spontaneity
-displayed in the markings on Alaskan totem
-poles or in the scratchings of the caveman on the flint.
-A prerequisite to pure genius, if we are to judge by
-their own productions, is an inability to draw. The futurists
-in their endeavor to convey symbolically their
-own “soul” or “vision”&mdash;a vision be it noted of pure
-flux and motion&mdash;deny the very conditions of time and
-space that determine the special technique of painting;
-and inasmuch as to express one’s “soul” means for these
-moderns, as it did for the “genius” of the eighteenth
-century, to express the ineffable difference between
-themselves and others, the symbolizing of this soul to
-which they have sacrificed both culture and technique
-remains a dark mystery.</p>
-
-<p>An eccentricity so extreme as to be almost or quite
-indistinguishable from madness is then the final outcome
-of the revolt of the original genius from the regularity of
-the eighteenth century. The eighteenth century had,
-one must confess, become too much like the Happy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-Valley from which Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia, sought
-an egress. It was fair to the eye and satisfied all man’s
-ordinary needs, but it seemed at the same time to hem
-him in oppressively, and limit unduly his horizons.
-For the modern man, as for the prince in Johnson’s
-tale, a regular round of assured felicities has counted for
-nought as compared with the passion for the open; though
-now that he has tasted strange adventures, the modern
-man will scarcely decide at the end, like the prince,
-to “return to Abyssinia.” I have already spoken of the
-rationalistic and pseudo-classic elements in the eighteenth
-century that the romantic rebels found so intolerable.
-It is impossible to follow “reason,” they said in substance,
-and also to slake one’s thirst for the “infinite”;
-it is impossible to conform and imitate and at the same
-time to be free and original and spontaneous. Above all
-it is impossible to submit to the yoke of either reason
-or imitation and at the same time to be imaginative. This
-last assertion will always be the main point at issue in
-any genuine debate between classicist and romanticist.
-The supreme thing in life, the romanticist declares, is
-the creative imagination, and it can be restored to its
-rights only by repudiating imitation. The imagination is
-supreme the classicist grants but adds that to imitate
-rightly is to make the highest use of the imagination.
-To understand all that is implied in this central divergence
-between classicist and romanticist we shall need
-to study in more detail the kind of imaginative activity
-that has been encouraged in the whole movement extending
-from the rise of the original genius in the eighteenth
-century to the present day.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROMANTIC IMAGINATION</span></h2>
-
-<p>I have already spoken of the contrast established by the
-theorists of original genius in the eighteenth century
-between the different types of imagination&mdash;especially
-between the literary and the scientific imagination. According
-to these theorists, it will be remembered, the
-scientific imagination should be strictly subordinated to
-judgment, whereas the literary imagination, freed from
-the shackles of imitation, should be at liberty to wander
-wild in its own empire of chimeras, or, at all events,
-should be far less sharply checked by judgment. It is
-easy to follow the extension of these English views of
-genius and imagination into the France of Rousseau and
-Diderot, and then the elaboration of these same views,
-under the combined influence of both France and England,
-in Germany. I have tried to show that Kant,
-especially in his “Critique of Judgment,” and Schiller
-in his “Æsthetic Letters” (1795) prepare the way for
-the conception of the creative imagination that is at the
-very heart of the romantic movement. According to this
-romantic conception, as we have seen, the imagination is
-to be free, not merely from outer formalistic constraint,
-but from all constraint whatever. This extreme romantic
-emancipation of the imagination was accompanied by an
-equally extreme emancipation of the emotions. Both kinds
-of emancipation are, as I have tried to show, a recoil
-partly from neo-classical judgment&mdash;a type of judgment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-which seemed to oppress all that is creative and spontaneous
-in man under a weight of outer convention;
-partly, from the reason of the Enlightenment, a type
-of reason that was so logical and abstract that it seemed
-to mechanize the human spirit, and to be a denial of all
-that is immediate and intuitive. The neo-classical judgment,
-with its undue unfriendliness to the imagination,
-is itself a recoil, let us remember, from the imaginative
-extravagance of the “metaphysicals,” the intellectual romanticists
-of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries,
-and also, if we take a sufficiently wide view, from the
-Quixotic type of romanticism, the romanticism of action,
-that we associate with the Middle Ages.</p>
-
-<p>Now not only are men governed by their imaginations
-(the imagination, as Pascal says, disposes of everything),
-but the type of imagination by which most men are
-governed may be defined in the widest sense of the word
-as romantic. Nearly every man cherishes his dream, his
-conceit of himself as he would like to be, a sort of “ideal”
-projection of his own desires, in comparison with which
-his actual life seems a hard and cramping routine.
-“Man must conceive himself what he is not,” as Dr.
-Johnson says, “for who is pleased with what he is?”
-The ample habitation that a man rears for his fictitious
-or “ideal” self often has some slight foundation in fact,
-but the higher he rears it the more insecure it becomes,
-until finally, like Perrette in the fable, he brings the whole
-structure down about his ears by the very gesture of his
-dream. “We all of us,” La Fontaine concludes in perhaps
-the most delightful account of the romantic imagination
-in literature,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span> “wise as well as foolish, indulge in daydreams.
-There is nothing sweeter. A flattering illusion
-carries away our spirits. All the wealth in the world is
-ours, all honors and all women,”<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> etc. When Johnson
-descants on the “dangerous prevalence of imagination,”<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a>
-and warns us to stick to “sober probability,” what he
-means is the dangerous prevalence of day-dreaming.
-The retreat of the Rousseauist into some “land of chimeras”
-or tower of ivory assumes forms almost incredibly
-complex and subtle, but at bottom the ivory tower is only
-one form of man’s ineradicable longing to escape from
-the oppression of the actual into some land of heart’s
-desire, some golden age of fancy. As a matter of fact,
-Rousseau’s imaginative activity often approaches very
-closely to the delights of day-dreaming as described by
-La Fontaine. He was never more imaginative, he tells us,
-than when on a walking-trip&mdash;especially when the trip
-had no definite goal, or at least when he could take his
-time in reaching it. The <i>Wanderlust</i> of body and spirit
-could then be satisfied together. Actual vagabondage
-seemed to be an aid to the imagination in its escape from
-verisimilitude. One should note especially Rousseau’s
-account of his early wandering from Lyons to Paris and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-the airy structures that he raised on his anticipations of
-what he might find there. Inasmuch as he was to be
-attached at Paris to the Swiss Colonel Godard, he already
-traced for himself in fancy, in spite of his short-sightedness,
-a career of military glory. “I had read that Marshal
-Schomberg was short-sighted, why shouldn’t Marshal
-Rousseau be so too?” In the meanwhile, touched by the
-sight of the groves and brooks, “I felt in the midst of my
-glory that my heart was not made for so much turmoil,
-and soon without knowing how, I found myself once
-more among my beloved pastorals, renouncing forever
-the toils of Mars.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus alongside the real world and in more or less sharp
-opposition to it, Rousseau builds up a fictitious world,
-that <i>pays des chimères</i>, which is alone, as he tells us,
-worthy of habitation. To study his imaginative activity
-is simply to study the new forms that he gives to what
-I have called man’s ineradicable longing for some Arcadia,
-some land of heart’s desire. Goethe compares the
-illusions that man nourishes in his breast to the population
-of statues in ancient Rome which were almost as
-numerous as the population of living men. The important
-thing from the point of view of sanity is that a man
-should not blur the boundaries between the two populations,
-that he should not cease to discriminate between
-his fact and his fiction. If he confuses what he dreams himself
-to be with what he actually is, he has already entered
-upon the pathway of madness. It was, for example, natural
-for a youth like Rousseau who was at once romantic
-and musical, to dream that he was a great composer; but
-actually to set up as a great composer and to give the
-concert at Lausanne, shows an unwillingness to discriminate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-between his fictitious and his real world that
-is plainly pathological. If not already a megalomaniac,
-he was even then on the way to megalomania.</p>
-
-<p>To wander through the world as though it were an
-Arcadia or enchanted vision contrived for one’s especial
-benefit is an attitude of childhood&mdash;especially of imaginative
-childhood. “Wherever children are,” says Novalis,
-“there is the golden age.” As the child grows and matures
-there is a more or less painful process of adjustment
-between his “vision” and the particular reality in which
-he is placed. A little sense gets knocked into his head,
-and often, it must be confessed, a good deal of the imagination
-gets knocked out. As Wordsworth complains, the
-vision fades into the light of common day. The striking
-fact about Rousseau is that, far more than Wordsworth,
-he held fast to his vision. He refused to adjust it to an
-unpalatable reality. During the very years when the
-ordinary youth is forced to subordinate his luxurious
-imaginings to some definite discipline he fell under the
-influence of Madame de Warens who encouraged rather
-than thwarted his Arcadian bent. Later, when almost
-incurably confirmed in his penchant for revery, he came
-into contact with the refined society of Paris, an environment
-requiring so difficult an adjustment that no one we
-are told could accomplish the feat unless he had been disciplined
-into the appropriate habits from the age of six.
-He is indeed the supreme example of the unadjusted
-man, of the original genius whose imagination has never
-suffered either inner or outer constraint, who is more of
-an Arcadian dreamer at sixty perhaps than he was at
-sixteen. He writes to the Bailli de Mirabeau (31 January,
-1767):</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The fatigue of thinking becomes every day more painful to me.
-I love to dream, but freely, allowing my mind to wander without
-enslaving myself to any subject. … This idle and contemplative
-life which you do not approve and which I do not excuse, becomes to
-me daily more delicious; to wander alone endlessly and ceaselessly
-among the trees and rocks about my dwelling, to muse or rather to
-be as irresponsible as I please, and as you say, to go wool-gathering;
-… finally to give myself up unconstrainedly to my fantasies which,
-thank heaven, are all within my power: that, sir, is for me the supreme
-enjoyment, than which I can imagine nothing superior in this world
-for a man at my age and in my condition.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Rousseau, then, owes his significance not only to the
-fact that he was supremely imaginative in an age that
-was disposed to deny the supremacy of the imagination,
-but to the fact that he was imaginative in a particular
-way. A great multitude since his time must be reckoned
-among his followers, not because they have held certain
-ideas but because they have exhibited a similar quality
-of imagination. In seeking to define this quality of imagination
-we are therefore at the very heart of our subject.</p>
-
-<p>It is clear from what has already been said that Rousseau’s
-imagination was in a general way Arcadian, and
-this, if not the highest, is perhaps the most prevalent
-type of imagination. In surveying the literature of the
-world one is struck not only by the universality of the
-pastoral or idyllic element, but by the number of forms
-it has assumed&mdash;forms ranging from the extreme of
-artificiality and conventionalism to the purest poetry.
-The very society against the artificiality of which Rousseau’s
-whole work is a protest is itself in no small degree
-a pastoral creation. Various elements indeed entered into
-the life of the drawing-room as it came to be conceived
-towards the beginning of the seventeenth century. The
-Marquise de Rambouillet and others who set out at this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-time to live in the grand manner were in so far governed
-either by genuine or by artificial decorum. But at the same
-time that the creators of <i>le grand monde</i> were aiming to
-be more “decent” than the men and women of the sixteenth
-century, they were patterning themselves upon the
-shepherds and shepherdesses of D’Urfé’s interminable
-pastoral “l’Astrée.” They were seeking to create a sort
-of enchanted world from which the harsh cares of ordinary
-life were banished and where they might be free,
-like true Arcadians, to discourse of love. This discourse of
-love was associated with what I have defined as intellectual
-romanticism. In spite of the attacks by the exponents
-of humanistic good sense (Molière, Boileau, etc.)
-on this drawing-room affectation, it lingered on and still
-led in the eighteenth century, as Rousseau complained,
-to “inconceivable refinements.”<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> At the same time we
-should recollect that there is a secret bond between all
-forms of Arcadian dreaming. Not only was Rousseau
-fascinated, like the early <i>précieux</i> and <i>précieuses</i>, by
-D’Urfé’s pastoral, but he himself appealed by his renewal
-of the main pastoral theme of love to the descendants
-of these former Arcadians in the polite society of his
-time. The love of Rousseau is associated not like that
-of the <i>précieux</i>, with the intellect, but with the emotions,
-and so he substitutes for a “wire-drawn and super-subtilized
-gallantry,” the ground-swell of elemental
-passion.<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> Moreover, the definitely primitivistic coloring
-that he gave to his imaginative renewal of the pastoral
-dream appealed to an age that was reaching the last stages
-of over-refinement. Primitivism is, strictly speaking,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-nothing new in the world. It always tends to appear in
-periods of complex civilization. The charms of the simple
-life and of a return to nature were celebrated especially
-during the Alexandrian period of Greek literature for the
-special delectation no doubt of the most sophisticated
-members of this very sophisticated society. “Nothing,”
-as Dr. Santayana says, “is farther from the common
-people than the corrupt desire to be primitive.” Primitivistic
-dreaming was also popular in ancient Rome at
-its most artificial moment. The great ancients, however,
-though enjoying the poetry of the primitivistic dream,
-were not the dupes of this dream. Horace, for example,
-lived at the most artificial moment of Rome when primitivistic
-dreaming was popular as it had been at Alexandria.
-He descants on the joys of the simple life in a well-known
-ode. One should not therefore hail him, like
-Schiller, as the founder of the sentimental school “of
-which he has remained the unsurpassed model.”<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> For
-the person who plans to return to nature in Horace’s
-poem is the old usurer Alfius, who changes his mind at
-the last moment and puts out his mortgages again. In
-short, the final attitude of the urbane Horace towards
-the primitivistic dream&mdash;it could hardly be otherwise&mdash;is
-ironical.</p>
-
-<p>Rousseau seems destined to remain the supreme example,
-at least in the Occident, of the man who takes
-the primitivistic dream seriously, who attempts to set
-up primitivism as a philosophy and even as a religion.
-Rousseau’s account of his sudden illumination on the
-road from Paris to Vincennes is famous: the scales, he
-tells us, fell from his eyes even as they had from the eyes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-of Paul on the road to Damascus, and he saw how man
-had fallen from the felicity of his primitive estate; how
-the blissful ignorance in which he had lived at one with
-himself and harmless to his fellows had been broken by
-the rise of intellectual self-consciousness and the resulting
-progress in the sciences and arts. Modern students of
-Rousseau have, under the influence of James, taken this
-experience on the road to Vincennes to be an authentic
-case of conversion,<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> but this is merely one instance of
-our modern tendency to confound the subrational with
-the superrational. What one finds in this alleged conversion
-when one looks into it, is a sort of “subliminal
-uprush” of the Arcadian memories of his youth, especially
-of his life at Annecy and Les Charmettes, and at
-the same time the contrast between these Arcadian
-memories and the hateful constraints he had suffered
-at Paris in his attempts to adjust himself to an uncongenial
-environment.</p>
-
-<p>We can trace even more clearly perhaps the process
-by which the Arcadian dreamer comes to set up as a seer,
-in Rousseau’s relation of the circumstances under which
-he came to compose his “Discourse on the Origins of
-Inequality.” He goes off on a sort of picnic with Thérèse
-into the forest of St. Germain and gives himself up to
-imagining the state of primitive man. “Plunged in the
-forest,” he says,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span> “I sought and found there the image of
-primitive times of which I proudly drew the history;
-I swooped down on the little falsehoods of men; I ventured
-to lay bare their nature, to follow the progress of
-time and of circumstances which have disfigured it, and
-comparing artificial man (<i>l’homme de l’homme</i>) with
-natural man, to show in his alleged improvement the true
-source of his miseries. My soul, exalted by these sublime
-contemplations, rose into the presence of the Divinity.
-Seeing from this vantage point that the blind pathway
-of prejudices followed by my fellows was also that of their
-errors, misfortunes and crimes, I cried out to them in a
-feeble voice that they could not hear: Madmen, who are
-always complaining of nature, know that all your evils
-come from yourselves alone.”</p>
-
-<p>The golden age for which the human heart has an
-ineradicable longing is here presented not as poetical,
-which it certainly is, but as a “state of nature” from
-which man has actually fallen. The more or less innocent
-Arcadian dreamer is being transformed into the dangerous
-Utopist. He puts the blame of the conflict and division
-of which he is conscious in himself upon the social
-conventions that set bounds to his temperament and
-impulses; once get rid of these purely artificial restrictions
-and he feels that he will again be at one with himself
-and “nature.” With such a vision of nature as this it is
-not surprising that every constraint is unendurable to
-Rousseau, that he likes, as Berlioz was to say of himself
-later, to “make all barriers crack.” He is ready to shatter
-all the forms of civilized life in favor of something that
-never existed, of a state of nature that is only the projection
-of his own temperament and its dominant desires
-upon the void. His programme amounts in practice to
-the indulgence of infinite indeterminate desire, to an endless
-and aimless vagabondage of the emotions with the
-imagination as their free accomplice.</p>
-
-<p>This longing of the highly sophisticated person to get<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-back to the primitive and naïve and unconscious, or
-what amounts to the same thing, to shake off the trammels
-of tradition and reason in favor of free and passionate
-self-expression, underlies, as I have pointed out, the
-conception of original genius which itself underlies the
-whole modern movement. A book reflecting the primitivistic
-trend of the eighteenth century, and at the same time
-pointing the way, as we shall see presently, to the working
-out of the fundamental primitivistic contrast between the
-natural and the artificial in the romanticism of the early
-nineteenth century, is Schiller’s “Essay on Simple and
-Sentimental Poetry.” The poetry that does not “look before
-or after,” that is free from self-questioning and self-consciousness,
-and has a childlike spontaneity, Schiller
-calls simple or naïve. The poet, on the other hand, who is
-conscious of his fall from nature and who, from the midst
-of his sophistication, longs to be back once more at his
-mother’s bosom, is sentimental. Homer and his heroes,
-for example, are naïve; Werther, who yearns in a drawing-room
-for the Homeric simplicity, is sentimental. The
-longing of the modern man for nature, says Schiller,
-is that of the sick man for health. It is hard to see in
-Schiller’s “nature” anything more than a development
-of Rousseau’s primitivistic Arcadia. To be sure, Schiller
-warns us that, in order to recover the childlike and
-primitive virtues still visible in the man of genius, we
-must not renounce culture. We must not seek to revert
-lazily to an Arcadia, but must struggle forward to an
-Elysium. Unfortunately Schiller’s Elysium has a strange
-likeness to Rousseau’s Arcadia; and that is because
-Schiller’s own conception of life is, in the last analysis,
-overwhelmingly sentimental. His most Elysian conception,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-that of a purely æsthetic Greece, a wonderland of
-unalloyed beauty, is also a bit of Arcadian sentimentalizing.
-Inasmuch as Rousseau’s state of nature never
-existed outside of dreamland, the Greek who is simple
-or naïve in this sense is likewise a myth. He has no real
-counterpart either in the Homeric age or any other age
-of Greece. It is hard to say which is more absurd, to
-make the Greeks naïve, or to turn Horace into a sentimentalist.
-One should note how this romantic perversion
-of the Greeks for which Schiller is largely responsible
-is related to his general view of the imagination. We
-have seen that in the “Æsthetic Letters” he maintains
-that if the imagination is to conceive the ideal it
-must be free; and that to be free it must be emancipated
-from purpose and engage in a sort of play. If the imagination
-has to subordinate itself to a real object it ceases
-in so far to be free. Hence the more ideal the imagination
-the farther it gets away from a real object. By his theory
-of the imagination, Schiller thus encourages that opposition
-between the ideal and the real which figures so
-largely in romantic psychology. A man may consent to
-adjust a mere dream to the requirements of the real,
-but when his dream is promoted to the dignity of an ideal
-it is plain that he will be less ready to make the sacrifice.
-Schiller’s Greece is very ideal in the sense I have just
-defined. It hovers before the imagination as a sort of
-Golden Age of pure beauty, a land of chimeras that is
-alone worthy of the æsthete’s habitation. As an extreme
-type of the romantic Hellenist, one may take Hölderlin,
-who was a disciple at once of Schiller and of Rousseau.
-He begins by urging emancipation from every form of
-outer and traditional control in the name of spontaneity.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-“Boldly forget,” he cries in the very accents of Rousseau,
-“what you have inherited and won&mdash;all laws and customs&mdash;and
-like new-born babes lift up your eyes to
-godlike nature.” Hölderlin has been called a “Hellenizing
-Werther,” and Werther, one should recollect, is only
-a German Saint-Preux, who is in turn, according to Rousseau’s
-own avowal, only an idealized image of Rousseau.
-The nature that Hölderlin worships and which is, like
-the nature of Rousseau, only an Arcadian intoxication
-of the imagination, he associates with a Greece which is,
-like the Greece of Schiller, a dreamland of pure beauty.
-He longs to escape into this dreamland from an actual
-world that seems to him intolerably artificial. The
-contrast between his “ideal” Greece and reality is so
-acute as to make all attempt at adjustment out of the
-question. As a result of this maladjustment his whole
-being finally gave way and he lingered on for many years
-in madness.</p>
-
-<p>The acuteness of the opposition between the ideal and
-the real in Hölderlin recalls Shelley, who was also a
-romantic Hellenist, and at the same time perhaps the
-most purely Rousseauistic of the English romantic poets.
-But Shelley was also a political dreamer, and here one
-should note two distinct phases in his dream: a first
-phase that is filled with the hope of transforming the
-real world into an Arcadia<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> through revolutionary reform;
-and then a phase of elegiac disillusion when the
-gap between reality and his ideal refuses to be bridged.<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-Something of the same radiant political hope and the
-same disillusion is found in Wordsworth. In the first
-flush of his revolutionary enthusiasm, France seemed
-to him to be “standing on the top of golden hours” and
-pointing the way to a new birth of human nature:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive,</div>
-<div class="verse">But to be young was very heaven! O times,</div>
-<div class="verse">In which the meagre stale forbidding ways</div>
-<div class="verse">Of custom, law and statute, took at once</div>
-<div class="verse">The attraction of a country in romance!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>When it became evident that the actual world and
-Utopia did not coincide after all, when the hard sequences
-of cause and effect that bind the present inexorably
-to the past refused to yield to the creations of the
-romantic imagination, what ensued in Wordsworth was
-not so much an awakening to true wisdom as a transformation
-of the pastoral dream. The English Lake Country
-became for him in some measure as it was later to
-be for Ruskin, the ivory tower into which he retreated
-from the oppression of the real. He still continued to see,
-if not the general order of society, at least the denizens
-of his chosen retreat through the Arcadian mist, and
-contrasted their pastoral felicity with the misery of men
-“barricadoed in the walls of cities.” I do not mean to
-disparage the poetry of humble life or to deny that many
-passages may be cited from Wordsworth that justify his
-reputation as an inspired teacher: I wish merely to point
-out here and elsewhere what is specifically romantic in
-the quality of his imagination.</p>
-
-<p>After all it is to Rousseau himself even more than to
-his German or English followers that one needs to turn
-for the best examples of the all-pervasive conflict between<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-the ideal and the actual. The psychology of this
-conflict is revealed with special clearness in the four letters
-that he wrote to M. de Malesherbes, and into which
-he has perhaps put more of himself than into any other
-similar amount of his writing. His natural indolence and
-impatience at the obligations and constraints of life were,
-he avows to M. de Malesherbes, increased by his early
-reading. At the age of eight he already knew Plutarch by
-heart and had read “all novels” and shed tears over
-them, he adds “by the pailful.” Hence was formed his
-“heroic and romantic taste” which filled him with
-aversion for everything that did not resemble his dreams.
-He had hoped at first to find the equivalent of these
-dreams among actual men, but after painful disillusions
-he had come to look with disdain on his age and his
-contemporaries. “I withdrew more and more from human
-society and created for myself a society in my
-imagination, a society that charmed me all the more in
-that I could cultivate it without peril or effort and that
-it was always at my call and such as I required it.” He
-associated this dream society with the forms of outer
-nature. The long walks in particular that he took during
-his stay at the Hermitage were, he tells us, filled with a
-“continual delirium” of this kind. “I peopled nature
-with beings according to my heart. … I created for
-myself a golden age to suit my fancy.” It is not unusual
-for a man thus to console himself for his poverty in the
-real relations of life by accumulating a huge hoard of
-fairy gold. Where the Rousseauist goes beyond the ordinary
-dreamer is in his proneness to regard his retirement
-into some land of chimeras as a proof of his nobility
-and distinction. Poetry and life he feels are irreconcilably<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-opposed to each other, and he for his part is on the
-side of poetry and the “ideal.” Goethe symbolized the
-hopelessness of this conflict in the suicide of the young
-Werther. But though Werther died, his creator continued
-to live, and more perhaps than any other figure in
-the whole Rousseauistic movement perceived the peril
-of this conception of poetry and the ideal. He saw phantasts
-all about him who refused to be reconciled to the
-gap between the infinitude of their longing and the platitude
-of their actual lot. Perhaps no country and time
-ever produced more such phantasts than Germany of
-the Storm and Stress and romantic periods&mdash;partly no
-doubt because it did not offer any proper outlet for the
-activity of generous youths. Goethe himself had been a
-phantast, and so it was natural in works like his “Tasso”
-that he should show himself specially preoccupied with
-the problem of the poet and his adjustment to life. About
-the time that he wrote this play, he was, as he tells us,
-very much taken up with thoughts of “Rousseau and his
-hypochondriac misery.” Rousseau for his part felt a
-kinship between himself and Tasso, and Goethe’s Tasso
-certainly reminds us very strongly of Rousseau. Carried
-away by his Arcadian imaginings, Tasso violates the decorum
-that separates him from the princess with whom
-he has fallen in love. As a result of the rebuffs that follow,
-his dream changes into a nightmare, until he
-finally falls like Rousseau into wild and random suspicion
-and looks on himself as the victim of a conspiracy.
-In opposition to Tasso is the figure of Antonio, the man
-of the world, whose imagination does not run away with
-his sense of fact, and who is therefore equal to the “demands
-of the day.” The final reconciliation between Tasso<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-and Antonio, if not very convincing dramatically, symbolizes
-at least what Goethe achieved in some measure
-in his own life. There were moments, he declares, when
-he might properly look upon himself as mad, like Rousseau.
-He escaped from this world of morbid brooding,
-this giddy downward gazing into the bottomless pit of
-the romantic heart against which he utters a warning
-in Tasso, by his activity at the court of Weimar, by
-classical culture, by scientific research. Goethe carries
-the same problem of reconciling the ideal to the real a
-stage further in his “Wilhelm Meister.” The more or less
-irresponsible and Bohemian youth that we see at the
-beginning learns by renunciation and self-limitation to
-fit into a life of wholesome activity. Goethe saw that the
-remedy for romantic dreaming is work, though he is
-open to grave criticism, as I shall try to show elsewhere,
-for his unduly naturalistic conception of work. But the
-romanticists as a rule did not wish work in any sense
-and so, attracted as they were by the free artistic life
-of Meister at the beginning, they looked upon his final
-adjustment to the real as a base capitulation to philistinism.
-Novalis described the book as a “Candide directed
-against poetry,” and set out to write a counterblast in
-“Heinrich von Ofterdingen.” This apotheosis of pure
-poetry, as he meant it to be, is above all an apotheosis of
-the wildest vagabondage of the imagination. Novalis
-did not, however, as a result of the conflict between the
-ideal and the real, show any signs of going mad like
-Hölderlin, or of simply fading from life like his friend
-Wackenroder. Like E. T. A. Hoffmann and a certain
-number of other phantasts he had a distinct gift for
-leading a dual life&mdash;for dividing himself into a prosaic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-self which went one way, and a poetical self which went
-another.</p>
-
-<p>This necessary and fatal opposition between poetry
-and prose the romanticist saw typified in “Don Quixote,”
-and of course he sided with the idealism of the knight
-against the philistine good sense of Sancho Panza; and so
-for the early romanticists as well as for those who were
-of their spiritual posterity,&mdash;Heine, for example, and
-Flaubert,&mdash;“Don Quixote” was a book to evoke not
-laughter but tears.</p>
-
-<p>To the romantic conception of the ideal can be traced
-the increasing lack of understanding between the poet,
-or in general the creator, and the public during the past
-century. Many neo-classical writers may, like Boileau,
-have shown an undue reverence for what they conceived
-to be the general sense of their time, but to measure one’s
-inspiration by one’s remoteness from this general sense
-is surely a far more dangerous error; and yet one was
-encouraged to do this very thing by the views of original
-genius that were held in the eighteenth century. Certain
-late neo-classicists lacked imagination and were at the
-same time always harping on good sense. It was therefore
-assumed that to insist on good sense was necessarily
-proof of a lack of imagination. Because the attempt to
-achieve the universal had led to a stale and lifeless imitation
-it was assumed that a man’s genius consists in his
-uniqueness, in his unlikeness to other men. Now nothing
-is more private and distinctive in a man than his feelings,
-so that to be unique meant practically for Rousseau and
-his followers to be unique in feeling. Feeling alone they
-held was vital and immediate. As a matter of fact the
-element in a man’s nature that he possesses in common<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-with other men is also something that he <i>senses</i>, something
-that is in short intuitive and immediate. But good
-sense the genius identifies with lifeless convention and so
-measures his originality by the distance of his emotional
-and imaginative recoil from it. Of this warfare between
-sense and sensibility that begins in the eighteenth century,
-the romantic war between the poet and the philistine
-is only the continuation. This war has been bad for
-both artist and public. If the artist has become more and
-more eccentric, it must be confessed that the good sense
-of the public against which he has protested has been
-too flatly utilitarian. The poet who reduces poetry to
-the imaginative quest of strange emotional adventure,
-and the plain citizen who does not aspire beyond a reality
-that is too literal and prosaic, both suffer; but the æsthete
-suffers the more severely&mdash;so much so that I shall need
-to revert to this conception of poetry in my treatment
-of romantic melancholy. It leads at last to a contrast
-between the ideal and the real such as is described by
-Anatole France in his account of Villiers de l’Isle Adam.
-“For thirty years,” says M. France,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span> “Villiers wandered
-around in cafés at night, fading away like a shadow at
-the first glimmer of dawn. … His poverty, the frightful
-poverty of cities, had so put its stamp on him and fashioned
-him so thoroughly that he resembled those vagabonds,
-who, dressed in black, sleep on park benches. He
-had the livid complexion with red blotches, the glassy
-eye, the bowed back of the poor; and yet I am not sure
-we should call him unhappy, for he lived in a perpetual
-dream and that dream was radiantly golden. … His dull
-eyes contemplated within himself dazzling spectacles.
-He passed through the world like a somnambulist seeing
-nothing of what we see and seeing things that it is not
-given us to behold. Out of the commonplace spectacle of
-life he succeeded in creating an ever fresh ecstasy. On
-those ignoble café tables in the midst of the odor of beer
-and tobacco, he poured forth floods of purple and gold.”</p>
-
-<p>This notion that literal failure is ideal success, and
-conversely, has been developed in a somewhat different
-form by Rostand in his “Cyrano de Bergerac.” By his
-refusal to compromise or adjust himself to things as
-they are, Cyrano’s real life has become a series of defeats.
-He is finally forced from life by a league of all the mediocrities
-whom his idealism affronts. His discomfiture is
-taken to show, not that he is a Quixotic extremist, but
-that he is the superior of the successful Guise, the man
-who has stooped to compromise, the French equivalent of
-the Antonio whom Goethe finally came to prefer to Tasso.
-Rostand’s “Chanticleer” is also an interesting study
-of romantic idealism and of the two main stages through
-which it passes&mdash;the first stage when one relates one’s
-ideal to the real; the second, when one discovers that the
-ideal and the real are more or less hopelessly dissevered.
-Chanticleer still maintains his idealistic pose even after he
-has discovered that the sun is not actually made to rise
-by his crowing. In this hugging of his illusion in defiance
-of reality Chanticleer is at the opposite pole from
-Johnson’s astronomer in “Rasselas” who thinks that
-he has control of the weather, but when disillusioned is
-humbly thankful at having escaped from this “dangerous
-prevalence of imagination,” and entered once more
-into the domain of “sober probability.”</p>
-
-<p>The problem, then, of the genius or the artist versus
-the philistine has persisted without essential modification<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-from the eighteenth century to the present day&mdash;from
-the suicide of Chatterton, let us say, to the suicide
-of John Davidson. The man of imagination spurns in the
-name of his “ideal” the limits imposed upon it by a dull
-respectability, and then his ideal turns out only too often
-to lack positive content and to amount in practice to
-the expansion of infinite indeterminate desire. What the
-idealist opposes to the real is not only something that
-does not exist, but something that never can exist. The
-Arcadian revery which should be allowed at most as
-an occasional solace from the serious business of living
-is set up as a substitute for living. The imaginative
-and emotional dalliance of the Rousseauistic romanticist
-may assume a bewildering variety of forms. We have
-already seen in the case of Hölderlin how easily Rousseau’s
-dream of a state of nature passes over&mdash;and that
-in spite of Rousseau’s attacks on the arts&mdash;into the
-dream of a paradise of pure beauty. The momentous
-matter is not that a man’s imagination and emotions go
-out towards this or that particular haven of refuge in the
-future or in the past, in the East or in the West, but that
-his primary demand on life is for some haven of refuge;
-that he longs to be away from the here and now and their
-positive demands on his character and will. Poe may
-sing of “the glory that was Greece and the grandeur that
-was Rome,” but he is not therefore a classicist. With the
-same wistfulness innumerable romanticists have looked towards
-the Middle Ages. So C. E. Norton says that Ruskin
-was a white-winged anachronism,<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> that he should have
-been born in the thirteenth century. But one may surmise
-that a man with Ruskin’s special quality of imagination<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-would have failed to adjust himself to the actual life of
-the thirteenth or any other century. Those who put their
-Arcadia in the Middle Ages or some other period of the
-past have at least this advantage over those who put it
-in the present, they are better protected against disillusion.
-The man whose Arcadia is distant from him merely
-in space may decide to go and see for himself, and the
-results of this overtaking of one’s dream are somewhat
-uncertain. The Austrian poet Lenau, for example, actually
-took a trip to his primitive paradise that he had
-imagined somewhere in the neighborhood of Pittsburgh.
-Perhaps it is not surprising that he finally died mad.
-The disenchantment of Chateaubriand in his quest for
-a Rousseauistic Arcadia in America and for Arcadian
-savages I describe later. In his journey into the wilderness
-Chateaubriand reveals himself as a spiritual lotos-eater
-no less surely than the man who takes flight into
-what is superficially most remote from the virgin forest&mdash;into
-some palace of art. His attitude towards
-America does not differ psychically from that of many
-early romanticists towards Italy. Italy was their land
-of heart’s desire, the land that filled them with ineffable
-longing (<i>Sehnsucht nach Italien</i>), a palace of art that, like
-the Latin Quarter of later Bohemians, had some points
-of contact with Mohammed’s paradise. A man may even
-develop a romantic longing for the very period against
-which romanticism was originally a protest and be
-ready to “fling his cap for polish and for Pope.” One
-should add that the romantic Eldorado is not necessarily
-rural. Lamb’s attitude towards London is almost as
-romantic as that of Wordsworth towards the country.
-Dr. Johnson cherished urban life because of its centrality.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-Lamb’s imaginative dalliance, on the other hand, is stimulated
-by the sheer variety and wonder of the London
-streets as another’s might be by the mountains or the
-sea.<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> Lamb could also find an Elysium of unmixed æsthetic
-solace in the literature of the past&mdash;especially in
-Restoration Comedy.</p>
-
-<p>The essence of the mood is always the straining of the
-imagination away from the here and now, from an
-actuality that seems paltry and faded compared to the
-radiant hues of one’s dream. The classicist, according to
-A. W. Schlegel,<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> is for making the most of the present,
-whereas the romanticist hovers between recollection
-and hope. In Shelleyan phrase he “looks before and after
-and pines for what is not.” He inclines like the Byronic
-dandy, Barbey d’Aurevilly, to take for his mottoes the
-words “Too late” and “Nevermore.”</p>
-
-<p>Nostalgia, the term that has come to be applied to the
-infinite indeterminate longing of the romanticist&mdash;his
-never-ending quest after the ever-fleeting object of desire&mdash;is
-not, from the point of view of strict etymology, well-chosen.
-Romantic nostalgia is not “homesickness,” accurately
-speaking, but desire to get away from home.
-Odysseus in Homer suffers from true nostalgia. The
-Ulysses of Tennyson, on the other hand, is nostalgic
-in the romantic sense when he leaves home “to sail
-beyond the sunset.” Ovid, as Goethe points out, is
-highly classical even in his melancholy. The longing
-from which he suffers in his exile is very determinate:
-he longs to get back to Rome, the centre of the world.
-Ovid indeed sums up the classic point of view when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-he says that one cannot desire the unknown (<i>ignoti
-nulla cupido</i>).<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> The essence of nostalgia is the desire
-for the unknown. “I was burning with desire,” says
-Rousseau, “without any definite object.” One is filled
-with a desire to fly one knows not whither, to be off
-on a journey into the blue distance.<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a> Music is exalted
-by the romanticists above all other arts because it is the
-most nostalgic, the art that is most suggestive of the
-hopeless gap between the “ideal” and the “real.” “Music,”
-in Emerson’s phrase, “pours on mortals its beautiful
-disdain.” “Away! away!” cries Jean Paul to Music.
-“Thou speakest of things which throughout my endless
-life I have found not, and shall not find.” In musical and
-other nostalgia, the feelings receive a sort of infinitude
-from the coöperation of the imagination; and this infinitude,
-this quest of something that must ever elude one,
-is at the same time taken to be the measure of one’s
-idealism. The symmetry and form that the classicist
-gains from working within bounds are no doubt excellent,
-but then the willingness to work within bounds betokens
-a lack of aspiration. If the primitivist is ready, as some
-one has complained, to turn his back on the bright forms
-of Olympus and return to the ancient gods of chaos and
-of night, the explanation is to be sought in this idea of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-infinite. It finally becomes a sort of Moloch to which he
-is prepared to sacrifice most of the values of civilized life.
-The chief fear of the classicist is to be thought monstrous.
-The primitivist on the contrary is inclined to see a proof
-of superior amplitude of spirit in mere grotesqueness and
-disproportion. The creation of monsters is, as Hugo says,
-a “satisfaction due to the infinite.”<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a></p>
-
-<p>The breaking down by the emotional romanticist of the
-barriers that separate not merely the different literary
-genres but the different arts is only another aspect of his
-readiness to follow the lure of the infinite. The title of
-a recent bit of French decadent verse&mdash;“Nostalgia in
-Blue Minor”&mdash;would already have been perfectly intelligible
-to a Tieck or a Novalis. The Rousseauist&mdash;and
-that from a very early stage in the movement&mdash;does
-not hesitate to pursue his ever receding dream across all
-frontiers, not merely those that separate art from art,
-but those that divide flesh from spirit and even good
-from evil, until finally he arrives like Blake at a sort of
-“Marriage of Heaven and Hell.” When he is not breaking
-down barriers in the name of the freedom of the
-imagination he is doing so in the name of what he is
-pleased to term love.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p><div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The ancient art and poetry,” says A. W. Schlegel, “rigorously
-separate things which are dissimilar; the romantic delights in indissoluble
-mixtures. All contrarieties: nature and art, poetry and prose,
-seriousness and mirth, recollection and anticipation, spirituality and
-sensuality, terrestrial and celestial, life and death, are by it blended
-together in the most intimate combination. As the oldest lawgivers
-delivered their mandatory instructions and prescriptions in measured
-melodies; as this is fabulously ascribed to Orpheus, the first
-softener of the yet untamed race of mortals; in like manner the whole
-of the ancient poetry and art is, as it were a <i>rhythmical nomos</i> (law),
-an harmonious promulgation of the permanently established legislation
-of a world submitted to a beautiful order, and reflecting in itself
-the eternal images of things. Romantic poetry, on the other hand, is
-the expression of the secret attraction to a chaos which lies concealed
-in the very bosom of the ordered universe, and is perpetually striving
-after new and marvellous births; the life-giving spirit of primal love
-broods here anew on the face of the waters. The former is more
-simple, clear, and like to nature in the self-existent perfection of her
-separate works; the latter, notwithstanding its fragmentary appearance,
-approaches more to the secret of the universe. For Conception
-can only comprise each object separately, but nothing in truth can
-ever exist separately and by itself; Feeling perceives all in all at one
-and the same time.”<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Note the assumption here that the clear-cut distinctions
-of classicism are merely abstract and intellectual, and
-that the only true unity is the unity of feeling.</p>
-
-<p>In passages of this kind A. W. Schlegel is little more
-than the popularizer of the ideas of his brother Friedrich.
-Perhaps no one in the whole romantic movement showed
-a greater genius for confusion than Friedrich Schlegel;
-no one, in Nietzsche’s phrase, had a more intimate
-knowledge of all the bypaths to chaos. Now it is from
-the German group of which Friedrich Schlegel was the
-chief theorist that romanticism as a distinct and separate
-movement takes its rise. We may therefore pause appropriately
-at this point to consider briefly how the epithet
-romantic of which I have already sketched the early
-history came to be applied to a distinct school. In the
-latter part of the eighteenth century, it will be remembered,
-romantic had become a fairly frequent word in
-English and also (under English influence) a less frequent,
-though not rare word, in French and German; it
-was often used favorably in all these countries as applied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-to nature, and usually indeed in this sense in France and
-Germany; but in England, when applied to human nature
-and as the equivalent of the French <i>romanesque</i>, it
-had ordinarily an unfavorable connotation; it signified
-the “dangerous prevalence of imagination” over “sober
-probability,” as may be seen in Foster’s essay “On the
-Epithet Romantic.” One may best preface a discussion
-of the next step&mdash;the transference of the word to a
-distinct movement&mdash;by a quotation from Goethe’s
-Conversations with Eckermann (21 March, 1830):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“This division of poetry into classic and romantic,” says Goethe,
-“which is to-day diffused throughout the whole world and has caused
-so much argument and discord, comes originally from Schiller and
-me. It was my principle in poetry always to work objectively. Schiller
-on the contrary wrote nothing that was not subjective; he thought
-his manner good, and to defend it he wrote his article on naïve and
-sentimental poetry. … The Schlegels got hold of this idea, developed
-it and little by little it has spread throughout the whole world.
-Everybody is talking of romanticism and classicism. Fifty years ago
-nobody gave the matter a thought.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>One statement in this passage of Goethe’s is perhaps
-open to question&mdash;that concerning the obligation of
-the Schlegels, or rather Friedrich Schlegel, to Schiller’s
-treatise. A comparison of the date of publication of
-the treatise on “Naïve and Sentimental Poetry” with the
-date of composition of Schlegel’s early writings would
-seem to show that some of Schlegel’s distinctions, though
-closely related to those of Schiller, do not derive from
-them so immediately as Goethe seems to imply.<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> Both
-sets of views grow rather inevitably out of a primitivistic
-or Rousseauistic conception of “nature” that had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-epidemic in Germany ever since the Age of Genius. We
-need also to keep in mind certain personal traits of
-Schlegel if we are to understand the development of his
-theories about literature and art. He was romantic, not
-only by his genius for confusion, but also one should add,
-by his tendency to oscillate violently between extremes.
-For him as for Rousseau there was “no intermediary term
-between everything and nothing.” One should note here
-another meaning that certain romanticists give to the
-word “ideal”&mdash;Hazlitt, for example, when he says that
-the “ideal is always to be found in extremes.” Every
-imaginable extreme, the extreme of reaction as well as
-the extreme of radicalism, goes with romanticism; every
-genuine mediation between extremes is just as surely
-unromantic. Schlegel then was very idealistic in the sense
-I have just defined. Having begun as an extreme partisan
-of the Greeks, conceived in Schiller’s fashion as a people
-that was at once harmonious and instinctive, he passes
-over abruptly to the extreme of revolt against every form
-of classicism, and then after having posed in works like
-his “Lucinde” as a heaven-storming Titan who does not
-shrink at the wildest excess of emotional unrestraint, he
-passes over no less abruptly to Catholicism and its rigid
-outer discipline. This last phase of Schlegel has at least
-this much in common with his phase of revolt, that it
-carried with it a cult of the Middle Ages. The delicate
-point to determine about Friedrich Schlegel and many
-other romanticists is why they finally came to place their
-land of heart’s desire in the Middle Ages rather than in
-Greece. In treating this question one needs to take at least
-a glance at the modification that Herder (whose influence
-on German romanticism is very great) gave to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-primitivism of Rousseau. Cultivate your genius, Rousseau
-said in substance, your ineffable difference from
-other men, and look back with longing to the ideal moment
-of this genius&mdash;the age of childhood, when your
-spontaneous self was not as yet cramped by conventions
-or “sicklied o’er by the pale cast of thought.” Cultivate
-your national genius, Herder said in substance, and look
-back wistfully at the golden beginnings of your nationality
-when it was still naïve and “natural,” when poetry
-instead of being concocted painfully by individuals was
-still the unconscious emanation of the folk. Herder indeed
-expands primitivism along these lines into a whole
-philosophy of history. The romantic notion of the origin
-of the epic springs out of this soil, a notion that is probably
-at least as remote from the facts as the neo-classical
-notion&mdash;and that is saying a great deal. Any German
-who followed Herder in the extension that he gave to
-Rousseau’s views about genius and spontaneity could not
-only see the folk soul mirrored at least as naïvely in the
-“Nibelungenlied” as in the “Iliad,” but by becoming
-a mediæval enthusiast he could have the superadded
-pleasure of indulging not merely personal but racial
-and national idiosyncrasy. Primitivistic mediævalism is
-therefore an important ingredient, especially in the case
-of Germany, in romantic nationalism&mdash;the type that
-has flourished beyond all measure during the past century.
-Again, though one might, like Hölderlin, cherish an
-infinite longing for the Greeks, the Greeks themselves,
-at least the Greeks of Schiller, did not experience longing;
-but this fact came to be felt more and more by F.
-Schlegel and other romanticists as an inferiority, showing
-as it did that they were content with the finite. As for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-the neo-classicists who were supposed to be the followers
-of the Greeks, their case was even worse; they not only
-lacked aspiration and infinitude, but were sunk in artificiality,
-and had moreover become so analytical that they
-must perforce see things in “disconnection dead and
-spiritless.” The men of the Middle Ages, on the other
-hand, as F. Schlegel saw them, were superior to the neo-classicists
-in being naïve; their spontaneity and unity of
-feeling had not yet suffered from artificiality, or been
-disintegrated by analysis.<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> At the same time they were
-superior to the Greeks in having aspiration and the
-sense of the infinite. The very irregularity of their art
-testified to this infinitude. It is not uncommon in the
-romantic movement thus to assume that because one has
-very little form one must therefore have a great deal
-of “soul.” F. Schlegel so extended his definition of the
-mediæval spirit as to make it include writers like Shakespeare
-and Cervantes, who seemed to him to be vital and
-free from formalism. The new nationalism was also made
-to turn to the profit of the Middle Ages. Each nation in
-shaking off the yoke of classical imitation and getting
-back to its mediæval past, was recovering what was
-primitive in its own genius, was substituting what was
-indigenous for what was alien to it.</p>
-
-<p>The person who did more than any one else to give
-international currency to the views of the Schlegels about
-classic and romantic and to their primitivistic mediævalism
-was Madame de Staël in her book on Germany. It
-was with special reference to Madame de Staël and her
-influence that Daunou wrote the following passage in his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-introduction to La Harpe, a passage that gives curious
-evidence of the early attitude of French literary conservatives
-towards the new school:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“One of the services that he [La Harpe] should render nowadays
-is to fortify young people against vain and gothic doctrines which
-would reduce the fine arts to childhood if they could ever gain credit
-in the land of Racine and Voltaire. La Harpe uttered a warning against
-these doctrines when he discovered the first germs of them in the
-books of Diderot, Mercier and some other innovators. Yet these
-writers were far from having professed fully the barbaric or childish
-system which has been taught and developed among us for a few
-years past; it is of foreign origin; it had no name in our language and
-the name that has been given to it is susceptible in fact of no precise
-meaning. Romanticism, for thus it is called, was imported into our
-midst along with Kantism, with mysticism and other doctrines of the
-same stamp which collectively might be named obscurantism. These
-are words which La Harpe was happy enough not to hear. He was
-accustomed to too much clearness in his ideas and expression to use
-such words or even to understand them. He did not distinguish two
-literatures. The literature that nature and society have created for us
-and which for three thousand years past has been established and
-preserved and reproduced by masterpieces appeared to him alone
-worthy of a Frenchman of the eighteenth century. He did not foresee
-that it would be reduced some day to being only a particular kind of
-literature, tolerated or reproved under the name of classic, and that
-its noblest productions would be put on the same level as the formless
-sketches of uncultivated genius and untried talents. Yet more than
-once decadence has thus been taken for an advance, and a retrograde
-movement for progress. Art is so difficult. It is quicker to abandon it
-and to owe everything to your genius. … Because perfection calls for
-austere toil you maintain that it is contrary to nature. This is a system
-that suits at once indolence and vanity. Is anything more needed
-to make it popular, especially when it has as auxiliary an obscure
-philosophy which is termed transcendent or transcendental? That
-is just the way sound literature fell into decline beginning with the
-end of the first century of the Christian era. It became extinct only
-to revive after a long period of darkness and barbarism; and that is
-how it will fall into decline again if great examples and sage lessons
-should ever lose their authority.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The general public in England became at least vaguely
-aware of the new movement with the translation of
-Madame de Staël’s “Germany” (1813) and A. W.
-Schlegel’s “Dramatic Art and Literature” (1815).
-Byron wrote in his reply to Bowles (1821): “Schlegel
-and Madame de Staël have endeavored to reduce poetry
-to <i>two</i> systems, classical and romantic. The effect is only
-beginning.”</p>
-
-<p>The distinction between classic and romantic worked
-out by the Schlegels and spread abroad by Madame de
-Staël was, then, largely associated with a certain type
-of mediævalism. Nevertheless one cannot insist too
-strongly that the new school deserved to be called romantic,
-not because it was mediæval, but because it displayed
-a certain quality of imagination in its mediævalism.
-The longing for the Middle Ages is merely a very
-frequent form of nostalgia, and nostalgia I have defined as
-the pursuit of pure illusion. No doubt a man may be
-mediæval in his leanings and yet very free from nostalgia.
-He may, for example, prefer St. Thomas Aquinas to any
-modern philosopher on grounds that are the very reverse
-of romantic; and in the attitude of any particular
-person towards the Middle Ages, romantic and unromantic
-elements may be mingled in almost any conceivable
-proportion; and the same may be said of any past epoch
-that one prefers to the present. Goethe, for instance, as
-has been remarked, took flight from his own reality,
-but he did not, like the romanticists, take flight from all
-reality. The classical world in which Goethe dwelt in
-imagination during his latter years, in the midst of a
-very unclassical environment, was to some extent at least
-real, though one can discern even in the case of Goethe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-the danger of a classicism that is too aloof from the here
-and now. But the mediævalist, in so far as he is romantic,
-does not turn to a mediæval reality from a real but distasteful
-present. Here as elsewhere his first requirement
-is not that his “vision” should be true, but that it should
-be rich and radiant; and the more “ideal” the vision becomes
-in this sense, the wider the gap that opens between
-poetry and life.</p>
-
-<p>We are thus brought back to the problem of the romantic
-imagination or, one may term it, the eccentric imagination.
-The classical imagination, I have said, is not free
-thus to fly off at a tangent, to wander wild in some empire
-of chimeras. It has a centre, it is at work in the service of
-reality. With reference to this real centre, it is seeking to
-disengage what is normal and representative from the
-welter of the actual. It does not evade the actual, but
-does select from it and seek to impose upon it something
-of the proportion and symmetry of the model to which
-it is looking up and which it is imitating. To say that the
-classicist (and I am speaking of the classicist at his best)
-gets at his reality with the aid of the imagination is but
-another way of saying that he perceives his reality only
-through a veil of illusion. The creator of this type
-achieves work in which illusion and reality are inseparably
-blended, work which gives the “illusion of a higher
-reality.”</p>
-
-<p>Proportionate and decorous in this sense æsthetic
-romanticism can in no wise be, but it does not follow that
-the only art of which the Rousseauist is capable is an
-art of idyllic dreaming. Schiller makes a remark about
-Rousseau that goes very nearly to the heart of the matter:
-he is either, says Schiller, dwelling on the delights of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-nature or else avenging her. He is either, that is, idyllic
-or satirical. Now Rousseau himself says that he was not
-inclined to satire and in a sense this is true. He would
-have been incapable of lampooning Voltaire in the same
-way that Voltaire lampooned him, though one might
-indeed wish to be lampooned by Voltaire rather than to
-be presented as Rousseau has presented certain persons
-in his “Confessions.” In all that large portion of Rousseau’s
-writing, however, in which he portrays the polite
-society of his time and shows how colorless and corrupt
-it is compared with his pastoral dream (for his “nature,”
-as I have said, is only a pastoral dream) he is highly
-satirical. In general, he is not restrained, at least in the
-“Confessions,” from the trivial and even the ignoble
-detail by any weak regard for decorum. At best decorum
-seems to him a hollow convention, at worst the
-“varnish of vice” and the “mask of hypocrisy.” Every
-reader of the “Confessions” must be struck by the
-presence, occasionally on the same page, of passages
-that look forward to Lamartine, and of other passages
-that seem an anticipation rather of Zola. The passage
-in which Rousseau relates how he was abruptly brought
-to earth from his “angelic loves”<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> is typical. In short
-Rousseau oscillates between an Arcadian vision that is
-radiant but unreal, and a photographic and literal and
-often sordid reality. He does not so use his imagination
-as to disengage the real from the welter of the actual
-and so achieve something that strikes one still as nature
-but a selected and ennobled nature.<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> “It is a very odd
-circumstance,” says Rousseau,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span> “that my imagination is
-never more agreeably active than when my outer conditions
-are the least agreeable, and that, on the contrary,
-it is less cheerful when everything is cheerful about me.
-My poor head cannot subordinate itself to things. It
-cannot embellish, it wishes to create. Real objects are
-reflected in it at best such as they are; it can adorn only
-imaginary objects. If I wish to paint the springtime I
-must be in winter,” etc.</p>
-
-<p>This passage may be said to foreshadow the two types
-of art and literature that have been prevalent since
-Rousseau&mdash;romantic art and the so-called realistic
-art that tended to supplant it towards the middle of
-the nineteenth century.<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> This so-called realism does not
-represent any fundamental change of direction as compared
-with the earlier romanticism; it is simply, as some
-one has put it, romanticism going on all fours. The
-extreme of romantic unreality has always tended to produce
-a sharp recoil. As the result of the wandering of
-the imagination in its own realm of chimeras, one finally
-comes to feel the need of refreshing one’s sense of fact;
-and the more trivial the fact, the more certain one is that
-one’s feet are once more planted on <i>terra firma</i>. Don
-Quixote is working for the triumph of Sancho Panza.
-Besides this tendency of one extreme to produce the
-other, there are special reasons that I shall point out more
-fully later for the close relationship of the romanticism
-and the so-called realism of the nineteenth century.
-They are both merely different aspects of naturalism.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-What binds together realism and romanticism is their
-common repudiation of decorum as something external
-and artificial. Once get rid of decorum, or what amounts
-to the same thing, the whole body of “artificial” conventions,
-and what will result is, according to the romanticist,
-Arcadia. But what actually emerges with the progressive
-weakening of the principle of restraint is <i>la bête
-humaine</i>. The Rousseauist begins by walking through the
-world as though it were an enchanted garden, and then
-with the inevitable clash between his ideal and the real
-he becomes morose and embittered. Since men have
-turned out not to be indiscriminately good he inclines
-to look upon them as indiscriminately bad and to portray
-them as such. At the bottom of much so-called realism
-therefore is a special type of satire, a satire that is the
-product of violent emotional disillusion. The collapse of
-the Revolution of 1848 produced a plentiful crop of disillusion
-of this kind. No men had ever been more convinced
-of the loftiness of their idealism than the Utopists
-of this period, or failed more ignominiously when put to
-the test. All that remained, many argued, was to turn
-from an ideal that had proved so disappointing to the
-real, and instead of dreaming about human nature to
-observe men as coolly, in Flaubert’s phrase, as though
-they were mastodons or crocodiles. But what lurks most
-often behind this pretence to a cold scientific impassiveness
-in observing human nature is a soured and cynical
-emotionalism and a distinctly romantic type of imagination.
-The imagination is still idealistic, still straining,
-that is, away from the real, only its idealism has undergone
-a strange inversion; instead of exaggerating the loveliness
-it exaggerates the ugliness of human nature; it finds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-a sort of morose satisfaction in building for itself not
-castles but dungeons in Spain. What I am saying applies
-especially to the French realists who are more logical
-in their disillusion than the men of other nations. They
-often establish the material environment of their heroes
-with photographic literalness, but in their dealings with
-what should be the specifically human side of these
-characters they often resemble Rousseau at his worst:
-they put pure logic into the service of pure emotion, and
-this is a way of achieving, not the real, but a maximum
-of unreality. The so-called realistic writers abound in
-extreme examples of the romantic imagination. The
-peasants of Zola are not real, they are an hallucination.
-If a man is thus to let his imagination run riot, he might,
-as Lemaître complains, have imagined something more
-agreeable.</p>
-
-<p>The same kinship between realism and romanticism
-might be brought out in a writer whom Zola claimed as
-his master&mdash;Balzac. I do not refer to the side of Balzac
-that is related to what the French call <i>le bas romantisme</i>&mdash;his
-lapses into the weird and the melodramatic, his
-occasional suggestions of the claptrap of Anne Radcliffe
-and the Gothic romance&mdash;but to his general thesis and
-his handling of it. Balzac’s attitude towards the society of
-his time is, like the attitude of Rousseau towards the
-society of his time, satirical, but on entirely different
-grounds: he would show the havoc wrought in this society
-by its revolutionary emancipation from central control
-of the kind that had been provided traditionally by the
-monarchy and the Catholic Church, and the consequent
-disruption of the family by the violent and egoistic
-expansion of the individual along the lines of his ruling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-passion. But Balzac’s imagination is not on the side of
-his thesis; not, that is, on the side of the principle of
-control; on the contrary, it revels in its vision of a world
-in which men are overstepping all ethical bounds in their
-quest of power and pleasure, of a purely naturalistic
-world that is governed solely by the law of cunning and
-the law of force. His imagination is so fascinated by this
-vision that, like the imagination of Rousseau, though in
-an entirely different way, he simply parts company with
-reality. Judged by the ultimate quality of his imagination,
-and this, let me repeat, is always the chief thing to
-consider in a creative artist, Balzac is a sort of inverted
-idealist. Compared with the black fictions he conjures
-up in his painting of Paris, the actual Paris seems pale
-and insipid. His Paris is not real in short, but an hallucination&mdash;a
-lurid land of heart’s desire. As Leslie Stephen
-puts it, for Balzac Paris is hell, but then hell is the
-only place worth living in. The empire of chimeras over
-which he holds sway is about as far on one side of reality
-as George Sand’s kingdom of dreams is on the other.
-George Sand, more perhaps than any other writer of her
-time, continues Rousseau in his purely idyllic manner.
-Her idealized peasants are not any further from the truth
-and are certainly more agreeable than the peasants of
-Balzac, who foreshadow the peasants of Zola.</p>
-
-<p>The writer, however, who shows the conflict between
-the romantic imagination and the real better than either
-Balzac or Zola, better than any other writer perhaps of
-the modern French movement, is Flaubert. The fondness
-of this founder of realism for reality may be inferred
-from a passage in one of his letters to George Sand:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span> “I
-had in my very youth a complete presentiment of life.
-It was like a sickly kitchen smell escaping from a basement
-window.” In his attitude towards the society of his
-time, he is, in the same sense, but in a far greater degree
-than Rousseau, satirical. The stupidity and mediocrity
-of the bourgeois are his target, just as Rousseau’s target
-is the artificiality of the drawing-room. At the same time
-that he shrinks back with nausea from this reality, Flaubert
-is like Gautier “full of nostalgias,” even the nostalgia
-of the Middle Ages. “I am a Catholic,” he exclaims,
-“I have in my heart something of the green ooze of the
-Norman Cathedrals.” Yet he cannot acquiesce in a mediæval
-or any other dream. Even Rousseau says that he
-was “tormented at times by the nothingness of his chimeras.”
-Flaubert was tormented far more by the nothingness
-of his. Perhaps indeed the predominant flavor in
-Flaubert’s writing as a whole is that of an acrid disillusion.
-He portrays satirically the real and at the same time
-mocks at the ideal that he craves emotionally and imaginatively
-(this is only one of the innumerable forms assumed
-by the Rousseauistic warfare between the head
-and the heart). He oscillates rapidly between the pole
-of realism as he conceives it, and the pole of romance,
-and so far as any serious philosophy is concerned, is
-left suspended in the void. Madame Bovary is the very
-type of the Rousseauistic idealist, misunderstood in
-virtue of her exquisite faculty of feeling. She aspires to
-a “love beyond all loves,” an infinite satisfaction that
-her commonplace husband and environment quite deny
-her. At bottom Flaubert’s heart is with Madame Bovary.
-“I am Madame Bovary,” he exclaims. Yet he
-exposes pitilessly the “nothingness of her chimeras,”
-and pursues her to the very dregs of her disillusion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-I have already mentioned Flaubert’s cult for “Don
-Quixote.” His intellectual origins were all there, he
-says; he had known it by heart even when a boy. It
-has been said that “Madame Bovary” bears the same
-relationship to æsthetic romanticism that “Don Quixote”
-does to the romanticism of actual adventure of
-the Middle Ages. Yet “Don Quixote” is the most
-genial, “Madame Bovary” the least genial of masterpieces.
-This difference comes out no less clearly in a
-comparison of M. Homais with Sancho Panza than in
-a comparison of Madame Bovary with the Knight, and
-is so fundamental as to throw doubt on the soundness of
-the whole analogy.</p>
-
-<p>In M. Homais and like figures Flaubert simply means
-to symbolize contemporary life and the immeasurable
-abyss of platitude in which it is losing itself through its
-lack of imagination and ideal. Yet this same platitude
-exercises on him a horrid fascination. For his execration
-of the philistine is the nearest approach in his idealism
-to a positive content, to an escape from sheer emptiness
-and unreality. This execration must therefore be cherished
-if he is to remain convinced of his own superiority.
-“If it were not for my indignation,” he confesses in one
-place, “I should fall flat.” Unfortunately we come to
-resemble what we habitually contemplate. “By dint of
-railing at idiots,” says Flaubert, “one runs the risk of
-becoming idiotic one’s self.”</p>
-
-<p>In his discourse on the “Immortality of the Soul”
-(1659) Henry More speaks of “that imagination which
-is most free, such as we use in romantic inventions.”
-The price that the romantic imagination pays for its
-freedom should by this time be obvious: the freer it becomes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-the farther it gets away from reality. We have
-seen that the special form of unreality encouraged by
-the æsthetic romanticism of Rousseau is the dream of the
-simple life, the return to a nature that never existed, and
-that this dream made its special appeal to an age that
-was suffering from an excess of artificiality and conventionalism.
-Before entering upon the next stage of our
-subject it might be well to consider for a moment wherein
-the facts of primitive life, so far as we can ascertain
-them, differ from Rousseau’s dream of primitive life;
-why we are justified in assuming that the noble savage
-of Rousseau, or the Greek of Schiller, or Hölderlin, or the
-man of the Middle Ages of Novalis never had any equivalent
-in reality. More or less primitive men have existed
-and still exist and have been carefully studied. Some of
-them actually recall by various traits, their gentleness,
-for example, Rousseau’s aboriginal man, and the natural
-pity that is supposed to guide him. Why then will any
-one familiar with the facts of aboriginal life smile when
-Rousseau speaks of the savage “attached to no place,
-having no prescribed task, obeying no one, having no
-other law than his own will,”<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> and therefore displaying
-independence and initiative? The answer is of course that
-genuine savages are, with the possible exception of children,
-the most conventional and imitative of beings.
-What one takes to be natural in them is often the result
-of a long and, in the Rousseauistic sense, artificial
-discipline. The tendency to take for pure and unspoiled
-nature what is in fact a highly modified nature is one that
-assumes many forms. “When you see,” says Rousseau,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-“in the happiest people in the world bands of peasants
-regulate the affairs of state under an oak-tree and always
-behave sensibly, can you keep from despising the refinements
-of other nations which make themselves illustrious
-and miserable with so much art and mystery?” Rousseau
-is viewing these peasants through the Arcadian glamour.
-In much the same way Emerson saw a proof of the consonance
-of democracy with human nature in the working
-of the New England town-meeting. But both Rousseau’s
-Swiss and Emerson’s New Englanders had been moulded
-by generations of austere religious discipline and so throw
-little light on the relation of democracy to human nature
-in itself.</p>
-
-<p>A somewhat similar illusion is that of the man who
-journeys into a far country and enjoys in the highest
-degree the sense of romantic strangeness. He has escaped
-from the convention of his own society and is inclined
-to look on the men and women he meets in the foreign
-land as Arcadian apparitions. But these men and women
-have not escaped from <i>their</i> convention. On the contrary,
-what most delights him in them (for example,
-what most delighted Lafcadio Hearn in the Japanese)
-may be the result of an extraordinarily minute and
-tyrannical discipline imposed in the name of the general
-sense upon the impulses of the individual.</p>
-
-<p>The relation of convention to primitive life is so well
-understood nowadays that the Rousseauist has reversed
-his argument. Since primitive folk (let us say the Bushmen
-of Australia) are more conventional than the Parisian
-and Londoner we may infer that at some time in
-the future when the ideal is at last achieved upon earth,
-conventions will have disappeared entirely. But this is
-simply to transfer the Golden Age from the past to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-future, and also to miss the real problem: for there is a
-real problem&mdash;perhaps indeed the gravest of all problems&mdash;involved
-in the relation of the individual to convention.
-If we are to grasp the nature of this problem we
-should perceive first of all that the significant contrast
-is not that between conditions more or less primitive
-and civilization, but that between a civilization that
-does not question its conventions and a civilization that
-has on the contrary grown self-conscious and critical.
-Thus the Homeric Greeks, set up by Schiller as exemplars
-of the simple life, were plainly subject to the conventions
-of an advanced civilization. The Periclean Greeks
-were also highly civilized, but unlike the Homeric
-Greeks, were becoming self-conscious and critical. In the
-same way the European thirteenth century, in some
-respects the most civilized that the world has seen, was
-governed by a great convention that imposed very strict
-limits upon the liberty of the individual. The critical
-spirit was already awake and tugging at the leashes of
-the outer authority that confined it, but it did not actually
-break them. Dante and St. Thomas Aquinas did not,
-for example, inquire into the basis of the mediæval convention
-in the same way that Socrates and the sophists
-inquired into the traditional opinions of Greece. But in
-the eighteenth century, especially in France, and from
-that time down to the present day, the revolt against convention
-has assumed proportions quite comparable to
-anything that took place in ancient Greece. Perhaps no
-other age has witnessed so many individuals who were,
-like Berlioz, eager to make all traditional barriers crack
-in the interest of their “genius” and its full expression.
-The state of nature in the name of which Rousseau himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-assailed convention, though in itself only a chimera,
-a mere Arcadian projection upon the void, did indeed
-tend in a rationalistic pseudo-classic age, to new forms
-of imaginative activity. In the form that concerns us
-especially the imagination is free to give its magic and
-glamour and infinitude to the emancipated emotions.
-This type of romanticism did not result in any recovery
-of the supposed primitive virtues, but it did bring about
-a revaluation of the received notions of morality that
-can scarcely be studied too carefully.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROMANTIC MORALITY: THE IDEAL</span></h2>
-
-<p>The period that began in the late eighteenth century and
-in the midst of which we are still living has witnessed an
-almost unparalleled triumph, as I have just said, of the
-sense of the individual (<i>sens propre</i>) over the general
-sense of mankind (<i>sens commun</i>). Even the collectivistic
-schemes that have been opposed to individualism during
-this period are themselves, judged by traditional standards,
-violently individualistic. Now the word individualism
-needs as much as any other general term to be
-treated Socratically: we need in the interests of our
-present subject to discriminate between different varieties
-of individualism. Perhaps as good a working
-classification as any is to distinguish three main varieties:
-a man may wish to act, or think, or feel, differently
-from other men, and those who are individualistic in
-any one of these three main ways may have very little
-in common with one another. To illustrate concretely,
-Milton’s plea in his “Areopagitica” for freedom of conscience
-makes above all for individualism of action. (<i>La
-foi qui n’agit pas est-ce une foi sincère?</i>) Pierre Bayle, on
-the other hand, pleads in his Dictionary and elsewhere
-for tolerance, not so much because he wishes to act or
-feel in his own way as because he wishes to think his own
-thoughts. Rousseau is no less obviously ready to subordinate
-both thought and action to sensibility. His message
-is summed up once for all in the exclamation of Faust,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-“Feeling is all.” He urges war on the general sense only
-because of the restrictions it imposes on the free expansion
-of his emotions and the enhancing of these emotions
-by his imagination.</p>
-
-<p>Now the warfare that Rousseau and the individualists
-of feeling have waged on the general sense has meant in
-practice a warfare on two great traditions, the classical
-and the Christian. I have already pointed out that these
-two traditions, though both holding the idea of imitation,
-were not entirely in accord with one another, that the
-imitation of Horace differs widely from the imitation of
-Christ. Yet their diverging from one another is as nothing
-compared with their divergence from the individualism of
-the primitivist. For the man who imitates Christ in any
-traditional sense this world is not an Arcadian dream but
-a place of trial and probation. “Take up your cross and
-follow me.” The following of this great exemplar required
-that the instinctive self, which Rousseau would indulge,
-should be either sternly rebuked or else mortified utterly.
-So far from Nature and God being one, the natural man
-is so corrupt, according to the more austere Christian,
-that the gap between him and the divine can be traversed
-only by a miracle of grace. He should therefore live in
-fear and trembling as befits a being upon whom rests the
-weight of the divine displeasure. “It is an humble thing
-to be a man.” Humility indeed is, in the phrase of Jeremy
-Taylor, the special ornament and jewel of the Christian
-religion, and one is tempted to add, of all religion in so
-far as it is genuine. Genuine religion must always have in
-some form the sense of a deep inner cleft between man’s
-ordinary self and the divine. But some Christians were
-more inclined from the start, as we can see in the extreme<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-forms of the doctrine of grace, to push their humility to
-an utter despair of human nature. The historical explanation
-of this despair is obvious: it is a sharp rebound
-from the pagan riot; an excessive immersion in this
-world led to an excess of otherworldliness. At the same
-time the conviction as to man’s helplessness was instilled
-into those, who, like St. Augustine, had witnessed in
-some of its phases the slow disintegration of the Roman
-Empire. Human nature had gone bankrupt; and for
-centuries it needed to be administered, if I may continue
-the metaphor, in receivership. The doctrine of grace was
-admirably adapted to this end.</p>
-
-<p>The pagan riot from which the church reacted so
-sharply, was not, however, the whole of the ancient
-civilization. I have already said that there was at the
-heart of this civilization at its best a great idea&mdash;the
-idea of proportionateness. The ancients were in short
-not merely naturalistic but humanistic, and the idea of
-proportion is just as fundamental in humanism as is
-humility in religion. Christianity, one scarcely need add,
-incorporated within itself, however disdainfully, many
-humanistic elements from Greek and Roman culture.
-Yet it is none the less true that in his horror at the pagan
-worldliness the Christian tended to fly into the opposite
-extreme of unworldliness, and in this clash between
-naturalism and supernaturalism the purely human
-virtues of mediation were thrust more or less into the
-background. Yet by its very defect on the humanistic
-side the doctrine of grace was perhaps all the better
-fitted for the administration of human nature in receivership.
-For thus to make man entirely distrustful of himself
-and entirely dependent on God, meant in practice to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-make him entirely dependent on the Church. Man became
-ignorant and fanatical in the early Christian centuries,
-but he also became humble, and in the situation
-then existing that was after all the main thing. The
-Church as receiver for human nature was thus enabled
-to rescue civilization from the wreck of pagan antiquity
-and the welter of the barbarian invasions. But by the
-very fact that the bases of life in this world gradually
-grew more secure man became less otherworldly. He
-gradually recovered some degree of confidence in himself.
-He gave increasing attention to that side of himself that
-the ascetic Christian had repressed. The achievements
-of the thirteenth century which mark perhaps the culmination
-of Christian civilization were very splendid
-not only from a religious but also from a humanistic
-point of view. But although the critical spirit was already
-beginning to awake, it did not at that time, as I
-have already said, actually break away from the tutelage
-of the Church.</p>
-
-<p>This emancipation of human nature from theological
-restraint took place in far greater measure at the Renaissance.
-Human nature showed itself tired of being treated
-as a bankrupt, of being governed from without and from
-above. It aspired to become autonomous. There was in
-so far a strong trend in many quarters towards individualism.
-This rupture with external authority meant very
-diverse things in practice. For some who, in Lionardo’s
-phrase, had caught a glimpse of the antique symmetry
-it meant a revival of genuine humanism; for others it
-meant rather a revival of the pagan and naturalistic side
-of antiquity. Thus Rabelais, in his extreme opposition
-to the monkish ideal, already proclaims, like Rousseau,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-the intrinsic excellence of man, while Calvin and others
-attempted to revive the primitive austerity of Christianity
-that had been corrupted by the formalism of Rome.
-In short, naturalistic, humanistic, and religious elements
-are mingled in almost every conceivable proportion in
-the vast and complex movement known as the Renaissance;
-all these elements indeed are often mingled in the
-same individual. The later Renaissance finally arrived
-at what one is tempted to call the Jesuitical compromise.
-There was a general revamping of dogma and
-outer authority, helped forward by a society that had
-taken alarm at the excesses of the emancipated individual.
-If the individual consented to surrender his moral
-autonomy, the Church for its part consented to make
-religion comparatively easy and pleasant for him, to
-adapt it by casuistry and other devices to a human nature
-that was determined once for all to take a less severe
-and ascetic view of life. One might thus live inwardly to
-a great extent on the naturalistic level while outwardly
-going through the motions of a profound piety. There is
-an unmistakable analogy between the hollowness of a religion
-of this type and the hollowness that one feels in
-so much neo-classical decorum. There is also a formalistic
-taint in the educational system worked out by the
-Jesuits&mdash;a system in all respects so ingenious and in
-some respects so admirable. The Greek and especially
-the Latin classics are taught in such a way as to become
-literary playthings rather than the basis of a philosophy
-of life; a humanism is thus encouraged that is external
-and rhetorical rather than vital, and this humanism is
-combined with a religion that tends to stress submission
-to outer authority at the expense of inwardness and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-individuality. The reproach has been brought against this
-system that it is equally unfitted to form a pagan hero
-or a Christian saint. The reply to it was Rousseau’s educational
-naturalism&mdash;his exaltation of the spontaneity
-and genius of the child.</p>
-
-<p>Voltaire says that every Protestant is a Pope when he
-has his Bible in his hand. But in practice Protestantism
-has been very far from encouraging so complete a subordination
-of the general sense to the sense of the individual.
-In the period that elapsed between the first
-forward push of individualism in the Renaissance and
-the second forward push in the eighteenth century, each
-important Protestant group worked out its creed or
-convention and knew how to make it very uncomfortable
-for any one of its members who rebelled against its
-authority. Protestant education was also, like that of the
-Jesuits, an attempt to harmonize Christian and classical
-elements.</p>
-
-<p>I have already spoken elsewhere of what was menacing
-all these attempts, Protestant as well as Catholic, to revive
-the principle of authority, to put the general sense
-once more on a traditional and dogmatic basis and impose
-it on the sense of the individual. The spirit of free
-scientific enquiry in the Renaissance had inspired great
-naturalists like Kepler and Galileo, and had had its
-prophet in Bacon. So far from suffering any setback in
-the seventeenth century, science had been adding conquest
-to conquest. The inordinate self-confidence of the
-modern man would seem to be in large measure an outcome
-of this steady advance of scientific discovery, just
-as surely as the opposite, the extreme humility that
-appears in the doctrine of grace, reflects the despair of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-those who had witnessed the disintegration of the Roman
-Empire. The word humility, if used at all nowadays,
-means that one has a mean opinion of one’s self in comparison
-with other men, and not that one perceives the
-weakness and nothingness of human nature in itself in
-comparison with what is above it. But it is not merely
-the self-confidence inspired by science that has undermined
-the traditional disciplines, humanistic and religious,
-and the attempts to mediate between them on a
-traditional basis; it is not merely that science has fascinated
-man’s imagination, stimulated his wonder and curiosity
-beyond all bounds and drawn him away from the
-study of his own nature and its special problems to the
-study of the physical realm. What has been even more
-decisive in the overthrow of the traditional disciplines
-is that science has won its triumphs not by accepting
-dogma and tradition but by repudiating them, by dealing
-with the natural law, not on a traditional but on a
-positive and critical basis. The next step that might
-logically have been taken, one might suppose, would have
-been to put the human law likewise on a positive and
-critical basis. On the contrary the very notion that man
-is subject to two laws has been obscured. The truths of
-humanism and religion, being very much bound up with
-certain traditional forms, have been rejected along with
-these forms as obsolescent prejudice, and the attempt
-has been made to treat man as entirely the creature of
-the natural law. This means in practice that instead of
-dying to his ordinary self, as the austere Christian demands,
-or instead of imposing a law of decorum upon
-his ordinary self, as the humanist demands, man has
-only to develop his ordinary self freely.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At the beginning, then, of the slow process that I have
-been tracing down in briefest outline from mediæval
-Christianity, we find a pure supernaturalism; at the end,
-a pure naturalism. If we are to understand the relationship
-of this naturalism to the rise of a romantic morality, we
-need to go back, as we have done in our study of original
-genius, to the England of the early eighteenth century.
-Perhaps the most important intermediary stage in the
-passage from a pure supernaturalism to a pure naturalism
-is the great deistic movement which flourished especially
-in the England of this period. Deism indeed is no new
-thing. Deistic elements may be found even in the philosophy
-of the Middle Ages. But for practical purposes one
-does not need in one’s study of deism to go behind English
-thinkers like Shaftesbury and his follower Hutcheson.
-Shaftesbury is a singularly significant figure. He is
-not only the authentic precursor of innumerable naturalistic
-moralists in England, France, and Germany, but
-one may also trace in his writings the connection between
-modern naturalistic morality and ancient naturalistic
-morality in its two main forms&mdash;Stoic and Epicurean.
-The strict Christian supernaturalist had maintained
-that the divine can be known to man only by the outer
-miracle of revelation, supplemented by the inner miracle
-of grace. The deist maintains, on the contrary, that God
-reveals himself also through outer nature which he has
-fitted exquisitely to the needs of man, and that inwardly
-man may be guided aright by his unaided thoughts
-and feelings (according to the predominance of thought
-or feeling the deist is rationalistic or sentimental). Man,
-in short, is naturally good and nature herself is beneficent
-and beautiful. The deist finally pushes this harmony in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-God and man and nature so far that the three are practically
-merged. At a still more advanced stage God disappears,
-leaving only nature and man as a modification
-of nature, and the deist gives way to the pantheist who
-may also be either rationalistic or emotional. The pantheist
-differs above all from the deist in that he would
-dethrone man from his privileged place in creation, which
-means in practice that he denies final causes. He no
-longer believes, for example, like that sentimental deist
-and disciple of Rousseau, Bernardin de St. Pierre, that
-Providence has arranged everything in nature with an
-immediate eye to man’s welfare; that the markings on
-the melon, for instance, “seem to show that it is destined
-for the family table.”<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a></p>
-
-<p>Rousseau himself, though eschewing this crude appeal
-to final causes, scarcely got in theory at least beyond
-the stage of emotional deism. The process I have been
-describing is illustrated better in some aspects by
-Diderot who began as a translator of Shaftesbury and
-who later got so far beyond mere deism that he anticipates
-the main ideas of the modern evolutionist and
-determinist. Diderot is at once an avowed disciple of
-Bacon, a scientific utilitarian in short, and also a believer
-in the emancipation of the emotions. Rousseau’s attack on
-science is profoundly significant for other reasons, but
-it is unfortunate in that it obscures the connection that
-is so visible in Diderot between the two sides of the naturalistic
-movement. If men had not been so heartened
-by scientific progress they would have been less ready, we
-may be sure, to listen to Rousseau when he affirmed that
-they were naturally good. There was another reason why<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-men were eager to be told that they were naturally good
-and that they could therefore trust the spontaneous
-overflow of their emotions. This reason is to be sought in
-the inevitable recoil from the opposite doctrine of total
-depravity and the mortal constraint that it had put on
-the instincts of the natural man. I have said that many
-churchmen, notably the Jesuits, sought to dissimulate
-the full austerity of Christian doctrine and thus retain
-their authority over a world that was moving away from
-austerity and so threatening to escape them. But other
-Catholics, notably the Jansenists, as well as Protestants
-like the Calvinists, were for insisting to the full on man’s
-corruption and for seeking to maintain on this basis
-what one is tempted to call a theological reign of terror.
-One whole side of Rousseau’s religion can be understood
-only as a protest against the type of Christianity that is
-found in a Pascal or a Jonathan Edwards. The legend
-of the abyss that Pascal saw always yawning at his side
-has at least a symbolical value. It is the wont of man to
-oscillate violently between extremes, and each extreme
-is not only bad in itself but even worse by the opposite
-extreme that it engenders. From a God who is altogether
-fearful, men are ready to flee to a God who is altogether
-loving, or it might be more correct to say altogether
-lovely. “Listen, my children,” said Mother Angélique
-of Port-Royal to her nuns a few hours before her death,
-“listen well to what I say. Most people do not know
-what death is, and never give the matter a thought. But
-my worst forebodings were as nothing compared with the
-terrors now upon me.” In deliberate opposition to such
-expressions of the theological terror, Rousseau imagined
-the elaborate complacency and self-satisfaction of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-dying Julie, whose end was not only calm but æsthetic
-(<i>le dernier jour de sa vie en fut aussi le plus charmant</i>).</p>
-
-<p>A sensible member of Edwards’s congregation at
-Northampton might conceivably have voted with the
-majority to dismiss him, not only because he objected to
-this spiritual terrorism in itself, but also because he saw
-the opposite extreme that it would help to precipitate&mdash;the
-boundless sycophancy of human nature from which
-we are now suffering.</p>
-
-<p>The effusiveness, then, that began to appear in the
-eighteenth century is one sign of the progress of naturalism,
-which is itself due to the new confidence inspired in
-man by scientific discovery coupled with a revulsion
-from the austerity of Christian dogma. This new effusiveness
-is also no less palpably a revulsion from the excess
-of artificial decorum and this revulsion was in turn
-greatly promoted by the rapid increase in power and
-influence at this time of the middle class. Reserve is
-traditionally aristocratic. The plebeian is no less traditionally
-expansive. It cannot be said that the decorous
-reserve of the French aristocracy that had been more
-or less imitated by other European aristocracies was in
-all respects commendable. According to this decorum
-a man should not love his wife, or if he did, should be
-careful not to betray the fact in public. It was also good
-“form” to live apart from one’s children and bad form
-to display one’s affection for them. The protest against
-a decorum that repressed even the domestic emotions
-may perhaps best be followed in the rise of the middle
-class drama. According to strict neo-classic decorum only
-the aristocracy had the right to appear in tragedy,
-whereas the man of the middle class was relegated to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-comedy and the man of the people to farce. The intermediate
-types of play that multiply in the eighteenth
-century (<i>drame bourgeois</i>, <i>comédie larmoyante</i>, etc.) are
-the reply of the plebeian to this classification. He is beginning
-to insist that his emotions too shall be taken
-seriously. But at the same time he is, under the influence
-of the new naturalistic philosophy, so bent on affirming
-his own goodness that in getting rid of artificial decorum
-he gets rid of true decorum likewise and so strikes at the
-very root of the drama. For true drama in contradistinction
-to mere melodrama requires in the background a
-scale of ethical values, or what amounts to the same
-thing, a sense of what is normal and representative and
-decorous, and the quality of the characters is revealed
-by their responsible choices good or bad with reference
-to some ethical scale, choices that the characters reveal
-by their actions and not by any explicit moralizing. But
-in the middle class drama there is little action in this
-sense: no one <i>wills</i> either his goodness or badness, but
-appears more or less as the creature of accident or fate
-(in a very un-Greek sense), or of a defective social order;
-and so instead of true dramatic conflict and proper motivation
-one tends to get domestic tableaux in which the
-characters weep in unison. For it is understood not only
-that man (especially the bourgeois) is good but that the
-orthodox way for this goodness to manifest itself is
-to overflow through the eyes. Perhaps never before or
-since have tears been shed with such a strange facility.
-At no other time have there been so many persons who,
-with streaming eyes, called upon heaven and earth to
-bear witness to their innate excellence. A man would be
-ashamed, says La Bruyère, speaking from the point of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-view of <i>l’honnête homme</i> and his decorum, to display his
-emotions at the theatre. By the time of Diderot he would
-have been ashamed not to display them. It had become
-almost a requirement of good manners to weep and sob
-in public. At the performance of the “Père de Famille”
-in 1769 we are told that every handkerchief was in use.
-The Revolution seems to have raised doubts as to the
-necessary connection between tearfulness and goodness.
-The “Père de Famille” was hissed from the stage in 1811.
-Geoffroy commented in his feuilleton: “We have learned
-by a fatal experience that forty years of declamation
-and fustian about sensibility, humanity and benevolence,
-have served only to prepare men’s hearts for the last
-excesses of barbarism.”</p>
-
-<p>The romanticist indulged in the luxury of grief and
-was not incapable of striking an attitude. But as a rule
-he disdained the facile lachrymosity of the man of feeling
-as still too imitative and conventional. For his part, he
-has that within which passes show. To estimate a play
-solely by its power to draw tears is, as Coleridge observes,
-to measure it by a virtue that it possesses in
-common with the onion; and Chateaubriand makes a
-similar observation. Yet one should not forget that the
-romantic emotionalist derives directly from the man of
-feeling. One may indeed study the transition from the
-one to the other in Chateaubriand himself. For example,
-in his early work the “Natchez” he introduces a tribe
-of Sioux Indians who are still governed by the natural
-pity of Rousseau, as they prove by weeping on the slightest
-occasion. Lamartine again is close to Rousseau when
-he expatiates on the “genius” that is to be found in a
-tear; and Musset is not far from Diderot when he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-exclaims, “Long live the melodrama at which Margot
-wept” (<i>Vive le mélodrame où Margot a pleuré</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Though it is usual to associate this effusiveness with
-Rousseau it should be clear from my brief sketch of the
-rise of the forces that were destined to overthrow the
-two great traditions&mdash;the Christian tradition with its
-prime emphasis on humility and the classical with its
-prime emphasis on decorum&mdash;that Rousseau had many
-forerunners. It would be easy enough, for example, to
-cite from English literature of the early eighteenth-century
-domestic tableaux<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> that look forward equally to
-the middle class drama and to Rousseau’s picture of the
-virtues of Julie as wife and mother. Yet Rousseau, after
-all, deserves his preëminent position as the arch-sentimentalist
-by the very audacity of his revolt in the name
-of feeling from both humility and decorum. Never before
-and probably never since has a man of such undoubted
-genius shown himself so lacking in humility and
-decency (to use the old-fashioned synonym for decorum)
-as Rousseau in the “Confessions.” Rousseau feels himself
-so good that he is ready as he declares to appear before
-the Almighty at the sound of the trump of the last
-judgment, with the book of his “Confessions” in his
-hand, and there to issue a challenge to the whole human
-race: “Let a single one assert to Thee if he dare: I am
-better than that man.” As Horace Walpole complains
-he meditates a gasconade for the end of the world. It is
-possible to maintain with M. Lemaître that Rousseau’s
-character underwent a certain purification as he grew
-older, but never at any time, either at the beginning or
-at the end, is it possible, as M. Lemaître admits, to detect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-an atom of humility&mdash;an essential lack that had already
-been noted by Burke.</p>
-
-<p>The affront then that Rousseau puts upon humility
-at the very opening of his “Confessions” has like so much
-else in his life and writings a symbolical value. He also
-declares war in the same passage in the name of what he
-conceives to be his true self&mdash;that is his emotional self&mdash;against
-decorum or decency. I have already spoken
-of one of the main objections to decorum: it keeps one
-tame and conventional and interferes with the explosion
-of original genius. Another and closely allied grievance
-against decorum is implied in Rousseau’s opening assertion
-in the Confessions that his aim is to show a man in
-all the truth of his nature, and human nature can be
-known in its truth only, it should seem, when stripped of
-its last shred of reticence. Rousseau therefore already
-goes on the principle recently proclaimed by the Irish
-Bohemian George Moore, that the only thing a man
-should be ashamed of is of being ashamed. If the first
-objection to decorum&mdash;that it represses original genius&mdash;was
-urged especially by the romanticists, the second
-objection&mdash;that decorum interferes with truth to
-nature&mdash;was urged especially by the so-called realists
-of the later nineteenth century (and realism of this type
-is, as has been said, only romanticism going on all fours).
-Between the Rousseauistic conception of nature and that
-of the humanist the gap is especially wide. The humanist
-maintains that man attains to the truth of his nature
-only by imposing decorum upon his ordinary self. The
-Rousseauist maintains that man attains to this truth
-only by the free expansion of his ordinary self. The humanist
-fears to let his ordinary self unfold freely at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-expense of decorum lest he merit some such comment
-as that made on the “Confessions” by Madame de Boufflers
-who had been infatuated with Rousseau during his
-lifetime: that it was the work not of a man but of an
-unclean animal.<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a></p>
-
-<p>The passages of the “Confessions” that deserve this verdict
-do not, it is hardly necessary to add, reflect directly
-Rousseau’s moral ideal. In his dealings with morality as
-elsewhere he is, to come back to Schiller’s distinction,
-partly idyllic and partly satirical. He is satiric in his
-attitude towards the existing forms&mdash;forms based upon
-the Christian tradition that man is naturally sinful and
-that he needs therefore the discipline of fear and humility,
-or else forms based upon the classical tradition that
-man is naturally one-sided and that he needs therefore
-to be disciplined into decorum and proportionateness.
-He is idyllic in the substitutes that he would offer for
-these traditional forms. The substitutes are particularly
-striking in their refusal to allow any place for fear.
-Fear, according to Ovid, created the first Gods, and religion
-has been defined by an old English poet as the
-“mother of form and fear.” Rousseau would put in the
-place of form a fluid emotionalism, and as for fear, he
-would simply cast it out entirely, a revulsion, as I have
-pointed out, from the excessive emphasis on fear in
-the more austere forms of Christianity. Be “natural,”
-Rousseau says, and eschew priests and doctors, and
-you will be emancipated from fear.</p>
-
-<p>Rousseau’s expedient for getting rid of man’s sense of
-his own sinfulness on which fear and humility ultimately<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-rest is well known. Evil, says Rousseau, foreign to man’s
-constitution, is introduced into it from without. The burden
-of guilt is thus conveniently shifted upon society.
-Instead of the old dualism between good and evil in the
-breast of the individual, a new dualism is thus set up
-between an artificial and corrupt society and “nature.”
-For man, let me repeat, has, according to Rousseau,
-fallen from nature in somewhat the same way as in the
-old theology he fell from God, and it is here that the
-idyllic element comes in, for, let us remind ourselves
-once more, Rousseau’s nature from which man has fallen
-is only an Arcadian dream.</p>
-
-<p>The assertion of man’s natural goodness is plainly something
-very fundamental in Rousseau, but there is something
-still more fundamental, and that is the shifting of
-dualism itself, the virtual denial of a struggle between
-good and evil in the breast of the individual. That deep
-inner cleft in man’s being on which religion has always
-put so much emphasis is not genuine. Only get away
-from an artificial society and back to nature and the inner
-conflict which is but a part of the artificiality will give
-way to beauty and harmony. In a passage in his “Supplément
-au voyage de Bougainville,” Diderot puts the
-underlying thesis of the new morality almost more
-clearly than Rousseau: “Do you wish to know in brief
-the tale of almost all our woe? There once existed a
-natural man; there has been introduced within this man
-an artificial man and there has arisen in the cave a civil
-war which lasts throughout life.”</p>
-
-<p>The denial of the reality of the “civil war in the cave”
-involves an entire transformation of the conscience. The
-conscience ceases to be a power that sits in judgment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-on the ordinary self and inhibits its impulses. It tends
-so far as it is recognized at all, to become itself an instinct
-and an emotion. Students of the history of ethics
-scarcely need to be told that this transformation of the
-conscience was led up to by the English deists, especially
-by Shaftesbury and his disciple Hutcheson.<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a> Shaftesbury
-and Hutcheson are already æsthetic in all senses of the
-word; æsthetic in that they tend to base conduct upon
-feeling, and æsthetic in that they incline to identify the
-good and the beautiful. Conscience is ceasing for both
-of them to be an inner check on the impulses of the individual
-and becoming a moral <i>sense</i>, a sort of expansive
-instinct for doing good to others. Altruism, as thus conceived,
-is opposed by them to the egoism of Hobbes and
-his followers.</p>
-
-<p>But for the full implications of this transformation of
-conscience and for æsthetic morality in general one
-needs to turn to Rousseau. Most men according to Rousseau
-are perverted by society, but there are a few in
-whom the voice of “nature” is still strong and who, to be
-good and at the same time beautiful, have only to let
-themselves go. These, to use a term that came to have
-in the eighteenth century an almost technical meaning,
-are the “beautiful souls.” The <i>belle âme</i> is practically
-indistinguishable from the <i>âme sensible</i> and has many
-points in common with the original genius. Those whose
-souls are beautiful are a small transfigured band in the
-midst of a philistine multitude. They are not to be
-judged by the same rules as those of less exquisite sensibility.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-“There are unfortunates too privileged to follow
-the common pathway.”<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> The beautiful soul is unintelligible
-to those of coarser feelings. His very superiority,
-his preternatural fineness of sensation, thus predestines
-him to suffering. We are here at the root of romantic
-melancholy as will appear more fully later.</p>
-
-<p>The most important aspect of the whole conception is,
-however, the strictly ethical&mdash;the notion that the beautiful
-soul has only to be instinctive and temperamental
-to merit the praise that has in the past been awarded
-only to the purest spirituality. “As for Julie,” says Rousseau,
-“who never had any other guide but her heart and
-could have no surer guide, she gives herself up to it without
-scruple, and to do right, has only to do all that it
-asks of her.”<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> Virtue indeed, according to Rousseau, is
-not merely an instinct but a passion and even a voluptuous
-passion, moving in the same direction as other passions,
-only superior to them in vehemence. “Cold reason
-has never done anything illustrious; and you can triumph
-over the passions only by opposing them to one another.
-When the passion of virtue arises, it dominates everything
-and holds everything in equipoise.”<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a></p>
-
-<p>This notion of the soul that is spontaneously beautiful
-and therefore good made an especial appeal to the Germans
-and indeed is often associated with Germany more
-than with any other land.<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a> But examples of moral æstheticism
-are scarcely less frequent elsewhere from Rousseau<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-to the present. No one, for example, was ever more
-convinced of the beauty of his own soul than Renan.
-“Morality,” says Renan, “has been conceived up to the
-present in a very narrow spirit, as obedience to a law,
-as an inner struggle between opposite laws. As for me,
-I declare that when I do good I obey no one, I fight no
-battle and win no victory. The cultivated man has only
-to follow the delicious incline of his inner impulses.”<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a>
-Therefore, as he says elsewhere, “Be beautiful and then
-do at each moment whatever your heart may inspire
-you to do. This is the whole of morality.”<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a></p>
-
-<p>The doctrine of the beautiful soul is at once a denial and
-a parody of the doctrine of grace; a denial because it
-rejects original sin; a parody because it holds that the
-beautiful soul acts aright, not through any effort of its
-own but because nature acts in it and through it even as
-a man in a state of grace acts aright not through any
-merit of his own but because God acts in him and through
-him. The man who saw everything from the angle of
-grace was, like the beautiful soul or the original genius,
-inclined to look upon himself as exceptional and superlative.
-Bunyan entitles the story of his own inner life
-“Grace abounding to the chief of sinners.” But Bunyan
-flatters himself. It is not easy to be chief in such a lively
-competition. Humility and pride were evidently in a
-sort of grapple with one another in the breast of the
-Jansenist who declared that God had killed three men
-in order to compass his salvation. In the case of the beautiful
-soul the humility disappears, but the pride remains.
-He still looks upon himself as superlative but superlative
-in goodness. If all men were like himself, Renan declares,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-it would be appropriate to say of them: Ye are Gods and
-sons of the most high.<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a> The partisan of grace holds that
-works are of no avail compared with the gratuitous and
-unmerited illumination from above. The beautiful soul
-clings to his belief in his own innate excellence, no matter
-how flagrant the contradiction may be between this
-belief and his deeds. One should not fail to note some
-approximation to the point of view of the beautiful soul
-in those forms of Christianity in which the sense of sin
-is somewhat relaxed and the inner light very much
-emphasized&mdash;for example among the German pietists
-and the quietists of Catholic countries.<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> We even hear
-of persons claiming to be Christians who as the result
-of debauchery have experienced a spiritual awakening
-(<i>Dans la brute assoupie, un ange se réveille</i>). But such doctrines
-are mere excrescences and eccentricities in the
-total history of Christianity. Even in its extreme insistence
-on grace, Christianity has always tended to supplement
-rather than contradict the supreme maxim of
-humanistic morality as enunciated by Cicero: “The
-whole praise of virtue is in action.” The usual result of
-the doctrine of grace when sincerely held is to make a
-man feel desperately sinful at the same time that he is
-less open to reproach than other men in his actual behavior.
-The beautiful soul on the other hand can always
-take refuge in his feelings from his real delinquencies.
-According to Joubert, Chateaubriand was not disturbed
-by actual lapses in his conduct because of his persuasion
-of his own innate rectitude.<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span> “Her conduct was reprehensible,”
-says Rousseau of Madame de Warens, “but her
-heart was pure.” It does not matter what you do if only
-through it all you preserve the sense of your own loveliness.
-Indeed the more dubious the act the more copious
-would seem to be the overflow of fine sentiments to
-which it stimulates the beautiful soul. Rousseau dilates
-on his “warmth of heart,” his “keenness of sensibility,”
-his “innate benevolence for his fellow creatures,” his
-“ardent love for the great, the true, the beautiful, the
-just,” on the “melting feeling, the lively and sweet emotion
-that he experiences at the sight of everything that
-is virtuous, generous and lovely,” and concludes: “And
-so my third child was put into the foundling hospital.”</p>
-
-<p>If we wish to see the psychology of Rousseau writ
-large we should turn to the French Revolution. That
-period abounds in persons whose goodness is in theory
-so superlative that it overflows in a love for all men, but
-who in practice are filled like Rousseau in his later years
-with universal suspicion. There was indeed a moment in
-the Revolution when the madness of Rousseau became
-epidemic, when suspicion was pushed to such a point
-that men became “suspect of being suspect.” One of
-the last persons to see Rousseau alive at Ermenonville
-was Maximilien Robespierre. He was probably a more
-thoroughgoing Rousseauist than any other of the Revolutionary
-leaders. Perhaps no passage that could be cited
-illustrates with more terrible clearness the tendency of
-the new morality to convert righteousness into self-righteousness
-than the following from his last speech
-before the Convention at the very height of the Reign of
-Terror. Himself devoured by suspicion, he is repelling
-the suspicion that he wishes to erect his own power on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-the ruins of the monarchy. The idea, he says, that “he
-can descend to the infamy of the throne will appear
-probable only to those perverse beings who have not
-even the right to believe in virtue. But why speak of
-virtue? Doubtless virtue is a natural passion. But how
-could they be familiar with it, these venal spirits who
-never yielded access to aught save cowardly and ferocious
-passions? … Yet virtue exists as you can testify, feeling
-and pure souls; it exists, that tender, irresistible, imperious
-passion, torment and delight of magnanimous hearts,
-that profound horror of tyranny, that compassionate
-zeal for the oppressed, that sacred love for one’s country,
-that still more sublime and sacred love for humanity,
-without which a great revolution is only a glittering
-crime that destroys another crime; it exists, that generous
-ambition to found on earth the first Republic of the
-world; that egoism of undegenerate men who find a
-celestial voluptuousness in the calm of a pure conscience
-and the ravishing spectacle of public happiness(!).
-You feel it at this moment burning in your souls. I feel
-it in mine. But how could our vile calumniators have any
-notion of it?” etc.</p>
-
-<p>In Robespierre and other revolutionary leaders one
-may study the implications of the new morality&mdash;the
-attempt to transform virtue into a natural passion&mdash;not
-merely for the individual but for society. M. Rod
-entitled his play on Rousseau “The Reformer.” Both
-Rousseau and his disciple Robespierre were reformers in
-the modern sense,&mdash;that is they are concerned not with
-reforming themselves, but other men. Inasmuch as there
-is no conflict between good and evil in the breast of the
-beautiful soul he is free to devote all his efforts to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-improvement of mankind, and he proposes to achieve this
-great end by diffusing the spirit of brotherhood. All the
-traditional forms that stand in the way of this free emotional
-expansion he denounces as mere “prejudices,”
-and inclines to look on those who administer these forms
-as a gang of conspirators who are imposing an arbitrary
-and artificial restraint on the natural goodness of man
-and so keeping it from manifesting itself. With the final
-disappearance of the prejudices of the past and those
-who base their usurped authority upon them, the Golden
-Age will be ushered in at last; everybody will be boundlessly
-self-assertive and at the same time temper this
-self-assertion by an equally boundless sympathy for
-others, whose sympathy and self-assertion likewise know
-no bounds. The world of Walt Whitman will be realized,
-a world in which there is neither inferior nor superior but
-only comrades. This vision (such for example as appears
-at the end of Shelley’s “Prometheus”) of a humanity released
-from all evil artificially imposed from without, a
-humanity “where all things flow to all, as rivers to the
-sea” and “whose nature is its own divine control,” is the
-true religion of the Rousseauist. It is this image of a humanity
-glorified through love that he sets up for worship
-in the sanctuary left vacant by “the great absence of
-God.”</p>
-
-<p>This transformation of the Arcadian dreamer into the
-Utopist is due in part, as I have already suggested, to
-the intoxication produced in the human spirit by the
-conquests of science. One can discern the coöperation
-of Baconian and Rousseauist from a very early stage of
-the great humanitarian movement in the midst of which
-we are still living. Both Baconian and Rousseauist are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-interested not in the struggle between good and evil in
-the breast of the individual, but in the progress of mankind
-as a whole. If the Rousseauist hopes to promote the
-progress of society by diffusing the spirit of brotherhood
-the Baconian or utilitarian hopes to achieve the same end
-by perfecting its machinery. It is scarcely necessary to
-add that these two main types of humanitarianism may
-be contained in almost any proportion in any particular
-person. By his worship of man in his future material
-advance, the Baconian betrays no less surely than the
-Rousseauist his faith in man’s natural goodness. This
-lack of humility is especially conspicuous in those who
-have sought to develop the positive observations of
-science into a closed system with the aid of logic and
-pure mathematics. Pascal already remarked sarcastically
-of Descartes that he had no need of God except to give
-an initial fillip to his mechanism. Later the mechanist no
-longer grants the need of the initial fillip. According to
-the familiar anecdote, La Place when asked by Napoleon
-in the course of an explanation of his “Celestial Mechanics”
-where God came in, replied that he had no need of a
-God in his system. As illustrating the extreme of humanitarian
-arrogance one may take the following from the
-physicist and mathematician, W. K. Clifford:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span> “The
-dim and shadowy outlines of the superhuman deity fade
-slowly from before us; and as the mist of his presence
-floats aside, we perceive with greater and greater clearness
-the shape of a yet grander and nobler figure&mdash;of
-Him who made all gods and shall unmake them. From
-the dim dawn of history and from the inmost depths of
-every soul the face of our father Man looks out upon
-us with the fire of eternal youth in his eyes and says,
-‘Before Jehovah was, I am.’” The fire, one is tempted to
-say, of eternal lust! Clifford is reported to have once
-hung by his toes from the cross-bar of a weathercock on
-a church-tower. As a bit of intellectual acrobatics the
-passage I have just quoted has some analogy with this
-posture. Further than this, man’s intoxication with
-himself is not likely to go. The attitude of Clifford is
-even more extreme in its way than that of Jonathan
-Edwards in his. However, there are already signs that
-the man of science is becoming, if not humble, at least a
-trifle less arrogant.</p>
-
-<p>One can imagine the Rousseauist interrupting at this
-point to remark that one of his chief protests has always
-been against the mechanical and utilitarian and in general
-the scientific attitude towards life. This is true.
-Something has already been said about this protest and
-it will be necessary to say more about it later. Yet
-Rousseauist and Baconian agree, as I have said, in turning
-away from the “civil war in the cave” to humanity
-in the lump. They agree in being more or less rebellious
-towards the traditional forms that put prime emphasis
-on the “civil war in the cave”&mdash;whether the Christian
-tradition with its humility or the classical with its decorum.
-No wonder Prometheus was the great romantic
-hero. Prometheus was at once a rebel, a lover of man
-and a promoter of man’s material progress. We have
-been living for over a century in what may be termed
-an age of Promethean individualism.</p>
-
-<p>The Rousseauist especially feels an inner kinship with
-Prometheus and other Titans. He is fascinated by every
-form of insurgency. Cain and Satan are both romantic
-heroes. To meet the full romantic requirement, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-the insurgent must also be tender-hearted. He must
-show an elemental energy in his explosion against the
-established order and at the same time a boundless
-sympathy for the victims of it. One of Hugo’s poems tells
-of a Mexican volcano, that in sheer disgust at the cruelty
-of the members of the Inquisition, spits lava upon them.
-This compassionate volcano symbolizes in both of its main
-aspects the romantic ideal. Hence the enormous international
-popularity of Schiller’s “Robbers.” One may
-find innumerable variants of the brigand Karl Moor who
-uses his plunder “to support meritorious young men at
-college.” The world into which we enter from the very
-dawn of romanticism is one of “glorious rascals,” and
-“beloved vagabonds.”</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Sublime convicts,” says M. Lasserre, “idlers of genius, angelic
-female poisoners, monsters inspired by God, sincere comedians,
-virtuous courtesans, metaphysical mountebanks, faithful adulterers,
-form only one half&mdash;the sympathetic half of humanity according to
-romanticism. The other half, the wicked half, is manufactured by the
-same intellectual process under the suggestion of the same revolutionary
-instinct. It comprises all those who hold or stand for a portion of
-any discipline whatsoever, political, religious, moral or intellectual&mdash;kings,
-ministers, priests, judges, soldiers, policemen, husbands and
-critics.”<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Rousseauist is ever ready to discover beauty of
-soul in any one who is under the reprobation of society.
-The figure of the courtesan rehabilitated through love
-that has enjoyed such popularity during the past
-hundred years goes back to Rousseau himself.<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a> The
-underlying assumption of romantic morality is that the
-personal virtues, the virtues that imply self-control,
-count as naught compared with the fraternal spirit and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-the readiness to sacrifice one’s self for others. This is the
-ordinary theme of the Russian novel in which one finds,
-as Lemaître remarks, “the Kalmuck exaggerations of
-our French romantic ideas.” For example Sonia in
-“Crime and Punishment” is glorified because she prostitutes
-herself to procure a livelihood for her family.
-One does not however need to go to Russia for what is
-scarcely less the assumption of contemporary America.
-If it can only be shown that a person is sympathetic we
-are inclined to pardon him his sins of unrestraint, his
-lack, for example, of common honesty. As an offset to
-the damaging facts brought out at the investigation of
-the sugar trust, the defense sought to establish that the
-late H. O. Havemeyer was a beautiful soul. It was testified
-that he could never hear little children sing without
-tears coming into his eyes. His favorite song, some one
-was unkind enough to suggest, was “little drops of water,
-little grains of sand.” The newspapers again reported
-not long ago that a notorious Pittsburg grafter had petitioned
-for his release from the penitentiary on the
-grounds that he wished to continue his philanthropic
-activities among the poor. Another paragraph that
-appeared recently in the daily press related that a burglar
-while engaged professionally in a house at Los
-Angeles discovered that the lady of the house had a child
-suffering from croup, and at once came to her aid, explaining
-that he had six children of his own. No one could
-really think amiss of this authentic descendant of
-Schiller’s Karl Moor. For love, according to the Rousseauist,
-is not the fulfillment of the law but a substitute
-for it. In “Les Misérables” Hugo contrasts Javert who
-stands for the old order based on obedience to the law<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-with the convict Jean Valjean who stands for the new
-regeneration of man through love and self-sacrifice.
-When Javert awakens to the full ignominy of his rôle
-he does the only decent thing&mdash;he commits suicide.
-Hugo indeed has perhaps carried the new evangel of
-sympathy as a substitute for all the other virtues further
-than any one else and with fewer weak concessions to
-common sense. Sultan Murad, Hugo narrates, was “sublime.”
-He had his eight brothers strangled, caused his
-uncle to be sawn in two between two planks, opened one
-after the other twelve children to find a stolen apple,
-shed an ocean of blood and “sabred the world.” One day
-while passing in front of a butcher-shop he saw a pig
-bleeding to death, tormented by flies and with the sun
-beating upon its wound. Touched by pity, the Sultan
-pushes the pig into the shade with his foot and with an
-“enormous and superhuman gesture” drives away the
-flies. When Murad dies the pig appears before the
-Almighty and, pleading for him against the accusing
-host of his victims, wins his pardon. Moral: “A succored
-pig outweighs a world oppressed”<a name="FNanchor_88_88" id="FNanchor_88_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a> (<i>Un pourceau
-secouru vaut un monde égorgé</i>).</p>
-
-<p>This subordination of all the other values of life to
-sympathy is achieved only at the expense of the great
-humanistic virtue&mdash;decorum or a sense of proportion.
-Now not to possess a sense of proportion is, however
-this lack may be manifested, to be a pedant; and, if
-there is ever a humanistic reaction, Hugo, one of the
-chief products of the age of original genius, will scarcely
-escape the charge of pedantry. But true religion also insists
-on a hierarchy of the virtues. Burke speaks at least<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-as much from a religious as from a humanistic point of
-view when he writes:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The greatest crimes do not arise so much from a want of feeling for
-others as from an over-sensibility for ourselves and an over-indulgence
-to our own desires. … They [the ‘philosophes’] explode or render
-odious or contemptible that class of virtues which restrain the appetite.
-These are at least nine out of ten of the virtues. In the place of
-all this they substitute a virtue which they call humanity or benevolence.
-By these means their morality has no idea in it of restraint or
-indeed of a distinct and settled principle of any kind. When their
-disciples are thus left free and guided only by present feeling, they
-are no longer to be depended on for good and evil. The men who to-day
-snatch the worst criminals from justice will murder the most
-innocent persons to-morrow.”<a name="FNanchor_89_89" id="FNanchor_89_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The person who seeks to get rid of ninety per cent of
-the virtues in favor of an indiscriminate sympathy does
-not simply lose his scale of values. He arrives at an
-inverted scale of values. For the higher the object for
-which one feels sympathy the more the idea of obligation
-is likely to intrude&mdash;the very thing the Rousseauist is
-seeking to escape. One is more irresponsible and therefore
-more spontaneous in the Rousseauistic sense in lavishing
-one’s pity on a dying pig. Medical men have given a
-learned name to the malady of those who neglect the
-members of their own family and gush over animals
-(zoöphilpsychosis). But Rousseau already exhibits this
-“psychosis.” He abandoned his five children one after the
-other, but had we are told an unspeakable affection for
-his dog.<a name="FNanchor_90_90" id="FNanchor_90_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Rousseau’s contemporary, Sterne, is supposed to have
-lavished a somewhat disproportionate emotion upon an
-ass. But the ass does not really come into his own until
-a later stage of the movement. Nietzsche has depicted
-the leaders of the nineteenth century as engaged in a
-veritable onolatry or ass-worship. The opposition between
-neo-classicist and Rousseauist is indeed symbolized
-in a fashion by their respective attitude towards the
-ass. Neo-classical decorum was, it should be remembered,
-an all-pervading principle. It imposed a severe hierarchy,
-not only upon objects, but upon the words that express
-these objects. The first concern of the decorous person
-was to avoid lowness, and the ass he looked upon as hopelessly
-low&mdash;so low as to be incapable of ennoblement
-even by a resort to periphrasis. Homer therefore was
-deemed by Vida to have been guilty of outrageous indecorum
-in comparing Ajax to an ass. The partisans of
-Homer sought indeed to prove that the ass was in the
-time of Homer a “noble” animal or at least that the word
-ass was “noble.” But the stigma put upon Homer by
-Vida&mdash;reinforced as it was by the similar attacks of
-Scaliger and others&mdash;remained.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The rehabilitation of the ass by the Rousseauist is at
-once a protest against an unduly squeamish decorum, and
-a way of proclaiming the new principle of unbounded
-expansive sympathy. In dealing with both words and
-what they express, one should show a democratic inclusiveness.
-Something has already been said of the war
-the romanticist waged in the name of local color against
-the impoverishment of vocabulary by the neo-classicists.
-But the romantic warfare against the aristocratic
-squeamishness of the neo-classic vocabulary goes perhaps
-even deeper. Take, for instance, Wordsworth’s view
-as to the proper language of poetry. Poetical decorum
-had become by the end of the eighteenth century a
-mere varnish of conventional elegance. Why should
-mere polite prejudice, so Wordsworth reasoned, and the
-“gaudiness and inane phraseology” in which it resulted
-be allowed to interfere with the “spontaneous overflow of
-powerful emotion”? And so he proceeds to set up a view
-of poetry that is only the neo-classical view turned upside
-down. For the proper subjects and speech of poetry he
-would turn from the highest class of society to the lowest,
-from the aristocrat to the peasant. The peasant is more
-poetical than the aristocrat because he is closer to nature,
-for Wordsworth as he himself avows, is less interested
-in the peasant for his own sake than because he sees in
-him a sort of emanation of the landscape.<a name="FNanchor_91_91" id="FNanchor_91_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a></p>
-
-<p>One needs to keep all this background in mind if one
-wishes to understand the full significance of a poem like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-“Peter Bell.” Scaliger blames Homer because he stoops
-to mention in his description of Zeus something so trivial
-as the eyebrows. Wordsworth seeks to bestow poetical
-dignity and seriousness on the “long left ear” of an ass.<a name="FNanchor_92_92" id="FNanchor_92_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a>
-The ass is thus exalted one scarcely need add, because of
-his compassionateness. The hard heart of Peter Bell is at
-last melted by the sight of so much goodness. He aspires
-to be like the ass and finally achieves his wish.</p>
-
-<p>The French romanticists, Hugo, for instance, make an
-attack on decorum somewhat similar to that of Wordsworth.
-Words formerly lived, says Hugo, divided up
-into castes. Some had the privilege of mounting into the
-king’s coaches at Versailles, whereas others were relegated
-to the rabble. I came along and clapped a red
-liberty cap on the old dictionary. I brought about a
-literary ’93,<a name="FNanchor_93_93" id="FNanchor_93_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> etc. Hugo’s attack on decorum is also combined
-with an even more violent assertion than Wordsworth’s
-of the ideal of romantic morality&mdash;the supremacy
-of pity. He declares in the “Legend of the
-Ages” that an ass that takes a step aside to avoid
-crushing a toad is “holier than Socrates and greater
-than Plato.”<a name="FNanchor_94_94" id="FNanchor_94_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a> For this and similar utterances Hugo
-deserves to be placed very nearly if not quite at the
-head of romantic onolaters.</p>
-
-<p>We have said that the tremendous burden put upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-sympathy in romantic morality is a result of the assumption
-that the “civil war in the cave” is artificial and that
-therefore the restraining virtues (according to Burke
-ninety per cent of the virtues) which imply this warfare
-are likewise artificial. If the civil war in the cave should
-turn out to be not artificial but a fact of the gravest import,
-the whole spiritual landscape would change immediately.
-Romantic morality would in that case be not a
-reality but a mirage. We need at all events to grasp the
-central issue firmly. Humanism and religion have always
-asserted in some form or other the dualism of the human
-spirit. A man’s spirituality is in inverse ratio to his
-immersion in temperament. The whole movement from
-Rousseau to Bergson is, on the other hand, filled with the
-glorification of instinct. To become spiritual the beautiful
-soul needs only to expand along the lines of temperament
-and with this process the cult of pity or sympathy does not
-interfere. The romantic moralist tends to favor expansion
-on the ground that it is vital, creative, infinite, and to dismiss
-whatever seems to set bounds to expansion as something
-inert, mechanical, finite. In its onslaughts on the
-veto power whether within or without the breast of the
-individual it is plain that no age has ever approached the
-age of original genius in the midst of which we are still
-living. Goethe defines the devil as the spirit that always
-says no, and Carlyle celebrates his passage from darkness
-to light as an escape from the Everlasting Nay to the
-Everlasting Yea. We rarely pause to consider what a
-reversal of traditional wisdom is implied in such conceptions.
-In the past, the spirit that says no has been
-associated rather with the divine. Socrates tells us that
-the counsels of his “voice” were always negative, never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-positive.<a name="FNanchor_95_95" id="FNanchor_95_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> According to the ancient Hindu again the divine
-is the “inner check.” God, according to Aristotle, is
-pure Form. In opposition to all this emphasis on the restricting
-and limiting power, the naturalist, whether scientific
-or emotional, sets up a program of formless, fearless
-expansion; which means in practice that he recognizes
-no bounds either to intellectual or emotional curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>I have said that it is a part of the psychology of the
-original genius to offer the element of wonder and surprise
-awakened by the perpetual novelty, the infinite
-otherwiseness of things, as a substitute for the awe that
-is associated with their infinite oneness; or rather to
-refuse to discriminate between these two infinitudes and
-so to confound the two main directions of the human
-spirit, its religious East, as one may say, with its West
-of wonder and romance. This confusion may be illustrated
-by the romantic attitude towards what is perhaps
-the most Eastern of all Eastern lands,&mdash;India. The
-materials for the study of India in the Occident were
-accumulated by Englishmen towards the end of the
-eighteenth century, but the actual interpretation of this
-material is due largely to German romanticists, notably
-to Friedrich Schlegel.<a name="FNanchor_96_96" id="FNanchor_96_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> Alongside the romantic Hellenist
-and the romantic mediævalist we find the romantic
-Indianist. It is to India even more than to Spain that
-one needs to turn, says Friedrich Schlegel, for the
-supremely romantic<a name="FNanchor_97_97" id="FNanchor_97_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a>&mdash;that is, the wildest and most
-unrestrained luxuriance of imagination. Now in a country
-so vast and so ancient as India you can find in some place
-or at some period or other almost anything you like.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-If, for example, W. B. Yeats waxes enthusiastic over
-Tagore we may be sure that there is in the work of
-Tagore something akin to æsthetic romanticism. But if
-we take India at the top of her achievement in the early
-Buddhistic movement, let us say, we shall find something
-very different. The early Buddhistic movement in its
-essential aspects is at the extreme opposite pole from
-romanticism. The point is worth making because certain
-misinterpretations that still persist both of Buddhism
-and other movements in India can be traced ultimately
-to the bad twist that was given to the whole subject by
-romanticists like the Schlegels. The educated Frenchman,
-for instance, gets his ideas of India largely from
-certain poems of Leconte de Lisle who reflects the
-German influence. But the sense of universal and meaningless
-flux that pervades these poems without any
-countervailing sense of a reality behind the shows of
-nature is a product of romanticism, working in coöperation
-with science, and is therefore antipodal to the
-absorption of the true Hindu in the oneness of things.
-We are told, again, that Schopenhauer was a Buddhist.
-Did he not have an image of Buddha in his bedroom?
-But no doctrine perhaps is more remote from the genuine
-doctrine of Buddha than that of this soured and disillusioned
-romanticist. The nature of true Buddhism and its
-opposition to all forms of romanticism is worth dwelling
-on for a moment. Buddha not only asserted the human
-law with unusual power but he also did what, in the
-estimation of some, needs doing in our own day&mdash;he put
-this law, not on a traditional, but on a positive and critical
-basis. This spiritual positivism of Buddha is, reduced to
-its simplest terms, a psychology of desire. Not only is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-the world outside of man in a constant state of flux and
-change, but there is an element within man that is in
-constant flux and change also and makes itself felt
-practically as an element of expansive desire. What is
-unstable in him longs for what is unstable in the outer
-world. But he may escape from the element of flux and
-change, nay he must aspire to do so, if he wishes to be
-released from sorrow. This is to substitute the noble for
-the ignoble craving. The permanent or ethical element
-in himself towards which he should strive to move is
-known to him practically as a power of inhibition or
-inner check upon expansive desire. Vital impulse (<i>élan
-vital</i>) may be subjected to vital control (<i>frein vital</i>).
-Here is the Buddhist equivalent of the “civil war in the
-cave” that the romanticist denies. Buddha does not
-admit a soul in man in the sense that is often given to
-the word, but on this opposition between vital impulse
-and vital control as a psychological fact he puts his
-supreme emphasis. The man who drifts supinely with the
-current of desire is guilty according to Buddha of the
-gravest of all vices&mdash;spiritual or moral indolence
-(<i>pamāda</i>). He on the contrary who curbs or reins in his
-expansive desires is displaying the chief of all the virtues,
-spiritual vigilance or strenuousness (<i>appamāda</i>). The
-man who is spiritually strenuous has entered upon the
-“path.” The end of this path and the goal of being cannot
-be formulated in terms of the finite intellect, any more
-than the ocean can be put into a cup. But progress on
-the path may be known by its fruits&mdash;negatively by the
-extinction of the expansive desires (the literal meaning
-of Nirvâna), positively by an increase in peace, poise,
-centrality.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A man’s rank in the scale of being is, then, according
-to the Buddhist determined by the quality of his desires;
-and it is within his power to determine whether he shall
-let them run wild or else control them to some worthy end.
-We hear of the fatalistic East, but no doctrine was ever
-less fatalistic than that of Buddha. No one ever put so
-squarely upon the individual what the individual is ever
-seeking to evade&mdash;the burden of moral responsibility.
-“Self is the lord of self. Who else can be the lord? … You
-yourself must make the effort. The Buddhas are only
-teachers.”<a name="FNanchor_98_98" id="FNanchor_98_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> But does not all this emphasis on self, one
-may ask, tend to hardness and indifference towards
-others, towards the undermining of that compassion to
-which the romantic moralist is ready to sacrifice all the
-other virtues? Buddha may be allowed to speak for
-himself: “Even as a mother cherishes her child, her only
-child, so let a man cultivate a boundless love towards
-all beings.”<a name="FNanchor_99_99" id="FNanchor_99_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a> Buddha thus seems to fulfil Pascal’s requirement
-for a great man: he unites in himself opposite
-virtues and occupies all the space between them.</p>
-
-<p>Enough has been said to make plain that the infinite
-indeterminate desire of the romanticist and the Buddhist
-repression of desire are the most different things conceivable.
-Chateaubriand it has been said was an “invincibly
-restless soul,” a soul of desire (<i>une âme de désir</i>), but
-these phrases are scarcely more applicable to him than to
-many other great romanticists. They are fitly symbolized
-by the figures that pace to and fro in the Hall of Eblis
-and whose hearts are seen through their transparent
-bosoms to be lapped in the flames of unquenchable longing.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-The romanticist indeed bases, as I have said, on the
-very intensity of his longing his claims to be an idealist
-and even a mystic. William Blake, for example, has been
-proclaimed a true mystic. The same term has also been
-applied to Buddha. Without pretending to have fathomed
-completely so unfathomable a being as Buddha or
-even the far less unfathomable William Blake, one may
-nevertheless assert with confidence that Buddha and
-Blake stand for utterly incompatible views of life. If
-Blake is a mystic then Buddha must be something else.
-To be assured on this point one needs only to compare
-the “Marriage of Heaven and Hell” with the “Dhammapada,”
-an anthology of some of the most authentic and
-authoritative material in early Buddhism. “He who
-desires but acts not, breeds pestilence. … The road of
-excess leads to the palace of wisdom,” says Blake. “Even
-in heavenly pleasures he finds no satisfaction; the disciple
-who is fully awakened delights only in the destruction
-of all desires. … Good is restraint in all things,”
-says Buddha. Buddha would evidently have dismissed
-Blake as a madman, whereas Blake would have looked
-on Buddhism as the ultimate abomination. My own conviction
-is that Buddha was a genuine sage well worthy
-of the homage rendered him by multitudes of men for
-more than twenty-four centuries, whereas Blake was
-only a romantic æsthete who was moving in his imaginative
-activity towards madness and seems at the end
-actually to have reached the goal.</p>
-
-<p>I have been going thus far afield to ancient India and
-to Buddha, not that I might, like a recent student of
-Buddhism, enjoy “the strangeness of the intellectual
-landscape,” but on the contrary that I might suggest that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-there is a centre of normal human experience and that
-Buddhism, at least in its ethical aspects, is nearer to this
-centre than æsthetic romanticism. Buddha might perhaps
-marvel with more reason at our strangeness than we at
-his. Buddha’s assertion of man’s innate moral laziness in
-particular accords more closely with what most of us
-have experienced than Rousseau’s assertion of man’s
-natural goodness. This conception of the innate laziness
-of man seems to me indeed so central that I am going to
-put it at the basis of the point of view I am myself seeking
-to develop, though this point of view is not primarily
-Buddhistic. This conception has the advantage of being
-positive rather than dogmatic. It works out in practice
-very much like the original sin of the Christian theologian.
-The advantage of starting with indolence rather than
-sin is that many men will admit that they are morally
-indolent who will not admit that they are sinful. For
-theological implications still cluster thickly about the word
-sin, and these persons are still engaged more or less consciously
-in the great naturalistic revolt against theology.</p>
-
-<p>The spiritual positivist then will start from a fact of
-immediate perception&mdash;from the presence namely in
-the breast of the individual of a principle of vital control
-(<i>frein vital</i>), and he will measure his spiritual strenuousness
-or spiritual sloth by the degree to which he exercises
-or fails to exercise this power. In accordance with the
-keenness of a man’s perception of a specially human order
-that is known practically as a curb upon his ordinary self,
-he may be said to possess insight. The important thing is
-that the insight should not be sophisticated, that a man
-should not fall away from it into some phantasmagoria of
-the intellect or emotions. A man sometimes builds up a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-whole system of metaphysics as a sort of screen between
-himself and his obligations either to himself or others.
-Mrs. Barbauld suspected that Coleridge’s philosophy
-was only a mask for indolence. Carlyle’s phrase for Coleridge
-was even harsher: “putrescent indolence,” a phrase
-that might be applied with more justice perhaps to
-Rousseau. One may learn from Rousseau the art of sinking
-to the region of instinct that is below the rational level
-instead of struggling forward to the region of insight that
-is above it, and at the same time passing for a sublime
-enthusiast; the art of looking backwards and downwards,
-and at the same time enjoying the honor that belongs
-only to those who look forwards and up. We need not
-wonder at the warm welcome that this new art received.
-I have said that that man has always been accounted a
-benefactor who has substituted for the reality of spiritual
-discipline some ingenious art of going through the motions
-and that the decorum of the neo-classical period
-had largely sunk to this level. Even in the most decorous
-of modern ages, that of Louis XIV, it was very common,
-as every student of the period knows, for men to set up as
-personages in the grand manner and at the same time
-behind the façade of conventional dignity to let their
-appetites run riot. It would have been perfectly legitimate
-at the end of the eighteenth century to attack in
-the name of true decorum a decorum that had become
-the “varnish of vice” and “mask of hypocrisy.” What
-Rousseau actually opposed to pseudo-decorum was perhaps
-the most alluring form of sham spirituality that
-the world has ever seen&mdash;a method not merely of masking
-but of glorifying one’s spiritual indolence.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span> “You
-wish to have the pleasures of vice and the honor of virtue,”
-wrote Julie to Saint-Preux in a moment of unusual
-candor. The Rousseauist may indulge in the extreme of
-psychic unrestraint and at the same time pose as a perfect
-idealist or even, if one is a Chateaubriand, as a champion
-of religion. Chateaubriand’s life according to Lemaître
-was a “magnificent series of attitudes.”</p>
-
-<p>I do not mean to assert that the Rousseauist is always
-guilty of the pose and theatricality of which there is more
-than a suggestion in Chateaubriand. There is, however,
-much in the Rousseauistic view of life that militates
-against a complete moral honesty. “Of all the men I have
-known,” says Rousseau, “he whose character derives
-most completely from his temperament alone is Jean-Jacques.”<a name="FNanchor_100_100" id="FNanchor_100_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a>
-The ugly things that have a way of happening
-when impulse is thus left uncontrolled do not, as we
-have seen, disturb the beautiful soul in his complacency.
-He can always point an accusing finger at something or
-somebody else. The faith in one’s natural goodness is a
-constant encouragement to evade moral responsibility.
-To accept responsibility is to follow the line of maximum
-effort, whereas man’s secret desire is to follow, if not the
-line of least, at all events the line of lesser resistance. The
-endless twisting and dodging and proneness to look for
-scapegoats that results is surely the least reputable aspect
-of human nature. Rousseau writes to Madame de Francueil
-(20 April, 1751) that it was her class, the class of the
-rich, that was responsible for his having had to abandon
-his children. With responsibility thus shifted from one’s
-self to the rich, the next step is inevitable, namely to
-start a crusade against the members of a class which,
-without any warrant from “Nature,” oppresses its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-brothers, the members of other classes, and forces them
-into transgression. A man may thus dodge his duties as
-a father, and at the same time pose as a paladin of humanity.
-Rousseau is very close here to our most recent
-agitators. If a working girl falls from chastity, for example,
-do not blame her, blame her employer. She would
-have remained a model of purity if he had only added a
-dollar or two a week to her wage. With the progress of
-the new morality every one has become familiar with
-the type of the perfect idealist who is ready to pass laws
-for the regulation of everybody and everything except
-himself, and who knows how to envelop in a mist of radiant
-words schemes the true driving power of which is
-the desire to confiscate property.</p>
-
-<p>The tendency to make of society the universal scapegoat
-is not, one scarcely needs add, to be ascribed entirely
-to the romantic moralist. It is only one aspect of the
-denial of the human law, of the assumption that because
-man is partly subject to the natural law he is entirely
-subject to it; and in this dehumanizing of man the rationalist
-has been at least as guilty as the emotionalist. If the
-Rousseauist hopes to find a substitute for all the restraining
-virtues in sympathy, the rationalistic naturalist, who
-is as a rule utilitarian with a greater or smaller dash of
-pseudo-science, hopes to find a substitute for these same
-virtues in some form of machinery. The legislative mill to
-which our “uplifters” are so ready to resort, is a familiar
-example. If our modern society continues to listen to
-those who are seeking to persuade it that it is possible to
-find mechanical or emotional equivalents for self-control,
-it is likely, as Rousseau said of himself, to show a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span> “great
-tendency to degenerate.”</p>
-
-<p>The fact on which the moral positivist would rest his
-effort to rehabilitate self-control is, as I have said, the
-presence in man of a restraining, informing and centralizing
-power that is anterior to both intellect and emotion.
-Such a power, it must be freely granted, is not present
-equally in all persons; in some it seems scarcely to exist
-at all. When released from outer control, they are simply
-unchained temperaments; whereas in others this superrational
-perception seems to be singularly vivid and distinct.
-This is the psychological fact that underlies what
-the theologian would term the mystery of grace.</p>
-
-<p>Rousseau himself was not quite so temperamental as
-might be inferred from what has been said about his
-evasion of ethical effort. There were moments when the
-dualism of the spirit came home to him, moments when
-he perceived that the conscience is not itself an expansive
-emotion but rather a judgment and a check upon expansive
-emotion. Yet his general readiness to subordinate his
-ethical self to his sensibility is indubitable. Hence the
-absence in his personality and writing of the note of
-masculinity. There is indeed much in his make-up that
-reminds one less of a man than of a high-strung impressionable
-woman. Woman, most observers would agree, is
-more natural in Rousseau’s sense, that is, more temperamental,
-than man. One should indeed always temper
-these perilous comparisons of the sexes with the remark
-of La Fontaine that in this matter he knew a great
-many men who were women. Now to be temperamental is
-to be extreme, and it is in this sense perhaps that the
-female of the species may be said to be “fiercer than the
-male.” Rousseau’s failure to find “any intermediary term
-between everything and nothing” would seem to be a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-feminine rather than a masculine trait. Decorum in the
-case of women, even more perhaps than in the case of
-men, tends to be a mere conformity to what is established
-rather than the immediate perception of a law of measure
-and proportion that sets bounds to the expansive
-desires. “Women believe innocent everything that they
-dare,” says Joubert, whom no one will accuse of being
-a misogynist. Those who are thus temperamental have
-more need than others of outer guidance. “His feminine
-nature,” says C. E. Norton of Ruskin, “needed support
-such as it never got.”<a name="FNanchor_101_101" id="FNanchor_101_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a></p>
-
-<p>If women are more temperamental than men it is only
-fair to add that they have a greater fineness of temperament.
-Women, says Joubert again, are richer in native
-virtues, men in acquired virtues. At times when men are
-slack in acquiring virtues in the truly ethical sense&mdash;and
-some might maintain that the present is such a time&mdash;the
-women may be not only men’s equals but their
-superiors. Rousseau had this feminine fineness of temperament.
-He speaks rightly of his “exquisite faculties.”
-He also had no inconsiderable amount of feminine charm.
-The numerous members of the French aristocracy whom
-he fascinated may be accepted as competent witnesses
-on this point. The mingling of sense and spirit that pervades
-Rousseau, his pseudo-Platonism as I have called
-it elsewhere, is also a feminine rather than a masculine
-trait.</p>
-
-<p>There is likewise something feminine in Rousseau’s
-preference for illusion. Illusion is the element in which
-woman even more than man would seem to live and move<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-and have her being. It is feminine and also romantic to
-prefer to a world of sharp definition a world of magic and
-suggestiveness. W. Bagehot (it will be observed that in
-discussing this delicate topic I am prone to take refuge
-behind authorities) attributes the triumph of an art of
-shifting illusion over an art of clear and firm outlines to
-the growing influence of women.<a name="FNanchor_102_102" id="FNanchor_102_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a> Woman’s being is to
-that of man, we are told, as is moonlight unto sunlight&mdash;and
-the moon is the romantic orb. The whole of German
-romance in particular is bathed in moonshine.<a name="FNanchor_103_103" id="FNanchor_103_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a></p>
-
-<p>The objection of the classicist to the so-called enlightenment
-of the eighteenth century is that it did not have
-in it sufficient light. The primitivists on the contrary
-felt that it had too much light&mdash;that the light needed to
-be tempered by darkness. Even the moon is too effulgent
-for the author of “Hymns to the Night.” No movement
-has ever avowed more openly its partiality for the dim
-and the crepuscular. The German romanticists have
-been termed “twilight men.” What many of them admire
-in woman as in children and plants, is her unconsciousness
-and freedom from analysis&mdash;an admiration<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-that is also a tribute in its way to the “night side”
-of nature.<a name="FNanchor_104_104" id="FNanchor_104_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a></p>
-
-<p>Discussions of the kind in which I have been indulging
-regarding the unlikeness of woman and man are very
-dreary unless one puts at least equal emphasis on their
-fundamental likeness. Woman, before being woman, is a
-human being and so subject to the same law as man. So
-far as men and women both take on the yoke of this law,
-they move towards a common centre. So far as they throw
-it off and live temperamentally, there tends to arise
-the most odious of all forms of warfare&mdash;that between
-the sexes. The dictates of the human law are only too
-likely to yield in the case of both men and women to the
-rush of outer impressions and the tumult of the desires
-within. This is what La Rochefoucauld means when he
-says that “the head is always the dupe of the heart.”
-Nevertheless feeling is even more likely to prevail over
-judgment in woman than it is in man. To be judicial
-indeed to the point of hardness and sternness has always
-been held to be unfeminine. It is almost woman’s prerogative
-to err on the side of sympathy. But even woman
-cannot be allowed to substitute sympathy for true conscience&mdash;that
-is for the principle of control. In basing
-conduct on feeling Rousseau may be said to have founded
-a new sophistry. The ancient sophist at least made man
-the measure of all things. By subordinating judgment to
-sensibility Rousseau may be said to have made woman
-the measure of all things.</p>
-
-<p>The affirmation of a human law must ultimately rest
-on the perception of a something that is set above the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-flux upon which the flux itself depends&mdash;on what Aristotle
-terms an unmoved mover. Otherwise conscience
-becomes a part of the very flux and element of change it
-is supposed to control. In proportion as he escapes from
-outer control man must be conscious of some such unmoved
-mover if he is to oppose a definite aim or purpose
-to the indefinite expansion of his desires. Having
-some such firm centre he may hope to carry through to a
-fortunate conclusion the “civil war in the cave.” He may,
-as the wise are wont to express it, build himself an island
-in the midst of the flood. The romantic moralist, on the
-other hand, instead of building himself an island is simply
-drifting with the stream. For feeling not only shifts
-from man to man, it is continually shifting in the same
-man; so that morality becomes a matter of mood, and
-romanticism here as elsewhere might be defined as the
-despotism of mood. At the time of doing anything, says
-Mrs. Shelley, Shelley deemed himself right; and Rousseau
-says that in the act of abandoning his own children
-he felt “like a member of Plato’s republic.”</p>
-
-<p>The man who makes self-expression and not self-control
-his primary endeavor becomes subject to every
-influence, “the very slave of circumstance and impulse
-borne by every breath.”<a name="FNanchor_105_105" id="FNanchor_105_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> This is what it means in practice
-no longer to keep a firm hand on the rudder of one’s
-personality, but to turn one’s self over to “nature.” The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-partisan of expression becomes the thrall of his impressions
-so that the whole Rousseauistic conception may be
-termed indifferently impressionistic or expressionistic.
-For the beautiful soul in order to express himself has to
-indulge his emotions instead of hardening and bracing
-them against the shock of circumstance. The very refinement
-of sensibility which constitutes in his own eyes his
-superiority to the philistine makes him quiver responsive
-to every outer influence; he finally becomes subject to
-changes in the weather, or in Rousseau’s own phrase, the
-“vile plaything of the atmosphere and seasons.”</p>
-
-<p>This rapid shifting of mood in the romanticist, in response
-to inner impulse or outer impression, is almost
-too familiar to need illustration. Here is an example that
-may serve for a thousand from that life-long devotee of
-the great god Whim&mdash;Hector Berlioz. When at Florence,
-Berlioz relates in his Memoirs, he received a letter from
-the mother of Camille, the woman he loved, informing him
-of Camille’s marriage to another. “In two minutes my
-plans were laid. I must hurry to Paris to kill two guilty
-women and one innocent man; for, this act of justice done,
-I too must die.” Accordingly he loads his pistols, supplies
-himself with a disguise as a lady’s maid, so as to be able
-to penetrate into the guilty household, and puts into his
-pockets “two little bottles, one of strychnine, the other
-of laudanum.” While awaiting the departure of the
-diligence he “rages up and down the streets of Florence
-like a mad dog.” Later, as the diligence is traversing a
-wild mountain road, he suddenly lets out a “‘Ha’! so
-hoarse, so savage, so diabolic that the startled driver
-bounded aside as if he had indeed a demon for his fellow-traveller.”
-But on reaching Nice he is so enchanted by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-the climate and environment that he not only forgets his
-errand, but spends there “the twenty happiest days” of
-his life! There are times, one must admit, when it is an
-advantage to be temperamental.</p>
-
-<p>In this exaltation of environmental influences one
-should note again the coöperation of Rousseauist and
-Baconian, of emotional and scientific naturalist. Both
-are prone to look upon man as being made by natural
-forces and not as making himself. To deal with the substitutes
-that Rousseauist and Baconian have proposed
-for traditional morality, is in fact to make a study of the
-varieties&mdash;and they are numerous&mdash;of naturalistic fatalism.
-The upshot of the whole movement is to discredit
-moral effort on the part of the individual. Why should
-a man believe in the efficacy of this effort, why should
-he struggle to acquire character if he is convinced that
-he is being moulded like putty by influences beyond his
-control&mdash;the influence of climate, for example? Both
-science and romanticism have vied with one another in
-making of man a mere stop on which Nature may play
-what tune she will. The Æolian harp enjoyed an extraordinary
-popularity as a romantic symbol. The man of science
-for his part is ready to draw up statistical tables
-showing what season of the year is most productive of
-suicide and what type of weather impels bank-cashiers
-most irresistibly to embezzlement. A man on a mountain
-top, according to Rousseau, enjoys not only physical
-but spiritual elevation, and when he descends to the plain
-the altitude of his mind declines with that of his body.
-Ruskin’s soul, says C. E. Norton,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span> “was like an Æolian
-harp, its strings quivering musically in serene days under
-the touch of the soft air, but as the clouds gathered and
-the winds arose, vibrating in the blast with a tension that
-might break the sounding board itself.” It is not surprising
-Ruskin makes other men as subject to “skyey influences”
-as himself. “The mountains of the earth are,” he
-says, “its natural cathedrals. True religion can scarcely
-be achieved away from them. The curate or hermit of the
-field and fen, however simple his life or painful his lodging,
-does not often attain the spirit of the hill pastor or
-recluse: we may find in him a decent virtue or a contented
-ignorance, rarely the <i>prophetic vision or the martyr’s
-passion</i>.” The corruptions of Romanism “are traceable
-for the most part to lowland prelacy.”<a name="FNanchor_106_106" id="FNanchor_106_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a></p>
-
-<p>Is then the Rousseauist totally unable to regulate his
-impressions? It is plain that he cannot control them from
-within because the whole idea of a vital control of this
-kind is, as we have seen, foreign to the psychology of the
-beautiful soul. Yet it is, according to Rousseau, possible
-to base morality on the senses&mdash;on outer perception that
-is&mdash;and at the same time get the equivalent of a free-will
-based on inner perception. He was so much interested
-in this subject that he had planned to devote to it a
-whole treatise to be entitled “Sensitive morality or the
-materialism of the sage.” A man cannot resist an outer
-impression but he may at least get out of its way and put
-himself in the way of another impression that will impel
-him to the desired course of conduct. “The soul may then
-be put or maintained in the state most favorable to
-virtue.” “Climates, seasons, sounds, colors, darkness,
-light, the elements, food, noise, silence, movement, rest,
-everything, acts on our physical frame.” By a proper
-adjustment of all these outer elements we may govern<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-in their origins the feelings by which we allow ourselves
-to be dominated.<a name="FNanchor_107_107" id="FNanchor_107_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a></p>
-
-<p>Rousseau’s ideas about sensitive morality are at once
-highly chimerical and highly significant. Here as elsewhere
-one may say with Amiel that nothing of Rousseau
-has been lost. His point of view has an inner kinship with
-that of the man of science who asserts that man is necessarily
-the product of natural forces, but that one may
-at least modify the natural forces. For example, moral
-effort on the part of the individual cannot overcome
-heredity. It is possible, however, by schemes of eugenics
-to regulate heredity. The uneasy burden of moral responsibility
-is thus lifted from the individual, and the
-moralist in the old-fashioned sense is invited to abdicate
-in favor of the biologist. It would be easy enough to
-trace similar assumptions in the various forms of socialism
-and other “isms” almost innumerable of the present hour.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the problem to which I have already alluded
-may as well be faced here. How does it happen that
-Rousseau who attacked both science and literature as
-the chief sources of human degeneracy should be an arch-æsthete,
-the authentic ancestor of the school of art for
-art’s sake and at the same time by his sensitive (or æsthetic)
-morality play into the hands of the scientific
-determinist? If one is to enter deeply into the modern
-movement one needs to consider both wherein scientific
-and emotional naturalists clash and wherein they agree.
-The two types of naturalists agree in their virtual denial
-of a superrational realm. They clash above all in their
-attitude towards what is on the rational level. The scientific
-naturalist is assiduously analytical. Rousseau, on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-other hand, or rather one whole side of Rousseau, is
-hostile to analysis. The arts and sciences are attacked
-because they are the product of reflection. “The man
-who reflects is a depraved animal,” because he has fallen
-away from the primitive spontaneous unity of his being.
-Rousseau is the first of the great anti-intellectualists.
-By assailing both rationalism and pseudo-classic decorum
-in the name of instinct and emotion he appealed to men’s
-longing to get away from the secondary and the derivative
-to the immediate. True decorum satisfies the craving
-for immediacy because it contains within itself an element
-of superrational perception. The “reason” of a Plato or
-an Aristotle also satisfies the craving for immediacy because
-it likewise contains within itself an element of
-superrational perception. A reason or a decorum of this
-kind ministers to another deep need of human nature&mdash;the
-need to lose itself in a larger whole. Once eliminate
-the superrational perception and reason sinks to the level
-of rationalism, consciousness becomes mere self-consciousness.
-It is difficult, as St. Evremond said, for man
-to remain in the long run in this doubtful middle state.
-Having lost the unity of insight, he will long for the unity
-of instinct. Hence the paradox that this most self-conscious
-of all movements is filled with the praise of the
-unconscious. It abounds in persons who, like Walt Whitman,
-would turn and live with the animals, or who, like
-Novalis, would fain strike root into the earth with the
-plant. Animals<a name="FNanchor_108_108" id="FNanchor_108_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a> and plants are not engaged in any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-moral struggle, they are not inwardly divided against
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Here is the source of the opposition between the abstract
-and analytical head, deadly to the sense of unity,
-and the warm immediate heart that unifies life with the
-aid of the imagination&mdash;an opposition that assumes so
-many forms from Rousseau to Bergson. The Rousseauist
-always betrays himself by arraigning in some form or
-other, “the false secondary power by which we multiply
-distinctions.” One should indeed remember that there
-were obscurantists before Rousseau. Pascal also arrays
-the heart against the head; but his heart is at the farthest
-remove from that of Rousseau; it stands for a superrational
-perception. Christians like Pascal may indulge with
-comparative impunity in a certain amount of obscurantism.
-For they have submitted to a tradition that supplies
-them with distinctions between good and evil and at the
-same time controls their imagination. But for the individualist
-who has broken with tradition to deny his head
-in the name of his heart is a deadly peril. He above all
-persons should insist that the power by which we multiply
-distinctions, though secondary, is not false&mdash;that
-the intellect, of however little avail in itself, is invaluable
-when working in coöperation with the imagination in the
-service of either inner or outer perception. It is only
-through the analytical head and its keen discriminations
-that the individualist can determine whether the unity
-and infinitude towards which his imagination is reaching
-(and it is only through the imagination that one can have
-the sense of unity and infinitude) is real or merely chimerical.
-Need I add that in making these distinctions
-between imagination, intellect, feeling, etc., I am not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-attempting to divide man up into more or less watertight
-compartments, into hard and fast “faculties,” but
-merely to express, however imperfectly, certain obscure
-and profound facts of experience?</p>
-
-<p>The varieties of what one may term the rationalistic
-error, of the endeavor of the intellect to emancipate itself
-from perception and set up as an independent power,
-are numerous. The variety that was perhaps formerly
-most familiar was that of the theologian who sought to
-formulate intellectually what must ever transcend formulation.
-The forms of the rationalistic error that concern
-our present subject can be traced back for the
-most part to Descartes, the father of modern philosophy,
-and are indeed implicit in his famous identification of
-thought and being (<i>Je pense, donc je suis</i>). The dogmatic
-and arrogant rationalism that denies both what is above
-and what is below itself, both the realm of awe and the
-realm of wonder, which prevailed among the Cartesians
-of the Enlightenment, combined, as I have said, with
-pseudo-classic decorum to produce that sense of confinement
-and smugness against which the original genius
-protested. Man will always crave a view of life to which
-perception lends immediacy and the imagination infinitude.
-A view of life like that of the eighteenth century
-that reduces unduly the rôle of both imagination and
-perception will always seem to him unvital and mechanical.
-“The Bounded,” says Blake, “is loathed by its possessor.
-The same dull round even of a Universe would
-soon become a Mill with complicated wheels.”</p>
-
-<p>The mechanizing of life against which the romanticist
-protested may as I said be largely associated with the
-influence of Descartes. It is not however the whole truth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-about Descartes to say that he forgot the purely instrumental
-rôle of the intellect and encouraged it to set up
-as an independent power. As a matter of fact he also
-used the intellect as an instrument in the service of outer
-perception. Taking as his point of departure the precise
-observations that science was accumulating, he sought
-to formulate mathematically the natural law. Now the
-more one reduces nature to a problem of space and
-movement, the more one is enabled to measure nature;
-and the method of exact measurement may be justified,
-if not on metaphysical, at least on practical grounds.
-It helps one, if not to understand natural forces, at
-least to control them. It thereby increases man’s power
-and ministers to utility. In a word, the intellect when
-thus pressed into the service of outer perception makes
-for material efficiency. In a sense science becomes scientific
-only in proportion as it neglects the qualitative
-differences between phenomena, e.g. between light
-and sound, and treats them solely from the point of view
-of quantity. But the penalty that science pays for this
-quantitative method is a heavy one. The farther it gets
-away from the warm immediacy of perception the less
-real it becomes; for that only is real to a man that he
-immediately perceives. Perfectly pure science tends to
-become a series of abstract mathematical formulæ without
-any real content. By his resort to such a method, the
-man of science is in constant danger of becoming a mere
-rationalist. At bottom he is ignorant of the reality that
-lies behind natural phenomena; he must even be ignorant
-of it, for it lays hold upon the infinite, and so must elude
-a finite being like man. But the desire to conceal his own
-ignorance from himself and others, the secret push for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-power and prestige that lies deep down in the breast of
-the man of science as in that of every other man, impels
-him to attach an independent value to the operations of
-the intellect that have only an instrumental value in the
-service of outer perception and to conceive that he has
-locked up physical nature in his formulæ. The man of
-science thus falls victim to a special form of metaphysical
-illusion. The gravity of the error of the scientific intellectualist
-is multiplied tenfold when he conceives that his
-formulæ cover not merely the natural law but the human
-law as well, when he strives, like Taine, to convert man
-himself into a “walking theorem,” a “living geometry.”
-This denial of every form of spontaneity was rightly felt
-by the romanticists to be intolerable.</p>
-
-<p>Goethe contrasts the smug satisfaction of Wagner in
-his dead formulæ that give only what is external and
-secondary, with Faust’s fierce craving for immediacy and
-therefore his impatience with an analysis that gives only
-the dry bones from which the vital breath has departed.
-Wagner is a philistine because he is not tormented by the
-thirst for the infinite. Faust, on the other hand, reaches
-out beyond the mere intellect towards the spirit that is
-behind the shows of nature, but this spirit appears to
-him and reduces him to despair by declaring that he is
-trying to grasp something that is not only infinite but
-alien to him. Instead of turning from this alien spirit
-to the spirit that is relevant to man, a spirit that sets
-bounds to every inordinate craving, including the inordinate
-craving for knowledge (<i>libido sciendi</i>), Faust gives
-himself to the devil in what was, in the time of the
-youthful Goethe, the newest fashion: he becomes a
-Rousseauist. Instead of striking into the ascending path<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-of insight, he descends to the level of impulse. Seen from
-this level the power by which we multiply distinctions
-seems to him, as it was to seem later to Wordsworth, not
-merely secondary but false, and so definition yields to
-indiscriminate feeling (<i>Gefühl ist alles</i>). In general the
-Rousseauistic reply to the Cartesian attempt to identify
-thought and being is the identification of being with emotion
-(<i>je sens donc je suis</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The Mephistopheles of Goethe has often been taken as
-a symbol of the iconoclastic and Voltairian side of the
-eighteenth century. The rationalists assailed the traditional
-forms that imply a superrational realm as mere
-“prejudice,” and, failing to find in insight a substitute
-for these discarded forms, they succumbed in turn to the
-emotionalists. A “reason” that is not grounded in insight
-will always seem to men intolerably cold and negative and
-will prove unable to withstand the assault of the primary
-passions. The reason of a Plato or an Aristotle
-is on a different footing altogether because, as I have
-said, it includes an element of inner perception. One may
-note here that the difficulties of the present subject arise
-in no small degree from the ambiguities that cluster about
-the word reason. It may not only mean the imaginative
-insight<a name="FNanchor_109_109" id="FNanchor_109_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a> of a Plato and the abstract reasoning of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-Descartes but is often employed by the classicist himself
-as a synonym of good sense. Good sense may be defined
-as a correct perception of the ordinary facts of life and
-of their relation to one another. It may be of very many
-grades, corresponding to the infinite diversity of the facts
-to be perceived. A man may evidently have good sense
-in dealing with one order of facts, and quite lack it in dealing
-with some different order of facts. As the result of long
-observation and experience of a multitude of minute relationships,
-of the facts that ordinarily follow one another
-or coexist in some particular field, a man’s knowledge of
-this field becomes at last, as it were, automatic and unconscious.
-A sea captain for example acquires at last an
-intuitive knowledge of the weather, the broker, an intuitive
-knowledge of stocks. The good sense or practical
-judgment of the sea captain in his particular calling and
-of the broker in his is likely to be greater than that of less
-experienced persons. One cannot, however, assert that a
-man’s good sense is always in strict ratio to his experience.
-Some persons seem to have an innate gift for seeing
-things as they are, others a gift equally innate for seeing
-things as they are not.</p>
-
-<p>Again the field in which one displays one’s good sense
-or practical judgment may fall primarily under either the
-human law or the natural law, may belong in Aristotelian
-phrase to the domain either of the probable or of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-necessary. To take a homely illustration, a man is free
-to choose the temperature of his bath, but only within
-the limits of natural necessity&mdash;in this case the temperature
-at which water freezes and that at which water
-boils. He will show his practical judgment by choosing
-water that is neither too hot nor too cold and this so far
-as he is concerned will be the golden mean. Here as elsewhere
-the golden mean is nothing mechanical, but may
-vary not only from individual to individual but in the
-same individual according to his age, the state of his
-health, etc. In determining what conforms to the golden
-mean or law of measure there must always be a mediation
-between the particular instance and the general principle,
-and it is here that intuition is indispensable. But even
-so there is a centre of normal human experience, and the
-person who is too far removed from it ceases to be probable.
-Aged persons may exist who find bathing in ice-water
-beneficial, but they are not representative. Now
-creative art, in distinct ratio to its dignity, deals not with
-what may happen in isolated cases but with what happens
-according to probability or necessity. It is this preoccupation
-with the universal that as Aristotle says
-makes poetry a more serious and philosophical thing than
-history. There enters indeed into true art an element of
-vital novelty and surprise. But the more cultivated the
-audience to which the creator addresses himself the more
-will it insist that the surprise be not won at the expense
-of motivation. It will demand that characters and incidents
-be not freakish, not too remote from the facts that
-normally follow one another or coexist, whether in nature
-or human nature. One needs, in short, to deal with
-both art and life from some ethical centre. The centre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-with reference to which one has good sense may be only
-the ethos of one’s time and country, but if one’s good
-sense has, as in the case of the great poets, the support of
-the imagination, it may pass beyond to something more
-abiding. “Of Pope’s intellectual character,” says Dr.
-Johnson, “the constituent and fundamental principle was
-good sense, a prompt and intuitive perception of consonance
-and propriety. He saw immediately of his own
-conceptions what was to be chosen, and what to be rejected.”
-One may grant all this and at the same time feel
-the difference between the “reason” of a Pope and the
-reason of a Sophocles.</p>
-
-<p>Good sense of the kind Dr. Johnson describes and decorum
-are not strictly speaking synonymous. To be
-decorous not only must one have a correct perception of
-what to do, but one must actually be able to do it; and
-this often requires a long and difficult training. We have
-seen that Rousseau’s spite against eighteenth-century
-Paris was largely due to the fact that he had not acquired
-young enough the habits that would have made
-it possible for him to conform to its convention. “I
-affected,” says Rousseau with singular candor, “to despise
-the politeness I did not know how to practice.”
-As a matter of fact he had never adjusted himself to the
-decorum and good sense of any community. His attitude
-towards life was fundamentally Bohemian. But a person
-who was sensible and decorous according to the standards
-of some other country might have emphasized the differences
-between his good sense and decorum and the good
-sense and decorum of eighteenth-century Paris. The opponents
-of the traditional order in the eighteenth century
-were fond of introducing some Persian or Chinese<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-to whom this order seemed no true order at all but only
-“prejudice” or “abuse.” The conclusion would seem to be
-that because the good sense and decorum of one time and
-country do not coincide exactly with those of another
-time and country, therefore good sense and decorum
-themselves have in them no universal element, and are
-entirely implicated in the shifting circumstances of time
-and place. But behind the ethos of any particular country,
-that of Greece, for instance, there are, as Antigone
-perceived, the “unwritten laws of heaven,” and something
-of this permanent order is sure to shine through
-even the most imperfect convention. Though no convention
-is final, though man and all he establishes are
-subject to the law of change, it is therefore an infinitely
-delicate and perilous task to break with convention. One
-can make this break only in favor of insight; which is
-much as if one should say that the only thing that may
-safely be opposed to common sense is a commoner sense, or
-if one prefers, a common sense that is becoming more and
-more imaginative. Even so, the wiser the man, one may
-surmise, the less likely he will be to indulge in a violent
-and theatrical rupture with his age, after the fashion of
-Rousseau. He will like Socrates remember the counsel
-of the Delphian oracle to follow the “usage of the city,”<a name="FNanchor_110_110" id="FNanchor_110_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a>
-and while striving to gain a firmer hold upon the human
-law and to impose a more strenuous discipline upon his
-ordinary self, he will so far as possible conform to what
-he finds established. A student of the past cannot help
-being struck by the fact that men are found scattered
-through different times and countries and living under
-very different conventions who are nevertheless in virtue<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-of their insight plainly moving towards a common
-centre. So much so that the best books of the world seem
-to have been written, as Emerson puts it, by one all-wise,
-all-seeing gentleman. A curious circumstance is that the
-writers who are most universal in virtue of their imaginative
-reason or inspired good sense, are likewise as a rule
-the writers who realized most intensely the life of their
-own age. No other Spanish writer, for example, has so
-much human appeal as Cervantes, and at the same time
-no other brings us so close to the heart of sixteenth-century
-Spain. In the writings attributed to Confucius
-one encounters, mixed up with much that is almost inconceivably
-remote from us, maxims that have not lost
-their validity to-day; maxims that are sure to be reaffirmed
-wherever and whenever men attain to the level of
-humanistic insight. In the oldest Buddhist documents
-again one finds along with a great deal that is very expressive
-of ancient India, and thus quite foreign to our
-idiosyncrasy, a good sense which is even more imaginative
-and inspired, and therefore more universal, than that of
-Confucius, and which is manifested, moreover, on the
-religious rather than on the humanistic level. We are
-dealing here with indubitable facts, and should plant
-ourselves firmly upon them as against those who would
-exaggerate either the constant or the variable elements
-in human nature.</p>
-
-<p>Enough has been said to show the ambiguities involved
-in the word reason. Reason may mean the abstract and
-geometrical reason of a Descartes, it may mean simply
-good sense, which may itself exist in very many grades
-ranging from an intuitive mastery of some particular
-field to the intuitive mastery of the ethos of a whole age,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-like the reason of a Pope. Finally reason may be imaginative
-and be thereby enabled to go beyond the convention
-of a particular time and country, and lay hold in varying
-degrees on “the unwritten laws of heaven.” I have
-already traced in some measure the process by which
-reason in the eighteenth century had come to mean
-abstract and geometrical (or as one may say Cartesian)
-reason or else unimaginative good sense. Cartesian
-reason was on the one hand being pressed into the service
-of science and its special order of perceptions; on the
-other hand it was being used frequently in coöperation
-with an unimaginative good sense to attack the traditional
-forms that imply a realm of insight which is above
-both abstract reason and ordinary good sense. Men were
-emboldened to use reason in this way because they were
-flushed not only by the increasing mastery of man over
-nature through science, but by the positive and anti-traditional
-method through which this mastery had been
-won. Both those who proclaimed and those who denied
-a superrational realm were at least agreed in holding that
-the faith in any such realm was inseparable from certain
-traditional forms. Pascal, for example, held not only that
-insight in religion is annexed to the acceptance of certain
-dogmas&mdash;and this offended the new critical spirit&mdash;but
-furthermore that insight could exist even in the orthodox
-only by a special divine gift or grace, and this offended
-man’s reviving confidence in himself. People were ready
-to applaud when a Voltaire declared it was time to “take
-the side of human nature against this sublime misanthropist.”
-The insight into the law of decorum on which
-classicism must ultimately rest was in much the same
-way held to be inseparable from the Græco-Roman tradition;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-and so the nature of classical insight as a thing
-apart from any tradition tended to be obscured in the
-endless bickerings of ancients and moderns. The classical
-traditionalists, however, were less prone than the Christian
-traditionalists (Jansenists, Jesuits and Protestants)
-to weaken their cause still further by wrangling among
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Inasmuch as both Christians and humanists failed to
-plant themselves on the fact of insight, the insight came
-more and more to be rejected along with the special forms
-from which it was deemed to be inseparable. As a result
-of this rejection “reason” was left to cope unaided with
-man’s impulses and expansive desires. Now Pascal saw
-rightly that the balance of power in such a conflict between
-reason and impulse was held by the imagination,
-and that if reason lacked the support of insight the imagination
-would side with the expansive desires and reason
-would succumb. Moreover the superrational insight, or
-“heart” as Pascal calls it, that can alone keep man from
-being thus overwhelmed, comes, as he holds, not through
-reason but through grace and is at times actually opposed
-to reason. (“The heart,” he says, “has reasons of which
-the reason knows nothing.”) Instead of protesting against
-the asceticism of this view as the true positivist would
-do, instead of insisting that reason and imagination may
-pull together harmoniously in the service of insight, the
-romantic moralist opposed to the superrational “heart”
-of the austere Christian a subrational “heart,” and this
-involved an attempt to base morality on the very element
-in human nature it is designed to restrain. The positivist
-will plant himself first of all on the fact of insight and will
-define it as the immediate perception of a something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-anterior to both thought and feeling, that is known practically
-as a power of control over both. The beautiful
-soul, as we have seen, has no place for any such power in
-his scheme of things, but hopes to satisfy all ethical elements
-simply by letting himself go. Rousseau (following
-Shaftesbury and Hutcheson) transforms conscience itself
-from an inner check into an expansive emotion. While
-thus corrupting conscience in its very essence he does
-not deny conscience. On the contrary he grows positively
-rhapsodic over conscience and other similar words.
-“Rousseau took wisdom from men’s souls,” says Joubert,
-“by talking to them of virtue.” In short, Rousseau displays
-the usual dexterity of the sophist in juggling with
-ill-defined general terms. If one calls for sharp definition
-one is at once dismissed as a mere rationalist who is retreating
-into a false secondary power from a warm immediacy.
-The traditional distinctions regarding good and
-bad were thus discarded at the same time that discredit
-was cast on the keen analysis with which it would have
-been possible to build up new distinctions&mdash;all in favor
-of an indiscriminate emotionalism. This discomfiture of
-both tradition and analysis in the field of the human law
-would not have been so easy if at the same time man’s
-active attention and effort had not been concentrated
-more and more on the field of the natural law. In that
-field imagination and the analytical intellect were actually
-pulling together in the service of perception with the
-result that man was constantly gaining in power and
-utility. Emotional romanticists and scientific utilitarians
-have thus, in spite of their surface clashes, cooperated
-during the past century in the dehumanizing of man.</p>
-
-<p>It is not enough to say of the representatives of both<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-sides of this great naturalistic movement that they eliminate
-the veto power from human nature while continuing
-to use the old words, like virtue and conscience, that imply
-a veto power. We have seen that they actually attack the
-veto power as synonymous with evil. The devil is conceived
-as the spirit that always says no. A purely affirmative
-morality is almost necessarily an emotional morality.
-If there is no region of insight above the reason which is
-felt by the natural man as an element of vital control,
-and if cold reason, reason unsupported by insight, never
-has done anything illustrious, as Rousseau truly says, it
-follows that the only way to put driving power behind
-reason is to turn virtue into a passion,&mdash;a passion that
-differs from other passions merely in its greater imperiousness.
-For the beautiful soul virtue, as we have seen
-in the case of Robespierre, is not only a tender, imperious
-and voluptuous passion but even an intoxication. “I was,
-if not virtuous,” says Rousseau, “at least intoxicated
-with virtue.” In its extreme manifestations romantic
-morality is indeed only one aspect, and surely the most
-singular aspect, of the romantic cult of intoxication. No
-student of romanticism can fail to be struck by its
-pursuit of delirium, vertigo and intoxication for their
-own sake. It is important to see how all these things are
-closely related to one another and how they all derive
-from the attempt to put life on an emotional basis. To
-rest conscience, for example, on emotion is to rest it on
-what is always changing, not only from man to man but
-from moment to moment in the same man. “If,” as
-Shelley says, “nought is, but that it feels itself to be,” it
-will feel itself to be very different things at different times.
-No part of man is exempt from the region of flux and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-change. There is, as James himself points out, a kinship
-between such a philosophy of pure motion and vertigo.
-Faust after all is only consistent when having identified
-the spirit that says no, which is the true voice of conscience,
-with the devil, he proceeds to dedicate himself
-to vertigo (<i>dem Taumel weih’ ich mich</i>). Rousseau also,
-as readers of the “Confessions” will remember, deliberately
-courted giddiness by gazing down on a waterfall from the
-brink of a precipice (making sure first that the railing on
-which he leaned was good and strong). This naturalistic
-dizziness became epidemic among the Greeks at the critical
-moment of their break with traditional standards.
-“Whirl is King,” cried Aristophanes, “having driven out
-Zeus.” The modern sophist is even more a votary of the
-god Whirl than the Greek, for he has added to the mobility
-of an intellect that has no support in either tradition or
-insight the mobility of feeling. Many Rousseauists were,
-like Hazlitt, attracted to the French Revolution by its
-“grand whirling movements.”</p>
-
-<p>Even more significant than the cult of vertigo is the
-closely allied cult of intoxication. “Man being reasonable,”
-says Byron, with true Rousseauistic logic, “must
-therefore get drunk. The best of life is but intoxication.”
-The subrational and impulsive self of the man who has
-got drunk is not only released from the surveillance of
-reason in any sense of the word, but his imagination is
-at the same tune set free from the limitations of the real.
-If many Rousseauists have been rightly accused of being
-“lovers of delirium,” that is because in delirium the
-fancy is especially free to wander wild in its own empire
-of chimeras. To compose a poem, as Coleridge is supposed
-to have composed “Kubla Khan,” in an opium<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-dream without any participation of his rational self is a
-triumph of romantic art. “I should have taken more
-opium when I wrote it,” said Friedrich Schlegel in explanation
-of the failure of his play “Alarcos.” What more
-specially concerns our present topic is the carrying over of
-this subrational “enthusiasm” into the field of ethical
-values, and this calls for certain careful distinctions.
-Genuine religion&mdash;whether genuine Christianity or
-genuine Buddhism&mdash;is plainly unfriendly in the highest
-degree to every form of intoxication. Buddhism, for
-example, not only prohibits the actual use of intoxicants
-but it pursues implacably all the subtler intoxications of
-the spirit. The attitude of the humanist towards intoxication
-is somewhat more complex. He recognizes how
-deep in man’s nature is the craving for some blunting of
-the sharp edge of his consciousness and at least a partial
-escape from reason and reality; and so he often makes a
-place on the recreative side of life for such moments of
-escape even if attained with the aid of wine. <i>Dulce est
-desipere in loco.</i> Pindar, who displays so often in his verse
-the high seriousness of the ethical imagination, is simply
-observing the decorum of the occasion when he celebrates
-in a song for the end of a feast “the time when the wearisome
-cares of men have vanished from their reasons and
-on a wide sea of golden wealth we are all alike voyaging
-to some visionary shore. He that is penniless is then rich,
-and even they that are wealthy find their hearts expanding,
-when they are smitten by the arrows of the vine.”
-The true Greek, one scarcely needs add, put his final emphasis,
-as befitted a child of Apollo, not on intoxication
-but on the law of measure and sobriety&mdash;on preserving
-the integrity of his mind, to render literally the Greek<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-word for the virtue that he perhaps prized the most.<a name="FNanchor_111_111" id="FNanchor_111_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a> One
-must indeed remember that alongside the Apollonian
-element in Greek life is the orgiastic or Dyonisiac element.
-But when Euripides sides imaginatively with the
-frenzy of Dionysus, as he does in his “Bacchae,” though
-ostensibly preaching moderation, we may affirm that he
-is falling away from what is best in the spirit of Hellas and
-revealing a kinship with the votaries of the god Whirl.
-The cult of intoxication has as a matter of fact appeared
-in all times and places where men have sought to get the
-equivalent of religious vision and the sense of oneness that
-it brings without rising above the naturalistic level. True
-religious vision is a process of concentration, the result of
-the imposition of the veto power upon the expansive
-desires of the ordinary self. The various naturalistic
-simulations of this vision are, on the contrary, expansive,
-the result of a more or less complete escape from the veto
-power, whether won with the aid of intoxicants or not.
-The emotional romanticists from Rousseau down have
-left no doubt as to the type of vision they represented.
-Rousseau dilates with a sort of fellow feeling on the deep
-potations that went on in the taverns of patriarchal
-Geneva.<a name="FNanchor_112_112" id="FNanchor_112_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a> Renan looks with disfavor on those who are
-trying to diminish drunkenness among the common
-people. He merely asks that this drunkenness “be
-gentle, amiable, accompanied by moral sentiments.”
-Perhaps this side of the movement is best summed up
-in the following passage of William James:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span> “The sway
-of alcohol over mankind is unquestionably due to its
-power to stimulate the mystical faculties of human nature,
-usually crushed to earth by the cold facts and dry
-criticisms of the sober hour. Sobriety diminishes, discriminates
-and says no; drunkenness expands, unites, and
-says yes. It is, in fact, the great exciter of the <i>Yes</i> function
-in man. It brings its votary from the chill periphery
-of things to the radiant core. It makes him for the moment
-one with truth.”<a name="FNanchor_113_113" id="FNanchor_113_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a></p>
-
-<p>The American distiller who named one of his brands
-“Golden Dream Whiskey” was evidently too modest.
-If an adept in the new psychology he might have set up
-as a pure idealist, as the opener up of an especially radiant
-pathway to the “truth.”</p>
-
-<p>The primitivist then attacks sober discrimination as
-an obstacle both to warm immediacy of feeling and to
-unity. He tends to associate the emotional unity that
-he gains through intoxication with the unity of instinct
-which he so admires in the world of the subrational. “The
-romantic character,” says Ricarda Huch, “is more exposed
-to waste itself in debaucheries than any other; for
-only in intoxication, whether of love or wine, when the
-one half of its being, consciousness, is lulled to sleep, can
-it enjoy the bliss for which it envies every beast&mdash;the
-bliss of feeling itself one.”<a name="FNanchor_114_114" id="FNanchor_114_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> The desires of the animal,
-however, work within certain definite limits. They are
-not, like those of the primitivist, inordinate, the explanation
-being that they are less stimulated than the desires
-of the primitivist by the imagination. Even if he gets rid
-of intellect and moral effort, the primitivist cannot attain
-the unity of instinct because he remains too imaginative;
-at the same time he proclaims and proclaims rightly that
-the imagination is the great unifying power&mdash;the power
-that can alone save us from viewing things in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span> “disconnection
-dead and spiritless.” We should attend carefully
-at this point for we are coming to the heart of the great
-romantic sophism. The Rousseauist does not attain to
-the unity of the man whose impulses and desires are controlled
-and disciplined to some ethical centre. He does not,
-in spite of all his praise of the unconscious and of the
-“sublime animals,” attain to the unity of instinct. In
-what sense then may he be said to attain unity? The
-obvious reply is that he attains unity only in dreamland.
-For the nature to which he would return, one cannot
-repeat too often, is nothing real, but a mere nostalgic
-straining of the imagination away from the real. It is
-only in dreamland that one can rest unity on the expansive
-forces of personality that actually divide not only
-one individual from another but the same individual
-from himself. It is only in dreamland that, in the absence
-of both inner and outer control, “all things” will “flow
-to all, as rivers to the sea.” Such a unity will be no more
-than a dream unity, even though one term it the ideal
-and sophisticate in its favor all the traditional terms of
-religion and morality. A question that forces itself at
-every stage upon the student of this movement is: <i>What
-is the value of unity without reality?</i> For two things are
-equally indubitable: first, that romanticism on the philosophical
-side, is a protest in the name of unity against the
-disintegrating analysis of the eighteenth-century rationalist;
-second, that what the primitivist wants in exchange
-for analysis is not reality but illusion. Rousseau who inclines
-like other æsthetes to identify the true with the
-beautiful was, we are told, wont to exclaim: “There is
-nothing beautiful save that which is not”; a saying to
-be matched with that of “La Nouvelle Héloïse”:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span> “The
-land of chimeras is alone worthy of habitation.” Similar
-utterances might be multiplied from French, English, and
-German romanticists.<a name="FNanchor_115_115" id="FNanchor_115_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a> To be sure, the word “reality” is
-perhaps the most slippery of all general terms. Certain
-recent votaries of the god Whirl, notably Bergson, have
-promised us that if we surrender to the flux we shall have
-a “vision” not only of unity but also of reality; and so
-they have transferred to the cult of their divinity all
-the traditional language of religion.</p>
-
-<p>We do not, however, need for the present to enter into
-a discussion as to the nature of reality, but simply to stick
-to strict psychological observation. From this point of
-view it is not hard to see that the primitivist makes his
-primary appeal not to man’s need for unity and reality
-but to a very different need. Byron has told us what this
-need is in his tale (“The Island”) of a ship’s crew that
-overpowered its officers and then set sail for Otaheite;
-what impelled these Arcadian mutineers was not the
-desire for a genuine return to aboriginal life with its rigid
-conventions, but</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">The wish&mdash;which ages have not yet subdued</div>
-<div class="verse">In man&mdash;to have no master save his mood.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Now to have no master save one’s mood is to be wholly
-temperamental. In Arcadia&mdash;the ideal of romantic morality&mdash;those
-who are wholly temperamental unite in
-sympathy and brotherly love. It remains to consider
-more fully what this triumph of temperament means in
-the real world.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROMANTIC MORALITY: THE REAL</span></h2>
-
-<p>The fundamental thing in Rousseauistic morality is not,
-as we have seen, the assertion that man is naturally
-good, but the denial of the “civil war in the cave.”
-Though this denial is not complete in Rousseau himself,
-nothing is more certain than that his whole tendency is
-away from this form of dualism. The beautiful soul does
-the right thing not as a result of effort, but spontaneously,
-unconsciously and almost inevitably. In fact the beautiful
-soul can scarcely be said to be a voluntary agent at all.
-“Nature” acts in him and for him. This minimizing of
-moral struggle and deliberation and choice, this drift towards
-a naturalistic fatalism, as it may be termed, is a
-far more significant thing in Rousseau than his optimism.
-One may as a matter of fact eliminate dualism in favor of
-nature and at the same time look on nature as evil. This
-is precisely what one is likely to do if one sees no alternative
-to temperamental living, while judging those who
-live temperamentally not by their “ideal,” that is by
-their feeling of their own loveliness, but by what they
-actually do. One will become a realist in the sense that
-came to be attached to this word during the latter part
-of the nineteenth century. Rousseau himself is often
-realistic in this sense when he interrupts his Arcadian
-visions to tell us what actually occurred. In the “Confessions,”
-as I have said, passages that recall Lamartine
-alternate with passages that recall Zola, and the transition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-from one type of passage to the other is often disconcertingly
-sudden. In reading these realistic passages
-of Rousseau we are led to reflect that his “nature” is
-not, in practice, so remote from Taine’s nature as might
-at first appear. “What we call <i>nature</i>,” says Taine, “is
-this brood of secret passions, often maleficent, generally
-vulgar, always blind, which tremble and fret within us, ill-covered
-by the cloak of decency and reason under which
-we try to disguise them; we think we lead them and they
-lead us; we think our actions our own, they are theirs.”<a name="FNanchor_116_116" id="FNanchor_116_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_116_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a></p>
-
-<p>The transition from an optimistic to a pessimistic
-naturalism can be followed with special clearness in the
-stages by which the sentimental drama of the eighteenth
-century passes over into the realistic drama of a later
-period. Petit de Julleville contrasts the beginning and
-the end of this development as follows: “[In the eighteenth
-century] to please the public you had to say to it:
-‘You are all at least at bottom good, virtuous, full of
-feeling. Let yourselves go, follow your instincts; listen
-to nature and you will do the right thing spontaneously.’
-How changed times are! Nowadays<a name="FNanchor_117_117" id="FNanchor_117_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> any one who wishes
-to please, to be read and petted and admired, to pass for
-great and become very rich, should address men as follows:
-‘You are a vile pack of rogues, and profligates, you
-have neither faith nor law; you are impelled by your
-instincts alone and these instincts are ignoble. Do not try
-though to mend matters, that would be of no use at all.’”<a name="FNanchor_118_118" id="FNanchor_118_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a></p>
-
-<p>The connecting link between these different forms of
-the drama is naturalistic fatalism, the suppression of
-moral responsibility for either man’s goodness or badness.
-Strictly speaking, the intrusion of the naturalistic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-element into the realm of ethical values and the subversion
-by it of deliberation and choice and of the normal
-sequence of moral cause and effect is felt from the human
-point of view not as fate at all, but as chance. Emotional
-romanticism joins at this point with other forms of
-romanticism, which all show a proclivity to prefer to
-strict motivation, to probability in the Aristotelian sense,
-what is fortuitous and therefore wonderful. This is only
-another way of saying that the romanticist is moving
-away from the genuinely dramatic towards melodrama.
-Nothing is easier than to establish the connection between
-emotional romanticism and the prodigious efflorescence
-of melodrama, the irresponsible quest for thrills,
-that has marked the past century. What perhaps distinguishes
-this movement from any previous one is the
-attempt to invest what is at bottom a melodramatic
-view of life with philosophic and even religious significance.
-By suppressing the “civil war in the cave” one
-strikes at the very root of true drama. It does not then
-much matter from the dramatic point of view whether the
-burden of responsibility for good or evil of which you
-have relieved the individual is shifted upon “nature”
-or society. Shelley, for example, puts the blame for evil
-on society. “Prometheus Unbound,” in which he has
-developed his conception, is, judged as a play, only an
-ethereal melodrama. The unaccountable collapse of
-Zeus, a monster of unalloyed and unmotivated badness,
-is followed by the gushing forth in man of an equally
-unalloyed and unmotivated goodness. The whole genius
-of Hugo, again, as I have said in speaking of his use of
-antithesis, is melodramatic. His plays may be described
-as parvenu melodramas. They abound in every variety<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-of startling contrast and strange happening, the whole
-pressed into the service of “problems” manifold and
-even of a philosophy of history. At the same time the
-poverty of ethical insight and true dramatic motivation
-is dissimulated under profuse lyrical outpourings and
-purple patches of local color. His Hernani actually glories
-in not being a responsible agent, but an “unchained and
-fatal force,”<a name="FNanchor_119_119" id="FNanchor_119_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_119_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a> and so more capable of striking astonishment
-into himself and others. Yet the admirers of Hugo
-would not only promote him to the first rank of poets,
-but would have us share his own belief that he is a seer
-and a prophet.</p>
-
-<p>It may be objected that the great dramatists of the
-past exalt this power of fate and thus diminish moral
-responsibility. But the very sharpest distinction must
-be drawn between the subrational fate of the emotional
-romanticist and the superrational fate of Greek tragedy.
-The fate of Æschylean tragedy, for instance, so far from
-undermining moral responsibility rather reinforces it.
-It is felt to be the revelation of a moral order of which
-man’s experience at any particular moment is only an
-infinitesimal fragment. It does not seem, like the subrational
-fate of the emotional romanticist, the intrusion
-into the human realm of an alien power whether friendly
-or unfriendly. This point might be established by a study
-of the so-called fate drama in Germany (<i>Schicksaltragödie</i>),
-which, though blackly pessimistic, is closely related to
-the optimistic sentimental drama of the eighteenth century.<a name="FNanchor_120_120" id="FNanchor_120_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_120_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a>
-The German fate drama is in its essence ignoble<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-because its characters are specimens of sensitive morality&mdash;incapable,
-that is, of opposing a firm human purpose
-to inner impulse or outer impression. The fate that thus
-wells up from the depths of nature and overwhelms their
-wills is not only malign and ironical, but as Grillparzer
-says, makes human deeds seem only “throws of the dice
-in the blind night of chance.”<a name="FNanchor_121_121" id="FNanchor_121_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_121_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a> It would be easy to follow
-similar conceptions of fate down through later literature
-at least to the novels of Thomas Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the earlier exponents of the sentimental
-drama, like Diderot, were not so certain as one might
-expect that the discarding of traditional decorum in
-favor of “nature” would result practically in a reign of
-pure loveliness. At one moment Diderot urges men to get
-rid of the civil war in the cave in order that they may be
-Arcadian, like the savages of the South Sea, but at other
-moments&mdash;as in “Rameau’s Nephew”&mdash;he shows a
-somewhat closer grip on the problem of what will actually
-come to pass when a man throws off the conventions of
-a highly organized civilization and sets out to live temperamentally.
-Diderot sees clearly that he will be that
-least primitive of all beings, the Bohemian. Rameau’s
-nephew, in his irresponsibility and emotional instability,
-in the kaleidoscopic shiftings of his mood, anticipates
-all the romantic Bohemians and persons of “artistic
-temperament” who were to afflict the nineteenth century.
-But he is more than a mere æsthete. At moments we can
-discern in him the first lineaments of the superman, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-knows no law save the law of might. One should recollect
-that the actual influence of Diderot in France fell in the
-second rather than in the first half of the nineteenth
-century&mdash;was upon the realists rather than upon the
-romanticists. The same men that had a cult for Diderot
-admired the Vautrins and the Rastignacs of Balzac
-and the Julien Sorel of Stendhal. These characters are
-little Napoleons. They live temperamentally in the midst
-of a highly organized society, but they set aside its conventions
-of right and wrong in favor, not of æsthetic
-enjoyment, but of power.</p>
-
-<p>The ideal of romantic morality, as was seen in the last
-chapter, is altruism. The real, it should be clear from the
-examples I have been citing, is always egoism. But egoism
-may assume very different forms. As to the main
-forms of egoism in men who have repudiated outer control
-without acquiring self-control we may perhaps revive
-profitably the old Christian classification of the three
-lusts&mdash;the lust of knowledge, the lust of sensation, and
-the lust of power. Goethe indeed may be said to have
-treated these three main ways of being temperamental
-in three of his early characters&mdash;the lust of knowledge in
-“Faust,” the lust of sensation in “Werther,” and the lust
-of power in “Götz.” If we view life solely from the naturalistic
-level and concern ourselves solely with the world
-of action, we are justified in neglecting, like Hobbes, the
-other lusts and putting supreme emphasis on the lust
-for power.<a name="FNanchor_122_122" id="FNanchor_122_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a> Professor F.J. Mather, Jr., has distinguished
-between “hard” and “soft” sentimentalists.<a name="FNanchor_123_123" id="FNanchor_123_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a> His distinction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-might perhaps be brought more closely into line with
-my own distinctions if I ventured to coin a word and to
-speak of hard and soft temperamentalists. The soft temperamentalist
-will prove unable to cope in the actual world
-with the hard temperamentalist, and is very likely to become
-his tool. Balzac has very appropriately made Lucien
-de Rubempré, the romantic poet and a perfect type of a
-soft temperamentalism, the tool of Vautrin, the superman.</p>
-
-<p>Here indeed is the supreme opposition between the
-ideal and the real in romantic morality. The ideal to which
-Rousseau invites us is either the primitivistic anarchy of
-the “Second Discourse,” in which egoism is tempered by
-“natural pity,” or else a state such as is depicted in the
-“Social Contract,” in which egoism is held in check by
-a disinterested “general will.” The preliminary to achieving
-either of these ideals is that the traditional checks on
-human nature should be removed. But in exact proportion
-as this programme of emancipation is carried out
-what emerges in the real world is not the mythical will
-to brotherhood, but the ego and its fundamental will to
-power. Give a bootblack half the universe, according to
-Carlyle, and he will soon be quarreling with the owner
-of the other half. He will if he is a very temperamental
-bootblack. Perhaps indeed all other evils in life may be
-reduced to the failure to check that something in man
-that is reaching out for more and ever for more. In a
-society in which the traditional inhibitions are constantly
-growing weaker, the conflict I have just sketched between
-the ideal and the real is becoming more and more
-acute. The soft temperamentalists are overflowing with
-beautiful professions of brotherly love, and at the same
-time the hard temperamentalists are reaching out for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-everything in sight; and inasmuch as the hard temperamentalists
-operate not in dreamland, but in the real
-world, they are only too plainly setting the tone. Very
-often, of course, the same temperamentalist has his hard
-and his soft side. The triumph of egoism over altruism
-in the relations between man and man is even more
-evident in the relations between nation and nation. The
-egoism that results from the inbreeding of temperament
-on a national scale runs in the case of the strong nations
-into imperialism.<a name="FNanchor_124_124" id="FNanchor_124_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_124_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a> We have not reflected sufficiently on
-the fact that the soft temperamentalist Rousseau is more
-than any other one person the father of <i>Kultur</i>;<a name="FNanchor_125_125" id="FNanchor_125_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a> and
-that the exponents of Kultur in our own day have been
-revealed as the hardest of hard temperamentalists.</p>
-
-<p>To understand the particular craving that is met by
-Rousseauistic idealism one would need to go with some
-care into the psychology of the half-educated man. The
-half-educated man may be defined as the man who has
-acquired a degree of critical self-consciousness sufficient
-to detach him from the standards of his time and place,
-but not sufficient to acquire the new standards that come
-with a more thorough cultivation. It was pointed out long
-ago that the characteristic of the half-educated man is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-that he is incurably restless; that he is filled with every
-manner of desire. In contrast with him the uncultivated
-man, the peasant, let us say, and the man of high cultivation
-have few and simple desires. Thus Socrates had
-fewer and simpler desires than the average Athenian. But
-what is most noteworthy about the half-educated man
-is not simply that he harbors many desires and is therefore
-incurably restless, but that these desires are so often
-incompatible. He craves various good things, but is not
-willing to pay the price&mdash;not willing to make the necessary
-renunciations. He pushes to an extreme what is after
-all a universal human proclivity&mdash;the wish to have
-one’s cake and eat it too. Thus, while remaining on the
-naturalistic level, he wishes to have blessings that accrue
-only to those who rise to the humanistic or religious levels.
-He wishes to live in “a universe with the lid off,” to
-borrow a happy phrase from the pragmatist, and at the
-same time to enjoy the peace and brotherhood that are
-the fruits of restraint. The moral indolence of the Rousseauist
-is such that he is unwilling to adjust himself to the
-truth of the human law; and though living naturalistically,
-he is loath to recognize that what actually prevails
-on the naturalistic level is the law of cunning and the law
-of force. He thus misses the reality of both the human
-and the natural law and in the pursuit of a vague Arcadian
-longing falls into sheer unreality. I am indeed overstating
-the case so far as Rousseau is concerned. He makes plain
-in the “Emile” that the true law of nature is not the law
-of love but the law of force. Emile is to be released from
-the discipline of the human law and given over to the
-discipline of nature; and this means in practice that he
-will have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span> “to bow his neck beneath the hard yoke of
-physical necessity.” In so far the “nature” of Emile is
-no Arcadian dream. Where the Arcadian dreaming begins
-is when Rousseau assumes that an Emile who has
-learned the lesson of force from Nature herself, will not
-pass along this lesson to others, whether citizens of his
-own or some other country, but will rather display in his
-dealings with them an ideal fraternity. In the early stages
-of the naturalistic movement, in Hobbes and Shaftesbury,
-for example, egoism and altruism, the idea of power
-and the idea of sympathy, are more sharply contrasted
-than they are in Rousseau and the later romanticists.
-Shaftesbury assumes in human nature an altruistic impulse
-or will to brotherhood that will be able to cope
-successfully with the will to power that Hobbes declares
-to be fundamental. Many of the romanticists, as we have
-seen, combine the cult of power with the cult of brotherhood.
-Hercules, as in Shelley’s poem, is to bow down
-before Prometheus, the lover of mankind. The extreme
-example, however, is probably William Blake. He proclaims
-himself of the devil’s party, he glorifies a free
-expansion of energy, he looks upon everything that restricts
-this expansion as synonymous with evil. At the
-same time he pushes his exaltation of sympathy to the
-verge of the grotesque.<a name="FNanchor_126_126" id="FNanchor_126_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_126_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Such indeed is the jumble of incompatibles in Blake
-that he would rest an illimitable compassion on the psychology
-of the superman. For nothing is more certain
-than that the “Marriage of Heaven and Hell” is among
-other things a fairly complete anticipation of Nietzsche.
-The reasons are worth considering why the idea of power
-and the idea of sympathy which Blake and so many other
-romanticists hoped to unite have once more come to seem
-antipodal, why in the late stages of the movement one
-finds a Nietzsche and a Tolstoy, just as in its early stages
-one finds a Hobbes and a Shaftesbury. It is plain, first of
-all, that what brought the two cults together for a time
-was their common hatred of the past. With the triumph
-over the past fairly complete, the incompatibility of
-power and sympathy became increasingly manifest.
-Nietzsche’s attitude is that of a Prometheus whose sympathy
-for mankind has changed to disgust on seeing the
-use that they are actually making of their emancipation.
-Humanitarian sympathy seemed to him to be tending
-not merely to a subversion, but to an inversion of values,
-to a positive preference for the trivial and the ignoble.
-He looked with special loathing on that side of the movement
-that is symbolized in its homage to the ass. The
-inevitable flying apart of power and sympathy was further
-hastened in Nietzsche and others by the progress
-of evolution. Darwinism was dissipating the Arcadian
-mist through which nature had been viewed by Rousseau
-and his early followers. The gap is wide between Tennyson’s
-nature “red in tooth and claw” and the tender
-and pitiful nature of Wordsworth.<a name="FNanchor_127_127" id="FNanchor_127_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_127_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a> Nietzsche’s preaching
-of ruthlessness is therefore a protest against the sheer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-unreality of those who wish to be natural and at the same
-time sympathetic. But how are we to get a real scale of
-values to oppose to an indiscriminate sympathy? It is
-here that Nietzsche shows that he is caught in the same
-fatal coil of naturalism as the humanitarian. He accepts
-the naturalistic corruption of conscience which underlies
-all other naturalistic corruptions. “The will to overcome
-an emotion,” he says, “is ultimately only the will
-of another or of several other emotions.”<a name="FNanchor_128_128" id="FNanchor_128_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a> All he can do
-with this conception of conscience is to set over against
-the humanitarian suppression of values a scale of values
-based on force and not a true scale of values based on the
-degree to which one imposes or fails to impose on one’s
-temperamental self a human law of vital control. The
-opposition between a Nietzsche and a Tolstoy is therefore
-not specially significant; it is only that between the hard
-and the soft temperamentalist. To be sure Nietzsche can
-on occasion speak very shrewdly about the evils that
-have resulted from temperamentalism&mdash;especially from
-the passion for an untrammeled self-expression. But the
-superman himself is a most authentic descendant of the
-original genius in whom we first saw this passion dominant.
-The imagination of the superman, spurning every
-centre of control, traditional or otherwise, so coöperates
-with his impulses and desires as to give them “infinitude,”
-that is so as to make them reach out for more and
-ever for more. The result is a frenzied romanticism.<a name="FNanchor_129_129" id="FNanchor_129_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Proportionateness is strange to us, let us confess it
-to ourselves,” says Nietzsche. “Our itching is really the
-itching for the infinite, the immeasurable.” How the
-humanitarian loses proportionateness is plain; it is by his
-readiness to sacrifice to sympathy the ninety per cent or
-so of the virtues that imply self-control. The superman
-would scarcely seem to redress the balance by getting rid
-of the same restraining virtues in favor of power. He
-simply oscillates wildly from the excess of which he is
-conscious in others or in himself into the opposite excess,
-at imminent peril in either case to the ethical basis of
-civilization. The patterns or models that the past had set
-up for imitation and with reference to which one might
-rein in his lusts and impose upon them proportionateness
-are rejected by every type of romantic expansionist,
-not only as Nietzsche says, because they do not satisfy
-the yearning for the infinite, but also, as we have seen,
-because they do not satisfy the yearning for unity and
-immediacy. Now so far as the forms of the eighteenth
-century were concerned the romantic expansionist had
-legitimate grounds for protest. But because the rationalism
-and artificial decorum of that period failed to
-satisfy, he goes on to attack the analytical intellect and
-decorum in general and this attack is entirely illegitimate.
-It may be affirmed on the contrary that the power by
-which we multiply distinctions is never so necessary as
-in an individualistic age, an age that has broken with
-tradition on the ground that it wishes to be more imaginative
-and immediate. There are various ways of being
-imaginative and immediate, and analysis is needed, not
-to build up some abstract system but to discriminate
-between the actual data of experience and so to determine
-which one of these ways it is expedient to follow if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-one wishes to become wise and happy. It is precisely at
-such moments of individualistic break with the past that
-the sophist stands ready to juggle with general terms,
-and the only protection against such juggling is to define
-these terms with the aid of the most unflinching analysis.
-Thus Bergson would have us believe that there are
-in France two main types of philosophy, a rationalistic
-type that goes back to Descartes and an intuitive type
-that goes back to Pascal,<a name="FNanchor_130_130" id="FNanchor_130_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_130_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a> and gives us to understand
-that, inasmuch as he is an intuitionist, he is in the line of
-descent from Pascal. Monstrous sophistries lurk in this
-simple assertion, sophistries which if they go uncorrected
-are enough to wreck civilization. The only remedy is to
-define the word intuition, to discriminate practically and
-by their fruits between subrational and superrational
-intuition. When analyzed and defined in this way subrational
-intuition will be found to be associated with vital
-impulse (<i>élan vital</i>) and superrational intuition with a
-power of vital control (<i>frein vital</i>) over this impulse; and
-furthermore it will be clear that this control must be
-exercised if men are to be drawn towards a common
-centre, not in dreamland, but in the real world. So far
-then from its being true that the man who analyzes must
-needs see things in disconnection dead and spiritless, it is
-only by analysis that he is, in an individualistic age, put
-on the pathway of true unity, and also of the rôle of the
-imagination in achieving this unity. For there is need to
-discriminate between the different types of imagination
-no less than between the different types of intuition. One<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-will find through such analysis that the centre of normal
-human experience that is to serve as a check on impulse
-(so far at least as it is something distinct from the mere
-convention of one’s age and time) can be apprehended
-only with the aid of the imagination. This is only another
-way of saying that the reality that is set above one’s
-ordinary self is not a fixed absolute but can be glimpsed,
-if at all, only through a veil of illusion and is indeed inseparable
-from the illusion. This realm of insight cannot be
-finally formulated for the simple reason that it is anterior
-to formulæ. It must therefore from the point of view of
-an intellect it transcends seem infinite though in a very
-different sense from the outer infinite of expansive desire.</p>
-
-<p>This inner or human infinite, so far from being incompatible
-with decorum, is the source of true decorum.
-True decorum is only the pulling back and disciplining of
-impulse to the proportionateness that has been perceived
-with the aid of what one may term the ethical or generalizing
-imagination. To dismiss like the romantic expansionist
-everything that limits or restricts the lust of
-knowledge or of power or of sensation as arbitrary and
-artificial is to miss true decorum and at the same time to
-sink, as a Greek would say, from ethos to pathos. If one is
-to avoid this error one must, as Hamlet counsels, “in the
-very torrent, tempest, and (as I may say) whirlwind of
-passion, acquire and beget a temperance that may give it
-smoothness.” This is probably the best of all modern
-definitions of decorum simply because it is the most experimental.
-In general all that has been said about the
-ethical imagination is not to be taken as a fine-spun
-theory, but as an attempt however imperfect to give an
-account of actual experience.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One may report from observation another trait of
-truly ethical art, art which is at once imaginative and
-decorous. It is not merely intense, as art that is imaginative
-at the expense of decorum may very well be,<a name="FNanchor_131_131" id="FNanchor_131_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a> it has
-a restrained and humanized intensity&mdash;intensity on a
-background of calm. The presence of the ethical imagination
-whether in art or life<a name="FNanchor_132_132" id="FNanchor_132_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_132_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a> is always known as an element
-of calm.</p>
-
-<p>In art that has the ethical quality, and I am again not
-setting up a metaphysical theory but reporting from
-observation, the calm that comes from imaginative insight
-into the universal is inextricably blended with an
-element of uniqueness&mdash;with a something that belongs
-to a particular time and place and individual. The truth
-to the universal, as Aristotle would say, gives the work
-verisimilitude and the truth to the particular satisfies
-man’s deep-seated craving for novelty; so that the best
-art unites the probable with the wonderful. But the
-probable, one cannot insist too often, is won no less than
-the wonderful with the aid of the imagination and so is
-of the very soul of art. The romanticist who is ready to
-sacrifice the probable to the wonderful and to look on the
-whole demand for verisimilitude as an academic superstition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-is prone to assume that he has a monopoly of
-soul and imagination. But the word soul is at least in as
-much need of Socratic definition as the word intuition.
-It is possible, for example, with the aid of the ethical
-imagination so to partake of the ultimate element of calm
-as to rise to the religious level. The man who has risen
-to this level has a soul, but it is a soul of peace. Both soul
-and imagination are also needed to achieve the fine adjustment
-and mediation of the humanist. It is not enough,
-however, to have a religious or a humanistic soul if one
-is to be a creator or even a fully equipped critic of art.
-For art rests primarily not on ethical but æsthetic perception.
-This perception itself varies widely according to
-the art involved. One may, for instance, be musically
-perceptive and at the same time lack poetic perception.
-To be a creator in any art one must possess furthermore
-the technique of this art&mdash;something that is more or less
-separable from its “soul” in any sense of the word. It is
-possible to put a wildly romantic soul into art, as has often
-been done in the Far East, and at the same time to
-be highly conventional or traditional in one’s technique.
-Writers like Mérimée, Renan, and Maupassant again are
-faithful in the main to the technique of French prose
-that was worked out during the classical period, but combine
-with this technique an utterly unclassical “soul.”</p>
-
-<p>Rules, especially perhaps rules as to what to avoid,
-may be of aid in acquiring technique, but are out of place
-in dealing with the soul of art. There one passes from
-rules to principles. The only rule, if we are to achieve art
-that has an ethical soul, is to view life with some degree
-of imaginative wholeness. Art that has technique without
-soul in either the classical or romantic sense, and so fails<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-either to inspire elevation or awaken wonder, is likely
-to be felt as a barren virtuosity. The pseudo-classicist was
-often unduly minute in the rules he laid down for technique
-or outer form, as one may say, and then ignored
-the ethical imagination or inner form entirely, or else set
-up as a substitute mere didacticism. Since pseudo-classic
-work of this type plainly lacked soul and imagination,
-and since the romanticist felt and felt rightly that he himself
-had a soul and imagination, he concluded wrongly
-that soul and imagination are romantic monopolies.
-Like the pseudo-classicist, he inclines to identify high
-seriousness in art, something that can only come from
-the exercise of the ethical imagination at its best, with
-mere preaching, only he differs from the pseudo-classicist
-in insisting that preaching should be left to divines. One
-should insist, on the contrary, that the mark of genuinely
-ethical art, art that is highly serious, is that it is free from
-preaching. Sophocles is more ethical than Euripides for
-the simple reason that he views life with more imaginative
-wholeness. At the same time he is much less given
-to preaching than Euripides. He does not, as FitzGerald
-says, interrupt the action and the exhibition of character
-through action in order to “jaw philosophy.”</p>
-
-<p>It is not unusual for the modern artist to seek, like
-Euripides, to dissimulate the lack of true ethical purpose
-in his work by agitating various problems. But problems
-come and go, whereas human nature abides. One may agitate
-problems without number, and yet lack imaginative
-insight into the abiding element in human nature. Moreover,
-not being of the soul of art, the problem that one
-agitates is in danger of being a clogging intellectualism.
-Furthermore to seek in problems an equivalent for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-definition and purpose that the ethical imagination alone
-can give is to renew, often in an aggravated form, the
-neo-classical error. The moralizing of the pseudo-classic
-dramatist, even though dull and misplaced, was usually
-sound enough in itself; whereas the moralizing of those
-who seek nowadays to use the stage as a pulpit, resting
-as it does on false humanitarian postulates, is in itself
-dubious. The problem play succeeds not infrequently in
-being at once dull and indecent.</p>
-
-<p>The problem play is often very superior in technique
-or outer form to the earlier romantic drama, but it still
-suffers from the same lack of inner form, inasmuch as its
-social purpose cannot take the place of true human
-purpose based on imaginative insight into the universal.
-The lack of inner form in so much modern drama and art
-in general can be traced to the original unsoundness of
-the break with pseudo-classic formalism. To a pseudo-classic
-art that lacked every kind of perceptiveness the
-Rousseauist opposed æsthetic perceptiveness, and it is
-something, one must admit, thus to have discovered the
-senses. But to his æsthetic perceptiveness he failed, as I
-have already said, to add ethical perceptiveness because
-of his inability to distinguish between ethical perceptiveness
-and mere didacticism, and so when asked to put ethical
-purpose into art he replied that art should be pursued
-for its own sake (<i>l’art pour l’art</i>) and that “beauty is its
-own excuse for being.” One should note here the transformation
-that this pure æstheticism brought about
-in the meaning of the word beauty itself. For the Greek
-beauty resided in proportion,<a name="FNanchor_133_133" id="FNanchor_133_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a> and proportion can be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-attained only with the aid of the ethical imagination.
-With the elimination of the ethical element from the soul
-of art the result is an imagination that is free to wander
-wild with the emancipated emotions. The result is likely
-to be art in which a lively æsthetic perceptiveness is
-not subordinated to any whole, art that is unstructural,
-however it may abound in vivid and picturesque details;
-and a one-sided art of this kind the romanticist does not
-hesitate to call beautiful. “If we let the reason sleep and
-are content to watch a succession of dissolving views,”
-says Mr. Elton of Shelley’s “Revolt of Islam,” “the
-poem is seen at once to overflow with beauty.”<a name="FNanchor_134_134" id="FNanchor_134_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_134_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> Mere
-reason is not strictly speaking a sufficient remedy for this
-unstructural type of “beauty.” Thus Chateaubriand’s
-reason is on the side of proportion and all the classical
-virtues but his imagination is not (and we cannot repeat
-too often that it is what a man is imaginatively and not
-what he preaches that really counts). Instead of siding
-with his reason and aiding it to ethical perception Chateaubriand’s
-imagination is the free playmate of his emotions.
-“What did I care for all these futilities” (i.e. his
-functions as cabinet minister), he exclaims, “I who never
-cared for anything except for my dreams, and even then
-on condition that they should last only for a night.” When
-a man has once spoken in that vein sensible people will
-pay little heed to what he preaches; for they will be certain
-that the driving power of his work and personality
-is elsewhere. The imagination holds the balance of power
-between the reason and the perceptions of sense, and
-Chateaubriand’s imagination is plainly on the side of
-sensuous adventure. This vagabondage of the imagination<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-appears especially in his imagistic trend, in his pursuit
-of the descriptive detail for its own sake. To set out
-like Chateaubriand to restore the monarchy and the Christian
-religion and instead to become the founder of “<i>l’école
-des images à tout prix</i>” is an especially striking form of the
-contrast in romantic morality between the ideal and the
-real.</p>
-
-<p>The attempt that we have been studying to divorce
-beauty from ethics led in the latter part of the eighteenth
-century to the rise of a nightmare subject,&mdash;æsthetics.
-Shaftesbury indeed, as we have seen already, anticipates
-the favorite romantic doctrine that beauty is truth and
-truth beauty, which means in practice to rest both truth
-and beauty upon a fluid emotionalism. Thus to deal
-æsthetically with truth is an error of the first magnitude,
-but it is also an error, though a less serious one, to see only
-the æsthetic element in beauty. For beauty to be complete
-must have not only æsthetic perceptiveness but
-order and proportion; and this brings us back again to
-the problem of the ethical imagination and the permanent
-model or pattern with reference to which it seeks to impose
-measure and proportion upon sensuous perception
-and expansive desire. We should not hesitate to say that
-beauty loses most of its meaning when divorced from
-ethics even though every æsthete in the world should
-arise and denounce us as philistines. To rest beauty upon
-feeling as the very name æsthetics implies, is to rest it
-upon what is ever shifting. Nor can we escape from this
-endless mobility with the aid of physical science, for
-physical science does not itself rise above the naturalistic
-flux. After eliminating from beauty the permanent pattern
-and the ethical imagination with the aid of which it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-perceived, a man will be ready to term beautiful anything
-that reflects his ordinary or temperamental self. Diderot
-is a sentimentalist and so he sees as much beauty in the
-sentimentalist Richardson as in Homer. If a man is
-psychically restless he will see beauty only in motion.
-The Italian futurist Marinetti says that for him a rushing
-motor car is more beautiful than the Victory of Samothrace.
-A complete sacrifice of the principle of repose in
-beauty (which itself arises from the presence of the ethical
-imagination) to the suggesting of motion such as has been
-seen in certain recent schools, runs practically into a mixture
-of charlatanism and madness. “He that is giddy
-thinks the world goes round,” says Shakespeare, and the
-exponents of certain ultra-modern movements in painting
-are simply trying to paint their inner giddiness. As
-a matter of fact the pretension of the æsthete to have
-a purely personal vision of beauty and then treat as a
-philistine every one who does not accept it, is intolerable.
-Either beauty cannot be defined at all or we must say that
-only is beautiful which seems so to the right kind of
-man, and the right kind of man is plainly he whose total
-attitude towards life is correct, who views life with some
-degree of imaginative wholeness, which is only another
-way of saying that the problem of beauty is inseparable
-from the ethical problem. In an absolute sense nobody
-can see life steadily and see it whole; but we may at least
-move towards steadiness and wholeness. The æsthete is
-plainly moving in an opposite direction; he is becoming
-more and more openly a votary of the god Whirl. His
-lack of inner form is an error not of æsthetics but of
-general philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>The romantic imagination, the imagination that is not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-drawn back to any ethical centre and so is free to wander
-wild in its own empire of chimeras, has indeed a place in
-life. To understand what this place is one needs to emphasize
-the distinction between art that has high seriousness
-and art that is merely recreative. The serious
-moments of life are moments of tension, of concentration
-on either the natural or the human law. But Apollo
-cannot always be bending the bow. Man needs at times
-to relax, and one way of relaxing is to take refuge for
-a time in some land of chimeras, to follow the Arcadian
-gleam. He may then come back to the real world, the
-world of active effort, solaced and refreshed. But it is
-only with reference to some ethical centre that we may
-determine what art is soundly recreative, in what forms
-of adventure the imagination may innocently indulge.
-The romanticist should recollect that among other forms
-of adventure is what Ben Jonson terms “a bold adventure
-for hell”; and that a not uncommon nostalgia is
-what the French call <i>la nostalgie de la boue</i>&mdash;man’s
-nostalgia for his native mud. Because we are justified at
-times, as Lamb urges, in wandering imaginatively beyond
-“the diocese of strict conscience,” it does not follow
-that we may, like him, treat Restoration Comedy as a
-sort of fairyland; for Restoration Comedy is a world not
-of pure but of impure imagination.</p>
-
-<p>Lamb’s paradox, however, is harmless compared with
-what we have just been seeing in Chateaubriand. With
-a dalliant imagination that entitles him at best to play
-a recreative rôle, he sets up as a religious teacher.
-Michelet again has been described as an “entertainer
-who believes himself a prophet,” and this description fits
-many other Rousseauists. The æsthete who assumes an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-apocalyptic pose is an especially flagrant instance of the
-huddling together of incompatible desires. He wishes
-to sport with Amaryllis in the shade and at the same
-time enjoy the honors that belong only to the man who
-scorns delights and lives laborious days. For the exercise
-of the ethical imagination, it is hardly necessary to say,
-involves effort. Perhaps no one has ever surpassed Rousseau
-himself in the art of which I have already spoken,&mdash;that
-of giving to moral indolence a semblance of profound
-philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>One cannot indeed always affirm that the Rousseauist
-is by the quality of his imagination an entertainer pure
-and simple. His breaking down of barriers and running
-together of the planes of being results at times in ambiguous
-mixtures&mdash;gleams of insight that actually seem to
-minister to fleshliness. One may cite as an example the
-“voluptuous religiosity” that certain critics have discovered
-in Wagner.</p>
-
-<p>The romanticist will at once protest against the application
-of ethical standards to Wagner or any other musician.
-Music, he holds, is the most soulful of the arts and
-so the least subject to ethics. For the same reason it is the
-chief of arts and also&mdash;in view of the fact that romanticists
-have a monopoly of soul&mdash;the most romantic.
-One should not allow to pass unchallenged this notion that
-because music is filled with soul it is therefore subject to
-no ethical centre, but should be treated as a pure enchantment.
-The Greeks were as a matter of fact much
-concerned with the ethical quality of music. Certain
-musical modes, the Doric for example, had as they
-believed a virile “soul,” other modes like the Lydian had
-the contrary (“Lap me in soft Lydian airs”). For the very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-reason that music is the most appealing of the arts (song,
-says Aristotle, is the sweetest of all things) they were
-especially anxious that this art should be guarded from
-perversion.<a name="FNanchor_135_135" id="FNanchor_135_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_135_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a> Without attempting a full discussion of a
-difficult subject for which I have no competency, it will be
-enough to point out that the plain song that prevailed
-in Christian churches for over a thousand years evidently
-had a very different “soul,” a soul that inspired to
-prayer and peace, from much specifically romantic music
-that has a soul of restlessness, of infinite indeterminate
-desire. The result of the failure to recognize this distinction
-is very often a hybrid art. Berlioz showed a rather
-peculiar conception of religion when he took pride in
-the fact that his Requiem (!) Mass frightened one of the
-listeners into a fit.</p>
-
-<p>The ethical confusion that arises from the romantic
-cult of “soul” and the closely allied tendency towards a
-hybrid art&mdash;art that lacks high seriousness without being
-frankly recreative&mdash;may also be illustrated from the
-field of poetry. Many volumes have been published and
-are still being published on Browning as a philosophic and
-religious teacher. But Browning can pass as a prophet
-only with the half-educated person, the person who
-has lost traditional standards and has at the same time
-failed to work out with the aid of the ethical imagination
-some fresh scale of values and in the meanwhile lives
-impulsively and glorifies impulse. Like the half-educated
-person, Browning is capable of almost any amount of
-intellectual and emotional subtlety, and like the half-educated
-person he is deficient in inner form: that is he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-deals with experience impressionistically without reference
-to any central pattern or purpose.<a name="FNanchor_136_136" id="FNanchor_136_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_136_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a> It is enough that
-the separate moments of this experience should each
-stand forth like</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent5">The quick sharp scratch</div>
-<div class="verse">And blue spurt of a lighted match.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>One may take as an illustration of this drift towards the
-melodramatic the “Ring and the Book.” The method of
-this poem is peripheral, that is, the action is viewed not
-from any centre but as refracted through the temperaments
-of the actors. The twelve monologues of which the
-poem is composed illustrate the tendency of romantic
-writing to run into some “song of myself” or “tale of
-my heart.” The “Ring and the Book” is not only off the
-centre, but is designed to raise a positive prejudice against
-everything that is central. Guido, for example, had observed
-decorum, had done all the conventional things and
-is horrible. Pompilia, the beautiful soul, had the great
-advantage of having had an indecorous start. Being the
-daughter of a drab, she is not kept from heeding the voice
-of nature. Caponsacchi again shows the beauty of his soul
-by violating the decorum of the priesthood. This least
-representative of priests wins our sympathy, not by his
-Christianity, but by his lyrical intensity:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">O lyric love, half angel and half bird,</div>
-<div class="verse">And all a wonder and a wild desire!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Browning here escapes for once from the clogging intellectualism
-that makes nearly all the “Ring and the
-Book” an indeterminate blend of verse and prose, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-achieves true poetry though not of the highest type.
-The hybrid character of his art, due partly to a lack of
-outer form, to a defective poetical technique, arises even
-more from a lack of inner form&mdash;from an attempt to
-give a semblance of seriousness to what is at bottom
-unethical. The aged Pope may well meditate on the
-revolution that is implied in the substitution of the
-morality of the beautiful soul for that of St. Augustine.<a name="FNanchor_137_137" id="FNanchor_137_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_137_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a>
-In seeming to accept this revolution Browning’s Pope
-comes near to breaking all records, even in the romantic
-movement, for paradox and indecorum.</p>
-
-<p>At bottom the war between humanist and romanticist
-is so irreconcilable because the one is a mediator and the
-other an extremist. Browning would have us admire his
-Pompilia because her love knows no limit;<a name="FNanchor_138_138" id="FNanchor_138_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_138_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a> but a secular
-love like hers must know a limit, must be decorous in
-short, if it is to be distinguished from mere emotional
-intensity. It is evident that the romantic ideal of art for
-art’s sake meant in the real world art for sensation’s
-sake. The glorification of a love knowing no limit, that a
-Browning or a Hugo sets up as a substitute for philosophy
-and even for religion, is therefore closely affiliated in
-practice with the <i>libido sentiendi</i>. “It is hard,” wrote
-Stendhal, in 1817, “not to see what the nineteenth century
-desires. A love of strong emotions is its true character.”
-The romantic tendency to push every emotion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-to an extreme, regardless of decorum, is not much affected
-by what the romanticist preaches or by the problems he
-agitates. Doudan remarks of a mother who loses her child
-in Hugo’s “Nôtre Dame de Paris,” that “her rage after
-this loss has nothing to equal it in the roarings of a lioness
-or tigress who has been robbed of her young. She becomes
-vulgar by excess of despair. It is the saturnalia of
-maternal grief. You see that this woman belongs to a
-world in which neither the instincts nor the passions have
-that divine aroma which imposes on them some kind of
-measure&mdash;the dignity or decorum that contains a moral
-principle; … When the passions no longer have this
-check, they should be relegated to the menagerie along
-with leopards and rhinoceroses, and, strange circumstance,
-when the passions do recognize this check they
-produce more effect on the spectators than unregulated
-outbursts; they give evidence of more depth.” This superlativeness,
-as one may say, that Hugo displays in his
-picture of maternal grief is not confined to the emotional
-romanticist. It appears, for example, among the intellectual
-romanticists of the seventeenth century and
-affected the very forms of language. Molière and others
-ridiculed the adjectives and adverbs with which the
-<i>précieuses</i> sought to express their special type of superlativeness
-and intensity (<i>extrêmement</i>, <i>furieusement</i>, <i>terriblement</i>,
-etc.). Alfred de Musset’s assertion that the
-chief difference between classicist and romanticist is
-found in the latter’s greater proneness to adjectives is not
-altogether a jest. It has been said that the pessimist uses
-few, the optimist many adjectives; but the use of adjectives
-and above all of superlatives would rather seem to
-grow with one’s expansiveness, and no movement was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-ever more expansive than that we are studying. Dante,
-according to Rivarol, is very sparing of adjectives. His
-sentence tends to maintain itself by the verb and substantive
-alone. In this as in other respects Dante is at
-the opposite pole from the expansionist.</p>
-
-<p>The romantic violence of expression is at once a proof
-of “soul” and a protest against the tameness and smugness
-of the pseudo-classicist. The human volcano must
-overflow at times in a lava of molten words. “Damnation!”
-cries Berlioz, “I could crush a red-hot iron between
-my teeth.”<a name="FNanchor_139_139" id="FNanchor_139_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a> The disproportion between the outer
-incident and the emotion that the Rousseauist expends
-on it is often ludicrous.<a name="FNanchor_140_140" id="FNanchor_140_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_140_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a> The kind of force that the man
-attains who sees in emotional intensity a mark of spiritual
-distinction, and deems moderation identical with mediocrity,
-is likely to be the force of delirium or fever. What
-one sees in “Werther,” says Goethe himself, is weakness
-seeking to give itself the prestige of strength; and this
-remark goes far. There is in some of the romanticists
-a suggestion not merely of spiritual but of physical
-anæmia.<a name="FNanchor_141_141" id="FNanchor_141_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_141_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> Still the intensity is often that of a strong but
-unbridled spirit. Pleasure is pushed to the point where it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-runs over into pain, and pain to the point where it becomes
-an auxiliary of pleasure. The <i>âcre baiser</i> of the
-“Nouvelle Héloïse” that so scandalized Voltaire presaged
-even more than a literary revolution. The poems of A. de
-Musset in particular contain an extraordinary perversion
-of the Christian doctrine of purification through suffering.
-There is something repellent to the genuine Christian as
-well as to the worldling in what one is tempted to call
-Musset’s Epicurean cult of pain.<a name="FNanchor_142_142" id="FNanchor_142_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_142_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a></p>
-
-<p>Moments of superlative intensity whether of pleasure
-or pain must in the nature of the case be brief&mdash;mere
-spasms or paroxysms; and one might apply to the whole
-school the term paroxyst and spasmodist assumed by
-certain minor groups during the past century. The Rousseauist
-is in general loath to rein in his emotional vehemence,
-to impair the zest with which he responds to the
-solicitations of sense, by any reference to the “future and
-sum of time,” by any reference, that is, to an ethical
-purpose. He would enjoy his thrill pure and unalloyed,
-and this amounts in practice to the pursuit of the beautiful
-or sensation-crowded moment. Saint-Preux says of
-the days spent with Julie that a “sweet ecstasy” absorbed
-“their whole duration and gathered it together in
-a point like that of eternity. There was for me neither
-past nor future, and I enjoyed at one and the same time
-the delights of a thousand centuries.”<a name="FNanchor_143_143" id="FNanchor_143_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_143_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a> The superlativist
-one might suppose could go no further. But in the deliberate
-sacrifice of all ethical values to the beautiful moment
-Browning has perhaps improved even on Rousseau:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent2">Truth, that’s brighter than gem,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Trust, that’s purer than pearl,&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Brightest truth, purest trust in the universe&mdash;all were for me</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">In the kiss of one girl.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Browning entitles the poem from which I am quoting
-<i>Summum Bonum</i>. The supreme good it would appear is
-identical with the supreme thrill.</p>
-
-<p>I have already said enough to make clear that the title
-of this chapter and the last is in a way a misnomer. There
-is no such thing as romantic morality. The innovations in
-ethics that are due to romanticism reduce themselves on
-close scrutiny to a vast system of naturalistic camouflage.
-To understand how this camouflage has been so successful
-one needs to connect Rousseauism with the Baconian
-movement. Scientific progress had inspired man with a
-new confidence in himself at the same time that the positive
-and critical method by which it had been achieved detached
-him from the past and its traditional standards of
-good and evil. To break with tradition on sound lines one
-needs to apply the utmost keenness of analysis not merely
-to the natural but to the human law. But man’s analytical
-powers were very much taken up with the new task of
-mastering the natural law, so much so that he seemed
-incapable of further analytical effort, but longed rather
-for relaxation from his sustained concentration of intellect
-and imagination on the physical order. At the same
-time he was so elated by the progress he was making in
-this order that he was inclined to assume a similar advance
-on the moral plane and to believe that this advance
-could also be achieved collectively. A collective salvation
-of this kind without any need of a concentration of the
-intellect and imagination is precisely what was opened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-up to him by the Rousseauistic “ideal” of brotherhood.
-This “ideal,” as I have tried to show, was only a projection
-of the Arcadian imagination on the void. But in
-the abdication of analysis and critical judgment, which
-would have reduced it to a purely recreative rôle, this
-Arcadian dreaming was enabled to set up as a serious
-philosophy, and to expand into innumerable Utopias.
-Many who might have taken alarm at the humanitarian
-revolution in ethics were reassured by the very fervor
-with which its promoters continued to utter the old words&mdash;conscience,
-virtue, etc. No one puts more stress than
-Rousseau himself on conscience, while in the very act of
-transforming conscience from an inner check into an
-expansive emotion.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen that as a result of this transformation of
-conscience, temperament is emancipated from both inner
-and outer control and that this emancipation tends in the
-real world to the rise of two main types&mdash;the Bohemian
-and the superman, both unprimitive, inasmuch as primitive
-man is governed not by temperament but by convention;
-and that what actually tends to prevail in such
-a temperamental world in view of the superior “hardness”
-of the superman, is the law of cunning and the law
-of force. So far as the Rousseauists set up the mere emancipation
-of temperament as a serious philosophy, they
-are to be held responsible for the results of this emancipation
-whether displayed in the lust of power or the lust of
-sensation. But the lust of power and the lust of sensation,
-such as they appear, for example, in the so-called realism
-of the later nineteenth century, are not in themselves
-identical with romanticism. Many of the realists, like
-Flaubert, as I have already pointed out, are simply bitter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-and disillusioned Rousseauists who are expressing their
-nausea at the society that has actually arisen from the
-emancipation of temperament in themselves and others.
-The essence of Rousseauistic as of other romance, I may
-repeat, is to be found not in any mere fact, not even in the
-fact of sensation, but in a certain quality of the imagination.
-Rousseauism is, it is true, an emancipation of impulse,
-especially of the impulse of sex. Practically all the
-examples I have chosen of the tense and beautiful moment
-are erotic. But what one has even here, as the imagination
-grows increasingly romantic, is less the reality than
-the dream of the beautiful moment, an intensity that is
-achieved only in the tower of ivory. This point can be
-made clear only by a fuller study of the romantic conception
-of love.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROMANTIC LOVE</span></h2>
-
-<p>What first strikes one in Rousseau’s attitude towards
-love is the separation, even wider here perhaps than elsewhere,
-between the ideal and the real. He dilates in the
-“Confessions” on the difference of the attachment that
-he felt when scarcely more than a boy for two young
-women of Geneva, Mademoiselle Vulson and Mademoiselle
-Goton. His attachment for the latter was real in a
-sense that Zola would have understood. His attachment
-for Mademoiselle Vulson reminds one rather of that of a
-mediæval knight for his lady. The same contrast runs
-through Rousseau’s life. “Seamstresses, chambermaids,
-shop-girls,” he says, “attracted me very little. I had to
-have fine ladies.”<a name="FNanchor_144_144" id="FNanchor_144_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a> So much for the ideal; the real was
-Thérèse Levasseur.</p>
-
-<p>We are not to suppose that Rousseau’s love even when
-most ideal is really exalted above the fleshly level. Byron
-indeed says of Rousseau that “his was not the love of
-living dame but of ideal beauty,” and if this were strictly
-true Rousseau might be accounted a Platonist. But
-any particular beautiful object is for Plato only a symbol
-or adumbration of a supersensuous beauty; so that an
-earthly love can be at best only a stepping-stone to the
-Uranian Aphrodite. The terrestrial and the heavenly loves
-are not in short run together, whereas the essence of
-Rousseauistic love is this very blending.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span> “Rousseau,”
-says Joubert, “had a voluptuous mind. In his writings
-the soul is always mingled with the body and never distinct
-from it. No one has ever rendered more vividly the
-impression of the flesh touching the spirit and the delights
-of their marriage.” I need not, however, repeat here
-what I have said elsewhere<a name="FNanchor_145_145" id="FNanchor_145_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_145_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a> about this confusion of the
-planes of being, perhaps the most important aspect of
-romantic love.</p>
-
-<p>Though Rousseau is not a true Platonist in his treatment
-of love, he does, as I have said, recall at times the
-cult of the mediæval knight for his lady. One may even
-find in mediæval love something that is remotely related
-to Rousseau’s contrast between the ideal and the actual;
-for in its attitude towards woman as in other respects the
-Middle Ages tended to be extreme. Woman is either depressed
-below the human level as the favorite instrument
-of the devil in man’s temptation (<i>mulier hominis confusio</i>),
-or else exalted above this level as the mother of
-God. The figure of Mary blends sense and spirit in a way
-that is foreign to Plato and the ancients. As Heine says
-very profanely, the Virgin was a sort of heavenly <i>dame
-du comptoir</i> whose celestial smile drew the northern barbarians
-into the Church. Sense was thus pressed into the
-service of spirit at the risk of a perilous confusion. The
-chivalric cult of the lady has obvious points of contact
-with the worship of the Madonna. The knight who is
-raised from one height of perfection to another by the
-light of his lady’s eyes is also pressing sense into the service
-of spirit with the same risk that the process may be
-reversed. The reversal actually takes place in Rousseau
-and his followers: spirit is pressed into the service of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-sense in such wise as to give to sense a sort of infinitude.
-Baudelaire pays his homage to a Parisian grisette in
-the form of a Latin canticle to the Virgin.<a name="FNanchor_146_146" id="FNanchor_146_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a> The perversion
-of mediæval love is equally though not quite so
-obviously present in many other Rousseauists.</p>
-
-<p>I have said that the Middle Ages inclined to the extreme;
-mediæval writers are, however, fond of insisting
-on “measure”; and this is almost inevitable in view of the
-large amount of classical, especially Aristotelian, survival
-throughout this period. But the two distinctively mediæval
-types, the saint and the knight, are neither of them
-mediators. They stand, however, on an entirely different
-footing as regards the law of measure. Not even Aristotle
-himself would maintain that the law of measure applies
-to saintliness, and in general to the religious realm. The
-saint in so far as he is saintly has undergone conversion,
-has in the literal sense of the word faced around and is
-looking in an entirely different direction from that to
-which the warnings “nothing too much” and “think as
-a mortal” apply. Very different psychic elements may
-indeed appear in any particular saint. A book has been
-published recently on the “Romanticism of St. Francis.”
-The truth seems to be that though St. Francis had his
-romantic side, he was even more religious than romantic.
-One may affirm with some confidence of another mediæval
-figure, Peter the Hermit, that he was, on the other
-hand, much more romantic than religious. For all the
-information we have tends to show that he was a very
-restless person and a man’s restlessness is ordinarily in
-inverse ratio to his religion.</p>
-
-<p>If the saint transcends in a way the law of measure,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-the knight on the other hand should be subject to it. For
-courage and the love of woman&mdash;his main interests in
-life&mdash;belong not to the religious but to the secular
-realm. But in his conception of love and courage the
-knight was plainly not a mediator but an extremist: he
-was haunted by the idea of adventure, of a love and
-courage that transcend the bounds not merely of the
-probable but of the possible. His imagination is romantic
-in the sense I have tried to define&mdash;it is straining, that is,
-beyond the confines of the real. Ruskin’s violent diatribe
-against Cervantes<a name="FNanchor_147_147" id="FNanchor_147_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_147_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a> for having killed “idealism” by his
-ridicule of these knightly exaggerations, is in itself absurd,
-but interesting as evidence of the quality of Ruskin’s own
-imagination. Like other romanticists I have cited, he
-seems to have been not unaware of his own kinship to
-Don Quixote. The very truth about either the mediæval
-or modern forms of romantic love&mdash;love which is on the
-secular level and at the same time sets itself above the
-law of measure&mdash;was uttered by Dr. Johnson in his comment
-on the heroic plays of Dryden: “By admitting the
-romantic omnipotence of love he has recommended as
-laudable and worthy of imitation that conduct which
-through all ages the good have censured as vicious and the
-bad have despised as foolish.”</p>
-
-<p>The man of the Middle Ages, however extravagant in
-his imaginings, was often no doubt terrestrial enough in
-his practice. The troubadour who addressed his high-flown
-fancies to some fair châtelaine (usually a married<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-woman) often had relations in real life not unlike those of
-Rousseau with Thérèse Levasseur. Some such contrast
-indeed between the “ideal” and the “real” existed in the
-life of one of Rousseau’s favorite poets, Petrarch. The
-lover may, however, run together the ideal and the
-real. He may glorify some comparatively commonplace
-person, crown as queen of his heart some Dulcinea del
-Toboso. Hazlitt employs appropriately in describing his
-own passion for the vulgar daughter of a London boarding-house
-keeper the very words of Cervantes: “He had
-courted a statue, hunted the wind, cried aloud to the
-desert.” Hazlitt like other lovers of this type is in love not
-with a particular person but with his own dream. He
-is as one may say in love with love. No subject indeed
-illustrates like this of love the nostalgia, the infinite indeterminate
-desire of the romantic imagination. Something
-of this diffusive longing no doubt came into the
-world with Christianity. There is a wide gap between the
-sentence of St. Augustine that Shelley has taken as epigraph
-for his “Alastor”<a name="FNanchor_148_148" id="FNanchor_148_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_148_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a> and the spirit of the great
-Greek and Roman classics. Yet such is the abiding vitality
-of Greek mythology that one finds in Greece perhaps
-the best symbol of the romantic lover. Rousseau could
-not fail to be attracted by the story of Pygmalion and
-Galatea. His lyrical “monodrama” in poetical prose,
-“Pygmalion,” is important not only for its literary but
-for its musical influence. The Germans in particular
-(including the youthful Goethe) were fascinated. To the
-mature Goethe Rousseau’s account of the sculptor who
-became enamored of his own creation and breathed into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-it actual life by the sheer intensity of his desire seemed a
-delirious confusion of the planes of being, an attempt to
-drag ideal beauty down to the level of sensuous realization.
-But a passion thus conceived exactly satisfies the
-romantic requirement. For though the romanticist wishes
-to abandon himself to the rapture of love, he does not
-wish to transcend his own ego. The object with which
-Pygmalion is in love is after all only a projection of his
-own “genius.” But such an object is not in any proper
-sense an object at all. There is in fact no object in the
-romantic universe&mdash;only subject. This subjective love
-amounts in practice to a use of the imagination to enhance
-emotional intoxication, or if one prefers, to the
-pursuit of illusion for its own sake.</p>
-
-<p>This lack of definite object appears just as clearly in
-the German symbol of romantic love&mdash;the blue flower.
-The blue flower resolves itself at last, it will be remembered,
-into a fair feminine face<a name="FNanchor_149_149" id="FNanchor_149_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_149_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a>&mdash;a face that cannot,
-however, be overtaken. The color typifies the blue distance
-in which it always loses itself, “the never-ending
-quest after the ever-fleeting object of desire.” The object
-is thus elusive because, as I have said, it is not, properly
-speaking, an object at all but only a dalliance of the
-imagination with its own dream. Cats, says Rivarol, do
-not caress us, they caress themselves upon us. But though
-cats may suffer from what the new realist calls the egocentric
-predicament, they can scarcely vie in the subtle
-involutions of their egoism with the romantic lover.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-Besides creating the symbol of the blue flower, Novalis
-treats romantic love in his unfinished tale “The Disciples
-at Saïs.” He contemplated two endings to this tale&mdash;in
-the one, when the disciple lifts the veil of the inmost
-sanctuary of the temple at Saïs, Rosenblütchen (the
-equivalent of the blue flower) falls into his arms. In the
-second version what he sees when he lifts the mysterious
-veil is&mdash;“wonder of wonders&mdash;himself.” The two endings
-are in substance the same.</p>
-
-<p>The story of Novalis’s attachment for a fourteen-year-old
-girl, Sophie von Kühn, and of his plans on her death
-for a truly romantic suicide&mdash;a swooning away into the
-night&mdash;and then of the suddenness with which he transferred
-his dream to another maiden, Julie von Charpentier,
-is familiar. If Sophie had lived and Novalis had lived
-and they had wedded, he might conceivably have made
-her a faithful husband, but she would no longer have
-been the blue flower, the ideal. For one’s love is for
-something infinitely remote; it is as Shelley says, in
-what is perhaps the most perfect expression of romantic
-longing:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">The desire of the moth for the star,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Of the night for the morrow,</div>
-<div class="verse">The devotion to something afar</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">From the sphere of our sorrow.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The sphere of Shelley’s sorrow at the time he wrote these
-lines to Mrs. Williams was Mary Godwin. In the time of
-Harriet Westbrook, Mary had been the “star.”</p>
-
-<p>The romantic lover often feigns in explanation of his
-nostalgia that in some previous existence he had been
-enamored of a nymph&mdash;an Egeria&mdash;or a woman transcending
-the ordinary mould&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>“some Lilith or Helen or
-Antigone.”<a name="FNanchor_150_150" id="FNanchor_150_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_150_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a> Shelley inquires eagerly in one of his letters
-about the new poem by Horace Smith, “The Nympholept.”
-In the somewhat unclassical sense that the term
-came to have in the romantic movement, Shelley is himself
-the perfect example of the nympholept. In this respect
-as in others, however, he merely continues Rousseau.
-“If it had not been for some memories of my youth and
-Madame d’Houdetot,” says Jean-Jacques, “the loves
-that I have felt and described would have been only with
-sylphids.”<a name="FNanchor_151_151" id="FNanchor_151_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_151_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a></p>
-
-<p>Chateaubriand speaks with aristocratic disdain of
-Rousseau’s Venetian amours, but on the “ideal” side he
-is not only his follower but perhaps the supreme French
-example of nympholepsy. He describes his lady of dreams
-sometimes like Rousseau as the “sylphid,” sometimes as
-his “phantom of love.” He had been haunted by this
-phantom almost from his childhood. “Even then I
-glimpsed that to love and be loved in a way that was
-unknown to me was destined to be my supreme felicity. …
-As a result of the ardor of my imagination, my timidity
-and solitude, I did not turn to the outer world, but
-was thrown back upon myself. In the absence of a real
-object, I evoked by the power of my vague desires a
-phantom that was never to leave me.” To those who
-remember the closely parallel passages in Rousseau,
-Chateaubriand will seem to exaggerate the privilege of
-the original genius to look on himself as unique when he
-adds: “I do not know whether the history of the human
-heart offers another example of this nature.”<a name="FNanchor_152_152" id="FNanchor_152_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_152_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a> The pursuit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-of this phantom of love gives the secret key to
-Chateaubriand’s life. He takes refuge in the American
-wilderness in order that he may have in this primitive
-Arcadia a more spacious setting for his dream.<a name="FNanchor_153_153" id="FNanchor_153_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_153_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a></p>
-
-<p>If one wishes to see how very similar these nympholeptic
-experiences are not only from individual to individual,
-but from country to country, one has only to
-compare the passages I have just been quoting from
-Chateaubriand with Shelley’s “Epipsychidion.” Shelley
-writes of his own youth:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">There was a Being whom my spirit oft</div>
-<div class="verse">Met on its visioned wanderings, far aloft,</div>
-<div class="verse">In the clear golden prime of my youth’s dawn,</div>
-<div class="verse">Upon the fairy isles of sunny lawn,</div>
-<div class="verse">Amid the enchanted mountains, and the caves</div>
-<div class="verse">Of divine sleep, and on the air-like waves</div>
-<div class="verse">Of wonder-level dream, whose tremulous floor</div>
-<div class="verse">Paved her light steps; on an imagined shore,</div>
-<div class="verse">Under the gray beak of some promontory</div>
-<div class="verse">She met me, robed in such exceeding glory,</div>
-<div class="verse">That I beheld her not, etc.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>At the time of writing “Epipsychidion” the magic vision
-happened to have coalesced for the moment with Emilia
-Viviani, though destined soon to flit elsewhere. Shelley
-invites his “soul’s sister,” the idyllic “she,” who is at
-bottom only a projection of his own imagination, to set
-sail with him for Arcady. “Epipsychidion,” indeed, might
-be used as a manual to illustrate the difference between
-mere Arcadian dreaming and a true Platonism.</p>
-
-<p>Chateaubriand is ordinarily and rightly compared with
-Byron rather than with Shelley. He is plainly, however,
-far more of a nympholept than Byron. Mr. Hilary, indeed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-in Peacock’s “Nightmare Abbey” says to Mr.
-Cypress (Byron): “You talk like a Rosicrucian, who will
-love nothing but a sylph, who does not believe in the existence
-of a sylph, and who yet quarrels with the whole universe
-for not containing a sylph.”<a name="FNanchor_154_154" id="FNanchor_154_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_154_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a> Certain distinctions
-would have to be made if one were attempting a complete
-study of love in Byron; yet after all the love of Don Juan
-and Haidée is one that Sappho or Catullus or Burns would
-have understood; and these poets were not nympholepts.
-They were capable of burning with love, but not, as
-Rousseau says of himself, “without any definite object.”<a name="FNanchor_155_155" id="FNanchor_155_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_155_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a>
-Where Chateaubriand has some resemblance to
-Byron is in his actual libertinism. He is however nearer
-than Byron to the libertine of the eighteenth century&mdash;to
-the Lovelace who pushes the pursuit of pleasure to its
-final exasperation where it becomes associated with the
-infliction of pain. Few things are stranger than the blend
-in Chateaubriand of this Sadic fury<a name="FNanchor_156_156" id="FNanchor_156_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a> with the new
-romantic revery. Indeed almost every type of egotism
-that may manifest itself in the relations of the sexes and
-that pushed to the superlative pitch, will be found in this
-theoretical classicist and champion of Christianity. Perhaps
-no more frenzied cry has ever issued from human
-lips than that uttered by Atala<a name="FNanchor_157_157" id="FNanchor_157_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a> in describing her emotions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-when torn between her religious vow and her love for
-Chactas: “What dream did not arise in this heart overwhelmed
-with sorrow. At times in fixing my eyes upon
-you, I went so far as to form desires as insensate as they
-were guilty; at one moment I seemed to wish that you
-and I were the only living creatures upon the earth; and
-then again, feeling a divinity that held me back in my
-horrible transports, I seemed to want this divinity to
-be annihilated provided that clasped in your arms I
-should roll from abyss to abyss with the ruins of God and
-the world.” Longing is here pushed to a pitch where it
-passes over, as in Wagner’s “Tristan and Isolde,” into the
-desire for annihilation.</p>
-
-<p>Actual libertinism is no necessary concomitant of
-nympholeptic longing. There is a striking difference in
-this respect between Poe, for example, and his translator
-and disciple, Baudelaire. Nothing could be less suggestive
-of voluptuousness than Poe’s nostalgia. “His ecstasy,”
-says Stedman, “is that of the nympholept seeking
-an evasive being of whom he has glimpses by moonlight,
-starlight, even fenlight, but never by noonday.” The
-embodiments of his dream that flit through his tales and
-poems, enhanced his popularity with the ultra-romantic
-public in France. These strange apparitions nearly all
-of whom are epileptic, cataleptic, or consumptive made a
-natural appeal to a school that was known among its
-detractors as <i>l’école poitrinaire</i>. “Tender souls,” says
-Gautier, “were specially touched by Poe’s feminine figures,
-so vaporous, so transparent and of an almost spectral
-beauty.” Perhaps the nympholepsy of Gérard de Nerval
-is almost equally vaporous and ethereal. He pursued
-through various earthly forms the queen of Sheba whom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-he had loved in a previous existence and hanged himself at
-last with what he believed to be her garter: an interesting
-example of the relation between the extreme forms of the
-romantic imagination and madness.<a name="FNanchor_158_158" id="FNanchor_158_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_158_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a></p>
-
-<p>The pursuit of a phantom of love through various
-earthly forms led in the course of the romantic movement
-to certain modifications in a famous legend&mdash;that of
-Don Juan. What is emphasized in the older Don Juan is
-not merely his libertinism but his impiety&mdash;the gratification
-of his appetite in deliberate defiance of God. He is
-animated by Satanic pride, by the lust of power as well
-as by the lust of sensation. In Molière’s treatment of the
-legend we can also see the beginnings of the philanthropic
-pose.<a name="FNanchor_159_159" id="FNanchor_159_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a> With the progress of Rousseauism Don Juan tends
-to become an “idealist,” to seek to satisfy in his amorous
-adventures not merely his senses but his “soul” and his
-thirst for the “infinite.”<a name="FNanchor_160_160" id="FNanchor_160_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> Along with this idealistic Don
-Juan we also see appearing at a very early stage in the
-movement the exotic Don Juan who wishes to have a
-great deal of strangeness added to his beauty. In his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-affair with the “Floridiennes,” Chateaubriand shows the
-way to a long series of exotic lovers.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">I said to my heart between sleeping and waking,</div>
-<div class="verse">Thou wild thing that always art leaping or aching,</div>
-<div class="verse">What black, brown or fair, in what clime, in what nation,</div>
-<div class="verse">By turns has not taught thee a pit-a-pat-ation?</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>These lines are so plainly meant for Pierre Loti that one
-learns with surprise that they were written about 1724
-by the Earl of Peterborough.<a name="FNanchor_161_161" id="FNanchor_161_161"></a><a href="#Footnote_161_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a></p>
-
-<p>Byron’s Don Juan is at times exotic in his tastes, but,
-as I have said, he is not on the whole very nympholeptic&mdash;much
-less so than the Don Juan of Alfred de Musset,
-for example. Musset indeed suggests in many respects a
-less masculine Byron&mdash;Mademoiselle Byron as he has
-been called. In one whole side of his art as well as his
-treatment of love he simply continues like Byron the
-eighteenth century. But far more than Byron he aspires
-to ideal and absolute passion; so that the Musset of the
-“Nuits” is rightly regarded as one of the supreme embodiments,
-and at the same time the chief martyr, of the
-romantic religion of love. The outcome of his affair with
-George Sand may symbolize fitly the wrecking of thousands
-of more obscure lives by this mortal chimera.
-Musset and George Sand sought to come together, yet
-what they each sought in love is what the original genius
-seeks in all things&mdash;self-expression. What Musset
-saw in George Sand was not the real woman but only his
-own dream. But George Sand was not content thus to
-reflect back passively to Musset his ideal. She was rather
-a Galatea whose ambition it was to create her own
-Pygmalion. “Your chimera is between us,” Musset<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-exclaims; but his chimera was between them too. The
-more Titan and Titaness try to meet, the more each is
-driven back into the solitude of his own ego. They were
-in love with love rather than with one another: and to be
-thus in love with love means on the last analysis to be in
-love with one’s own emotions. “To love,” says Musset,
-“is the great point. What matters the mistress? What
-matters the flagon provided one have the intoxication?”<a name="FNanchor_162_162" id="FNanchor_162_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_162_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a>
-He then proceeds to carry a love of this quality up into
-the presence of God and to present it to him as his justification
-for having lived. The art of speaking in tones of
-religious consecration of what is in its essence egoistic has
-never been carried further than by the Rousseauistic
-romanticist. God is always appearing at the most unexpected
-moments.<a name="FNanchor_163_163" id="FNanchor_163_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_163_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a> The highest of which man is capable
-apparently is to put an uncurbed imagination into the
-service of an emancipated temperament. The credo that
-Perdican recites at the end of the second act of “On ne
-badine pas avec l’Amour”<a name="FNanchor_164_164" id="FNanchor_164_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a> throws light on this point.
-Men and women according to this credo are filled with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-every manner of vileness, yet there is something “sacred
-and sublime,” and that is the union of two of these despicable
-beings.</p>
-
-<p>The confusion of ethical values here is so palpable as
-scarcely to call for comment. It is precisely when men
-and women set out to love with this degree of imaginative
-and emotional unrestraint that they come to deserve all
-the opprobrious epithets Musset heaps upon them. This
-radiant apotheosis of love and the quagmire in which it
-actually lands one is, as I have said, the whole subject of
-“Madame Bovary.” I shall need to return to this particular
-disproportion between the ideal and the real when
-I take up the subject of romantic melancholy.</p>
-
-<p>The romantic lover who identifies the ideal with the
-superlative thrill is turning the ideal into something very
-transitory. If the <i>summum bonum</i> is as Browning avers
-the “kiss of one girl,” the <i>summum bonum</i> is lost almost
-as soon as found. The beautiful moment may however be
-prolonged in revery. The romanticist may brood over it
-in the tower of ivory, and when thus enriched by being
-steeped in his temperament it may become more truly his
-own than it was in reality. “Objects make less impression
-upon me than my memory of them,” says Rousseau. He
-is indeed the great master of what has been termed the
-art of impassioned recollection. This art is far from being
-confined in its application to love, though it may perhaps
-be studied here to the best advantage. Rousseau, one
-should note, had very little intellectual memory, but an
-extraordinarily keen memory of images and sensations.
-He could not, as he tells us in the “Confessions,” learn
-anything by heart, but he could recall with perfect distinctness
-what he had eaten for breakfast about thirty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-years before. In general he recalls his past feelings with a
-clearness and detail that are perhaps more feminine than
-masculine. “He seems,” says Hazlitt, one of his chief disciples
-in the art of impassioned recollection, “to gather
-up the past moments of his being like drops of honey-dew
-to distil a precious liquor from them; his alternate pleasures
-and pains are the bead-roll that he tells over and
-piously worships; he makes a rosary of the flowers of hope
-and fancy that strewed his earliest years.”<a name="FNanchor_165_165" id="FNanchor_165_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_165_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a> This highly
-developed emotional memory is closely associated with
-the special quality of the romantic imagination&mdash;its
-cult of Arcadian illusion and the wistful backward glance
-to the vanished paradise of childhood and youth when
-illusion was most spontaneous. “Let me still recall [these
-memories],” says Hazlitt, “that they may breathe fresh
-life into me, and that I may live that birthday of thought
-and romantic pleasure over again! Talk of the ideal! This
-is the only true ideal&mdash;the heavenly tints of Fancy reflected
-in the bubbles that float upon the spring-tide of
-human life.”<a name="FNanchor_166_166" id="FNanchor_166_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a> Hazlitt converts criticism itself into an art
-of impassioned recollection. He loves to linger over the
-beautiful moments of his own literary life. The passing
-years have increased the richness of their temperamental
-refraction and bestowed upon them the “pathos of distance.”
-A good example is his account of the two years of
-his youth he spent in reading the “Confessions” and the
-“Nouvelle Héloïse,” and in shedding tears over them.
-“They were the happiest years of our life. We may well
-say of them, sweet is the dew of their memory and pleasant
-the balm of their recollection.”<a name="FNanchor_167_167" id="FNanchor_167_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Rousseau’s own Arcadian memories are usually not of
-reading, like Hazlitt’s, but of actual incidents, though he
-does not hesitate to alter these incidents freely, as in his
-account of his stay at Les Charmettes, and to accommodate
-them to his dream. He neglected the real Madame de
-Warens at the very time that he cherished his recollection
-of her because this recollection was the idealized image
-of his own youth. The yearning that he expresses at the
-beginning of his fragmentary Tenth Promenade, written
-only a few weeks before his death, is for this idyllic period
-rather than for an actual woman.<a name="FNanchor_168_168" id="FNanchor_168_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_168_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> A happy memory, says
-Musset, repeating Rousseau, is perhaps more genuine
-than happiness itself. Possibly the three best known love
-poems of Lamartine, Musset, and Hugo respectively&mdash;“Le
-Lac,” “Souvenir,” and “La Tristesse d’Olympio,”
-all hinge upon impassioned recollection and derive very
-directly from Rousseau. Lamartine in particular has
-caught in the “Le Lac” the very cadence of Rousseau’s
-reveries.<a name="FNanchor_169_169" id="FNanchor_169_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a></p>
-
-<p>Impassioned recollection may evidently be an abundant
-source of genuine poetry, though not, it must be
-insisted, of the highest poetry. The predominant rôle that
-it plays in Rousseau and many of his followers is simply
-a sign of an unduly dalliant imagination. Experience after
-all has other uses than to supply furnishings for the tower<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-of ivory; it should control the judgment and guide the
-will; it is in short the necessary basis of conduct. The
-greater a man’s moral seriousness, the more he will be
-concerned with doing rather than dreaming (and I include
-right meditation among the forms of doing). He
-will also demand an art and literature that reflect this
-his main preoccupation. Between Wordsworth’s definition
-of poetry as “emotion recollected in tranquillity,”
-and Aristotle’s definition of poetry as the imitation of
-human action according to probability or necessity, a wide
-gap plainly opens. One may prefer Aristotle’s definition
-to that of Wordsworth and yet do justice to the merits of
-Wordsworth’s actual poetical performance. Nevertheless
-the tendency to put prime emphasis on feeling instead of
-action shown in the definition is closely related to Wordsworth’s
-failure not only in dramatic but in epic poetry, in
-all poetry in short that depends for its success on an element
-of plot and sustained narrative.</p>
-
-<p>A curious extension of the art of impassioned recollection
-should receive at least passing mention. It has been
-so extended as to lead to what one may term an unethical
-use of literature and history. What men have done in the
-past and the consequences of this doing should surely
-serve to throw some light on what men should do under
-similar circumstances in the present. But the man who
-turns his own personal experience into mere dalliance
-may very well assume a like dalliant attitude towards the
-larger experience of the race. This experience may merely
-provide him with pretexts for revery. This narcotic use of
-literature and history, this art of creating for one’s self an
-alibi as Taine calls it, is nearly as old as the romantic
-movement. The record of the past becomes a gorgeous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-pageant that lures one to endless imaginative exploration
-and lulls one to oblivion of everything except its variety
-and picturesqueness. It becomes everything in fact except
-a school of judgment. One may note in connection
-with this use of history the usual interplay between
-scientific and emotional naturalism. Both forms of naturalism
-tend to turn man into the mere product and plaything
-of physical forces&mdash;climate, heredity, and the like,
-over which his will has no control. Since literature and
-history have no meaning from the point of view of moral
-choice they may at least be made to yield the maximum
-of æsthetic satisfaction. Oscar Wilde argues in this wise
-for example in his dialogue “The Critic as Artist,” and
-concludes that since man has no moral freedom or responsibility,
-and cannot therefore be guided in his conduct
-by the past experience of the race, he may at least
-turn this experience into an incomparable “bower of
-dreams.” “The pain of Leopardi crying out against life
-becomes our pain. Theocritus blows on his pipe and we
-laugh with the lips of nymph and shepherd. In the wolf-skin
-of Pierre Vidal we flee before the hounds, and in the
-armor of Lancelot we ride from the bower of the queen.
-We have whispered the secret of our love beneath the
-cowl of Abelard, and in the stained raiment of Villon have
-put our shame into song,” etc.</p>
-
-<p>The assumption that runs through this passage that
-the mere æsthetic contemplation of past experience gives
-the equivalent of actual experience is found in writers of
-far higher standing than Wilde&mdash;in Renan, for instance.
-The æsthete would look on his dream as a substitute for
-the actual, and at the same time convert the actual into
-a dream. (<i>Die Welt wird Traum, der Traum wird Welt.</i>)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-It is not easy to take such a programme of universal
-dreaming seriously. In the long run the dreamer himself
-does not find it easy to take it seriously. For his attempts
-to live his chimera result, as we have seen in the case of
-romantic love, in more or less disastrous defeat and disillusion.
-The disillusioned romanticist continues to cling
-to his dream, but intellectually, at least, he often comes at
-the same time to stand aloof from it. This subject of
-disillusion may best be considered, along with certain
-other important aspects of the movement, in connection
-with the singular phenomenon known as romantic irony.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROMANTIC IRONY</span></h2>
-
-<p>The first romanticist who worked out a theory of irony
-was Friedrich Schlegel.<a name="FNanchor_170_170" id="FNanchor_170_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_170_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a> The attempt to put this theory
-into practice, after the fashion of Tieck’s plays, seemed
-and seemed rightly even to later representatives of the
-movement to be extravagant. Thus Hegel, who in his
-ideas on art continues in so many respects the Schlegels,
-repudiates irony. Formerly, says Heine, who is himself in
-any larger survey, the chief of German romantic ironists,
-when a man had said a stupid thing he had said it; now
-he can explain it away as “irony.” Nevertheless one cannot
-afford to neglect this early German theory. It derives
-in an interesting way from the views that the partisans of
-original genius had put forth regarding the rôle of the creative
-imagination. The imagination as we have seen is to
-be free to wander wild in its own empire of chimeras.
-Rousseau showed the possibilities of an imagination that
-is at once extraordinarily rich and also perfectly free in
-this sense. I have said that Kant believed like the original
-genius that the nobility of art depends on the free “play”
-of the imagination; though he adds that art should at the
-same time submit to a purpose that is not a purpose&mdash;whatever
-that may mean. Schiller in his “Æsthetic Letters”
-relaxed the rationalistic rigor of Kant in favor of
-feeling and associated even more emphatically the ideality
-and creativeness of art with its free imaginative play,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-its emancipation from specific aim. The personal friction
-that arose between the Schlegels and Schiller has perhaps
-obscured somewhat their general indebtedness to him.
-The Schlegelian irony in particular merely pushes to an
-extreme the doctrine that nothing must interfere with
-the imagination in its creative play. “The caprice of the
-poet,” as Friedrich Schlegel says, “suffers no law above
-itself.” Why indeed should the poet allow any restriction
-to be placed upon his caprice in a universe that is after
-all only a projection of himself? The play theory of art is
-here supplemented by the philosophy of Fichte.<a name="FNanchor_171_171" id="FNanchor_171_171"></a><a href="#Footnote_171_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a> In justice
-to him it should be said that though his philosophy
-may not rise above the level of temperament, he at least
-had a severe and stoical temperament, and if only for this
-reason his “transcendental ego” is far less obviously
-ego than that which appears in the irony of his romantic
-followers. When a man has taken possession of his transcendental
-ego, according to the Schlegels and Novalis,
-he looks down on his ordinary ego and stands aloof from
-it. His ordinary ego may achieve poetry but his transcendental
-ego must achieve the poetry of poetry. But
-there is in him something that may stand aloof even from
-this aloofness and so on indefinitely. Romantic irony joins
-here with what is perhaps the chief preoccupation of the
-German romanticists, the idea of the infinite or, as they
-term it, the striving for endlessness (<i>Unendlichkeitstreben</i>).<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-Now, according to the romanticist, a man can show that
-he lays hold imaginatively upon the infinite only by
-expanding beyond what his age holds to be normal and
-central&mdash;its conventions in short; nay more, he must
-expand away from any centre he has himself achieved.
-For to hold fast to a centre of any kind implies the acceptance
-of limitations and to accept limitations is to be finite,
-and to be finite is, as Blake says, to become mechanical;
-and the whole of romanticism is a protest against the
-mechanizing of life. No man therefore deserves to rank as
-a transcendental egotist unless he has learned to mock not
-merely at the convictions of others but at his own, unless
-he has become capable of self-parody. “Objection,” says
-Nietzsche, “evasion, joyous distrust, and love of irony
-are signs of health; everything absolute belongs to
-pathology.”<a name="FNanchor_172_172" id="FNanchor_172_172"></a><a href="#Footnote_172_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a></p>
-
-<p>One cannot repeat too often that what the romanticist
-always sees at the centre is either the mere rationalist or
-else the philistine; and he therefore inclines to measure
-his own distinction by his remoteness from any possible
-centre. Now thus to be always moving away from centrality
-is to be paradoxical, and romantic irony is, as
-Friedrich Schlegel says, identical with paradox. Irony,
-paradox and the idea of the infinite have as a matter of
-fact so many points of contact in romanticism that they
-may profitably be treated together.</p>
-
-<p>Friedrich Schlegel sought illustrious sponsors in the
-past for his theory of irony. Among others he invoked the
-Greeks and put himself in particular under the patronage
-of Socrates. But Greek irony always had a centre.
-The ironical contrast is between this centre and something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-that is less central. Take for example the so-called irony
-of Greek tragedy. The tragic character speaks and acts
-in darkness as to his impending doom, regarding which
-the spectator is comparatively enlightened. To take another
-example, the German romanticists were especially
-absurd in their attempts to set up Tieck as a new Aristophanes.
-For Aristophanes, however wild and irresponsible
-he may seem in the play of his imagination, never
-quite loses sight of his centre, a centre from which the
-comic spirit proceeds and to which it returns. Above all,
-however far he may push his mockery, he never mocks at
-his own convictions; he never, like Tieck, indulges in
-self-parody. A glance at the parabasis of almost any one
-of his plays will suffice to show that he was willing to lay
-himself open to the charge of being unduly didactic
-rather than to the charge of being aimless. The universe
-of Tieck, on the other hand, is a truly romantic universe:
-it has no centre, or what amounts to the same thing, it
-has at its centre that symbol of spiritual stagnation, the
-philistine, and his inability to rise above a dull didacticism.
-The romanticist cherishes the illusion that to be a
-spiritual vagrant is to be exalted on a pinnacle above the
-plain citizen. According to Professor Stuart P. Sherman,
-the Irish dramatist Synge indulges in gypsy laughter
-from the bushes,<a name="FNanchor_173_173" id="FNanchor_173_173"></a><a href="#Footnote_173_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a> a good description of romantic irony
-in general.</p>
-
-<p>The irony of Socrates, to take the most important
-example of Greek irony, is not of the centrifugal character.
-Socrates professes ignorance, and this profession
-seems very ironical, for it turns out that his ignorance is
-more enlightened, that is, more central than other me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>n’s
-swelling conceit of knowledge. It does not follow that
-Socrates is insincere in his profession of ignorance; for
-though his knowledge may be as light in comparison
-with that of the ordinary Athenian, he sees that in comparison
-with true and perfect knowledge it is only darkness.
-For Socrates was no mere rationalist; he was a man
-of insight, one would even be tempted to say a mystic
-were it not for the corruption of the term mystic by the
-romanticists. This being the case he saw that man is by
-his very nature precluded from true and perfect knowledge.
-A path, however, opens up before him towards
-this knowledge, and this path he should seek to follow
-even though it is in a sense endless, even though beyond
-any centre he can attain within the bounds of his finite
-experience there is destined always to be something still
-more central. Towards the mere dogmatist, the man who
-thinks he has achieved some fixed and final centre, the
-attitude of Socrates is that of scepticism. This attitude
-implies a certain degree of detachment from the received
-beliefs and conventions of his time, and it is all the more
-important to distinguish here between Socrates and the
-romanticists because of the superficial likeness; and also
-because there is between the Rousseauists and some of
-the Greeks who lived about the time of Socrates a real
-likeness. Promethean individualism was already rife at
-that time, and on the negative side it resulted then as
-since in a break with tradition, and on the positive side
-in an oscillation between the cult of force and the exaltation
-of sympathy, between admiration for the strong man
-and compassion for the weak. It is hardly possible to
-overlook these Promethean elements in the plays of
-Euripides. Antisthenes and the cynics, again, who professed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-to derive from Socrates, established an opposition
-between “nature” and convention even more radical in
-some respects than that established by Rousseau. Moreover
-Socrates himself was perhaps needlessly unconventional
-and also unduly inclined to paradox&mdash;as when
-he suggested to the jury who tried him that as an appropriate
-punishment he should be supported at the public
-expense in the prytaneum. Yet in his inner spirit and in
-spite of certain minor eccentricities, Socrates was neither
-a superman nor a Bohemian, but a humanist. Now that
-the critical spirit was abroad and the traditional basis
-for conduct was failing, he was chiefly concerned with
-putting conduct on a positive and critical basis. In establishing
-this basis his constant appeal is to actual experience
-and the more homely this experience the more it
-seems to please him. While working out the new basis for
-conduct he continues to observe the existing laws and
-customs; or if he gets away from the traditional discipline
-it is towards a stricter discipline; if he repudiates in aught
-the common sense of his day, it is in favor of a commoner
-sense. One may say indeed that Socrates and the Rousseauists
-(who are in this respect like some of the sophists)
-are both moving away from convention but in opposite
-directions. What the romanticist opposes to convention
-is his “genius,” that is his unique and private self. What
-Socrates opposes to convention is his universal and ethical
-self. According to Friedrich Schlegel, a man can never
-be a philosopher but only become one; if at any time he
-thinks that he is a philosopher he ceases to become one.
-The romanticist is right in thus thinking that to remain
-fixed at any particular point is to stagnate. Man is, as
-Nietzsche says, the being who must always surpass himself,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-but he has&mdash;and this is a point that Nietzsche did
-not sufficiently consider&mdash;a choice of direction in his
-everlasting pilgrimage. The man who is moving away
-from some particular centre will always seem paradoxical
-to the man who remains at it, but he may be moving
-away from it in either the romantic or the ethical direction.
-In the first case he is moving from a more normal
-to a less normal experience, in the second case he is moving
-towards an experience that is more profoundly representative.
-The New Testament abounds in examples of
-the ethical paradox&mdash;what one may term the paradox of
-humility. (A man must lose his life to find it, etc.) It is
-possible, however, to push even this type of paradox too
-far, to push it to a point where it affronts not merely some
-particular convention but the good sense of mankind
-itself, and this is a far graver matter. Pascal falls into this
-excess when he says that sickness is the natural state of
-the Christian. As a result of its supreme emphasis on
-humility Christianity from the start inclined unduly perhaps
-towards this type of paradox. It is hardly worth
-while, as Goethe said, to live seventy years in this world
-if all that one learn here below is only folly in the sight of
-God.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most delicate of tasks is to determine
-whether a paradox occupies a position more or less central
-than the convention to which it is opposed. A somewhat
-similar problem is to determine which of two differing
-conventions has the greater degree of centrality. For one
-convention may as compared with another seem highly
-paradoxical. In 1870, it was announced at Peking that his
-Majesty the Emperor had had the good fortune to catch
-the small-pox. The auspiciousness of small-pox was part<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-of the Chinese convention at this time, but to those of us
-who live under another convention it is a blessing we
-would willingly forego. But much in the Chinese convention,
-so far from being absurd, reflects the Confucian
-good sense, and if the Chinese decide to break with their
-convention, they should evidently consider long and
-carefully in which direction they are going to move&mdash;whether
-towards something more central, or something
-more eccentric.</p>
-
-<p>As to the direction in which Rousseau is moving and
-therefore as to the quality of his paradoxes there can be
-little question. His paradoxes&mdash;and he is perhaps the
-most paradoxical of writers&mdash;reduce themselves on
-analysis to the notion that man has suffered a loss of
-goodness by being civilized, by having had imposed on
-his unconscious and instinctive self some humanistic or
-religious discipline&mdash;e.g., “The man who reflects is a
-depraved animal”; “True Christians are meant to be
-slaves”; decorum is only the “varnish of vice” or the
-“mask of hypocrisy.” Innumerable paradoxes of this
-kind will immediately occur to one as characteristic of
-Rousseau and his followers. These paradoxes may be
-termed in opposition to those of humility, the paradoxes
-of spontaneity. The man who holds them is plainly moving
-in an opposite direction not merely from the Christian
-but from the Socratic individualist. He is moving from
-the more representative to the less representative and not
-towards some deeper centre of experience, as would be the
-case if he were tending towards either humanism or religion.
-Wordsworth has been widely accepted not merely
-as a poet but as a religious teacher, and it is therefore
-important to note that his paradoxes are prevailingly of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-the Rousseauistic type. His verse is never more spontaneous
-or, as he would say, inevitable, than when it is
-celebrating the gospel of spontaneity. I have already
-pointed out some of the paradoxes that he opposes to
-pseudo-classic decorum: e.g., his attempt to bestow
-poetical dignity and importance upon the ass, and to
-make of it a model of moral excellence, also to find poetry
-in an idiot boy and to associate sublimity with a pedlar in
-defiance of the ordinary character of pedlars. In general
-Wordsworth indulges in Rousseauistic paradoxes when
-he urges us to look to peasants for the true language
-of poetry and would have us believe that man is taught
-by “woods and rills” and not by contact with his fellow
-men. He pushes this latter paradox to a point that would
-have made even Rousseau “stare and gasp” when he
-asserts that</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">One impulse from a vernal wood</div>
-<div class="verse">May teach you more of man</div>
-<div class="verse">Of moral evil and of good</div>
-<div class="verse">Than all the sages can.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Another form of this same paradox that what comes
-from nature spontaneously is better than what can be
-acquired by conscious effort is found in his poem “Lucy
-Gray”:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">No mate, no comrade Lucy knew;</div>
-<div class="verse">She dwelt on a wide moor,</div>
-<div class="verse">The sweetest thing that ever grew</div>
-<div class="verse">Beside a human door!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>True maidenhood is made up of a thousand decorums;
-but this Rousseauistic maiden would have seemed too
-artificial if she had been reared in a house instead of
-“growing” out of doors; she might in that case have been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-a human being and not a “thing” and this would plainly
-have detracted from her spontaneity. Wordsworth’s
-paradoxes about children have a similar origin. A child
-who at the age of six is a “mighty prophet, seer blest,”
-is a highly improbable not to say impossible child. The
-“Nature” again of “Heart-Leap Well” which both feels
-and inspires pity is more remote from normal experience
-than the Nature “red in tooth and claw” of Tennyson.
-Wordsworth indeed would seem to have a penchant for
-paradox even when he is less obviously inspired by his
-naturalistic thesis.</p>
-
-<p>A study of Wordsworth’s life shows that he became
-progressively disillusioned regarding Rousseauistic spontaneity.
-He became less paradoxical as he grew older and
-in almost the same measure, one is tempted to say, less
-poetical. He returns gradually to the traditional forms
-until radicals come to look upon him as the “lost leader.”
-He finds it hard, however, to wean his imagination from
-its primitivistic Arcadias; so that what one finds, in
-writing like the “Ecclesiastical Sonnets,” is not imaginative
-fire but at best a sober intellectual conviction, an
-opposition between the head and the heart in short that
-suggests somewhat Chateaubriand and the “Genius of
-Christianity.”<a name="FNanchor_174_174" id="FNanchor_174_174"></a><a href="#Footnote_174_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a> If Wordsworth had lost faith in his revolutionary
-and naturalistic ideal, and had at the same time
-refused to return to the traditional forms, one might then
-have seen in his work something of the homeless hovering
-of the romantic ironist. If, on the other hand, he had
-worked away from the centre that the traditional forms
-give to life towards a more positive and critical centre, if,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-in other words, he had broken with the past not on Rousseauistic,
-but on Socratic lines, he would have needed
-an imagination of different quality, an imagination less
-idyllic and pastoral and more ethical than that he usually
-displays.<a name="FNanchor_175_175" id="FNanchor_175_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a> For the ethical imagination alone can guide
-one not indeed to any fixed centre but to an ever increasing
-centrality. We are here confronted once more with the
-question of the infinite which comes very close to the
-ultimate ground of difference between classicist and romanticist.
-The centre that one perceives with the aid of
-the classical imagination and that sets bounds to impulse
-and desire may, as I have already said, be defined in
-opposition to the outer infinite of expansion as the inner
-or human infinite. If we moderns, to repeat Nietzsche, are
-unable to attain proportionateness it is because “our
-itching is really the itching for the infinite, the immeasurable.”
-Thus to associate the infinite only with the immeasurable,
-to fail to perceive that the element of form
-and the curb it puts on the imagination are not external
-and artificial, but come from the very depths, is to betray
-the fact that one is a barbarian. Nietzsche and many
-other romanticists are capable on occasion of admiring
-the proportionateness that comes from allegiance to some
-centre. But after all the human spirit must be ever advancing,
-and its only motive powers, according to romantic
-logic, are wonder and curiosity; and so from the perfectly
-sound premise that man is the being who must always
-surpass himself, Nietzsche draws the perfectly unsound
-conclusion that the only way for man thus constantly to
-surpass himself and so show his infinitude is to spurn all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-limits and “live dangerously.” The Greeks themselves,
-according to Renan, will some day seem the “apostles of
-ennui,” for the very perfection of their form shows a lack
-of aspiration. To submit to form is to be static, whereas
-“romantic poetry,” says Friedrich Schlegel magnificently,
-is “universal progressive poetry.” Now the only
-effective counterpoise to the endless expansiveness that
-is implied in such a programme is the inner or human
-infinite of concentration. For it is perfectly true that
-there is something in man that is not satisfied with the
-finite and that, if he becomes stationary, he is at once
-haunted by the spectre of ennui. Man may indeed be
-defined as the insatiable animal; and the more imaginative
-he is the more insatiable he is likely to become, for it is
-the imagination that gives him access to the infinite in
-every sense of the word. In a way Baudelaire is right when
-he describes ennui as a “delicate monster” that selects
-as his prey the most highly gifted natures. Marguerite
-d’Angoulême already speaks of the “ennui proper to
-well-born spirits.” Now religion seeks no less than
-romance an escape from ennui. Bossuet is at one with
-Baudelaire when he dilates on that “inexorable ennui
-which is the very substance of human life.” But Bossuet
-and Baudelaire differ utterly in the remedies they propose
-for ennui. Baudelaire hopes to escape from ennui by
-dreaming of the superlative emotional adventure, by
-indulging in infinite, indeterminate desire, and becomes
-more and more restless in his quest for a something that
-at the end always eludes him. This infinite of nostalgia
-has nothing in common with the infinite of religion. No
-distinction is more important than that between the man
-who feels the divine discontent of religion, and the man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-who is suffering from mere romantic restlessness. According
-to religion man must seek the satisfaction that the
-finite fails to give by looking not without but within;
-and to look within he must in the literal sense of the word
-undergo conversion. A path will then be found to open up
-before him, a path of which he cannot see the end. He
-merely knows that to advance on this path is to increase
-in peace, poise, centrality; though beyond any calm he
-can attain is always a deeper centre of calm. The goal is
-at an infinite remove. This is the truth that St. Augustine
-puts theologically when he exclaims: “For thou hast
-made us for thyself and our heart is restless until it
-findeth peace in thee.”<a name="FNanchor_176_176" id="FNanchor_176_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a> One should insist that this
-question of the two infinites is not abstract and metaphysical
-but bears on what is most concrete and immediate
-in experience. If the inner and human infinite
-cannot be formulated intellectually, it can be known practically
-in its effect on life and conduct. Goethe says of
-Werther that he “treated his heart like a sick child; its
-every wish was granted it.” “My restless heart asked me
-for something else,” says Rousseau. “René,” says Chateaubriand,
-“was enchanted, tormented and, as it were,
-possessed by the demon of his heart.” Mr. Galsworthy
-speaks in a similar vein of “the aching for the wild, the
-passionate, the new, that never quite dies in a man’s
-heart.” But is there not deep down in the human breast
-another heart that is felt as a power of control over this
-romantic heart and can keep within due bounds “its
-aching for the wild, the passionate, the new.” This is the
-heart, it would seem, to which a man must hearken if he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-is not for a “little honey of romance” to abandon his
-“ancient wisdom and austere control.”</p>
-
-<p>The romantic corruption of the infinite here joins with
-the romantic corruption of conscience, the transformation
-of conscience from an inner check into an expansive emotion
-that I have already traced in Shaftesbury and Rousseau.
-But one should add that in some of its aspects this
-corruption of the idea of the infinite antedates the whole
-modern movement. At least the beginnings of it can be
-found in ancient Greece,&mdash;especially in that “delirious
-and diseased Greece” of which Joubert speaks&mdash;the
-Greece of the neo-Platonists. There is already in the neo-Platonic
-notion of the infinite a strong element of expansiveness.
-Aristotle and the older Greeks conceived of the
-infinite in this sense as bad. That something in human
-nature which is always reaching out for more&mdash;whether
-the more of sensation or of power or of knowledge&mdash;was,
-they held, to be strictly reined in and disciplined to the
-law of measure. All the furies lie in wait for the man who
-overextends himself. He is ripening for Nemesis. “Nothing
-too much.” “Think as a mortal.” “The half is better
-than the whole.” In his attitude towards man’s expansive
-self the Greek as a rule stands for mediation, and not
-like the more austere Christian, for renunciation. Yet
-Plato frequently and Aristotle at times mount from
-the humanistic to the religious level. One of the most
-impressive passages in philosophy is that in which Aristotle,
-perhaps the chief exponent of the law of measure,
-affirms that one who has really faced about and is moving
-towards the inner infinite needs no warning against excess:
-“We should not give heed,” he says,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span> “to those who bid
-one think as a mortal, but so far as we can we should make
-ourselves immortal and do all with a view to a life in
-accord with the best Principle in us.”<a name="FNanchor_177_177" id="FNanchor_177_177"></a><a href="#Footnote_177_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a> (This Principle
-Aristotle goes on to say is a man’s true self.)</p>
-
-<p>The earlier Greek distinction between an outer and
-evil infinite of expansive desire and an inner infinite that
-is raised above the flux and yet rules it, is, in the Aristotelian
-phrase, its “unmoved mover,” became blurred, as
-I have said, during the Alexandrian period. The Alexandrian
-influence entered to some extent into Christianity
-itself and filtered through various channels down to
-modern times. Some of the romanticists went directly to
-the neo-Platonists, especially Plotinus. Still more were
-affected by Jacob Boehme, who himself had no direct
-knowledge of the Alexandrian theosophy. This theosophy
-appears nevertheless in combination with other elements
-in his writings. He appealed to the new school by his insistence
-on the element of appetency or desire, by his universal
-symbolizing, above all by his tendency to make of
-the divine an affirmative instead of a restrictive force&mdash;a
-something that pushes forward instead of holding back.
-The expansive elements are moderated in Boehme himself
-and in disciples like Law by genuinely religious elements&mdash;e.g.,
-humility and the idea of conversion. What happens
-when the expansiveness is divorced from these elements,
-one may see in another English follower of Boehme&mdash;William
-Blake. To be both beautiful and wise one
-needs, according to Blake, only to be exuberant. The influence
-of Boehme blends in Blake with the new æstheticism.
-Jesus himself, he says, so far from being restrained
-“was all virtue, and acted from impulse not from rules.”
-This purely æsthetic and impulsive Jesus has been cruelly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-maligned, as we learn from the poem entitled the “Everlasting
-Gospel,” by being represented as humble and
-chaste. Religion itself thus becomes in Blake the mere
-sport of a powerful and uncontrolled imagination, and this
-we are told is mysticism. I have already contrasted with
-this type of mysticism something that goes under the same
-name and is yet utterly different&mdash;the mysticism of
-ancient India. Instead of conceiving of the divine in
-terms of expansion the Oriental sage defines it experimentally
-as the “inner check.” No more fundamental
-distinction perhaps can be made than that between those
-who associate the good with the yes-principle and those
-who associate it rather with the no-principle. But I need
-not repeat what I have said elsewhere on the romantic
-attempt to discredit the veto power. Let no one think
-that this contrast is merely metaphysical. The whole
-problem of evil is involved in it and all the innumerable
-practical consequences that follow from one’s attitude
-towards this problem. The passage in which Faust defines
-the devil as the “spirit that always says no” would seem
-to derive directly or indirectly from Boehme. According
-to Boehme good can be known only through evil. God
-therefore divides his will into two, the “yes” and the
-“no,” and so founds an eternal contrast to himself in order
-to enter into a struggle with it, and finally to discipline
-and assimilate it. The object of all manifested nature is
-the transforming of the will which says “no” into the will
-which says “yes.”<a name="FNanchor_178_178" id="FNanchor_178_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> The opposition between good and
-evil tends to lose its reality when it thus becomes a sort
-of sham battle that God gets up with himself (without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-contraries is no progression, says Blake), or when, to
-take the form that the doctrine assumes in “Faust,” the
-devil appears as the necessary though unwilling instrument
-of man’s betterment. The recoil from the doctrine
-of total depravity was perhaps inevitable. What is sinister
-is that advantage has been taken of this recoil to tamper
-with the problem of evil itself. Partial evil we are told is
-universal good; or else evil is only good in the making.
-For a Rousseau or a Shelley it is something mysteriously
-imposed from without on a spotless human nature; for
-a Wordsworth it is something one may escape by contemplating
-the speargrass on the wall.<a name="FNanchor_179_179" id="FNanchor_179_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a> For a Novalis
-sin is a mere illusion of which a man should rid his mind
-if he aspires to become a “magic idealist.”<a name="FNanchor_180_180" id="FNanchor_180_180"></a><a href="#Footnote_180_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a> In spite of his
-quaint Tory prejudices Dr. Johnson is one of the few
-persons in recent times that one may term wise without
-serious qualification because he never dodges or equivocates
-in dealing with the problem of evil; he never fades
-away from the fact of evil into some theosophic or sentimental
-dream.</p>
-
-<p>The rise of a purely expansive view of life in the eighteenth
-century was marked by a great revival of enthusiasm.
-The chief grievance of the expansionist indeed
-against the no-principle is that it kills enthusiasm. But
-concentration no less than expansion may have its own
-type of enthusiasm. It is therefore imperative in an age
-that has repudiated the traditional sanctions and set out
-to walk by the inner light that all general terms and in
-particular the term enthusiasm should be protected by a
-powerful dialectic. Nothing is more perilous than an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-uncritical enthusiasm, since it is only by criticism that
-one may determine whether the enthusiast is a man who
-is moving towards wisdom or is a candidate for Bedlam.
-The Rousseauist, however, exalts enthusiasm at the same
-time that he depreciates discrimination. “Enthusiasm,”
-says Emerson, “is the height of man. It is the passage
-from the human to the divine.” It is only too characteristic
-of Emerson and of the whole school to which he
-belongs, to put forth statements of this kind without any
-dialectical protection. The type of enthusiasm to which
-Emerson’s praise might be properly applied, the type
-that has been defined as exalted peace, though extremely
-rare, actually exists. A commoner type of enthusiasm
-during the past century is that which has been defined as
-“the rapturous disintegration of civilized human nature.”
-When we have got our fingers well burned as a result of
-our failure to make the necessary discriminations, we
-may fly to the opposite extreme like the men of the early
-eighteenth century among whom, as is well known, enthusiasm
-had become a term of vituperation. This dislike of
-enthusiasm was the natural recoil from the uncritical following
-of the inner light by the fanatics of the seventeenth
-century. Shaftesbury attacks this older type of enthusiasm
-and at the same time prepares the way for the new
-emotional enthusiasm. One cannot say, however, that
-any such sharp separation of types appears in the revival
-of enthusiasm that begins about the middle of the eighteenth
-century, though some of those who were working
-for this revival felt the need of discriminating:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">That which concerns us therefore is to see</div>
-<div class="verse">What Species of Enthusiasts we be&mdash;</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>says John Byrom in his poem on Enthusiasm. The different<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-species, however,&mdash;the enthusiasm of the Evangelicals
-and Wesleyans, the enthusiasm of those who like
-Law and his disciple Byrom hearken back to Boehme,
-the enthusiasm of Rousseau and the sentimentalists,
-tend to run together. To “let one’s feelings run in soft
-luxurious flow,”<a name="FNanchor_181_181" id="FNanchor_181_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a> is, as Newman says, at the opposite pole
-from spirituality. Yet much of this mere emotional facility
-appears alongside of genuinely religious elements in
-the enthusiasm of the Methodist. One may get a notion
-of the jumble to which I refer by reading a book like
-Henry Brooke’s “Fool of Quality.” Brooke is at one and
-the same time a disciple of Boehme and Rousseau
-while being more or less affiliated with the Methodistic
-movement. The book indeed was revised and abridged
-by John Wesley himself and in this form had a wide circulation
-among his followers.<a name="FNanchor_182_182" id="FNanchor_182_182"></a><a href="#Footnote_182_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a></p>
-
-<p>The enthusiasm that has marked the modern movement
-has plainly not been sufficiently critical. Perhaps
-the first discovery that any one will make who wishes
-to be at once critical and enthusiastic is that in a genuinely
-spiritual enthusiasm the inner light and the inner
-check are practically identical. He will find that if he is
-to rise above the naturalistic level he must curb constantly
-his expansive desires with reference to some centre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-that is set above the flux. Here let me repeat is the supreme
-rôle of the imagination. The man who has ceased to lean
-on outer standards can perceive his new standards or
-centre of control only through its aid. I have tried to
-show that to aim at such a centre is not to be stagnant
-and stationary but on the contrary to be at once purposeful
-and progressive. To assert that the creativeness
-of the imagination is incompatible with centrality or,
-what amounts to the same thing, with purpose, is to
-assert that the creativeness of the imagination is incompatible
-with reality or at least such reality as man
-may attain. Life is at best a series of illusions; the whole
-office of philosophy is to keep it from degenerating into
-a series of delusions. If we are to keep it from thus degenerating
-we need to grasp above all the difference
-between the eccentric and the concentric imagination.
-To look for serious guidance to an imagination that owes
-allegiance to nothing above itself, is to run the risk of
-taking some cloud bank for terra firma. The eccentric
-imagination may give access to the “infinite,” but it is
-an infinite empty of content and therefore an infinite not
-of peace but of restlessness. Can any one maintain seriously
-that there is aught in common between the “striving
-for endlessness” of the German romanticists and the
-supreme and perfect Centre that Dante glimpses at the
-end of the “Divine Comedy” and in the presence of
-which he becomes dumb?</p>
-
-<p>We are told to follow the gleam, but the counsel is
-somewhat ambiguous. The gleam that one follows may be
-that which is associated with the concentric imagination
-and which gives steadiness and informing purpose, or it
-may be the romantic will o’ the wisp. One may, as I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-said, in recreative moments allow one’s imagination to
-wander without control, but to take these wanderings
-seriously is to engage in a sort of endless pilgrimage in
-the void. The romanticist is constantly yielding to the
-“spell” of this or the “lure” of that, or the “call” of
-some other thing. But when the wonder and strangeness
-that he is chasing are overtaken, they at once cease to
-be wondrous and strange, while the gleam is already
-dancing over some other object on the distant horizon.
-For nothing is in itself romantic, it is only imagining that
-makes it so. Romanticism is the pursuit of the element of
-illusion in things for its own sake; it is in short the cherishing
-of glamour. The word glamour introduced into
-literary usage from popular Scotch usage by Walter
-Scott itself illustrates this tendency. Traced etymologically,
-it turns out to be the same word as grammar. In
-an illiterate age to know how to write at all was a weird
-and magical accomplishment,<a name="FNanchor_183_183" id="FNanchor_183_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a> but in an educated age,
-nothing is so drearily unromantic, so lacking in glamour
-as grammar.</p>
-
-<p>The final question that arises in connection with this
-subject is whether one may quell the mere restlessness of
-one’s spirit and impose upon it an ethical purpose. “The
-man who has no definite end is lost,” says Montaigne.
-The upshot of the romantic supposition that purpose
-is incompatible with the freedom of the imagination is
-a philosophy like that of Nietzsche. He can conceive of
-nothing beyond whirling forever on the wheel of change
-(“the eternal recurrence”) without any goal or firm
-refuge that is set above the flux. He could not help doubting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-at times whether happiness was to be found after all
-in mere endless, purposeless mutation.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>Have <i>I</i> still a goal? A haven towards which <i>my</i> sail is set? A good
-wind? Ah, he only who knoweth <i>whither</i> he saileth, knoweth what wind
-is good, and a fair wind for him.</p>
-
-<p>What still remaineth to me? A heart weary and flippant; an unstable
-will; fluttering wings; a broken backbone.</p>
-
-<p class="center">…</p>
-
-<p><i>Where</i> is <i>my</i> home? For it do I ask and seek, and have sought, but
-have not found it. O eternal everywhere, O eternal nowhere, O eternal&mdash;in
-vain.<a name="FNanchor_184_184" id="FNanchor_184_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To allow one’s self to revolve passively on the wheel of
-change (<i>samsāra</i>) seemed to the Oriental sage the acme
-of evil. An old Hindu writer compares the man who does
-not impose a firm purpose upon the manifold solicitations
-of sense to a charioteer who fails to rein in his restless
-steeds<a name="FNanchor_185_185" id="FNanchor_185_185"></a><a href="#Footnote_185_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a>&mdash;a comparison suggested independently to
-Ricarda Huch by the lives of the German romanticists.
-In the absence of central control, the parts of the self
-tend to pull each in a different way. It is not surprising<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-that in so centrifugal a movement, at least on the human
-and spiritual level, one should find so many instances of
-disintegrated and multiple personality. The fascination
-that the phenomenon of the double (<i>Doppelgängerei</i>) had
-for Hoffmann and other German romanticists is well
-known.<a name="FNanchor_186_186" id="FNanchor_186_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a> It may well be that some such disintegration of
-the self takes place under extreme emotional stress.<a name="FNanchor_187_187" id="FNanchor_187_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a>
-We should not fail to note here the usual coöperation
-between the emotional and the scientific naturalist. Like
-the romanticist, the scientific psychologist is more interested
-in the abnormal than in the normal. According to
-the Freudians, the personality that has become incapable
-of any conscious aim is not left entirely rudderless. The
-guidance that it is unable to give itself is supplied to it
-by some “wish,” usually obscene, from the sub-conscious
-realm of dreams. The Freudian then proceeds to develop
-what may be true of the hysterical degenerate into a complete
-view of life.</p>
-
-<p>Man is in danger of being deprived of every last scrap
-and vestige of his humanity by this working together of
-romanticism and science. For man becomes human only
-in so far as he exercises moral choice. He must also enter
-upon the pathway of ethical purpose if he is to achieve
-happiness. “Moods,” says Novalis, “undefined emotions,
-not defined emotions and feelings, give happiness.” The
-experience of life shows so plainly that this is not so that
-the romanticist is tempted to seek shelter once more from
-his mere vagrancy of spirit in the outer discipline he has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-abandoned. “To such unsettled ones as thou, seemeth at
-last even a prisoner blessed. Didst thou ever see how
-captured criminals sleep? They sleep quietly, they enjoy
-their new security. … Beware in the end lest a narrow
-faith capture thee, a hard rigorous delusion! For now
-everything that is narrow and fixed seduceth and tempteth
-thee.”<a name="FNanchor_188_188" id="FNanchor_188_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a></p>
-
-<p>Various reasons have been given for romantic conversions
-to Catholicism&mdash;for example, the desire for confession
-(though the Catholic does not, like the Rousseauist,
-confess himself from the housetops), the æsthetic
-appeal of Catholic rites and ceremonies, etc. The sentence
-of Nietzsche puts us on the track of still another reason.
-The affinity of certain romantic converts for the Church
-is that of the jelly-fish for the rock. It is appropriate that
-Friedrich Schlegel, the great apostle of irony, should
-after a career as a heaven-storming Titan end by submitting
-to this most rigid of all forms of outer authority.</p>
-
-<p>For it should now be possible to return after our digression
-on paradox and the idea of the infinite and the perils
-of aimlessness, to romantic irony with a truer understanding
-of its significance. Like so much else in this movement
-it is an attempt to give to a grave psychic weakness the
-prestige of strength&mdash;unless indeed one conceives the
-superior personality to be the one that lacks a centre and
-principle of control. Man it has usually been held should
-think lightly of himself but should have some conviction
-for which he is ready to die. The romantic ironist, on the
-other hand, is often morbidly sensitive about himself, but
-is ready to mock at his own convictions. Rousseau was
-no romantic ironist, but the root of self-parody is found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-nevertheless in his saying that his heart and his head did
-not seem to belong to the same individual. Everything of
-course is a matter of degree. What poor mortal can say
-that he is perfectly at one with himself? Friedrich
-Schlegel is not entirely wrong when he discovers elements
-of irony based on an opposition between the head and the
-heart in writers like Ariosto and Cervantes, who love the
-very mediæval tales that they are treating in a spirit of
-mockery. Yet the laughter of Cervantes is not gypsy
-laughter. He is one of those who next to Shakespeare
-deserve the praise of having dwelt close to the centre
-of human nature and so can in only a minor degree be
-ranked with the romantic ironists.</p>
-
-<p>In the extreme type of romantic ironist not only are
-intellect and emotion at loggerheads but action often
-belies both: he thinks one thing and feels another and
-does still a third. The most ironical contrast of all is that
-between the romantic “ideal” and the actual event. The
-whole of romantic morality is from this point of view, as
-I have tried to show, a monstrous series of ironies. The
-pacifist, for example, has been disillusioned so often that
-he should by this time be able to qualify as a romantic
-ironist, to look, that is, with a certain aloofness on his own
-dream. The crumbling of the ideal is often so complete
-indeed when put to the test that irony is at times, we
-may suppose, a merciful alternative to madness. When
-disillusion overtakes the uncritical enthusiast, when he
-finds that he has taken some cloud bank for terra firma,
-he continues to cling to his dream, but at the same time
-wishes to show that he is no longer the dupe of it; and so
-“hot baths of sentiment,” as Jean Paul says of his novels,
-“are followed by cold douches of irony.” The true German<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-master of the genre is, however, Heine. Every one
-knows with what coldness his head came to survey the
-enthusiasms of his heart, whether in love or politics. One
-may again measure the havoc that life had wrought with
-Renan’s ideals if one compares the tone of his youthful
-“Future of Science” with the irony of his later writings.
-He compliments Jesus by ascribing to him an ironical
-detachment similar to his own. Jesus, he says, has that
-mark of the superior nature&mdash;the power to rise above
-his own dream and to smile down upon it. Anatole France,
-who is even more completely detached from his own
-dreams than his master Renan, sums up the romantic
-emancipation of imagination and sensibility from any
-definite centre when he says that life should have as its
-supreme witnesses irony and pity.</p>
-
-<p>Irony is on the negative side, it should be remembered,
-a way of affirming one’s escape from traditional and conventional
-control, of showing the supremacy of mood over
-decorum. “There are poems old and new which throughout
-breathe the divine breath of irony. … Within lives
-the poet’s mood that surveys all, rising infinitely above
-everything finite, even above his own art, virtue or
-genius.”<a name="FNanchor_189_189" id="FNanchor_189_189"></a><a href="#Footnote_189_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> Decorum is for the classicist the grand masterpiece
-to observe because it is only thus he can show that
-he has a genuine centre set above his own ego; it is only
-by the allegiance of his imagination to this centre that
-he can give the illusion of a higher reality. The romantic
-ironist shatters the illusion wantonly. It is as though he
-would inflict upon the reader the disillusion from which
-he has himself suffered. By his swift passage from one
-mood to another (<i>Stimmungsbrechung</i>) he shows that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-is subject to no centre. The effect is often that of a sudden
-breaking of the spell of poetry by an intrusion of the
-poet’s ego. Some of the best examples are found in that
-masterpiece of romantic irony, “Don Juan.”<a name="FNanchor_190_190" id="FNanchor_190_190"></a><a href="#Footnote_190_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a></p>
-
-<p>Closely allied to the irony of emotional disillusion is a
-certain type of misanthropy. You form an ideal of man
-that is only an Arcadian dream and then shrink back from
-man when you find that he does not correspond to your
-ideal. I have said that the romantic lover does not love a
-real person but only a projection of his mood. This substitution
-of illusion for reality often appears in the relations
-of the romanticist with other persons. Shelley, for example,
-begins by seeing in Elizabeth Hitchener an angel
-of light and then discovers that she is instead a “brown
-demon.” He did not at any time see the real Elizabeth
-Hitchener. She merely reflects back to him two of his own
-moods. The tender misanthropy of the Rousseauist is at
-the opposite pole from that of a Swift, which is the misanthropy
-of naked intellect. Instead of seeing human nature
-through an Arcadian haze he saw it without any illusion
-at all. His irony is like that of Socrates, the irony of intellect.
-Its bitterness and cruelty arise from the fact that his
-intellect does not, like the intellect of Socrates, have the
-support of insight. Pascal would have said that Swift saw
-man’s misery without at the same time seeing his grandeur.
-For man’s grandeur is due to his infinitude and this
-infinitude cannot be perceived directly, but only through
-a veil of illusion; only, that is, through a right use of the
-imagination. Literary distinctions of this kind must of
-course be used cautiously. Byron’s irony is prevailingly
-sentimental, but along with this romantic element he has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-much irony and satire that Swift would have understood
-perfectly.</p>
-
-<p>The misanthropist of the Rousseauistic or Byronic
-type has a resource that was denied to Swift. Having
-failed to find companionship among men he can flee to
-nature. Rousseau relates how when he had taken refuge
-on St. Peter’s Island he “exclaimed at times with deep
-emotion: Oh nature, oh my mother, here I am under your
-protection alone. Here is no adroit and rascally man to
-interpose between you and me.”<a name="FNanchor_191_191" id="FNanchor_191_191"></a><a href="#Footnote_191_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a> Few aspects of romanticism
-are more important than this attempt to find companionship
-and consolation in nature.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROMANTICISM AND NATURE</span></h2>
-
-<p>One of the most disquieting features of the modern movement
-is the vagueness and ambiguity of its use of the
-word nature and the innumerable sophistries that have
-resulted. One can sympathize at times with Sir Leslie
-Stephen’s wish that the word might be suppressed entirely.
-This looseness of definition may be said to begin
-with the very rise of naturalism in the Renaissance, and
-indeed to go back to the naturalists of Greek and Roman
-antiquity.<a name="FNanchor_192_192" id="FNanchor_192_192"></a><a href="#Footnote_192_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a> Even writers like Rabelais and Molière are not
-free from the suspicion of juggling dangerously on occasion
-with the different meanings of the word nature. But
-the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were not merely
-naturalistic, they were also humanistic, and what they
-usually meant by nature, as I have pointed out, was the
-conception of normal, representative human nature that
-they had worked out with the aid of the ancients. There
-is undeniably an element of narrowness and artificiality
-in this conception of nature, and a resulting unfriendliness,
-as appears in Pope’s definition of wit, towards originality
-and invention. In his “Art of Poetry” Boileau says,
-“Let nature be your sole study.” What he means by
-nature appears a few lines later: “Study the court and
-become familiar with the town.” To this somewhat conventionalized
-human nature the original genius opposed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-as we have seen, the cult of primitive nature. A whole
-revolution is implied in Byron’s line:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">I love not man the less, but nature more.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Any study of this topic must evidently turn on the question
-how far at different times and by different schools of
-thought the realm of man and the realm of nature (as
-Byron uses the word) have been separated and in what
-way, and also how far they have been run together and
-in what way. For there may be different ways of running
-together man and nature. Ruskin’s phrase the “pathetic
-fallacy” is unsatisfactory because it fails to recognize this
-fact. The man who is guilty of the pathetic fallacy sees
-in nature emotions that are not really there but only in
-himself. Extreme examples of this confusion abound in
-Ruskin’s own writings. Now the ancients also ran man
-and nature together, but in an entirely different way.
-The Greek we are told never saw the oak tree without
-at the same time seeing the dryad. There is in this and
-similar associations a sort of overflow of the human realm
-upon the forms of outer nature whereas the Rousseauist
-instead of bestowing imaginatively upon the oak tree a
-conscious life and an image akin to his own and so lifting
-it up to his level, would, if he could, become an oak tree
-and so enjoy its unconscious and vegetative felicity. The
-Greek, one may say, humanized nature; the Rousseauist
-naturalizes man. Rousseau’s great discovery was revery;
-and revery is just this imaginative melting of man into
-outer nature. If the ancients failed to develop in a marked
-degree this art of revery, it was not because they lacked
-naturalists. Both Stoics and Epicureans, the two main
-varieties of naturalists with which classical antiquity was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-familiar, inclined to affirm the ultimate identity of the
-human and the natural order. But both Stoics and Epicureans
-would have found it hard to understand the
-indifference to the intellect and its activities that Rousseauistic
-revery implies. The Stoics to be sure employed
-the intellect on an impossible and disheartening task&mdash;that
-of founding on the natural order virtues that
-the natural order does not give. The Epicureans remind
-one rather in much of their intellectual activity of the
-modern man of science. But the Epicurean was less prone
-than the man of science to look on man as the mere passive
-creature of environment. The views of the man of
-science about the springs of conduct often seem to coincide
-rather closely with those of Rousseau about “sensitive
-morality.” Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire says that when
-reclining on the banks of the Nile he felt awakening
-within himself the instincts of the crocodile. The point
-of view is Rousseauistic perhaps rather than genuinely
-scientific. An Epicurus or a Lucretius would, we are probably
-safe in assuming, have been disquieted by any such
-surrender to the subrational, by any such encroachment
-of the powers of the unconscious upon conscious control.</p>
-
-<p>It is hard as a matter of fact to find in the ancients
-anything resembling Rousseauistic revery, even when
-they yield to the pastoral mood. Nature interests them as
-a rule less for its own sake than as a background for
-human action; and when they are concerned primarily
-with nature, it is a nature that has been acted upon by
-man. They have a positive shrinking from wild and uncultivated
-nature. “The green pastures and golden slopes
-of England,” says Lowell,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span> “are sweeter both to the outward
-and to the inward eye that the hand of man has
-immemorially cared for and caressed them.” This is an
-attitude towards nature that an ancient would have
-understood perfectly. One may indeed call it the Virgilian
-attitude from the ancient who has perhaps expressed it
-most happily. The man who lives in the grand manner
-may indeed wish to impose on nature some of the fine
-proportion and symmetry of which he is conscious in
-himself and he may then from our modern point of view
-carry the humanizing of nature too far. “Let us sing of
-woods,” says Virgil, “but let the woods be worthy of
-a consul.” This line has sometimes been taken to be a
-prophecy of the Park of Versailles. We may sympathize
-up to a certain point with the desire to introduce a human
-symmetry into nature (such as appears, for instance, in
-the Italian garden), but the peril is even greater here
-than elsewhere of confounding the requirements of a real
-with those of an artificial decorum. I have already mentioned
-the neo-classicist who complained that the stars
-in heaven were not arranged in sufficiently symmetrical
-patterns.</p>
-
-<p>What has been said should make clear that though
-both humanist and Rousseauist associate man with nature
-it is in very different ways, and that there is therefore
-an ambiguity in the expression “pathetic fallacy.” It remains
-to show that men may not only associate themselves
-with nature in different ways but that they may
-likewise differ in their ways of asserting man’s separateness
-from nature. The chief distinction to be made here
-is that between the humanist and the supernaturalist.
-Some sense of the gap between man and the “outworld”
-is almost inevitable and forces itself at times even upon
-those most naturalistically inclined:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Nor will I praise a cloud however bright,</div>
-<div class="verse">Disparaging Man’s gifts and proper food&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Grove, isle, with every shape of sky-built dome,</div>
-<div class="verse">Though clad in colors beautiful and pure,</div>
-<div class="verse">Find in the heart of man no natural home.<a name="FNanchor_193_193" id="FNanchor_193_193"></a><a href="#Footnote_193_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Wordsworth who speaks here is scarcely the Wordsworth
-of Tintern Abbey or the Wordsworth whose “daily
-teachers had been woods and rills.” He reminds us rather
-of Socrates who gave as his reason for going so rarely
-into the country, delightful as he found it when once
-there, that he did not learn from woods and rills but
-from the “men in the cities.” This sense of the separateness
-of the human and the natural realm may be carried
-much further&mdash;to a point where an ascetic distrust of
-nature begins to appear. Something of this ascetic distrust
-is seen for example in the following lines from Cardinal
-Newman:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">There strayed awhile amid the woods of Dart</div>
-<div class="verse">One who could love them, but who durst not love;</div>
-<div class="verse">A vow had bound him ne’er to give his heart</div>
-<div class="verse">To streamlet bright or soft secluded grove.<a name="FNanchor_194_194" id="FNanchor_194_194"></a><a href="#Footnote_194_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The origins of this latter attitude towards nature are to
-be sought in mediæval Christianity rather than in classical
-antiquity. No man who knows the facts would assert for
-a moment that the man of the Middle Ages was incapable
-of looking on nature with other feelings than those of
-ascetic distrust. It is none the less true that the man of
-the Middle Ages often saw in nature not merely something
-alien but a positive temptation and peril of the spirit. In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-his attitude towards nature as in other respects Petrarch
-is usually accounted the first modern. He did what no
-man of the mediæval period is supposed to have done
-before him, or indeed what scarcely any man of classical
-antiquity did: he ascended a mountain out of sheer curiosity
-and simply to enjoy the prospect. But those who
-tell of his ascent of Mt. Ventoux sometimes forget to
-add that the passage of Saint Augustine<a name="FNanchor_195_195" id="FNanchor_195_195"></a><a href="#Footnote_195_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a> that occurred to
-him at the top reflects the distrust of the more austere
-Christian towards the whole natural order. Petrarch is
-at once more ascetic and more romantic in his attitude
-towards nature than the Greek or Roman.</p>
-
-<p>Traces of Petrarch’s taste for solitary and even for wild
-nature are to be found throughout the Renaissance and
-the seventeenth century. But the recoil from supernaturalism
-that took place at this time led rather, as I have
-remarked, to a revival of the Græco-Roman humanism
-with something more of artifice and convention, and to an
-even more marked preference<a name="FNanchor_196_196" id="FNanchor_196_196"></a><a href="#Footnote_196_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a> of the town to the country.
-An age that aims first of all at urbanity must necessarily
-be more urban than rural in its predilections. It was
-a sort of condescension for the neo-classical humanist to
-turn from the central model he was imitating to mere
-unadorned nature, and even then he felt that he must
-be careful not to condescend too far. Even when writing
-pastorals he was warned by Scaliger to avoid details
-that are too redolent of the real country; he should indulge
-at most in an “urbane rusticity.” Wild nature the
-neo-classicist finds simply repellent. Mountains he looks
-upon as “earth’s dishonor and encumbering load.” The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-Alps were regarded as the place where Nature swept up
-the rubbish of the earth to clear the plains of Lombardy.
-“At last,” says a German traveller of the seventeenth
-century, “we left the horrible and wearisome mountains
-and the beautiful flat landscape was joyfully welcomed.”
-The taste for mountain scenery is associated no doubt to
-some extent, as has been suggested, with the increasing
-ease and comfort of travel that has come with the progress
-of the utilitarian movement. It is scarcely necessary
-to point the contrast between the Switzerland of which
-Evelyn tells in his diary<a name="FNanchor_197_197" id="FNanchor_197_197"></a><a href="#Footnote_197_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a> and the Switzerland in which
-one may go by funicular to the top of the Jungfrau.</p>
-
-<p>Those who in the eighteenth century began to feel the
-need of less trimness in nature and human nature
-were not it is true entirely without neo-classic predecessors.
-They turned at times to painting&mdash;as the very
-word picturesque testifies&mdash;for the encouragement they
-failed to find in literature. A landscape was picturesque
-when it seemed like a picture<a name="FNanchor_198_198" id="FNanchor_198_198"></a><a href="#Footnote_198_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a> and it might be not merely
-irregular but savage if it were to seem like some of the
-pictures of Salvator Rosa. This association of even wildness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-with art is very characteristic of eighteenth-century
-sentimentalism. It is a particular case of that curious
-blending in this period of the old principle of the imitation
-of models with the new principle of spontaneity.
-There was a moment when a man needed to show a
-certain taste for wildness if he was to be conventionally
-correct. “The fops,” says Taine, describing Rousseau’s
-influence on the drawing-rooms, “dreamt between two
-madrigals of the happiness of sleeping naked in the virgin
-forest.” The prince in Goethe’s “Triumph of Sensibility”
-has carried with him on his travels canvas
-screens so painted that when placed in position they
-give him the illusion of being in the midst of a wild
-landscape. This taste for artificial wildness can however
-best be studied in connection with the increasing
-vogue in the eighteenth century of the English garden as
-compared either with the Italian garden or the French
-garden in the style of Le Nôtre.<a name="FNanchor_199_199" id="FNanchor_199_199"></a><a href="#Footnote_199_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a> As a relief from the
-neo-classical symmetry, nature was broken up, often at
-great expense, into irregular and unexpected aspects.
-Some of the English gardens in France and Germany
-were imitated directly from Rousseau’s famous description
-of this method of dealing with the landscape in the
-“Nouvelle Héloïse.”<a name="FNanchor_200_200" id="FNanchor_200_200"></a><a href="#Footnote_200_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a> Artificial ruins were often placed
-in the English garden as a further aid to those who
-wished to wander imaginatively from the beaten path,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-and also as a provocative of the melancholy that was
-already held to be distinguished. Towards the end of the
-century this cult of ruins was widespread. The veritable
-obsession with ruins that one finds in Chateaubriand
-is not unrelated to this sentimental fashion, though it
-arises even more perhaps from the real ruins that had
-been so plentifully supplied by the Revolution.</p>
-
-<p>Rousseau himself, it should hardly be necessary to say,
-stands for far more than an artificial wildness. Instead
-of imposing decorum on nature like the neo-classicist,
-he preached constantly the elimination of decorum from
-man. Man should flee from that “false taste for grandeur
-which is not made for him” and which “poisons his pleasures,”<a name="FNanchor_201_201" id="FNanchor_201_201"></a><a href="#Footnote_201_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a>
-to nature. Now “it is on the summits of mountains,
-in the depths of forests, on deserted islands that
-nature reveals her most potent charms.”<a name="FNanchor_202_202" id="FNanchor_202_202"></a><a href="#Footnote_202_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> The man of
-feeling finds the savage and deserted nook filled with
-beauties that seem horrible to the mere worldling.<a name="FNanchor_203_203" id="FNanchor_203_203"></a><a href="#Footnote_203_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a> Rousseau
-indeed did not crave the ultimate degree of wildness
-even in the Alps. He did not get beyond what one may
-term the middle zone of Alpine scenery&mdash;scenery that
-may be found around the shores of Lake Leman. He was
-inclined to find the most appropriate setting for the earthly
-paradise in the neighborhood of Vevey. Moreover, others
-about the same time and more or less independently of
-his influence were opposing an even more primitive nature
-to the artificialities of civilization. The mountains of
-“Ossian” are, as has been said, mere blurs, yet the new
-delight in mountains is due in no small measure throughout
-Europe to the Ossianic influence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The instinct for getting away from the beaten track, for
-exploration and discovery, has of course been highly developed
-at other epochs, notably at the Renaissance.
-Much of the romantic interest in the wild and waste
-places of the earth did not go much beyond what might
-have been felt in Elizabethan England. Many of the
-Rousseauists, Wordsworth and Chateaubriand for example,
-not only read eagerly the older books of travel but
-often the same books. The fascination of penetrating to
-regions “where foot of man hath ne’er or rarely been,” is
-perennial. It was my privilege a few years ago to listen
-to Sir Ernest Shackleton speak of his expedition across
-the Antarctic continent and of the thrill that he and the
-members of his party felt when they saw rising before them
-day after day mountain peaks that no human eye had
-ever gazed upon. The emotion was no doubt very similar
-to that of “stout Cortez” when he first “stared at
-the Pacific.” Chateaubriand must have looked forward
-to similar emotions when he planned his trip to North
-America in search of the North West Passage. But the
-passion for actual exploration which is a form of the
-romanticism of action is very subordinate in the case of
-Chateaubriand to emotional romanticism. He went into
-the wilderness first of all not to make actual discoveries but
-to affirm his freedom from conventional restraint, and at
-the same time to practice the new art of revery. His sentiments
-on getting into what was then the virgin forest
-to the west of Albany were very different we may assume
-from those of the early pioneers of America. “When,” he
-says,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span> “after passing the Mohawk I entered woods which
-had never felt the axe, I was seized by a sort of intoxication
-of independence: I went from tree to tree, to right
-and left, saying to myself, ‘Here are no more roads or
-cities or monarchy or republic or presidents or kings or
-men.’ And in order to find out if I was restored to my
-original rights I did various wilful things that made my
-guide furious. In his heart he believed me mad.” The
-disillusion that followed is also one that the early pioneers
-would have had some difficulty in understanding.
-For he goes on to relate that while he was thus rejoicing
-in his escape from conventional life to pure nature he
-suddenly bumped up against a shed, and under the shed
-he saw his first savages&mdash;a score of them both men and
-women. A little Frenchman named M. Violet, “bepowdered
-and befrizzled, with an apple-green coat, drugget
-waistcoat and muslin frill and cuffs, was scraping on a
-pocket fiddle” and teaching the Indians to dance to
-the tune of Madelon Friquet. M. Violet, it seemed, had
-remained behind on the departure from New York of
-Rochambeau’s forces at the time of the American Revolution,
-and had set up as dancing-master among the
-savages. He was very proud of the nimbleness of his
-pupils and always referred to them as “ces messieurs
-sauvages et ces dames sauvagesses.” “Was it not a crushing
-circumstance for a disciple of Rousseau,” Chateaubriand
-concludes, “this introduction to savage life by a
-ball that the ex-scullion of General Rochambeau was
-giving to Iroquois? I felt very much like laughing, but
-I was at the same time cruelly humiliated.”</p>
-
-<p>In America, as elsewhere, Chateaubriand’s chief concern
-is not with any outer fact or activity, but with his
-own emotions and the enhancement of these emotions by
-his imagination. In him as in many other romanticists
-the different elements of Rousseauism&mdash;Arcadian longing,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-the pursuit of the dream woman, the aspiration towards
-the “infinite” (often identified with God)&mdash;appear
-at times more or less separately and then again almost
-inextricably blended with one another and with the cult
-of nature. It may be well to consider more in detail these
-various elements of Rousseauism and their relation to
-nature in about the order I have mentioned. The association
-of Arcadian longing with nature is in part an outcome
-of the conflict between the ideal and the real. The
-romantic idealist finds that men do not understand him:
-his “vision” is mocked and his “genius” is unrecognized.
-The result is the type of sentimental misanthropy of
-which I spoke at the end of the last chapter. He feels,
-as Lamartine says, that there is nothing in common
-between the world and him. Lamartine adds, however,
-“But nature is there who invites you and loves you.” You
-will find in her the comprehension and companionship
-that you have failed to find in society. And nature will
-seem a perfect companion to the Rousseauist in direct
-proportion as she is uncontaminated by the presence of
-man. Wordsworth has described the misanthropy that
-supervened in many people on the collapse of the revolutionary
-idealism. He himself overcame it, though there
-is more than a suggestion in the manner of his own retirement
-into the hills of a man who retreats into an Arcadian
-dream from actual defeat. The suggestion of defeat
-is much stronger in Ruskin’s similar retirement. Ruskin
-doubtless felt in later life, like Rousseau, that if he had
-failed to get on with men “it was less his fault than
-theirs.”<a name="FNanchor_204_204" id="FNanchor_204_204"></a><a href="#Footnote_204_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a> Perhaps emotional misanthropy and the worship
-of wild nature are nowhere more fully combined than in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-Byron. He gives magnificent expression to the most untenable
-of paradoxes&mdash;that one escapes from solitude by
-eschewing human haunts in favor of some wilderness.<a name="FNanchor_205_205" id="FNanchor_205_205"></a><a href="#Footnote_205_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a>
-In these haunts, he says, he became like a “falcon with
-clipped wing,” but found in nature the kindest of mothers.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent1">Oh! she is fairest in her features wild,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Where nothing polished dare pollute her path:</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">To me by day or night she ever smiled</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Though I have marked her when none other hath</div>
-<div class="verse">And sought her more and more, and loved her best in wrath.<a name="FNanchor_206_206" id="FNanchor_206_206"></a><a href="#Footnote_206_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>He not only finds companionship in nature but at the
-same time partakes of her infinitude&mdash;an infinitude, one
-should note, of feeling:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">I live not in myself, but I become</div>
-<div class="verse">Portion of that around me; and to me</div>
-<div class="verse">High mountains are a feeling, but the hum</div>
-<div class="verse">Of human cities torture.<a name="FNanchor_207_207" id="FNanchor_207_207"></a><a href="#Footnote_207_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In his less misanthropic moods the Rousseauist sees in
-wild nature not only a refuge from society, but also a
-suitable setting for his companionship with the ideal
-mate, for what the French term <i>la solitude à deux</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Oh! that the Desert were my dwelling-place</div>
-<div class="verse">With one fair Spirit for my minister,</div>
-<div class="verse">That I might all forget the human race</div>
-<div class="verse">And, hating no one, love but only her!<a name="FNanchor_208_208" id="FNanchor_208_208"></a><a href="#Footnote_208_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The almost innumerable passages in the romantic
-movement that celebrate this Arcadian companionship
-in the wilderness merely continue in a sense the pastoral
-mood that must be as old as human nature itself. But in
-the past the pastoral mood has been comparatively placid.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-It has not been associated in any such degree with misanthropy
-and wildness, with nympholeptic longing and
-the thirst for the infinite. The scene that Chateaubriand
-has imagined between Chactas and Atala in the primeval
-forest, is surely the stormiest of Arcadias; so stormy indeed
-that it would have been unintelligible to Theocritus.
-It is not certain that it would have been intelligible to
-Shakespeare, who like the other Elizabethans felt at times
-that he too had been born in Arcadia. The Arcadian of
-the past was much less inclined to sink down to the subrational
-and to merge his personality in the landscape.
-Rousseau describes with a charm that has scarcely been
-surpassed by any of his disciples, the reveries in which he
-thus descends below the level of his rational self. Time,
-no longer broken up by the importunate intellect and
-its analysis, is then felt by him in its unbroken flow;
-the result is a sort of “eternal present that leaves no
-sense of emptiness.” Of such a moment of revery Rousseau
-says, anticipating Faust, that he “would like it
-to last forever.” Bergson in his conception of the <i>summum
-bonum</i> as a state in which time is no longer cut up
-into artificial segments but is perceived in its continuous
-stream as a “present that endures,”<a name="FNanchor_209_209" id="FNanchor_209_209"></a><a href="#Footnote_209_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a> has done little more
-than repeat Rousseau. The sight and sound of water
-seem to have been a special aid to revery in Rousseau’s
-case. His accounts of the semi-dissolution of his conscious
-self that he enjoyed while drifting idly on the Lake of
-Bienne are justly celebrated. Lamartine’s soul was, like
-that of Rousseau, lulled by “the murmur of waters.”
-Nothing again is more Rousseauistic than the desire
-Arnold attributes to Maurice de Guérin&mdash;the desire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-“to be borne on forever down an enchanted stream.”
-That too is why certain passages of Shelley are so near
-in spirit to Rousseau&mdash;for example, the boat revery in
-“Prometheus Unbound” in which an Arcadian nature
-and the dream companion mingle to the strains of music
-in a way that is supremely romantic.<a name="FNanchor_210_210" id="FNanchor_210_210"></a><a href="#Footnote_210_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a></p>
-
-<p>The association of nature with Arcadian longing and
-the pursuit of the dream woman is even less significant
-than its association with the idea of the infinite. For as
-a result of this latter association the nature cult often
-assumes the aspect of a religion. The various associations
-may indeed as I have said be very much blended
-or else may run into one another almost insensibly. No
-better illustration of this blending can be found perhaps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-than in Chateaubriand&mdash;especially in that compendium
-of Rousseauistic psychology, his “René.” The soul of
-René, one learns, was too great to adjust itself to the
-society of men. He found that he would have to contract
-his life if he put himself on their level. Men, for their part,
-treated him as a dreamer, and so he is forced more and
-more by his increasing disgust for them into solitude. Now
-René rests the sense of his superiority over other men on
-two things: first, on his superlative capacity to feel
-grief;<a name="FNanchor_211_211" id="FNanchor_211_211"></a><a href="#Footnote_211_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a> secondly, on his thirst for the infinite. “What is
-finite,” he says, “has no value for me.” What is thus
-pushing him beyond all bounds is “an unknown good of
-which the instinct pursues me.” “I began to ask myself
-what I desired. I did not know but I thought all of a
-sudden that the woods would be delicious to me!” What
-he found in this quest for the mystical something that
-was to fill the abyss of his existence was the dream
-woman. “I went down into the valley, I strode upon the
-mountain, summoning with all the force of my desire the
-ideal object of a future flame; I embraced this object in
-the winds; I thought that I heard it in the moanings of
-the river. All was this phantom of the imagination&mdash;both
-the stars in heaven and the very principle of life in
-the universe.” I have already quoted a very similar passage
-and pointed out the equivalent in Shelley. No such
-close equivalent could be found in Byron, and Wordsworth,
-it is scarcely necessary to say, offers no equivalent
-at all. If one reads on, however, one finds passages that
-are Byronic and others that are Wordsworthian. Paganism,
-Chateaubriand complains, by seeing in nature only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
-certain definite forms&mdash;fauns and satyrs and nymphs&mdash;had
-banished from it both God and the infinite. But
-Christianity expelled these thronging figures in turn
-and restored to the grottoes their silence and to the woods
-their revery. The true God thus became visible in his
-works and bestowed upon them his own immensity.
-What Chateaubriand understands by God and the infinite
-appears in the following description of the region near
-Niagara seen by moonlight. The passage is Byronic as
-a whole with a Wordsworthian touch at the end. “The
-grandeur, the amazing melancholy of this picture cannot
-be expressed in human language; the fairest night of
-Europe can give no conception of it. In vain in our cultivated
-fields does the imagination seek to extend itself.
-It encounters on every hand the habitations of men; but
-in these savage regions the soul takes delight in plunging
-into an ocean of forests, in hovering over the gulf of cataracts,
-in meditating on the shores of lakes and rivers and,
-so to speak, in finding itself alone in the presence of God.”
-The relation between wild and solitary nature and the
-romantic idea of the infinite is here obvious. It is an aid
-to the spirit in throwing off its limitations and so in feeling
-itself “free.”<a name="FNanchor_212_212" id="FNanchor_212_212"></a><a href="#Footnote_212_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a></p>
-
-<p>A greater spiritual elevation it is sometimes asserted
-is found in Wordsworth’s communings with nature than
-in those of Rousseau and Chateaubriand. The difference
-perhaps is less one of spirit than of temperament. In its
-abdication of the intellectual and critical faculties, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-its semi-dissolution of the conscious self, the revery of
-Wordsworth does not differ from that of Rousseau<a name="FNanchor_213_213" id="FNanchor_213_213"></a><a href="#Footnote_213_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> and
-Chateaubriand, but the erotic element is absent. In the
-“Genius of Christianity” Chateaubriand gives a magnificent
-description of sunset at sea and turns the whole
-picture into a proof of God. Elsewhere he tells us that it
-was “not God alone that I contemplated on the waters
-in the splendor of his works. I saw an unknown woman
-and the miracle of her smile. … I should have sold eternity
-for one of her caresses. I imagined that she was
-palpitating behind that veil of the universe that hid her
-from my eyes,” etc. Wordsworth was at least consistently
-religious in his attitude towards the landscape: he did not
-see in it at one moment God, and at another an unknown
-woman and the miracle of her smile. At the same time his
-idea of spirituality is very remote from the traditional
-conception. Formerly spirituality was held to be a
-process of recollection, of gathering one’s self in, that is,
-towards the centre and not of diffusive emotion; so that
-when a man wished to pray he retired into his closet, and
-did not, like a Wordsworth or a Rousseau, fall into an
-inarticulate ecstasy before the wonders of nature. As for
-the poets of the past, they inclined as a rule to look on
-nature as an incentive not to religion but to love. Keble,
-following Wordsworth, protests on this ground against
-Aristophanes, and Catullus and Horace and Theocritus.
-He might have lengthened the list almost indefinitely.
-Chateaubriand bids us in our devotional moods to betake
-ourselves “to the religious forest.” La Fontaine is at least<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-as near to normal human experience and also at least as
-poetical when he warns “fair ones” to “fear the depths of
-the woods and their vast silence.”<a name="FNanchor_214_214" id="FNanchor_214_214"></a><a href="#Footnote_214_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a></p>
-
-<p>No one would question that Wordsworth has passages
-of great ethical elevation. But in some of these passages
-he simply renews the error of the Stoics who also display
-at times great ethical elevation; he ascribes to the natural
-order virtues that the natural order does not give. This
-error persists to some extent even when he is turning
-away, as in the “Ode to Duty,” from the moral spontaneity
-of the Rousseauist. It is not quite clear that the
-law of duty in the breast of man is the same law that preserves
-“the stars from wrong.” His earlier assertion that
-the light of setting suns and the mind of man are identical
-in their essence is at best highly speculative, at least
-as speculative as the counter assertion of Sir Thomas
-Browne that “there is surely a piece of divinity in us;
-something that was before the elements, and owes no
-homage unto the sun.” Furthermore this latter sense of
-the gap between man and nature seems to be more fully
-justified by its fruits in life and conduct, and this is after
-all the only test that counts in the long run.</p>
-
-<p>One of the reasons why pantheistic revery has been so
-popular is that it seems to offer a painless substitute for
-genuine spiritual effort. In its extreme exponents, a
-Rousseau or a Walt Whitman, it amounts to a sort of
-ecstatic animality that sets up as a divine illumination.
-Even in its milder forms it encourages one to assume a
-tone of consecration in speaking of experiences that are
-æsthetic rather than truly religious. “’Tis only heaven
-that’s given away,” sings Lowell;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span> “’Tis only God may
-be had for the asking.” God and heaven are accorded
-by Lowell with such strange facility because he identifies
-them with the luxurious enjoyment of a “day in June.”
-When pushed to a certain point the nature cult always
-tends towards sham spirituality.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Oh World as God has made it</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">&mdash;All is beauty,</div>
-<div class="verse">And knowing this is love, and</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Love is duty.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It seems to follow from these verses of Browning, perhaps
-the most flaccid spiritually in the English language,
-that to go out and mix one’s self up with the landscape
-is the same as doing one’s duty. As a method of salvation
-this is even easier and more æsthetic than that of the
-Ancient Mariner, who, it will be remembered, is relieved
-of the burden of his transgression by admiring the color
-of water-snakes!</p>
-
-<p>The nature cult arose at a time when the traditional
-religious symbols were becoming incredible. Instead of
-working out new and firm distinctions between good
-and evil, the Rousseauist seeks to discredit all precise
-distinctions whether new or old, in favor of mere emotional
-intoxication. The passage to which I have already
-alluded, in which Faust breaks down the scruples of
-Marguerite by proclaiming the supremacy of feeling,
-surpasses even the lines I have cited from Browning as
-an example of sham spirituality:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><i>Marguerite</i>:</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Dost thou believe in God?</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><i>Faust</i>:</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">My darling, who dares say,</div>
-<div class="verse">Yes, I in God believe?</div>
-<div class="verse">Question or priest or sage, and they</div>
-<div class="verse">Seem, in the answer you receive,</div>
-<div class="verse">To mock the questioner.</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><i>Marguerite</i>:</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Then thou dost not believe?</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><i>Faust</i>:</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Sweet one! my meaning do not misconceive!</div>
-<div class="verse">Him who dare name</div>
-<div class="verse">And who proclaim,</div>
-<div class="verse">Him I believe?</div>
-<div class="verse">Who that can feel,</div>
-<div class="verse">His heart can steel</div>
-<div class="verse">To say: I believe him not?</div>
-<div class="verse">The All-embracer,</div>
-<div class="verse">All-sustainer,</div>
-<div class="verse">Holds and sustains he not</div>
-<div class="verse">Thee, me, himself?</div>
-<div class="verse">Lifts not the Heaven its dome above?</div>
-<div class="verse">Doth not the firm-set earth beneath us lie?</div>
-<div class="verse">And beaming tenderly with looks of love</div>
-<div class="verse">Climb not the everlasting stars on high?</div>
-<div class="verse">Do I not gaze into thine eyes?</div>
-<div class="verse">Nature’s impenetrable agencies,</div>
-<div class="verse">Are they not thronging on thy heart and brain,</div>
-<div class="verse">Viewless, or visible to mortal ken,</div>
-<div class="verse">Around thee weaving their mysterious chain?</div>
-<div class="verse">Fill thence thy heart, how large soe’er it be;</div>
-<div class="verse">And in the feeling when thou utterly art blest,</div>
-<div class="verse">Then call it what thou wilt&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Call it Bliss! Heart! Love! God!</div>
-<div class="verse">I have no name for it!</div>
-<div class="verse">Feeling is all;</div>
-<div class="verse">Name is but sound and smoke</div>
-<div class="verse">Shrouding the glow of heaven.<a name="FNanchor_215_215" id="FNanchor_215_215"></a><a href="#Footnote_215_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The upshot of this enthusiasm that overflows all boundaries
-and spurns definition as mere smoke that veils its
-heavenly glow is the seduction of a poor peasant girl.
-Such is the romantic contrast between the “ideal” and
-the “real.”</p>
-
-<p>Those to whom I may seem to be treating the nature
-cult with undue severity should remember that I am
-treating it only in its pseudo-religious aspect. In its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-proper place all this refining on man’s relation to the
-“outworld” may be legitimate and delightful; but that
-place is secondary. My quarrel is only with the æsthete
-who assumes an apocalyptic pose and gives forth as a
-profound philosophy what is at best only a holiday or
-week-end view of existence. No distinction is more important
-for any one who wishes to maintain a correct
-scale of values than that between what is merely recreative
-and what ministers to leisure. There are times when
-we may properly seek solace and renewal in nature, when
-we may invite both our souls and our bodies to loaf. The
-error is to look on these moments of recreation and relief
-from concentration on some definite end as in themselves
-the consummation of wisdom. Rousseau indeed assumes
-that his art of mixing himself up with the landscape
-is identical with leisure; like innumerable disciples
-he confuses revery with meditation&mdash;a confusion
-so grave that I shall need to revert to it later. He parodies
-subtly what is above the ordinary rational level in
-terms of what is below it. He thus brings under suspicion
-the most necessary of all truths&mdash;that the kingdom of
-heaven is within us.</p>
-
-<p>The first place always belongs to action and purpose
-and not to mere idling, even if it be like that of the Rousseauist
-transcendental idling. The man who makes a
-deliberate choice and then plans his life with reference
-to it is less likely than the aimless man to be swayed by
-every impulse and impression. The figures of Raphael
-according to Hazlitt have always “a set, determined,
-voluntary character,” they “want that wild uncertainty
-of expression which is connected with the accidents of
-nature and the changes of the elements.” And Hazlitt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-therefore concludes rightly that Raphael has “nothing
-romantic about him.” The distinction is so important
-that it might be made the basis for a comparison between
-the painting of the Renaissance and some of the important
-schools of the nineteenth century. Here again no
-sensible person would maintain that the advantage is all
-on one side. Romanticism gave a great impulse to landscape
-painting and to the painting of man in the landscape.
-Few romantic gains are more indubitable. One
-may prefer the best work of the Barbizon school for
-example to the contemporary product in French literature.
-But even here it must be insisted that painting from
-which man is absent or in which he is more or less subordinated
-to the landscape is not the highest type of painting.
-Turner, one of the greatest masters of landscape, was
-almost incapable of painting the human figure. Ruskin is
-therefore indulging in romantic paradox when he puts
-Turner in the same class as Shakespeare. Turner’s vision
-of life as compared with that of Shakespeare is not central
-but peripheral.</p>
-
-<p>The revolution that has resulted from the triumph of
-naturalistic over humanistic tendencies in painting extends
-down to the minutest details of technique; it has
-meant the subordination of design&mdash;the imposition, that
-is, on one’s material of a firm central purpose&mdash;to light
-and color; and this in painting corresponds to the literary
-pursuit of glamour and illusion for their own sake. It has
-meant in general a tendency to sacrifice all the other
-elements of painting to the capture of the vivid and immediate
-impression. And this corresponds to the readiness
-of the writer to forego decorum in favor of intensity.
-The choice that is involved, including a choice of technique,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-according as one is a naturalist or a humanist, is
-brought out by Mr. Kenyon Cox in his comparison of
-two paintings of hermits,<a name="FNanchor_216_216" id="FNanchor_216_216"></a><a href="#Footnote_216_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a> one by Titian and one by John
-Sargent: the impressionistic and pantheistic hermit of
-Sargent is almost entirely merged in the landscape; he is
-little more than a pretext for a study of the accidents
-of light. The conception of Titian’s St. Jerome in the
-Desert is perhaps even more humanistic than religious.
-The figure of the saint on which everything converges is
-not merely robust, it is even a bit robustious. The picture
-affirms in its every detail the superior importance of man
-and his purposes to his natural environment. So far as
-their inner life is concerned the two hermits are plainly
-moving in opposite directions. An appropriate motto for
-Sargent’s hermit would be the following lines that I take
-from a French symbolist, but the equivalent of which
-can be found in innumerable other Rousseauists:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse"><i>Je voudrais me confondre avec les chases, tordre</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Mes bras centre la pierre et les fraîches écorces,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Etre l’arbre, le mur, le pollen et le sel,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Et me dissoudre au fond de l’être universel.</i></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This is to push the reciprocity between man and nature
-to a point where the landscape is not only a state of the
-soul but the soul is a state of the landscape; just as in
-Shelley’s Ode, Shelley becomes the West Wind and the
-West Wind becomes Shelley.<a name="FNanchor_217_217" id="FNanchor_217_217"></a><a href="#Footnote_217_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a> The changes in the romantic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-soul are appropriately mirrored in the changes of the
-seasons. In Tieck’s “Genoveva,” for example, Golo’s love
-blossoms in the springtime, the sultry summer impels
-him to sinful passion, the autumn brings grief and repentance,
-and in winter avenging judgment overtakes the
-offender and casts him into the grave.<a name="FNanchor_218_218" id="FNanchor_218_218"></a><a href="#Footnote_218_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a> Autumn is perhaps
-even more than springtime the favorite season of
-the Rousseauist. The movement is filled with souls who
-like the hero of Poe’s “Ulalume” have reached the October
-of their sensations. Some traces of this sympathetic
-relation between man and nature may indeed be found
-in the literature of the past. The appropriateness of the
-setting in the “Prometheus Bound” of Æschylus would
-scarcely seem to be an accident. The storm in “Lear” may
-also be instanced. But as I have already said occidental
-man did not before Rousseau show much inclination to
-mingle with the landscape. The parallelism that Pater
-establishes in “Marius the Epicurean” between the
-moods of the hero and the shifting aspects of nature is felt
-as a distinct anachronism. If we wish to find any early
-approximations to the subtleties and refinements of the
-Rousseauist in his dealings with nature we need to turn
-to the Far East&mdash;especially to the Taoist movement in
-China.<a name="FNanchor_219_219" id="FNanchor_219_219"></a><a href="#Footnote_219_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a> As a result of the Taoist influence China had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-from a very early period poets and painters for whom the
-landscape is very plainly a state of the soul.</p>
-
-<p>Pantheistic revery of the kind I have been describing
-leads inevitably to a special type of symbolism. The
-Rousseauist reads into nature unutterable love. He sees
-shining through its finite forms the light of the infinite.
-The Germans especially set out to express symbolically
-the relationship between the love and infinitude that they
-saw in nature and the kindred elements in themselves.
-Any one who has attempted to thread his way through
-the German theories of the symbol will feel that he has,
-like Wordsworth’s shepherd, “been in the heart of many
-thousand mists.” But in view of the importance of the
-subject it is necessary to venture for a moment into this
-metaphysical murk. Schelling’s “Nature Philosophy” is
-perhaps the most ambitious of all the German attempts
-to run together symbolically the human spirit and phenomenal
-nature. “What we call nature,” says Schelling,
-“is a poem that lies hidden in a secret wondrous writing”;
-if the riddle could be revealed we should recognize in
-nature “the Odyssey of the Spirit.” “There looks out
-through sensuous objects as through a half-transparent
-mist the world of phantasy for which we long.” “All
-things are only a garment of the world of spirit.” “To
-be romantic,” says Uhland, “is to have an inkling of the
-infinite in appearances.” “Beauty,” says Schelling in
-similar vein, “is a finite rendering of the infinite.” Now
-the infinite and the finite can only be thus brought together
-through the medium of the symbol. Therefore, as
-A. W. Schlegel says,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span> “beauty is a symbolical representation
-of the infinite. All poetry is an everlasting symbolizing.”</p>
-
-<p>This assertion is in an important sense true. Unfortunately
-there remains the ambiguity that I have already
-pointed out in the word “infinite.” No one would give a
-high rating to a certain type of allegory that flourished
-in neo-classical times as also in a somewhat different
-form during the Middle Ages. It is a cold intellectual
-contrivance in which the imagination has little part and
-which therefore fails to suggest the infinite in any sense.
-But to universalize the particular in the classical sense is
-to give access imaginatively to the human infinite that is
-set above nature. Every successful humanistic creation
-is more or less symbolical. Othello is not merely a jealous
-man; he is also a symbol of jealousy. Some of the myths of
-Plato again are imaginative renderings of a supersensuous
-realm to which man has no direct access. They are
-symbolical representations of an infinite that the romanticist
-leaves out of his reckoning. The humanistic and
-spiritual symbols that abound in the religion and poetry
-of the past, are then, it would seem, very different from
-the merely æsthetic symbolizing of a Schelling. For
-Schelling is one of the chief of those who from Shaftesbury
-down have tended to identify beauty and truth
-and to make both purely æsthetic. But a symbol that
-is purely æsthetic, that is in other words purely a matter
-of feeling, rests on what is constantly changing not
-only from man to man but in the same man. Romantic
-symbolism, therefore, though it claims at one moment to
-be scientific (especially in Germany) and at another moment
-to have a religious value, is at bottom the symbolizing
-of mood. Both the imagination and the emotion that
-enter into the romantic symbol are undisciplined. The
-results of such a symbolism do not meet the demand of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-the genuine man of science for experimental proof, they
-do not again satisfy the test of universality imposed by
-those who believe in a distinctively human realm that is
-set above nature. The nature philosophy of a Schelling
-leads therefore on the one hand to sham science and on
-the other to sham philosophy and religion.</p>
-
-<p>The genuine man of science has as a matter of fact
-repudiated the speculations of Schelling and other romantic
-physicists as fantastic. He may also be counted
-on to look with suspicion on the speculations of a Bergson
-who, more perhaps than any living Rousseauist,
-reminds one of the German romantic philosophers. One
-idea has however lingered in the mind even of the genuine
-man of science as a result of all this romantic theorizing&mdash;namely
-that man has access to the infinite only
-through nature. Thus Professor Henry Fairfield Osborn
-said in a recent address to the students of Columbia University:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>I would not for a moment take advantage of the present opportunity
-to discourage the study of human nature and of the humanities,
-but for what is called the best opening for a constructive career give
-me nature. The ground for my preference is that human nature is an
-exhaustible fountain of research; Homer understood it well; Solomon
-fathomed it; Shakespeare divined it, both normal and abnormal; the
-modernists have been squeezing out the last drops of abnormality.
-Nature, studied since Aristotle’s time, is still full to the brim; no
-perceptible falling of its tides is evident from any point at which it is
-attacked, from nebulæ to protoplasm; it is always wholesome, refreshing
-and invigorating. Of the two most creative literary artists of
-our time, Maeterlinck, jaded with human abnormality, comes back
-to the bee and the flowers and the “blue bird,” with a delicious renewal
-of youth, while Rostand turns to the barnyard.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The romanticists acted from the start, following here
-in the wake of the pseudo-classicists, on Professor Osbor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>n’s
-assumption that normal human nature is something
-that may be bottled up once for all and put by on a
-shelf, though they would have been pained to learn from
-him that even abnormal human nature may also be bottled
-up and put by in the same fashion. Sophistries of
-this kind should perhaps be pardoned in the man of
-science when so many men who are supposed to stand
-for letters have shown him the way. Great literature is
-an imaginative and symbolical interpretation of an infinite
-that is accessible only to those who possess in some degree
-the same type of imagination. A writer like Maeterlinck,
-whom Professor Osborn takes to be representative
-of literature in general, is merely a late exponent of a
-movement that from the start turned away from this
-human infinite towards pantheistic revery.</p>
-
-<p>The imagination is, as Coleridge says, the great unifying
-power; it draws together things that are apparently
-remote. But its analogies to be of value should surely have
-validity apart from the mere shifting mood of the man
-who perceives them. Otherwise he simply wrests some
-outer object from the chain of cause and effect of which
-it is actually a part, and incorporates it arbitrarily into
-his own private dream. Wordsworth is not sparing of
-homely detail in his account of his leech-gatherer; but at
-a given moment in this poem the leech-gatherer undergoes
-a strange transformation; he loses all verisimilitude
-as a leech-gatherer and becomes a romantic symbol, a
-mere projection, that is, of the poet’s own broodings.
-To push this symbolizing of mood beyond a certain point
-is incipient hallucination. We are told that when the
-asylum at Charenton was shelled in the Franco-Prussian
-War of 1870, the lunatics saw reflected in the bursting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-bombs, each in a different way, his own madness. One
-took the bombs to be a link in the plot of his enemies
-against him, etc. It is hard to consider the symbolizing
-and visions of the extreme romanticist, such as those of
-William Blake, without thinking at times of Charenton.</p>
-
-<p>What I have said of the romantic symbol is true in
-some degree of the romantic metaphor, for the symbol
-and even the myth are often only a developed metaphor.
-The first part of the romantic metaphor, the image or
-impression that has been received from the outer world, is
-often admirably fresh and vivid.<a name="FNanchor_220_220" id="FNanchor_220_220"></a><a href="#Footnote_220_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a> But the second part of
-the metaphor when the analogy involved is that between
-some fact of outer perception and the inner life of man is
-often vague and misty; for the inner life in which the
-romanticist takes interest is not the life he possesses in
-common with other men but what is most unique in his
-own emotions&mdash;his mood in short. That is why the
-metaphor and still more the symbol in so far as they are
-romantic are always in danger of becoming unintelligible,
-since it is not easy for one man to enter into another’s
-mood. Men accord a ready welcome to metaphors and
-symbols that instead of expressing something more or
-less individual have a real relevancy to their common
-nature. Tribulation, for example, means literally the
-beating out of grain on the threshing floor. The man who
-first saw the analogy between this process and certain
-spiritual experiences established a legitimate link between
-nature and human nature, between sense and the
-supersensuous. Language is filled with words and expressions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-of this kind which have become so current that
-their metaphorical and symbolical character has been
-forgotten and which have at the same time ceased to be
-vivid and concrete and become abstract.</p>
-
-<p>The primitivistic fallacies of the German romanticists
-in their dealings with the symbol and metaphor appear
-in various forms in French romanticism and even more
-markedly in its continuation known as the symbolistic
-movement. What is exasperating in many of the poets
-of this school is that they combine the pretence to a vast
-illumination with the utmost degree of spiritual and intellectual
-emptiness and vagueness. Like the early German
-romanticists they mix up flesh and spirit in nympholeptic
-longing and break down and blur all the boundaries of
-being in the name of the infinite. Of this inner formlessness
-and anarchy the chaos of the <i>vers libre</i> (in which they
-were also anticipated by the Germans) is only an outer
-symptom.<a name="FNanchor_221_221" id="FNanchor_221_221"></a><a href="#Footnote_221_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a></p>
-
-<p>If the Rousseauistic primitivist recognizes the futility
-of his symbolizing, and consents to become a passive
-register of outer perception, if for example he proclaims
-himself an imagist, he at least has the merit of frankness,
-but in that case he advertises by the very name he has
-assumed the bankruptcy of all that is most worth while
-in poetry.</p>
-
-<p>But to return to romanticism and nature. It should be
-plain from what has already been said that the romanticist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-tends to make of nature the mere plaything of his
-mood. When Werther’s mood is cheerful, nature smiles
-at him benignly. When his mood darkens she becomes for
-him “a devouring monster.” When it grows evident to
-the romanticist that nature does not alter with his alteration,
-he chides her at times for her impassibility; or again
-he seeks to be impassible like her, even if he can be so
-only at the expense of his humanity. This latter attitude
-is closely connected with the dehumanizing of man by
-science that is reflected in a whole literature during the
-last half of the nineteenth century&mdash;for instance, in so-called
-“impassive” writers like Flaubert and Leconte
-de Lisle.</p>
-
-<p>The causal sequences that had been observed in the
-physical realm were developed more and more during
-this period with the aid of pure mathematics and the
-mathematical reason (<i>esprit de géométrie</i>) into an all-embracing
-system. For the earlier romanticists nature
-had at least been a living presence whether benign or
-sinister. For the mathematical determinist she tends to
-become a soulless, pitiless mechanism against which man
-is helpless.<a name="FNanchor_222_222" id="FNanchor_222_222"></a><a href="#Footnote_222_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a> This conception of nature is so important
-that I shall need to revert to it in my treatment of melancholy.</p>
-
-<p>The man who has accepted the universe of the mechanist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-or determinist is not always gloomy. But men in
-general felt the need of some relief from the deterministic
-obsession. Hence the success of the philosophy of
-Bergson and similar philosophies. The glorification of
-impulse (<i>élan vital</i>) that Bergson opposes to the mechanizing
-of life is in its main aspects, as I have already indicated,
-simply a return to the spontaneity of Rousseau.
-His plan of escape from deterministic science is at bottom
-very much like Rousseau’s plan of escape from the undue
-rationalism of the Enlightenment. As a result of these
-eighteenth-century influences, nature had, according to
-Carlyle, become a mere engine, a system of cogs and
-pulleys. He therefore hails Novalis as an “anti-mechanist,”
-a “deep man,” because of the way of deliverance
-that he teaches from this nightmare. “I owe him somewhat.”
-What Carlyle owed to Novalis many moderns
-have owed to Bergson, but it is not yet clear that either
-Novalis or Bergson are “deep men.”</p>
-
-<p>The mechanistic view of nature, whether held pessimistically
-or optimistically, involving as it does factors
-that are infinite and therefore beyond calculation, cannot
-furnish proofs that will satisfy the true positivist: he is
-inclined to dismiss it as a mere phantasmagoria of the
-intellect. The Rousseauistic view of nature, on the other
-hand, whether held optimistically or pessimistically, is
-even less capable of satisfying the standards of the positivist
-and must be dismissed as a mere phantasmagoria
-of the emotions. The fact is that we do not know and can
-never know what nature is in herself. The mysterious
-mother has shrouded herself from us in an impenetrable
-veil of illusion. But though we cannot know nature absolutely
-we can pick up a practical and piecemeal knowledge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-of nature not by dreaming but by doing. The man
-of action can within certain limits have his way with
-nature. Now the men who have acted during the past
-century have been the men of science and the utilitarians
-who have been turning to account the discoveries of
-science. The utilitarians have indeed derived such potent
-aid from science that they have been able to stamp their
-efforts on the very face of the landscape. The romanticists
-have not ceased to protest against this scientific
-utilizing of nature as a profanation. But inasmuch as
-these protests have come from men who have stood not
-for work but for revery they have for the most part been
-futile. This is not the least of the ironic contrasts that
-abound in this movement between the ideal and the real.
-No age ever grew so ecstatic over natural beauty as the
-nineteenth century, at the same time no age ever did so
-much to deface nature. No age ever so exalted the country
-over the town, and no age ever witnessed such a
-crowding into urban centres.</p>
-
-<p>A curious study might be made of this ironic contrast
-as it appears in the early romantic crusade against railways.
-One of the romantic grievances against the railway
-is that it does not encourage vagabondage: it has a definite
-goal and gets to it so far as possible in a straight line.
-Yet in spite of Wordsworth’s protesting sonnet the Windermere
-railway was built. Ruskin’s wrath at railways
-was equally vain. In general, sentiment is not of much
-avail when pitted against industrial advance. The papers
-announced recently that one of the loveliest cascades in
-the California Sierras had suddenly disappeared as a result
-of the diversion of its water to a neighboring power-plant.
-The same fate is overtaking Niagara itself. It is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-perhaps symbolic that a quarry has made a hideous gash
-in the hillside on the shores of Rydal Mere right opposite
-Wordsworth’s house.</p>
-
-<p>If the man of science and the utilitarian do not learn
-what nature is in herself they learn at least to adjust
-themselves to forces outside themselves. The Rousseauist,
-on the other hand, does not in his “communion”
-with nature adjust himself to anything. He is simply communing
-with his own mood. Rousseau chose appropriately
-as title for the comedy that was his first literary
-effort “Narcissus or the Lover of Himself.” The nature
-over which the Rousseauist is bent in such rapt contemplation
-plays the part of the pool in the legend of Narcissus.
-It renders back to him his own image. He sees in
-nature what he himself has put there. The Rousseauist
-transfuses himself into nature in much the same way
-that Pygmalion transfuses himself into his statue. Nature
-is dead, as Rousseau says, unless animated by the fires
-of love. “Make no mistake,” says M. Masson, “the
-nature that Jean-Jacques worships is only a projection
-of Jean-Jacques. He has poured himself forth so complacently
-upon it that he can always find himself and
-cherish himself in it.” And M. Masson goes on and quotes
-from a curious and little-known fragment of Rousseau:
-“Beloved solitude,” Rousseau sighs,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span> “beloved solitude,
-where I still pass with pleasure the remains of a life given
-over to suffering. Forest with stunted trees, marshes
-without water, broom, reeds, melancholy heather, inanimate
-objects, you who can neither speak to me nor hear
-me, what secret charm brings me back constantly into
-your midst? Unfeeling and dead things, this charm is not
-in you; it could not be there. It is in my own heart which
-wishes to refer back everything to itself.”<a name="FNanchor_223_223" id="FNanchor_223_223"></a><a href="#Footnote_223_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a> Coleridge
-plainly only continues Rousseau when he writes:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">O Lady! we receive but what we give,</div>
-<div class="verse">And in our life alone does nature live:<a name="FNanchor_224_224" id="FNanchor_224_224"></a><a href="#Footnote_224_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a></div>
-<div class="verse">Ours is her wedding-garment, ours her shroud!</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And would we aught behold, of higher worth,</div>
-<div class="verse">Than that inanimate cold world allow’d</div>
-<div class="verse">To the poor loveless ever-anxious crowd,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Ah! from the soul itself must issue forth</div>
-<div class="verse">A light, a glory, a fair luminous cloud</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Enveloping the Earth.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The fair luminous cloud is no other than the Arcadian
-imagination. “The light that never was on sea or land,
-the consecration and the poet’s dream” of which Wordsworth
-speaks, is likewise as appears very plainly from
-the context,<a name="FNanchor_225_225" id="FNanchor_225_225"></a><a href="#Footnote_225_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a> Arcadian. He should once, Wordsworth
-writes, have wished to see Peele Castle bathed in the
-Arcadian light, but now that he has escaped by sympathy
-for his fellow-men from the Arcadian aloofness, he is willing
-that it should be painted in storm. Mere storminess, one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-should recollect, is not in itself an assurance that one has
-turned from the romantic dream to reality. One finds in
-this movement, if nowhere else, as I remarked apropos
-of Chateaubriand, the stormy Arcadia.</p>
-
-<p>It is not through the Arcadian imagination that one
-moves towards reality. This does not much matter if
-what one seeks in a “return to nature” is merely recreation.
-I cannot repeat too often that I have no quarrel
-with the nature cult when it remains recreative but only
-when it sets up as a substitute for philosophy and religion.
-This involves a confusion between the two main
-directions of the human spirit, a confusion as I have said
-in a previous chapter between the realm of awe and the
-region of wonder. Pascal exaggerates somewhat when he
-says the Bible never seeks to prove religion from the
-“wonders” of nature. But this remark is true to the total
-spirit of the Bible. A knowledge of the flowers of the Holy
-Land is less necessary for an understanding of the gospel
-narrative than one might suppose from Renan.<a name="FNanchor_226_226" id="FNanchor_226_226"></a><a href="#Footnote_226_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a> Renan
-is simply seeking to envelop Jesus so far as possible in an
-Arcadian atmosphere. In so doing he is following in the
-footsteps of the great father of sentimentalists. According
-to M. Masson, Jesus, as depicted by Jean-Jacques, becomes
-“a sort of grand master of the Golden Age.”</p>
-
-<p>Here as elsewhere the Rousseauist is seeking to identify
-the Arcadian view of life with wisdom. The result is a
-series of extraordinarily subtle disguises for egoism. We
-think we see the Rousseauist prostrate before the ideal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-woman or before nature or before God himself, but when
-we look more closely we see that he is only (as Sainte-Beuve
-said of Alfred de Vigny) “in perpetual adoration
-before the holy sacrament of himself.” The fact that he
-finds in nature only what he has put there seems to be
-for Rousseau himself a source of satisfaction. But the
-poem of Coleridge I have just quoted, in which he proclaims
-that so far as nature is concerned “we receive but
-what we give,” is entitled “Ode to Dejection.” One of
-man’s deepest needs would seem to be for genuine communion,
-for a genuine escape, that is, from his ordinary
-self. The hollowness of the Rousseauistic communion with
-nature as well as other Rousseauistic substitutes for
-genuine communion is indissolubly bound up with the
-subject of romantic melancholy.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROMANTIC MELANCHOLY</span></h2>
-
-<p>Rousseau and his early followers&mdash;especially perhaps
-his early French followers&mdash;were very much preoccupied
-with the problem of happiness. Now in a sense all men&mdash;even
-those who renounce the world and mortify the flesh&mdash;aim
-at happiness. The important point to determine is
-what any particular person means by happiness and how
-he hopes to attain it. It should be plain from all that
-has been said that the Rousseauist seeks happiness in
-the free play of the emotions. The “Influence of the
-Passions on Happiness” is the significant title of one of
-Madame de Staël’s early treatises. The happiness that
-the Rousseauist seeks involves not merely a free play of
-feeling but&mdash;what is even more important&mdash;a free
-play of the imagination. Feeling acquires a sort of infinitude
-as a result of this coöperation of the imagination,
-and so the romanticist goes, as we have seen, in quest of
-the thrill superlative, as appears so clearly in his nympholepsy,
-his pursuit of the “impossible she.” But the more
-imaginative this quest for emotional happiness grows the
-more it tends to become a mere nostalgia. Happiness is
-achieved so far as it is achieved at all in dreamland. Rousseau
-says of himself: <i>Mon plus constant bonheur fut en
-songe</i>. Every finite satisfaction by the very fact that it is
-finite leaves him unsatisfied. René says that he had exhausted
-solitude as he had exhausted society: they had
-both failed to satisfy his insatiable desires. René plainly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-takes his insatiableness to be the badge of his spiritual
-distinction. To submit to any circumscribing of one’s desires
-is to show that one has no sense of infinitude and
-so to sink to the level of the philistine.</p>
-
-<p>But does one become happy by being nostalgic and
-hyperæsthetic, by burning with infinite indeterminate
-desire? We have here perhaps the chief irony and contradiction
-in the whole movement. The Rousseauist seeks
-happiness and yet on his own showing, his mode of seeking
-it results, not in happiness but in wretchedness. One
-finds indeed figures in the nineteenth century, a Browning,
-for example, who see in life first of all an emotional
-adventure and then carry this adventure through to the
-end with an apparently unflagging gusto. One may
-affirm nevertheless that a movement which began by
-asserting the goodness of man and the loveliness of nature
-ended by producing the greatest literature of despair the
-world has ever seen. No movement has perhaps been so
-prolific of melancholy as emotional romanticism. To
-follow it from Rousseau down to the present day is to
-run through the whole gamut of gloom.<a name="FNanchor_227_227" id="FNanchor_227_227"></a><a href="#Footnote_227_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Infections of unutterable sadness,</div>
-<div class="verse">Infections of incalculable madness,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Infections of incurable despair.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>According to a somewhat doubtful authority, Ninon
-de Lenclos,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span> “the joy of the spirit measures its force.”
-When the romanticist on the other hand discovers that
-his ideal of happiness works put into actual unhappiness
-he does not blame his ideal. He simply assumes that the
-world is unworthy of a being so exquisitely organized as
-himself, and so shrinks back from it and enfolds himself
-in his sorrow as he would in a mantle. Since the superlative
-bliss that he craves eludes him he will at least be
-superlative in woe. So far from being a mark of failure
-this woe measures his spiritual grandeur. “A great soul,”
-as René says, “must contain more grief than a small
-one.” The romantic poets enter into a veritable competition
-with one another as to who shall be accounted the
-most forlorn. The victor in this competition is awarded
-the palm not merely for poetry but wisdom. In the
-words of Arnold:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent4">Amongst us one</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Who most has suffered, takes dejectedly</div>
-<div class="verse">His seat upon the intellectual throne;</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And all his store of sad experience he</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Lays bare of wretched days.</div>
-<div class="verse">Tells us his misery’s birth and growth and signs,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And how the dying spark of hope was fed,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And how the breast was soothed, and how the head,</div>
-<div class="verse">And all his hourly varied anodynes.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">This for our wisest! and we others pine,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And wish the long unhappy dream would end,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And waive all claim to bliss, and try to bear;</div>
-<div class="verse">With close-lipped patience for our only friend,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Sad patience, too near neighbor to despair.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Though Arnold may in this poem, as some one has
-complained, reduce the muse to the rôle of hospital
-nurse, he is, like his master Senancour, free from the
-taint of theatricality. He does not as he said of Byron<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-make “a pageant of his bleeding heart”; and the Byronic
-pose has a close parallel in the pose of Chateaubriand.
-An Irish girl at London once told Chateaubriand that “he
-carried his heart in a sling.” He himself said that he had
-a soul of the kind “the ancients called a sacred malady.”</p>
-
-<p>Chateaubriand, to be sure, had his cheerful moments
-and many of them. His sorrows he bestowed upon the
-public. Herein he was a true child of Jean-Jacques. We are
-told by eye-witnesses how heartily Rousseau enjoyed
-many aspects of his life at Motiers-Travers. On his own
-showing, he was plunged during this period in almost
-unalloyed misery. Froude writes of Carlyle: “It was his
-peculiarity that if matters were well with himself, it
-never occurred to him that they could be going ill with
-any one else; and, on the other hand, if he was uncomfortable,
-he required everybody to be uncomfortable
-along with him.” We can follow clear down to Gissing
-the assumption in some form or other that “art must be
-the mouthpiece of misery.” This whole question as to the
-proper function of art goes to the root of the debate
-between the classicist and the Rousseauist. “All these
-poets,” Goethe complains to Eckermann of the romanticists
-of 1830, “write as though they were ill, and as
-though the whole world were a hospital. … Every one
-of them in writing tries to be more desolate than all the
-others. This is really an abuse of poetry which has been
-given to make man satisfied with the world and with his
-lot. But the present generation is afraid of all solid
-energy; its mind is at ease and sees poetry only in weakness.
-I have found a good expression to vex these gentlemen.
-I am going to call their poetry hospital poetry.”<a name="FNanchor_228_228" id="FNanchor_228_228"></a><a href="#Footnote_228_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Now Goethe is here, like Chateaubriand, mocking to
-some degree his own followers. When he suffered from a
-spiritual ailment of any kind he got rid of it by inoculating
-others with it; and it was in this way, as we learn from
-his Autobiography, that he got relief from the <i>Weltschmerz</i>
-of “Werther.” But later in life Goethe was classical
-not merely in precept like Chateaubriand, but to some
-extent in practice. The best of the poetry of his maturity
-tends like that of the ancients to elevate and console.</p>
-
-<p>The contrast between classic and romantic poetry in
-this matter of melancholy is closely bound up with the
-larger contrast between imitation and spontaneity.
-Homer is the greatest of poets, according to Aristotle,
-because he does not entertain us with his own person but
-is more than any other poet an imitator. The romantic
-poet writes, on the other hand, as Lamartine says he
-wrote, solely for the “relief of his heart.” He pours forth
-himself&mdash;his most intimate and private self; above all,
-his anguish and his tears. In his relation to his reader, as
-Musset tells us in a celebrated image,<a name="FNanchor_229_229" id="FNanchor_229_229"></a><a href="#Footnote_229_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a> he is like the pelican
-who rends and lacerates his own flesh to provide
-nourishment for his young (<i>Pour toute nourriture il apporte
-son cœur</i>):</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse"><i>Les plus désespérés sont les chants les plus beaux,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Et j’en sais d’immortels qui sont de purs sanglots.</i><a name="FNanchor_230_230" id="FNanchor_230_230"></a><a href="#Footnote_230_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>To make of poetry a spontaneous overflow of powerful
-emotion, usually of sorrowful emotion, is what the French
-understand by lyricism (<i>le lyrisme</i>); and it may be objected<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
-that it is not fair to compare an epic poet like
-Homer with a lyricist like Musset. Let us then take for our
-comparison the poet whom the ancients themselves looked
-upon as the supreme type of the lyricist&mdash;Pindar. He
-is superbly imaginative, “sailing,” as Gray tells us, “with
-supreme dominion through the azure deep of air,” but
-his imagination is not like that of Musset in the service
-of sensibility. He does not bestow his own emotions upon
-us but is rather in the Aristotelian sense an imitator. He
-is indeed at the very opposite pole from Rousseau and
-the “apostles of affliction.” “Let a man,” he says, “not
-darken delight in his life.” “Disclose not to strangers our
-burden of care; this at least shall I advise thee. Therefore
-is it fitting to show openly to all the folk the fair and
-pleasant things allotted us; but if any baneful misfortune
-sent of heaven befalleth man, it is seemly to shroud this in
-darkness.”<a name="FNanchor_231_231" id="FNanchor_231_231"></a><a href="#Footnote_231_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a> And one should also note Pindar’s hostility
-towards that other great source of romantic lyricism&mdash;nostalgia
-(“The desire of the moth for the star”), and
-the closely allied pursuit of the strange and the exotic.
-He tells of the condign punishment visited by Apollo upon
-the girl Coronis who became enamoured of “a strange
-man from Arcadia,” and adds: “She was in love with things
-remote&mdash;that passion which many ere now have felt.
-For among men, there is a foolish company of those
-who, putting shame on what they have at home, cast
-their glances afar, and pursue idle dreams in hopes that
-shall not be fulfilled.”<a name="FNanchor_232_232" id="FNanchor_232_232"></a><a href="#Footnote_232_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a></p>
-
-<p>We are not to suppose that Pindar was that most tiresome
-and superficial of all types&mdash;the professional optimist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
-who insists on inflicting his “gladness” upon us.
-“The immortals,” he says, “apportion to man two sorrows
-for every boon they grant.”<a name="FNanchor_233_233" id="FNanchor_233_233"></a><a href="#Footnote_233_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a> In general the Greek
-whom Kipling sings and whom we already find in Schiller&mdash;the
-Greek who is an incarnation of the “joy of life
-unquestioned, the everlasting wondersong of youth”<a name="FNanchor_234_234" id="FNanchor_234_234"></a><a href="#Footnote_234_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a>&mdash;is
-a romantic myth. We read in the Iliad:<a name="FNanchor_235_235" id="FNanchor_235_235"></a><a href="#Footnote_235_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a> “Of all the
-creatures that breathe or crawl upon the earth, none is
-more wretched than man.” Here is the “joy of life unquestioned”
-in Homer. Like Homer the best of the later
-Greeks and Romans face unflinchingly the facts of life
-and these facts do not encourage a thoughtless elation.
-Their melancholy is even more concerned with the lot
-of man in general than with their personal and private
-grief. The quality of this melancholy is rendered in
-Tennyson’s line on Virgil, one of the finest in nineteenth
-century English poetry:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Thou majestic in thy sadness at the doubtful doom of human kind.<a name="FNanchor_236_236" id="FNanchor_236_236"></a><a href="#Footnote_236_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>One should indeed not fail to distinguish between the
-note of melancholy in a Homer or a Virgil and the melancholy
-of the ancients, whether Stoic or Epicurean, who had
-experienced the hopelessness and helplessness of a pure
-naturalism in dealing with ultimate problems. The melancholy
-of the Stoic is the melancholy of the man who associates
-with the natural order a “virtue” that the natural
-order does not give, and so is tempted to exclaim at last
-with Brutus, that he had thought virtue a thing and had
-found that it was only a word. The melancholy of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
-Epicurean is that of the man who has tasted the bitter
-sediment (<i>amari aliquid</i>) in the cup of pleasure. It is not
-difficult to discover modern equivalents of both Stoic and
-Epicurean melancholy. “One should seek,” says Sainte-Beuve,
-“in the pleasures of René the secret of his <i>ennuis</i>,”
-and so far as this is true Chateaubriand is on much the
-same level as some Roman voluptuary who suffered from
-the <i>tædium vitæ</i> in the time of Tiberius or Nero.<a name="FNanchor_237_237" id="FNanchor_237_237"></a><a href="#Footnote_237_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a> But
-though the Roman decadent gave himself up to the
-pursuit of sensation and often of violent and abnormal
-sensation he was less prone than a Chateaubriand to
-associate this pursuit with the “infinite”; and so he was
-less nostalgic and hyperæsthetic. His Epicureanism was
-therefore less poetical no doubt, but on the other hand
-he did not set up mere romantic restlessness as a sort of
-substitute for religion. It was probably easier therefore
-for him to feel the divine discontent and so turn to real
-religion than it would have been if he had, like the
-Rousseauist, complicated his Epicureanism with sham
-spirituality.</p>
-
-<p>To say that the melancholy even of the decadent
-ancient is less nostalgic is perhaps only another way of
-saying what I have said about the melancholy of the
-ancients in general&mdash;that it is not so purely personal. It
-derives less from his very private and personal illusions
-and still less from his very private and personal disillusions.
-In its purely personal quality romantic melancholy
-is indeed inseparable from the whole conception of original<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
-genius. The genius sets out not merely to be unique
-but unique in feeling, and the sense uniqueness in
-feeling speedily passes over into that of uniqueness in
-suffering&mdash;on the principle no doubt laid down by
-Horace Walpole that life, which is a comedy for those
-who think, is a tragedy for those who feel. To be a beautiful
-soul, to preserve one’s native goodness of feeling among
-men who have been perverted by society, is to be the elect
-of nature and yet this election turns out as Rousseau tells
-us to be a “fatal gift of heaven.” It is only the disillusioned
-romanticist, however, who assumes this elegiac
-tone. We need to consider what he means by happiness
-while he still seeks for it in the actual world and not in
-the <i>pays des chimères</i>. Rousseau tells us that he based the
-sense of his own worth on the fineness of his powers of
-perception. Why should nature have endowed him with
-such exquisite faculties<a name="FNanchor_238_238" id="FNanchor_238_238"></a><a href="#Footnote_238_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a> if he was not to have a satisfaction
-commensurate with them, if he was “to die without
-having lived”? We have here the psychological origins
-of the right to happiness that the romanticists were to
-proclaim. “We spend on the passions,” says Joubert,
-“the stuff that has been given us for happiness.” The
-Rousseauist hopes to find his happiness in the passions
-themselves. Romantic happiness does not involve any
-moral effort and has been defined in its extreme forms as
-a “monstrous dream of passive enjoyment.” Flaubert
-has made a study of the right to happiness thus understood
-in his “Madame Bovary.” Madame Bovary, who is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
-very commonplace in other respects, feels exquisitely;
-and inasmuch as her husband had no such fineness the
-right to happiness meant for her, as it did for so many
-other “misunderstood” women, the right to extra-marital
-adventure. One should note the germs of melancholy
-that lurk in the quest of the superlative moment
-even if the quest is relatively successful. Suppose Saint-Preux
-had succeeded in compressing into a single instant
-“the delights of a thousand centuries”; and so far as
-outer circumstances are concerned had had to pay no
-penalty. The nearer the approach to a superhuman intensity
-of feeling the greater is likely to be the ensuing
-languor. The ordinary round of life seems pale and insipid
-compared with the exquisite and fugitive moment. One
-seems to one’s self to have drained the cup of life at a
-draught and save perhaps for impassioned recollection
-of the perfect moment to have no reason for continuing
-to live. One’s heart is “empty and swollen”<a name="FNanchor_239_239" id="FNanchor_239_239"></a><a href="#Footnote_239_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a> and one is
-haunted by thoughts of suicide.</p>
-
-<p>This sense of having exhausted life<a name="FNanchor_240_240" id="FNanchor_240_240"></a><a href="#Footnote_240_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a> and the accompanying
-temptation to suicide that are such striking
-features of the malady of the age are not necessarily associated
-with any outer enjoyment at all. One may devour
-life in revery and then the melancholy arises from the disproportion
-between the dream and the fact. The revery
-that thus consumes life in advance is not necessarily erotic.
-What may be termed the cosmic revery of a Senancour or
-an Amiel<a name="FNanchor_241_241" id="FNanchor_241_241"></a><a href="#Footnote_241_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a> has very much the same effect.</p>
-
-<p>The atony and aridity of which the sufferer from romantic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
-melancholy complains may have other sources
-besides the depression that follows upon the achieving
-of emotional intensity whether in revery or in fact; it may
-also be an incident in the warfare between head and heart
-that assumes so many forms among the spiritual posterity
-of Jean-Jacques. The Rousseauist seeks happiness in
-emotional spontaneity and this spontaneity seems to be
-killed by the head which stands aloof and dissects and
-analyzes. Perhaps the best picture of the emotionalist
-who is thus incapacitated for a frank surrender to his own
-emotions is the “Adolphe” of Benjamin Constant (a
-book largely reminiscent of Constant’s actual affair with
-Madame de Staël).</p>
-
-<p>Whether the victim of romantic melancholy feels or
-analyzes he is equally incapable of action. He who faces
-resolutely the rude buffetings of the world is gradually
-hardened against them. The romantic movement is filled
-with the groans of those who have evaded action and at
-the same time become highly sensitive and highly self-conscious.
-The man who thrills more exquisitely to pleasure
-than another will also thrill more exquisitely to pain;
-nay, pleasure itself in its extreme is allied to pain;<a name="FNanchor_242_242" id="FNanchor_242_242"></a><a href="#Footnote_242_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a> so
-that to be hyperæsthetic is not an unmixed advantage
-especially if it be true, as Pindar says, that the Gods
-bestow two trials on a man for every boon. Perhaps the
-deepest bitterness is found, not in those who make a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
-pageant of their bleeding hearts, but in those who, like
-Leconte de Lisle<a name="FNanchor_243_243" id="FNanchor_243_243"></a><a href="#Footnote_243_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a> and others (<i>les impassibles</i>), disdain to
-make a show of themselves to the mob, and so dissimulate
-their quivering sensibility under an appearance of
-impassibility; or, like Stendhal, under a mask of irony
-that “is imperceptible to the vulgar.”</p>
-
-<p>Stendhal aims not at emotional intensity only, but
-also glorifies the lust for power. He did as much as any
-one in his time to promote the ideal of the superman. Yet
-even if the superman has nerves of steel, as seems to have
-been the case with Stendhal’s favorite, Napoleon, and
-acts on the outer world with a force of which the man in
-search of a sensation is quite incapable, he does not act
-upon himself, he remains ethically passive. This ethical
-passivity is the trait common to all those who incline to
-live purely on the naturalistic level&mdash;whether they sacrifice
-the human law and its demands for measure to the
-lust of knowledge or the lust of sensation or the lust of
-power. The man who neglects his ethical self and withdraws
-into his temperamental or private self, must
-almost necessarily have the sense of isolation, of remoteness
-from other men. We return here to the psychology
-of the original genius to whom it was a tame and uninteresting
-thing to be simply human and who, disdaining
-to seem to others a being of the same clay as themselves,
-wished to be in their eyes either an angel or a
-demon&mdash;above all a demon.<a name="FNanchor_244_244" id="FNanchor_244_244"></a><a href="#Footnote_244_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a> René does not, as I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
-said,<a name="FNanchor_245_245" id="FNanchor_245_245"></a><a href="#Footnote_245_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a> want even the woman who loves him to feel at one
-with him, but rather to be at once astonished and appalled.
-He exercises upon those who approach him a malign fascination;
-for he not only lives in misery himself as in his
-natural element, but communicates this misery to those
-who approach him. He is like one of those fair trees
-under which one cannot sit without perishing. Moreover
-René disavows all responsibility for thus being a
-human Upas-tree. Moral effort is unavailing, for it was
-all written in the book of fate. The victim of romantic
-melancholy is at times tender and elegiac, at other
-times he sets up as a heaven-defying Titan. This latter
-pose became especially common in France around 1830
-when the influence of Byron had been added to that of
-Chateaubriand. Under the influence of these two writers
-a whole generation of youth became “things of dark imaginings,”<a name="FNanchor_246_246" id="FNanchor_246_246"></a><a href="#Footnote_246_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a>
-predestined to a blight that was at the same
-time the badge of their superiority. One wished like René
-to have an “immense, solitary and stormy soul,” and
-also, like a Byronic hero, to have a diabolical glint in
-the eye and a corpse-like complexion,<a name="FNanchor_247_247" id="FNanchor_247_247"></a><a href="#Footnote_247_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a> and so seem the
-“blind and deaf agent of funereal mysteries.”<a name="FNanchor_248_248" id="FNanchor_248_248"></a><a href="#Footnote_248_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a> “It was
-possible to believe everything about René except the
-truth.” The person who delights in being as mysterious
-as this easily falls into mystification. Byron himself we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
-are told was rather flattered by the rumor that he had
-committed at least one murder. Baudelaire, it has been
-said, displayed his moral gangrene as a warrior might
-display honorable wounds. This flaunting of his own
-perversity was part of the literary attitude he had inherited
-from the “Satanic School.”</p>
-
-<p>When the romanticist is not posing as the victim of fate
-he poses as the victim of society. Both ways of dodging
-moral responsibility enter into the romantic legend of the
-<i>poète maudit</i>. Nobody loves a poet. His own mother
-according to Baudelaire utters a malediction upon him.<a name="FNanchor_249_249" id="FNanchor_249_249"></a><a href="#Footnote_249_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a>
-That is because the poet feels so exquisitely that he is at
-once odious and unintelligible to the ordinary human
-pachyderm. Inasmuch as the philistine is not too sensitive
-to act he has a great advantage over the poet in the
-real world and often succeeds in driving him from it and
-indeed from life itself. This inferiority in action is a
-proof of the poet’s ideality. “His gigantic wings,” as
-Baudelaire says, “keep him from walking.” He has, in
-Coleridgean phrase, fed on “honey dew and drunk the
-milk of paradise,”<a name="FNanchor_250_250" id="FNanchor_250_250"></a><a href="#Footnote_250_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a> and so can scarcely be expected to
-submit to a diet of plain prose. It is hardly necessary to
-say that great poets of the past have not been at war<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-with their public in this way. The reason is that they
-were less taken up with the uttering of their own uniqueness;
-they were, without ceasing to be themselves, servants
-of the general sense.</p>
-
-<p>Chatterton became for the romanticists a favorite
-type of the <i>poète maudit</i>, and his suicide a symbol of the
-inevitable defeat of the “ideal” by the “real.” The first
-performance of Vigny’s Chatterton (1835) with its picture
-of the implacable hatred of the philistine for the
-artist was received by the romantic youth of Paris with
-something akin to delirium. As Gautier says in his well-known
-account of this performance one could almost hear
-in the night the crack of the solitary pistols. The ordinary
-man of letters, says Vigny in his preface to this play,
-is sure of success, even the great writer may get a hearing,
-but the poet, a being who is on a far higher level than
-either, can look forward only to “perpetual martyrdom
-and immolation.” He comes into the world to be a burden
-to others; his native sensibility is so intimate and profound
-that it “has plunged him from childhood into involuntary
-ecstasies, interminable reveries, infinite inventions.
-Imagination possesses him above all … it sweeps
-his faculties heavenward as irresistibly as the balloon
-carries up its car.” From that time forth he is more
-or less cut off from normal contact with his fellow-men.
-“His sensibility has become too keen; what only grazes
-other men wounds him until he bleeds.” He is thrown back
-more and more upon himself and becomes a sort of living
-volcano, “consumed by secret ardors and inexplicable
-languors,” and incapable of self-guidance. Such is the
-poet. From his first appearance he is an outlaw. Let all
-your tears and all your pity be for him. If he is finally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
-forced to suicide not he but society is to blame. He is like
-the scorpion that cruel boys surround with live coals and
-that is finally forced to turn his sting upon himself.
-Society therefore owes it to itself to see that this exquisite
-being is properly pensioned and protected by government,
-to the end that idealism may not perish from the
-earth. M. Thiers who was prime minister at that time is
-said to have received a number of letters from young
-poets, the general tenor of which was: “A position or I’ll
-kill myself.”<a name="FNanchor_251_251" id="FNanchor_251_251"></a><a href="#Footnote_251_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a></p>
-
-<p>A circumstance that should interest Americans is that
-Poe as interpreted by Baudelaire came to hold for a later
-generation of romanticists the place that Chatterton
-had held for the romanticists of 1830. Poe was actually
-murdered, says Baudelaire&mdash;and there is an element of
-truth in the assertion along with much exaggeration&mdash;by
-this great gas-lighted barbarity (i.e., America). All his
-inner and spiritual life whether drunkard’s or poet’s, was
-one constant effort to escape from this antipathetic
-atmosphere “in which,” Baudelaire goes on to say, “the
-impious love of liberty has given birth to a new tyranny,
-the tyranny of the beasts, a zoöcracy”; and in this human
-zoo a being with such a superhuman fineness of
-sensibility as Poe was of course at a hopeless disadvantage.
-In general our elation at Poe’s recognition in
-Europe should be tempered by the reflection that this
-recognition is usually taken as a point of departure for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-insulting America. Poe is about the only hyperæsthetic
-romanticist we have had, and he therefore fell in with
-the main European tendency that comes down from the
-eighteenth century. Villiers de l’Isle-Adam, whom I have
-already cited as an extreme example of romantic idealism,
-was one of Poe’s avowed followers; but Villiers is
-also related by his æsthetic and “diabolic” Catholicism
-to Chateaubriand; and the religiosity of Chateaubriand
-itself derives from the religiosity of Rousseau.</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto I have been studying for the most part only
-one main type of modern melancholy. This type even in
-a Chateaubriand or a Byron and still more in their innumerable
-followers may seem at once superficial and
-theatrical. It often does not get beyond that Epicurean
-toying with sorrow, that luxury of grief, which was not
-unknown even to classical antiquity.<a name="FNanchor_252_252" id="FNanchor_252_252"></a><a href="#Footnote_252_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a> The despair of
-Chateaubriand is frequently only a disguise of his love of
-literary glory, and Chesterton is inclined to see in the
-Byronic gloom an incident of youth and high spirits.<a name="FNanchor_253_253" id="FNanchor_253_253"></a><a href="#Footnote_253_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a>
-But this is not the whole story even in Byron and Chateaubriand.
-To find what is both genuine and distinctive
-in romantic melancholy we need to enlarge a little further
-on the underlying difference between the classicist and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-the Rousseauist. The Rousseauist, as indeed the modern
-man in general, is more preoccupied with his separate
-and private self than the classicist. Modern melancholy
-has practically always this touch of isolation not merely
-because of the proneness of the “genius” to dwell on his
-own uniqueness, but also because of the undermining of
-the traditional communions by critical analysis. The
-noblest form of the “malady of the age” is surely that
-which supervened upon the loss of religious faith. This is
-what distinguishes the sadness of an Arnold or a Senancour
-from that of a Gray. The “Elegy” belongs to
-the modern movement by the humanitarian note, the
-sympathetic interest in the lowly, but in its melancholy
-it does not go much beyond the milder forms of classical
-meditation on the inevitable sadness of life&mdash;what one
-may term pensiveness. Like the other productions of the
-so-called graveyard school, it bears a direct relation to
-Milton’s “Il Penseroso.” It is well to retain Gray’s own
-distinction. “Mine is a white Melancholy, or rather
-Leucocholy for the most part,” he wrote to Richard West
-in 1742, “but there is another sort, black indeed, which
-I have now and then felt.” Gray did not experience the
-more poignant sadness, one may suspect, without some
-loss of the “trembling hope” that is the final note of the
-“Elegy.” No forlornness is greater than that of the man
-who has known faith and then lost it. Renan writes of
-his own break with the Church:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>The fish of Lake Baikal, we are told, have spent thousands of years
-in becoming fresh-water fish after being salt-water fish. I had to go
-through my transition in a few weeks. Like an enchanted circle
-Catholicism embraces the whole of life with so much strength that
-when one is deprived of it everything seems insipid. I was terribly lost.
-The universe produced upon me the impression of a cold and arid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
-desert. For the moment that Christianity was not the truth, all the
-rest appeared to me indifferent, frivolous, barely worthy of interest.
-The collapse of my life upon itself left in me a feeling of emptiness like
-that which follows an attack of fever or an unhappy love-affair.<a name="FNanchor_254_254" id="FNanchor_254_254"></a><a href="#Footnote_254_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The forlornness at the loss of faith is curiously combined
-in many of the romanticists with the mood of
-revolt. This type of romanticist heaps reproaches on a
-God in whose existence he no longer believes (as in
-Leconte de Lisle’s “Quaïn,” itself related to Byron’s
-“Cain”). He shakes his fist at an empty heaven, or like
-Alfred de Vigny (in his <i>Jardin des Oliviers</i>) assumes towards
-this emptiness an attitude of proud disdain. He
-is loath to give up this grandiose defiance of divinity if
-only because it helps to save him from subsiding into
-platitude. A somewhat similar mood appears in the
-“Satanic” Catholics who continue to cling to religion
-simply because it adds to the gusto of sinning.<a name="FNanchor_255_255" id="FNanchor_255_255"></a><a href="#Footnote_255_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a> A Barbey
-succeeded in combining the rôle of Byronic Titan with
-that of champion of the Church. But in general the romantic
-Prometheus spurns the traditional forms of communion
-whether classical or Christian. He is so far as
-everything established is concerned enormously centrifugal,
-but he hopes to erect on the ruins of the past the
-new religion of human brotherhood. Everything in this
-movement from Shaftesbury down hinges on the rôle
-that is thus assigned to sympathy: if it can really unite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
-men who are at the same time indulging each to the
-utmost his own “genius” or idiosyncrasy there is no
-reason why one should not accept romanticism as a
-philosophy of life.</p>
-
-<p>But nowhere else perhaps is the clash more violent
-between the theory and the fact. No movement is so
-profuse in professions of brotherhood and none is so
-filled with the aching sense of solitude. “Behold me then
-alone upon the earth,” is the sentence with which Rousseau
-begins his last book;<a name="FNanchor_256_256" id="FNanchor_256_256"></a><a href="#Footnote_256_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a> and he goes on to marvel that
-he, the “most loving of men,” had been forced more and
-more into solitude. “I am in the world as though in a
-strange planet upon which I have fallen from the one that
-I inhabited.”<a name="FNanchor_257_257" id="FNanchor_257_257"></a><a href="#Footnote_257_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a> When no longer subordinated to something
-higher than themselves both the head and the heart
-(in the romantic sense) not only tend to be opposed to
-one another, but also, each in its own way, to isolate.
-Empedocles was used not only by Arnold but by other
-victims<a name="FNanchor_258_258" id="FNanchor_258_258"></a><a href="#Footnote_258_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a> of romantic melancholy, as a symbol of intellectual
-isolation: by his indulgence in the “imperious
-lonely thinking power” Empedocles has broken the warm
-bonds of sympathy with his fellows:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent10">thou art</div>
-<div class="verse">A living man no more, Empedocles!</div>
-<div class="verse">Nothing but a devouring flame of thought,&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">But a naked eternally restless mind!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>His leaping into Ætna typifies his attempt to escape from
-his loneliness by a fiery union with nature herself.</p>
-
-<p>According to religion one should seek to unite with
-a something that is set above both man and nature,
-whether this something is called God as in Christianity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
-or simply the Law as in various philosophies of the Far
-East.<a name="FNanchor_259_259" id="FNanchor_259_259"></a><a href="#Footnote_259_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a> The most severe penalty visited on the man who
-transgresses is that he tends to fall away from this union.
-This is the element of truth in the sentence of Diderot
-that Rousseau took as a personal affront: “Only the
-wicked man is alone.” Rousseau asserted in reply, anticipating
-Mark Twain,<a name="FNanchor_260_260" id="FNanchor_260_260"></a><a href="#Footnote_260_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a> that “on the contrary only the
-good man is alone.” Now in a sense Rousseau is right.
-“Most men are bad,” as one of the seven sages of Greece
-remarked, and any one who sets out to follow a very
-strenuous virtue is likely to have few companions on the
-way. Rousseau is also right in a sense when he says that
-the wicked man needs to live in society so that he may
-have opportunity to practice his wickedness. Yet Rousseau
-fails to face the main issue: solitude is above all a
-psychic thing. A man may frequent his fellows and suffer
-none the less acutely, like Poe’s “Man of the Crowd,”
-from a ghastly isolation. And conversely one may be like
-the ancient who said that he was never less alone than
-when he was alone.</p>
-
-<p>Hawthorne, who was himself a victim of solitude,
-brooded a great deal on this whole problem, especially,
-as may be seen in the “Scarlet Letter” and elsewhere,
-on the isolating effects of sin. He perceived the relation
-of the problem to the whole trend of religious life in New
-England. The older Puritans had a sense of intimacy with
-God and craved no other companionship. With the weakening<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
-of their faith the later Puritans lost the sense of a
-divine companionship, but retained their aloofness from
-men. Hawthorne’s own solution of the problem of solitude,
-so far as he offers any, is humanitarian. Quicken
-your sympathies. Let the man who has taken as his
-motto <i>Excelsior</i><a name="FNanchor_261_261" id="FNanchor_261_261"></a><a href="#Footnote_261_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a> be warned. Nothing will console him
-on the bleak heights either of knowledge or of power for
-the warm contact with the dwellers in the valley. Faust,
-who is a symbol of the solitude of knowledge, seeks to
-escape from his forlornness by recovering this warm
-contact. That the inordinate quest of power also leads to
-solitude is beyond question. Napoleon, the very type of
-the superman, must in the nature of the case have been
-very solitary.<a name="FNanchor_262_262" id="FNanchor_262_262"></a><a href="#Footnote_262_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a> His admirer Nietzsche wrote one day:
-“I have forty-three years behind me and am as alone as
-if I were a child.” Carlyle, whose “hero” derives like the
-superman from the original genius<a name="FNanchor_263_263" id="FNanchor_263_263"></a><a href="#Footnote_263_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a> of the eighteenth
-century, makes the following entry in his diary: “My
-isolation, my feeling of loneliness, unlimitedness (much
-meant by this) what tongue shall say? Alone, alone!”<a name="FNanchor_264_264" id="FNanchor_264_264"></a><a href="#Footnote_264_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It cannot be granted, however, that one may escape
-by love, as the Rousseauist understands the word, from
-the loneliness that arises from the unlimited quest either
-of knowledge or power. For Rousseauistic love is also unlimited
-whether one understands by love either passion
-or a diffusive sympathy for mankind at large. “What
-solitudes are these human bodies,” Musset exclaimed
-when fresh from his affair with George Sand. Wordsworth
-cultivated a love for the lowly that quite overflowed the
-bounds of neo-classic selection. It is a well-known fact
-that the lowly did not altogether reciprocate. “A desolate-minded
-man, ye kna,” said an old inn-keeper of the
-Lakes to Canon Rawnsley, “’Twas potry as did it.” If
-Wordsworth writes so poignantly of solitude one may infer
-that it is because he himself had experienced it.<a name="FNanchor_265_265" id="FNanchor_265_265"></a><a href="#Footnote_265_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a> Nor
-would it be difficult to show that the very philanthropic
-Ruskin was at least as solitary as Carlyle with his tirades
-against philanthropy.</p>
-
-<p>I have spoken of the isolating effects of sin, but sin is
-scarcely the right word to apply to most of the romanticists.
-The solitude of which so many of them complain
-does, however, imply a good deal of spiritual inertia.
-Now to be spiritually inert, as I have said elsewhere,
-is to be temperamental, to indulge unduly the lust for
-knowledge or sensation or power without imposing on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
-these lusts some centre or principle of control set above
-the ordinary self. The man who wishes to fly off on the
-tangent of his own temperament and at the same time
-enjoy communion on any except the purely material level
-is harboring incompatible desires. For temperament is
-what separates. A sense of unlimitedness (“much meant
-by this” as Carlyle says) and of solitude are simply the
-penalties visited upon the eccentric individualist. If we
-are to unite on the higher levels with other men we must
-look in another direction than the expansive outward
-striving of temperament: we must in either the humanistic
-or religious sense undergo conversion. We must pull
-back our temperaments with reference to the model that
-we are imitating, just as, in Aristotle’s phrase, one might
-pull back and straighten out a crooked stick.<a name="FNanchor_266_266" id="FNanchor_266_266"></a><a href="#Footnote_266_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a> Usually
-the brake on temperament is supplied by the ethos, the
-convention of one’s age and country. I have tried to show
-elsewhere that the whole programme of the eccentric
-individualist is to get rid of this convention, whatever it
-may be, without developing some new principle of control.
-The eccentric individualist argues that to accept
-control, to defer to some centre as the classicist demands,
-is to cease to be himself. But are restrictions upon temperament
-so fatal to a man’s being himself? The reply
-hinges upon the definition of the word self, inasmuch as
-man is a dual being. If a man is to escape from his isolation
-he must, I have said, aim at some goal set above his
-ordinary self which is at the same time his unique and
-separate self. But because this goal is set above his ordinary
-self, it is not therefore necessarily set above his total
-personality. The limitations that he imposes on his ordinary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
-self may be the necessary condition of his entering
-into possession of his ethical self, the self that he possesses
-in common with other men. Aristotle says that if a
-man wishes to achieve happiness he must be a true lover
-of himself. It goes without saying that he means the
-ethical self. The author of a recent book on Ibsen says
-that Ibsen’s message to the world is summed up in the
-line:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">This above all,&mdash;to thine own self be true.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is abundantly plain from the context, however, that
-Polonius is a decayed Aristotelian and not a precursor
-of Ibsen. The self to which Aristotle would have a
-man be true is at the opposite pole from the self that
-Ibsen and the original geniuses are so eager to get uttered.</p>
-
-<p>To impose the yoke of one’s human self upon one’s
-temperamental self is, in the Aristotelian sense, to work.
-Aristotle conceives of happiness in terms of work. All
-types of temperamentalists, on the other hand, are from
-the human point of view, passive. The happiness that
-they crave is a passive happiness. A man may pursue
-power with the energy of a Napoleon and yet remain ethically
-passive. He may absorb whole encyclopædias and
-remain ethically passive. He may expand his sympathies
-until, like Schiller, he is ready to “bestow a kiss upon the
-whole world” and yet remain ethically passive. A man
-ceases to be ethically passive only when he begins to work
-in the Aristotelian sense, that is when he begins to put
-the brake on temperament and impulse, and in the same
-degree he tends to become ethically efficient. By his
-denial of the dualism of the spirit, Rousseau discredited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
-this inner working, so that inwardness has come to seem
-synonymous with mere subjectivity; and to be subjective
-in the Rousseauistic sense is to be diffusive, to lack
-purpose and concentration, to lose one’s self in a shoreless
-sea of revery.</p>
-
-<p>The utilitarian intervenes at this point and urges the
-romanticist, since he has failed to work inwardly, at least
-to work outwardly. Having missed the happiness of
-ethical efficiency he may in this way find the happiness of
-material efficiency, and at the same time serve the
-world. This is the solution of the problem of happiness
-that Goethe offers at the end of the Second Faust, and
-we may affirm without hesitation that it is a sham solution.
-To work outwardly and in the utilitarian sense,
-without the inner working that can alone save from ethical
-anarchy is to stimulate rather than repress the most
-urgent of all the lusts&mdash;the lust of power. It is only
-too plain that the unselective sympathy or joy in service
-with which Goethe would complete Faust’s utilitarian
-activity is not in itself a sufficient counterpoise to the
-will to power, unless indeed we assume with Rousseau
-that one may control expansive impulses by opposing
-them to one another.</p>
-
-<p>A terrible danger thus lurks in the whole modern programme:
-it is a programme that makes for a formidable
-mechanical efficiency and so tends to bring into an ever
-closer material contact men who remain ethically centrifugal.
-The reason why the humanitarian and other
-schemes of communion that have been set up during the
-last century have failed is that they do not, like the traditional
-schemes, set any bounds to mere expansiveness,
-or, if one prefers, they do not involve any conversion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
-And so it is not surprising that the feeling of emptiness<a name="FNanchor_267_267" id="FNanchor_267_267"></a><a href="#Footnote_267_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a>
-or unlimitedness and isolation should be the special mark
-of the melancholy of this period. René complains of his
-“moral solitude”;<a name="FNanchor_268_268" id="FNanchor_268_268"></a><a href="#Footnote_268_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a> but strictly speaking his solitude is
-the reverse of moral. Only by cultivating his human self
-and by the unceasing effort that this cultivation involves
-does a man escape from his nightmare of separateness
-and so move in some measure towards happiness. But
-the happiness of which René dreams is unethical&mdash;something
-very private and personal and egoistic. Nothing
-is easier than to draw the line from René to Baudelaire
-and later decadents&mdash;for instance to Des Esseintes,
-the hero of Huysmans’s novel “A Rebours,”<a name="FNanchor_269_269" id="FNanchor_269_269"></a><a href="#Footnote_269_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a>
-who is typical of the last exaggerations of the movement.
-Des Esseintes cuts himself off as completely as possible
-from other men and in the artificial paradise he has
-devised gives himself up to the quest of strange and
-violent sensation; but his dream of happiness along
-egoistic lines turns into a nightmare,<a name="FNanchor_270_270" id="FNanchor_270_270"></a><a href="#Footnote_270_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a> his palace of art
-becomes a hell. Lemaître is quite justified in saying of
-Des Esseintes that he is only René or Werther brought
-up to date&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>“a played-out and broken-down Werther
-who has a malady of the nerves, a deranged stomach and
-eighty years more of literature to the bad.”<a name="FNanchor_271_271" id="FNanchor_271_271"></a><a href="#Footnote_271_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a></p>
-
-<p>Emotional romanticism was headed from the start
-towards this bankruptcy because of its substitution for
-ethical effort of a mere lazy floating on the stream of
-mood and temperament. I have said that Buddhism saw
-in this ethical indolence the root of all evil. Christianity
-in its great days was preoccupied with the same problem.
-To make this point clear it will be necessary to add
-to what I have said about classical and romantic melancholy
-a few words about melancholy in the Middle Ages.
-In a celebrated chapter of his “Genius of Christianity”
-(<i>Le Vague des passions</i>) Chateaubriand seeks to give
-to the malady of the age Christian and mediæval origins.
-This was his pretext, indeed, for introducing René into
-an apology for Christianity and so, as Sainte-Beuve
-complained, administering poison in a sacred wafer.
-Chateaubriand begins by saying that the modern man
-is melancholy because, without having had experience
-himself, he is at the same time overwhelmed by the
-second-hand experience that has been heaped up in the
-books and other records of an advanced civilization; and
-so he suffers from a precocious disillusion; he has the
-sense of having exhausted life before he has enjoyed it.
-There is nothing specifically Christian in this disillusion
-and above all nothing mediæval. But Chateaubriand
-goes on to say that from the decay of the pagan world
-and the barbarian invasions the human spirit received
-an impression of sadness and possibly a tinge of misanthropy
-which has never been completely effaced. Those
-that were thus wounded and estranged from their fellow-men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
-took refuge formerly in monasteries, but now that
-this resource has failed them, they are left in the world
-without being of it and so they “become the prey of a
-thousand chimeras.” Then is seen the rise of that guilty
-melancholy which the passions engender when, left
-without definite object, they prey upon themselves in a
-solitary heart.<a name="FNanchor_272_272" id="FNanchor_272_272"></a><a href="#Footnote_272_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a></p>
-
-<p>The <i>vague des passions</i>, the expansion of infinite indeterminate
-desire, that Chateaubriand here describes
-may very well be related to certain sides of Christianity&mdash;especially
-to what may be termed its neo-Platonic side.
-Yet Christianity at its best has shown itself a genuine
-religion, in other words, it has dealt sternly and veraciously
-with the facts of human nature. It has perceived
-clearly how a man may move towards happiness and
-how on the other hand he tends to sink into despair; or
-what amounts to the same thing, it has seen the supreme
-importance of spiritual effort and the supreme danger of
-spiritual sloth. The man who looked on himself as cut off
-from God and so ceased to strive was according to the
-mediæval Christian the victim of <i>acedia</i>. This sluggishness
-and slackness of spirit, this mere drifting and abdication
-of will, may, as Chaucer’s parson suggests, be the
-crime against the Holy Ghost itself. It would in fact not
-be hard to show that what was taken by the Rousseauist
-to be the badge of spiritual distinction was held by the
-mediæval Christian to be the chief of all the deadly sins.</p>
-
-<p>The victim of <i>acedia</i> often looked upon himself, like
-the victim of the malady of the age, as foredoomed. But
-though the idea of fate enters at times into mediæval
-melancholy, the man of the Middle Ages could scarcely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
-so detach himself from the community as to suffer from
-that sense of loneliness which is the main symptom of
-romantic melancholy. This forlornness was due not
-merely to the abrupt disappearance of the older forms
-of communion, but to the failure of the new attempts at
-communion. When one gets beneath the surface of the
-nineteenth century one finds that it was above all a
-period of violent disillusions, and it is especially after
-violent disillusion that a man feels himself solitary and
-forlorn. I have said that the special mark of the half-educated
-man is his harboring of incompatible desires.
-The new religions or unifications of life that appeared
-during the nineteenth century made an especially strong
-appeal to the half-educated man because it seemed to
-him that by accepting some one of these he could enjoy
-the benefits of communion and at the same time not have
-to take on the yoke of any serious discipline; that he
-could, in the language of religion, achieve salvation without
-conversion. When a communion on these lines turns
-out to be not a reality, but a sham, and its disillusioned
-votary feels solitary and forlorn, he is ready to blame
-everybody and everything except himself.</p>
-
-<p>A few specific illustrations will help us to understand
-how romantic solitude, which was created by the weakening
-of the traditional communions, was enhanced by
-the collapse of various sham communions. Let us return
-for a moment to that eminent example of romantic melancholy
-and disillusion, Alfred de Vigny. His “Chatterton”
-deals with the fatal misunderstanding of the original
-genius by other men. “Moïse” deals more specifically
-with the problem of his solitude. The genius is so eminent
-and unique, says Vigny, speaking for himself from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-behind the mask of the Hebrew prophet, that he is quite
-cut off from ordinary folk who feel that they have nothing
-in common with him.<a name="FNanchor_273_273" id="FNanchor_273_273"></a><a href="#Footnote_273_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a> This forlornness of the genius
-is not the sign of some capital error in his philosophy.
-On the contrary it is the sign of his divine election, and
-so Moses blames God for his failure to find happiness.<a name="FNanchor_274_274" id="FNanchor_274_274"></a><a href="#Footnote_274_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a>
-If the genius is cut off from communion with men he
-cannot hope for companionship with God because he has
-grown too sceptical. Heaven is empty and in any case
-dumb; and so in the poem to which I have already referred
-(<i>Le Mont des Oliviers</i>) Vigny assumes the mask of
-Jesus himself to express this desolateness, and concludes
-that the just man will oppose a haughty and Stoic disdain
-to the divine silence.<a name="FNanchor_275_275" id="FNanchor_275_275"></a><a href="#Footnote_275_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a></p>
-
-<p>All that is left for the genius is to retire into his ivory
-tower&mdash;a phrase appropriately applied for the first time
-to Vigny.<a name="FNanchor_276_276" id="FNanchor_276_276"></a><a href="#Footnote_276_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a> In the ivory tower he can at least commune
-with nature and the ideal woman. But Vigny came at a
-time when the Arcadian glamour was being dissipated
-from nature. Partly under scientific influence she was
-coming to seem not a benign but a cold and impassive
-power, a collection of cruel and inexorable laws. I have
-already mentioned this mood that might be further illustrated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
-from Taine and so many others towards the middle
-of the nineteenth century.<a name="FNanchor_277_277" id="FNanchor_277_277"></a><a href="#Footnote_277_277" class="fnanchor">[277]</a> “I am called a ‘mother,’”
-Vigny makes Nature say, “and I am a tomb.”<a name="FNanchor_278_278" id="FNanchor_278_278"></a><a href="#Footnote_278_278" class="fnanchor">[278]</a> (“La
-Maison du Berger”); and so in the <i>Maison roulante</i>, or
-sort of Arcadia on wheels that he has imagined, he must
-seek his chief solace with the ideal feminine companion.
-But woman herself turns out to be treacherous; and,
-assuming the mask of Samson (“La Colère de Samson”),
-Vigny utters a solemn malediction upon the eternal
-Delilah (<i>Et, plus ou moins, la Femme est toujours Dalila</i>).
-Such is the disillusion that comes from having sought an
-ideal communion in a liaison with a Parisian actress.<a name="FNanchor_279_279" id="FNanchor_279_279"></a><a href="#Footnote_279_279" class="fnanchor">[279]</a></p>
-
-<p>Now that every form of communion has failed, all that
-is left it would seem is to die in silence and solitude like
-the wolf (“La Mort du Loup”). Vigny continues to hold,
-however, like the author of the “City of Dreadful
-Night,” that though men may not meet in their joys,
-they may commune after a fashion in their woe. He
-opposes to heartless nature and her “vain splendors” the
-religion of pity, “the majesty of human sufferings.”<a name="FNanchor_280_280" id="FNanchor_280_280"></a><a href="#Footnote_280_280" class="fnanchor">[280]</a>
-Towards the end when Vigny feels the growing prestige of
-science, he holds out the hope that a man may to a certain
-extent escape from the solitude of his own ego into
-some larger whole by contributing his mite to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span> “progress.”
-But the symbol of this communion<a name="FNanchor_281_281" id="FNanchor_281_281"></a><a href="#Footnote_281_281" class="fnanchor">[281]</a> that he has chosen&mdash;that
-of the shipwrecked and sinking mariner who consigns
-his geographical discoveries to a bottle in the hope
-that it may be washed up on some civilized shore&mdash;is itself
-of a singular forlornness.</p>
-
-<p>Vigny has a concentration and power of philosophical
-reflection that is rare among the romanticists. George
-Sand is inferior to him in this respect but she had a richer
-and more generous nature, and is perhaps even more instructive
-in her life and writings for the student of romantic
-melancholy. After the loss of the religious faith of
-her childhood she became an avowed Rousseauist. She
-attacks a society that seems to her to stand in the way of
-the happiness of which she dreams&mdash;the supreme emotional
-intensity to be achieved in an ideal love. In celebrating
-passion and the rights of passion she is lyrical in
-the two main modes of the Rousseauist&mdash;she is either
-tender and elegiac, or else stormy and Titanic. But when
-she attempts to practice with Musset this religion of love,
-the result is violent disillusion. In the forlornness that
-follows upon the collapse of her sham communion she
-meditates suicide. “Ten years ago,” she wrote in 1845 to
-Mazzini, “I was in Switzerland; I was still in the age of
-tempests; I made up my mind even then to meet you, if
-I should resist the temptation to suicide which pursued
-me upon the glaciers.” And then gradually a new faith
-dawned upon her; she substituted for the religion of love
-the religion of human brotherhood. She set up as an
-object of worship humanity in its future progress; and
-then, like so many other dreamers, she suffered a violent
-disillusion in the Revolution of 1848. The radiant abstraction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
-she had been worshipping had been put to the
-test and she discovered that there entered into the actual
-make-up of the humanity she had so idealized “a large
-number of knaves, a very large number of lunatics, and
-an immense number of fools.” What is noteworthy in
-George Sand is that she not only saved the precious principle
-of faith from these repeated shipwrecks but towards
-the end of her life began to put it on a firmer footing. Like
-Goethe she worked out to some extent, in opposition to
-romanticism, a genuinely ethical point of view.</p>
-
-<p>This latter development can best be studied in her
-correspondence with Flaubert. She urges him to exercise
-his will, and he replies that he is as “fatalistic as a Turk.”
-His fatalism, however, was not oriental but scientific or
-pseudo-scientific. I have already cited his demand that
-man be studied “objectively” just as one would study
-“a mastodon or a crocodile.” Flaubert refused to see any
-connection between this determinism and his own gloom
-or between George Sand’s assertion of will and her cheerfulness.
-It was simply, he held, a matter of temperament,
-and there is no doubt some truth in this contention.
-“You at the first leap mount to heaven,” he says, “while
-I, poor devil, am glued to the earth as though by leaden
-soles.” And again: “In spite of your great sphinx eyes
-you have always seen the world as through a golden
-mist,” whereas “I am constantly dissecting; and when
-I have finally discovered the corruption in anything
-that is supposed to be pure, the gangrene in its fairest
-parts, then I raise my head and laugh.” Yet George
-Sand’s cheerfulness is also related to her perception of a
-power in man to work upon himself&mdash;a power that sets
-him apart from other animals. To enter into this region<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
-of ethical effort is to escape from the whole fatal circle
-of naturalism, and at the same time to show some capacity
-to mature&mdash;a rare achievement among the romanticists.
-The contrast is striking here between George
-Sand and Hugo, who, as the ripe fruit of his meditations,
-yields nothing better than the apotheosis of Robespierre
-and Marat. “I wish to see man as he is,” she writes to
-Flaubert. “He is not good or bad: he is good and bad.
-But he is something else besides: being good and bad he
-has an inner force which leads him to be very bad and a
-little good, or very good and a little bad. I have often
-wondered,” she adds, “why your ‘Education Sentimentale’
-was so ill received by the public, and the reason, as
-it seems to me, is that its characters are passive&mdash;that
-they do not act upon themselves.” But the Titaness of
-the period of “Lélia” can scarcely be said to have acted
-upon herself, so that she is justified in writing: “I cannot
-forget that my personal victory over despair is the work
-of my will, and of a new way of understanding life which
-is the exact opposite of the one I held formerly.” How
-different is the weary cry of Flaubert: “I am like a piece
-of clock work, what I am doing to-day I shall be doing
-to-morrow; I did exactly the same thing yesterday; I
-was exactly the same man ten years ago.”</p>
-
-<p>The correspondence of Flaubert and George Sand
-bears interestingly on another of the sham religions of
-the nineteenth century&mdash;the religion of art. Art is for
-Flaubert not merely a religion but a fanaticism. He
-preaches abstinence, renunciation and mortification of
-the flesh in the name of art. He excommunicates those
-who depart from artistic orthodoxy and speaks of heretics
-and disbelievers in art with a ferocity worthy of a Spanish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
-inquisitor. Ethical beauty such as one finds in the
-Greeks at their best resides in order and proportion; it is
-not a thing apart but the outcome of some harmonious
-whole. Beauty in the purely æsthetic and unethical
-sense that Flaubert gives to the word is little more than
-the pursuit of illusion. The man who thus treats beauty
-as a thing apart, who does not refer back his quest of the
-exquisite to some ethical centre will spend his life Ixion-like
-embracing phantoms. “O Art, Art,” exclaims Flaubert,
-“bitter deception, nameless phantom, which gleams
-and lures us to our ruin!” He speaks elsewhere of “the
-chimera of style which is wearing him out soul and body.”
-Attaching as he did an almost religious importance to his
-quest of the exquisite he became like so many other
-Rousseauists not merely æsthetic but hyperæsthetic. He
-complains in his old age: “My sensibility is sharper than
-a razor’s edge; the creaking of a door, the face of a
-bourgeois, an absurd statement set my heart to throbbing
-and completely upset me.” Hardly anywhere else,
-indeed, will one find such accents of bitterness, such
-melancholy welling up unbidden from the very depths of
-the heart, as in the devotees of art for art’s sake&mdash;Flaubert,
-Leconte de Lisle, Théophile Gautier.</p>
-
-<p>George Sand takes Flaubert to task with admirable
-tact for his failure to subordinate art to something higher
-than itself. “Talent imposes duties; and art for art’s sake
-is an empty word.” As she grew older she says she came
-more and more to put truth above beauty, and goodness
-before strength. “I have reflected a great deal on what
-is <i>true</i>, and in this search for truth, the sentiment of
-my ego has gradually disappeared.” The truth on which
-she had reflected was what she herself calls total truth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
-(<i>le vrai total</i>), not merely truth according to the natural
-law, which received such exclusive emphasis towards the
-middle of the nineteenth century as to lead to the rise of
-another sham religion&mdash;the religion of science. “You
-have a better sense for total truth,” she tells one of her
-correspondents “than Sainte-Beuve, Renan and Littré.
-They have fallen into the German rut: therein lies their
-weakness.” And Flaubert writes to George Sand: “What
-amazes and delights me is the strength of your whole
-personality, not that of the brain alone.”</p>
-
-<p>Furthermore the holding of the human law that made
-possible this rounded development, this growth towards
-total truth, was a matter not of tradition but of immediate
-perception. George Sand had succeeded, as Taine
-says, in making the difficult transition from an hereditary
-faith to a personal conviction. Now this perception of the
-human law is something very different from the pantheistic
-revery in which George Sand was also an adept. To
-look on revery as the equivalent of vision in the Aristotelian
-sense, as Rousseau and so many of his followers have
-done, is to fall into sham spirituality. Maurice de Guérin
-falls into sham spirituality when he exclaims “Oh! this
-contact of nature and the soul would engender an ineffable
-voluptuousness, a prodigious love of heaven and
-of God.” I am not asserting that George Sand herself
-discriminated sharply between ethical and æsthetic
-perception or that she is to be rated as a very great sage
-at any time. Yet she owes her recovery of serenity after
-suffering shock upon shock of disillusion to her having
-exercised in some degree what she terms “the contemplative
-sense wherein resides invincible faith” (<i>le sens
-contemplatif où réside la foi invincible</i>), and the passages<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
-that bear witness to her use of this well-nigh obsolete
-sense are found in her correspondence.</p>
-
-<p>Wordsworth lauds in true Rousseauistic fashion a
-“wise passiveness.” But to be truly contemplative is not
-to be passive at all, but to be “energetic” in Aristotle’s
-sense, or strenuous in Buddha’s sense. It is a matter of
-no small import that the master analyst of the East and
-the master analyst of the West are at one in their solution
-of the supreme problem of ethics&mdash;the problem of happiness.
-For there can be no doubt that the energy<a name="FNanchor_282_282" id="FNanchor_282_282"></a><a href="#Footnote_282_282" class="fnanchor">[282]</a> in which
-the doctrine of Aristotle culminates is the same as the
-“strenuousness”<a name="FNanchor_283_283" id="FNanchor_283_283"></a><a href="#Footnote_283_283" class="fnanchor">[283]</a> on which Buddha puts his final emphasis.
-The highest good they both agree is a contemplative
-<i>working</i>. It is by thus working according to the
-human law that one rises above the naturalistic level.
-The scientific rationalists of the nineteenth century left
-no place for this true human spontaneity when they
-sought to subject man entirely to the “law for thing.”
-This scientific determinism was responsible for a great
-deal of spiritual depression and <i>acedia</i>, especially in
-France during the second half of the nineteenth century.<a name="FNanchor_284_284" id="FNanchor_284_284"></a><a href="#Footnote_284_284" class="fnanchor">[284]</a>
-But even if science is less dogmatic and absolute one
-needs to consider why it does not deserve to be given the
-supreme and central place in life, why it cannot in short
-take the place of humanism and religion, and the working
-according to the human law that they both enjoin.</p>
-
-<p>A man may indeed effect through science a certain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
-escape from himself, and this is very salutary so far as it
-goes; he has to discipline himself to an order that is quite
-independent of his own fancies and emotions. He becomes
-objective in short, but objective according to the
-natural and not according to the human law. Objectivity
-of this kind gives control over natural forces but it does
-not supply the purpose for which these forces are to be
-used. It gives the airship, for instance, but does not determine
-whether the airship is to go on some beneficent
-errand or is to scatter bombs on women and children.
-Science does not even set right limits to the faculty that
-it chiefly exercises&mdash;the intellect. In itself it stimulates
-rather than curbs one of the three main lusts to which
-human nature is subject&mdash;the lust of knowledge. Renan,
-who makes a religion of science, speaks of “sacred curiosity.”
-But this is even more dangerous than the opposite
-excess of the ascetic Christian who denounces all curiosity
-as vain. The man of science avers indeed that he does
-subordinate his knowledge to an adequate aim, namely
-the progress of humanity. But the humanity of the
-Baconian is only an intellectual abstraction just as the
-humanity of the Rousseauist is only an emotional dream.
-George Sand found, as we have seen, that the passage
-from one’s dream of humanity to humanity in the concrete
-involved a certain disillusion. The scientific or
-rationalistic humanitarian is subject to similar disillusions.<a name="FNanchor_285_285" id="FNanchor_285_285"></a><a href="#Footnote_285_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a>
-Science not only fails to set proper limits to the
-activity of the intellect, but one must also note a curious
-paradox in its relation to the second of the main lusts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
-to which man is subject, the lust for emotion (<i>libido
-sentiendi</i>). The prime virtue of science is to be unemotional
-and at the same time keenly analytical. Now
-protracted and unemotional analysis finally creates a
-desire, as Renan says, for the opposite pole, “the kisses
-of the naïve being,” and in general for a frank surrender
-to the emotions. Science thus actually prepares clients for
-the Rousseauist.<a name="FNanchor_286_286" id="FNanchor_286_286"></a><a href="#Footnote_286_286" class="fnanchor">[286]</a> The man of science is also flattered by
-the Rousseauistic notion that conscience and virtue are
-themselves only forms of emotion. He is thus saved from
-anything so distasteful as having to subordinate his own
-scientific discipline to some superior religious or humanistic
-discipline. He often oscillates between the rationalistic
-and the emotional pole not only in other things but
-also in his cult of humanity. But if conscience is merely an
-emotion there is a cult that makes a more potent appeal
-to conscience than the cult of humanity itself and that is
-the cult of country. One is here at the root of the most
-dangerous of all the sham religions of the modern age&mdash;the
-religion of country, the frenzied nationalism that is
-now threatening to make an end of civilization itself.</p>
-
-<p>Both emotional nationalism and emotional internationalism
-go back to Rousseau, but in his final emphasis
-he is an emotional nationalist;<a name="FNanchor_287_287" id="FNanchor_287_287"></a><a href="#Footnote_287_287" class="fnanchor">[287]</a> and that is because he
-saw that patriotic “virtue” is a more potent intoxicant
-than the love of humanity. The demonstration came in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
-the French Revolution which began as a great international
-movement on emotional lines and ended in imperialism
-and Napoleon Bonaparte. It is here that the terrible
-peril of a science that is pursued as an end in itself becomes
-manifest. It disciplines man and makes him efficient
-on the naturalistic level, but leaves him ethically
-undisciplined. Now in the absence of ethical discipline
-the lust for knowledge and the lust for feeling count very
-little, at least practically, compared with the third main
-lust of human nature&mdash;the lust for power. Hence the
-emergence of that most sinister of all types, the efficient
-megalomaniac. The final use of a science that has thus
-become a tool of the lust for power is in Burke’s phrase
-to “improve the mystery of murder.”</p>
-
-<p>This union of material efficiency and ethical unrestraint,
-though in a way the upshot of the whole movement
-we have been studying, is especially marked in the
-modern German. Goethe as I have pointed out is ready
-to pardon Faust for grave violations of the moral law
-because of work which, so far from being ethical, is, in
-view of the ruin in which it involves the rustic pair,
-Baucis and Philemon, under suspicion of being positively
-unethical. Yet Goethe was far from being a pure utilitarian
-and he had reacted more than most Germans of his
-time from Rousseauism. Rousseau is glorified by Germans
-as a chief source of their <i>Kultur</i>, as I have already
-pointed out. Now <i>Kultur</i> when analyzed breaks up into
-two very different things&mdash;scientific efficiency and emotionalism
-or what the Germans (and unfortunately not
-the Germans alone) term “idealism.” There is no question
-about the relation of this idealism to the stream of
-tendency of which Rousseau is the chief representative.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>
-By his corruption of conscience Rousseau made it possible
-to identify character with temperament. It was easy
-for Fichte and others to take the next step and identify
-national character with national temperament. The
-Germans according to Fichte are all beautiful souls, the
-elect of nature. If they have no special word for character
-it is because to be a German and have character are
-synonymous. Character is something that gushes up
-from the primordial depths of the German’s being without
-any conscious effort on his part.<a name="FNanchor_288_288" id="FNanchor_288_288"></a><a href="#Footnote_288_288" class="fnanchor">[288]</a> The members of
-a whole national group may thus flatter one another and
-inbreed their national “genius” in the romantic sense,
-and feel all the while that they are ecstatic “idealists”;
-yet as a result of the failure to refer their genius back
-to some ethical centre, to work, in other words, according
-to the human law, they may, so far as the members
-of other national groups are concerned, remain in a state
-of moral solitude.</p>
-
-<p>Everything thus hinges on the meaning of the word
-work. In the abstract and metaphysical sense man can
-know nothing of unity. He may, however, by working
-in the human sense, by imposing, that is, due limits on
-his expansive desires, close up in some measure the gap
-in his own nature (the “civil war in the cave”) and so
-tend to become inwardly one. He may hope in the same
-way to escape from the solitude of his own ego, for the
-inner unity that he achieves through work is only an
-entering into possession of his ethical self, the self that
-he possesses in common with other men. Thus to work
-ethically is not only to become more unified and happy
-but also to move away from what is less permanent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
-towards what is more permanent and therefore more
-peaceful in his total nature; so that the problem of happiness
-and the problem of peace turn out at last to be
-inseparable.</p>
-
-<p>Souls, says Emerson, never meet; and it is true that a
-man never quite escapes from his solitude. That does not
-make the choice of direction any the less important. An
-infinite beckons to him on either hand. The one inspires
-the divine discontent, the other romantic restlessness.
-If instead of following the romantic lure he heeds the call
-from the opposite direction, he will not indeed attain to
-any perfect communion but he will be less solitary.
-Strictly speaking a man is never happy in the sense of
-being completely satisfied with the passing moment,<a name="FNanchor_289_289" id="FNanchor_289_289"></a><a href="#Footnote_289_289" class="fnanchor">[289]</a> or
-never, Dr. Johnson would add, except when he is drunk.
-The happiness of the sober and waking man resides, it
-may be, not in his content with the present moment but
-in the very effort that marks his passage from a lower to
-a higher ethical level.</p>
-
-<p>The happiness of which Rousseau dreamed, it has been
-made plain, was not this active and ethical happiness, but
-rather the passive enjoyment of the beautiful moment&mdash;the
-moment that he would like to have last forever. After
-seeking for the beautiful moment in the intoxication of
-love, he turned as we have seen to pantheistic revery.
-“As long as it lasts,” he says of a moment of this kind,
-“one is self-sufficing like God.” Yes, but it does not last,
-and when he wakes from his dream of communion with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
-nature, he is still solitary, still the prisoner of his ego.
-The pantheistic dreamer is passive in every sense. He is
-not working either according to the human or according
-to the natural law, and so is not gaining either in material
-or in ethical efficiency. In a world such as that in which
-we live this seems too much like picnicking on a battlefield.
-Rousseau could on occasion speak shrewdly on this
-point. He wrote to a youthful enthusiast who wished to
-come and live with him at Montmorency: “The first bit
-of advice I should like to give you is not to indulge in the
-taste you say you have for the contemplative life and
-which is only an indolence of the spirit reprehensible at
-every age and especially at yours. Man is not made to
-meditate but to act.”</p>
-
-<p>The contemplative life is then, according to Rousseau,
-the opposite of action. But to contemplate is according
-to an Aristotle or a Buddha to engage in the most important
-form of action, the form that leads to happiness.
-To identify leisure and the contemplative life with pantheistic
-revery, as Rousseau does, is to fall into one of the
-most vicious of confusions. Perhaps indeed the most important
-contrast one can reach in a subject of this kind
-is that between a wise strenuousness and a more or less
-wise passiveness, between the spiritual athlete and the
-cosmic loafer, between a Saint Paul, let us say, and a
-Walt Whitman.</p>
-
-<p>The spiritual idling and drifting of the Rousseauist
-would be less sinister if it did not coexist in the world of
-to-day with an intense material activity. The man who
-seeks happiness by work according to the natural law is
-to be rated higher than the man who seeks happiness in
-some form of emotional intoxication (including pantheistic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
-revery). He is not left unarmed, a helpless dreamer in
-the battle of life. The type of efficiency he is acquiring
-also helps him to keep at bay man’s great enemy, ennui.
-An Edison, we may suppose, who is drawn ever onward
-by the lure of wonder and curiosity and power, has little
-time to be bored. It is surely better to escape from the
-boredom of life after the fashion of Edison than after the
-fashion of Baudelaire.<a name="FNanchor_290_290" id="FNanchor_290_290"></a><a href="#Footnote_290_290" class="fnanchor">[290]</a></p>
-
-<p>I have already pointed out, however, the peril in a
-one-sided working of this kind. It makes man efficient
-without making him ethical. It stimulates rather than
-corrects a fearless, formless expansion on the human
-level. This inordinate reaching out beyond bounds is, as
-the great Greek poets saw with such clearness, an invitation
-to Nemesis. The misery that results from unrestraint,
-from failure to work according to the human law,
-is something different from mere pain and far more to be
-dreaded; just as the happiness that results from a right
-working according to the human law is something different
-from mere pleasure and far more worthy of pursuit.</p>
-
-<p>The present alliance between emotional romanticists
-and utilitarians<a name="FNanchor_291_291" id="FNanchor_291_291"></a><a href="#Footnote_291_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a> is a veritable menace to civilization itself.
-It does not follow, as I said in a previous chapter,
-because revery or “intuition of the creative flux” cannot
-take the place of leisure or meditation, that one must
-therefore condemn it utterly. It may like other forms of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>
-romanticism have a place on the recreative side of life.
-What finally counts is work according to either the human
-or the natural law, but man cannot always be working.
-He needs moments of relief from tension and concentration
-and even, it should seem, of semi-oblivion of
-his conscious self. As one of the ways of winning such moments
-of relaxation and partial forgetfulness much may
-be said for revery. In general one must grant the solace
-and rich source of poetry that is found in communion
-with nature even though the final emphasis be put on
-communion with man. It is no small thing to be, as
-Arnold says Wordsworth was, a “priest of the wonder
-and bloom of the world.” One cannot however grant the
-Wordsworthian that to be a priest of wonder is necessarily
-to be also a priest of wisdom. Thus to promote to
-the supreme and central place something that is legitimate
-in its own degree, but secondary, is to risk starting
-a sham religion.</p>
-
-<p>Those who have sought to set up a cult of love or
-beauty or science or humanity or country are open to
-the same objections as the votaries of nature. However
-important each of these things may be in its own place, it
-cannot properly be put in the supreme and central place
-for the simple reason that it does not involve any adequate
-conversion or discipline of man’s ordinary self to
-some ethical centre. I have tried to show that the sense of
-solitude or forlornness that is so striking a feature of
-romantic melancholy arises not only from a loss of hold
-on the traditional centres, but also from the failure of
-these new attempts at communion to keep their promises.
-The number of discomfitures of this kind in the
-period that has elapsed since the late eighteenth century,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
-suggests that this period was even more than most
-periods an age of sophistry. Every age has had its false
-teachers, but possibly no age ever had so many dubious
-moralists as this, an incomparable series of false prophets
-from Rousseau himself down to Nietzsche and Tolstoy.
-It remains to sum up in a closing chapter the results of
-my whole inquiry and at the same time to discuss somewhat
-more specifically the bearing of my whole point of
-view, especially the idea of work according to the human
-law, upon the present situation.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE PRESENT OUTLOOK</span></h2>
-
-<p>It has been my endeavor throughout this book to show
-that classic and romantic art, though both at their best
-highly imaginative, differ in the quality of the imagination.
-I pointed out in my first chapter that in his recoil
-from the intellectual romanticism of the Renaissance and
-the mediæval romanticism of actual adventure the neo-classicist
-came to rest his literary faith on “reason” (by
-which he meant either ordinary good sense or abstract
-reasoning), and then opposed this reason or judgment to
-imagination. This supposed opposition between reason
-and imagination was accepted by the romantic rebels
-against neo-classicism and has been an endless source
-of confusion to the present day. Though both neo-classicists
-and romanticists achieved much admirable work,
-work which is likely to have a permanent appeal, it is
-surely no small matter that they both failed on the
-whole to deal adequately with the imagination and its rôle
-whether in literature or life. Thus Dryden attributes the
-immortality of the Æneid to its being “a well-weighed
-judicious poem. Whereas poems which are produced
-by the vigor of imagination only have a gloss upon
-them at the first which time wears off, the works of judgment
-are like the diamond; the more they are polished,
-the more lustre they receive.”<a name="FNanchor_292_292" id="FNanchor_292_292"></a><a href="#Footnote_292_292" class="fnanchor">[292]</a> Read on and you will find
-that Dryden thus stresses judgment by way of protest
-against the Cavalier Marini and the imaginative unrestraint<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>
-that he and other intellectual romanticists display.
-Dryden thus obscures the fact that what gives the
-immortalizing touch to the Æneid is not mere judgment
-but imagination&mdash;a certain quality of imagination.
-Even the reader who is to enter properly into the spirit
-of Virgil needs more than judgment&mdash;he needs to possess
-in some measure the same quality of imagination.
-The romantic answer to the neo-classic distrust of the
-imagination was the apotheosis of the imagination, but
-without sufficient discrimination as to its quality, and
-this led only too often to an anarchy of the imagination&mdash;an
-anarchy associated, as we have seen, in the case of
-the Rousseauist, with emotion rather than with thought
-or action.</p>
-
-<p>The modern world has thus tended to oscillate between
-extremes in its attitude towards the imagination,
-so that we still have to turn to ancient Greece for the best
-examples of works in which the imagination is at once
-disciplined and supreme. Aristotle, I pointed out, is
-doing little more than give an account of this Greek
-practice when he says that the poet ranks higher than
-the historian because he achieves a more general truth,
-but that he can achieve this more general truth only by
-being a master of illusion. Art in which the illusion is
-not disciplined to the higher reality counts at best on
-the recreative side of life. “Imagination,” says Poe, “feeling
-herself for once unshackled, roamed at will among
-the ever-changing wonders of a shadowy and unstable
-land.”<a name="FNanchor_293_293" id="FNanchor_293_293"></a><a href="#Footnote_293_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a> To take seriously the creations of this type of
-imagination is to be on the way towards madness. Every
-madhouse, indeed, has inmates who are very imaginative<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span>
-in the fashion Poe here describes. We must not
-confuse the concentric or ethical with the eccentric imagination
-if we are to define rightly the terms classic and
-romantic or indeed to attain to sound criticism at all.
-My whole aim has been to show that a main stream of
-emotional sophistry that takes its rise in the eighteenth
-century and flows down through the nineteenth involves
-just such a confusion.</p>
-
-<p>The general distinction between the two types of
-imagination would seem sufficiently clear. To apply the
-distinction concretely is, it must be admitted, a task
-infinitely difficult and delicate, a task that calls for the
-utmost degree of the <i>esprit de finesse</i>. In any particular
-case there enters an element of vital novelty. The relation
-of this vital novelty to the ethical or permanent element
-in life is something that cannot be determined by any
-process of abstract reasoning or by any rule of thumb;
-it is a matter of immediate perception. The art of the
-critic is thus hedged about with peculiar difficulties. It
-does not follow that Aristotle himself because he has laid
-down sound principles in his Poetics, would always have
-been right in applying them. Our evidence on this point
-is as a matter of fact somewhat scanty.</p>
-
-<p>Having thus admitted the difficulty of the undertaking
-we may ourselves attempt a few concrete illustrations of
-how sound critical standards tended to suffer in connection
-with the romantic movement. Leaving aside for the
-moment certain larger aspects of the ethical imagination
-that I am going to discuss presently, let us confine ourselves
-to poetry. Inasmuch as the ethical imagination
-does not in itself give poetry but wisdom, various cases
-may evidently arise: a man may be wise without being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span>
-poetical; he may be poetical without being wise; he may
-be both wise and poetical.</p>
-
-<p>We may take as an example of the person who was
-wise without being poetical Dr. Johnson. Though most
-persons would grant that Dr. Johnson was not poetical,
-it is well to remember that this generalization has only
-the approximate truth that a literary generalization can
-have. The lines on Levet have been inserted and rightly
-in anthologies. If not on the whole poetical, Johnson
-was, as Boswell says, eminently fitted to be a “majestic
-teacher of moral and religious wisdom.” Few men
-have had a firmer grasp on the moral law or been freer
-from the various forms of sophistry that tend to obscure
-it. Unlike Socrates, however, of whom he reminds
-us at times by his ethical realism, Johnson rests his insight
-not on a positive but on a traditional basis. To say
-that Johnson was truly religious is only another way of
-saying that he was truly humble, and one of the reasons
-for his humility was his perception of the ease with which
-illusion in man passes over into delusion, and even into
-madness. His chapter on the “Dangerous Prevalence of
-Imagination” in “Rasselas” not only gives the key to
-that work but to much else in his writings. What he
-opposes to this dangerous prevalence of imagination is
-not a different type of imagination but the usual neo-classical
-reason or judgment or “sober probability.” His
-defence of wisdom against the gathering naturalistic sophistries
-of his time is therefore somewhat lacking in
-imaginative prestige. He seemed to be opposing innovation
-on purely formalistic and traditional grounds in an
-age which was more and more resolutely untraditional
-and which was determined above all to emancipate the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
-imagination from its strait-jacket of formalism. Keats
-would not have hesitated to rank Johnson among those
-who “blasphemed the bright Lyrist to his face.”</p>
-
-<p>Keats himself may serve as a type of the new imaginative
-spontaneity and of the new fullness and freshness
-of sensuous perception. If Johnson is wise without being
-poetical, Keats is poetical without being wise, and here
-again we need to remember that distinctions of this kind
-are only approximately true. Keats has written lines
-that have high seriousness. He has written other lines
-which without being wise seem to lay claim to wisdom&mdash;notably
-the lines in which, following Shaftesbury and
-other æsthetes, he identifies truth and beauty; an identification
-that was disproved for practical purposes at
-least as far back as the Trojan War. Helen was beautiful,
-but was neither good nor true. In general, however,
-Keats’s poetry is not sophistical. It is simply delightfully
-recreative. There are signs that Keats himself would not
-have been content in the long run with a purely recreative
-rôle&mdash;to be “the idle singer of an empty day.” Whether
-he would ever have achieved genuine ethical purpose is a
-question. In working out a wise view of life he did not,
-like Dante, have the support of a great and generally
-accepted tradition. It is not certain again that he would
-ever have developed the critical keenness that enabled
-a Sophocles to work out a wise view of life in a less traditional
-age than that of Dante. The evidence is rather
-that Keats would have succumbed, to his own poetical
-detriment, to some of the forms of sham wisdom current
-in his day, especially the new humanitarian evangel.<a name="FNanchor_294_294" id="FNanchor_294_294"></a><a href="#Footnote_294_294" class="fnanchor">[294]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In any case we may contrast Sophocles and Dante
-with Keats as examples of poets who were not merely
-poetical but wise&mdash;wise in the relative and imperfect
-sense in which it is vouchsafed to mortals to achieve
-wisdom. Sophocles and Dante are not perhaps more
-poetical than Keats&mdash;it is not easy to be more poetical
-than Keats. As Tennyson says, “there is something
-magic and of the innermost soul of poetry in almost everything
-he wrote.” Yet Sophocles and Dante are not only
-superior to Keats, but in virtue of the presence of the
-ethical imagination in their work, superior not merely
-in degree but in kind. Not that even Sophocles and Dante
-maintain themselves uniformly on the level of the ethical
-imagination. There are passages in Dante which
-are less imaginative than theological. Passages of this
-kind are even more numerous in Milton, a poet who on
-the whole is highly serious.<a name="FNanchor_295_295" id="FNanchor_295_295"></a><a href="#Footnote_295_295" class="fnanchor">[295]</a> It is in general easy to be
-didactic, hard to achieve ethical insight.</p>
-
-<p>If Keats is highly imaginative and poetic without on
-the whole rising to high seriousness or sinking to sophistry,
-Shelley, on the other hand, illustrates in his imaginative
-activity the confusion of values that was so fostered
-by romanticism. Here again I do not wish to be too
-absolute. Shelley has passages especially in his “Adonais”
-that are on a high level. Yet nothing is more certain
-than that the quality of his imagination is on the whole
-not ethical but Arcadian or pastoral. In the name of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
-Arcadia conceived as the “ideal” he refuses to face the
-facts of life. I have already spoken of the flimsiness of
-his “Prometheus Unbound” as a solution of the problem
-of evil. What is found in this play is the exact opposite
-of imaginative concentration on the human law.
-The imagination wanders irresponsibly in a region quite
-outside of normal human experience. We are hindered
-from enjoying the gorgeous iridescences of Shelley’s
-cloudland by Shelley’s own evident conviction that it
-is not a cloudland, an “intense inane,” but a true empyrean
-of the spirit. And our irritation at Shelley’s own
-confusion is further increased by the long train of his
-indiscreet admirers. Thus Professor C.H. Herford writes
-in the “Cambridge History of English Literature” that
-what Shelley has done in the “Prometheus Unbound,”
-is to give “magnificent expression to the faith of Plato
-and of Christ”!<a name="FNanchor_296_296" id="FNanchor_296_296"></a><a href="#Footnote_296_296" class="fnanchor">[296]</a> Such a statement in such a place is a
-veritable danger signal, an indication of some grave
-spiritual bewilderment in the present age. To show the
-inanity of these attempts to make a wise man of Shelley
-it is enough to compare him not with Plato and Christ,
-but with the poet whom he set out at once to continue
-and contradict&mdash;with Æschylus. The “Prometheus
-Bound” has the informing ethical imagination that the
-“Prometheus Unbound” lacks, and so in its total structure
-belongs to an entirely different order of art. Shelley,
-indeed, has admirable details. The romanticism of
-nympholeptic longing may almost be said to culminate,
-at least in England, in the passage I have already cited
-(“My soul is an enchanted boat”). There is no reason
-why in recreative moods one should not imagine on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>e’s
-soul an enchanted boat and float away in a musical rapture
-with the ideal dream companion towards Arcady.
-But to suppose that revery of this kind has anything to
-do with the faith of Plato and of Christ, is to fall from
-illusion into dangerous delusion.</p>
-
-<p>We may doubt whether if Shelley had lived longer he
-would ever have risen above emotional sophistry and
-become more ethical in the quality of his imagination.
-Such a progress from emotional sophistry to ethical insight
-we actually find in Goethe; and this is the last and
-most complex case we have to consider. Johnson, I have
-said, is wise without being poetical and Keats poetical
-without being wise; Sophocles is both poetical and wise,
-whereas Shelley is poetical, but with a taint of sophistry
-or sham wisdom. No such clear-cut generalization can be
-ventured about Goethe. I have already quoted Goethe’s
-own judgment on his “Werther” as weakness seeking to
-give itself the prestige of strength, and perhaps it would
-be possible to instance from his early writings even worse
-examples of a morbid emotionalism (e.g. “Stella”). How
-about “Faust” itself? Most Germans will simply dismiss
-such a question as profane. With Hermann Grimm they
-are ready to pronounce “Faust” the greatest work of the
-greatest poet of all times, and of all peoples. Yet it is not
-easy to overlook the sophistical element in both parts of
-“Faust.” I have already commented on those passages
-that would seem especially sophistical: the passage in
-which the devil is defined as the spirit that always says
-no strikes at the very root of any proper distinction between
-good and evil. The passage again in which Faust
-breaks down all precise discrimination in favor of mere
-emotional intoxication is an extreme example of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
-Rousseauistic art of “making madness beautiful.” The
-very conclusion of the whole poem, with its setting up of
-work according to the natural law as a substitute for work
-according to the human law, is an egregious piece of sham
-wisdom. The result of work according to the human law,
-of ethical efficiency in short, is an increasing serenity; and
-it is not clear that Faust is much calmer at the end of the
-poem than he is at the beginning. According to Dr. Santayana
-he is ready to carry into heaven itself his romantic
-restlessness&mdash;his desperate and feverish attempts to
-escape from ennui.<a name="FNanchor_297_297" id="FNanchor_297_297"></a><a href="#Footnote_297_297" class="fnanchor">[297]</a> Perhaps this is not the whole truth
-even in regard to “Faust”; and still less can we follow
-Dr. Santayana when he seems to discover in the whole
-work of Goethe only romantic restlessness. At the very
-time when Goethe was infecting others with the wild
-expansiveness of the new movement, he himself was beginning
-to strike out along an entirely different path.
-He writes in his Journal as early as 1778: “A more definite
-feeling of limitation and in consequence of true broadening.”
-Goethe here glimpses the truth that lies at the
-base of both humanism and religion. He saw that the
-romantic disease was the imaginative and emotional
-straining towards the unlimited (<i>Hang zum Unbegrenzten</i>),
-and in opposition to this unrestraint he was never
-tired of preaching the need of working within boundaries.
-It may be objected that Goethe is in somewhat the same
-case here as Rousseau: that the side of his work which
-has imaginative and emotional driving power and has
-therefore moved the world is of an entirely different
-order. We may reply that Goethe is at times both poetical
-and wise. Furthermore in his maxims and conversations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span>
-where he does not rise to the poetical level, he displays a
-higher quality of wisdom than Rousseau. At his best he
-shows an ethical realism worthy of Dr. Johnson, though
-in his attitude towards tradition he is less Johnsonian
-than Socratic. Like Socrates he saw on what terms a
-break with the past may be safely attempted. “Anything
-that emancipates the spirit,” he says, “without
-a corresponding growth in self-mastery, is pernicious.”
-We may be sure that if the whole modern experiment
-fails it will be because of the neglect of the truth contained
-in this maxim. Goethe also saw that a sound individualism
-must be rightly imaginative. He has occasional
-hints on the rôle of illusion in literature and life
-that go far beneath the surface.</p>
-
-<p>Though the mature Goethe, then, always stands for
-salvation by work, it is not strictly correct to say that it
-is work only according to the natural law. In Goethe at
-his best the imagination accepts the limitations imposed
-not merely by the natural, but also by the human law.
-However, we must admit that the humanistic Goethe
-has had few followers either in Germany or elsewhere,
-whereas innumerable persons have escaped from the imaginative
-unrestraint of the emotional romanticist, as
-Goethe himself likewise did, by the discipline of science.</p>
-
-<p>The examples I have chosen should suffice to show how
-my distinction between two main types of imagination&mdash;the
-ethical type that gives high seriousness to creative
-writing and the Arcadian or dalliant type that does not
-raise it above the recreative level&mdash;works out in practice.
-Some such distinction is necessary if we are to understand
-the imagination in its relation to the human law. But
-in order to grasp the present situation firmly we need<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span>
-also to consider the imagination in its relation to the
-natural law. I have just said that most men have escaped
-from the imaginative anarchy of the emotional romanticist
-through science. Now the man of science at his
-best is like the humanist at his best, at once highly imaginative
-and highly critical. By this coöperation of
-imagination and intellect they are both enabled to concentrate
-effectively on the facts, though on facts of a
-very different order. The imagination reaches out and
-perceives likenesses and analogies whereas the power in
-man that separates and discriminates and traces causes
-and effects tests in turn these likenesses and analogies as
-to their reality: for we can scarcely repeat too often that
-though the imagination gives unity it does not give reality.
-If we were all Aristotles or even Goethes we might
-concentrate imaginatively on both laws, and so be both
-scientific and humanistic: but as a matter of fact the
-ordinary man’s capacity for concentration is limited.
-After a spell of concentration on either law he aspires to
-what Aristotle calls “relief from tension.” Now the very
-conditions of modern life require an almost tyrannical
-concentration on the natural law. The problems that
-have been engaging more and more the attention of the
-Occident since the rise of the great Baconian movement
-have been the problems of power and speed and utility.
-The enormous mass of machinery that has been accumulated
-in the pursuit of these ends requires the closest
-attention and concentration if it is to be worked efficiently.
-At the same time the man of the West is not willing
-to admit that he is growing in power alone, he likes
-to think that he is growing also in wisdom. Only by keeping
-this situation in mind can we hope to understand how<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
-emotional romanticism has been able to develop into a
-vast system of sham spirituality. I have said that the
-Rousseauist wants unity without reality. If we are to
-move towards reality, the imagination must be controlled
-by the power of discrimination and the Rousseauist
-has repudiated this power as “false and secondary.”
-But a unity that lacks reality can scarcely be accounted
-wise. The Baconian, however, accepts this unity gladly.
-He has spent so much energy in working according to
-the natural law that he has no energy left for work according
-to the human law. By turning to the Rousseauist
-he can get the “relief from tension” that he needs
-and at the same time enjoy the illusion of receiving a
-vast spiritual illumination. Neither Rousseauist nor
-Baconian carry into the realm of the human law the keen
-analysis that is necessary to distinguish between genuine
-insight and some mere phantasmagoria of the emotions.
-I am speaking especially, of course, of the interplay of
-Rousseauistic and Baconian elements that appear in
-certain recent philosophies like that of Bergson. According
-to Bergson one becomes spiritual by throwing overboard
-both thought and action, and this is a very convenient
-notion of spirituality for those who wish to devote both
-thought and action to utilitarian and material ends. It
-is hard to see in Bergson’s intuition of the creative flux
-and perception of real duration anything more than the
-latest form of Rousseau’s transcendental idling. To
-work with something approaching frenzy according to the
-natural law and to be idle according to the human law
-must be accounted a rather one-sided view of life. The
-price the man of to-day has paid for his increase in power
-is, it should seem, an appalling superficiality in dealing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span>
-with the law of his own nature. What brings together
-Baconian and Rousseauist in spite of their surface differences
-is that they are both intent on the element of
-novelty. But if wonder is associated with the Many,
-wisdom is associated with the One. Wisdom and wonder
-are moving not in the same but in opposite directions.
-The nineteenth century may very well prove to have
-been the most wonderful and the least wise of centuries.
-The men of this period&mdash;and I am speaking of course of
-the main drift&mdash;were so busy being wonderful that they
-had no time, apparently, to be wise. Yet their extreme
-absorption in wonder and the manifoldness of things can
-scarcely be commended unless it can be shown that happiness
-also results from all this revelling in the element of
-change. The Rousseauist is not quite consistent on this
-point. At times he bids us boldly set our hearts on
-the transitory. <i>Aimez</i>, says Vigny, <i>ce que jamais on ne
-verra deux fois</i>. But the Rousseauist strikes perhaps a
-deeper chord when looking forth on a world of flux he
-utters the anguished exclamation of Leconte de Lisle:
-<i>Qu’est-ce que tout cela qui n’est pas éternel?</i> Even as
-one swallow, says Aristotle, does not make a spring,
-so no short time is enough to determine whether a man
-deserves to be called happy. The weakness of the romantic
-pursuit of novelty and wonder and in general of the
-philosophy of the beautiful moment&mdash;whether the
-erotic moment<a name="FNanchor_298_298" id="FNanchor_298_298"></a><a href="#Footnote_298_298" class="fnanchor">[298]</a> or the moment of cosmic revery&mdash;is that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span>
-it does not reckon sufficiently with the something deep
-down in the human breast that craves the abiding. To pin
-one’s hope of happiness to the fact that “the world is so
-full of a number of things” is an appropriate sentiment for
-a “Child’s Garden of Verse.” For the adult to maintain
-an exclusive Bergsonian interest in “the perpetual gushing
-forth of novelties” would seem to betray an inability
-to mature. The effect on a mature observer of an age so
-entirely turned from the One to the Many as that in
-which we are living must be that of a prodigious peripheral
-richness joined to a great central void.</p>
-
-<p>What leads the man of to-day to work with such energy
-according to the natural law and to be idle according
-to the human law is his intoxication with material success.
-A consideration that should therefore touch him is
-that in the long run not merely spiritual success or happiness,
-but material prosperity depend on an entirely
-different working. Let me revert here for a moment to
-my previous analysis: to work according to the human
-law is simply to rein in one’s impulses. Now the strongest
-of all the impulses is the will to power. The man who does
-not rein in his will to power and is at the same time very
-active according to the natural law is in a fair way to
-become an efficient megalomaniac. Efficient megalomania,
-whether developed in individuals of the same
-group or in whole national groups in their relations with
-one another, must lead sooner or later to war. The efficient
-megalomaniacs will proceed to destroy one another
-along with the material wealth to which they have sacrificed
-everything else; and then the meek, if there are any
-meek left, will inherit the earth.</p>
-
-<p>“If I am to judge by myself,” said an eighteenth-century<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span>
-Frenchman, “man is a stupid animal.” Man is
-not only a stupid animal in spite of his conceit of his own
-cleverness but we are here at the source of his stupidity.
-The source is the moral indolence that Buddha with his
-almost infallible sagacity defined long ago. In spite of the
-fact that his spiritual and in the long run his material
-success hinge on his ethical effort, man persists in dodging
-this effort, in seeking to follow the line of least or lesser
-resistance. An energetic material working does not mend
-but aggravate the failure to work ethically and is therefore
-especially stupid. Just this combination has in fact
-led to the crowning stupidity of the ages&mdash;the Great
-War. No more delirious spectacle has ever been witnessed
-than that of hundreds of millions of human beings
-using a vast machinery of scientific efficiency to turn life
-into a hell for one another. It is hard to avoid concluding
-that we are living in a world that has gone wrong on first
-principles, a world that, in spite of all the warnings of the
-past, has allowed itself to be caught once more in the
-terrible naturalistic trap. The dissolution of civilization
-with which we are threatened is likely to be worse in
-some respects than that of Greece or Rome in view of the
-success that has been attained in “perfecting the mystery
-of murder.” Various traditional agencies are indeed
-still doing much to chain up the beast in man. Of these
-the chief is no doubt the Church. But the leadership of
-the Occident is no longer here. The leaders have succumbed
-in greater or less degree to naturalism<a name="FNanchor_299_299" id="FNanchor_299_299"></a><a href="#Footnote_299_299" class="fnanchor">[299]</a> and so
-have been tampering with the moral law. That the brutal
-imperialist who brooks no obstacle to his lust for dominion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>
-has been tampering with this law goes without saying;
-but the humanitarian, all adrip with brotherhood and
-profoundly convinced of the loveliness of his own soul,
-has been tampering with it also, and in a more dangerous
-way for the very reason that it is less obvious. This tampering
-with the moral law, or what amounts to the same
-thing, this overriding of the veto power in man, has been
-largely a result, though not a necessary result, of the
-rupture with the traditional forms of wisdom. The Baconian
-naturalist repudiated the past because he wished to
-be more positive and critical, to plant himself upon the
-facts. Yet the veto power is itself a fact,&mdash;the weightiest
-with which man has to reckon. The Rousseauistic
-naturalist threw off traditional control because he wished
-to be more imaginative. Yet without the veto power the
-imagination falls into sheer anarchy. Both Baconian and
-Rousseauist were very impatient of any outer authority
-that seemed to stand between them and their own perceptions.
-Yet the veto power is nothing abstract, nothing
-that one needs to take on hearsay, but is very immediate.
-The naturalistic leaders may be proved wrong without
-going beyond their own principles, and their wrongness is
-of a kind to wreck civilization.</p>
-
-<p>I have no quarrel, it is scarcely necessary to add,
-either with the man of science or the romanticist when
-they keep in their proper place. As soon however as they
-try, whether separately or in unison, to set up some substitute
-for humanism or religion, they should be at once
-attacked, the man of science for not being sufficiently
-positive and critical, the romanticist for not being rightly
-imaginative.</p>
-
-<p>This brings us back to the problem of the ethical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span>
-imagination&mdash;the imagination that has accepted the veto
-power&mdash;which I promised a moment ago to treat in its
-larger aspects. This problem is indeed in a peculiar sense
-the problem of civilization itself. A curious circumstance
-should be noted here: a civilization that rests on dogma
-and outer authority cannot afford to face the whole truth
-about the imagination and its rôle. A civilization in which
-dogma and outer authority have been undermined by the
-critical spirit, not only can but must do this very thing
-if it is to continue at all. Man, a being ever changing and
-living in a world of change, is, as I said at the outset,
-cut off from immediate access to anything abiding and
-therefore worthy to be called real, and condemned to live
-in an element of fiction or illusion. Yet civilization must
-rest on the recognition of something abiding. It follows
-that the truths on the survival of which civilization depends
-cannot be conveyed to man directly but only
-through imaginative symbols. It seems hard, however,
-for man to analyze critically this disability under which
-he labors, and, facing courageously the results of his
-analysis, to submit his imagination to the necessary control.
-He consents to limit his expansive desires only when
-the truths that are symbolically true are presented to him
-as literally true. The salutary check upon his imagination
-is thus won at the expense of the critical spirit. The pure
-gold of faith needs, it should seem, if it is to gain currency,
-to be alloyed with credulity. But the civilization that
-results from humanistic or religious control tends to
-produce the critical spirit. Sooner or later some Voltaire
-utters his fatal message:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse"><i>Les prêtres ne sont pas ce qu’un vain peuple pense;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Nôtre crédulité fait toute leur science.</i></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The emancipation from credulous belief leads to an
-anarchic individualism that tends in turn to destroy
-civilization. There is some evidence in the past that it is
-not quite necessary to run through this cycle. Buddha,
-for example, was very critical; he had a sense of the flux
-and evanescence of all things and so of universal illusion
-keener by far than that of Anatole France; at the same
-time he had ethical standards even sterner than those of
-Dr. Johnson. This is a combination that the Occident has
-rarely seen and that it perhaps needs to see. At the very
-end of his life Buddha uttered words that deserve to be
-the Magna Charta of the true individualist: “Therefore,
-O Ananda, be ye lamps unto yourselves. Be ye refuges
-unto yourselves. Look to no outer refuge. Hold fast as a
-refuge unto the Law (<i>Dhamma</i>).”<a name="FNanchor_300_300" id="FNanchor_300_300"></a><a href="#Footnote_300_300" class="fnanchor">[300]</a> A man may safely go
-into himself if what he finds there is not, like Rousseau,
-his own emotions, but like Buddha, the law of righteousness.</p>
-
-<p>Men were induced to follow Rousseau in his surrender
-to the emotions, it will be remembered, because that
-seemed the only alternative to a hard and dry rationalism.
-The rationalists of the Enlightenment were for the
-most part Cartesians, but Kant himself is in his main
-trend a rationalist. The epithet critical usually applied to
-his philosophy is therefore a misnomer. For to solve the
-critical problem&mdash;the relation between appearance and
-reality&mdash;it is necessary to deal adequately with the rôle
-of the imagination and this Kant has quite failed to do.<a name="FNanchor_301_301" id="FNanchor_301_301"></a><a href="#Footnote_301_301" class="fnanchor">[301]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span>
-Modern philosophy is in general so unsatisfactory because
-it has raised the critical problem without carrying it
-through; it is too critical to receive wisdom through the
-traditional channels and not critical enough to achieve
-insight, and so has been losing more and more its human
-relevancy, becoming in the words of one of its recent
-votaries, a “narrow and unfruitful eccentricity.” The
-professional philosophers need to mend their ways and
-that speedily if the great world is not to pass them disdainfully
-by and leave them to play their mysterious
-little game among themselves. We see one of the most
-recent groups, the new realists, flat on their faces before
-the man of science&mdash;surely an undignified attitude for a
-philosopher. It is possible to look on the kind of knowledge
-that science gives as alone real only by dodging the
-critical problem&mdash;the problem as to the trustworthiness
-of the human instrument through which all knowledge is
-received&mdash;and it would be easy to show, if this were the
-place to go into the more technical aspects of the question,
-that the new realists have been doing just this&mdash;whether
-through sheer naïveté or metaphysical despair I
-am unable to say. The truly critical observer is unable
-to discover anything real in the absolute sense since
-everything is mixed with illusion. In this absolute sense
-the man of science must ever be ignorant of the reality
-behind the shows of nature. The new realist is, however,
-justified relatively in thinking that the only thing real in
-the view of life that has prevailed of late has been its
-working according to the natural law and the fruits of this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span>
-working. The self-deception begins when he assumes that
-there can be no other working. What I have myself been
-opposing to naturalistic excess, such as appears in the
-new realism, is insight; but insight is in itself only a
-word, and unless it can be shown to have its own working
-and its own fruits, entirely different from those of work
-according to the natural law, the positivist at all events
-will have none of it.</p>
-
-<p>The positivist will not only insist upon fruits, but will
-rate these fruits themselves according to their bearing
-upon his main purpose. Life, says Bergson, can have no
-purpose in the human sense of the word.<a name="FNanchor_302_302" id="FNanchor_302_302"></a><a href="#Footnote_302_302" class="fnanchor">[302]</a> The positivist
-will reply to Bergson and to the Rousseauistic drifter in
-general, in the words of Aristotle, that the end is the chief
-thing of all and that the end of ends is happiness. To the
-Baconian who wants work and purpose but according to
-the natural law alone, the complete positivist will reply
-that happiness cannot be shown to result from this one-sided
-working; that in itself it affords no escape from the
-misery of moral solitude, that we move towards true
-communion and so towards peace and happiness only
-by work according to the human law. Now the more individualistic
-we are, I have been saying, the more we must
-depend for the apprehension of this law on the imagination,
-the imagination, let me hasten to add, supplemented
-by the intellect. It is not enough to put the brakes on the
-natural man&mdash;and that is what work according to the
-human law means&mdash;we must do it intelligently. Right
-knowing must here as elsewhere precede right doing.
-Even a Buddha admitted that at one period in his life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
-he had not been intelligent in his self-discipline. I need
-only to amplify here what I have said in a previous chapter
-about the proper use of the “false secondary power”
-by those who wish to be either religious or humanistic
-in a positive fashion. They will employ their analytical
-faculties, not in building up some abstract system,
-but in discriminating between the actual data of
-experience with a view to happiness, just as the man of
-science at his best employs the same faculties in discriminating
-between the data of experience with a view to
-power and utility.</p>
-
-<p>I have pointed out another important use of the analytical
-intellect in its relation to the imagination. Since the
-imagination by itself gives unity but does not give reality,
-it is possible to discover whether a unification of life
-has reality only by subjecting it to the keenest analysis.
-Otherwise what we take to be wisdom may turn out to be
-only an empty dream. To take as wise something that is
-unreal is to fall into sophistry. For a man like Rousseau
-whose imagination was in its ultimate quality not ethical
-at all but overwhelmingly idyllic to set up as an inspired
-teacher was to become an arch-sophist. Whether or not
-he was sincere in his sophistry is a question which the
-emotionalist is very fond of discussing, but which the
-sensible person will dismiss as somewhat secondary.
-Sophistry of all kinds always has a powerful ally in man’s
-moral indolence. It is so pleasant to let one’s self go and
-at the same time deem one’s self on the way to wisdom.
-We need to keep in mind the special quality of Rousseau’s
-sophistry if we wish to understand a very extraordinary
-circumstance during the past century. During
-this period men were moving steadily towards the naturalistic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>
-level, where the law of cunning and the law of force
-prevail, and at the same time had the illusion&mdash;or at
-least multitudes had the illusion&mdash;that they were moving
-towards peace and brotherhood. The explanation
-is found in the endless tricks played upon the uncritical
-and still more upon the half-critical by the Arcadian
-imagination.</p>
-
-<p>The remedy is not only a more stringent criticism, but,
-as I have tried to make plain in this whole work, in an
-age of sophistry, like the present, criticism itself amounts
-largely to that art of inductive defining which it is the
-great merit of Socrates, according to Aristotle,<a name="FNanchor_303_303" id="FNanchor_303_303"></a><a href="#Footnote_303_303" class="fnanchor">[303]</a> to have
-devised and brought to perfection. Sophistry flourishes,
-as Socrates saw, on the confused and ambiguous use of
-general terms; and there is an inexhaustible source of
-such ambiguities and confusions in the very duality of
-human nature. The word nature itself may serve as an
-illustration. We may take as a closely allied example the
-word progress. Man may progress according to either the
-human or the natural law. Progress according to the natural
-law has been so rapid since the rise of the Baconian
-movement that it has quite captivated man’s imagination
-and stimulated him to still further concentration and
-effort along naturalistic lines. The very magic of the word
-progress seems to blind him to the failure to progress
-according to the human law. The more a word refers to
-what is above the strictly material level, the more it
-is subject to the imagination and therefore to sophistication.
-It is not easy to sophisticate the word horse, it is
-only too easy to sophisticate the word justice. One may
-affirm, indeed, not only that man is governed by his imagination<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
-but that in all that belongs to his own special
-domain <i>the imagination itself is governed by words</i>.<a name="FNanchor_304_304" id="FNanchor_304_304"></a><a href="#Footnote_304_304" class="fnanchor">[304]</a></p>
-
-<p>We should not therefore surrender our imaginations
-to a general term until it has been carefully defined, and
-to define it carefully we need usually to practice upon it
-what Socrates would call a dichotomy. I have just been
-dichotomizing or “cutting in two” the word progress.
-When the two main types of progress, material and
-moral, have been discriminated in their fruits, the positivist
-will proceed to rate these fruits according to their
-relevancy to his main goal&mdash;the goal of happiness. The
-person who is thus fortified by a Socratic dialectic will be
-less ready to surrender his imagination to the first sophist
-who urges him to be “progressive.” He will wish to make
-sure first that he is not progressing towards the edge of a
-precipice.</p>
-
-<p>Rousseau would have us get rid of analysis in favor of
-the “heart.” No small part of my endeavor in this work
-and elsewhere has been to show the different meanings
-that may attach to the term heart (and the closely allied
-terms “soul” and “intuition”)&mdash;meanings that are a
-world apart, when tested by their fruits. Heart may refer
-to outer perception and the emotional self or to inner
-perception and the ethical self. The heart of Pascal is not
-the heart of Rousseau. With this distinction once obliterated
-the way is open for the Rousseauistic corruption of
-such words as virtue and conscience, and this is to fling
-wide the door to every manner of confusion. The whole
-vocabulary that is properly applicable only to the supersensuous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span>
-realm is then transferred to the region of the
-subrational. The impulsive self proceeds to cover its
-nakedness with all these fair phrases as it would with
-a garment. A recent student of war-time psychology asks:
-“Is it that the natural man in us has been masquerading
-as the spiritual man by hiding himself under splendid
-words&mdash;courage, patriotism, justice&mdash;and now he rises
-up and glares at us with blood-red eyes?” That is precisely
-what has been happening.</p>
-
-<p>But after all the heart in any sense of the word is controlled
-by the imagination, so that a still more fundamental
-dichotomy, perhaps the most fundamental of all, is
-that of the imagination itself. We have seen how often
-the Arcadian dreaming of the emotional naturalist has
-been labelled the “ideal.” Our views of this type of imagination
-will therefore determine our views of much that
-now passes current as idealism. Now the term idealist
-may have a sound meaning: it may designate the man
-who is realistic according to the human law. But to be an
-idealist in Shelley’s sense or that of innumerable other
-Rousseauists is to fall into sheer unreality. This type of
-idealist shrinks from the sharp discriminations of the
-critic: they are like the descent of a douche of ice-water
-upon his hot illusions. But it is pleasanter, after all, to be
-awakened by a douche of ice-water than by an explosion
-of dynamite under the bed; and that has been the frequent
-fate of the romantic idealist. It is scarcely safe to
-neglect any important aspect of reality in favor of one’s
-private dream, even if this dream be dubbed the ideal.
-The aspect of reality that one is seeking to exclude finally
-comes crashing through the walls of the ivory tower and
-abolishes the dream and at times the dreamer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The transformation of the Arcadian dreamer into the
-Utopist is a veritable menace to civilization. The ends
-that the Utopist proposes are often in themselves desirable
-and the evils that he denounces are real. But when we
-come to scrutinize critically his means, what we find is not
-a firm grip on the ascertained facts of human nature but
-what Bagehot calls the feeble idealities of the romantic
-imagination. Moreover various Utopists may come together
-as to what they wish to destroy, which is likely to
-include the whole existing social order; but what they
-wish to erect on the ruins of this order will be found to
-be not only in dreamland, but in different dreamlands.
-For with the elimination of the veto power from personality&mdash;the
-only power that can pull men back to some
-common centre&mdash;the ideal will amount to little more
-than the projection of this or that man’s temperament
-upon the void. In a purely temperamental world an
-affirmative reply may be given to the question of Euryalus
-in Virgil: “Is each man’s God but his own fell desire?”
-(<i>An sua cuique deus fit dira cupido?</i>)</p>
-
-<p>The task of the Socratic critic at the present time is,
-then, seen to consist largely in stripping idealistic disguises
-from egoism, in exposing what I have called sham
-spirituality. If the word spirituality means anything, it
-must imply, it should seem, some degree of escape from
-the ordinary self, an escape that calls in turn for effort
-according to the human law. Even when he is not an open
-and avowed advocate of a “wise passiveness,” the Rousseauistic
-idealist is only too manifestly not making any
-such effort&mdash;it would interfere with his passion for self-expression
-which is even more deeply rooted in him than
-his passion for saving society. He inclines like Rousseau<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span>
-to look upon every constraint<a name="FNanchor_305_305" id="FNanchor_305_305"></a><a href="#Footnote_305_305" class="fnanchor">[305]</a> whether from within or
-from without as incompatible with liberty. A right definition
-of liberty is almost as important as a right definition
-of imagination and derives from it very directly. Where
-in our anarchical age will such a definition be found, a
-definition that is at once modern and in accord with the
-psychological facts? “A man has only to declare himself
-free,” says Goethe, “and he will at once feel himself
-dependent. If he ventures to declare himself dependent,
-he will feel himself free.” In other words he is not free to do
-whatever he pleases unless he wishes to enjoy the freedom
-of the lunatic, but only to adjust himself to the
-reality of either the natural or the human law. A progressive
-adjustment to the human law gives ethical efficiency,
-and this is the proper corrective of material efficiency,
-and not love alone as the sentimentalist is so fond
-of preaching. Love is another word that cries aloud for
-Socratic treatment.</p>
-
-<p>A liberty that means only emancipation from outer
-control will result, I have tried to show, in the most
-dangerous form of anarchy&mdash;anarchy of the imagination.
-On the degree of our perception of this fact will
-hinge the soundness of our use of another general term&mdash;democracy.
-We should beware above all of surrendering
-our imaginations to this word until it has been hedged
-about on every side with discriminations that have behind
-them all the experience of the past with this form of
-government. Only in this way may the democrat know
-whether he is aiming at anything real or merely dreaming
-of the golden age. Here as elsewhere there are pitfalls<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span>
-manifold for the uncritical enthusiast. A democracy that
-produces in sufficient numbers sound individualists who
-look up imaginatively to standards set above their ordinary
-selves, may well deserve enthusiasm. A democracy,
-on the other hand, that is not rightly imaginative, but is
-impelled by vague emotional intoxications, may mean all
-kinds of lovely things in dreamland, but in the real world
-it will prove an especially unpleasant way of returning
-to barbarism. It is a bad sign that Rousseau, who is more
-than any other one person the father of radical democracy,
-is also the first of the great anti-intellectualists.</p>
-
-<p>Enough has been said to show the proper rôle of the
-secondary power of analysis that the Rousseauist looks
-upon with so much disfavor. It is the necessary auxiliary
-of the art of defining that can alone save us in an untraditional
-age from receiving some mere phantasmagoria
-of the intellect or emotions as a radiant idealism. A Socratic
-dialectic of this kind is needed at such a time not
-only to dissipate sophistry but as a positive support to
-wisdom. I have raised the question in my Introduction
-whether the wisdom that is needed just now should be
-primarily humanistic or religious. The preference I have
-expressed for a positive and critical humanism I wish to
-be regarded as very tentative. In the dark situation that
-is growing up in the Occident, all genuine humanism and
-religion, whether on a traditional or a critical basis,
-should be welcome. I have pointed out that traditional
-humanism and religion conflict in certain respects, that
-it is difficult to combine the imitation of Horace with the
-imitation of Christ. This problem does not disappear entirely
-when humanism and religion are dealt with critically
-and is indeed one of the most obscure that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>
-thinker has to face. The honest thinker, whatever his own
-preference, must begin by admitting that though religion
-can get along without humanism, humanism cannot get
-along without religion. The reason has been given by
-Burke in pointing out the radical defect of Rousseau:
-the whole ethical life of man has its root in humility. As
-humility diminishes, conceit or vain imagining rushes in
-almost automatically to take its place. Under these circumstances
-decorum, the supreme virtue of the humanist,
-is in danger of degenerating into some art of going
-through the motions. Such was only too often the decorum
-of the French drawing-room, and such we are told,
-has frequently been the decorum of the Chinese humanist.
-Yet the decorum of Confucius himself was not only genuine
-but he has put the case for the humanist with his
-usual shrewdness. “I venture to ask about death,” one of
-his disciples said to him. “While you do not know life,”
-Confucius replied, “how can you know about death?”<a name="FNanchor_306_306" id="FNanchor_306_306"></a><a href="#Footnote_306_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a></p>
-
-<p>The solution of this problem as to the relation between
-humanism and religion, so far as a solution can be found,
-lies in looking upon them both as only different stages
-in the same path. Humanism should have in it an element
-of religious insight: it is possible to be a humble and
-meditative humanist. The type of the man of the world
-who is not a mere worldling is not only attractive in itself
-but has actually been achieved in the West, though not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span>
-perhaps very often, from the Greeks down. Chinese who
-should be in a position to know affirm again that, alongside
-many corrupt mandarins, a certain number of true
-Confucians<a name="FNanchor_307_307" id="FNanchor_307_307"></a><a href="#Footnote_307_307" class="fnanchor">[307]</a> have been scattered through the centuries
-from the time of the sage to the present.</p>
-
-<p>If humanism may be religious, religion may have its
-humanistic side. I have said, following Aristotle, that the
-law of measure does not apply to the religious life, but
-this saying is not to be understood in an absolute sense.
-Buddha is continually insisting on the middle path in the
-religious life itself. The resulting urbanity in Buddha and
-his early followers in India is perhaps the closest approach
-that that very unhumanistic land has ever made
-to humanism.</p>
-
-<p>It is right here in this joining of humanism and religion
-that Aristotle, at least the Aristotle that has come
-down to us, does not seem altogether adequate. He fails
-to bring out sufficiently the bond between the meditative
-or religious life that he describes at the end of his “Ethics”
-and the humanistic life or life of mediation to which
-most of this work is devoted. An eminent French authority
-on Aristotle,<a name="FNanchor_308_308" id="FNanchor_308_308"></a><a href="#Footnote_308_308" class="fnanchor">[308]</a> complains that this separation of the
-two lives encouraged the ascetic excess of the Middle
-Ages, the undue spurning of the world in favor of mystic
-contemplation. I am struck rather by the danger of leaving
-the humanistic life without any support in religion.
-In a celebrated passage,<a name="FNanchor_309_309" id="FNanchor_309_309"></a><a href="#Footnote_309_309" class="fnanchor">[309]</a> Aristotle says that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>
-“magnanimous” man or ideal gentleman sees all things including
-himself proportionately: he puts himself neither
-too high nor too low. And this is no doubt true so far as
-other men are concerned. But does the magnanimous
-man put human nature itself in its proper place? Does
-he feel sufficiently its nothingness and helplessness, its
-dependence on a higher power? No one, indeed, who gets
-beyond words and outer forms would maintain that humility
-is a Christian monopoly. Pindar is far more humble<a name="FNanchor_310_310" id="FNanchor_310_310"></a><a href="#Footnote_310_310" class="fnanchor">[310]</a>
-than Aristotle, as humble, one might almost maintain,
-as the austere Christian.</p>
-
-<p>A humanism sufficiently grounded in humility is not
-only desirable at all times but there are reasons for thinking
-that it would be especially desirable to-day. In the
-first place, it would so far as the emotional naturalist is
-concerned raise a clear-cut issue. The naturalist of this
-type denies rather than corrupts humanism. He is the
-foe of compromise and inclines to identify mediation
-and mediocrity. On the other hand, he corrupts rather
-than denies religion, turning meditation into pantheistic
-revery and in general setting up a subtle parody of what
-is above the ordinary rational level in terms of the subrational.
-On their own showing Rousseau and his followers
-are extremists,<a name="FNanchor_311_311" id="FNanchor_311_311"></a><a href="#Footnote_311_311" class="fnanchor">[311]</a> and even more effective perhaps than
-to attack them directly for their sham religion would be
-to maintain against them that thus to violate the law
-of measure is to cease to be human.</p>
-
-<p>Furthermore, a critical humanism would appear to be
-the proper corrective of the other main forms of naturalistic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span>
-excess at the present time&mdash;the one-sided devotion
-to physical science. What keeps the man of science from
-being himself a humanist is not his science but his pseudo-science,
-and also the secret push for power and prestige
-that he shares with other men. The reasons for putting
-humanistic truth above scientific truth are not metaphysical
-but very practical: the discipline that helps a man
-to self-mastery is found to have a more important bearing
-on his happiness than the discipline that helps him to a
-mastery of physical nature. If scientific discipline is not
-supplemented by a truly humanistic or religious discipline
-the result is unethical science, and unethical science
-is perhaps the worst monster that has yet been turned
-loose on the race. Man in spite of what I have termed his
-stupidity, his persistent evasion of the main issue, the
-issue of his own happiness, will awaken sooner or later
-to the fearful evil he has already suffered from a science
-that has arrogated to itself what does not properly belong
-to it; and then science may be as unduly depreciated as it
-has, for the past century or two, been unduly magnified;
-so that in the long run it is in the interest of science itself
-to keep in its proper place, which is below both humanism
-and religion.</p>
-
-<p>It would be possible to frame in the name of insight an
-indictment against science that would make the indictment
-Rousseau has framed against it in the name of
-instinct seem mild. The critical humanist, however, will
-leave it to others to frame such an indictment. Nothing
-is more foreign to his nature than every form of obscurantism.
-He is ready indeed to point out that the man of
-science has in common with him at least one important
-idea&mdash;the idea of habit, though its scientific form seems<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span>
-to him very incomplete. One may illustrate from perhaps
-the best known recent treatment of the subject, that of
-James in his “Psychology.” It is equally significant that
-the humanist can agree with nearly every line of James’s
-chapter on habit and that he disagrees very gravely with
-James in his total tendency. That is because James shows
-himself, as soon as he passes from the naturalistic to the
-humanistic level, wildly romantic. Even when dealing
-with the “Varieties of Religious Experience” he is plainly
-more preoccupied with the intensity than with the centrality
-of this experience.<a name="FNanchor_312_312" id="FNanchor_312_312"></a><a href="#Footnote_312_312" class="fnanchor">[312]</a> He is obsessed with the idea
-that comes down to him straight from the age of original
-genius that to be at the centre is to be commonplace. In
-a letter to C. E. Norton (June 30, 1904) James praises
-Ruskin’s Letters and adds: “Mere sanity is the most
-philistine and at bottom unessential of a man’s attributes.”
-“Mere sanity” is not to be thus dismissed, because
-to lack sanity is to be headed towards misery and
-even madness. “Ruskin’s,” says Norton, who was in a
-position to know, “was essentially one of the saddest of
-lives.”<a name="FNanchor_313_313" id="FNanchor_313_313"></a><a href="#Footnote_313_313" class="fnanchor">[313]</a> Is a man to live one of the saddest of lives merely
-to gratify romantic lovers of the vivid and picturesque
-like James?</p>
-
-<p>However, if the man of science holds fast to the results
-reached by James and others regarding habit and at the
-same time avoids James’s romantic fallacies he might perceive
-the possibility of extending the idea of habit beyond<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span>
-the naturalistic level; and the way would then be
-open for an important coöperation between him and the
-humanist. Humanists themselves, it must be admitted,
-even critical humanists, have diverged somewhat in
-their attitude towards habit, and that from the time of
-Socrates and Aristotle. I have been dwelling thus far on
-the indispensableness of a keen Socratic dialectic and of
-the right knowledge it brings for those who aspire to be
-critical humanists. But does right knowing in itself suffice
-to ensure right doing? Socrates and Plato with their
-famous identification of knowledge and virtue would seem
-to reply in the affirmative. Aristotle has the immediate
-testimony of consciousness on his side when he remarks
-simply regarding this identification: The facts are otherwise.<a name="FNanchor_314_314" id="FNanchor_314_314"></a><a href="#Footnote_314_314" class="fnanchor">[314]</a>
-No experience is sadder or more universal than that
-of the failure of right knowledge to secure right performance:
-so much so that the austere Christian has been
-able to maintain with some plausibility that all the
-knowledge in the world is of no avail without a special
-divine succor. Now the Aristotelian agrees with the Christian
-that mere knowledge is insufficient: conversion is
-also necessary. He does not incline, however, like the
-austere Christian to look for conversion to “thunderclaps
-and visible upsets of grace.” Without denying necessarily
-these pistol-shot transformations of human nature he
-conceives of man’s turning away from his ordinary self&mdash;and
-here he is much nearer in temper to the man of
-science&mdash;as a gradual process. This gradual conversion
-the Aristotelian hopes to achieve by work according to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span>
-the human law. Now right knowledge though it supplies
-the norm, is not in itself this working, which consists in
-the actual pulling back of impulse. But an act of this kind
-to be effective must be repeated. A habit is thus formed
-until at last the new direction given to the natural man
-becomes automatic and unconscious. The humanistic
-worker may thus acquire at last the spontaneity in right
-doing that the beautiful soul professes to have received
-as a free gift from “nature.” Confucius narrates the
-various stages of knowledge and moral effort through
-which he had passed from the age of fifteen and concludes:
-“At seventy I could follow what my heart desired
-without transgressing the law of measure.”<a name="FNanchor_315_315" id="FNanchor_315_315"></a><a href="#Footnote_315_315" class="fnanchor">[315]</a></p>
-
-<p>The keener the observer the more likely he is to be
-struck by the empire of habit. Habit, as Wellington said,
-is ten times nature, and is indeed so obviously a second
-nature that many of the wise have suspected that nature
-herself is only a first habit.<a name="FNanchor_316_316" id="FNanchor_316_316"></a><a href="#Footnote_316_316" class="fnanchor">[316]</a> Now Aristotle who is open
-to criticism, it may be, on the side of humility, still remains
-incomparable among the philosophers of the world
-for his treatment of habit on the humanistic level. Any
-one who wishes to learn how to become moderate and
-sensible and decent can do no better even at this late day
-than to steep himself in the “Nicomachean Ethics.”</p>
-
-<p>One of the ultimate contrasts that presents itself in a
-subject of this kind is that between habit as conceived by
-Aristotle and nature as conceived by Rousseau. The
-first great grievance of the critical humanist against
-Rousseau is that he set out to be an individualist and at
-the same time attacked analysis, which is indispensable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span>
-if one is to be a sound individualist. The second great
-grievance of the humanist is that Rousseau sought to discredit
-habit which is necessary if right analysis is to be
-made effective. “The only habit the child should be
-allowed to form,” says Rousseau, “is that of forming no
-habit.”<a name="FNanchor_317_317" id="FNanchor_317_317"></a><a href="#Footnote_317_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a> How else is the child to follow his bent or
-genius and so arrive at full self-expression? The point
-I am bringing up is of the utmost gravity, for Rousseau
-is by common consent the father of modern education.
-To eliminate from education the idea of a progressive
-adjustment to a human law, quite apart from temperament,
-may be to imperil civilization itself. For civilization
-(another word that is sadly in need of Socratic defining)
-may be found to consist above all in an orderly
-transmission of right habits; and the chief agency for
-securing such a transmission must always be education,
-by which I mean far more of course than mere formal
-schooling.</p>
-
-<p>Rousseau’s repudiation of habit is first of all, it should
-be pointed out, perfectly chimerical. The trait of the
-child to which the sensible educator will give chief attention
-is not his spontaneity, but his proneness to imitate.
-In the absence of good models the child will imitate bad
-ones, and so, long before the age of intelligent choice and
-self-determination, become the prisoner of bad habits.
-Men, therefore, who aim at being civilized must come
-together, work out a convention in short, regarding the
-habits they wish transmitted to the young. A great civilization
-is in a sense only a great convention. A sane individualist
-does not wish to escape from convention in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span>
-itself; he merely remembers that no convention is final&mdash;that
-it is always possible to improve the quality of the
-convention in the midst of which he is living, and that it
-should therefore be held flexibly. He would oppose no
-obstacles to those who are rising above the conventional
-level, but would resist firmly those who are sinking beneath
-it. It is much easier to determine practically
-whether one has to do with an ascent or a descent (even
-though the descent be rapturous like that of the Rousseauist)
-than our anarchical individualists are willing
-to acknowledge.</p>
-
-<p>The notion that in spite of the enormous mass of experience
-that has been accumulated in both East and West
-we are still without light as to the habits that make for
-moderation and good sense and decency, and that education
-is therefore still purely a matter of exploration
-and experiment is one that may be left to those who are
-suffering from an advanced stage of naturalistic intoxication&mdash;for
-example, to Professor John Dewey and his
-followers. From an ethical point of view a child has the
-right to be born into a cosmos, and not, as is coming to
-be more and more the case under such influences, pitch-forked
-into chaos. But the educational radical, it may be
-replied, does stress the idea of habit; and it is true that he
-would have the young acquire the habits that make for
-material efficiency. This, however, does not go beyond
-Rousseau who came out very strongly for what we should
-call nowadays vocational training.<a name="FNanchor_318_318" id="FNanchor_318_318"></a><a href="#Footnote_318_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a> It is the adjustment
-to the human law against which Rousseau and all the
-Rousseauists are recalcitrant.</p>
-
-<p>Self-expression and vocational training combined in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span>
-various proportions and tempered by the spirit of “service,”
-are nearly the whole of the new education. But
-I have already said that it is not possible to extract from
-any such compounding of utilitarian and romantic elements,
-with the resulting material efficiency and ethical
-inefficiency, a civilized view of life. It is right here indeed
-in the educational field that concerted opposition
-to the naturalistic conspiracy against civilization is most
-likely to be fruitful. If the present generation&mdash;and I
-have in mind especially American conditions&mdash;cannot
-come to a working agreement about the ethical training
-it wishes given the young, if it allows the drift towards
-anarchy on the human level to continue, it will show
-itself, however ecstatic it may be over its own progressiveness
-and idealism, both cowardly and degenerate.
-It is very stupid, assuming that it is not very hypocritical,
-to denounce <i>Kultur</i>, and then to adopt educational
-ideas that work out in much the same fashion as <i>Kultur</i>,
-and have indeed the same historical derivation.</p>
-
-<p>The dehumanizing influences I have been tracing are
-especially to be deprecated in higher education. The design
-of higher education, so far as it deserves the name,
-is to produce leaders, and on the quality of the leadership
-must depend more than on any other single factor the
-success or failure of democracy. I have already quoted
-Aristotle’s saying that “most men would rather live in a
-disorderly than in a sober manner.” This does not mean
-much more than that most men would like to live temperamentally,
-to follow each his own bent and then put
-the best face on the matter possible. Most men, says
-Goethe in a similar vein, prefer error to truth because
-truth imposes limitations and error does not. It is well<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span>
-also to recall Aristotle’s saying that “the multitude is
-incapable of making distinctions.”<a name="FNanchor_319_319" id="FNanchor_319_319"></a><a href="#Footnote_319_319" class="fnanchor">[319]</a> Now my whole
-argument is that to be sound individualists we must not
-only make the right distinctions but submit to them until
-they become habitual. Does it follow that the whole experiment
-in which we are engaged is foredoomed to failure?
-Not quite&mdash;though the obstacles to success are somewhat
-greater than our democratic enthusiasts suspect.
-The most disreputable aspect of human nature, I have
-said, is its proneness to look for scapegoats; and my chief
-objection to the movement I have been studying is that
-more perhaps than any other in history it has encouraged
-the evasion of moral responsibility and the setting up of
-scapegoats. But as an offset to this disreputable aspect of
-man, one may note a creditable trait: he is very sensitive
-to the force of a right example. If the leaders of a community
-look up to a sound model and work humanistically
-with reference to it, all the evidence goes to show
-that they will be looked up to and imitated in turn by
-enough of the rank and file to keep that community
-from lapsing into barbarism. Societies always decay from
-the top. It is therefore not enough, as the humanitarian
-would have us believe, that our leaders should act vigorously
-on the outer world and at the same time be filled
-with the spirit of “service.” Purely expansive leaders of
-this kind we have seen who have the word humanity
-always on their lips and are at the same time ceasing to
-be human. “That wherein the superior man cannot
-be equalled,” says Confucius, “is simply this&mdash;his work
-which other men cannot see.”<a name="FNanchor_320_320" id="FNanchor_320_320"></a><a href="#Footnote_320_320" class="fnanchor">[320]</a> It is this inner work and
-the habits that result from it that above all humanize a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</a></span>
-man and make him exemplary to the multitude. To perform
-this work he needs to look to a centre and a model.</p>
-
-<p>We are brought back here to the final gap that opens
-between classicist and romanticist. To look to a centre
-according to the romanticist is at the best to display
-“reason,” at the worst to be smug and philistine. To look
-to a true centre is, on the contrary, according to the
-classicist, to grasp the abiding human element through
-all the change in which it is implicated, and this calls for
-the highest use of the imagination. The abiding human
-element exists, even though it cannot be exhausted by
-dogmas and creeds, is not subject to rules and refuses to
-be locked up in formulæ. A knowledge of it results from
-experience,&mdash;experience vivified by the imagination. To
-do justice to writing which has this note of centrality
-we ourselves need to be in some measure experienced and
-imaginative. Writing that is romantic, writing in which
-the imagination is not disciplined to a true centre is best
-enjoyed while we are young. The person who is as much
-taken by Shelley at forty as he was at twenty has, one
-may surmise, failed to grow up. Shelley himself wrote to
-John Gisborne (October 22, 1821): “As to real flesh and
-blood, you know that I do not deal in those articles; you
-might as well go to a ginshop for a leg of mutton as expect
-anything human or earthly from me.” The mature
-man is likely to be dissatisfied with poetry so unsubstantial
-as this even as an intoxicant and still more when it is
-offered to him as the “ideal.” The very mark of genuinely
-classical work, on the other hand, is that it yields its full
-meaning only to the mature. Young and old are, as
-Cardinal Newman says, affected very differently by the
-words of some classic author, such as Homer or Horace.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</a></span>
-“Passages, which to a boy are but rhetorical commonplaces,
-neither better nor worse than a hundred others
-which any clever writer might supply … at length come
-home to him, when long years have passed, and he has
-had experience of life, and pierce him, as if he had never
-before known them, with their sad earnestness and vivid
-exactness. Then he comes to understand how it is that
-lines, the birth of some chance morning or evening at an
-Ionian festival or among the Sabine hills, have lasted generation
-after generation for thousands of years, with a
-power over the mind and a charm which the current literature
-of his own day, with all its obvious advantages, is
-utterly unable to rival.”</p>
-
-<p>In the poets whom Newman praises the imagination
-is, as it were, centripetal. The neo-classic proneness to
-oppose good sense to imagination, and the romantic
-proneness to oppose imagination to good sense, have at
-least this justification, that in many persons, perhaps in
-most persons, the two actually conflict, but surely the
-point to emphasize is that they may come together, that
-good sense may be imaginative and imagination sensible.
-If imagination is not sensible, as is plainly the case in
-Victor Hugo, for example, we may suspect a lack of the
-universal and ethical quality. All men, even great poets,
-are more or less immersed in their personal conceit and
-in the zones of illusion peculiar to their age. But there is
-the question of degree. The poets to whom the world has
-finally accorded its suffrage have not been megalomaniacs;
-they have not threatened like Hugo to outbellow the
-thunder or pull comets around by the tail.<a name="FNanchor_321_321" id="FNanchor_321_321"></a><a href="#Footnote_321_321" class="fnanchor">[321]</a> Bossuet’s
-saying that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</a></span> “good sense is the master of human life”
-does not contradict but complete Pascal’s saying that
-“the imagination disposes of everything,” provided only
-due stress be laid on the word human. It would not be
-easy to live a more imaginative life than Hugo, but his
-imagination was so unrestrained that we may ask whether
-he lived a very human life, whether he was not rather,
-in Tennyson’s phrase, a “weird Titan.” Man realizes
-that immensity of his being of which Joubert speaks only
-in so far as he ceases to be the thrall of his own ego. This
-human breadth he achieves not by throwing off but by
-taking on limitations, and what he limits is above all his
-imagination. The reason why he should strive for a life
-that is thus increasingly full and complete is simply, as
-Joubert suggests, that it is more delectable, that it is
-found practically to make for happiness.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">THE END</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="APPENDIX" id="APPENDIX"></a>APPENDIX<br />
-<span class="smaller">CHINESE PRIMITIVISM</span></h2>
-
-<p>Perhaps the closest approach in the past to the movement of
-which Rousseau is the most important single figure is the
-early Taoist movement in China. Taoism, especially in its popular
-aspects, became later something very different, and what
-I say is meant to apply above all to the period from about
-550 to 200 <span class="smcapuc">B.C.</span> The material for the Taoism of this period will
-be found in convenient form in the volume of Léon Wieger
-(1913)&mdash;<i>Les Pères du Système taoïste</i> (Chinese texts with
-French translations of Lao-tzŭ, Lieh-tzŭ and Chuang-tzŭ).
-The Tao Tê King of Lao-tzŭ is a somewhat enigmatical document
-of only a few thousand words, but plainly primitivistic in
-its general trend. The phrase that best sums up its general
-spirit is that of Wordsworth&mdash;a “wise passiveness.” The unity
-at which it aims is clearly of the pantheistic variety, the unity
-that is obtained by breaking down discrimination and affirming
-the “identity of contradictories,” and that encourages a reversion
-to origins, to the state of nature and the simple life. According
-to the Taoist the Chinese fell from the simple life into
-artificiality about the time of the legendary Yellow Emperor,
-Hoang-ti (27th century <span class="smcapuc">B.C.</span>). The individual also should look
-back to beginnings and seek to be once more like the new-born
-child<a name="FNanchor_322_322" id="FNanchor_322_322"></a><a href="#Footnote_322_322" class="fnanchor">[322]</a> or, according to Chuang-tzŭ, like the new-born calf.<a name="FNanchor_323_323" id="FNanchor_323_323"></a><a href="#Footnote_323_323" class="fnanchor">[323]</a> It
-is in Chuang-tzŭ indeed that the doctrine develops its full naturalistic
-and primitivistic implications. Few writers in either
-East or West have set forth more entertainingly what one may
-term the Bohemian attitude towards life. He heaps ridicule<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</a></span>
-upon Confucius and in the name of spontaneity attacks his
-doctrine of humanistic imitation.<a name="FNanchor_324_324" id="FNanchor_324_324"></a><a href="#Footnote_324_324" class="fnanchor">[324]</a> He sings the praises of
-the unconscious,<a name="FNanchor_325_325" id="FNanchor_325_325"></a><a href="#Footnote_325_325" class="fnanchor">[325]</a> even when obtained through intoxication,<a name="FNanchor_326_326" id="FNanchor_326_326"></a><a href="#Footnote_326_326" class="fnanchor">[326]</a>
-and extols the morality of the beautiful soul.<a name="FNanchor_327_327" id="FNanchor_327_327"></a><a href="#Footnote_327_327" class="fnanchor">[327]</a> He traces
-the fall of mankind from nature into artifice in a fashion that
-anticipates very completely both Rousseau’s Discourse on the
-Arts and Sciences<a name="FNanchor_328_328" id="FNanchor_328_328"></a><a href="#Footnote_328_328" class="fnanchor">[328]</a> and that on the Origin of Inequality.<a name="FNanchor_329_329" id="FNanchor_329_329"></a><a href="#Footnote_329_329" class="fnanchor">[329]</a> See
-also the amusing passage in which the brigand Chi, child of
-nature and champion of the weak against the oppressions of
-government, paints a highly Rousseauistic picture of man’s
-fall from his primitive felicity.<a name="FNanchor_330_330" id="FNanchor_330_330"></a><a href="#Footnote_330_330" class="fnanchor">[330]</a> Among the things that are
-contrary to nature and purely conventional, according to
-Chuang-tzŭ and the Taoists, are, not only the sciences and arts
-and attempts to discriminate between good and bad taste,<a name="FNanchor_331_331" id="FNanchor_331_331"></a><a href="#Footnote_331_331" class="fnanchor">[331]</a> but
-likewise government and statecraft,<a name="FNanchor_332_332" id="FNanchor_332_332"></a><a href="#Footnote_332_332" class="fnanchor">[332]</a> virtue and moral standards.<a name="FNanchor_333_333" id="FNanchor_333_333"></a><a href="#Footnote_333_333" class="fnanchor">[333]</a>
-To the artificial music of the Confucians, the Taoists oppose
-a natural music that offers startling analogies to the most
-recent programmatic and descriptive tendencies of Occidental
-music.<a name="FNanchor_334_334" id="FNanchor_334_334"></a><a href="#Footnote_334_334" class="fnanchor">[334]</a> See especially Chuang-tzŭ’s programme for a cosmic
-symphony in three movements<a name="FNanchor_335_335" id="FNanchor_335_335"></a><a href="#Footnote_335_335" class="fnanchor">[335]</a>&mdash;the <i>Pipes of Pan</i> as one is
-tempted to call it. This music that is supposed to reflect in all
-its mystery and magic the infinite creative processes of nature
-is very close to the primitivistic music (“L’arbre vu du côté
-des racines”) with which Hugo’s satyr strikes panic into the
-breasts of the Olympians.</p>
-
-<p>The Taoist notion of following nature is closely related, as in
-other naturalistic movements, to the idea of fate whether in its
-stoical or epicurean form.<a name="FNanchor_336_336" id="FNanchor_336_336"></a><a href="#Footnote_336_336" class="fnanchor">[336]</a> From the references in Chuang-tzŭ<a name="FNanchor_337_337" id="FNanchor_337_337"></a><a href="#Footnote_337_337" class="fnanchor">[337]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</a></span>
-and elsewhere to various sects and schools we see that Taoism
-was only a part of a great stream of naturalistic and primitivistic
-tendency. China abounded at that time in pacifists,<a name="FNanchor_338_338" id="FNanchor_338_338"></a><a href="#Footnote_338_338" class="fnanchor">[338]</a> in
-apostles of brotherly love, and as we should say nowadays
-Tolstoyans. A true opposite to the egoistic Yang-chu was the
-preacher of pure altruism and indiscriminate sympathy, Mei-ti.
-Mencius said that if the ideas of either of these extremists prevailed
-the time would come, not only when wolves would devour
-men, but men would devour one another.<a name="FNanchor_339_339" id="FNanchor_339_339"></a><a href="#Footnote_339_339" class="fnanchor">[339]</a> In opposing
-discrimination and ethical standards to the naturalists, Mencius
-and the Confucian humanists were fighting for civilization.
-Unfortunately there is some truth in the Taoist charge that the
-standards of the Confucians are too literal, that in their defence
-of the principle of imitation they did not allow sufficiently
-for the element of flux and relativity and illusion in things&mdash;an
-element for which the Taoists had so keen a sense that they
-even went to the point of suppressing the difference between
-sleeping and waking<a name="FNanchor_340_340" id="FNanchor_340_340"></a><a href="#Footnote_340_340" class="fnanchor">[340]</a> and life and death.<a name="FNanchor_341_341" id="FNanchor_341_341"></a><a href="#Footnote_341_341" class="fnanchor">[341]</a> To reply properly
-to the Taoist relativist the Confucians would have needed to
-work out a sound conception of the rôle of the imagination&mdash;the
-universal key to human nature&mdash;and this they do not
-seem to have done. One is inclined to ask whether this is the reason
-for China’s failure to achieve a great ethical art like that
-of the drama and the epic of the Occident at their best. The
-Taoists were richly imaginative but along romantic lines. We
-should not fail to note the Taoist influence upon Li Po and other
-Bohemian and bibulous poets of the Tang dynasty, or the relation
-of Taoism to the rise of a great school of landscape painting
-at about the same time. We should note also the Taoist element
-in “Ch’an” Buddhism (the “Zen” Buddhism<a name="FNanchor_342_342" id="FNanchor_342_342"></a><a href="#Footnote_342_342" class="fnanchor">[342]</a> of Japan),
-some knowledge of which is needed for an understanding of
-whole periods of Japanese and Chinese art.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In these later stages, however, the issues are less clear-cut
-than in the original struggle between Taoists and Confucians.
-The total impression one has of early Taoism is that it is a main
-manifestation of an age of somewhat sophistical individualism.
-Ancient Chinese individualism ended like that of Greece at
-about the same time in disaster. After a period of terrible convulsions
-(the era of the “Fighting States”), the inevitable man
-on horseback appeared from the most barbaric of these states
-and “put the lid” on everybody. Shi Hwang-ti, the new emperor,
-had many of the scholars put to death and issued an
-edict that the writings of the past, especially the Confucian
-writings, should be destroyed (213 <span class="smcapuc">B.C.</span>). Though the emperor
-behaved like a man who took literally the Taoist views as to
-the blessings of ignorance, it is not clear from our chief authority,
-the historian Ssŭ-ma Ch’ien, that he acted entirely or
-indeed mainly under Taoist influence.</p>
-
-<p>It is proper to add that though Lao-tzŭ proclaims that the
-soft is superior to the hard, a doctrine that should appeal to
-the Occidental sentimentalist, one does not find in him or in the
-other Taoists the equivalent of the extreme emotional expansiveness
-of the Rousseauist. There are passages, especially in
-Lao-tzŭ, that in their emphasis on concentration and calm are
-in line with the ordinary wisdom of the East; and even where
-the doctrine is unmistakably primitivistic the emotional quality
-is often different from that of the corresponding movement in
-the West.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="BIBLIOGRAPHY" id="BIBLIOGRAPHY"></a>BIBLIOGRAPHY</h2>
-
-<p>My only justification for these very unsystematic bibliographical notes is that,
-bringing together as they do under one cover material somewhat scattered and
-inaccessible to most readers, they may help to add to the number, now unfortunately
-very small, of those who have earned the right to have an opinion
-about romanticism as an international movement. A list of this kind is a fragment
-of a fragment. I have given, for example, only a fraction of the books on
-Rousseau and scarcely any of the books, thousands in numbers, which without
-being chiefly on Rousseau, contain important passages on him. I may cite almost
-at random as instances of this latter class, the comparison between Burke
-and Rousseau in the fifth volume of Lecky’s <i>History of the Eighteenth Century</i>;
-the stanzas on Rousseau in the third canto of <i>Childe Harold</i>; the passage on
-Rousseau in Hazlitt’s essay on the <i>Past and Future</i> (<i>Table Talk</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The only period that I have covered with any attempt at fullness is that from
-about 1795 to 1840. Books that seem to me to possess literary distinction or to
-deal authoritatively with some aspect of the subject I have marked with a star.
-I make no claim, however, to have read all the books I have listed, and my rating
-will no doubt often be questioned in the case of those I have read.</p>
-
-<p>I have not as a rule mentioned articles in periodicals. The files of the following
-special publications may often be consulted with profit. Those that have
-current bibliographies I have marked with a dagger.</p>
-
-<p>† <i>Revue d’Histoire littéraire de la France.</i>&mdash;† <i>Annales romantiques.</i>&mdash;† <i>Revue
-germanique</i> (Eng. and German).</p>
-
-<p>† <i>Englische Studien</i>&mdash;<i>Anglia</i>.&mdash;† <i>Mitteilungen über Englische Sprache und
-Literatur</i> (Beiblatt zur Anglia).&mdash;† <i>Archiv für das Studium der neueren Sprachen</i>
-(<i>Herrigs Archiv</i>).&mdash;† <i>Zeitschrift für französische Sprache und Literatur</i>&mdash;<i>Kritischer
-Jahresbericht der romanischen Philologie</i>&mdash;<i>Germanisch-Romanische
-Monatschrift</i>&mdash;<i>Euphorion</i> (German lit.).&mdash;† <i>Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum
-und deutsche Literatur.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Publications of the Modern Language Association of America.</i>&mdash;† <i>Modern
-Language Notes</i> (Baltimore).&mdash;<i>Modern Philology</i> (Chicago).&mdash;<i>The Journal
-of English and Germanic Philology</i> (Urbana, Ill.).&mdash;† <i>Studies in Philology</i>
-(Univ. of North Car.).&mdash;† <i>The Modern Language Review</i> (Cambridge, Eng.).</p>
-
-<p>Works that are international in scope and that fall either wholly or in part in
-the romantic period are as follows: L. P. Betz: ✱ <i>La Littérature Comparée, Essai
-bibliographique</i>, 2<sup>e</sup> éd. augmentée, 1904.&mdash;A. Sayous: <i>Le XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle à l’étranger</i>,
-2 vols. 1861.&mdash;H. Hettner: ✱ <i>Literaturgeschichte des 18. Jahr.</i> 1872. 6 vols.
-5th edn. 1909. (Still standard.)&mdash;G. Brandes: ✱ <i>Main Currents in 19th Century
-Literature</i>, 6 vols. 1901 ff. Originally given as lectures in Danish at the
-University of Copenhagen and trans. into German, 1872 ff. (Often marred by
-political “tendency.”)&mdash;T. Süpfle: <i>Geschichte des deutschen Kultureinflusses
-auf Frankreich</i>, 2 vols. 1886-90.&mdash;V. Rossel: <i>Hist. de la litt. fr. hors de France</i>.
-2<sup>e</sup> éd. 1897.&mdash;C. E. Vaughan: <i>The Romantic Revolt</i>, 1900.&mdash;T. S. Omond:
-<i>The Romantic Triumph</i>, 1900. (A somewhat colorless book.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>ENGLISH FIELD</h3>
-
-<p>✱ <i>The Cambridge History of English Literature</i>, vols. <span class="smcapuc">X</span>, <span class="smcapuc">XI</span>, <span class="smcapuc">XII</span>, 1913 ff. (Excellent
-bibliographies.)&mdash;See also articles and bibliographies in ✱ <i>Dictionary of
-National Biography</i>, Chambers <i>Encyclopædia of English Literature</i> (new edn.)
-and <i>Encyclopædia Britannica</i> (11th edn.).</p>
-
-<p>L. Stephen: ✱ <i>History of English Thought in the 18th Century</i>, 1876. (To be
-consulted for the deistic prelude to emotional naturalism. The author’s horizons
-are often limited by his utilitarian outlook.)&mdash;T. S. Seccombe: <i>The Age
-of Johnson</i>, 1900.&mdash;E. Bernbaum’s <i>English Poets of the 18th Century</i>, 1918.
-(An anthology so arranged as to illustrate the growth of sentimentalism.)&mdash;W. L.
-Phelps: <i>The Beginnings of the English Romantic Movement</i>, 1893.&mdash;H. A.
-Beers: <i>A History of English Romanticism in the 18th Century</i>, 1898. <i>A History
-of English Romanticism in the 19th Century</i>, 1901. (Both vols. are agreeably
-written but start from a very inadequate definition of romanticism.)&mdash;C. H.
-Herford: <i>The Age of Wordsworth</i>, 1897.&mdash;G. Saintsbury: <i>Nineteenth Century Literature</i>,
-1896.&mdash;A. Symons: <i>The Romantic Movement in English Poetry</i>, 1909.
-(Ultra-romantic in outlook.)&mdash;W. J. Courthope: <i>History of English Poetry</i>, vols.
-<span class="smcapuc">V</span> and <span class="smcapuc">VI</span>, 1911.&mdash;O. Elton: ✱ <i>A Survey of English Literature, 1780-1830</i>, 1912.
-(A distinguished treatment of the period, at once scholarly and literary. The
-point of view is on the whole romantic, as appears in the use of such general
-terms as “beauty” and the “infinite.”)&mdash;H. Richter: <i>Geschichte der englischen
-Romantik</i>, 1911 ff.&mdash;W. A. Neilson: <i>The Essentials of Poetry</i>, 1912. (The
-point of view appears in a passage like the following, pp. 192-93: According to
-Arnold high seriousness “is the final criterion of a great poet. One might suggest
-it as a more fit criterion for a great divine. … The element for which Arnold
-was groping when he seized on the σπουδή of Aristotle was not seriousness
-but intensity.”)&mdash;P. E. More: ✱ <i>The Drift of Romanticism</i> (<i>Shelburne Essays,
-Eighth Series</i>), 1913. (Deals also with the international aspects of the movement,
-especially in the essay on Nietzsche. The point of view has much in common
-with my own.)</p>
-
-<p>George Lillo: <i>The London Merchant</i>; or <i>The History of George Barnwell</i>, 1731.
-<i>Fatal Curiosity</i>, 1737. Both plays ed. with intro. by A. W. Ward, 1906. (Bibliography.)&mdash;E.
-Bernbaum: <i>The Drama of Sensibility, 1696-1780</i>, 1915.</p>
-
-<p><b>S. Richardson</b>, 1689-1761: <i>Novels</i>, ed. L. Stephen, 12 vols. 1883.</p>
-
-<p>D. Diderot: <i>Eloge de R.</i>, 1761. Reprinted in <i>Œuvres complètes</i>, vol. v.&mdash;J.
-Jusserand: <i>Le Roman Anglais</i>, 1886.&mdash;J. O. E. Donner: <i>R. in der deutschen
-Romantik</i>, 1896.&mdash;W. L. Cross: <i>The Development of the English Novel</i> (chap. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>,
-“The 18th Century Realists”), 1899.&mdash;J. Texte: ✱ <i>J.-J. Rousseau et les
-Origines du Cosmopolitisme littéraire</i>. Eng. trans. by J.W. Matthews, 1899.&mdash;C.
-L. Thomson: <i>Samuel Richardson: a Biographical and Critical Study</i>, 1900.&mdash;A.
-Dobson: <i>S. R.</i>, 1902.</p>
-
-<p><b>L. Sterne</b>, 1713-68: Collected Works, ed. G. Saintsbury, 6 vols. 1894. Ed.
-W. L. Cross, 12 vols. 1904.</p>
-
-<p>P. Fitzgerald: <i>Life of S.</i>, 2 vols. 1864. 3d edn. 1906.&mdash;P. Stapfer: <i>Laurence
-Sterne</i>, 1870.&mdash;H. D. Traill: <i>Sterne</i>, 1882.&mdash;L. Stephen: <i>Sterne. Hours in a
-Library</i>, vol. <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, 1892.&mdash;J. Czerny: <i>Sterne, Hippel, und Jean Paul</i>, 1904.&mdash;H. W.
-Thayer: <i>L. S. in Germany</i>, 1905.&mdash;P. E. More: <i>Shelburne Essays</i>, 3d
-Series, 1905.&mdash;W. L. Cross: <i>The Life and Times of L. S.</i>, 1909.&mdash;W. Sichel: ✱<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</a></span>
-<i>Sterne</i>, 1910.&mdash;L. Melville: <i>The Life and Letters of L. S.</i>, 2 vols. 1911.&mdash;F.
-B. Barton: <i>Etude sur l’influence de S. en France au XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Henry Mackenzie: <i>The Man of Feeling</i>, 1771.&mdash;Horace Walpole: <i>The Castle
-of Otranto</i>, 1765.&mdash;Clara Reeve: <i>The Champion of Virtue</i>, 1777. Title changed
-to <i>The Old English Baron</i> in later edns.&mdash;Thomas Amory: <i>Life of John Buncle,
-Esq.</i>, 4 vols. 1756-66. New edn. (with intro. by E. A. Baker), 1904.&mdash;Henry
-Brooke: <i>The Fool of Quality</i>, 5 vols. 1766-70. Ed. E. A. Baker, 1906.&mdash;William
-Beckford: <i>An Arabian Tale</i> [<i>Vathek</i>], 1786. In French, 1787. Ed. R. Garnett,
-1893.&mdash;L. Melville: <i>The Life and Letters of William Beckford</i>, 1910.&mdash;P. E.
-More: <i>W. B.</i>, in <i>The Drift of Romanticism</i>, 1913.</p>
-
-<p><b>Edward Young</b>, 1683-1765: <i>Works</i>, 6 vols. 1757-78. <i>Poetical Works</i> (Aldine
-Poets), 1858.&mdash;George Eliot: <i>The Poet Y.</i>, in <i>Essays</i>, 2d edn. 1884.&mdash;W.
-Thomas: <i>Le poète E. Y.</i>, 1901.&mdash;J. L. Kind: <i>E. Y. in Germany</i>, 1906.&mdash;H. C.
-Shelley: <i>The Life and Letters of E. Y.</i>, 1914.</p>
-
-<p><b>James Macpherson</b>, 1736-96: <i>Fingal</i>, 1762. <i>Temora</i>, 1763. <i>The Works of
-Ossian</i>, ed. W. Sharp, 1896.&mdash;For bibliography of Ossian and the Ossianic
-controversy see <i>Lowndes’s Bibliographer’s Manual</i>, part <span class="smcapuc">VI</span>, 1861.&mdash;J. S.
-Smart: ✱ <i>James Macpherson</i>, 1905.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas Percy: <i>Reliques of Ancient English Poetry</i>, 3 vols. 1765. Ed. H. B.
-Wheatley, 3 vols. 1876 and 1891.&mdash;A. C. C. Gaussen: <i>Percy, Prelate and Poet</i>,
-1908.</p>
-
-<p><b>Thomas Chatterton</b>, 1752-70: <i>Complete Poetical Works</i>, ed. with intro. and
-bibliography by H. D. Roberts, 2 vols. 1906. <i>Poetical Works</i>, with intro. by Sir
-S. Lee, 2 vols. 1906-09.&mdash;A. de Vigny: <i>Chatterton</i>. Drame, 1835&mdash;D. Masson:
-<i>Chatterton</i> in <i>Essays</i>, 1856.&mdash;T. Watts-Dunton: Introduction to poems of C.,
-in <i>Ward’s English Poets</i>.&mdash;C. E. Russell: <i>Thomas Chatterton</i>, 1909.&mdash;J. H.
-Ingram: <i>The True Chatterton</i>, 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas Warton: <i>The History of English Poetry</i>, 1774-88.&mdash;C. Rinaker:
-<i>Thomas Warton</i>, 1916.&mdash;Joseph Warton: <i>Essay on the Genius and Writings of
-Pope</i>, 2 vols. 1756-82.&mdash;Paul-Henri Mallet: <i>Introduction à l’Hist. de Dannemarc</i>,
-2 vols. 1755-56&mdash;F. E. Farley: <i>Scandinavian Influence on the English
-Romantic Movement</i>, 1903 (Bibliography).&mdash;R. Hurd: <i>Letters on Chivalry and
-Romance</i>, 1762; ed. E. J. Morley, 1911.</p>
-
-<p><b>W. Godwin</b>, 1756-1836: <i>Political Justice</i>, 1793. <i>Caleb Williams</i>, 1794.</p>
-
-<p>C. K. Paul: <i>W. G., his Friends and Contemporaries</i>, 2 vols 1876.&mdash;W. Hazlitt:
-<i>W. G.</i>, in <i>The Spirit of the Age</i>, 1902.&mdash;L. Stephen: <i>W. G.’s Novels. Studies of a
-Biographer</i>, vol. <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, 1902.&mdash;P. Ramus: <i>W. G. der Theoretiker des kommunistischen
-Anarchismus</i>, 1907.&mdash;H. Saitzeff: <i>W. G. und die Anfänge des Anarchismus
-im xviii Jahrhundert</i>, 1907.&mdash;Helene Simon: <i>W. G. und Mary Wollstonecraft</i>,
-1909.&mdash;H. Roussin: <i>W. G.</i>, 1912.</p>
-
-<p><b>R. Burns</b>, 1759-96: <i>The Complete Poetical Works</i>, ed. J. L. Robertson, 3
-vols. 1896.&mdash;J. C. Ewing: <i>Selected List of the Works of R. B., and of Books upon
-his Life and Writings</i>, 1899.</p>
-
-<p>W. Wordsworth: <i>Letter to a Friend of R. Burns</i>, 1816.&mdash;T. Carlyle: <i>Burns</i>,
-1828. Rptd. 1854. <i>On Heroes and Hero-Worship</i>, 1841.&mdash;J. G. Lockhart: <i>Life
-of R. Burns</i>, 1828.&mdash;H. A. Taine: <i>Histoire de la Littérature Anglaise</i>, vol. <span class="smcapuc">III</span>,
-1863-64.&mdash;J. C. Shairp: <i>R. Burns</i>, 1879.&mdash;R. L. Stevenson: <i>Familiar Studies<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</a></span>
-of Men and Books</i>, 1882.&mdash;M. Arnold: <i>Essays in Criticism, Second Series</i>,
-1888.&mdash;A. Angellier: ✱ <i>R. Burns: la vie et les œuvres</i>, 2 vols. 1893.&mdash;T. F. Henderson:
-<i>R. Burns</i>, 1904.&mdash;W. A. Neilson: <i>Burns: How to Know Him</i>, 1917.</p>
-
-<p><b>W. Blake</b>, 1759-1827: <i>The Poetical Works</i>, ed. with an intro. and textual
-notes by J. Sampson, 1913.</p>
-
-<p>A. Gilchrist: <i>Life of B.</i>, 2 vols. 1863. New edn. 1906.&mdash;A. C. Swinburne: <i>W. B.</i>,
-1868. New edn. 1906.&mdash;A. T. Story: <i>W. B.</i>, 1893.&mdash;J. Thomson (B.V.):
-<i>Essay on the Poems of W. B.</i>, in <i>Biographical and Critical Studies</i>, 1896.&mdash;W. B.
-Yeats: <i>Ideas of Good and Evil</i>, 1903.&mdash;F. Benoit: <i>Un Maître de l’Art. B. le
-Visionnaire</i>, 1906.&mdash;P. E. More: <i>Shelburne Essays, Fourth Series</i>, 1906.&mdash;P.
-Berger: <i>W. B.</i>, 1907.&mdash;S. A. Brooke: <i>Studies in Poetry</i>, 1907.&mdash;E. J. Ellis:
-<i>The Real B., a Portrait Biography</i>, 1907.&mdash;B. de Selincourt: <i>W. B.</i>, 1909.&mdash;G.
-Saintsbury: <i>A History of English Prosody</i>, vol. III, 1910.&mdash;J. H. Wicksteed:
-<i>B.’s Vision of the Book of Job</i>, 1910.&mdash;H. C. Beeching: <i>B.’s Religious
-Lyrics, Essays and Studies by Members of the Eng. Association</i>, vol. III, 1912.&mdash;A. G. B.
-Russell: <i>The Engravings of W. B.</i>, 1912.</p>
-
-<p><b>W. Wordsworth</b>, 1770-1850: <i>Poetical Works</i>, ed. T. Hutchinson, 1904.
-<i>Poems</i>, chosen and edited by M. Arnold, 1879. <i>Prose Works</i>, ed. W. Knight, 2
-vols. 1896. <i>Wordsworth’s Literary Criticism</i>, ed. N. C. Smith, 1905.</p>
-
-<p>W. Hazlitt: <i>The Spirit of the Age</i>, 1825.&mdash;C. Wordsworth: <i>Memoirs of W. W.</i>,
-2 vols. 1851.&mdash;T.B. Macaulay: <i>Critical and Historical Essays</i>, 1852.&mdash;J. R.
-Lowell: <i>Among my Books</i>, 1870.&mdash;R. H. Hutton: <i>Essays Theological and
-Literary</i>, 2 vols. 1871.&mdash;J. C. Shairp: <i>W.</i>, 1872.&mdash;S. A. Brooke: <i>Theology in
-the English Poets</i>, 1874. 10th edn. 1907.&mdash;E. Dowden: <i>Studies in Literature</i>,
-1878. <i>New Studies in Literature</i>, 1895.&mdash;W. Bagehot: <i>Literary Studies</i>, 1879.&mdash;F. W. H.
-Myers: <i>W.</i>, 1881.&mdash;J. H. Shorthouse: <i>On the Platonism of W.</i>,
-1882.&mdash;W. A. Knight: <i>Memorials of Coleorton</i>, 2 vols. 1887. <i>Letters of the
-Wordsworth Family from 1787 to 1855</i>, 1907.&mdash;M. Arnold: ✱ <i>Essays in Criticism,
-Second Series</i>, 1888.&mdash;P. Bourget: <i>Etudes et Portraits</i>, vol. II, 1888.&mdash;W. H.
-Pater: <i>Appreciations</i>, 1889.&mdash;L. Stephen: <i>Hours in a Library</i>, vol. II,
-1892. <i>Studies of a Biographer</i>, vol. I, 1898.&mdash;Dorothy Wordsworth: <i>Journals</i>,
-ed. W. Knight, 2 vols, 1897.&mdash;E. Legouis: ✱ <i>The Early Life of W., 1770-98</i>.
-Trans. by J.W. Matthews, 1897.&mdash;E. Yarnall: <i>W. and the Coleridges</i>, 1899.&mdash;W. A.
-Raleigh: <i>W.</i>, 1903.&mdash;K. Bömig: <i>W. W. im Urteile seiner Zeit</i>, 1906.&mdash;A. C.
-Bradley: <i>Eng. Poetry and German Philosophy in the Age of W.</i>, 1909.&mdash;M.
-Reynolds: <i>The Treatment of Nature in Eng. Poetry between Pope and W.</i>, 1909.
-(Bibliography.)&mdash;L. Cooper: <i>A Concordance to the Poems of W. W.</i>, 1911.&mdash;E. S.
-Robertson: <i>Wordsworthshire. An Introduction to a Poet’s Country</i>, 1911.</p>
-
-<p><b>W. Scott</b>, 1771-1832: <i>Poetical Works</i>, ed. J. L. Robertson, 1904. <i>The Waverly
-Novels</i> (Oxford edn.), 25 vols. 1912. <i>The Miscellaneous Prose Works</i>, 30
-vols. 1834-71.</p>
-
-<p>W. Hazlitt: <i>The Spirit of the Age</i>, 1825.&mdash;J. G. Lockhart: ✱ <i>Memoirs of the
-Life of Sir W. S. Baronet</i>, 2 vols. 1837-38.&mdash;T. Carlyle: <i>Sir W.S.</i>, 1838.&mdash;G.
-Grant: <i>Life of Sir W. S.</i>, 1849.&mdash;L. Stephen: <i>Hours in a Library</i>, vol. I, 1874.
-<i>The Story of S.’s Ruin, Studies of a Biographer</i>, vol. II, 1898.&mdash;R. H. Hutton:
-<i>Sir W. S.</i>, 1876.&mdash;W. Bagehot: <i>The Waverley Novels in Literary Studies</i>, vol.
-II, 1879.&mdash;G. Smith: <i>Sir W. S.</i>, in <i>Ward’s English Poets</i>, vol. IV, 1883.&mdash;R. L.
-Stevenson: <i>A Gossip on Romance</i> in <i>Memories and Portraits</i>, 1887.&mdash;J.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[403]</a></span>
-Veitch: <i>The Feeling for Nature in Scottish Poetry</i>, 2 vols. 1887. Vol. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>. <i>History
-and Poetry of the Scottish Border</i>. 2d edn. 2 vols. 1893.&mdash;C.D. Yonge: <i>Life
-of Sir W.S.</i> (bibliography by J.P. Anderson), 1888.&mdash;V. Waille: <i>Le Romantisme
-de Manzoni</i>, 1890.&mdash;A. Lang: <i>Life and Letters of J.G. Lockhart</i>, 2 vols.
-1896. <i>L. and the Border Minstrelsy</i>, 1910.&mdash;F.T. Palgrave: <i>Landscape in
-Poetry</i>, 1896.&mdash;A.A. Jack: <i>Essays on the Novel as illustrated by S. and Miss
-Austen</i>, 1897.&mdash;G. Saintsbury: <i>Sir W.S.</i>, 1897.&mdash;L. Maigron: ✱ <i>Le Roman
-historique à l’époque romantique. Essai sur l’influence de W.S.</i>, 1898.&mdash;W.L.
-Cross: <i>Development of the English Novel</i>, 1899.&mdash;M. Dotti: <i>Delle derivazioni nei
-Promessi sposi di A. Manzoni dai Romanzi di W.S.</i>, 1900.&mdash;W.H. Hudson:
-<i>Sir W.S.</i>, 1901.&mdash;W.S. Crockett: <i>The Scott Country</i>, 1902. <i>Footsteps of S.</i>,
-1907. <i>The Scott Originals</i>, 1912.&mdash;A. Ainger: <i>S. Lectures and Essays</i>, vol. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>.
-1905.&mdash;A.S.G. Canning: <i>History in S.’s Novels</i>, 1905. <i>Sir W.S. studied in
-Eight Novels</i>, 1910.&mdash;G. Agnoli: <i>Gli Albori del romanzo storico in Italia e i primi
-imitatori di W.S.</i>, 1906.&mdash;C.A. Young: <i>The Waverley Novels</i>, 1907.&mdash;G.
-Wyndham: <i>Sir W.S.</i>, 1908.&mdash;F.A. MacCunn: <i>Sir W.S.’s friends</i>, 1909.</p>
-
-<p><b>S. T. Coleridge</b>, 1772-1831: <i>Dramatic Works</i>, ed. D. Coleridge, 1852. <i>Poetical
-Works</i>, ed. with biographical intro. by J.D. Campbell, 1893. <i>Complete
-Poetical Works</i>, ed. E.H. Coleridge, 2 vols. 1912. <i>Prose Works</i>, 6 vols. in
-<i>Bohn’s Library</i>, 1865 ff.&mdash;<i>Biographia Literaria</i>, ed. with his æsthetical essays
-by I. Shawcross, 2 vols. 1907. <i>Anima Poetae</i>, ed. E.H. Coleridge, 1895. C.’s
-<i>Literary Criticism</i>, with intro. by J.W. Mackail, 1908. <i>Biographia epistalaris</i>,
-ed. A. Tumbull, 2 vols. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>W. Hazlitt: <i>Mr. C.</i>, in <i>The Spirit of the Age</i>, 1825.&mdash;T. Allsop: <i>Letters, Conversations,
-and Recollections of S.T.C.</i>, 2 vols. 1836.&mdash;T. Carlyle: <i>Life of John
-Sterling</i> (part I, chap, VIII), 1851.&mdash;Sara Coleridge: <i>Memoirs and Letters of
-Sara Coleridge</i>, 2 vols. 1873.&mdash;H.D. Traill: <i>Coleridge</i>, 1884.&mdash;A. Brandl: <i>S.T.C.
-und die englishe Romantik</i>, 1886. Eng. trans. by Lady Eastlake, 1887.&mdash;W.
-Pater: <i>Coleridge. Appreciations</i>, 1889.&mdash;T. De Quincey: <i>S.T.C.</i>, 1889.&mdash;L.
-Stephen: <i>Coleridge, Hours in a Library</i>, vol. III, 1892.&mdash;J.D. Campbell:
-<i>S.T.C.</i>, 1894. 2d edn.; 1896.&mdash;E. Dowden: <i>C. as a Poet. New Studies in Literature</i>,
-1895.&mdash;E.V. Lucas: <i>Charles Lamb and the Lloyds</i>, 1898.&mdash;R.H.
-Shepherd: <i>The Bibliography of C.</i>, 1900.&mdash;C. Cestre: <i>La Révolution française et
-les poètes anglais (1789-1809)</i>, 1906.&mdash;J. Aynard: <i>La vie d’un poète</i>. <i>Coleridge</i>,
-1907.&mdash;A.A. Helmholtz: <i>The Indebtedness of S.T.C. to A.W. Schlegel</i>, 1907.&mdash;A.A.
-Jack and A.C. Bradley: <i>Short Bibliography of C.</i>, 1912.</p>
-
-<p><b>C. Lamb</b>, 1775-1834: <i>Life and Works</i>, ed. A. Ainger, 12 vols. 1899-1900. <i>The
-Works of Charles and Mary L.</i>, ed. E.V. Lucas, 7 vols. 1903-05. <i>The Works in
-Prose and Verse of Charles and Mary L.</i>, ed. T. Hutchinson, 2 vols. 1908. <i>The
-Letters of C.L.</i> Intro, by H.H. Harper, 5 vols. 1907. <i>Dramatic Essays of C.L.</i>,
-ed. B. Matthews, 1891.</p>
-
-<p>G. Gilfillan: <i>C.L.</i>, vol. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 1857.&mdash;B.W. Proctor: <i>C.L.</i>, 1866.&mdash;P. Fitzgerald:
-<i>C.L.</i>, 1866.&mdash;A. Ainger: <i>C.L., a Biography</i>, 1882. <i>Lectures and Essays</i>,
-vol. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 1905.&mdash;W. Pater: <i>C.L. Appreciations</i>, 1889.&mdash;E.V. Lucas:
-<i>Bernard Barton and his Friends</i>, 1893. <i>C.L. and the Lloyds</i>, 1898. <i>The Life of C.L.</i>,
-2 vols. 1905.&mdash;F. Harrison: <i>L. and Keats</i>, 1899.&mdash;G.E. Woodberry: <i>C.L.</i>,
-1900.&mdash;H. Paul: <i>C.L. Stray Leaves</i>, 1906.</p>
-
-<p><b>W. Hazlitt</b>, 1778-1830: <i>Works</i>, edd. A.R. Waller and A. Glover, 12 vols. and
-index, 1902-06.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[404]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>L. Hunt: <i>Autobiography</i>, 3 vols. 1850.&mdash;W. C. Hazlitt: <i>Memoirs of W. H.</i>, 2
-vols. 1867. <i>Four Generations of a Literary Family</i>, 2 vols. 1897. <i>Lamb and H.</i>,
-1899.&mdash;G. Saintsbury: <i>H. Essays in English Literature (1780-1860)</i>, 1890.&mdash;L.
-Stephen: <i>Hours in a Library</i>, vol. II, 1892.&mdash;A. Birrell: <i>W. H.</i>, 1902.&mdash;P.
-E. More: <i>The Shelburne Essays, Second Series</i>, 1905.&mdash;J. Douady: <i>Vie de
-W. H.</i>, 1907.&mdash;<i>Liste chronologique des œuvres de W. H.</i>, 1906.</p>
-
-<p><b>Lord Byron</b>, 1788-1824: <i>The Works of Lord B.</i>, ed. by R. H. Coleridge and
-R. E. Prothero, 13 vols. 1898-1904. <i>Complete Poetical Works</i>, ed. with intro.,
-etc., by P. E. More, 1905.&mdash;<i>Poetry of B.</i>, chosen and arranged by M. Arnold,
-1881.</p>
-
-<p>S. E. Brydges: <i>Letters on the Character and Poetical Genius of Lord B.</i>, 1824.&mdash;T.
-Medwin: <i>Journal of the Conversations of Lord B.</i>, 1824.&mdash;L. Hunt:
-<i>Lord B. and Some of his Contemporaries</i>, 3 vols. 1828.&mdash;J. Galt: <i>The Life of
-Lord B.</i>, 1830, 1908.&mdash;V. E. P. Chasles: <i>Vie et influence de B. sur son époque</i>,
-1850.&mdash;T. B. Macaulay: <i>Lord B.</i>, 1853.&mdash;H. Beyle: <i>Lord B. en Italie</i>, in <i>Racine
-et Shakespeare</i>, 1824.&mdash;K. Elze: <i>Lord B.</i>, 1870.&mdash;H. von Treitschke:
-<i>Lord B. und der Radicalismus</i>, in <i>Historische und politische Aufsätze</i>, vol. I,
-1871.&mdash;E. Castelar: <i>Vida de Lord B.</i>, 1873.&mdash;A. C. Swinburne: B., in <i>Essays
-and Studies</i>, 1875.&mdash;C. Cant: <i>Lord B. and his Works</i>, 1883.&mdash;J. C. Jeaffreson:
-<i>The Real Lord B.</i>, 2 vols. 1883.&mdash;M. Arnold: ✱ <i>Essays in Criticism, Second
-Series</i>, 1888.&mdash;R. Noel: <i>Life of B.</i> (bibliography by J. P. Anderson), 1890.&mdash;O.
-Schmidt: <i>Rousseau und B.</i>, 1890.&mdash;S. Singheimer: <i>Goethe und Lord B.</i>, 1894.&mdash;K.
-Bleibtreu: <i>B. der Übermensch</i>, 1897. <i>Das Byron-Geheimnis</i>, 1912.&mdash;R.
-Ackermann: <i>Lord B.</i>, 1901.&mdash;F. Melchior: <i>Heines Verhältnis zu Lord B.</i>,
-1902.&mdash;G. K. Chesterton: <i>The Optimism of B., in Twelve Types</i>, 1902.&mdash;E.
-Koeppel: <i>Lord B.</i>, 1903.&mdash;J. C. Collins: <i>The Works of Lord B., in Studies in
-Poetry and Criticism</i>, 1905.&mdash;W. E. Leonard: <i>B. and Byronism in America</i>,
-1905.&mdash;M. Eimer: <i>Lord B. und die Kunst</i>, 1907.&mdash;E. Estève: ✱ <i>B. et le romantisme
-français</i>, 1907.&mdash;J. Calcaño: <i>Tres Poetas pesimistas del siglo xix</i>
-(<i>Lord B., Shelley, Leopardi</i>), 1907.&mdash;P. H. Churchman: <i>B. and Espronoeda</i>,
-1909.&mdash;R. Edgcumbe: B.; <i>The Last Phase</i>, 1909.&mdash;B. Miller: <i>Leigh Hunt’s
-Relations with B.</i>, 1910.&mdash;C. M. Fuess: <i>Lord B. as a Satirist in Verse</i>, 1912.&mdash;E.
-C. Mayne: B., 2 vols. 1912.</p>
-
-<p><b>T. De Quincey</b>, 1785-1859. <i>Select Essays</i>, ed. D. Masson, 2 vols. 1888. <i>Collected
-Writings</i>, ed. D. Masson, 14 vols. 1889-90. <i>Literary Criticism</i>, ed. H. Darbishire,
-1909.</p>
-
-<p>A. H. Japp: <i>T. De Q.: His Life and Writings.</i>. 2 vols. 1877. New edn. 1890. <i>De Q.
-Memorials</i>, 2 vols. 1891.&mdash;S. H. Hodgson: <i>Outcast Essays</i>, 1881.&mdash;D. Masson:
-<i>T. De Q.</i>, 1881.&mdash;G. Saintsbury: <i>De Q. Essays in English Literature (1780-1860)</i>,
-1890.&mdash;L. Stephen: <i>Hours in a Library.</i> New edn. vol. I. 1892.&mdash;J.
-Hogg: <i>De Q. and his Friends</i>, 1895.&mdash;A. Barine: <i>Névrosés: De Q.</i>, etc., 1898.&mdash;A.
-Birrell: <i>Essays about Men, Women and Books</i>, 1901.&mdash;H. S. Salt: <i>De Q.</i>,
-1904.&mdash;J. A. Green: <i>T. De Q.: a Bibliography</i>, 1908.</p>
-
-<p><b>P. B. Shelley</b>, 1792-1822: <i>Complete Poetical Works</i>, ed. T. Hutchinson, 1904.
-<i>Prose Works</i>, 4 vols. Ed. H. B. Forman, 1880. <i>Prose Works</i>, ed. R. H. Shepherd,
-2 vols. 1888, 1912. <i>S.’s Literary Criticism</i>, ed. J. Shawcross, 1909. <i>Letters
-to Elizabeth Hitchener</i>, ed. B. Dobell, 1909. The <i>Letters of S.</i>, ed. R. Ingpen, 2
-vols. 1909. New edn. 1912.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[405]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>L. Hunt: <i>Lord Byron and his Contemporaries</i>, 1828.&mdash;T. Medwin: <i>The Shelley
-Papers</i>, 1833. <i>Life of S.</i>, 2 vols. 1847. Ed. H. B. Forman, 1913.&mdash;T. J.
-Hogg: <i>Life of S.</i>, 2 vols. 1858. Ed. E. Dowden, 1906.&mdash;E. J. Trelawny: <i>Recollections
-of the Last Days of S. and Byron</i>, 1858. Ed. E. Dowden, 1906.&mdash;D. Masson:
-<i>Wordsworth, S., Keats, and other Essays</i>, 1874.&mdash;J. A. Symonds: <i>S.</i>,
-1878.&mdash;J. Todhunter: <i>A Study of S.</i>, 1880.&mdash;<i>Shelley Society Publications</i>,
-1884-88.&mdash;F. Rabbe: <i>S.</i>, 1887.&mdash;J. C. Jeaffreson: <i>The Real S.</i>, 2 vols. 1885.&mdash;E.
-Dowden: <i>Life of S.</i>, 2 vols. 1886. Revised and condensed, 1896.&mdash;W.
-Sharp: <i>Life of S.</i>, 1887.&mdash;M. Arnold: ✱ <i>Essays in Criticism, Second Series</i>,
-1888.&mdash;F. S. Ellis: <i>A Lexical Concordance to the Poetical Works of S.</i>, 1892.&mdash;W.
-Bagehot: <i>Literary Studies</i>. New edn., vol. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 1895.&mdash;H. Richter: <i>P. B. S.</i>,
-1898.&mdash;W. B. Yeats: <i>The Philosophy of S.’s Poetry</i>, 1903.&mdash;S. A. Brooke:
-<i>The Lyrics of S.</i>, etc. <i>Studies in Poetry</i>, 1907.&mdash;E. S. Bates: <i>A Study of S.’s
-Drama The Cenci</i>, 1908.&mdash;F. Thompson: <i>S.</i>, 1909.&mdash;A. C. Bradley: <i>S.’s View
-of Poetry</i>, in <i>Oxford Lectures on Poetry</i>, 1909. <i>Short Bibliography of S.</i>, English
-Association Leaflet, no. 23, 1912.&mdash;A. Clutton-Brock: <i>S., the Man and the
-Poet</i>, 1910.&mdash;P. E. More: <i>S.</i>, in <i>Shelburne Essays, Seventh Series</i>, 1910.&mdash;A. H.
-Koszul: <i>La Jeunesse de Shelley</i>, 1910.&mdash;H. R. Angeli: <i>S. and his Friends in
-Italy</i>, 1911.&mdash;F. E. Schelling: <i>The English Lyric</i>, 1913.&mdash;H. N. Brailsford: <i>S.
-and Godwin</i>, 1913.&mdash;R. Ingpen: <i>S. in England</i>, 2 vols. 1917.</p>
-
-<p><b>J. Keats</b>, 1795-1821: <i>Poetical Works</i>, ed. with an intro., etc., by H. B. Forman,
-1906. <i>Poems</i>, ed. Sir S. Colvin, 2 vols. 1915. <i>Letters.</i> Complete revised
-edn., ed. H. B. Forman, 1895. <i>Keats Letters, Papers and other Relics</i>, ed. G. C.
-Williamson, 1914.</p>
-
-<p>M. Arnold: <i>Selections from K.’s Poems</i>, with <i>Introduction</i>, in <i>Ward’s English
-Poets</i>, vol. <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, 1880. Also in ✱ <i>Essays in Criticism, Second Series</i>, 1888.&mdash;A. C.
-Swinburne: <i>Miscellanies</i>, 1886.&mdash;W. M. Rossetti: <i>Life of J. K.</i> (bibliography
-by J. P. Anderson), 1887.&mdash;S. Colvin: <i>K.</i>, 1887.&mdash;W. Watson: <i>Excursions in
-Criticism</i>, 1893.&mdash;J. Texte: <i>K. et le neo-hellénisme dans la poésie anglaise</i> in
-<i>Etudes de littérature européenne</i>, 1898.&mdash;P. E. More: <i>Shelburne Essays, Fourth
-Series</i>, 1906.&mdash;S. A. Brooke: <i>Studies in Poetry</i>, 1907.&mdash;A. E. Hancock: <i>J. K.</i>,
-1908.&mdash;A. C. Bradley: <i>The Letters of K.</i>, in <i>Oxford Lectures on Poetry</i>, 1909.&mdash;L.
-Wolff: <i>An Essay on K.’s Treatment of the Heroic Rhythm and Blank Verse</i>,
-1909. <i>J. K., sa vie et son œuvre</i>, 1910.&mdash;J. W. Mackail: <i>Lectures on Poetry</i>,
-1912.&mdash;Sir S. Colvin: ✱ <i>Life of J. K.</i>, 1917.</p>
-
-<h3>FRENCH FIELD</h3>
-
-<p>Bibliography: G. Lanson: ✱ <i>Manuel bibliographique de la litt. fr. moderne,
-1500-1900</i>, vols. <span class="smcapuc">III</span> and <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>. Nouvelle éd. revue et complétée, 1915.&mdash;H. P.
-Thieme: <i>Guide bibliographique de la litt. fr. de 1800-1906</i>, 1907.&mdash;Asselineau:
-<i>Bibliographie romantique</i>, 3d edn., 1873. Histories of French Literature: D. Nisard:
-<i>Histoire de la litt. fr.</i>, 4 vols. 1844-61. (For N.’s type of classicism see my
-<i>Masters of Mod. Fr. Crit.</i>, pp. 87 ff.)&mdash;F. Brunetière: <i>Manuel de l’histoire de la litt.
-fr.</i>, 1899.&mdash;G. Lanson: ✱ <i>Histoire de la litt. fr.</i> 11th edn. 1909.&mdash;C. H. C. Wright:
-<i>A History of Fr. Lit.</i> (bibliography), 1912.&mdash;C.-M. Des Granges: <i>Histoire
-illustrée de la litt. fr.</i>, 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Eighteenth century: F. Baldensperger: <i>Lénore de Bürger dans la litt. fr.</i>, in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[406]</a></span><i>Etudes d’hist. litt.</i> 1<sup>e</sup> série, 1907. <i>Young et ses Nuits en France</i>, <i>ibid.</i>&mdash;J.
-Reboul: <i>Un grand précurseur des romantiques, Ramond (1755-1827)</i>, 1911.&mdash;D.
-Mornet: <i>Le romantisme en Fr. au XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, 1912.&mdash;P. van Tieghem:
-<i>Ossian en Fr.</i>, 2 vols. 1917.</p>
-
-<p>E. Bersot: <i>Etudes sur le XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, 1855. <i>Hist. des idées morales et politiques
-en Fr. au XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, 2 vols. 1865-67.&mdash;H. Taine: ✱ <i>L’Ancien Régime</i>,
-1876. Vol. <span class="smcapuc">I</span> of <i>Les Origines de la Fr. contemporaine</i>.&mdash;E. Faguet: ✱ <i>XVIII<sup>e</sup>
-siècle</i>, 1892.&mdash;Rocafort: <i>Les Doctrines litt. de l’Encyclopédie</i>, 1890.&mdash;G. Lanson:
-<i>Le Rôle de l’expérience dans la formation de la philosophie du XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>,
-1910.</p>
-
-<p>Abbé Prévost: <i>Manon Lescaut</i>, 1731.&mdash;Harrisse: <i>Bibliographie et Notes
-pour servir à l’hist. de Manon Lescaut</i>, 1875. <i>L’Abbé Prévost: hist. de sa vie et de
-ses œuvres</i>, 1896.&mdash;Heilborn: <i>Abbé Prévost und seine Beziehungen zur deutschen
-Lit.</i>, 1897.</p>
-
-<p><i>Œuvres complètes de Gessner</i>, trad. par Huber, 3 vols. 1768. H. Heis: <i>Studien
-aber einige Beziehungen zwischen der deutschen und der französischen Lit. im
-XVII. Jahr.</i> I. <i>Der Uebersetzer und Vermittler Huber</i>, 1909.</p>
-
-<p>G. Lanson: ✱ <i>Nivelle de La Chaussée et la comédie larmoyante</i>, 1887. 2d edn.
-1903.&mdash;E. Lintilhac: <i>Beaumarchais et ses œuvres</i>, 1887.&mdash;L. Béclard: <i>Sébastien
-Mercier</i>, 1903.&mdash;Günther: <i>L’œuvre dramatique de Sedaine</i>, 1908.&mdash;F.
-Gaiffe: <i>Etude sur le drame en Fr. au XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, 1910.</p>
-
-<p><b>J.-J. Rousseau</b>, 1712-1778: <i>Discours sur les sciences et les arts</i>, 1750. <i>Discours
-sur l’origine et les fondements de l’inégalité</i>, 1755. <i>Nouvelle Héloïse</i>, 1761. <i>Emile</i>,
-1762. <i>Le contrat social</i>, 1762. Ed. Dreyfus-Brisác, 1896. Ed. Beaulavon, 1903. 2
-éd. revue, 1914. <i>Confessions</i>, 1782-88. Ed. A. van Beyer, 1914. ✱ <i>The Political
-Writings of R.</i>, ed. with intro., etc. by C. E. Vaughan, 2 vols. 1915. (Excellent
-work on the text. The estimate of the political influence seems to me to lack
-penetration.) Collected works: Ed. Petitain, 22 vols. 1819-20. Ed. Musset-Pathay,
-23 vols. 1823-26. Ed. Hachette, 13 vols. 1887. (No good collected ed. as yet.)</p>
-
-<p>Streckeisen-Moultou: <i>Œuvres et Correspondance inédites de J.-J. R.</i>, 1861.
-<i>J.-J. R., ses amis et ses ennemis</i> (Lettres à R.), 1865.: E. Asse: <i>Bibliographie de
-J.-J. R.</i> [no date]. For current bibliography see ✱ <i>Annales de la Société J.-J.
-Rousseau</i>, 1905 ff. <i>Extraits de J.-J. R.</i> publiés avec intro. p. L. Brunel. 3<sup>e</sup> éd.
-1896.&mdash;<i>Morceaux choisis de J.-J. R.</i> avec intro. etc., p. D. Mornet, 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Studies (chiefly biographical): Musset-Pathay: <i>Histoire de la Vie et des
-Ouvrages de J.-J. R.</i>, 2 vols. 1821.&mdash;Gaberel: <i>R. et les Génevois</i>, 1858.&mdash;H.
-Beaudoin: <i>La Vie et les Œuvres de J.-J. R.</i>, 2 vols. 1891 (bibliography).&mdash;F.
-Mugnier: <i>Mme. de Warens et J.-J. R.</i>, 1891.&mdash;F. Macdonald: <i>Studies in the
-France of Voltaire and R.</i>, 1895. <i>J.-J. R., a New Criticism</i>, 2 vols. 1906. (The
-evidence offered as to the tampering with the memoirs of Mad. d’Epinay is of
-value. The work is in general uncritical.)&mdash;E. Ritter: ✱ <i>La famille et la jeunesse
-de J.-J. R.</i>, 1896.&mdash;Stoppolini: <i>Le donne nella vita di G.-G. R.</i>, 1898.&mdash;E.
-Rod: <i>L’affaire J.-J. R.</i>, 1906.&mdash;Comte de Girardin: ✱ <i>Iconographie de J.-J. R.</i>,
-1908. <i>Iconographie des Œuvres de J.-J. R.</i>, 1910.&mdash;H. Buffenoir: <i>Les Portraits
-de J.-J. R.</i>&mdash;E. Faguet: <i>Vie de R.</i>, 1912.&mdash;G. Gran: <i>J.-J. R.</i>, 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Hume: <i>Exposé succint de la contestation qui s’est élevée entre M. Hume et M.
-Rousseau</i>, 1766.&mdash;Dussaulx: <i>De mes rapports avec J.-J. R.</i>, 1798.&mdash;Comte
-d’Escherny: <i>Mélanges de littérature</i>, etc., 1811.&mdash;D. Guillaume: <i>J.-J. R. à Motiers</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[407]</a></span>
-1865.&mdash;Metzger: <i>J.-J. R. à l’île Saint-Pierre</i>, 1875. <i>La conversion de
-Mme. Warens</i>, 1887. <i>Une poignée de documents inédits sur Mme. Warens</i>, 1888.
-<i>Pensées de Mme. Warens</i>, 1888. <i>Les dernières années de Mme. Warens</i> [no date].
-G. Desnoiresterres: <i>Voltaire et J.-J. R.</i> (vol. <span class="smcapuc">VI</span> of ✱ <i>Voltaire et la société fr.
-au XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>) 2<sup>e</sup> éd. 1875.&mdash;G. Maugras: <i>Voltaire et J.-J. R.</i>, 1886.&mdash;F.
-Berthoud: <i>J.-J. R. au Val de Travers</i>, 1881. <i>J.-J. R. et le pasteur de
-Montmollin</i>, 1884.&mdash;T. de Saussure: <i>J.-J. R. à Venise, notes et documents</i>, recueillis
-par Victor Ceresole 1885.&mdash;P. J. Möbius: ✱ <i>J.-J. R.’s Krankheitsgeschichte</i>,
-1889.&mdash;Chatelain: <i>La Folie de J.-J. R.</i>, 1890.&mdash;F. Mugnier: <i>Nouvelles
-Lettres de Mme. Warens</i>, 1900.&mdash;A. de Montaigu: <i>Démêlés du Comte
-Montaigu et de son secrétaire J.-J. R.</i>, 1904.&mdash;B. de Saint-Pierre: <i>La Vie et les
-Ouvrages de J.-J. R.</i>, éd. critique p. par M. Souriau, 1907.&mdash;C. Collins: <i>J.-J. R.
-in England</i>, 1908.&mdash;A. Rey: <i>J.-J. R. dans la vallée de Montmorency</i>, 1909.&mdash;D.
-Cabanès: <i>Le Cabinet secret de l’histoire</i>, 3<sup>e</sup> série, 1909.&mdash;F. Girardet: <i>La Mort
-de J.-J. R.</i>, 1909.&mdash;P.-P. Plan: <i>R. raconté par les gazettes de son temps</i>, 1913.</p>
-
-<p>General Studies (chiefly critical): Bersot: <i>Etudes sur le XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>,
-1855.&mdash;J. Morley: ✱ <i>R.</i>, 1873. 2d edn. 2 vols., 1886&mdash;Saint-Marc Girardin:
-<i>J.-J. R., sa vie et ses œuvres</i>, 1874.&mdash;H.-F. Amiel: <i>Caractéristique générale de
-R.</i>, in <i>J.-J. R. jugé par les Génevois d’aujourd’hui</i>, 1878.&mdash;Mahrenholtz: <i>J.-J.
-R.’s Leben</i>, 1889.&mdash;Chuquet: <i>J.-J. R.</i>, 1893.&mdash;H. Höffding: <i>R. und seine
-Philosophie</i>, 1897.&mdash;J.-F. Nourrisson: <i>J.-J. R. et le Rousseauisme</i>, 1903.&mdash;Brédif:
-<i>Du Caractère intellectuel et moral de J.-J. R.</i>, 1906.&mdash;J. Lemaître:
-<i>J.-J. R.</i>, 1907.&mdash;L. Claretie: <i>J.-J. R. et ses amis</i>, 1907.&mdash;L. Ducros: <i>J.-J. R.
-(1712-57)</i>, 1908. <i>J.-J. R. (1757-65)</i>, 1917.&mdash;B. Bouvier: <i>J.-J. R.</i>, 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Special Studies (chiefly critical): Sainte-Beuve: ✱ <i>Lundis</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">II</span> (<i>R. et Mme. de
-Franqueville</i>), 1850; t. <span class="smcapuc">III</span> (<i>les Confessions</i>), 1850; t. <span class="smcapuc">XV</span> (<i>Œuvres et Correspondance
-inédites</i>), 1861. <i>Nouveaux Lundis</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">IX</span> (<i>Mad. de Verdelin</i>), 1865.&mdash;J. R.
-Lowell: <i>R. and the Sentimentalists, in Lit. Essays</i>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 1867.&mdash;Brunetière: <i>Etudes
-critiques</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">III</span> (1886) et IV (1890).&mdash;C. Borgeaud: <i>J.-J. R.’s Religionsphilosophie</i>,
-1883.&mdash;A. Jansen: <i>R. als Musiker</i>, 1884. <i>R. als Botaniker</i>, 1885.&mdash;Espinas:
-<i>Le système de R.</i>, 1895.&mdash;T. Davidson: <i>J.-J. R. and Education according
-to Nature</i>, 1898.&mdash;M. Liepmann: <i>Die Rechtsphilosophie des J.-J. R.</i>
-1898.&mdash;F. Haymann: <i>J.-J. R.’s Sozial-Philosophie</i>, 1898.&mdash;P. E. Merriam:
-<i>History of the Theory of Sovereignty since R.</i>, 1900.&mdash;E. Duffau: <i>La profession
-de foi du Vicaire Savoyard</i>, 1900.&mdash;J. L. Windenberger: <i>Essai sur le Système de
-politique étrangère de J.-J. R.</i>, 1900.&mdash;A. Pougin: <i>J.-J. R. musicien</i>, 1901.&mdash;G.
-Schumann: <i>Religion und Religion-Erziehung bei R.</i>, 1902.&mdash;Faguet: <i>Politique
-comparée de Montesquieu, Voltaire et R.</i>, 1902.&mdash;M. Gascheau: <i>Les Idées économiques
-chez quelques philosophes du XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, 1903.&mdash;Grand-Carteret:
-<i>La Montagne à travers les âges</i>, 1903.&mdash;Albalat: <i>Le Travail du Style enseigné
-par les corrections manuscrites des grands écrivains</i>, 1903.&mdash;A. Geikie: <i>Landscape
-in History and other Essays</i>, 1905.&mdash;B. Lassudrie-Duchesne: <i>J.-J. R. et le
-Droit des gens</i>, 1906.&mdash;G. del Vecchio: <i>Su la teoria del Contratto Sociale</i>, 1906.&mdash;P. E.
-More: <i>Shelburne Essays</i>, <span class="smcapuc">VI</span> (<i>Studies in Religious Dualism</i>), 1909.&mdash;D.
-Mornet: <i>Le sentiment de la nature en France, de J.-J. R. à B. de S. Pierre</i>,
-1907.&mdash;L. Gignoux: <i>Le théâtre de J.-J. R.</i>, 1909.&mdash;H. Rodet: <i>Le Contrat Social
-et les idées politiques de J.-J. R.</i>, 1909.&mdash;A. Schinz: <i>J.-J. R., a Forerunner
-of Pragmatism</i>, 1909.&mdash;G. Fusseder: <i>Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Sprache R.’s</i>,
-1909.&mdash;J.-J. Tiersot: <i>R.</i>, 1912 (<i>Les Maîtres de la Musique</i>).&mdash;G. Vallette:
-<i>J.-J. R. Génevois</i>, 1911.&mdash;E. Faguet: <i>R. contre Molière</i>, 1912. <i>Les Amies de R.</i>,
-1912. <i>R. Artiste</i>, 1913. <i>R. Penseur</i>, 1913.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[408]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Sources: Dom Cajot: <i>Les Plagiats de J.-J. R. de Genève sur l’Education</i>, 1765.&mdash;J.
-Vuy: <i>Origine des ideés politiques de J.-J. R.</i>, 1878.&mdash;G. Krüger: <i>Emprunts
-de J.-J. R. dans son premier Discours</i>, 1891.&mdash;J. Texte: ✱ <i>J.-J. R. et les
-origines du Cosmopolitisme littéraire au XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, 1895.&mdash;C. Culcasi:
-<i>Degli influssi italiani nell’ opera di J.-J. R.</i>&mdash;G. Chinni: <i>Le fonti dell’ Emile de
-J.-J. R.</i>, 1908.&mdash;D. Villey: <i>L’influence de Montaigne sur les idées pédagogiques
-de Locke et de R.</i>, 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Reputation and Influence: Mme. de Staël: <i>Lettres sur le caractère et les ouvrages
-de J.-J. R.</i>, 1788.&mdash;Mercier: <i>De J.-J. R. considéré comme l’un des premiers
-auteurs de la Révolution</i>, 1791.&mdash;Kramer: <i>A.-H. Francke, J.-J. R., H. Pestalozzi</i>,
-1854.&mdash;E. Schmidt: <i>Richardson, Rousseau und Goethe</i>, 1875.&mdash;Dietrich:
-<i>Kant et R.</i>, 1878.&mdash;Nolen: <i>Kant et J.-J. R.</i>, 1880.&mdash;O. Schmidt: <i>R. et
-Byron</i>, 1887.&mdash;Pinloche: <i>La réforme de l’éducation en Allemagne au XVIII<sup>e</sup>
-siècle, Basedow et le philanthropinisme</i>, 1889. <i>Pestalozzi et l’éducation populaire
-moderne</i>, 1891.&mdash;Lévy-Bruhl: <i>L’Allemagne depuis Leibnitz</i>, 1890. <i>La
-Philosophie de Jacobi</i>, 1894.&mdash;J. Grand-Carteret: <i>J.-J. R. jugé par les Français
-d’aujourd’hui</i>, 1890.&mdash;R. Fester: <i>R. und die deutsche Geschichtsphilosophie</i>,
-1890.&mdash;H. Gössgen: <i>R. und Basedow</i>, 1891.&mdash;C. H. Lincoln: <i>J.-J. R. and
-the French Revolution</i>, 1898.&mdash;A. Chalybans: <i>J.-J. R.’s Einfluss auf die französische
-Revolution und die Socialdemokratie</i>, 1899.&mdash;V. Delbos: <i>Essai sur la
-formation de la philosophie pratique de Kant</i>, 1903.&mdash;C. Cestre: <i>La Révolution
-française et les Poètes anglais</i>, 1906.&mdash;P. Lasserre: ✱ <i>Le Romantisme français</i>,
-1907.&mdash;Natorp: <i>Gesammelte Abhandlungen zur Sozialpädagogik</i>, erste Abteilung:
-<i>Historisches (Pestalozzi et R.)</i>, 1907.&mdash;M. Schiff: <i>Editions et traductions italiennes
-des œuvres de J.-J. R.</i>, 1908.&mdash;H. Buffenoir: <i>Le Prestige de J.-J. R.</i>, 1909.&mdash;E.
-Champion: <i>J.-J. R. et la Révolution française</i>, 1910 (superficial).&mdash;A.
-Meynier: <i>J.-J. R. révolutionnaire</i>, 1913 (superficial).&mdash;<i>Revue de métaphysique
-et de morale</i>, May, 1912. Symposium on R. and his influence by E. Boutroux, B.
-Bosanquet, J. Jaurès, etc. For similar symposium (by G. Lanson, H. Höffding,
-E. Gosse, etc.) see <i>Annales de la Soc. J.-J. R.</i>, VIII (1912). For symposium by
-Italian writers see <i>Per il II<sup>o</sup> centenario di G. G. R. (Studi pubblicati dalla Rivista
-pedagogica)</i>, 1913.&mdash;P. M. Masson: ✱ <i>La Religion de J.-J. R.</i>, 3 vols. 1917. (A
-storehouse of information for the growth of deism and religious sentimentalism
-in France in the 18th century. Unfortunately the author is himself confused
-as to the difference between genuine religion and mere religiosity.)</p>
-
-<p><b>D. Diderot</b>, 1713-84: <i>Œuvres</i>, p. par Assézat et Tourneux, 20 vols. 1875-79.
-<i>Diderot. Extraits</i>, avec intro., etc., par J. Texte, 1909 (excellent). <i>Pages choisies
-de D.</i>, p. avec intro. par G. Pellissier, 1909 (excellent).</p>
-
-<p>Naigeon: <i>Mémoire sur la vie et les ouvrages de D.</i>, 1798. <i>Mémoires de Mme.
-de Vandeul</i>, 1830.&mdash;Sainte-Beuve: <i>Portraits litt.</i>, I (1830). <i>Lundis</i>, <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, (1851).&mdash;Rosenkranz:
-<i>D.’s Leben und Werke</i>, 2 vols. 1866.&mdash;E. Scherer: ✱ <i>D.</i>, 1880.&mdash;Caro:
-<i>La fin du Dix-huitième Siècle</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 1880.&mdash;E. Faguet: <i>Dix-huitième Siècle</i>,
-1892.&mdash;J. Morley: ✱ <i>Diderot and the Encyclopædists</i>, 2 vols. 1891.&mdash;L. Ducros:
-<i>D., l’homme et l’écrivain</i>, 1894.&mdash;J. Reinach: <i>D.</i>, 1894.&mdash;A. Collignon: <i>D., sa
-vie, ses œuvres, sa correspondance</i>, 1895.&mdash;Bersot: <i>Etudes sur le Dix-huitième
-Siècle</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 1855.&mdash;Brunetière: <i>Etudes critiques</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>. <i>Les Salons de D.</i>, 1880.&mdash;J.
-Bédier: <i>Le Paradoxe sur le Comédien est-il de D.? Etudes Critiques</i>, 1903.</p>
-
-<p><b>Bernardin de Saint-Pierre</b>, 1737-1814: <i>Etudes de la nature</i>, 3 vols. 1784;
-4 vols. 1787 (4th vol. contains <i>Paul et Virginie</i>); éd. augmentée, 5 vols. 1792.
-<i>œuvres complètes</i>, p. par Aimé Martin, 12 vols. 1818-20. Supplément, 1823.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[409]</a></span>
-<i>Correspondance</i>, p. par A. Martin, 3 vols. 1826.&mdash;A. Barine: <i>B. de Saint-Pierre</i>,
-1891.&mdash;F. Maury: <i>Etude sur la vie et les œuvres de B. de Saint-Pierre</i>,
-1892.</p>
-
-<p>Nineteenth Century: A. Nettement: <i>Histoire de la litt. fr. sous le gouvernement
-de juillet</i>, 2 vols. 1854.&mdash;A. Michiels: <i>Histoire des idées lit. en Fr.</i>, 2 vols.
-1842.&mdash;G. Pellissier: ✱ <i>Le mouvement litt. au XIX<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>. (Eng. trans.) 6th
-edn. 1900.&mdash;E. Faguet: <i>Le XIX<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, 1887. ✱ <i>Politiques et Moralistes du
-XIX<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, 3 vols. 1891-99.&mdash;F. Brunetière: ✱ <i>L’Evolution de la poésie lyrique
-en Fr. au XIX<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, 2 vols. 1894.&mdash;C. Le Goffie: <i>La Litt. fr. au XIX<sup>e</sup>
-siècle</i>, 1910.&mdash;F. Strowski: <i>Histoire de la litt. fr. au XIX<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, 1911. Important
-material bearing on the romantic period will also be found in the critical
-essays of G. Planche, D. Nisard, Sainte-Beuve, A. Vinet, E. Scherer, Barbey
-d’Aurevilly, H. Taine, E. Montégut, F. Brunetière, P. Bourget, E. Biré,
-E. Faguet, J. Lemaître, G. Larroumet, G. Pellissier, R. Doumic, etc. For fuller
-information see bibliography of my <i>Masters of Mod. Fr. Crit.</i>, 395 ff. For tables
-of contents of the different volumes of these and other critics see Thieme:
-<i>Guide bibliographique</i>, 499 ff.</p>
-
-<p>History, Critical Studies and Special Topics: Stendhal: <i>Racine et Shakespeare</i>,
-1823.&mdash;D. Sauvageot: <i>Le Romantisme</i> (t. <span class="smcapuc">VIII</span> de <i>L’Hist. de la Litt. fr.</i>, publiée
-sous la direction de Petit de Julleville).&mdash;T. Gautier: <i>Hist. du Romantisme</i>,
-1874.&mdash;Fournier: <i>Souvenirs poétiques de l’Ecole Romantique</i>, 1880.&mdash;R.
-Bazin: <i>Victor Pavie</i>, 1886.&mdash;T. Pavie: <i>Victor Pavie, sa jeunesse, ses relations
-littéraires</i>, 1887.&mdash;L. Derôme: <i>Les éditions originales des romantiques</i>,
-2 vols. 1887.&mdash;G. Allais: <i>Quelques vues générales sur le Romantisme fr.</i> 1897.&mdash;J.
-Texte: <i>L’influence allemande dans le Romantisme fr.</i>, in <i>Etudes de litt.
-européenne</i>, 1898.&mdash;E. Asse: <i>Les petits romantiques</i>, 1900.&mdash;E. Dubedout:
-<i>Le sentiment chrétien dans la poésie romantique</i>, 1901.&mdash;Le Roy: <i>L’Aube du
-théâtre romantique</i>, 1902.&mdash;R. Canat: <i>Du sentiment de la solitude morale chez
-les romantiques et les parnassiens</i>, 1904.&mdash;E. Barat: <i>Le style poétique et la
-révolution romantique</i>, 1904.&mdash;H. Lardanchet: <i>Les enfants perdus du romantisme</i>,
-1905.&mdash;A. Cassagne: <i>La théorie de l’art pour l’art en France</i>, 1906.&mdash;E.
-Kircher: <i>Philosophie der Romantik</i>, 1906.&mdash;E. Estève: ✱ <i>Byron et le Romantisme
-fr.</i>, 1907.&mdash;Lasserre: ✱ <i>Le Romantisme fr.</i>, 1907. (A very drastic attack
-on Rousseau and the whole Rousseauistic tendency.)&mdash;L. Séché: <i>Le Cénacle
-de La Muse Fr. (1823-27)</i>, 1908.&mdash;E. Seillière: <i>Le Mal romantique, essai sur
-l’impérialisme irrationnel</i>, 1908. (One of about 18 vols. in which S. attacks the
-underlying postulates of the Rousseauist. Like the other leaders of the crusade
-against romanticism in France, S. seems to me unsound on the constructive
-side.)&mdash;A. Pavie: <i>Médaillons romantiques</i>, 1909.&mdash;W. Küchler: <i>Französische
-Romantik</i>, 1909.&mdash;C. Lecigne: <i>Le Fléau romantique</i>, 1909.&mdash;P. Lafond:
-<i>L’Aube romantique</i>, 1910.&mdash;L. Maigron: ✱ <i>Le Romantisme et les mœurs</i>, 1910.
-<i>Le Romantisme et la mode</i>, 1911.&mdash;G. Michaut: <i>Sur le Romantisme, une
-poignée de définitions</i> (extraits du <i>Globe</i>) in <i>Pages de critique et d’hist. litt.</i>, 1910.&mdash;J.
-Marsan: <i>La Bataille romantique</i>, 1912.&mdash;P. van Tieghem: <i>Le Mouvement
-romantique</i>, 1912.&mdash;G. Pellissier: <i>Le Réalisme du romantisme</i>, 1912.&mdash;A.
-Bisi: <i>L’Italie et le romantisme français</i>, 1914.&mdash;C. Maurras: <i>L’Avenir de
-l’intelligence.</i> 2<sup>e</sup> éd. 1917.&mdash;L. Rosenthal: <i>Du Romantisme au réalisme</i>, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>A. Jullien: <i>Le Romantisme et l’éditeur Renduel</i>, 1897.&mdash;P. Nebout: <i>Le
-Drame romantique</i>, 1897.&mdash;F. Baldensperger: ✱ <i>Goethe en France</i>, 1904. <i>Bibliographie
-critique de Goethe en France</i>, 1907.&mdash;C. Latreille: <i>La Fin du théâtre romantique<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[410]</a></span>
-et François Ponsard</i>, 1899.&mdash;R. Canat: <i>La renaissance de la Grèce antique
-(1820-50)</i>, 1911.&mdash;G. Gendarme de Bévotte: <i>La Légende de Don Juan</i>, 2
-vols. 1911.&mdash;L. Séché: <i>Le Cénacle de Joseph Delorme</i>, 2 vols. 1912.&mdash;J. L.
-Borgerhoff: <i>Le théâtre anglais à Paris sous la Restauration</i>, 1913.&mdash;M. Souriau:
-<i>De la convention dans la tragédie classique et dans le drame romantique</i>, 1885.</p>
-
-<p>Anthologies: <i>Anthologie des poètes fr. du XIX<sup>e</sup> siècle</i> (Lemerre), 4 vols.
-1887-88.&mdash;<i>French Lyrics of the Nineteenth Century</i>, ed. by G. N. Henning,
-1913. (An excellent selection.)&mdash;<i>The Romantic Movement in French Literature</i>,
-traced by a series of texts selected and edited by H. F. Stewart and A. Tilley,
-1910.</p>
-
-<p>The Press: <i>La Muse Française</i>, 1823-24. Reprinted with intro. by J. Marsan,
-2 vols. 1907-09.&mdash;P. F. Dubois: <i>Fragments litt.</i>, articles extraits du
-<i>Globe</i>, 2 vols. 1879.&mdash;T. Ziessing: <i>“Le Globe” de 1824 à 1830, considéré dans
-ses rapports avec l’école romantique</i>, 1881.&mdash;F. Davis: <i>French Romanticism and
-the Press, “The Globe”</i>, 1906.&mdash;C. M. Desgranges: ✱ <i>Le Romantisme et la
-critique, la presse litt. sous la Restauration</i>, 1907.</p>
-
-<p>B. Constant: <i>Adolphe</i>, 1816; avec préface de Sainte-Beuve, 1867; de P.
-Bourget, 1888; d’A. France, 1889.&mdash;Sainte-Beuve: <i>Portraits litt.</i>, 1844. <i>Lundis</i>,
-<span class="smcapuc">XI</span> (sur <i>Adolphe</i>); <i>Nouveaux Lundis</i>, <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 1862.&mdash;E. Faguet: <i>Politiques et
-Moralistes</i>, 1<sup>r</sup>e série, 1891.&mdash;G. Rudler: <i>La jeunesse de B. Constant (1767-94)</i>,
-1909. <i>Bibliographie critique des œuvres de B. C.</i>, 1908.&mdash;J. Ettlinger: <i>B. C., der
-Roman eines Lebens</i>, 1909.</p>
-
-<p><b>Madame de Staël</b>, 1766-1817: <i>De la littérature</i>, 1801. Delphine, 1802. <i>Corinne</i>,
-1807. <i>De l’Allemagne</i>, 1814. <i>Œuvres complètes</i>, 3 vols. 1836.</p>
-
-<p>Biography: Mme. Necker de Saussure: <i>Notice en tête de l’édition des Œuvres</i>,
-1820.&mdash;Mme. Lenormant: <i>Mme. de S. et la grande duchesse Louise</i>, 1862.
-<i>Mme. Récamier</i>, 1872.&mdash;A. Stevens: <i>Mme. de S.</i>, 2 vols. 1881.&mdash;D’Haussonville:
-<i>Le Salon de Mme. Necker</i>, 1882.&mdash;Lady Blennerhassett: ✱ <i>Mme. de S. et
-son temps</i>, traduit de l’allemand p. A. Dietrich, 3 vols. 1890.&mdash;A. Sorel:
-<i>Mme. de S.</i>, 1890.&mdash;Dejob: <i>Mme. de S. et l’Italie</i>, 1890.&mdash;E. Ritter: <i>Notes sur
-Mme. de S.</i>, 1899.&mdash;P. Gautier: <i>Mme. de S. et Napoléon</i>, 1903.</p>
-
-<p>Critical Studies: Sainte-Beuve: <i>Portraits Littéraires</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, 1836. <i>Portraits de
-Femmes</i>, 1844. <i>Nouveaux Lundis</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 1862.&mdash;Vinet: <i>Etudes sur la litt. française.
-Mme. de S. et Chateaubriand</i>, 1849. New edn. published by P. Sirven, 1911.&mdash;Faguet:
-<i>Politiques et Moralistes</i>, 1891.&mdash;F. Brunetière: <i>Evolution de la Critique</i>,
-1892.&mdash;U. Mengin: <i>L’Italie des Romantiques</i>, 1902.&mdash;Maria-Teresa Porta: <i>Mme.
-de S. e l’Italia (bibliographia)</i>, 1909.&mdash;G. Muoni: <i>Ludovico di Breme e le prime
-polemiche intorno a Mme. de S. ed al Romanticismo in Italia</i>.&mdash;E. G. Jaeck:
-<i>Mme. de S. and the Spread of German Literature</i>, 1915.&mdash;P. Kohler: <i>Mme. de S.
-et la Suisse</i>, 1916.&mdash;R. C. Whitford: <i>Mme. de S.’s Reputation in England</i>, 1918.</p>
-
-<p><b>François René de Chateaubriand</b>, 1768-1848. <i>Essai sur les Révolutions</i>,
-1797.&mdash;Atala, 1801. <i>Le Génie du Christianisme</i>, 1802. <i>René</i>, 1802. <i>Les Martyrs</i>,
-1809. <i>Mémoires d’Outre-Tombe</i>, 1849-50; éd. Biré, 6 vols. 1898-1901.
-<i>œuvres complètes</i>, 12 vols. 1859-61. <i>Correspondance générale</i>, p. par L. Thomas,
-vols. I-IV, 1912-13.&mdash;Rocheblave: <i>Pages choisies de C.</i>, 1896.&mdash;V. Giraud:
-<i>Mémoires d’Outre-Tombe: Pages choisies</i>, 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Biography: Vinet: <i>Etudes sur la litt. française. Mme. de Staël et C.</i>, 1849. New
-edn. published by P. Sirven, 1911.&mdash;A. France: <i>Lucile de Chateaubriand</i>,
-1879.&mdash;A. Bardoux: <i>Mme. de Beaumont</i>, 1884. <i>Mme. de Custine</i>, 1888. <i>Mme.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[411]</a></span>
-de Duras</i>, 1898.&mdash;F. Saulnier: <i>Lucile de Chateaubriand</i>, 1885.&mdash;G. Pailhès:
-<i>Mme. de C.</i>, 1887. <i>Mme. de C., lettres inédites à Clausel de Coussergues</i>, 1888. <i>C.,
-sa femme et ses amis</i>, 1896. <i>Du nouveau sur Joubert, C.</i>, etc., 1900.&mdash;J. Bédier:
-<i>C. en Amérique</i>, 1899. <i>Etudes critiques</i>, 1903.&mdash;E. Biré: <i>Les dernières années
-de C. (1830-48)</i>, 1902.&mdash;A. Le Braz: <i>Au pays d’exil de C.</i>, 1909.&mdash;A. Beaunier:
-<i>Trois amies de C.</i>, 1910.&mdash;A. Cassagne: <i>La vie politique de C.</i>, 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Critical Studies: Sainte-Beuve: <i>Portraits Contemporains</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 1834, 1844.
-<i>Lundis</i>, ts. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 1850; <span class="smcapuc">X</span>, 1854. <i>Nouveaux Lundis</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, 1862. ✱ <i>C. et son groupe
-littéraire sous l’Empire</i>, 1848.</p>
-
-<p>Villemain: <i>C.</i>, 1853.&mdash;Comte de Marcellus: <i>C. et son temps</i>, 1859.&mdash;P.
-Bourget: <i>C.</i>, in <i>Etudes et Portraits</i>, 1889.&mdash;C. Maurras: <i>Trois idées politiques
-(C., Michelet, Sainte-Beuve)</i>, 1898.&mdash;F. Gansen: <i>Le rapport de V. Hugo à C.</i>,
-1900.&mdash;Lady Blennerhassett: <i>Die Romantik und die Restaurationsepoche in
-Frankreich, C.</i>, 1903.&mdash;E. Dick: <i>Plagiats de C.</i>, 1905.&mdash;G. Daub: <i>Der Parallelismus
-zwischen C. und Lamartine</i>, 1909.&mdash;E. Michel: <i>C., interprétation médico-psychologique
-de son caractère</i>, 1911.&mdash;Portiquet: <i>C. et l’hystérie</i>, 1911.&mdash;V.
-Giraud: <i>Nouvelles études sur C.</i>, 1912.&mdash;J. Lemaître: <i>C.</i>, 1912.&mdash;G. Chinard:
-✱ <i>L’Exotisme américain dans l’œuvre de C.</i>, 1918. (This volume with its
-two predecessors: <i>L’Exotisme américain au XVI<sup>e</sup> siècle</i> (1911), and <i>L’Amérique
-et le rêve exotique au XVII<sup>e</sup> et au XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle</i> (1913) is an important repertory
-of material for the legend of the “noble savage” and allied topics.)</p>
-
-<p><b>E. P. de Senancour</b>, 1770-1846: <i>Rêveries</i>, 1798, 1800. Ed. critique, pub. par
-J. Merlant, vol. I, 1911. <i>Obermann</i>, 1804, 2d edn. with preface by Sainte-Beuve,
-1833.&mdash;J. Levallois: <i>Un précurseur, Senancour</i>, 1897.&mdash;A. S. Tornudd:
-<i>S.</i>, 1898&mdash;J. Troubat: <i>Essais critiques</i>, 1902.&mdash;J. Merlant: <i>S., poète, penseur
-religieux et publiciste</i>, 1907.&mdash;R. Bouyer: <i>Un contemporain de Beethoven, Obermann
-précurseur et musicien</i>, 1907.&mdash;G. Michaut: <i>S., ses amis et ses ennemis</i>,
-1909.</p>
-
-<p><b>Charles Nodier</b>, 1783-1844: <i>Œuvres</i>, 13 vols. 1832-41 (incomplete).&mdash;S.
-de Lovenjoul: <i>Bibliographie et critique</i>, 1902. <i>Œuvres choisies de N.</i> Notices p.
-A. Cazes, 1914.&mdash;Sainte-Beuve: <i>Portraits littér.</i>, <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 1840.&mdash;P. Mérimée: <i>Portraits
-histor. et littér.</i>, 1874.&mdash;E. Montégut: <i>Nos morts contemp.</i>, <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 1884.&mdash;M.
-Salomon: <i>C. N. et le groupe romantique d’après des documents inédits</i>, 1908.&mdash;J.
-Marsan: <i>Notes sur C. N., documents inédits, lettres</i>, 1912.</p>
-
-<p><b>Alphonse de Lamartine</b>, 1790-1869: <i>Méditations poétiques</i>, 1820. <i>Nouvelles
-méditations poétiques</i>, 1823. <i>Harmonies poétiques et religieuses</i>, 1832. <i>Jocelyn</i>,
-1836. <i>Œuvres complètes</i>, 41 vols. 1860-66. <i>Œuvres</i> (éd. Lemerre), 12 vols. 1885-87.
-<i>Correspondance</i>, p. par V. de Lamartine, 6 vols. 1872-75.</p>
-
-<p>Biographical and General Studies: F. Falconnet: <i>A. de L.</i>, 1840.&mdash;Chapuys-Montlaville:
-<i>L.</i>, 1843.&mdash;E. de Mirecourt: <i>L.</i>, 1853.&mdash;E. Ollivier: <i>L.</i>,
-1874.&mdash;H. de Lacretelle: <i>L. et ses amis</i>, 1878.&mdash;P. Bourget: <i>L.</i>, in <i>Etudes et
-Portraits</i>, 1889.&mdash;De Pomairols: <i>L.</i>, 1889.&mdash;Baron de Chamborand de
-Périssat: <i>L. inconnu</i>, 1891.&mdash;F. Reyssié: <i>La jeunesse de L.</i>, 1892.&mdash;Deschanel:
-<i>L.</i>, 1893.&mdash;A. France: <i>L’Elvire de L.</i>, 1893.&mdash;R. Doumic: <i>Elvire à
-Aix-les-Bains</i>, in <i>Etudes sur la litt. française</i>, 6<sup>e</sup> série, 1909. <i>L.</i>, 1912.&mdash;Zyromski:
-<i>L. poète lyrique</i>, 1897.&mdash;Larroumet: <i>L.</i>, in <i>Nouvelles études de litt. et d’art</i>,
-1899.&mdash;L. Séché: <i>L. de 1816 à 1830</i>, 1905. <i>Le Roman d’Elvire</i>, 1909. <i>Les
-amitiés de L., 1<sup>r</sup>e série</i>, 1911.&mdash;E. Sugier: <i>L.</i>, 1910.&mdash;P.-M. Masson: <i>L.</i>, 1911.&mdash;P.
-de Lacretelle: <i>Les origines et la jeunesse de L.</i>, 1911.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[412]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Critical Studies: G. Planche: <i>Portraits littéraires</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 1836. <i>Nouveaux Portraits</i>,
-1854.&mdash;Sainte-Beuve: ✱ <i>Lundis</i>, ts. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, <span class="smcapuc">X</span>, 1849-54. <i>Portraits contemporains</i>,
-t. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 1832-39.&mdash;J. Lemaître: <i>Les Contemporains</i>, 6<sup>e</sup> série, 1896.&mdash;E. Faguet:
-<i>XIX<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, 1897&mdash;Brunetière: <i>L’évolution de la poésie lyrique en France
-au XIX<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>, 1894.&mdash;A. Roux: <i>La question de Jocelyn</i>, 1897.&mdash;M. Citoleux:
-<i>La poésie philosophique au XIX<sup>e</sup> siècle, L.</i>, 1905.&mdash;C. Maréchal: <i>Le véritable
-Voyage en Orient de L.</i>, 1908.&mdash;P. de Lacretelle: <i>Les origines et la jeunesse de
-L.</i>, 1911.&mdash;L. Séché: <i>Les Amitiés de L.</i>, 1912.&mdash;R. Doumic: <i>L.</i>, 1912.&mdash;H. R.
-Whitehouse: <i>The Life of L.</i>, 2 vols. 1918.</p>
-
-<p><b>Alfred de Vigny</b>, 1797-1863: <i>Eloa</i>, 1824. <i>Poèmes antiques et modernes</i>, 1826.
-<i>Cinq-Mars</i>, 1826. <i>Chatterton</i>, 1835. <i>Les Destinées</i>, 1864. <i>Œuvres</i> (Lemerre), 8
-vols. 1883-85. <i>Le Journal d’un poète</i>, p. par L. Ratisbonne, 1867. <i>La Correspondance
-d’A. de V.</i>, 1906 (incomplete).&mdash;S. de Lovenjoul: <i>Les Lundis d’un
-chercheur</i>, 1894.&mdash;E. Asse: <i>A. de V. et les éditions originales de ses poésies</i>,
-1895.&mdash;J. Langlais: <i>Essai de bibliographie de A. de V.</i>, 1905.</p>
-
-<p>Biography: L. Séché: <i>A. de V. et son temps</i> [no date].&mdash;E. Dupuy: <i>La Jeunesse
-des Romantiques</i>, 1905. <i>A. de V., ses amitiés, son rôle littéraire</i>, 2 vols. 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Critical Studies: Sainte-Beuve: <i>Portraits littéraires</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, 1844. <i>Nouveaux
-Lundis</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">VI</span>, 1863.&mdash;Barbey d’Aurevilly: <i>Les Œuvres et les Hommes</i>, <span class="smcapuc">III</span>,
-1862.&mdash;A. France: <i>A. de V.</i>, 1868.&mdash;P. Bourget: <i>Etudes et Portraits</i>, 1889.&mdash;Brunetière:
-<i>L’évolution de la poésie lyrique</i>, 1894.&mdash;Faguet: <i>XIX<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>,
-1897.&mdash;Paléologue: <i>A. de V.</i>, 1891.&mdash;Dorison: <i>A. de V. poète, philosophe</i>,
-1891.&mdash;J. Lemaître: <i>Contemporains</i>, <span class="smcapuc">VII</span>, 1899.&mdash;E. Sakellaridès: <i>A. de V.,
-auteur dramatique</i>, 1902.&mdash;Marabail: <i>De l’influence de l’esprit militaire sur A.
-de V.</i>, 1905.&mdash;H. Schmack: <i>A. de V.’s Stello und Chatterton</i>, 1905.&mdash;P.-M.
-Masson: <i>A. de V.</i>, 1908.&mdash;P. Buhle: <i>A. de V.’s biblische Gedichte und ihre
-Quellen</i>, 1909.&mdash;E. Lauvrière: <i>A. de V.</i>, 1910.&mdash;F. Baldensperger: <i>A. de V.</i>,
-1912.&mdash;L. Séché: <i>A. de V.</i>, 2 vols. 1914.&mdash;A. Desvoyes: <i>A. de V. d’après son
-œuvre</i>, 1914.&mdash;J. Aicard: <i>A. de V.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p><b>Victor Hugo</b>, 1802-85: <i>Œuvres complètes</i>, ed. <i>ne varietur d’après les manuscrits
-originaux</i>, 48 vols. 1880-85. <i>Œuvres inédites</i>, 14 vols. 1886-1902. <i>Correspondence
-(1815-84)</i>, 2 vols. 1896. <i>Lettres à la fiancée (1820-22)</i>, 1901.</p>
-
-<p>Biography: Mme. Victor Hugo: <i>V. H. raconté par un témoin de sa vie</i>, 2 vols.
-1863.&mdash;E. Biré: <i>V. H. avant 1830</i>, 1883. <i>V. H. après 1830</i>, 2 vols. 1891. <i>V.
-H. après 1852</i>, 1894.&mdash;G. Larroumet: <i>La maison de V. H., impressions de
-Guernsey</i>, 1895.&mdash;A. Jullien: <i>Le Romantisme et l’éditeur Renduel</i>, 1897.&mdash;A.
-Barbou: <i>La Vie de V. H.</i>, 1902.&mdash;G. Simon: <i>L’Enfance de V. H.</i>, 1904.&mdash;E.
-Dupuy: <i>La Jeunesse des Romantiques</i>, 1905.&mdash;C. Maréchal: <i>Lamennais et V.
-H.</i>, 1906.&mdash;L. Séché: <i>Le Cénacle de Joseph Delorme.</i> <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, <i>V. H. et les Poètes.</i> <span class="smcapuc">II</span>,
-<i>V. H. et les artistes</i>, 1912.&mdash;L. Guimbaud: <i>V. H. et Juliette Drouet</i>, 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Critical Studies: G. Planche: <i>Portraits littéraires</i>, ts. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 1836. <i>Nouveaux
-Portraits littéraires</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 1854.&mdash;Barbey d’Aurevilly: <i>Les Misérables de M.
-Victor Hugo</i>, 1862.&mdash;Sainte-Beuve: <i>Portraits litt.</i>, t, <span class="smcapuc">I</span> (1827); t. <span class="smcapuc">II</span> (1840); t. <span class="smcapuc">III</span>
-(1829); <i>Portraits contemporains</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">I</span> (1830-35).&mdash;Rémusat: <i>Critiques et études
-littéraires du passé et du présent</i>, 2<sup>e</sup> éd., 1857.&mdash;E. Zola: <i>Nos auteurs dramatiques</i>,
-1881. <i>Documents littéraires</i>, 1881.&mdash;A. C. Swinburne: <i>Essay on V. H.</i>,
-1886.&mdash;E. Dupuy: <i>V. H., l’homme et le poète</i>, 1887.&mdash;G. Duval: <i>Dictionnaire
-des métaphores de V. H.</i>, 1888.&mdash;P. Bourget: <i>V. H.</i>, in <i>Etudes et Portraits</i>, 1889.&mdash;Nisard:
-<i>Essais sur l’école Romantique</i>, 1891.&mdash;L. Mabilleau: <i>V. H.</i>, 1893.&mdash;C.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[413]</a></span>
-Renouvier: <i>V. H., le poète</i>, 1893. <i>V. H., le philosophe</i>, 1900.&mdash;A. Ricard:
-<i>Mgr. de Miollis, évêque de Digne</i>, 1893.&mdash;Brunetière: <i>L’évolution de la poésie
-lyrique</i>, 1894. <i>Les époques du théâtre français</i>, 1892.&mdash;A. Blanchard: <i>Le théâtre
-de V. H. et la parodie</i>, 1894.&mdash;Morel Fatio: <i>L’Histoire dans Ruy Blas</i>, in <i>Etudes
-sur l’Espagne, 1<sup>r</sup>e série</i>, 1895.&mdash;A. J. Theys: <i>Métrique de V. H.</i>, 1896.&mdash;M.
-Souriau: <i>La préface de Cromwell</i>, 1897. <i>Les idées morales de V. H.</i>, 1908.&mdash;A.
-Rochette: <i>L’Alexandrin chez V. H.</i>, 1899 and 1911.&mdash;F. Ganser: <i>Beiträge zur
-Beurteilung des Verhältnisses von V. H. zu Chateaubriand</i>, 1900.&mdash;E. Rigal:
-<i>V. H. poète épique</i>, 1900.&mdash;P. Stapfer: <i>V. H. et la grande poésie satirique en
-France</i>, 1901.&mdash;T. Gautier: <i>V.H.</i>, 1902.&mdash;P. and V. Glachant: <i>Essai critique
-sur le théâtre de V. H., Drames en vers. Drames en prose</i>, 2 vols., 1902 and
-1903.&mdash;P. Levin: <i>V. H.</i>, 1902.&mdash;<i>Leçons faites à l’Ecole Normale sous la
-direction de F. Brunetière</i>, 2 vols. 1902.&mdash;F. Gregh: <i>Etude sur V. H.</i>, 1902.&mdash;H.
-Peltier: <i>La philosophie de V. H.</i>, 1904.&mdash;H. Galletti: <i>L’opera di V.H.
-nella letteratura italiana</i>, 1904.&mdash;E. Huguet: <i>La couleur, la lumière et
-l’ombre dans les métaphores de V. H.</i>, 1905.&mdash;L. Lucchetti: <i>Les images dans
-les œuvres de V. H.</i>, 1907.&mdash;P. Bastier: <i>V. H. und seine Zeit.</i>, 1908.&mdash;Maria
-Valente: <i>V. H. e la lirica italiana</i>, 1908.&mdash;A. Guiard: <i>La fonction du poète,
-étude sur V. H.</i>, 1910. <i>Virgile et V. H.</i>, 1910.&mdash;C. Grillet: <i>La Bible dans V. H.</i>,
-1910.&mdash;P. Berret: <i>Le moyen âge européen dans La Légende des Siècles</i>,
-1911.&mdash;A. Rochette: <i>L’Alexandrin chez V. H.</i>, 1911.&mdash;P. Dubois: <i>V. H. Ses
-Idées religieuses de 1802-25</i>, 1913.</p>
-
-<p>H. Berlioz: <i>Correspondance inédite (1819-68)</i>, pub. par D. Bernard, 1879.
-<i>Lettres intimes</i>, pub. par Ch. Gounod, 1882. <i>Berlioz; les années romantiques
-(1819-42), Correspondance</i>, pub. par J. Tiersot, 1907.&mdash;A. Boschot: <i>La Jeunesse
-d’un romantique, H. Berlioz (1803-31)</i>, 1906. <i>Un romantique sous Louis
-Philippe, Berlioz (1831-42)</i>, 1908. <i>Le Crépuscule d’un romantique, Berlioz
-(1842-69)</i>, 1913.</p>
-
-<p><b>Alexandre Dumas</b>, 1803-70: <i>Henri III et sa cour</i>, 1829. <i>Antony</i>, 1831. <i>Les
-Trois Mousquetaires</i>, 1844. <i>Le Comte de Monte Cristo</i>, 1844-45.</p>
-
-<p>J. Janin: <i>A.D.</i>, 1871.&mdash;B. Matthews: In <i>Fr. Dramatists of the 19th cent.</i> ,
-1881.&mdash;B. de Bury: <i>A. D.</i>, 1885.&mdash;E. Courmeaux: <i>A. D.</i>, 1886.&mdash;J. J.
-Weiss: <i>Le théâtre et les mœurs</i>, 3<sup>e</sup> éd. 1889.&mdash;H. Parigot: <i>Le drame d’ A. D.</i>,
-1898. <i>A. D.</i>, 1901.&mdash;H. Lecomte: <i>A. D.</i>, 1903.&mdash;J. Lemaître: <i>Impressions de
-théâtre</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">III</span> (1890), <span class="smcapuc">IV</span> (’95), <span class="smcapuc">VIII</span> (’95), <span class="smcapuc">IX</span> (’96).&mdash;R. Doumic: <i>De Scribe à
-Ibsen</i>, 1896; also in <i>Hommes et idées du XIX<sup>e</sup> Siècle</i>, 1903.</p>
-
-<p><b>George Sand</b>, 1804-76: <i>Indiana</i>, 1832. <i>Lélia</i>, 1833. <i>Jacques</i>, 1834. <i>Consuelo</i>,
-1842-43. <i>La petite Fadette</i>, 1849. <i>Histoire de ma vie</i>, 4 vols. 1854-55.&mdash;<i>Correspondance</i>,
-6 vols. 1882-84. <i>Correspondance de G. S. et d’ A. de Musset</i>, p.
-par F. Decori, 1904. <i>Œuvres complètes</i> (éd. C. Lévy), 105 vols.&mdash;S. de Lovenjoul:
-<i>Etude bibliographique sur les œuvres de G. S.</i>, 1868.</p>
-
-<p>Biography: H. Lapaire and F. Roz: <i>La bonne dame de Nohant</i>, 1897.&mdash;Ageorges:
-<i>G. S. paysan</i>, 1901.&mdash;A. Le Roy: <i>G. S. et ses amis</i>, 1903.&mdash;H. Harrisse:
-<i>Derniers moments et obsèques de G. S., souvenirs d’un ami</i>, 1905.&mdash;A.
-Séché and J. Bertaut: <i>La vie anecdotique et pittoresque des grands écrivains, G. S.</i>,
-1909.</p>
-
-<p>Critical Studies: G. Planche: <i>Portraits littéraires</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 1836. <i>Nouveaux
-Portraits littéraires</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 1854.&mdash;Sainte-Beuve: ✱ <i>Lundis</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 1850. <i>Portraits
-Contemporains</i>, 1832.&mdash;E. Caro: <i>G. S.</i>, 1887.&mdash;P. Bourget: <i>Etudes et Portraits</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[414]</a></span>
-1889.&mdash;J. Lemaître: <i>Les Contemporains</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, 1889. <i>Impressions de
-théâtre</i>, ts. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, 1888-92.&mdash;Marillier: <i>La sensibilité et l’imagination chez G. S.</i>,
-1896.&mdash;W. Karénine: <i>G. S.</i>, 3 vols. 1899-1912.&mdash;R. Doumic: <i>G. S.</i>, 1909.&mdash;L.
-Buis: <i>Les théories sociales de G. S.</i>, 1910.&mdash;E. Moselly: <i>G. S.</i>, 1911.</p>
-
-<p><b>Gérard de Nerval</b>, 1808-55: <i>Œuvres compl.</i>, 5 vols. 1868. M. Tourneux: <i>G.
-de N.</i>, 1867.&mdash;T. Gautier: <i>Portr. et souvenirs littér.</i>, 1875.&mdash;Arvède Barine:
-<i>Les Névrosés</i>, 1898.&mdash;Mlle. Cartier: <i>Un intermédiaire entre la France et l’Allemagne,
-G. de N.</i>, 1904.&mdash;Gauthier-Ferrières: <i>G. de N., la vie et l’œuvre</i>, 1906.&mdash;J.
-Marsan: <i>G. de N., lettres inédites</i>, 1909.&mdash;<i>Correspondance (1830-55)</i>,
-p. par J. Marsan, 1911.&mdash;A. Marie: <i>G. de N.</i>, 1915.</p>
-
-<p><b>Alfred de Musset</b>, 1810-57: <i>Œuvres Complètes</i> (Charpentier), 10 vols. 1866,
-10 vols. (Lemerre), 1886. 9 vols. p. par E. Biré, 1907-08.&mdash;Rocheblave: <i>Lettres
-de George Sand à Musset et à Sainte-Beuve</i>, 1897.&mdash;<i>Correspondance de
-George Sand et d’A. de M.</i>, p. par F. Decori, 1904.&mdash;<i>Correspondance d’A. de
-M.</i>, p. par L. Séché, 1907.&mdash;S. de Lovenjoul: <i>Etude critique et bibliographique
-des œuvres d’A. de M.</i>, 1867.&mdash;M. Clouard: <i>Bibliographie des œuvres d’A. de
-M.</i>, 1883.</p>
-
-<p>Biography: G. Sand: <i>Elle et Lui</i>, 1859.&mdash;P. de Musset: <i>Lui et Elle</i>, 1859.
-<i>Biographie d’A. de M.</i>, 1877.&mdash;Louise Colet: <i>Lui</i>, 1859.&mdash;S. de Lovenjoul:
-<i>La véritable histoire de Elle et Lui</i>, 1897.&mdash;P. Mariéton: <i>Une histoire d’amour,
-George Sand et A. de M.</i>, 1897.&mdash;E. Lefébure: <i>L’état psychique d’A. de M.</i>,
-1897.&mdash;E. Faguet: <i>Amours d’hommes de lettres</i>, 1906.&mdash;L. Séché: <i>A. de M.</i>,
-1907. <i>La Jeunesse dorée sous Louis-Philippe</i>, 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Critical Studies: Sainte-Beuve: <i>Portraits Contemporains</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 1833. ✱ <i>Lundis</i>,
-<span class="smcapuc">I</span>., 1850, <span class="smcapuc">XIII</span>, 1857.&mdash;D. Nisard: <i>Etudes d’hist. et de lit.</i>, 1859. <i>Mélanges d’hist. et de lit.</i>, 1868.&mdash;P. Lindau: <i>A. de M.</i>, 1876.&mdash;H. James: <i>Fr. Poets and
-Novelists</i>, 1878.&mdash;D’Ancona: <i>A. de M. e l’Italia</i>, in <i>Varieta Storiche e Letterarie</i>,
-2 vols. 1883-85.&mdash;J. Lemaître: <i>Impr. de théâtre</i>, <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span> (’88), <span class="smcapuc">VII</span> (’93),
-<span class="smcapuc">IX</span> (’96), <span class="smcapuc">X</span> (’98).&mdash;Arvède Barine: <i>A. de M.</i>, 1893.&mdash;L. P. Betz: <i>H. Heine
-und A. de M.</i>, 1897.&mdash;L. Lafoscade: <i>Le théâtre d’A. de M.</i>, 1901.&mdash;G. Crugnola:
-<i>A. de M. e la sua opera</i>, 2 vols. 1902-03.&mdash;J. d’Aquitaine: <i>A. de M.,
-l’œuvre, le poète</i>, 1907.&mdash;Gauthier-Ferrières: <i>M., la vie de M., l’œuvre, M. et son
-temps</i>, 1909.&mdash;M. Donnay: <i>A. de M.</i>, 1914.&mdash;C. L. Maurras: ✱ <i>Les Amants de
-Venise</i>, Nou. éd., 1917.</p>
-
-<p><b>Théophile Gautier</b>, 1811-72: <i>Les Jeune-France</i>, 1833. <i>Mlle. de Maupin</i>,
-1836-36. <i>Emaux et Camées</i>, 1852. <i>Histoire du romantisme</i>, 1874. <i>Œuvres
-Compl.</i> (éd. Charpentier). 37 vols. 1883.&mdash;M. Tourneux: <i>T. G., sa bibliographie</i>,
-1876.&mdash;S. de Lovenjoul: <i>Histoire des œuvres de T. G.</i>, 2 vols. 1887.</p>
-
-<p>Sainte-Beuve: <i>Premiers Lundis</i>, t. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 1838. <i>Portraits Contemporains</i>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>.
-1846. <i>Nouveaux Lundis</i>, <span class="smcapuc">VI</span>, 1863.&mdash;Barbey d’Aurevilly: <i>Les Œuvres et les
-Hommes</i>, 1865.&mdash;Baudelaire: <i>L’Art romantique</i>, 1874.&mdash;E. Feydeau: <i>T. G.,
-souvenirs intimes</i>, 1874.&mdash;H. James: <i>Fr. Poets and Novelists</i>, 1878.&mdash;E. Bergerat:
-<i>T. G.</i>, 1880.&mdash;M. Du Camp: <i>T. G.</i>, 1890.&mdash;E. Richet: <i>T. G., l’homme,
-la vie et l’œuvre</i>, 1893.</p>
-
-<h3>GERMAN FIELD</h3>
-
-<p>Bibliography: Goedeke: ✱ <i>Grundriss zur Geschichte der deutschen Dichtung</i>, 2
-edn. vol. <span class="smcapuc">VI</span>, 1898.&mdash;R. M. Meyer: <i>Grundriss der neuren deutschen Literatur<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[415]</a></span>geschichte</i>,
-2 edn. 1907.&mdash;A. Bartels: <i>Handbuch zur Geschichte der deutschen
-Literatur</i>, 2 edn. 1909.&mdash;<i>Jahresberichte für neuere deutsche Literaturgeschichte</i>,
-1892 ff. (bibliographical notes on romanticism by O. F. Walzel).</p>
-
-<p>General Studies: H. Heine: ✱ <i>Die romantische Schule</i>, 1836. Eng. trans, in
-<i>Bohn’s Library</i>. (Filled with political “tendency.” A brilliant attack on romanticism
-by a romanticist.)&mdash;J. v. Eichendorff: <i>Ueber die ethische und religiöse
-Bedeutung der neuren romantischen Poesie in Deutschland</i>, 1847.&mdash;J.
-Schmidt: <i>Geschichte der Romantik im Zeitalter der Reformation und der Revolution</i>,
-2 vols. 1848-50.&mdash;H. Hettner: ✱ <i>Die romantische Schule in ihrem inneren
-Zusammenhange mit Goethe und Schiller</i>.&mdash;R. Haym: ✱ <i>Die romantische Schule</i>,
-1870. Unrevised reprint, 1902. (Heavy reading but still the standard treatment.)&mdash;Ricarda
-Huch: ✱ <i>Blütezeit der Romantik</i>, 1899. ✱ <i>Ausbreitung und
-Verfall der Romantik</i>, 1902. (Attractively written. The point of view, like that
-of practically all Germans, is very romantic.)&mdash;Marie Joachimi: <i>Die Weltanschauung
-der deutschen Romantik</i>, 1905.&mdash;O. F. Walzel: ✱ <i>Deutsche Romantik</i>,
-3 edn. 1912.&mdash;R. M. Wernaer: <i>Romanticism and the Romantic School in
-Germany</i>, 1909. (The outlook, which professes to be humanistic, seems to me in
-the main that of the beautiful soul.)&mdash;A. Farinelli: <i>Il romanticismo in Germania</i>,
-1911. (Simply reeks with the “infinite” in the romantic sense. “Sono,
-ahimè, stoffa di ribelle anch’io.” Useful bibliographical notes.)&mdash;A. W. Porterfield:
-<i>An Outline of German Romanticism</i>, 1914. (Of no importance from the
-point of view of ideas. The bibliography is useful.)&mdash;J. Bab: <i>Fortinbras, oder
-der Kampf des 19. Jahr. mil dem Geist der Romantik</i>, 1912. (An attack on romanticism.)</p>
-
-<p>See also A. Kobersteim: <i>Geschichte der deutschen Nationalliteratur</i>, vol. <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>,
-pp. 543-955, 1873.&mdash;G. G. Gervinus: <i>Geschichte der deutschen Dichtung</i>, vol.
-<span class="smcapuc">V</span>, pp. 631-816, 1874.&mdash;R. M. Meyer: <i>Die deutsche Literatur des 19. Jahr.</i>, pp.
-1-243, 1898.&mdash;R. v. Gottschall: <i>Die deutsche Nationalliteratur des 19. Jahr.</i>,
-vol. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 1901.&mdash;K. Francke: <i>A History of German Literature</i>, 1901. (The point
-of view is sociological rather than literary.)&mdash;W. Scherer: <i>Geschichte der
-deutschen Literatur</i>, pp. 614-720, 1908.&mdash;C. Thomas: <i>A History of German
-Literature</i>, pp. 328-76, 1909.&mdash;J. G. Robertson: <i>Outlines of the History of
-German Literature</i>, pp. 178-253, 1911.&mdash;A. Biese: <i>Deutsche Literaturgeschichte</i>,
-vol. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, pp. 288-693, 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Anthologies: <i>Stürmer und Dränger</i>. An anthology ed. by A. Sauer. <i>Deutsche
-Nat. Lit.</i>, vols. 79, 80, 81, 1883.&mdash;<i>Sturm und Drang. Dichtungen aus der
-Geniezeit</i>, ed. by Karl Freye.&mdash;A. Spiess: <i>Die deutschen Romantiker</i>, 1903.
-(Poetry and prose.)&mdash;F. Oppeln-Bronikowski and L. Jacobowski: <i>Die blaue
-Blume. Eine Anthologie romantischer Lyrik</i>, 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Philosophy: L. Noack: <i>Schelling und die Philosophie der Romantik</i>, 2 vols.
-1859.&mdash;E. Grucker: <i>François Hemsterhuis, sa vie et ses œuvres</i>, 1866.&mdash;E.
-Meyer: <i>Der Philosoph F. Hemsterhuis</i>, 1893.&mdash;W. Dilthey: ✱ <i>Leben Schleiermachers</i>,
-1870.&mdash;J. Royce: <i>The Spirit of Modern Philosophy</i>, 1892.&mdash;L. Lévy-Bruhl:
-<i>La Philosophie de Jacobi</i>, 1894.&mdash;H. Höffding: <i>A History of Modern
-Philosophy</i> (bk. <span class="smcapuc">VIII</span>: <i>The Philosophy of Romanticism</i>), 1900.&mdash;R. Burck:
-<i>H. Steffens, Ein Beitrag zur Philosophie der Romantik</i>, 1906.&mdash;W. Windelband:
-<i>Geschichte der neuren Philosophie</i>, 4 edn. 2 vols. 1907 (Eng. trans.).</p>
-
-<p>Music and painting: H. Riemann: ✱ <i>Geschichte der Musik seit Beethoven</i>,
-1800-1900, pp. 106-356, 1901.&mdash;D. G. Mason: <i>The Romantic Composers</i>,
-1906.&mdash;E. Istel: ✱ <i>Die Blütezeit der musikalischen Romantik in Deutschland</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[416]</a></span>
-1909.&mdash;✱ <i>The Oxford History of Music</i>, vol. <span class="smcapuc">VI</span> (<i>The Romantic Period</i>, 1905).&mdash;C.
-Gurlitt: <i>Die deutsche Kunst des 19. Jahr.</i>, especially pp. 180-279, 1899.&mdash;A.
-Aubert: <i>Runge und die Romantik</i>, 1909.&mdash;R. Muther: <i>Geschichte der Malerei</i>,
-3 vols. (vol. <span class="smcapuc">III</span> for romantic period in Germany and other countries), 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Special Topics (18th and 19th Centuries): L. Friedländer: <i>Ueber die Entstehung
-und Entwickelung des Gefühls für das Romantische in der Natur</i>, 1873.&mdash;J.
-Minor: <i>J. G. Hamann in seiner Bedeutung für die Sturm und Drangperiode</i>,
-1881. <i>Das Schicksalsdrama.</i> <i>Deutsche Nation. Lit.</i>, vol. 151. <i>Die Schicksalstragödie
-in ihren Hauptvertretern</i>, 1883.&mdash;R. Unger: ✱ <i>Hamann und die Aufklärung</i>,
-1911.&mdash;G. Bonet-Maury: <i>Bürger et les origines anglaises de la ballade littéraire
-en Allemagne</i>, 1890.&mdash;S. Lublinski: <i>Die Frühzeit der Romantik</i>, 1899.&mdash;T. S.
-Baker: <i>The Influence of L. Sterne upon German Literature</i> in <i>Americana Germanica</i>,
-vol. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 1900.&mdash;R. Tombo: <i>Ossian in Germany</i>, 1902 (bibliography).&mdash;E.
-Ederheimer: <i>Jakob Boehme und die Romantiker</i>, 1904.&mdash;L. Hirzel: <i>Wieland’s
-Beziehungen zu den deutschen Romantikern</i>, 1904.&mdash;K. Joel: <i>Nietzsche
-und die Romantik</i>, 1904.&mdash;S. Schultze: <i>Die Entwickelung des Naturgefühls in
-der deutschen Literatur des 19. Jahr.</i> 1906.&mdash;M. Joachimi-Dege: <i>Deutsche
-Shakespeare-Probleme im 18. Jahr. und im Zeitalter der Romantik</i>, 1907.&mdash;E.
-Vierling: <i>Z. Werner: La conversion d’un romantique</i>, 1908.&mdash;E. Glöckner:
-<i>Studien zur romantischen Psychologie der Musik</i>, 1909.&mdash;R. Benz: <i>Märchen-Dichtung
-der Romantiker</i>, 1909.&mdash;F. Brüggemann: <i>Die Ironie als entwicklungsgeschichtliches
-Moment</i>, 1909.&mdash;O. F. Walzel: <i>Das Prometheussymbol von
-Shaftesbury zu Goethe</i>, 1910.&mdash;F. Strich: <i>Die Mythologie in der deutschen Literatur
-von Klopstock bis Wagner</i>, 1910.&mdash;F. G. Shneider: <i>Die Freimaurerei und
-ihr Einfluss auf die geistige Kultur in Deutschland am Ende des 18. Jahr.</i>
-1909.&mdash;R. Buchmann: <i>Helden und Mächte des romantischen Kunstmärchens</i>,
-1910.&mdash;K. G. Wendriner: <i>Das romantische Drama</i>, 1909.&mdash;O. F. Walzel
-and H. Hub: ✱ <i>Zeitschriften der Romantik</i>, 1904.&mdash;J. Bobeth: <i>Die Zeitschriften
-der Romantik</i>, 1910.&mdash;J. E. Spenlé: <i>Rahel, Mme. Varnhagen v. Ense. Histoire
-d’un salon romantique en Allemagne</i>, 1910.&mdash;P. Wächtler: <i>E. A. Poe und die
-deutsche Romantik</i>, 1910.&mdash;W. Brecht: <i>Heinse und das ästhetische Immoralismus</i>,
-1911.&mdash;E. Mürmig: <i>Calderon und die ältere deutsche Romantik</i>, 1912.&mdash;G.
-Gabetti: <i>Il dramma di Z. Werner</i>, 1917.&mdash;J. J. A. Bertrand: <i>Cervantes et le
-Romantisme allemand</i>, 1917.</p>
-
-<p><b>J. G. Herder</b>, 1744-1803: <i>Fragmente über die neuere deutsche Literatur</i>, 1767.
-<i>Kritische Wälder</i>, 1769. <i>Volkslieder</i>, 1778. <i>Vom Geist der Ebräischen Poesie</i>,
-1782. <i>Ideen zur Philosophie der Geschichte der Menschheit</i>, 1784-85. <i>Sämt.
-Werke</i>, ed. B. Suphan, 32 vols. 1877-99.&mdash;Joret: <i>Herder</i>, 1876.&mdash;R. Haym:
-<i>Herder nach seinem Leben und seinen Werken dargestellt</i>, 2 vols. 1885.&mdash;E.
-Kühnemann: <i>Herder</i>, 2 edn. 1907.</p>
-
-<p><b>J. W. v. Goethe</b>, 1749-1832: <i>Götz von Berlichingen</i>, 1773. <i>Die Leiden des jungen
-Werthers</i>, 1774. <i>Faust: Ein Fragment</i>, 1790. Collected Works (Jubiläums
-Ausgabe), ed. E. von der Hellen, 40 vols. 1902-12.&mdash;T. Carlyle: <i>Essays on
-G.</i> in Critical and Mis. Essays, vols. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, 1828-32.&mdash;J. W. Appell: ✱ <i>Werther
-und seine Zeit.</i>, 1855. 4 edn. 1896.&mdash;E. Schmidt: <i>Richardson, Rousseau und G.</i>,
-1875.&mdash;A. Brandl: <i>Die Aufnahme von G.’s Jugendwerken in England. Goethe-Jahrb.</i>,
-vol. <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, 1883.&mdash;R. Steig: <i>G. und die Gebrüder Grimm</i>, 1892.&mdash;J. O. E.
-Donner: <i>Der Einfluss Wilhelm Meisters auf den Roman der Romantiker</i>, 1893.&mdash;E. Oswald:
-<i>G. in England and America</i>, 1899.&mdash;A. Brandl: <i>Ueber das Verhältnis
-G.’s zu Lord Byron. Goethe-Jahrb.</i>, vol. 20, 1900.&mdash;K. Schüddekopf and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[417]</a></span>
-O. F. Walzel: ✱ <i>Goethe und die Romantik, Briefe mit Erläuterungen</i>, vols. 13 and
-14 of the pub. of the Goethegesellschaft, 1893-94.&mdash;S. Waetzold: <i>G. und die
-Romantik</i>, 2 edn. 1903.&mdash;O. Baumgarten: <i>Carlyle und G.</i>, 1906.&mdash;H. Röhl:
-<i>Die älteste Romantik und die Kunst des jungen G.</i>, 1909.</p>
-
-<p><b>J. C. F. Schiller</b>, 1759-1805: <i>Die Räuber</i>, 1781. <i>Briefe über die ästhetische
-Erziehung des Menschen</i>, 1795. <i>Ueber naïve u. sentimentalische Dichtung</i>, 1795-96.
-(Trans. of these and other æsthetic treatises of S. in <i>Bohn’s Library</i>.) Collected
-works, ed. E. von der Hellen, 16 vols. 1904-05.&mdash;C. Alt: <i>S. und die
-Brüder Schlegel</i>, 1904.&mdash;E. Spenlé: <i>Schiller et Novalis</i>, in <i>Etudes sur Schiller
-publiées pour le Centenaire</i>, 1905.&mdash;A. Ludwig: ✱ <i>Schiller und die deutsche
-Nachwelt</i> (especially pp. 52-202), 1909.</p>
-
-<p><b>J. P. F. Richter</b>, 1763-1825: <i>Titan</i>, 1803. <i>Flegeljahre</i>, 1804. <i>Die Vorschule der
-Æsthetik</i>, 1804. Selected works with intro. by R. Steiner, 8 vols. (Cotta, no
-date).&mdash;P. Nerrlich: <i>Jean Paul und seine Zeitgenossen</i>, 1876. <i>Jean Paul; sein
-Leben und seine Werke</i>, 1889.&mdash;J. Müller: <i>Jean Paul und seine Bedeutung für
-die Gegenwart</i>, 1894. <i>Jean Paul-Studien</i>, 1900.&mdash;W. Hoppe: <i>Das Verhältnis
-Jean Pauls zur Philosophie seiner Zeit</i>, 1901.&mdash;H. Plath: <i>Rousseau’s Einfluss
-auf Jean Paul’s “Levana”</i>, 1903.</p>
-
-<p><b>J. C. F. Hölderlin</b>, 1770-1843: <i>Gesammelte Dichtungen</i>. Int. by B. Litzmann,
-2 vols. (Cotta, no date). <i>Werke</i>, ed. M. Joachimi-Dege, 1913. <i>Hölderlin’s Leben
-in Briefen von und an Hölderlin</i>, ed. K. K. T. Litzmann, 1890.&mdash;C. Müller-Rastatt:
-<i>F. H. Sein Leben und seine Dichtungen</i>, 1894.&mdash;W. Dilthey: ✱ <i>Das
-Erlebnis und die Dichtung</i>, pp. 330-455, 1907.&mdash;E. Bauer: <i>H. und Schiller</i>,
-1908.&mdash;L. Bohme: <i>Die Landschaft in den Werken H.’s und Jean Pauls</i>, 1908.</p>
-
-<p><b>Friedrich Leopold, Freiherr von Hardenberg (Novalis)</b>, 1772-1801: <i>Die Lehrlinge
-zu Saïs</i>, 1798. <i>Die Christenheit oder Europa</i>, 1799. <i>Heinrich von Ofterdingen</i>,
-1800. <i>Hymnen an die Nacht</i>, 1800. Schriften, ed. E. Heilborn, 3 vols.
-1901. <i>Schriften</i>, ed. J. Minor, 4 vols. 1907. <i>Werke</i>, ed. H. Friedemann [1913].&mdash;Carlyle:
-N., in <i>Crit. Essays</i>, vol. II, 1829.&mdash;<i>Friedrich v. Hardenberg.</i> A collection
-of documents from the family archives by a member of the family, 1873.&mdash;J.
-Bing: <i>Novalis</i>, 1893.&mdash;C. Busse: <i>N.’s Lyrik</i>, 1898.&mdash;E. Heilborn: <i>N.,
-der Romantiker</i>, 1901.&mdash;E. Spenlé: ✱ <i>Novalis</i>, 1904.&mdash;W. Olshausen: <i>F. v.
-Hardenbergs Beziehungen zur Naturwissenschaft seiner Zeit</i>, 1905.&mdash;W. Dilthey:
-✱ <i>Das Erlebnis und die Dichtung</i>, pp. 201-82, 1906.&mdash;H. Lichtenberger:
-✱ <i>Novalis</i>, 1912.</p>
-
-<p><b>A. W. v. Schlegel</b>, 1767-1845: <i>Vorlesungen über dramatische Kunst und Literatur</i>,
-1809-11. Eng. trans. 1814. Fr. trans. 1815. Ital. trans. 1817. <i>Sämtliche
-Werke</i>, 12 vols. 1846-47; also <i>œuvres écrites en français</i>, 3 vols. and Opera
-latine scripta, 1 vol. 1846.&mdash;<i>Vorlesungen über schöne Literatur und Kunst</i> (1801-03),
-ed. with intro. by J. Minor in <i>Literaturdenkmäler des 18. und 19. Jahrs.</i>
-nos. 17-19, 1884.&mdash;Selections with intro. by O. F. Walzel in <i>Deutsche Nat.
-lit.</i>, vol. 143.&mdash;M. Bernays: <i>Zur Entstehungsgeschichte des Schlegelschen Shakespeare</i>,
-1872.&mdash;E. Sulger-Gebing: <i>Die Brüder A. W. und F. Schlegel in ihrem
-Verhältnisse zur bildenden Kunst</i>, 1897.</p>
-
-<p><b>Friedrich v. Schlegel</b>, 1772-1829: Lucinde, 1799. <i>Ueber die Weisheit und
-Sprache der Indier</i>, 1808. <i>Sämt. Werke</i>, 15 vols. 1847. ✱ <i>Jugendschriften</i> (1794-1802),
-ed. J. Minor, 1906. <i>F. Schlegels Philosophische Vorlesungen aus den
-Jahren 1804 bis 1806. Aus dem Nachlass</i>, von C. F. H. Windischmann, 2 vols.
-1836-37.&mdash;✱ <i>F. Schlegel’s Briefe an seinen Brüder August Wilhelm</i>, ed. O. F.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[418]</a></span>
-Walzel, 1890. Schleiermacher: <i>Vertraute Briefe über die Lucinde</i>, 1800. (New
-edn. ed. by R. Frank, 1907.)&mdash;I. Rouge: <i>F. Schlegel et la genèse du Romantisme
-allemand</i>, 1904.&mdash;<i>Dorothea und F. Schlegel. Briefe an die Familie Paulus</i>,
-ed. R. Unger, 1913.&mdash;C. Enders: <i>F. Schlegel. Die Quellen seines Wesens und
-Werdens</i>, 1913. (Attaches great importance to the influence on S. of Hemsterhuis,
-a philosopher of Neo-Platonic and Rousseauistic tendency.)&mdash;H. Horwitz:
-<i>Das Ich-Problem der Romantik. Die historische Stellung F. S.’s innerhalb
-der modernen Geistesgeschichte</i>, 1916.</p>
-
-<p><b>J. L. Tieck</b>, 1773-1853: <i>William Lovell</i>, 1796. <i>Der blonde Eckbert</i>, 1796.
-<i>Prinz Zerbino</i>, 1798. <i>Franz Sternbalds Wanderungen</i>, 1798. <i>Leben und Tod der
-heiligen Genoveva</i>, 1799. <i>Schriften</i>, 28 vols. 1828-54. <i>Ausgewählte Werke</i>, ed.
-H. Welti, 8 vols. 1888. Two of the tales trans. in Carlyle’s <i>German Romance</i>,
-1841. ✱ <i>Briefe an Ludwig Tieck</i>, selected and edited by K. von Holtei, 4 vols.
-1864.&mdash;H. Petrich: <i>Drei Kapitel vom romantischen Stil</i>, 1878.&mdash;J. Minor: <i>T.
-als Novellendichter</i>, in <i>Akademische Blätter</i>, pp. 128-61 and 193-220, 1884.&mdash;J.
-Ranftl: <i>L. T.’s Genoveva als romantische Dichtung betrachtet</i>, 1899.&mdash;K.
-Hassler: <i>L. T.’s Jugendroman William Lovell und der Paysan perverti</i>, 1902.&mdash;H.
-Günther: <i>Romantische Kritik und Satire bei L. T.</i>, 1907.&mdash;G. H. Danton:
-<i>The Nature Sense in the Writings of L. T.</i>, 1907.&mdash;F. Brüggemann: <i>Die Ironie
-in T.’s William Lovell und seinen Vorläufern</i>, 1909.&mdash;S. Krebs: <i>Philipp Otto
-Runge und L. T.</i>, 1909.&mdash;W. Steinert: <i>L. T. und das Farbenempfinden der
-romantischen Dichtung</i>, 1910.&mdash;E. Schönebeck: <i>T. und Solger</i>, 1910.</p>
-
-<p><b>W. H. Wackenroder</b>, 1773-98: <i>Herzensergiessungen eines kunstliebenden
-Klosterbruders</i>, 1797, ed. by K. D. Jessen, 1904. <i>Tieck und Wackenroder
-(Phantasien über die Kunst)</i>, ed. J. Minor in <i>Deutsche Nat. Lit.</i>, vol. 145.&mdash;P.
-Koldewey: <i>Wackenroder und sein Einfluss auf Tieck</i>, 1903.</p>
-
-<p><b>Friedrich Baron de La Motte Fouqué</b>, 1777-1843: <i>Undine</i>, 1811. <i>Lebensgeschichte
-des Baron F. de La M. Fouqué, ausgezeichnet durch ihn selbst</i>, 1840.
-<i>Ausgewählte Werke</i>, 12 vols. 1841.&mdash;W. Pfeiffer: <i>Ueber Fouqués Undine</i>, 1903.&mdash;L.
-Jeuthe: <i>Fouqué als Erzähler</i>, 1910.</p>
-
-<p><b>E. T. A. Hoffmann</b>, 1776-1822: <i>Sämt. Werke</i>. Intro. by E. Grisebach, 15 vols.
-1899. <i>Ausgewählte Erzählungen.</i> <i>Bücher der Rose</i> series, vol. 6, 1911. <i>Contes fantastiques</i>,
-trad. par Loève-Veimars, 20 vols. 1829-33. G. Ellinger: <i>E. T. A. H.:
-sein Leben und seine Werke</i>, 1894.&mdash;G. Thurau: <i>H.’s Erzählungen in Frankreich</i>,
-1896.&mdash;A. Barine: <i>Poètes et Névrosés</i>, pp. 1-58, 1908.&mdash;P. Cobb: <i>The
-Influence of H. on the Tales of E. A. Poe</i>, 1908.&mdash;A. Sakheim: <i>Hoffmann:
-Studien zu seiner Persönlichkeit und seinen Werken</i>, 1908.&mdash;C. Schaeffer: <i>Die
-Bedeutung des Musikalischen und Akustischen in H.’s literarischen Schaffen</i>,
-1909.&mdash;E. Kroll: <i>H.’s musikalische Anschauungen</i>, 1909.&mdash;P. Sucher: <i>Les
-sources du merveilleux chez H.</i>, 1912.</p>
-
-<p><b>Heinrich v. Kleist</b>, 1777-1811: <i>Sämt. Werke</i>, ed. F. Muncker, 4 vols. 1893.
-<i>Werke</i>, ed. E. Schmidt [1905].&mdash;A. Wilbrandt: <i>H. v. K.</i>, 1863.&mdash;R. Bonafous:
-<i>H. de K. Sa vie et ses œuvres</i>, 1894.&mdash;G. Minde-Pouet: <i>H. v. K. Seine
-Sprache und sein Stil</i>, 1897.&mdash;R. Steig: <i>K.’s Berliner Kämpfe</i>, 1901.&mdash;S.
-Rahmer: <i>Das Kleist-Problem</i>, 1903. <i>H. v. K. als Mensch und Dichter</i>, 1909.&mdash;M.
-Lex: <i>Die Idee im Drama bei Goethe, Schiller, Grillparzer, K.</i>, 1904.&mdash;E.
-Kayka: <i>K. und die Romantik</i>, 1906.&mdash;W. Herzog: <i>H. v. K. Sein Leben und
-seine Werke</i>, 1911.&mdash;H. Meyer-Benfey: <i>Das Drama H. v. K.’s</i>, 2 vols. 1911-13.&mdash;K.
-Günther: <i>Die Entwickelung der novellistischen Kompositionstechnik K.’s
-bis zur Meisterschaft</i>, 1911.&mdash;W. Kühn: <i>H. v. K. und das deutsche Theater</i>, 1912.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[419]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b>C. M. Brentano</b>, 1778-1842: <i>Gesammelte Schriften</i>, 9 vols. 1852-55. <i>Godwi</i>,
-ed. A. Ruest, 1906.&mdash;A. Kerr: <i>Godwi; ein Kapitel deutscher Romantik</i>, 1898.</p>
-
-<p><b>A. v. Chamisso</b>, 1781-38: <i>Peter Schlemihls wundersame Geschichte</i>, 1814.
-<i>Gesammelte Werke</i>, ed. M. Koch, 4 vols. 1883. <i>Werke</i>, ed. O. F. Walzel.
-<i>Deutsche Nat. Lit.</i>, vol. 148, 1892. <i>Werke</i>, ed. M. Sydow, 2 vols. 1912. <i>Aus
-Chamisso’s Frühzeit. Ungedruckte Briefe</i>, ed. L. Geiger, 1905.&mdash;K. Fulda:
-<i>Chamisso und seine Zeit.</i>, 1881.&mdash;X. Brun: <i>A. de Chamisso de Boncourt</i>, 1896.</p>
-
-<p><b>Achim v. Arnim</b>, 1781-1831: <i>Des Knaben Wunderhorn</i> (first 3 vols.), 1808.
-Werke, ed. M. Jacobs, 2 vols. 1910. <i>Arnims Tröst Einsamkeit</i>, ed. F. Pfaff,
-1883.&mdash;R. Steig and H. Grimm: ✱ <i>A. v. Arnim und die ihm nahe standen</i>, 3
-vols. 1894-1904.&mdash;F. Rieser: <i>Des Knaben Wunderhorn und seine Quellen</i>, 1908.&mdash;K.
-Bode: <i>Die Bearbeitung der Vorlagen in des Knaben Wunderhorn</i>, 1909.</p>
-
-<p><b>J. L. Uhland</b>, 1787-1862: <i>Werke</i>, ed. H. Fischer, 6 vols. 1892. <i>Gedichte</i>, ed.
-E. Schmidt and J. Hartmann, 2 vols. 1898.&mdash;F. Notter: <i>L. U.; seine Leben
-und seiner Dichtungen</i>, 1863.&mdash;K. Mayer: <i>L. U.; seine Freunde und Zeitgenossen</i>,
-1867.&mdash;A. v. Keller: <i>U. als Dramatiker</i>, 1877.&mdash;G. Schmidt <i>U.’s Poetik</i>,
-1906.&mdash;W. Reinhöhl: <i>U. als Politiker</i>, 1911.</p>
-
-<p><b>J. v. Eichendorff</b>, 1788-1857: <i>Aus dem Leben eines Taugenichts</i>, 1826. <i>Werke</i>,
-ed. R. v. Gottschall, 4 vols. [no date].&mdash;J. Nadler: <i>Eichendorff’s Lyrik und
-ihre Geschichte</i>, 1908.</p>
-
-<p><b>Heinrich Heine</b>, 1797-1856: <i>Sämt. Werke</i>, ed. E. Elster, 7 vols. 1887-90.
-<i>H.’s Autobiographie, nach seinen Werken, Briefen und Gesprächen</i>, ed. G.
-Karpeles, 1888. Trans. by Arthur Dexter, 1893. <i>Erinnerungen an H. H. und
-seine Familie</i> by his brother, Maximilien Heine, 1868.&mdash;A. Meissner: <i>H. H.:
-Erinnerungen</i>, 1856.&mdash;A. Strodtmann: <i>H. H.’s Leben und Werke</i>, 1884.&mdash;M.
-Arnold: ✱ <i>H. H.</i>, in <i>Essays in Criticism</i>, 4th edn., 1884.&mdash;George Eliot:
-<i>German Wit: H. H.</i>, in <i>Essays</i>, 1885.&mdash;K. R. Prölls: <i>H. H.: Sein Lebensgang
-und seine Shriften</i>, 1886.&mdash;G. Karpeles: <i>H. H. und seine Zeitgenossen</i>, 1888.
-<i>H. H.: Aus seinem Leben und aus seiner Zeit.</i>, 1899.&mdash;A. Kohut: <i>H. H. und
-die Frauen</i>, 1888.&mdash;Wm. Sharp: <i>Life of H. H.</i> (bibliography by J. P. Anderson),
-1888.&mdash;T. Odinga: <i>Ueber die Einflüsse der Romantik auf H. H.</i>, 1891.&mdash;T.
-Gautier: <i>Portraits et souvenirs littéraires</i>, pp. 103-28, 1892.&mdash;L. P. Betz:
-<i>Die französische Litteratur im Urteile H. H.’s.</i>, 1897. <i>H. H. und A. de Musset</i>,
-1897.&mdash;J. Legras: <i>H. H., Poète</i>, 1897.&mdash;G. M. C. Brandes: <i>Ludwig Börne
-und H. H.</i>, 2<sup>n</sup> ed. 1898.&mdash;O. zur Linde: <i>H. H. und die deutsche Romantik</i>,
-1899.&mdash;F. Melchior: <i>H. H.’s Verhältnis zu Lord Byron</i>, 1903.&mdash;E. A.
-Schalles: <i>H.’s Verhältnis zu Shakespeare</i>, 1904.&mdash;A. W. Fischer: <i>Ueber die
-volkstümlichen Elemente in den Gedichten H.’s</i>, 1905.&mdash;W. Ochsenbein: <i>Die
-Aufnahme Lord Byrons in Deutschland und sein Einfluss auf den jungen H.</i>,
-1905.&mdash;R. M. Meyer: <i>Der Dichter des Romanzero in Gestalten und Probleme</i>,
-pp. 151-63, 1905.&mdash;A. Bartels: <i>H. H.: Auch ein Denkmal</i>, 1906.&mdash;H. Reu:
-<i>H. H. und die Bibel</i>, 1909.&mdash;C. Puetzfeld: <i>H. H.’s Verhältnis zur Religion</i>, 1912.</p>
-
-<p><b>Nikolaus Lenau</b>, 1802-50: <i>Sämt. Werke</i>, ed. A. Grüss [no year].&mdash;A. X.
-Schurz: <i>L.’s Leben</i>, 2 vols. 1855.&mdash;L. A. Frankl: <i>Zur Biographie L.’s.</i>, 1885.&mdash;T.
-S. Baker: <i>L. and Young Germany in America</i>, 1897.&mdash;L. Roustan: <i>L. et
-son temps</i>, 1898.&mdash;J. Saly Stern: <i>La vie d’un poète, essai sur L.</i>, 1902.&mdash;A. W.
-Ernst: <i>L.’s Frauengestalten</i>, 1902.&mdash;T. Gesky: <i>L. als Naturdichter</i>, 1902.&mdash;C.
-v. Klenze: <i>Treatment of Nature in the Works of N. L.</i>, 1903.&mdash;L. Reynaud:
-<i>N. L., poète lyrique</i>, 1905.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[420]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> See, for example, in vol. <span class="smcapuc">IX</span> of the <i>Annales de la Société Jean-Jacques
-Rousseau</i> the bibliography (pp. 87-276) for 1912&mdash;the year of the bicentenary.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> <i>Literature and the American College</i> (1908); <i>The New Laokoon</i> (1910);
-<i>The Masters of Modern French Criticism</i> (1912).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> See his Oxford address <i>On the Modern Element in Literature</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> These two tendencies in Occidental thought go back respectively at
-least as far as Parmenides and Heraclitus.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> In his <i>World as Imagination</i> (1916) E. D. Fawcett, though ultra-romantic
-and unoriental in his point of view, deals with a problem that
-has always been the special preoccupation of the Hindu. A Hindu, however,
-would have entitled a similar volume <i>The World as Illusion</i> (māyā).
-Aristotle has much to say of fiction in his <i>Poetics</i> but does not even use the
-word imagination (φαντασία). In the <i>Psychology</i>, where he discusses the imagination,
-he assigns not to it, but to mind or reason the active and creative
-rôle (νοῦς ποιητικός). It is especially the notion of the <i>creative</i> imagination
-that is recent. The earliest example of the phrase that I have noted
-in French is in Rousseau’s description of his erotic reveries at the Hermitage
-(<i>Confessions</i>, Livre <span class="smcapuc">IX</span>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Essay on Flaubert in <i>Essais de Psychologie contemporaine</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> <i>Le Romantisme et les mœurs</i> (1910).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> <i>Annales de la Société Jean-Jacques Rousseau</i>, <span class="smcapuc">VIII</span>, 30-31.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> I should perhaps say that in the case of Buddha I have been able to
-consult the original Pāli documents. In the case of Confucius and the
-Chinese I have had to depend on translations.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> See appendix on Chinese primitivism.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> See, for example, <i>Majjhima</i> (Pāli Text Society), <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 265. Later Buddhism,
-especially Mahāyāna Buddhism, fell away from the positive and
-critical spirit of the founder into mythology and metaphysics.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Buddha expressed on many occasions his disdain for the <i>Vedas</i>, the
-great traditional authority of the Hindus.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> I have explained the reasons for giving this place to Bacon in chapter
-<span class="smcapuc">II</span> of <i>Literature and the American College</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> <i>Eth. Nic.</i>, 1179 a.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> I scarcely need remind the reader that the extant Aristotelian writings
-which have repelled so many by their form were almost certainly not
-meant for publication. For the problems raised by these writings as well
-as for the mystery in the method of their early transmission see R. Shute,
-<i>History of the Aristotelian Writings</i> (1888). The writings which Aristotle
-prepared for publication and which Cicero describes as a “golden stream
-of speech” (<i>Acad.</i> <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 38, 119) have, with the possible exception of the
-recently recovered <i>Constitution of Athens</i>, been lost.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> See his <i>Essai sur le genre dramatique sérieux</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Quoted in Grimm’s Dictionary.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Ex lectione quorundam romanticorum, i.e. librorum compositorum in
-gallico poeticorum de gestis militaribus, in quibus maxima pars fabulosa
-est.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Perhaps the most romantic lines in English are found in one of Camillo’s
-speeches in <i>The Winter’s Tale</i> (<span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, 4):</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent2">a wild dedication of yourselves</div>
-<div class="verse">To unpath’d waters, undream’d shores.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This “wild dedication” is, it should be noted, looked upon by Camillo
-with disfavor.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> <i>Pepys’s Diary</i>, 13 June, 1666.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> Thomas Shadwell, Preface to the <i>Sullen Lovers</i>, 1668.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> <i>Spectator</i>, 142, by Steele.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Pope, 2d Epistle, <i>Of the Character of Women</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Cf. <i>Revue d’hist. litt.</i>, <span class="smcapuc">XVIII</span>, 440. For the Early French history of the
-word, see also the article <i>Romantique</i> by A. François in <i>Annales de la Soc.
-J.-J. Rousseau</i>, <span class="smcapuc">V</span>, 199-236.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> First edition, 1698; second edition, 1732.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> Cf. his <i>Elégie à une dame</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Mon âme, imaginant, n’a point la patience</div>
-<div class="verse">De bien polir les vers et ranger la science.</div>
-<div class="verse">La règle me déplaît, j’écris confusément:</div>
-<div class="verse">Jamais un bon esprit ne fait rien qu’aisément.</div>
-<div class="verse center">…</div>
-<div class="verse">Je veux faire des vers qui ne soient pas contraints</div>
-<div class="verse center">…</div>
-<div class="verse">Chercher des lieux secrets où rein ne me déplaise,</div>
-<div class="verse">Méditer à loisir, rêver tout à mon aise,</div>
-<div class="verse">Employer toute une heure à me mirer dans l’eau,</div>
-<div class="verse">Ouïr, comme en songeant, la course d’un ruisseau.</div>
-<div class="verse">Ecrire dans un bois, m’interrompre, me taire,</div>
-<div class="verse">Composer un quatrain sans songer à le faire.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> <i>Caractères</i>, ch. <span class="smcapuc">V</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> His psychology of the memory and imagination is still Aristotelian.
-Cf. E. Wallace, <i>Aristotle’s Psychology</i>, Intr., lxxxvi-cvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> <i>An Essay upon Poetry</i> (1682).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> The French Academy discriminates in its <i>Sentiments sur le Cid</i>
-between two types of probability, “ordinary” and “extraordinary.”
-Probability in general is more especially reserved for action. In the domain
-of action “ordinary” probability and decorum run very close together.
-It is, for example, both indecorous and improbable that Chimène in the
-<i>Cid</i> should marry her father’s murderer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> In his <i>Preface</i> to Shakespeare.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> For a similar distinction in Aristotle see <i>Eth. Nic.</i>, 1143 b.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> The Platonic and Aristotelian reason or mind (νοῦς) contains an
-element of intuition.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> In his <i>Lettre à d’Alembert sur les spectacles</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> <i>Rousseau contre Molière</i>, 238.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> <i>Letters on Chivalry and Romance.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> See verses prefixed to Congreve’s <i>Double-Dealer</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Change l’état douteux dans lequel tu nous ranges,</div>
-<div class="verse">Nature élève-nous à la clarté des anges,</div>
-<div class="verse">Ou nous abaisse au sens des simples animaux.</div>
-<p class="right"><i>Sonnet</i> (1657?).</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> See, for example, A. Gerard’s <i>Essay on Genius</i> (1774), <i>passim</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> The English translation of this part of the <i>Critique of Judgment</i>,
-edited by J. C. Meredith, is useful for its numerous illustrative passages
-from these theorists (Young, Gerard, Duff, etc.).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> Mrs. Katharine Fullerton Gerould has dealt interestingly with this
-point in an article in the <i>Unpopular Review</i> (October, 1914) entitled <i>Tabu
-and Temperament</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> See <i>Biographia literaria</i>, ch. <span class="smcapuc">XXII</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> This message came to him in any case straight from German romanticism.
-See Walzel, <i>Deutsche Romantik</i>, 22, 151.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> “De tous les corps et esprits, on n’en saurait tirer un mouvement de
-vraie charité; cela est impossible, et d’un autre ordre, surnaturel.”
-<i>Penseés</i>, Article <span class="smcapuc">XVII</span>. “Charité,” one should recollect, here has its traditional
-meaning&mdash;the love, not of man, but of God.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> See poem, <i>Ce siècle avait deux ans</i> in the <i>Feuilles d’Automne</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> For amusing details, see L. Maigron, <i>Le Romantisme et la mode</i> (1911),
-ch. <span class="smcapuc">V</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> For Disraeli see Wilfrid Ward, <i>Men and Matters</i>, 54 ff. Of Bulwer-Lytton
-at Nice about 1850 Princess von Racowitza writes as follows in her
-<i>Autobiography</i> (p. 46): “His fame was at its zenith. He seemed to me
-antediluvian, with his long dyed curls and his old-fashioned dress …
-with long coats reaching to the ankles, knee-breeches, and long colored
-waistcoats. Also, he appeared always with a young lady who adored him,
-and who was followed by a man servant carrying a harp. She sat at his
-feet and appeared as he did in the costume of 1830, with long flowing
-curls called <i>Anglaises</i>. … In society, however, people ran after him
-tremendously, and spoilt him in every possible way. He read aloud from
-his own works, and, in especially poetic passages, his ‘Alice’ accompanied
-him with arpeggios on the harp.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> See essay by Kenyon Cox on <i>The Illusion of Progress</i>, in his <i>Artist and
-Public</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> See <i>Creative Criticism</i> by J. E. Spingarn, and my article on <i>Genius and
-Taste</i>, reviewing this book, in the <i>Nation</i> (New York), 7 Feb., 1918.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> One should note here as elsewhere points of contact between scientific
-and emotional naturalism. Take, for example, the educational theory that
-has led to the setting up of the elective system. The general human discipline
-embodied in the fixed curriculum is to be discarded in order that the
-individual may be free to work along the lines of his bent or “genius.”
-In a somewhat similar way scientific naturalism encourages the individual
-to sacrifice the general human discipline to a specialty.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> See his poem <i>L’Art</i> in <i>Emaux et Camées</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Quel esprit ne bat la campagne?</div>
-<div class="verse">Qui ne fait châteaux en Espagne?</div>
-<div class="verse">Picrochole, Pyrrhus, la laitière, enfin tous,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Autant les sages que les fous</div>
-<div class="verse">Chacun songe en veillant; il n’est rien de plus doux.</div>
-<div class="verse">Une flatteuse erreur emporte alors nos âmes;</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Tout le bien du monde est à nous,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Tous les honneurs, toutes les femmes.</div>
-<div class="verse">Quand je suis seul, je fais au plus brave un défi,</div>
-<div class="verse">Je m’écarte, je vais détrôner le sophi;</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">On m’élit roi, mon peuple m’aime;</div>
-<div class="verse">Les diadèmes vont sur ma tête pleuvant:</div>
-<div class="verse">Quelque accident fait-il que je rentre en moi-même,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Je suis gros Jean comme devant.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> <i>Rasselas</i>, ch. <span class="smcapuc">XLIV</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> <i>Nouvelle Héloïse</i>, Pt. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, Lettre <span class="smcapuc">XVII</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> Rostand has hit off this change in the Balcony Scene of his <i>Cyrano
-de Bergerac</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> Essay on <i>Simple and Sentimental Poetry</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> The life of Rousseau by Gerhard Gran is written from this point of
-view.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">The world’s great age begins anew,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">The golden years return, etc.</div>
-<p class="right"><i>Hellas</i>, vv. 1060 ff.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> For an excellent analysis of Shelley’s idealism see Leslie Stephen’s
-<i>Godwin and Shelley</i> in his <i>Hours in a Library</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> <i>Letters</i>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 292.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> See his letter to Wordsworth, 30 January, 1801.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> <i>Dramatic Art and Literature</i>, ch. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> Cf. Voltaire: On ne peut désirer ce qu’on ne connaît pas. (<i>Zaïre</i>.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> Cf. Sainte-Beuve, <i>Causeries du lundi</i>. <span class="smcapuc">XV</span>, 371: “Le romantique a la
-nostalgie, comme Hamlet; il cherche ce qu’il n’a pas, et jusque par delà les
-nuages; il rêve, il vit dans les songes. Au dix-neuvième siècle, il adore le
-moyen âge; au dix-huitième, il est déjà révolutionnaire avec Rousseau,”
-etc. Cf. also T. Gautier as quoted in the <i>Journal des Goncourt</i>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 51:
-“Nous ne sommes pas Français, nous autres, nous tenons à d’autres races.
-Nous sommes pleins de nostalgies. Et puis quand à la nostalgie d’un pays
-se joint la nostalgie d’un temps … comme vous par exemple du dix-huitième
-siècle … comme moi de la Venise de Casanova, avec embranchement
-sur Chypre, oh! alors, c’est complet.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> See article <i>Goût</i> in <i>Postscriptum de ma vie</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> Schlegel’s <i>Dramatic Art and Literature</i>, Lecture <span class="smcapuc">XXII</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> For a discussion of this point see I. Rouge: <i>F. Schlegel et la Genèse du
-romantisme allemand</i>, 48 ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> For a development of this point of view see the essay of Novalis:
-<i>Christianity or Europe</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> <i>Confessions</i>, Livre <span class="smcapuc">IX</span> (1756).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> This is Goethe’s very classical definition of genius: Du nur, Genius,
-mehrst in der Natur die Natur.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> Greek literature, after it had lost the secret of selection and the
-grand manner, as was the case during the Alexandrian period, also
-tended to oscillate from the pole of romance to the pole of so-called
-realism&mdash;from the <i>Argonautica</i> of Apollonius of Rhodes, let us say, to
-the <i>Mimes</i> of Herondas.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> <i>Emile</i>, Livre <span class="smcapuc">II</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> <i>Etudes de la nature.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> See, for example, <i>Tatler</i>, 17 November, 31 December, 1709 (by Steele).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> See her letter to Gustavus III, King of Sweden, cited in <i>Gustave III
-et la cour de France</i>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 402, par A. Geffroy.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> See Hastings Rashdall: <i>Is Conscience an Emotion?</i> (1914), especially
-ch. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>. Cf. <i>Nouvelle Héloïse</i>. (Pt. <span class="smcapuc">VI</span>, Lettre <span class="smcapuc">VII</span>): “Saint-Preux fait de la
-conscience morale un sentiment, et non pas un jugement.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> <i>Nouvelle Héloïse</i>, Pt. <span class="smcapuc">V</span>, Lettre <span class="smcapuc">II</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i>, Pt. <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, Lettre <span class="smcapuc">XII</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> Schiller’s definition is well known: “A beautiful soul we call a state
-where the moral sentiment has taken possession of all the emotions to
-such a degree that it may unhesitatingly commit the guidance of life to
-instinct,” etc. (<i>On Grace and Dignity.</i>) Cf. Madame de Staël: “La vertu
-devient alors une impulsion involontaire, un mouvement qui passe dans
-le sang, et vous entraîne irrésistiblement comme les passions les plus
-impérieuses.” (<i>De la Littérature: Discours préliminàire.</i>)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> <i>Avenir de la Science</i>, 354.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i>, 179-180.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> <i>Avenir de la Science</i>, 476.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> Madame de Warens felt the influence of German pietism in her youth.
-See <i>La Jeunesse de J.-J. Rousseau</i> par E. Ritter; ch. <span class="smcapuc">XIII</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> <i>Lettre à M. Molé</i> (21 October, 1803).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> <i>Le romantisme français</i>, 215.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> See <i>Les Amours de Milord Bomston</i> at the end of <i>La Nouvelle Héloïse</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_88_88" id="Footnote_88_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> <i>Sultan Mourad</i> in <i>La Légende des Siècles</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_89_89" id="Footnote_89_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> <i>Correspondence</i>, <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, 213 (June, 1791). The date of this letter should
-be noted. Several of the worst terrorists of the French Revolution began
-by introducing bills for the abolition of capital punishment.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_90_90" id="Footnote_90_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> See Burton’s <i>Hume</i>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 309 (note 2).</p>
-
-<p>This sentimental trait did not escape the authors of the <i>Anti-Jacobin</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Sweet child of sickly Fancy&mdash;Her of yore</div>
-<div class="verse">From her lov’d France Rousseau to exile bore;</div>
-<div class="verse">And while midst lakes and mountains wild he ran</div>
-<div class="verse">Full of himself and shunn’d the haunts of man,</div>
-<div class="verse">Taught her o’er each lone vale and Alpine steep</div>
-<div class="verse">To lisp the stories of his wrongs and weep;</div>
-<div class="verse">Taught her to cherish still in either eye</div>
-<div class="verse">Of tender tears a plentiful supply,</div>
-<div class="verse">And pour them in the brooks that babbled by&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Taught her to mete by rule her feelings strong,</div>
-<div class="verse">False by degrees and delicately wrong,</div>
-<div class="verse">For the crush’d Beetle, <i>first</i>&mdash;the widow’d Dove,</div>
-<div class="verse">And all the warbled sorrows of the grove,</div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Next</i> for poor suff’ring Guilt&mdash;and <i>last</i> of all,</div>
-<div class="verse">For Parents, Friends, or King and Country’s fall.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_91_91" id="Footnote_91_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Shepherds, dwellers in the valleys, men</div>
-<div class="verse">Whom I already loved;&mdash;not verily</div>
-<div class="verse">For their own sakes, but for the fields and hills</div>
-<div class="verse">Where was their occupation and abode.</div>
-<p class="right"><i>Michael</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_92_92" id="Footnote_92_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Once more the Ass, with motion dull,</div>
-<div class="verse">Upon the pivot of his skull</div>
-<div class="verse">Turned round his long left ear.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“The bard who soars to elegize an ass” and the “laureate of the long-eared
-kind” (<i>English Bards and Scotch Reviewers</i>) is, however, not
-Wordsworth but Coleridge. See his poem <i>To a Young Ass, its mother being
-tethered near it</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_93_93" id="Footnote_93_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> See the poem <i>Acte d’accusation</i> in <i>Les Contemplations</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_94_94" id="Footnote_94_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> <i>Le Crapaud</i> in <i>La Légende des Siècles</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_95_95" id="Footnote_95_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> See <i>Apology</i> 31<span class="smcap">D</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_96_96" id="Footnote_96_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> His <i>Language and Wisdom of the Hindus</i> appeared in 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_97_97" id="Footnote_97_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> See <i>Jugendschriften</i>, ed. by J. Minor, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 362.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_98_98" id="Footnote_98_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> <i>Dhammapada.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_99_99" id="Footnote_99_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> <i>Sutta-Nipāta</i>, v. 149 (<i>Metta-sutta</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_100_100" id="Footnote_100_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> <i>Second Dialogue.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_101_101" id="Footnote_101_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> <i>Letters</i>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 298. For Ruskin and Rousseau see <i>Ibid.</i> <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 360: “[Ruskin]
-said that great parts of <i>Les Confessions</i> were so true to himself that he felt
-as if Rousseau must have transmigrated into his body.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_102_102" id="Footnote_102_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> “If a poet wishes an atmosphere of indistinct illusion and of moving
-shadow, he must use the romantic style. … Women, such as we know
-them, such as they are likely to be, ever prefer a delicate unreality to
-a true or firm art.” Essay on <i>Pure, Ornate, and Grotesque Art in English
-Poetry</i> (1864).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_103_103" id="Footnote_103_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> “Die Romanze auf einem Pferde” utters the following lines in the
-Prologue to Tieck’s <i>Kaiser Octavianus</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Mondbeglänzte Zaubernacht,</div>
-<div class="verse">Die den Sinn gefangen hält,</div>
-<div class="verse">Wundervolle Märchenwelt</div>
-<div class="verse">Steig’ auf in der alten Pracht.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A special study might be made of the rôle of the moon in Chateaubriand
-and Coleridge&mdash;even if one is not prepared like Carlyle to dismiss
-Coleridge’s philosophy as “bottled moonshine.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_104_104" id="Footnote_104_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> O. Walzel points out that as soon as the women in H. von Kleist’s
-plays become conscious they fall into error (<i>Deutsche Romantik</i>, 3. Auflage,
-147).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_105_105" id="Footnote_105_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> Byron, <i>Sardanapalus</i>, <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, 5. Cf. Rousseau, <i>Neuvième Promenade</i>:
-“Dominé par mes sens, quoi que je puisse faire, je n’ai jamais pu résister
-à leurs impressions, et, tant que l’objet agit sur eux, mon cœur ne cesse
-d’en être affecté.” Cf. also Musset, <i>Rolla</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Ce n’était pas Rolla qui gouvernait sa vie,</div>
-<div class="verse">C’étaient ses passions; il les laissait aller</div>
-<div class="verse">Comme un pâtre assoupi regarde l’eau couler.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_106_106" id="Footnote_106_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> <i>Modern Painters</i>, Part <span class="smcapuc">V</span>, ch. <span class="smcapuc">XX</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_107_107" id="Footnote_107_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> <i>Confessions</i>, Pt. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, Livre <span class="smcapuc">IX</span> (1756).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_108_108" id="Footnote_108_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">With nature never do <i>they</i> wage</div>
-<div class="verse">A foolish strife; they see</div>
-<div class="verse">A happy youth and their old age</div>
-<div class="verse">Is beautiful and free.</div>
-<p class="right">Wordsworth: <i>The Fountain</i>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_109_109" id="Footnote_109_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> The phrase imaginative insight is, I believe, true to the spirit of Plato
-at his best, but it is certainly not true to his terminology. Plato puts the
-imagination (φαντασία) not only below intuitive reason (νοῦς) and discursive
-reason or understanding (διάνοια), but even below outer perception
-(πίστις). He recognizes indeed that it may reflect the operations of the
-understanding and even the higher reason as well as the impressions of
-sense. This notion of a superior intellectual imagination was carried much
-further by Plotinus and the neo-Platonists. Even the intellectual imagination
-is, however, conceived of as passive. Perhaps no Greek thinker, not
-even Plato, makes as clear as he might that reason gets its intuition of
-reality and the One with the aid of the imagination and, as it were, through
-a veil of illusion, that, in Joubert’s phrase, “l’illusion est une partie inté,
-grante de la réalité” (<i>Pensées</i>, Titre <span class="smcapuc">XI</span>, <span class="smcapuc">XXXIX</span>). Joubert again distinguishes
-(<i>ibid.</i>, Titre <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, <span class="smcapuc">XLVII</span>, <span class="smcapuc">LI</span>) between “l’imaginative” which is passive
-and “l’imagination” which is active and creative (“l’œil de l’âme”). In
-its failure to bring out with sufficient explicitness this <i>creative</i> rôle of the
-imagination and in the stubborn intellectualism that this failure implies
-is to be found, if anywhere, the weak point in the cuirass of Greek philosophy.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_110_110" id="Footnote_110_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> See Xenophon, <i>Memorabilia</i>, <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, 16, 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_111_111" id="Footnote_111_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> Σωφροσύνη.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_112_112" id="Footnote_112_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> See his <i>Lettre à d’Alembert</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_113_113" id="Footnote_113_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a> <i>Varieties of Religious Experience</i>, 387.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_114_114" id="Footnote_114_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> <i>Blütezeit der Romantik</i>, 126.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_115_115" id="Footnote_115_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> “Parfaite illusion, réalité parfaite” (Alfred de Vigny). “Die Welt
-wird Traum, der Traum wird Welt” (Novalis). “This sort of dreaming
-existence is the best; he who quits it to go in search of realities generally
-barters repose for repeated disappointments and vain regrets” (Hazlitt).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_116_116" id="Footnote_116_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> <i>Lit. Ang.</i>, <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, 130.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_117_117" id="Footnote_117_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> About 1885.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_118_118" id="Footnote_118_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> <i>Le Théâtre en France</i>, 304.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_119_119" id="Footnote_119_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent5">Je suis une force qui va!</div>
-<div class="verse">Agent aveugle et sourd de mystères funèbres.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_120_120" id="Footnote_120_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> E.g., Lillo’s <i>Fatal Curiosity</i> (1736) had a marked influence on the rise
-of the German fate tragedy.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_121_121" id="Footnote_121_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121_121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Wo ist der, der sagen dürfe,</div>
-<div class="verse">So will ich’s, so sei’s gemacht,</div>
-<div class="verse">Unser Taten sind nur Würfe</div>
-<div class="verse">In des Zufalls blinde Nacht.</div>
-<p class="right"><i>Die Ahnfrau.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_122_122" id="Footnote_122_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122_122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> “So that in the first place, I put for a general inclination of all mankind,
-a perpetual and restless desire of Power after power, that ceaseth
-only in Death.” <i>Leviathan</i>, Part <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, ch. <span class="smcapuc">XI</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_123_123" id="Footnote_123_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123_123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a> See <i>Unpopular Review</i>, October, 1915.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_124_124" id="Footnote_124_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124_124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> E. Seillière has been tracing, in <i>Le Mal romantique</i> and other volumes,
-the relation between Rousseauism and what he terms an “irrational imperialism.”
-His point of view is on the constructive side very different
-from mine.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_125_125" id="Footnote_125_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125_125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a> The best account of Rousseau’s German influence is still that of
-H. Hettner in his <i>Literaturgeschichte des 18. Jahrhunderts</i>. Compared with
-Rousseau’s German influence, says Professor Paul Hensel in his <i>Rousseau</i>
-(1907), “his influence in France seems almost trifling.” In Germany
-“Rousseau became the basis not of a guillotine but of a new culture
-(Kultur). … We have drawn his spirit over to us, we have made it our
-own.” (121.) See also Professor Eugen Kühnemann, <i>Vom Weltreich des
-deutschen Geistes</i> (1914), 54-62, and <i>passim</i>. German idealism is, according
-to Kühnemann, the monument that does the greatest honor to Rousseau.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_126_126" id="Footnote_126_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126_126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">A robin redbreast in a cage</div>
-<div class="verse">Puts all Heaven in a rage.</div>
-<div class="verse center">…</div>
-<div class="verse">He who shall hurt the little wren</div>
-<div class="verse">Shall never be belov’d by men.</div>
-<div class="verse">He who the ox to wrath has mov’d</div>
-<div class="verse">Shall never be by woman lov’d.</div>
-<div class="verse center">…</div>
-<div class="verse">Kill not the moth nor butterfly,</div>
-<div class="verse">For the Last Judgment draweth nigh.</div>
-<p class="right"><i>Auguries of Innocence.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_127_127" id="Footnote_127_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127_127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> See <i>Hart-Leap Well</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_128_128" id="Footnote_128_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128_128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a> <i>Beyond Good and Evil</i>, ch. <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_129_129" id="Footnote_129_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129_129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a> “Out into distant futures, which no dream hath yet seen, into warmer
-souths than ever sculptor conceived. … Let this love be your new nobility,&mdash;the
-undiscovered in the remotest seas,” etc. (<i>Thus Spake Zarathustra</i>,
-translated by Thomas Common, 240, 248.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_130_130" id="Footnote_130_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130_130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a> “On trouverait, en rétablissant les anneaux intermédiaires de la chaîne,
-qu’à Pascal se rattachent les doctrines modernes qui font passer en
-première ligne la connaissance immédiate, l’intuition, la vie intérieure,
-comme à Descartes … se rattachent plus particulièrement les philosophies
-de la raison pure.” <i>La Science française</i> (1915), <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 17.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_131_131" id="Footnote_131_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131_131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a> Cf. Tennyson:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent2">Fantastic beauty, such as lurks</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">In some wild poet when he works</div>
-<div class="verse">Without a conscience or an aim&mdash;</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_132_132" id="Footnote_132_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132_132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a> Addison writes:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">’Twas then great Marlbro’s mighty soul was proved,</div>
-<div class="verse">That, in the shock of changing hosts unmoved,</div>
-<div class="verse">Amidst confusion, horror, and despair,</div>
-<div class="verse">Examin’d all the dreadful scenes of war;</div>
-<div class="verse">In peaceful thought the field of death survey’d.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>So far as Marlborough deserved this praise he was a general in the
-grand manner.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_133_133" id="Footnote_133_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_133_133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a> “Beauty resides in due proportion and order,” says Aristotle (<i>Poetics</i>,
-ch. <span class="smcapuc">VII</span>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_134_134" id="Footnote_134_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_134_134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a> <i>A Survey of English Literature, 1780-1830</i> (1912), <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 191.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_135_135" id="Footnote_135_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_135_135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a> Confucius and the Chinese sages were if anything even more concerned
-than Plato or Aristotle with the ethical quality of music.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_136_136" id="Footnote_136_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_136_136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a> Like Bishop Blougram’s his “interest’s on the dangerous edge of
-things.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_137_137" id="Footnote_137_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_137_137"><span class="label">[137]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Does he take inspiration from the church,</div>
-<div class="verse">Directly make her rule his law of life?</div>
-<div class="verse">Not he: his own mere impulse guides the man.</div>
-<div class="verse center">…</div>
-<div class="verse">Such is, for the Augustine that was once,</div>
-<div class="verse">This Canon Caponsacchi we see now.</div>
-<p class="right"><span class="smcapuc">X</span>, 1911-28.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_138_138" id="Footnote_138_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_138_138"><span class="label">[138]</span></a> See <span class="smcapuc">X</span>, 1367-68.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_139_139" id="Footnote_139_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_139_139"><span class="label">[139]</span></a> Letter to Joseph d’Ortigue, January 19, 1833.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_140_140" id="Footnote_140_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_140_140"><span class="label">[140]</span></a> Here is an extreme example from Maigron’s manuscript collection
-(<i>Le Romantisme et les mœurs</i>, 153). A youth forced to be absent three
-weeks from the woman he loves writes to her as follows: “Trois semaines,
-mon amour, trois semaines loin de toi! … Oh! Dieu m’a maudit! …
-Hier j’ai erré toute l’après-midi comme une bête fauve, une bête traquée. …
-Dans la forêt, j’ai hurlé, hurlé comme un démon … je me suis roulé
-par terre … j’ai broyé sous mes dents des branches que mes mains
-avaient arrachées. … Alors, de rage, j’ai pris ma main entre mes dents;
-j’ai serré, serré convulsivement; le sang a jailli et j’ai craché au ciel le
-morceau de chair vive … j’aurais voulu lui cracher mon cœur.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_141_141" id="Footnote_141_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_141_141"><span class="label">[141]</span></a> Maxime Du Camp asserts in his <i>Souvenirs littéraires</i> (<span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 118) that this
-anæmia was due in part to the copious blood-letting to which the physicians
-of the time, disciples of Broussais, were addicted.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_142_142" id="Footnote_142_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_142_142"><span class="label">[142]</span></a> This perversion was not unknown to classical antiquity. Cf. Seneca, <i>To
-Lucilius</i>, <span class="smcapuc">XCIX</span>: “Quid turpius quam captare in ipso luctu voluptatem; et
-inter lacrymas quoque, quod juvet, quærere?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_143_143" id="Footnote_143_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_143_143"><span class="label">[143]</span></a> <i>Nouvelle Héloïse</i>, Pt. <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, Lettre <span class="smcapuc">VI</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_144_144" id="Footnote_144_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_144_144"><span class="label">[144]</span></a> <i>Confessions</i>, Livre <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_145_145" id="Footnote_145_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_145_145"><span class="label">[145]</span></a> <i>The New Laokoon</i>, ch. <span class="smcapuc">V</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_146_146" id="Footnote_146_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_146_146"><span class="label">[146]</span></a> <i>Franciscae meæ laudes</i>, in <i>Les Fleurs du mal</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_147_147" id="Footnote_147_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_147_147"><span class="label">[147]</span></a> <i>Architecture and Painting</i>, Lecture <span class="smcapuc">II</span>. This diatribe may have been
-suggested by Byron’s <i>Don Juan</i>, Canto <span class="smcapuc">XIII</span>, <span class="smcapuc">IX</span>-<span class="smcapuc">XI</span>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Cervantes smiled Spain’s chivalry away:</div>
-<div class="verse">A single laugh demolished the right arm</div>
-<div class="verse">Of his own country, etc.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_148_148" id="Footnote_148_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_148_148"><span class="label">[148]</span></a> “Nondum amabam, et amare amabam, quærebam quid amarem,
-amans amare.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_149_149" id="Footnote_149_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_149_149"><span class="label">[149]</span></a> Cf. Shelley’s <i>Alastor</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent10">Two eyes,</div>
-<div class="verse">Two starry eyes, hung in the gloom of thought</div>
-<div class="verse">And seemed with their serene and azure smiles</div>
-<div class="verse">To beckon.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_150_150" id="Footnote_150_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_150_150"><span class="label">[150]</span></a> “Some of us have in a prior existence been in love with an Antigone,
-and that makes us find no full content in any mortal tie.” Shelley to John
-Gisborne, October 22, 1821.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_151_151" id="Footnote_151_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_151_151"><span class="label">[151]</span></a> <i>Confessions</i>, Livre <span class="smcapuc">XI</span> (1761).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_152_152" id="Footnote_152_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_152_152"><span class="label">[152]</span></a> <i>Mémoires d’Outre-Tombe</i>, November, 1817.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_153_153" id="Footnote_153_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_153_153"><span class="label">[153]</span></a> “Je me faisais une félicité de réaliser avec ma sylphide mes courses
-fantastiques dans les forêts du Nouveau Monde.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Mémoires d’Outre-Tombe</i>, December, 1821.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_154_154" id="Footnote_154_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_154_154"><span class="label">[154]</span></a> Peacock has in mind <i>Childe Harold</i>, canto <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, <span class="smcapuc">CXXI</span> ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_155_155" id="Footnote_155_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_155_155"><span class="label">[155]</span></a> Rousseau plans to make a nympholept of his ideal pupil, Emile:
-“Il faut que je sois le plus maladroit des hommes si je ne le rends d’avance
-passionné sans savoir de quoi”, etc. <i>Emile</i>, Liv. <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_156_156" id="Footnote_156_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_156_156"><span class="label">[156]</span></a> Cf. René’s letter to Céluta in <i>Les Natchez</i>: “Je vous ai tenue sur ma
-poitrine au milieu du désert, dans les vents de l’orage, lorsque, après vous
-avoir portée de l’autre côté d’un torrent, j’aurais voulu vous poignarder
-pour fixer le bonheur dans votre sein, et pour me punir de vous avoir
-donné ce bonheur.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_157_157" id="Footnote_157_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_157_157"><span class="label">[157]</span></a> The romantic lover, it should be observed, creates his dream companion
-even less that he may adore her than that she may adore him.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_158_158" id="Footnote_158_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_158_158"><span class="label">[158]</span></a> Walter Bagehot has made an interesting study of the romantic imagination
-in his essay on a figure who reminds one in some respects of Gérard
-de Nerval&mdash;Hartley Coleridge.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_159_159" id="Footnote_159_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_159_159"><span class="label">[159]</span></a> Don Juan bids his servant give a coin to the beggar not for the love of
-God but for the love of humanity.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_160_160" id="Footnote_160_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_160_160"><span class="label">[160]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Demandant aux forêts, à la mer, à la plaine,</div>
-<div class="verse">Aux brises du matin, à toute heure, à tout lieu,</div>
-<div class="verse">La femme de son âme et de son premier voeu!</div>
-<div class="verse">Prenant pour fiancée un rêve, une ombre vaine,</div>
-<div class="verse">Et fouillant dans le cœur d’une hécatombe humaine,</div>
-<div class="verse">Prêtre désespéré, pour y trouver son Dieu.</div>
-<p class="right">A. de Musset, <i>Namouna</i>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Don Juan avait en lui cet amour pour la femme idéale; il a couru le
-monde serrant et brisant de dépit dans ses bras toutes les imparfaites
-images qu’il croyait un moment aimer; et il est mort épuisé de fatigue, consumé
-de son insatiable amour.” Prévost-Paradol, <i>Lettres</i>, 149.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_161_161" id="Footnote_161_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_161_161"><span class="label">[161]</span></a> See Scott’s (2d) edition of Swift, <span class="smcapuc">XIII</span>, 310.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_162_162" id="Footnote_162_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_162_162"><span class="label">[162]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Aimer c’est le grand point. Qu’importe la maîtresse?</div>
-<div class="verse">Qu’importe le flacon pourvu qu’on ait l’ivresse?</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_163_163" id="Footnote_163_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_163_163"><span class="label">[163]</span></a> It has been said that in the novels of George Sand when a lady wishes
-to change her lover God is always there to facilitate the transfer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_164_164" id="Footnote_164_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_164_164"><span class="label">[164]</span></a> “Tous les hommes sont menteurs, inconstants, faux, bavards, hypocrites,
-orgueilleux ou lâches, méprisables et sensuels; toutes les femmes
-sont perfides, artificieuses, vaniteuses, curieuses et dépravées; le monde
-n’est qu’un égout sans fond où les phoques les plus informes rampent et se
-tordent sur des montagnes de fange; mais il y a au monde une chose sainte
-et sublime, c’est l’union de deux de ces êtres si imparfaits et si affreux.
-On est souvent trompé en amour; souvent blessé et souvent malheureux;
-mais on aime et quand on est sur le bord de sa tombe, on se retourne pour
-regarder en arrière, et on se dit: J’ai souffert souvent, je me suis trompé
-quelquefois, mais j’ai aimé. C’est moi qui ai vécu, et non pas un être
-factice créé par mon orgueil et mon ennui.” (The last sentence is taken
-from a letter of George Sand to Musset.) <i>On ne badine pas avec l’Amour</i>,
-<span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_165_165" id="Footnote_165_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_165_165"><span class="label">[165]</span></a> <i>Table-Talk. On the Past and Future.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_166_166" id="Footnote_166_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_166_166"><span class="label">[166]</span></a> <i>The Plain Speaker. On Reading Old Books.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_167_167" id="Footnote_167_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_167_167"><span class="label">[167]</span></a> <i>The Round Table. On the Character of Rousseau.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_168_168" id="Footnote_168_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_168_168"><span class="label">[168]</span></a> “Aujourd’hui, jour de Pâques fleuries, il y a précisément cinquante
-ans de ma première connaissance avec Madame de Warens.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_169_169" id="Footnote_169_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_169_169"><span class="label">[169]</span></a> Even on his death-bed the hero of Browning’s <i>Confessions</i> gives himself
-up to impassionated recollection:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">How sad and bad and mad it was&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">But then, how it was sweet.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In his <i>Stances à Madame Lullin</i> Voltaire is at least as poetical and
-nearer to normal experience:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Quel mortel s’est jamais flatté</div>
-<div class="verse">D’un rendez-vous à l’agonie?</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_170_170" id="Footnote_170_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_170_170"><span class="label">[170]</span></a> See especially <i>Lyceum fragment</i>, no. 108.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_171_171" id="Footnote_171_171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_171_171"><span class="label">[171]</span></a> A well-known example of the extreme to which the romanticists
-pushed their Fichtean solipsism is the following from the <i>William Lovell</i>
-of the youthful Tieck: “Having gladly escaped from anxious fetters,
-I now advance boldly through life, absolved from those irksome duties
-which were the inventions of cowardly fools. Virtue is, only because I am;
-it is but a reflection of my inner self. What care I for forms whose dim
-lustre I have myself brought forth? Let vice and virtue wed. They are only
-shadows in the mist,” etc.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_172_172" id="Footnote_172_172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_172_172"><span class="label">[172]</span></a> <i>Beyond Good and Evil</i>, ch. <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_173_173" id="Footnote_173_173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_173_173"><span class="label">[173]</span></a> <i>On Contemporary Literature</i>, 206. The whole passage is excellent.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_174_174" id="Footnote_174_174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_174_174"><span class="label">[174]</span></a> M. Legouis makes a similar remark in the <i>Cambridge History of English
-Literature</i> <span class="smcapuc">XI</span>, 108.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_175_175" id="Footnote_175_175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_175_175"><span class="label">[175]</span></a> I scarcely need say that Wordsworth is at times genuinely ethical,
-but he is even more frequently only didactic. The <i>Excursion</i>, as M. Legouis
-says, is a “long sermon against pessimism.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_176_176" id="Footnote_176_176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_176_176"><span class="label">[176]</span></a> “Quia fecisti nos ad te et inquietum est cor nostrum, donec requiescat
-in te.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_177_177" id="Footnote_177_177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_177_177"><span class="label">[177]</span></a> <i>Eth. Nic.</i>, 1177 b.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_178_178" id="Footnote_178_178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_178_178"><span class="label">[178]</span></a> Cf. the chapter on <i>William Law and the Mystics</i> in <i>Cambridge History
-of English Literature</i>, <span class="smcapuc">IX</span>, 341-67; also the bibliography of Boehme,
-<i>ibid.</i>, 560-74.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_179_179" id="Footnote_179_179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_179_179"><span class="label">[179]</span></a> See <i>Excursion</i>, <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, <span class="smcapuc">VV</span>. 943 ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_180_180" id="Footnote_180_180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_180_180"><span class="label">[180]</span></a> In his attitude towards sin Novalis continues Rousseau and anticipates
-the main positions of the Christian Scientist.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_181_181" id="Footnote_181_181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_181_181"><span class="label">[181]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Prune thou thy words,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">The thoughts control</div>
-<div class="verse">That o’er thee swell and throng.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">They will condense within the soul</div>
-<div class="verse">And change to purpose strong.</div>
-<div class="verse">But he who lets his feelings run</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">In soft, luxurious flow,</div>
-<div class="verse">Shrinks when hard service must be done</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And faints at every foe.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_182_182" id="Footnote_182_182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_182_182"><span class="label">[182]</span></a> Wesley had no liking for Boehme and cut out from Brooke’s book the
-theosophy that had this origin.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_183_183" id="Footnote_183_183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_183_183"><span class="label">[183]</span></a> Writing was often associated with magic formulæ. Hence γράμμα also
-gave Fr. “grimoire.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_184_184" id="Footnote_184_184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_184_184"><span class="label">[184]</span></a> <i>Thus Spake Zarathustra</i>, <span class="smcapuc">LXIX</span> (The Shadow to Zarathustra).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_185_185" id="Footnote_185_185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_185_185"><span class="label">[185]</span></a> <i>Katha-Upanishad.</i> The passage is paraphrased as follows by P. E.
-More in his <i>Century of Indian Epigrams</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent1">Seated within this body’s car</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">The silent Self is driven afar,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And the five senses at the pole</div>
-<div class="verse">Like steeds are tugging restive of control.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent1">And if the driver lose his way,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Or the reins sunder, who can say</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">In what blind paths, what pits of fear</div>
-<div class="verse">Will plunge the chargers in their mad career?</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent1">Drive well, O mind, use all thy art,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Thou charioteer!&mdash;O feeling Heart,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Be thou a bridle firm and strong!</div>
-<div class="verse">For the Lord rideth and the way is long.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_186_186" id="Footnote_186_186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_186_186"><span class="label">[186]</span></a> See Brandes: <i>The Romantic School in Germany</i>, ch. <span class="smcapuc">XI</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_187_187" id="Footnote_187_187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_187_187"><span class="label">[187]</span></a> Alfred de Musset saw his double in the stress of his affair with George
-Sand (see <i>Nuit de Décembre</i>), Jean Valjean (<i>Les Misérables</i>) sees his double
-in the stress of his conversion. Peter Bell also sees his double at the emotional
-crisis in Wordsworth’s poem of that name.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_188_188" id="Footnote_188_188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_188_188"><span class="label">[188]</span></a> <i>Thus Spake Zarathustra</i>, <span class="smcapuc">LXIX</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_189_189" id="Footnote_189_189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_189_189"><span class="label">[189]</span></a> F. Schlegel: <i>Lyceumfragment</i>, no. 42.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_190_190" id="Footnote_190_190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_190_190"><span class="label">[190]</span></a> E.g., canto <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, <span class="smcapuc">CVII-CXI</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_191_191" id="Footnote_191_191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_191_191"><span class="label">[191]</span></a> <i>Confessions</i>, Livre <span class="smcapuc">XII</span> (1765).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_192_192" id="Footnote_192_192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_192_192"><span class="label">[192]</span></a> Cf. Th. Gomperz, <i>Greek Thinkers</i>, <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 402.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_193_193" id="Footnote_193_193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_193_193"><span class="label">[193]</span></a> Wordsworth: <i>Miscellaneous Sonnets</i>, <span class="smcapuc">XII</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_194_194" id="Footnote_194_194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_194_194"><span class="label">[194]</span></a> In much the same spirit the Japanese hermit, Kamo Chōmei (thirteenth
-century), expresses the fear that he may forget Buddha because
-of his fondness for the mountains and the moon.&mdash;See article on nature
-in Japan by M. Revon in <i>Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_195_195" id="Footnote_195_195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_195_195"><span class="label">[195]</span></a> <i>Confessions</i>, Bk. <span class="smcapuc">X</span>, ch. <span class="smcapuc">IX</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_196_196" id="Footnote_196_196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_196_196"><span class="label">[196]</span></a> Cf. Cicero: “Urbem, urbem, mi Rufe, cole et in ista luce vive.” (<i>Ad
-Fam.</i>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 22.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_197_197" id="Footnote_197_197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_197_197"><span class="label">[197]</span></a> March 23, 1646.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_198_198" id="Footnote_198_198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_198_198"><span class="label">[198]</span></a> It was especially easy for the poets to go for their landscapes to the
-painters because according to the current theory poetry was itself a form
-of painting (<i>ut pictura poesis</i>). Thus Thomson writes in <i>The Castle of
-Indolence</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent1">Sometimes the pencil, in cool airy halls,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Bade the gay bloom of vernal landskips rise,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Or autumn’s varied shades embrown the walls:</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Now the black tempest strikes the astonish’d eyes;</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Now down the steep the flashing torrent flies;</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">The trembling sun now plays o’er ocean blue,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And now rude mountains frown amid the skies;</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Whate’er <i>Lorrain</i> light touch’d with softening hue,</div>
-<div class="verse">Or savage <i>Rosa</i> dash’d, or learned <i>Poussin</i> drew.</div>
-<p class="right">(C. <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, st. 38.)</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_199_199" id="Footnote_199_199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_199_199"><span class="label">[199]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent1">Disparaissez, monuments du génie,</div>
-<div class="verse">Pares, jardins immortels, que Le Nôtre a plantés;</div>
-<div class="verse">De vos dehors pompeux l’exacte symmétrie,</div>
-<div class="verse">Etonne vainement mes regards attristés.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">J’aime bien mieux ce désordre bizarre,</div>
-<div class="verse">Et la variété de ces riches tableaux</div>
-<div class="verse">Que disperse l’Anglais d’une main moins avare.</div>
-<p class="right">Bertin, 19<sup>e</sup> Elégie of <i>Les Amours</i>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_200_200" id="Footnote_200_200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_200_200"><span class="label">[200]</span></a> Pt. <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, Lettre <span class="smcapuc">XI</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_201_201" id="Footnote_201_201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_201_201"><span class="label">[201]</span></a> <i>Nouvelle Héloïse</i>, Pt. <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, Lettre <span class="smcapuc">XI</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_202_202" id="Footnote_202_202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_202_202"><span class="label">[202]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_203_203" id="Footnote_203_203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_203_203"><span class="label">[203]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i>, Pt. <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, Lettre <span class="smcapuc">XVII</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_204_204" id="Footnote_204_204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_204_204"><span class="label">[204]</span></a> <i>Confessions</i>, Livre <span class="smcapuc">V</span> (1732).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_205_205" id="Footnote_205_205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_205_205"><span class="label">[205]</span></a> See especially <i>Childe Harold</i>, canto <span class="smcapuc">II, XXV</span> ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_206_206" id="Footnote_206_206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_206_206"><span class="label">[206]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i>, canto <span class="smcapuc">II, XXXVII</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_207_207" id="Footnote_207_207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_207_207"><span class="label">[207]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i>, canto <span class="smcapuc">III, LXXII</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_208_208" id="Footnote_208_208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_208_208"><span class="label">[208]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i>, canto <span class="smcapuc">IV, CLXXVII</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_209_209" id="Footnote_209_209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_209_209"><span class="label">[209]</span></a> See <i>La Perception du changement</i>, 30.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_210_210" id="Footnote_210_210"></a><a href="#FNanchor_210_210"><span class="label">[210]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<p class="center">ASIA</p>
-<div class="verse indent1">My soul is an enchanted boat,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Which like a sleeping swan, doth float</div>
-<div class="verse">Upon the silver waves of thy sweet singing;</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And thine doth like an angel sit</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Beside a helm conducting it,</div>
-<div class="verse">Whilst all the winds with melody are ringing.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">It seems to float ever, for ever</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Upon that many-winding river,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Between mountains, woods, abysses,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">A paradise of wildernesses!</div>
-<div class="verse center">…</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Meanwhile thy spirit lifts its pinions</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">In music’s most serene dominions;</div>
-<div class="verse">Catching the winds that fan that happy heaven.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And we sail on away, afar,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Without a course, without a star,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">But by the instinct of sweet music driven;</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Till through Elysian garden islets</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">By thee, most beautiful of pilots,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Where never mortal pinnace glided</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">The boat of my desire is guided;</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Realms where the air we breathe is love&mdash;</div>
-<p class="right"><i>Prometheus Unbound</i>, Act <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, Sc. <span class="smcapuc">V</span>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_211_211" id="Footnote_211_211"></a><a href="#FNanchor_211_211"><span class="label">[211]</span></a> “Si tu souffres plus qu’un autre des choses de la vie, il ne faut pas t’en
-étonner; une grande âme doit contenir plus de douleurs qu’une petite.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_212_212" id="Footnote_212_212"></a><a href="#FNanchor_212_212"><span class="label">[212]</span></a> Cf. Shelley, <i>Julian and Maddalo</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent10">I love all waste</div>
-<div class="verse">And solitary places; where we taste</div>
-<div class="verse">The pleasure of believing what we see</div>
-<div class="verse">Is boundless, as we wish our souls to be.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_213_213" id="Footnote_213_213"></a><a href="#FNanchor_213_213"><span class="label">[213]</span></a> Cf. for example, the passage of Rousseau in the seventh <i>Promenade</i>
-(“Je sens des extases, des ravissements inexprimables à me fondre pour
-ainsi dire dans le système des êtres,” etc.) with the revery described by
-Wordsworth in <i>The Excursion</i>, <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 200-218.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_214_214" id="Footnote_214_214"></a><a href="#FNanchor_214_214"><span class="label">[214]</span></a> O belles, craignez le fond des bois, et leur vaste silence.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_215_215" id="Footnote_215_215"></a><a href="#FNanchor_215_215"><span class="label">[215]</span></a> <i>Faust</i> (Miss Swanwick’s translation).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_216_216" id="Footnote_216_216"></a><a href="#FNanchor_216_216"><span class="label">[216]</span></a> <i>Artist and Public</i>, 134 ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_217_217" id="Footnote_217_217"></a><a href="#FNanchor_217_217"><span class="label">[217]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Make me thy lyre, even as the forest is:</div>
-<div class="verse">What if my leaves are falling like its own!</div>
-<div class="verse">The tumult of thy mighty harmonies</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Will take from both a deep, autumnal tone,</div>
-<div class="verse">Sweet though in sadness. Be thou, Spirit fierce,</div>
-<div class="verse">My spirit! Be thou me, impetuous one!</div>
-<div class="verse">Drive my dead thoughts over the universe</div>
-<div class="verse">Like withered leaves, etc.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Cf. Lamartine:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Quand la feuille des bois tombe dans la prairie,</div>
-<div class="verse">Le vent du soir s’élève et l’arrache aux vallons;</div>
-<div class="verse">Et moi, je suis semblable à la feuille flétrie;</div>
-<div class="verse">Emportez-moi comme elle, orageux aquilons.</div>
-<p class="right"><i>L’Isolement.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_218_218" id="Footnote_218_218"></a><a href="#FNanchor_218_218"><span class="label">[218]</span></a> Cf. Hettner, <i>Romantische Schule</i>, 156.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_219_219" id="Footnote_219_219"></a><a href="#FNanchor_219_219"><span class="label">[219]</span></a> See appendix on Chinese primitivism.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_220_220" id="Footnote_220_220"></a><a href="#FNanchor_220_220"><span class="label">[220]</span></a> G. Duval has written a <i>Dictionnaire des métaphores de Victor Hugo</i>,
-and G. Lucchetti a work on <i>Les Images dans les œuvres de Victor Hugo</i>.
-So far as the ethical values are concerned, the latter title is alone justified.
-Hugo is, next to Chateaubriand, the great imagist.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_221_221" id="Footnote_221_221"></a><a href="#FNanchor_221_221"><span class="label">[221]</span></a> The French like to think of the symbolists as having rendered certain
-services to their versification. Let us hope that they did, though few things
-are more perilous than this transfer of the idea of progress to the literary
-and artistic domain. Decadent Rome, as we learn from the younger Pliny
-and others, simply swarmed with poets who also no doubt indulged in
-many strange experiments. All this poetical activity, as we can see only too
-plainly at this distance, led nowhere.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_222_222" id="Footnote_222_222"></a><a href="#FNanchor_222_222"><span class="label">[222]</span></a> Grant Allen writes of the laws of nature in <i>Magdalen Tower</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">They care not any whit for pain or pleasure,</div>
-<div class="verse">That seems to us the sum and end of all,</div>
-<div class="verse">Dumb force and barren number are their measure,</div>
-<div class="verse">What shall be shall be, tho’ the great earth fall,</div>
-<div class="verse">They take no heed of man or man’s deserving,</div>
-<div class="verse">Reck not what happy lives they make or mar,</div>
-<div class="verse">Work out their fatal will unswerv’d, unswerving,</div>
-<div class="verse">And know not that they are!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_223_223" id="Footnote_223_223"></a><a href="#FNanchor_223_223"><span class="label">[223]</span></a> Fragment de l’<i>Art de jouir</i>, quoted by P.-M. Masson in <i>La Religion
-de J.-J. Rousseau</i>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 228.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_224_224" id="Footnote_224_224"></a><a href="#FNanchor_224_224"><span class="label">[224]</span></a> If nature merely reflects back to a man his own image, it follows that
-Coleridge’s celebrated distinction between fancy and imagination has
-little value, inasmuch as he rests his proof of the unifying power of the
-imagination, in itself a sound idea, on the union the imagination effects
-between man and outer nature&mdash;and this union is on his own showing
-fanciful.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_225_225" id="Footnote_225_225"></a><a href="#FNanchor_225_225"><span class="label">[225]</span></a> If I had had this consecration Wordsworth says, addressing Peele
-Castle,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">I would have planted thee, thou hoary Pile,</div>
-<div class="verse">Amid a world how different from this!</div>
-<div class="verse">Beside a sea that could not cease to smile;</div>
-<div class="verse">On tranquil land, beneath a sky of bliss.</div>
-<div class="verse center">…</div>
-<div class="verse">A Picture had it been of lasting ease,</div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Elysian quiet, without toil or strife</i>, etc.</div>
-<p class="right"><i>Elegiac Stanzas suggested by a picture of Peele Castle in a storm.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_226_226" id="Footnote_226_226"></a><a href="#FNanchor_226_226"><span class="label">[226]</span></a> Cf. Doudan, <i>Lettres</i>, <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, 216: “J’ai parcouru le <i>Saint-Paul</i> de Renan.
-Je n’ai jamais vu dans un théologien une si grande connaissance de la flore
-orientale. C’est un paysagiste bien supérieur à Saint-Augustin et à Bossuet.
-Il sème des résédas, des anémones, des pâquerettes pour recueillir
-l’incrédulité.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_227_227" id="Footnote_227_227"></a><a href="#FNanchor_227_227"><span class="label">[227]</span></a> In his <i>Mal romantique</i> (1908) E. Seillière labels the generations that
-have elapsed since the rise of Rousseauism as follows:</p>
-
-<p>1. Sensibility (<i>Nouvelle Héloïse</i>, 1761).</p>
-
-<p>2. Weltschmerz (Schiller’s <i>Æsthetic Letters</i>, 1795).</p>
-
-<p>3. Mal du siècle (Hugo’s <i>Hernani</i>, 1830).</p>
-
-<p>4. Pessimism (vogue of Schopenhauer and Stendhal, 1865).</p>
-
-<p>5. Neurasthenia (culmination of <i>fin de siècle</i> movement, 1900).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_228_228" id="Footnote_228_228"></a><a href="#FNanchor_228_228"><span class="label">[228]</span></a> <i>Eckermann</i>, September 24, 1827.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_229_229" id="Footnote_229_229"></a><a href="#FNanchor_229_229"><span class="label">[229]</span></a> See <i>La Nuit de Mai</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_230_230" id="Footnote_230_230"></a><a href="#FNanchor_230_230"><span class="label">[230]</span></a> These lines are inscribed on the statue of Musset in front of the
-Théâtre Français. Cf. Shelley:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Our sweetest songs are those that tell of saddest thought.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_231_231" id="Footnote_231_231"></a><a href="#FNanchor_231_231"><span class="label">[231]</span></a> Translation by J. E. Sandys of fragment cited in Stobæus, <i>Flor.</i>
-<span class="smcapuc">CIX</span>, <span class="smcapuc">I</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_232_232" id="Footnote_232_232"></a><a href="#FNanchor_232_232"><span class="label">[232]</span></a> <i>Pythian Odes</i>, <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, 20 ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_233_233" id="Footnote_233_233"></a><a href="#FNanchor_233_233"><span class="label">[233]</span></a> <i>Pythian Odes</i>, <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, 81-82.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_234_234" id="Footnote_234_234"></a><a href="#FNanchor_234_234"><span class="label">[234]</span></a> <i>Song of the Banjo</i>, in the <i>Seven Seas</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_235_235" id="Footnote_235_235"></a><a href="#FNanchor_235_235"><span class="label">[235]</span></a> <span class="smcapuc">XVII</span>, 446-47.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_236_236" id="Footnote_236_236"></a><a href="#FNanchor_236_236"><span class="label">[236]</span></a> A brief survey of melancholy among the Greeks will be found in Professor
-S. H. Butcher’s <i>Some Aspects of the Greek Genius</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_237_237" id="Footnote_237_237"></a><a href="#FNanchor_237_237"><span class="label">[237]</span></a> The exasperated quest of novelty is one of the main traits both of the
-ancient and the modern victim of ennui. See Seneca, <i>De Tranquillitate
-animi</i>: “Fastidio illis esse cœpit vita, et ipse mundus; et subit illud rabidorum
-deliciarum: quousque eadem?” (Cf. La Fontaine: Il me faut du
-nouveau, n’en fût-il plus au monde.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_238_238" id="Footnote_238_238"></a><a href="#FNanchor_238_238"><span class="label">[238]</span></a> “A quoi bon m’avoir fait naître avec des facultés exquises pour les
-laisser jusqu’à la fin sans emploi? Le sentiment de mon prix interne en
-me donnant celui de cette injustice m’en dédommageait en quelque sorte,
-et me faisait verser des larmes que j’aimais a laisser couler.” <i>Confessions.</i>
-Livre <span class="smcapuc">IX</span> (1756).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_239_239" id="Footnote_239_239"></a><a href="#FNanchor_239_239"><span class="label">[239]</span></a> <i>Nouvelle Héloise</i>, Pt. <span class="smcapuc">VI</span>, Lettre <span class="smcapuc">VIII</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_240_240" id="Footnote_240_240"></a><a href="#FNanchor_240_240"><span class="label">[240]</span></a> “Encore enfant par la tête, vous êtes déjà vieux par le cœur.” <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_241_241" id="Footnote_241_241"></a><a href="#FNanchor_241_241"><span class="label">[241]</span></a> See the examples quoted in Arnold: <i>Essays in Criticism</i>, Second Series,
-305-06.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_242_242" id="Footnote_242_242"></a><a href="#FNanchor_242_242"><span class="label">[242]</span></a> This is the thought of Keats’s <i>Ode to Melancholy</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Ay, in the very temple of Delight</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Veil’d Melancholy has her sovran shrine,</div>
-<div class="verse">Though seen of none save him whose strenuous tongue</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Can burst Joy’s grape against his palate fine.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Cf. Chateaubriand: <i>Essai sur les Révolutions</i>, Pt. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, ch. <span class="smcapuc">LVIII</span>: “Ces jouissances
-sont trop poignantes: telle est notre faiblesse, que les plaisirs
-exquis deviennent des douleurs,” etc.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_243_243" id="Footnote_243_243"></a><a href="#FNanchor_243_243"><span class="label">[243]</span></a> See his sonnet <i>Les Montreurs</i>. This type of Rousseauist is anticipated
-by “Milord” Bomston in <i>La Nouvelle Héloïse</i>. Rousseau directed the
-engraver to depict him with “un maintien grave et stoïque sous lequel
-il cache avec peine une extrême sensibilité.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_244_244" id="Footnote_244_244"></a><a href="#FNanchor_244_244"><span class="label">[244]</span></a> “Qui es-tu? À coup sûr tu n’es pas un être pétri du même limon et
-animé de la même vie que nous! Tu es un ange ou un démon mais tu n’es
-pas une créature humaine. … Pourquoi habiter parmi nous, qui ne pouvons
-te suffire ni te comprendre?” G. Sand, <i>Lélia</i>, <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_245_245" id="Footnote_245_245"></a><a href="#FNanchor_245_245"><span class="label">[245]</span></a> See p. 51.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_246_246" id="Footnote_246_246"></a><a href="#FNanchor_246_246"><span class="label">[246]</span></a> See <i>Lara</i>, <span class="smcapuc">XVIII, XIX</span>, perhaps the best passage that can be quoted for
-the Byronic hero.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_247_247" id="Footnote_247_247"></a><a href="#FNanchor_247_247"><span class="label">[247]</span></a> Cf. Gautier, <i>Histoire du romantisme</i>: “Il était de mode alors dans
-l’école romantique d’être pâle, livide, verdâtre, un peu cadavéreux, s’il
-était possible. Cela donnait l’air fatal, byronien, giaour, dévoré par les
-passions et les remords.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_248_248" id="Footnote_248_248"></a><a href="#FNanchor_248_248"><span class="label">[248]</span></a> Hugo, <i>Hernani</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_249_249" id="Footnote_249_249"></a><a href="#FNanchor_249_249"><span class="label">[249]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Lorsque, par un décret des puissances suprêmes,</div>
-<div class="verse">Le Poète apparaît dans ce monde ennuyé,</div>
-<div class="verse">Sa mère épouvantée et pleine de blasphèmes</div>
-<div class="verse">Crispe ses poings vers Dieu, qui la prend en pitié.</div>
-<p class="right"><i>Fleurs du mal: Bénédiction.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Cf. <i>Nouvelle Héloïse</i>, Pt. <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, Lettre <span class="smcapuc">XXVI</span>:</p>
-
-<p>“Ciel inexorable! … O ma mère, pourquoi vous donna-t-il un fils dans
-sa colère?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_250_250" id="Footnote_250_250"></a><a href="#FNanchor_250_250"><span class="label">[250]</span></a> Coleridge has a side that relates him to the author of <i>Les Fleurs du
-mal</i>. In his <i>Pains of Sleep</i> he describes a dream in which he felt</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Desire with loathing strangely mix’d,</div>
-<div class="verse"><i>On wild or hateful objects fix’d</i>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_251_251" id="Footnote_251_251"></a><a href="#FNanchor_251_251"><span class="label">[251]</span></a> Keats according to Shelley was an example of the <i>poète maudit</i>. “The
-poor fellow” he says “was literally hooted from the stage of life.” Keats
-was as a matter of fact too sturdy to be snuffed out by an article and had less
-of the quivering Rousseauistic sensibility than Shelley himself. Cf. letter
-of Shelley to Mrs. Shelley (Aug. 7, 1820): “Imagine my despair of good,
-imagine how it is possible that one of so weak and sensitive a nature as
-mine can run further the gauntlet through this hellish society of men.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_252_252" id="Footnote_252_252"></a><a href="#FNanchor_252_252"><span class="label">[252]</span></a> Euripides speaks of the Χάρις γόων in his Ἱκέτιδες (Latin, “dolendi
-voluptas”; German, “die Wonne der Wehmut”).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_253_253" id="Footnote_253_253"></a><a href="#FNanchor_253_253"><span class="label">[253]</span></a> Chesterton is anticipated in this paradox by Wordsworth:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">In youth we love the darksome lawn</div>
-<div class="verse">Brushed by the owlet’s wing.</div>
-<div class="verse">Then Twilight is preferred to Dawn</div>
-<div class="verse">And autumn to the spring.</div>
-<div class="verse">Sad fancies do we then affect</div>
-<div class="verse">In luxury of disrespect</div>
-<div class="verse">To our own prodigal excess</div>
-<div class="verse">Of too familiar happiness.</div>
-<p class="right"><i>Ode to Lycoris.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_254_254" id="Footnote_254_254"></a><a href="#FNanchor_254_254"><span class="label">[254]</span></a> <i>Souvenirs d’enfance et de jeunesse</i>, 329-30.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_255_255" id="Footnote_255_255"></a><a href="#FNanchor_255_255"><span class="label">[255]</span></a> “[Villiers] était de cette famille des néo-catholiques littéraires dont
-Chateaubriand est le père commun, et qui a produit Barbey d’Aurevilly,
-Baudelaire et plus récemment M. Joséphin Peladan. Ceux-là ont goûté
-par-dessus tout dans la religion les charmes du péché, la grandeur du
-sacrilège, et leur sensualisme a caressé les dogmes qui ajoutaient aux
-voluptés la suprême volupté de se perdre.” A. France, <i>Vie Littéraire</i>, <span class="smcapuc">III</span>,
-121.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_256_256" id="Footnote_256_256"></a><a href="#FNanchor_256_256"><span class="label">[256]</span></a> <i>Première Promenade.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_257_257" id="Footnote_257_257"></a><a href="#FNanchor_257_257"><span class="label">[257]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_258_258" id="Footnote_258_258"></a><a href="#FNanchor_258_258"><span class="label">[258]</span></a> E.g., Hölderlin and Jean Polonius.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_259_259" id="Footnote_259_259"></a><a href="#FNanchor_259_259"><span class="label">[259]</span></a> A striking passage on solitude will be found in the <i>Laws of Manu</i>, <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>,
-240-42. (“Alone a being is born: alone he goes down to death.” His kin
-forsake him at the grave; his only hope then is in the companionship of
-the Law of righteousness [Dharma]. “With the Law as his companion he
-crosses the darkness difficult to cross.”)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_260_260" id="Footnote_260_260"></a><a href="#FNanchor_260_260"><span class="label">[260]</span></a> “Be good and you will be lonely.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_261_261" id="Footnote_261_261"></a><a href="#FNanchor_261_261"><span class="label">[261]</span></a> In the poem by the Swiss poet C. Didier from which Longfellow’s
-poem seems to be derived, the youth who persists in scaling the heights
-in spite of all warnings is Byron!</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Et Byron … disparaît aux yeux du pâtre épouvanté.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>(See E. Estève, <i>Byron en France</i>, 147).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_262_262" id="Footnote_262_262"></a><a href="#FNanchor_262_262"><span class="label">[262]</span></a> In the <i>Mémoires d’Outre-Tombe</i> Chateaubriand quotes from the jottings
-of Napoleon on the island of Elba. “Mon cœur se refuse aux joies
-communes comme à la douleur ordinaire.” He says of Napoleon elsewhere
-in the same work: “Au fond il ne tenait à rien: homme solitaire, il se suffisait;
-le malheur ne fit que le rendre au désert de sa vie.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_263_263" id="Footnote_263_263"></a><a href="#FNanchor_263_263"><span class="label">[263]</span></a> The solitude of the “genius” is already marked in Blake:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">O! why was I born with a different face?</div>
-<div class="verse">Why was I not born like the rest of my race?</div>
-<div class="verse">When I look, each one starts; when I speak, I offend;</div>
-<div class="verse">Then I’m silent and passive and lose every friend.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_264_264" id="Footnote_264_264"></a><a href="#FNanchor_264_264"><span class="label">[264]</span></a> Froude’s <i>Carlyle</i>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 377.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_265_265" id="Footnote_265_265"></a><a href="#FNanchor_265_265"><span class="label">[265]</span></a> No finer lines on solitude are found in English than those in which
-Wordsworth relates how from his room at Cambridge he could look out on</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">The antechapel where the statue stood</div>
-<div class="verse">Of Newton with his prism and silent face,</div>
-<div class="verse">The marble index of a mind for ever</div>
-<div class="verse">Voyaging through strange seas of thought alone.</div>
-<p class="right">(<i>Prelude</i> <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, 61-63.)</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Cf. also the line in the Sonnet on Milton:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">His soul was like a star and dwelt apart.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_266_266" id="Footnote_266_266"></a><a href="#FNanchor_266_266"><span class="label">[266]</span></a> <i>Eth. Nic.</i>, 1109 b.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_267_267" id="Footnote_267_267"></a><a href="#FNanchor_267_267"><span class="label">[267]</span></a> James Thomson in <i>The City of Dreadful Night</i> says that he would have
-entered hell</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent4">gratified to gain</div>
-<div class="verse">That positive eternity of pain</div>
-<div class="verse">Instead of this insufferable inane.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_268_268" id="Footnote_268_268"></a><a href="#FNanchor_268_268"><span class="label">[268]</span></a> R. Canat has taken this phrase as the title of his treatment of the
-subject: <i>La Solitude morale dans le mouvement romantique</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_269_269" id="Footnote_269_269"></a><a href="#FNanchor_269_269"><span class="label">[269]</span></a> Decadent Rome had the equivalent of Des Esseintes. Seneca (<i>To
-Lucilius</i>, <span class="smcapuc">CXXII</span>) speaks of those who seek to affirm their originality and
-attract attention to themselves by doing everything differently from
-other people and, “ut ita dicam, <i>retro vivunt</i>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_270_270" id="Footnote_270_270"></a><a href="#FNanchor_270_270"><span class="label">[270]</span></a> Tennyson has traced this change of the æsthetic dream into a nightmare
-in his <i>Palace of Art</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_271_271" id="Footnote_271_271"></a><a href="#FNanchor_271_271"><span class="label">[271]</span></a> <i>Contemporains</i>, <span class="smcapuc">I</span>, 332.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_272_272" id="Footnote_272_272"></a><a href="#FNanchor_272_272"><span class="label">[272]</span></a> <i>Génie du Christianisme</i>, Pt. <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, Livre <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, ch. <span class="smcapuc">IX</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_273_273" id="Footnote_273_273"></a><a href="#FNanchor_273_273"><span class="label">[273]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">L’orage est dans ma voix, l’éclair est sur ma bouche;</div>
-<div class="verse">Aussi, loin de m’aimer, voilà qu’ils tremblent tous,</div>
-<div class="verse">Et quand j’ouvre les bras, on tombe à mes genoux.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_274_274" id="Footnote_274_274"></a><a href="#FNanchor_274_274"><span class="label">[274]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Que vous ai-je donc fait pour être votre élu?</div>
-<div class="verse center">…</div>
-<div class="verse">Hélas! je suis, Seigneur, puissant et solitaire,</div>
-<div class="verse">Laissez-moi m’endormir du sommeil de la terre!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_275_275" id="Footnote_275_275"></a><a href="#FNanchor_275_275"><span class="label">[275]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Le juste opposera le dédain à l’absence</div>
-<div class="verse">Et ne répondra plus que par un froid silence</div>
-<div class="verse">Au silence éternel de la Divinité.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_276_276" id="Footnote_276_276"></a><a href="#FNanchor_276_276"><span class="label">[276]</span></a> See Sainte-Beuve’s poetical epistle <i>A. M. Villemain</i> (<i>Pensées d’Août
-1837</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_277_277" id="Footnote_277_277"></a><a href="#FNanchor_277_277"><span class="label">[277]</span></a> See <i>Masters of Modern French Criticism</i>, 233, 238.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_278_278" id="Footnote_278_278"></a><a href="#FNanchor_278_278"><span class="label">[278]</span></a> Wordsworth writes</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent1">A piteous lot it were to flee from man</div>
-<div class="verse">Yet not rejoice in Nature.</div>
-<p class="right">(<i>Excursion</i>, <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, 514.)</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This lot was Vigny’s:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Ne me laisse jamais seul avec la Nature</div>
-<div class="verse">Car je la connais trop pour n’en avoir pas peur.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_279_279" id="Footnote_279_279"></a><a href="#FNanchor_279_279"><span class="label">[279]</span></a> Madame Dorval.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_280_280" id="Footnote_280_280"></a><a href="#FNanchor_280_280"><span class="label">[280]</span></a> <i>La Maison du Berger.</i> Note that in Wordsworth the “still sad music
-of humanity” is very closely associated with nature.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_281_281" id="Footnote_281_281"></a><a href="#FNanchor_281_281"><span class="label">[281]</span></a> <i>La Bouteille à la Mer.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_282_282" id="Footnote_282_282"></a><a href="#FNanchor_282_282"><span class="label">[282]</span></a> See Book <span class="smcapuc">IX</span> of the <i>Nicomachean Ethics</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_283_283" id="Footnote_283_283"></a><a href="#FNanchor_283_283"><span class="label">[283]</span></a> “All salutary conditions have their root in strenuousness” (appamāda),
-says Buddha.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_284_284" id="Footnote_284_284"></a><a href="#FNanchor_284_284"><span class="label">[284]</span></a> See <i>Masters of Modern French Criticism</i>, Essay on Taine, <i>passim</i>.
-Paul Bourget in his <i>Essais de Psychologie contemporaine</i> (2 vols.) has
-followed out during this period the survivals of the older romantic melancholy
-and their reinforcement by scientific determinism.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_285_285" id="Footnote_285_285"></a><a href="#FNanchor_285_285"><span class="label">[285]</span></a> “Le pauvre M. Arago, revenant un jour de l’Hôtel de Ville en 1848
-après une épouvantable émeute, disait tristement à l’un de ses aides de
-camp au ministère de la marine: ‘En vérité ces gens-là ne sont pas raisonnables.’”
-Doudan, <i>Lettres</i>, <span class="smcapuc">IV</span>, 338.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_286_286" id="Footnote_286_286"></a><a href="#FNanchor_286_286"><span class="label">[286]</span></a> See Preface (pp. viii-ix) to his <i>Souvenirs d’enfance et de jeunesse</i> and
-my comment in <i>The New Laokoon</i>, 207-08.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_287_287" id="Footnote_287_287"></a><a href="#FNanchor_287_287"><span class="label">[287]</span></a> Most of the political implications of the point of view I am developing
-I am reserving for a volume I have in preparation to be entitled <i>Democracy
-and Imperialism</i>. Some of my conclusions will be found in two
-articles in the (New York) <i>Nation: The Breakdown of Internationalism</i>
-(June 17 and 24, 1915), and <i>The Political Influence of Rousseau</i> (Jan. 18,
-1917).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_288_288" id="Footnote_288_288"></a><a href="#FNanchor_288_288"><span class="label">[288]</span></a> <i>Reden an die deutsche Nation</i>, <span class="smcapuc">XII</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_289_289" id="Footnote_289_289"></a><a href="#FNanchor_289_289"><span class="label">[289]</span></a> I should perhaps allow for the happiness that may be experienced in
-moments of supernormal consciousness&mdash;something quite distinct from
-emotional or other intoxication. Fairly consistent testimony as to moments
-of this kind is found in the records of the past from the early Buddhists
-down to Tennyson.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_290_290" id="Footnote_290_290"></a><a href="#FNanchor_290_290"><span class="label">[290]</span></a> I scarcely need say that I am speaking of the man of science only in
-so far as he is purely naturalistic in his point of view. There may enter
-into the total personality of Edison or any particular man of science other
-and very different elements.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_291_291" id="Footnote_291_291"></a><a href="#FNanchor_291_291"><span class="label">[291]</span></a> M. René Berthelot has written a book on pragmatism and similar
-tendencies in contemporary philosophy entitled <i>Un Romantisme utilitaire</i>.
-I have not read it but the title alone is worth more than most books on
-the subject I have read.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_292_292" id="Footnote_292_292"></a><a href="#FNanchor_292_292"><span class="label">[292]</span></a> <i>Dedication of the Æneis</i> (1697).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_293_293" id="Footnote_293_293"></a><a href="#FNanchor_293_293"><span class="label">[293]</span></a> <i>Adventure of one Hans Pfaal.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_294_294" id="Footnote_294_294"></a><a href="#FNanchor_294_294"><span class="label">[294]</span></a> His attempt to rewrite <i>Hyperion</i> from a humanitarian point of view
-is a dismal failure.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_295_295" id="Footnote_295_295"></a><a href="#FNanchor_295_295"><span class="label">[295]</span></a> There is also a strong idyllic element in <i>Paradise Lost</i> as Rousseau
-(<i>Emile</i>, <span class="smcapuc">V</span>) and Schiller (<i>Essay on Naïve and Sentimental Poetry</i>) were
-among the first to point out. Critics may be found even to-day who, like
-Tennyson, prefer the passages which show a richly pastoral imagination
-to the passages where the ethical imagination is required but where it does
-not seem to prevail sufficiently over theology.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_296_296" id="Footnote_296_296"></a><a href="#FNanchor_296_296"><span class="label">[296]</span></a> <span class="smcapuc">XII</span>, 74.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_297_297" id="Footnote_297_297"></a><a href="#FNanchor_297_297"><span class="label">[297]</span></a> <i>Three Philosophical Poets</i>, 188.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_298_298" id="Footnote_298_298"></a><a href="#FNanchor_298_298"><span class="label">[298]</span></a> After telling of the days when “il n’y avait pour moi ni passé ni
-avenir et je goûtais à la fois les délices de mille siècles,” Saint-Preux
-concludes: “Hélas! vous avez disparu comme un éclair. Cette éternité
-de bonheur ne fut qu’un instant de ma vie. Le temps a repris sa lenteur
-dans les moments de mon désespoir, et l’ennui mesure par longues années
-le reste infortuné de mes jours” (<i>Nouvelle Héloïse</i>, Pt. <span class="smcapuc">III</span>, Lettre <span class="smcapuc">VI</span>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_299_299" id="Footnote_299_299"></a><a href="#FNanchor_299_299"><span class="label">[299]</span></a> The Church, so far as it has become humanitarian, has itself succumbed
-to naturalism.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_300_300" id="Footnote_300_300"></a><a href="#FNanchor_300_300"><span class="label">[300]</span></a> <i>Sutta of the Great Decease.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_301_301" id="Footnote_301_301"></a><a href="#FNanchor_301_301"><span class="label">[301]</span></a> If a man recognizes the supreme rôle of fiction or illusion in life while
-proceeding in other respects on Kantian principles, he will reach results
-similar to the “As-if Philosophy” (<i>Philosophie des Als Ob</i>) of Vaihinger,
-a leading authority on Kant and co-editor of the <i>Kantstudien</i>. This
-work, though not published until 1911, was composed, the author tells
-us in his preface, as early as 1875-78. It will be found to anticipate very
-strikingly pragmatism and various other isms in which philosophy has
-been proclaiming so loudly of late its own bankruptcy.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_302_302" id="Footnote_302_302"></a><a href="#FNanchor_302_302"><span class="label">[302]</span></a> “C’est en vain qu’on voudrait assigner à la vie un but, au sens humain
-du mot.” <i>L’Evolution créatrice</i>, 55.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_303_303" id="Footnote_303_303"></a><a href="#FNanchor_303_303"><span class="label">[303]</span></a> <i>Metaphysics</i>, 1078 b.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_304_304" id="Footnote_304_304"></a><a href="#FNanchor_304_304"><span class="label">[304]</span></a> In the beginning was the Word! To seek to substitute, like Faust, the
-Deed for the Word is to throw discrimination to the winds. The failure to
-discriminate as to the <i>quality</i> of the deed is responsible for the central
-sophistry of <i>Faust</i> (see p. 331) and perhaps of our modern life in general.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_305_305" id="Footnote_305_305"></a><a href="#FNanchor_305_305"><span class="label">[305]</span></a> “J’adore la liberté; j’abhorre la gêne, la peine, l’assujettissement.”
-<i>Confessions</i>, Livre <span class="smcapuc">I</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_306_306" id="Footnote_306_306"></a><a href="#FNanchor_306_306"><span class="label">[306]</span></a> <i>Analects</i>, <span class="smcapuc">XI, CXI</span>. Cf. <i>ibid.</i>, <span class="smcapuc">VI, CXX</span>: “To give one’s self earnestly to the
-duties due to men, and while respecting spiritual beings, to keep aloof
-from them, may be called wisdom.” Much that has passed current as religion
-in all ages has made its chief appeal, not to awe but to wonder; and
-like many humanists Confucius was somewhat indifferent to the marvellous.
-“The subjects on which the Master did not talk were: extraordinary
-things, feats of strength, disorder and spiritual beings” (<i>ibid.</i>,
-<span class="smcapuc">VII, CXX</span>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_307_307" id="Footnote_307_307"></a><a href="#FNanchor_307_307"><span class="label">[307]</span></a> One of the last Chinese, I am told, to measure up to the Confucian
-standard was Tsêng Kuo-fan (1811-1872) who issued forth from poverty,
-trained a peasant soldiery and, more than any other one person, put
-down the Taiping Rebellion.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_308_308" id="Footnote_308_308"></a><a href="#FNanchor_308_308"><span class="label">[308]</span></a> See J. Barthélemy Saint-Hilaire’s Introduction to his translation of
-the <i>Nicomachean Ethics</i>, p. cxlix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_309_309" id="Footnote_309_309"></a><a href="#FNanchor_309_309"><span class="label">[309]</span></a> <i>Eth. Nic.</i>, 1122-25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_310_310" id="Footnote_310_310"></a><a href="#FNanchor_310_310"><span class="label">[310]</span></a> I have in mind such passages as <i>P.</i>, <span class="smcapuc">VIII</span>, 76-78, 92-96; <i>N.</i>, <span class="smcapuc">VI</span>, 1-4;
-<i>N.</i>, <span class="smcapuc">XI</span>, 13-16.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_311_311" id="Footnote_311_311"></a><a href="#FNanchor_311_311"><span class="label">[311]</span></a> “II n’y eut jamais pour moi d’intermédiaire entre tout et rien.”
-<i>Confessions</i>, Livre <span class="smcapuc">VII</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_312_312" id="Footnote_312_312"></a><a href="#FNanchor_312_312"><span class="label">[312]</span></a> Some wag, it will be remembered, suggested as an alternative title
-for this work: <i>Wild Religions I have known</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_313_313" id="Footnote_313_313"></a><a href="#FNanchor_313_313"><span class="label">[313]</span></a> <i>Letters</i>, <span class="smcapuc">II</span>, 298; cf. <i>ibid.</i>, 291: “I have never known a life less wisely
-controlled or less helped by the wisdom of others than his. The whole
-retrospect of it is pathetic; waste, confusion, ruin of one of the most gifted
-and sweetest natures the world ever knew.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_314_314" id="Footnote_314_314"></a><a href="#FNanchor_314_314"><span class="label">[314]</span></a> <i>Nic. Eth.</i>, 1145 b. The opposition between Socrates or Plato and Aristotle,
-when put thus baldly, is a bit misleading. Socrates emphasized the
-importance of practice (μελέτη) in the acquisition of virtue, and Plato has
-made much of habit in the <i>Laws</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_315_315" id="Footnote_315_315"></a><a href="#FNanchor_315_315"><span class="label">[315]</span></a> <i>Analects</i>, <span class="smcapuc">II, CIV</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_316_316" id="Footnote_316_316"></a><a href="#FNanchor_316_316"><span class="label">[316]</span></a> This belief the Oriental has embodied in the doctrine of Karma.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_317_317" id="Footnote_317_317"></a><a href="#FNanchor_317_317"><span class="label">[317]</span></a> “La seule habitude qu’on doit laisser prendre à l’enfant est de n’en
-contractor aucune.” <i>Emile</i>, Livre <span class="smcapuc">I</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_318_318" id="Footnote_318_318"></a><a href="#FNanchor_318_318"><span class="label">[318]</span></a> Emile was to be trained to be a cabinet-maker.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_319_319" id="Footnote_319_319"></a><a href="#FNanchor_319_319"><span class="label">[319]</span></a> <i>Eth. Nic.</i>, 1172 b.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_320_320" id="Footnote_320_320"></a><a href="#FNanchor_320_320"><span class="label">[320]</span></a> <i>Doctrine of the Mean</i> (c. <span class="smcapuc">XXXIII</span>, v. 2).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_321_321" id="Footnote_321_321"></a><a href="#FNanchor_321_321"><span class="label">[321]</span></a> See his poem <i>Ibo</i> in <i>Les Contemplations</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_322_322" id="Footnote_322_322"></a><a href="#FNanchor_322_322"><span class="label">[322]</span></a> La. 55, p. 51. (In my references La. stands for Lao-tzŭ, Li. for Lieh-tzŭ,
-Ch. for Chuang-tzŭ. The first number gives the chapter; the second number
-the page in Wieger’s edition.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_323_323" id="Footnote_323_323"></a><a href="#FNanchor_323_323"><span class="label">[323]</span></a> Ch. 22 C, p. 391.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_324_324" id="Footnote_324_324"></a><a href="#FNanchor_324_324"><span class="label">[324]</span></a> Ch. 12 n, p. 305.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_325_325" id="Footnote_325_325"></a><a href="#FNanchor_325_325"><span class="label">[325]</span></a> Ch. 11 D, p. 291. Ibid. 15, p. 331. See also Li. 31, p. 113.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_326_326" id="Footnote_326_326"></a><a href="#FNanchor_326_326"><span class="label">[326]</span></a> Ch. 19 B, p. 357.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_327_327" id="Footnote_327_327"></a><a href="#FNanchor_327_327"><span class="label">[327]</span></a> Ch. 19 L, p. 365.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_328_328" id="Footnote_328_328"></a><a href="#FNanchor_328_328"><span class="label">[328]</span></a> Ch. 10, pp. 279-80.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_329_329" id="Footnote_329_329"></a><a href="#FNanchor_329_329"><span class="label">[329]</span></a> Ch. 9, pp. 274-75.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_330_330" id="Footnote_330_330"></a><a href="#FNanchor_330_330"><span class="label">[330]</span></a> Ch. 29, pp. 467 ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_331_331" id="Footnote_331_331"></a><a href="#FNanchor_331_331"><span class="label">[331]</span></a> Ch. 2, p. 223.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_332_332" id="Footnote_332_332"></a><a href="#FNanchor_332_332"><span class="label">[332]</span></a> La. 27, p. 37.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_333_333" id="Footnote_333_333"></a><a href="#FNanchor_333_333"><span class="label">[333]</span></a> Ch. 8 A, p. 271.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_334_334" id="Footnote_334_334"></a><a href="#FNanchor_334_334"><span class="label">[334]</span></a> Li. 5, p. 143.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_335_335" id="Footnote_335_335"></a><a href="#FNanchor_335_335"><span class="label">[335]</span></a> Ch. 14 C, p. 321.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_336_336" id="Footnote_336_336"></a><a href="#FNanchor_336_336"><span class="label">[336]</span></a> For an extreme form of Epicureanism see the ideas of Yang-chu, Li. 7, pp.
-165 ff. For stoical apathy see Ch. 6 C., p. 253. For fate see Li. 6, p. 165, Ch.
-6 K, p. 263.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_337_337" id="Footnote_337_337"></a><a href="#FNanchor_337_337"><span class="label">[337]</span></a> Ch. 33, pp. 499 ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_338_338" id="Footnote_338_338"></a><a href="#FNanchor_338_338"><span class="label">[338]</span></a> Ch. 33 C, p. 503.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_339_339" id="Footnote_339_339"></a><a href="#FNanchor_339_339"><span class="label">[339]</span></a> Bk. III, Part 2, ch. 9.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_340_340" id="Footnote_340_340"></a><a href="#FNanchor_340_340"><span class="label">[340]</span></a> Li. 3, p. 111. Ch. 24, pp. 225-27.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_341_341" id="Footnote_341_341"></a><a href="#FNanchor_341_341"><span class="label">[341]</span></a> Ch. 6 E, p. 255.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_342_342" id="Footnote_342_342"></a><a href="#FNanchor_342_342"><span class="label">[342]</span></a> See <i>The Religion of the Samurai: a Study of Zen Philosophy</i> (1913) by
-Kaiten Nukariya (himself a Zenist), p. 23.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[421]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="INDEX_OF_NAMES" id="INDEX_OF_NAMES"></a>INDEX OF NAMES</h2>
-
-<ul>
-<li class="ifrst">Abelard, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Addison, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Æschylus, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Ajax, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Allen, Grant, <a href="#Page_299">299</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Amiel, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Ananda, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Angélique, Mother, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">d’Angoulême, Marguerite, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Antisthenes, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Apollonius of Rhodes, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Aquinas, St. Thomas, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Arago, <a href="#Page_244">244</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Ariosto, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Aristophanes, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Aristotle, <a href="#Page_xv">xv</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_xix">xix</a>, <a href="#Page_xxi">xxi</a>, <a href="#Page_xxii">xxii</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_15">15-19</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Arnold, Matthew, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Augustine, St., <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="ifrst">Bacon, F., <a href="#Page_xxi">xxi</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Bacon, Roger, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Bagehot, W., <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Balzac, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Barbauld, Mrs., <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Barbey d’Aurevilly, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Baudelaire, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Bayle, Pierre, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Beaumarchais, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Bergson, Henri, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a>, <a href="#Page_xiii">xiii</a>, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Berlioz, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Berthelot, René, <a href="#Page_350">350</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Bertin, Edouard, <a href="#Page_275">275</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Blake, William, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254-256</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Boehme, Jacob, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Boileau, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Bossuet, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Boswell, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Boufflers, Mme. de, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Bourget, Paul, <a href="#Page_xvi">xvi</a>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Bowles, Samuel, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Brandes, G., <a href="#Page_262">262</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Brooke, Henry, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Broussais, <a href="#Page_215">215</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Browne, Sir Thomas, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Brownell, W. C., <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Browning, Robert, <a href="#Page_211">211-213</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Brunetière, F., <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Buddha, xix-xxi, <a href="#Page_149">149-153</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Buffon, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Bulwer-Lytton, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Bunyan, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Burke, Edmund, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Burns, Robert, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Burton, <a href="#Page_143">143</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Butcher, S. H., <a href="#Page_312">312</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Byrom, John, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Byron, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="ifrst">Calvin, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Canat, R., <a href="#Page_332">332</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Carlyle, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327-329</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Catullus, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Cervantes, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Cézanne, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Chapelain, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Charpentier, Julie von, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[422]</a></span>Chateaubriand, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227-229</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276-278</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283-285</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Chatterton, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Chaucer, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Chesterfield, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Chesterton, G., <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Christ (Jesus), <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Cicero, <a href="#Page_xxii">xxii</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Clifford, W. K., <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Coleridge, Hartley, <a href="#Page_231">231</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Coleridge, Samuel T., <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Common, T., <a href="#Page_198">198</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Confucius, xix-xxi, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Congreve, <a href="#Page_35">35</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Constant, Benjamin, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Cortez, F., <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Cowley, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Cox, Kenyon, <a href="#Page_64">64</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Croce, Benedetto, <a href="#Page_xiii">xiii</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Dante, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Daunou, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Davidson, John, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Descartes, <a href="#Page_xvi">xvi</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Dewey, John, <a href="#Page_xiii">xiii</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Diderot, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Didier, C., <a href="#Page_327">327</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Disraeli, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Dorval, Mme., <a href="#Page_337">337</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Doudan, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Dryden, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Du Camp, M., <a href="#Page_215">215</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Duff, <a href="#Page_40">40</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">D’Urfé, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Duval, G., <a href="#Page_297">297</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="ifrst">Eckermann, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Edison, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Edwards, Jonathan, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Elton, O., <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Emerson, R. W., <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Epicurus, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Euripides, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Evelyn, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Faguet, E., <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Fawcett, E. D., <a href="#Page_xv">xv</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Fichte, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">FitzGerald, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Flaubert, <a href="#Page_xvi">xvi</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107-109</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339-342</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Fontenelle, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Foster, John, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">France, A., <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Francis, St., <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">François, A. F., <a href="#Page_7">7</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Francueil, Mme. de, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Froude, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="ifrst">Galileo, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Galsworthy, John, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Gautier, T., <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Geffroy, A., <a href="#Page_129">129</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Gerard, A., <a href="#Page_40">40</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Gérard de Nerval, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Gerould, Katherine F., <a href="#Page_49">49</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Gisborne, John, <a href="#Page_227">227</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Gissing, George, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Godard, Colonel, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Godwin, Mary, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Goethe, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_xvii">xvii</a>, <a href="#Page_xviii">xviii</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360-363</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Gomperz, Th., <a href="#Page_268">268</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Gran, Gerhard, <a href="#Page_78">78</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Gray, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Greville, F., <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Grillparzer, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Grimm, H., <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Guérin, M. de, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Gustavus III, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Hardy, T., <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Havemeyer, H. O., <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Hawthorne, N., <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Hazlitt, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Hearn, Lafcadio, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Heidigger, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Heine, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Hensel, P., <a href="#Page_194">194</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Heraclitus, <a href="#Page_xiii">xiii</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Herder, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[423]</a></span>Herford, C. H., <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Herondas, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Hettner, H., <a href="#Page_194">194</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Hitchener, Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Hobbes, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Hoffmann, E. T. A., <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Hölderlin, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Homer, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Horace, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">d’Houdetot, Mme., <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Huch, Ricarda, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Hugo, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140-142</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Hurd, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Hutcheson, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Huysmans, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Ibsen, H., <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">James, W., <a href="#Page_xiii">xiii</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Johnson, Dr. Samuel, <a href="#Page_xx">xx</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Jonson, Ben, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Joubert, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Kamo Chōmei, <a href="#Page_272">272</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Kant, <a href="#Page_xvi">xvi</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Keats, <a href="#Page_316">316</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Keble, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Kepler, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Kipling, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Kleist, H. von, <a href="#Page_160">160</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Kühn, Sophie von, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Kühnemann, E., <a href="#Page_194">194</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="ifrst">La Bruyère, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">La Fontaine, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">La Harpe, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Lamartine, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Lamb, Charles, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">La Motte Houdard, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Lanson, Gustave, <a href="#Page_xvii">xvii</a>, <a href="#Page_xviii">xviii</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">La Place, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">La Rochefoucauld, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Lasserre, Pierre, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Law, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Leconte de Lisle, <a href="#Page_xiv">xiv</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Legouis, E., <a href="#Page_249">249</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Lemaître, Jules, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Lenau, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Lenclos, Ninon de, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Le Nôtre, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Leopardi, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Levasseur, Thérèse, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Levet, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Lillo, <a href="#Page_190">190</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Lionardo da Vinci, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Littré, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Locke, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Longfellow, H. W., <a href="#Page_327">327</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Longinus, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Lorrain, C., <a href="#Page_274">274</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Loti, Pierre, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Louis XIV, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Lowell, J. R., <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Lucchetti, G., <a href="#Page_297">297</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Lucretius, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Maeterlinck, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Maigron, L., <a href="#Page_xvi">xvi</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Malherbe, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Malesherbes, de, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Manu, <a href="#Page_326">326</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Marat, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Marinetti, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Marini, Cavalier, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Marlborough, <a href="#Page_202">202</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Mary, the Virgin, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Masson, P. M., <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Mather, F. J., Jr., <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Maupassant, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Mazzini, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Mercier, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Meredith, J. C., <a href="#Page_40">40</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Mérimée, P., <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Michelet, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Milton, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Mirabeau, Bailli de, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Mohammed, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Molière, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Montaigne, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Moore, George, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">More, Henry, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[424]</a></span>More, Paul Elmer, <a href="#Page_261">261</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Mulgrave, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Musset, A. de, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_232">232-234</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Napoleon, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Nero, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Newman, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Newton, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Nietzsche, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197-199</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Nisard, D., <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Norton, C. E., <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Novalis, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">d’Ortigue, J., <a href="#Page_215">215</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Osborn, Henry Fairfield, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Ossian, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Ovid, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Parmenides, <a href="#Page_xiii">xiii</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Pascal, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28-30</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Pater, W., <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Paul, St., <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Peacock, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Peladan, Joséphin, <a href="#Page_324">324</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Pepys, <a href="#Page_6">6</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Pericles, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Perrault, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Peterborough, Earl of, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Peter the Hermit, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Petit de Julleville, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Petrarch, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Pindar, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Plato, <a href="#Page_xiii">xiii</a>, <a href="#Page_xx">xx</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Pliny, the Younger, <a href="#Page_298">298</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Plotinus, <a href="#Page_171">171</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Plutarch, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Poe, E. A., <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Polonius, Jean, <a href="#Page_325">325</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Pope, <a href="#Page_6">6</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Poussin, <a href="#Page_274">274</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Prévost-Paradol, <a href="#Page_231">231</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="ifrst">Rabelais, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Racine, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Racowitza, Princess von, <a href="#Page_62">62</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Radcliffe, Anne, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Rambouillet, Marquise de, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Raphael, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Rashdall, Hastings, <a href="#Page_131">131</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Rawnsley, Canon, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Régnier, M., <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Renan, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Revon, M., <a href="#Page_272">272</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Richardson, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Richter, Jean Paul, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Ritter, E., <a href="#Page_134">134</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Rivarol, <a href="#Page_xxiii">xxiii</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Robespierre, M., <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Rochambeau, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Ronsard, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Rosa, Salvator, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Rostand, <a href="#Page_76">76</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Rouge, I., <a href="#Page_96">96</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Rousseau, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_xv">xv</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_xvii">xvii</a>, <a href="#Page_xviii">xviii</a>, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23-25</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43-45</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72-82</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85-87</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102-104</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106-108</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110-112</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126-132</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153-158</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160-167</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179-181</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193-197</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284-286</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305-307</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345-349</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386-388</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Ruskin, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Rymer, T., <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Sainte-Beuve, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Saint-Evremond, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Saint-Hilaire, Geoffroy, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Saint-Hilaire, J. Barthélemy, <a href="#Page_381">381</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Saint-Pierre, B. de, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[425]</a></span>Sand, George, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338-342</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Sandys, J. E., <a href="#Page_311">311</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Santayana, G., <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Sappho, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Sargent, John, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Scaliger, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Schelling, <a href="#Page_293">293-295</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Schiller, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80-82</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96-98</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Schlegel, A. W., <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94-97</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Schlegel, F., <a href="#Page_95">95-99</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263-265</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Schomberg, Marshal, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Schopenhauer, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Scott, Walter, <a href="#Page_232">232</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Seillière, E., <a href="#Page_194">194</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Senancour, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Seneca, <a href="#Page_216">216</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Shackleton, Sir Ernest, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Shadwell, T., <a href="#Page_6">6</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Shaftesbury, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Shakespeare, <a href="#Page_21">21</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Shelley, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a> <i>n.</i>-<a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282-284</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_358">358-360</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Shelley, Mrs., <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Sherman, Stuart P., <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Shute, R., <a href="#Page_xxii">xxii</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Sidney, Sir Phillip, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Smith, Horace, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Socrates, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242-245</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Solomon, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Solon, <a href="#Page_xxi">xxi</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Sophocles, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Spingarn, J. E., <a href="#Page_65">65</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Staël, Mme. de, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Stedman, E. C., <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Steele, <a href="#Page_6">6</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Stendhal, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Stephen, Leslie, <a href="#Page_82">82</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Sterne, L., <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Stobæus, <a href="#Page_311">311</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Swanwick, Miss, <a href="#Page_288">288</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Swift, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Synge, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Tagore, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Taine, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Talleyrand, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Tasso, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Taylor, Jeremy, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Tennyson, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Theocritus, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Thiers, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Thomson, James (author of <i>The Seasons</i>), <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Thomson, James (“B.V.”), <a href="#Page_332">332</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Tiberius, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Tieck, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Titian, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Tolstoy, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Tsêng Kuo-fan, <a href="#Page_381">381</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Turner, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Twain, Mark, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Uhland, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Vaihinger, H., <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Vida, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Vidal, Pierre, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Vigny, A. de., <a href="#Page_186">186</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335-338</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Villemain, <a href="#Page_336">336</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Villers, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Villiers de l’Isle Adam, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Villon, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Violet, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Virgil, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Viviani, Emilia, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Voltaire, <a href="#Page_32">32-34</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Wackenroder, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Wagner, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Wallace, E., <a href="#Page_12">12</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Walpole, H., <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Walzel, O. F., <a href="#Page_52">52</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Ward, Wilfrid, <a href="#Page_62">62</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="indx">Warens, Mme. de, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[426]</a></span>Wellington, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Wesley, John, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">West, Richard, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Westbrook, Harriet, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Whitman, Walt, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Wilde, Oscar, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Williams, Mrs., <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Wolseley, R., <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Wordsworth, <a href="#Page_xvii">xvii</a>, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247-250</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283-285</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_301">301-303</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Xenophon, <a href="#Page_175">175</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-<li class="ifrst">Yalden, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Yeats, W. B., <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-<li class="indx">Young, E., <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="ifrst">Zola, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
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