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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78914 ***
+
+
+
+
+ THE DECLINE
+ OF THE WEST
+
+ [DER UNTERGANG DES
+ ABENDLANDES]
+
+ BY
+ OSWALD SPENGLER
+
+ VOLUME ONE
+ FORM AND ACTUALITY
+ [GESTALT UND WIRKLICHKEIT]
+
+ VOLUME TWO
+ PERSPECTIVES OF
+ WORLD-HISTORY
+
+ [WELTHISTORISCHE PERSPEKTIVEN]
+
+
+
+
+ THE DECLINE
+ OF THE WEST
+
+ PERSPECTIVES OF WORLD-HISTORY
+
+ BY
+ OSWALD SPENGLER
+
+
+ _AUTHORIZED TRANSLATION
+ WITH NOTES BY_
+ CHARLES FRANCIS ATKINSON
+
+
+ VOLUME TWO
+
+ MCMXXVIII: ALFRED A KNOPF: NEW YORK
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT 1928 BY ALFRED A. KNOPF, INC.
+
+ _Originally published as
+ Der Untergang des Abendlandes
+ Welthistorische Perspektiven_
+
+ _Copyright 1922 by
+ C. H. Becksche, Verlagsbuchhandlung,
+ München_
+
+ MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+
+
+
+ TRANSLATOR’S NOTE
+
+
+In the annotations to this volume I have followed the same course
+as in the first--namely, that of giving primary references to the
+_Encyclopædia Britannica_ as being the most considerable work of the
+kind that is really widely distributed in both the English-speaking
+fields, though occasionally special encyclopaedias or other works
+are referred to. Owing to the more definitely historical character
+of this volume, as compared with its predecessor, and particularly
+its stressing of a history that scarcely figures as yet in a regular
+education--the “Magian”--such references are necessarily more numerous.
+Even so, more might perhaps have been inserted with advantage. The
+Translator’s notes have no pretension to be critical in themselves,
+though here and there an argument is pointed with an additional
+example, or an obvious criticism anticipated. In each domain they will
+no doubt be resented by an expert, but the same expert will, it is
+hoped, find them useful for domains not his own.
+
+In the first volume of the English version, references to the second
+were necessarily given according to the pagination of the German. A
+comparative table of English and German page numbers has therefore
+been inserted. A list of corrigenda to Vol. I is also issued with this
+volume.
+
+ C. F. A.
+
+_London, July 1928_
+
+
+
+
+ TABLE OF GERMAN AND ENGLISH PAGES
+
+
+ German English German English
+ VOL. II VOL. II VOL. II VOL. II
+
+ 11 9 166 138
+ 13 10 180 149
+ 16 13 182 151
+ 18 14 207 173
+ 19 15 212 176
+ 20 16 227 189
+ 25 23 231 192
+ 27 25 238 196
+ 31 27 240 199
+ 33 29 241 200
+ 34 30 243 202
+ 36 32 244 203
+ 38 33 253 209
+ 41 35 269 220
+ 42 36 275 225
+ 51 43 293 240
+ 58 48 294 241
+ 68 60 296 242
+ 80 68 298 243
+ 101 87 304 248
+ 104 89 305 249
+ 109 92 306 249
+ 110 93 307 250
+ 116 98 314 255
+ 117 99 315 256
+ 122 103 316 257
+ 135 115 318 258
+ 137 116 323 265
+ 138 118 324 265
+ 142 120 327 268
+ 159 133 328 268
+
+ German English German English
+ VOL. II VOL. II VOL. II VOL. II
+
+ 334 273 403 327
+ 342 279 421 340
+ 343 280 427 345
+ 345 281 441 355
+ 346 282 482 388
+ 350 286 488 392
+ 354 288 521 416
+ 357 291 529 422
+ 358 292 539 430
+ 359 293 562 449
+ 360 293 577 460
+ 362 295 589 471
+ 363 296 603 481
+ 365 297 607 484
+ 368 299 610 486
+ 369 300 616 490
+ 370 301 618 492
+ 373 303 624 499
+ 376 306 625 500
+ 378 307 626 501
+ 382 310 627 501
+ 385 313 631 504
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS OF VOLUME II
+
+
+ Translator’s Note v
+
+ References from Volume I vii
+
+ Chapter I. Origin and Landscape. (A) The Cosmic and The Microcosm 1
+
+ Plant and animal, p. 3. Being and waking-being, p. 6. Feeling,
+ understanding, thinking, p. 9. The motion problem, p. 14.
+ Mass-soul, p. 18.
+
+ Chapter II. Origin and Landscape. (B) The Group of the Higher
+ Cultures 21
+
+ History-picture and nature-picture, p. 23. Human and world history,
+ p. 28. Two ages: primitive and high Cultures, p. 33. Survey of
+ the high Cultures, p. 39. Historyless mankind, p. 48.
+
+ Chapter III. Origin and Landscape. (C) The Relations between the
+ Cultures 53
+
+ “Influence,” p. 55. Roman law, p. 60. Magian law, p. 67. Western
+ law, p. 75.
+
+ Chapter IV. Cities and Peoples. (A) The Soul of the City 85
+
+ Mycenæ and Crete, p. 87. The peasant, p. 89. World-history is
+ urban history, p. 90. Figure of the city, p. 92. City and
+ intellect, p. 96. Spirit of the world-city, p. 99. Sterility and
+ disintegration, p. 103.
+
+ Chapter V. Cities and Peoples. (B) Peoples, Races, Tongues 111
+
+ Streams of being and linkages of waking-being, p. 114.
+ Expression-language and communication-language, p. 115. Totem
+ and Taboo, p. 116. Speech and speaking, p. 117. The house as
+ race-expression, p. 120. Castle and cathedral, p. 122. Race, p.
+ 124. Blood and soil, p. 127. Speech, p. 131. Means and meaning,
+ p. 134. Word, grammar, p. 137. Language-history, p. 145. Script,
+ p. 149. Morphology of the Culture-languages, p. 152.
+
+ Chapter VI. Cities and Peoples. (C) Primitives, Culture-Peoples,
+ Fellaheen 157
+
+ People-names, languages, races, p. 159. Migrations, p. 161. People
+ and soul, p. 165. The Persians, p. 166. Morphology of peoples, p.
+ 169. People and nation, p. 170. Classical, Arabian, and Western
+ nations, p. 173.
+
+ Chapter VII. Problems of the Arabian Culture. (A) Historic
+ Pseudomorphoses 187
+
+ “Pseudomorphosis,” p. 189. Actium, p. 191. Russia, p. 192. Arabian
+ chivalry, p. 196. Syncretism, p. 200. Jews, Chaldeans, Persians
+ of the pre-Culture, p. 204. Mission, p. 209. Jesus, p. 212.
+ Paul, p. 220. John, Marcion, p. 225. The pagan and Christian
+ cult-churches, p. 228.
+
+ Chapter VIII. Problems of the Arabian Culture. (B) The
+ Magian Soul 231
+
+ Dualism of the World-cavern, p. 233. Time-feeling (era,
+ world-history, grace), p. 238. Consensus, p. 242. The “Word” as
+ substance, the Koran, p. 244. Secret Torah, commentary, p. 246.
+ The group of the Magian religions, p. 248. The Christological
+ controversy, p. 255. Being as extension (mission), p. 258.
+
+ Chapter IX. Problems of the Arabian Culture. (C) Pythagoras,
+ Mohammed, Cromwell 263
+
+ Essence of religion, p. 265. Myth and cult, p. 268. Moral as
+ sacrifice, p. 271. Morphology of religious history, p. 275. The
+ pre-Culture: Franks, Russians, p. 277. Egyptian early period, p.
+ 279. Classical, p. 281. China, p. 285. Gothic (Mary and Devil,
+ baptism and contrition), p. 288. Reformation, p. 295. Science, p.
+ 300. Rationalism, p. 305. “Second Religiousness,” p. 310. Roman
+ and Chinese emperor-worship, p. 313. Jewry, p. 315.
+
+ Chapter X. The State. (A) The Problem of the Estates: Nobility and
+ Priesthood 325
+
+ Man and woman, p. 327. Stock and estate, p. 329. Peasantry and
+ society, p. 331. Estate, caste, calling, p. 332. Nobility and
+ priesthood as symbols of Time and Space, p. 335. Training and
+ shaping, customary-ethic and moral, p. 340. Property, power, and
+ booty, p. 343. Priest and savant, p. 345. Economics and science,
+ money and intellect, p. 347. History of the estates, early
+ period, p. 348. The Third Estate, City-Freedom, _Bourgeoisie_,
+ p. 354.
+
+ Chapter XI. The State. (B) State and History 359
+
+ Movement and thing-moved; Being “in form,” p. 361. Right and might,
+ p. 363. Estate and State, p. 366. The feudal State, p. 371. From
+ feudal union to Estate-State, p. 375. Polis and Dynasty, p. 376.
+ The Absolute State, Fronde, and Tyrannis, p. 385. Wallenstein,
+ p. 389. Cabinet politics, p. 391. From First Tyrannis to Second,
+ p. 394. The bourgeois revolution, p. 398. Intellect and money,
+ p. 400. Formless powers (Napoleonism), p. 404. Emancipation
+ of money, p. 410. “Constitution,” p. 412. From Napoleonism to
+ Cæsarism (period of the “Contending States”), p. 416. The great
+ wars, p. 419. Age of the Romans, p. 422. From Caliphate to
+ Sultanate, p. 423. Egypt, p. 427. The present, p. 428. Cæsarism,
+ p. 431.
+
+ Chapter XII. The State. (C) Philosophy of Politics 437
+
+ Life is politics, p. 439. The political instinct, p. 441. The
+ statesman, p. 442. Creation of tradition, p. 444. Physiognomic
+ (diplomatic) pulse, p. 445. Estate and party, p. 448. The
+ _bourgeoisie_ as primary party (liberalism), p. 449. From Estate,
+ through party, to the magnate’s following, p. 452. Theory, from
+ Rousseau to Marx, p. 453. Intellect and money (democracy), p.
+ 455. The press, p. 460. Self-annihilation of democracy through
+ money, p. 464.
+
+ Chapter XIII. The Form-world of Economic Life. (A) Money 467
+
+ National economics, p. 469. Political and economic sides of life,
+ p. 471. Productive and acquisitive economy (agriculture and
+ trade), p. 473. Politics and trade (power and spoil), p. 475.
+ Primitive economy, and economic style of the high Cultures,
+ p. 476. Estate and economic class, p. 477. The cityless land,
+ thinking in goods, p. 480. The city, thinking in money, p.
+ 481. World-economics, mobilization of goods by money, p. 484.
+ The Classical idea of money, the coin, p. 486. The slave as
+ money, p. 487. Faustian thinking in money, the book-value, p.
+ 489. Double-entry book-keeping, p. 490. The coin in the West,
+ p. 490. Money and work, p. 492. Capitalism, p. 493. Economic
+ organization, p. 494. Extinction of money-thought; Diocletian;
+ the economic thought of the Russian, p. 495.
+
+ Chapter XIV. The Form-world of Economic Life. (B) The Machine 497
+
+ Spirit of technics, p. 499. Primitive technics and style of
+ the high Cultures, p. 500. Classical technics, p. 501. The
+ will-to-power over nature, the inventor, p. 501. Intoxication of
+ modern discovery, p. 502. The man as slave of the machine, p.
+ 504. Entrepreneurs, workers, engineers, p. 504. Struggle between
+ money and industry, p. 505. Last battle of money and politics,
+ victory of the blood, p. 507.
+
+ Index TO FOLLOW 507
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+ORIGIN AND LANDSCAPE
+
+(A)
+
+THE COSMIC AND THE MICROCOSM
+
+
+I[1]
+
+Regard the flowers at eventide as, one after the other, they close
+in the setting sun. Strange is the feeling that then presses in
+upon you--a feeling of enigmatic fear in the presence of this blind
+dreamlike earth-bound existence. The dumb forest, the silent meadows,
+this bush, that twig, do not stir themselves, it is the wind that plays
+with them. Only the little gnat is free--he dances still in the evening
+light, he moves whither he will.
+
+A plant is nothing on its own account. It forms a part of the landscape
+in which a chance made it take root. The twilight, the chill, the
+closing of every flower--these are not cause and effect, not danger and
+willed answer to danger. They are a single process of nature, which is
+accomplishing itself near, with, and in the plant. The individual is
+not free to look out for itself, will for itself, or choose for itself.
+
+An animal, on the contrary, can choose. It is emancipated from the
+servitude of all the rest of the world. This midget swarm that dances
+on and on, that solitary bird still flying through the evening, the
+fox approaching furtively the nest--these are _little worlds of their
+own within another great world_. An animalcule in a drop of water, too
+tiny to be perceived by the human eye, though it lasts but a second and
+has but a corner of this drop as its field--nevertheless is _free and
+independent in the face of the universe_. The giant oak, upon one of
+whose leaves the droplet hangs, is not.
+
+Servitude and freedom--this is in last and deepest analysis the
+differentia by which we distinguish vegetable and animal existence. Yet
+only the plant is wholly and entirely what it is; in the being of the
+animal there is something dual. A vegetable is only a vegetable; an
+animal is a vegetable and something more besides. A herd that huddles
+together trembling in the presence of danger, a child that clings
+weeping to its mother, a man desperately striving to force a way into
+his God--all these are seeking to return out of the life of freedom
+into the vegetal servitude from which they were emancipated into
+individuality and loneliness.
+
+The seeds of a flowering plant show, under the microscope, two
+sheath-leaves which form and protect the young plant that is presently
+to turn towards the light, with its organs of the life-cycle and of
+reproduction, and in addition a third, which contains the future root
+and tells us that the plant is destined irrevocably to become once
+again part of a landscape. In the higher animals, on the contrary,
+we observe that the fertilized egg forms, in the first hours of its
+individualized existence, an outer sheath by which the inner containers
+of the cyclic and reproductive components--i.e., the plant element in
+the animal body--are enclosed and shut off from the mother body and
+_all the rest of the world_. This outer sheath symbolizes the essential
+character of animal existence and distinguishes the two kinds in which
+the Living has appeared on this earth.
+
+There are noble names for them, found and bequeathed by the Classical
+world. The plant is something _cosmic_, and the animal is additionally
+_a microcosm in relation to a macrocosm_. When, and not until, the unit
+has thus separated itself from the All and can define its position with
+respect to the All, it becomes thereby a microcosm. Even the planets
+in their great cycles are in servitude, and it is only these tiny
+worlds that move freely relative to a great one which appears in their
+consciousness as their world-around (environment). Only through this
+individualism of the microcosm does that which the light offers to its
+eyes--our eyes--acquire meaning as “body,” and even to planets we are
+from some inner motive reluctant to concede the property of bodiliness.
+
+All that is cosmic bears the hall-mark of _periodicity_; it has “beat”
+(rhythm, tact). All that is microcosmic possesses _polarity_; it
+possesses “tension.”
+
+We speak of tense alertness and tense thought, but all wakeful states
+are in their essence tensions. Sense and object, I and thou, cause
+and effect, thing and property--each of these is a tension between
+discretes, and when the state pregnantly called “_détente_” appears,
+then at once fatigue, and presently sleep, set in for the microcosmic
+side of life. A human being asleep, discharged of all tensions, is
+leading only a plantlike existence.
+
+Cosmic beat, on the other hand, is everything that can be paraphrased
+in terms like direction, time, rhythm, destiny, longing--from the
+hoof-beats of a team of thoroughbreds and the deep tread of proud
+marching soldiers to the silent fellowship of two lovers, the sensed
+tact that makes the dignity of a social assembly, and that keen quick
+judgment of a “judge of men” which I have already, earlier in this
+work,[2] called physiognomic tact.
+
+This beat of cosmic cycles goes on notwithstanding the freedom of
+microcosmic movement in space, and from time to time breaks down the
+tension of the waking individual’s being into the _one_ grand felt
+harmony. If we have ever followed the flight of a bird in the high
+air--how, always in the same way, it rises, turns, glides, loses itself
+in the distance--we must have felt the plantlike certainty of the
+“it” and the “we” in this ensemble of motion, which needs no bridge
+of reason to unite your sense of it with mine. This is the meaning
+of war-dances and love-dances amongst men and beasts. In this wise a
+regiment mounting to the assault under fire is forged into a unity, in
+this wise does the crowd collect at some exciting occasion and become a
+body, capable of thinking and acting pitifully, blindly, and strangely
+for a moment ere it falls apart again. In such cases the microcosmic
+wall is obliterated. _It_ jostles and threatens, _it_ pushes and pulls,
+_it_ flees, swerves, and sways. Limbs intertwine, feet rush, _one_ cry
+comes from every mouth, _one_ destiny overlies all. Out of a sum of
+little single worlds comes suddenly a complete whole.
+
+The perception of cosmic beat we call “feel (_Fühlen_),” that of
+microcosmic tensions “feeling (_Empfinden_).” The ambiguity of the
+word “_Sinnlichkeit_” has obscured this clear difference between the
+general and plantlike side and the specifically animal side of life. If
+we say for the one race- or sex-life, and for the other sense-life, a
+deep connexion reveals itself between them. The former ever bears the
+mark of periodicity, beat, even to the extent of harmony with the great
+cycles of the stars, of relation between female nature and the moon,
+of this life generally to night, spring, warmth. The latter consists
+in tensions, polarities of light and object illuminated, of cognition
+and that which is cognized, of wound and the weapon that has caused it.
+Each of these sides of life has, in the more highly developed genera,
+taken shape in special organs, and the higher the development, the
+clearer the emphasis on each side. We possess _two cyclic organs of
+the cosmic existence_, the blood system and the sex-organ, _and two
+differentiating organs of microcosmic mobility_, senses and nerves.
+We have to assume that in its origin the _whole_ body has been both a
+cyclic and a tactual organ.
+
+The blood is for us the symbol of the living. Its course proceeds
+without pause, from generation to death, from the mother body in
+and out of the body of the child, in the waking state and in sleep,
+never-ending. The blood of the ancestors flows through the chain of the
+generations and binds them in a great linkage of destiny, beat, and
+time. Originally this was accomplished only by a process of division,
+redivision, and ever new division of the cycles, until finally a
+specific organ of sexual generation appeared and made _one moment_ into
+a symbol of duration. And how thereafter creatures begat and conceived,
+how the plantlike in them drove them to reproduce themselves for the
+maintenance beyond themselves of the eternal cycle, how the _one_
+great pulse-beat operates through all the detached souls, filling,
+driving, checking, and often destroying--that is the deepest of all
+life’s secrets, the secret that all religious mysteries and all great
+poems seek to penetrate, the secret whose tragedy stirred Goethe in his
+“_Selige Sehnsucht_” and “_Wahlverwandtschaften_,” where the child has
+to die because, brought into existence out of discordant cycles of the
+blood, it is the fruit of a cosmic sin.
+
+To these cosmic organs the microcosm as such adds (in the degree to
+which it possesses freedom of movement _vis-à-vis_ the macrocosm) the
+organ “sense,” which is originally touch-sense and nothing else.
+Even now, at our own high level of development, we use the word
+“touch” quite generally of contacts by eye, by ear, and even by the
+understanding, for it is the simplest expression of the mobility of a
+living creature that needs constantly to be establishing its relation
+to its world-around. But to “establish” here means to fix _place_, and
+thus all senses, however sophisticated and remote from the primitive
+they may seem, are essentially _positive senses_; there are no others.
+Sensation of all kinds distinguishes proper and alien. And for the
+positional definition of the alien with respect to the proper the scent
+of the hound serves just as much as the hearing of the stag and the eye
+of the eagle. Colour, brightness, tones, odours, all conceivable modes
+of sensation, imply detachment, distance, extension.
+
+Like the cosmic cycle of the blood, the differentiating activity
+of sense is originally a unity. The active sense is always an
+understanding sense also. In these simple relations seeking and finding
+are one--that which we most appositely call “touch.” It is only later,
+in a stage wherein considerable demands are made upon developed senses,
+that sensation and understanding of sensation cease to be identical
+and the latter begins to detach itself more and more clearly from the
+former. In the outer sheath the critical organ separates itself from
+the sense-organ (as the sex-organ does from that of blood-circulation).
+But our use of words like “keen,” “sensitive,” “insight,” “poking
+our nose,” and “flair,” not to mention the terminology of logic, all
+taken from the visual world, shows well enough that we regard all
+understanding as derived from sensation, and that even in the case of
+man the two still work hand in hand.
+
+We see a dog lying indifferent and then in a moment tense, listening,
+and scenting--what he merely senses he is seeking to understand as
+well. He is able, too, to reflect--that is a state in which the
+understanding is almost alone at work and playing upon mat sensations.
+The older languages very clearly expressed this graduation, sharply
+distinguishing each degree as an activity of a specific kind by means
+of a specific label--e.g., hear, listen, listen for (_lauschen_);
+smell, scent, sniff; see, spy, observe. In such series as these
+the reason-content becomes more and more important relative to the
+sensation-content.
+
+Finally, however, a supreme sense develops among the rest. A
+something in the All, which for ever remains inaccessible to our
+will-to-understand, evokes for itself a bodily organ. The eye comes
+into existence--and in and with the eye, as its opposite pole, light.
+Abstract thinking about light may lead (and has led) to an ideal
+light representable by an ensemble picture of waves and rays, but the
+significance of this development in actuality was that thenceforward
+life was embraced and taken in _through the light-world of the eye_.
+This is the supreme marvel that makes everything human what it is.
+Only with this light-world of the eye do distances come into being as
+colours and brightnesses; only in this world are night and day and
+things and motions visible in the extension of illumined space, and the
+universe of infinitely remote stars circling above the earth, and that
+light-horizon of the individual life which stretches so far beyond the
+environs of the body.
+
+In the world of this light--not the light which science has deduced
+indirectly by the aid of mental concepts, themselves derived from
+visions (“theory” in the Greek sense)--it comes to pass that seeing,
+human herds wander upon the face of this little earth-star, and that
+circumstances of light--the full southern flood over Egypt and Mexico,
+the greyness of the north--contribute to the determination of their
+entire life. It is for his _eye_ that man develops the magic of his
+architecture, wherein the constructional elements given by touch are
+restated in relations generated by light. Religion, art, thought, have
+all arisen for light’s sake, and all differentiations reduce to the
+one point of whether it is the bodily eye or the mind’s eye that is
+addressed.
+
+And with this there emerges in all clarity yet another distinction,
+which is normally obscured by the use of the ambiguous word
+“consciousness (_Bewusstsein_).” I distinguish _being_ or “being there”
+(_Dasein_) from _waking-being_ or waking-consciousness (_Wachsein_).[3]
+Being possesses beat and direction, while waking-consciousness
+is tension and extension. In being a destiny rules, while
+waking-consciousness distinguishes causes and effects. The prime
+question is for the one “when and wherefore?” for the other “where and
+how?”
+
+A plant leads an existence that is without waking-consciousness. In
+sleep all creatures become plants, the tension of polarity to the
+world-around is extinguished, and the beat of life goes on. A plant
+knows only a relation to the when and the wherefore. The upthrust of
+the first green shoots out of the wintry earth, the swelling of the
+buds, the whole mighty process of blooming, scent, colour glory, and
+ripening--all this is desire to fulfil a destiny, constant yearning
+towards a “when?”
+
+“Where?” on the other hand can have no meaning for a plant existence.
+It is the question with which awakening man daily orients himself
+afresh with respect to the world. For it is only the pulse-beat
+of Being that endures throughout the generations, whereas
+waking-consciousness begins anew for each microcosm. And herein lies
+the distinction between procreation and birth, the first being a pledge
+of duration, the second a beginning. A plant, therefore, is bred, but
+it is not born. It “is there,” but no awakening, no birthday, expands a
+sense-world around it.
+
+
+II
+
+With this we are brought face to face with man. In man’s
+waking-consciousness nothing disturbs the now pure lordship of the eye.
+The sounds of the night, the wind, the panting of beasts, the odour of
+flowers, all stimulate in him _a “whither” and a “whence” in the world
+of light_. Of the world of scent, in which even our closest comrade the
+dog still co-ordinates his visual impressions, we have no conception
+whatever. We know nothing of the world of the butterfly, whose
+crystalline eye projects no synthetic picture, or of those animals
+which, while certainly not destitute of senses, are blind. _The only
+space that remains to us is visual space_, and in it places have been
+found for the relics of other sense-worlds (such as sounds, scents,
+heat and cold) as _properties and effects of light-things_--it is a
+seen fire that warmth comes from, it is a seen rose in illumined space
+that gives off the scent and we speak of a certain tone as violin-tone.
+As to the stars, our conscious relations with them are limited to
+seeing them--over our heads they shine, describing their visible
+path.[4] But of these sense-worlds there is no doubt that animals and
+even primitive men still have sensations that are wholly different
+from ours; some of these sensations we are able to figure to ourselves
+indirectly by the aid of scientific hypotheses, but the rest now escape
+us altogether.
+
+This impoverishment of the sensual implies, however, an immeasurable
+deepening. Human waking-consciousness is no longer a mere tension
+between body and environment. It is now life _in_ a self-contained
+light-world. The body moves _in_ the space that is seen. The
+depth-experience[5] is a mighty out-thrust _into the visible distance_
+from a light-centre[6]--the point which we call “I.” “I” is a
+light-concept. From this point onward the life of an “I” becomes
+essentially a life in the sun, and night is akin to death. And out of
+it, too, there arises a new feeling of fear which absorbs all others
+within itself--_fear before the invisible_, fear of that which one
+hears or feels, suspects, or observes in its effects without seeing.
+Animals indeed experience fear in other forms, but man finds these
+forms puzzling, and even uneasiness in the presence of stillness to
+which primitive men and children are subject (and which they seek
+to dispel by noise and loud talking) is disappearing in the higher
+types of mankind. It is fear of the invisible that is the essence
+and hall-mark of human religiousness. Gods are surmised, imagined,
+envisaged light-actualities, and the idea of an “invisible” god is the
+highest expression of human transcendence. Where the bounds of the
+light-world are, there lies the beyond, and salvation is emancipation
+from the spell of the light-world and its facts.
+
+In precisely this resides the ineffable charm and the very real power
+of emancipation that music possesses for us men. For music is the only
+art whose means lie outside the light-world that has so long become
+coextensive with our total world, and music alone, therefore, can take
+us right out of this world, break up the steely tyranny of light, and
+let us fondly imagine that we are on the verge of reaching the soul’s
+final secret--an illusion due to the fact that our waking consciousness
+is now so dominated by one sense only, so thoroughly adapted to the
+eye-world, that it is incapable of forming, out of the impressions it
+receives, a world of the ear.[7]
+
+Man’s thought, then, is visual thought, our concepts are derived from
+vision, and the whole fabric of our logic is a light-world in the
+imagination.
+
+This narrowing and consequent deepening, which has led to all our
+sense-impressions being adapted to and ordered with those of sight,
+has led also to the replacement of the innumerable methods of
+thought-communication known to animals by the one single medium of
+language, which is a bridge _in the light-world_ between two persons
+present to one another’s bodily or imaginative eyes. The other modes of
+speaking of which vestiges remain at all have long been absorbed into
+language in the form of mimicry, gesture, or emphasis. The difference
+between purely human speech and general animal utterance is that words
+and word-linkages constitute a domain of inward light-ideas, which has
+been built up under the sovereignty of the eyes. Every word-meaning
+has a light-value, even in the case of words like “melody,” “taste,”
+“cold,” or of perfectly abstract designations.
+
+Even among the higher animals, the habit of reciprocal understanding
+by means of a sense-link has brought about a marked difference between
+_mere_ sensation and _understanding_ sensation. If we distinguish
+in this wise _sense-impressions_ and _sense-judgments_ (e.g.,
+scent-judgment, taste-judgment, or aural-judgment), we find that
+very often, even in ants and bees, let alone birds of prey, horses,
+and dogs, the centre of gravity has palpably shifted towards the
+judgment side of waking-being. But it is only under the influence
+of language that there is set up within the waking-consciousness a
+definite _opposition_ between sensation and understanding, a tension
+that in animals is quite unthinkable and even in man can hardly have
+been at first anything more than a rarely actualized possibility. The
+development of language, then, brought along with it a determination
+of fundamental significance--_the emancipation of understanding from
+sensation_.
+
+More and more often there appears, in lieu of the simple comprehension
+of the gross intake, a comprehension of the significances of the
+component sense-impressions, which have hardly been noticed as such
+before.[8] Finally these impressions themselves are discarded and
+replaced by the felt connotations of familiar word-sounds. The word,
+originally the name of a visual thing, changes imperceptibly into the
+label of a mental thing, the “concept.” We are far from being able
+to fix exact meanings to such names--that we can do only with wholly
+new names. We never use a word twice with identical connotation,
+and no one ever understands exactly as another does. But mutual
+comprehension is possible, in spite of this, because of the common
+world-outlook that has been induced in both, with and by the use of
+a common language; in an ambiance common to the lives and activities
+of both, mere word-sounds suffice to evoke cognate ideas. It is this
+mode of comprehending by means of sounds at once derived and detached
+(abstract) from actual seeing which, however rarely we can find it
+definitely evidenced at the primitive level, does in fact sharply
+separate the generic-animal kind of waking-consciousness from the
+purely human kind which supervenes. Just so, at an earlier stage, the
+appearance of waking-consciousness as such fixed a frontier between the
+general plantlike and the specifically animal existence.
+
+_Understanding detached from sensation is called thought._ Thought has
+introduced a permanent disunity into the human waking-consciousness.
+From early times it has rated understanding and sensibility as “higher”
+and “lower” soul-power. It has created the fateful opposition between
+the light-world of the eye, described as a figment and an illusion,
+and the world-imagined (“_vorgestellte_,” “set before” oneself),
+in which the concepts, with their faint but ineffaceable tinge of
+light-coloration, live and do business. And henceforth for man, so long
+as he “thinks,” this is the true world, the world-in-itself. At the
+outset the ego was waking-being as such (in so far, that is, as, having
+sight, it felt itself as the centre of a light-world); now it becomes
+“spirit”--namely, pure understanding, which “cognizes” itself as such
+and very soon comes to regard not only the world _around_ itself, but
+even the remaining component of life, its own body, as qualitatively
+_below itself_. This is evidenced not only in the upright carriage of
+man, but in the thoroughly intellectualized formation of his head, in
+which the eyes, the brow, and the temples become more and more the
+vehicles of expression.[9]
+
+Clearly, then, thought, when it became independent, discovered a
+new mode of activity for itself. To the practical thought which is
+directed upon the constitution of the light-things in the world-around,
+with reference to this or that practical end, there is added the
+theoretical, penetrating, subtilizing thought which sets itself to
+establish the constitution of these things “in themselves,” the
+_natura rerum_. From that which is seen, the light is abstracted,
+the depth-experience of the eye intensifies itself in a grand and
+unmistakable course of development into a depth-experience within the
+tinted realm of word-connotations. Man begins to believe that it is
+not impossible for his inner eye to see right through into the things
+that actually are. Concept follows upon concept, and at last there is
+a mighty thought-architecture made up of buildings that stand out with
+full clarity under the inner light.
+
+The development of theoretical thought within the human
+waking-consciousness gives rise to a kind of activity that makes
+inevitable a fresh conflict--that between Being (existence) and
+Waking-Being (waking-consciousness). The animal microcosm, in which
+existence and consciousness are joined in a self-evident unity of
+living, knows of consciousness _only as the servant_ of existence. The
+animal “lives” simply and does not reflect upon life. Owing, however,
+to the unconditional monarchy of the eye, life is presented as the life
+of a visible entity in the light; understanding, then, when it becomes
+interlocked with speech, promptly forms a _concept_ of thought and with
+it a _counter-concept_[10] of life, and in the end it distinguishes
+life as it is from that which might be. Instead of straight,
+uncomplicated living, we have the antithesis represented in the phrase
+“thought and action.” That which is not possible at all in the beasts
+becomes in every man not merely a possibility, but a fact and in the
+end an alternative. The entire history of mature humanity with all its
+phenomena has been formed by it, and the higher the form that a Culture
+takes, the more fully this opposition dominates the significant moments
+of its conscious being.
+
+The plantlike-cosmic, Being heavy with Destiny, blood, sex, possess an
+immemorial mastery and keep it. They _are_ life. The other only serves
+life. But this other wills, not to serve, but to rule; moreover, it
+believes that it does rule, for one of the most determined claims put
+forward by the human spirit is its claim to possess power over the
+body, over “nature.” But the question is: Is not this very belief a
+service to life? Why does our thought think just so? Perhaps because
+the cosmic, the “it,” wills that it shall? Thought shows off its power
+when it calls the body a notion, when it establishes the pitifulness
+of the body and commands the voices of the blood to be silent. But in
+truth the blood rules, in that silently it commands the activity of
+thought to begin and to cease. There, too, is a distinction between
+speech and life--Being can do without consciousness and the life of
+understanding, but not vice versa. Thought rules, after all, in spite
+of all, only in the “realm of thought.”
+
+
+III
+
+It only amounts to a verbal difference whether we say that thought is a
+creation of man, or higher mankind a creation of thought. But thought
+itself persistently credits itself with much too high a rank in the
+ensemble of life, and through its ignorance of, or indifference to,
+the fact that there are other modes of ascertainment besides itself,
+forfeits its opportunity of surveying the whole without prejudice. In
+truth, all professors of thought--and in every Culture they have been
+almost the only authorized spokesmen--have taken it as self-evident
+that cold abstract thought is _the_ way of approach to “last things.”
+Moreover, they have assumed, also as self-evident, that the “truth”
+which they reach on this line of advance is the same as the truth which
+they have set before themselves as an aim, and not, as it really is,
+a sort of imaginary picture which takes the place of the unknowable
+secrets.
+
+For, although man is a thinking being, it is very far from the fact
+that his being consists in thinking. This is a difference that the born
+subtilizer fails to grasp. The aim of thought is called “truth,” and
+truths are “established”--i.e., brought out of the living impalpability
+of the light-world into the form of concepts and assigned permanently
+to places in a system, which means a kind of intellectual space. Truths
+are absolute and eternal--i.e., they have nothing more to do with life.
+
+But for an animal, not truths, but only facts exist. Here is the
+difference between practical and theoretical understanding. Facts and
+truths[11] differ as time and space, destiny and causality. A fact
+addresses itself to the whole waking-consciousness, for the service
+of being, and not to that side of the waking-consciousness which
+imagines it can detach itself from being. Actual life, history, knows
+only facts; life experience and knowledge of men deal only in facts.
+The active man who does and wills and fights, daily measuring himself
+against the power of facts, looks down upon mere truths as unimportant.
+The real statesman knows only political facts, not political truths.
+Pilate’s famous question is that of every man of fact.
+
+It is one of the greatest achievements of Nietzsche that he confronted
+science with the problem of the _value_ of truth and knowledge--cheap
+and even blasphemous though this seems to the born thinker and savant,
+who regards his whole _raison d’être_ as impugned by it. Descartes
+meant to doubt everything, but certainly not the value of his doubting.
+
+It is one thing, however, to pose problems and quite another to believe
+in solutions of them. The plant lives and knows not that it lives. The
+animal lives and knows that it lives. Man is astounded by his life and
+asks questions about it. But even man cannot give an answer to his own
+questions, he can only _believe_ in the correctness of his answer,
+and in that respect there is no difference between Aristotle and the
+meanest savage.
+
+Whence comes it, then, that secrets must be unravelled and questions
+answered? Is it not from that fear which looks out of even a child’s
+eyes, that terrible dowry of human waking-consciousness which compels
+the understanding, free now from sensation and brooding on images, to
+probe into every deep for solutions that mean release? Can a desperate
+faith in knowledge free us from the nightmare of the grand questions?
+
+“Shuddering awe is mankind’s noblest part.” He to whom that gift has
+been denied by fate must seek to discover secrets, to attack, dissect,
+and destroy the awe-inspiring, and to extract a booty of knowledge
+therefrom. The will-to-system is a will to kill something living, to
+“establish,” stabilize, stiffen it, to bind it in the train of logic.
+The intellect has _conquered_ when it has completed the business of
+making rigid.
+
+This distinction that is usually drawn between “reason” (_Vernunft_)
+and “understanding” (_Verstand_) is really that between the divination
+and flair belonging to our plant side, which merely _makes use_ of the
+language of eye and word, and the understanding proper, belonging to
+our animal side, which is _deduced from_ language. “Reason” in this
+sense is that which calls ideas into life, “understanding” that which
+finds truths. Truths are lifeless and can be imparted (_mitgeteilt_);
+ideas belong to the living self of the author and can only be
+sympathetically evoked (_mitgefühlt_). Understanding is essentially
+critical, reason essentially creative.[12] The latter begets the object
+of its activity, the former starts from it. In fact, understanding
+criticism is first practised and developed in association with ordinary
+sensations--it is in sensation-judgments that the child learns to
+comprehend and to differentiate. Then, abstracted from this connexion
+and henceforward busied with itself, criticism needs a substitute for
+the sensation-activity that had previously served as its object. And
+this cannot be given it but by an _already existing_ mode of thought,
+and it is upon this that criticism now works. This, only this, and not
+something building freely on nothingness, is Thought.
+
+For quite early, before he has begun to think abstractly, primitive
+man forms for himself a religious world-picture, and this is the
+object upon which the understanding begins to operate critically.
+Always science has grown up on a religion and under all the spiritual
+prepossessions of that religion, and always it signifies nothing more
+or less than an abstract melioration of these doctrines, considered
+as false because less abstract. Always it carries along the kernel
+of a religion in its ensemble of principles, problem-enunciations,
+and methods. Every new truth that the understanding finds is nothing
+but a critical judgment upon some other that was already there. The
+polarity between old and new knowledge involves the consequence
+that in the world of the understanding there is only the relatively
+correct--namely, judgments of greater convincingness than other
+judgments. Critical knowledge rests upon the belief that the
+understanding of to-day is better than that of yesterday. And that
+which forces us to this belief, is again, life.
+
+Can criticism then, as criticism, solve the great questions, or can it
+merely pose them? At the beginning of knowledge we believe the former.
+But the more we know, the more certain we become of the latter. So long
+as we hope, we call the secret a problem.
+
+Thus, for mankind aware, there is a double problem, that of
+Waking-Being and that of Being; or of Space and of Time; or of the
+world-as-nature[13] and the world as history; or of pulse and tension.
+The waking consciousness seeks to understand not only itself, but in
+addition something that is akin to itself. Though an inner voice may
+tell one that here all possibilities of knowledge are left behind,
+yet, in spite of it, fear overpersuades--everyone--and one goes on
+with the search, preferring even the pretence of a solution to the
+alternative of looking into nothingness.
+
+
+IV
+
+Waking-consciousness consists of sensation and understanding, and
+their common essence is a continuous self-adjustment in relation to
+the macrocosm. To that extent waking-consciousness is identical with
+ascertainment (_Feststellen_), whether we consider the touch of an
+infusorian, or human thinking of the highest order. Feeling, now,
+for touch with itself in this wise, the waking-consciousness first
+encounters the epistemological problem. What do we mean by cognition,
+or by the knowledge of cognition? And what is the relation between the
+original meanings of these terms and their later formulations in words?
+Waking and sleep alternate, like day and night, according to the course
+of the stars, and so, too, cognition alternates with dreams. How do
+these two differ?
+
+Waking-consciousness, however--whether it be that of sensation or that
+of understanding--is synonymous with the existence of oppositions,
+such as that between cognition and the object cognized, or thing and
+property, or object and event. Wherein consists the essence of these
+oppositions? And so arises the second problem, that of _causality_.
+When we give the names “cause” and “effect” to a pair of sensuous
+elements, or “premiss” and “consequence” to a pair of intellectual
+elements, we are fixing between them a relation of power and rank--when
+one is there, the other must be there also. In these relations,
+observe, time does not figure at all. We are concerned not with facts
+of destiny, but with causal truths, not with a “When?” but with a
+law-fixed dependence. Beyond doubt this is the understanding’s most
+promising line of activity. Mankind perhaps owes to discoveries of
+this order his happiest moments; and thus he proceeds, from these
+oppositions in the near and present things of everyday life that strike
+him immediately, forward in an endless series of conclusions to the
+first and final causes in the structure of nature that he calls God and
+the meaning of the world. He assembles, orders, and reviews his system,
+his dogma of law-governed connexions, and he finds in it a refuge from
+the unforeseen. He who can demonstrate, fears no longer. But wherein
+consists the essence of causality? Does it lie in knowing, in the
+known, or in a unity of both?
+
+The world of tensions is necessarily in itself stiff and dead--namely,
+“eternal truth,” something beyond all time, something that is a
+state. The actual world of waking-consciousness, however, is full
+of changes. This does not astonish an animal in the least, but it
+leaves the thought of the thinker powerless, for rest and movement,
+duration and change, become and becoming,[14] are oppositions denoting
+something that in its very nature “passeth all understanding” and
+_must_ therefore (from the point of view of the understanding) contain
+an absurdity. For is that a fact at all which proves to be incapable
+of distillation from the sense-world in the form of a truth? On the
+other hand, though the world is cognized as timeless, a time element
+nevertheless adheres to it--tensions appear as beat, and direction
+associates itself with extension. And so all that is problematical for
+the understanding consciousness somehow gathers itself together in one
+last and gravest problem, _the problem of motion_. And on that problem
+free and abstract thought breaks down, and we begin to discern that the
+microcosmic is after all as dependent as ever upon the cosmic, just as
+the individualness of a being from its first moment is constituted not
+by a body, but by the sheath of a body. Life can exist without thought,
+but thought is only one mode of life. High as may be the objectives
+that thought sets before itself, in actuality life makes use of thought
+for _its_ ends and gives it a living objective quite apart from the
+solution of abstract problems. For thought the solutions of problems
+are correct or erroneous--for life they are valuable or valueless, and
+if the will-to-know breaks down on the motion problem, it may well be
+because life’s purpose has at that point been achieved. In spite of
+this, and indeed because of this, the motion problem remains the centre
+of gravity of all higher thought. All mythology and all natural science
+has arisen out of man’s wonder in the presence of the mystery of motion.
+
+The problem of motion touches, at once and immediately, the secrets
+of existence, which are alien to the waking-consciousness and yet
+inexorably press upon it. In posing motion as a problem we affirm
+our will to comprehend the incomprehensible, the when and wherefore,
+Destiny, blood, all that our intuitive processes touch in our depths.
+Born to see, we strive to set it before our eyes in the light, so that
+we may in the literal sense grasp it, assure ourselves of it as of
+something tangible.
+
+For this is the decisive fact, of which the observer is
+unconscious--his whole effort of seeking is aimed not at life, but
+at the seeing of life, and not at death, but at the seeing of death.
+We try to grasp the cosmic as it appears in the macrocosm to the
+microcosm, _as the life of a body in the light-world_ between birth
+and death, generation and dissolution, and with that differentiation
+of body and soul that follows of deepest necessity from our ability to
+experience[15] the inward-proper as a sensuous alien.
+
+That we do not merely live but _know_ about “living” is a consequence
+of our bodily existence in the light. But the beast knows only life,
+not death. Were we pure plantlike beings, we should die unconscious of
+dying, for to feel death and to die would be identical. But animals,
+even though they hear the death-cry, see the dead body, and scent
+putrefaction, behold death without comprehending it. Only when
+understanding has become, through language, detached from visual
+awareness and pure, does death appear to man as the great enigma of the
+light-world about him.
+
+Then, and only then, life becomes the short span of time between birth
+and death, and it is in relation to death that that other great mystery
+of generation arises also. Only then does the diffuse animal fear
+of everything become the definite human fear of death. It is _this_
+that makes the love of man and woman, the love of mother and child,
+the tree of the generations, the family, the people, and so at last
+world-history itself the infinitely deep facts and problems of destiny
+that they are. To death, as the common lot of every human being born
+into the light, adhere the ideas of guilt and punishment, of existence
+as a penance, of a new life beyond the world of this light, and of a
+salvation that makes an end of the death-fear. In the knowledge of
+death is originated that world-outlook which we possess as being men
+and not beasts.
+
+
+V
+
+There are born destiny-men and causality-men. A whole world
+separates the purely living man--peasant and warrior, statesman
+and general, man of the world and man of business, everyone who
+wills to prosper, to rule, to fight, and to dare, the organizer or
+entrepreneur, the adventurer or bravo or gambler--from the man who
+is destined either by the power of his mind or the defect of his
+blood to be an “intellectual”--the saint, priest, savant, idealist,
+or ideologue. Being and waking-being, pulse and tension, motives
+and ideas, cyclic organs and touch-organs--there has rarely been a
+man of any significance in whom the one side or the other has not
+markedly predominated. All that motives and urges, the eye for men
+and situations, the belief in his star which every born man of action
+possesses and which is something wholly different from belief in the
+correctness of a standpoint, the voices of the blood that speak in
+moments of decision, and the immovably quiet conviction that justifies
+any aim and any means--all these are denied to the critical, meditative
+man. Even the footfall of the fact-man sounds different from, sounds
+more planted than, that of the thinker, in whom the pure microcosmic
+can acquire no firm relation with earth.
+
+Destiny has made the man so or so--subtle and fact-shy, or active and
+contemptuous of thought. But the man of the active category is a whole
+man, whereas in the contemplative a single organ can operate without
+(and even against) the body. All the worse, then, when this organ tries
+to master actuality as well as its own world, for then we get all those
+ethico-politico-social reform-projects which demonstrate, unanswerably,
+how things ought to be and how to set about making them so--theories
+that without exception rest upon the hypothesis that all men are as
+rich in ideas and as poor in motives as the author is (or thinks he
+is). Such theories, even when they have taken the field armed with the
+full authority of a religion or the prestige of a famous name, have
+not in one single instance effected the slightest alteration in life.
+They have merely caused us to _think_ otherwise than before about life.
+And this, precisely, is the doom of the “late” ages of a Culture, the
+ages of much writing and much reading--that they should perpetually
+confuse the opposition of life and thought with the opposition between
+thought-about-life and thought-about-thought. All world-improvers,
+priests, and philosophers are unanimous in holding that life is a fit
+object for the nicest meditation, but the life of the world goes its
+own way and cares not in the least what is said about it. And even
+when a community succeeds in living “according to rule,” all that it
+achieves is, at best, a note on itself in some future history of the
+world--if there is space left after the proper and only important
+subject-matter has been dealt with.
+
+For, in the last resort, only the active man, the man of destiny, lives
+in the _actual_ world, the world of political, military, and economic
+decisions, in which concepts and systems do not figure or count. Here a
+shrewd blow is more than a shrewd conclusion, and there is sense in the
+contempt with which statesmen and soldiers of all times have regarded
+the “ink-slinger” and the “bookworm” who think that world-history
+exists for the sake of the intellect or science or even art. Let us
+say it frankly and without ambiguity: the understanding divorced from
+sensation is only one, and not the decisive, side of life. A history
+of Western thought may not contain the name of Napoleon, but in the
+history of actuality Archimedes, for all his scientific discoveries,
+was possibly less effective than that soldier who killed him at the
+storming of Syracuse.
+
+Men of theory commit a huge mistake in believing that their place is
+at the head and not in the train of great events. They misunderstand
+completely the rôle played, for example, by the political Sophists in
+Athens or by Voltaire and Rousseau in France. Often enough a statesman
+does not “know” what he is doing, but that does not prevent him from
+following with confidence just the one path that leads to success;
+the political doctrinaire, on the contrary, always knows what should
+be done, and yet his activity, once it ceases to be limited to paper,
+is the least successful and therefore the least valuable in history.
+These intrusions happen only too frequently in times of uncertainty,
+like that of the Attic enlightenment, or the French or the German
+revolutions, when the ideologue of word or pen is eager to be busy with
+the actual history of the people instead of with systems. He mistakes
+his place. He belongs with his principles and programs to no history
+but the history of a literature. Real history passes judgment on him
+not by controverting the theorist, but by leaving him and all his
+thoughts to himself. A Plato or a Rousseau--not to mention the smaller
+intellects--could build up abstract political structures, but for
+Alexander, Scipio, Cæsar, and Napoleon, with their schemes and battles
+and settlements, they were entirely without importance. The thinker
+could discuss destiny if he liked; it was enough for these men to be
+destiny.
+
+Under all the plurality of microcosmic beings, we are perpetually
+meeting with the formation of _inspired mass-units_, beings of
+a higher order, which, whether they develop slowly or come into
+existence in a moment, contain all the feelings and passions of the
+individual, enigmatic in their inward character and inaccessible to
+reasoning--though the connoisseur can see into and reckon upon their
+reactions well enough. Here too we distinguish the generic animal
+unities which are sensed, the unities profoundly dependent upon Being
+and Destiny--like the way of an eagle in the air or the way of the
+stormers on the breach--from the purely human associations which depend
+upon the understanding and cohere on the basis of like opinions, like
+purposes, or like knowledge. Unity of cosmic pulse one has without
+willing to have it; unity of common ground is acquired at will. One
+can join or resign from an intellectual association as one pleases,
+for only one’s waking-consciousness is involved. But to a cosmic unity
+one is _committed_, and committed with one’s entire being. Crowds
+of this order of unity are seized by storms of enthusiasm or, as
+readily, of panic. They are noisy and ecstatic at Eleusis or Lourdes,
+or heroically firm like the Spartans of Thermopylæ and the last Goths
+in the battle of Vesuvius.[16] They form themselves to the music of
+chorales, marches, and dances, and are sensitive like human and animal
+thoroughbreds to the effects of bright colours, decoration, costume,
+and uniform.
+
+These inspired aggregates are born and die. Intellectual associations
+are mere sums in the mathematical sense, varying by addition
+and subtraction, unless and until (as sometimes happens) a mere
+coincidence of opinion strikes so impressively as to reach the blood
+and so, suddenly, to create out of the sum a Being. In any political
+turning-point words may become fates and opinions passions. A chance
+crowd is herded together in the street and has _one_ consciousness,
+_one_ sensation, _one_ language--until the short-lived soul flickers
+out and everyone goes his way again. This happened every day in the
+Paris of 1789, whenever the cry of “_A la lanterne!_” fell upon the ear.
+
+These souls have their special psychology,[17] and the knowledge of
+this psychology is for the public man an essential. A single soul
+is the mark of every genuine order or class, be it the chivalry and
+military orders of the Crusades, the Roman Senate or the Jacobin club,
+polite society under Louis XIV or the Prussian country “_Adel_,”
+peasantry or guilds, the masses of the big city or the folk of the
+secluded valley, the peoples and tribes of the migrations or the
+adherents of Mohammed and generally, of any new-founded religion
+or sect, the French of the Revolution or the Germans of the Wars
+of Liberation. The mightiest beings of this kind that we know are
+the higher Cultures, which are born in great spiritual upheavals,
+and in a thousand years of existence weld all aggregates of lower
+degree--nations, classes, towns, generations--into one unit.
+
+All grand events of history are carried by beings of the cosmic order,
+by peoples, parties, armies, and classes, while the history of the
+intellect runs its course in loose associations and circles, schools,
+levels of education, “tendencies” and “isms.” And here again it is a
+question of destiny whether such aggregates at the decisive moments
+of highest effectiveness find a leader or are driven blindly on,
+whether the chance headmen are men of the first order or men of no
+real significance tossed up, like Robespierre or Pompey, by the surge
+of events. It is the hall-mark of the statesman that he has a sure and
+penetrating eye for these mass-souls that form and dissolve on the tide
+of the times, their strength and their duration, their direction and
+purpose. And even so, it is a question of Incident[18] whether he is
+one who _can_ master them or one who is swept away by them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+ORIGIN AND LANDSCAPE
+
+(B)
+
+THE GROUP OF THE HIGHER CULTURES
+
+
+I
+
+Now, man--no matter whether it is for life or for thought that he is
+born into the world--so long as he is acting or is thinking, is awake
+and therefore _in focus_--i.e., adjusted to the one significance that
+for the moment his light-world holds for him. Everyone knows that it is
+almost sharply painful to switch off suddenly in the middle of, say, an
+experiment in physics, in order to think about some event of the day.
+I have said earlier that the innumerable settings that take turns in
+man’s waking consciousness fall into two distinct groups--the worlds of
+destiny and pulsation, and the worlds of causes and tensions. The two
+pictures I have called _world-as-history_ and _world-as-nature_. In the
+first, life makes use of critical understanding. It has the eye under
+command, the felt pulsation becomes the inwardly imagined wave-train,
+and the shattering spiritual experience becomes pictured as the epochal
+peak. In the second, thought itself rules, and its causal criticism
+turns life into a rigorous process, the living content of a fact into
+an abstract truth, and tension into formula.
+
+How is this possible? Each is an eye-picture, but in the one the seer
+is giving himself up to the never-to-be-repeated facts, and in the
+other he is striving to catch truths for an ever-valid system. In the
+history-picture, that in which knowledge is simply an _auxiliary_,
+the cosmic makes use of the microcosmic. In the picture which we
+call memory and recollection, things are present to us as bathed in
+an inner light and swept by the pulsation of our existence. But the
+chronological element[19] tells us that history, as soon as it becomes
+_thought_ history, is no longer immune from the basic conditions of
+all waking-consciousness. In the nature- (or science-) picture it is
+the ever-present subjective that is alien and illusive, but in the
+history-picture it is the equally ineliminable objective, Number, that
+leads into error.
+
+When we are working in the domain of Nature (science), our settings
+and self-adjustments should be and can be up to a certain point
+impersonal--one “forgets oneself”--but every man, class, nation, or
+family sees the picture of history _in relation to itself_. The mark
+of Nature is an extension that is inclusive of everything, but History
+is that which comes up out of the darkness of the past, presents
+itself to the _seer_, and from him sweeps onward into the future. He,
+as the present, is always its middle point, and it is quite impossible
+for him to order the facts with any meaning if he ignores their
+direction--which is an element proper to life and not to thought.
+Every time, every land, every living aggregate has its own historical
+horizon, and it is the mark of the genuine historical thinker that he
+actualizes the picture of history that his time demands.
+
+Thus Nature and History are distinguishable like pure and impure
+criticism--meaning by “criticism” the opposite of lived experience.
+Natural science _is_ criticism and nothing else. But in History,
+criticism can do no more than scientifically prepare the field over
+which the historian’s eye is to sweep. _History is that ranging
+glance itself_, whatever the direction in which it ranges. He who
+possesses such an eye can understand every fact and every situation
+“historically.” Nature is a system, and systems can be learnt.
+
+The process of _historical_ self-adjustment begins for everyone with
+the earliest impressions of childhood. Children’s eyes are keen, and
+the facts of the nearest environment, the life of the family and the
+house and the street, are sensed and felt right down to the core, long
+before the city and its population come into their visual field, and
+while the words “people,” “country,” “state,” are still quite destitute
+of tangible meaning to them. Just so, and so thoroughly, primitive man
+knows all that is presented to his narrow field of view as history,
+as living--and above all Life itself, the drama of birth and death,
+sickness and eld; the history of passionate war and passionate love, as
+experienced in himself or observed in others; the fate of relatives,
+of the clan, of the village, their actions and their motives; tales
+of long enmity, of fights, victory, and revenge. The life-horizon
+widens, and shows not lives, but Life coming and going. The pageant
+is not now of villages and clans, but of remote races and countries;
+not of years, but of centuries. The history that is actually lived
+with and participated in never reaches over more than a grandfather’s
+span--neither for ancient Germans and present-day Negroes, nor for
+Pericles and Wallenstein. Here the horizon of living ends, and a new
+plane begins wherein the picture is based upon hearsay and historical
+tradition, a plane in which direct sympathies are adapted to a
+mind-picture that is both distinct and, from long use, stable. The
+picture so developed shows very different amplitudes for the men of the
+different Cultures. For us Westerners it is with this secondary picture
+that genuine history begins, for we live under the aspect of eternity,
+whereas for the Greeks and Romans it is just then that history ceases.
+For Thucydides[20] the events of the Persian Wars, for Cæsar those of
+the Punic Wars, were already devoid of living import.
+
+And beyond this plane again, other historic unit-pictures rise to the
+view--pictures of the destinies of the plant world and the animal
+world, the landscape, the stars--which at the last fuse with the last
+pictures of natural science into mythic images of the creation and the
+end of the world.
+
+The nature- (science-) picture of the child and the primitive develops
+out of the petty technique of every day, which perpetually forces both
+of them to turn away from the fearful contemplation of wide nature to
+the critique of the facts and situations of their near environment.
+Like the young animal, the child discovers its first truths through
+play. Examining the toy, cutting open the doll, turning the mirror
+round to see what is behind it, the feeling of triumph in having
+established something as correct for good and all--no nature-research
+whatsoever has got beyond this. Primitive man applies this critical
+experience, as he acquires it, to his arms and tools, to the materials
+for his clothing, food, and housing--i.e., to things _in so far as they
+are dead_. He applies it to animals as well when suddenly they cease
+to have meaning for him as living beings whose movements he watches
+and divines as pursuer or pursued, and are apprehended mechanically
+instead of vitally, as aggregates of flesh and bone for which he has a
+definite use--exactly as he is conscious of an event, now as the act
+of a dæmon and a moment afterwards as a sequence of cause and effect.
+The mature man of the Culture transposes in exactly the same way, every
+day and every hour. Here, too, is a “nature”-horizon, and beyond it
+lies the secondary plane formed of our impressions of rain, lightning,
+and tempest, summer and winter, moon-phases and star-courses. But at
+that plane religiousness, trembling with fear and awe, forces upon man
+criteria of a far higher kind. Just as in the history-picture he sounds
+the ultimate facts of life, so here he seeks to establish the ultimate
+truths of nature. What lies beyond any attainable frontier of knowledge
+he calls God, and all that lies within that frontier he strives to
+comprehend--as action, creation, and manifestation of God--causally.
+
+Every group of scientifically established elements, therefore, has a
+dual tendency, inherent and unchanged since primitive ages. The one
+tendency urges forwards the completest possible system of _technical_
+knowledge, for the service of practical, economical, and warlike
+ends, which many kinds of animals have developed to a high degree of
+perfection, and which from them leads, through primitive man and his
+acquaintance with fire and metals, directly to the machine-technics
+of our Faustian Culture. The other tendency took shape only with the
+separation of strictly human thought from physical vision by means
+of language, and the aim of its effort has been an equally complete
+_theoretical_ knowledge, which we call in the earlier phases of the
+Culture _religious_, and in the later _scientific_. Fire is for the
+warrior a weapon, for the craftsman part of his equipment, for the
+priest a sign from God, and for the scientist a problem. But in all
+these aspects alike it is proper to the “natural,” the scientific,
+mode of waking-consciousness. In the world-as-history we do not find
+fire as such, but the conflagration of Carthage and the flames of the
+faggots heaped around John Hus and Giordano Bruno.
+
+
+II
+
+I repeat, every being livingly experiences every other being and its
+destiny _only in relation to itself_. A flock of pigeons is regarded
+by the farmer on whose fields it settles quite otherwise than by the
+nature-lover in the street or the hawk in the air. The peasant sees
+in his son the future and the heritage, but what the neighbour sees
+in him is a peasant, what the officer sees is a soldier, what the
+visitor sees is a native. Napoleon experienced men and things very
+differently as Emperor and as lieutenant. Put a man in a new situation,
+make the revolutionary a minister, the soldier a general, and at once
+history and the key men of history become for him something other than
+what they were. Talleyrand saw through the men of his time because
+he belonged with them, but had he been suddenly plumped down in the
+company of Crassus, Cæsar, Catiline, and Cicero, his understanding of
+their measures and views would have been either null or erroneous.
+There is no history-in-itself. The history of a family is taken
+differently by each member of it, that of a country differently by each
+party, that of the age by each nation. The German looks upon the World
+War otherwise than the Englishman, the workman upon economic history
+otherwise than the employer, and the historian of the West has a quite
+other world-history before his eyes than that of the great Arabian and
+Chinese historians. The history of an era could be handled objectively
+only if it were very distant in time, and the historian were radically
+disinterested; and we find that our best historians cannot judge of or
+describe even the Peloponnesian Wars and Actium without being in some
+measure influenced by present interests.
+
+It is not incompatible with, rather it is essential to, a profound
+knowledge of men that the appraiser should see through glasses of
+his own colour. This knowledge, indeed, is exactly the component
+that we discern to be wanting in those generalizations that distort
+or altogether ignore that all-important fact, the uniqueness of the
+constituent event in history[21]--the worst example of this being
+the “materialistic” conception of history, about which we have said
+almost all there is to say when we have described it as physiognomic
+barrenness. But both in spite of this and on account of this[22] there
+is for every man, _because_ he belongs to a class and a time and a
+nation and a Culture, a typical picture of history as it ought to
+appear in relation to himself, and equally there are typical pictures
+specific to the time or class or Culture, _qua_ time or class or
+Culture. The supreme generalization possible to each Culture as a
+major being is a primary and, for it, symbolical image of its own
+world-as-history, and all self-attunements of the individual--or of
+the group livingly effective as individual--are with reference to
+that image. Whenever we describe another person’s ideas as profound
+or superficial, original or trivial, mistaken or obsolete, we are
+unwittingly judging them with reference to a picture which springs up
+to answer for the value at the moment of a continuous function of our
+time and our personality.[23]
+
+Obviously, then, every man of the Faustian Culture possesses his own
+picture of history and, besides, innumerable other pictures from his
+youth upwards, which fluctuate and alter ceaselessly in response to
+the experiences of the day and the year. And how different, again,
+are the typical history-images of men and different eras and classes,
+the world of Otto the Great and that of Gregory VII, that of a Doge
+of Venice and that of a poor pilgrim! In what different worlds lived
+Lorenzo de’ Medici, Wallenstein, Cromwell, Marat, and Bismarck, a serf
+of the Gothic age, a savant of the Baroque, the army officer of the
+Thirty Years’ War, the Seven Years’ War, and the Wars of Liberation
+respectively! Or, to consider our own times alone, a Frisian peasant
+whose life of actuality is limited to his own countryside and its folk,
+a high merchant of Hamburg, and a professor of physics! And yet to all
+of these, irrespective of individual age, status, and period, there is
+a common basis that differentiates the ensemble of these figures, their
+prime-image, from that of every other Culture.
+
+But, over and above this, there is a distinction of another kind which
+separates the Classical and the Indian history-pictures from those of
+the Chinese, the Arabian, and, most of all, the Western Cultures--the
+_narrow horizon_ of the two first-named. Whatever the Greeks may (and
+indeed must) have known of ancient Egyptian history, they never allowed
+it to penetrate into their peculiar history-picture, which for the
+majority was limited to the field of events that could be related by
+the oldest surviving participant, and which even for the finer minds
+stopped at the Trojan War, a frontier beyond which they would not
+concede that there had been historical life at all.[24]
+
+The Arabian Culture,[25] on the other hand, very early dared the
+astounding gesture--we see it in the historical thought alike of the
+Jews and of the Persians from Cyrus’s time--of connecting the legend of
+creation to the present by means of a genuine chronology; the Persians
+indeed comprised the future as well in the sweep of the gesture, and
+predated the last judgment and the coming of the Messiah. This exact
+and very narrow definition of human history--the Persian reckoning
+allows twelve millennia from first to last, the Jewish counts less
+than six up to the present--is a necessary expression of the Magian
+world-feeling and fundamentally distinguishes the Judæo-Persian
+creation-sagas from those of the Babylonian Culture, from which so many
+of their external traits are derived.
+
+Different, again, are the primary feelings which give historical
+thought in the Chinese and the Egyptian Cultures its characteristically
+wide and unbounded horizons, represented by chronologically stated
+sequences of dynasties which stretch over millennia and finally
+dissolve into a grey remoteness.
+
+The Faustian picture of world-history, again, prepared in advance by
+the existence of a Christian chronology,[26] came into being suddenly,
+with an immense extension and deepening of the Magian picture which
+the Western Church had taken over, an extension and deepening that
+was to give Joachim of Floris[27] in the high Gothic the basis of his
+wonderful interpretation of all world-destinies as a sequence of three
+æons under the aspects of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.
+Parallel with this there was an immense widening of the geographical
+horizon, which even in Gothic times (thanks to Vikings and Crusaders)
+came to extend from Iceland to the remotest ends of Asia;[28] and from
+1500 onwards, the developed man of the Baroque is able to do what none
+of his peers in the other Cultures could do and--for the first time in
+human history--to regard the whole surface of the planet as its field.
+Thanks to compass and telescope, the savant of that mature age could
+for the first time not merely posit the sphericity of the earth as a
+matter of theory, but actually feel that he was living upon a sphere in
+space. The land-horizon is no more. So, too, time-horizons melt in the
+double endlessness of the calendar before and after Christ. And to-day,
+under the influence of this picture, which comprises the whole planet
+and will eventually embrace all the high Cultures, the old Gothic
+division of history into “ancient,” “mediæval,” and modern, long become
+trite and empty, is visibly dissolving.[29]
+
+In all other Cultures the aspects of world-history and of man-history
+coincide. The beginning of the world is the beginning of man, and the
+end of man is the end of the world. But the Faustian infinity-craving
+for the first time separated the two notions during the Baroque, and
+now it has made human history, for all its immense and still unknown
+span, _a mere episode in world-history_, while the Earth--of which
+other Cultures had seen not even the whole, but only superficial
+fractions as “the world”--has become a little star amongst millions of
+solar systems.
+
+The extension of the historical world-picture makes it even more
+necessary in this Culture than in any other to distinguish between
+the everyday self-attunements of ordinary people and that extreme
+self-attunement of which only the highest minds are capable, and
+which even in them holds only for moments. The difference between the
+historical view-field of Themistocles and that of an Attic husbandman
+is probably very small, but this difference is already immense as
+between Henry VI and a hind of his day,[30] and as the Faustian
+Culture mounts up and up, the power of self-focusing attains to such
+heights and depths that the circle of adepts grows ever smaller and
+smaller. In fact, there is formed a sort of pyramid of possibilities,
+in which individuals are graded according to their endowments; every
+individual, according to his constitution, stands at the level which
+he is capable at his best focus of holding. But it follows from this
+that between Western men there are limitations to the possibilities
+of reciprocal understanding of historical life-problems, limitations
+that do not apply to other Cultures, at any rate in such fateful rigour
+as they do to ours. Can a workman to-day really understand a peasant?
+Or a diplomat a craftsman? The historico-geographical horizon that
+determines for each of them the questions worth asking and the form
+in which these are asked is so different from the horizons of the
+others that what they can exchange is not a communication, but passing
+remarks. It is, of course, the mark of the real appraiser of man that
+he understands how “the other man” is adjusted and regulates his
+intercourse with him accordingly (as we all do in talking to children),
+but the art of appraising in this sense some man of the past (say
+Henry the Lion or Dante), of living oneself into his history-picture
+so thoroughly that his thoughts, feelings, and decisions take on a
+character of self-evidence, is, owing to the vast difference between
+the one’s and the other’s waking consciousness, so rare that up to the
+eighteenth century it was not even seen that the historian ought to
+attempt it. Only since 1800 has it become a desideratum for the writing
+of history, and it is one very seldom satisfied at that.
+
+The typically Faustian separation of human history, as such, from the
+far wider history of the world has had the result that since the end of
+the Baroque our world-picture has contained several horizons disposed
+one behind the other in as many planes. For the exploration of these,
+individual sciences, more or less overtly historical in character, have
+taken shape. Astronomy, geology, biology, anthropology, one after the
+other follow up the destinies of the star-world, the earth’s crust,
+life, and man, and only then do we come to the “world”-history--as it
+is still called even to-day--of the higher Cultures, to which, again,
+are attached the histories of the several cultural elements, family
+history, and lastly (that highly developed speciality of the West)
+biography.
+
+Each of these planes demands a particular self-focusing, and the
+moment the special focus becomes sharp the narrower and the broader
+planes cease to be live Being and become mere given facts. If we
+are investigating the battle of the Teutoburger Wald, the growing
+up of this forest in the plant-world of the North German plain is
+presupposed. If, on the other hand, we are examining into the history
+of the German tree-world, the geological stratification of the earth is
+the presupposition, though it is just a fact whose particular destiny
+need not be further followed out in this connexion. If, again, our
+question is the origin of the Cretaceous, the existence of the Earth
+itself as a planet in the solar system is a datum, not a problem. Or,
+to express it otherwise, that there is an Earth in the star-world, that
+the phenomenon “life” occurs in the Earth, that within this “life”
+there is the form “man,” that within the history of man there exists
+the organic form of the Culture, is in each case an incident in the
+picture of the next higher plane.
+
+In Goethe, from his Strassburg period to his first Weimar residence,
+the inclination to attune himself to “world”-history was very
+strong--as evidenced in his Cæsar, Mohammed, Socrates, Wandering
+Jew, and Egmont sketches. And after that painful renunciation of the
+prospect of high political achievement[31]--the pain which calls to us
+in _Tasso_ even through the sober resignedness of its final form--this
+precisely was the attunement that he chose to cut out of his life; and
+thereafter he limits himself, almost fiercely, to the picture-planes of
+plant-history, animal-history, and earth-history (his “living nature”)
+on the one hand and to biography on the other.
+
+All these “pictures,” developed in the same man, have the same
+structure. Even the history of plants and animals, even that of the
+earth’s crust or that of the stars, is a _fable convenue_ and mirrors
+in outward actuality the inward tendency of the ego’s being. The
+student of the animal world or of stratification is a man, living in a
+period and having a nationality and a social status, and it is no more
+possible to eliminate his subjective standpoint from his treatment of
+these things than it would be to obtain a perfectly abstract account
+of the French Revolution or the World War. The celebrated theories of
+Kant, Laplace, Cuvier, Lyell, Darwin, have also a politico-economic
+tinting, and their very power and impressiveness for the lay public
+show that the mode of outlook upon all these historical planes proceeds
+from a single source. And what is accomplishing itself to-day is the
+final achievement of which Faustian history-thinking is capable--the
+organic linking and disposition of these historical planes in a
+single vast world-history of uniform physiognomic that shall enable
+our glance to range from the life of the individual man without a
+break to the first and last destinies of the universe. The nineteenth
+century--in mechanistic (i.e., unhistorical) form--enunciated the
+problem. It is one of the preordained tasks of the twentieth to solve
+it.
+
+
+III
+
+The picture that we possess of the history of the Earth’s crust and of
+life is at present still dominated by the ideas which civilized[32]
+English thought has developed, since the Age of Enlightenment, out of
+the English habit of life--Lyell’s “phlegmatic” theory of the formation
+of the geological strata, and Darwin’s of the origin of species, are
+actually but derivatives of the development of England herself. In
+place of the incalculable catastrophes and metamorphoses such as von
+Buch and Cuvier[33] admitted, they put a methodical evolution over
+very long periods of time and recognize as causes only _scientifically
+calculable_ and indeed _mechanical utility-causes_.
+
+This “English” type of causality is not only shallow, but also far
+too narrow. It limits possible causal connexions, in the first
+place, to those which work out their _entire_ course on the earth’s
+surface; but this immediately excludes all great cosmic relations
+between earthly life-phenomena and the events of the solar system and
+the stellar universe, and assumes the impossible postulate that the
+exterior face of the earth-ball is a completely insulated region of
+natural phenomena. And, secondly, it assumes that connexions which
+are not comprehensible by the means at present available to the human
+consciousness--namely, sensation refined by instruments and thought
+precised by theory--do not even exist.
+
+It will be the characteristic task of the twentieth century, as
+compared with the nineteenth, to get rid of this system of superficial
+causality, whose roots reach back into the rationalism of the Baroque
+period, and to put in its place a pure physiognomic. We are sceptics in
+regard to any and every mode of thought which “explains” causally. We
+let things speak for themselves, and confine ourselves to sensing the
+Destiny immanent in them and contemplating the form-manifestations that
+we shall never penetrate. The extreme to which we can attain is the
+discovery of causeless, purposeless, purely existent forms underlying
+the changeful picture of nature. For the nineteenth century the word
+“evolution” meant progress in the sense of increasing fitness of life
+to purposes. For Leibniz--whose _Protogæa_ (1691), a work full of
+significant thought, outlines, on the basis of studies made in the Harz
+silver-mines, a picture of the world’s infancy that is Goethian through
+and through--and for Goethe himself it meant fulfilment in the sense
+of increasing connotation of the form. The two concepts, Goethe’s
+form-fulfilment and Darwin’s evolution, are in as complete opposition
+as destiny to causality, and (be it added) as German to English
+thought, and German to English history.
+
+There is no more conclusive refutation of Darwinism than that furnished
+by palæontology. Simple probability indicates that fossil hoards can
+only be test samples. Each sample, then, should represent a different
+stage of evolution, and there ought to be merely “transitional” types,
+no definition and no species. Instead of this we find perfectly stable
+and unaltered forms persevering through long ages, forms that have not
+developed themselves on the fitness principle, but _appear suddenly
+and at once in their definitive shape_; that do not thereafter evolve
+towards better adaptation, but become rarer and finally disappear,
+while quite different forms crop up again. What unfolds itself, in
+ever-increasing richness of form, is the great classes and kinds of
+living beings which _exist aboriginally and exist still, without
+transition types_, in the grouping of to-day. We see how, amongst
+fish, the Selachians, with their simple form, appear first in the
+foreground of history and then slowly fade out again, while the
+Teleostians slowly bring a more perfected fish-type to predominance.
+The same applies to the plant-world of the ferns and horsetails, of
+which only the last species now linger in the fully developed kingdom
+of the flowering plants. But the assumption of utility-causes or other
+visible causes for these phenomena has no support of actuality.[34] It
+is a Destiny that evoked into the world life as life, the ever-sharper
+opposition between plant and animal, each single type, each genus,
+and each species. And along with this existence there is given also a
+definite _energy_ of the form--by virtue of which in the course of its
+self-fulfilment it keeps itself pure or, on the contrary, becomes dull
+and unclear or evasively splits into numerous varieties--and finally a
+_life-duration of this form_, which (unless, again, incident intervenes
+to shorten it) leads naturally to a senility of the species and finally
+to its disappearance.
+
+As for mankind, discoveries of the Diluvial age indicate more and
+more pointedly that the man-forms existing then correspond to those
+living now; there is not the slightest trace of evolution towards a
+race of greater utilitarian “fitness.” And the continued failure to
+find man in the Tertiary discoveries indicates more and more clearly
+that the human life-form, like every other, originates in a sudden
+mutation (_Wandlung_) of which the “whence,” “how,” and “why” remain an
+impenetrable secret. If, indeed, there were evolution in the English
+sense of the word, there could be neither defined earth-strata nor
+specific animal-classes, but only a single geological mass and a chaos
+of living singular forms which we may suppose to have been left over
+from the struggle for existence. But all that we see about us impels
+us to the conviction that again and again profound and very sudden
+changes take place in the being of plants and animals, changes which
+are of a cosmic kind and nowise restricted to the earth’s surface,
+which are beyond the ken of human sense and understanding in respect
+of causes, if not indeed in all respects.[35] So, too, we observe
+that swift and deep changes assert themselves in the history of the
+great Cultures, without assignable causes, influences, or purposes of
+any kind. The Gothic and the Pyramid styles come into full being as
+suddenly as do the Chinese imperialism of Shi-hwang-ti and the Roman of
+Augustus, as Hellenism and Buddhism and Islam. It is exactly the same
+with the events in the individual life of every person who counts at
+all, and he who is ignorant of this knows nothing of men and still less
+of children. Every being, active or contemplative, strides on to its
+fulfilment by _epochs_ and we have to assume just such epochs in the
+history of solar systems and the world of the fixed stars. The origins
+of the earth, of life, of the free-moving animal _are_ such epochs,
+and, therefore, mysteries that we can do no more than accept.[36]
+
+
+IV
+
+That which we know of man divides clearly into two great ages of his
+being. The first is, as far as our view is concerned, limited on the
+one side by that profound fugue of planetary Destiny which we call the
+beginning of the Ice Age--and about which we can (within the picture of
+world-history) say no more than _that_ a cosmic change took place--and
+on the other by the beginnings of high cultures on Nile and Euphrates,
+with which the whole meaning of human existence became suddenly
+different. We discover everywhere the sharp frontier of Tertiary and
+Diluvial, and on the hither side of it we see man as a completely
+formed type, familiar with custom, myth, wit, ornament, and technique
+and endowed with a bodily structure that has not materially altered up
+to the present day.
+
+We will consider the first age as that of the primitive Culture.
+The only field in which this Culture endured throughout the second
+age (though certainly in a very “late” form) and is found alive and
+fairly intact to-day is north-west Africa. It is the great merit of
+Leo Frobenius[37] that he recognized this quite clearly, beginning
+with the assumption that in this field a _whole world_ of primitive
+life (and not merely a greater or less number of primitive tribes)
+remained remote from the influences of the high Cultures. The
+ethnologist-psychologist, on the contrary, delights in collecting,
+from all over the five continents, fragments of peoples who really
+have nothing in common but the negative fact of living a subordinate
+existence in the middle of one or another of the high Cultures, without
+participation in its inner life. The result is a congeries of tribes,
+some stationary, some inferior, and some decadent, whose respective
+modes of expression, moreover, are indiscriminately lumped together.
+
+But the primitive Culture is not fragmentary, but something _strong and
+integral_, something highly vital and effectual. Only, this Culture is
+so different from everything that we men of a higher Culture possess in
+the way of spiritual potentialities that we may question whether even
+those people which have carried the first age very deep into the second
+are good evidence, in their present modes of being and waking-being,
+for the condition of the old time.
+
+For some thousands of years now the waking-consciousness of man has had
+the impression of constant mutual touch between the tribes and peoples
+as an obvious everyday fact. But in dealing with the first age we must
+not forget that in it man, cohering in a very few small groups, is
+completely lost in the immensity of the landscape, the ruling element
+therein being the mighty masses of the great animal-herds. The rarity
+of our finds sufficiently proves this. At the time of Aurignacian Man
+there were perhaps a dozen hordes, each a few hundred strong, wandering
+in the whole area of France, and such hordes must have regarded it
+as a deeply impressive and puzzling event when (if ever) they became
+aware that fellow men existed. Can we imagine even in the least degree
+what it was to live in a world almost empty of men--we for whom all
+nature has long since become a background for the human multitude? How
+man’s world-consciousness must have changed when, besides the forests
+and the herds of beasts, other men “just like himself” began to be
+met with, more and more frequently, in the country-side. The increase
+of man’s numbers--this, too, doubtless took place very suddenly--made
+experience of “fellow men” habitual, and replaced the impression of
+astonishment by the feelings of pleasure or hostility, and these
+again evoked a whole new world of experiences and of involuntary and
+inevitable relations. It was for the history of the human soul perhaps
+the deepest and most pregnant of all events. It was in relation to
+alien life-forms that man first became conscious of his own, and now
+the interior organization of the clan was enriched by a wealth of
+intertribal forms of relation, which thereafter completely dominated
+primitive life and thought. For it was then that, out of very simple
+modes of sensuous understanding, the rudiments of verbal language (and,
+therefore, of abstract thought) came into being, amongst them the
+particularly fortunate few, which--though we can form no idea of their
+structure--we may assume as the origins of the later Indogermanic and
+Semitic language-groups.
+
+Then, out of this general primitive Culture of a humanity linked by
+intertribal relations, there shot up suddenly (about 3000 B.C.[38])
+the Culture of Egypt and Babylonia. Probably for a millennium before
+that date both these fields had been nursing something that differed
+radically from every primitive Culture in kind and in intent, something
+having an inward unity common to all its forms of expression and
+directional in all its life. To me it seems highly probable that, if
+not indeed all over the earth’s surface, at any rate in man’s essence
+a change was accomplished at that time; and if so, then any primitive
+Culture worthy of the name that is still found living later, ever
+dwindling, in the midst of higher Cultures, should itself be something
+different from the Culture of the first Age. But, with reference to
+primitive Culture of any sort, that which I call the pre-Culture (and
+which can be shown to occur as a uniform process in the beginning of
+every high Culture) is something different in kind, something entirely
+new.
+
+In all primitive existence the “it,” the Cosmic, is at work with such
+immediacy of force that all microcosmic utterances, whether in myth,
+custom, technique, or ornament, obey only the pressures of the very
+instant. For us, there are no ascertainable rules for the duration,
+tempo, and course of development of these utterances. We observe, say,
+an ornamental form-language--not to be called a style[39]--ruling
+over the population of a wide area, spreading, changing, and at last
+dying out. Alongside this, and perhaps with quite different fields of
+extension, we may find modes of fashioning and using weapons, tribal
+organizations, religious practices, each developing in a special way
+of its own, with epochal points of its own, beginnings and ends of
+its own, completely influenced by other form-domains. When in some
+prehistoric stratum we have identified an accurately known type of
+pottery, we cannot safely argue from it to the customs and religion
+of the population to which it belonged. And if by chance the same
+area does hold for a particular form of marriage and, say, a certain
+type of tattooing, this never signifies a common basic idea such as
+is indicated, for example, by the discovery of gunpowder and that of
+perspective in painting. No necessary connexions come to light between
+ornament and organization by age-classes, or between the cult of a god
+and the kind of agriculture practised. Development in these cases means
+always some development of one or another individual aspect or trait of
+the primitive Culture, never of that Culture itself. This, as I have
+said before, is essentially chaotic; the primitive Culture is neither
+an organism nor a sum of organisms.
+
+But with the type of the higher Culture this “it” gives way to a strong
+and undiffused _tendency_. Within the primitive Culture tribes and
+clans are the only quickened beings--other than the individual men of
+course. _Here, however, the Culture itself is such a being._ Everything
+primitive is a sum--a sum of the expression-forms of primitive
+groupings. The high Culture, on the contrary, is the waking-being of
+a single huge organism which makes not only custom, myths, technique,
+and art, but the very peoples and classes incorporated in itself the
+vessels of one single form-language and one single history. The oldest
+speech that we know of belongs to the primitive Culture, and has
+lawless destinies of its own which cannot be deduced from those of,
+say, Ornament or Marriage. But the history of script belongs integrally
+with the expression-history of the several higher Cultures. That the
+Egyptian, Chinese, Babylonian, and Mexican each formed a special
+script in its pre-Cultural age--that the Indian and the Classical on
+the other hand did not do so, but took over (and very late) the highly
+developed writing of a neighbouring Civilization--that in the Arabian,
+again, every new religion and sect immediately formed its particular
+script--all these are facts that stand in a deeply intimate relation to
+the generic form-history of these Cultures and its inner significance.
+
+To these two ages our knowledge of man is restricted, and they
+certainly do not suffice to justify conclusions of any sort about
+possible or certain new eras or about their “when” and “how”--quite
+apart from the fact that in any case the cosmic connexions that govern
+the history of man as a genus are entirely inaccessible to our measures.
+
+My kind of thought and observation is limited to the physiognomy
+of the actual. At the point when the experience of the “judge of
+men” _vis-à-vis_ his environment, and that of the “man of action”
+_vis-à-vis_ his facts, become ineffective, there also this insight
+finds its limit. The existence of these two ages is a _fact of
+historical experience_; more, our experiencing of the primitive Culture
+consists not only in surveying, in its relics, a self-contained and
+closed-off thing, but also in reacting to its deeper meaning by virtue
+of an inward relation to it which persists in us. But the second
+age opens to us another and quite different kind of experience. It
+was an incident, the sense of which cannot now be scrutinized, that
+the type of the higher Culture appeared suddenly in the field of
+human history. Quite possibly, indeed, it was some sudden event in
+the domain of earth-history that brought forth a new and different
+form into phenomenal existence. But the fact that we have before us
+eight such Cultures, all of the same build, the same development, and
+the same duration, justifies us in _looking at them comparatively_,
+and therefore justifies our treating them as comparable, studying
+them comparatively, and obtaining from our study a knowledge which
+we can extend backwards over lost periods and forwards over the
+future--provided always that a Destiny of a different order does not
+replace this form-world, suddenly and basically, by another. Our
+licence to proceed thus comes from general experience of organic being.
+As in the history of the Raptores or the Coniferæ we cannot prophesy
+whether and when a new species will arise, so in that of Cultural
+history we cannot say whether and when a new Culture shall be. But from
+the moment when a new being is conceived in the womb, or a seed sinks
+into the earth, we do know _the inner form of this new life-course_;
+and we know that the quiet course of its development and fulfilment may
+be disturbed by the pressure of external powers, but never altered.
+
+This experience teaches, further, that the Civilization which at this
+present time has gripped the earth’s whole surface is not a third age,
+but a stage--a necessary stage--of the Western Culture, distinguished
+from its analogues only by the forcefulness of its extension-tendency.
+Here experience ends, and all speculation on what new forms will govern
+the life of future mankind (or, for that matter, whether there will
+be any such new forms) all building of majestic card-houses on the
+foundation of “it should be, it shall be” is mere trifling--far too
+futile, it seems to me, to justify one single life of any value being
+expended on it.
+
+The group of the high Cultures is not, as a group, an organic
+unit. That they have happened in just this number, at just these
+places and times, is, for the human eye, an incident without deeper
+intelligibility. The ordering of the individual Cultures, on the
+contrary, has stood out so distinctly that the historical technique of
+the Chinese, the Magian, and the Western worlds--often, indeed, the
+mere common consent of the educated in these Cultures--has been able to
+fashion a set of names upon which it would be impossible to improve.[40]
+
+Historical thought, therefore, has the double task of dealing
+comparatively with _the individual life-courses of the Cultures_, and
+of examining the incidental and irregular relations of the Cultures
+amongst themselves in respect of their meaning. The necessity of the
+first of these tasks, obvious enough, has yet been overlooked hitherto.
+The second has been handled, but only by the lazy and shallow method
+of imposing causality over the whole tangle and laying it out tidily
+along the “course” of a hypothetical “world”-history, thereby making
+it impossible to discover either the psychology of these difficult,
+but richly suggestive, relations or to discover that of the inner
+life of any particular Culture. In truth, the condition for solving
+the first problem is that the second has been solved already. The
+relations are very different, even under the simple aspect of time and
+space. The Crusades brought a Springtime face to face with an old and
+ripe Civilization; in the Cretan-Mycenæan world seed-time and golden
+autumn are seen together. A Civilization may stream over from immense
+remoteness, as the Indian streamed into the Arabian from the East, or
+lie senile and stifling over an infancy, as the Classical lay upon its
+other side. But there are differences, too, of kind and strength; the
+Western Culture seeks out relations, the Egyptian tries to avoid them;
+the former is beaten by them again and again in tragic crises, while
+the Classical gets all it can out of them, without suffering. But all
+these tendencies have their roots in the spirituality of the Culture
+itself--and sometimes they tell us more of this Culture than does its
+own language, which often hides more than it communicates.
+
+
+V
+
+A glance over the group of the Cultures discloses task after task. The
+nineteenth century, in which historical research was guided by natural
+science, and historical thought by the ideas of the Baroque, has simply
+brought us to a pinnacle whence we see the new world at our feet. Shall
+we ever take possession of that new world?
+
+Even to-day uniform treatment of these grand life-courses is immensely
+difficult, because the more remote fields have not been seriously
+worked up at all. Once more, it is the lordly outlook of the West
+European--he will only notice that which approaches him from one or
+another antiquity by the proper and respectful route of a Middle Age,
+and that which goes its own ways will get but little of his attention.
+Thus, of the things of the Chinese and the Indian worlds, certain
+kinds are now beginning to be tackled--art, religion, philosophy--but
+the political history is dealt with, if at all, “chattily.” It does
+not occur to anyone to treat the great constitutional problems of
+Chinese history--the Hohenstaufen-destiny of the Li-Wang (842), the
+first Congress of Princes (659), the struggle of principle between
+the imperialism (Lien-heng) of the “Roman” state of Tsin and the
+League-of-Nations idea (Ho-tsung) between 500 and 300, the rise of the
+Chinese Augustus, Hwang-ti (221)--with anything of the thoroughness
+that Mommsen devoted to the principate of Augustus. India, again;
+however completely the Indians themselves have forgotten their
+state-history, we have after all more available material for Buddha’s
+time than we have for history of the Classical ninth and eighth
+centuries, and yet even to-day we act as though “the” Indian had lived
+entirely in his philosophy, just as the Athenians (so our classicists
+would have us believe) spent their lives in beauty-philosophizing on
+the banks of the Ilissus. But even Egyptian politics receive little
+reflective attention. The later Egyptian historian concealed under the
+name “Hyksos period” the same crisis which the Chinese treat of under
+the name “Period of the Contending States”--here, too, is something
+never yet investigated. And interest in the Arabian world has reached
+to the frontier of the Classical tongues and no further. With what
+endless assiduity we have described the constitution of Diocletian,
+and assembled material for the entirely unimportant administrative
+history of the provinces of Asia Minor--because it is written in Greek.
+But the Sassanid state, the precedent and in every respect the model
+of Diocletian’s, comes into the picture only occasionally, and then
+as Rome’s _opponent_ in war. What about _its own_ administrative and
+juristic history? What is the poor sum-total of material that we have
+assembled for the law and economics of Egypt, India, and China[41] in
+comparison with the work that has been done on Greek and Roman law.
+
+About 3000[42] after a long “Merovingian” period, which is still
+distinctly perceptible in Egypt, the two oldest Cultures began, in
+exceedingly limited areas on the lower Nile and the lower Euphrates.
+In these cases the distinctions between early and late periods have
+long ago been labelled as Old and Middle Kingdom, Sumer and Akkad. The
+outcome of the Egyptian feudal period marked by the establishment of
+a hereditary nobility and the decline (from Dynasty VI) of the older
+Kingship, presents so astounding a similarity with the course of events
+in the Chinese springtime from I-Wang (934-909) and that in the Western
+from the Emperor Henry IV (1056-1106) that a unified comparative study
+of all three might well be risked. At the beginning of the Babylonian
+“Baroque” we see the figure of the great Sargon (2500), who pushed
+out to the Mediterranean coast, conquered Cyprus, and styled himself,
+like Justinian I and Charles V, “lord of the four parts of the earth.”
+And in due course, about 1800 on the Nile and rather earlier in
+Sumer-Akkad, we perceive the beginnings of the first Civilizations. Of
+these the Asiatic displayed immense expansive power. The “achievements
+of the Babylonian Civilization” (as the books say), many things and
+notions connected with measuring, numbering, and accounting, travelled
+probably as far as the North and the Yellow Seas. Many a Babylonian
+trademark upon a tool may have come to be honoured, out there in the
+Germanic wild, as a magic symbol, and so may have originated some
+“Early-German” ornament. But meantime the Babylonian realm itself
+passed from hand to hand. Kassites, Assyrians, Chaldeans, Medes,
+Persians, Macedonians--all of these small[43] warrior-hosts under
+energetic leaders--successively replaced one another in the capital
+city without any serious resistance on the part of its people.
+
+It is a first example--soon paralleled in Egypt--of the Roman Empire
+style. Under the Kassites rulers were set up and displaced by
+prætorians; the Assyrians, like the later soldier-emperors of Rome
+(after Commodus), maintained the old constitutional forms; the Persian
+Cyrus and the Ostrogoth Theodoric regarded themselves as managers of
+the Empire, and the warrior bands, Mede and Lombard, as master-peoples
+in alien surroundings. But these are constitutional rather than factual
+distinctions; in intent and purpose the legions of Septimius Severus,
+the African, did not differ from the Visigoths of Alaric, and by the
+battle of Adrianople[44] “Romans” and “barbarians” have become almost
+indistinguishable.
+
+After 1500 three new Cultures begin--first, the Indian, in the upper
+Punjab; then, a hundred years later, the Chinese on the middle
+Hwang-Ho; and then, about 1100, the Classical, on the Ægean Sea.
+The Chinese historians speak of the three great dynasties of Hsia,
+Shang, and Chóu in much the same way as Napoleon regarded himself as
+a fourth dynasty following the Merovingians, the Carolingians, and
+the Capetians--in reality, the third coexisted with the Culture right
+through its course in each case. When in 441 B.C. the titular Emperor
+of the Chóu dynasty became a state pensioner of the “Eastern Duke” and
+when in A.D. 1793 “Louis Capet” was executed, the Culture in each case
+passed into the Civilization. There are some bronzes of very great
+antiquity preserved from late Chang times, which stand towards the
+later art in exactly the same relation as Mycenæan to Early Classical
+pottery and Carolingian to Romanesque art. In the Vedic, Homeric, and
+Chinese springtimes, with their “_Pfalzen_” and “_Burgen_,” their
+knighthood and feudal rulership, can be seen the whole image of our
+Gothic, and the “period of the Great Protectors” (Ming-Chu, 685-691)
+corresponds precisely to the time of Cromwell, Wallenstein, and
+Richelieu and to the First Tyrannis of the Greek world.
+
+The period 480-230 is called by the Chinese historians the “Period
+of the Contending States”; it culminated in a century of unbroken
+warfare between mass-armies with frightful social upheavals, and
+out of it came the “Roman” state of Tsin as founder of a Chinese
+Imperium. This phase Egypt experienced between 1780 and 1580, of which
+the last century was the “Hyksos” time. The Classical experienced
+it from Chæronea (338), and, at the high pitch of horror, from the
+Gracchi (133) to Actium (31 B.C.). And it is the destiny of the
+West-European-American world for the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
+
+During this period the centre of gravity changes--as from Attica to
+Latium, so from the Hwang-ho (at Ho-nan-fu) to the Yang-tse (modern
+province of Hu-pei). The Si-Kiang was as vague for the Chinese savants
+of those days as the Elbe for the Alexandrian geographer, and of the
+existence of India they had as yet no notion.
+
+As on the other side of the globe there arose the principes of the
+Julian-Claudian house, so here in China there arose the mighty figure
+of Wang-Cheng, who led Tsin through the decisive struggle to sole
+supremacy and in 221 assumed the title of Shi (literally equivalent
+to “Augustus”) and the Cæsar-name Hwang-ti. He founded the “_Pax
+Serica_,” as we may call it, carried out a grand social reform in the
+exhausted Empire, and--as promptly as Rome[45]--began to build his
+“_Limes_,” the famous Great Wall, for which in 214 he annexed a part
+of Mongolia. He was the first, too, to subdue the barbarians south
+of the Yang-tse, in a series of large-scale campaigns followed and
+confirmed by military roads, castles, and colonies. But “Roman,” too,
+was his family history--a Tacitean drama with Lui-Shi (Chancellor
+and stepfather of the Emperor) and Li-Szu, the great statesman (the
+Agrippa of his day, and unifier of the Chinese script), playing parts,
+and one that quickly closed in Neronic horrors. Followed then the
+two Han dynasties (Western, 206 B.C.-A.D. 23; Eastern, A.D. 25-220),
+under which the frontiers extended more and more, while in the capital
+eunuch-ministers, generals, and soldiery made and unmade the rulers
+at their pleasure. At certain rare moments, as under Wu-ti (140-86)
+and Ming-ti (58-76), the Chinese-Confucian, the Indian-Buddhist, and
+the Classical-Stoic world-forces approached one another so closely in
+the region of the Caspian that they might easily have come into actual
+touch.[46]
+
+Chance decreed that the heavy attacks of the Huns should break
+themselves in vain upon the Chinese “Limes,” which at each crisis
+found a strong emperor to defend it. The decisive repulse of the Huns
+took place in 124-119 under the Chinese Trajan, Wu-ti; and it was he,
+too, who finally incorporated Southern China in the Empire, with the
+object of obtaining a route into India, and built a grand embattled
+road to the Tarim. And so the Huns turned westward, and in due course
+they appear, impelling a swarm of Germanic tribes, in face of the
+Limes of the Roman world. This time they succeeded. The Roman Imperium
+collapsed, and thus two only of the three empires continued, and still
+continue, as desirable spoil for a succession of different powers.
+To-day it is the “red-haired barbarian” of the West who is playing
+before the highly civilized eyes of Brahman and Mandarin the rôle
+once played by Mogul and Manchu, playing it neither better nor worse
+than they, and certain like them to be superseded in due course by
+other actors. But in the colonization-field of foundering Rome, on the
+other hand, the future Western Culture was ripening underground in the
+north-west, while in the east the Arabian Culture had flowered already.
+
+The Arabian Culture[47] is a discovery. Its unity was suspected by late
+Arabians, but it has so entirely escaped Western historical research
+that not even a satisfactory name can be found for it. Conformably
+to the dominant languages, the seed-time and the spring might be
+called the Aramaic and the later time the Arabian, but there is no
+really effectual name. In this field the Cultures were close to one
+another, and the extension of the corresponding Civilizations led to
+much overlaying. The pre-Cultural period of the Arabian, which we can
+follow out in Persian and Jewish history, lay completely within the
+area of the old Babylonian world, but the springtime was under the
+mighty spell of the Classical Civilization, which invaded from the West
+with all the power of a just-attained maturity, and the Egyptian and
+Indian Civilizations also made themselves distinctly felt. And then
+in turn the Arabian spirit--under Late Classical disguises for the
+most part--cast its spell over the nascent Culture of the West. The
+Arabian Civilization stratified over a still surviving Classical in
+the popular soul of south Spain, Provence, and Sicily, and became the
+model upon which the Gothic soul educated itself. The proper landscape
+of this Culture is remarkably extended and singularly fragmented. Let
+one put oneself at Palmyra or Ctesiphon, and, musing, look outwards
+all round. In the north is Osrhoene; Edessa became the Florence of the
+Arabian spring. To the west are Syria and Palestine--the home of the
+New Testament and of the Jewish Mishna, with Alexandria as a standing
+outpost. To the east Mazdaism experienced a mighty regeneration,
+which corresponded to the birth of Jesus in Jewry and about which the
+fragmentary state of Avesta literature enables us to say only _that_ it
+happened.[48] Here, too, were born the Talmud and the religion of Mani.
+Deep in the south, the future home of Islam, an age of chivalry was
+able to develop as fully as in the realm of the Sassanids; even to-day
+there survive, unexplored, the ruins of castles and strongholds whence
+the decisive wars were waged between the Christian state of Axum and
+the Jewish state of the Himyarites on the two shores of the Red Sea,
+with Roman and Persian diplomacy poking the fire. In the extreme north
+was Byzantium, that strange mixture of sere, civilized, Classical,
+with vernal and chevaleresque which is manifested above all in the
+bewildering history of the Byzantine army system. Into this world Islam
+at last--and far too late--brought a consciousness of unity, and this
+accounts for the self-evident character of its victorious progress
+and the almost unresisting adhesion of Christians, Jews, and Persians
+alike. Out of Islam in due course arose the Arabian Civilization which
+was at the peak of its intellectual completeness when the barbarians
+from the West broke in for a moment, marching on Jerusalem. How, we
+may ask ourselves, did this inroad appear in the eyes of cultivated
+Arabians of the time? Somewhat like Bolshevism, perhaps? For the
+statecraft of the Arabian World the political relations of “Frankistan”
+were something on a lower plane. Even in our Thirty Years’ War--from
+that point of view a drama of the “Far West”--when an English envoy[49]
+strove to stir up the Porte against the house of Habsburg, the
+statesman who handled policy over a field stretching from Morocco to
+India, evidently judged that the little predatory states on the horizon
+were of no real interest. And even when Napoleon landed in Egypt, there
+were still many without an inkling of the future.
+
+Meantime yet another new Culture developed in Mexico. This lay so
+remote from the rest that no word even passed between them. All the
+more astonishing, therefore, is the similarity of its development to
+that of the Classical. No doubt the archæologist standing before a
+teocalli would be horrified to think of his Doric temple in such a
+connexion; yet it was a thoroughly Classical trait--feebleness of the
+will-to-power in the matter of technics--that kept the Aztecs ill armed
+and so made possible their catastrophe.
+
+For, as it happens, this is the one example of a Culture ended by
+violent death. It was not starved, suppressed, or thwarted, but
+murdered in the full glory of its unfolding, destroyed like a sunflower
+whose head is struck off by one passing. All these states--including a
+world-power and more than one federation--with an extent and resources
+far superior to those of the Greek and Roman states of Hannibal’s day;
+with a comprehensive policy, a carefully ordered financial system, and
+a highly developed legislation; with administrative ideas and economic
+tradition such as the ministers of Charles V could never have imagined;
+with a wealth of literature in several languages, an intellectually
+brilliant and polite society in great cities to which the West could
+not show one single parallel--all this was not broken down in some
+desperate war, but washed out by a handful of bandits in a few years,
+and so entirely that the relics of the population retained not even
+a memory of it all. Of the giant city Tenochtitlan[50] not a stone
+remains above ground. The cluster of great Mayan cities in the virgin
+forests of Yucatan succumbed swiftly to the attack of vegetation, and
+we do not know the old name of any one of them. Of the literature three
+books survive, but no one can read them.
+
+The most appalling feature of the tragedy was that it was not in the
+least a necessity of the Western Culture that it should happen. It was
+a private affair of adventurers, and at the time no one in Germany,
+France, or England had any idea of what was taking place. This instance
+shows, as no other shows, that _the history of humanity has no meaning
+whatever_ and that deep significances reside only in the life-courses
+of the separate Cultures. Their inter-relations are unimportant
+and accidental. In this case the accident was so cruelly banal, so
+supremely absurd, that it would not be tolerated in the wildest farce.
+A few cannon and handguns began and ended the drama.[51]
+
+A sure knowledge of even the most general history of this world is
+now for ever impossible. Events as important as our Crusades and
+Reformation have vanished without leaving a trace. Only in recent years
+has research managed to settle the outline, at any rate, of the later
+course of development, and with the help of these data comparative
+morphology may attempt to widen and deepen the picture by means of
+those of other Cultures.[52] On this basis the epochal points of this
+Culture lie about two hundred years later than those of the Arabian and
+seven hundred years before those of our own. There was a pre-Cultural
+period which, as in China and Egypt, developed script and calendar, but
+of this we now know nothing. The time-reckoning began with an initial
+date which lies far behind the birth of Christ, but it is impossible
+now to fix it with certainty relative to that event.[53] In any case,
+it shows an extraordinarily strongly developed history-sense in Mexican
+mankind.
+
+The springtime of the “Hellenic” Maya states is evidenced by the
+dated relief-pillars of the old cities of Copan (in the south),
+Tikal, and somewhat later Chichen Itza (in the north), Naranjo, and
+Seibal[54]--about 160-450. At the end of this period Chichen Itza was
+a model of architecture that was followed for centuries. The full glory
+of Palenque and Piedras Negras (in the west) may correspond to our Late
+Gothic and Renaissance (450-600 = European 1250-1400?). In the Baroque
+or Late period Champutun appears as the centre of style-formation, and
+now the “Italic” Nahua peoples of the high plateau of Anahuac began to
+come under the cultural influence. Artistically and spiritually these
+peoples were mere recipients, but in their political instincts they
+were far superior to the Maya (about 600-960, = Classical 750-400 =
+Western 1400-1750?). And now Maya entered on the “Hellenistic” phase.
+About 960 Uxmal was founded, soon to be a cosmopolis of the first rank,
+an Alexandria or Baghdad, founded like these on the threshold of the
+Civilization. With it we find a series of brilliant cities like Labna,
+Mayapan, Chacmultun, and a revived Chichen Itza. These places mark
+the culminating point of a grandiose architecture, which thereafter
+produced no new style, but applies the old motives with taste and
+discrimination to mighty masses. Politically this is the age of the
+celebrated League of Mayapan, an alliance of three leading states,
+which appears to have maintained the position successfully--if somewhat
+artificially and arbitrarily--in spite of great wars and repeated
+revolutions (960-1165 = Classical 350-150 = Western 1800-2000).
+
+The end of this period was marked by a great revolution, and with it
+the definitive intervention of the (“Roman”) Nahua powers in the Maya
+affair. With their aid Hunac Ceel brought about a general overthrow
+and destroyed Mayapan (about 1190 = Classical 150). The sequel was
+typical of the history of the over-ripened Civilization in which
+different peoples contend for military lordship. The great Maya cities
+sink into the same bland contentment as Roman Athens and Alexandria,
+but out on the horizon of the Nahua lands was developing the last of
+these peoples, the Aztecs--young, vigorous, barbaric, and filled with
+an insatiable will-to-power. In 1325 (= the Age of Augustus) they
+founded Tenochtitlan, which soon became the paramount and capital city
+of the whole Mexican world. About 1400 military expansion began on the
+grand scale. Conquered regions were secured by military colonies and a
+network of military roads, and a superior diplomacy kept the dependent
+states in check and separated. Imperial Tenochtitlan grew enormous
+and housed a cosmopolitan population speaking every tongue of this
+world-empire.[55] The Nahua provinces were politically and militarily
+secure, the southward thrust was developing rapidly, and a hand was
+about to be laid on the Maya states; there is no telling what the
+course of the next centuries would have been. And suddenly--the end.
+
+At that date the West was at a level which the Maya had already
+overpassed by 700; nothing short of the age of Frederick the Great
+would have been ripe enough to comprehend the politics of the Mayapan
+League, and what the Aztecs of A.D. 1500 were organizing lies for us
+well in the future. But that which distinguished Faustian man, even
+then, from the man of any other Culture was his irrepressible urge
+into distance. It was this, in the last resort, that killed and even
+annihilated the Mexican and Peruvian Culture--the unparalleled drive
+that was ready for service in any and every domain. Certainly the Ionic
+style was imitated in Carthage and in Persepolis, and Hellenistic taste
+in the Gandara art of India found admirers. Future investigation will
+probably find some Chinese in the primitive German wood-architecture.
+The Mosque style ruled from Farther India to North Russia, to West
+Africa, and to Spain. But all that amounts to nothing as compared
+with the expansion-power of the Western Soul. The true style-history
+of that soul, it need hardly be said, accomplished itself only on
+the mother soil, but its resultant effects knew no bounds. On the
+spot where Tenochtitlan had stood, the Spaniards erected a Baroque
+cathedral adorned with masterpieces of Spanish painting and plastic.
+Already at that date the Portuguese had got to work in Hither India
+and Late-Baroque architects from Spain and Italy in the heart of
+Poland and Russia. The English Rococo, and especially Empire, made for
+themselves a broad province in the Plantation States of North America,
+whose wonderful rooms and furniture are far less well known in Germany
+than they ought to be. Classicism was at work already in Canada and at
+the Cape, and presently there were no limits at all. It was just the
+same in every other domain of form; the relation between this forceful
+young Civilization and the still remaining old ones--is that it covers
+them, all alike, with ever-thickening layers of West-European-American
+life-forms under which, slowly, the ancient native form disappears.
+
+
+VI
+
+In the presence of this picture of the world of man--which is destined
+to displace the older one of “Ancient-Mediæval-Modern” that is still
+firmly established even in the best minds--it will become possible,
+too, to give a new answer (and for our Civilization, I think, a final
+answer) to the old question: What is History?
+
+Ranke, in the preface of his _World History_ says: “History only
+begins when the monuments become intelligible, and trustworthy written
+evidences are available.” This is the answer of a collector and
+arranger of data; obviously, it confuses that which has happened with
+that which happened within the field of view open at the particular
+time to the particular student. Mardonius was defeated at Platæa--has
+this ceased to be history if two thousand years later it has somehow
+dropped out of the ken of the historians? For a fact to be a fact, must
+it be mentioned in books?
+
+The weightiest historian since Ranke, Eduard Meyer,[56] says: “Historic
+is that which is, or has been, effective.... Only through historical
+treatment does the individual process, lifted by history from among the
+infinite mass of contemporary processes, become the historical event.”
+The remark is thoroughly in the manner and spirit of Hegel. Firstly,
+its starting-point is the fact and not any accidental knowledge or
+ignorance of the fact, and if there is any mode of picturing history
+which necessarily imposes such a starting-point, it is that presented
+in these pages, since it compels us to assume the existence of facts of
+the first order in majestic sequences, even when we do not (and never
+will) know them in the scientific sense. We have to learn to handle
+the unknown in the most comprehensive way. Secondly, truths exist for
+the mind, facts only in relation to life. Historical treatment--in
+my terminology, _physiognomic fact_--is decided by the _blood_, the
+gift of judging men broadened out into past and future, the innate
+flair for persons and situations, for the event, for that which had
+to be, must have been. It does _not_ consist in bare scientific
+criticism and knowing of data. The scientific mode of experience is,
+for every true historian, something additional or subordinate. It
+addresses to the waking-consciousness, by the way of understanding and
+imparting, laborious and repetitive proof of that which _one moment_ of
+illumination has already, and instantly, demonstrated to Being.
+
+Just because the force of our Faustian being has by now worked up
+about us a circumcircle of inner experiences such as no other men and
+no other time could acquire--just because for us the remotest events
+become increasingly significant and disclose relationships that no
+one else, not even the closest contemporaries of these events, could
+perceive--much has now become history (i.e., life in tune with our
+life) that centuries ago was not history. Tacitus probably “knew”
+the data concerning Tiberius Gracchus’s revolution, but for him it
+no longer meant anything effectively, whereas for us it is full
+of meaning. The history of the Monophysites and their relation to
+Mohammed’s _milieu_ signify nothing whatever to the Islamic believer,
+but for _us_ it is recognizably the story of English Puritanism in
+another setting. For the world-view of a Civilization which has
+made the whole earth its stage, nothing is in the last resort quite
+unhistorical. The scheme of ancient-mediæval-modern history, as
+understood by the nineteenth century, contained only a selection of the
+more obvious relations. But the influence that old Chinese and Mexican
+history are beginning to exercise on us to-day is of a subtler and more
+intellectual kind. There we are sounding the last necessities of life
+itself. We are learning out of another life-course to know ourselves
+what we are, what we must be, what we shall be. It is the great school
+of our future. We who have history still, are making history still,
+find here on the extreme frontiers of historical humanity what history
+_is_.
+
+A battle between two Negro tribes in the Sudan, or between the Cherusci
+and Chatti of Cæsar’s time, or--what is substantially the same--between
+ant-communities, is merely a drama of “living Nature.” But when the
+Cherusci beat the Romans, as in the year 9,[57] or the Aztecs the
+Tlascalans, it is _history_. Here the “when” is of importance and
+each decade, or even year, matters, for here one is dealing with the
+march of a grand life-course, in which every decision takes rank as an
+epoch. Here there is an object towards which every happening impels, a
+being that strives to fulfil its predestination, a tempo, an organic
+duration--and not the disorderly ups and downs of Scythians, Gauls,
+or Caribs, of which the particular detail is as unimportant as that
+of doings in a colony of beavers or a steppe-herd of gazelles. These
+are _zoölogical happenings_ and have their place in an altogether
+different orientation of our outlook, that in which we are concerned
+not with the destiny of individual peoples or herds, but with that of
+“man,” or “the” gazelle, or “the” ants, _as species_. Primitive man has
+history only in the biological sense, and all prehistoric study boils
+down to the investigation of this sense. The increasing familiarity
+of men with fire, stone tools, and the mechanical laws which make
+weapons effective, characterizes only the development of the type and
+of its latent possibilities. The objects for which one tribe employed
+these weapons against another tribe are of no importance in this plane
+of history. Stone Age and Baroque are age-grades in the existence of
+respectively a genus and a Culture--i.e., two organisms belonging to
+two fundamentally different settings. And here I would protest against
+two assumptions that have so far vitiated all historical thought: the
+assertion of an ultimate aim of mankind as a whole and the denial
+of there being ultimate aims at all. The life _has_ an aim. It is
+the fulfilment of that which was ordained at its conception. But the
+individual belongs by birth to the particular high Culture on the
+one hand and to the type Man on the other--there is no third unit of
+being for him. His destiny must lie either in the zoölogical or in the
+world-historical field. “Historical” man, as I understand the word
+and as all great historians have meant it to be taken, is the man of
+a Culture that is in full march towards self-fulfilment. Before this,
+after this, outside this, man is _historyless_; and the destinies of
+the people to which he belongs matter as little as the Earth’s destiny
+matters when the plane of attention is the astronomical and not the
+geological.
+
+From this there follows a fact of the most decisive importance, and
+one that has never before been established: that man is not only
+historyless before the birth of the Culture, but again becomes so as
+soon as a Civilization has worked itself out fully to the definitive
+form which betokens the end of the living development of the Culture
+and the exhaustion of the last potentialities of its significant
+existence. That which we see in the Egyptian Civilization after Seti
+I (1300) and in the Chinese, the Indian, the Arabian to this day
+is--notwithstanding all the cleverness of the religious, philosophical
+and, especially, political forms in which it is wrapped--just the old
+zoölogical up-and-down of the primitive age again. Whether the lords
+sitting in Babylon were wild war-hordes like the Kassites or refined
+inheritors like the Persians, when, for how long, and with what
+success they kept their seats, signified nothing from the standpoint
+of Babylon. The comfort of the population was affected by such things,
+naturally, but they made no difference either way to the fact that the
+soul of this world was extinct and its events, therefore, void of any
+deep meaning. A new dynasty, native or foreign, in Egypt, a revolution
+or a conquest in China, a new Germanic people in the Roman Empire, were
+elements in the history of the landscape like a change in the fauna or
+the migration of a flock of birds.
+
+In the history, the genuine history, of higher men the stake fought
+for and the basis of the animal struggle to prevail is ever--even when
+driver and driven are completely unconscious of the symbolic force of
+their doings, purposes, and fortunes--the actualization of something
+that is essentially spiritual, the translation of an idea into a
+living historical form. This applies equally to the struggle of big
+style-tendencies in art (Gothic and Renaissance), of philosophy (Stoics
+and Epicureans), of political ideals (Oligarchy and Tyrannis), and of
+economic forms (Capitalism and Socialism). But the post-history is
+void of all this. All that remains is the struggle for mere power, for
+animal advantage _per se_. Whereas previously power, even when to all
+appearance destitute of any inspiration, was always serving the Idea
+somehow or other, in the late Civilization even the most convincing
+illusion of an idea is only the mask for purely zoölogical strivings.
+
+The distinction between Indian philosophy before and after Buddha
+is that the former is a grand movement towards attaining the aim of
+Indian thought by and in the Indian soul, and the latter the perpetual
+turning-up of new facets of a now crystallized and undevelopable
+thought-stock. The solutions are there, for good, though the fashions
+of expressing them change. The same is true of Chinese painting before
+and after the Han dynasties--whether we know it or not--and of Egyptian
+architecture before and after the beginning of the New Empire. So
+also with technics. The West’s discoveries of the steam-engine and
+of electricity are accepted by the Chinese to-day in just the same
+way--and with just the same religious awe--as bronze and the plough
+were accepted four thousand years ago, and fire in a still remoter
+age. Both, spiritually, differ _in toto_ from the discoveries which
+the Chinese made for themselves in the Chóu period and which in each
+instance signified an epoch in their inner history.[58] Before and
+after that time, centuries play a vastly less important rôle than
+decades and even years within the Culture, _for the spans of time are
+gradually returning to the biological order_. This it is that confers
+upon these very Late conditions--which to the people living in them
+seem almost self-evident--that character of changeless pageantry
+which the genuine Culture-man--e.g., Herodotus in Egypt and the
+Western successors of Marco Polo in China--has found so astonishing
+in comparison with his own vigorous pulse of development. It is the
+changelessness of non-history.
+
+Is not Classical history at an end with Actium and the _Pax Romana?_
+There are no more of those great decisions which concentrate the
+inner meaning of a whole Culture. Unreason, biology, is beginning
+to dominate, and it is becoming a matter of indifference for the
+world--though not for the actions of the private individual--whether an
+event turns out thus or thus. All great political questions are solved,
+as they are solved sooner or later in every Civilization, inasmuch
+as questions are no longer felt as questions and are not asked. Yet
+a little while, and man will cease to understand what problems were
+really involved in the earlier catastrophes; what is not livingly
+experienced of oneself cannot be livingly experienced of another. When
+the later Egyptians speak of the Hyksos time, or the later Chinese of
+the corresponding period of the “Contending States,” they are judging
+the outward picture according to the criteria of their own ways of
+life, in which there are no riddles more. They see in these things
+merely struggles for power, and they do not see that those desperate
+wars, external and internal, wars in which men stirred up the alien
+against their own kin, were fought for an idea. To-day we understand
+what was taking place, in fearful alternations of tension and
+discharge, round the murder of Tiberius Gracchus and that of Clodius.
+In 1700 we could not have done so, and in 2200 we shall again be
+unable to do so. It is just the same with that of Chian, a Napoleonic
+figure, in whom later Egyptian historians could discover nothing more
+characterized than a “Hyksos king.” Had it not been for the coming of
+the Germans, Roman historians a thousand years later might have put
+the Gracchi, Marius, Sulla, and Cicero together as a dynasty which was
+overthrown by Cæsar.
+
+Compare the death of Tiberius Gracchus with the death of Nero, when
+Rome received the news of Galba’s rising, or the victory of Sulla
+over the Marian party with that of Septimius Severus over Pescennius
+Niger. If in these later cases the event had gone otherwise, would
+the course of the Imperial Age have been altered in any way? The
+distinction so carefully drawn by Mommsen and Eduard Meyer[59] between
+the “principate” of Pompey and Augustus and the “monarchy” of Cæsar
+misses the mark completely. At that stage, the point is merely a
+constitutional one, though fifty years before it would still have
+signified an opposition between ideas. When Vindex and Galba in 68
+set out to restore “the Republic,” they were gambling on a notion in
+days when notions having genuine symbolic force had ceased to be, and
+the only question was who should have the plain material power. The
+struggle for the Cæsar-title became steadily more and more negroid, and
+might have gone on century after century in increasingly primitive and,
+therefore, “eternal” forms.
+
+These populations no longer possessed a soul. Consequently they could
+no longer have a history proper to themselves. At best they might
+acquire some significance as an object in the history of an alien
+Culture, and whatever deeper meaning this relation possessed would
+be derived entirely from the will of the alien Life. Any effective
+historical happening that does take place on the soil of an old
+Civilization acquires its consistency as a course of events from
+elsewhere and never from any part played in it by the man of that
+soil. And so once again we find ourselves regarding the phenomenon
+of “world-history” under the two aspects--life-courses of the great
+Cultures and relations between them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+ORIGIN AND LANDSCAPE
+
+(C)
+
+THE RELATIONS BETWEEN THE CULTURES
+
+
+I
+
+Although consideration of the Cultures themselves should logically
+precede that of the relations between them, modern historical
+thought generally reverses the order. The less it really knows
+of the life-courses which together make up a seeming unity of
+world-happenings, the more zealously it searches for life in the
+web of relations, and the less it understands even of these. What a
+wealth of psychology there is in the probings, rejections, choices,
+transvaluations, errors, penetrations, and welcomings!--and not only
+between Cultures which immediately touch one another, wonder at one
+another, fight one another, but also as between a living Culture and
+the form-world of a dead one whose remains still stand visible in
+the landscape. And how narrow and poor, on the other hand, are the
+conceptions which the historians label “influence,” “continuity,” and
+“permanent effects”!
+
+This is pure nineteenth century. What is sought is just a chain of
+causes and effects. Everything follows and nothing is prime. Since
+every young Culture superficially shows form-elements of older
+Cultures, these elements are supposed to have had continuing effect
+(_fortgewirkt_), and when a set of such effects has been strung
+together, the historian regards it with satisfaction as a sound piece
+of work.
+
+At bottom, this mode of treatment rests upon that idea which inspired
+the great Gothics long ago, the idea of a significant singleness in
+the history of all mankind. They saw how, on earth, men and peoples
+changed, but ideas stayed, and the powerful impressiveness of the
+picture has not worn itself out even to-day. Originally it was seen as
+a plan that God was working out by means of the human instrument. And
+it could still be regarded as such at a far later stage, in fact so
+long as the spell of the “ancient-mediæval-modern” scheme lasted and
+its parade of permanence prevented us from noting that actuality was
+ever changing. But meantime our outlook also has altered and become
+cooler and wider. Our knowledge has long overpassed the limits of
+this chart, and those who are still trying to sail by it are beating
+about in vain. It is not products that “influence,” but creators that
+absorb. Being has been confused with waking-being, life with the means
+by which it expresses itself. The critical thought, or even simple
+waking-consciousness, sees everywhere theoretical units subjected to
+motion. That is truly dynamic and Faustian, for in no other Culture
+have men imagined history thus. The Greek, with his thoroughly
+corporeal understanding of the world, would never have traced “effects”
+of pure expression-units like “Attic drama” or “Egyptian art.”
+
+Originally what happens is that a name is given to a _system of
+expression-forms_ conjuring up in our minds a particular complex of
+relations. But this does not last long, and soon one is suppositing
+{sic} under the name a being, and under the relation an effect. When
+we speak to-day of Greek philosophy, or Buddhism, or Scholasticism,
+we mean something that is somehow living, a power-unit that has
+grown and grown until it is mighty enough to take possession of men,
+to subject their waking-consciousness and even their being, and in
+the end to force them into an active conformity, which prolongs the
+direction followed by its own “life.” It is a whole mythology, and,
+significantly, it is only men of the Western Culture--the only mankind
+that lives with and in this picture is the Western--whose myth contains
+plenty of dæmons of this sort--“electricity” and “positional energy,”
+for example.
+
+In reality these systems only exist in the human waking-consciousness,
+and they exist as modes of activity. Religion, science, art, are
+_activities of waking-consciousness_ that are based on a being. Faith,
+meditation, creation, and whatever of visible activity is required
+as outcome of these invisibles--as sacrifice, prayer, the physical
+experiment, the carving of a statue, the statement of an experience
+in communicable words--are activities of the waking-consciousness and
+nothing else. Other men see only the visible and hear only words. In
+so doing they experience something in themselves, but they cannot give
+any account of the relation between this experience and that which the
+creator lived in himself. We see a form, but we do not know what in the
+other’s soul begat that form; we can only have some belief about the
+matter, and we believe by putting in our own soul. However definitely
+and distinctly a religion may express itself in words, they are words,
+and the hearer puts his own sense into them. However impressive the
+artist’s notes or colours, the beholder sees and hears in them only
+himself, and if he cannot do so, the work is for him meaningless. (The
+extremely rare and highly modern gift, possessed by a few intensely
+historical men, of “putting oneself in the other’s place” need not be
+considered in this connexion.) The German whom Boniface converted did
+not transfer himself into the missionary’s soul. It was a springtide
+quiver that passed in those days through the whole young world of the
+North, and what it meant was that each man found suddenly in conversion
+a language wherein to express his own religiousness. Just so the eyes
+of a child light up when we tell it the name of the object in its hand.
+
+It is not, then, microcosmic units that move, but cosmic entities that
+pick amongst them and appropriate them. Were it otherwise--were these
+systems very beings that could exercise an activity (for “influence” is
+an organic activity)--the picture of history would be quite other than
+what it is. Consider how every maturing man and every living Culture
+is continuously bathed in innumerable potential influences. Out of all
+these, only some few are _admitted_ as such--the great majority are
+not. Is choice concerned with the works, or with the men?
+
+The historian who is intent upon establishing causal series counts
+only the influences that are present, and the other side of the
+reckoning--those that are not--does not appear. With the psychology of
+the “positive” influences is associated that of the “negative.” This
+is a domain into which no one has yet ventured, but here, if anywhere,
+there are fruits to be reaped, and it must be tackled unless the answer
+to the whole question is to be left indeterminate; for if we try to
+evade it, we are driven into illusory visions of world-historical
+happening as a continuous process in which everything is properly
+accounted for. Two Cultures may touch between man and man, or the man
+of one Culture may be confronted by the dead form-world of another as
+presented in its communicable relics. In both cases the agent is the
+man himself. The closed-off act of A can be vivified by B only out of
+his own being, and _eo ipso_ it becomes B’s, his inward property, his
+work, and part of himself. There was no movement of “Buddhism” from
+India to China, but an acceptance of part of the Indian Buddhists’
+store of images by Chinese of a certain spiritual tendency, who
+fashioned out a _new_ mode of religious expression having meaning for
+Chinese, and only Chinese, Buddhists. What matters in all such cases
+is not the original meanings of the forms, but the forms themselves,
+as disclosing to the active sensibility and understanding of the
+observer potential modes of his own creativeness. Connotations are not
+transferable. Men of two different kinds are parted, each in his own
+spiritual loneliness, by an impassable gulf. Even though Indians and
+Chinese in those days both felt as Buddhists, they were spiritually as
+far apart as ever. The same words, the same rites, the same symbol--but
+two different souls, each going its own way.
+
+Searching through all Cultures, then, one will always find that
+the continuation of earlier creations into a later Culture is only
+apparent, and that in fact the younger _being_ has set up a few (very
+few) relations to the older _being_, always without regard to the
+original meanings of that which it makes its own. What becomes, then,
+of the “permanent conquests” of philosophy and science? We are told
+again and again how much of Greek philosophy still lives on to-day,
+but this is only a figure of speech without real content, for first
+Magian and then Faustian humanity, each with the deep wisdom of its
+unimpaired instincts, rejected that philosophy, or passed unregarding
+by it, or retained its formulæ under radically new interpretations.
+The naïve credulity of erudite enthusiasm deceives itself here--Greek
+philosophic notions would make a long catalogue, and the further it is
+taken, the more vanishingly small becomes the proportion of the alleged
+survivals. Our custom is simply to overlook as incidental “errors”
+such conceptions as Democritus’s theory of atomic images,[60] the very
+corporeal world of Plato’s “ideas,” and the fifty-two hollow spheres
+of Aristotle’s universe, as though we could presume to know what the
+dead meant better than they knew themselves! These things are truths
+and essential--only, not for us. The sum total of the Greek philosophy
+that we possess, actually and not merely superficially, is practically
+nil. Let us be honest and take the old philosophers at their word;
+not one proposition of Heraclitus or Democritus or Plato is true for
+us unless and until we have accommodated it to ourselves. And how
+much, after all, have we taken over of the methods, the concepts, the
+intentions, and the means of Greek science, let alone its basically
+incomprehensible terms? The Renaissance, men say, was completely under
+the “influence” of Classical art. But what about the form of the
+Doric temple, the Ionic column, the relation of column to architrave,
+the choice of colour, the treatment of background and perspective in
+painting, the principles of figure-grouping, vase-painting, mosaic,
+encaustic, the structural element in statuary, the proportions of
+Lysippus? Why did all this exercise no “influence?”
+
+_Because that which one_ (here, the Renaissance artist) _wills to
+express is in him a priori_. Of the stock of dead forms that he had in
+front of him, he really saw only the few that he wanted to see, and
+saw them as he wanted them--namely, in line with his own intention
+and not with the intention of the original creator, for no living art
+ever seriously considers that. Try to follow, element by element, the
+“influence” of Egyptian plastic upon early Greek, and you will find
+in the end that there is none at all, but that the Greek will-to-form
+took out of the older art-stock some few characteristics that it would
+in any case have discovered in some shape for itself. All round the
+Classical landscape there were working, or had worked, Egyptians,
+Cretans, Babylonians, Assyrians, Hittites, Persians, and Phœnicians,
+and the works of these peoples--their buildings, ornaments, art-works,
+cults, state-forms, scripts, and sciences--were known to the Greeks
+in profusion. But how much out of all this mass did the Classical
+soul extract as its own means of expression? I repeat, it is only the
+relations that are _accepted_ that we observe. But what of those that
+were _not_ accepted? Why, for example, do we fail to find in the former
+category the pyramid, pylon, and obelisk of Egypt, or hieroglyphic, or
+cuneiform? What of the stock of Byzantium and of the Moorish East was
+_not_ accepted by Gothic art and thought in Spain and Sicily? It is
+impossible to overpraise the wisdom (quite unconscious) that governed
+the choice and the unhesitating transvaluation of what was chosen.
+Every relation that was accepted was not only an exception, but also a
+misunderstanding, and the inner force of a Being is never so clearly
+evidenced as it is in this _art of deliberate misunderstanding_. The
+more enthusiastically we laud the principles of an alien thought, the
+more fundamentally in truth we have denatured it. Only consider the
+praises addressed by the West to Plato! From Bernard of Chartres and
+Marsilius Ficinus to Goethe and Schelling! And the more humble our
+acceptance of an alien religion, the more certain it is that that
+religion has already assumed the form of the new soul. Truly, someone
+ought to have written the history of the “three Aristotles”--Greek,
+Arabian, and Gothic--who had not one concept or thought in common.
+Or the history of the transformation of Magian Christianity into
+Faustian! We are told in sermon and book that this religion extended
+from the old Church into and over the Western field without change of
+essence. Actually, Magian man evolved out of the deepest depths of his
+dualistic world-consciousness a language of his own religious awareness
+that we call “the” Christian religion. So much of this experience
+as was communicable--words, formulæ, rites--was accepted by the man
+of the Late-Classical Civilization as a means of expression for his
+religious need; then it passed from man to man, even to the Germans of
+the Western pre-Culture, in words always the same and in sense always
+altering. Men would never have dared to _improve upon_ the original
+meanings of the holy words--it was simply that they did not know these
+meanings. If this be doubted, let the doubter study “the” idea of
+Grace, as it appears under the dualistic interpretation of Augustine
+affecting a substance in man, and under the dynamic interpretation of
+Calvin, affecting a will in man. Or that Magian idea, which we can
+hardly grasp at all, of the consensus (Arabic _ijma_)[61] wherein, as
+a consequence of the presence in each man of a _pneuma_ emanating from
+the divine _pneuma_, the unanimous opinion of the elect is held to be
+immediate divine Truth. It was this that gave the decisions of the
+early Church Councils their authoritative character, and it underlies
+the scientific methods that rule in the world of Islam to this day.
+And it was because Western men did not understand this that the Church
+Councils of later Gothic times amounted, for him, to nothing more than
+a kind of parliament for limiting the spiritual mobility of the Papacy.
+This idea of what a Council meant prevailed even in the fifteenth
+century--think of Constance and Basel, Savonarola and Luther--and
+in the end it disappeared, as futile and meaningless, before the
+conception of Papal Infallibility. Or, again, the idea, universal
+in the Early Arabian world, of the resurrection of the flesh, which
+again presupposed that of divine and human _pneuma_. Classical man
+assumed that the soul, as the form and meaning of the body, was somehow
+co-created herewith, and Greek thought scarcely mentions it. Silence
+on a matter of such gravity may be due to one or the other of two
+reasons--the idea’s not being there at all, or being so self-evident
+as not to emerge into consciousness as a problem. With Arabian man it
+was the latter. But just as self-evident for him was the notion that
+his _pneuma_ was an emanation from God that had taken up residence in
+his body. Necessarily, therefore, there had to be something from which
+the human soul should rise again on the Day of Judgment, and hence
+resurrection was thought of as ἔκ νεκρῶν, “out of the corpses.” This,
+in its deeper meaning, is utterly incomprehensible for the West. The
+words of Holy Scripture were not indeed doubted, but unconsciously
+another meaning was substituted by the finer minds amongst Catholics;
+this other meaning, unmistakable already in Luther and to-day quite
+general, is the conception of immortality as the continued existence to
+all eternity of the soul as a centre of force. Were Paul or Augustine
+to become acquainted with our ideas of Christianity, they would
+reject all our dogmas, all our books, and all our concepts as utterly
+erroneous and heretical.
+
+As the strongest example of a system that to all appearance has
+travelled unaltered through two millennia, and yet actually has passed
+through three whole courses of evolution in three Cultures, with
+completely different meanings in each, we may take _Roman law_.
+
+
+II
+
+_Law_, in the Classical world, _is law made by citizens for citizens_
+and presupposes that the state-form is that of the Polis. It was this
+basic form of public life that led--and self-evidently--to the notion
+of the person as identical with the man who, added to others like him,
+made up the body (σῶμα)[62] of the State. From this formal fact of
+Classical world-feeling grew up the whole structure of Classical law.
+
+_“Persona” then is a specifically Classical notion, possessing meaning
+and valency only in the Classical Culture._ The individual person is
+a body which belongs to the stock of the Polis. It is with reference
+to him that the law of the Polis is ordered, downwards into the law
+of Things--with, as a marginal case, the slave who was body, but not
+person--and upward into the law of Gods--with, as a marginal case, the
+hero who from being person had attained godhead and the legal right
+to a cult, like Lysander and Alexander in the Greek cities and _Divus
+Julius_ and his successors in Rome. This tendency, becoming more and
+more definite in the development of Classical jurisprudence, explains
+also the notion of _capitis deminutio media_, which is so alien to our
+Western ideas; for we can imagine a person (in our sense of the word)
+as deprived of certain rights and even of all rights, but the Classical
+man under this punishment _ceased to be a person_ although living on
+as a body. And the specifically Classical idea of the thing, _res_, is
+only intelligible in contrast to and as the object of _persona_.
+
+As Classical religion was State religion through and through, there
+is no distinction made as to the fount of law; real law and divine
+law were made, like personal law, by the citizen, and the relations
+of things and of gods to persons were precise and definite. Now, it
+was a fact of decisive significance for the Classical jurisprudence
+that it was always the product of immediate public experience--and,
+moreover, not the professional experience of the jurists, but the
+practical everyday experience of men who counted in political and
+economic life generally. The man who followed the public career
+in Rome had necessarily to be jurist, general, administrator, and
+financial manager. When he gave judgment as prætor, he had behind him
+a wide experience of many fields other than law. A judicial _class_,
+professionally (let alone theoretically) specialized in law as its sole
+activity, was entirely unknown to the Classical. The whole outlook
+of the later jurisprudence was determined by this fact. The Romans
+were here neither systematists nor historians nor theorists, but just
+splendidly practical. Their jurisprudence is an _empirical science
+of individual cases_, a refined technique, and not in the least a
+structure of abstractions.[63]
+
+It would give an incorrect idea to oppose Greek and Roman law to
+one another as quantities of the same order. Roman law in its whole
+development is an individual city law, one amongst hundreds of such,
+and Greek law as a unity never existed at all. Although Greek-speaking
+cities very often had similar laws, this did not alter the fact that
+the law of each was its own and no other’s. Never did the idea of
+a general Doric, still less a general Hellenic, legislation arise.
+Such notions were wholly alien to Classical thought. The _jus
+civile_ applied only to Quirites--foreigners, slaves and the whole
+world outside the city[64] simply did not count in the eyes of the
+law, whereas even the _Sachsenspiegel_[65] evidences already our
+own deep-felt idea that there can only really be one law. Until far
+into Imperial times the strict distinction was maintained between
+the _jus civile_ of citizens and the _jus gentium_ for “other
+people” who came within the cognizance of Rome’s jurisdiction as
+sojourners.[66] (It need hardly be added that this “law of nations”
+has no sort of resemblance to that which we call by the same name.)
+It was only because Rome as a unit-city attained--as under other
+conditions Alexandria might have attained--to “Imperium” over the
+Classical world that Roman law became pre-eminent, not because of its
+intrinsic superiority, but firstly through Rome’s political success
+and afterwards because of Rome’s monopoly of practical experience on
+the large scale. The formation of a general Classical jurisprudence of
+Hellenistic cast--if we are entitled to call by that name an affinity
+of spirit in a large number of separate legal systems--falls in a
+period when Rome was still politically a third-rate power. And when
+Roman law began to assume bigger forms, this was only one aspect of
+the fact that Roman intellect had subjugated Hellenism. The work of
+forming later Classical law passed from Hellenism to Rome--i.e., from
+a sum of city-states, which one and all had been impressively made
+aware of their individual impotence, to one single city whose whole
+activity was in the end devoted to the upholding and exploitation of
+an effective primacy. Thus it came about that Hellenism never formed
+a jurisprudence in the Greek tongue. When the Classical world entered
+upon a stage in which it was ripe for this science (the latest of all),
+there was but _one_ lawgiving city that counted in the matter.
+
+In reality, insufficient regard has been paid to the fact that Greek
+and Roman law are not parallel in time but successive. Roman law is
+the younger and presupposes the long experience of the elder;[67] it
+was built up, in fact, late and, with this exemplar before it, very
+swiftly. It is not without significance that the flowering-time of the
+Stoic philosophy, which deeply affected juridical ideas, followed that
+of Greek, but preceded that of Roman, law.
+
+
+III
+
+This jurisprudence, however, was built up by the mind of an intensely
+ahistorical species of man. Classical law, consequently, is law _of
+the day and even the moment_; it was in its very idea occasional
+legislation for particular cases, and when the case was settled, it
+ceased to be law. To extend its validity over subsequent cases would
+have been in contradiction to the Classical sense of the present.
+
+The Roman prætor, at the beginning of his year of office, issued an
+edict in which he set forth the rules that he intended to follow,
+but his successor next year was in nowise bound to them. And even
+this limitation of a year on the validity of the rules did not mean
+that this was actually the duration of the rules. On the contrary
+(particularly after the _Lex Æbutia_) the prætor formulated in each
+individual case the concrete rule of law for the judges[68] to whom he
+remitted the matter for judgment, which had to be according to this
+rule and no other. That is, the prætor produced, and indeed generated,
+a _present_ law without duration.[69]
+
+Similar in appearance, but so profoundly different in meaning as to
+leave no doubt as to the great gap which is set between Classical and
+Western Law, is that inspired and truly Germanic notion of English
+jurisprudence, the creative power of the judge who “declares” the law.
+His business is to apply a law which in principle possesses eternal
+validity. Even the application of the existing body of laws he can
+regulate, according to the situations disclosed in the course of the
+case, by means of his “rules” (which have nothing in common with the
+prætor’s). And if he should conclude in the presence of a particular
+set of facts that current law is defective in respect of these, he
+can _fill the gap at once_, and thus in the very middle of a trial
+create new law, which (if concurred in by the judicial body in the
+due forms) _becomes thereafter part and parcel of the permanent stock
+of law_. This is what makes it so completely un-Classical. In the old
+jurisprudence, the gradual formation of a stock of rules was due purely
+to the fact that public life followed a substantially homogeneous
+course throughout a particular period, and produced again and again the
+same situations to be dealt with--rules _not_ deliberately invested
+with validity for the future, but more or less recreated again and
+again as empirical rulings _ad hoc_. The sum of these rulings--not a
+system, but a collection--came to constitute “the law” as we find it in
+the later legislation by prætor’s edict, each successive prætor having
+found it practically convenient to take over substantial portions of
+his predecessor’s work.
+
+Experience, then, means for the ancient lawgiver something different
+from what it means to us. It means, not the comprehensive outlook over
+a consistent mass of law that contains implicitly every possible case,
+associated with practical skill in applying it, but the experimental
+knowledge that certain jural situations are for ever recurring, so that
+one can save oneself the trouble of forming new law on every occasion.
+
+The genuine Classical form for the slow accretion of legal material
+is an almost automatic summation of individual νομοί _leges, edicta_,
+as we find it in the heyday of the Roman prætor. All the so-called
+legislations of Solon, Charondas, and the Twelve Tables are nothing
+but occasional collections of such edicts as had been found to be
+useful. The Law of Gortyn,[70] which is more or less contemporary with
+the Twelve, is a supplement to some older collection. A newly-founded
+city would promptly provide itself with such a collection, and in
+the process a certain amount of dilettantism would slip in (cf. the
+lawmakers satirized by Aristophanes in _The Birds_). But there is never
+system in them, still less any intention of establishing enduring law
+thereby.
+
+In the West it is conspicuously the other way about. The tendency is
+from the first to bring the entire living body of law into a general
+code, ordered for ever and exhaustively complete, containing in advance
+the decision of every conceivable future problem.[71] All Western law
+bears the stamp of the future, all Classical the stamp of the moment.
+
+
+IV
+
+But this, it may be said, is contradicted by the fact that there
+actually were Classical law-works compiled by professional jurists
+for permanent use. Undoubtedly so. But we must remember that we are
+completely ignorant of Early Classical law (1100-700) and it is pretty
+certain that the customary law of the country-side and the nascent
+town was never noted down as that of the Gothic age was set forth
+in the _Sachsenspiegel_ or that of the Early Arabian in the _Syrian
+Law-book_.[72] The earliest stratification that we can now detect
+consists of the collections (from 700 B.C.) ascribed to mythical or
+semi-mythical personages like Lycurgus, Zaleucus, Charondas, and
+Dracon,[73] and certain Roman kings.[74] That these existed the form
+of the saga shows, but of their real authors, the actual process of
+their codification, and their original contents even the Greeks of the
+Persian War period were ignorant.
+
+A second stratification, corresponding to Justinian’s code and to the
+“Reception” of Roman Law in Germany, is connected with the names of
+Solon (600), Pittacus (550), and others. Here the laws have already
+attained to a structure and are inspired by the city; they are
+described as “politeiai,” “nomoi,” in contrast to old “thesmai” and
+“rhetrai.”[75] In reality, therefore, we only know the history of
+_late_ Classical law. Now, why these sudden codifications? A mere look
+at these names shows that at bottom they were not processes of putting
+down the results of pure experience, but _decisions of political power
+problems_.
+
+It is a grave error to suppose that a law that surveys all things
+evenly and without being influenced by political and economic
+interests can exist at all. Such a state of things can be pictured,
+and is always being pictured, by those who suppose that the imagining
+of political possibilities is a political activity. But nothing
+alters the fact that such a law, born of abstractions, does not
+exist in real history. Always the law contains in abstract form the
+world-picture of its author, and every historical world-picture
+contains a political-economic _tendency_ dependent, not upon what
+this man or that thinks, but upon what is practically intended by the
+class which in fact commands the power and, with it, the legislation.
+Every law is established by a class in the name of the generality.
+Anatole France once said that “our law in majestic equality forbids
+the rich no less than the poor to steal bread and to beg in the
+street.”[76] A one-sided justice no doubt. But equally the other
+side will always try to win sole authority for laws derived from
+_its_ outlook upon life. These legislative codes are one and all
+political acts, and party-political acts at that--in the case of
+Solon a democratic constitution (πολιτεία) combined with private laws
+(νομοί) of the same stamp, in that of Dracon and the Decemvirs[77]
+an oligarchic constitution fortified by private law. It was left
+to Western historians, accustomed to their own durable law, to
+undervalue the importance of this connexion; Classical man was under
+no misapprehension as to what really happened in these cases. The
+product of the Decemvirs was in Rome the last code of purely patrician
+character. Tacitus calls it the end of right law (“_finis æqui juris_,”
+_Annals_, III, 27). For, just as the fall of the Decemvirs was followed
+very significantly by the rise of another Ten, the Tribunes, so
+immediately the _jus_ of the Twelve Tables and the constitution on
+which it was founded began to be attacked by the undermining process
+of the _lex rogata_ (people’s law), which set itself with Roman
+constancy to do what Solon had achieved in one act in the case of
+Dracon’s work, the πατρίος πολιτεία which was the law-ideal of the
+Attic oligarchy. Thenceforward Dracon and Solon were the “slogans”
+in the long battle between Oligarchy and Demos, which in Rome meant
+Senate and Tribunate. The Spartan constitution associated with the
+name “Lycurgus” not only stood for the ideal of Dracon and the Twelve
+Tables, but concreted it. We can see, parallel with the closely related
+course of events in Rome, the tendency of the two Spartan kings to
+evolve from the condition of Tarquinian tyrants to that of tribunes of
+the Gracchan kind; the fall of the last Tarquins or the institution
+of the Decemvirs--a _coup d’état_ of one kind or another against the
+tribunician tendency[78]--corresponds more or less to the fall of
+Cleomenes (488) and of Pausanias (470); and the revolution of Agis III
+and Cleomenes III (about 240) aligns itself with the political activity
+of C. Flaminius, which began only a few years later. But never in
+Sparta were the kings able to achieve any thorough-going success over
+the senatorial element represented by the Ephors.
+
+In the period of these struggles, Rome had become a megalopolis of the
+late-Classical type. The rustic instincts were more and more pushed
+back by the intelligence of the city.[79] Consequently from about 350
+we find side by side with the _lex rogata_ of the people the _lex
+data_, the administrative law, of the prætor. With this the Twelve
+Tables idea drops out of the contest and it is the prætor’s edict that
+becomes the football of the party battle.
+
+It did not take long for the prætor to become the centre of both
+legislation and judicial practice. And presently, corresponding to the
+political extension of the city’s power, the jurisdiction of the prætor
+and the field of his _jus civile_--the law of the citizens--begin
+to diminish in significance and the peregrin prætor with his _jus
+gentium_--the law of the alien--steps into the foreground. And when
+finally the whole population of the Classical world, save the small
+part possessing Roman citizenship, was comprised in the field of this
+alien law, the _jus peregrinum_ of the city of Rome became practically
+an imperial law. All other cities--and even Alpine tribes and migrant
+Bedouin clans were _civitates_ from the administrative point of
+view--retained their local laws only as supplements, not alternatives,
+to the peregrin law of Rome.
+
+It marked the close of Classical law-making, therefore, when Hadrian
+(about A.D. 130) introduced the _Edictum perpetuum_, which gave final
+form to the well-established corpus of the annual pronouncements of the
+prætors and forbade further modifications thereof. It was still, as
+before, the prætor’s duty to publish the “law of his year,” but, even
+though this law had no greater degree of validity than corresponded to
+his administrative powers and was not the law of the Empire, he was
+obliged thenceforth to stick to the established text.[80] It is the
+very symbol of the petrified “Late” Civilization.[81]
+
+With the Hellenistic age began jurisprudence, the _science_ of law,
+the systematic comprehension of the law which men actually apply.
+Since legal thought presupposes a substance of political and economic
+relations, in the same way as mathematical thought presupposes physical
+and technical elements of knowledge,[82] Rome very soon became _the
+home of Classical jurisprudence_. Similarly in the Mexican world it
+was the conquering Aztecs whose academies (e.g., Tezcuco) made law
+the chief subject of study. Classical jurisprudence was the Roman’s
+science, and his only one. At the very moment when the creative
+mathematic closes off with Archimedes, juristic literature begins
+with Ælius’s _Tripertita_, a commentary on the Twelve (198 B.C.).[83]
+The first systematic private law was written by M. Scævola about
+100. The genuine maturity of Classical law is in the two centuries
+200-0--although we to-day, with quaint perversity, apply the time to a
+period which was really that of Early Arabian law. And from the relics
+of these two literatures we can measure the greatness of the gap that
+separates the thought of two Cultures. The Romans treat only of cases
+and their classification; they never analyse a basic idea such as,
+for instance, judicial error. They distinguish carefully the sorts of
+contracts, but they have no conception of Contract as an idea, or of
+any theories as to invalidity or unsoundness. “Taking everything into
+account,” says Lenel,[84] “it is clear that the Romans cannot possibly
+be regarded as exemplars of scientific method.”
+
+The last phase is that of the schools of the Sabiniani and Proculiani
+(Augustus to about 160 A.D.). They are scientific schools like the
+philosophical schools in Athens, and in them, possibly, the expiring
+stages of the conflict between the senatorial and the tribunician
+(Cæsarian) conceptions of law were fought, for amongst the best of
+the Sabiniani were two descendants of Cæsar’s slayers and one of the
+Proculiani was picked upon by Trajan as his potential successor. While
+the method was to all intents and purposes settled and concluded, the
+practical fusion of the citizen’s statute-law (_jus civile_) and the
+prætor’s edict (_jus honorarium_) was carried out here.
+
+The last landmark of Classical jurisprudence, so far as we know, was
+the _Institutes_ of Gaius (about 161).
+
+_Classical law is a law of bodies._ In the general stock composing
+the world it distinguishes bodily Persons and bodily Things and, like
+a sort of Euclidean mathematic of public life, establishes ratios
+between them. The affinity between mathematical and legal thought is
+very close. The intention, in both, is to take the prima facie data, to
+separate out the sensuous-incidental, and to find the intellectually
+basic principle--the _pure_ form of the object, the _pure_ type of
+the situation, the _pure_ connexity of cause and effect. Life, in
+the Classical, presents itself to the critical waking-consciousness
+of the Classical man in a form penetrated with Euclidean character,
+and the image that is generated in the legal mind is one of bodies,
+of positional relations between bodies, and of reciprocal effects of
+bodies by contact and reaction--just as with Democritus’s atoms. It is
+juristic statics.[85]
+
+
+V
+
+The first creation of “Arabian” law was _the concept of the incorporeal
+person_.
+
+Here is an element entirely absent in Classical law,[86] and appearing
+quite suddenly in the “Classical” jurists (who were all Aramæans),
+which cannot be estimated at its full value, or in its symbolic
+importance as an index of the new world-feeling, unless we realize the
+full extent of the field that this Arabian law covered.
+
+The new landscape embraces Syria and northern Mesopotamia, southern
+Arabia and Byzantium. In all these regions a new law was coming into
+being, an oral or written customary law of the same “early” type
+as that met with in the _Sachsenspiegel_. Wonderfully, the _law of
+individual cities_ which is so self-evident on Classical ground is
+here silently transmuted into a _law of creed-communities_. It is
+Magian, magic, through and through. Always _one_ Pneuma, _one_ like
+spirit, _one_ identical knowledge and comprehension of whole and
+sole truth, welds the believers of the same religion into a unit
+of will and action, _into one juristic person_. A juristic person
+is thus a collective entity which has intentions, resolutions, and
+responsibilities as an entity. In Christianity we see the idea already
+actual and effective in the primitive community at Jerusalem,[87] and
+presently it soars to the conception of a triune Godhead of three
+Persons.[88]
+
+Before Constantine, even, the Late Classical law of imperial decrees
+(_constitutiones, placita_) though the Roman form of city law was
+strictly kept, was genuinely a law for the _believers of the “Syncretic
+Church,”_[89] that mass of cults perfused by one single religiousness.
+In Rome itself, it is true, law was conceived of by a large part of
+the population as city-state law, but this feeling became weaker and
+weaker with every step towards the East. The fusion of the faithful
+into a single _jural community_ was effected in express form by the
+Emperor-cult, which was religious law through and through. In relation
+to this law Jews and Christians[90] were infidels who ensconced
+themselves with their own laws in another field of law. When in 212
+the Aramæan Caracalla, by the _Constitutio Antoniana_, gave Roman
+citizenship to all inhabitants except _dediticii_ peregrins,[91] the
+form of his act was purely Classical, and no doubt there were plenty of
+people who understood it in the Classical spirit--i.e., as literally
+an incorporation of the citizens of every other city in the city of
+Rome. But the Emperor himself conceived it quite otherwise. It made
+everyone subject to the “Ruler of the Faithful,” the head of the
+cult-religion venerated as _Divus_. With Constantine came the great
+change; he turned Imperial Caliph law on to the creed-community of
+Christianity in lieu of that of Syncretism, and thereby _constituted
+the Christian Nation_. The labels “devout” and “unbeliever” changed
+places. From Constantine onwards the quiet transformation of “Roman”
+law into _orthodox Christian law_ proceeded more and more decisively,
+and it was as such that converted Asiatics and Germans received and
+adopted it. Thus a perfectly new law came into being in old forms.
+According to the old marriage-law it was impossible for a Roman burgher
+to marry the daughter of, say, a Capuan burgher if legal community,
+_connubium_, was not in force between the two cities.[92] But now the
+question was whether a Christian or a Jew--irrespective of whether he
+was Roman, Syrian, or Moor--could legally marry an infidel. For in the
+Magian law-world there was no _connubium_ between those of different
+faiths. There was not the slightest difficulty about an Irishman
+in Constantinople marrying a Negress if both were Christians, but
+how could a Monophysite Christian marry a Nestorian maiden who was
+his neighbour in their Syrian village? Racially they were probably
+indistinguishable, but they belonged to legally different nations.
+
+This Arabian concept of nationality is a new and wholly decisive
+fact. The frontiers between “home” and “abroad” lay in the Apollinian
+world between every two towns, and in the Magian between every two
+creed-communities. What the “enemy,” the peregrin, was to the Roman,
+the Pagan was to the Christian, the Amhaarez to the Jew. What the
+acquisition of Roman citizenship meant for the Gaul or the Greek in
+Cæsar’s time, Christian baptism meant for him now--entry into the
+leading nation of the leading Culture.[93] The Persians of the Sassanid
+period no longer conceived of themselves, as their predecessors of
+Achæmenid times had done, as a unit by virtue of origin and speech, but
+as a unit of Mazdaist believers, _vis-à-vis_ unbelievers, irrespective
+of the fact that the latter might be of pure Persian origin (as
+indeed the bulk of the Nestorians were). So also with the Jews, and
+later the Mandæans and Manichæans, and later again the Monophysite
+and the Nestorian Christians--each body felt itself a nation, a legal
+community, a juristic person in a new sense.
+
+Thus there arises a group of Early Arabian laws, differentiated
+according to religions as decisively as Classical laws are
+differentiated according to cities. In the realm of the Sassanids
+schools arose for the teaching the Zoroastrian law proper to them; the
+Jews, who formed an exceedingly large portion of the population from
+Armenia to Sabæa, created their proper law in the Talmud, which was
+completed and closed some few years before the _Corpus Juris_. Each one
+of these Churches had its peculiar jurisdiction, independent of the
+geographical frontiers of the moment--as in the East to-day--and the
+judge representing the ground-lord judged only cases between parties
+of different faiths. The self-jurisdiction of the Jews within the
+Empire had never been contested by anyone, but the Nestorians and the
+Monophysites also began, very soon after their separation, to create
+and to apply laws of their own, and thus by a negative process--i.e.,
+by the gradual withdrawal of all heterodox communities--Roman imperial
+law came to be the law of the Christians who confessed the same creed
+as the Emperor. Hence the importance of the Roman-Syrian law-book,
+which has been preserved in several languages. It was probably[94]
+pre-Constantinian and written in the chancery of the Patriarch of
+Antioch; it is quite unmistakably Early Arabian law in Late Classical
+form, and, as its many translations indicate, it owed its currency to
+the opposition to the orthodox Imperial Church. It was without doubt
+the basis of Monophysite law, and it reigned till the coming of Islam
+over a field far larger than that of the _Corpus Juris_.
+
+The question arises, what in such a tapestry of laws could have been
+the real practical value of the part of them which was written in
+Latin? The law historians, with all the one-sidedness of the expert,
+have hitherto looked at this part alone and therefore have not yet
+realized that there is a problem here at all. Their texts were “Law”
+unqualified, the law that descended from Rome to us, and they were
+concerned only to investigate the history of these texts and not their
+real significance in the lives of the Eastern peoples. What in reality
+we have here is the highly civilized law of an aged Culture forced upon
+the springtime of a young one.[95] It came over as learned literature,
+and in the train of political developments which were quite other than
+they would have been had Alexander or Cæsar lived longer or had Antony
+won at Actium. We must look at Early Arabian law from the standpoint
+of Ctesiphon and not from that of Rome. The law of the distant West
+had long before reached inward fulfilment--could it be here more
+than a mere literature? What part did it play, if any, in the active
+law-study, law-making, and law-practice of this landscape? And, indeed
+we must further ask how much of Roman--or for that matter of Classical
+generally--is contained in this literature itself.[96]
+
+The history of this Latin-written law belongs after 160 to the Arabian
+East, and it says a great deal that it can be traced in exactly
+parallel courses into the history of Jewish, Christian, and Persian
+literature.[97] The “Classical” jurists (160-220), Papinian, Ulpian,
+and Paul, were Aramæans, and Ulpian described himself with pride as a
+Phœnician from Tyre. They came, therefore, from the same population as
+the Tannaim who perfected the Mishnah shortly after 200, and most of
+the Christian Apologists (Tertullian 160-223). Contemporary with them
+is the fixation of canon and text for the New Testament by Christian,
+for the Hebrew Old Testament by Jewish,[98] and for the Avesta by
+Persian, scholars. It is the high Scholasticism of the Arabian
+Springtime. The digests and commentaries of these jurists stand towards
+the petrified legal store of the Classical in exactly the same relation
+as the Mishnah to the Torah of Moses (and as, much later, the Hadith
+to the Koran)--they are “Halakhoth”[99]--a new customary law grasped
+in the forms of an authoritative and traditional law-material. The
+casuistic method is everywhere the same. The Babylonian Jews possessed
+a well-developed civil law which was taught in the academies of Sura
+and Pumbeditha. Everywhere a class of law-men formed itself--the
+_prudentes_ of the Christians, the rabbis of the Jews, later the ulemas
+(in Persian, mollahs) of the Islamic nation--who enunciated opinions,
+_responsa_ (Arabic, _Fetwa_). If the Ulema was acknowledged by the
+State, he was called “Mufti” (Byzantine, _ex auctoritate principis_).
+Everywhere the forms are exactly the same.
+
+About 200 the Apologists pass into the Fathers proper, the Tannaim
+into the Amoraim, the great casuists of juridical law (_jus_) into the
+exegetes and codifiers of constitutional law (_lex_). The constitutions
+of the Emperors, from 200 the sole source of new “Roman” law, are
+again a new “Halakhah” laid down over that in the jurists’ writings,
+and therefore correspond exactly to the Gemara, which rapidly evolved
+as an outlier of the Mishnah. The new tendencies reached fulfilment
+simultaneously in the _Corpus Juris_ and the Talmud.
+
+The opposition between _jus_ and _lex_ in Arabian-Latin usage comes
+to expression very clearly in the work of Justinian. Institutes and
+Digests are _jus_; they have essentially the significance of canonical
+texts. Constitutions and Novels are _leges_, new law in the form
+of elucidations. The canonical books of the New Testament and the
+traditions of the Fathers are related to one another in the same way.
+
+As to the Oriental character of the thousands of constitutions, no
+one now has any doubts. It is pure customary law of the Arabian world
+that the living pressure of evolution forced under the texts of
+the learned.[100] The innumerable decrees of the Christian rulers
+of Byzantium, of the Persian of Ctesiphon, of the Jewish (the
+Resh-Galuta[101]) in Babylonia, and finally of the Caliphs of Islam
+have all exactly the same significance.
+
+But what significance had the _other_ part of pseudo-Classical, the
+old jurists’, law? Here it is not enough to explain texts, and we
+must know what was the relation between texts, jurisprudence, and
+court decisions. It can happen that one and the same law-book is, in
+the waking-consciousness of two groups of peoples, equivalent to two
+fundamentally different works.
+
+It was not long before it became the habit, not to apply the old laws
+of the city of Rome to the fact-material of the given case, but to
+quote the jurists’ texts like the Bible.[102] What does this signify?
+For our Romanists it is a sign of decadence, but looked at from the
+view-point of the Arabian world, it is just the reverse--a proof that
+Arabian man did eventually succeed in making an alien and imposed
+literature inwardly his own, in the form admissible for his own
+world-feeling. With this the completeness of the opposition between the
+Classical and the Arabian world-feeling becomes manifest.
+
+
+VI
+
+Whereas the Classical law was made by burghers on the basis of
+practical experience, the Arabian came from God, who manifested
+it through the intellect of chosen and enlightened men. The Roman
+distinction between _jus_ and _fas_ (such as it was, for the content
+even of _fas_ had proceeded from human reflection) became meaningless.
+The law, of whatever kind, spiritual or secular, came into being, as
+stated in the first words of Justinian’s Digests, _Deo auctore_. The
+authoritativeness of Classical laws rests upon their success, that of
+the Arabian on the majesty of the name that they bear.[103] But it
+matters very considerably indeed in a man’s feelings whether he regards
+law as an expression of some fellow man’s will or as an element of the
+divine dispensation. In the one case he either sees for himself that
+the law is right or else yields to force, but in the other he devoutly
+acknowledges (“_Islam_” = to commit, devote). The Oriental does not ask
+to see either the practical object of the law that is applied to him or
+the logical grounds of its judgments. The relation of the cadi to the
+people, therefore, has nothing in common with that of the prætor to the
+citizens. The latter bases his decisions upon an insight trained and
+tested in high positions, the former upon a spirit that is effective
+and immanent in him and speaks through his mouth. But it follows from
+this that their respective relations to written law--the prætor’s
+to his edict, the cadi’s to the jurists’ texts--must be entirely
+different. It is a quintessence of concentrated experience that the
+prætor makes his own, but the texts are a sort of oracle that the cadi
+esoterically questions. It does not matter in the least to the cadi
+what a passage originally meant or why it was framed. He consults the
+words--_even the letters_--and he does so not at all for their everyday
+meanings, but for the _magic_ relations in which they must stand
+towards the case before him. We know this relation of the “spirit” to
+the “letter” from the Gnosis, from the early-Christian, Jewish, and
+Persian apocalyptic and mystical literature, from the Neopythagorean
+philosophy, from the Kabbalah; and there is not the slightest doubt
+that the Latin codices were used in exactly the same way in the minor
+judicial practice of the Aramæan world. The conviction that the letters
+contain secret meanings, penetrated with the Spirit of God, finds
+imaginative expression in the fact (mentioned above) that all religions
+of the Arabian world formed scripts of their own, in which the holy
+books had to be written and which maintained themselves with astounding
+tenacity as badges of the respective “nations” even after changes of
+language.[104]
+
+But even in law the basis of determining the truth by a majority
+of texts is the fact of the consensus of the spiritual elect, the
+_ijma_.[105] This theory Islamic science worked out to its logical
+conclusions. We seek to find the truth, each for himself, by personal
+pondering, but the Arabian savant feels for and ascertains the general
+conviction of his associates, which cannot err because the mind of God
+and the mind of the community are the same. If _consensus_ is found,
+truth is established. “_Ijma_” is the key of all Early Christian,
+Jewish, and Persian Councils, but it is the key, too, of the famous
+Law of Citations of Valentinian III (426), which the law-men have
+universally ridiculed without in the least understanding its spiritual
+foundations. The law limits the number of great jurists whose texts
+were allowed to be cited to five, and thus set up a canon--in the same
+sense as the Old and New Testaments, both of which also were summations
+of texts which might be cited as canonical. If opinions differed, the
+law of Valentinian laid it down that a majority should prevail, or if
+the texts were equally divided, the authority of Papinian.[106] The
+interpolation method, used on a large scale by Tribonian for the Digest
+of Justinian, is a product of this same outlook. A canonical text is
+in its very idea true and incapable of improvement. But the actual
+needs of the spirit alter, and so there grew up a technique of secret
+modifications which outwardly kept up the fiction of inalterability and
+which is employed very freely indeed in all religious writings of the
+Arabian world, the Bible included.
+
+After Mark Antony, Justinian is the most fateful personality of the
+Arabian world. Like his “contemporary” Charles V he ruined everything
+for which he was invoked. Just as in the West the Faustian dream of a
+resurrection of the Holy Roman Empire runs through all the political
+romanticism that darkened the sense of fact during and beyond the age
+of Napoleon--and even that of the princely fools of 1848--so also
+Justinian was possessed with a Quixotic urgency to recover the entire
+Imperium. It was always upon distant Rome instead of upon his proper
+world, the Eastern, that his eyes were fixed. Even before he ascended
+the throne, he was already in negotiation with the Pope of Rome, who
+was still subordinate to the great Patriarch of Christendom and not yet
+generally recognized even as _primus inter pares_. It was at the Pope’s
+instance that the dual-nature symbol was introduced at Chalcedon,[107]
+a step which lost the Monophysite countries wholly and for ever. The
+consequence of Actium was that Christianity in its first two decisive
+and formative centuries was pulled over into the West, into Classical
+territories, where the higher intellectual stratum held aloof. Then
+the Early Christian spirit rose afresh with the Monophysites and
+Nestorians. But Justinian thrust this revival back upon itself, and the
+result was that in the realms of Eastern Christianity the reformist
+movement, when in due course it appeared, was not a Puritanism but the
+_new religion_ of Islam. And in the same way, at the very moment when
+the Eastern customary law had become ripe for codification, he framed a
+Latin codex which, for language reasons in the East and for political
+reasons in the West, was condemned from the first to remain a literary
+product.
+
+The work itself, like the corresponding codes of Dracon and Solon, came
+into being at the threshold of a “Late” period, and with political
+intentions. In the West, where the fiction of a continuing _Imperium
+Romanum_ produced the utterly meaningless campaigns of Belisarius
+and Narses, Latin codes had been put together (about A.D. 500) by
+Visigoths, Burgundians and Ostrogoths for subjugated Romans, and so
+Byzantium must needs get out a genuine Roman code in opposition. In the
+East the Jewish nation has already settled its code, the Talmud, while,
+for the immense numbers of people who were subject to the Emperor’s
+law, a code proper for the Emperor’s own nation, the Christian, had
+become a necessity.
+
+For the _Corpus Juris_ with its topsy-turviness and its technical
+faults is, in spite of everything, an Arabic--in other words, a
+_religious_--creation, as evidenced in the Christian tendency
+of many interpolations;[108] in the fact that the constitutions
+relative to ecclesiastical law, which had been put at the end even
+in the Theodosian codex, were now placed at the beginning; and very
+markedly in the preambles of many of the Novels. Yet the book is not
+a beginning, but an end. Latin, which had long become valueless, now
+disappears completely from legal life (even the Novels are mostly in
+Greek), and with it the work so misguidedly written in that language.
+But the history of the law pursues the way that the Syrian-Roman
+law-book had indicated to it, and in the eighth century arrives
+at works in the mode of our eighteenth, such as the Ecloga of the
+Emperor Leo[109] and the Corpus of the great Persian jurist Archbishop
+Jesubocht.[110] In that time, too, came the greatest figure of Islamic
+jurisprudence, Abu Hanifah.
+
+
+VII
+
+The law-history of the West begins in total independence of Justinian’s
+creation. At that time it was in complete oblivion, so thoroughly
+unimportant, in fact, that of its main element, the Pandects (Digest),
+there was but one manuscript, which by accident (an unfortunate one)
+was discovered about 1050.
+
+The pre-Cultural phase, from about A.D. 500, had thrown up a series
+of Germanic tribal codes--the Visigothic, Ostrogothic, Burgundian,
+Frankish, and Lombard--which correspond to those of the Arabian
+pre-Culture that survives for us only in the Jewish[111] Deuteronomy
+(_c._ 621, more or less our Deuteronomy xii-xxvi) and Priestly History
+(_c._ 450, now represented by the second, third, and fourth books
+of the Pentateuch). Both are concerned with the values of basic
+significance for a primitive existence--family and chattels--and both
+make use, crudely, yet shrewdly, of an old and civilized law--the
+Jews (and no doubt the Persians and others) working upon the late
+Babylonian,[112] and the Germans upon some few relics of Urbs Roma.
+
+The political life of the Gothic springtime, with its peasant, feudal,
+and simple burgher laws, leads very soon to particular development
+in three great branches of law which have remained distinct to this
+day--and there has been no unifying comparative history of law in the
+West to probe the deep meaning of this development.
+
+The most important by far, owing to the political destinies in which it
+was involved, was the Norman law, which was borrowed from the Frankish.
+After the Conquest of England in 1066, this drove out the native Saxon,
+and since that day in England “the law of the great men has become the
+law of the whole people.” Its purely German spirit has developed it,
+without a catastrophe, from a feudal régime of unparalleled stringency
+into the institutions of the present day which have become law in
+Canada, India, Australia, South Africa, and the United States. Even
+apart from the extent of its power, it is the most instructive in
+West Europe. Its development, unlike that of the rest, did _not_ lie
+in the hands of theoretical jurists. The study of Roman law at Oxford
+was not allowed to touch practice; and at Merton in 1236 the higher
+nobility expressly rejected it. The Bench itself continued to develop
+the old law-material by means of creative precedents, and it was these
+practical decisions (“Reports”) that formed the basis of law-books such
+as that of Bracton.[113] Since then, and to this day, a statute law,
+kept living and progressive by the court decisions, and a common law,
+which always vividly underlies the legislation, exist side by side,
+without its ever becoming necessary for the representatives of the
+people to make single large efforts at codification.
+
+In the South, the law of the German-Roman codices above mentioned
+prevailed--in southern France the Visigothic (called the _droit écrit_
+in contrast to the Frankish _droit coutumier_ of the north), and in
+Italy the Lombard (which was the most important of them, was almost
+purely Germanic, and held its own till well into the Renaissance).
+Pavia became a study-centre for German law and produced about 1070 the
+“_Expositio_,” by far the greatest achievement of juridical science in
+the age, and immediately after it a code, the “_Lombarda_.”[114] The
+legal evolution of the entire South was broken off by Napoleon’s _Code
+Civil_, which took its place. But this in turn has become in all Latin
+lands and far beyond them the basis for further creative work--and
+hence, after the English, it is the most important.
+
+In Germany, the movement that set in so powerfully with the Gothic
+tribal laws (_Sachsenspiegel_, 1230; _Schwabenspiegel_, 1274) frittered
+itself away to nullity. A host of petty civic and territorial rights
+went on springing up until indignation with the facts induced an
+unreal political romanticism in dreamers and enthusiasts, the Emperor
+Maximilian among them, and law came under attack with the rest. The
+Diet of Worms in 1495 framed its “_Kammergerichtsordnung_”[115] after
+an Italian model. Now there was not only the “Holy Roman Empire” on
+German ground, but “Roman law” as German common-law. The old German
+procedures were exchanged for Italian. The judges had to study their
+law beyond the Alps, and obtained their experience not from the ambient
+life, but from a logic-chopping philology. In this country alone are to
+be found, later, the ideologues for whom the _Corpus Juris_ is an ark
+to be defended against the profanation of realities.
+
+What, in fact, was it that under the high-sounding name passed into
+the intellectual keeping of a handful of Gothic men? About 1100, at
+the University of Bologna, a German, Irnerius, had made that unique
+manuscript of the Pandects the object of a veritable Scholasticism.
+He transferred the Lombard method to the new text, “the truth of
+which, as a _ratio scripta_, was believed in as implicitly as the
+Bible and Aristotle.”[116] Truth!--but the Gothic understanding,
+tied to the Gothic life-content, was incapable even of distantly
+guessing at the spirit of these texts, for the principles fixed in
+them were the principles of a civilized and megalopolitan life.
+This school of the glossators, like Scholasticism in general, stood
+under the spell of concept-realism; as they held the genuine real,
+the substance of the world, to be not in things, but in universal
+concepts, so they maintained that the law was to be found not in custom
+and usage as displayed in the despised[117] _Lombarda_, but in the
+manipulation of abstract notions. Their interest in the book was purely
+dialectical[118]--never was it in their minds to apply their work to
+life. It was only after 1300, and then slowly, that their anti-Lombard
+glosses and summæ made their way into the cities of the Renaissance.
+The jurists of the Late Gothic, above all Bartolus, had fused canon
+and Germanic law into one whole with a definitely practical intention,
+and into it they brought ideas of actuality--here, as in Dracon’s code
+and the Imperial Edicts from Theodosius to Justinian, the actuality
+of a Culture that is on the threshold of its “Late” stage. It was
+_the creation of Bartolus that became effective_ in Spain and Germany
+as “Roman law”; only in France did the jurists of the Baroque, after
+Cujacius and Donellus, get back from the Scholastic to the Byzantine
+text.
+
+But Bologna witnessed, besides Irnerius’s achievement in abstraction,
+an event of quite other and decisive import--the famous Decretum
+of Gratian, written about 1140.[119] This created the Western
+_science of spiritual law_. For by bringing the old-Catholic,
+Magian, church-law,[120] founded in the Early-Arabian sacrament of
+baptism,[121] into a system, it provided the very form that the
+new-Catholic, Faustian Christianity needed for the jural expression of
+its own being, which reached back to the prime sacrament of an altar
+and a consecrated priesthood. With the _Liber extra_ of 1234 the main
+body of the _Corpus Juris Canonici_ is complete. What the Empire had
+failed to accomplish--the creation, out of the immense undeveloped
+profusion of tribal laws, of a general Western “_Corpus Juris
+Germanici_”--the Papacy achieved. There came into existence a complete
+private law, with sanctions and processes, produced with German method
+out of the ecclesiastical and secular law-material of the Gothic. This
+is the law called “Roman” which presently, after Bartolus, was infused
+into all study of the texts of Justinian themselves. And it shows us,
+in the domain of jurisprudence as elsewhere, that great dissidence,
+inherent in the Faustian, which produced the gigantic conflict between
+the Papacy and the Empire. The destruction between _fas_ and _jus_,
+impossible in the Arabian world, was inevitable in the Western. They
+are two expressions of a will-to-power over the infinite, but the will
+behind “temporal” legislation is rooted in custom and lays hands on
+the generations of the future, while that of “spiritual” originates in
+mystical certainty and pronounces a timeless and eternal law.[122] This
+battle between equally matched opponents has never yet been ended, and
+it is visible even to-day in our law of marriage, with its opposition
+of the ecclesiastical and the civil wedding.
+
+With the dawn of the Baroque, life, having by that time assumed urban
+and money-economic forms, begins to demand a law like that of the
+Classical city-states after Solon. The purpose of the prevailing law
+was now perfectly clear. But it was a fateful legacy from the Gothic
+that the creation of “the law inborn in us” was looked upon as the
+privilege of a learned class, and this privilege no one succeeded in
+shaking.
+
+Urban rationalism turned, as in the case of the Sophists and the
+Stoics, to busy itself with the “law of nature,” from its foundation
+by Oldendorp and Bodinus to its destruction by Hegel. In England the
+great Coke successfully defended Germanic self-developing practical law
+against the last attempts of the Tudors to introduce Pandect law. But
+on the Continent the systems of the learned evolved in _Roman_ forms
+right down to the state codes of Germany and the schemes of the _Ancien
+Régime_ in France on which the Code Napoléon was based. And therefore
+Blackstone’s _Commentaries on the Laws of England_ (1765) is the one
+purely Germanic Code, and it appeared when the Faustian Culture had
+already reached the threshold of its Civilization.
+
+
+VIII
+
+With this I reach the objective and look around me. I see three
+law-histories, connected merely by the elements of verbal and
+syntactical form, taken over by one from another, voluntarily or
+perforce, but never revealing to the new user the nature of the alien
+being which underlay them. Two of these histories are complete. The
+third is that in which we ourselves are standing--standing, too, at a
+decisive point where we embark in our turn upon the big constructive
+task that Rome and Islam, each for itself and in its season, have
+accomplished before us.
+
+What has “Roman” law been for us hitherto? What has it spoilt? What can
+it be for us in the future?
+
+All through our legal history runs, as basic motive, the conflict
+between book and life. The Western book is not an oracle or magician’s
+text with Magian under-sense, but _a piece of preserved history_. It
+is compressed Past that wants to become Future, through us who read it
+and in whom its content lives anew. Faustian man does not aim, like
+Classical man, at bringing his life to a self-contained perfection,
+but at carrying on a life that emerged long before him and will draw
+to its end long after him. For Gothic man--so far as he reflected
+about himself at all--the question was not whether he should look for
+linkages of his being and history, but in what direction to look for
+them. He required a past in order to find meaning and depth in the
+present. On the spiritual side the past which presented itself to him
+was ancient Israel; on the mundane it was ancient Rome, whose relics
+he saw all about him. What was revered was revered not because it was
+great, but because it was old and distant. If these men had known
+Egypt, they would hardly have noticed Rome, and the language of our
+Culture would have developed differently.
+
+As it was a Culture of books and readers, Classical texts were
+“received” in any and every field as Roman law was “received” in
+Germany, and their further development assumed the form of a slow and
+unwilling self-emancipation. “Reception” of Aristotle, of Euclid, of
+the _Corpus Juris_, means in this Culture (in the Magian East it was
+different) discovering a ready-made vessel for our own thought a great
+deal too soon, with the result of making a historically built kind of
+man into a slave of concepts. The alien life-feeling, of course, did
+not and could not enter into his thought, but it was a hindrance to his
+own life-feeling’s development of an unconstrained speech of its own.
+
+Now, legal thought is forced to attach itself to something
+tangible--there must be something before it can abstract its
+concepts; it must have something from which to abstract. And it was
+the misfortune of Western jurisprudence that, instead of quarrying
+in strong, firm custom of social and economic life, it abstracted
+prematurely and in a hurry from Latin writings. The Western jurist
+became a philologist, and practical experience of life was replaced by
+scholarly experience in the purely logical separation and disposition
+of legal concepts on self-contained foundations.
+
+Owing to this, we have been completely cut off from touch with the
+fact that _private law is meant to represent the social and economic
+existence of its period_. Neither the Code Napoléon nor the Prussian
+Landrecht, neither Grotius nor Mommsen, was definitely conscious
+of this fact. Neither in the training of the legal profession nor
+in its literature do we detect the slightest inkling of this--the
+genuine--“source” of valid law.
+
+And consequently we possess a private law that rests on the shadowy
+foundations of _the Late Classical economy_. The intense embitterment
+which, in these beginnings of our Civilization’s economy, opposes the
+name of Capitalism to the name of Socialism comes very largely from the
+fact that scholarly jurisprudence, and under its influence educated
+thought generally, have tied up such all-important notions as person,
+thing, and property to the conditions and the dispositions of Classical
+life. The book puts itself between the facts and the perception
+of them. The learned--meaning thereby the book-learned--weigh up
+everything to this day in scales that are essentially Classical. The
+man who is merely active and not trained to judgment feels himself
+misunderstood. He sees the contradiction between the life of the times
+and the law’s outlook upon it, and calls for the heads of those who--to
+gain their private ends, as he thinks--have promoted this opposition.
+
+Again the question is: By whom and for whom is Western law made? The
+Roman prætor was a landowner, a military officer, a man experienced in
+administrative and financial questions; and it was just this experience
+that was held to qualify him for the inseparable functions of expounder
+and maker of the law. The peregrin prætor developed his aliens’ law
+as a law of commercial intercourse adapted to the Late Classical
+megalopolis--without plan, without tendency, out of the cases that came
+before him and nothing else.
+
+But the Faustian will-to-duration demands a book, something valid “for
+evermore,”[123] a system that is intended to provide in advance for
+every possible case, and this book, a work of learning, necessarily
+called for a scholarly class of jurists and judges--the doctors of the
+faculties, the old German legal families, and the French “_noblesse de
+robe_.” The English judges, who number hardly over a hundred,[124] are
+drawn indeed from an upper class of advocates (the “barristers”), but
+they actually rank above many members of the Government.
+
+A scholar-class is alien to the world, and despises experience that
+does not originate in thought. Inevitably conflict arises between the
+“state of knowledge” as the scholar will accept it and the flowing
+custom of practical life. That manuscript of the Pandect of Irnerius
+became, and for centuries remained, the “world” in which learned
+jurists lived. Even in England, where there are no law faculties (in
+the European sense), it was exclusively the legal profession that
+controlled further growth, so that even here the development of legal
+ideas diverged from the development of general life.
+
+Thus what we have hitherto called juristic science is in fact either
+the philology of law-language, or the scholarship of law-ideas. It is
+now the only science that still continues to deduce the meaning of
+life from “eternally valid” principles. “The German jurisprudence of
+to-day,” says Sohm,[125] “represents very largely indeed an inheritance
+from mediæval Scholasticism. We have not yet begun to consider in deep
+earnest the bearing of the basic values of the _actual_ life about us
+upon legal theory. We do not even yet know what these values are.”
+
+Here, then, is the task that German thought of the future has to
+perform. From the practical life of the present it has to develop the
+deepest principles of that life and elevate them into basic law-ideas.
+If our great arts lie behind us, our great jurisprudence is yet to come.
+
+For the work of the nineteenth century--however creative that century
+believed itself to be--was merely preparatory. _It freed us from the
+book of Justinian, but not from the concepts._ The ideologues of Roman
+law among scholars no longer count, but scholarship of the old cast
+remains. It is another kind of jurisprudence that is needed now to free
+us from the schematism of these concepts. Philological expertness must
+give place to social and economic.
+
+A glance at German civil and penal law will make the position clear.
+They are systems ringed with a chaplet of minor laws--it was impossible
+to embody the material of these in the main law. Conceptually, and
+therefore syntactically, that which could not be understood in terms
+of the Classical scheme separates itself from that which can be so
+understood.
+
+How was it that in 1900 the theft of electric power--after grotesque
+discussions as to whether the matter in dispute was a corporeal
+thing[126]--had to be dealt with under an _ad hoc_ statute? Why was
+it impossible to work the substance of patent law into the ensemble
+of the law about things? Why was copyright law unable conceptually to
+differentiate the intellectual creation, its communicable form the
+manuscript, and the objective product in print? Why, in contradiction
+with the law of things, had the artistic and the material property
+in a picture to be distinguished by separating acquisition of the
+original from acquisition of the right to reproduce it? Why is the
+misappropriation of a business idea or a scheme of organization
+unpunishable, and theft of the piece of paper on which it is set forth
+punishable? Because even to-day we are dominated by the Classical
+idea of the material thing.[127] We _live_ otherwise. Our instinctive
+experience is subject to _functional_ concepts, such as working
+power, inventiveness, enterprise, such as intellectual and bodily,
+artistic and organizing, energies and capacities and talents. In our
+physics (of which the theory, advanced though it is, is but a copy
+of our present mode of life) the old idea of a body has in principle
+ceased to exist--as in this very instance of electrical power. Why is
+our law conceptually helpless in the presence of the great facts of
+modern economics? Because _persons, too_, are known to it _only as
+bodies_.[128]
+
+If the Western jurisprudence took over ancient words, yet only the most
+superficial elements of the ancient meanings still adhered to them. The
+consistency of the text disclosed only the _logical_ use of the words,
+not the life that underlay them. No practice can reawaken the silent
+metaphysic of old jural ideas. No laws in the world make this last and
+deepest element explicit, because--just because--it is self-evident. In
+all of them the essential is tacitly presupposed; in application it is
+not only the formula but also, and primarily, the inexpressible element
+beneath it that the people inwardly understands and can practise.
+Every law is, to the extent that it would be impossible to exaggerate,
+customary law. Let the statute define the words; it is life that
+explains them.
+
+If, however, a scholars’ law-language of alien origin and alien scheme
+tries to bind the native and proper law, the ideas remain void and the
+life remains dumb. Law becomes, not a tool, but a burden, and actuality
+marches on, not with, but apart from legal history.
+
+And thus it is that the law-material that our Civilization needs fits
+only in externals, or even not at all, with the Classical scheme of the
+law-books, and for the purposes of our proper jurisprudence and our
+educated thought generally is still formless and therefore unavailable.
+
+Are persons and things, in the sense of present-day legislation,
+law-_concepts_ at all? No! They merely serve to draw the ordinary
+distinction, the zoölogical distinction, so to say, between man and the
+rest. But of old the whole metaphysic of Classical being adhered to
+the notion of “_persona_.” The distinction between man and deity, the
+essence of the Polis, of the hero, of the slave, the Cosmos of stuff
+and form, the life-ideal of Ataraxia, were the self-evident premisses,
+and these premisses have for us completely perished. In our thought
+the word “property” is tied up with the Classical _static_ definition,
+and consequently, in every application to the dynamism of our way
+of living it falsifies. We leave such definitions to the world-shy
+abstract professors of ethics, jurists, and philosophers and to the
+unintelligent debate of political doctrinaires--and this although the
+_whole_ understanding of the economic history of this day _rests upon
+the metaphysic of this one notion_.
+
+It must be emphasized then--and with all rigour--that Classical law
+was a law of _bodies_, while ours is a law of _functions_. The Romans
+created a juristic statics; our task is juristic dynamics. For us
+persons are not bodies, but units of force and will; and things are not
+bodies, but aims, means, and creations of these units. The Classical
+relation between bodies was positional, but the relation between
+forces is called action. For a Roman the slave was a thing which
+produced new things. A writer like Cicero could never have conceived of
+“intellectual property,” let alone property in a practical notion or in
+the potentialities of talent; for us, on the contrary, the organizer
+or inventor or promoter is _a generative force which works upon other,
+executive, forces_, by giving direction, aim, and means to their
+action.[129] Both belong to economic life, not as possessors of things,
+but as carriers of energies.
+
+The future will be called upon to transpose our entire legal thought
+into alignment with our higher physics and mathematics. Our whole
+social, economic, and technical life is waiting to be understood, at
+long last, in this wise. We shall need a century and more of keenest
+and deepest thought to arrive at the goal. And the prerequisite is a
+wholly new kind of preparatory training in the jurist. It demands:
+
+ 1. An immediate, extended, and practical experience in the economic
+ life of the present.
+
+ 2. An exact knowledge of the legal history of the West, with
+ constant comparison of German, English, and “Roman” development.
+
+ 3. Knowledge of Classical jurisprudence, not as a model for
+ principles of present-day validity, but as a brilliant example of
+ how a law can develop strong and pure out of the _practical life_
+ of its time.
+
+Roman law has ceased to be our source for principles of eternal
+validity. But the relation between Roman existence and Roman law-ideas
+gives it a renewed value for us. We can learn from it how we have to
+build up _our_ law out of _our_ experiences.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+CITIES AND PEOPLES
+
+(A)
+
+THE SOUL OF THE CITY
+
+
+About the middle of the second millennium before Christ, two worlds lay
+over against one another on the Ægean Sea. The one, darkly groping,
+big with hopes, drowsy with the intoxication of deeds and sufferings,
+ripening quietly towards its future, was the Mycenæan. The other, gay
+and satisfied, snugly ensconced in the treasures of an ancient Culture,
+elegant, light, with all its great problems far behind it, was the
+Minoan of Crete.
+
+We shall never really comprehend this phenomenon, which in these days
+is becoming the centre of research-interest, unless we appreciate the
+abyss of opposition that separates the two souls. The man of those days
+must have felt it deeply, but hardly “cognised” it. I see it before
+me: the humility of the inhabitant of Tiryns and Mycenæ before the
+unattainable _esprit_ of life in Cnossus, the contempt of the well-bred
+of Cnossus for the petty chiefs and their followers, and withal a
+secret feeling of superiority in the healthy barbarians, like that of
+the German soldier in the presence of the elderly Roman dignitary.
+
+How are we in a position to know this? There are several such moments
+in which the men of two Cultures have looked into one another’s eyes.
+We know more than one “Inter-Culture” in which some of the most
+significant tendencies of the human soul have disclosed themselves.
+
+As it was (we may confidently say) between Cnossus and Mycenæ, so it
+was between the Byzantine court and the German chieftains who, like
+Otto II, married into it--undisguised wonder on the part of the knights
+and counts, answered by the contemptuous astonishment of a refined,
+somewhat pale and tired Civilization at that bearish morning vigour of
+the German lands which Scheffel has described in _Ekkehard_.[130]
+
+In Charlemagne the mixture of a primitive human spirituality, on the
+threshold of its awakening, with a superposed Late intellectuality,
+becomes manifest. Certain characteristics of his rulership would
+lead us to name him the Caliph of Frankistan, but on his other side
+he is but the chief of a Germanic tribe; and it is the mingling of
+the two that makes him symbolic, in the same way as the form of
+the Aachen palace-chapel--no longer mosque, not yet cathedral. The
+Germanic-Western pre-Culture meanwhile is moving on, but slowly and
+underground, for that sudden illumination which we most ineptly call
+the Carolingian Renaissance is a ray from Baghdad. It must not be
+overlooked that the period of Charles the Great is an episode of the
+surface, ending, as accidentals do end, without issue. After 900, after
+a new deep depression, there begins something really new, something
+having the telling force of a Destiny and the depth that promises
+duration. But in 800 it was the sun of the Arabian Civilization passing
+on from the world-cities of the East to the countryside of the West.
+Even so the sunshine of Hellenism had spread to the distant Indus.[131]
+
+That which stands on the hills of Tiryns and Mycenæ is _Pfalz_ and
+_Burg_ of root-Germanic type. The palaces of Crete--which are not
+kings’ castles, but huge cult-buildings for a crowd of priests and
+priestesses--are equipped with megalopolitan--nay, Late-Roman--luxury.
+At the foot of those hills were crowded the huts of yeoman and vassals,
+but in Crete (Gournia, Hagia Triada) the excavation of towns and villas
+has shown that the requirements were those of high civilization,
+and the building-technique that of a long experience, accustomed to
+catering for the most pampered taste in furniture and wall-decoration,
+and familiar with lighting, water-circulation, staircases, and
+suchlike problems.[132] In the one, the plan of the house is a strict
+life-symbol; in the other, the expression of a refined utilitarianism.
+Compare the Kamares vases and the frescoes of smooth stucco with
+everything that is genuinely Mycenæan--they are, through and through,
+the product of an industrial art, clever and empty, and not of any
+grand and deep art of heavy, clumsy, but forceful symbolism like that
+which in Mycenæ was ripening towards the geometric style. It is, in a
+word, not a style but a taste.[133] In Mycenæ was housed a primitive
+race which chose its sites according to soil-value and facilities for
+defence, whereas the Minoan population settled in business foci, as may
+be observed very clearly in the case of Philakopi on Melos which was
+established for the export trade in obsidian. A Mycenæan palace is a
+promise, a Minoan something that is ending. But it was just the same in
+the West about 800--the Frankish and Visigothic farms and manor-houses
+stretched from the Loire to the Ebro, while south of them lay the
+Moorish castles, villas, and mosques of Cordova and Granada.
+
+It is surely no accident that the peak of this Minoan luxury coincides
+with the period of the great Egyptian revolution, and particularly the
+Hyksos time (1780-1580 B.C.).[134] The Egyptian craftsmen may well
+have fled in those days to the peaceful islands and even as far as
+the strongholds of the mainland, as in a later instance the Byzantine
+scholars fled to Italy. For it is axiomatic that the Minoan Culture is
+a part of the Egyptian, and we should be able to realize this more
+fully were it not that the part of Egypt’s art-store which would have
+been decisive in this connexion--viz.: what was produced in the Western
+Delta--has perished from damp. We only know the Egyptian Culture in so
+far as it flourished on the dry soil of the south, but it has long been
+admitted as certain that the centre of gravity of its evolution lay
+elsewhere.
+
+It is not possible to draw a strict frontier between the late Minoan
+and the young Mycenæan art. Throughout the Egyptian-Cretan world we
+can observe a highly modern fad for these alien and primitive things,
+and vice versa the war-band kings of the mainland strongholds stole
+or bought Cretan _objets d’art_ wherever and however they could come
+by them, admiring and imitating--even as the style of the Migrations,
+once supposed to be, and prized as, proto-German, borrows the whole
+of its form-language from the East.[135] They had their palaces
+and tombs built and decorated by captive or invited craftsmen. The
+“Treasure-house” (Tomb) of Atreus in Mycenæ, therefore, is exactly
+analogous to the tomb of Theoderich at Ravenna.
+
+In this regard Byzantium itself is a marvel. Here layer after layer
+has to be carefully separated. In 326 Constantine, rebuilding on the
+ruins of the great city destroyed by Septimus Severus, created a _Late
+Classical cosmopolis_ of the first rank, into which presently streamed
+hoary Apollinism from the West and youthful Magism from the East. And
+long afterwards again, in 1096, it is a _Late Magian_ cosmopolis,
+confronted in its last autumn days with spring in the shape of Godfrey
+of Bouillon’s crusaders, whom that clever royal lady Anna Comnena[136]
+portrays with contempt. As the easternmost of the Classical West, this
+city bewitched the Goths; then, a millennium later, as the northernmost
+of the Arabian world, it enchanted the Russians. And the amazing Vasili
+Blazheny in Moscow (1554), the herald of the Russian pre-Culture,
+stands “between styles,” just as, two thousand years before, Solomon’s
+Temple had stood between Babylon the Cosmopolis and early Christianity.
+
+
+II
+
+Primeval man is a _ranging_ animal, a being whose waking-consciousness
+restlessly feels its way through life, all microcosm, under no
+servitude of place or home, keen and anxious in its senses, ever alert
+to drive off some element of hostile Nature. A deep transformation
+sets in first with agriculture--for that is something _artificial_,
+with which hunter and shepherd have no touch. He who digs and ploughs
+is seeking not to plunder, but to _alter_ Nature. To plant implies,
+not to take something, but to produce something. _But with this, man
+himself becomes plant_--namely, as peasant. He roots in the earth that
+he tends, the soul of man discovers a soul in the countryside, and a
+new earth-boundness of being, a new feeling, pronounces itself. Hostile
+Nature becomes the friend; earth becomes _Mother_ Earth. Between
+sowing and begetting, harvest and death, the child and the grain, a
+profound affinity is set up. A new devoutness addresses itself in
+chthonian cults to the fruitful earth that grows up along with man.
+And as completed expression of this life-feeling, we find everywhere
+the _symbolic shape of the farmhouse_, which in the disposition of
+the rooms and in every line of external form tells us about the blood
+of its inhabitants. The peasant’s dwelling is the great symbol of
+settledness. It is itself plant, thrusts its roots deep into its “own”
+soil.[137] It is _property_ in the most sacred sense of the word. The
+kindly spirits of hearth and door, floor and chamber--Vesta, Janus,
+Lares and Penates--are as firmly fixed in it as the man himself.
+
+This is the condition precedent of every Culture, which itself in
+turn grows up out of a mother-landscape and renews and intensifies
+the intimacy of man and soil. What his cottage is to the peasant,
+that the town is to the Culture-man. As each individual house has
+its kindly spirits, so each town has its tutelary god or saint. The
+town, too, is a plantlike being, as far removed as a peasantry is from
+nomadism and the purely microcosmic. Hence the development of a high
+form-language is linked always to a landscape. Neither an art nor a
+religion can alter the site of its growth; only in the Civilization
+with its giant cities do we come again to despise and disengage
+ourselves from these roots. Man as civilized, as _intellectual nomad_,
+is again wholly microcosmic, wholly homeless, as free _intellectually_
+as hunter and herdsman were free sensually. “_Ubi bene, ibi patria_”
+is valid _before_ as well as _after_ a Culture. In the not-yet-spring
+of the Migrations it was a Germanic yearning--virginal, yet already
+maternal--that searched the South for a home in which to nest its
+future Culture. To-day, at the end of this Culture, the rootless
+intellect ranges over all landscapes and all possibilities of thought.
+But between these limits lies the time in which a man held a bit of
+soil to be something _worth dying for_.
+
+It is a conclusive fact--yet one hitherto never appreciated--that
+all great Cultures are town-Cultures. Higher man of the Second
+Age is a town-tied animal. Here is the real criterion of
+“world-history” that differentiates it with utter sharpness from man’s
+history--_world-history is the history of civic man_. Peoples, states,
+politics, religion, all arts, and all sciences rest upon _one_ prime
+phenomenon of human being, the town. As all thinkers of all Cultures
+themselves live in the town (even though they may reside bodily in the
+country), they are perfectly unaware of what a bizarre thing a town is.
+To feel this we have to put ourselves unreservedly in the place of the
+wonder-struck primitive who for the first time sees this mass of stone
+and wood set in the landscape, with its stone-enclosed streets and its
+stone-paved squares--a domicile, truly, of strange form and strangely
+teeming with men!
+
+But the real miracle is the birth of the _soul_ of a town. A mass-soul
+of a wholly new kind--whose last foundations will remain hidden from
+us for ever--suddenly buds off from the general spirituality of its
+Culture. As soon as it is awake, it forms for itself a visible body.
+Out of the rustic group of farms and cottages, each of which has its
+own history, arises a _totality_. And the whole lives, breathes, grows,
+and acquires a face and an inner form and history. Thenceforward, in
+addition to the individual house, the temple, the cathedral, and the
+palace, the town-figure itself becomes a unit objectively expressing
+the form-language and style-history that accompanies the Culture
+throughout its life-course.
+
+It goes without saying that what distinguishes a town from a village is
+not size, but the presence of a soul. Not only in primitive conditions,
+such as those of central Africa, but in Late conditions too--China,
+India, and industrialized Europe and America--we find very large
+settlements that are nevertheless not to be called cities. They are
+centres of landscape; they do not inwardly form worlds in themselves.
+They have no soul. Every primitive population lives wholly as peasant
+and son of the soil--the being “City” does not exist for it. That which
+in externals develops from the village is not the city, but the market,
+a mere meeting-point of rural life-interests. Here there can be no
+question of a separate existence. The inhabitant of a market may be a
+craftsman or a tradesman, but he lives and thinks as a peasant. We have
+to go back and sense accurately what it means when out of a primitive
+Egyptian or Chinese or Germanic village--a little spot in a wide
+land--a city comes into being. It is quite possibly not differentiated
+in any outward feature, but spiritually it is _a place from which
+the countryside is henceforth regarded, felt, and experienced as
+“environs,”_ as something different and subordinate. From now on
+there are two lives, that of the inside and that of the outside, and
+the peasant understands this just as clearly as the townsman. The
+village smith and the smith in the city, the village headman and the
+burgomaster, live in two different worlds. The man of the land and the
+man of the city are different essences. First of all they feel the
+difference, then they are dominated by it, and at last they cease to
+understand each other at all. To-day a Brandenburg peasant is closer
+to a Sicilian peasant than he is to a Berliner. From the moment of
+this specific attunement, the City comes into being, and it is this
+attunement which underlies, as something that goes without saying, the
+entire waking-consciousness of every Culture.
+
+Every springtime of a Culture is _ipso facto_ the springtime of a new
+city-type and civism. The men of the pre-Culture are filled with a
+deep uneasiness in the presence of these types, with which they cannot
+get into any inward relation. On the Rhine and the Danube the Germans
+frequently, as at Strassburg, settled down at the gates of Roman cities
+that remained uninhabited.[138] In Crete the conquerors built, on the
+ruins of the burnt-out cities like Gournia and Cnossus--villages. The
+Orders of the Western pre-Culture, the Benedictines, and particularly
+the Cluniacs and Premonstratensians, settled like the knights on
+free land; it was the Franciscans and Dominicans who began to build
+in the Early Gothic city. There the new soul had just awakened. But
+even there a tender melancholy still adheres to the architecture,
+as to Franciscan art as a whole--an almost mystical fear of the
+individual in presence of the new and bright and conscious, which as
+yet was only dully accepted by the generality. Man hardly yet dared to
+cease to be peasant; the first to live with the ripe and considered
+alertness of genuine megalopolitans are the Jesuits. It is a sign that
+the countryside is still unconditionally supreme, and does not yet
+recognize the city, when the ruler shifts his court every spring from
+palace to palace. In the Egyptian Old Kingdom the thickly-populated
+centre of the administration was at the “White Wall” (Memphis), but the
+residences of the Pharaohs changed incessantly as in Sumerian Babylon
+and the Carolingian Empire.[139] The Early Chinese rulers of the Chóu
+dynasty had their court as a rule at Lo-Yang (the present Ho-nan-fu)
+from about 1160, but it was not until 770--corresponding to our
+sixteenth century--that the locality was promoted to be the permanent
+royal residence.[140]
+
+Never has the feeling of earth-boundness, of the plantwise-cosmic,
+expressed itself so powerfully as it did in the architecture of the
+petty early towns, which consisted of hardly more than a few streets
+about a market-place or a castle or a place of worship. Here, if
+anywhere, it is manifest that every grand style is itself plantlike.
+The Doric column, the Egyptian pyramid, the Gothic cathedral,
+_grow out of_ the ground, earnest, big with destiny, Being without
+waking-consciousness. The Ionic column, the buildings of the Middle
+Kingdom and those of the Baroque, calmly aware and conscious of
+themselves, free and sure, _stand on_ the ground. There, separated
+from the power of the land--cut off from it, even, by the pavement
+underfoot--Being becomes more and more languid, sensation and reason
+more and more powerful. Man becomes intellect, “free” like the
+nomads, whom he comes to resemble, but narrower and colder than they.
+“Intellect,” “_Geist_,” “_esprit_,” is the specific urban form of the
+understanding waking-consciousness. All art, all religion and science,
+become slowly intellectualized, alien to the land, incomprehensible to
+the peasant of the soil. With the Civilization sets in the climacteric.
+The immemorially old roots of Being are dried up in the stone-masses
+of its cities. And the free intellect--fateful word!--appears like a
+flame, mounts splendid into the air, and pitiably dies.
+
+
+III
+
+The new Soul of the City speaks a new language, which soon comes to
+be tantamount to the language of the Culture itself. The open land
+with its village-mankind is wounded; it no longer understands that
+language, it is nonplussed and dumb. All genuine style-history is
+played out in the cities. It is exclusively the city’s destiny and the
+life-experience of urban men that speaks to the eye in the logic of
+visible forms. The very earliest Gothic was still a growth of the soil
+and laid hold of the farmhouse with its inhabitants and its contents.
+But the Renaissance style flourished only in the Renaissance _city_,
+the Baroque only in the Baroque _city_--not to mention the wholly
+megalopolitan Corinthian column or Rococo. There was perhaps some quiet
+infiltration from these into the landscape; but the land itself was no
+longer capable of the smallest creative effort--only of dumb aversion.
+The peasant and his dwelling remained in all essentials Gothic, and
+Gothic it is to this day. The Hellenic _countryside_ preserved the
+geometric style, the Egyptian village the cast of the Old Kingdom.
+
+It is, above all, the expression of the city’s “visage” that has
+a history. The play of this facial expression, indeed, is almost
+the spiritual history of the Culture itself. First we have the
+little proto-cities of the Gothic and other Early Cultures, which
+almost efface themselves in the landscape, which are still genuine
+peasant-houses crowded under the shadow of a stronghold or a
+sanctuary, and without inward change become town-houses merely in
+the sense that they have neighbour-houses instead of fields and
+meadows around them. The peoples of the Early Culture gradually
+became town-peoples, and accordingly there are not only specifically
+Chinese, Indian, Apollinian, and Faustian town-forms, but, moreover,
+Armenian and Syrian, Ionian and Etruscan, German and French and English
+town-physiognomies. There is a city of Phidias, a city of Rembrandt,
+a city of Luther. These designations, and the mere names of Granada,
+Venice, and Nürnberg conjure up at once quite definite images, for all
+that the Culture produces in religion, art, and knowledge has been
+produced in such cities. While it was still the spirit of knights’
+castles and rural monasteries that evoked the Crusades, the Reformation
+is urban and belongs to narrow streets and steep-gabled houses. The
+great Epic, which speaks and sings of the blood, belongs to _Pfalz_
+and _Burg_, but the Drama, in which _awakened_ life tests itself, is
+city-poetry, and the great Novel, the survey of all things human by the
+_emancipated_ intellect, presupposes the world-city. Apart from really
+genuine folk-song, the only lyrism is of the city. Apart from the
+“eternal” peasant-art, there is only urban painting and architecture,
+with a swift and soon-ended history.
+
+And these stone visages that have incorporated in their light-world
+the humanness of the citizen himself and, like him, are all eye and
+intellect--how distinct the language of form that they talk, how
+different from the rustic drawl of the landscape! The silhouette of
+the great city, its roofs and chimneys, the towers and domes on the
+horizon! What a language is imparted to us through _one_ look at
+Nürnberg or Florence, Damascus or Moscow, Peking or Benares. What
+do we know of the Classical cities, seeing that we do not know the
+lines that they presented under the Southern noon, under clouds in the
+morning, in the starry night? The courses of the streets, straight or
+crooked, broad or narrow; the houses, low or tall, bright or dark,
+that in all Western cities turn their façades, _their faces_, and in
+all Eastern cities turn their backs, blank wall and railing, towards
+the street; the spirit of squares and corners, impasses and prospects,
+fountains and monuments, churches or temples or mosques, amphitheatres
+and railway stations, bazaars and town-halls! The suburbs, too, of
+neat garden-villas or of jumbled blocks of flats, rubbish-heaps and
+allotments; the fashionable quarter and the slum area, the Subura of
+Classical Rome and the Faubourg Saint-Germain of Paris, ancient Baiæ
+and modern Nice, the little town-picture like Bruges and Rothenburg
+and the sea of houses like Babylon, Tenochtitlan, Rome, and London!
+All this has history and _is_ history. One major political event--and
+the visage of the town falls into different folds. Napoleon gave to
+Bourbon Paris, Bismarck gave to worthy little Berlin, a new mien. But
+the Country stands by, uninfluenced, suspicious and irritated.
+
+In the earliest time the _landscape-figure alone_ dominates man’s eyes.
+It gives form to his soul and vibrates in tune therewith. Feelings
+and woodland rustlings beat together; the meadows and the copses
+adapt themselves to its shape, to its course, even to its dress.
+The village, with its quiet hillocky roofs, its evening smoke, its
+wells, its hedges, and its beasts, lies completely fused and embedded
+in the landscape. The country town _confirms_ the country, is an
+intensification of the picture of the country. It is the Late city
+that first defies the land, contradicts Nature in the lines of its
+silhouette, _denies_ all Nature. It wants to be something different
+from and higher than Nature. These high-pitched gables, these Baroque
+cupolas, spires, and pinnacles, neither are, nor desire to be, related
+with anything in Nature. And then begins the gigantic megalopolis,
+the _city-as-world_, which suffers nothing beside itself and sets
+about _annihilating_ the country picture. The town that once upon a
+time humbly accommodated itself to that picture now insists that it
+shall be the same as itself. _Extra muros_, chaussées and woods and
+pastures become a park, mountains become tourists’ view-points; and
+_intra muros_ arises an imitation Nature, fountains in lieu of springs,
+flower-beds, formal pools, and clipped hedges in lieu of meadows and
+ponds and bushes. In a village the thatched roof is still hill-like and
+the street is of the same nature as the baulk of earth between fields.
+But here the picture is of deep, long gorges between high, stony houses
+filled with coloured dust and strange uproar, and men dwell in these
+houses, the like of which no nature-being has ever conceived. Costumes,
+even faces, are adjusted to a background of stone. By day there is a
+street traffic of strange colours and tones, and by night a new light
+that outshines the moon. And the yokel stands helpless on the pavement,
+understanding nothing and understood by nobody, tolerated as a useful
+type in farce and provider of this world’s daily bread.
+
+It follows, however--and this is the most essential point of any--that
+we cannot comprehend political and economic history at all unless we
+realize that the city, with its gradual detachment from and final
+bankrupting of the country, is the determinative form to which the
+course and sense of higher history generally conforms. _World history
+is city history._
+
+An obvious case in point is, of course, the Classical world, in
+which the Euclidean feeling of existence connected the city-idea
+with its need of minimizing extension and thus, with ever-increasing
+emphasis, identified the State with the stone body of the individual
+Polis. But, quite apart from this instance, we find in every Culture
+(and very soon) the type of the _capital city_. This, as its name
+pointedly indicates, is that city whose spirit, with its methods,
+aims, and decisions of policy and economics, dominates the land. The
+land with its people is for this controlling spirit a tool and an
+object. The land does not understand what is going on, and is not
+even asked. In all countries of all Late Cultures, the great parties,
+the revolutions, the Cæsarisms, the democracies, the parliaments,
+are the form in which the spirit of the capital tells the country
+what it is expected to desire and, if called upon, to die for. The
+Classical forum, the Western press, are, essentially, intellectual
+engines of the ruling City. Any country-dweller who really understands
+the meaning of politics in such periods, and feels himself on their
+level, moves into the City, not perhaps in the body, but certainly in
+the spirit.[141] The sentiment and public opinion of the peasant’s
+country-side--so far as it can be said to exist--is prescribed and
+guided by the print and speech of the city. Egypt is Thebes, the _orbis
+terrarum_ is Rome, Islam is Baghdad, France is Paris. The history of
+every springtime phase is played out in the many small centres of many
+separate districts. The Egyptian nomes, the Greek peoples of Homer, the
+Gothic counties and free cities, were the makers of history of old.
+But gradually Policy gathers itself up into a very few capitals, and
+everything else retains but a shadow of political existence. Even in
+the Classical world, the atomizing tendency towards city-states did not
+hold out against the major movement. As early as the Peloponnesian War
+it was only Athens and Sparta that were really handling policy, the
+remaining cities of the Ægean being merely elements within the hegemony
+of the one or the other; of policies of _their own_ there is no longer
+any question. Finally it is the Forum of the City of Rome alone that
+is the scene of Classical history. Cæsar might campaign in Gaul, his
+slayers in Macedonia, Antony in Egypt, but, whatever happened in these
+fields, _it was from their relation to Rome that events acquired
+meaning_.
+
+
+IV
+
+All effectual history begins with the primary classes, nobility and
+priesthood, forming themselves and elevating themselves above the
+peasantry as such. The opposition of greater and lesser nobility,
+between king and vassal, between worldly and spiritual power, is the
+basic form of all primitive politics, Homeric, Chinese, or Gothic,
+until with the coming of the City, the burgher, the _Tiers État_,
+history changes its style. But it is exclusively in these classes as
+such, in their class-consciousness, that the whole meaning of history
+inheres. _The peasant is historyless._ The village stands outside
+world-history, and all evolution from the “Trojan” to the Mithridatic
+War, from the Saxon emperors to the World War of 1914, passes by these
+little points on the landscape, occasionally destroying them and
+wasting their blood, but never in the least touching their inwardness.
+
+The peasant is the eternal man, independent of every Culture that
+ensconces itself in the cities. He precedes it, he outlives it, a dumb
+creature propagating himself from generation to generation, limited
+to soil-bound callings and aptitudes, a mystical soul, a dry, shrewd
+understanding that sticks to practical matters, the origin and the
+ever-flowing source of the blood that makes world-history in the cities.
+
+Whatever the Culture up there in the city conceives in the way
+of state-forms, economic customs, articles of faith, implements,
+knowledge, art, he receives mistrustfully and hesitatingly; though
+in the end he may accept these things, never is he altered in kind
+thereby. Thus the West-European peasant outwardly took in all the
+dogmas of the Councils from the great Lateran to that of Trent, just
+as he took in the products of mechanical engineering and those of the
+French Revolution--but he remains what he was, what he already was
+in Charlemagne’s day. The present-day piety of the peasant is older
+than Christianity; his gods are more ancient than those of any higher
+religion. Remove from him the pressure of the great cities and he
+will revert to the state of nature without feeling that he is losing
+anything. His real ethic, his real metaphysic, which no scholar of
+the city has yet thought it worth while to discover, lie outside all
+religious and spiritual history, have in fact no history at all.
+
+The city is intellect. The Megalopolis is “free” intellect. It is
+in resistance to the “feudal” powers of blood and tradition that
+the burgherdom or bourgeoisie, the intellectual class, begins to be
+conscious of its own separate existence. It upsets thrones and limits
+old rights in the name of reason and above all in the name of “the
+People,” which henceforward means exclusively the people of the city.
+Democracy is the political form in which the townsman’s outlook upon
+the world is demanded of the peasantry also. The urban intellect
+reforms the great religion of the springtime and sets up by the side
+of the old religion of noble and priest, the new religion of the Tiers
+État, _liberal science_. The city assumes the lead and control of
+economic history in replacing the primitive values of the land, which
+are for ever inseparable from the life and thought of the rustic, by
+the _absolute idea of money_ as distinct from goods. The immemorial
+country word for exchange of goods is “barter”; even when one of the
+things exchanged is precious metal, the underlying idea of the process
+is not yet _monetary_--i.e., it does not involve the abstraction of
+value from things and its fixation in metallic or fictitious quantities
+intended to _measure_ things qua “commodities.” Caravan expeditions
+and Viking voyages in the springtime are made between land-settlements
+and imply barter or booty, whereas in the Late period they are made
+between cities and mean “money.” This is the distinction between the
+Normans before and the Hansa and Venetians after the Crusades,[142]
+and between the seafarers of Mycenæan times and those of the later
+colonization period in Greece. The City means not only intellect, but
+also money.[143]
+
+Presently there arrived an epoch when the development of the city
+had reached such a point of power that it had no longer to defend
+itself against country and chivalry, but on the contrary had become a
+despotism against which the land and its basic orders of society were
+fighting a hopeless defensive battle--in the spiritual domain against
+nationalism, in the political against democracy, in the economic
+against money. At this period the number of cities that really counted
+as historically dominant had already become very small. And with this
+there arose the profound distinction--which was above all a spiritual
+distinction--between the great city and the little city or town. The
+latter, very significantly called the country-town, was a part of the
+no longer co-efficient countryside. It was not that the difference
+between townsman and rustic had become lessened in such towns, but
+that this difference had become negligible as compared with the new
+difference between them and the great city. The sly-shrewdness of
+the country and the intelligence of the megalopolis are two forms of
+waking-consciousness between which reciprocal understanding is scarcely
+possible. Here again it is evident that what counts is not the number
+of inhabitants, but the spirit. It is evident, moreover, that in all
+great cities nooks remained in which relics of an almost rural mankind
+lived in their byeways much as if they were on the land, and the people
+on the two sides of the street were almost in the relation of two
+villages. In fact, a pyramid of mounting civism, of decreasing number
+and increasing field of view, leads up from such quasi-rural elements,
+in ever-narrowing layers, to the small number of genuine megalopolitans
+at the top, who are at home wherever their spiritual postulates are
+satisfied.
+
+With this the notion of money attains to full abstractness. It no
+longer merely _serves_ for the understanding of economic intercourse,
+but _subjects_ the exchange of goods to _its own_ evolution. It
+values things, no longer as between each other, but _with reference
+to itself_. Its relation to the soil and to the man of the soil has
+so completely vanished, that in the economic thought of the leading
+cities--the “money-markets”--it is ignored. Money has now become a
+power, and, moreover, a power that is wholly intellectual and merely
+figured in the metal it uses, a power the reality of which resides
+in the waking-consciousness of the upper stratum of an economically
+active population, a power that makes those concerned with it just as
+dependent upon itself as the peasant was dependent upon the soil. There
+is monetary thought, just as there is mathematical or juristic.
+
+But the earth is actual and natural, and money is abstract and
+artificial, a mere “category”--like “virtue” in the imagination of the
+Age of Enlightenment. And therefore every primary, pre-civic economy
+is dependent upon and held in bondage by the cosmic powers, the
+soil, the climate, the type of man, whereas money, as the pure form
+of economic intercourse within the waking-consciousness, is no more
+limited in potential scope by actuality than are the quantities of the
+mathematical and the logical world. Just as no view of facts hinders
+us from constructing as many non-Euclidean geometries as we please,
+so in the developed megalopolitan economics there is no longer any
+inherent objection to increasing “money” or to thinking, so to say, in
+other money-dimensions. This has nothing to do with the availability
+of gold or with any values in actuality at all. There is no standard
+and no sort of goods in which the value of the talent in the Persian
+Wars can be compared with its value in the Egyptian booty of Pompey.
+Money has become, for man as an economic animal, a form of the activity
+of waking-consciousness, having no longer any roots in Being. This is
+the basis of its monstrous power over every beginning Civilization,
+which is always an unconditional _dictatorship of money_, though taking
+different forms in different Cultures. But this is the reason, too,
+for the want of solidity, which eventually leads to its losing its
+power and its meaning, so that at the last, as in Diocletian’s time,
+it disappears from the thought of the closing Civilization, and the
+primary values of the soil return anew to take its place.
+
+Finally, there arises the monstrous symbol and vessel of the completely
+emancipated intellect, the world-city, the centre in which the course
+of a world-history ends by winding itself up. A handful of gigantic
+places in each Civilization disfranchises and disvalues the entire
+motherland of its own Culture under the contemptuous name of “the
+provinces.” The “provinces” are now everything whatsoever--land, town,
+_and_ city--except these two or three points. There are no longer
+noblesse and bourgeoisie, freemen and slaves, Hellenes and Barbarians,
+believers and unbelievers, _but only cosmopolitans and provincials_.
+All other contrasts pale before this one, which dominates all events,
+all habits of life, all views of the world.
+
+The earliest of all world-cities were Babylon and the Thebes of the
+New Empire--the Minoan world of Crete, for all its splendour, belonged
+to the Egyptian “provinces.” In the Classical the first example is
+Alexandria, which reduced old Greece at one stroke to the provincial
+level, and which even Rome, even the resettled Carthage, even
+Byzantium, could not suppress. In India the giant cities of Ujjaina,
+Kanauj, and above all Pataliputra were renowned even in China and Java,
+and everyone knows the fairy-tale reputation of Baghdad and Granada in
+the West. In the Mexican world, it seems, Uxmal (founded in 950) was
+the first world-city of the Maya realms, which, however, with the rise
+of the Toltec world-cities Tezcuco and Tenochtitlan sank to the level
+of the provinces.
+
+It should not be forgotten that the word “province” first appears
+as a constitutional designation given by the Romans to Sicily; the
+subjugation of Sicily, in fact, is the first example of a once
+pre-eminent Culture-landscape sinking so far as to be purely and
+simply an object. Syracuse, the first real great-city of the Classical
+world, had flourished when Rome was still an unimportant country town,
+but thenceforward, _vis-à-vis_ Rome, it becomes a provincial city.
+In just the same way Habsburg Madrid and Papal Rome, leading cities
+in the Europe of the seventeenth century, were from the outset of
+the eighteenth depressed to the provincial level by the world-cities
+of Paris and London. And the rise of New York to the position of
+world-city during the Civil War of 1861-5 may perhaps prove to have
+been the most pregnant event of the nineteenth century.
+
+
+V
+
+The stone Colossus “Cosmopolis” stands at the end of the life’s course
+of every great Culture. The Culture-man whom the land has spiritually
+formed is seized and possessed by his own creation, the City, and is
+made into its creature, its executive organ, and finally its victim.
+This stony mass is the _absolute_ city. Its image, as it appears with
+all its grandiose beauty in the light-world of the human eye, contains
+the whole noble death-symbolism of the definitive thing-become. The
+spirit-pervaded stone of Gothic buildings, after a millennium of
+style-evolution, has become the soulless material of this dæmonic
+stone-desert.
+
+These final cities are _wholly_ intellect. Their houses are no longer,
+as those of the Ionic and the Baroque were, derivatives of the old
+peasant’s house, whence the Culture took its spring into history.
+They are, generally speaking, no longer houses in which Vesta and
+Janus, Lares and Penates, have any sort of footing, but mere premises
+which have been fashioned, not by blood but by requirements, not by
+feeling but by the spirit of commercial enterprise. So long as the
+hearth has a pious meaning as the actual and genuine centre of a
+family, the old relation to the land is not wholly extinct. But when
+_that_, too, follows the rest into oblivion, and the mass of tenants
+and bed-occupiers in the sea of houses leads a vagrant existence from
+shelter to shelter like the hunters and pastors of the “pre-” time,
+then the intellectual nomad is completely developed. This city is a
+world, is _the_ world. Only as a whole, as a human dwelling-place, has
+it meaning, the houses being merely the stones of which it is assembled.
+
+Now the old mature cities with their Gothic nucleus of cathedral,
+town-halls, and high-gabled streets, with their old walls, towers,
+and gates, ringed about by the Baroque growth of brighter and more
+elegant patricians’ houses, palaces, and hall-churches, begin to
+overflow in all directions in formless masses, to eat into the
+decaying country-side with their multiplied barrack-tenements and
+utility buildings, and to destroy the noble aspect of the old time by
+clearances and rebuildings. Looking down from one of the old towers
+upon the sea of houses, we perceive in this petrification of a historic
+being the exact epoch that marks the end of organic growth and the
+beginning of an inorganic and therefore unrestrained process of massing
+without limit. And now, too, appears that artificial, mathematical,
+utterly land-alien product of a pure intellectual satisfaction in the
+appropriate, the city of the city-architect. In all Civilizations
+alike, these cities aim at the chessboard form, which is the symbol of
+soullessness. Regular rectangle-blocks astounded Herodotus in Babylon
+and Cortez in Tenochtitlan. In the Classical world the series of
+“abstract” cities begins with Thurii, which was “planned” by Hippodamus
+of Miletus in 441. Priene, whose chessboard scheme entirely ignores the
+ups and downs of the site, Rhodes, and Alexandria follow, and become
+in turn models for innumerable provincial cities of the Imperial Age.
+The Islamic architects laid out Baghdad from 762, and the giant city of
+Samarra a century later, according to plan.[144] In the West-European
+and American world the lay-out of Washington in 1791 is the first big
+example.[145] There can be no doubt that the world-cities of the
+Han period in China and the Maurya dynasty in India possessed this
+same geometrical pattern. Even now the world-cities of the Western
+Civilization are far from having reached the peak of their development.
+I see, long after A.D. 2000, cities laid out for ten to twenty million
+inhabitants, spread over enormous areas of country-side, with buildings
+that will dwarf the biggest of to-day’s and notions of traffic and
+communication that we should regard as fantastic to the point of
+madness.[146]
+
+Even in this final shape of his being, the Classical man’s form-ideal
+remains the corporeal point. Whereas the giant cities of our present
+confess our irresistible tendency towards the infinite--our suburbs
+and garden cities, invading the wide country-side, our vast and
+comprehensive network of roads, and within the thickly built areas
+a controlled fast traffic on, below, and above straight, broad
+streets--the genuine Classical world-city ever strove, not to expand,
+but to thicken--the streets narrow and cramped, impossible for fast
+traffic (although this was fully developed on the great Roman roads),
+entire unwillingness to live in suburbs or even to make suburbs
+possible.[147] Even at that stage the city must needs be a body, thick
+and round, σῶμα in the strictest sense. The synœcism that in the early
+Classical had gradually drawn the land-folk into the cities, and so
+created the type of the Polis, repeated itself at the last in absurd
+form; everyone wanted to live in the middle of the city, in its densest
+nucleus, for otherwise he could not feel himself to be the urban man
+that he was. All these cities are only _cités_, inner towns. The new
+synœcism formed, instead of suburban zones, _the world of the upper
+floors_. In the year 74 Rome, in spite of its immense population, had
+the ridiculously small perimeter of nineteen and a half kilometres
+[twelve miles].[148] Consequently these city-bodies extended in general
+not in breadth, but more and more upward. The block-tenements of Rome
+such as the famous Insula Feliculæ, rose, with a street breadth of only
+three to five metres [ten to seventeen feet][149] to heights that have
+never been seen in Western Europe and are seen in only a few cities
+in America. Near the Capitol, the roofs already reached to the level
+of the hill-saddle.[150] But always the splendid mass-cities harbour
+lamentable poverty and degraded habits, and the attics and mansards,
+the cellars and back courts are breeding a new type of raw man--in
+Baghdad and in Babylon, just as in Tenochtitlan and to-day in London
+and Berlin. Diodorus tells of a deposed Egyptian king who was reduced
+to living in one of these wretched upper-floor tenements of Rome.
+
+But no wretchedness, no compulsion, not even a clear vision of the
+madness of this development, avails to neutralize the attractive force
+of these dæmonic creations. The wheel of Destiny rolls on to its end;
+the birth of the City entails its death. Beginning and end, a peasant
+cottage and a tenement-block are related to one another as soul and
+intellect, as blood and stone. But “Time” is no abstract phrase, but a
+name for the actuality of Irreversibility. Here there is only forward,
+never back. Long, long ago the country bore the country-town and
+nourished it with her best blood. Now the giant city sucks the country
+dry, insatiably and incessantly demanding and devouring fresh streams
+of men, till it wearies and dies in the midst of an almost uninhabited
+waste of country. Once the full sinful beauty of this last marvel of
+all history has captured a victim, it never lets him go. Primitive folk
+can loose themselves from the soil and wander, but the intellectual
+nomad never. Homesickness for the great city is keener than any
+other nostalgia. Home is for him any one of these giant cities, but
+even the nearest village is alien territory. He would sooner die
+upon the pavement than go “back” to the land. Even disgust at this
+pretentiousness, weariness of the thousand-hued glitter, the _tædium
+vitæ_ that in the end overcomes many, does not set them free. They take
+the City with them into the mountains or on the sea. They have lost the
+country within themselves and will never regain it outside.
+
+What makes the man of the world-cities incapable of living on any but
+this artificial footing is that the cosmic beat in his being is ever
+decreasing, while the tensions of his waking-consciousness become
+more and more dangerous. It must be remembered that in a microcosm
+the animal, waking side supervenes upon the vegetable side, that of
+being, and not vice versa. Beat and tension, blood and intellect,
+Destiny and Causality are to one another as the country-side in bloom
+is to the city of stone, as something existing _per se_ to something
+existing dependently. Tension without cosmic pulsation to animate it
+is the transition to nothingness. But Civilization is nothing but
+tension. The head, in all the outstanding men of the Civilizations, is
+dominated exclusively by an expression of extreme tension. Intelligence
+is only the capacity for understanding at high tension, and in every
+Culture these heads are the types of its final men--one has only to
+compare them with the peasant heads, when such happen to emerge in
+the swirl of the great city’s street-life. The advance, too, from
+peasant wisdom--“slimness,” mother wit, instinct, based as in other
+animals upon the sensed beat of life--through the city-spirit to the
+cosmopolitan intelligence--the very word with its sharp ring betraying
+the disappearance of the old cosmic foundation--can be described
+as a steady diminution of the Destiny-feeling and an unrestrained
+augmentation of needs according to the operation of a Causality.
+Intelligence is the replacement of unconscious living by exercise in
+thought, masterly, but bloodless and jejune. The intelligent visage is
+similar in all races--what is recessive in them is, precisely, race.
+The weaker the feeling for the necessity and self-evidence of Being,
+the more the habit of “elucidation” grows, the more the fear in the
+waking-consciousness comes to be stilled by causal methods. Hence the
+assimilation of knowledge with demonstrability, and the substitution
+of scientific theory, the causal myth, for the religious. Hence,
+too, money-in-the-abstract as the pure causality of economic life,
+in contrast to rustic barter, which is pulsation and not a system of
+tensions.
+
+Tension, when it has become intellectual, knows no form of recreation
+but that which is specific to the world-city--namely, _détente_,
+relaxation, distraction. Genuine play, _joie de vivre_, pleasure,
+inebriation, are products of the cosmic beat and as such no longer
+comprehensible in their essence. But the relief of hard, intensive
+brain-work by its opposite--conscious and practised fooling--of
+intellectual tension by the bodily tension of sport, of bodily
+tension by the sensual straining after “pleasure” and the spiritual
+straining after the “excitements” of betting and competitions, of the
+pure logic of the day’s work by a consciously enjoyed mysticism--all
+this is common to the world-cities of all the Civilizations. Cinema,
+Expressionism, Theosophy, boxing contests, nigger dances, poker, and
+racing--one can find it all in Rome. Indeed, the connoisseur might
+extend his researches to the Indian, Chinese, and Arabian world-cities
+as well. To name but one example, if one reads the Kama-sutram one
+understands how it was that Buddhism _also_ appealed to men’s tastes,
+and then the bullfighting scenes in the Palace of Cnossus will be
+looked at with quite different eyes. A cult, no doubt, underlay
+them, but there was a savour over it all, as over Rome’s fashionable
+Isis-cult in the neighbourhood of the Circus Maximus.
+
+And then, when Being is sufficiently uprooted and Waking-Being
+sufficiently strained, there suddenly emerges into the bright light of
+history a phenomenon that has long been preparing itself underground
+and now steps forward to make an end of the drama--the _sterility of
+civilized man_. This is not something that can be grasped as a plain
+matter of Causality (as modern science naturally enough has tried to
+grasp it); it is to be understood as an essentially _metaphysical_
+turn towards death. The last man of the world-city no longer _wants_
+to live--he may cling to life as an individual, but as a type, as an
+aggregate, no, for it is a characteristic of this collective existence
+that it eliminates the terror of death. That which strikes the true
+peasant with a deep and inexplicable fear, the notion that the family
+and the name may be extinguished, has now lost its meaning. The
+continuance of the blood-relation in the visible world is no longer a
+duty of the blood, and the destiny of being the last of the line is no
+longer felt as a doom. Children do not happen, not because children
+have become impossible, but principally because intelligence at the
+peak of intensity can no longer find any reason for their existence.
+Let the reader try to merge himself in the soul of the peasant. He
+has sat on his glebe from primeval times,[151] or has fastened his
+clutch in it, to adhere to it with his blood. He is rooted in it as the
+descendant of his forbears and as the forbear of future descendants.
+_His_ house, _his_ property, means, here, not the temporary connexion
+of person and thing for a brief span of years, but an enduring and
+inward union of _eternal_ land and _eternal_ blood. It is only from
+this mystical conviction of settlement that the great epochs of
+the cycle--procreation, birth, and death--derive that metaphysical
+element of wonder which condenses in the symbolism of custom and
+religion that all land-bound people possess. For the “last men” all
+this is past and gone. Intelligence and sterility are allied in old
+families, old peoples, and old Cultures, not merely because in each
+microcosm the overstrained and fettered animal-element is eating up
+the plant element, but also because the waking-consciousness assumes
+that being is normally regulated by causality. That which the man
+of intelligence, most significantly and characteristically, labels
+as “natural impulse” or “life-force,” he not only knows, but also
+values, causally, giving it the place amongst his other needs that
+his judgment assigns to it. When the ordinary thought of a highly
+cultivated people begins to regard “having children” as a question
+of _pro’s_ and _con’s_, the great turning-point has come. For Nature
+knows nothing of _pro_ and _con_. Everywhere, wherever life is actual,
+reigns an inward organic logic, an “it,” a drive, that is utterly
+independent of waking-being, with its causal linkages, and indeed not
+even observed by it. The abundant proliferation of primitive peoples
+is a _natural phenomenon_, which is not even thought about, still
+less judged as to its utility or the reverse. When reasons have to
+be put forward at all in a question of life, life itself has become
+questionable. At that point begins prudent limitation of the number of
+births. In the Classical world the practice was deplored by Polybius
+as the ruin of Greece, and yet even at his date it had long been
+established in the great cities; in subsequent Roman times it became
+appallingly general. At first explained by the economic misery of the
+times, very soon it ceased to explain itself at all. And at that point,
+too, in Buddhist India as in Babylon, in Rome as in our own cities, a
+man’s choice of the woman who is to be, not mother of his children as
+amongst peasants and primitives, but his own “companion for life,”
+becomes a problem of mentalities. The Ibsen marriage appears, the
+“higher spiritual affinity” in which both parties are “free”--free,
+that is, as intelligences, free from the plantlike urge of the blood
+to continue itself, and it becomes possible for a Shaw to say “that
+unless Woman repudiates her womanliness, her duty to her husband, to
+her children, to society, to the law, and to everyone but herself,
+she cannot emancipate herself.”[152] The primary woman, the peasant
+woman, is _mother_. The whole vocation towards which she has yearned
+from childhood is included in that one word. But now emerges the Ibsen
+woman, the comrade, the heroine of a whole megalopolitan literature
+from Northern drama to Parisian novel. Instead of children, she has
+soul-conflicts; marriage is a craft-art for the achievement of “mutual
+understanding.” It is all the same whether the case against children
+is the American lady’s who would not miss a season for anything, or
+the Parisienne’s who fears that her lover would leave her, or an Ibsen
+heroine’s who “belongs to herself”--they all belong to themselves and
+they are all unfruitful. The same fact, in conjunction with the same
+arguments, is to be found in the Alexandrian, in the Roman, and, as a
+matter of course, in every other civilized society--and conspicuously
+in that in which Buddha grew up. And in Hellenism and in the nineteenth
+century, as in the times of Lao-Tzu and the Charvaka doctrine,[153]
+there is an ethic for childless intelligences, and a literature about
+the inner conflicts of Nora and Nana. The “quiverful,” which was
+still an honourable enough spectacle in the days of Werther, becomes
+something rather provincial. The father of many children is for the
+great city a subject for caricature; Ibsen did not fail to note it, and
+presented it in his _Love’s Comedy_.
+
+At this level all Civilizations enter upon a stage, which lasts for
+centuries, of appalling depopulation. The whole pyramid of cultural man
+vanishes. It crumbles from the summit, first the world-cities, then the
+provincial forms, and finally the land itself, whose best blood has
+incontinently poured into the towns, merely to bolster them up awhile.
+At the last, only the primitive blood remains, alive, but robbed of
+its strongest and most promising elements. This residue is the _Fellah
+type_.
+
+If anything has demonstrated the fact that Causality has nothing
+to do with history, it is the familiar “decline” of the Classical,
+which accomplished itself long before the irruption of Germanic
+migrants.[154] The Imperium enjoyed the completest peace; it was rich
+and highly developed; it was well organized; and it possessed in its
+emperors from Nerva to Marcus Aurelius a series of rulers such as the
+Cæsarism of no other Civilization can show. And yet the population
+dwindled, quickly and wholesale. The desperate marriage-and-children
+laws of Augustus--amongst them the _Lex de maritandis ordinibus_,
+which dismayed Roman society more than the destruction of Varus’s
+legions--the wholesale adoptions, the incessant plantation of
+soldiers of barbarian origin to fill the depleted country-side, the
+immense food-charities of Nerva and Trajan for the children of poor
+parents--nothing availed to check the process. Italy, then North Africa
+and Gaul, and finally Spain, which under the early Cæsars had been one
+of the most densely populated parts of the Empire, become empty and
+desolate. The famous saying of Pliny--so often and so significantly
+quoted to-day in connexion with national economics--“_Latifundia
+perdidere Italiam, jam, vero et provincias_,”[155] inverts the order
+of the process; the large estates would never have got to this point
+if the peasantry had not already been sucked into the towns and, if
+not openly, at any rate inwardly, surrendered their soil. The terrible
+truth came out at last in the edict of Pertinax, A.D. 193, by which
+anyone in Italy or the provinces was permitted to take possession of
+untended land, and if he brought it under cultivation, to hold it
+as his legal property. The historical student has only to turn his
+attention seriously to other Civilizations to find the same phenomenon
+everywhere. Depopulation can be distinctly traced in the background
+of the Egyptian New Empire, especially from the XIX dynasty onwards.
+Street widths like those to Amenophis IV at Tell-el-Amarna--of fifty
+yards--would have been unthinkable with the denser population of
+the old days. The onset of the “Sea-peoples,” too, was only barely
+repulsed--their chances of obtaining possession of the realm were
+certainly not less promising than those of the Germans of the fourth
+century _vis-à-vis_ the Roman world. And finally the incessant
+infiltration of Libyans into the Delta culminated when one of their
+leaders seized the power, in 945 B.C.--precisely as Odoacer seized
+it in A.D. 476. But the same tendency can be felt in the history of
+political Buddhism after the Cæsar Asoka.[156] If the Maya population
+literally vanished within a very short time after the Spanish conquest,
+and their great empty cities were reabsorbed by the jungle, this
+does not prove merely the brutality of the conqueror--which in this
+regard would have been helpless before the self-renewing power of a
+young and fruitful Culture-mankind--but an extinction from within
+that no doubt had long been in progress. And if we turn to our own
+civilization, we find that the old families of the French noblesse were
+not, in the great majority of cases, eradicated in the Revolution,
+but have died out since 1815, and their sterility has spread to
+the bourgeoisie and, since 1870, to the peasantry which that very
+Revolution almost re-created. In England, and still more in the United
+States--particularly in the east, the very states where the stock is
+best and oldest--the process of “race suicide” denounced by Roosevelt
+set in long ago on the largest scale.
+
+Consequently we find everywhere in these Civilizations that the
+provincial cities at an early stage, and the giant cities in turn
+at the end of the evolution, stand empty, harbouring in their stone
+masses a small population of fellaheen who shelter in them as the men
+of the Stone Age sheltered in caves and pile-dwellings.[157] Samarra
+was abandoned by the tenth century; Pataliputra, Asoka’s capital, was
+an immense and completely uninhabited waste of houses when the Chinese
+traveller Hsinan-tang visited it about A.D. 635, and many of the great
+Maya cities must have been in that condition even in Cortez’s time. In
+a long series of Classical writers from Polybius onward[158] we read of
+old, renowned cities in which the streets have become lines of empty,
+crumbling shells, where the cattle browse in forum and gymnasium, and
+the amphitheatre is a sown field,[159] dotted with emergent statues and
+herms. Rome had in the fifth century of our era the population of a
+village, but its Imperial palaces were still habitable.
+
+This, then, is the conclusion of the city’s history; growing from
+primitive barter-centre to Culture-city and at last to world-city,
+it sacrifices first the blood and soul of its creators to the needs
+of its majestic evolution, and then the last flower of that growth
+to the spirit of Civilization--and so, doomed, moves on to final
+self-destruction.
+
+
+VI
+
+If the Early period is characterized by the birth of the City out of
+the country, and the Late by the battle between city and country, the
+period of Civilization is that of the victory of city over country,
+whereby it frees itself from the grip of the ground, but to its own
+ultimate ruin. Rootless, dead to the cosmic, irrevocably committed
+to stone and to intellectualism, it develops a form-language that
+reproduces every trait of its essence--not the language of a becoming
+and growth, but that of a becomeness and completion, capable of
+alteration certainly, but not of evolution. Not now Destiny, but
+Causality, not now living Direction, but Extension, rules. It follows
+from this that whereas every form-language of a Culture, together with
+the history of its evolution, adheres to the original spot, civilized
+forms are at home anywhere and capable, therefore, of unlimited
+extension as soon as they appear. It is quite true that the Hanse Towns
+in their north-Russian staples built Gothically, and the Spaniards in
+South America in the Baroque style, but that even the smallest chapter
+of Gothic style-_history_ should _evolve_ outside the limits of West
+Europe was impossible, as impossible as that Attic or English drama,
+or the art of fugue, or the Lutheran or the Orphic religion should be
+propagated, or even inwardly assimilated, by men of alien Cultures.
+But the essence of Alexandrinism and of our Romanticism is something
+which belongs to all urban men without distinction. Romanticism marks
+the beginning of that which Goethe, with his wide vision, called
+world-literature--the literature of the leading world-_city_, against
+which a provincial literature, native to the soil but negligible,
+struggles everywhere with difficulty to maintain itself. The state of
+Venice, or that of Frederick the Great, or the English Parliament (as
+an effective reality), cannot be reproduced, but “modern constitutions”
+can be “introduced” into any African or Asiatic state as Classical
+Poleis could be set up amongst Numidians and ancient Britons. In
+Egypt the writing that came into common use was not the hieroglyphic,
+but the letter-script, which was without doubt a technical discovery
+of the Civilization Age.[160] And so in general--it is not true
+Culture-languages like the Greek of Sophocles or the German of Luther,
+but world-languages like the Greek Koine and Arabic and Babylonian and
+English, the outcome of daily practical usage in a world-city, which
+are capable of being acquired by anybody and everybody. Consequently,
+in all Civilizations the “modern” cities assume a more and more uniform
+type. Go where we may, there are Berlin, London, and New York for us,
+just as the Roman traveller would find his columnar architecture,
+his fora with their statuary, and his temples in Palmyra or Trier or
+Timgad or the Hellenistic cities that extended out to the Indus and
+the Aral. But that which was thus disseminated was no longer a style,
+but a taste, not genuine custom but mannerism, not national costume
+but the fashion. This, of course, makes it possible for remote peoples
+not only to accept the “permanent” gains of a Civilization, but even
+to re-radiate them in an independent form. Such regions of “moonlight”
+civilization are south China and especially Japan (which were first
+Sinized at the close of the Han period, about A.D. 220); Java as a
+relay of the Brahman Civilization; and Carthage, which obtained its
+forms from Babylon.
+
+All these are forms of a waking-consciousness now acute to excess,
+mitigated or limited by no cosmic force, purely intellectual and
+extensive, but on that very account capable of so powerful an output
+that their last flickering rays reach out and superpose effects over
+almost the whole earth. Fragments of the forms of Chinese Civilization
+are probably to be found in Scandinavian wood-architecture, Babylonian
+measures probably in the South Seas, Classical coins in South Africa,
+Egyptian and Indian influences probably in the land of the Incas.
+
+But while this process of extension was overpassing all frontiers,
+the development of inner form of the Civilization was fulfilling
+itself with impressive consistency. Three stages are clearly to be
+distinguished--the release from the Culture, the production of the
+thoroughbred Civilization-form, and the final hardening. For us this
+development has now set in, and, as I see it, it is Germany that is
+destined, as the last nation of the West, to crown the mighty edifice.
+In this stage all questions of the life--the Apollinian, Magian, or
+Faustian life--have been thought upon to the limit, and brought to a
+final clear condition of knowledge and not-knowledge. For or about
+ideas men fight no more. The last idea--that of the Civilization
+itself--is formulated in outline, and technics and economics are, as
+_problems_, enunciated and prepared for handling. But this is only
+the beginning of a vast task; the postulates have to be unfolded and
+these forms applied to the whole existence of the earth. Only when
+this has been accomplished and the Civilization has become definitely
+established not only in shape, but in mass, does the hardening of
+the form set in. Style, in the Cultures, has been the _rhythm of
+the process of self-implementing_. But the Civilized style (if we
+may use the word at all) arises as the _expression of the state of
+completeness_. It attains--in Egypt and China especially--to a splendid
+perfection, and imparts this perfection to all the utterances of a life
+that is now inwardly unalterable, to its ceremonial and mien as to the
+superfine and studied forms of its art-practice. Of history, in the
+sense of an urge towards a form-ideal, there can now be no question,
+but there is an unfailing and easy superficial adaptiveness which again
+and again manages to coax fresh little art-problems and solutions
+out of the now basically stable language. Of this kind is the whole
+“history” of Chinese-Japanese painting (as we know it) and of Indian
+architecture. And just as the real history of the Gothic style differs
+from this pseudo-history, so the Knight of the Crusades differs from
+the Chinese Mandarin--_the becoming state from the finished_. The one
+_is_ history; the other has long ago overcome history. “Long ago,” I
+say; for the history of these Civilizations is merely apparent, like
+their great cities, which constantly change in face, but never become
+other than what they are. In these cities there is no Soul. They are
+land in petrified form.
+
+What is it that perishes here? And what that survives? It is a mere
+incident that German peoples, under pressure from the Huns, take
+possession of the Roman landscape and so prevent the Classical from
+prolonging itself in a “Chinese” end-state. The movement of the
+“Sea-peoples” (similar to the Germanic, even down to the details) which
+set in against the Egyptian Civilization from 1400 B.C. succeeded
+only as regards the Cretan island-realm--their mighty expeditions
+against the Libyan and Phœnician coasts, with the accompaniment of
+Viking fleets, failed, as those of the Huns failed against China. And
+thus the Classical is our one example of a Civilization broken off
+in the moment of full splendour. Yet the Germans only destroyed the
+upper layer of the forms and replaced it by the life of their own
+pre-Culture. The “eternal” layer was never reached. It remains, hidden
+and completely shrouded by a new form-language, in the underground
+of the whole following history, and to this day in southern France,
+southern Italy, and northern Spain tangible relics of it endure. In
+these countries the popular Catholicism is tinged from beneath with a
+Late Classical colouring, that sets it off quite distinctly from the
+Church Catholicism of the West-European layer above it. South Italian
+Church-festivals disclose Classical (and even pre-Classical) cults, and
+generally in this field there are to be found deities (saints) in whose
+worship the Classical constitution is visible behind the Catholic names.
+
+Here, however, another element comes into the picture, an element with
+a significance of its own. We stand before the problem of Race.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+CITIES AND PEOPLES
+
+(B)
+
+PEOPLES, RACES, TONGUES
+
+
+I
+
+Throughout the nineteenth century the scientific picture of history
+was vitiated by a notion that was either derived from, or at any rate
+brought to a point by, Romanticism--the idea of the “People” in the
+moral-enthusiastic sense of the word. If, here and there, in earlier
+time a new religion, a new ornamentation, a new architecture, or a
+new script appeared, the question that it raised presented itself to
+the investigator thus--What was the name of the _people_ who produced
+the phenomenon? This enunciation of the problem is peculiar to the
+Western spirit and the present-day cast of that spirit; but it is so
+false at every point that the picture that it evokes of the course of
+events must necessarily be erroneous. “The people” as the absolute
+basic form in which men are historically effective, the original home,
+the original settlement, the migrations of “the” peoples--all this is
+a reflection of the vibrant idea expressed in the “_Nation_” of 1789,
+of the “_Volk_” of 1813, both of which, in last analysis, are derived
+from the self-assuredness of England and Puritanism. But the very
+intensity of passion that the idea contains has protected it only too
+well from criticism. Even acute investigators have unwittingly made it
+cover a multitude of utterly dissimilar things, with the result that
+“peoples” have developed into definite and supposedly well-understood
+unit-quantities by which all history is _made_. For us, to-day,
+world-history means--what it cannot be asserted to mean self-evidently,
+or to mean for, e.g., the Greeks and the Chinese--the history of
+Peoples. Everything else, Culture, speech, wit, religion, is created by
+the peoples. The State is the form of a people.
+
+The purpose of this chapter is to demolish this romantic conception.
+What has inhabited the earth since the Ice Age is man, not “peoples.”
+In the first instance, their Destiny is determined by the fact that the
+bodily succession of parents and children, the bond of the blood, forms
+natural groups, which disclose a definite tendency to take root in a
+landscape. Even nomadic tribes confine their movements within a limited
+field. Thereby the cosmic-plantlike side of life, of Being, is invested
+with a character of duration. This I call _race_. Tribes, septs, clans,
+families--all these are designations for the fact of a blood which
+circles, carried on by procreation, in a narrow or a wide landscape.
+
+But these human beings possess also the microcosmic-animal side of
+life, in waking-consciousness and receptivity and reason. And the
+form in which the waking-consciousness of one man gets into relation
+with that of another I call _language_, which begins by being a mere
+unconscious living expression that is received as a sensation, but
+gradually develops into a conscious _technique of communication_ that
+depends upon a common sense of the meanings attaching to signs.
+
+In the limit, every race is a single great body, and every
+language[161] the efficient form of _one_ great waking-consciousness
+that connects many individual beings. And we shall never reach the
+ultimate discoveries about either unless they are treated together and
+constantly brought into comparison with one another.
+
+But, further, we shall never understand man’s higher history if we
+ignore the fact that man, as constituent of a race and as possessor
+of a language, as derivative of a blood-unit and as member of an
+understanding-unit, has different Destinies, that of his being and that
+of his waking-being. That is, the origin, development, and duration of
+his race side and the origin, development, and duration of his language
+side are _completely independent of one another_. Race is _something
+cosmic and psychic_ (_Seelenhaft_), periodic in some obscure way, and
+in its inner nature partly conditioned by major astronomical relations.
+
+Languages, on the other hand, are causal forms, and operate through the
+polarity of their means. We speak of race-instincts and of the spirit
+of a language. But they are two distinct _worlds_. To Race belong the
+deepest meanings of the words “time” and “yearning”; to language those
+of the words “space” and “fear.” But all this has been hidden from us,
+hitherto, by the overlying idea of “peoples.”
+
+There are, then, _currents of being_ and _linkages of waking-being_.
+The former have physiognomy, the latter are based on system. Race,
+as seen in the picture of the world-around, is the aggregate of all
+bodily characters so far as these exist for the sense-perceptions of
+conscious creatures. Here we have to remember that a body develops
+and fulfils from childhood to old age the specific inner form that
+was assigned to it at the moment of its conception, while at the
+same time that which the body is (considered apart from its form) is
+perpetually being renewed. Consequently nothing of the body actually
+remains in the man except the living meaning of his existence, and of
+this all that we know is so much as presents itself in the world of
+waking-consciousness. Man of the higher sort is limited, as to the
+impression of race that he can receive, almost wholly to what appears
+in the light-world of his eye, so that for him race is essentially
+a sum of _visible_ characters. But even for him there are not
+inconsiderable relics of the power to observe non-optical characters
+such as smell, the cries of animals, and, above all, the modalities
+of human speech. In the other higher animals, on the contrary, the
+capacity to receive the impression of race is decidedly _not_ dominated
+by sight. Scent is stronger, and, besides, the animals have modes of
+sensation that entirely elude human understanding. It is, however, only
+men and animals that can _receive the impression of race_, and not
+the plants, and yet these too _have_ race, as every nurseryman knows.
+It is, to me, a sight of deep pathos to see how the spring flowers,
+craving to fertilize and be fertilized, cannot for all their bright
+splendour attract one another, or even see one another, but must have
+recourse to animals, for whom alone these colours and these scents
+exist.
+
+“Language” I call the entire free activity of the waking microcosm
+in so far as it brings something to expression _for others_. Plants
+have no waking-being, no capacity of being moved, and therefore no
+language. The waking-consciousness of animal existences, on the
+contrary, is through and through a speaking, whether individual
+acts are intended to tell or not, and even if the conscious or the
+unconscious purpose of the doing lies in a quite other direction. A
+peacock is indubitably speaking when he spreads his tail, but a kitten
+playing with a cotton-reel also speaks to us, unconsciously, through
+the quaint charm of its movements. Everyone knows the difference there
+is in one’s movements according as one is conscious or unconscious of
+being observed; one suddenly begins to speak, consciously, in all one’s
+actions.
+
+This, however, leads at once to the very significant distinction
+between two genera of language--the language which is only an
+_expression for the world_, an inward necessity springing from the
+longing inherent in all life to actualize itself before witnesses,
+to display its own presence to itself, and the language that is
+meant to be _understood by definite beings_. There are, therefore,
+_expression-languages_ and _communication-languages_. The former assume
+only a state of waking-being, the latter a connexion of waking-beings.
+To understand means to respond to the stimulus of a signal with
+one’s own feeling of its significance. To understand one another, to
+hold “conversation,” to speak to a “thou,” supposes, therefore, a
+sense of meanings in the other that corresponds to that in oneself.
+Expression-language before witnesses merely proves the presence of an
+“I,” but communication-language postulates a “thou.” The “I” is that
+which speaks, and the “thou” that which is meant to understand the
+speech of the “I.” For primitives a tree, a stone, or a cloud can be a
+“thou.” Every deity is a “thou.” In fairy-tales there is nothing that
+cannot hold converse with men, and we need only look at our own selves
+in moments of furious irritation or of poetic excitement to realize
+that anything can become a “thou” for us even to-day. And it is by some
+“thou” that we first came to the knowledge of an “I.” “I,” therefore,
+is a designation for the fact that a bridge exists to some other being.
+
+It is impossible, however, to delimit an exact frontier
+between religious and artistic expression-languages and pure
+communication-languages. This is true also (and indeed specially)
+of the higher Cultures with the separate development of their
+form-domains. For, on the one hand, no one can speak without putting
+into his mode of speech some significant trait of emphasis that has
+nothing to do with the needs of communication as such; and, on the
+other hand, we all know the drama in which the poet wants to “say”
+something that he could have said equally well or better in an
+exhortation, and the painting whose contents are meant to instruct,
+warn, or improve--the picture-series in any Greek Orthodox church,
+which conforms to a strict canon and has the avowed purpose of making
+the truths of religion clear to a beholder to whom the book says
+nothing; or Hogarth’s substitute for sermons; or, for that matter,
+even prayer, the direct address to God, which also can be replaced by
+the performance before one’s eyes of cult-ritual that speaks to one
+intelligibly. The theoretical controversy concerning the purpose of art
+rests upon the postulate that an artistic expression-language should in
+no wise be a communication-language, and the phenomenon of priesthood
+is based upon the persuasion that the priest alone knows the language
+in which man can communicate with God.
+
+All currents of Being bear a historical, and all linkages of
+Waking-Being a religious, stamp. What we know to be inherent in every
+genuine religious or artistic form-language, and particularly in the
+history of every script (for writing is verbal language for the eye),
+holds good without doubt for the origin of human articulate speech
+in general--indeed the prime words (of the structure of which we now
+know nothing whatever) must also certainly have had a cult-colouring.
+But there is a corresponding linkage on the other side between Race
+and everything that we call life (as struggle for power), History (as
+Destiny), or, to-day, politics. It is perhaps too fantastic to argue
+something of political instinct in the search of a climbing plant for
+points of attachment that shall enable it to encircle, overpower, and
+choke the tree in order finally to rear itself high in the air above
+the tree-top--or something of religious world-feeling in the song of
+the mounting lark. But it is certain that from such things as these the
+utterances of being and of waking-being, of pulse and tension, form an
+uninterrupted series up to the perfected political and religious forms
+of every modern Civilization.
+
+And here at last is the key to those two strange words which were
+discovered by the ethnologists in two entirely different parts of the
+world in rather limited applications, but have since been quietly
+moving up into the foreground of research--“_totem_” and “_taboo_.”
+The more enigmatic and indefinable these words became, the more it was
+felt that in them we were touching upon an ultimate life-basis which
+was not that of merely primitive man. And now, as the result of the
+above inquiry, we have clear meanings for both before us. Totem and
+Taboo describe the ultimate meanings of Being and Waking-Being, Destiny
+and Causality, Race and Language, Time and Space, yearning and fear,
+pulse and tension, politics and religion. The Totem side of life is
+plantlike and inheres in all being, while the Taboo side is animal
+and presupposes the free movement of a being in a world. Our Totem
+organs are those of the blood-circulation and of reproduction, our
+Taboo organs those of the senses and the nerves. All that is of Totem
+has physiognomy, all that is of Taboo has system. In the Totemistic
+resides the common feeling of beings that belong to the same stream
+of existence. It cannot be acquired and cannot be got rid of; it is a
+fact, _the_ fact of all facts. That which is of Taboo, on the other
+hand, is the characteristic of linkages of waking-consciousness, it is
+learnable and acquirable, and on that very account guarded as a secret
+by cult-communities, philosophers’ schools, and artists’ guilds--each
+of which possesses a sort of cryptic language of its own.[162]
+
+But Being can be thought of without waking-consciousness, whereas
+the reverse is not the case--i.e., there are race-beings without
+language, but no languages without race. All that is of race,
+therefore, possesses its proper expression, independent of any
+kind of waking-consciousness and common to plant and animal. This
+expression--not to be confounded with the expression-_language_ which
+consists in an _active alteration_ of the expression--is not meant
+for witnesses, but is simply there; it is physiognomy. Not that it
+stops at the plant; in every living language, too (and how significant
+the word “living”!) we can detect, besides the Taboo side that is
+learnable, an entirely untransferable quality of race that the old
+vessels of the language cannot pass on to alien successors; it lies in
+melody, rhythm, stress; in colour, ring, and tempo of the expression;
+in idiom, in accompanying gesture. On this account it is necessary to
+distinguish between language and speaking, the first being in itself
+a dead stock of signs, and the second the activity that operates with
+the signs.[163] When we cease to be able to hear and see directly how a
+language is spoken, thenceforward it is only its ossature and not its
+flesh that we can know. This is so with Sumerian, Gothic, Sanskrit,
+and all other languages that we have merely deciphered from texts and
+inscriptions, and we are right in calling these languages dead, for
+the human communities that were formed by them have vanished. We know
+the Egyptian tongue, but not the tongues of the Egyptians. Of Augustan
+Latin we know approximately the sound-values of the letters and the
+meaning of the words, but we do not know how the oration of Cicero
+sounded from the rostra and still less how Hesiod and Sappho spoke
+their verses, or what a conversation in the Athenian market-place was
+really like. If in the Gothic age Latin came into actual speech again,
+it was as a new language; this Gothic Latin did not take long to pass
+from the formation of rhythms and sounds characteristic of itself (but
+which our imagination to-day cannot recapture, any more than those of
+old Latin) to encroachments upon the word-meanings and the syntax as
+well. But the anti-Gothic Latin of the Humanists, too, which was meant
+to be Ciceronian, was anything but a revival. The whole significance of
+the race-element in language can be measured by comparing the German of
+Nietzsche and of Mommsen, the French of Diderot and of Napoleon, and
+observing that in idiom Voltaire and Lessing are much closer together
+than Lessing and Hölderlin.
+
+It is the same with the most telling of all the expression-languages,
+art. The Taboo side--namely, the stock of forms, the rules of
+convention, and style in so far as it means an armoury of established
+expedients (like vocabulary and syntax in verbal language)--stands
+for the language itself, which can be learned. And it is learned
+and transmitted in the tradition of the great schools of painting,
+the cottage-building tradition, and generally in the strict
+craft-discipline which every genuine art possesses as a matter of
+course and which in all ages has been meant to give the sure command
+of the idiom that at a particular time is quite definitely living
+idiom of that time. For in this domain, too, there are living and dead
+languages. The form-language of an art can only be called living, when
+the artist corps as a whole employs it like a mother tongue, which one
+uses without even thinking about its structure. In this sense Gothic
+in the sixteenth century and Rococo in 1800 were both dead languages.
+Contrast the unqualified sureness with which architects and musicians
+of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries expressed themselves
+with the hesitations of Beethoven, the painfully acquired, almost
+self-taught, _philological_ art of Schinkel and Schadow,[164] the
+manglings of the Pre-Raphaelites and the Neo-Gothics, and the baffled
+experimentalism of present-day artists.
+
+In an artistic form-language, as presented to us by its products, the
+voice of the Totem side, the race, makes itself heard, and not less
+so in individual artists than in whole generations of artists. The
+creators of the Doric temples of South Italy and Sicily, and those
+of the brick Gothic of North Germany were emphatically race-men, and
+so too the German musicians from Heinrich Schütz to Johann Sebastian
+Bach. To the Totem side belong the influences of the cosmic cycles--the
+importance of which in the structure of art-history has hardly been
+suspected, let alone established--and the creative times of spring and
+love-stirrings which (apart altogether from the executive sureness in
+imparting form) determine the force of the forms and the depth of the
+conceptions. The formalists are explained by depth of world-fear or by
+defect of “race,” and the great formless ones by plethora of blood or
+defect of discipline. We comprehend that there is a difference between
+the history of artists and that of styles, and that the language of an
+art may be carried from country to country, but mastery in speaking it,
+never.
+
+A race has roots. Race and landscape belong together. Where a plant
+takes root, there it dies also. There is certainly a sense in which we
+can, without absurdity, work backwards from a race to its “home,” but
+it is much more important to realize that the race adheres permanently
+to this home with some of its most essential characters of body and
+soul. If in that home the race cannot now be found, this means that the
+race has ceased to exist. A race does not migrate. Men migrate, and
+their successive generations are born in ever-changing landscapes; but
+the landscape exercises a secret force upon the plant-nature in them,
+and eventually the race-expression is completely transformed by the
+extinction of the old and the appearance of a new one. Englishmen and
+Germans did not migrate to America, but human beings migrated thither
+_as_ Englishmen and Germans, and their descendants are there _as_
+Americans. It has long been obvious that the soil of the Indians has
+made its mark upon them--generation by generation they become more and
+more like the people they eradicated. Gould and Baxter have shown that
+Whites of all races, Indians, and Negroes have come to the same average
+in size of body and time of maturity--and that so rapidly that Irish
+immigrants, arriving young and developing very slowly, come under this
+power of the landscape within the same generation. Boas has shown that
+the American-born children of long-headed Sicilian and short-headed
+German Jews at once conform to the same head-type. This is not a
+special case, but a general phenomenon, and it should serve to make us
+very cautious in dealing with those migrations of history about which
+we know nothing more than some names of vagrant tribes and relics of
+languages (e.g., Danai, Etruscans, Pelasgi, Achæans, and Dorians). As
+to the race of these “peoples” we can conclude nothing whatever. That
+which flowed into the lands of southern Europe under the diverse names
+of Goths, Lombards, and Vandals was without doubt a race in itself. But
+already by Renaissance times it had completely grown itself into the
+root characters of the Provençal, Castilian, and Tuscan soil.
+
+Not so with language. The home of a language means merely the
+accidental place of its formation, and this has no relation to its
+inner form. Languages migrate in that they spread by carriage from
+tribe to tribe. Above all, they are capable of being, and are,
+exchanged--indeed, in studying the early history of races we need not,
+and should not, feel the slightest hesitation about postulating such
+speech-changes. It is, I repeat, the form-content and not the speaking
+of a language that is taken over, and it is taken over (as primitives
+are for ever taking over ornament-motives) in order to be used with
+perfect sureness as elements of their own form-language. In early times
+the fact that a people has shown itself the stronger, or the feeling
+that its language possesses superior efficacy, is enough to induce
+others to give up their own language and--with genuinely religious
+awe--to take its language to themselves. Follow out the speech-changes
+of the Normans, whom we find in Normandy, England, Sicily, and
+Constantinople with different languages in each place, and ever ready
+to exchange one for another. Piety towards the mother tongue--the very
+term testifies to deep ethical forces, and accounts for the bitterness
+of our ever-recurring language-battles--is a trait of the _Late_
+Western soul, almost unknowable for the men of other Cultures and
+entirely so for the primitive. Unfortunately, our historians not only
+are sensible of this, but tacitly extend it as a postulate over their
+entire field, which leads to a multitude of fallacious conclusions
+as to the bearing of linguistic discoveries upon the fortunes of
+“peoples”--think of the reconstruction of the “Dorian migration,”
+argued from the distribution of later Greek dialects. It is impossible,
+therefore, to draw conclusions as to the fortunes of the race side
+of peoples from mere place-names, personal names, inscriptions, and
+dialects. Never do we know _a priori_, whether a folkname stands for
+a language-body, or a race-part, or both, or neither--besides which,
+folk-names themselves, and even land-names, have, as such, Destinies of
+their own.
+
+
+II
+
+Of all expressions of race, the purest is the House. From the moment
+when man, becoming sedentary, ceases to be content with mere shelter
+and builds himself a dwelling, this expression makes its appearance
+and marks off, within the race “man” (which is the element of the
+_biological_ world-picture[165]) the human races of world-history
+proper, which are streams of being of far greater spiritual
+significance. The prime form of the house is everywhere a product of
+feeling and of growth, never at all of knowledge. Like the shell of the
+nautilus, the hive of the bee, the nest of the bird, it has an innate
+self-evidentness, and every trait of original custom and form of being,
+of marriage, of family life, and of tribal order is reflected in the
+place and in the room-organization of parterre, hall, wigwam, atrium,
+court, chamber, and gynæceum. One need only compare the lay-out of the
+old Saxon and that of the Roman house to feel that the soul of the men
+and the soul of the house were in each case identical.
+
+This domain art-history ought never to have laid its hands on. It was
+an error to treat the building of the dwelling-house as a branch of the
+art of architecture. It is a form that arises in the obscure courses
+of being and not for the eye that looks for forms in the light; no
+room-scheme of the boor’s hovel was ever thought out by an architect as
+the scheme of a cathedral was thought out. This significant frontier
+line has escaped the observation of art-research--although Dehio[166]
+in one place remarks that the old German wooden house has nothing to do
+with the later great architecture, which arose quite independently--and
+the result has been a perpetual perplexity in method, of which the
+art-savant is sensible enough, but which he cannot understand. His
+science gathers, indiscriminately in all the “pre-” and “primitive”
+periods, all sorts of gear, arms, pottery, fabrics, funerary monuments,
+and houses, and considers them from the point of view of form as well
+as that of decoration; and, proceeding thus, it is not until he comes
+to the _organic_ history of painting, sculpture, and architecture
+(i.e., the self-contained and differentiated arts) that he finds
+himself on firm ground. But, unknowing, he has stepped over a frontier
+between two worlds, that of soul-_expression_ and that of visual
+expression-_language_. The house, and like it the completely unstudied
+basic (i.e., customary) forms of pots, weapons, clothing, and gear,
+belong to the Totem side. They characterize, not a taste, but a way of
+fighting, of dwelling, of working. Every primitive seat is the offset
+of a racial mode of body-posing, every jar-handle an extension of the
+supple arm. Domestic painting and dressmaking, the garment as ornament,
+the decoration of weapons and implements, belong, on the contrary, to
+the Taboo side of life, and indeed for primitive man the patterns and
+motives on these things possess even magical properties.[167] We all
+know the Germanic sword-blades of the Migrations with their Oriental
+ornamentation, and the Mycenæan strongholds with their Minoan artistry.
+It is the distinction between blood and sense, race and speech,
+_politics and religion_.
+
+There is, in fact, as yet no world-history of the House and its Races,
+and to give us such a history should be one of the most urgent tasks
+of the researcher. But we must work with means quite other than those
+of art-history. The peasant dwelling is, as compared with the tempo of
+all _art_-history, something constant and “eternal” like the peasant
+himself. It stands outside the Culture and therefore outside the higher
+history of man; it recognizes neither the temporal nor the spacial
+limits of this history and it maintains itself, unaltered ideally,
+throughout all the changes of architecture, which it witnesses, but in
+which it does not participate. The round hut of ancient Italy is still
+found in Imperial times.[168] The form of the Roman rectangular house,
+the existence-mark of a second race, is found in Pompeii and even in
+the Imperial palaces. Every sort of ornament and style was borrowed
+from the Orient, but no Roman would ever think of imitating the Syrian
+house,[169] any more than the Hellenistic city-architect tampered with
+the megaron form of Mycenæ and Tiryns and the old Greek peasant-house
+described by Galen. The Saxon and Franconian peasant-house kept its
+essential nucleus unimpaired right from the country farm, through the
+burgher-house of the old Free Cities, up to the patrician buildings
+of the eighteenth century, while Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque, and
+Empire styles glided over it one after the other, clothing it from
+cellar to garret with _their_ essences, but never perverting the Soul
+of the House. And the same is true of the furniture-forms, in which
+we have to distinguish carefully the psychological from the artistic
+treatment. In particular, the evolution of the Northern seat-furniture
+is, right up to the club arm-chair, a piece of race-history and not
+of what is called style-history. Every other character can deceive us
+as to the fortunes of race--the Etruscan names amongst the “Sea-folk”
+defeated by Rameses III, the enigmatic inscription of Lemnos, the
+wall-paintings in the tombs of Etruria, afford no sure evidences of the
+bodily connexion of these men. Although towards the end of the Stone
+Age a telling ornamentation arose and continued in the vast region
+east of the Carpathians, it is perfectly possible that race superseded
+race there. If we possessed in western Europe only pottery remains
+for the centuries between Trojan and Chlodwig, we should not have the
+least inkling of the event that we know as the “great Migrations.”
+But the presence of an oval house in the Ægean region[170] and of
+another and very striking example of it in Rhodesia,[171] and the
+much-discussed concordance of the Saxon peasant-house with that of the
+Libyan Kabyle disclose a piece of race-history. Ornaments spread when
+a people incorporates them in its form-language, but a house-type is
+only transplanted along with its race. The disappearance of an ornament
+means no more than a change of language, _but when a house-type
+vanishes it means that race is extinguished_.
+
+It follows that art-history, besides taking care to begin properly with
+the Culture, must not neglect even in its course to separate the race
+side carefully from the language proper. At the outset of a Culture
+two well-defined forms of a higher order rise up over the peasant
+village, as expressions of being and language of waking-being. They
+are the _castle_ and the _cathedral_.[172] In them the distinction
+between Totem and Taboo, longing and fear, blood and intellect, rises
+to a grand symbolism. The ancient Egyptian, the ancient Chinese, the
+Classical, the South-Arabian, and the Western castle stands, as the
+home of continuing generations, very near to the peasant cottage,
+and both, as copies of the realities of living, breeding, and dying,
+lie outside all art-history. The history of the German _Burgen_ is a
+piece of race-history throughout. On them both, early ornament does
+indeed venture to spread itself, beautifying here the beams, there
+the door, and there again the staircase, but it can be so, or so, at
+choice, or omitted altogether, for there is no inward bond between the
+structure and the ornament. The cathedral, on the other hand, is not
+ornamented, but _is itself ornament_. Its history is coincident with
+that of the Gothic style, and the same is true of the Doric temple and
+all other Early Culture buildings. So complete is the congruence, in
+the Western and every other Culture whose art we know at all, that it
+has never occurred to anyone to be astonished at the fact that strict
+architecture (which is simply the highest form of pure ornament) is
+entirely confined to religious building. All the beauty of architecture
+that there is in Gelnhausen, Goslar, and the Wartburg has been _taken
+over_ from cathedral art; it is decoration and not essence. A castle or
+a sword or a pitcher can do without this decoration altogether without
+losing its meaning or even its form.[173] But in a Cathedral, or an
+Egyptian pyramid-temple, such a distinction between essence and art is
+simply inconceivable.
+
+We distinguish, then, the building that _has a style_ and the building
+_in which_ men have a style. Whereas in monastery and cathedral it is
+the stone that possesses form and communicates it to the men who are in
+its service, in farmhouse and feudal stronghold it is the full strength
+of the countryman’s and the knight’s life that forms the building forth
+from itself. Here the man and not the stone comes first, and here, too,
+there is an ornamentation; it is an ornament which is proper to man and
+consists in the strict nature and stable form _of manners and customs_.
+We might call this living, as distinct from rigid, style. But, just
+as the power of this living form lays hands on the priesthood also,
+creating in Gothic and in Vedic times the type of the knightly priest,
+so the Romanesque-Gothic _sacred_ form-language seizes upon everything
+pertaining to this secular life--costume, arms, rooms, implements, and
+so forth--and stylizes their surface. But art-history must not let
+itself lose its bearings in this alien world--it is only the surface.
+
+In the early cities it is the same; nothing new supervenes. Amongst
+the race-made houses, which now form streets, there are scattered
+the handful of cult-buildings that _have_ style. And, as having it,
+they are the seats of art-history and the sources whence its forms
+radiate out on to squares, façades, and house-rooms. Even though the
+castle develops into the urban palace and patrician residence, and the
+_palatium_ and the men’s hall, into guild-house and town-hall, one
+and all they receive and carry a style, they do not _have_ it. True,
+at the stage of real burgherdom the metaphysical creativeness of the
+early religion has been lost. It develops the ornament further, _but
+not the building as ornament_, and from this point art-history splits
+up into the histories of the separate arts. The picture, the statue,
+the house, become particular objects to which the style is to be
+applied. Even the church itself is now such a house. A Gothic cathedral
+_is_ ornament, but a Baroque hall-church is a building clothed with
+ornament. The process begun in the Ionic style and the sixteenth
+century is completed in the Corinthian and Rococo, wherein the house
+and its ornament are separated for good and all, so completely
+that even the master-works amongst eighteenth-century churches and
+monasteries cannot mislead us--we know that all this art of theirs is
+secular, is adornment. With Empire the style transforms itself into
+a “taste,” and with the end of this mode architecture turns into a
+craft-art. And that is the end of the ornamental expression-language,
+and of art-history with it. But the peasant-house, with its unaltered
+race-form, lives on.
+
+
+III
+
+The practical importance of the house as race-expression begins to
+be appreciated as and when one realizes the immense difficulty of
+approaching the kernel of race. I do not refer to its inner essence,
+its soul--as to that, feeling speaks to us clearly enough and we all
+know a man of race, a “thoroughbred,” when we see one. But what are
+the hall-marks for our sense, and above all for our eye, by which we
+recognize and distinguish races? This is a matter that belongs to the
+domain of Physiognomic just as surely as the classification of tongues
+belongs to that of Systematic. But how immense and how varied the
+material that would be required! How much of it is irretrievably lost
+by destruction, and how much more by corruption! In the most favourable
+cases, what we have of prehistoric men is their skeletons, and how much
+does a skeleton _not_ tell us! Very nearly everything. Prehistoric
+research in its naïve zeal is ready to deduce the incredible from
+a jaw-bone or an arm-bone. But think of one of those mass-graves
+of the War in northern France, in which we _know_ that men of all
+races, white and coloured, peasants and townsmen, youths and men lie
+together. If the future had no collateral evidence as to their nature,
+it would certainly not be enlightened by anthropological research.
+In other words, immense dramas of race can pass over a land without
+the investigator of its grave-skeletons obtaining the least hint of
+the fact. It is the _living_ body that carries nine-tenths of the
+expression--not the articulation of the parts, but their articulate
+motions; not the bone of the face, but its mien. And, for that matter,
+how much potentially interpretable race-expression is actually observed
+even by the keenest-sensed contemporary? How much we _fail_ to see and
+to hear! What is it for which--unlike many species of beasts--we lack a
+sense-organ?
+
+The science of the Darwinian age met this question with an easy
+assurance. How superficial, how glib, how mechanistic the conception
+with which it worked! In the first place, this conception groups an
+aggregate of such grossly palpable characters as are observable in the
+anatomy of the discoveries--that is, characters that even a corpse
+displays. As to observing the body qua living thing, there is no
+question of it. Secondly, it investigates only those signs which very
+little perspicacity is needed to detect, and investigates them only in
+so far as they are measurable and countable. The microscope and not
+the pulse-sense determines. When language is used as a differentia, it
+is to classify races, not according to their _way of speaking_, but
+according to the grammatical _structure of the speech_, which is just
+anatomy and system of another sort. No one as yet has perceived that
+the investigation of these _speech-races_ is one of the most important
+tasks that research can possibly set itself. In the actuality of daily
+experience we all know perfectly well that the way of speaking is one
+of the most distinctive traits in present-day man--examples are legion;
+each of us knows any number of them. In Alexandria the same Greek was
+spoken in the most dissimilar race-modes, as we can see even to-day
+from the script of the texts. In North America the native-born speak
+exactly alike, whether in English, in German, or for that matter in
+Indian. What in the speech of East-European Jews is a race-trait of the
+land, and present therefore in Russian also, and what is a race-trait
+of the blood common to all Jews, independent of their habitat and their
+hosts, in their speaking of any of the European “mother”-tongues? What
+in detail are the relations of the sound-formations, the accentuations,
+the placing of words?
+
+But science has completely failed to note that race is not the
+same for rooted plants as it is for mobile animals, that with the
+microcosmic side of life a fresh group of characters appears, and that
+for the animal world it is decisive. Nor again has it perceived that
+a completely different significance must be attached to “races” when
+the word denotes subdivisions _within the integral race “Man.”_ With
+its talk of adaptation and of inheritance it sets up a soulless causal
+concatenation of superficial characters, and blots out the fact that
+here the blood and there the power of the land over the blood are
+expressing themselves--secrets that cannot be inspected and measured,
+but only livingly experienced and felt from eye to eye.
+
+Nor are the scientists at one as to the relative rank of these
+superficial characters amongst themselves. Blumenbach classified the
+races of man according to skull-forms, Friedrich Müller (as a true
+German) by hair and language-structure, Topinard (as a true Frenchman)
+by skin-colour and shape of nose, and Huxley (as a true Englishman) by,
+so to say, sport characteristics. This last is undoubtedly in itself a
+very suitable criterion, but any judge of horses would tell him that
+breed-characteristics cannot be hit off by scientific terminology.
+These “descriptions” of races are without exception as worthless as
+the descriptions of “wanted” men on which policemen exercise their
+theoretical knowledge of men.
+
+Obviously, the _chaotic_ in the total expression of the human body
+is not in the least realized. Quite apart from smell (which for the
+Chinese, for example, is a most characteristic mark of race) and sound
+(the sound of speech, song, and, above all, laughter, which enables
+us accurately to sense deep differences inaccessible to scientific
+method) the profusion of images before the eye is so embarrassingly
+rich in details, either actually visible or sensible to the inner
+vision, that the possibility of marshalling them under a few aspects
+is simply unthinkable. And all these sides to the picture, all these
+traits composing it, are independent of one another and have each
+their individual history. There are cases in which the bony structure
+(and particularly the skull-form) completely alter without the
+expression of the fleshy parts--i.e., the face--becoming different.
+The brothers and sisters of the same family may all present almost
+every differentia posited by Blumenbach, Müller, and Huxley, and yet
+the identity of their living race-expression may be patent to anyone
+who looks at them. Still more frequent is similarity of bodily build
+accompanied by thorough diversity of living expression--I need only
+mention the immeasurable difference between genuine peasant-stock,
+like the Frisians or the Bretons, and genuine city-stock.[174]
+But besides the energy of the blood--which coins the same living
+features (“family” traits) over and over again for centuries--and
+the power of the soil--evidenced in its stamp of man--there is that
+mysterious cosmic force of the syntony of close human connexions.
+What is called the “_Versehen_” of a pregnant woman[175] is only a
+particular and not very important instance of the workings of a very
+deep and powerful formative principle inherent in all that is of the
+race side. It is a matter of common observation that elderly married
+people become strangely like one another, although probably Science
+with its measuring instruments would “prove” the exact opposite. It
+is impossible to exaggerate the formative power of this living pulse,
+this strong inward feeling for the perfection of one’s own type. The
+feeling for race-beauty--so opposite to the conscious taste of ripe
+urbans for intellectual-individual traits of beauty--is immensely
+strong in primitive men, and for that very reason never emerges into
+their consciousness. But such a feeling is race-forming. It undoubtedly
+moulded the warrior- and hero-type of a nomad tribe more and more
+definitely on _one bodily ideal_, so that it would have been quite
+unambiguous to speak of the race-figure of Romans or Ostrogoths. The
+same is true of any ancient nobility--filled with a strong and deep
+sense of its own unity, it achieves the formation of a bodily ideal.
+Comradeship breeds races. French _noblesse_ and Prussian _Landadel_
+are genuine race-denotations. But it is just this, too, that has bred
+the types of the European Jew, with his immense race-energy and his
+thousand years of ghetto life; and it always will forge a population
+into a race whenever it has stood for long together spiritually firm
+and united in the presence of its Destiny. Where a race-ideal exists,
+as it does, supremely, in the Early period of the Culture--the Vedic,
+the Homeric, the knightly times of the Hohenstaufen--the yearning of
+a ruling class towards this ideal, its will to be just _so_ and not
+otherwise, operates (quite independently of the choosing of wives)
+towards actualizing this ideal and eventually achieves it. Further,
+there is a statistical aspect of the matter which has received far less
+attention than it should. For every human being alive to-day there
+were a million ancestors even in A.D. 1300 and ten million in A.D.
+1000. This means that every German now living, without exception, is a
+blood-relative of every European of the age of the Crusades and that
+the relationship becomes a hundred and a thousand times more intensely
+close as we narrow the limits of its field, so that within twenty
+generations or less the population of a land grows together into _one
+single family_; and this, together with the choice and voice of the
+blood that courses through the generations, ever driving congeners
+into one another’s arms, dissolving and breaking marriages, evading or
+forcing all obstacles of custom, leads to innumerable procreations that
+in utter unconsciousness fulfil the _will of the race_.
+
+Primarily, this applies to the vegetal race-traits, the “physiognomy
+of position,” as apart from movement of the mobile--i.e., everything
+which does _not_ differ in the living and in the dead animal-body
+and cannot but express itself even in stiffened members. There is
+undoubtedly something cognate in the growth of an ilex or a Lombardy
+poplar and that of a man--“thickset,” “slim,” “drooping,” and so forth.
+Similarly, the outline of the back of a dromedary, or the striping of
+a tiger- or zebra-skin is a vegetal race-mark. And so, too, are the
+motion-actions of nature _upon and with a creature_--a birch-tree or a
+delicately built child, which both sway in the wind, an oak with its
+splintered crown, the steady circles or frightened flutterings of birds
+in the storm, all belong to the plant side of race. But on which side
+of the line do such characters stand when _blood and soil contend for
+the inner form of the “transplanted” species_, human or animal? And how
+much of the constitution of the soul, the social code, the house, is of
+this kind?
+
+It is quite another picture that presents itself when we attune
+ourselves to receive the impressions of the purely animal. The
+difference between plantwise being and animalwise waking-being (to
+recall what has been said earlier) is such that we are here concerned,
+not simply with waking-being itself and its language, but with the
+combination of cosmic and microcosmic to form a freely moving body,
+a microcosm _vis-à-vis_ a macrocosm, whose independent life-activity
+possesses an expression peculiar to itself, which makes use in part of
+the organs of waking-consciousness and which--as the corals show--is
+mostly lost again with the cessation of mobility.
+
+If the race-expression of the plant consists predominantly in
+the physiognomy of position, the animal-expression resides in _a
+physiognomy of movement_--namely, in the form as having motion,
+in the motion itself, and in the set of the limbs as figuring the
+motion. Of this race-expression not very much is revealed in the
+sleeping animal, and far less still in the dead animal, whose parts
+the scientist explores; we have practically nothing to learn now
+about the skeleton of the vertebrate. Hence it is that in vertebrates
+the limbs are more expressive than the bones. Hence it is that the
+limb-masses are the true seat of expressiveness in contrast to the
+ribs and skull-bones--the jaw being an exception in that its structure
+discloses the character of the animal’s food, whereas the plant’s
+nutrition is a mere _process of nature_. Hence it is, again, that the
+insect’s skeleton, which clothes its body, is fuller of expression
+than the bird’s, which is clothed by its body. It is pre-eminently
+the organs of the outer sheath that more and more forcefully gather
+the race-expression to themselves--the eye, not as a thing of form
+and colour, but as _glance_ and expressive _visage_; the mouth, which
+becomes through the usage of speech the expression of understanding;
+and the head (not the skull), with its lineaments formed by the
+flesh, which has become the very throne of the non-vegetable side
+of life. Consider how, on the one hand, we breed orchids and roses
+and, on the other, we breed horses and dogs--and would like human
+beings to be bred, too. But it is not, I repeat, the mathematical
+form of the visible parts, but exclusively the expression of the
+movement, that displays this physiognomy. When we seize at a glance
+the race-expression of a motionless man, it is because our experienced
+eye sees the appropriate motion already potentially in the limbs.
+The real race-appearance of a bison, a trout, a golden eagle, is not
+to be reproduced by any reckoning of the creature’s plane or solid
+dimensions; and the deep attractiveness that they possess for the
+creative artist comes precisely from the fact that the secret of race
+can reveal itself in the picture _by way of the soul_ and not by any
+mere imitation of the visible. One has to see and, seeing, to feel
+how the immense energy of this life concentrates upon head and neck,
+how it speaks in the bloodshot eye, in the short compact horn, in the
+“aquiline” beak and profile of the bird of prey--to mention one or two
+only of the innumerable points that cannot be communicated by words and
+are only expressible, by me for you, in the language of an art.
+
+But with such hall-marks as those quoted, characterizing the noblest
+sorts of animals, we come very near to the concept of race which
+enables us to perceive within the type “mankind” differences of a
+higher sort than either the vegetable or the animal--differences that
+are spiritual rather, and _eo ipso_ less accessible to scientific
+methods. The coarse characters of the skeletal structure have ceased
+to possess independent importance. Already Retzius (d. 1860) had put
+an end to the belief of Blumenbach that race and skull-formation are
+coincident, and J. Ranke summarizes his tenets in these words:[176]
+“What in point of variety of skull-formation is displayed by mankind
+in general is displayed also on the smaller scale by every tribe
+(_Volksstamm_) and even by many fair-sized communities--a union of
+the different skull-forms with the extremes led up to through finely
+graduated intermediate forms.” No one would deny that it is reasonable
+to seek for ideal basic forms, but the researcher ought not to
+lose sight of the fact that these are ideals and that, for all the
+objectivity of his measurements, it is his taste that really fixes his
+limits and his classification. Much more important than any attempts
+to discover an ordering principle is the fact that within the unit
+“humanity” all these forms occur and have occurred from the earliest
+ice-times, that they have never markedly varied, and that they are
+found indiscriminately even within the same families. The one certain
+result of science is that observed by Ranke, that when skull-forms are
+arranged serially with respect to transitions, certain averages emerge
+which are characteristic not of “race,” but of the land.
+
+In reality, the race-expression of a human head can associate itself
+with any conceivable skull-form, the decisive element being not the
+bone, but the flesh, the look, the play of feature. Since the days of
+Romanticism we have spoken of an “Indogermanic” race. But is there such
+a thing as an Aryan or a Semitic skull? Can we distinguish Celtic and
+Frankish skulls, or even Boer and Kaffir? And if not, what may not the
+earth have witnessed in the way of history unknown to us, for which
+not the slightest evidences, but only bones, remain! How unimportant
+these are for that which we call race in higher mankind can be shown
+by a drastic experiment. Take a set of men with every conceivable
+race-difference, and, while mentally picturing “race,” observe them in
+an X-ray apparatus. The result is simply comic. As soon as light is let
+through it, “race” vanishes suddenly and completely.
+
+It cannot be too often repeated, moreover, that the little that is
+really illustrative in skeletal structure is a growth of the landscape
+and never a function of the blood. Elliot Smith in Egypt and von
+Luschen in Crete have examined an immense material yielded by graves
+ranging from the Stone Age to the present day. From the “Sea-peoples”
+of the middle of the second millennium B.C. to the Arabs and the Turks
+one human stream after another has passed over this region, but the
+average bone-structure has remained unaltered. It would be true, in
+a measure, to say that “race” has travelled as flesh over the fixed
+skeleton-form of the land.[177] The Alpine region to-day contains
+“peoples” of the most diverse origins--Teuton, Latin, Slav--and we
+need only glance backward to discover Etruscans and Huns there also.
+Tribe follows tribe. But the skeletal structure in the mankind of the
+region in general is ever the same, and only on the edges, towards
+the plains, does it gradually disappear in favour of other forms,
+which are themselves likewise fixed. As to race, therefore, and the
+race-wanderings of primitive men, the famous finds of prehistoric
+bones, Neanderthal to Aurignacian, prove nothing. Apart from some
+conclusions from the jaw-bone as to the kinds of food eaten, they
+merely indicate the basic land-form that is found there to this day.
+
+Once more, it is the mysterious power of the soil, demonstrable at once
+in every living being as soon as we discover a criterion independent of
+the heavy hand of the Darwinian age. The Romans brought the vine from
+the South to the Rhine, and there it has certainly not visibly--i.e.,
+botanically--changed. But in this instance “race” can be determined in
+other ways. There is a soil-born difference not merely between Southern
+and Northern, between Rhine and Moselle wines, but even between the
+products of every different site on every different hill-side; and the
+same holds good for every other high-grade vegetable “race,” such as
+tea and tobacco. Aroma, a genuine growth of the country-side, is one
+of the hall-marks (all the more significant because they cannot be
+measured) of true race. But noble races of men are differentiated in
+just the same intellectual way as noble wines. There is a like element,
+only sensible to the finest perceptions, a faint aroma in every form,
+that underneath all higher Culture connects the Etruscans and the
+Renaissance in Tuscany,[178] and the Sumerians, the Persians of 500
+B.C., and the Persians of Islam on the Tigris.
+
+None of this is accessible to a science that measures and weighs.
+It exists for the feelings--with a plain certainty and at the first
+glance--but not for the savant’s treatment. And the conclusion to which
+I come is that Race, like Time and Destiny, is a decisive element in
+every question of life, something which everyone knows clearly and
+definitely so long as he does not try to set himself to comprehend it
+by way of rational--i.e., soulless--dissection and ordering. Race,
+Time, and Destiny belong together. But the moment scientific thought
+approaches them, the word “Time” acquires the significance of a
+dimension, the word “Destiny” that of causal connexion, while Race,
+for which even at that stage of scientific _askesis_ we still retain a
+very sure feeling, becomes an incomprehensible chaos of unconnected and
+heterogeneous characters that (under headings of land, period, culture,
+stock) interpenetrate without end and without law. Some adhere toughly
+and permanently to a stock and are transmissible; others glide over a
+population like mere cloud-shadows; and many are, as it were, dæmons
+of the land, which possess everyone who inhabits it for as long as he
+stays in it. Some expel one another, some seek one another. A strict
+classification of races--the ambition of all ethnology--is impossible.
+The attempt is foredoomed from the start, as it contradicts this very
+essence of the racial, and every systematic lay-out always has been
+and will be, inevitably, a falsification and misapprehension of the
+nature of its subject. Race, in contrast to speech, is unsystematic
+through and through. In the last resort every individual man and every
+individual moment of his existence have their own race. And therefore
+the only mode of approach to the Totem side is, not classification, but
+physiognomic fact.
+
+
+IV
+
+He who would penetrate into the essence of language should begin
+by putting aside all the philologist’s apparatus and observe how a
+hunter speaks to his dog. The dog follows the outstretched finger. He
+listens, tense, to the sound of the word, but shakes his head--this
+kind of man-speech he does not understand. Then he makes one or two
+sentences to indicate _his_ idea; he stands still and barks, which
+in his language is a sentence containing the question: “Is that what
+Master means?” Then, still in dog language, he expresses his pleasure
+at finding that he was right. In just the same way two men who do not
+really possess a single word in common seek to understand one another.
+When a country parson explains something to a peasant-woman, he looks
+at her keenly, and, unconsciously, he puts into his look the essence
+that she would certainly never be able to understand from a parsonic
+mode of expression. The locutions of to-day, without exception, are
+capable of comprehension only in association with other modes of
+speech--adequate by themselves they are not, and never have been.
+
+If the dog, now, wants something, he wags his tail; impatient of
+Master’s stupidity in not understanding this perfectly distinct and
+expressive speech, he adds a vocal expression--he barks--and finally an
+expression of attitude--he mimes or makes signs. Here the man is the
+obtuse one who has not yet learned to talk.
+
+Finally something very remarkable happens. When the dog has exhausted
+every other device to comprehend the various speeches of his master,
+he suddenly plants himself squarely, and his eye bores into the eye of
+the human. Something deeply mysterious is happening here--the immediate
+contact of Ego and Tu. The look emancipates from the limitations of
+waking-consciousness. Being understands itself without signs. Here the
+dog has become a “judge” of men, looking his opposite straight in the
+eye and grasping, behind the speech, the speaker.
+
+Languages of these kinds we habitually use without being conscious of
+the fact. The infant speaks long before it has learned its first word,
+and the grown-up talks with it without even thinking of the ordinary
+meanings of the words he or she is using--that is, the sound-forms in
+this case subserve a language that is quite other than that of words.
+Such languages also have their groups and dialects; they, too, can be
+learned, mastered, and misunderstood, and they are so indispensable to
+us that verbal language would mutiny if we were to attempt to make it
+do all the work without assistance from tone- and gesture-language.
+Even our script, which is verbal language for the eye, would be almost
+incomprehensible but for the aid that it gets from gesture-language in
+the form of punctuation.
+
+It is the fundamental mistake of linguistic science that it confuses
+language in general with human word-language--and that not merely
+theoretically, but habitually in the practical conduct of all its
+investigations. As a result, it has remained immensely ignorant of the
+vast profusion of speech-modes of different kinds that are in common
+use amongst beasts and men. The domain of speech, taken as a whole,
+is far wider, and verbal speech, with its incapacity to stand alone
+(an incapacity not wholly shaken off, even now) has really a much more
+modest part in it, than its students have observed. As to the “origin
+of human speech,” the very phrase implies a wrong enunciation of the
+problem. Verbal speech--for that is what is meant--never had origins
+at all in the sense here postulated. It is not primary, and it is not
+unitary. The vast importance to which it has attained, since a certain
+stage in man’s history, must not deceive us as to its position in the
+history of free-moving entity. An investigation into speech certainly
+ought not to begin with man.
+
+But the idea of a beginning for animal language, too, is erroneous.
+Speaking is so closely bound up with the living being of the animal (in
+contradiction to the mere being of the plant) that not even unicellular
+creatures devoid of all sense-organs can be conceived of as speechless.
+To be a microcosm in the macrocosm is one and the same thing as having
+a power to communicate oneself to another. To speak of a beginning
+of speech in animal history is meaningless. For that microcosmic
+existences are _in plurality_ is a matter of simple self-evidence. To
+speculate on other possibilities is mere waste of time. Granted that
+Darwinian fancies about an original generation and first pairs of
+ancestors belong with the Victorian rearguard and should be left there,
+still the fact remains that swarms also are awake and aware, inwardly
+and livingly sensible, of a “we,” and reaching out to one another for
+linkages of waking-consciousness.
+
+Waking-being is activity in the extended; and, further, is willed
+activity. This is the distinction between the movements of a microcosm
+and the mechanical mobility of the plant, the animal, or the man in the
+plant-state--i.e., asleep. Consider the animal activity of nutrition,
+procreation, defence, attack--one side of it regularly consists in
+getting into touch with the macrocosm by means of the senses, whether
+it be the undifferentiated sensitivity of the unicellular creature or
+the vision of a highly developed eye that is in question. Here there is
+a definite _will to receive impression_; this we call orientation. But,
+besides, there exists from the beginning a _will to produce impression
+in the other_--what we call expression--and with that, at once, we have
+_speaking as an activity of the animal waking-consciousness_. Since
+then nothing fundamentally new has supervened. The world-languages of
+high Civilizations are nothing but exceedingly refined expositions of
+potentialities that were all implicitly contained in the fact of willed
+impressions of unicellular creatures upon one another.
+
+But the foundations of this fact lie in the primary feeling of fear.
+The waking-consciousness makes a cleft in the cosmic, projects a space
+between particulars, and alienates them. To feel oneself alone is
+one’s first impression in the daily awakening, and hence the primitive
+impulse to crowd together in the midst of this alien world, to assure
+oneself sensibly of the proximity of the other, to seek a conscious
+connexion with him. The “thou” is deliverance from the fear of the
+being-alone. _The discovery of the Thou_, the sense of another self
+resolved organically and spiritually out of the world of the alien,
+is the grand moment in the early history of the animal. Thereupon
+animals _are_. One has only to look long and carefully into the tiny
+world of a water-droplet under the microscope to be convinced that the
+discovery of the Thou, and _with it that of the I_ has been taking
+place here in its simplest imaginable form. These tiny creatures know
+not only the Other, but also the Others; they possess not merely
+waking-consciousness but also relations of waking-consciousness,
+and therewith not only expression, but the elements of an
+expression-_speech_.
+
+It is well to recall here the distinction between the two great
+speech-groups. Expression-speech treats the Other as witness, and aims
+purely at effects upon him, while communication-speech regards him as
+a collocutor and expects him to answer. To understand means to receive
+impressions with one’s own feeling of their significance, and it is on
+this that the effect of the highest form of human expression-speech,
+art, depends.[179] To come to an understanding, to hold a conversation,
+postulates that the Other’s feeling of significances is the same
+as one’s own. The elementary unit of an expression-speech before
+witnesses is called the Motive. Command of the motive is the basis of
+all expression-technique. On the other hand, the impression produced
+for the purpose of an understanding is called the Sign, and is the
+elementary unit of all communication-technique--including, therefore,
+at the highest level, human speech.
+
+Of the extensiveness of both these speech-worlds in the
+waking-consciousness of man we to-day can scarcely form an idea.
+Expression-speech, which appears in the earliest times with all the
+religious seriousness of the Taboo, includes not only weighty and
+strict ornament--which in the beginning coincides completely with
+the idea of art and makes every stiff, inert thing into a vehicle
+of the expression--but also the solemn ceremonial--whose web of
+formulæ spreads over the whole of public life, and even over that
+of the family[180]--and the language of costume, which is contained
+in clothing, tattooing, and personal adornment, all of which have a
+_uniform_ significance. The investigators of the nineteenth century
+vainly attempted to trace the origin of clothing to the feeling of
+shame or to utilitarian motives. It is in fact intelligible only as
+the means of an expression-speech, and as such it is developed to a
+grandiose level in all the high Civilizations, including our own of
+to-day. We need only think of the dominant part played by the “mode” in
+our whole public life and doings, the regulation attire for important
+occasions, the nuances of wear for this and that social function, the
+wedding-dress, mourning; of the military uniform, the priest’s robes,
+orders and decorations, mitre and tonsure, periwig and queue, powder,
+rings, styles of hairdressing; of all the significant displays and
+concealments of person, the costume of the mandarin and the senator,
+the odalisque and the nun; of the court-state of Nero, Saladin and
+Montezuma--not to mention the details of peasant costumes, the language
+of flowers, colours, and precious stones. As for the language of
+religion, it is superfluous to mention it, for all this _is_ religion.
+
+The communication-languages, in which every kind of sense-impression
+that it is possible to conceive more or less participates, have
+gradually evolved (so far as the peoples of the higher Cultures are
+concerned) three outstanding signs--picture, sound, and gesture, which
+in the script-speech of the Western Civilization have crystallized into
+a unit of letter, word, and punctuation mark.
+
+In the course of this long evolution there comes about at the last the
+_detachment of speaking from speech_. Of all processes in the history
+of language, none has a wider bearing than this. Originally all motives
+and signs are unquestionably the product of the moment and meant
+only for a single individual act of the active waking-consciousness.
+Their actual and their felt and willed significances are one and the
+same. But this is no longer so when a _definite stock of signs offers
+itself_ for the living act of giving the sign, for with that not only
+is the activity differentiated from its means, but the means are
+differentiated _from their significance_. The unity of the two not
+only ceases to be a matter of self-evidence, it ceases even to be a
+possibility. The feeling of significance is a living feeling and,
+like everything else belonging with Time and Destiny, it is uniquely
+occurring and non-recurring. No sign, however well known and habitually
+used, is ever repeated with exactly the same connotation; and hence it
+is that originally no sign ever recurred in the same form. The domain
+of the rigid sign is unconditionally one of things-become of the pure
+extended; it is _not an organism, but a system_, which possesses its
+own _causal_ logic and brings the irreconcilable opposition of space
+and time, intellect and mood, also into the waking connexions of two
+beings.
+
+This fixed stock of signs and motives, with its ostensibly fixed
+meanings, must be acquired by learning and practice if one wishes
+to belong to the community of waking-consciousness with which it
+is associated. _The necessary concomitant of speech divorced from
+speaking is the notion of the school._ This is fully developed in the
+higher animals; and in every self-contained religion, every art, every
+society, it is presupposed as the background of the believer, the
+artist, the “well-brought-up” human being. And from this point each
+community has its sharply defined frontier; to be a member one must
+know its language--i.e., its articles of faith, its ethics, its rules.
+In counterpoint and Catholicism alike, bliss is not to be compassed
+by mere feeling and goodwill. Culture means a hitherto unimagined
+intensification of the depth and strictness of the form-language in
+every department; for each individual belonging to it, it consists--as
+his _personal_ Culture, religious, ethical, social, artistic--in
+a lifelong process of education and training _for_ this life. And
+consequently in all great arts, in the great Churches, mysteries and
+orders, there is reached such a command of form as astonishes the
+human being himself, and ends by breaking itself under the stress of
+its own exigences--whereupon, in every Culture alike, there is set
+up (expressly or tacitly) the slogan of a “return to nature.” This
+_maestria_ extends also to verbal language. Side by side with the
+social polish of the period of the Tyrannis or of the troubadours,
+with the fugues of Bach and the vase-paintings of Exekias,[181] we
+have the art of Attic oratory and that of French conversation, both
+presupposing, like any other art, a strict and carefully matured
+convention and a long and exacting training of the individual.
+
+Metaphysically the significance of this separating-off of a
+set language can hardly be over-estimated. The daily practice
+of intercourse in settled forms, and the command of the entire
+waking-consciousness through such forms--of which there is no longer
+a sensed process of formation _ad hoc_, but which are just simply
+there, and require understanding in the strictest sense of the
+word--lead to an ever-sharper distinction between understanding and
+feeling within the waking-consciousness. An incipient language is
+felt understandingly; the practice of speaking requires one, first,
+to feel the _known_ speech-medium and, secondly, to understand the
+intention put into it on _this_ occasion. Consequently the kernel
+of all schooling lies in the acquisition of elements of knowledge.
+Every Church proclaims unhesitatingly that not feeling but knowledge
+leads into its ways of salvation; all true artistry rests on the sure
+knowledge of forms that the individual has not to discover, but to
+learn. “Understanding” is knowledge conceived of as a being. It is that
+which is completely alien to blood, race, time; from the opposition
+of rigid speech to coursing blood and developing history come the
+_negative_ ideals of the absolute, the eternal, the universally
+valid--the ideals of Church and School.
+
+But just this, in the last analysis, makes languages incomplete and
+leads to the eternal contradiction between what is in fact spoken and
+what was willed or meant by the speaking. We might indeed say that
+lies came into the world with the separation of speech from speaking.
+The signs are fixed, but not so their meaning--from the outset we feel
+that this is so, then we know it, and finally we turn our knowledge
+to account. It is an old, old, experience that when one wills to
+say something, the words “fail” one (_versagen_, mis-say); that one
+does not “express oneself aright” and in fact says something other
+than what was meant; that one may speak accurately and be understood
+inaccurately. And so finally we get to the art--which is widespread
+even amongst animals (e.g., cats)--of “using words to conceal
+thoughts.” One says not everything, one says something quite different,
+one speaks formally about nothing, one talks briskly to cover the fact
+that one has said something. Or one imitates the speech of another. The
+red-backed shrike (_Lanius collurio_) imitates the strophes of small
+song-birds in order to lure them. This is a well-known hunter’s dodge,
+but here again established motives and signs are precedent for it,
+just as much as they are a condition for the faking in antiques or the
+forgery of a signature. And all these traits, met with in attitude and
+mien as in handwriting and verbal utterance, reappear in the language
+of every religion, every art, every society--we need only refer to the
+ideas expressed by the words “hypocrite,” “orthodox,” “heretic,” the
+English “cant,” the secondary senses of “diplomat,” “Jesuit,” “actor,”
+the masks and warinesses of polite society, and the painting of to-day,
+in which nothing is honest more and which in every gallery offers the
+eye untruth in every imaginable form.
+
+In a language that one stammers, one cannot be a diplomat. But in
+the real command of a language there is the danger that the relation
+between the means and the meaning may be made into a new means. There
+arises an intellectual art of _playing_ with expression, practised by
+the Alexandrines and the Romantics--by Theocritus and Brentano in
+lyric poetry, by Reger in music, by Kierkegaard in religion.
+
+_Finally, speech and truth exclude one another._[182] And in fact this
+is just what brings up, in the age of fixed language, the typical
+“judge of men,” who is all race and knows how to take the being that
+is speaking. To look a man keenly in the eyes, to size up the speaker
+behind the stump speech or the philosophical discourse, to know behind
+the prayer the heart, and behind the common good-tone the more intimate
+levels of social importance--and that instantaneously, immediately,
+and with the self-evident certainty that characterizes everything
+cosmic--that is what is lacking to the real Taboo-man, for whom _one_
+language at any rate carries conviction. A priest who is also a
+diplomat cannot be genuinely a priest. An ethical philosopher of the
+Kant stamp is never a “judge of men.”
+
+The man who lies in his verbal utterances betrays himself, without
+observing it, in his demeanour. One who uses demeanour to dissimulate
+with betrays himself in his tone. It is precisely because rigid speech
+separates means and intent that it never carries it off with the keen
+appraiser. The adept reads between the lines and understands a man
+as soon as he sees his walk or his handwriting. The deeper and more
+intimate a spiritual communion, the more readily it dispenses with
+signs and linkages through waking-consciousness. A real comradeship
+makes itself understood with few words, a real faith is silent
+altogether. The purest symbol of an understanding that has again got
+beyond language is the old peasant couple sitting in the evening
+in front of their cottage and entertaining one another without a
+word’s being passed, each knowing what the other is thinking and
+feeling. Words would only disturb the harmony. From such a state
+of reciprocal understanding something or other reaches back, far
+beyond the collective existence of the higher animal-world, deep in
+the primeval history of free-moving life. Here deliverance from the
+waking-consciousness is, at moments, very nearly achieved.
+
+
+V
+
+Of all the signs that have come to be fixed, none has led to greater
+consequences than that which in its present state we call “word.”
+It belongs, no doubt, to the purely human history of speech, but
+nevertheless the idea, or at any rate the conventional idea, of an
+“origin” of verbal language is as meaningless and barren as that of a
+zero-point for speech generally. A precise beginning is inconceivable
+for the latter because it is compresent with and contained in the
+essence of the microcosm, and for the former because it presupposes
+many fully developed kinds of communication-speech and constitutes
+only one element--though in the end the dominant element--of a slow and
+quiet evolution. It is a fundamental error in all theories (however
+diametrically opposed to each other) like those of Wundt and of
+Jespersen[183] that they investigate speaking in words as if it were
+something new and self-contained, which inevitably leads them into a
+radically false psychology. In reality verbal language is a very late
+phenomenon, not a young shoot, but the last blossom borne by one of the
+ramifications of the parent stem of all vocal speeches.
+
+In actuality a pure word-speech does not exist. No one speaks
+without employing, in addition to the set vocabulary, quite other
+modes of speech, such as emphasis, rhythm, and facial play, which
+are much more primary than the language of the word, and with
+which, moreover, it has become completely intertwined. It is highly
+necessary, therefore, to avoid regarding the ensemble of present-day
+word-languages, with its extreme structural intricacy, as an inner
+unity with a homogeneous history. Every word-language known to us has
+very different sides, and each of these sides has its own Destiny
+within the history of the whole. There is not one sense-perception
+that would be wholly irrelevant to an adequate history of the use
+of words. Further, we must distinguish very strictly between vocal
+and verbal languages; the former is familiar even to the simpler
+genera of animals, the latter is in certain characters--individual
+characters, it is true, but all the more significant for that--a
+radically different thing. For every animal voice-language, further,
+expression-motives (a roar of anger) and communication-signs (a cry
+of warning) can be clearly distinguished, and doubtless the same may
+be said of the earliest words. But was it, then, as an expression-
+or as a communication-language that verbal language _arose_? Was it
+in quite primitive conditions, independent, more or less, of any and
+every visual language such as picture and gesture? To such questions
+we have no answer, since we have no inkling of what the pre-forms of
+the “word,” properly so called, were. Naïve indeed is the philology
+which uses what we of to-day call “primitive” languages (in reality,
+incomplete pictures of very _late_ language-conditions) as premisses
+for conclusions as to the origin of words and the Word. The word is
+in them an already established, highly developed, and self-evident
+means--i.e., precisely what anything “originally” is _not_.
+
+There can be no doubt that the sign which made it possible for the
+future word-language to detach itself from the general vocal speech of
+the animal world was that which I call “name”--a vocal image serving
+to denote a Something in the world-around, which was felt as a being,
+and by the act of naming became a numen.[184] It is unnecessary to
+speculate as to how the first names came to be--no human speech
+accessible to us at this time of day gives us the least _point d’appui_
+here. But, contrary to the view of modern research, I consider that
+the decisive turn came not from a change of the throat-formation or
+from a peculiarity of sound-formation or from any other physiological
+factor--if any such changes ever took place at all, it would be the
+race side that they would affect--not even an increased capacity for
+self-expression by existing means, like, say, the transition from
+word to sentence (H. Paul[185]), but _a profound spiritual change_.
+With the Name comes a new world-outlook. And if speech in general is
+the child of fear, of the unfathomable terror that wells up when the
+waking-consciousness is presented with the facts, that impels all
+creatures together in the longing to prove each other’s reality and
+proximity--then the first word, the Name, is a mighty leap upward.
+The Name grazes the _meaning_ of consciousness and the _source_ of
+fear alike. The world is not merely existent, a secret is felt in
+it. Above and apart from the more ordinary objects of expression-
+and communication-language, man names _that which is enigmatic_. It
+is the beast that knows no enigmas. Man cannot think too solemnly,
+reverently, of this first name-giving. It was not well always to speak
+the name, it should be kept secret, a dangerous power dwelt in it.
+_With the name the step is taken from the everyday physical of the
+beast to the metaphysical of man._ It was the greatest turning-point
+in the history of the human soul. Our epistemology is accustomed to
+set speech and thought side by side, and it is quite right, if we take
+into consideration only the languages that are still accessible at the
+present day. But I believe that we can go much deeper than this and say
+that with the Name religion in the proper sense, _definite_ religion in
+the midst of formless quasi-religious awe, came into being. Religion in
+this sense means religious _thought_. It is the new conception of the
+creative understanding emancipated from sensation. We say, in a very
+significant idiom, that we “reflect on,” “think _over_,” something.
+With the understanding of things-named the formation of a _higher_
+world, _above_ all sensational existence, is begun--“higher” both
+according to obvious symbolism and in reference to the position of the
+head which man guesses (often with painful distinctness) to be the home
+of his thoughts. It gives to the primary feeling of fear both an object
+and a glimpse of liberation. On this religious first thought all the
+philosophical, scholarly, scientific thought of later times has been
+and remains dependent for its very deepest foundations.
+
+These first names we have to think of as quite separate and
+individual elements in the stock of signs of a highly developed
+sound- and gesture-language, the richness of which we can no longer
+imagine, since these other means have come to be subordinate to
+the word-languages, and their further developments have been in
+dependent connexion therewith.[186] One thing, however, was assured
+when the name inaugurated the transformation and spiritualization of
+communication-technique--the pre-eminence of the eye over the other
+sense-organs. Man’s awakeness and awareness was in an illuminated
+space, his depth-experience[187] was a radiation outward towards
+light-sources and light-resistances, and he conceived of his ego as a
+middle point in the light. “Visible” or “invisible” was the alternative
+which governed the state of understanding in which the first names
+arose. Were the first _numina_, perhaps, things of the light-world that
+were felt, heard, observed in their effects, _but not seen_? No doubt
+the group of names, like everything else that marks a turning-point
+in the course of world-happenings, must have developed both rapidly
+and powerfully. The entire light-world, in which everything possesses
+the properties of position and duration in space, was--in the midst
+of what tensions of cause and effect, thing and property, object and
+subject!--very soon listed with innumerable names, and so anchored in
+the memory, for what we now call “memory” is the capacity of storing
+for the understanding, by means of the name, _the named_. Over the
+realm of understood visuals (_Sehdinge_) supervenes a more intellectual
+realm of namings, which shares with it the logical property of being
+purely extensive, disposed in polarity, and ruled by the causal
+principle. All word-types like cases and pronouns and prepositions
+(which arise, of course, much later) have a causal or local meaning in
+respect of named units; adjectives, and verbs also, have frequently
+come into existence in pairs of opposites; often (as in the E’we
+languages of West Africa investigated by Westermann) the same word is
+pronounced low or high to denote for example great and small, far and
+near, passive and active.[188] Later these relics of gesture-language
+pass completely into the word-form,[189] as we see clearly, for
+example, in the Greek μακρός and μικρός and the _u_-sounds of Egyptian
+designations of suffering. It is the form of thinking in opposites
+which, starting from these antithetical word-pairs, constitutes the
+foundation of all inorganic logic, and turns every scientific discovery
+of truths into a movement of conceptual contraries, of which the
+most universal instance is that of an old view and a new one being
+contrasted as “error” and “truth.”
+
+The second great turning-point was the use of _grammar_. Besides
+the name there was now the sentence, besides the verbal designation
+the verbal relation, and thereupon reflection--which is a thinking
+in word-relations that follows from the perception of things for
+which word-labels exist--became the decisive characteristic of man’s
+waking-consciousness. The question whether the communication-languages
+already contained effective “sentences” before the appearance of the
+genuine “name” is a difficult one. The sentence, in the _present_
+acceptation of the word, has indeed developed within these languages
+according to its own conditions and with its own phases, but
+nevertheless it postulates the _prior_ existence of the name. Sentences
+as conceptual relations become possible only with the intellectual
+change that accompanied their birth. And we must assume further
+that within the highly developed wordless languages one character
+or trait after another, in the course of continuous practical use,
+was transformed into verbal form and as such fell into its place in
+an increasingly solid structure, the prime form of our present-day
+languages. Thus the inner build of all verbal languages rests upon
+foundations of far older construction, and for its further development
+is _not_ dependent upon the stock of words and its destiny.
+
+It is in fact just the reverse. For with syntax the original group
+of individual _names_ was transformed into a system of words, whose
+character was given, not by their proper, but by their grammatical
+significance. The name made its appearance as something novel and
+entirely self-contained. But word-species arose as elements of the
+sentence, and thereafter the contents of waking-consciousness streamed
+in overflowing profusion into this world of words, demanding to be
+labelled and represented in it, until finally even “all” became, in one
+shape or another, a word and available for the thought-process.
+
+Thenceforward the sentence is the decisive element--we speak in
+sentences and not words. Attempts to define the two have been frequent,
+but never successful. According to F. N. Finck, word-formation is an
+analytical and sentence-formation a synthetical activity of the mind,
+the first preceding the second. It is demonstrable that the same
+actuality received as impression is variously understood, and words,
+therefore, are definable from very different points of view.[190] But
+according to the usual definition, a sentence is the verbal expression
+of a _thought_, a symbol (says H. Paul) for the connexion of several
+_ideas_ in the soul of the speaker. It seems to me quite impossible
+to settle the nature of the sentence from its contents. The fact is
+simply that we call the relatively largest mechanical units employed
+“sentences” and the relatively smallest “words.” Over this range
+extends the validity of grammatical _laws_. But as soon as we pass
+from theory to practice, we see that language as currently used is
+no longer such a mechanism; it obeys not laws, but _pulse_. Thus a
+race-character is involved, _a priori_, in the way in which the matter
+to be communicated is set in sentences. Sentences are not the same
+for Tacitus and Napoleon as for Cicero and Nietzsche. The Englishman
+orders his material syntactically in a different way from the German.
+Not the ideas and thoughts, but the thinking, the kind of life, _the
+blood_, determine in the primitive, Classical, Chinese, and Western
+speech-communities the type of the sentence-unit, and with it the
+_mechanical_ relation of the word to the sentence. The boundary between
+grammar and syntax should be placed at the point where the mechanical
+of speech ceases and the organic of speaking begins--usages, custom,
+the _physiognomy_ of the way that a man employs to express himself. The
+other boundary lies where the mechanical structure of the word passes
+into the organic factors of sound-formation and expression. Even the
+children of immigrants can often be recognized by the way in which the
+English “_th_” is pronounced--a race-trait of the land. Only that which
+lies between these limits is the “language,” properly so called, which
+has system, is a technical instrument, and can be invented, improved,
+changed, and worn out; enunciation and expression, on the contrary,
+adhere to the _race_. We recognize a person known to us, without seeing
+him, by his pronunciation, and not only that, but we can recognize a
+member of an alien race even if he speaks perfectly correct German.
+The great sound-modifications, like the Old High German in Carolingian
+times and the Middle High German in the Late Gothic, have territorial
+frontiers and affect only the speaking of the language, not the inner
+form of sentence and word.
+
+Words, I have just said, are the relatively smallest mechanical units
+in the sentence. There is probably nothing that is so characteristic
+of the thinking of a human species as the way in which these units
+are acquired by it. For the Bantu Negro a thing that he sees belongs
+first of all to a very large number of categories of comprehension.
+Correspondingly the word for it consists of a kernel or root and a
+number of monosyllabic prefixes. When he speaks of a woman in a field,
+his word is something like this: “living, one, big, old, female,
+outside, _human_”; this makes seven syllables, but it denotes a single,
+clear-headed, and to us quite alien act of comprehension.[191] There
+are languages in which the word is almost coextensive with the sentence.
+
+The gradual replacement of bodily or sonic by grammatical gestures
+is thus the decisive factor in the formation of sentences, but it
+has never been completed. There are no purely verbal languages.
+The activity of speaking, in words, as it emerges more and more
+precise, consists in this, that through word-sounds we awaken
+significance-feelings, which in turn through the sound of the
+word-connexions evoke further relation-feelings. Our schooling in
+speech trains us to understand in this abbreviated and indicative form
+not only light-things and light-relations, but also thought-things and
+thought-relations. Words are only named, not used definitively, and
+the hearer has to feel what the speaker means. This and this alone
+amounts to speech, and hence mien and tone play a much greater part
+than is generally admitted in the understanding of modern speech.
+Substantive signs may conceivably exist for many of the animals even,
+but verb-signs never.
+
+The last grand event in this history, which brings the formation of
+verbal speech more or less to a close, is the coming of the verb.
+This assumes at the outset a very high order of abstraction. For
+substantives are words whereby things sense-defined in illuminated
+space[192] become evocable also in after-thought, while verbs describe
+_types_ of change, which are not seen, but are extracted from the
+unendingly protean light-world, by noting the special characters of
+the individual cases, and generating concepts from them. “Falling
+stone” is originally a unit impression, but we first separate movement
+and thing moved and then isolate falling as one _kind_ of movement
+from innumerable other sorts and shades thereof--sinking, tottering,
+stumbling, slipping. We do not “see” the distinction, we “know” it. The
+difference between fleeing and running, or between flying and being
+wafted, altogether transcends the visual impression they produce and is
+only apprehensible by a word-trained consciousness. But now, with this
+verb-thinking, even life itself has become accessible to reflection.
+Out of the living impress made on the waking-consciousness, out of the
+ambiance of the becoming (which gesture-speech, being merely imitative,
+leaves unquestioned and unprobed) that which is life itself--namely,
+singularity of occurrence--is unconsciously eliminated, and the rest,
+as effect of a cause (the wind wafts, lightning flashes, the peasant
+ploughs), is put, under purely extensive descriptions, into suitable
+places in the sign-system. One has to bury oneself completely in the
+solid definiteness of subject and predicate, active and passive,
+present and perfect, to perceive how entirely the understanding here
+masters the senses and unsouls actuality. In substantives one can still
+regard the mental thing (the idea) as a copy of the visual thing, but
+in the verb _something inorganic has been put in place of something
+organic_. The fact that we live--namely, that we at this instant
+perceive something--becomes eventually a _property_ of the something
+perceived. In terms of word-thought, the perceived endures--“is.” Thus,
+finally, are formed the categories of thought, graded according to what
+is and what is not natural to it; thus Time appears as a dimension,
+Destiny as a cause, the living as chemical or psychical mechanism. It
+is in this wise that the style of mathematical, judicial, and dogmatic
+thought arises.
+
+And in this wise, too, arises that disunity which seems to us
+inseparable from the essence of man, but is really only the expression
+of the dominance of word-language in his waking-consciousness.
+This instrument of communication between Ego and Tu has, by reason
+of its perfection, fashioned out of the animal understanding of
+sensation, a thinking-in-words which stands proxy for sensation.
+Subtle thinking--“splitting hairs,” as it is called--is conversing
+with oneself in word-significances. It is the activity that no kind of
+language but the language of words can subserve, and it becomes, with
+the perfection of the language, distinctive of the life-habit of whole
+classes of human beings. The divorce of speech, rigid and devitalized,
+from speaking, which makes it impossible to include the whole truth in
+a verbal utterance, has particularly far-reaching consequences in the
+sign-system of words. Abstract thinking consists in the use of a finite
+word-framework into which it is sought to squeeze the whole infinite
+content of life. Concepts kill Being and falsify Waking-Being. Long ago
+in the springtime of language-history, while understanding had still to
+struggle in order to hold its own with sensation, this mechanization
+was without importance for life. But now, from a being who occasionally
+thought, man has become a thinking being, and it is the ideal of every
+thought-system to subject life, once and for all, to the domination of
+intellect. This is achieved in theory by according validity only to the
+known and branding the actual as a sham and a delusion. It is achieved
+in practice by forcing the voices of the blood to be silent in the
+presence of universal ethical principles.[193]
+
+Both, logic and ethics alike, are systems of absolute and eternal
+truths for the intellect, and correspondingly untruths for history.
+However completely the inner eye may triumph over the outer in the
+domain of thought, in the realm of facts the belief in eternal truths
+is a petty and absurd stage-play that exists only in the heads of
+individuals. A true system of thoughts emphatically cannot exist, for
+no sign can replace actuality. Profound and honest thinkers are always
+brought to the conclusion that all cognition is conditioned _a priori_
+by its own form and can never reach that which the words mean--apart,
+again, from the case of technics, in which the concepts are instruments
+and not aims in themselves. And this _ignorabimus_ is in conformity
+also with the intuition of every true sage, that abstract principles of
+life are acceptable only as figures of speech, trite maxims of daily
+use underneath which life flows, as it has always flowed, onward. Race,
+in the end, is stronger than languages, and thus it is that, under all
+the great names, it has been thinkers--who are personalities--and not
+systems--which are mutable--that have taken effect upon life.
+
+
+VI
+
+So far, then, the inner history of word-languages shows three stages.
+In the first there appears, within highly developed but wordless
+communication-languages, the first names--units in a new sort of
+understanding. The world awakens _as a secret_, and religious thought
+begins. In the second stage, a complete communication-speech is
+gradually transformed into grammatical values. The gesture becomes the
+sentence, and the sentence transforms the names into words. Further,
+the sentence becomes the great school of understanding _vis-à-vis_
+sensation, and an increasingly subtle significance-feeling for abstract
+relations within the mechanism of the sentence evokes an immense
+profusion of inflexions, which attach themselves especially to the
+substantive and the verb, the space-word and the time-word. This is the
+blossoming time of grammar, the period of which we may probably (though
+under all reserves) take as the two millennia preceding the birth of
+the Egyptian and Babylonian Culture. The third stage is marked by a
+rapid decay of inflexions and a simultaneous replacement of grammar by
+syntax. The intellectualization of man’s waking-consciousness has now
+proceeded so far that he no longer needs the sense-props of inflexion
+and, discarding the old luxuriance of word-forms, communicates freely
+and surely by means of the faintest nuances of idiom (particles,
+position of words, rhythm). By dint of speaking in words, the
+understanding has attained supremacy over the waking-consciousness,
+and to-day it is in process of liberating itself from the restrictions
+of sensible-verbal machinery and working towards pure mechanics of the
+intellect. Minds and not senses are making the contact.
+
+In this third stage of linguistic history, which as such takes place
+in the biological plane[194] and therefore belongs to _man as a type_,
+the history of the higher Cultures now intervenes with an entirely
+new speech, the speech of the distance--writing--an invention of such
+inward forcefulness that again there is a sudden decisive turn in the
+destinies of the word-languages.
+
+The written language of Egypt is already by 3000 in a state of
+rapid grammatical decomposition; likewise the Sumerian literary
+languages called _eme-sal_ (women’s language). The written language
+of China--which _vis-à-vis_ the vernaculars of the Chinese world has
+long formed a language apart--is, even in the oldest known texts,
+so entirely inflexionless that only recent research has established
+that it ever had inflexions at all.[195] The Indogermanic system is
+known to us only in a state of complete break-down. Of the Case in Old
+Vedic (about 1500 B.C.) the Classical languages a thousand years later
+retained only fragments.[196] From Alexander the Great’s time the dual
+disappeared from the declension of ordinary Hellenistic Greek, and the
+passive vanished from the conjugation entirely. The Western languages,
+although of the most miscellaneous provenance imaginable--the Germanic
+from primitive and the Romanic from highly civilized stock--modify
+in the same direction, the Romanic cases having become reduced to
+one, and the English, after the Reformation, to zero. Ordinary German
+definitely shed the genitive at the beginning of the nineteenth century
+and is now in process of abolishing the dative. Only after trying to
+translate a piece of difficult and pregnant prose--say of Tacitus or
+Mommsen--“back”[197] into some very ancient language rich in inflexions
+does one realize how meantime the technique of signs has vaporized
+into a technique of thoughts, which now only needs to employ the
+signs--abbreviated, but replete with meaning--merely as the counters
+in a game that only the initiates of the particular speech-communion
+understand. This is why to a west-European, the sacred Chinese texts
+must always be in the fullest sense a sealed book; but the same holds
+good also for the primary words of every other Culture-language--the
+Greek λογός and ἀρχή, the Sanskrit _Atman_ and _Braman_--indications of
+the world-outlook of their respective Cultures that no one not bred in
+the Culture can comprehend.
+
+The external history of languages is as good as lost to us in just
+its most important parts. Its springtime lies deep in the primitive
+era, in which (to repeat what has been said earlier), we have to
+imagine “humanity” in the form of scattered and quite small troops,
+lost in the wide spaces of the earth. A spiritual change came when
+reciprocal contacts became habitual (and eventually natural) to them,
+but correspondingly there can be no doubt that this contact was first
+sought for and then regulated, or fended off, by means of speech, and
+that it was the impression of an earth filled with men that first
+brought the waking-consciousness to the point of tense intelligent
+shrewdness, forcing verbal language under pressure to the surface.
+So that, perhaps, the birth of grammar is connected with the race
+hall-mark of the grand Number.
+
+Since then, no other grammatical system has ever come into existence,
+but only novel derivatives of what was already there. Of these
+_authentic_ primitive languages and their structure and sound we know
+nothing. As far as our backward look takes us, we see only complete and
+developed linguistic systems, used by everyone, learned by every child,
+as something perfectly natural. And we find it more than difficult to
+imagine that once upon a time things may have been different, that
+perhaps a shudder of fear accompanied the hearing of such strange and
+enigmatic language--an awe like that which in historic times has been
+and still is excited by script. And yet we have to reckon with the
+possibility that at one time, in a world of wordless communication,
+verbal language constituted an aristocratic privilege, a jealously
+preserved class-secret. We have a thousand examples--the diplomats with
+their French, the scholars with their Latin, the priests with their
+Sanskrit--to suggest that there may have been such a tendency. It is
+part of the thoroughbred’s pride to be able to speak to one another
+in a way that outsiders cannot understand--a language for everybody
+is a vernacular. To be “on conversational terms with” someone is a
+privilege or a pretension. So, too, the use of literary language in
+talking with educated people, and contempt for dialect, mark the true
+bourgeois pride. It is only we who live in a Civilization wherein it is
+just as normal for children to learn to write as to learn to walk--in
+all earlier Cultures it was a rare accomplishment, to which few could
+aspire. And I am convinced that it was just so once with verbal
+language.
+
+The tempo of linguistic history is immensely rapid; here a mere century
+signifies a great deal. I may refer again to the gesture-language of
+the North Indians,[198] which became necessary because the rapidity
+of changes in the tribal dialects made intertribal understanding
+impossible otherwise. Compare, too, the Latin of the recently
+discovered Forum inscription[199] (about 500) with the Latin of Plautus
+(about 200) and this again with the Latin of Cicero (about 50). If we
+assume that the oldest Vedic texts have preserved the linguistic state
+of 1200 B.C., then even that of 2000 may have differed from it far more
+completely than any Indogermanic philologists working by _a posteriori_
+methods can even surmise.[200] But _allegro_ changes to _lento_ in the
+moment when script, the language of duration, intervenes and ties down
+and immobilizes the systems at entirely different age-levels. This is
+what makes this evolution so opaque to research; all that we possess is
+remains of written languages. Of the Egyptian and Babylonian linguistic
+world we do possess originals from as far back as 3000, but the oldest
+Indogermanic relics are _copies_, of which the linguistic state is much
+younger than the contents.
+
+Very various, under all these determinants, have been the destinies
+of the different grammars and vocabularies. The first attaches to
+the intellect, the second to things and places. Only grammatical
+systems are subject to natural inward change. The use of words, on the
+contrary, psychologically presupposes that, although the expression
+may change, inner mechanical structure is maintained (and all the more
+firmly) as being the basis on which denomination essentially rests.
+_The great linguistic families are purely grammatical families._ The
+words in them are more or less homeless and wander from one to another.
+It is a fundamental error in philological (especially Indogermanic)
+research that grammar and vocabulary are treated as a unit. All
+specialist vocabularies--the jargon of hunter, soldier, sportsman,
+seaman, savant--are in reality _only stocks of words_, and can be
+used within any and every grammatical system. The semi-Classical
+vocabulary of chemistry, the French of diplomacy, and the English of
+the racecourse have become naturalized in all modern languages alike.
+We may talk of “alien” words, but the same could have been said at
+some time or other of most of the “roots,” so-called, in all the old
+languages. All names adhere to the things that they denote, and share
+their history. In Greek the names for metals are of alien provenance;
+words like ταῦρος, χιτῶν, οἶνος are Semitic. Indian numerals are
+found in the Hittite texts of Boghaz Keüi,[201] and the contexts
+in which they occur are technical expressions which came into the
+country with horse-breeding. Latin administrative terms invaded the
+Greek East,[202] German invaded Petrine Russia in multitudes, Arabic
+words permeate the vocabulary of Western mathematics, chemistry, and
+astronomy. The Normans, themselves Germanic, inundated English with
+French words. Banking, in German-speaking regions, is full of Italian
+expressions,[203] and similarly and to a far greater extent masses of
+designations relating to agriculture and cattle-breeding, to metals and
+weapons, and in general to all transactions of handicraft, barter, and
+intertribal law, must have migrated from one language to another, just
+as geographical nomenclature always passed into the proper vocabulary
+of the dominant language, with the result that Greek contains numerous
+Carian and German Celtic place-names. It is no exaggeration to say that
+the more widely an Indogermanic word is distributed, the _younger_ it
+is, the more likely it is to be an “alien” word. It is precisely the
+very oldest names that are hoarded as private possessions. Latin and
+Greek have only quite young words in common. Or do “telephone,” “gas,”
+“automobile,” belong to the word-stock of the “primitive” people?
+Suppose, for the sake of argument that three-fourths of the Aryan
+“primitive” words came from the Egyptian or the Babylonian vocabularies
+of the third millennium; we should not find a trace of the fact in
+Sanskrit after a thousand years of unwritten development, for even in
+German thousands of Latin loan-words have long ago become completely
+unrecognizable. The ending “-ette” in “Henriette” is Etruscan--how
+many genuine Aryan and genuine Semitic endings, notwithstanding their
+thoroughly alien origin, defy us to prove them intruders? What is
+the explanation of the astounding similarity of many words in the
+Australian and the Indogermanic languages?
+
+The Indogermanic system is certainly the youngest, and therefore the
+most intellectual. The languages derived from it rule the earth to-day,
+but did it really exist at all in 2000 as a specific grammatical
+edifice? As is well known, a single initial form for Aryan, Semitic,
+and Hamitic is nowadays assumed as probable. The oldest Indian
+texts preserve the linguistic conditions of (probably) before 1200,
+the oldest Greek those of (probably) 700. But Indian personal and
+divine names occur in Syria and Palestine,[204] simultaneously with
+the horse, at a much later date, the bearers of these names being
+apparently first soldiers of fortune and afterwards potentates.[205]
+May it be that about 1600 these land-Vikings, these first _Reiter_--men
+grown up inseparable from their horses, the terrifying originals of the
+Centaur-legend--established themselves more or less everywhere in the
+Northern plains as adventurer-chiefs, bringing with them the speech
+and divinities of the Indian feudal age? And the same with the Aryan
+aristocratic ideals of breed and conduct. According to what has been
+said above on race, this would explain the race-ideal of Aryan-speaking
+regions without any necessity for “migrations” of a “primitive” folk.
+After all, it was in this way that the knightly Crusaders founded their
+states in the East--and in exactly the same locality as the heroes with
+Mitanni names had done so twenty-five hundred years before.
+
+Or was this system of about 3000 merely an unimportant dialect of a
+language that is lost? The Romanic language-family about A.D. 1600
+dominated all the seas. About 400 B.C. the “original” language on the
+Tiber possessed a domain of little more than a thousand square miles.
+It is certain that the geographical picture of the grammatical families
+at about 4000 was still very variegated. The Semitic-Hamitic-Aryan
+group (_if_ it ever did form a unit) can hardly have been of much
+importance at that time. We stumble at every turn upon the relics of
+old speech-families--Etruscan, Basque, Sumerian, Ligurian, the ancient
+tongues of Asia Minor, and others--that in their day must have belonged
+to very extensive systems. In the archives of Boghaz-Keüi eight new
+languages have so far been identified, all of them in use about the
+year 1000. With the then prevailing tempo of modification, Aryan may in
+2000 have formed a unit with languages that we should never dream of
+associating with it.
+
+
+VII
+
+Writing is an entirely new kind of language, and implies a complete
+change in the relations of man’s waking-consciousness, in that it
+_liberates it from the tyranny of the present_. Picture-languages which
+portray objects are far older, older probably than any words; but here
+the picture is no longer an immediate denotation of some sight-object,
+but primarily the sign of a word--i.e., something already abstract from
+sensation. It is the first and only example of a language that demands,
+without itself providing, the necessary preparatory training.
+
+Script, therefore, presupposes a fully developed grammar, since the
+activity of writing and reading is infinitely more abstract than that
+of speaking and hearing. Reading consists in scanning a script-image
+_with a feeling of the significances of corresponding word-sounds_;
+what script contains is not signs for things, but signs for other
+signs. The grammatical sense must be enlarged by instantaneous
+comprehension.
+
+The word is a possession of man generally, whereas writing belongs
+exclusively to Culture-men. In contrast to verbal language it is
+conditioned, not merely partially, but entirely, by the political and
+religious Destinies of world-history. All scripts come into being
+in the _individual_ Cultures and are to be reckoned amongst their
+profoundest symbols. But hitherto a comprehensive history of script
+has never been produced, and a psychology of its forms and their
+modifications has never even been attempted. _Writing is the grand
+symbol of the Far_, meaning not only extension-distance, but also,
+and above all, duration and future and the will-to-eternity. Speaking
+and listening take place only in proximity and the present,[206] but
+through script one speaks to men whom one has never seen, who may not
+even have been born yet; the voice of a man is heard centuries after
+he has passed away. It is one of the first distinguishing marks of
+the _historical_ endowment. But for that very reason nothing is more
+characteristic of a Culture than its inward relation to writing. If
+we know as little as we do about Indogermanic, it is because the two
+earliest Cultures whose people made use of this system--the Indian and
+the Classical--were so _a-historic_ in disposition that they not only
+formed no script of their own, but even fought off alien scripts until
+well into the Late period of their course. Actually, the whole art of
+Classical prose is designed immediately for the ear. One read it as
+if one were speaking, whereas we, by comparison, speak everything as
+though we were reading it--with the result that in the eternal seesaw
+between script-image and word-sound we have never attained to a prose
+style that is perfect in the Attic sense. In the Arabian Culture, on
+the other hand, each religion developed its own script and kept it even
+through changes of verbal language; the duration of the sacred books
+and teachings and the script as symbol of duration belong together.
+The oldest evidences of alphabetical script are found in southern
+Arabia in the Minæan and Sabæan scripts--differentiated, without
+doubt, according to sect--which probably go back to the tenth century
+before Christ.[207] The Jews, Mandæans, and Manichæans in Babylonia
+spoke Eastern Aramaic, but all of them had scripts of their own. From
+the Abbassid period onward Arabic ruled, but Christians and Jews
+wrote it in their own characters.[208] Islam spread the Arabic script
+universally amongst its adherents, irrespective of whether their spoken
+language was Semitic, Mongolian, Aryan, or a Negro tongue.[209] The
+growth of the writing habit brings with it, everywhere and inevitably,
+the distinction between the written and the colloquial languages. The
+written language brings the symbolism of duration to bear upon its own
+grammatical condition, which itself yields only slowly and reluctantly
+to the progressive modifications of the colloquial language--the
+latter, therefore, always representing at any given moment a younger
+condition. There is not one Hellenic κοινή, but two,[210] and the
+immense distance between the written and the living Latin of Imperial
+times is sufficiently evidenced in the structure of the early Romance
+languages.[211] The older a Civilization becomes, the more abrupt
+is the distinction, until we have the gap that to-day separates
+written Chinese from Kuan-Chua, the spoken language of educated North
+Chinese--a matter no longer of two dialects but of two reciprocally
+alien languages.
+
+Here, it should be observed, we have direct expression of the fact that
+writing is above everything a matter of status, and more particularly
+an ancient privilege of priesthood. The peasantry is without history
+_and therefore without writing_. But, even apart from this, there is
+in Race an unmistakable antipathy to script. It is, I think, a fact
+of the highest importance to graphology that the more the writer has
+race (breed), the more cavalierly he treats the ornamental structure
+of the letters, and the more ready he is to replace this by personal
+line-pictures. Only the Taboo-man evidences a certain respect for
+the proper forms of the letters and ever, if unconsciously, tries to
+reproduce them. It is the distinction between the man of action, who
+makes history, and the scholar, who merely puts it down on paper,
+“eternalizes” it. In all Cultures the script is in the keeping of
+the priesthood, in which class we have to count also the poet and
+the scholars. The nobility despises writing; it has people to write
+for it. From the remotest times this activity has had something
+intellectual-sacerdotal about it. Timeless truths came to be such,
+not at all through speech, but only when there came to be script for
+them. It is the opposition of castle and cathedral over again: which
+shall endure, deed or truth? The archivist’s “sources” preserve facts,
+the holy scripture, truths. What chronicles and documents mean in
+the first-named, exegesis and library mean in the second. And thus
+there is something besides cult-architecture that is not decorated
+with ornament, but _is_ ornament[212]--the _book_. The art-history
+of all Cultural springtimes ought to begin with the script, and the
+cursive script even before the monumental. Here we can observe the
+essence of the Gothic style, or of the Magian, at its purest. No other
+ornament possesses the inwardness of a letter-shape or a manuscript
+page; nowhere else is arabesque as perfect as it is in the Koran
+texts on the walls of a mosque. And, then, the great art of initials,
+the architecture of the marginal picture, the plastic of the covers!
+In a Koran in the Kufi script every page has the effect of a piece
+of tapestry. A Gothic book of the Gospels is, as it were, a little
+cathedral. As for Classical art, it is very significant that the one
+thing that it did not beautify with its touch was the script and the
+book-roll--an exception founded in its steady hatred of that which
+endures, the contempt for a technique which insists on being more
+than a technique. Neither in Hellas nor in India do we find an art of
+monumental inscription as in Egypt. It does not seem to have occurred
+to anybody that a sheet of handwriting of Plato was a relic, or that a
+fine edition of the dramas of Sophocles ought to be treasured up in the
+Acropolis.
+
+As the city lifted up its head over the countryside, as the burgher
+joined the noble and the priest and the urban spirit aspired to
+supremacy, writing, from being a herald of nobles’ fame and of eternal
+truths, became a means of commercial and scientific intercourse. The
+Indian and the Classical Cultures rejected the pretension and met the
+working requirement by importation from abroad; it was as a humble tool
+of everyday use that alphabetical script slowly won their acceptance.
+With this event rank, as contemporaneous and like in significance,
+the introduction into China of the phonetic script about 800, and the
+discovery of book-printing in the West in the fifteenth century; the
+symbol of duration and distance was reinforced in the highest degree
+by making it accessible to the large number. Finally the Civilizations
+took the last step and brought their scripts into utilitarian form.
+As we have seen, the discovery of alphabetical script in the Egyptian
+Civilization, about 2000, was a purely technical innovation. In the
+same way Li Si, Chancellor to the Chinese Augustus, introduced the
+Chinese standard script in 227. And lastly, amongst ourselves--though
+as yet few of us have appreciated the real significance of the fact--a
+new kind of writing has appeared. That Egyptian alphabetic script is in
+no wise a final and perfected thing is proved by the discovery of its
+fellow, our _stenography_, which means no mere shortening of writing,
+but _the overcoming of the alphabetic script by a new and highly
+abstract mode of communication_. It is not impossible, indeed, that in
+the course of the next centuries script-forms of the shorthand kind may
+displace letters completely.
+
+
+VIII
+
+May the attempt be made, thus early, to write a morphology of the
+Culture-languages? Certainly, science has not as yet even discovered
+that there is such a task. Culture-languages are languages of
+_historical_ men. Their Destiny accomplishes itself not in biological
+spaces of time, but in step with the organic evolution of strictly
+limited lifetimes. _Culture languages are historical languages_, which
+means, primarily, that there is no historical event and no political
+institution that will not have been determined in part by the spirit
+of the language employed in it and, conversely, that will not have
+its influence upon the spiritual form of that language. The build
+of the Latin sentence is yet another consequence of Rome’s battles,
+which in giving her conquests compelled the nation as a whole to think
+administratively; German prose bears traces even to-day of the Thirty
+Years’ War in its want of established norms, and early Christian dogma
+would have acquired a different shape if the oldest Scriptures, instead
+of being one and all written in Greek, and been set down in Syriac form
+like those of the Mandæans. But secondarily it means that world-history
+is dependent--to a degree that students have hitherto scarcely
+imagined--_upon the existence of script as the essentially historical
+means of communication_. The State (in the higher sense of the word)
+presupposes intercourse by writing; the style of all politics is
+determined absolutely by the significance that the politico-historical
+thought of the nation attaches in each instance to charters and
+archives, to signatures, to the products of the publicist; the battle
+of legislation is a fight for or against a written law; constitutions
+replace material force by the composition of paragraphs and elevate a
+piece of writing to the dignity of a weapon. Speech belongs with the
+present, and writing with duration, but equally, oral understanding
+pairs with practical experience, and writing with theoretical thought.
+The bulk of the inner political history of all Late periods can be
+traced back to this opposition. The ever-varying facts resist the
+“letter,” while _truths demand it_--that is the world-historical
+opposition of two parties that in one form or another is met with in
+the great crises of all Cultures. The one lives in actuality, the other
+flourishes a text in its face; all great revolutions presuppose a
+literature.
+
+The group of Western Culture-languages appeared in the tenth century.
+The available bodies of language--namely, the Germanic and Romance
+dialects (monkish Latin included)--were developed into script-languages
+under a single spiritual influence. It is _impossible_ that there
+should not be a common character in the development of German,
+English, Italian, French, and Spanish from 900 to 1900, as also in
+the history of the Hellenic and Italic (Etruscan included) between
+1100 and the Empire. But what is it that, irrespective of the area
+of extension of language-families or races, acquires specific unity
+from the landscape-limit of the Culture alone? What modifications have
+Hellenistic and Latin in common after 300--in pronunciation and idiom,
+metrically, grammatically, and stylistically? What is present in German
+and Italian after 1000, but not in Italian and Rumanian? These and
+similar questions have never yet been systematically investigated.
+
+Every Culture at its awakening finds itself in the presence
+of _peasant-languages_, speeches of the cityless countryside,
+“everlasting,” and almost unconcerned with the great events of history,
+which have gone on through late Culture and Civilization as unwritten
+dialects and slowly undergone imperceptible changes. On the top of
+this now the language of the two primary Estates raises itself as the
+first manifestation of a waking relation that _has_ Culture, that _is_
+Culture. Here, in the ring of nobility and priesthood, languages become
+Culture-languages, and, more particularly, _talk belongs with the
+castle, and speech to the cathedral_. And thus on the very threshold
+of evolution the plantlike separates itself from the animal, the
+destiny of the living from the destiny of the dead, that of the organic
+side from that of the mechanical side of understanding. For the Totem
+side affirms and the Taboo side denies, blood and Time. Everywhere we
+meet, and very early indeed, rigid cult-languages whose sanctity is
+guaranteed by their inalterability, systems long dead, or alien to
+life and artificially fettered, which have the strict vocabulary that
+the formulation of eternal truths requires. Old Vedic stiffened as a
+religious language, and with it Sanskrit as a savant-language. The
+Egyptian of the Old Kingdom was perpetuated as priests’ language, so
+that in the New Empire sacred formulæ were no more understandable than
+the _Carmen Saliare_ and the hymn of the Fratres Arvales in Augustan
+times.[213] In the Arabian pre-Cultural period Babylonian, Hebrew, and
+Avestan simultaneously went out of use as workaday languages--probably
+in the second century before Christ--indeed on that very account Jews
+and Persians used them in their Scriptures as in opposition to Aramaic
+and Pehlevi. The same significance attached to Gothic Latin for the
+Church, Humanists’ Latin for the learning of the Baroque, Church
+Slavonic in Russia, and no doubt Sumerian in Babylonia.
+
+In contrast with this, the nursery of talk is in the early castles
+and palaces of assize. Here the _living_ Culture-languages have been
+formed. Talk is the custom of speech, its manners--“good form” in
+the intonation and idiom, fine tact in choice of words and mode of
+expression. All these things are a mark of _race_; they are learned not
+in the monastery cell or the scholar’s study, but in polite intercourse
+and from living examples. In noble society, and as a hall-mark of
+nobility, the language of Homer,[214] as also the old French of the
+Crusades and the Middle High German of the Hohenstaufen, were erected
+out of the ordinary talk of the country-side. When we speak of the
+great epic poets, the Skalds, the Troubadours, as creators of language,
+we must not forget that they began by being trained for their task, _in
+language as in other things_, by moving in noble circles. The great art
+by which the Culture finds its tongue is the achievement of a race and
+not that of a craft.
+
+The clerical language on the other hand starts from concepts and
+conclusions. It labours to improve the dialectical capacities of the
+words and sentence-forms to the maximum. There sets in, consequently,
+an ever-increasing differentiation of scholastic and courtly, of
+the idiom of intellectual from that of social intercourse. Beyond
+all divisions of language-families there is a component common to
+the expression of Plotinus and Thomas Aquinas, of Veda and Mishna.
+Here we have the starting-point of all the ripe scholar-languages of
+the West--which, German and English and French alike, bear to this
+day the unmistakable signs of their origin in scholars’ Latin--and,
+therefore, the starting point of all the apparatus of technical
+expression and logical sentence-form. This opposition between the
+modes of understanding of “Society” and of Science renews itself again
+and again till far into the Late period. The centre of gravity in
+the history of French was decisively on the side of race; i.e., of
+talk. At the Court of Versailles, in the salons of Paris, the _esprit
+précieux_ of the Arthurian romances evolves into the “conversation,”
+the classical art of talk, whose dictature the whole West acknowledges.
+The fact that Ionic-Attic, too, was fashioned entirely in the halls
+of the tyrants and in symposia created great difficulties for Greek
+philosophy: for later on, it was almost impossible to discuss the
+syllogism in the language of Alcibiades. On the other hand, German
+prose, in the decisive phase of Baroque, had no central point on which
+it could rise to excellence, and so even to-day it oscillates in point
+of style between French and Latin--courtly and scholarly--according as
+the author’s intuition is to express himself well or accurately. Our
+Classical writers, thanks to their linguistic origin in office or study
+and their stay as tutors in the castles and the little courts, arrived
+indeed at personal styles, and others are able to imitate these styles,
+but a specifically German prose, standard for all, they were unable to
+create.
+
+To these two class-languages the rise of the city added a third, the
+language of the bourgeoisie, which is the true script-speech, reasoned
+and utilitarian, prose in the strictest sense of the word. It swings
+gently between the expression-modes of elegant society and of learning,
+in the one direction thinking for ever of new turns and words _à la
+mode_, in the other keeping sturdy hold on its existing stock of ideas.
+But in its inner essence it is of a _mercantile_ nature. It feels
+itself frankly as a class badge _vis-à-vis_ the historyless-changeless
+phrasing of the “people” which Luther and others employed, to the great
+scandal of their superficial contemporaries. With the final victory
+of the city the urban speech absorbs into itself that of elegance and
+that of learning. There arises in the upper strata of megalopolitan
+populations the uniform, keenly intelligent, practical κοινή, the
+child and symbol of its Civilization, equally averse from dialect
+and poetry--something perfectly mechanical, precise, cold, leaving
+as little as possible to gesture. These final homeless and rootless
+languages can be learned by every trader and porter--Hellenistic in
+Carthage and on the Oxus, Chinese in Java, English in Shanghai--and
+for their comprehension talk has no importance or meaning. And if we
+inquire what really created these languages, we find not the spirit of
+a race or of a religion, but the spirit of economics.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+CITIES AND PEOPLES
+
+(C)
+
+PRIMITIVES, CULTURE-PEOPLES, FELLAHEEN
+
+
+I
+
+Now at last it is possible to approach--if with extreme precaution--the
+conception “people,” and to bring order into that chaos of people-forms
+that the historical research of the present day has only succeeded in
+making worse confounded than before. There is no word that has been
+used more freely and more utterly uncritically, yet none that calls
+for a stricter critique, than this. Very careful historians, even,
+after going to much trouble to clear their theoretical basis (up to a
+point) slide back thereafter into treating peoples, race-parts, and
+speech-communities as completely equivalent. If they find the name of a
+people, it counts without more ado as the designation of a language as
+well. If they discover an inscription of three words, they believe they
+have established a racial connexion. If a few “roots” correspond, the
+curtain rises at once on a primitive people with a primitive habitat
+in the background. And the modern nationalist spirit has only enhanced
+this “thinking in terms of peoples.”
+
+But is it the Hellenes, the Dorians, or the Spartans that are a people?
+If the Romans were a people, what are we to say about the Latins? And
+what kind of a unit within the population of Italy at _c._ 400 do we
+mean by the name “Etruscan?” Has not their “nationality,” like that
+of Basques and Thracians, been made actually to depend upon the build
+of their language? What ethnic idea underlies the words “American,”
+“Swiss,” “Jew,” “Boer”? Blood, speech, faith, State, landscape--what in
+all these is determinative in the formation of a people? In general,
+relationships of blood and language are determined only by way of
+scholarship, and the ordinary individual is perfectly unconscious
+of them. “Indogermanic” is purely and simply a scientific, more
+particularly a philological, concept. The attempt of Alexander the
+Great to fuse Greeks and Persians together was a complete failure, and
+we have recently had experience of the real strength of Anglo-German
+community of feeling. But “people” is a linkage of which one is
+_conscious_. In ordinary usage, one designates as one’s “people”--and
+with feeling--that community, out of the many to which one belongs,
+which inwardly stands nearest to one.[215] And then he extends the
+use of this concept, which is really quite particular and derived
+from personal experience, to collectivities of the most varied kinds.
+For Cæsar the Arverni were a “_civitas_”; for us the Chinese are a
+“nation.” On this basis, it was the Athenians and not the Greeks who
+constituted a nation, and in fact there were only a few individuals
+who, like Isocrates, felt themselves _primarily_ as Hellenes. On this
+basis, one of two brothers may call himself a Swiss and the other,
+with equal right, a German. These are not philosophical concepts, but
+historical facts. A people is an aggregate of men which feels itself
+a unit. The Spartiates[216] felt themselves a people in _this_ sense;
+the “Dorians” of 1100, too, probably, but those of 400 certainly not.
+The Crusaders became genuinely a people in taking the oath of Clermont;
+the Mormons in their expulsion from Missouri, in 1839;[217] the
+Mamertines[218] by their need of winning for themselves a stronghold
+of refuge.[219] Was the formative principle very different with the
+Jacobins and Hyksos? How many peoples may have originated in a chief’s
+following or a band of fugitives? Such a group can change race, like
+the Osmanli, who appeared in Asia Minor as Mongols; or language, like
+the Sicilian Normans; or name, like Achæans and Danaoi. So long as the
+common feeling is there, the people as such is there.
+
+We have to distinguish the destiny of a people from its name. The
+latter is often the only thing about which information remains to us;
+but can we fairly conclude from a name anything about the history, the
+descent, the language, or even merely the identity of those who bore
+it? Here again the historical researcher is to blame, in that, whatever
+his theory may have been, he has in practice treated the relation
+between name and bearer as simply as he would treat, say, the personal
+names of to-day. Have we any conception of the number of unexplored
+possibilities in this field? To begin with, the very act of name-giving
+is of enormous importance in early associations. For with a name the
+human group consciously sets itself up with a sort of sacral dignity.
+But, here, cult- and war-names may exist side by side; others the land
+or the heritage may provide; the tribal name may be exchanged for that
+of an eponymous hero, as with the Osmanli;[220] lastly, an unlimited
+number of alien names can be applied along the frontiers of a group
+without more than a part of the community ever hearing them at all.
+If only such names as these be handed down, it becomes practically
+inevitable that conclusions about the bearers of them will be wrong.
+The indubitably sacral names of Franks, Alemanni, and Saxons have
+superseded a host of names of the period of the Varus battle--but if
+we did not happen to know this, we should long ago have been convinced
+that an expulsion or annihilation of old tribes by new intruders had
+taken place here. The names “Romans” and “Quirites,” “Spartans” and
+“Lacedæmonians,” “Carthaginian” and “Punic” have endured side by
+side--here again there was a risk of supposing two peoples instead of
+one. In what relation the names “Pelasgi,” “Achæans,” “Danai,” stand to
+one another we shall never learn, and had we nothing more than these
+names, the scholar would long ago have assigned to each a separate
+people, complete with language and racial affinities. Has it not been
+attempted to draw from the regional designation “Doric” conclusions
+as to the course of the Dorian migration? How often may a people have
+adopted a land-name and taken it along with them? This is the case
+with the modern Prussians, but also with the modern Parsees, Jews, and
+Turks, while the opposite is the case in Burgundy and Normandy. The
+name “Hellenes” arose about 650, and, therefore, cannot be connected
+with any movement of population. Lorraine (Lothringen) received the
+name of a perfectly unimportant prince, and that, in connexion with
+the decision of a heritage and not a folk-migration. Paris called
+the Germans Allemands in 1814, Prussians in 1870, Boches in 1914--in
+other circumstances three distinct peoples might have been supposed to
+be covered by these names. The West-European is called in the East a
+Frank, the Jew a Spaniole--the fact is readily explained by historical
+circumstances, but what would a philologist have produced from the
+_words alone_?
+
+It is not to be imagined at what results the scholars of A.D. 3000
+might arrive if they worked by present-day methods on names, linguistic
+remains, and the notion of original homes and migration. For example,
+the Teutonic Knights about 1300 drove out the heathen “Prussians,” and
+in 1870 these people suddenly appear on their wanderings at the gates
+of Paris! The Romans, pressed by the Goths, emigrate from the Tiber to
+the lower Danube! Or a part of them perhaps settled in Poland, where
+Latin was spoken? Charlemagne on the Weser defeated the Saxons, who
+thereupon emigrated to the neighbourhood of Dresden, their places being
+taken by the Hanoverians, whose original settlement, according to the
+dynasty-name, was on the Thames! The historian who writes down the
+history of names instead of that of peoples, forgets that names, too,
+have their destinies. So also languages, which, with their migrations,
+modifications, victories, and defeats, are inconclusive even as to the
+existence of peoples associated with them. This is the basic error of
+Indo-Germanic research in particular. If in historic times the names
+“Pfalz” and “Calabria” have moved about, if Hebrew has been driven
+from Palestine to Warsaw, and Persian from the Tigris to India, what
+conclusions can be drawn from the history of the Etruscan name and
+the alleged “Tyrsenian” inscription at Lemnos?[221] Or did the French
+and the Haytian Negroes, as shown by their common language, once
+form a single primitive people? In the region between Budapest and
+Constantinople to-day two Mongolian, one Semitic, two Classical, and
+three Slavonic languages are spoken, and these speech-communities all
+feel themselves essentially as peoples.[222] If we were to build up
+a migration-story here, the error of the method would be manifested
+in some singular results. “Doric” is a dialect designation--that we
+know, and that is all we know. No doubt some few dialects of this group
+spread rapidly, but that is no proof of the spread or even of the
+existence of a human stock belonging with it.[223]
+
+
+II
+
+Thus we come to the pet idea of modern historical thought. If a
+historian meets a people that has achieved something, he feels that he
+owes it to these people to answer the question: Whence did it come? It
+is a matter of dignity for a people to have come from somewhere and to
+have an original home. The notion that it is at home in the place where
+we find it is almost an insulting assumption. Wandering is a cherished
+saga-motive of primitive mankind, but its employment in serious
+research also has become a sheer mania. _Whether_ the Chinese invaded
+China or the Egyptians Egypt no one inquires, the question being always
+_when_ and _whence_ they did so. It would be less of an effort to
+originate the Semites in Scandinavia or the Aryans in Canaan than to
+abandon the notion of an original home.
+
+Now, the fact that all early populations were highly mobile is
+unquestionable. In it, for example, lies the secret of the Libyan
+problem. The Libyans or their predecessors spoke Hamitic, but, as shown
+even by old Egyptian reliefs, they were all blond and blue-eyed and,
+therefore, doubtless of North-European provenance.[224] In Asia Minor
+at least three migration-strata since 1300 have been determined, which
+are related probably to the attacks of the “Sea-peoples” in Egypt,
+and something similar has been shown in the Mexican Culture. But as
+to the nature of these movements we know nothing at all. In any case,
+there can be no question of migrations such as modern historians like
+to picture--movements of close-pressed peoples traversing the lands
+in great masses, pushing and being pushed till finally they come to
+rest somewhere or other. It is not the alterations in themselves,
+but the conceptions we have formed about them, that have spoilt our
+outlook upon the nature of the peoples. Peoples in the modern sense
+of the word do not wander, and that which of old _did_ wander needs
+to be very carefully examined before it is labelled, as the label
+will not always stand for the same thing. The motive, too, that is
+everlastingly assigned to these migrations is colourless and worthy of
+the century that invented it--material necessity. Hunger would normally
+lead to efforts of quite a different sort, and it has certainly been
+only the last of the motives that drove men of race out of their
+nests--although it is understandable that it would very frequently make
+itself felt when such bands suddenly encountered a military obstacle.
+It was doubtless, in this simple and strong kind of man, the primary
+microcosmic urgency to move in free space which sprang up out of the
+depths of his soul as love of adventure, daring, liking for power
+and booty; as a blazing desire, to us almost incomprehensible, for
+deeds, for joy of carnage, for the death of the hero. Often, too, no
+doubt, domestic strife or fear of the revenge of the stronger, was
+the motive, but again a strong and manly one. Motives like these are
+infectious--the “man who stays at home” is a coward. Was it common
+bodily hunger, again, that induced the Crusades, or the expeditions
+of Cortez and Pizarro, or in our time the ventures of “wild west”
+pioneers? Where, in history, we find the little handful invading
+wide lands, it is ever the voices of the blood, the longing for high
+destinies, that drive them.
+
+Further, we have to consider the position in the country traversed by
+the invaders. Its characteristics are always modified more or less,
+but the modifications are due not merely to the influence of the
+immigrants, but more and more to the nature of the settled population,
+which in the end becomes numerically overwhelming.
+
+Obviously, in spaces almost empty of men it is easy for the weaker
+simply to evade the onslaught, and as a rule he was able to do so.
+But in later and denser conditions, the inroad spelt dispossession
+for the weaker, who must either defend himself successfully or else
+win new lands for old. Already there is the out-thrust into space. No
+tribe lives without constant contacts on all sides and a mistrustful
+readiness to stand to arms. The hard necessity of war breeds men.
+Peoples grow by, and against, other peoples to inward greatness.
+Weapons become weapons against men and not beasts. And finally we
+have the only migration-form that counts in historic times--warrior
+bands sweep through thoroughly populated countries, whose inhabitants
+remain, undisturbed and upstanding, as an essential part of the spoils
+of victory. And then, the victors being in a minority, completely new
+situations arise. Peoples of strong inward form spread themselves
+on top of much larger but formless populations, and the further
+transformations of peoples, languages, and races depend upon very
+complicated factors of detail. Since the decisive investigations of
+Beloch[225] and Delbrück[226] we know that all migrant peoples--and the
+Persians of Cyrus, the Mamertines and the Crusaders, the Ostrogoths and
+the “Sea-peoples” of the Egyptian inscriptions were all peoples in this
+sense--were, in comparison with the inhabitants of the regions they
+occupied, very small in numbers, just a few thousand warriors, superior
+to the natives only in respect of their determination to _be_ a Destiny
+and not to submit to one. It was not inhabitable, but inhabited, land
+of which they took possession, and thus the relation between the two
+peoples became a question of status, the migration turned into the
+campaign, and the process of settling down became a political process.
+And here again, in presence of the fact that at a historic distance
+of time the successes of a small war-band, with the consequent spread
+of the victor’s names and language, may all too easily be taken for a
+“migration of peoples,” it is necessary to repeat our question, what,
+in fact, the men, things, and factors are that _can_ migrate.
+
+Here are some of the answers--the name of a district or that of a
+collectivity (or of a hero, adopted by his followers), in that it
+spreads, becomes extinct here and is taken by or given to a totally
+different population there: in that it may pass from land to people and
+travel with the latter or vice versa--the language of the conqueror or
+that of the conquered, or even a third language, adopted for reciprocal
+understanding--the war-band of a chief which subdues whole countries
+and propagates itself through captive women, or some accidental group
+of heterogeneous adventurers, or a tribe with its women and children,
+like the Philistines of 1200, who quite in the Germanic fashion trekked
+with their ox-wagons along the Phœnician coast to Egypt.[227] In
+such conditions, we may again ask, can conclusions be drawn from the
+destinies of names and languages as to those of peoples and races?
+There is only one possible answer, a decided negative.
+
+Amongst the “Sea-peoples” that repeatedly attacked Egypt in the
+thirteenth century appear the _names_ of Danai and Achæans--but
+in Homer both are almost mythical designations--the _name_ of the
+Lukka--which adhered later to Lycia, though the inhabitants of that
+country called themselves Tramilæ--and the _names_ of the Etruscans,
+the Sards, the Siculi--but this in no wise proved that these “Tursha”
+spoke the later Etruscan, nor that there was the slightest physical
+connexion with the like-named inhabitants of Italy or anything else
+entitling us to speak of “one and the same people.” Assuming that the
+Lemnos inscription is Etruscan, and Etruscan an Indogermanic language,
+much could be deduced therefrom in the domain of linguistic history,
+but in that of racial history nothing whatever. Rome was an Etruscan
+city, but is not the fact completely without bearing upon the _soul_
+of the Roman people? Are the Romans Indogermanic because they happen
+to speak a Latin dialect? The ethnologists recognize a Mediterranean
+Race and an Alpine Race, and north and south of these an astonishing
+physical resemblance between North-Germans and Libyans; but the
+philologists know that the Basques are in virtue of their speech a
+“pre-Indogermanic”--Iberian--population. The two views are mutually
+exclusive. Were the builders of Mycenæ and Tiryns “Hellenes”?--it would
+be as pertinent to ask were the Ostrogoths Germans. I confess that I do
+not comprehend why such questions are formulated at all.
+
+For me, the “people” is a _unit of the soul_. The great events of
+history were not really achieved by peoples; _they themselves created
+the peoples_. Every act alters the soul of the doer. Even when the
+event is preceded by some grouping around or under a famous name, the
+fact that there is a people and not merely a band behind the prestige
+of that name is not a condition, but a result of the event. It was
+the fortunes of their migrations that made the Ostrogoths and the
+Osmanli what they afterwards were. The “Americans” did _not_ immigrate
+from Europe; the name of the Florentine geographer Amerigo Vespucci
+designates to-day not only a continent, but also a people in the true
+sense of the word, whose specific character was born in the spiritual
+upheavals of 1775 and, above all, 1861-5.
+
+This is the one and only connotation of the word “people.” Neither
+unity of speech nor physical descent is decisive. That which
+distinguishes the people from the population, raises it up out of
+the population, and will one day let it find its level again in the
+population is always the inwardly lived experience of the “we.” The
+deeper this feeling is, the stronger is the _vis viva_ of the people.
+There are energetic and tame, ephemeral and indestructible, forms of
+peoples. They can change speech, name, race, and land, but so long as
+their soul lasts, they can gather to themselves and transform human
+material of any and every provenance. The Roman name in Hannibal’s day
+meant a people, in Trajan’s time nothing more than a population.
+
+Of course, it is often quite justifiable to align peoples with races,
+but “race” in this connexion must not be interpreted in the present-day
+Darwinian sense of the word. It cannot be accepted, surely, that a
+people was ever held together by the mere unity of physical origin,
+or, if it were, could maintain that unity even for ten generations.
+It cannot be too often reiterated that this physiological provenance
+has no existence except for science--never for folk-consciousness--and
+that no people was ever yet stirred to enthusiasm for _this_ ideal of
+blood-purity. In race there is nothing material, but something cosmic
+and directional, the felt harmony of a Destiny, the single cadence
+of the march of historical Being. It is inco-ordination of this
+(wholly metaphysical) beat that produces race-hatred, which is just
+as strong between Germans and Frenchmen as it is between Germans and
+Jews, and it is resonance on this beat that makes the true love--so
+akin to hate--between man and wife. He who has not race knows nothing
+of this perilous love. If a part of the human multitude that now
+speaks Indogermanic languages, cherishes a certain race-ideal, what
+is evidenced thereby is not the existence of the prototype-people so
+dear to the scholar, but the metaphysical force and power of the ideal.
+It is highly significant that this ideal is expressed, never in the
+whole population, but mainly in its warrior-element and pre-eminently
+in its genuine nobility--that is, in men who live entirely in a world
+of facts, under the spell of historical becoming, destiny-men who will
+and dare--and it was precisely in the early times (another significant
+point) that a born alien of quality and dignity could without
+particular difficulty gain admittance to the ruling class, and wives
+in particular were chosen for their “breed” and not their descent.
+Correspondingly, the impress of race-traits is weakest (as may be
+observed even to-day) in the true priestly and scholarly natures,[228]
+even though these often do stand in close blood-relationship to the
+others. A strong spirit trains up the body into a product of art.
+The Romans formed, in the midst of the confused and even heteroclite
+tribes of Italy, a race of the firmest and strictest inward unity
+that was neither Etruscan nor Latin nor merely “Classical,” but quite
+specifically Roman.[229] Nowhere is the force that cements a people
+set before us more plainly than in Roman busts of the late Republican
+period.
+
+I will cite yet another example, than which none more clearly exhibits
+the errors that these scholars’ notions of people, language, and
+race inevitably entail, and in which lies the ultimate, perhaps
+the determining reason why the Arabian Culture has never yet been
+recognized as an organism. It is that of the Persians. Persian is an
+Aryan language, hence “the Persians” are an “Indogermanic people,”
+and hence Persian history and religion are the affair of “Iranian”
+philology.
+
+To begin with, is Persian a language of equal rank with the Indian,
+derived from a common ancestor, _or is it merely an Indian dialect?_
+Seven centuries of linguistic development, scriptless and therefore
+very rapid, lie between the Old Vedic of the Indian texts and the
+Behistun Inscription[230] of Darius. It is almost as great a gap as
+that between the Latin of Tacitus and the French of the Strassburg Oath
+of 842.[231] Now the Tell-el-Amarna letters and the archives of Boghaz
+Keüi tell us many “Aryan” names of persons and gods of the middle of
+the second millennium B.C.--that is, the Vedic Age of Chivalry. It is
+Palestine and Syria that furnish these names. Nevertheless, Eduard
+Meyer observes[232] that they are Indian and not Persian, and the same
+holds good for the numerals that have now been discovered.[233] There
+is not a unit of Persians, or of any other “people” in the sense of our
+historical writers. They were Indian heroes, who rode westward and with
+their precious weapon the warhorse and their own ardent energy made
+themselves felt as a power far and wide in the ageing Babylonian Empire.
+
+About 600 there appears in the middle of this world Persis, a little
+district with a politically united population of peasant barbarians.
+Herodotus says that of its tribes only three were of genuine Persian
+nationality. Had the language of these knights of old lived on in
+the hills, and is “Persians” really a land-name that passed to a
+people? The Medes, who were very similar, bear only the name of a land
+where an upper warrior-stratum had learned through great political
+successes to feel itself as a unit. In the Assyrian archives of Sargon
+and his successors (about 700) are found, along with the non-Aryan
+place-names, numerous “Aryan” names of persons, all leading figures,
+but Tiglath-Pileser IV (745-727) calls the people black-haired.[234] It
+can only have been later that the “Persian people” of Cyrus and Darius
+was formed, out of men of varied provenance, but forged to a strong
+inner unity of lived experience. But when, scarce two centuries later,
+the Macedonians put an end to their lordship--was it that the Persians
+in this form were _no longer in existence_? (Was there still a Lombard
+people at all in Italy in A.D. 900?) It is certain that the very wide
+diffusion of the empire-language of Persia, and the distribution of
+the few thousands of adult males from Persia over the immense system
+of military and administrative business, must long ago have led to the
+dissolution of the Persian nation and set up in its place, as carriers
+of the Persian name in upper-class conscious of itself as a _political_
+unit, of whose members very few could have claimed descent from the
+invaders from Persia.[235] There is, indeed, not even a country that
+can be considered as the theatre of Persian history. The events of
+the period from Darius to Alexander took place partly in northern
+Mesopotamia (that is, in the midst of an Aramaic-speaking population),
+partly lower down in old Sinear, anywhere but in Persis, where the
+handsome buildings begun by Xerxes were never carried out. The
+Parthians of the succeeding Achæmenid period were a Mongol tribe which
+had adopted a Persian dialect and in the midst of this people sought to
+embody the Persian national feeling in themselves.
+
+Here the Persian religion emerges as a problem no less difficult
+than those of race and language.[236] scholarship has associated it
+with these as though the association were self-evident, and has,
+therefore, treated it always with reference to India. But the religion
+of these land-Vikings was not related to, it was identical with the
+Vedic, as shown by the divine pairs Mitra-Varuna and Indra-Nasatya
+of the Boghaz Keüi texts. And within this religion which held up its
+head in the middle of the Babylonian world Zarathustra now appeared,
+from out of the lower ranks of the people, as reformer. It is known
+that he was not a Persian. That which he created (as I hope to show)
+was a transfer of _Vedic_ religion into the forms of the _Aramæan_
+world-contemplation, in which already there were the faint beginnings
+of the Magian religiousness. The _dævas_, the gods of the old Indian
+beliefs, grew to be the demons of the Semitic and the jinn of the
+Arabian. Yahweh and Beelzebub are related to one another precisely as
+Ahuramazda and Ahriman in this peasant-religion, which was essentially
+Aramæan and, therefore, founded in an ethical-dualistic world-feeling.
+Eduard Meyer[237] has correctly established the difference between
+the Indian and the Iranian view of the world, but, owing to his
+erroneous premisses, has not recognized its origin. _Zarathustra is
+a travelling-companion of the prophets of Israel_, who like him, and
+at the same time, transformed the old (Mosaic-Canaanitish) beliefs of
+the people. It is significant that the whole eschatology is a common
+possession of the Persian and Jewish religions, and that the Avesta
+texts were originally written in Aramaic (in Parthian times) and only
+afterwards translated into Pehlevi.[238]
+
+But already in Parthian times there occurred amongst both Persians
+and Jews that profoundly intimate change which makes no longer tribal
+attachment but orthodoxy the hall-mark of nationality.[239] A Jew who
+went over to the Mazda faith _became thereby a Persian_; a Persian who
+became a Christian belonged to the Nestorian “people.” The very dense
+population of northern Mesopotamia--the motherland of the Arabian
+Culture--is partly of Jewish and partly of Persian nationality in
+this sense of the word, which is not at all concerned with race and
+very little with language. Even before the birth of Christ, “Infidel”
+designates the non-Persian as it designates the non-Jew.
+
+This nation is the “Persian people” of the Sassanid empire, and,
+connected with the fact, we find that Pehlevi and Hebrew die out
+simultaneously, Aramaic becoming the mother tongue of both communities.
+If we speak in terms of Aryans and Semites, the Persians in the
+time of the Tell-el-Amarna Correspondence were Aryans, but no
+“people”: in that of Darius a people, but without race: in Sassanid
+times a community of believers, but of Semitic origin. There is no
+proto-Persian “people” branched off from the Aryan, nor a general
+history of the Persians, and for the three special histories, which are
+held together only by certain linguistic relations, there is not even a
+common historical theatre.
+
+
+III
+
+With this are laid, at last, the foundations for a _morphology of
+peoples_. Directly its essence is seen, we see also an inward order
+in the historical stream of the peoples. They are neither linguistic
+nor political nor zoölogical, but spiritual, units. And this leads at
+once to the further distinction between _peoples before, within, and
+after a Culture_. It is a fact that has been profoundly felt in all
+ages that Culture-peoples are _more distinct_ in character than the
+rest. Their predecessors I will call primitive peoples. These are the
+fugitive and heterogeneous associations that form and dissolve without
+ascertainable rule, till at last, in the presentiment of a still unborn
+Culture (as, for example, in the pre-Homeric, the pre-Christian, and
+the Germanic periods), phase by phase, becoming ever more definite in
+type, they assemble the human material of a population into groups,
+though all the time little or no alteration has been occurring in the
+stamp of man. Such a superposition of phases leads from the Cimbri and
+Teutones through the Marcomanni and Goths to the Franks, Lombards,
+and Saxons. Instances of primitive peoples are the Jews and Persians
+of the Seleucid age, the “Sea-peoples,” the Egyptian Nomes of Menes’s
+time.[240] And that which follows a Culture we may call--from its
+best-known example, the Egyptians of post-Roman times--fellah-peoples.
+
+In the tenth century of our era the Faustian soul suddenly awoke
+and manifested itself in innumerable shapes. Amongst these, side
+by side with the architecture and the ornament, there appears a
+distinctly characterized form of “people.” Out of the people-shapes
+of the Carolingian Empire--the Saxons, Swabians, Franks, Visigoths,
+Lombards--arise suddenly the German, the French, the Spaniards, the
+Italians. Hitherto (consciously and deliberately or not) historical
+research has uniformly regarded these Culture-peoples as something in
+being, as primaries, and have treated the Culture itself as secondary,
+as their product. The creative units of history, accordingly, were
+simply the Indians, the Greeks, the Romans, the Germans, and so on.
+As the Greek Culture was the work of the Hellenes, they must have
+been in existence as such far earlier; therefore they must have been
+immigrants. Any other idea of creator and creation seemed inconceivable.
+
+I regard it, therefore, as a discovery of decisive importance that
+the facts here set forth lead to the reverse conclusion. It will be
+established in all rigour that the great Cultures are entities,
+primary or original, that arise out of the deepest foundations of
+spirituality, and that the peoples under the spell of a Culture are,
+alike in their inward form and in their whole manifestation, its
+products and not its authors. These shapes in which humanity is seized
+and moulded possess style and style-history no less than kinds of art
+and modes of thought. The people of Athens is a symbol not less than
+the Doric temple, the Englishman not less than modern physics. There
+are peoples of Apollinian, Magian, Faustian cast. The Arabian Culture
+was _not_ created by “the Arabs”--quite the contrary; for the Magian
+Culture begins in the time of Christ, and the Arabian people represents
+its last great creation of that kind, a community bonded by Islam as
+the Jewish and Persian communities before it had been bonded by their
+religions. World-history is the history of the great Cultures, and
+peoples are but the symbolic forms and vessels in which the men of
+these Cultures fulfil their Destinies.
+
+In each of these Cultures, Mexican and Chinese, Indian and Egyptian,
+there is--whether our science is aware of it or not--_a group of
+great peoples of identical style_, which arises at the beginning of
+the springtime, forming states and carrying history, and throughout
+the course of its evolution bears its fundamental form onward to the
+goal. They are in the highest degree unlike amongst themselves--it is
+scarcely possible to conceive of a sharper contrast than that between
+Athenians and Spartans, Germans and Frenchmen, Tsin and Tsu--and
+all military history shows national hatred as the loftiest method
+of inducting historic decisions. But the moment that a people alien
+to the Culture makes an appearance in the field of history, there
+awakens everywhere an overpowering feeling of spiritual relationship,
+and the notion of the barbarian--meaning the man who inwardly does
+_not_ belong to the Culture--is as clear-cut in the peoples of the
+Egyptian settlements and the Chinese world of states as it is in the
+Classical. The energy of the form is so high that it grasps and recasts
+neighbouring peoples, witness the Carthaginians of Roman times with
+their half-Classical style, and the Russians who have figured as a
+people of Western style from Catherine the Great to the fall of Petrine
+Tsardom.
+
+Peoples in the style of their Culture we will call _Nations_, the word
+itself distinguishing them from the forms that precede and that follow
+them. It is not merely a strong feeling of “we” that forges the inward
+unity of its most significant of all major associations; _underlying
+the nation there is an Idea_. This stream of a collective being
+possesses a very deep relation to Destiny, to Time, and to History,
+a relation that is different in each instance and one, too, that
+determines the relation of the human material to race, language, land,
+state, and religion. As the styles of the Old Chinese and the Classical
+peoples differ, so also the styles of their histories.
+
+Life as experienced by primitive and by fellaheen peoples is just
+the zoölogical up-and-down, a planless happening without goal or
+cadenced march in time, wherein occurrences are many, but, in the last
+analysis, devoid of significance. The only historical peoples, the
+peoples whose existence _is world-history_, are the nations. Let us be
+perfectly clear as to what is meant by this. The Ostrogoths suffered
+a great destiny, and therefore, inwardly, they have no history. Their
+battles and settlements were not necessary and therefore were episodic;
+their end was insignificant. In 1500 B.C. that which lived about Mycenæ
+and Tiryns was not _as yet_ a nation, and that which lived in Minoan
+Crete was _no longer_ a nation. Tiberius was the last ruler who tried
+to lead a Roman nation further on the road of history, who sought to
+_retrieve_ it for history. By Marcus Aurelius there was only a Romanic
+population to be defended--a field for occurrences, but no longer for
+history. How many free pre-generations of Mede or Achæan or Hun folk
+there were, in what sort of social groups their predecessors and their
+descendants lived, cannot be determined and depends upon no rule. But
+of a nation the life-period _is_ determinate, and so are the pace and
+the rhythm in which its history moves to fulfilment. From the beginning
+of the Chóu period to the rulership of Shih-Hwang-ti, from the events
+on which the Troy legend was founded to Augustus, and from Thinite
+times to the XVIII Dynasty, the numbers of generations are more or less
+the same. The “Late” period of the Culture, from Solon to Alexander,
+from Luther to Napoleon, embraces no more than about ten generations.
+Within such limits the destiny of the genuine Culture-people, and with
+it that of world-history in general, reach fulfilment. The Romans, the
+Arabs, the Prussians, are late-born nations. How many generations of
+Fabii and Junii had already come and gone _as Romans_ by the time Cannæ
+was fought?
+
+Further, nations are _the true city-building peoples_. In the
+strongholds they arose, with the cities they ripen to the full height
+of their world-consciousness, and in the world-cities they dissolve.
+Every town-formation that has character has also _national_ character.
+The village, which is wholly a thing of race, does not yet possess it;
+the megalopolis possesses it no longer. Of this essential, which so
+characteristically colours the nation’s public life that its slightest
+manifestation identifies it, we cannot exaggerate--we can scarcely
+imagine--the force, the self-sufficingness, and the _loneliness_.
+If between the souls of two Cultures the screen is impenetrable, if
+no Western may ever hope completely to understand the Indian or the
+Chinese, this is equally so, even more so, as between well-developed
+nations. Nations understand one another as little as individuals do
+so. Each understands merely a self-created picture of the other,
+and individuals with the insight to penetrate deeper are few and
+far between. _Vis-à-vis_ the Egyptians, all the Classical peoples
+necessarily felt themselves as relatives in one whole, but as between
+themselves they never understood each other. What sharper contrast is
+there than that between the Athenian and the Spartan spirit? German,
+French, and English modes of philosophical thinking are distinct, not
+merely in Bacon, Descartes, and Leibniz, but already in the age of
+Scholasticism;[241] and even now, in modern physics and chemistry, the
+scientific method, the choice and type of experiments and hypotheses,
+their inter-relations, and their relative importance for the course and
+aim of the investigation are markedly different in every nation. German
+and French piety, English and Spanish social ethics, German and English
+habits of life, stand so far apart that for the average man, and,
+therefore, for the public opinion of his community, the real inwardness
+of every foreign nation remains a deep secret and a source of continual
+and pregnant error. In the Roman Empire men began generally to
+understand one another, but this was precisely because there had ceased
+to be anything worth understanding in the Classical city. With the
+advent of mutual comprehension this particular humanity ceased to live
+in nations, _and ipso facto ceased to be historic_.[242]
+
+Owing to the very depth of these experiences, it is not possible for
+a whole people to be _uniformly and throughout_ a Culture-people,
+a nation. Amongst primitives each individual man has the same
+feeling of group-obligations, but the awakening of a nation into
+self-consciousness invariably takes place in gradations--that is,
+pre-eminently in the particular class that is strongest of soul and
+holds the others spellbound by a power derived from what it has
+experienced. _Every nation is represented in history by a minority._ At
+the beginning of the springtime it is the nobility,[243] which in that
+period of its first appearance is the fine flowering of the people, the
+vessel in which the national character--unconscious, but felt all the
+more strongly in its cosmic pulse--receives its destined Style. The
+“we” is the knightly class, in the Egyptian feudal period of 2700 not
+less than in the Indian and the Chinese of 1200. The Homeric heroes
+_are_ the Danai; the Norman barons _are_ England. Centuries later,
+Saint-Simon--the embodiment, it is true, of an older France--used to
+say that “all France” was assembled in the King’s ante-room, and there
+was a time in which Rome and the Senate were actually identical. With
+the advent of the town the burgher becomes the vessel of nationality,
+and (as we should expect from the growth of intellectuality) of a
+national _consciousness_ that it gets from the nobility and carries
+through to its fulfilment. Always it is particular circles, graduated
+in fine shades, that _in the name of_ the people live, feel, act, and
+know how to die, but these circles become larger and larger. In the
+eighteenth century arose the Western _concept_ of the Nation which
+sets up (and on occasion energetically insists upon) the claim to
+be championed by everybody without exception; but in reality, as we
+know, the _émigrés_ were just as convinced as the Jacobins that they
+were _the_ people, _the_ representatives of the French nation. A
+Culture-people which is coincident with “all” does not exist--this is
+possible only in primitive and fellaheen peoples, only in a mere joint
+being without depth or historical dignity. So long as a people is a
+nation and works out the Destiny of a nation, there is in it a minority
+which in the name of all represents and fulfils its history.
+
+
+IV
+
+The Classical nations, in accordance with the static-Euclidean soul of
+their Culture, were corporeal units of the smallest imaginable size.
+It was not Hellenes or Ionians that were nations, but in each city the
+Demos, a union of adult men, legally and _by the same token nationally_
+defined between the type of the hero as upper limit and the slave as
+lower.[244] Synœcism, that mysterious process of early periods in which
+the inhabitants of a countryside give up their villages and assemble
+themselves as a town, marks the moment at which, having arrived at
+self-consciousness, the Classical nation constitutes itself as such. We
+can still trace the way in which this form of the nation steadily makes
+good from Homeric times[245] to the epoch of the great colonizations.
+It responds exactly to the Classical prime-symbol: each folk was a
+body, visible and surveyable, a σῶμα, the express negation of the idea
+of geographical space.
+
+It is of no importance to Classical history whether or not the
+Etruscans in Italy were identical physically or linguistically with
+the bearers of this name amongst the “Sea-peoples,” or what the
+relation was between the pre-Homeric units of the Pelasgi or Danai
+and the later bearers of the Doric or the Hellenic name. If, about
+1100, there are Doric and Etruscan primitive peoples (as is probable),
+nevertheless _a Doric or an Etruscan nation never existed_. In
+Tuscany as in the Peloponnese there were only City-states, _national
+points_ which in the period of colonization _could only multiply,
+never expand_. The Etruscan wars of Rome were always waged against
+one or more cities,[246] and the nations that the Persians and the
+Carthaginians confronted were of this same type. To speak of “the
+Greeks and the Romans” as the eighteenth century did (and as we
+still do) is completely erroneous. A Greek “nation” in our sense is
+a misconception--the Greeks themselves never knew such an idea at
+all. The name of “Hellenes,” which arose about 500, did not denote
+a people, but the aggregate of Classical Culture-men, the _sum_ of
+their nations,[247] in contradistinction to the “Barbarian” world.
+And the Romans, a true urban people, could not conceive of their
+Empire otherwise than in the form of innumerable nation-points,
+the _civitates_ into which, juridically as in other respects, they
+dissolved all the primitive peoples of their Imperium.[248] When
+national feeling in _this_ shape is extinguished, there is an end to
+Classical history.
+
+It will be the task--one of the heaviest tasks of historians--to trace,
+generation by generation, the quiet fading-out of the Classical nations
+in the eastern Mediterranean during the “Late Classical” age, and the
+ever stronger inflow of a new nation-spirit, the Magian.
+
+A nation of the Magian type is the community of co-believers, the group
+of all who know the right way to salvation and are inwardly linked
+to one another by the _ijma_[249] of this belief. Men belonged to a
+Classical nation by virtue of the possession of citizenship, but to
+a Magian nation by virtue of a sacramental act--circumcision for the
+Jews, specific forms of baptism for the Mandæans or the Christians. An
+unbeliever was for a Magian folk what an alien was for a Classical--no
+intercourse with him, no _connubium_--and this national separation
+went so far that in Palestine a Jewish-Aramaic and a Christian-Aramaic
+dialect formed themselves side by side.[250] The Faustian nation,
+though necessarily bound up with a particular religiousness, is not
+so with a particular confession; the Classical nation is by type
+non-exclusive in its relations to different cults; but _the Magian
+nation comprises neither more nor less than is covered by the idea of
+one or another of the Magian Churches_. Inwardly the Classical nation
+is linked with the city, and the Western with a landscape, but the
+Arabian knows neither fatherland nor mother tongue. Outwardly its
+specific world-outlook is only expressed by the distinctive script
+which each such nation develops as soon as it is born. But for that
+very reason the inwardness and hidden force--the magic, in fact--of a
+Magian nation-feeling impresses us Faustians, who notice the absence of
+the home-idea, as something entirely enigmatic and uncanny. This tacit,
+self-secure cohesion (that of the Jews, for example, in the homes of
+the Western peoples) is what entered “Roman Law” (called by a Classical
+label _but worked out by Aramæans_) as the concept of the “juridical
+person,”[251] which is nothing but the Magian notion of a community.
+Post-exilic Judaism was a juridical person long before anyone had
+discovered the concept itself.
+
+The primitives who preceded this evolution were predominantly tribal
+associations, among them the South-Arabian Minæans,[252] who appear
+about the beginning of the first millennium, and whose name vanishes
+in the first century before Christ; the Aramaic-speaking Chaldeans,
+who, likewise about 1000 B.C., sprang up as clan-groups and from
+659 to 539 ruled the Babylonian world; the Israelites before the
+Exile;[253] and the Persians of Cyrus.[254] So strongly already the
+populations felt this form that the priesthoods which developed
+here, there, and everywhere after the time of Alexander received the
+names of foundered or fictitious tribes. Amongst the Jews and the
+South-Arabian Sabæans they were called Levites; amongst the Medes
+and Persians, Magi (after an extinct Indian tribe); and amongst the
+adherents of the new Babylonian religion Chaldeans (also after a
+disintegrated clan-grouping).[255] But here, as in all other Cultures,
+the energy of the national _consensus_ completely overrode the old
+tribal arrangements of the primitives. Just as the _Populus Romanus_
+unquestionably contained folk-elements of very varied provenance,
+and as the nation of the French took in Salian Franks and Romanic
+and Old Celtic natives alike, so the Magian nation also ceased to
+regard origin as a distinguishing mark. The process, of course, was an
+exceedingly long one. The tribe still counts for much with the Jews
+of the Maccabæan period and even with the Arabs of the first Caliphs;
+but for the inwardly ripened Culture-peoples of this world, such as
+the Jews of the Talmudic period, it no longer possessed any meaning.
+He who belongs to the Faith belongs to the Nation--it would have been
+blasphemy even to admit any other distinction. In early Christian times
+the Prince of Adiabene[256] went over to Judaism with his people in a
+body, and they were all _ipso facto_ incorporated in the Jewish nation.
+The same applies to the nobility of Armenia and even the Caucasian
+tribes (which at that period must have Judaized on a large scale) and,
+in the opposite direction, to the Beduins of Arabia, right down to the
+extreme south, and beyond them again to African tribes as far afield as
+Lake Chad.[257] Here evidently is a national common feeling proof even
+against such race-distinctions as these. It is stated that even to-day
+Jews can amongst themselves distinguish very different races at the
+first glance, and that in the ghettos of eastern Europe the “tribes”
+(in the Old Testament sense) are clearly recognized. But none of this
+constitutes a difference of _nation_. According to von Erckert[258] the
+West-European Jew-type is universally distributed within the non-Jewish
+Caucasian peoples, whereas according to Weissenberg[259] it does not
+occur at all amongst the long-headed Jews of southern Arabia, where the
+Sabæan tomb-sculptures show a human type that might almost claim to be
+Roman or Germanic and is the ancestor of these Jews who were converted
+by missionary effort at least by the birth of Christ.
+
+But this resolution of the tribal primitives into the Magian nations of
+Persians, Jews, Mandæans, Christians, and the rest must have occurred
+quite generally and on an immense scale. I have already drawn attention
+to the decisive fact that long before the beginning of our era the
+Persians represented simply a religious community, and it is certain
+that their numbers were indefinitely increased by accessions to the
+Mazdaist faith. The Babylonian religion vanished at that time--which
+means that its adherents became in part Jews and in part Persians--but
+emerging from it there is a _new_ religion, inwardly alien to both
+Jewish and Persian, an astral religion, which bears the name of the
+Chaldees and whose adherents constituted a genuine Aramaic-speaking
+nation. From this Aramæan population of Chaldean-Jewish-Persian
+nationality came, firstly the Babylonian Talmud, the Gnosis, and the
+religion of Mani, and secondly, in Islamic times, Sufism and the Shia.
+
+Moreover, as seen from Edessa, the inhabitants of the Classical
+world, they also, appear as nations in the Magian style. “The Greeks”
+in the Eastern idiom means the aggregate of all who adhered to the
+Syncretic cults and were bound together by the _ijma_ of the Late
+Classical religiousness. The Hellenistic city-nations are no longer
+in the picture, which shows only _one_ community of believers, the
+“worshippers of the mysteries,” who under the names of Helios,
+Jupiter, Mithras, θεός ὕψιστος, worshipped a kind of Yahweh or Allah.
+Throughout the East, Greekness is a definite _religious_ notion, and
+for that matter one completely concordant with the facts as they
+then were. The feeling of the Polis is almost extinct, and a Magian
+nation needs neither home nor community of origin. Even the Hellenism
+of the Seleucid Empire, which made converts in Turkestan and on the
+Indus, was related in inward form to Persian and post-exilic Judaism.
+Later, the Aramæan Porphyry, the pupil of Plotinus, attempted to
+organize this Greekness as a cult-Church on the model of the Christian
+and the Persian, and the Emperor Julian raised it to the dignity of
+being the State Church--an act not merely religious, but also and
+above all national. When a Jew sacrificed to Sol or to Apollo, he
+thereby became a Greek. So, for example Ammonius Saccas (d. 242), the
+teacher of Plotinus and probably also of Origen, went over “from the
+Christians to the Greeks”; so also Porphyry, born Malchus and (like
+the “Roman” jurist Ulpian)[260] a Phœnician of Tyre.[261] In these
+cases we see jurists and State officials taking Latin, and philosophers
+Greek, names--and for the philological spirit of modern and religious
+research, this is quite historical enough to justify these men’s being
+regarded as Roman and Greek in the Classical city-national sense!
+But how many of the great Alexandrines may have been Greeks only in
+the Magian sense of the term? In point of birth were not Plotinus and
+Diophantus[262] perhaps Jews or Chaldeans?
+
+Now, the Christians also felt themselves from the outset as a nation
+of the Magian cast, and, moreover, the others, Greeks (“heathen”)
+and Jews alike, regarded them as such. Quite logically the latter
+considered their secession from Judaism as high treason, and the
+former their missionary infiltration into the Classical cities as an
+invasion and conquest, while the Christians, on their side, designated
+people of other faiths as τὰ ἔθνη.[263] When the Monophysites and
+the Nestorians separated themselves from the Orthodox, new nations
+came into being as well as new Churches. The Nestorians since 1450
+have been governed by the Mar Shimun,[264] who was at once prince and
+patriarch of his people and, _vis-à-vis_ the Sultan, occupied exactly
+the same position as, long before, the Jewish Resh Galutha had occupied
+in the Persian Empire.[265] This nation-consciousness, derived from
+particular and defined world-feeling and therefore self-evident with
+an _a priori_ sureness, cannot be ignored if we are to understand the
+later persecutions of the Christians. The Magian State is inseparably
+bound up with the concept of orthodoxy. Caliphate, nation, and Church
+form an intimate unit. It was as _states_ that Adiabene went over to
+Judaism, Osrhoene about 200 (so soon!) from Greekdom to Christendom,
+Armenia in the sixth century from the Greek to the Monophysite Church.
+Each of these events expresses the fact that the State was identical
+with the orthodox community as a juridical person.[266] If Christians
+lived in the Islamic State, Nestorians in the Persian, Jews in the
+Byzantine, they did not and could not as unbelievers belong to it, and
+consequently were thrown back upon their own jurisdictions.[267] If by
+reason of their numbers or their missionary spirit they became a threat
+to the continuance of the identity of state and creed-community,
+persecution became a national duty. It was on this account that first
+the “orthodox” (or “Greek”) and then the Nestorian Christians suffered
+in the Persian Empire. Diocletian also, who as “Caliph”[268] (_Dominus
+et Deus_) had linked the Imperium with the pagan cult-Churches and saw
+himself in all sincerity as Commander of _these_ Faithful, could not
+evade the duty of suppressing the second Church. Constantine changed
+the “true” Church _and in that act changed the nationality_ of the
+Byzantine Empire. From that point on, the Greek name slowly passed over
+to the Christian nation, and specifically to that Christian nation
+which the Emperor as Head of the Faithful recognized and allowed to
+sit in the Great Councils. Hence the uncertain lines of the picture
+of Byzantine history--in 290 the organization that of a Classical
+Imperium, but the substance already a Magian national state; in 312
+a change of nationality without change of name. Under this name of
+“Greeks,” first Paganism as a nation fought the Christians, and then
+Christianity as a nation fought Islam. And in the latter fight, Islam
+itself being a nation also (the Arabian), nationality stamped itself
+more and more deeply upon events. Hence the present-day Greeks are
+a creation of the Magian Culture, developed first by the Christian
+Church, then by the sacred language of this Church, and finally by the
+name of this Church. Islam brought with it from the home of Mohammed
+the Arab name as the badge of its nationality. It is a mistake to
+equate these “Arabs” with the Beduin tribes of the desert. What created
+the new nation, with its passionate and strongly characteristic soul,
+was the _consensus_ of the new faith. Its unity is no more derived
+from race and home than that of the Christian, Jewish, or Persian, and
+therefore it did not “migrate”; rather it owes its immense expansion to
+the incorporation within itself of the greater part of the early Magian
+nations. With the end of the first millennium of our era these nations
+one and all pass over into the form of fellah-peoples, and it is as
+fellaheen that the Christian peoples of the Balkans under Turkish rule,
+the Parsees in India, and the Jews in Western Europe have lived ever
+since.[269]
+
+In the West, nations of Faustian style emerge, more and more
+distinctly, from the time of Otto the Great (936-973), and in them the
+primitive peoples of the Carolingian period are swiftly dissolved.[270]
+Already by A.D. 1000 the men who “mattered most” were everywhere
+beginning to sense themselves as Germans, Italians, Spaniards,
+Frenchmen; whereas hardly six generations earlier their ancestors had
+been to the depths of their souls Franks, Lombards, and Visigoths.
+
+The people-form of this Culture is founded, like its Gothic
+architecture and its Infinitesimal Calculus upon a tendency to
+the Infinite, in the spatial as well as the temporal sense. The
+nation-feeling comprises, to begin with, a geographical horizon that,
+considering the period and its means of communication, can only be
+called vast, and is not paralleled in any other Culture. The fatherland
+as _extent_, as a region whose boundaries the individual has scarcely,
+if ever, seen and which nevertheless he will defend and die for, is
+something that in its symbolic depth and force men of other Cultures
+can never comprehend. The Magian nation does not as such possess an
+earthly home; the Classical possesses it only as a point-focus. The
+actuality that, even in Gothic times, united men from the banks of the
+Adige with men in the Order-castles of Lithuania in an association of
+feeling would have been inconceivable even in ancient China and ancient
+Egypt, and stands in the sharpest opposition to the actuality of Rome
+and Athens, where every member of the Demos had the rest constantly in
+sight.
+
+Still stronger is the sensitivity to distance _in time_. Before the
+fatherland-idea (which is a _consequence_ of the existence of the
+nation) emerged at all, this passion evolved another idea to which the
+Faustian nations owe that existence--the _dynastic_ idea. Faustian
+peoples are historical peoples, communities that feel themselves bound
+together not by place or consensus, but by history; and the eminent
+symbol and vessel of the common Destiny is the ruling “house.” For
+Egyptian and for Chinese mankind the dynasty is a symbol of quite
+other meaning. Here what it signifies, as a will and an activity, _is
+Time_. All that we have been, all that we would be, is manifested in
+the being of the one generation; and our sense of this is much too
+profound to be upset by the worthlessness of a regent. What matters is
+not the person, but the idea, and it is for the sake of the idea that
+thousands have so often marched to their deaths with conviction in a
+genealogical quarrel. Classical history was for Classical eyes only a
+chain of incidents leading from moment to moment; Magian history was
+for its members the progressive actualization in and through mankind
+of a world-plan laid down by God and accomplished between a creation
+and a cataclysm; but Faustian history is in our eyes a single grand
+willing of conscious logic, in the accomplishment of which nations are
+led and represented by their rulers. It is a trait of race. Rational
+foundations it has not and cannot have--it has simply been felt so,
+and because it has been felt so, the companion-trust of the Germanic
+migration-time developed on into the feudal troth of the Gothic,
+the loyalty of the Baroque, and the merely seemingly undynastic
+patriotism of the nineteenth century. We must not misjudge the depth
+and dignity of this feeling because there is an endless catalogue
+of perjured vassals and peoples[271] and an eternal comedy in the
+cringing of courtiers and the abjectness of the vulgar. All great
+symbols are spiritual and can be comprehended only in their highest
+forms. The private life of a pope bears no relation to the idea of
+the Papacy. Henry the Lion’s very defection[272] shows how fully in a
+time of nation-forming a real ruler feels the destiny of “his” people
+incorporated in himself. He represents that destiny in the face of
+history, and at times it costs him his honour to do so.
+
+All nations of the West are of dynastic origins. In the Romanesque
+and even in Early Gothic architecture the soul of the Carolingian
+primitives still quivers through. There is no French or German Gothic,
+but Salian, Rhenish, and Suabian, as there is Visigothic (northern
+Spain, southern France) and Lombard and Saxon Romanesque. But over it
+all there spreads soon the minority, composed of men of race, that
+feels membership in a nation as a great historical vocation. From
+it proceed the Crusades, and in them there truly were French and
+German chivalries. It is the hall-mark of Faustian peoples that they
+are conscious of the direction of their history. But this direction
+attaches to the sequence of the generations, and so the nature of the
+race-ideal is _genealogical_ through and through--Darwinism, even,
+with its theories of descent and inheritance is a sort of caricature
+of Gothic heraldry--and the world-as-history, when every individual
+lives in the plane of it, contains not only the tree of the individual
+family, ruling or other, but also the tree of the people as the basic
+form of all its happenings.[273] It needs very exact observation to
+perceive that this Faustian-genealogical principle, with its eminently
+historical notions of “_Ebenbürtigkeit_” (equivalence by virtue of
+birth) and of purity of blood, is just as alien to the Egyptians and
+Chinese, for all their historical disposition, as it is to the Roman
+nobility and the Byzantine Empire. On the other hand, neither our
+peasantry nor the patriciate of the cities is conceivable without
+it. The scientific conception of the people, which I have dissected
+above, is derived essentially from the genealogical sense of the
+Gothic period. The notion that the peoples have their trees has made
+the Italians proud to be the heirs of Rome, and the Germans proud to
+recall their Teuton forefathers, and that is something quite different
+from the Classical belief in timeless descent from heroes and gods.
+And eventually, when after 1789 the notion of mother tongue came to be
+fitted on to the dynastic principle, the once merely scientific fancy
+of a primitive Indogermanic people transformed itself into a deeply
+felt genealogy of “the Aryan race,” and in the process the word “race”
+became almost a designation for Destiny.
+
+But the “races” of the West are not the creators of the great nations,
+but _their result_. Not one of them had yet come into existence in
+Carolingian times. It was the class-ideal of chivalry that worked
+creatively in different ways upon Germany, England, France, and Spain
+and impressed upon an immense area that which within the individual
+nations is felt and experienced as race. On this rest (as I have said
+before) the nations--so _historical_, so alien to the Classical--of
+equivalence by birth (_peer_-age, _Ebenbürtigkeit_) and blood-purity.
+It was because the blood of the ruling family incorporated the destiny,
+the being, of the whole nation, that the state-system of the Baroque
+was of genealogical structure and that most of the grand crises assumed
+the form of wars of dynastic succession. Even the catastrophic ruin
+of Napoleon, which settled the world’s political organization for a
+century, took its shape from the fact than an adventurer dared to drive
+out with his blood that of the old dynasties, and that his attack upon
+a symbol made it historically a sacred duty to resist him. For all
+these peoples were the _consequence_ of dynastic destinies. That there
+is a Portuguese people, and a Portuguese Brazil in the midst of Spanish
+America, is the result of the marriage of Count Henry of Burgundy in
+1095. That there are Swiss and Hollanders is the result of a reaction
+against the House of Habsburg. That Lorraine is the name of a land and
+not of a people is a consequence of the childlessness of Lothar II.
+
+It was the Kaiser-idea that welded the disjunct primitives of
+Charlemagne’s time into the German nation. Germany and Empire are
+inseparable ideas. The fall of the Hohenstaufens meant the replacement
+of one great dynasty by a handful of small and tiny ones; and the
+German nation of Gothic style was inwardly shattered even before
+the beginning of the Baroque--that is, at the very time when the
+nation-idea was being raised to higher levels of intellect in
+leader-cities like Paris, Madrid, London, and Vienna. The Thirty Years’
+War, so conventional history says, destroyed Germany in its flower. Not
+so; the fact that it could occur at all in this wretched form simply
+confirmed and showed up a long-completed decadence--it was the final
+consequence of the fall of the Hohenstaufens. There could hardly be a
+more convincing proof that Faustian nations are dynastic units. But
+then again, the Salians and the Hohenstaufens created also--at least in
+idea--an Italian nation out of Romans, Lombards, and Normans. Only the
+Empire made it possible for them to stretch a hand back to the age of
+Rome. Even though alien power evoked the hostility of the townsmen, and
+split the two primary orders, the nobles to the Emperor, the priests
+to the Pope; even though in these conflicts of Guelph and Ghibelline
+the nobility soon lost its importance and the Papacy rose through the
+anti-dynastic cities to political supremacy; even though at the last
+there was but a tangle of predatory states whose “Renaissance”-politics
+opposed the soaring world-policy of the Gothic Empire, as Milan of
+old had defied the will of Frederick Barbarossa--yet the ideal of
+_Una Italia_, the ideal for which Dante sacrificed the peace of his
+life, was a pure dynastic creation of the great Germany emperors. The
+Renaissance, whose historical horizon was that of the urban patriciate,
+led the nation as far out of the path of self-fulfilment as it is
+possible to imagine. All through the Baroque and Rococo the land was
+depressed to the state of being a mere pawn in the power-politics
+of alien houses. And not until after 1800 did Romanticism arise and
+reawaken the Gothic feeling with an intensity that made of it a
+political power.
+
+The French people was forged out of Franks and Visigoths by its kings.
+It learned to feel itself as a whole for the first time at Bouvines
+in 1214.[274] Still more significant is the creation of the House of
+Habsburg, which, out of a population linked neither by speech nor
+folk-feeling nor tradition caused to arise the Austrian nation, which
+proved its nationhood in defending Maria Theresa and in resisting
+Napoleon--its first tests, and its last. The political history of the
+Baroque age is in essentials the history of the Houses of Bourbon and
+Habsburg. The rise of the House of Wettin in place of that of Welf is
+the reason why “Saxony” was on the Weser in 800, and is on the Elbe
+to-day. Dynastic events, and finally the intervention of Napoleon,
+brought it about that half of Bavaria has shared in the history of
+Austria and that the Bavarian State consists for the most part of
+Franconia and Suabia.
+
+The latest nation of the West is the Prussian, a creation of the
+Hohenzollerns as the Roman was the last creation of the Classical
+Polis-feeling, and the Arabian the last product of a religious
+_consensus_. At Fehbellin[275] the young nation gained its recognition;
+at Rossbach[276] it won for Germany. It was Goethe who with his
+infallible eye for historic turning-points described the then new
+“Minna von Barnhelm” as the first German poetry of specifically
+national content. It is one more example, and a deeply significant
+one, to show how dynastically the Western nations defined themselves,
+that Germany thus at one stroke re-discovered her poetic language.
+The collapse of the Hohenstaufen rule had been accompanied by that of
+Germany’s Gothic literature also. What did emerge here and there in the
+following centuries--the golden age of all the Western literatures--was
+undeserving of the name. But with the victories of Frederick the Great
+a new poesy began. “From Lessing to Hebbel” means the same as “from
+Rossbach to Sedan.” The attempts that were made to restore the lost
+connexion by consciously leaning upon, first the French, and then
+Shakespeare, upon the Volkslied, and finally (in Romanticism) upon the
+poetry of the age of chivalry, produced at least the unique phenomenon
+of an art-history which, though it never really attained one aim, was
+constituted, for the greater part, of flashes of genius.
+
+The end of the eighteenth century witnessed the accomplishment of that
+remarkable turn with which national consciousness sought to emancipate
+itself from the dynastic principle. To all appearance this had happened
+in England long before. In this connexion Magna Charta (1215) will
+occur to most readers, but some will not have failed to observe
+that on the contrary, the very recognition of the nation involved
+in the recognition of its representatives gave the dynastic feeling
+a fresh-enforced depth and refinement to which the peoples of the
+Continent remained almost utter strangers. If the modern Englishman is
+(without appearing so) the most conservative human being in the world,
+and if in consequence his political management solves its problems
+so much by wordless harmony of national pulse instead of express
+discussion, and therefore has been the most successful up to now, the
+underlying cause is the _early emancipation of the dynastic feeling_
+from its expression in monarchical power.
+
+The French Revolution, on the contrary, was in this regard only a
+victory of Rationalism. It set free not so much the nation as the
+concept of the nation. The dynastic has penetrated into the blood
+of the Western races, and on that very account it is a vexation
+to their intellect. For a dynasty represents history, it is the
+history-become-flesh of a land, and intellect is timeless and
+unhistorical. The ideas of the Revolution were all “eternal” and
+“true.” Universal human rights, freedom, and equality are literature
+and abstraction and not facts. Call all this republican if you will, in
+reality it was one more case of a minority striving in the name of all
+to introduce the new ideal into the world of fact. It became a power,
+but at the cost of the ideal, and all it did was to replace the old
+felt adherence by the reasoned patriotism of the nineteenth century;
+by a civilized nationalism, only possible in our Culture, which in
+France itself and even to-day is unconsciously dynastic; and by the
+concept of the _fatherland as dynastic unit_ which emerged first in the
+Spanish and Prussian uprisings against Napoleon and then in the German
+and Italian wars of _dynastic_ unification. Out of the opposition of
+race and speech, blood and intellect, a new and specifically Western
+ideal arose to confront the genealogical ideal--that of the mother
+tongue. Enthusiasts there were in both countries who thought to replace
+the unifying force of the Emperor- and King-idea by the linking of
+republic and poetry--something of the “return to nature” in this, but
+a return of history to nature. In place of the wars of succession came
+language-struggles, in which one nation sought to force its language
+and therewith its nationality upon the fragments of another. But no one
+will fail to observe that even the rationalistic conception of a nation
+as a linguistic unit can at best ignore, never abolish, the dynastic
+feeling, any more than a Hellenistic Greek could inwardly overcome
+his Polis-consciousness or a modern Jew the national _ijma_. The
+mother tongue does not arise out of nothing, but is itself a product of
+dynastic history. Without the Capetian line there would have been no
+French language, but a Romance-Frankish in the north and a Provençal
+in the south. The Italian written-language is to be credited to the
+German Emperors and above all to Frederick II. The modern nations
+are primarily the populations of an old dynastic history. Yet in the
+nineteenth century the second concept of the nation as a unit of
+written language has annihilated the Austrian, and probably created the
+American. Thenceforward there have been in all countries two parties
+representing the nation in two opposed aspects, as dynastic-historical
+unit and as intellectual unit--the race party and the language
+party--but these are reflections that evoke too soon problems of
+politics that must await a later chapter.
+
+
+V
+
+At first, when the land was still without cities, it was the nobility
+that represented, in the highest sense of the word, the nation. The
+peasantry, “everlasting” and historyless, was a people _before_ the
+dawn of the Culture, and in very fundamental characters it continued
+to be the primitive people, surviving when the form of the nation had
+passed away again. “The nation,” like every other grand symbol of the
+Culture, is intimately the cherished possession of a few; those who
+have it are born to it as men are born to art or philosophy, and the
+distinctions of creator, critic, and layman, or something like them,
+hold for it also--alike in a classical Polis, a Jewish consensus, and a
+Western people. When a nation rises up ardent to fight for its freedom
+and honour, it is always a minority that really fires the multitude.
+The people “awakens”--it is more than a figure of speech, for only thus
+and then does the waking-consciousness of the whole become manifested.
+All these individuals whose “we”-feeling yesterday went content with
+a horizon of family and job and perhaps home-town are suddenly to-day
+men of nothing less than the People. Their thought and feeling, their
+Ego, and therewith the “it” in them have been transformed to the very
+depths. It has become _historic_. And then even the unhistorical
+peasant becomes a member of the nation, and a day dawns for him in
+which he experiences history and not merely lets it pass him by.
+
+But in the world-cities, besides a minority which has history and
+livingly experiences, feels, and seeks to lead the nation, there arises
+another minority of timeless a-historic, literary men, men not of
+destiny, but of reasons and causes, men who are inwardly detached from
+the pulse of blood and being, wide-awake thinking consciousnesses,
+that can no longer find any “reasonable” connotation for the
+nation-idea. Cosmopolitanism is a mere waking-conscious association of
+intelligentsias. In it there is hatred of Destiny, and above all of
+history as the expression of Destiny. Everything national belongs to
+race--so much so that it is incapable of finding language for itself,
+clumsy in all that demands thought, and shiftless to the point of
+fatalism. _Cosmopolitanism is literature_ and remains literature, very
+strong in reasons, very weak in defending them otherwise than with more
+reasons, in defending them with the blood.
+
+All the more, then, this minority of far superior intellect chooses the
+intellectual weapon, and all the more is it able to do so as the world
+cities are pure intellect, rootless, and by very hypothesis the common
+property of the civilization. The born world-citizens, world-pacifists,
+and world-reconcilers--alike in the China of the “Contending States,”
+in Buddhist India, in the Hellenistic age, and in the Western world
+to-day--are the _spiritual leaders of fellaheen_. _“Panem et circenses”
+is only another formula for pacifism._ In the history of all Cultures
+there is an anti-national element, whether we have evidences of it or
+not. Pure self-directed thinking was ever alien to life, and therefore
+alien to history, unwarlike, raceless. Consider our Humanism and
+Classicism, the Sophists of Athens, Buddha and Lao-tze--not to mention
+the passionate contempt of all nationalisms displayed by the great
+champions of the ecclesiastical and the philosophical world-view.
+However the cases differ amongst themselves otherwise, they are alike
+in this, that the world-feeling of race; the political (and therefore
+national) instinct for fact (“my country, right or wrong!”); the
+resolve to be the subject and not the object of evolution (for one or
+the other it has to be)--in a word, the _will_-to-power--has to retreat
+and make room for a tendency of which the standard-bearers are most
+often men without original impulse, but all the more set upon their
+logic; men at home in a world of truths, ideals, and Utopias; bookmen
+who believe that they can replace the actual by the logical, the might
+of facts by an abstract justice, Destiny by Reason. It begins with the
+everlastingly fearful who withdraw themselves out of actuality into
+cells and study-chambers and spiritual communities, and proclaim the
+nullity of the world’s doings, and it ends in every Culture with the
+apostles of world-peace. Every people has such (historically speaking)
+waste-products. Even their heads constitute physiognomically a group
+by themselves. In the “history of intellect” they stand high--and many
+illustrious names are numbered amongst them--but regarded from the
+point of view of actual history, they are inefficients.
+
+The Destiny of a nation plunged in the events of its world depends
+upon how far its race-quality is successful in making these events
+historically ineffective against it. It could perhaps be demonstrated
+even now that in the Chinese world of states the realm of Tsin won
+through (250 B.C.) because it alone had kept itself free from Taoist
+sentiments. Be this as it may, the Roman people prevailed over the rest
+of the Classical world because it was able to insulate its conduct of
+policy from the fellah-instincts of Hellenism.
+
+A nation is humanity brought into living form. The practical result
+of world-improving theories is consistently a _formless and therefore
+historyless mass_. All world-improvers and world-citizens stand
+for fellaheen ideals, whether they know it or not. _Their success
+means the historical abdication of the nation in favour, not of
+everlasting peace, but of another nation._ World-peace is always a
+one-sided resolve. The _Pax Romana_ had for the later soldier-emperors
+and Germanic band-kings only the one practical significance that
+it made a formless population of a hundred millions a mere object
+for the will-to-power of small warrior-groups. This peace cost the
+peaceful sacrifices beside which the losses of Cannæ seem vanishingly
+small. The Babylonian, Chinese, Indian, Egyptian worlds pass from
+one conqueror’s hands to another’s, and it is their own blood that
+pays for the contest. That is their--peace. When in 1401 the Mongols
+conquered Mesopotamia, they built a victory memorial out of the skulls
+of a hundred thousand inhabitants of Baghdad, which had not defended
+itself. From the intellectual point of view, no doubt, the extinction
+of the nations puts a fellaheen-world above history, civilized at
+last and _for ever_. But in the realm of facts it reverts to a state
+of nature, in which it alternates between long submissiveness and
+brief angers that for all the bloodshed--world-peace never diminishes
+that--alter nothing. Of old they shed their blood for themselves; now
+they must shed it for others, often enough for the mere entertainment
+of others--that is the difference. A resolute leader who collects ten
+thousand adventurers about him can do as he pleases. Were the whole
+world a single Imperium, it would thereby become merely the maximum
+conceivable field for the exploits of such conquering heroes.
+
+“_Lever doodt als Sklav_ (better dead than slave)” is an old Frisian
+peasant-saying. The reverse has been the choice of every Late
+Civilization, and every Late Civilization has had to experience how
+much that choice costs it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+PROBLEMS OF THE ARABIAN CULTURE
+
+(A)
+
+HISTORIC PSEUDOMORPHOSES
+
+
+I
+
+In a rock-stratum are embedded crystals of a mineral. Clefts and
+cracks occur, water filters in, and the crystals are gradually washed
+out so that in due course only their hollow mould remains. Then come
+volcanic outbursts which explode the mountain; molten masses pour in,
+stiffen, and crystallize out in their turn. But these are not free to
+do so in their own special forms. They must fill up the spaces that
+they find available. Thus there arise distorted forms, crystals whose
+inner structure contradicts their external shape, stones of one kind
+presenting the appearance of stones of another kind. The mineralogists
+call this phenomenon _Pseudomorphosis_.
+
+By the term “historical pseudomorphosis” I propose to designate those
+cases in which an older alien Culture lies so massively over the land
+that a young Culture, born in this land, cannot get its breath and
+fails not only to achieve pure and specific expression-forms, but even
+to develop fully its own self-consciousness. All that wells up from
+the depths of the young soul is cast in the old moulds, young feelings
+stiffen in senile works, and instead of rearing itself up in its own
+creative power, it can only hate the distant power with a hate that
+grows to be monstrous.
+
+This is the case of the Arabian Culture. Its pre-history lies entirely
+within the ambit of the ancient Babylonian Civilization,[277] which
+for two thousand years had been the prey of successive conquerors. Its
+“Merovingian period” is marked by the dictatorship of a small[278]
+Persian clan, primitive as the Ostrogoths, whose domination of two
+hundred years, scarcely challenged, was founded on the infinite
+weariness of a fellah-world. But from 300 B.C. onwards there begins
+and spreads a great awakening in the young Aramaic-speaking[279]
+peoples between Sinai and the Zagros range. As at the epoch of the
+Trojan War and at that of the Saxon emperors, a new relation of
+man to God, a wholly new world-feeling, penetrated all the current
+religions, whether these bore the name of Ahuramazda, Baal, or Yahweh,
+impelling everywhere to a great effort of creation. But precisely at
+this juncture there came the Macedonians--so appositely that some
+inner connexion is not altogether impossible, for the Persian power
+had rested on spiritual postulates, and it was precisely these that
+had disappeared. To Babylon these Macedonians appeared as yet another
+swarm of adventurers like the rest. They laid down a thin sheet of
+Classical Civilization over the lands as far as Turkestan and India.
+The kingdoms of the Diadochi might indeed have become, insensibly,
+states of pre-Arabian spirit--the Seleucid Empire, which actually
+coincided geographically with the region of Aramaic speech, was in fact
+such a state by 200 B.C. But from the battle of Pydna[280] onwards
+it was, in its western part, more and more embodied in the Classical
+Imperium and so subjected to the powerful workings of a spirit which
+had its centre of gravity in a distant region. And thus was prepared
+the Pseudomorphosis.
+
+The Magian Culture, geographically and historically, is the midmost
+of the group of higher Cultures--the only one which, in point both
+of space and of time, was in touch with practically all others. The
+structure of its history as a whole in our world-picture depends,
+therefore, entirely on our recognizing the true inner form which the
+outer moulds distorted. Unhappily, that is just what we do not yet
+know, thanks to theological and philological prepossessions, and
+even more to the modern tendency of over-specialization which has
+unreasonably subdivided Western research into a number of separate
+branches--each distinguished from the others not merely by its
+materials and its methods, but by its very way of thinking--and so
+prevented the big problems from being even seen. In this instance the
+consequences of specialization have been graver perhaps than in any
+other. The historians proper stayed within the domain of Classical
+philology and made the Classical language-frontier their eastern
+horizon; hence they entirely failed to perceive the deep unity of
+development on both sides of their frontier, which spiritually had no
+existence. The result is a perspective of “Ancient,” “Mediæval,” and
+“Modern” history, ordered and defined by the use of the Greek and Latin
+languages. For the experts of the old languages, with their “texts,”
+Axum, Saba, and even the realm of the Sassanids were unattackable,
+and the consequence is that in “history” these scarcely exist at all.
+The literature-researcher (he also a philologist) confuses the spirit
+of the language with the spirit of the work. Products of the Aramæan
+region, if they happen to be written in Greek or even merely preserved
+in Greek, he embodies in his “Late Greek literature” and proceeds to
+classify as a special period of that literature. The cognate texts
+in other languages are outside his department and have been brought
+into other groups of literature in the same artificial way. And yet
+here was the strongest of all proofs that the history of a literature
+never coincides with the history of a language.[281] Here, in reality,
+was a self-contained ensemble of Magian national literature, single
+in spirit, but written in several languages--the Classical amongst
+others. For a nation of Magian type has no mother tongue. There are
+Talmudic, Manichæan, Nestorian, Jewish, or even Neopythagorean national
+literatures, but _not_ Hellenistic or Hebrew.
+
+Theological research, in its turn, broke up its domain into
+subdivisions according to the different West-European confessions,
+and so the “philological” frontier between West and East came into
+force, and still is in force, for Christian theology also. The Persian
+world fell to the student of Iranian philology, and as the Avesta
+texts were disseminated, though not composed, in an Aryan dialect,
+their immense problem[282] came to be regarded as a minor branch of
+the Indologist’s work and so disappeared absolutely from the field
+of vision of Christian theology. And lastly the history of Talmudic
+Judaism, since Hebrew philology became bound up in one specialism with
+Old Testament research, not only never obtained separate treatment, but
+has been _completely forgotten_ by all the major histories of religions
+with which I am acquainted, although these find room for every Indian
+sect (since folk-lore, too, ranks as a specialism) and every primitive
+Negro religion to boot. Such is the preparation of scholarship for the
+greatest task that historical research has to face to-day.
+
+
+II
+
+The Roman world of the Imperial period had a good idea of its own
+state. The later writers are full of complaints concerning the
+depopulation and spiritual emptiness of Africa, Spain, Gaul, and, above
+all, the mother countries Italy and Greece. But those provinces which
+belong to the Magian world are consistently excepted in these mournful
+surveys. Syria in particular is densely peopled and, like Parthian
+Mesopotamia, flourishes in blood and spirit.
+
+The preponderance of the young East, palpable to all, had sooner
+or later to find political expression also. Viewing the scene from
+this standpoint, we see behind the epic and pageant of Marius and
+Sulla, Cæsar and Pompey, Antony and Octavian, this East striving ever
+more intensely to free itself from the historically dying West, the
+fellah-world waking up. The transfer of the capital to Byzantium was a
+great symbol. Diocletian had selected Nicodemia; Cesar had had thoughts
+of Alexandria or Troy. A better choice than any would have been
+Antioch. But the act came too late by three centuries, and these had
+been the decisive period of the Magian Springtime.
+
+The Pseudomorphosis began with Actium; there _it should have been
+Antony who won_. It was not the struggle of Rome and Greece that came
+there to an issue--that struggle had been fought out at Cannæ and Zama,
+where it was the tragic fate of Hannibal to stand as champion not for
+his own land, but for Hellenism. At Actium it was the unborn Arabian
+Culture that was opposed to iron-grey Classical Civilization; the
+issue lay between Principate and Caliphate. Antony’s victory would have
+freed the Magian soul; his defeat drew over its lands the hard sheet of
+Roman _Imperium_. A comparable event in the history of the West is the
+battle between Tours and Poitiers, A.D. 732. Had the Arabs won it and
+made “Frankistan” into a caliphate of the North-east, Arabic speech,
+religion, and customs would have become familiar to the ruling classes,
+giant cities like Granada and Kairawan would have arisen on the Loire
+and the Rhine, the Gothic feeling would have been forced to find
+expression in the long-stiffened forms of Mosque and Arabesque, and
+instead of the German mysticism we should have had a sort of Sufism.
+That the equivalent of these things actually happened to the Arabian
+world was due to the fact that the Syro-Persian peoples produced no
+Charles Martel to battle along with Mithradates or Brutus and Cassius
+or Antony (or for that matter without them) against Rome.
+
+A second pseudomorphosis is presented to our eyes to-day in Russia. The
+Russian hero-tales of the Bylini culminated in the epic cycle of Prince
+Vladimir of Kiev (_c._ A.D. 1000), with his Round Table, and in the
+popular hero Ilya Muromyets.[283] The whole immense difference between
+the Russian and the Faustian soul is already revealed in the contrast
+of these with the “contemporary” Arthur, Ermanarich, and Nibelungen
+sagas of the Migration-period in the form of the _Hildebrandslied_
+and the _Waltharilied_.[284] The Russian “Merovingian” period begins
+with the overthrow of the Tatar domination by Ivan III (1480) and
+passes, by the last princes of the House of Rurik and the first of the
+Romanovs, to Peter the Great (1689-1725). It corresponds exactly to
+the period between Clovis (481-511) and the battle of Testry (687),
+which effectively gave the Carolingians their supremacy. I advise all
+readers to read the Frankish history of Gregory of Tours (to 591)
+in parallel with the corresponding parts of Karamzin’s patriarchal
+narrative, especially those dealing with Ivan the Terrible, and with
+Boris Godunov and Vassili Shuiski.[285] There could hardly be a closer
+parallel. This Muscovite period of the great Boyar families and
+Patriarchs, in which a constant element is the resistance of an Old
+Russia party to the friends of Western Culture, is followed, from the
+founding of Petersburg in 1703, by the pseudomorphosis which forced the
+primitive Russian soul into the alien mould, first of full Baroque,
+then of the Enlightenment, and then of the nineteenth century. The
+fate-figure in Russian history is Peter the Great, with whom we may
+compare the Charlemagne who deliberately and with all his might strove
+to impose the very thing which Charles Martel had just prevented, the
+rule of the Moorish-Byzantine spirit. The possibility was there of
+treating the Russian world in the manner of a Carolingian or that of
+Seleucid--that is, of choosing between Old Russian and “Western” ways,
+and the Romanovs chose the latter. The Seleucids liked to see Hellenes
+and not Aramæans about them. The primitive tsarism of Moscow is the
+only form which is even to-day appropriate to the Russian world, but
+in Petersburg it was distorted to the dynastic form of western Europe.
+The pull of the sacred South--of Byzantium and Jerusalem--strong in
+every Orthodox soul, was twisted by the worldly diplomacy which set
+its face to the West. The burning of Moscow, that mighty symbolic act
+of a primitive people, that expression of Maccabæan hatred of the
+foreigner and heretic, was followed by the entry of Alexander I into
+Paris, the Holy Alliance, and the concert of the Great Powers of the
+West. And thus a nationality whose destiny should have been to live
+without a history for some generations still was forced into a false
+and artificial history that the soul of Old Russia was simply incapable
+of understanding. Late-period arts and sciences, enlightenment, social
+ethics, the materialism of world-cities, were introduced, although
+in this pre-cultural time religion was the only language in which
+man understood himself and the world. In the townless land with its
+primitive peasantry, cities of alien type fixed themselves like
+ulcers--false, unnatural, unconvincing. “Petersburg,” says Dostoyevski,
+“is the most abstract and artificial city in the world.” Born in it
+though he was, he had the feeling that one day it might vanish with
+the morning mist. Just so ghostly, so incredible, were the Hellenistic
+artifact-cities scattered in the Aramaic peasant-lands. Jesus in his
+Galilee knew this. St. Peter must have felt it when he set eyes on
+Imperial Rome.
+
+After this everything that arose around it was felt by the true Russdom
+as lies and poison. A truly apocalyptic hatred was directed on Europe,
+and “Europe” was all that was not Russia, including Athens and Rome,
+just as for the Magian world in its time Old Egypt and Babylon had
+been antique, pagan, devilish. “The first condition of emancipation
+for the Russian soul,” wrote Aksakov in 1863 to Dostoyevski, “is that
+it should hate Petersburg with all its might and all its soul.” Moscow
+is holy, Petersburg Satanic. A widespread popular legend presents
+Peter the Great as Antichrist. Just so the Aramaic Pseudomorphosis
+cries out in all the Apocalypses from Daniel and Enoch in Maccabæan
+times to John, Baruch, and Ezra IV after the destruction of Jerusalem,
+against Antiochus the Antichrist, against Rome the Whore of Babylon,
+against the cities of the West with their refinement and their
+splendour, against the whole Classical Culture. All its works are
+untrue and unclean; the polite society, the clever artistry, the
+classes, the alien state with its civilized diplomacy, justice, and
+administration. The contrast between Russian and Western, Jew-Christian
+and Late-Classical nihilisms is extreme--the one kind is hatred of the
+alien that is poisoning the unborn Culture in the womb of the land, the
+other a surfeited disgust of one’s own proper overgrowths. Depths of
+religious feeling, flashes of revelation, shuddering fear of the great
+awakening, metaphysical dreaming and yearning, belong to the beginning,
+as the pain of spiritual clarity belongs to the end of a history. In
+these pseudomorphoses they are mingled. Says Dostoyevski: “Everyone in
+street and market-place now speculates about the nature of Faith.” So
+might it have been said of Edessa or Jerusalem. Those young Russians
+of the days before 1914--dirty, pale, exalted, moping in corners, ever
+absorbed in metaphysics, seeing all things with an eye of faith even
+when the ostensible topic is the franchise, chemistry, or women’s
+education--are the Jews and early Christians of the Hellenistic cities,
+whom the Romans regarded with a mixture of surly amusement and secret
+fear. In Tsarist Russia there was no bourgeoisie and, in general, no
+true class-system, but merely, as in the Frankish dominions, lord and
+peasant. There were no Russian towns. Moscow consisted of a fortified
+residency (the Kreml) round which was spread a gigantic market. The
+imitation city that grew up and ringed it in, like every other city on
+the soil of Mother Russia, is there for the satisfaction and utilities
+of the Court, the administration, the traders, but that which lives in
+it is, on the top, an embodiment of fiction, an Intelligentsia bent on
+discovering problems and conflicts, and below, an uprooted peasantry,
+with all the metaphysical gloom, anxiety, and misery of their own
+Dostoyevski, perpetually homesick for the open land and bitterly hating
+the stony grey world into which Antichrist has tempted them. Moscow had
+no proper soul. The spirit of the upper classes was Western, and the
+lower had brought in with them the soul of the countryside. Between the
+two worlds there was no reciprocal comprehension, no communication,
+no charity. To understand the two spokesmen and victims of the
+pseudomorphosis, it is enough that Dostoyevski is the peasant, and
+Tolstoi the man of Western society. The one could never in his soul get
+away from the land; the other, in spite of his desperate efforts, could
+never get near it.
+
+_Tolstoi is the former Russia, Dostoyevski the coming Russia._ The
+inner Tolstoi is tied to the West. He is the great spokesman of
+Petrinism even when he is denying it. The West is never without a
+negative--the guillotine, too, was a true daughter of Versailles--and
+rage as he might against Europe, Tolstoi could never shake it off.
+Hating it, he hates himself and so becomes the father of Bolshevism.
+The utter powerlessness of this spirit, and “its” 1917 revolution,
+stands confessed in his posthumously published _A Light Shines in the
+Darkness_. This hatred Dostoyevski does not know. His passionate power
+of living is comprehensive enough to embrace all things Western as
+well--“I have two fatherlands, Russia and Europe.” He has passed beyond
+both Petrinism and revolution, and from _his_ future he looks back over
+them as from afar. His soul is apocalyptic, yearning, desperate, but of
+this future _certain_. “I will go to Europe,” says Ivan Karamazov to
+his brother, Alyosha; “I know well enough that I shall be going only to
+a churchyard, but I know too that that churchyard is dear, very dear
+to me. Beloved dead lie buried there, every stone over them tells of a
+life so ardently lived, so passionate a belief in its own achievements,
+its own truth, its own battle, its own knowledge, that I know--even
+now I know--I shall fall down and kiss these stones and weep over
+them.” Tolstoi, on the contrary, is essentially a great understanding,
+“enlightened” and “socially minded.” All that he sees about him takes
+the Late-period, megalopolitan, and Western form of a _problem_,
+whereas Dostoyevski does not even know what a problem is. Tolstoi is
+an event within and of Western Civilization. He stands midway between
+Peter and Bolshevism, and neither he nor these managed to get within
+sight of Russian earth. The thing they are fighting against reappears,
+recognizable, in the very form in which they fight. Their kind of
+opposition is not apocalyptic but intellectual. Tolstoi’s hatred of
+property is an economist’s, his hatred of society a social reformer’s,
+his hatred of the State a political theorist’s. Hence his immense
+effect upon the West--he belongs, in one respect as in another, to the
+band of Marx, Ibsen, and Zola.
+
+Dostoyevski, on the contrary, belongs to no band, unless it be the band
+of the Apostles of primitive Christianity. His “Dæmons” were denounced
+by the Russian Intelligentsia as reactionaries. But he himself was
+quite unconscious of such conflicts--“conservative” and “revolutionary”
+were terms of the West that left him indifferent. Such a soul as his
+can look beyond everything that we call social, for the things of
+this world seem to it so unimportant as not to be worth improving. No
+genuine religion aims at improving the world of facts, and Dostoyevski,
+like every primitive Russian, is fundamentally unaware of that world
+and lives in a second, metaphysical world beyond. What has the agony of
+a soul to do with Communism? A religion that has got as far as taking
+social problems in hand has ceased to be a religion. But the reality in
+which Dostoyevski lives, even during this life, is a religious creation
+directly present to him. His Alyosha has defied all literary criticism,
+even Russian. His life of Christ, had he written it--as he always
+intended to do--would have been a genuine gospel like the Gospels of
+primitive Christianity, which stand completely outside Classical and
+Jewish literary forms. Tolstoi, on the other hand, is a master of the
+Western novel--_Anna Karenina_ distances every rival--and even in his
+peasant’s garb remains a man of polite society.
+
+Here we have beginning and end clashing together. Dostoyevski is a
+saint, Tolstoi only a revolutionary. From Tolstoi, the true successor
+of Peter, and from him only, proceeds Bolshevism, which is not the
+contrary, but the final issue of Petrinism, the last dishonouring of
+the metaphysical by the social, and _ipso facto_ a new form of the
+Pseudomorphosis. If the building of Petersburg was the first act
+of Antichrist, the self-destruction of the society formed of that
+Petersburg is the second, and so the peasant soul must feel it. For the
+Bolshevists are not the nation, or even a part of it, but the lowest
+stratum of this Petrine society, alien and western like the other
+strata, yet not recognized by these and consequently filled with the
+hate of the downtrodden. It is all megalopolitan and “Civilized”--the
+social politics, the Intelligentsia, the literature that first in
+the romantic and then in the economic jargon champions freedoms and
+reforms, before an audience that itself belongs to the society. The
+real Russian is a disciple of Dostoyevski. Although he may not have
+read Dostoyevski or anyone else, nay, perhaps _because_ he cannot read,
+he is himself Dostoyevski in substance; and if the Bolshevists, who
+see in Christ a mere social revolutionist like themselves, were not
+intellectually so narrowed, it would be in Dostoyevski that they would
+recognize their prime enemy. What gave this revolution its momentum
+was not the intelligentsia’s hatred. It was the people itself, which,
+_without hatred_, urged only by the need of throwing off a disease,
+destroyed the old Westernism in one effort of upheaval, and will send
+the new after it in another. For what this townless people yearns for
+is its own life-form, its own religion, its own history. Tolstoi’s
+Christianity was a misunderstanding. He spoke of Christ and he meant
+Marx. But to Dostoyevski’s Christianity the next thousand years will
+belong.
+
+
+III
+
+Outside the Pseudomorphosis, and the more vigorously in proportion
+as the Classical influence is weaker over the country, there spring
+up all the forms of a genuine feudal age. Scholasticism, mysticism,
+feudal fealty, minstrelsy, the crusade spirit, all existed in the first
+centuries of the Arabian Culture and will be found in it as soon as
+we know how to look for them. The legion existed in name even after
+Septimius Severus, but in the East, legions look for all the world like
+ducal retinues. Officials are nominated, but what nomination amounts
+to in reality is the investiture of a count with his fief. While in
+the West the Cæsar-title fell into the hands of chieftains, the East
+transformed itself into an early Caliphate amazingly like the feudal
+state of mature Gothic. In the Sassanid Empire,[286] in Hauran,[287]
+in southern Arabia, there dawned a pure feudal period. The exploits of
+a king of Saba,[288] Shamir Juharish, are immortalized like those of
+a Roland or an Arthur, in the Arabic saga which tells of his advance
+through Persia as far as China.[289] The Kingdom of Ma’in[290] existed
+side by side with the realm of Israel during the millennium before
+Christ, and its remains (which suggest comparisons with Mycenæ and
+Tiryns) extend deeply into Africa.[291] But now the feudal age flowered
+throughout Arabia and even in the mountains of Abyssinia.[292] In Axum
+there arose during early Christian times mighty castles and kings’
+tombs with the largest monoliths in the world.[293] Behind the kings
+stands a feudal nobility of counts (_kail_) and wardens (_kabir_),
+vassals of often questionable loyalty whose great possessions more
+and more narrowed the power of the king and his household. The
+endless Christian-Jewish wars between south Arabia and the kingdom
+of Axum[294] have essentially the character of chivalry-warfare,
+frequently degenerating into baronial feuds based on the castles. In
+Saba ruled the Hamdanids--who later became Christian. Behind them stood
+the Christian realm of Axum, in alliance with Rome, which about A.D.
+300 stretched from the White Nile to the Somali coast and the Persian
+Gulf, and in 525 overthrew the Jewish-Himaryites.[295] In 542 there
+was a diet of princes at Marib[296] to which both the Roman and the
+Sassanid Empires sent ambassadors. Even to-day the country is full
+of innumerable relics of mighty castles, which in Islamic times were
+popularly attributed to supernatural builders. The stronghold of Gomdan
+is a work of twenty tiers.[297]
+
+In the Sassanid Empire ruled the Dikhans, or local lords, while the
+brilliant court of these early-Eastern “Hohenstaufen” was in every
+respect a model for that of the Byzantines who followed Diocletian.
+Even much later the Abbassids in their new capital of Baghdad could
+think of nothing better than to imitate, on a grand scale, the
+Sassanid ideal of court life. In northern Arabia, at the courts of
+the Ghassanids[298] and at those of the Lakhmids,[299] there sprang up
+a genuine troubadour and _Minne_ poetry; and knightly poets, in the
+days of the Early Fathers, fought out their duels with “word, lance,
+and sword.” One of them was the Jew Samuel, lord of the castle of Al
+Alblaq, who stood a famous siege by the King of Hira for the sake of
+five precious suits of armour.[300] In relation to this lyric poetry,
+the Late-Arabic which flourished, especially in Spain, from 800 stands
+as Uhland and Eichendorff stand to Walter von der Vogelweide.
+
+For this young world of the first centuries of our era our antiquarians
+and theologians have had no eyes. Busied as they are with the state
+of Late Republican and Imperial Rome, the conditions of the Middle
+East seem to them merely primitive and void of all significance. But
+the Parthian bands that again and again rode at the legions of Rome
+were a chivalry exalted by Mazdaism; in their armies there was the
+spirit of crusade. So, too, might it have been with Christianity if
+it had not been wholly bound under the power of the pseudomorphosis.
+The spirit was there--Tertullian spoke of the “_militia Christi_,”
+and the sacrament was the soldier’s oath of fidelity.[301] But it was
+only later that Christ became the hero for whom his vassals went out
+against the heathen; for the time being, the hither side of the Roman
+frontier knew not Christian lords and knights, but only Roman legates;
+not the castle, but the _castra_; not tournaments, but executions. Yet
+in spite of all this it was not, strictly speaking, a Parthian war, but
+a true crusade of Jewry that blazed out in 115 when Trajan marched into
+the East, and it was as a reprisal for the destruction of Jerusalem
+that the whole infidel (“Greek”) population of Cyprus--traditionally
+240,000 souls--was massacred.[302] Nisibis, defended by Jews, made an
+illustrious resistance. Warlike Adiabene (the upper Tigris plain) was
+a Jewish state. In all the Parthian and Persian wars against Rome the
+gentry and peasantry, the feudal levy, of Jewish Mesopotamia fought in
+the front line.
+
+Byzantium, even, was not able entirely to evade the influence of the
+Arabian feudal age, and, under a crust of Late Classical administrative
+forms, the fief system (especially in the interior of Asia Minor)
+came into existence. There there were powerful families whose loyalty
+was doubtful and whose ambition was to possess the Imperial throne.
+“Originally tied to the capital, which they were not allowed to leave
+without the Emperor’s permission, this nobility settled down later on
+its broad estates in the provinces. From the fourth century onwards
+this provincial nobility was _de facto_ an ‘Estate of the realm,’
+and in course of time it claimed a certain independence of Imperial
+control.”[303]
+
+The “Roman Army” in the East, meanwhile, was transformed in less than
+two centuries from an army of modern type to one of the feudal order.
+The Roman legion disappeared in the reorganization of the age of
+Severus,[304] about A.D. 200. While in the West the army degenerated
+into hordes, in the East there arose, in the fourth century a genuine,
+if belated, knighthood--a fact that Mommsen long ago pointed out,
+without, however, seeing the significance of it.[305] The young noble
+received a thorough education in single combat, horsemanship, use
+of bow and lance. About A.D. 260 the Emperor Gallienus--the friend
+of Plotinus and the builder of the Porta Nigra of Trier, one of the
+most striking and most unfortunate figures of the period of the
+soldier-emperors--formed, from Germans and Moors, a new type of mounted
+force, the personal military suite.[306] A significant light is thrown
+upon the changes by the fact that the old city-gods give way, in the
+religion of the army, to the German gods of personal heroism, under
+the labels of Mars and Hercules.[307] Diocletian’s _palatini_ are not
+a substitute for the prætorians abolished by Septimius Severus, but
+a small, well-disciplined knight-army, while the _comitatenses_, the
+general levy, are organized in “_numeri_” or companies. The tactics
+are those of every Early period, with its pride of personal courage.
+The attack takes the Germanic form of the so-called “boar’s head”--the
+deep mass technically called the _Gevierthaufe_.[308] Under Justinian
+we find, fully developed, a system corresponding precisely to the
+_Landsknecht_ system of Charles V, in which condottieri[309] of the
+Frundsberg type[310] raise professional forces on a territorial basis.
+The expedition of Narses is described by Procopius[311] just as one
+might describe the great recruiting-operations of Wallenstein.
+
+But there appeared also in these early centuries a brilliant
+Scholasticism and Mysticism of Magian type, domesticated in the
+renowned schools of the Aramæan region--the Persian schools of
+Ctesiphon, Resaina, Gundisapora, the Jewish of Sura, Nehardea,
+Kinnesrin.[312] These are flourishing headquarters of astronomy,
+philosophy, chemistry, medicine. But towards the west these grand
+manifestations, too, become falsified by the Pseudomorphosis. The
+characteristically Magian elements of this knowledge assume at
+Alexandria the forms of Greek philosophy and at Beyrout those of
+Roman jurisprudence; they are committed to writing in the Classical
+languages, squeezed into alien and long-petrified literary forms,
+and perverted by the hoary logic of a Civilization of quite other
+structure. It is in this, and not in the Islamic, time that Arabian
+science began. Yet, as our philologists only unearthed what had been
+put in Late Classical dress at Alexandria and Antioch, and had not an
+inkling either of the immense wealth of the Arabian spring or of the
+real pivots of its researches and ideas, there arose the preposterous
+notion that the Arabs were spiritual epigoni of the Classical. In
+reality, practically everything that was produced on the “other”
+side--from Edessa’s point of view--of the philologist’s frontier,
+though seeming to the Western eye an offspring of a “Late Classical”
+spirit, is nothing but a reflection of Early Arabian inwardness. And
+so we come to consider what the Pseudomorphosis did for the Arabian
+religion.
+
+
+IV
+
+The Classical religion lived in its vast number of _separate cults_,
+which in this form were natural and self-evident to Apollinian man,
+essentially inaccessible to any alien. As soon as cults of this kind
+arise, we have a Classical Culture, and when their essence changes, in
+later Roman times, then the soul of this Culture is at an end. Outside
+the Classical landscape they have never been genuine and living.
+The divinity is always _bound to and bounded by one locality_, in
+conformity with the static and Euclidean world-feeling. Correspondingly
+the relation of man to the divinity takes the shape of a local cult, in
+which the significances lie in the _form_ of its ritual procedure and
+not in a dogma underlying them. Just as the population was scattered
+geographically in innumerable _points_, so spiritually its religion
+was subdivided into these petty cults, each of which was entirely
+independent of the rest. _Only their number, and not their scope, was
+capable of increase._ Within the Classical religion multiplication
+was the only form of growth, and missionary effort of any sort was
+excluded, for men could practise these cults without _belonging_ to
+them. There were no communities of fellow believers. Though the later
+thought of Athens reached somewhat more general ideas of God and his
+service, it was philosophy and not religion that it achieved; it
+appealed to only a few thinkers and had not the slightest effect on the
+feeling of the nation--that is, the Polis.
+
+In the sharpest contrast to this stands the visible form of the Magian
+religion--the Church, the brotherhood of the faithful, which has no
+home and knows no earthly frontier, which believes the words of Jesus,
+“when two or three are gathered together in My name, there am I in
+the midst of them.” It is self-evident that every such believer must
+believe that only one good and true God can be, and that the gods of
+the others are evil and false.[313] The relation between this God
+and man rests, not in expression or profession, but in the secret
+force, the magic, of certain symbolic performances, which if they are
+to be effective must be exactly known in form and significance and
+practised accordingly. The knowledge of this significance belongs to
+the Church--in fact, it is the Church itself, qua community of the
+instructed. And, therefore, the centre of gravity of every Magian
+religion lies not in a cult, but in a doctrine, in _the creed_.
+
+As long as the Classical remained spiritually strong, pseudomorphosis
+of all the Churches of the East into the style of the West continued.
+This is a most important aspect of Syncretism. The Persian religion
+enters in the shape of the Mithras cult, the Chaldean-Syrian element as
+the cults of the star-gods and Baals (Jupiter Dolichenus, Sabazius, Sol
+Invictus, Atargatis), the Jewish religion in the form of a Yahweh-cult
+(for no other name can be applied to the Egyptian communities of the
+Ptolemaic period[314]), and primitive Early-Christianity too--as the
+Pauline Epistles and the Catacombs of Rome clearly show--took substance
+as a Jesus-cult. And however loudly each of these various religions
+(which from about Hadrian’s time drove the genuine old Classical
+deities completely into the background) might proclaim itself as
+the revelation of the one true faith--Isis styled herself _deorum
+dearumque facies uniformis_--in reality they carry, one and all, marks
+of the Classical separatism--that is, they multiply to infinity; every
+community stands for itself and is local; all the temples, catacombs,
+Mithræa, house chapels, are holy places to which (in feeling, even
+though not in formal expression) the deity is considered to be
+attached.[315] Nevertheless, there is Magian feeling even in this
+piety. Classical cults are _practised_, and one may practise as many
+of them as one pleases, but of these newer, _a man belongs to one and
+one alone_. In the old, propaganda is unthinkable; in the new it goes
+without saying, and the purport of religious exercises tends more and
+more to the doctrinal side.
+
+From the second century onwards, with the fading of the Apollinian
+and the flowering of the Magian soul, the relations are reversed. The
+consequences of the Pseudomorphosis continue, _but it is now cults
+of the West which tend to become a new Church of the East_--that is,
+from the sum of separate cults there evolves a community of those
+who believe in these gods and their rituals--and so there arises, by
+processes like those of the Early Persian and the Early Judaic, a
+Magian Greek nationality. Out of the rigorously established forms of
+detail-procedure in sacrifices and mysteries grows a sort of dogma
+concerning the inner significance of these acts. The cults can now
+represent each other, and men no longer practise or perform them in
+the old way, but become “adherents” of them. And the little god _of_
+the place becomes--without the gravity of the change being noticed by
+anyone--the great God really present in the place.
+
+Carefully as Syncretism has been examined in recent years, the clue to
+its development--the transformation of Eastern Churches into Western
+cults, and then the reverse process of transformation of Western cults
+into Eastern Churches--has been missed.[316] Yet without this key
+it is quite impossible to understand the religious history of Early
+Christianity. The battle that in Rome was between Christ and Mithras
+as cult-deities took the form, east of Antioch, of a contest between
+the Persian and the Christian Churches. But the heaviest battle that
+Christianity had to fight, after it came itself under the influence
+of the Pseudomorphosis and began to develop spiritually with its face
+to the West, was not that against the true Classical deities. With
+these it was never face to face, for the public city-cults had long
+been inwardly dead and possessed no hold whatever on men’s souls. The
+formidable enemy was Paganism, or Hellenism, emerging as _a powerful
+new Church_ and born of the selfsame spirit as Christianity itself. In
+the end there were in the east of the Roman Empire not one cult-Church,
+but two, and if one of these comprised exclusively the followers of
+Christ, the other, too, was made up of communities which, under a
+thousand different labels, consciously worshipped one and the same
+divine principle.
+
+Much has been written on the Classical toleration. The nature of
+a religion may perhaps be most clearly seen in the limits of its
+tolerance, and there were such limits in Classical religions as in
+others. It was, indeed, one essential character of these religions
+that they were numerous, and another that they were religions of
+pure performance; for them, therefore, the question of toleration,
+as the word is usually understood, did not arise. But respect for
+the cult-formalities as such was postulated and required, and many
+a philosopher, even many an unwitting stranger, who infringed this
+law by word or deed, was made to realize the limits of Classical
+toleration. The reciprocal persecutions of the Magian Churches are
+something different from this; there it was the duty of the henotheist
+to his own faith that forbade him to recognize false tenets. Classical
+_cults_ would have tolerated the Jesus-cult as one of their own number.
+But the _cult-Church_ was bound to attack the Jesus-Church. All the
+great persecutions of Christians (corresponding therein exactly to
+the later persecutions of Paganism) came, not from the “Roman” State,
+but from this cult-Church, and they were only political inasmuch as
+the cult-Church was both nation and fatherland. It will be observed
+that the mask of Cæsar-worship covered _two_ religious usages. In
+the Classical cities of the West, Rome above all, the special cult
+of the _Divus_ arose as a last expression of that Euclidean feeling
+which required that there should be legal and therefore sacral means
+of communication between the body-unit man and the body-unit God.
+In the East, on the other hand, the product was a creed of Cæsar
+as Saviour, God-man, Messiah of all Syncretists, which this Church
+brought to expression in a supremely national form. The sacrifice for
+the Emperor was the most important _sacrament_ of the Church--exactly
+corresponding to the baptism of the Christians--and it is easy,
+therefore, to understand the symbolic significance in the days of
+persecution of the command and the refusal to do these acts. _All_
+these Churches had their sacraments: holy meals like the Haoma-drinking
+of the Persians,[317] the Passover of the Jews, the Lord’s Supper of
+the Christians, similar rites for Attis and Mithras, and baptismal
+ceremonies amongst the Mandæans, the Christians, and the worshippers of
+Isis and Cybele. Indeed, the individual cults of the Pagan Church might
+be regarded almost as sects and orders--a view which would lead to a
+much better understanding of their reciprocal propaganda.
+
+All true Classical mysteries, such as those of Eleusis and those
+founded by the Pythagoreans in the South-Italian cities about 500
+B.C., had been place-bound,[318] and had consisted in some symbolical
+act or process. Within the field of the Pseudomorphosis these freed
+themselves from their localities; they could be performed wherever
+initiates were gathered, and had now as their object the Magian ecstasy
+and the ascetic change of life. The visitors to the holy place had
+transformed themselves into practising Orders. The community of the
+Neopythagoreans, formed about 50 B.C. and closely related to the
+Jewish Essenes, is anything but a Classical “school of philosophy”;
+it is a pure monastic order, and it is not the only such order in
+the Syncretic movement that anticipated the ideals of the Christian
+hermits and the Mohammedan dervishes. These Pagan Churches had their
+anchorites, saints, prophets, miraculous conversions, scriptures, and
+revelations.[319] In the significance of images there came about a very
+remarkable transformation, which still awaits research. The greatest of
+Plotinus’s followers, Iamblichus, finally, about A.D. 300, evolved a
+mighty system of orthodox theology, ordered hierarchy, and rigid ritual
+for the Pagan Church, and his disciple Julian devoted, and finally
+sacrificed, his life to the attempt to establish this Church for all
+eternity.[320] He sought even to create cloisters for meditating men
+and women and to introduce ecclesiastical penance. This great work was
+supported by a great enthusiasm which rose to the height of martyrdom
+and endured long after the Emperor’s death. Inscriptions exist which
+can hardly be translated but by the formula: “There is but one god and
+Julian is his Prophet.”[321] Ten years more, and this Church would have
+become a historic, permanent fact. In the end not only its power, but
+also in important details its very form and content were inherited by
+Christianity. It is often stated that the Roman Church adapted itself
+to the structure of the Roman State; this is not quite correct. The
+latter structure was itself by hypothesis a Church. There was a period
+when the two were in touch--Constantine the Great acted simultaneously
+as convener of the Council of Nicæa and as Pontifex Maximus, and his
+sons, zealous Christians as they were, made him _Divus_ and paid to
+him the prescribed rites. St. Augustine dared to assert that the true
+religion had existed before the coming of Christianity in the form of
+the Classical.[322]
+
+
+V
+
+For the understanding of Judaism as a whole between Cyrus and
+Titus it is necessary constantly to bear in mind three facts, of
+which scholarship is quite aware, but which, owing to philological
+and theological _parti pris_, it refuses to admit as factors in
+its discussions. First, the Jews are a “nation without a land,” a
+_consensus_, and in the midst, moreover, of a world of pure nations of
+the same type. Secondly, Jerusalem is indeed a Mecca, a holy centre,
+but it is neither the home nor the spiritual focus of the people.
+Lastly, the Jews are a peculiar phenomenon in world-history only so
+long as we insist on treating them as such.
+
+It is true that the post-exilic Jews, in contradistinction to
+the pre-exilic Israelites are--as Hugo Winckler was the first to
+recognize--a people of quite new type. But they are not the only
+representatives of the type. The Aramæan world began in those days to
+arrange itself in a great number of such peoples, including Persians
+and Chaldeans,[323] all living in the same district, yet in stringent
+aloofness from each other, and even then practising the truly Arabian
+way of life that we call the ghetto.
+
+The first heralds of the new soul were the _prophetic religions_,
+with their magnificent inwardness, which began to arise about 700
+B.C. and challenged the primeval practices of the people and their
+rulers. They, too, are an essentially Aramæan phenomenon. The more
+I ponder Amos, Isaiah, and Jeremiah on the one hand, Zarathustra on
+the other, the more closely related they appear to me to be. What
+seems to separate them is not their new beliefs, but the objects of
+their attack. The first battled with that savage old-Israel religion,
+which in fact is a whole bundle of religious elements[324]--belief in
+holy stones and trees, innumerable place-gods (Dan, Bethel, Hebron,
+Shechem, Beersheba, Gilgal), a single Yahweh (or Elohim), whose name
+covers a multitude of most heterogeneous numina, ancestor-worship and
+human sacrifices, dervish-dancing and sacral prostitution--intermixed
+with indistinct traditions of Moses and Abraham and many customs and
+sagas of the Late Babylonian world, now after long establishment in
+Canaan degenerated and hardened into peasant forms. The second combated
+the old Vedic beliefs of heroes and Vikings, similarly coarsened,
+no doubt, and certainly needing to be recalled to actuality, time
+and again, by glorifications of the sacred cattle and of the care
+thereof. Zarathustra lived about 600 B.C., often in want, persecuted
+and misunderstood, and met his end as an old man in war against the
+unbelievers[325]--a worthy contemporary of the unfortunate Jeremiah,
+who for his prophesying was hated by his countrymen, imprisoned by his
+king, and after the catastrophe carried off by the fugitives to Egypt
+and there put to death. And it is my belief that this great epoch
+brought forth yet a third prophet-religion, the Chaldean.
+
+This, with its penetrating astronomy and its ever-amazing
+inwardness, was, I venture to guess, evolved at that time and by
+creative personalities of the Isaiah stature from relics of the old
+Babylonian religion.[326] About 1000, the Chaldeans were a group of
+Aramaic-speaking tribes like the Israelites, and lived in the south of
+Sinear--the mother tongue of Jesus is still sometimes called Chaldean.
+In Seleucid times the name was applied to a widespread religious
+community, and especially to its priests. The Chaldean religion was
+an astral religion, which before Hammurabi the Babylonian was _not_.
+It is the deepest of all interpretations of the Magian universe, the
+World-Cavern[327] and Kismet working therein, and consequently it
+remained the fundamental of Islamic and Jewish speculation to their
+very latest phases. It was by it, and not by the Babylonian Culture,
+that after the seventh century there was formed an astronomy worthy
+to be called an exact science--that is, a priestly technique of
+observation of marvellous acuteness.[328] It replaced the Babylonian
+moon-week by the planet-week. Ishtar, the most popular figure of the
+old religion, the goddess of life and fruitfulness, now became a
+planet, and Tammuz, the ever-dying and ever-revived god of vegetation,
+a fixed star. Finally, the henotheistic feeling announced itself; for
+Nebuchadnezzar the Great Marduk[329] was the one true god, the god of
+mercy, and Nebo, the old god of Borsippa, was his son and envoy to
+mankind. For a century (625-539) Chaldean kings were world-rulers,
+but they were also the heralds of the new religion. When temples were
+being built, they themselves carried bricks. The accession-prayer
+of Nebuchadnezzar, the contemporary of Jeremiah, to Marduk is still
+extant, and in depth and purity it is in nowise surpassed by the
+finest passages of Israelite prophecy. The Chaldean penitential
+psalms, closely related in rhythm and inner structure to those of the
+Jews, know the sin of which man is unconscious and the suffering that
+contrite avowal before the incensed god can avert. It is the same trust
+in the mercy of the Deity that finds a truly Christian expression in
+the inscriptions of the Bel temple of Palmyra.[330]
+
+The kernel of the prophetic teachings is already Magian. There is
+_one_ god--be he called Yahweh, Ahuramazda or Marduk-Baal--who is the
+principle of good, and all other deities are either impotent or evil.
+To this doctrine there attached itself the hope of a Messiah, very
+clear in Isaiah, but also bursting out everywhere during the next
+centuries, under pressure of an inner necessity. It is the basic idea
+of Magian religion, for it contains implicitly the conception of the
+world-historical struggle between Good and Evil, with the power of Evil
+prevailing in the middle period, and the Good finally triumphant on the
+Day of Judgment. This moralization of history is common to Persians,
+Chaldees, and Jews. But with its coming, the idea of the localized
+people _ipso facto_ vanished and the genesis of Magian nations without
+earthly homes and boundaries was at hand. The idea of the Chosen People
+emerged.[331] But it is easy to understand that men of strong blood,
+and in particular the great families, found these too spiritual ideas
+repugnant to their natures and harked back to the stout old tribal
+faiths. According to Cumont’s researches the religion of the Persian
+kings was polytheistic and did not possess the Haoma sacrament--that
+is, it was not wholly Zoroastrian. The same is true of most of the
+kings of Israel, and in all probability also of the last Chaldean
+Nabu-Nabid (Nabonidus), whose overthrow by Cyrus and his own subjects
+was in fact made possible by his rejection of the Marduk faith. And it
+was in the Captivity that circumcision and the (Chaldean) Sabbath were
+first acquired, as rites, by the Jews.
+
+The Babylonian exile, however, did set up an important difference
+between the Jews and the Persians, in respect, not of the ultimate
+truths of conscious piety, but of all the facts of actuality and
+consequently men’s inward attitude to these facts. It was the Yahweh
+believers who _were permitted_ to go home and the adherents of
+Ahuramazda who _allowed_ them to do so. Of two small tribes that two
+hundred years before had probably possessed equal numbers of fighting
+men, the one had taken possession of a world--while Darius crossed the
+Danube in the north, his power extended in the south through eastern
+Arabia to the island of Sokotra on the Somali coast[332]--and the other
+had become an entirely unimportant pawn of alien policy.
+
+This is what made one religion so lordly, the other so humble.
+Let the student read, in contrast to Jeremiah, the great Behistun
+inscription[333] of Darius--what a splendid pride of the King in his
+victorious god! And how despairing are the arguments with which the
+Israelite prophets sought to preserve intact the image of their god.
+Here, in exile, with every Jewish eye turned by the Persian victory
+to the Zoroastrian doctrine, the pure Judaic prophecy (Amos, Hosea,
+Isaiah, Jeremiah) passes into _Apocalypse_ (Deutero-Isaiah,[334]
+Ezekiel, Zechariah). All the new visions of the Son of Man, of Satan,
+of archangels, of the seven heavens, of the last judgment, are _Persian
+presentations of the common world-feeling_. In Isaiah xli appears Cyrus
+himself, hailed as Messiah. Did the great composer of Deutero-Isaiah
+draw his enlightenment from a Zoroastrian disciple? Is it possible
+that the Persians released the Jews out of a feeling of the inward
+relationship of their two teachings? It is certain at any rate that
+both shared one popular idea as to last things, and felt and expressed
+a common hatred of the old Babylonian and Classical religions, of
+unbelievers generally, which they did not feel towards one another.
+
+We must not, however, forget to look at the “return from captivity”
+also from the point of view of Babylon. The great mass, strong in
+race-force, was in reality far removed from these ideas, or regarded
+them as mere visions and dreams; and the solid peasantry, the artisans,
+and no doubt the nascent land-aristocracy quietly remained in its
+holdings _under a prince of their own_, the Resh Galutha, whose
+capital was Nehardea.[335] Those who returned “home” were the small
+minority, the stubborn, the zealots. They numbered with their wives and
+children forty thousand, a figure which cannot be one-tenth or even
+one-twentieth of the total, and anyone who confuses these settlers
+and their destiny with Jewry as a whole[336] must necessarily fail
+to read the inner meaning of all following events. The _little world
+of Judaism lived a spiritually separate life_, and the nation as a
+whole, while regarding this life with respect, certainly did not share
+in it. In the East apocalyptic literature, the heiress of prophecy,
+blossomed richly. It was a genuine native poetry of the people, of
+which we still have the masterpiece, the Book of Job--a work in
+character Islamic and decidedly un-Jewish[337]--while a multitude of
+its other tales and sagas, such as Judith, Tobit, Achikar,[338] are
+spread as motives over all the literatures of the “Arabian” world. In
+Judea only the Law flourished; the Talmudic spirit appears first in
+Ezekiel (chs. xl, et seq.) and after 450 is made flesh in the scribes
+(Sopherim) headed by Ezra. From 300 B.C. to A.D. 200 the Tannaim
+(“Teachers”) expounded the Torah and developed the Mishnah. Neither
+the coming of Jesus nor the destruction of the Temple interrupted
+this abstract scholarship. Jerusalem became for the rigid believer
+a Mecca, and his Koran was a Code of laws to which was gradually
+added a whole primitive history compounded of Chaldeo-Persian motives
+reset according to Pharisaic ideas.[339] But in this atmosphere there
+was no room for a worldly art, poetry, or learning. All that the
+Talmud contains of astronomical, medical, and juristic knowledge is
+exclusively of Mesopotamian origin.[340] It is probable, too, that it
+was in Mesopotamia, and _before_ the end of the Captivity, that there
+began that Chaldean-Persian-Jewish formation of sects which developed
+into the formation of great religions at the beginning of the Magian
+Culture, and reached its climax in the teaching of Mani. “The Law and
+the Prophets”--_these two nouns practically define the difference
+between Judea and Mesopotamia_. In the late Persian and in every other
+Magian theology both tendencies are united; it is only in the case
+here considered that they were separated in space. The decisions of
+Jerusalem were recognized everywhere, but it is a question how widely
+they were obeyed. Even as near as Galilee the Pharisees were the object
+of suspicion, while in Babylonia no Rabbi could be consecrated. For the
+great Gamaliel, Paul’s teacher, it was a title to fame that his rulings
+were followed by the Jews “even abroad.” How independent was the life
+of the Jews in Egypt is shown by the recently discovered documents
+of Elephantine and Assuan.[341] About 170, Onias asked the King for
+permission to build a temple “according to the measurements of the
+Temple in Jerusalem,” on the ground that the numerous non-conforming
+temples that existed were the cause of eternal bickerings amongst the
+communities.
+
+One other subject must be considered. Jewry, like Persia, had since the
+Exile increased enormously beyond the old small clan-limits; this was
+owing to conversions and secessions--_the only form of conquest open
+to a landless nation and, therefore, natural and obvious to the Magian
+religions_. In the north it very early drove, through the Jew State of
+Adiabene, to the Caucasus; in the south (probably along the Persian
+Gulf) it penetrated to Saba; in the west it was dominant in Alexandria,
+Cyrene, and Cyprus. The administration of Egypt and the policy of the
+Parthian Empire were largely in Jewish hands.
+
+But this movement _came out of Mesopotamia alone_, and the spirit in
+it was the Apocalyptic and not the Talmudic. Jerusalem was occupied in
+creating yet more legal barriers against the unbeliever. It was not
+enough even to abandon the practice of making converts. A Pharisee
+permitted himself to summon the universally beloved King Hyrcanus
+(135-106) to lay down the office of High Priest because his mother
+had once been in the power of the infidels.[342] This is the same
+narrowness which in the primitive Christian brotherhood of Judea took
+the form of opposing the preaching of the Gospel to the heathen. In
+the East it would simply never have occurred to anyone to draw such
+barriers, which were contrary to the whole idea of the Magian nation.
+But in that very fact was based _the spiritual superiority_ of the wide
+East. The Synedrion in Jerusalem might possess unchallenged religious
+authority, but politically, and therefore historically, the power of
+the Resh Galutha was a very different matter. Christian and Jewish
+research alike have failed to perceive these things. So far as I am
+aware, no one has noticed the important fact that the persecution of
+Antiochus Epiphanes was directed not against “Jewry” but against Judea.
+And this brings us to another fact, of still greater importance.
+
+The destruction of Jerusalem hits only a very small part of the nation,
+one moreover that was spiritually and politically by far the least
+important. It is not true that the Jewish people has lived “in the
+Dispersion” since that day, for it had lived for centuries (and so too
+had the Persian and others) in a form which was independent of country.
+On the other hand, we realize equally little the impression made by
+this war upon the real Jewry which Judea thought of and treated as an
+adjunct. The victory of the heathen and the ruin of the Sanctuary was
+felt in the inmost soul,[343] and in the crusade of 115[344] a bitter
+revenge was taken for it; but the ideal outraged and vindicated was the
+ideal of Jewry and not that of Judaism. Zionism then, as in Cyrus’s
+day and in ours, was a reality only for a quite small and spiritually
+narrow minority. If the calamity had been really felt in the sense of
+a “loss of home” (as we figure it to ourselves with the Western mind),
+a hundred opportunities after Marcus Aurelius’s time could have been
+seized to win the city back. But that would have contradicted the
+Magian sense of the nation, whose ideal organic form was the synagogue,
+the pure _consensus_--like the early Catholic “visible Church” and like
+Islam--and it was precisely the annihilation of Judea and the clan
+spirit of Judea that _for the first time completely actualized this
+ideal_.
+
+For Vespasian’s War, directed against Judea, was a liberation of
+Jewry. In the first place, it ended both the claim of the people of
+this petty district to be the genuine nation, and the pretensions
+of their bald spirituality to equivalence with the soul-life of the
+whole. The research, the scholasticism, and the mysticism of the
+Oriental academies entered into possession of their rights; so, for
+instance, the judge Karna--the contemporary, more or less, of Ulpian
+and Papinian--formulated at the academy of Nehardea the first code
+of civil law.[345] In the second place, it rescued this religion
+from the dangers of that pseudomorphosis to which Christianity in
+that same period was succumbing. Since 200 B.C. there had existed a
+half-Hellenistic Jewish literature. The “Preacher” (Ecclesiastes,
+Koheleth) contains Pyrrhonic ideas.[346] The Wisdom of Solomon, 2
+Maccabees, Theodotion, the Aristeas Letter, etc., follow; there are
+things like the Menander collection of Maxims, as to which it is
+impossible to say whether they ought to be regarded as Jewish or as
+Greek. There were, about 160, high priests who were so Hellenistic in
+spirit that they combated the Jewish religion, and later there were
+rulers like Hyrcanus and Herod who did the same by political methods.
+This danger came to an end instantly and for good in A.D. 70.
+
+In the time of Jesus there were in Jerusalem three tendencies which
+can be described as generally Aramæan, represented respectively by the
+Pharisees, the Sadducees, and the Essenes. Although the connotations
+of these names varied, and although both in Christian and in Jewish
+research most diverse views are held about them, it may at any rate be
+said that the first of these tendencies is found in greatest purity
+in Judaism, the second in Chaldeanism, the third in Hellenism.[347]
+Essene is the rise of the cult (almost the Order) of Mithras in
+the east of Asia Minor. The Sadducees, although in Jerusalem they
+appear as a small and distinguished group--Josephus compares them
+with the Epicureans--are thoroughly Aramæan in their apocalyptic and
+eschatological views, in virtue of a certain element which makes
+them, so to say, the Dostoyevskis of this Early period. They stand
+to the Pharisees in the relation of mysticism to scholasticism, of
+John to Paul, of Bundahish to Vendidad[348] in the Persian world.
+The Apocalyptic is popular, and many of its traits are spiritually
+common property throughout the Aramæan world; the Talmudic and Avestan
+Pharisaism is exclusive and tries to rule out every other religion with
+uncompromising rigour.
+
+The Essenes appear in Jerusalem as a monastic order like the
+Neopythagoreans. They possessed secret texts.[349] In the broad sense
+they are representative of the Pseudomorphosis, and in consequence
+they disappear from Jewry completely after A.D. 70, while precisely in
+this period Christian literature was becoming purely Greek--not in the
+least of the causes of this being that the Hellenized Western Jews left
+Judaism to retreat into its East, and gradually adopted Christianity.
+
+But also Apocalyptic, which is an expression-form of townless and
+town-fearing mankind, soon came to an end within the Synagogue, after a
+last wonderful reaction to the stimulus of the great catastrophe.[350]
+When it had become evident that the teaching of Jesus would lead
+not to a reform of Judaism, but to a new religion, and when, about
+A.D. 100, the daily imprecation-formula against the Jew-Christians
+was introduced, Apocalyptic for the short remainder of its existence
+resided in the young Church.
+
+
+VI
+
+The incomparable thing which lifted the infant Christianity out above
+all religions of this rich Springtime is the figure of Jesus. In all
+the great creations of those years there is nothing which can be set
+beside it. Tame and empty all the legends and holy adventures of
+Mithras, Attis, and Osiris must have seemed to any man reading or
+listening to the still recent story of Jesus’s sufferings--the last
+journey to Jerusalem, the last anxious supper, the hours of despair in
+Gethsemane, and the death on the cross.
+
+Here was no matter of philosophy. Jesus’s utterances, which stayed
+in the memory of many of the devoted, even in old age, are those of
+a child in the midst of an alien, aged, and sick world. They are not
+sociological observations, problems, debatings. Like a quiet island
+of bliss was the life of these fishermen and craftsmen by the Lake of
+Gennesareth in the midst of the age of the great Tiberius, far from all
+world-history and innocent of all the doings of actuality, while round
+them glittered the Hellenistic towns with their theatres and temples,
+their refined Western society, their noisy mob-diversions, their Roman
+cohorts, their Greek philosophy. When the friends and disciples of the
+sufferer had grown grey and his brother was president of their group in
+Jerusalem, they put together, from the sayings and narratives generally
+current in their small communities, a biography so arresting in its
+inward appeal that it evolved a presentation-form of its own, of which
+neither the Classical nor the Arabian Culture has any example--the
+Gospel. Christianity is the one religion in the history of the world in
+which the fate of a man of the immediate present has become the emblem
+and the central point of the whole creation.
+
+A strange excitement, like that which the Germanic world experienced
+about A.D. 1000, ran in those days through the whole Aramæan land.
+The Magian soul was awakened. That element which lay in the prophetic
+religions like a presentiment, and expressed itself in Alexander’s
+time in metaphysical outlines, came now to the state of fulfilment.
+And this fulfilment awakened, in indescribable strength, the primitive
+feeling of Fear. The birth of the Ego, and of the world-anxiety with
+which it is identical, is one of the final secrets of humanity and of
+mobile life generally. In front of the Microcosm there stands up a
+Macrocosm wide and overpowering, an abyss of alien, dazzling existence
+and activity that frightens the small lonely ego back into itself.
+Even in the blackest hours of life no adult experiences fear like the
+fear which sometimes overpowers a child in the crisis of awakening.
+Over the dawn of the new Culture likewise lay this deathly anxiety. In
+this early morning of Magian world-feeling, timorous and hesitant and
+ignorant of itself, young eyes saw the end of the world at hand--it
+is the first thought in which every Culture to this day has come to
+knowledge of itself. All but the shallower souls trembled before
+revelations, miracles, glimpses into the very fundament of things. Men
+now lived and thought only in apocalyptic images. Actuality became
+appearance. Strange and terrifying visions were told mysteriously by
+one to another, read out from fantastic veiled texts, and seized at
+once with an immediate inward certainty. These writings travelled from
+community to community, village to village, and it is quite impossible
+to assign them to any one particular religion.[351] Their colouring
+is Persian, Chaldean, Jewish, but they have absorbed all that was
+circulating in men’s minds. Whereas the canonical books are national,
+the apocalyptic literature is international in the literal sense of the
+word. It is there, and no one seems to have composed it. Its content
+is fluid--to-day it reads thus and to-morrow otherwise. But this
+does not mean that it is a “poetry”--it is not.[352] These creations
+resemble the terrible figures of the Romanesque cathedral-porches
+in France, which also are not “art,” but fear turned into stone.
+Everyone knows those angels and devils, the ascent to heaven and
+descent to hell of divine Essence, the Second Adam, the Envoy of God,
+the Redeemer of the last days, the Son of Man, the eternal city, and
+the last judgment.[353] In the alien cities and the high positions
+of strict Judaic and Persian priesthoods the different doctrines
+might be tangibly defined and argued about, but below in the mass of
+the people there was practically no specific religion, but a general
+Magian religiousness which filled all souls and attached itself to
+glimpses and visions of every conceivable origin. The Last Day was
+at hand. Men expected it and knew that on that day “He” of whom all
+these revelations spoke would appear. Prophets arose. More and more
+new communities and groups gathered, believing themselves to have
+found either a better understanding of the traditional religion, or
+the true religion itself. In this time of amazing, ever-increasing
+tension, and in the very years around Jesus’s birth-year, there arose,
+besides endless communities and sects, another redemption-religion, the
+Mandæan, as to which we know nothing of founder or origins. In spite
+of its hatred of the Judaism of Jerusalem and its definite preference
+for the Persian idea of redemption, the Mandæan religion seems to have
+stood very close to the popular beliefs of Syrian Jewry. One after
+another, pieces of its wonderful documents are becoming available, and
+they consistently show us a “Him,” a Son of Man, a Redeemer who is sent
+down into the depths, who himself must be redeemed and is the goal of
+man’s expectations. In the Book of John, the Father high upraised in
+the House of Fulfilment, bathed in light, says to his only begotten
+Son: “My Son, be to me an ambassador; go into the world of darkness,
+where no ray of light is.” And the Son calls up to him: “Father, in
+what have I sinned that thou hast sent me into the darkness?” And
+finally: “Without sin did I ascend and there was no sin and defect in
+me.”[354]
+
+All the characters of the great prophetic religions and of the whole
+store of profound glimpses and visions later collected into apocalypses
+are seen here as foundations. Of Classical thought and feeling not
+a breath reached this Magian underworld. No doubt the beginnings of
+the new religion are lost irrevocably. But _one_ historical figure of
+Mandæanism stands forth with startling distinctness, as tragic in his
+purpose and his downfall as Jesus himself--John the Baptist.[355] He,
+almost emancipated from Judaism, and filled with as mighty a hatred
+of the Jerusalem spirit as that of primitive Russia for Petersburg,
+preached the end of the world and the coming of the Barnasha, the Son
+of Man, _who is no longer the longed-for national Messiah of the Jews_,
+but the bringer of the world-conflagration.[356] To him came Jesus and
+was his disciple.[357] He was thirty years old when the awakening came
+over him. Thenceforth the apocalyptic, and in particular the Mandæan,
+thought-world filled his whole being. The other world of historical
+actuality lying round him was to him as something sham, alien, void of
+significance. That “He” would now come and make an end of this unreal
+reality was his magnificent certainty, and like his master John, he
+stepped forth as its herald. Even now we can see, in the oldest Gospels
+that were embodied into the New Testament, gleams of this period in
+which he was, in his consciousness, nothing but a prophet.[358]
+
+But there was a moment in his life when an inkling, and then high
+certainty, came over him--“Thou art thyself It!” It was a secret that
+he at first hardly admitted to himself, and only later imparted to his
+nearest friends and companions, who thereafter shared with him, in all
+stillness, the blessed mission, till finally they dared to reveal the
+truths before all the world by the momentous journey to Jerusalem. If
+there is anything at all that clouds the complete purity and honour of
+his thought, it is that doubt as to whether he has deceived himself
+which from time to time seizes him, and of which, later, his disciples
+told quite frankly. He comes to his home. The village crowds to him,
+recognizes the former carpenter who left his work, is angered. The
+family--mother and all the brothers and sisters--are ashamed of him
+and would have arrested him. And with all these familiar eyes upon him
+he was confused and felt the magic power depart from him (Mark vi).
+In Gethsemane doubts of his mission[359] mingled themselves in the
+terrible fear of coming things, and even on the cross men heard the
+anguished cry that God had forsaken him.
+
+Even in these last hours he lived entirely in the form of his own
+apocalyptic world, which alone was ever real to him. What to the Roman
+sentries standing below him was reality was for him an object of
+helpless wonder, an illusion that might at any moment without warning
+vanish into nothingness. He possessed the pure and unadulterated soul
+of the townless land. The life of the cities and their spirit were to
+him utterly alien. Did he really see the semi-Classical Jerusalem, into
+which he rode as the Son of Man, and understand its historical nature?
+This is what thrills us in the last days--and the collision of facts
+with truths, of two worlds that will never understand one another, and
+his entire incomprehension of what was happening about him.
+
+So he went, proclaiming his message without reservation, through his
+country. But this country was Palestine. He was born in the Classical
+Empire and lived under the eyes of the Judaism of Jerusalem, and when
+his soul, fresh from the awful revelation of its mission, looked
+about, it was confronted by the actuality of the Roman State and that
+of Pharisaism. His repugnance for the stiff and selfish ideal of the
+latter, which he shared with all Mandæanism and doubtless with the
+peasant Jewry of the wide East, is the hall-mark of all his discourses
+from first to last. It angered him that this wilderness of cold-hearted
+formulæ was reputed to be the only way to salvation. Still, thus far
+it was only another kind of piety that his conviction was asserting
+against Rabbinical logic. Thus far it is only the Law versus the
+Prophets.
+
+But when Jesus was taken before Pilate, then _the world of facts and
+the world of truths were face to face in immediate and implacable
+hostility_. It is a scene appallingly distinct and overwhelming in
+its symbolism, such as the world’s history had never before and has
+never since looked at. The discord that lies at the root of all mobile
+life from its beginning, in virtue of its very _being_, of its having
+both existence _and_ awareness, took here the highest form that can
+possibly be conceived of human tragedy. In the famous question of the
+Roman Procurator: “What is truth?”--the one word that is race-pure
+in the whole Greek Testament--lies _the entire meaning of history_,
+the exclusive validity of the deed, the prestige of the State and war
+and blood, the all-powerfulness of success and the pride of eminent
+fitness. Not indeed the mouth, but the silent feeling of Jesus answers
+this question by that other which is decisive in all things of
+religion--_What is actuality?_ For Pilate actuality was all; for him
+nothing. Were it anything, indeed, pure religiousness could never stand
+up against history and the powers of history, or sit in judgment on
+active life; or if it does, it ceases to be religion and is subjected
+itself to the spirit of history.
+
+_My kingdom is not of this world._ This is the final word which admits
+of no gloss and on which each must check the course wherein birth and
+nature have set him. A being that makes use of a waking-consciousness,
+or a waking-consciousness which subjects being to itself; pulsation
+or tension, blood or intellect, history or nature, politics or
+religion--here it is one or the other, there is no honest way
+of compromise. A statesman can be deeply religious, a pious man
+can die for his country--but they must, both, know on which side
+they are really standing. The born politician despises the inward
+thought-processes of the ideologue and ethical philosopher in a world
+of fact--and rightly. For the believer, all ambition and succession of
+the historical world are sinful and without lasting value--he, too,
+is right. A ruler who wishes to improve religion in the direction
+of political, practical purposes is a fool. A sociologist-preacher
+who tries to bring truth, righteousness, peace, and forgiveness into
+the world of actuality is a fool also. No faith yet has altered the
+world, and no fact can ever rebut a faith. There is no bridge between
+directional Time and timeless Eternity, between the _course_ of history
+and the _existence_ of a divine world-order, in the structure of which
+the word “providence” or “dispensation” denotes the form of causality.
+_This is the final meaning of the moment in which Jesus and Pilate
+confronted one another._ In the one world, the historical, the Roman
+caused the Galilean to be crucified--that was his Destiny. In the other
+world, Rome was cast for perdition and the Cross became the pledge of
+Redemption--that was the “will of God.”[360]
+
+_Religion is metaphysic and nothing else--“Credo quia absurdum”_--and
+this metaphysic is not the metaphysic of knowledge, argument, proof
+(which is mere philosophy or learnedness), but _lived and experienced_
+metaphysic--that is, the unthinkable as a certainty, the supernatural
+as a fact, life as existence in a world that is non-actual, but true.
+Jesus never lived one moment in any other world but this. He was no
+moralizer, and to see in moralizing the final aim of religion is to
+be ignorant of what religion is. Moralizing is nineteenth-century
+Enlightenment, humane Philistinism. To ascribe social purposes to Jesus
+is a blasphemy. His occasional utterances of a social kind, so far as
+they are authentic and not merely attributed sayings, tend merely to
+edification. They contain nothing whatever of new doctrine, and they
+include proverbs of the sort then in general currency. His _teaching_
+was the proclamation, nothing but the proclamation, of those Last
+Things with whose images he was constantly filled, the dawn of the New
+Age, the advent of heavenly envoys, the last judgment, a new heaven
+and a new earth.[361] Any other conception of religion was never in
+Jesus, nor in any truly deep-feeling period of history. _Religion is,
+first and last, metaphysic_, other-worldliness (_Jenseitigkeit_),
+awareness in a world of which the evidence of the senses merely lights
+the foreground. It is life in and with the supersensible. And where the
+capacity for this awareness, or even the capacity for believing in its
+existence, is wanting, real religion is at an end. “My kingdom is _not_
+of this world,” and only he who can look into the depths that this
+flash illumines can comprehend the voices that come out of them. It is
+the Late, city periods that, no longer capable of seeing into depths,
+have turned the remnants of religiousness upon the external world and
+replaced religion by humanities, and metaphysic by moralization and
+social ethics.
+
+In Jesus we have the direct opposite. “Give unto Cæsar the things that
+are Cæsar’s” means: “Fit yourselves to the powers of the fact-world, be
+patient, suffer, and ask it not whether they are ‘just.’” What alone
+matters is the salvation of the soul. “Consider the lilies” means:
+“Give no heed to riches _and poverty_, for both fetter the soul to
+cares of this world.” “Man cannot serve both God and Mammon”--by Mammon
+is meant the _whole_ of actuality. It is shallow, and it is cowardly,
+to argue away the grand significance of this demand. Between working
+for the increase of one’s own riches, and working for the social ease
+of everyone, he would have felt no difference whatever. When wealth
+affrighted him, when the primitive community in Jerusalem--which was
+a strict Order and not a socialist club--rejected ownership, it was
+the most direct opposite of “social” sentiment that moved them. Their
+conviction was, not that the visible state of things was all, but that
+it was nothing: that it rested not on appreciation of comfort in this
+world, but on unreserved contempt of it. Something, it is true, must
+always exist to be set against and to nullify worldly fortune, and so
+we come back to the contrast of Tolstoi and Dostoyevski. Tolstoi, the
+townsman and Westerner, saw in Jesus only a social reformer, and in
+his metaphysical impotence--like the whole civilized West, which can
+only think about _distributing_, never _renouncing_--elevated primitive
+Christianity to the rank of a social revolution. Dostoyevski, who was
+poor, but in certain hours almost a saint, never thought about social
+ameliorations--of what profit would it have been to a man’s _soul_ to
+abolish _property_?
+
+
+VII
+
+Amongst Jesus’s friends and disciples, stunned as they were by the
+appalling outcome of the journey to Jerusalem, there spread after a
+few days the news of his resurrection and reappearance. The impression
+of this news on such souls and in such a time can never be more than
+partially echoed in the sensibilities of a Late mankind. It meant the
+actual fulfilment of all the Apocalyptic of that Magian Springtime--the
+end of the present æon marked by the ascension of the redeemed
+Redeemer, the second Adam, the Saoshyant, Enosh, Barnasha, or whatever
+other name man attached to “Him,” into the light-realm of the Father.
+And therewith the foretold future, the new world-æon, “the Kingdom
+of Heaven,” became immediately present. They felt themselves at the
+decisive point in the history of redemption.
+
+This certainty completely transformed the world-outlook of the little
+circles. “His” teachings, as they had flowed from his mild and noble
+nature--his inner feeling of the relation between God and man and of
+the high meaning of the times, and were exhaustively comprised in
+and defined by the word “love”--fell into the background, and their
+place was taken by the _teaching of Him_. As the Arisen he became for
+his disciples a new figure, in and of the Apocalyptic, and (what was
+more) its most important and final figure. But therewith their image
+of the future took form as an image of memory. Now, this was something
+of quite decisive importance, unheard-of in the world of Magian
+thought--the transference of an actuality, lived and experienced, on to
+the plane of the high story itself. The Jews (amongst them the young
+Paul) and the Mandæans (amongst them the disciples of John the Baptist)
+fought against it with passion and made of Jesus a “False Messiah” such
+as had been spoken of in the earliest Persian texts.[362] For them “He”
+was still to come from afar; for the little community “He” had already
+been--had they not seen him and lived with him? We have to enter into
+this conception unreservedly if we are to appreciate the enormous
+superiority it had in those times. Instead of an uncertain glimpse into
+the distance,[363] a compelling present; instead of fearful waiting for
+a liberating certainty, instead of a saga, a lived and shared human
+destiny--truly they were “glad tidings” that were proclaimed.
+
+But to whom? Even in the first days the question arose which decided
+the whole Destiny of the new revelation. Jesus and his friends were
+Jews by birth, but they did not belong to the land of Judea. Here in
+Jerusalem men looked for the Messiah of their old sacred books, a
+Messiah who was to appear for the “Jewish people,” in the old tribal
+sense, and only for them. But all the rest of the Aramæan world waited
+upon the Saviour of the _world_, the Redeemer and Son of Man, the
+figure of all apocalyptic literature, whether written out in Jewish,
+Persian, Chaldean, or Mandæan terms.[364] In the one view the death
+and resurrection of Jesus were merely local events; in the other they
+betokened a world-change. For, while everywhere else the Jews were a
+Magian nation without home or unity of birth, Jerusalem held firmly
+to the tribal idea. The conflict was not one between “preaching to
+the Jews” and “preaching to the Gentiles”--it went far deeper. The
+word “mission” had essentially here a twofold meaning. In the Judaic
+view there was essentially no need for recruiting--quite the reverse,
+as it was a contradiction to the Messiah-idea. The words “tribe” and
+“mission” are reciprocally exclusive. The members of the Chosen People,
+and in particular the priesthood, had merely to convince _themselves_
+that their longing was now fulfilled. But to the Magian nation, based
+on _consensus_ or community of feeling, what the Resurrection conveyed
+was a full and definitive truth, and consensus in the matter of this
+truth gave the _principle of the true nation_, which must necessarily
+expand till it had taken in all older and conceptually incomplete
+principles. “A Shepherd and his sheep” was the formula of the new
+world-nation. The nation of the Redeemer was identical with mankind.
+When, therefore, we survey the early history of this Culture, we see
+that the controversy in the Apostles’ Council[365] had been already
+decided, five hundred years before, by facts. Post-exilic Jewry (with
+the sole exception of self-contained Judea) had, like the Persians,
+Chaldeans, and others, recruited widely amongst the heathen, from
+Turkestan to inner Africa, regardless of home and origin. As to this
+there is now no controversy. It never at any time entered the heads of
+this community to be anything but what it really was. It was itself
+already the result of _a national existence in dispersion_. In utter
+contrast to the old-Jewish texts--which were a carefully preserved
+treasure, and of which the right interpretation, the Halakha, was
+reserved by the Rabbis to themselves--the apocalyptic literature
+was written so that it could reach all the souls to be wakened, and
+interpreted so that it might strike home in everyone.
+
+It is easy to see which of these conceptions was that of Jesus’s
+oldest friends, for they established themselves as a community of the
+Last Days in Jerusalem and frequented the Temple. For these simple
+folk--amongst them his brothers, who erstwhile had openly rejected him,
+and his mother, who now believed in her executed Son[366]--the power of
+the Judaic tradition was even stronger than the spirit of Apocalypse.
+In their object of convincing the Jews they failed (although at first
+even Pharisees came over to them) and so they remained as one of the
+numerous sects within Judaism, and their product, the “Confession of
+Peter,” may fairly be characterized as an express assertion that they
+themselves were the true Jewry and the Synedrion the false.[367]
+
+The final destiny of this circle[368] was to fall into oblivion when,
+as very soon happened, the whole world of Magian thought and feeling
+responded to the new apocalyptic teaching. Amongst the later disciples
+of Jesus were many who were definitely and purely Magian, and wholly
+free from the Pharisaic spirit. Long before Paul, they had tacitly
+settled the mission question. Not to preach, for them, was not to live
+at all, and presently they had assembled, everywhere from the Tigris
+to the Tiber, small circles in which the figure of Jesus, in every
+conceivable presentation, merged with the mass of prior visions.[369]
+Out of this, a new discord arose, as between mission to the heathen and
+mission to the Jews, and this was far more important than the conflict
+between Judea and the world on issues already decided. Jesus had lived
+in Galilee. Was his teaching to look west or east? Was it to be a
+Jesus-cult or an Order of the Saviour? Was it to seek intimacy with the
+Persian or with the Syncretic Church, both of which were in process of
+formation?
+
+This was the question decided by Paul--the first great personality
+in the new movement, and the first who had the sense not only of
+truths, but of facts. As a young rabbi from the West, and a pupil
+of one of the most famous of the Tannaim, he had persecuted the
+Christians qua Jewish sectaries. Then, after an awakening of the sort
+that often happened in those days, he turned to the numerous small
+cult-communities of the West and forged out of them a Church of _his
+own_ modelling: so that thenceforward, the Pagan and the Christian
+cult-Churches evolved in parallel, and with constant reciprocal action,
+up to Iamblichus and Athanasius (about A.D. 330). In the presence of
+this great ideal, Paul had for the Jesus-communities of Jerusalem a
+scarcely veiled contempt. There is nothing in the New Testament more
+express and exact than the beginning of the Epistle to the Galatians;
+his activity is a self-assumed task; he has taught how it pleased him
+and he has built how it pleased him. Finally, after fourteen years, he
+goes to Jerusalem in order, by force of his superior mentality, his
+success, and his effective independence of the old comrades of Jesus,
+to compel them there to agree that his, Paul’s, creation contained the
+true doctrine. Peter and his people, alien to actualities, failed to
+seize and appreciate the far-reaching significance of the discussion.
+And from that moment the primitive community was superfluous.
+
+Paul was a rabbi in intellect and an apocalyptic in feeling. He
+recognized Judaism, but as a _preliminary_ development. And thus there
+came to be two Magian religions with the same Scriptures (namely,
+the Old Testament), but a double Halakha, the one setting towards
+the Talmud--developed by the Tannaim at Jerusalem from 300 B.C.
+onwards--and the other, founded by Paul and completed by the Fathers,
+in the direction of the Gospel. But, further, Paul drew together the
+whole fullness of Apocalypse and salvation-yearning then circulating
+in these fields[370] into a salvation-_certainty_, the certainty
+immediately revealed to him and to him _alone_ near Damascus. “_Jesus
+is the Redeemer and Paul is his Prophet_”--this is the whole content
+of his message. The analogy with Mohammed could scarcely be closer.
+They differed neither in the nature of the awakening, nor in prophetic
+self-assuredness, nor in the consequent assertion of sole authority and
+unconditional truth for their respective expositions.
+
+With Paul, urban man and his “intelligence” come on the scene. The
+others, though they might know Jerusalem or Antioch, never grasped the
+essence of these cities. They lived soil-bound, rural, wholly soul and
+feeling. But now there appeared a spirit that had grown up in the great
+cities of Classical cast, that could only live in cities, that neither
+understood nor respected the peasant’s countryside. An understanding
+was possible with Philo, but with Peter never. Paul was the first by
+whom the Resurrection-experience was _seen as a problem_; the ecstatic
+awe of the young countryman changed in his brain into a conflict of
+spiritual principles. For what a contrast!--the struggle of Gethsemane,
+and the hour of Damascus: Child and Man, soul-anguish and intellectual
+decision, self-devotion to death and resolve to change sides! Paul
+had begun by seeing in the new Jewish sect a danger to the Pharisaism
+of Jerusalem; now, suddenly, he comprehended that the Nazarenes “were
+right”--a phrase that is inconceivable on the lips of Jesus--and took
+up their cause against Judaism, thereby setting up as an _intellectual
+quantity_ that which had previously consisted in the knowledge of an
+experience. An intellectual quantity--but in making his cause into
+this he unwittingly drove it close to the other intellectual powers,
+_the cities of the West_. In the ambiance of pure Apocalyptic there
+is no “intellect.” For the old comrades it was simply not possible to
+understand him in the least--and mournfully and doubtfully they must
+have looked at him while he was addressing them. Their living image
+of Jesus (whom Paul had never seen) paled in this bright, hard light
+of concepts and propositions. Thenceforward the holy memory faded
+into a Scholastic system. But Paul had a perfectly exact feeling for
+the true home of his ideas. His missionary journeys were all directed
+westward, and the East he ignored. _He never left the domain of the
+Classical city._ Why did he go to Rome, to Corinth, and not to Edessa
+or Ctesiphon? And why was it that he worked _only in the cities, and
+never from village to village?_
+
+That things developed thus was due to Paul _alone_. In the face of his
+practical energy the feelings of all the rest counted for nothing, and
+so the young Church took the urban and Western tendency decisively,
+so decisively that later it could describe the remaining heathen as
+“_pagani_,” country-folk. Thus arose an immense danger that only youth
+and vernal force enabled the growing Church to repel; the fellah-world
+of the Classical cities grasped at it with both hands, and the marks
+of that grasp are visible to-day. But--how remote already from the
+essence of Jesus, whose entire life had been bound to country and
+the country-folk! The Pseudomorphosis in which he was born he had
+simply not noticed; his soul contained not the smallest trace of
+its influence--and now, a generation after him, probably within the
+lifetime of his mother, that which had grown up out of his death had
+already become a centre of formative purpose for that Pseudomorphosis.
+The Classical City was soon the only theatre of ritual and dogmatic
+evolution. Eastward the community extended only furtively and
+unobtrusively.[371] About A.D. 100 there were already Christians beyond
+the Tigris, but as far as the development of the Church was concerned
+they and their beliefs might almost have been non-existent.
+
+It was a second creation, then, that came out of Paul’s immediate
+entourage, and it was this creation that, essentially, defined the
+form of the new Church. The personality and the story of Jesus cried
+aloud to be put into poetic form, and yet it is due to one man alone,
+Mark, that Gospels came into existence at all.[372] What Paul and
+Mark had before them was a firm tradition in the community, _the_
+“Gospel,” a continued and propagated hearsay, supported by formless and
+insignificant notes in Aramaic and Greek, but in no way set out. In
+any case, of course, serious documents would have come into existence
+some time or another, but their natural form as products of the spirit
+of those who had _lived_ with Jesus (and of the spirit of the East
+generally) would have been a canonical collection of his sayings,
+amplified, conclusively defined, and provided with an exegesis by the
+Councils and pivoting upon the Second Advent. But any tentatives in
+this direction were completely broken off by the Gospel of Mark, which
+was written down about A.D. 65, at the same time as the last Pauline
+Epistles, and, like them, in Greek. The writer had no suspicion,
+perhaps, of the significance of his little work, but it made him one
+of the supremely important personalities not only of Christianity, but
+of the Arabian Culture generally. All older attempts vanished, leaving
+writings in Gospel-form as the sole sources concerning Jesus. (So much
+so that “_Evangelium_,” from signifying the content of glad tidings,
+came to mean the form itself.) The work was the outcome of the wishes
+of Pauline, literate, circles that had never heard any one of Jesus’s
+companions discourse about him. It is _an apocalyptic life-picture from
+a distance_; lived experience is replaced by narrative, and narrative
+so plain and straightforward that the apocalyptic tendency passes quite
+unperceived.[373] And yet Apocalyptic is its condition precedent. It
+is not the words of Jesus, but the doctrine of Jesus in the Pauline
+form, that constitutes the substance of Mark. The first Christian book
+emanates from the Pauline creation. But very soon the latter itself
+becomes unthinkable without the book and its successors.
+
+For presently there arose something which Paul, the born schoolman,
+had never intended, but which nevertheless had been made inevitable by
+the tendency of his work--the _cult-church of Christian nationality_.
+While the Syncretic creed-community, in proportion as it attained
+to consciousness of itself, drew the innumerable old city-cults and
+the new Magian together and by means of a supreme cult endowed the
+structure with henotheistic form, the Jesus-cult of the oldest Western
+communities was so long dissected and enriched that it also came to
+consist of just such another mass of cults.[374] Around the birth of
+Jesus, of which the Disciples knew nothing, grew up a story of his
+childhood. In the Mark Gospel it has not yet come into existence.
+Already in the old Persian apocalyptic, indeed, the Saoshyant as
+Saviour of the Last Day was said to be born of a virgin. But the new
+western myth was of quite other significance and had incalculable
+consequences. For within the Pseudomorphosis-region there arose
+presently beside Jesus a figure to which he was Son, which transcended
+his figure--that of the Mother of God. She, like her Son, was a simple
+human destiny of such arresting and attractive force that she towered
+above all the hundred and one Virgins and Mothers of Syncretism--Isis,
+Tanit, Cybele, Demeter--and all the mysteries of birth and pain, and
+finally drew them into herself. For Irenæus she is the Eve of a new
+mankind. Origen champions her continued virginity. By giving birth to
+Redeemer-God it is _she_ really who has redeemed the world. Mary the
+“Theotokos” (she who bare God) was the great stumbling-block for the
+Christians outside the Classical frontier, and it was the doctrinal
+developments of this idea that led Monophysites and Nestorians to break
+away and re-establish the pure Jesus-religion.[375] But the Faustian
+Culture, again, when it awoke and needed a symbol whereby to express
+its primary feeling for Infinity in time and to manifest its sense of
+the succession of generations, _set up the “Mater Dolorosa” and not the
+suffering Redeemer_ as the pivot of the German-Catholic Christianity of
+the Gothic age; and for whole centuries of bright fruitful inwardness
+this woman-figure was the very synthesis of Faustian world-feeling and
+the object of all art, poetry, and piety. Even to-day in the ritual and
+the prayers of the Roman Catholic Church, and above all in the thoughts
+of its people, Jesus takes second place after the Madonna.[376]
+
+Along with the Mary-cult there arose the innumerable cults of the
+saints, which certainly exceeded in number those of the antique
+place-gods; when the Pagan Church finally expired, the Christian had
+been able to absorb the whole store of local cults in the form of the
+veneration of saints.
+
+Paul and Mark were decisive in yet another matter of inestimably
+wide import. It was a result of Paul’s mission that, contrary to all
+the initial probabilities, Greek became the language of the Church
+and--following the lead of the first Gospel--of a sacred _Greek_
+literature. Let the reader consider what this meant, in one way and
+another. The Jesus Church was artificially separated from its spiritual
+origins and attached to an alien and scholarly element. Touch with the
+folk-spirit of the Aramæan motherland was lost. Thenceforward both
+the cult-Churches possessed the same language, the same conceptual
+traditions, the same book-literature from the same schools. The far
+less sophisticated Aramaic literatures of the East--the truly Magian,
+written and thought in the language of Jesus and his companions--were
+cut off from cooperating in the life of the Church. They could not
+be read, they dropped out of sight, and finally they were forgotten
+altogether. After all, notwithstanding that the Persian Scriptures were
+set down in Avestan and the Jewish in Hebrew, the language of their
+authors and exegetes; the language of the whole Apocalyptic from which
+the teachings of Jesus, and secondarily the teachings about Jesus,
+sprang; the language, lastly, of the scholars of all the Mesopotamian
+universities--was Aramaic. All this vanished from the field of view, to
+be replaced by Plato and Aristotle, both of whom were taken up, worked
+upon in common, and misunderstood in common by the Schoolmen of the two
+cult-Churches.
+
+A final step in this direction was attempted by a man who was
+the equal of Paul in organizing talent and greatly his superior
+in intellectual creativeness, but who was inferior to him in the
+feeling for possibilities and actualities, and consequently failed to
+achieve his grandly conceived schemes--Marcion.[377] He saw in Paul’s
+creation and its consequences only the basis on which to found the
+true religion of salvation. He was sensible of the absurdity of two
+religions that were unreservedly at war with one another possessing
+the same Holy Writ--namely, the _Jewish_ canon. To us to-day it seems
+almost inconceivable that this should have been, but in fact it was
+so, for a century--but we have to remember what a sacred text meant
+in every kind of Magian religiousness. In these texts Marcion saw the
+real “conspiracy against the truth” and the most urgent danger for
+the doctrines intended by Jesus and, in his view, not yet actualized.
+Paul the prophet had declared the Old Testament as fulfilled and
+concluded--Marcion the founder pronounced it defeated and cancelled. He
+strove to cut out everything Jewish, down to the last detail. From end
+to end he was fighting nothing but Judaism. Like every true founder,
+like every religiously creative period, like Zarathustra, the prophets
+of Israel, like the Homeric Greeks, and like the Germans converted to
+Christianity, he transformed the old gods into defeated powers.[378]
+Jehovah as the Creator-God, the Demiurge, is the “Just” _and therefore
+the Evil_: Jesus as the incarnation of the Saviour-God in this evil
+creation is the “alien”--that is, the good Principle.[379] The
+foundation of Magian, and in particular Persian, feeling is perfectly
+unmistakable here. Marcion came from Sinope, the old capital of that
+Mithradatic Empire whose religion is indicated in the very name of its
+kings. Here of old, too, the Mithras cult had originated.
+
+But to the new doctrine properly belonged new Scriptures. The “Law
+and Prophets” which had hitherto been canonical for the whole of
+Christendom was the _Bible of the Jewish God_, and in fact it had
+just been given final shape as such by the Synedrion at Jabna.
+Thus, it was a Devil’s book that the Christian had in his hands,
+and Marcion, therefore, now set up against it the Bible of the
+Redeemer-God--likewise an assemblage and ordering of writings that had
+hitherto been current in the community[380] as simple edification-books
+without canonical claims. In place of the Torah he puts the--_one and
+true_--Gospel, which he builds up uniformly out of various separate,
+and, in his view, corrupted and falsified, Gospels. In place of the
+Israelite prophets he sets up the Epistles of the _one prophet of
+Jesus_, who was Paul.
+
+Thus Marcion became the real creator of the New Testament. But for
+that reason it is impossible to ignore the mysterious personage,
+closely related to him, who not long before had written the Gospel
+“according to John.” The intention of this writer was neither to
+amplify nor to supersede the Gospels proper; what he did--and, unlike
+Mark, consciously did--was to create something quite new, _the first
+sacred book_ of Christianity, the Koran of the new religion.[381] The
+book proves that this religion was already conceived of as something
+complete and enduring. The idea of the immediately impending end of
+the world, with which Jesus was filled through and through and which
+even Paul and Mark in a measure shared, lies far behind “John” and
+Marcion. Apocalyptic is at an end, and Mysticism is beginning. Their
+content is not the teaching of Jesus, nor even the Pauline teaching
+about Jesus, but the enigma of the universe, the World-Cavern. There
+is here no question of a Gospel; not the figure of the Redeemer, but
+the principle of the Logos, is the meaning and the means of happening.
+The childhood story is rejected again; a god is not “born,” he is
+“there,” and wanders in human form over the earth. And this god is a
+Trinity--God, the Spirit of God, the Word of God. This sacred book
+of earliest Christianity contains, for the first time, the Magian
+problem of “Substance,” which dominated the following centuries to
+the exclusion of everything else and finally led to the religion’s
+splitting up into three churches. And--what is significant in more
+respects than one--the solution of that problem to which “John” stands
+closest is that which the Nestorian East stood for as the true one. It
+is, in virtue of the Logos idea (Greek though the word happens to be)
+the “easternmost” of the Gospels, and presents Jesus, emphatically not
+as the bringer of the final and total revelation, but as the second
+envoy, who is to be _followed by a third_ (the Comforter, Paraclete, of
+John xiv, 16, 26; xv, 26). This is the astounding doctrine that Jesus
+himself proclaims, and the decisive note of this enigmatic book. Here
+is unveiled, quite suddenly, the faith of the Magian East. If the Logos
+does not go, the Paraclete[382] cannot come (John xvi, 7), but between
+them lies the last Æon, the rule of Ahriman (xiv, 30). The Church of
+the Pseudomorphosis, ruled by Pauline intellect, fought long against
+the John Gospel and gave it recognition only when the offensive, darkly
+hinted doctrine had been covered over by a Pauline interpretation.
+The real state of affairs is disclosed in the Montanist movement
+(Asia Minor, 160) which harked back to oral tradition and proclaimed
+in Montanus the manifested Paraclete and the end of the world. Its
+popularity was immense. Tertullian went over to it at Carthage in 207.
+About 245 Mani,[383] who was intimately in touch with the currents of
+Eastern Christianity,[384] cast out the Pauline, human Jesus as a demon
+and confessed the Johannine Logos as the true Jesus, but announced
+himself as the Paraclete of the fourth Gospel. In Carthage, Augustine
+became a Manichæan, and it is a highly suggestive fact that both
+movements finally fused with Marcionism.
+
+To return to Marcion himself, it was he who carried through the idea
+of “John” and created a Christian Bible. And then, verging on old
+age, when the communities of the extreme west recoiled from him in
+horror,[385] he set out to build the masterly structure of his own
+Redeemer-Church.[386] From 156 to 190 this was a power, and it was only
+in the following century that the older Church succeeded in degrading
+the Marcionites to the rank of heretics. Even so, in the broad East and
+as far out as Turkestan, it was still important at a much later date,
+and it ended, in a way deeply significant of its essential feeling, by
+fusing with the Manichæans.[387]
+
+Nevertheless, though in the fullness of his conscious superiority
+he had underestimated the _vis inertiæ_ of existing conditions,
+his grand effort was not in vain. He was, like Paul before him and
+Athanasius after him, the deliverer of Christianity at a moment when
+it threatened to break up, and the grandeur of his idea is in no
+wise diminished by the fact that union came about in opposition to,
+instead of through, him. The early Catholic Church--that is, the
+_Church of the Pseudomorphosis_--arose in its greatness only about
+190, and then it was in self-defence against the Church of Marcion
+and with the aid of an organization taken from that Church. Further,
+it replaced Marcion’s Bible by another of similar structure--Gospels
+and apostolic Epistles--which it then proceeded to combine with the
+Law and the Prophets in one unit. And finally, this act of linking
+the two Testaments having in itself settled the Church’s attitude
+towards Judaism, it proceeded to combat Marcion’s third creation, his
+Redeemer-doctrine, by making a start with a theology of its own on the
+basis of _his_ enunciation of the problem.
+
+This development, however, took place on Classical soil, and,
+therefore, even the Church that arose in opposition to Marcion and his
+anti-Judaism was looked upon by Talmudic Jewry (whose centre of gravity
+lay entirely in Mesopotamia and its universities) as a mere piece of
+Hellenistic paganism. The destruction of Jerusalem was a conclusive
+event that in the world of fact no spiritual power could nullify. Such
+is the intimacy of inward relationship between waking-consciousness,
+religion, and speech that the complete severance after 70 of the Greek
+Pseudomorphosis and the Aramaic (that is, the truly Arabian) region
+was bound to result in the formation of two distinct domains of Magian
+religious development. On the Western margin of the young Culture the
+Pagan cult-Church, the Jesus-Church (removed thither by Paul), and the
+Greek-speaking Judaism of the Philo stamp were in point of language and
+literature so interlocked that the last-named fell into Christianity
+even in the first century, and Christianity and Hellenism combined to
+form a _common_ early philosophy. In the Aramaic-speaking world from
+the Orontes to the Tigris, on the other hand, Judaism and Persism
+interacted constantly and intimately, each creating in this period
+its own strict theology and scholastic in the Talmud and the Avesta;
+and from the fourth century both these theologies exercised _the most
+potent influence upon the Aramaic-speaking Christendom that resisted
+the Pseudomorphosis_, so that finally it broke away in the form of the
+Nestorian Church.
+
+Here in the East the difference, inherent in every human
+waking-consciousness, between sense-understanding and
+word-understanding--and, therefore between eye and letter--led up to
+purely Arabian methods of mysticism and scholasticism. The apocalyptic
+certainty, “Gnosis” in the first-century sense, that Jesus intended to
+confer,[388] the divining contemplation and emotion, is that of the
+Israelite prophets, the Gathas, Sufism, and we have it recognizable
+still in Spinoza, in the Polish Messiah Baal Shem[389] and in Mirza
+Ali Mohammed, the enthusiast-founder of Bahaism, who was executed in
+Teheran in 1850. The other way, “Paradosis,” is the characteristically
+Talmudic method of word-exegesis, of which Paul was a master;[390] it
+pervades all later Avestan works, the Nestorian dialectic,[391] the
+entire theology of Islam alike.
+
+On the other side, the Pseudomorphosis is single and whole both in its
+Magian believing acceptance (Pistis) and its metaphysical introversion
+(Gnosis).[392] The Magian belief in its Westerly shape was formulated
+for the Christians by Irenæus and, above all, by Tertullian, whose
+famous aphorism “_Credo quia absurdum_” is the very summation of this
+certainty in belief. The Pagan counterpart is Plotinus in his Enneads
+and even more so Porphyry in his treatise _On the Return of the Soul to
+God_.[393] But for the great schoolmen of the Pagan Church too, there
+were Father (Nus), Son, and the middle Being, just as already for Philo
+the Logos had been first-born Son and second God. Doctrines concerning
+ecstasy, angels and demons, and the dual substance of soul were freely
+current amongst them, and we see in Plotinus and Origen, both pupils
+of the same master, that the scholasticism of the Pseudomorphosis
+consisted in the development of Magian concepts and thoughts, by
+systematic transvaluation of the texts of Plato and Aristotle.
+
+The characteristic _central idea of the whole thought of the
+Pseudomorphosis is the Logos_,[394] in use and development its faithful
+image. There is no possibility here of any “Greek,” in the sense of
+Classical, influence; there was not a man alive in those days whose
+spiritual disposition could have accommodated the smallest trace of
+the Logos of Heraclitus and the Stoa. But, equally, the theologies
+that lived side by side in Alexandria were never able to develop in
+full purity the Logos-notion as they meant it, whereas both in Persian
+and Chaldean imaginings--as Spirit or Word of God--and in Jewish
+doctrine--as Ruach and Memra--it played a decisive part. What the
+Logos-teaching in the West did was to develop a Classical formula,
+by way of Philo and the John Gospel (the enduring effect of which on
+the West was its mark upon the schoolmen) not only into an element
+of Christian mysticism, but, eventually, into a dogma.[395] This
+was inevitable. This dogma which _both_ the Western Churches held,
+corresponded, on the side of knowledge, to that which, on the side of
+faith, was represented _both by_ the syncretic cults and the cults of
+Mary and the Saints. And against the whole thing, dogma and cult, the
+feeling of the East revolted from the 4th century on.
+
+For the eye the history of these thoughts and feelings is repeated
+in the history of Magian architecture.[396] _The basic form of the
+Pseudomorphosis is the Basilica_, which was known to the Jews of the
+West and to the Hellenistic sects of the Chaldeans even before the time
+of Christ. As the Logos of the John Gospel is a Magian fundamental in
+Classical shape, so the Basilica is a Magian room whose inner walls
+correspond to the outer surfaces of the old Classical temple, the
+cult-building introverted. The architectural form of the pure East is
+the _cupola building, the Mosque_, which without doubt existed long
+before the oldest Christian Churches in the temples of the Persians
+and Chaldeans, the synagogues of Mesopotamia, and probably the temples
+of Saba as well. The attempts to reconcile East and West in the
+Church Councils of the Byzantine period were finally symbolized in
+the mixed form of the domed basilica. For this item of the history of
+ecclesiastical architecture is really another expression of the great
+change that set in with Athanasius and Constantine, the last great
+champions of Christianity. The one created the firm western dogma
+and also Monasticism, into whose hands dogma gradually passed from
+those of the ageing schools. The other founded the State of Christian
+nationality, to which likewise the name of “Greek” passed in the end.
+And of this transition the domed basilica is the symbol.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+PROBLEMS OF THE ARABIAN CULTURE
+
+(B)
+
+THE MAGIAN SOUL
+
+
+I
+
+The world, as spread out for the Magian waking-consciousness, possesses
+a kind of extension that may be called cavern-like,[397] though it is
+difficult for Western man to pick upon any word in his vocabulary that
+can convey anything more than a hint of the meaning of Magian “space.”
+For “space” has essentially unlike meanings for the perceptions of
+the two Cultures. The world-as-cavern is just as different from the
+world-as-extent of the passionate, far-thrusting Faustian as it is from
+the Classical world-as-sum-of-bodily-things. The Copernican system, in
+which the earth, as it were, loses itself, must necessarily seem crazy
+and frivolous to Arabian thought. The Church of the West was perfectly
+right when it resisted an idea so incompatible with the world-feeling
+of Jesus, and the Chaldean _cavern-astronomy_, which was wholly natural
+and convincing for Persians, Jews, peoples of the Pseudomorphosis, and
+Islam, became accessible to the few genuine Greeks who knew of it at
+all only after a process of transvaluing its basic notions of space.
+
+The tension between Macrocosm and Microcosm (which is identical
+with the waking-consciousness) leads, in the world-picture of every
+Culture, to further oppositions of symbolic importance. All a man’s
+sensations or understanding, faith or knowledge, receive their shape
+from a primary opposition which makes them not only activities of the
+individual, but also expressions of the totality. In the Classical
+the opposition that universally dominates the waking-consciousness is
+the opposition of matter and form; in the West it is that of force
+and mass. In the former the tension loses itself in the small and
+particular, and in the latter it discharges itself in the character of
+work. In the World-Cavern, on the other hand, it persists in traversing
+and swaying to and fro in unsure strugglings, and so becomes that
+“Semitic” primary-dualism which, ever the same under its thousand
+forms, fills the Magian world. The light shines through the cavern and
+battles against the darkness (John i, 5). Both are Magian substances.
+Up and down, heaven and earth become powers that have entity and
+contend with one another. But these polarities in the most primary
+sensations mingle with those of the refined and critical understanding,
+like good and evil, God and Satan. Death, for the author of the
+John Gospel as for the strict Moslem, is not the end of life, but a
+Something, a death-force, that contends with a life-force for the
+possession of man.
+
+But still more important than all this is the opposition of Spirit
+and Soul (Hebrew _Ruach_ and _nephesh_, Persian _ahu_ and _urvan_,
+Mandæan _monuhmed_ and _gyan_, Greek _pneuma_ and _psyche_) which
+first comes out in the basic feeling of the prophetic religions, then
+pervades the whole of Apocalyptic, and finally forms and guides the
+world-contemplations of the awakened Culture--Philo, Paul and Plotinus,
+Gnostics and Mandæans, Augustine and the Avesta, Islam and the
+Kabbalah. _Ruach_ means originally “wind” and _nephesh_ “breath.”[398]
+The _nephesh_ is always in one way or another related to the bodily
+and earthly, to the below, the evil, the darkness. Its effort is
+the “upward.” The _ruach_ belongs to the divine, to the above, to
+the light. Its effects in man when it descends are the heroism of a
+Samson, the holy wrath of an Elijah, the enlightenment of the judge
+(the Solomon passing judgment,[399]) and all kinds of divination
+and ecstasy. It is poured out.[400] From Isaiah xi, 2, the Messiah
+becomes the incarnation of the _ruach_. Philo and the Islamic theology
+divide mankind into born Psychics and born Pneumatics (the “elect,”
+a concept thoroughly proper to the world-cavern and Kismet). All the
+sons of Jacob are pneumatics. For Paul (1 Cor. xv) the meaning of
+the Resurrection lies in the opposition of a psychic and a pneumatic
+body, which alike for him and Philo and the author of the Baruch
+apocalypse coincides with the opposition of heaven and earth, light and
+darkness.[401] For Paul, the Saviour is the heavenly Pneuma.[402] In
+the John Gospel he fuses as Logos with the Light; in Neoplatonism he
+appears as _Nus_ or, in the Classical terminology, the All-One opposed
+to _Physis_.[403] Paul and Philo, with their “Classical” (that is,
+western) conceptual criteria, equated soul and body with good and bad
+respectively, Augustine, as a Manichæan[404] with Persian-Eastern bases
+of distinction, lumps soul and body together as the naturally bad, in
+contrast to God as the sole Good, and finds in this opposition the
+source of his doctrine of Grace, which developed also, in the same form
+(though quite independently of him) in Islam.
+
+But souls are at bottom discrete entities, whereas the Pneuma is
+one and ever the same. The man _possesses_ a soul, but he only
+_participates_ in the spirit of the Light and the Good; the divine
+descends into him, thus binding all the individuals of the Below
+together with the one in the Above. This primary feeling, which
+dominates the beliefs and opinions of all Magian men, is something
+perfectly singular, and not only characterizes their world-view, but
+marks off the essence and kernel of their religiousness in all its
+forms from that of every other kind of man. This Culture, as has been
+shown, was characteristically the Culture of the middle. It could have
+borrowed forms and ideas from most of the others, and the fact that
+it did not do so, that in the face of all pressure and temptation
+it remained so profoundly mistress of its own inward form, attests
+an unbridgeable gulf of difference. Of all the wealth of Babylonian
+and Egyptian religion it admitted hardly more than a few names; the
+Classical and the Indian Cultures, or rather the Civilizations heir to
+them--Hellenism and Buddhism--distorted its expression to the point of
+pseudomorphosis, but its essence they never touched. All religions of
+the Magian Culture, from the creations of Isaiah and Zarathustra to
+Islam, constitute a complete inward unit of world-feeling; and, just as
+in the Avestan beliefs there is not to be found one trait of Brahmanism
+nor in early Christianity one breath of Classical feeling, but merely
+names and figures and outward forms, so also not a trace of this
+Jesus-religion could be absorbed by the Germanic-Catholic Christianity
+of the West, even though the stock of tenets and observances was taken
+over in its entirety.
+
+Whereas the Faustian man is an “I” that in the last resort draws its
+own conclusions about the Infinite; whereas the Apollinian man, as one
+_soma_ among many, represents only himself; the Magian man, with his
+spiritual kind of being, is only a _part of a pneumatic “We”_ that,
+descending from above, is one and the same in all believers. As body
+and soul he belongs to himself alone, but something else, something
+alien and higher, dwells in him, making him with all his glimpses
+and convictions just a member of a consensus which, as the emanation
+of God, excludes error, but excludes also all possibility of the
+self-asserting Ego. Truth is for him something other than for us. All
+our epistemological methods, resting upon the _individual_ judgment,
+are for him madness and infatuation, and its scientific results a
+work of the Evil One, who has confused and deceived the spirit as to
+its true dispositions and purposes. Herein lies the ultimate, for us
+unapproachable, secret of Magian thought in its cavern-world--the
+impossibility of a thinking, believing, and knowing Ego is the
+presupposition inherent in all the fundamentals of all these religions.
+While Classical man stood before his gods as one body before another;
+whereas the Faustian willing “I” in its wide world feels itself
+confronted by deity, also Faustian, also willing, effective everywhere;
+the Magian deity is the indefinite, enigmatic Power on high that pours
+out its Wrath or its Grace, descends itself into the dark or raises
+the soul into the light as it sees fit. The idea of individual wills
+is simply meaningless, for “will” and “thought” in man are not prime,
+but already effects of the deity upon him. Out of this unshakable
+root-feeling, which is merely re-expressed, never essentially altered,
+by any conversions, illumination or subtilizing in the world--there
+emerges of necessity the idea of the Divine Mediator, of one who
+transforms this state from a torment into a bliss. All Magian religions
+are by this idea bound together, and separated from those of all other
+Cultures.
+
+The Logos-idea in its broadest sense, an abstraction of the Magian
+light-sensation of the Cavern, is the exact correlative of this
+sensation in Magian thought. It meant that from the unattainable
+Godhead its Spirit, its “Word,” is released as carrier of the light
+and bringer of the good, and enters into relation with human being to
+uplift, pervade, and redeem it. This distinctness of three substances,
+which does not contradict their oneness in religious thought, was
+known already to the prophetic religions. Ahuramazda’s light-gleaming
+soul is the Word (Yasht 13, 31), and in one of the earliest Gathas his
+Holy Spirit (_spenta mainyu_) converses with the Evil Spirit (_angra
+mainyu_, Yasna 45, 2). The same idea penetrates the whole of the old
+Jewish literature. The thought which the Chaldeans built up on the
+separation of God and His Word and the opposition of Marduk and Nabu,
+which breaks forth with power in the whole Aramæan Apocalyptic remained
+permanently active and creative; by Philo and John, Marcion and Mani,
+it entered into the Talmudic teachings and thence into the Kabbalistic
+books Yesirah and Sohar, into the Church Councils and the works of
+the Fathers, into the later Avesta, and finally into Islam, in which
+a Mohammed gradually became the Logos and, as the mystically respent,
+_living_ Mohammed of the popular religion, fused into the figure of
+Christ.[405] This conception is for Magian man so self-evident that
+it was able to break through even the strictly monotheistic structure
+of the original Islam and to appear with Allah as the Word of God
+(_kalimah_), the Holy Spirit (_ruh_), and the “light of Mohammed.”
+
+For, for the popular religion, the first light that comes forth from
+the world-creation is that of Mohammed, in the shape of a peacock[406]
+“formed of white pearls” and walled about by veilings. But the peacock
+is the Envoy of God and the prime soul[407] as early as the Mandæans,
+and it is the emblem of immortality on Early Christian sarcophagi. The
+light-diffusing pearl that illumines the dark house of the body is the
+Spirit entered into man, and thought of as substance, for the Mandæans
+as in the Acts of Thomas.[408] The Jezidi[409] reverence the Logos as
+peacock and light; next to the Druses they have preserved most purely
+the old Persian conception of the substantial Trinity.
+
+Thus again and again we find the Logos-idea getting back to the
+light-sensation from which the Magian understanding derived it. _The
+world of Magian mankind is filled with a fairy-tale feeling._[410]
+Devils and evil spirits threaten man; angels and fairies protect him.
+There are amulets and talismans, mysterious lands, cities, buildings,
+and beings, secret letters, Solomon’s Seal, the Philosophers’ Stone.
+And over all this is poured the quivering cavern-light that the
+spectral darkness ever threatens to swallow up. If this profusion of
+figures astonishes the reader, let him remember that Jesus lived in it,
+and Jesus’s teachings are only to be understood from it. Apocalyptic
+is only a vision of fable intensified to an extreme of tragic power.
+Already in the Book of Enoch we have the crystal palace of God, the
+mountains of precious stone, and the imprisonment of the apostate
+stars. Fantastic, too, are the whole overpowering idea-world of the
+Mandæans, that of the Gnostics and the Manichæans, the system of
+Origen, and the figures of the Persian “Bundahish”; and when the time
+of the great visions was over, these ideas passed into a legend-poesy
+and into the innumerable religious romances of which we have Christian
+specimens in the gospels concerning Jesus’s childhood, the Acts of
+Thomas and the anti-Pauline Pseudo-Clementines. One such story is
+that of Abraham’s having minted the thirty pieces of silver of Judas.
+Another is the tale of the “treasure-cave” in which, deep under the
+hill of Golgotha, are stored the golden treasure of paradise and the
+bones of Adam.[411] Dante’s poetic material was after all poetic, but
+this was sheer actuality, the only world in which these people lived
+continuously. Such sensations are unapproachably remote from men who
+live in and with a dynamical world-picture. If we would obtain some
+inkling of how alien to us all the inner life of Jesus is--a painful
+realization for the Christian of the West, who would be glad indeed if
+he could make that inner life the point of contact for his own inward
+piety--if we would discover why nowadays only a pious Moslem has the
+capacity livingly to experience it, we should sink ourselves in this
+wonder-element of a world-image that was Jesus’s world-image. And then,
+and only then, shall we perceive how little Faustian Christianity has
+taken over from the wealth of the Church of the Pseudomorphosis--of its
+world-feeling nothing, of its inward form little, and of its concepts
+and figures much.
+
+
+II
+
+The When, for the Magian Soul, issues from the Where. Here too, is no
+Apollinian clinging to pointlike Present, nor Faustian thrust and drive
+towards an infinitely distant goal. Here Being has a different pulse,
+and consequently Waking-being has another sense of time, which is the
+counter-concept to Magian space. The prime thing that the humanity of
+this Culture, from poor slaves and porters to the prophets and the
+caliphs themselves, feels as the Kismet above him is not a limitless
+flight of the ages that never lets a lost moment recur, but a Beginning
+and an End of “This Day,” which is irrevocably ordained and in which
+the human existence takes the place assigned to it from creation
+itself. Not only world-space, but world-time also is cavern-like. Hence
+comes the thoroughly Magian certainty that _everything has “a” time_,
+from the origins of the Saviour, whose hour stood written in ancient
+texts, to the smallest detail of the everyday, in which Faustian hurry
+would be meaningless and unimaginable. Here, too, is the basis of the
+Early Magian (and in particular the Chaldean) astrology, which likewise
+presupposes that all things are written down in the stars and that the
+scientifically calculable course of the planets authorized conclusions
+as to the course of earthly things.[412] The Classical oracle answered
+the only question that could perturb Apollinian man--the form, the
+“How?” of coming things. But the question of the Cavern is “When?”
+The whole of Apocalyptic, the spiritual life of Jesus, the agony of
+Gethsemane, and the grand movement that arose out of his death are
+unintelligible if we have not grasped this primary question of Magian
+being and the presuppositions lying behind it. It is an infallible
+sign of the extinction of the Classical Soul that astrology in its
+westward advance drove the oracle step by step before it. Nowhere is
+the stage of transition more clearly visible than in Tacitus, whose
+entire history is dominated by the confusion and dislocation of his
+world-picture. First of all, as a true Roman, he brings in the power
+of the old city-deities; then, as an intelligent cosmopolitan, he
+regards this very belief in their intervention as a superstition; and
+finally, as a Stoic (by that time the spiritual outlook of the Stoa
+had become _Magian_), he speaks of the power of the seven planets that
+rule the fortunes of men. And thus it comes about that in the following
+centuries Time itself as vessel of fate--namely, the Vault of Time,
+limited each way and therefore capable of being grasped as an entity by
+the inner eye--is by Persian mysticism set above the light of God as
+Zrvan, and rules the world-conflict of Good and Evil. Zrvanism was the
+State religion of Persia in 438-457.
+
+Fundamentally, too, it is this belief that all stands written in the
+stars, that makes the Arabian Culture characteristically that of
+“eras”--that is, of time-reckonings that begin at some event felt
+as a peculiarly significant act of Providence. The first and most
+important is the generic Aramæan era, which begins about 300 B.C. with
+the growth of apocalyptic tension and is the “Seleucid era.” It was
+followed by many others, amongst them the Sabæan (about 115 B.C.), the
+starting-point of which is not exactly known to us; that of Diocletian;
+the Jewish era, beginning with the Creation, which was introduced by
+the Synedrion in 346;[413] the Persian, from the accession of the last
+Sassanid Jezdegerd in 632; and the Hijra, by which at last the Seleucid
+was displaced in Syria and Mesopotamia. Outside this land-field there
+is mere imitation for practical ends, like Varro’s “_ab urbe condita_”;
+that of the Marcionites, beginning with Marcion’s breach with the
+Church in 144; and that of the Christians, introduced shortly after 500
+and beginning with the birth of Jesus.
+
+World-history is the picture of the living world into which man sees
+himself woven by birth, ancestry, and progeny, and which he strives
+to comprehend from out of his world-feeling. The historical picture
+of Classical man concentrates itself upon the pure Present. Its
+content is no true Becoming, but a foreground Being with a conclusive
+background of timeless myth, rationalized as “the Golden Age.” This
+Being, however, was a variegated swarming of ups and downs, good
+and ill fortune, a blind “thereabouts,” an eternal alteration, yet
+ever in its changes the same, without direction, goal, or “Time.”
+The cavern-feeling, on the contrary, requires a surveyable history
+consisting in a beginning and an end to the world _that is also the
+beginning and the end of man_--acts of God of mighty magic--and between
+these turns, spellbound to the limits of the Cavern and the ordained
+period, the battle of light and darkness, of the angels and Jazatas
+with Ahriman, Satan, and Eblis, in which Man, his Soul, and his Spirit
+are involved. The present Cavern God can destroy and replace by a
+new creation. The Persian-Chaldean apocalyptic offers to the gaze a
+whole series of such æons, and Jesus, along with his time, stood in
+expectation of the end of the existing one.[414] The consequence of
+this is a historic outlook like that which is natural to Islam even
+to-day--the view over a given time. “The world-view of the people falls
+naturally into three major parts--world-beginning, world-development,
+and world-catastrophe. For the Moslem who feels so deeply ethically,
+the chief essentials in world-development are the salvation-story and
+the ethical way of life, knit into one as the ‘life’ of man. This
+debouches into the world-catastrophe, which contains the sanction of
+the moral history of humanity.”[415]
+
+But, further, for the Magian human-existence, the issue of the feeling
+of _this_ sort of Time and the view of _this_ sort of space is a quite
+peculiar type of piety, which likewise we may put under the sign of
+the Cavern--a _will-less_ resignation, to which the spiritual “I” is
+unknown, and which feels the spiritual “We” that has entered into
+the quickened body as simply a reflection of the divine Light. The
+Arab word for this is Islam (= submission) but this Islam was equally
+Jesus’s normal mode of feeling and that of every other personality
+of religious genius that appeared in this Culture. Classical piety
+is something perfectly different,[416] while, as for that of our own
+Culture, if we could mentally abstract from the piety of St. Theresa
+and Luther and Pascal their Ego--that Ego which wills to maintain
+itself against, to submit to, or even to be extinguished by the Divine
+Infinite--there would be nothing left. The Faustian prime-sacrament
+of Contrition presupposes the strong and free will that can overcome
+itself. But it is precisely the _impossibility of an Ego as a free
+power_ in the face of the divine that constitutes “Islam.” Every
+attempt to meet the operations of God with a personal purpose or even a
+personal opinion is “_masiga_,”--that is, not an evil willing, but an
+evidence that the powers of darkness and evil have taken possession of
+a man and expelled the divine from him. The Magian waking-consciousness
+is merely the _theatre_ of a battle between these two powers and not,
+so to say, a power in itself. Moreover, in this kind of world-happening
+there is no place for individual causes and effects, let alone any
+universally effective dynamic concatenation thereof, and consequently
+there is no _necessary_ connexion between sin and punishment, no
+_claim_ to reward, no old-Israelitish “righteousness.” Things of this
+order the true piety of this Culture regards as far beneath it. The
+laws of nature are not something settled for ever that God can alter
+only by the method of miracle--they are (so to put it) the ordinary
+state of an autocratic divine will, not possessing in themselves
+anything of the logical necessity that they have for Faustian souls.
+In the entire world-cavern there is but _one_ Cause, which lies
+_immediately_ behind all visible workings, and this is the Godhead,
+which, as itself, acts without causes. Even to speculate upon causes in
+connexion with God is sinful.
+
+From this basic feeling proceeds the Magian idea of Grace. This
+underlies all sacraments of this Culture (especially the Magian
+proto-sacrament of Baptism) and forms a contrast of the deepest
+intensity with the Faustian idea of Contrition. Contrition presupposes
+the will of an Ego, but Grace knows of no such thing. It was
+Augustine’s high achievement to develop this essentially Islamic
+thought with an inexorable logic, and with a penetration so thorough
+that since Pelagius the Faustian Soul has tried by any and every route
+to circumvent this certainty--which for _it_ constitutes an imminent
+danger of self-destruction--and in using Augustinian propositions to
+express its own proper consciousness of God has ever misunderstood and
+transvalued them. Actually, Augustine was the last great thinker of
+Early Arabian Scholasticism, anything but a Western intellect.[417]
+Not only was he at times a Manichæan, but he remained so even as a
+Christian in some important characteristics, and his closest relations
+are to be found amongst the Persian theologians of the later Avesta,
+with their doctrines of the Store of Grace of the Holy and of absolute
+guilt. For him grace is the substantial inflowing of something divine
+into the human Pneuma, itself also substantial.[418] The Godhead
+radiates it; man receives it, but does not acquire it. From Augustine,
+as from Spinoza so many centuries later,[419] the notion of force is
+absent, and for both the problem of freedom refers not to the Ego and
+its Will, but to the part of the universal Pneuma that is infused into
+a man and its relation to the rest of him. Magian waking-being is the
+_theatre_ of a conflict between the two world-substances of light
+and darkness. The Early Faustian thinkers such as Duns Scotus and
+William of Occam, on the contrary, see a contest inherent in dynamic
+waking-consciousness _itself_, a contest of the two forces of the
+Ego--namely, will and reason,[420] and so imperceptibly the question
+posed by Augustine changes into another, which he himself would have
+been incapable of understanding--are willing and thinking free forces,
+or are they not? Answer this question as we may, one thing at any rate
+is certain, that the individual ego has _to wage_ this war and not to
+suffer it. The Faustian Grace refers to the success of the Will and not
+to the species of a substance. Says the Westminster Confession of the
+Presbyterians (1646): “The rest of Mankind, God was pleased, according
+to the unsearchable Counsel of his own Will, whereby he extendeth, or
+withholdeth Mercy, as he pleaseth, for the Glory of his Sovereign Power
+over his Creatures, to pass by; and to ordain them to Dishonour and
+Wrath, for their Sin, to the Praise of his glorious Justice.” The other
+conception, that the idea of Grace excludes every individual will and
+every cause but the One, that it is sinful even to question why man
+suffers, finds an expression in one of the most powerful poems known to
+world-history, a poem that came into being in the midst of the Arabian
+pre-Culture and is in inward grandeur unparalleled by any product of
+that Culture itself--the Book of Job.[421] It is not Job, but his
+friends who look for a sin as the cause of his troubles. They--like the
+bulk of mankind in this and every other Culture, present-day readers
+and critics of the work, therefore, included--lack the metaphysical
+depth to get near the ultimate meaning of suffering within the
+world-cavern. Only the Hero himself fights through the fulfilment, to
+pure Islam, and he becomes thereby the only possible figure of tragedy
+that Magian feeling can set up by the side of our Faust.[422]
+
+
+III
+
+The waking-consciousness of every Culture allows of two ways of
+inwardness, that in which contemplative feeling spreads into
+understanding, and that in which the reverse takes place. The Magian
+contemplation is called by Spinoza “intellectual love of God,” and by
+his Sufist contemporaries in Asia “extinction in God” (_mahw_); it may
+be intensified to the Magian ecstasy that was vouchsafed to Plotinus
+several times, and to his pupil Porphyry once in old age. The other
+side, the rabbinical dialectic, appears in Spinoza as geometrical
+method and in the Arabian-Jewish “Late” philosophy in general as
+Kalaam. Both, however, rest upon the fact that there in Magian there
+is no individual-ego, but a single Pneuma present simultaneously in
+each and all of the elect, which is likewise Truth. It cannot be too
+strongly emphasized that the resultant root-idea of the _ijma_ is much
+more than a concept or notion, that it can be a lived experience of
+even overwhelming force, and that all community of the Magian kind
+rests upon it and, as doing so, is removed from community in any other
+Culture. “The mystic Community of Islam extends from the here into the
+beyond; it reaches beyond the grave, in that it comprises the dead
+Moslems of earlier generations, nay, even the righteous of the times
+before Islam. The Moslem feels himself bound up in one unity with them
+all. They help him, and he, too, can in turn increase their beatitude
+by the application of his own merit.”[423] The same, precisely, was
+what the Christians and the Syncretists of the Pseudomorphosis meant
+when they used the words _Polis_ and _Civitas_--these words, which had
+formerly implied a sum of bodies, now denoted a consensus of fellow
+believers. Augustine’s famous _Civitas Dei_ was neither a Classical
+Polis nor a Western Church, but a unity of believers, blessed,
+and angels, exactly as were the communes of Mithras, of Islam, of
+Manichæism, and of Persia. As the community was based upon consensus,
+it was in spiritual things infallible. “My people,” said Mohammed,
+“can never agree in an error,” and the same is premised in Augustine’s
+State of God. With him there was not and could not be any question of
+an infallible Papal ego or of any other sort of authority to settle
+dogmatic truths; that would completely destroy the Magian concept of
+the Consensus. And the same applied in this Culture generally--not only
+to dogma, but also to law[424] and to the State. The Islamic community,
+like that of Porphyry and that of Augustine, embraces the _whole_ of
+the world-cavern, the here and the beyond, the orthodox and the good
+angels and spirits, and within this community the State only formed a
+_smaller unit of the visible side_, a unit, therefore, of which the
+operations were governed by the major whole. In the Magian world,
+consequently, the separation of politics and religion is theoretically
+impossible and nonsensical, whereas in the Faustian Culture the battle
+of Church and State is inherent in the very conceptions--logical,
+necessary, unending. In the Magian, civil and ecclesiastical law are
+simply identical. Side by side with the Emperor of Constantinople stood
+the Patriarch, by the Shah was the Zarathustratema, by the Exilarch
+the Gaon, by the Caliph the Sheikh-ul-Islam, at once superiors and
+subjects. There is not in this the slightest affinity to the Gothic
+relation of Emperor and Pope; equally, all such ideas were alien to
+the Classical world. In the constitution of Diocletian this Magian
+embedding of the State in the community of the faithful was for the
+first time actualized, and by Constantine it was carried into full
+effect. It has been shown already that State, Church, and Nation formed
+a spiritual unit--namely, that part of the orthodox consensus which
+manifested itself in the living man. And hence for the Emperor, as
+ruler of the Faithful--that is, of that portion of the Magian community
+which God had entrusted to him--it was a self-evident duty to conduct
+the Councils so as to bring about the consensus of the elect.
+
+
+IV
+
+But besides the consensus there is another sort of revelation of
+Truth--namely, the “Word of God,” in a perfectly definite and purely
+Magian sense of the phrase, which is equally remote from Classical
+and from Western thought, and has, in consequence, been the source
+of innumerable misunderstandings. The sacred book in which it has
+become visibly evident, in which it has been captured by the spell of
+a sacred script, is part of the stock of every Magian religion.[425]
+In this conception three Magian notions are interwoven each of which,
+even by itself, presents extreme difficulties for us, while their
+simultaneous separateness and oneness is simply inaccessible to our
+religious thought, often though that thought has managed to persuade
+itself to the contrary. These ideas are: God, the Spirit of God,
+the Word of God. That which is written in the prologue of the John
+Gospel--“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God,
+and the Word was God”--had long before come to perfectly natural
+expression as something self-evident in the Persian ideas of Spenta
+Mainyu,[426] and Vohu Mano,[427] and in corresponding Jewish and
+Chaldean conceptions. And it was the kernel for which the conflicts of
+the fourth and fifth centuries concerning the substance of Christ were
+fought. But, for Magian thought, truth is itself a substance,[428] and
+lie (or error) second substance--again the same dualism that opposes
+light and darkness, life and death, good and evil. As substance, truth
+is identical now with God, now with the Spirit of God, now with the
+Word. Only in the light of this can we comprehend sayings like “I am
+the truth and the life” and “My word is the truth,” sayings to be
+understood, as they were meant, with reference to substance. Only so,
+too, can we realize with what eyes the religious man of this Culture
+looked upon his sacred book: in it the invisible truth has entered
+into a visible kind of existence, or, in the words of John i, 14: “The
+Word became flesh and dwelt among us.” According to the Yasna the
+Avesta was sent down from heaven, and according to the Talmud Moses
+received the Torah volume by volume from God. A Magian revelation is a
+mystical process in which the eternal and unformed word of God--or the
+Godhead as Word--enters into a man in order to assume through him the
+manifest, sensible form of sounds and especially of letters. _“Koran”
+means “reading.”_ Mohammed in a vision saw in the heaven treasured
+rolls of scripture that he (although he had never learned how to read)
+was able to decipher “in the name of the Lord.”[429] This is a form of
+revelation that in the Magian Culture is the rule and in other Cultures
+is not even the exception,[430] but it was only from the time of Cyrus
+that it began to take shape. The old Israelitish prophets, and no doubt
+Zarathustra also, see and hear in ecstasy things that afterwards they
+spread abroad. The Deuteronomic code (621) was given out as having
+been “found in the Temple,” which meant that it was to be taken as
+the wisdom of the Father. The first (and a very deliberate) example
+of a “Koran” is the book of Ezekiel, which the author received in a
+thought-out vision from God and “swallowed” (iii, 1-3). Here, expressed
+in the crudest imaginable form, is the basis on which later the idea
+and shape of all apocalyptic writing was founded. But by degrees this
+_substantial_ form of reception came to be one of the requisites for
+any book to be canonical. It was in post-Exilic times that the idea
+arose of the Tables of the Law received by Moses on Sinai; later
+such an origin came to be assumed for the whole Torah, and about the
+Maccabæan period for the bulk of the Old Testament. From the Council
+of Jabna (about 90 B.C.) the whole word was regarded as inspired and
+delivered in the most literal sense. But the same evolution took place
+in the Persian religion up to the sanctification of the Avesta in the
+third century, and the same idea of a literal delivery appears in the
+second vision of Hermas, in the Apocalypses, and in the Chaldean and
+Gnostic and Mandæan writings; lastly, it underlies, as a tacit natural
+basis, all the ideas that the Neo-Pythagoreans and the Neo-Platonists
+formed of the writings of their old masters. “Canon” is the technical
+expression for the totality of writings that are accepted by a religion
+as delivered. It was as canons in this sense that the Hermetic
+collection and the corpus of Chaldean oracles came into being from
+200--the latter a sacred book of the Neoplatonists which alone was
+admitted by Proclus, the “Father” of this Church, to stand with Plato’s
+_Timæus_.
+
+Originally, the young Jesus-religion, like Jesus himself, recognized
+the Jewish canon. The first Gospels set up no sort of claim to be the
+Word made visible. _The John Gospel is the first Christian writing
+of which the evident purpose is that of a Koran_, and its unknown
+author is the originator of the idea that there could be and must be
+a Christian Koran. The grave and difficult decision whether the new
+religion should break with that which Jesus had believed in clothed
+itself of deep necessity in the question whether the Jewish scriptures
+might still be regarded as incarnations of the one truth. The answer of
+the John Gospel was tacitly, and that of Marcion openly, no, but that
+of the Fathers was, quite illogically, yes.
+
+It followed from this metaphysical conception of the essence of a
+sacred book that the expressions “God speaks” and “the Scripture says”
+were, in a manner wholly alien to our thought, completely identical.
+To us it is suggestive of the Arabian Nights that God himself should
+be spellbound in these words and letters and could be unsealed and
+compelled to reveal the truth by the adepts of this magic. Exegesis
+no less than inspiration and delivery is a process of mystical
+under-meaning (Mark i, 22). Hence the reverence--in diametrical
+opposition to the Classical feeling--with which these precious
+manuscripts were cared for, their ornamentation by every means known
+to the young Magian art, and the appearance again and again of new
+scripts which, in the eyes of their users, alone possessed the power of
+capturing the truth sent down.
+
+But such a Koran is by its very nature unconditionally right, and
+therefore unalterable and incapable of improvement.[431] There arose,
+in consequence, the habit of secret interpretations meant to bring
+the text into harmony with the convictions of the time. A masterpiece
+of this kind is Justinian’s Digests, but the same applies not only to
+every book of the Bible, but also (we need not doubt) to the Gathas
+of the Avesta and even to the then current manuscripts of Plato,
+Aristotle, and other authorities of the Pagan theology. More important
+still is the assumption, traceable in every Magian religion, of a
+secret revelation, or a secret meaning of the Scriptures, preserved
+not by being written down, but in the memory of adepts and propagated
+orally. According to Jewish notions, Moses received at Sinai not
+only the written, but _also a secret oral Torah_,[432] which it was
+forbidden to commit to writing. “God foresaw,” says the Talmud, “that
+one day a time would come when the Heathen would possess themselves of
+the Torah and would say to Israel: ‘We, too, are sons of God.’ Then
+will the Lord say: ‘Only he who knows my secrets is my son.’ And what
+are the secrets of God? The oral teachings.”[433] The Talmud, then, in
+the form in which it is generally accessible, contains only a part of
+the religious material, and it is the same with Christian texts of the
+early period. It has often been observed[434] that Mark speaks of the
+Visitation and of the Resurrection only in hints, and that John only
+touches upon the doctrine of the Paraclete and omits the institution
+of the Lord’s Supper entirely. The initiates understood what was
+meant, and the unbeliever ought not to know it. Later there was a
+whole “secret discipline” which bound Christians to observe silence in
+the presence of unbelievers concerning the baptismal confession and
+other matters. With the Chaldeans, Neopythagoreans, Cynics, Gnostics,
+and especially the sects from Jewish to Islamic, this tendency went
+to such lengths that the greater part of their secret doctrines is
+unknown to us. Concerning the Word thus preserved only in the minds
+there was a _consensus of silence_, the more so as each believer was
+certain that the other “knew.” We ourselves, as it is upon the most
+important things that we are most emphatic and forthright, run the
+risk of misinterpreting Magian doctrines through taking the part that
+was expressed for the whole that existed, and the profane literal
+meaning of words for their real significance. Gothic Christianity had
+no secrets and hence it doubly mistrusted the Talmud, which it rightly
+regarded as being only the foreground of Jewish doctrine.
+
+Pure Magian, too, is the Kabbalah, which out of numbers, letter-forms,
+points, and strokes, unfolds secret significances, and therefore cannot
+but be as old as the Word itself that was sent down as Substance. The
+secret dogma of the creation of the world out of the two-and-twenty
+letters of the Hebrew alphabet, and that of the throne-chariot of
+Ezekiel’s Vision, are already traceable in Maccabæan times. Closely
+related to this is the allegorical exegesis of the sacred texts. All
+the tractates of the Mishnah, all the Fathers, all the Alexandrian
+philosophers are full of it; in Alexandria the whole Classical
+mythology and even Plato were treated in this way and brought into
+analogy (Moses = Musæus) with the Jewish prophets.
+
+The only strictly _scientific_ method that an unalterable Koran leaves
+open for progressive opinion is that of commentary. As by hypothesis
+the “word” of an authority cannot be improved upon, the only resource
+is reinterpretation. No one in Alexandria would ever have asserted
+that Plato was in “error”; instead, he was glossed upon. It was done
+in the strictly constructed forms of the Halakha, and the fixation of
+this exegesis in writing takes the commentary shape that dominates
+all religious, philosophical, and savant literatures of this Culture.
+Following the procedure of the Gnostics, the Fathers compiled written
+commentaries upon the Bible, and similarly the Pehlevi commentary
+of the Zend appeared by the side of the Avesta, and the Midrash by
+the side of the Jewish canon. But the “Roman” jurists of about A.D.
+200 and the “Late Classical” philosophers--that is, the Schoolmen of
+the growing cult-Church--went just the same way; the Apocalypse of
+this Church, commented over and over again after Posidonius, was the
+_Timæus_ of Plato. The Mishnah is one vast commentary upon the Torah.
+And when the oldest exegetes had become themselves authorities and
+their writings Korans, commentaries were written upon commentaries, as
+by Simplicius, the last Platonist, in the West, by the Amoraim, who
+added the Gemara to the Mishnah in the East, and by the jurists who
+compiled the Imperial Constitutions into the Digests at Byzantium.
+
+This method, which fictitiously refers back every saying to an
+immediate inspired delivery, was brought to its keenest edge in
+the Talmudic and the Islamic theologies. A new Halakha or a Hadith
+is only valid when it can be referred through an unbroken chain of
+guarantors back to Moses or Mohammed.[435] The solemn formula for this
+in Jerusalem was “Let it come over me! So have I heard it from my
+teacher.”[436] In the Zend the citation of the chain of warranty is the
+rule, and Irenæus justifies his theology by the fact that a chain goes
+back from him through Polycarp to the primitive Community. Into the
+Early Christian literature this Halakha-form entered so self-evidently
+that no one remarked it for what it was. Apart altogether from the
+constant references to the Law and the Prophets, it appears in the
+superscription of the four Gospels (“_according to_” Mark), each of
+which had thus to present its warrant if authority was to be claimed
+for the words of the Lord that it presented.[437] This established
+the chain back to the Truth that was incarnate in Jesus, and it is
+impossible to exaggerate the intense reality of this in the world-idea
+of an Augustine or a Jerome. This is the basis of the practice,
+which spread even more widely from the time of Alexander onwards, of
+providing religious and philosophical writings with names,[438] like
+Enoch, Solomon, Ezra, Hermes, Pythagoras--guarantors and vessels of
+divine wisdom, in whom, therefore, the Word had been made Flesh of
+old. We still possess a number of Apocalypses bearing the name of
+Baruch, who was then compared with Zarathustra, and we can scarcely
+form an idea of what in the way of literature circulated under the
+names of Aristotle and Pythagoras. The “Theology of Aristotle” was
+one of the most influential works of Neoplatonism. And, lastly,
+this the metaphysical presupposition for the style and the deeper
+meaning of _citation_, which was employed by Fathers, Rabbis, “Greek”
+philosophers, and “Roman” jurists, and eventuated on the one hand in
+the Law of Valentinian III,[439] and on the other in the elimination
+from the Jewish and Christian canons of apocryphal writings--a
+fundamental notion, which differentiated the literary stock according
+to difference of _substance_.
+
+
+V
+
+With such researches to build upon, it will become possible in the
+future to write a history of the _Magian group of religions_. It forms
+an inseparable unit of spirit and evolution, and let no one imagine
+that any individual one of them can be really comprehended without
+reference to the rest. Their birth, unfolding, and inward confirmation
+occupy the period 0-500. It corresponds exactly to the rise of the
+Western religion from the Cluniac movement to the Reformation. A
+mutual give-and-take, a confusingly rich blossoming, ripening,
+transformation--overlayings, migrations, adaptations, rejections--fill
+these centuries, without any sort of dependence of one system upon
+the others being demonstrable. But only the forms and the structures
+change; in the depths it is one and the same spirituality, and in all
+the languages of this world of religions it is always itself that it
+brings to expression.
+
+In the wide realm of old-Babylonian fellahdom young peoples lived.
+There everything was making ready. The first premonitions of the future
+awoke about 700 B.C. in the prophetic religions of the Persians, Jews,
+and Chaldeans. An image of creation of the same kind that later was to
+be the preface of the Torah showed itself in clear outlines, and with
+that an orientation, a direction, a goal of desire, was set. Something
+was descried in the far future, indefinitely and darkly still, but with
+a profound certainty that it would come. From that time on men lived
+with the vision of this, with the feeling of a mission.
+
+The second wave swelled up steeply in the Apocalyptic currents after
+300. Here it was the Magian waking-consciousness that arose and built
+itself a metaphysic of Last Things, based already upon the prime-symbol
+of the coming Culture, the Cavern. Ideas of an awful End of the World,
+of the Last Judgment, of Resurrection, Paradise, and Hell, and with
+them the grand thought of a process of salvation in which earth’s
+destiny and man’s were one, burst forth everywhere--we cannot say what
+land or people it was that created them--mantled in wondrous scenes and
+figures and names. The Messiah-figure presents itself, complete at one
+stroke. Satan’s temptation of the Saviour[440] is told as a tale. But
+simultaneously there welled up a deep and ever-increasing fear before
+this certainty of an implacable--and imminent--limit of all happening,
+before the moment in which there would be only Past. Magian Time, the
+“hour,” directedness under the Cavern, imparted a new pulse to life and
+a new import to the word “Destiny.” Man’s attitude before the Deity
+suddenly became completely different. In the dedicatory inscription of
+the great basilica of Palmyra (which was long thought to be Christian)
+Baal was called the good, the compassionate, the mild; and this feeling
+penetrated, with the worship of Rahman, right to southern Arabia.
+It fills the psalms of the Chaldeans and the teachings _about_ the
+God-sent Zarathustra that took the place of his teachings. And it
+stirred the Jewry of Maccabæan time--most of the psalms were written
+then--and all the other communities, long forgotten now, that lay
+between the Classical and the Indian worlds.
+
+The third upheaval came in the time of Cæsar and brought to birth the
+great religions of Salvation. And with this the Culture rose to bright
+day, and what followed continuously throughout one or two centuries was
+an intensity of religious experience, both unsurpassable and at long
+last unbearable. Such a tension bordering upon the breaking point the
+Gothic, the Vedic, and every other Culture-soul has known, once and
+once only, in its young morning.
+
+Now arose in the Persian, the Mandæan, the Jewish, the Christian,
+circles of belief, and in that of the Western Pseudomorphosis as
+well--just as in the Indian, the Classical, and the Western ages
+of Chivalry--the Grand Myth. In this Arabian Culture religious and
+national heroism are no more distinctly separable than nation,
+church, and state, or sacred and secular law. The prophet merges with
+the fighter, and the story of a great Sufferer rises to the rank of
+a national epic. The powers of light and darkness, fabulous beings,
+angels and devils, Satan and the good spirits wrestle together; all
+nature is a battle-ground from the beginning of the world to its
+annihilation. Down below in the world of mankind are enacted the
+adventures and sufferings of the heralds, the heroes, and the martyrs
+of religion. Every nation, in the sense of the word attaching to this
+Culture, possessed its heroic saga. In the East the life of the Persian
+prophet inspired an epic poetry of grand outlines. At his birth the
+Zarathustra-laughter pealed through the heavens, and all nature echoed
+it. In the West the suffering of Jesus, ever broadening and developing,
+became _the veritable epic of the Christian nation_, and by its side
+there grew up a chain of legends of his childhood which in the end
+fructified a whole genre of poetry. The figure of the Mother of God
+and the deeds of the Apostles became, like the stories of the Western
+Crusade-heroes, the centre of extended romances (Acts of Thomas,
+Pseudo-Clementines) which in the second century sprang up everywhere
+from the Nile to the Tigris. In the Jewish Haggada and in the Targums
+is brought together a rich measure of legends about Saul, David, the
+Patriarchs, and the great Tannaim, like Schuda and Akiba,[441] and the
+insatiable fancy of the age seized also upon what it could reach of the
+Late-Classical cult-legends and founder-stories (lives of Pythagoras,
+Hermes, Apollonius of Tyana).
+
+With the end of the second century the sounds of this exaltation
+die away. The flowering of epic poetry is past, and the mystical
+penetration and dogmatic analysis of the religious material begin. The
+doctrines of the new Churches are brought into theological systems.
+Heroism yields to Scholastism, poetry to thought, the seer and seeker
+to the priest. The early Scholasticism which ends about 200 (as the
+Western about 1200) comprises the whole Gnosis--in the very broadest
+sense, the great Contemplation--the author of the John Gospel,
+Valentinus, Bardesanes, and Marcion, the Apologists and the early
+Fathers, up to Irenæus and Tertullian, the last Tannaim up to Rabbi
+Jehuda, the completer of the Mishna, the Neopythagoreans and Hermetics
+of Alexandria. All this corresponds with, in the West, the School of
+Chartres, Anselm, Joachim of Floris, Bernard of Clairvaux, Hugo de St.
+Victor. Full Scholasticism begins with Neoplatonism, with Clement and
+Origen, the first Amoraim, and the creators of the newer Avesta under
+Ardeshir (226-241) and Sapor I, the Mazdaist high-priest Tanvasar
+above all. Simultaneously a higher religiousness begins to separate
+from the peasant’s piety of the countryside, which still lingered in
+the apocalyptic disposition, and thenceforth maintained itself almost
+unaltered under various names right into the fellahdom of the Turkish
+age, while in the urban and more intellectual upper world the Persian,
+Jewish, and Christian community was absorbed by that of Islam.
+
+Slowly and steadily now the great Churches moved to fulfilment. It
+had been decided--the most important religious result of the second
+century--that the outcome of the teaching of Jesus was not to be
+a transformation of Judaism, but a new Church, which took its way
+westward while Judaism, without loss of inward strength, turned itself
+to the East. To the third century belong the great mental structures of
+theology. A _modus vivendi_ with historical actuality had been reached,
+the end of the world had receded into the distance, and a new dogmatic
+grew up to explain the new world-picture. The arrival of mature
+Scholasticism presupposes faith in the duration of the doctrines that
+it sets itself to establish.
+
+Viewing the results of their efforts, we find that the Aramæan
+motherland developed its forms in three directions. In the East, out
+of the Zoroastrian religion of Achæmenid times and the remains of
+its sacred literature, there formed itself the Mazdaist Church, with
+a strict hierarchy and laborious ritual, with sacraments, mass, and
+confession (_patet_). As mentioned above, Tanvasar made a beginning
+with the collection and ordering of the _new_ Avesta; under Sapor I
+(as contemporaneously in the Talmud) the profane texts of medicine,
+law, and astronomy were added; and the rounding-off was the work of
+the Church magnate Mahraspand under Sapor II (309-379). The immediate
+accretion of a commentary in Pehlevi was only what was to be expected
+in the Magian Culture. The new Avesta, like the Jewish and the
+Christian Bibles, was a canon of separate writings, and we learn
+that amongst the Nasks (originally twenty-one) now lost there was a
+gospel of Zarathustra, the conversion-story of Vishtaspa, a Genesis, a
+law-book, and a genealogical book with trees from the Creation to the
+Persian kings, while the Vendidad, which Geldner calls the Leviticus of
+the Persians, was--most significantly--preserved complete.
+
+A new religious founder appeared in 242, in the reign of Sapor I. This
+was Mani, who, rejecting “redeemerless” Judaism and Hellenism, knit
+together the whole mass of Magian religions in one of the most powerful
+theological creations of all times--for which in 276 the Mazdaist
+priesthood crucified him. Equipped by his father (who quite late in
+life abandoned his family to enter a Mandæan order) with all the
+knowledge of the period, he unified the basic ideas of the Chaldeans
+and Persians with those of Johannine, Eastern, Christianity--a task
+which had been attempted before in the Christian-Persian Gnosis of
+Bardesanes, but without any idea of founding a new church.[442] He
+conceived of the mystical figures of the Johannine Logos (for him
+identical with the Persian Vohu Mano), the Zarathustra of the Avesta
+legends, and the Buddha of the late texts as divine Emanations, and
+himself he proclaimed to be the Paraclete of the John Gospel and
+the Saoshyant of the Persians. As we now know, thanks to the Turfan
+discoveries which included parts of Mani’s works (till then completely
+lost), the Church-language of the Mazdaists, Manichæans, and Nestorians
+was--independently of the current languages--Pehlevi.
+
+In the West the two cult-Churches developed (in Greek[443]) a theology
+that was not only cognate with this, but to a great extent identical
+with it. In the time of Mani began the theological fusion of the
+Aramæan-Chaldean sun-religion and the Aramæan-Persian Mithras cult into
+one system, whose first great “Father” was Iamblichus (_c._ 300)--the
+contemporary of Athanasius, but also of Diocletian, the Emperor who in
+295 made Mithras the God of a henotheistic State-religion. Spiritually,
+at any rate, its priests were in nowise distinguishable from those of
+Christianity. Proclus (he, too, a true “Father”) received in dreams
+elucidations of a difficult text-passage; to him the _Timæus_ and the
+Chaldean oracles were canonical, and he would gladly have seen all
+other writings of the philosophers destroyed. His hymns, tokens of
+the lacerations of a true eremite, implore Helios and other helpers
+to protect him against evil spirits. Hierocles wrote a moral breviary
+for the believers of the Neopythagorean community, which it needs a
+keen eye to distinguish from Christian work. Bishop Synesius was a
+prince-prelate of Neoplatonism before becoming one of Christianity--and
+the change did not involve an act of conversion; he kept his theology
+and only altered its names. It was possible for the Neoplatonist
+Asclepiades to write a great work on the likeness of all theologies. We
+possess Pagan gospels and hagiologies as well as Christian. Apollonius
+wrote the life of Pythagoras, Marinus that of Proclus, Damascius that
+of Isidore; and there is not the slightest difference between these
+works, which begin and end with prayers, and the Christian Acts of the
+Martyrs. Porphyry describes faith, love, hope, and truth as the four
+divine elements.
+
+Between these Churches of the East and the West we see, looking south
+from Edessa, the Talmudic Church (the “Synagogue”) with Aramaic
+as its written language. Against these great and firm foundations
+Jewish-Christians (such as Ebionites and Elkazites), Mandæans, and
+likewise Chaldeans (unless we regard Manichæism as a reconstruction
+of that religion) were unable to hold their own. Breaking down into
+numberless sects, they either faded out in the shadow of the great
+Churches or were absorbed in their structure as the last Marcionites
+and Montanists were absorbed into Manichæism. By about 300, outside the
+Pagan, Christian, Persian, Jewish, and Manichæan Churches no important
+Magian religions remained in being.
+
+
+VI
+
+Along with this ripe Scholasticism, there set in also, from 200,
+the effort to identify the _visible_ community, as its organization
+became ever stricter, with the organism of the State. This followed of
+necessity from the world-feeling of Magian man, and in turn it led to
+the transformation of the rulers into caliphs--lords of a creed-society
+far more than of domains--to the idea of orthodoxy as the premiss of
+real citizenship; to the duty of persecuting false religions (the
+“Holy War” of Islam is as old as the Culture itself, and the first
+centuries were full of it); and to a special régime within the State
+of unbelievers--just tolerated and under laws and governance of their
+own[444] (for the law God had given was not for heretics)--and, with
+it, the ghetto manner of living.
+
+First, Osrhoene, in the centre of the Aramæan landscape, adopted
+Christianity as the State religion about 200. Then Mazdaism assumed the
+same position in the Sassanid Empire (226) while under Aurelian (d.
+275) and above all Diocletian (295) Syncretism as a compound of the
+Divus, Sol, and Mithras cults became the state religion of the Roman
+Imperium. Constantine in 312, King Trdat of Armenia about 321, and
+King Mirian of Georgia a few years later, went over to Christianity.
+In the far South, Saba must already have become Christian in the
+third century, Axum in the fourth; on the other hand, simultaneously
+with these, the Himaryite State became Jewish, and there was one more
+effort, that of Julian, to bring back the Pagan Church to supremacy.
+
+In opposition to this--likewise in all the religions of this
+Culture--we find the spread of Monasticism, with its radical aversion
+from State, history, and actuality in general. For after all the
+conflict of being and waking-being--that is, of politics and religion,
+of history and nature--could not be completely mastered by the form
+of the Magian Church and its identification with State and nation.
+Race breaks forth into life in these mind-creations and overpowers the
+divine, precisely because the latter has absorbed the worldly into
+itself. But here there was no conflict of Church and State as in the
+Gothic age, and consequently the split in the nation was between the
+worldly-pious and the ascetics. A Magian religion relates exclusively
+to the divine spark, the Pneuma, in the man, that which he shares
+with the invisible community of the faithful and blessed spirits. The
+rest of the man belongs to Evil and Darkness. But in the man it is
+the divine that must rule, overcoming, suppressing, destroying the
+other. In this Culture the askete is not only the veritable priest--the
+secular priest, as to-day in Russia, is never really respected, and
+mostly he is allowed to marry--but, what is more, he is the true man
+of piety. Outside monasticism it was simply not possible to fulfil
+the demands of religion, and consequently communities of repentance,
+monasteries, and convents assume quite early a position that, for
+metaphysical reasons, they could never have had in India or China--let
+alone in the West, where the Orders were working and fighting--that
+is, dynamic--units.[445] Consequently, we must not regard the people
+of the Magian world as divided into the “world” and the “cloister” as
+two definitely separate modes of life, with equal possibilities of
+fulfilling all the demands of religion. Every pious person _was_ a monk
+in some sort.[446] Between world and cloister there was no opposition,
+but only a difference of _degree_. Magian churches and orders are
+homogeneous communities which are only to be distinguished from one
+another by extent. The community of Peter was an Order, that of Paul a
+Church, while the Mithras religion is at once almost too wide for the
+one designation and too narrow for the other.
+
+_Every Magian Church is itself an Order_ and it was only in respect
+of human weakness that there were stages and grades of askesis, and
+these not ordered, but only permitted, as among the Marcionites
+and the Manichæans (_electi, auditores_). And, in truth, a Magian
+nation is nothing but the sum, _the order of all the orders_, which,
+constituted in smaller and smaller, stricter and stricter groups, come
+out finally in the eremites, dervishes, and stylites, in whom nothing
+more is of the world, whose waking-consciousness now belongs only
+to the Pneuma. Setting aside the prophetic religions--out of which,
+and between which, the excitation of Apocalypse generated numerous
+order-like communities--the two cult-Churches of the West produced
+unnumbered monks, friars, and orders, distinguishable from one another
+in the end only by the name of the Deity upon whom they called. All
+observed fasting, prayer, celibacy, poverty. It is very doubtful which
+of the two Churches in 300 was the more ascetic in its tendency. The
+Neoplatonist monk Sarapion went into the desert in order to devote
+himself entirely to studying the hymns of Orpheus. Damascius, guided
+by a dream, withdrew into a noisome cave in order to pray continuously
+to Cybele.[447] The schools of philosophy were nothing but ascetic
+orders; the Neopythagoreans stood close to the Jewish Essenes; the
+Mithras cult, a true order, admitted only men to its communion and
+its fraternities; the Emperor Julian had the intention of endowing
+pagan monasteries. The Mandæan religion seems to have been a group
+of order-communities of varying rigour; amongst them was that of
+John the Baptist. Christian monasticism did not begin with Pachomius
+(320); he was merely the builder of the first cloister. The movement
+began with the original community in Jerusalem itself. The Gospel of
+Matthew and almost all “Acts of the Apostles” testify to rigorously
+ascetic sentiment.[448] The Persian and Nestorian Churches developed
+the monastic idea further, and finally Islam assimilated it to the
+full. To this day Oriental piety is dominated by the Moslem Orders and
+Brotherhoods. And Jewry followed the same line of evolution, from the
+Karæi[449] (Qaraites) of the eighth century to the Polish Hasidim of
+the eighteenth.[450]
+
+Christianity, which even in the second century was hardly more than an
+extended Order, and whose public influence was out of all proportion
+to the number of its adherents, grew suddenly vast about the year
+250. This is the epochal moment in which the last city-cults of the
+Classical effaced themselves before, _not Christianity, but the
+new-born Pagan Church_. The records of the Fratres Arvales in Rome
+break off in 241, and the last cult-inscriptions at Olympia are of
+265. At the same time, the cumulation of the most diverse priestly
+characters in one man became customary,[451] implying that these usages
+were felt no longer as specific, but as usages of one single religion.
+And this religion set out to _convert_, spreading itself far and wide
+over the lands of the Hellenistic-Roman stock. The Christian religion,
+on the other hand, was alone in spreading (_c._ 300) over the great
+Arabian field. And for that very reason it was inevitable that inner
+contradiction should now be set up in it. Due, not now to the spiritual
+dispositions of particular men, but to the spirit of the particular
+landscapes, these contradictions led to the break-up of Christianity
+into several religions--and for ever.
+
+The _controversy concerning the nature of Christ_ was the issue on
+which this conflict came up for decision. The matter in dispute was
+just those problems of substance which in the same form and with
+the same tendency fill the thoughts of all other Magian theologies.
+Neoplatonic Scholasticism, Porphyry, Iamblichus, and above all Proclus
+treated it in a Western formulation, by modes of thought closely akin
+to Philo’s and even to Paul’s. The relation between the Primary One,
+Nus, Logos, the Father, and the Mediator was considered with reference
+to the substantial. Was the process thereof one of emanation, of
+partition, or of pervasion? Was one contained in the other, are they
+identical, or mutually exclusive? Was the Triad at the same time a
+Monad? In the East a different constitution of the problem is evidenced
+already in the premisses of the John Gospel and the Bardesanian Gnosis:
+the relation of Ahuramazda to the Holy Spirit (Spenta Mainyu) and
+the nature of Vohu Mano gave plenty of occupation to the Avestan
+“fathers”; and it was just at the time of the decisive Councils of
+Ephesus and Chalcedon that we find the temporary triumph of Zrvanism
+(438-457), with its primacy of the divine world-course (Zrvan as
+historic Time) over the divine substances marking a peak of dogmatic
+battle. Later, Islam took up the whole subject over again and sought to
+solve it in relation to the nature (_Wesenheit_) of Mohammed and the
+Koran. The problem had been there, ever since a Magian mankind had come
+into being--very much as the specifically Western will-problem, our
+counterpart to the substance-problem, was posed in the beginnings of
+Faustian thought. There is no need to look for these problems; they are
+there as soon as the Culture thinks, they are the fundamental form of
+its thought, and come to the front, uncalled-for and sometimes not even
+perceived, in all its studies.
+
+But the three Christian solutions predetermined by the three landscapes
+of East, West, and South were all present from the first, implicit
+already in the main tendencies of Gnosticism, which we may indicate by
+the names of Bardesanes, Basilides, and Valentinus. Their meeting-point
+was Edessa, where the streets rang with the battle-cries of the
+Nestorians against the victors of Ephesus and, anon, with the εἷς θεός
+shout of the Monophysites, demanding that Bishop Ibas should be thrown
+to the wild beasts of the circus.
+
+The great question was formulated by Athanasius, whose intellectual
+origins lay in the Pseudomorphosis and who had many affinities with
+his Pagan contemporary Iamblichus. Against Arius, who saw in Christ
+a demigod, merely _like_ in substance to the Father, he maintained
+that Father and Son were of _the same_ substance (θεότης) which
+in Christ had assumed a human σῶμα. “The Word became Flesh”--this
+formula of the West depends upon visible facts of the cult-Churches,
+and the understanding of the Word upon constant contemplation of the
+picturable. Here in the iconodule West, where in these very times
+Iamblichus wrote his book concerning God-statues in which the divine
+was substantially present and worked miracles,[452] the abstraction of
+the Triunity was always effectively accompanied by the sensuous-human
+relation of Mother and Son, and it is the latter which it is impossible
+to eliminate from the thought-processes of Athanasius.
+
+With the recognition of the homoousia of Father and Son the real
+problem was for the first time posed--namely, the attitude of the
+Magian dualism to the historical phenomenon of the Son himself. In the
+world-cavern there was divine and human substance, in man a part in
+divine Pneuma and the individual soul somehow related to the “flesh.”
+But what of Christ?
+
+It was a decisive factor--one of the results of Actium--that the
+contest was fought out in the Greek tongue and in the territory of the
+Pseudomorphosis--that is, under the full influence of the “Caliph”
+of the Western Church. Constantine had even been the convener and
+president of the Council of Nicæa, where the doctrine of Athanasius
+carried the day. In the East, with its Aramaic speech and thought,
+these doings were (as we know from the letters of Aphrahat) hardly
+followed at all; there men saw no cause to quarrel about what, so far
+as they were concerned, had long ago been settled. The breach between
+East and West, a consequence of the Council of Ephesus (431) separated
+two Christian _nations_, that of the “Persian Church” and that of
+the Greek Church, but this was no more than the manifestation of a
+difference, inherent from the first, between _modes of thought_ proper
+to the two different landscapes. Nestorius and the whole East saw in
+Christ the Second Adam, the Divine Envoy of the last æon. Mary had
+borne a _man_-child in whose human and created substance (_physis_)
+the godly, uncreated element _dwelt_. The West, on the contrary, saw
+in Mary the Mother of a _God_: the divine and the human substance
+formed in his body (_persona_, in the Classical idiom[453]) a unity,
+named by Cyril ἕνωσις.[454] When the Council of Ephesus had recognized
+the mother of God, her who gave birth to God, the city of Diana’s old
+renown burst into a truly Classical orgy of celebration.[455]
+
+But long ere this the Syrian Apollinaris[456] had heralded the
+“Southern” idea of the matter--that in the living Christ there was not
+merely a substance, but a single substance. The divine had transmuted
+itself into, not mingled itself with, a human substance (no κρᾶσις,
+as Gregory Nazianzen maintained in opposition; significantly enough,
+the best way of expressing the Monophysite idea is through concepts of
+Spinoza--the _one_ substance in another mode). The Monophysites called
+the Christ of the Council of Chalcedon (451, where the West once more
+prevailed) “the idol with the two faces.” They not only fell away
+from the Church, they broke out in fierce risings in Palestine and
+Egypt; and when in Justinian’s time the troops of Persia--that is, of
+Mazdaism--penetrated to the Nile, they were hailed by the Monophysites
+as liberators.
+
+The fundamental meaning of this desperate conflict which raged
+for a century--not over scholarly concepts, but over the soul of
+a landscape that sought to be set free _in its people_--was the
+_reversal of the work of Paul_. If we can transport ourselves into
+the inmost soul of the two new-born nations, making no reservations
+and ignoring all minor points of dogmatics, then we see how the
+direction of Christianity towards the Greek West and its intellectual
+affinity with the Pagan Church culminated in the position that the
+Ruler of the West was the Head of Christianity in general. In the
+mind of Constantine it was self-evident that the Pauline foundation
+_within_ the Pseudomorphosis was synonymous with Christianity. The
+Jewish Christians of Petrine tendency were to him a heretical sect,
+and the Eastern Christians of “Johannine” type he never even noticed.
+When the spirit of the Pseudomorphosis had, in the three determining
+councils of Nicæa, Ephesus, and Chalcedon, put _its_ seal upon dogma,
+once and for all, the real Arabian world rose up with the force of
+nature and set up a barrier against it. With the end of the Arabian
+Springtime, Christianity fell apart for good into three religions,
+which can be symbolized by the names of Paul, Peter, and John, and of
+which none can henceforth claim to be regarded by the historically and
+doctrinally unprejudiced eye as _the_ true and proper Christianity.
+These three religions are at the same time three nations, living in
+the old race-areas of Greeks, Jews, and Persians, and the tongues that
+they used were the Church-languages borrowed from them--namely, Greek,
+Aramaic, and Pehlevi.
+
+
+VII
+
+The Eastern Church, since the Council of Nicæa, had organized itself
+with an episcopal constitution, at the head of which stood the
+Katholikos of Ctesiphon, and with councils, liturgy, and law of its
+own. In 486 the Nestorian doctrine was accepted as binding, and the tie
+with Constantinople was thus broken. From that point on, Mazdaists,
+Manichæans, and Nestorians have a common destiny, of which the seed was
+sown in the Gnosis of Bardesanes. In the Monophysite Churches of the
+South, the spirit of the primitive Community emerged again and spread
+itself further; with its uncompromising monotheism and its hatred of
+images its closest affinity was with Talmudic Judaism, and its old
+battle-cry of εἷς θεός had already marked it to be, with that Judaism,
+the starting-point of Islam (“Allah il Allah”). The Western Church
+continued to be bound up with the fate of the Roman Empire--that is,
+the cult-Church became the State. Gradually it absorbed into itself the
+adherents of the Pagan Church, and thenceforth its importance lay not
+so much in itself--for Islam almost annihilated it--but in the accident
+that it was _from it_ that the young peoples of the Western Culture
+received the Christian system as the basis for a new creation,[457]
+receiving it, moreover, in the Latin guise of the extreme West--which
+for the Greek Church itself was unmeaning, since Rome was now a Greek
+city, and the Latin language was far more truly at home in Africa and
+Gaul.
+
+The essential and elemental concept of the Magian nation, a being
+that consists in extension, had been from the beginning active in
+extending itself. All these Churches were, deliberately, forcefully,
+and successfully, missionary Churches. But it was not until men had
+at last ceased to think of the end of the world as imminent, and
+dogma appropriate to prolonged existence in this World’s Cavern had
+been built up, and the Magian religions had taken up their standpoint
+towards the problem of substance, that the extending of the Culture
+took up that swift, passionate tempo that distinguished it from all
+others and found in Islam its most impressive, its last, but by no
+means its only example. Of these mighty facts Western theologians and
+historians give an entirely false picture. All that their gaze, riveted
+upon the Mediterranean lands, observes is the Western direction that
+fits in with their “Ancient-Mediæval-Modern” schema, and even within
+these limits, accepting the ostensible unity of Christianity, they
+regard it as passing at a certain period from a Greek into a Latin
+form, whereby the Greek residue is lost sight of altogether.
+
+But even before Christianity--and this is a fact of which the immense
+significance has never been observed, which has not even been correctly
+interpreted as _mission_ effort--the Pagan Church had won for the
+Syncretic Cult the greater part of the population of North Africa,
+Spain, Gaul, Britain, and the Rhine and Danube frontiers. Of the
+Druidism that Cæsar had found in Gaul, little remained extant by
+the time of Constantine. The assimilation of indigenous local gods
+under the names of the great Magian divinities of the Cult-Church
+(and especially Mithras-Sol-Jupiter) from the second century on, was
+essentially a process of conquest, and the same is true of the later
+emperor-worship.[458] The missionary efforts of Christianity here would
+have been less successful than they were if the other cult-Church--its
+near relative--had not preceded it. But the latter’s propaganda was by
+no means limited to barbarian fields; even in the fifth century the
+missionary Asclepiodotus converted Aphrodisias, a Carian city, from
+Christianity to Paganism.
+
+The Jews, as has been shown already, directed missionary effort on a
+large scale towards the East and the South. Through southern Arabia
+they drove into the heart of Africa, possibly even before the birth
+of Christ, while on the side of the East their presence in China is
+demonstrable, even in the second century. To the north the realm
+of the Khazars[459] and its capital, Astrakhan, later went over to
+Judaism. From this area came the Mongols of Jewish religion who
+advanced into the heart of Germany and were defeated, along with the
+Hungarians, in the battle of the Lechfeld in 955. Jewish scholars of
+the Spanish-Moorish universities petitioned the Byzantine Emperor (in
+A.D. 1000) for safe-conduct for an embassy that was to ask the Khazars
+whether they were the Lost Tribes of Israel.
+
+From the Tigris, Mazdaists and Manichæans penetrated the empires on
+either hand, Roman and Chinese, to their utmost frontiers. Persian,
+as the Mithras cult, invaded Britain; Manichæism had by 400 become
+a danger to Greek Christianity, and there were Manichæan sects in
+southern France as late as the Crusades[460]; but the two religions
+drove eastwards as well, along the Great Wall of China (where the great
+polyglot inscription of Kara Balgassun testifies to the introduction of
+the Manichæan faith in the Oigur realm) and even to Shantung. Persian
+fire-temples arose in the interior of China, and from 700 Persian
+expressions are found in Chinese astrological writings.
+
+The three Christian Churches everywhere followed up the blazed trails.
+When the Western Church converted the Frankish King Chlodwig in 496,
+the missionaries of the Eastern Church had already reached Ceylon and
+the westernmost Chinese garrisons of the Great Wall, and those of
+the Southern were in the Empire of Axum. At the same time as, after
+Boniface (718), Germany became converted, the Nestorian missionaries
+were within an ace of winning China itself. They had entered Shantung
+in 638. The Emperor Gao-dsung (651-84) permitted churches to be built
+in all provinces of the Empire, in 750 Christianity was preached in
+the Imperial palace itself, and in 781, according to the Aramaic and
+Chinese inscriptions upon a memorial column in Singafu which has been
+preserved, “all China was covered with the palaces of Concord.” But it
+is in the highest degree significant that the Confucians, who cannot
+be called inexpert in religious matters, regarded the Nestorians,
+Mazdaists, and Manichæans as adherents of a single “Persian”
+religion,[461] just as the population of the Western Roman provinces
+were unable to discriminate between Mithras and Christ.
+
+Islam, therefore, is to be regarded as the Puritanism of the whole
+group of Early Magian religions, emerging as a religion only formally
+new, and in the domain of the Southern Church and Talmudic Judaism. It
+is this deeper significance, and not merely the force of its warlike
+onslaught, that gives the key to its fabulous successes. Although
+on political grounds it practised an astounding toleration--John
+Damascenus, the last great dogmatist of the Greek Church, was, under
+the name of Al Manzor, treasurer to the Caliph--Judaism, Mazdaism,
+and the Southern and Eastern churches of Christianity were swiftly
+and almost completely dissolved in it. The Katholikos of Seleucia,
+Jesujabh III, complains that tens of thousands of Christians went
+over to it as soon as it came on the scene, and in North Africa--the
+home of Augustine--the entire population fell away to Islam at once.
+Mohammed died in 632. In 641 the whole domain of the Monophysites and
+the Nestorians (and, therefore, of the Talmud and the Avesta) were in
+the possession of Islam. In 717 it stood before Constantinople, and
+the Greek Church was in peril of extinction. Already in 628 a relative
+of the prophet had brought presents to the Chinese Emperor Tai-dsung
+and obtained leave to institute a mission. From 700 there were mosques
+in Shantung, and in 720 Damascus sent instructions to the Arabs long
+established in southern France to conquer the realm of the Franks. Two
+centuries later, when in the West a new religious world was arising out
+of the remains of the old Western Church, Islam was in the Sudan and in
+Java.
+
+For all this, Islam is significant only as a piece of _outward_
+religious history. The inner history of the Magian religion ends
+with Justinian’s time, as truly as that of the Faustian ends with
+Charles V and the Council of Trent. Any book on religious history
+shows “_the_” Christian religion as having had _two ages of grand
+thought-movements_--0-500 in the East and 1000-1500 in the West.[462]
+_But these are two springtimes of two Cultures_, and in them
+are comprised also the non-Christian forms which belong to each
+religious development. The closing of the University of Athens by
+Justinian in 529 was not, as is always stated, the end of Classical
+philosophy--there had been no Classical philosophy for centuries.
+What he did, forty years before the birth of Mohammed, was to end
+the theology of the Pagan Church by closing this school and--as
+the historians forget to add--_to end the Christian theology also_
+by closing those of Antioch and Alexandria. Dogma was complete,
+finished--just as it was in the West with the Council of Trent
+(1564) and the Confession of Augsburg (1540), for with the city and
+intellectualism religious creative force comes to an end. So also
+in Jewry and in Persia, the Talmud was concluded about 500, and
+when Chosroës Nushirvan in 529 bloodily suppressed the Reformation
+of Mazdak--which was not unlike our Anabaptism in its rejection of
+marriage and worldly property, and had been supported by King Kobad
+I as counteracting the power of Church and nobility--Avestan dogma
+similarly passed into fixity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+PROBLEMS OF THE ARABIAN CULTURE
+
+(C)
+
+PYTHAGORAS, MOHAMMED, CROMWELL
+
+
+I[463]
+
+Religion may be described as the Waking-Being of a living creature
+in the moments when it overcomes, masters, denies, and even destroys
+Being. Race-life and the pulse of its drive dwindle as the eyes gaze
+into an extended, tense, and light-filled world, and _Time yields to
+Space_. The plantlike desire for fulfilment goes out, and from primary
+depths there wells up the animal fear of the fulfilment, of the ceasing
+of direction, of death. Not hate and love, but fear and love are the
+basic feelings of religion. Hate and fear differ as Time and Space,
+blood and eye, pulse and tension, heroism and saintliness. And love in
+the race-sense differs from love in the religious sense in the same way.
+
+All religion is turned to light. The extended itself becomes religious
+as a world of the eye comprehended from the ego as centre of light.
+Hearing and touch are adjusted to what is seen and the _Invisible_,
+whose workings are sensed, becomes the sum of the dæmonic. All
+that we designate by the words “deity,” “revelation,” “salvation,”
+“dispensation,” is in one way and another an element of illumined
+actuality. Death, for man, is something that he sees, and knows by
+seeing, and in relation to death birth is _the other_ secret. They are
+the two visible limits of the sensible cosmic that is incarnate in a
+live body in lighted space.
+
+There are two sorts of deeper fear--one is fear (known even to the
+animals) _in presence of_ microcosmic freedom in space, before space
+itself and its powers, before death; the other is fear _for_ the cosmic
+current of being, for life, for directional time. The first awakens a
+dark feeling that freedom in the extended is just a new and deeper sort
+of dependence than that which rules the vegetable world, and it leads
+the individual being, sensible of its weakness, to seek the propinquity
+and alliance of others. Anxiety produces speech, and our sort of speech
+is religion--every religion. Out of the fear of Space arise the numina
+of the _world-as-nature_ and the _cults of gods_; out of the fear
+for time arise the numina of _life_, of sex and breed, of the State,
+centring on _ancestor-worship_. That is the difference between Taboo
+and Totem[464]--for the totemistic, too, always appears in religious
+form, out of holy awe of that which passeth all understanding and is
+for ever alien.
+
+The higher religion requires tense alertness against the powers of
+blood and being that ever lurk in the depths ready to recapture
+their primeval rights over the _younger_ side of life. “_Watch_ and
+pray, that ye fall not into temptation.” Nevertheless, “liberation”
+is a fundamental word in every religion and an eternal wish of
+every waking-being. In this general, almost prereligious, sense, it
+means the desire for freedom from the anxieties and anguishes of
+waking-consciousness; for relaxation of the tensions of fear-born
+thought and search; for the obliteration and removal of the
+consciousness of the Ego’s loneliness in the universe, the rigid
+conditionedness of nature, the prospect of the immovable boundary of
+all Being in eld and death.
+
+Sleep, too, liberates--“Death and his brother Sleep.” And holy wine,
+intoxication, breaks the rigour of the spirit’s tension, and dancing,
+the Dionysus art, and every other form of stupefaction and ecstasy.
+These are modes of slipping out of awareness by the aid of being, the
+cosmic, the “it,” _the escape out of space into time_. But higher
+than all these stands the genuinely religious overcoming of fear _by
+means of the understanding itself_. The tension between microcosm and
+macrocosm becomes something that we can love, something in which we
+can wholly immerse ourselves.[465] We call this _faith_, and it is the
+beginning of all man’s intellectual life.
+
+Understanding is causal only, whether deductive or inductive, whether
+derived from sensation or not. It is wholly impossible to distinguish
+being-understood from being-caused--both express the same thing.
+When something is “actual” for us, we see it and think it in causal
+(_ursächlich_) form, just as we feel and know ourselves and our
+activities as things originating, causes (_Ursache_). The assignment
+of causes is, however, different from case to case, not only in the
+religious, but also generally in the inorganic logic of man. A fact
+is thought of at one moment as having such-and-such, at another
+moment as having something else, as its cause. Every kind of thinking
+has for every one of its domains of application a proper “system.”
+In everyday life a causal connexion in thought is never exactly
+repeated. Even in modern physics working hypotheses--that is, causal
+systems--which partially exclude one another are in use side by side;
+for instance, the ideas of electrodynamics and those of thermodynamics.
+The significance of the thought is not thereby nullified, for during
+a continuous spell of waking-consciousness we “understand” always in
+the form of single acts of which each has its own causal inception.
+The viewing of the entire world-as-nature in relation to the
+individual consciousness as a single causally-ordered concatenation
+is something perfectly unrealizable by our thought, inasmuch as our
+thinking proceeds always by unit acts. It remains a belief. It is
+indeed Faith itself, for it is the basis of religious understanding of
+the world, which, wherever something is observed, postulates numina
+as a necessity of thought--ephemeral numina for incidental events
+which are not again thought of, and enduring numina as place-definite
+indwellers (of springs, trees, stones, hills, stars, and so forth)
+or as universals (like the gods of Heaven, of War, of Wisdom) which
+can be present anywhere. These numina are limited only in virtue of
+the individualness of each separate act of thought. That which to-day
+is a property of the god is to-morrow itself the god. Others are
+now a plurality, now a unity, now a vague Ent. There are invisibles
+(shapes) and incomprehensibles (principles), which, to those to whom
+it is vouchsafed, may become phenomenal or comprehensible. Fate[466]
+in the Classical (εἰμαρμένη) and in the Indian (_rta_) is something
+which stands as origin-thing (_Ur-Sache_) above the picturable
+divinities; Magian Destiny, on the contrary, is the operation of the
+one and formless supreme God. Religious thought ever lets itself
+graduate values and rank within the causal succession, and leads up to
+supreme beings or principles, as very first and “governing” causes;
+“dispensation” is the word used for the most comprehensive of all
+systems based upon valuation. Science, on the contrary, is a mode of
+understanding which fundamentally abhors distinctions of rank amongst
+causes; what it finds is not dispensation, but law.
+
+The understanding of causes sets free. Belief in the linkages
+discovered compels the world-fear to retreat. God is man’s refuge from
+the Destiny which he can feel and livingly experience, but not think
+on, or figure, or name, and which sinks into abeyance for so long--only
+for so long--as the “critical” (literally, the _separating_) fear-born
+understanding can establish causes behind causes comprehensibly; that
+is, in order visible to the outer or inner eye. It is the desperate
+dilemma of the higher grade of man that his powerful will to understand
+is in constant contradiction with his being. It has ceased to serve
+his life, but is unable to rule it, and consequently in all important
+conjunctures there remains an insoluble element. “One has merely to
+declare oneself free, and one feels the moment to be conditioned. But
+if one has the courage to declare oneself conditioned, then one has the
+feeling of being free” (Goethe).
+
+We name a causal linkage within the world-as-nature, as to which we
+are convinced that no further reflection can alter it--Truth. Truths
+are established, and they are timeless--“absolute” means detached
+from Destiny and history, but detached also from the facts of our own
+living and dying--and they are an inward liberation, consolation,
+and salvation, in that they disvalue and overcome the incalculable
+happenings of the world of facts. Or, as it mirrors itself in the mind,
+men may go, but truth remains.
+
+In the world-around something is established--that is, fixed,
+spellbound. Understanding man has the secret in the hands,
+whether this be, as of old, some potent charm or, as nowadays, a
+mathematical formula. A feeling of triumph, even to-day, accompanies
+every experimental step in the realm of Nature which determines
+something--about the purposes and powers of the god of heaven or the
+storm-spirits of the ground-dæmons; or about the numina of natural
+science (atom-nuclei, the velocity of light, gravitation); or even
+about the abstract numina that thought conceives in contemplating its
+own image (concept, category, reason)--and, in determining, fixes it
+in the prison of an unalterable system of causal relations. Experience
+in this inorganic, killing, preserving sense, which is something quite
+different from life-experience and knowledge of men, takes place in
+two modes--_theory and technique_,[467] or, in religious language,
+_myth and cult_--according as the believer’s intention is to open up
+or to confine the secrets of the world-around. Both demand a high
+development of human understanding. _Both may be born of either fear or
+love._ There is a mythology of fear, like the Mosaic and the primitive
+generally, and a mythology of love, like that of early Christianity
+and Gothic mysticism. Similarly there is a technique of defensive,
+and another technique of postulant, magic, and this, no doubt the
+most fundamental, distinction between sacrifice and prayer[468]
+distinguishes also primitive and mature mankind. Religiousness is a
+trait of soul, but religion is a talent. “Theory” demands the gift
+of vision that few possess to the extent of luminous insight and
+many possess not at all. It is world-view, “_Weltanschauung_” in the
+most primary sense, whether what one sees in that world is the hand
+and the loom of powers, or (in a colder urban spirit, not fearing or
+loving, but inquisitive) the theatre of law-conform forces. The secrets
+of Taboo and Totem are beheld in god-faiths and soul-faiths, and
+calculated in theoretical physics and biology. “Technique” presupposes
+the intellectual gift of binding and conjuring. The theorist is the
+critical seer, the technician is the priest, the discoverer is the
+prophet.
+
+The means, however, in which the whole force of intellect concentrates
+itself is the _form_ of the actual, which is abstracted from vision by
+speech, and of which not every waking-consciousness can discern the
+quintessence--the conceptual circumscription, the communicable law,
+name, number. Hence every conjuration of the deity is based on the
+knowledge of its real name and the use of rites and sacraments, known
+and available only to the initiated, of which the form must be exact
+and the words correct. This applies not merely to primitive magic, but
+just as much to our physical (and particularly our medical) technique.
+It is for this reason that mathematics have a character of sanctity and
+are regularly the product of a religious milieu (Pythagoras, Descartes,
+Pascal); that there is a mysticism of sacred numbers (3, 7, 12) in
+every religion,[469] and that Ornament (of which cult-architecture is
+the highest form) is essentially number felt as shape. It is rigid,
+compelling forms, expression-motives and communication-signs[470]
+that the microcosm employs in the world of waking-consciousness to
+get into touch with the macrocosm. In sacerdotal technique they are
+called precepts, and in scientific, laws--but both are really name and
+number, and primitive man would discover no difference between the
+magic wherewith the priests of his villages command the dæmons and that
+wherewith the civilized technician commands his machines.
+
+The first, and perhaps the only, outcome of man’s will-to-understanding
+is _faith_. “I believe” is the great word against metaphysical fear,
+and at the same time it is an avowal of love. Even though one’s
+researches or accumulation of knowledge may culminate in sudden
+illumination or conclusive calculation, yet all one’s own sense and
+comprehension would be meaningless unless there were set up along
+with it an inward certainty of a “something” which as other and alien
+_is_--and is, moreover, exactly under the ascertained shape--in the
+concatenation of cause and effect. The highest intellectual possession,
+therefore, known to man as a being of speech-deduced thought, is the
+firm and hard-won belief in this something, withdrawn from the courses
+of time and destiny, which he has separated out by contemplation and
+labelled by name and number. But _what_ that something is remains
+in the last analysis obscure. Was it the something of secret logic
+of the universe that was touched, or only a silhouette? And all the
+struggle and passion starts afresh, and anxious investigation directs
+itself upon this new doubt, which may well turn to despair. He needs
+in his intellectual boring of belief a _final_ something attainable
+by thought, an end of dissection that leaves no remainder of mystery.
+The corners and pockets of his world of contemplation must all be
+illuminated--nothing less will give him his release.
+
+Here belief passes over into the knowledge evoked by mistrust, or,
+more accurately, becomes belief in that knowledge. For the latter
+form of the understanding is radically dependent upon the former; it
+is posterior, more artificial, more questionable. Further, religious
+theory--that is, the contemplation of the believer--_leads to_ priestly
+practice, but scientific theory, on the contrary, _liberates itself_ by
+contemplation _from_ the technical knowledge of every day life.[471]
+The firm belief that is bred by illuminations, revelations, sudden
+deep glimpses, can dispense with critical work. But critical knowledge
+presupposes the belief that its methods will lead to just that which
+is desired--that is, not to fresh imaginings, but to the “actual.”
+History, however, teaches that doubt as to belief leads to knowledge,
+and doubt as to knowledge (after a period of critical optimism) back
+again to belief. As theoretical knowledge frees itself from confiding
+acceptance, it is marching to self-destruction, after which what
+remains is simply and solely technical experience.
+
+Belief, in its primitive, unclear condition, acknowledges superior
+sources of wisdom by which things that man’s own subtlety could never
+unravel are more or less manifest--such as prophetic words, dreams,
+oracles, sacred scriptures, the voice of the deity. The critical
+spirit, on the contrary, wants, and believes itself able, to look
+into everything for itself. It not only mistrusts alien truths, but
+even denies their possibility. Truth, for it, is only knowledge
+that it has proved for itself. But if pure criticism creates its
+means out of itself solely, it did not long go unperceived that this
+position assumed the reality of the result. _De omnibus dubitandum_
+is a proposition that is incapable of being actualized. It is apt
+to be forgotten that critical activity must rest upon a _method_,
+and the possibility of obtaining this method in turn by the way of
+criticism is only apparent. For, in reality, it follows from the
+momentary disposition of the thought.[472] That is, the results of
+criticism themselves are determined by the basic method, but this in
+turn is determined by the stream of being which carries and perfuses
+the waking-consciousness. The belief in a knowledge that needs no
+postulates is merely a mark of the immense naïveté of rationalist
+periods. A theory of natural science is nothing but a historically
+older dogma in another shape. And the only profit from it is that
+which life obtains, in the shape of a successful technique, to which
+theory has provided the key. It has already been said that the value
+of a working hypothesis resides not in its “correctness” but in its
+usableness. But discoveries of another sort, findings of insight,
+“Truths” in the optimistic sense, cannot be the outcome of purely
+scientific understanding, since this always presupposes an existing
+view upon which its critical, dissecting activity can operate; the
+natural science of the Baroque is one continuous dissection of the
+religious world-picture of the Gothic.
+
+The aim of faith and science, fear and curiosity, is not to experience
+life, but to know the world-as-nature. Of world-as-history they are the
+express negation. But the secret of waking-consciousness is a twofold
+one; two fear-born, causally ordered pictures arise for the inner
+eye--the “outer world” and as its counter-image the “inner world.” In
+both are true problems, and the waking-consciousness is not only a
+look-out, but is very busy within its own domains as well. The Numen
+out there is called God; in here Soul. By the critical understanding
+the deities of the believer’s vision are transmuted in thought into
+mechanical magnitudes referable to its world, but their essence and
+kernel remain the same--Classical matter and form, Magian light and
+darkness, Faustian force and mass--and its mode is ever the same
+dissection of the primitive soul-belief, and its end is ever the
+same, a _predetermined_ result. The physics of the within is called
+systematic psychology and it discovers in man, if it is Classical
+science, thing-like soul-_parts_ (νοῦς, θυμός, ἐπιθυμία); if Magian,
+soul-substance (ruach, nephesh); if Faustian, soul-_forces_ (thinking,
+feeling, willing). These are the shapes that religious meditation, in
+fear and in love, then follows up in the causal relations of guilt,
+sin, pardon, conscience, reward, and punishment.
+
+Being is a mystery that, as soon as faith and science turn their
+attention to it, illudes them into fateful error. Instead of the cosmic
+itself being reached (which is completely outside the possibilities
+of the active waking-consciousness) the sensible mobility of body in
+the field of the eye, and the conceptual image of a mechanical-causal
+chain abstracted therefrom, are subjected to analysis. But real life
+_is led_, not cognised. _Only the Timeless is true._ Truths lie
+beyond history and life, and vice versa life is something beyond all
+causes, effects, and truths. Criticism in both cases, critique of
+waking-consciousness and critique of being, are contrary to happening
+and alien to life. But in the first case the application of a critique
+is entirely justified by the critical intention and the inner logic
+of the object that is referred to; in the second case it is not. It
+follows that the distinction between faith and knowledge, or fear and
+curiosity, or revelation and criticism, is not, after all, the ultimate
+distinction. Knowledge is only a late form of belief. But _belief and
+life_, love springing from the secret fear of the world, and love
+springing from the secret hate of the sexes, knowledge of inorganic and
+sense of organic logic, Causes and Destinies--_this_ is the deepest
+opposition of all. And here we distinguish men, not according to what
+their modes of thinking are--religious or critical--nor according
+to the objects of their thought, but according to whether they are
+thinkers (no matter about what) _or doers_.
+
+In the realm of doing the waking-consciousness takes charge only when
+it becomes _technique_. Religious knowledge, too, is power--man is
+not only ascertaining causations, but handling them. He who knows
+the secret relationship between microcosm and macrocosm commands
+it also, whether the knowledge has come to him by revelation or by
+eavesdropping. Thus the magician and conjuror is truly the Taboo-man.
+He compels the deity through sacrifice and prayer; he practises the
+true rites and sacraments because they are causes of inevitable
+results, and whosoever knows them, him they must serve. He reads in the
+stars and in the sacred books; in his power lies, timeless and immune
+from all accident, the _causal_ relation of sin and propitiation,
+repentance and absolutions, sacrifice and grace. His chain of sacred
+origins and results makes him himself a vessel of mysterious power and,
+therefore, a cause of new effects, in which one must have faith before
+one may have them imparted.
+
+From this starting-point we can understand (what the European-American
+world of to-day has wellnigh forgotten) the ultimate meaning of
+religious ethics, _Moral_. It is, wherever true and strong, a relation
+that has the full import of _ritual act and practice_; it is (to use
+Loyola’s phrase) “_exercitium spirituale_,” performed before the
+deity,[473] who is to be softened and conjured thereby. “What shall I
+do to be saved?” This “what?” is the key to the understanding of all
+real moral. In its deeps there is ever a “wherefore” and a “why,” even
+in the case of those few sublimate philosophers who have imagined a
+moral that is “for its own sake”--confessing in the very phrase that
+deep down they feel a “wherefore,” even though but a sympathetic few of
+their own kind can appreciate it. _There is only causal moral_--that
+is, _ethical technique_--on the background of a convinced metaphysic.
+
+Moral is a conscious and planned causality of the conduct, apart from
+all particulars of actual life and character, something eternal and
+universally valid, not only without time, but hostile to time and for
+that very reason “true.” Even if mankind did not exist, moral would
+be true and valid--this is no mere conceit, but an expression of the
+ethical inorganic logic of the world conceived as system that has
+actually been used. Never would the philosopher concede that it could
+have a historical evolution and fulfilment. Space denies Time; true
+moral is absolute, eternally complete and the same. In the depths of it
+there is ever a negation of life, a refraining and renunciation carried
+to the point of askesis and death itself. Negation is expressed in its
+very phrases--religious moral contains prohibitions, not precepts.
+Taboo, even where it ostensibly affirms, is a list of disclaimers. To
+liberate oneself from the world of fact, to evade the possibilities
+of Destiny, always to look upon the race in oneself as the lurking
+enemy--nothing but hard system, doctrine, and exercise will give
+that. No action must be causal or impulsive--that is, left to the
+blood--everything must be considered according to motives and results
+and “carried out” according to orders. Extreme tension of awareness
+is required lest we fall into sin. First of all things, continence in
+what pertains to the blood, love, marriage. Love and hate in mankind
+are cosmic and evil; the love of the sexes is the very polar opposite
+of timeless love and fear of God, and therefore it is the prime sin,
+for which Adam was cast forth from paradise and burdened man with the
+heritage of guilt. Conception and death define the life of the body in
+space, and the fact that it is the _body_ that is in question makes
+the former sin and the latter punishment. Σῶμα σῆμα (the Classical
+body a grave!) was the confession of the Orphic religion. Æschylus
+and Pindar comprehended Being as a reproach, and the saints of all
+Cultures feel it as an impiety that has to be killed off by askesis or
+(what is nearly related thereto) orgiastic squandering. Action, the
+field of history, the deed, heroism, delight in battle and victory and
+spoil, are evil. For in them the pulse of cosmic being knocks on the
+door too loudly and disturbingly for contemplativeness and thought.
+The whole world--meaning the world-as-history--is infamous. It fights
+instead of renouncing; it does not possess the idea of sacrifice.
+It prevails over truth by means of facts. As it follows impulse, it
+baffles thought about cause and effect. And therefore the highest
+sacrifice that intellectual man can offer is to make a personal present
+of it to the powers of nature. _Every moral action is a piece of this
+sacrifice_, and an ethical life-course is an unbroken chain of such
+sacrifices. Above all, the offering of sympathy, com-passion {sic}, in
+which the inwardly strong gives up his superiority to the powerless.
+The compassionate man kills something within himself. But we must not
+confuse this sympathy in the grand religious sense with the vague
+sentimentality of the everyday man, who cannot command himself, still
+less with the _race-feeling of chivalry_ that is not a moral of reasons
+and rules at all, but an upstanding and self-evident _custom_ bred of
+the unconscious pulsations of a keyed-up life. That which in civilized
+times is called social ethics has nothing to do with religion, and
+its presence only goes to show the weakness and emptiness of the
+religiousness of the day, which has lost that force of metaphysical
+sureness that is the condition precedent of strong, convinced, and
+self-denying moral. Think for instance of the difference between Pascal
+and Mill. Social ethic is nothing but practical politics. It is a very
+Late product of _the same_ historical world whose Springtime (in all
+Cultures alike) has witnessed the flowering of an ethic of high courage
+and knightliness in a strong stock that does not wince under the life
+of history and fate; an ethic of natural and acquired reactions that
+polite society to-day would call “the instincts of a gentleman”; an
+ethic of which vulgarity and not sin is the antithesis. Once again it
+is the Castle versus the Cathedral. The castle character does not ask
+about precepts and reasons. In fact, it does not ask questions at all.
+Its code lies in the blood--which is pulse--and its fear is not of
+punishment or requital, but of contempt and especially self-contempt.
+It is not selfless; on the contrary, it springs from the very fullness
+of a strong self. But Compassion likewise demands inward greatness
+of soul, and so it is those selfsame Springtimes that produce the
+most saintly servants of pity, the Francis of Assisi, the Bernard of
+Clairvaux, in whom renunciation was a pervading fragrance, to whom
+self-offering was bliss, whose _caritas_ was ethereal, bloodless,
+timeless, historyless, in whom fear of the universe had dissolved
+itself into pure, flawless love, a summit of causal moral of which Late
+periods are simply no longer capable.
+
+To constrain one’s blood, one must have blood. Consequently it is
+only in knightly warrior-times that we find a monasticism of the
+great style, and the highest symbol for the complete victory of
+Space over Time is the warrior become ascetic--not the born dreamer
+and weakling, who belongs by nature to the cloister, nor again the
+scholar, who works at a moral system in the study. Putting cant aside,
+that which is called moral to-day--a proper affection for one’s
+nearest, or the exercise of worthy inclinations, or the practice of
+_caritas_ with an _arrière-pensée_ of acquiring political power by
+that means--is not honour-moral, or even a low grade of it, according
+to Springtime standards. To repeat: there is grand moral only with
+reference to death, and its sources are a fear, pervading the whole
+waking-consciousness, of metaphysical causes and consequences, a love
+that overcomes life, a consciousness that one is under the inexorable
+magic of a causal system of sacred laws and purposes, which are
+honoured as truths and which one must either wholly belong to or wholly
+renounce. Constant tension, self-watching, self-testing, accompany the
+exercise of this moral, which is an art, and in the presence of which
+the world-as-history sinks to nothingness. Let a man be either a hero
+or a saint. In between lies, not wisdom, but banality.
+
+
+II
+
+If there were truths independent of the currents of being, there could
+be no history of truths. If there were one single eternally right
+religion, religious history would be an inconceivable idea. But,
+however highly developed the microcosmic side of an individual’s life
+may be, it is nevertheless something stretched like a membrane over
+the developing life, perfused by the pulsing blood, ever betraying
+the hidden drive of cosmic directedness. Race dominates and forms all
+apprehension. It is the destiny of each moment of awareness to be a
+cast of Time’s net over Space.
+
+Not that “eternal truths” do not exist. Every man possesses
+them--plenty of them--to the extent that he exists and exercises the
+understanding faculty in a world of thoughts, in the connected ensemble
+of which they are, in and for the instant of thought, unalterable
+fixtures--ironbound as cause-effect combinations in hoops of premisses
+and conclusions. Nothing in this disposition can become displaced, he
+believes. But in reality it is just _one_ surge of life that is lifting
+his waking self and its world together. Its unity remains integral,
+but _as_ a unit, a whole, _a fact_, it has a history. Absolute and
+relative are to one another as transverse and longitudinal sections of
+a succession of generations, the latter ignoring Space, and the former
+Time. The systematic thinker stays in the causal order of a moment;
+only the physiognomist who reviews the sequence of positions realizes
+the constant alteration of that which “is” true.
+
+_Alles Vergängliche ist nur ein Gleichnis_ holds good for the eternal
+truths also, as soon as we follow their course in the stream of
+history, and watch them move on as elements in the world-picture of the
+generations that live and die. For each man, during the short space of
+his existence, the _one_ religion is eternal and true which Destiny,
+through the time and place of his birth, has ordained for him. With it
+he feels, out of it he forms, the views and convictions of his days. To
+its words and forms he holds fast, although what he means by them is
+constantly changing. In the world-as-nature there are eternal truths;
+in the world-as-history there is an eternally changing trueness.
+
+_A morphology of religious history_, therefore, is a task that the
+Faustian spirit alone could ever formulate, and one that it is
+only now, at this present stage of its development, fit to deal
+with. The problem is enunciated, and we must dare the effort of
+getting completely away from our own convictions and seeing before
+us everything indifferently as equally alien. And how hard it is!
+He who undertakes the task must possess the strength not merely to
+imagine himself in an illusory detachment from the truths of his
+world-understanding--illusory even to one for whom truths are just a
+set of concepts and methods--but actually to penetrate his own system
+physiognomically to its very last cells. And even then is it possible,
+in a single language, which structurally and spiritually carries the
+whole metaphysical content of its own Culture, to capture transmissible
+ideas of the truths of other-tongued men?
+
+There is, to begin with, over the thousands of years of the first
+age,[474] the colourless throng of primitive populations, which stand
+fearfully agape in the presence of the chaotic environment, whose
+enigmas continually weigh upon them, for no man amongst them is able
+logically to master it. Lucky in comparison with them is the animal,
+who is awake and yet not thinking. An animal knows fear only from case
+to case, whereas early man trembles before the whole world. Everything
+inside and outside him is dark and unresolved. The everyday and the
+dæmonic are tangled together without clue and without rule. The day is
+filled with a frightened and painful religiousness, in which it is rare
+to find even the suggestion of a religion of confidence--for from this
+elementary form of the world-fear no way leads to the understanding
+love. Every stone on which a man stumbles, every tool that he takes in
+his hand, every insect buzzing past him, food, house, weather, all can
+be dæmonic; but the man believes in the powers that lurk in them only
+so long as he is frightened or so long _as he uses them_--there are
+quite enough of them even so. But one can love something only if one
+believes in its _continued_ existence. Love presupposes the thought of
+a world-order that has acquired stability. Western research has been at
+great pains, not only to set in order individual observations gathered
+from all parts of the world, but to arrange them according to assumed
+gradations that “lead up” from animism (or other beginnings, as you
+please) to the beliefs that it holds itself. Unfortunately, it is one
+particular religion that has provided the values of the scheme, and
+Chinese or Greeks would have built it quite differently. In reality
+no such gradation, leading a general human evolution up to one goal,
+exists. Primitive man’s chaotic world-around, born of his discontinuous
+understanding of separate moments and yet full of impressive meaning,
+is always something grown-up, self-complete, and closed off, often with
+chasms and terrors of deep metaphysical premonition. Always it contains
+a system, and it matters little whether this is partially abstracted
+from the contemplation of the light-world or remains wholly within
+it. Such a world-picture does not “progress”; nor is it a fixed sum
+of particulars from which this one and that one ought to be (though
+usually they are) picked out for comparison irrespective of time, land,
+and people. In reality they form a _world of organic religions_, which,
+all over the world, possessed (and, where they linger, still possess)
+proper and very significant modes of originating, growing, expanding,
+and fading out, and a well-established specific character in point
+of structure, style, tempo, and duration. The religions of the high
+Cultures are not developed from these, but different. They lie clearer
+and more intellectual in the light, they know what understanding love
+means, they have problems and ideas, theories and techniques, of strict
+intellect, but the religious symbolism of everyday light they know no
+more. The primitive religiousness penetrates everything; the later and
+individualized religions are self-contained form-worlds of their own.
+
+All the more enigmatic, therefore, are the “pre-” periods of the
+grand Cultures, still primitive through and through, and yet more and
+more distinctly anticipating and pointing in a definite direction.
+It is just these periods, of some centuries’ duration, that ought to
+have been accurately examined and compared amongst themselves and
+for themselves. In what shape does the coming phenomenon prepare
+itself? In the case of the Magian religions the threshold period, as
+we have seen, produced the type of the Prophetic religion, which led
+up to the Apocalyptic. How comes it that this particular form is more
+deeply grounded in the essence of this particular Culture? Or why
+is it that the Mycenæan prelude of the Classical is filled from one
+end to the other with imaginings of beast-formed deities?[475] They
+are not the gods of the warriors up in the megaron of the Mycenæan
+castle, where soul- and ancestor-worship was practised with a high
+and noble piety evidenced still in the monuments, but the gods of
+down below, the powers believed in in the peasant’s hut. The great
+menlike gods of the Apollinian religion, which must have arisen
+about 1100 out of a mighty religious upheaval, bear traces of their
+dark past on all sides. Hardly one of these figures is without some
+cognomen, attribute, or telltale transformation-myth indicative of
+its origin. To Homer Hera is invariably the cow-eyed; Zeus appears
+as a bull, and the Poseidon of the Thelpusan legend as a horse.
+Apollo comes to be the name for countless primitive numina; now he
+was wolf (Lycæus) like the Roman Mars, now dolphin (Delphinius), and
+now serpent (the Pythian Apollo of Delphi). A serpent, too, is the
+form of Zeus Meilichios on Attic grave-reliefs and of Asclepios, and
+of the Furies even in Æschylus;[476] and the sacred snake kept on the
+Acropolis was interpreted as Erichthonios. In Arcadia the horse-headed
+figure of Demeter in the temple of Phigalia was still to be seen
+by Pausanias; the Arcadian Artemis-Callisto appears as a she-bear,
+but in Athens too the priestesses of Artemis Brauronia were called
+“_arktoi_” (bears).[477] Dionysus--now a bull, now a stag--and Pan
+retained a certain beast-element to the end. Psyche (like the Egyptian
+corporal-soul, _bai_) is the soul-bird. And upon all this supervened
+the innumerable semi-animal figures like sirens and centaurs that
+completely fill up the Early Classical nature-picture.[478]
+
+But what are the features, now, of the primitive religion of
+Merovingian times that foreshadow the mighty uprising of the Gothic
+that was at hand? That both are _ostensibly_ the same religion,
+Christianity, proves nothing when we consider the entire difference
+in their deeps. For (we must be quite clear in our own mind on this)
+the primitive character of a religion does not lie in its stock of
+doctrines and usages, but in the specific spirituality of the mankind
+that adopts them and feels, speaks, and thinks with them. The student
+has to familiarize himself with the fact that primitive Christianity
+(more exactly, the early Christianity of the Western Church) has twice
+subsequently become the expression-vehicle of a primitive piety, and
+therefore itself a primitive religion--namely, in the Celtic-Germanic
+West between 500 and 900, and in Russia up to this day. Now, how did
+the world mirror itself to these “converted” minds? Leaving out of
+account some few clerics of, say, Byzantine education, what did one
+actually think and imagine about these ceremonies and dogmas. Bishop
+Gregory of Tours, who, we must remember, represents the highest
+intellectual outlook of his generation, once lauded the powder rubbed
+from a saint’s tombstone in these words: “O divine purgative, superior
+to all doctors’ recipes, which cleanses the belly like scammony and
+washes away all stains from our conscience!” For him the death of
+Jesus was a crime which filled him with indignation, but no more; the
+Resurrection, on the contrary, which hovered before him vaguely, he
+felt deep down as an athletic _tour de force_ that stamped the Messiah
+as the grand wizard and so legitimated him as the true Saviour. Of any
+mystic meaning in the story of the Passion he has not an inkling.[479]
+
+In Russia the conclusions of the “Synod of a Hundred Chapters,” of
+1551, evidence a wholly primitive order of belief. Shaving of the
+beard and wrong handling of the cross both figure here as deadly
+sins--they were affronts to the dæmons. The “Synod of Antichrist,”
+of 1667, led to the vast secession of the Raskol movement, because
+thenceforward the sign of the cross was to be made with three fingers
+instead of two, and the name “Jesus” was to be pronounced “Yissus”
+instead of “Issus”--whereby, for the strict believer, the power of
+this magic over the dæmons would be lost.[480] But this effect of
+fear is, after all, not the only one nor even the most potent. Why
+is it that the Merovingian period shows not the slightest trace of
+that glowing inwardness and longing to sink into the metaphysical
+that suffuses the Magian seed-time of Apocalyptic and the closely
+analogous period of the Holy Synod (1721-1917) in Russia? What was
+it that from Peter the Great’s time on led all those martyr-sects of
+the Raskolniki to celibacy, poverty, pilgrimage, self-mutilation, and
+asceticism in its most fearful forms, and in the seventeenth century
+had driven thousands, in religious frenzy, to throw themselves _en
+masse_ into the flames? The doctrines of the Chlysti, with their
+“Russian Christs” (of whom seven are counted so far); the Dukhobors
+with their Book of Life, which they use as their Bible and hold to
+contain psalms of Jesus orally transmitted; the Skoptsi with their
+ghastly mutilation-precepts--manifestations, one and all, of something
+without which Tolstoi, Nihilism, and the political revolutions are
+incomprehensible[481]--how is it that in comparison the Frankish period
+seems so dull and shallow? Is it that only Aramæans and Russians
+possess religious genius--and, if so, what have we to expect of the
+Russia that is to come, now that (just in the decisive centuries) the
+obstacle of scholarly orthodoxy has been destroyed?
+
+
+III
+
+Primitive religions have something homeless about them, like the clouds
+and the wind. The mass-souls of the proto-peoples have accidentally
+and fugitively condensed into _one_ being, and accidental, therefore,
+is and remains the “where”--which is an “anywhere”--of the linkages
+of waking-consciousness arising from the fear and defensiveness that
+spread over them. Whether they stay or move on, whether they alter or
+not, is immaterial so far as concerns their inward significance.
+
+From life of this order the high Cultures are separated by a
+deep soil-boundness. Here there is a mother-landscape behind all
+expression-forms, and just as the State, as temple and pyramid and
+cathedral, _must_ fulfil their history _there_ where their idea
+originated, so too the great religion of every Springtime is bound by
+all the roots of its being to the land over which its world-image has
+risen. Sacral practices and dogmas may be carried far and wide, but
+their inner evolution stays spellbound in the place of their birth. It
+is simply an impossibility that the slightest trace of evolution of
+Classical city-cults should be found in Gaul, or a dogmatic advance of
+Faustian Christianity in America. Whatever disconnects itself from the
+land becomes rigid and hard.
+
+It begins, in every case, like a great cry. The dull confusedness of
+terror and defence suddenly passes into a pure awakening of inwardness
+that blossoms up, wholly plantwise, from mother earth, and sees and
+comprehends the depth of the light-world with _one_ outlook. Wherever
+introspectiveness exists as a living sense, this change is felt and
+welcomed as an inward rebirth. In this moment--never earlier, and
+never (at least with the same deep intensity) later--it traverses the
+chosen spirits of the time like a grand light, which dissolves all fear
+in blissful love and lets the invisible appear, all suddenly, in a
+metaphysical radiance.
+
+Every Culture actualizes here its prime symbol. Each has its own sort
+of love--we may call it heavenly or metaphysical as we choose--with
+which it contemplates, comprehends, and takes into itself its godhead,
+and which remains to every other Culture inaccessible or unmeaning.
+Whether the world be something set under a domed light-cavern, as it
+was for Jesus and his companions, or just a vanishingly small bit of a
+star-filled infinity, as Giordano Bruno felt it; whether the Orphics
+take their bodily god into themselves, or the spirit of Plotinus,
+soaring in ecstasy, fuses in henosis with the spirit of God, or St.
+Bernard in his “mystic union” becomes one with the operation of
+infinite deity--the deep urge of the soul is governed always by the
+prime symbol of the particular Culture and of no other.
+
+In the Vth Dynasty of Egypt (2680-2540), which followed that of the
+great pyramid-builders, the cult of the Horus-falcon, whose _ka_
+dwelt in the reigning monarch, faded. The old local cults and even
+the profound Thot religion of Hermopolis fell into the background.
+The sun-religion of Re appears. Out from his palace westward every
+king erects a Re-sanctuary by his tomb-temple, the latter a symbol
+of a life directional from birth to sarcophagus-chamber, the former
+a symbol of grand and eternal nature. Time and Space, being and
+waking-being, Destiny and sacred Causality are set face to face in
+this mighty twin-creation as in no other architecture in the world. To
+both a covered way leads up; that to the Re is accompanied by reliefs
+figuring the power of the sun-god over the plant and animal worlds and
+the changings of seasons. No god-image, no temple, but only an altar of
+alabaster adorns the mighty terrace on which at day-break, high above
+the land, the Pharaoh advances out of the darkness to greet the great
+god who is rising up in the East.[482]
+
+This youthful inwardness proceeds always out of a townless
+country-side, out of villages, hovels, sanctuaries, solitary cloisters,
+and hermitages. Here is formed the community of high awareness, of
+the spiritual elect, which inwardly is separated by a whole world
+from the great being-currents of the heroic and the knightly. The
+two prime estates, priesthood and nobility--contemplation in the
+cathedral and deeds before the castles, askesis and _Minne_, ecstasy
+and high-bred custom--begin their special histories from this point.
+Though the Caliph was also worldly ruler of the faithful, though the
+Pharaoh sacrificed in both holy places, though the German King built
+his family vault under the cathedral, nothing gets rid of the abyssal
+opposition of Time and Space that is reflected in the contrast of
+these two social orders. Religious history and political history, the
+histories of truths and facts, stand opposed and irreconcilable. Their
+opposition begins in cathedral and castle, it propagates itself in the
+ever-growing towns as the opposition of wisdom and business, and in the
+last stages of historical capacity it closes as a wrestle of intellect
+and power.
+
+But both these movements take place on the _heights_ of humanity.
+Peasantdom remains historyless under it all, comprehending politics as
+little as it understands dogmatics. Out of the strong young religion of
+saintly groups, scholasticism and mysticism develop in the early towns;
+reformation, philosophy, and worldly learning in the increasing tumult
+of streets and squares; enlightenment and irreligion in the stone
+masses of the late megalopolis. The beliefs of the peasant outside
+remain “eternal” and always the same. The Egyptian hind understood
+nothing of this Re. He heard the name, but while a grand chapter of
+religious history was passing over his head in the cities, he went on
+worshipping the old Thinite beast-gods, until with the XXVIth Dynasty
+and its fellah-religion they regained supremacy. The Italian peasant
+prayed in Augustus’s time just as he had done long before Homer and as
+he does to-day. Names and dogmas of big religions, blossoming and dying
+in turn, have penetrated to him from the towns and have altered the
+sounds of his words--but the meaning remains ever the same. The French
+peasant lives still in the Merovingian Age. Freya or Mary, Druids or
+Dominicans, Rome or Geneva--nothing touches the innermost kernel of his
+beliefs.
+
+But even in the towns one stratum hangs back, historically, relatively
+to another. Over the primitive religion of the country-side there is
+another popular religion, that of the small people in the underground
+of the towns and in the provinces. The higher a Culture rises--Middle
+Kingdom, Brahman period, Pre-Socratics, Pre-Confucians, Baroque--the
+narrower becomes the circle of those who possess the final truths of
+their time as reality and not as mere name and sound. How many of
+those who lived with Socrates, Augustine, and Pascal understood them?
+In religion as otherwise the human pyramid rises with increasing
+sharpness, till at the end of the Culture it is complete--thereafter,
+bit by bit, to crumble.
+
+About 3000 in Egypt and Babylon two great religions began their
+life-courses. In Egypt the “reformation” period at the end of the
+Old Kingdom saw solar monotheism firmly founded as the religion of
+priests and educated persons. All other gods and goddesses--whom the
+peasantry and the humble people continued to worship in their former
+meaning--are now only incarnations or servants of the one Re. Even the
+particular religion of Hermopolis, with its cosmology, was adapted to
+the grand system, and a theological negotiation brought even the Ptah
+of Memphis into harmony with dogma as an abstract prime-principle of
+creation.[483] Exactly as in the times of Justinian and Charles V, the
+city-spirit asserted mastery over the soul of the land; the formative
+power of the Springtime had come to an end; the dogma was essentially
+complete, and its subsequent treatment by rational processes took down
+more of the structure than it improved. Philosophy began. In respect of
+dogma, the Middle Kingdom was as unimportant as the Baroque.
+
+From 1500 three new religious histories begin--first the Vedic in
+the Punjab, then the Early Chinese in the Hwang-ho, and lastly the
+Classical on the north of the Ægean Sea. Distinctly as the Classical
+man’s world-picture and his prime symbol of the unit body is presented
+to us, it is difficult even to guess the details of the great Early
+Classical religion. For this lacuna we have to thank the Homeric
+poems, which hinder rather than help us in comprehending it. The new
+notion of godhead that was the special ideal of this Culture is the
+human-formed body in the light, the hero as mediator between man and
+god--so much, at any rate, the Iliad evidences. This body might be
+light-transfigured by Apollo or disjected to the winds by Dionysus, but
+in every case it was the basic form of Being. The σῶμα as ideal of the
+extended, the cosmos as sum of these unit bodies, “Being” and “the one”
+as the extended-in-itself and “Logos”[484] as the order thereof in the
+light--all this came up before the eyes of priest-men, grandly visible
+and having the full force of a new religion.
+
+But the Homeric poetry is purely aristocratic. Of the two worlds--that
+of the noble and that of the priest, that of Taboo and that of Totem,
+that of heroism and that of sanctity--only the one is here living. It
+not only does not understand, but actually despises, the other. As in
+the Edda, so in Homer, it is the greatest glory of an immortal to know
+the way and code of nobility. The thinkers of the Classical Baroque,
+from Xenophanes to Plato, regarded these scenes of god-life as impudent
+and trivial, and they were right; they felt exactly as the theology
+and philosophy of the later West felt about the Germanic hero-sagas
+and even about Gottfried of Strassburg, Wolfram, and Walther. If the
+Homeric epics did not vanish as the hero-songs collected by Charlemagne
+vanished, it was only because there was no fully formed Classical
+priesthood, with the result that the Classical cities, when they
+arose, were intellectually dominated by a knightly and not a religious
+literature. The original doctrines of this religion, which out of
+opposition to Homer linked themselves with the (probably) still older
+name of Orpheus, were never written down.
+
+All the same, they existed. Who knows what and how much is hidden
+behind the figures of Calchas and Tiresias? A mighty upheaval there
+must have been at the beginning of this Culture, as at that of
+others--an upheaval extending from the Ægean Sea as far as Etruria--but
+the Iliad shows as few signs of it as the lays of the Nibelungs and
+of Roland show of the inwardness and mysticism of Joachim of Floris,
+St. Francis, and the Crusades, or of the inner fire of that _Dies Iræ_
+of Thomas of Celano, which would probably have excited mirth at a
+thirteenth-century court of love. Great personalities there must have
+been to give a mystical-metaphysical form to the new world-outlook, but
+we know nothing of them and it is only the gay, bright, easy side of
+it that passed into the song of knightly halls. Was the “Trojan War” a
+feud, or was it also a Crusade? What is the meaning of Helen? Even the
+Fall of Jerusalem has been looked at from a worldly point of view as
+well as from a spiritual.
+
+In the nobles’ poetry of Homer, Dionysus and Demeter, as priests’
+gods, are unhonoured.[485] But even in Hesiod, the herdsman of Ascra,
+the enthusiast-searcher inspired by his folk-beliefs, the ideas of
+the great early time are not to be found pure, any more than in Jakob
+Böhme the cobbler.[486] That is the second difficulty. _The great
+early religions, too, were the possession of a class_, and neither
+accessible to nor understandable by the generality; the mysticism of
+earliest Gothic, too, was confined to small elect circles, sealed by
+Latin and the difficulty of its concepts and figures, and neither
+nobility nor peasantry had any distinct idea of its existence. And
+excavation, therefore, important as it is in respect of the Classical
+country-faiths, can tell us as little about the Early Classical
+_religion_ as a village church can tell us about Abelard or Bonaventura.
+
+But Æschylus and Pindar, at any rate, were under the spell of a great
+priestly tradition, and before them there were the Pythagoreans, who
+made the Demeter-cult their centre (thereby indicating where the
+kernel of that mythology is to be sought), and earlier still were
+the Eleusinian Mysteries and the Orphic reformation of the seventh
+century; and, finally, there are the fragments of Pherecydes and
+Epimenides, who were not the first _but the last_ dogmatists of a
+theology in reality ancient. The idea that impiety was a heritable
+sin, visited upon the children and the children’s children, was known
+to Hesiod and Solon, as well as the doctrine (Apollinian also) of
+“Hybris.”[487] Plato, however, as an Orphic opponent of the Homeric
+conception of life, sets forth very ancient doctrines of hell and
+the judgment of the dead in his _Phædo_. We know the tremendous
+formula of Orphism, the Nay of the mysteries that answered the Yea
+of the agon, which arose, certainly by 1100 at latest, as a protest
+of Waking-Consciousness against Being--σῶμα σῆμα, that splendid
+Classical body a grave! Here man is no longer _feeling_ himself as a
+thing of breeding, strength, and movement; he _knows_ himself and is
+terrified by what he knows. Here begins the Classical askesis, which
+by strictest rites and expiations, even by voluntary suicide, seeks
+deliverance from this Euclidean body-being. It is an entirely erroneous
+interpretation of the Pre-Socratics to suppose that it was from the
+view-point of enlightenment that they spoke against Homer. It was as
+_ascetics_ that they did so. These “contemporaries” of Descartes and
+Leibniz were brought up in the strict traditions of the old great
+Orphism, which were as faithfully preserved in the almost claustral
+meditation-schools--old and famous holy places--as Gothic Scholasticism
+was treasured in the wholly intellectual universities of the Baroque.
+From the self-immolation of Empedocles the line runs straight forward
+to the suicide of the Roman Stoic, and straight back to “Orpheus.”
+
+Out of these last surviving traces, however, an outline of the Early
+Classical religion emerges bright and distinct. Just as all Gothic
+inwardness directed itself upon Mary, Queen of Heaven and Virgin
+and Mother, so in that moment of the Classical World there arose a
+garland of myths, images, and figures around Demeter, the bearing
+mother, around Gaia and Persephone, and also Dionysus the begetter,
+chthonian[488] and phallic cults, festivals and mysteries of birth and
+death. All this, too, was characteristically Classical, conceived under
+the aspect of present corporeality. The Apollinian religion venerated
+body, the Orphic rejected it, that of Demeter celebrated the moments
+of fertilization and birth, in which body acquired being. There was a
+mysticism that reverently honoured the secret of life, in doctrine,
+symbol, and mime, but side by side with it there was orgiasm too, for
+the squandering of the body is as deeply and closely akin to asceticism
+as sacred prostitution is to celibacy--both, all, are negations of
+time. It is the reverse of the Apollinian “halt!” that checks on the
+threshold of Hybris; detachment is not kept, but flung away. He who has
+experienced these things in his soul has “from being a mortal become
+a god.” In those days there must have been great saints and seers who
+towered as far above the figures of Heraclitus and Empedocles as the
+latter above the itinerant teachers of Cynicism and Stoicism--things
+of this order do not happen namelessly and impersonally. As the
+songs of Achilles and Odysseus were dying down everywhere, a grand,
+strict doctrine arose at the famous old cult-places, a mysticism and
+scholasticism with developed educational methods and a secret oral
+tradition, as in India. But all that is buried, and the relics of the
+later times barely suffice to prove that it once existed.
+
+By putting the knightly poetry and folk-cults quite aside, then, we can
+even now determine something more of this (_the_) Classical religion.
+But in doing so there is a third pitfall to be avoided--the opposing
+of Greek religion to Roman religion. For in reality there was no such
+opposition.
+
+Rome is only _one_ of innumerable city-states that arose during the
+great epoch of colonization. It was built by Etruscans. From the
+religious point of view it was re-created under the Etruscan dynasty of
+the sixth century, and it is possible indeed that the Capitoline group
+of deities, Jupiter, Juno, Minerva--which at that time replaced the
+ancient trinity, Jupiter, Mars, Quirinus, of the “Numa” religion--was
+in some way connected with the family cult of the Tarquins, in which
+case Minerva, as goddess of the city, is unmistakably a copy of Athene
+Polias.[489] The cults of this single city are properly comparable only
+with those of _individual_ Greek-speaking cities of the same degree of
+maturity, say Sparta or Thebes, which were in nowise more colourful.
+The little that in these latter discloses itself as generally Hellenic
+will also prove to be generally Italian. And as for the claim that the
+“Roman” religion is distinguished from that of the Greek city-states by
+the absence of myth--what is the basis of our knowledge on the point?
+We should know nothing at all of the great god-sagas of the Springtime
+if we had only the festival-calendar and the public cults of the Greek
+city-states to go upon, just as we should learn nothing of Jesus’s
+piety from the proceedings of the Council of Ephesus or of that of St.
+Francis from a church constitution of the Reformation. Menelaus and
+Helen were for the Laconian state-cult tree-deities and nothing more.
+The Classical myth derives from a period when the Poleis with their
+festivals and sacral constitutions were not yet in existence, when
+there was not only no Rome, but no Athens. With the religious duties
+and notions of the cities--which were eminently rational--it has no
+connexion at all. Indeed, myth and cult are even less in touch with one
+another in the Classical Culture than in others. The myth, moreover, is
+in no way a creation of the Hellenic culture-field as a whole--it is
+not “Greek”--but originated (like the stories of Jesus’s childhood and
+the Grail legend) in this and that group, quite local, under pressure
+of deep inward stirrings. For instance, the idea of Olympus arose in
+Thessaly and thence, as a common property of _all_ educated persons,
+spread out to Cyprus and to Etruria, thus, of course, involving Rome.
+Etruscan painting presupposes it as a thing of common knowledge, and
+therefore the Tarquins and their court must have been familiar with
+it. We may attach any implications we please to “belief” (whatever that
+may mean) in this myth; the point is that they will be as valid for
+Romans of the period of the Kings as for the inhabitants of Tegea or
+Corcyra.
+
+That the pictures of Greek and Roman mythology that modern research has
+developed are quite different from this is the result not of the facts,
+but of the _methods_. In the case of Rome (Mommsen) the festal calendar
+and the State cults, in that of Greece the poetic literature, were
+taken as the starting-points. Apply the “Latin” method which has led up
+to Wissowa’s picture to the Greek cities, and the result is a wholly
+similar picture, as, for example, in Nilsson’s _Griechische Festen_.
+
+When this is taken into consideration, the Classical religion is seen
+to be a whole possessing an inner unity. The grand god-legends of the
+eleventh century, which have the dew of Spring upon them, and in their
+tragic holiness remind us of Gethsemane, Balder’s death, and Francis,
+are the purest essence of “theoria,” contemplation, a world-picture
+before the inner eye, and born of the common inward awakening of a
+group of chosen souls from the world of chivalry.[490] But the much
+later city-religions are wholly _technique_, formal worship, and as
+such represent only one side (and a different side) of piety. They
+are as far from the great myth as they are from the folk-belief. They
+are concerned neither with metaphysic nor with ethic, but only with
+the fulfilment of sacral acts. And, finally, the choice of cults by
+the several cities very often originated, not, like the myth, from a
+single world-view, but from the accidental ancestor- and family-cults
+of great houses, which (precisely as in the Gothic) made their sacred
+figures the tutelary deities of the city and at the same time reserved
+to themselves the rights of celebrating and worshipping them. In Rome,
+for example, the Lupercalia in honour of the field-god Faunus were a
+privilege of the Quinctii and Fabii.
+
+The Chinese religion, of which the great “Gothic” period lies between
+1300 and 1100 and covers the rise of the Chóu dynasty, must be treated
+with extreme care. In presence of the superficial profundity and
+pedantic enthusiasm of Chinese thinkers of the Confucius and Lao-tse
+type--who were all born in the _ancien régime_ period of their
+state-world--it seems very hazardous to try to determine anything
+at all as to high mysticism and grand legends in the beginning.
+Nevertheless, such a mysticism and such legends must once have existed.
+But it is not from these over-rationalized philosophies of the great
+cities that we shall learn anything about them--as little as Homer can
+give us in the Classical parallel, though for another reason. What
+should we know about Gothic piety if all its works had undergone the
+censorship of Puritans and Retioralists like Locke, Rousseau, and
+Wolff! And yet we treat the Confucian _close_ of Chinese inwardness
+as its beginning--if, indeed, we do not go farther and describe the
+syncretism of Han times as “the” religion of China.[491]
+
+We know nowadays that, contrary to the usual assumption, there was
+a powerful old-Chinese priesthood.[492] We know that in the text of
+the Shu-Ching, relics of the ancient hero-sagas and god-myths were
+worked over rationalistically, and were thus able to survive, and
+similarly the Hou-li, Ngi-li, and Shi-King[493] would still reveal a
+good deal more if only they were attacked with the conviction that
+there was in them something far deeper than Confucius and his like
+were capable of comprehending. We hear of chthonian and phallic cults
+in early Chóu times; of orgiastic rites in which the service of the
+gods was accompanied by ecstatic mass-dances; of mimic representations
+and dialogues between god and priestess, out of which probably (as
+in Greece) the Chinese drama evolved.[494] And we obtain an inkling
+finally of why the luxuriant growth of early Chinese god-figures
+and myths was necessarily swallowed up in an emperor-mythology. For
+not only all saga-emperors, but also most of the figures of the
+Hia and Shang dynasties before 1400 are--all dates and chronicles
+notwithstanding--nothing but nature transformed into history. The
+origins of such a process lie deep in the possibilities of every young
+Culture.[495] Ancestor-worship ever seeks to gain power over the
+nature-dæmons. All Homeric heroes, and Minos and Theseus and Romulus,
+are gods become kings. In the _Heliand_,[496] Christ is about to
+become so. Mary is the crowned Queen of Heaven. It is the supreme (and
+perfectly unconscious) mode which enables men of breeding to venerate
+something--that is, for them, what is great must have breeding, race,
+must be mighty and lordly, the ancestor of whole families. A strong
+priesthood is able to make short work of this mythology of Time, but it
+won through partially in the Classical and completely in China--exactly
+in proportion to the disappearance of the priestly element. The old
+gods are now emperors, princes, ministers, and retainers; natural
+events have become acts of rulers, and onsets of peoples social
+enterprises. Nothing could have suited the Confucians better. Here was
+a myth which could absorb social-ethical tendencies to an indefinite
+extent, and all that was necessary was to expunge the traces of the
+original nature-myth.
+
+To the Chinese waking-consciousness heaven and earth were halves of
+the macrocosm, without opposition, each a mirror-image of the other.
+In this picture there was neither Magian dualism nor Faustian unity of
+active force. Becoming appears in the unconstrained reciprocal working
+of two principles, the _yang_ and the _yin_, which were conceived
+rather as periodic than as polar. Accordingly, there are two souls
+in man, the _kwei_ which corresponded with the _yin_, the earthly,
+the dark, the cold, and disintegrated with the body; and the _sen_,
+which is higher, light, and permanent.[497] But, further, there are
+innumerable multitudes of souls of both kinds outside man. Troops of
+spirits fill the air and the water and the earth--all is peopled and
+moved by _kweis_ and _sens_. The life of nature and that of man are
+in reality made out of the play of such units. Wisdom, will, force,
+and virtue depend on their relationship. Asceticism and orgiasm;
+the knightly custom of _hiao_, which requires the noble to revenge
+an impiety towards an ancestor even after centuries, and commands
+him never to survive defeat;[498] and the reasoning moral of the
+_yen_, which, according to the judgment of rationalism, followed from
+knowledge--all proceed from conceptions of the forces and possibilities
+of the _kwei_ and the _sen_.
+
+All this is concentrated in the basic word “_tao_.” The conflict
+between the _yang_ and the _yin_ in man is the _tao_ of his life; the
+warp and woof of the spirit-swarms outside him are the _tao_ of Nature.
+The world possesses _tao_ inasmuch as it possesses beat, rhythm, and
+periodicity. It possesses _li_, tension, inasmuch as man knows it and
+abstracts from it fixed relationships for future use. Time, Destiny,
+Direction, Race, History--all this, contemplated with the great
+world-embracing vision of the early Chóu times, lies in this one word.
+The path of the Pharaoh through the dark alley to his shrine is related
+to it, and so is the Faustian passion of the third dimension, but _tao_
+is nevertheless far removed from any idea of the technical conquest of
+Nature. The Chinese park avoids energetic perspective. It lays horizon
+behind horizon and, instead of pointing to a goal, tempts to wander.
+The Chinese “cathedral” of the early time, the Pi-Yung, with its paths
+that lead through gates and thickets, stairs and bridges and courts,
+has never the inexorable march of Egypt or the drive into depth of the
+Gothic.
+
+When Alexander appeared on the Indus, the piety of these three
+Cultures--Chinese, Indian, Classical--had long been moulded into the
+historyless forms of a broad Taoism, Buddhism, and Stoicism. But
+it was not long before the group of Magian religions arose in the
+region intermediate between the Classical and the Indian field, and
+it must have been at about the same time that the religious history
+of the Maya and Inca, now hopelessly lost to us, began. A thousand
+years later, when here also all was inwardly fulfilled and done with,
+there appeared on the unpromising soil of France, sudden and swiftly
+mounting, Germanic-Catholic Christianity. It was in this case as in
+every other; whether the whole stock of names and practices came from
+the East, or whether thousands of particular details were derived
+from primeval Germanic and Celtic feelings, the Gothic religion is
+something so new and unheard-of, something of which the final depths
+are so completely incomprehensible by anyone outside its faith, that
+to contrive linkages for them on the historical surface is meaningless
+jugglery.
+
+The mythic world that thereupon formed itself around this young soul,
+an integer of force, will, and direction seen under the symbol of
+Infinity, a stupendous action-into-distance, chasms of terror and of
+bliss suddenly opening up--it was all, for the elect of this early
+religiousness, something so entirely natural that they could not even
+detach themselves sufficiently to “know” it as a unit. They lived in
+it. To us, on the contrary, who are separated from these ancestors by
+thirty generations, this world seems so alien and overpowering that we
+always seek to grasp it in detail, and so misunderstand its wholeness
+and undividedness.
+
+The father-godhead men felt as Force itself, eternal, grand, and
+ever-present activity, sacred causality, which could scarcely assume
+any form comprehensible by human eyes. But the whole longing of the
+young breed, the whole desire of this strongly coursing blood, to
+bow itself in humility before the _meaning of the blood_ found its
+expression in the figure of the Virgin and Mother Mary, whose crowning
+in the heavens was one of the earliest motives of the Gothic art. She
+is a light-figure, in white, blue, and gold, surrounded by the heavenly
+hosts. She leans over the new-born Child; she fells the sword in her
+heart; she stands at the foot of the cross; she holds the corpse of
+the dead Son. From the turn of the tenth century on, Petrus Damiani
+and Bernard of Clairvaux developed her cult; there arose the Ave Maria
+and the angelic greeting and later, among the Dominicans, the crown
+of roses. Countless legends gathered round her figure.[499] She is
+the guardian of the Church’s store of Grace, the Great Intercessor.
+Among the Franciscans arose the festival of the Visitation, amongst
+the English Benedictines (even before 1100) that of the Immaculate
+Conception, which elevated her completely above mortal humanity into
+the world of light.
+
+But this world of purity, light, and utter beauty of soul would
+have been unimaginable without the counter-idea, inseparable from
+it, an idea that constitutes one of the maxima of Gothic, one of
+its unfathomable creations--one that the present day forgets, and
+_deliberately_ forgets. While she there sits enthroned, smiling in
+her beauty and tenderness, there lies in the background another world
+that throughout nature and throughout mankind weaves and breeds
+ill, pierces, destroys, seduces--namely, the realm of the Devil. It
+penetrates the whole of Creation, it lies ambushed everywhere. All
+around is an army of goblins, night-spirits, witches, werewolves, all
+in human shape. No man knows whether or not his neighbour has signed
+himself away to the Evil One. No one can say of an unfolding child
+that it is not already a devil’s temptress. An appalling fear, such
+as is perhaps only paralleled in the early spring of Egypt, weighs
+upon man. Every moment he may stumble into the abyss. There were black
+magic, and devils’ masses and witches’ sabbaths, night feasts on
+mountain-tops, magic draughts and charm-formulæ. The Prince of Hell,
+with his relatives--mother and grandmother, for as his very existence
+denies and scorns the sacrament of marriage, he may not have wife or
+child--his fallen angels and his uncanny henchmen, is one of the most
+tremendous creations in all religious history. The Germanic Loki is
+hardly more than a preliminary hint of him. Their grotesque figures,
+with horns, claws, and horses’ hoofs, were already fully formed in
+the mystery plays of the eleventh century; everywhere the artist’s
+fancy abounded in them, and, right up to Dürer and Grünewald, Gothic
+painting is unthinkable without them. The Devil is sly, malignant,
+malicious, but yet in the end the powers of light dupe him. He and
+his brood, bad-tempered, coarse, fiendishly inventive, are of a
+monstrous imaginativeness, incarnations of hellish laughter opposed
+to the illumined smile of the Queen of Heaven, but incarnations, too,
+of Faustian world-humour[500] opposed to the panic of the sinner’s
+contrition.
+
+It is not possible to exaggerate either the grandeur of this forceful,
+insistent picture or the depth of sincerity with which it was believed
+in. The Mary-myths and the Devil-myth formed themselves side by side,
+neither possible without the other. Disbelief in either of them was
+deadly sin. There was a Mary-cult of prayer, and a Devil-cult of
+spells and exorcisms. Man walked continuously on the thin crust of
+the bottomless pit. Life in this world is a ceaseless and desperate
+contest with the Devil, into which every individual plunges as a
+member of the Church Militant, to do battle for himself and to win his
+knight’s spurs. The Church Triumphant of angels and saints in their
+glory looks down from on high, and heavenly Grace is the warrior’s
+shield in the battle. Mary is the protectress to whose bosom he can fly
+to be comforted, and the high lady who awards the prizes of valour.
+Both worlds have their legends, their art, their scholasticism, and
+their mysticism--for the Devil, too, can work miracles. Characteristic
+of this alone among the religious Springtimes is the symbolism of
+_colour_--to the Madonna belong white and blue, to the Devil black,
+sulphur-yellow, and red. The saints and angels float in the æther, but
+the devils leap and crouch and the witches rustle through the night. It
+is the two together, light and night, which fill Gothic art with its
+indescribable inwardness--that, and not any “artistic” fancifulness.
+Every man knew the world to be peopled with angel and devil troops. The
+light-encircled angels of Fra Angelico and the early Rhenish masters,
+and the grimacing things on the portals of the great cathedrals,
+_really_ filled the air. Men saw them, felt their presence everywhere.
+To-day we simply no longer know what a myth is; for it is no mere
+æsthetically pleasing mode of representing something to oneself, but
+a piece of the most lively actuality that mines every corner of the
+waking-consciousness and shakes the innermost structure of being. These
+creatures were about one all the time. They were glimpsed without
+being seen. They were believed in with a faith that felt the very
+thought of proof as a desecration. What we call myth nowadays, our
+littérateur’s and connoisseur’s taste for Gothic colour, is nothing but
+Alexandrinism. In the old days men did not “enjoy” it--behind it stood
+Death.[501]
+
+For the Devil gained possession of human souls and seduced them into
+heresy, lechery, and black arts. It was war that was waged against
+him on earth,[502] and waged with fire and sword upon those who had
+given themselves up to him. It is easy enough for us to-day to think
+ourselves out of such notions, but if we eliminate this appalling
+reality from Gothic, all that remains is mere romanticism. It was not
+only the love-glowing hymns to Mary, but the cries of countless pyres
+as well that rose up to heaven. Hard by the Cathedral were the gallows
+and the wheel. Every man lived in those days in the consciousness of
+an immense danger, and it was hell, not the hangman, that he feared.
+Unnumbered thousands of witches genuinely imagined themselves to be
+so; they denounced themselves, prayed for absolution, and in pure love
+of truth confessed their night rides and bargains with the Evil One.
+Inquisitors, in tears and compassion for the fallen wretches, doomed
+them to the rack in order to save their souls. That is the Gothic myth,
+out of which came the cathedral, the crusader, the deep and spiritual
+painting, the mysticism. In its shadow flowered that profound Gothic
+blissfulness of which to-day we cannot even form an idea.
+
+In Carolingian times, all this was still strange and far. Charlemagne
+in the first Saxon Capitulary (787) put a ban on the ancient Germanic
+belief in werewolves and night-gangers (_strigæ_), and as late as
+1120 it was condemned as an error in the decree of Burkard of Worms.
+But twenty years later it was only in a dilute form that the anathema
+reappeared in the _Decretum Gratiani_. Cæsarius of Heisterbach,
+already, was familiar with the whole devil-legend and in the _Legenda
+Aurea_ it is just as actual and as effective as the Mary-legends. In
+1233, when the Cathedrals of Mainz and Speyer were being vaulted,
+appeared the bull _Vox in Rama_, by which the belief in Devil and witch
+was made canonical. St. Francis’s “Hymn to the Sun” had not long been
+written, and the Franciscans were kneeling in intimate prayer before
+Mary and spreading her cult afar, when the Dominicans armed themselves
+for battle with the Devil by setting up the Inquisition. Heavenly love
+found its focus in the Mary-image, and _eo ipso_ earthly love became
+akin to the Devil. Woman is Sin--so the great ascetics felt, as their
+fellows of the Classical, of China, and of India had felt. The Devil
+rules only through woman. The witch is the propagator of deadly sin.
+It was Thomas Aquinas who evolved the repulsive theory of Incubus and
+Succuba. Inward mystics like Bonaventura, Albertus Magnus, Duns Scotus,
+developed a full metaphysic of the devilish.
+
+The Renaissance had ever the strong faith of the Gothic at the back
+of its world-outlook. When Vasari eulogized Cimabue and Giotto for
+returning to Nature as their teacher, it was this Gothic nature that
+he had in mind, a nature influenced in every nook by the encircling
+troops of angels and devils that stood there, ever threatening, in
+the light. “Imitation” of Nature meant imitation of its soul, not
+of its surface. Let us be rid at last of the fable of a renewal of
+Classical “Antiquity.” Renaissance, _Rinascita_, meant then the Gothic
+uplift from A.D. 1000 onward,[503] the new _Faustian_ world-feeling,
+the new personal experience of _the Ego in the Infinite_. For some
+individual spirits, no doubt, it meant a sentimental enthusiasm for
+the Classical (or what was thought to be the Classical), but that
+was a manifestation of taste, nothing more.[504] The Classical myth
+was entertainment-material, an allegorical play, through the thin
+veil of which men saw, no less definitely than before, the old Gothic
+actuality. When Savonarola stood up, the antique trappings vanished
+from the surface of Florentine life in an instant. It was all for the
+church that the Florentines laboured, and with conviction. Raphael
+was the most deeply intimate of all Madonna-painters. A firm belief
+in the realm of Satan, and in deliverance from it through the saints,
+lay at the root of all this art and literature; and every one of
+them, painters, architects, and humanists--however often the names of
+Cicero and Virgil, Venus and Apollo were on their lips--looked upon
+the burning of witches as something entirely natural and wore amulets
+against the devil. The writings of Marsilius Ficinus are full of
+learned disquisitions on devils and witches. Francesco della Mirandola
+wrote (in elegant Latin) his dialogue “The Witch” in order to warn the
+fine intellects of his circle against a danger.[505] When Leonardo da
+Vinci, at the summit of the Renaissance, was working upon his “Anna
+Selbdritt,”[506] the “Witches’ Hammer” was being written in Rome (1487)
+in the finest Humanistic Latin. It was _these_ that constitute the real
+myth of the Renaissance, and without them we shall never understand the
+glorious and truly Gothic force of this anti-Gothic movement.[507] Men
+who did not feel the Devil very near at hand could not have created the
+_Divina Commedia_ or the frescoes of Orvieto[508] or the ceiling of the
+Sistine Chapel.
+
+It was the tremendous background of this myth that awakened in the
+Faustian soul a feeling of what it was. An Ego lost in Infinity, an
+Ego that was all force, but a force negligibly weak in an infinity
+of greater forces;[509] that was all will, but a will full of fear
+for its freedom. Never has the problem of Free-will been meditated
+upon more deeply or more painfully. Other Cultures have simply not
+known it. But precisely because here Magian resignation was totally
+impossible--because that which thought was not an “it” or particle
+of an all-soul, but an individual, fighting Ego, seeking to maintain
+itself--every limitation upon freedom was felt as a chain that had to
+be dragged along through life, and life in turn was felt as a living
+death. And if so--why? For _what_?
+
+The result of this in-looking was that immense sense of guilt which
+runs throughout these centuries like one long, desperate lament. The
+cathedrals rose ever more supplicatingly to heaven, the Gothic vaulting
+became a joining of hands in prayer, and little comfort of light
+shone through the high windows into the night of the long naves. The
+choking parallel-sequences of the church chants, the Latin hymns, tell
+of bruised knees and flagellations in the nocturnal cell. For Magian
+man the world-cavern had been close and the heaven impending, but for
+Gothic man heaven was infinitely far. No hand seemed to reach down from
+these spaces, and all about the lone Ego the mocking Devil’s world lay
+in leaguer. And, therefore, the great longing of Mysticism was to lose
+created form (as Heinrich Seuse said), to be rid of self and all things
+(Meister Eckart), to abandon selfness (_Theologie deutsch_).[510] And
+out of these longings there grew up an unending dogged subtilizing on
+notions which were ever more and more finely dissected to get at the
+“why,” and finally a universal cry for Grace--not the Magian Grace
+coming down as substance, but the Faustian Grace that unbinds the Will.
+
+_To be able to will freely_ is, at the very bottom, the one gift
+that the Faustian soul asks of heaven. The seven sacraments of the
+Gothic, felt as one by Peter Lombard, elevated into dogma by the
+Lateran Council of 1215, and grounded in mystical foundations by
+Thomas Aquinas, mean this and only this. They accompany the unit soul
+from birth to death and protect it against the diabolical powers that
+seek to nest themselves in its will. For to sell oneself to the Devil
+means to deliver up _one’s will_ to him. The Church Militant on earth
+is the visible community of those who are enabled, by enjoyment of
+the sacraments, to will. This certainty of free being is held to be
+guaranteed in the altar-sacrament, which accordingly suffers a complete
+change of meaning. The miracle of the holy transformation which takes
+place daily under the hands of the priest--the consecrated Host in the
+high altar of the cathedral, wherein the believer sensed the presence
+of him who of old sacrificed himself to secure for his own the _freedom
+to will_--called forth a sigh of relief of such depth and sincerity as
+we moderns can hardly imagine. It was in thanksgiving, therefore, that
+the chief feast of the Catholic Church, Corpus Christi, was founded in
+1264.[511]
+
+But more important still--and by far--was the essentially Faustian
+prime-sacrament of Contrition. This ranks with the Mary-myth and the
+Devil-myth as the third great creation of the Gothic. And, indeed,
+it is from this third that the other two derive depth and meaning;
+it discloses the last secrets of this Culture’s soul, and so sets it
+apart from all other Cultures. The effect of the Magian baptism was
+to incorporate a man in the great _consensus_--the _one_ great “it”
+of the divine spirit took up its abode in him as in the others, and
+thereafter resignation to all that should happen became his duty. But
+in the Faustian contrition the _idea of personality_ was implicit. It
+is not true that the Renaissance discovered personality[512]; what
+it did was to bring personality up to a brilliant surface, whereby
+it suddenly became visible to everyone. Its birth is in Gothic; it
+is the most intimate and peculiar property of Gothic; it is one
+and the same with Gothic soul. For this contrition is something
+that each one accomplishes for himself alone. He alone can search
+his own conscience. He alone stands rueful in the presence of the
+Infinite. He alone can and must in confession understand and put
+into words his own past. And even the absolution that frees his Ego
+for new responsible action is personal to himself. Baptism is wholly
+impersonal--one receives it because one is _a_ man, not because one
+is _this_ man--but the idea of contrition presupposes that the value
+of every act depends uniquely upon the man who does it. This is what
+differentiates the Western drama from the Classical, the Chinese, and
+the Indian. This is what directs our legislation more and more with
+reference to the doer rather than to the deed, and bases our primary
+ethical conceptions on individual doing and not typical behaviour.
+Faustian responsibility instead of Magian resignedness, the individual
+instead of the _consensus_; relief from, instead of submissiveness
+under, burdens--that is the difference between the most active and the
+most passive of all sacraments, and at the back of it again lies the
+difference between the world-cavern and infinity-dynamics. Baptism is
+something done upon one, Contrition something done by oneself within
+oneself. And, moreover, this conscientious searching of one’s own past
+is both the earliest evidence of, and the finest training for, the
+_historical sense_ of Faustian mankind. There is no other Culture in
+which the personal life of the living man, the conscientious tracing of
+each feature, has been so important, for this alone has required the
+accounts to be rendered in words. If historical research and biography
+are characteristic of the spirit of the West from its beginnings;
+if both in the last resort are self-examination and confession; if
+our lives are led with an assuredness and conscious reference to
+the historic background that nowhere else has been even imagined as
+possible or tolerable; if, lastly, we habitually look at history
+in terms of millennia, not rhapsodically or decoratively as in the
+Classical World and in China, but directionally and with the almost
+sacramental formula “_Tout comprendre, c’est tout pardonner_” ever in
+our minds--we have this sacrament of the Gothic Church, this continual
+unburdening of the Ego by _historical_ test and justification to thank
+for it. Every confession is an autobiography. This peculiar liberation
+of the will is to us so necessary that the refusal of absolution drives
+to despair, even to destruction. Only he who senses the bliss of such
+an inward acquittal can comprehend the old name of the _sacramentum
+resurgentium_, the sacrament of those who are risen again.[513]
+
+When in this heaviest of decisions the soul is left to its own
+resources, something unresolved remains hanging over it like a
+perpetual cloud. It may be said, therefore, that perhaps no institution
+in any religion has brought so much happiness into the world as this.
+The whole inwardness and heavenly love of the Gothic rests upon the
+certainty of full absolution through the power invested in the priest.
+In the insecurity that ensued from the decline of this sacrament, both
+Gothic joy of life and the Mary-world of the light faded out. Only
+the Devil’s world, with its grim all-presentness, remained. And then,
+in place of the blissfulness irrecoverably lost, came the Protestant,
+and especially Puritan, heroism, which could fight on, even hopeless,
+in a lost position. “Auricular confession,” said Goethe once, “ought
+never to have been taken from mankind.” Over the lands in which it had
+died out, a heavy earnestness spread itself. Ethic and costume, art
+and thought, took on the night-colour of the only myth that remained
+outstanding. Nothing is less sunlit than the doctrines of Kant. “Every
+man his own priest” is a conviction to which men could win through,
+but only as to that part of priesthood that involves duties, _not as
+to that which possesses powers_. No man confesses himself with the
+inward certainty of absolution. And as the need of the soul to be
+relieved of its past and to be redirected remained urgent as ever, all
+the higher forms of communication were transmuted, and in Protestant
+countries music and painting, letter-writing and memoirs, from being
+modes of description became modes of self-denunciation, penance, and
+unbounded confession. Even in Catholic regions too--in Paris above
+all--art as psychology set in as doubt in the sacrament of Contrition
+and Absolution grew. Outlook on the world was lost in ceaseless
+mine-warfare within the self. In lieu of the Infinite, contemporaries
+and descendants were called in to be priests and judges. Personal art,
+in the sense that distinguishes Goethe from Dante, and Rembrandt from
+Michelangelo, was a substitute for the sacrament of confession. It was,
+also, the sign that this Culture was already in the condition of a Late
+period.[514]
+
+
+IV
+
+In all Cultures, Reformation has the same meaning--the bringing back
+of the religion to the purity of its original idea as this manifested
+itself in the great centuries of the beginning. In no Culture is this
+movement missing, whether we know about it, as in the case of Egypt, or
+not, as in that of China. It means, further, that the city and with it
+the city-spirit are gradually freeing themselves from the soul of the
+country-side, setting up in opposition to the latter’s all-power and
+reconsidering the feelings and thoughts of the primitive pre-urban time
+with reference to its present self. It was Destiny and not intellectual
+necessities of thought that led, in the Magian and Faustian worlds, to
+the budding-off of new religions at this point. We know to-day that,
+under Charles V, Luther was within an ace of becoming the reformer of
+the whole undivided Church.
+
+For Luther, like all reformers in all Cultures, was not the first, but
+_the last of a grand succession_ which led from the great ascetics
+of the open land to the city-priest. Reformation is _Gothic_, the
+accomplishment and the testament thereof. Luther’s chorale “_Ein’
+feste Burg_” does _not_ belong to the spiritual lyrism of the Baroque.
+There rumbles in it still the splendid Latin of the _Dies iræ_. It
+is the Church Militant’s last mighty Satan-song.[515] Luther, like
+every reformer that had arisen since the year 1000, fought the Church
+not because it demanded too much, but because it demanded too little.
+The great stream flows on from Cluny: through Arnold of Brescia, who
+preached return to Apostolic simplicity and was burned in 1155; through
+Joachim of Floris, who was the first to use the world “_reformare_;”
+the spirituals of the Franciscan Order; Jacopone da Todi, revolutionary
+and singer of the _Stabat Mater_, the knight whom the death of a
+young wife turned into an ascetic and who tried to overthrow Boniface
+VIII for governing the Church too slackly; through Wyclif and Hus
+and Savonarola; to Luther, Karlstadt, Zwingli, Calvin, and--Loyola.
+The intention of these men, one and all, was not to overcome the
+Christianity of the Gothic, but to bring it to inward fulfilment. So
+also with Marcion, Athanasius, the Monophysites, and the Nestorians,
+who sought in the Councils of Ephesus and Chalcedon to purify the faith
+and lead it back to its origins.[516] But so also the Orphics of the
+Classical seventh century were the last and not the first of a series
+that must have begun even before 1000 B.C. So with the establishment of
+the Re religion in Egypt at the close of the Old Kingdom, the Egyptian
+Gothic. It is an ending, not a new beginning, that these signify. Just
+so, again, a reform-fulfilment happened in the Vedic religion about the
+tenth century and was followed by the setting-in of late Brahmanism.
+And in the ninth century a corresponding epochal point must have
+occurred in the religious history of China.
+
+However widely the Reformations of the various Cultures may differ
+amongst themselves, the purpose is the same for all--to bring the
+faith, which had strayed all too far into the world-as-history
+and time-secularism (“_Zeitlichkeit_”), back into the realm of
+Nature, clean waking-consciousness, and pure cause-controlled and
+cause-pervaded Space; out of the world of economics (“wealth”)
+into that of science (“poverty”), out of patrician and cavalier
+society (which was also that of Renaissance and Humanism) into
+that of spirituals and ascetics; and lastly (as significant as it
+is impossible) out of the political ambitions of vestmented human
+thoroughbreds into the realm of holy Causality that is not of this
+world.
+
+In those times the West--and the situation was the same in the other
+Cultures--divided the _Corpus Christianorum_ of the population into the
+three classes of _status policticus, ecclesiasticus, and œconomicus_
+(that is, urban), but as the outlook was that of the city and no longer
+that of the castle and the village, officials and judges belonged to
+the first-named class, men of learning to the second--and the peasant
+was forgotten. This is the key to the opposition of the Renaissance
+and Reformation, which was an opposition of class and not a difference
+in world-feeling like that of Renaissance and Gothic. Castle-taste
+and cloister-soul moved into town, and remained there, as before,
+in opposition--as in Florence the Medici to Savonarola, and as in
+old Greece the noble families of the cities--with their Homer now
+finally written down--to the last Orphics--these, too, writers. The
+Renaissance artists and Humanists are the legitimate successors of the
+Troubadours and Minnesingers, and just as there is a line from Arnold
+of Brescia to Luther, so there is a line from Bertrand de Born and
+Peire Cardinal, through Petrarch, to Ariosto. The castle has become
+the town-house, the knight the patrician. The whole movement adhered
+to palaces, as courts; it limits itself to those fields of expression
+that affect and interest polite society; it is bright and gay, like
+Homer, because it is courtly--an atmosphere where problems were bad
+taste, where Dante and Michelangelo cannot but have felt themselves out
+of place--and it spread over the Alps to the courts of the North, not
+as a new world-outlook, but as a new taste. The “Northern” Renaissance
+of the mercantile and capital cities consisted simply in the fact that
+the _bon ton_ of the Italian patriciate replaced that of the French
+chivalry.
+
+But the last reformers, too, the Luthers and Savonarolas, were
+_urban_ monks, and this differentiates them profoundly from the
+Joachims and the Bernards. Their intellectual and urban askesis is the
+stepping-stone from the hermitages of quiet valleys to the scholar’s
+study of the Baroque. The mystic experience of Luther which gave birth
+to his doctrine of justification is the experience, not of a St.
+Bernard in the presence of woods and hills and clouds and stars, but
+of a man who looks through narrow windows on the streets and house
+walls and gables. Broad God-perfused nature is remote, outside the city
+wall; and the free intellect, detached from the soil, is inside it.
+Within the urban, stonewalled waking-consciousness sense and reason
+part company and become enemies, and the city-mysticism of the last
+reformers is thus a mysticism of pure reason through and through, and
+not one of the eye--an illumination of concepts, in presence of which
+the brightly coloured figures of the old myth fade into paleness.
+
+Necessarily, therefore, it was, in its real depths, a thing of the few.
+Nothing was left of that sensible content that formerly had offered
+even to the poorest something to grip. The mighty act of Luther was
+a purely intellectual decision. Not for nothing has he been regarded
+as the last great Schoolman of the line of Occam.[517] He completely
+liberated the Faustian personality--the intermediate person of the
+priest, which had formerly stood between it and the Infinite, was
+removed. And now it was wholly alone, self-oriented, its own priest and
+its own judge. But the common people could only feel, not understand,
+the element of liberation in it all. They welcomed, enthusiastically,
+indeed, the tearing-up of visible duties, but they did not come to
+realize that these had been replaced by intellectual duties that were
+still stricter. Francis of Assisi had given much and taken little, but
+the urban Reformation took much and, as far as the majority of people
+were concerned, gave little.
+
+The holy Causality of the Contrition-sacrament Luther replaced by the
+mystic experience of inward absolution “by faith alone.” He came very
+near to Bernard of Clairvaux in this concept of contrition as lifelong,
+as a continuous intellectual askesis in contrast to the askesis of
+outward and visible works. Both of them understood absolution as
+a divine miracle: in so far as the man changes himself, it is God
+changing him. But what no purely intellectual mysticism can replace
+is the “Tu” outside, in free nature. The one and the other preached:
+“Thou must believe that God has forgiven thee,” but for Bernard belief
+was through the powers of the priest elevated to knowledge, whereas
+for Luther it sank to doubt and desperate insistence. This little
+“I,” detached from the cosmos, nailed up in an individual being and
+(in the most terrific sense of the word) alone, needed the proximity
+of a powerful “Thou,” and the weaker the intellect, the more urgent
+the need. Herein lies the ultimate meaning of the Western priest, who
+from 1215 was elevated above the rest of mankind by the sacrament of
+ordination and its _character indelebilis_: he was a hand with which
+even the poorest wretch could grasp God. This _visible_ link with the
+Infinite, Protestantism destroyed. Strong souls could and did win it
+back for themselves, but for the weaker it was gradually lost. Bernard,
+although for him the inward miracle was successful of itself, would
+not deprive others of the gentler way, for the very illumination of
+his soul showed him the Mary-world of living nature, all-pervading,
+ever near, and ever helpful. Luther, who knew himself only and not
+men, set postulated heroism in place of actual weakness. For him life
+was desperate battle against the Devil, and that battle he called upon
+everyone to fight. And everyone who fought it fought alone.
+
+The Reformation abolished the whole bright and consoling side of
+the Gothic myth--the cult of Mary, the veneration of the saints,
+the relics, the pilgrimages, the mass. But the myth of devildom and
+witchcraft remained, for it was the embodiment and cause of the inner
+torture, and now that torture at last rose to its supreme horror.[518]
+Baptism was, for Luther at least, an exorcism, the veritable sacrament
+of devil-banning. There grew up a large, purely Protestant literature
+about the Devil.[519] Out of the Gothic wealth of colour, there
+remained black; of its arts, music, in particular organ-music. But in
+the place of the mythic light-world, whose helpful nearness the faith
+of the common people could not, after all, forgo, there rose again out
+of long-buried depths an element of ancient German myth. It came so
+stealthily that even to-day its true significance is not yet realized.
+The expressions “folktale” and “popular custom” are inadequate: it is
+a true Myth that inheres in the firm belief in dwarfs, bogies, nixies,
+house-sprites, and sweeping clouds of the disembodied, and a true Cult
+that is seen in the rites, offerings, and conjurings that are still
+practised with a pious awe. In Germany, at any rate, the Saga took the
+place, unperceived, of the Mary-myth: Mary was now called Frau Holde,
+and where once the saints had stood, appeared the faithful Eckart.
+In the English people what arose was something that has long been
+designated “Bible-fetishism.”
+
+What Luther lacked--and it is an eternal fatality for Germany--was the
+eye for facts and the power of practical organization. He did not bring
+his doctrines to a clear system, nor did he lead the great movement
+and choose its aim. The one and the other were the work of his great
+successor Calvin. While the Lutheran movement advanced leaderless in
+central Europe, he viewed his rule in Geneva as the starting-point of a
+systematic subjection of the world under a Protestantism unfalteringly
+thought out to its logical conclusion. Therefore he, and he alone,
+became a world-power; therefore it was the decisive struggle between
+the spirit of Calvin and the spirit of Loyola that dominated, from
+the Spanish Armada on, the world-politics of the Baroque and the
+struggle for sea-supremacy. While in mid-Europe Reformation and
+Counter-Reformation struggled for some small imperial city or a few
+poor Swiss cantons, Canada, the mouth of the Ganges, the Cape, the
+Mississippi, were the scenes of great decisions fought to an issue by
+France and Spain, England and Holland. And in these decisions the two
+grand organizers of the Late religion of the West were ever present,
+ever opposed.
+
+
+V
+
+Intellectual creativeness of the Late period begins, not with, but
+after, the Reformation. Its most typical creation is free science. Even
+for Luther learning was still essentially the “handmaid of theology,”
+and Calvin had the freethinking doctor Servet burnt. The thought of the
+Springtimes--Faustian like Egyptian, Vedic, and Orphic--had felt its
+vocation to be the justification of faith by criticism. If criticism
+did not succeed, the critical method must be wrong. Knowledge was faith
+justified, not faith controverted.
+
+Now, however, the critical powers of the city intellect have become
+so great that it is no longer content to affirm, but must test. The
+stock of believed probables, and especially that part of it which was
+received by the understanding and not the heart, was the first obvious
+target for dissecting activities. This distinguishes the Springtime
+Scholasticism from the actuality-philosophy of the Baroque--as it
+distinguishes Neoplatonist from Islamic, Vedic from Brahmanic, Orphic
+from Pre-Socratic, thought. The (shall we say) profane Causality of
+human life, the world-around, the process and meaning of cognition,
+become a problem. The Egyptian philosophy of the Middle Kingdom
+measured up the value of life in _this_ sense; and akin to it, in all
+probability, was the late pre-Confucian philosophy of China from 800 to
+500 B.C. Only the book ascribed to Kwan-tse (d. 645) remains to give us
+some dim idea of this philosophy, but the indications, slight though
+they be, are that epistemological and biological problems occupied the
+centre of the one genuine philosophy of China, now utterly lost.
+
+Within Baroque philosophy, Western natural-science stands by itself.
+No other Culture possesses anything like it, and assuredly it must
+have been from its beginnings, not a “handmaid of theology,” but
+_the servant of the technical Will-to-Power_, oriented to that end
+both mathematically and experimentally--from its very foundations a
+practical _mechanics_. And as it is firstly technique and only secondly
+theory, it must be as old as Faustian man himself. Accordingly, we
+find technical works of an astounding energy of combination even by
+1000.[520] As early as the thirteenth century Robert Grosseteste[521]
+was treating space as a function of light. Petrus Peregrinus in 1289
+wrote the best experimentally based treatise on magnetism that
+appeared before Gilbert (1600). And Roger Bacon, the disciple of
+both, developed a natural-scientific theory of knowledge to serve
+as basis for his technical investigations.[522] But boldness in the
+discovery of dynamic interlinkages went further still. The Copernican
+system was hinted at in a manuscript of 1322 and a few decades later
+was mathematically developed by the Paris Occamists, Buridan, Albert
+of Saxony, and Oresme.[523] Let us not deceive ourselves as to the
+fundamental motive-power of these explorations. Pure contemplative
+philosophy could have dispensed with experiment for ever, but not so
+the Faustian symbol of the _machine_, which urged us to mechanical
+constructions even in the twelfth century and made “_Perpetuum mobile_”
+the Prometheus-idea of the Western intellect. For us the first thing
+is ever the _working hypothesis_--the very kind of thought-product
+that is meaningless to other Cultures. It is an astounding fact
+(to which, however, we must accustom ourselves) that the idea of
+immediately exploiting in practice any knowledge of natural relations
+that may be acquired is alien to every sort of mankind except the
+Faustian (and those who, like Japanese, Jews, and Russians, have
+to-day come under the intellectual spell of its Civilization). The
+very notion of the working hypothesis implicitly contains a dynamic
+lay-out of the universe. Theoria, contemplative vision of actuality,
+was for those subtly inquiring monks only secondary, and, being itself
+the outcome of the technical passion, it presently led them, quite
+imperceptibly, to the typically Faustian conception of God as the
+Grand Master of the machine, who could accomplish everything that
+they themselves in their impotence only dared to wish. Insensibly
+the world of God became, century by century, more and more like the
+_Perpetuum mobile_. And, imperceptibly also, as the scanning of nature
+became sharper and sharper in the school of experiment and technique,
+and the Gothic myth became more and more shadowy, the concepts of
+monkish working hypotheses developed, from Galileo onwards, into the
+critically illuminated numina of modern science, the collisions and
+the fields, gravitation, the velocity of light, and the “electricity”
+which in our electrodynamic world-picture has absorbed into itself
+the other forms of energy and thereby attained to a sort of physical
+monotheism. They are the concepts that are set up behind the formulæ,
+to endow them with a mythic visibility for the inner eye. The numbers
+themselves are technical elements, levers and screws, overhearings of
+the world’s secrets. The Classical Nature-thought--and that of others
+also--required no numbers, for it strove for no powers. The _pure_
+mathematic of Pythagoras and Plato had no relation whatever to the
+nature-views of Democritus and Aristotle.
+
+Just as the Classical mind felt Prometheus’s defiance of the gods
+as “hybris,” so our Baroque felt the machine as diabolical.[524]
+The spirit of Hell had betrayed to man the secret of mastering the
+world-mechanism and even of himself enacting the part of God. And
+hence it is that all purely priestly natures, that live wholly in the
+world of the spirit and expect nothing of “this world”--and notably
+the idealist philosophers, the Classicists, the Humanists, and even
+Nietzsche--have for technique nothing but silent hostility.
+
+Every Late philosophy contains this critical protest against the
+uncritical intuitiveness of the Spring. But this criticism of the
+intellect that is sure of its own superiority affects also faith itself
+and evokes the one great creation in the field of religion that is the
+peculiarity of the Late period--every Late period--namely, Puritanism.
+
+Puritanism manifests itself in the army of Cromwell and his
+Independents, iron, Bible-firm, psalm-singing as they rode into battle;
+in the ranks of the Pythagoreans, who in the bitter earnest of their
+gospel of duty wrecked gay Sybaris and branded it for ever as the city
+without morals; in the armies of the early Caliphs, which subdued
+not only states, but souls. Milton’s _Paradise Lost_, many surahs
+of the Koran, the little that we know of Pythagorean teachings--all
+come to the same thing. They are enthusiasms of a sober spirit, cold
+intensities, dry mysticism, pedantic ecstasy. And yet, even so, a wild
+piety flickers up once more in them. All the transcendent inwardness
+that the City can produce after attaining to unconditional mastery
+over the soul of the Land is here concentrated, with a sort of terror
+lest it should prove unreal and evanescent, and is correspondingly
+impatient, pitiless, and unforgiving. Puritanism--not in the West
+only, but in all Cultures--lacks the smile that had illumined the
+religion of the Spring--every Spring--the moments of profound joy in
+life, the humour of life. Nothing of the quiet blissfulness that in
+the Magian Springtime flashes up so often in the stories of Jesus’s
+childhood, or in Gregory Nazianzen, is to be found in the Koran,
+nothing in the palpable blitheness of St. Francis’s songs in Milton.
+Deadly earnest broods over the Jansenist mind of Port Royal, over the
+meetings of the black-clothed Roundheads, by whom Shakespeare’s “Merry
+England”--_Sybaris over again_--was annihilated in a few years. Now for
+the first time the battle against the Devil, whose bodily nearness they
+all felt, was fought with a dark and bitter fury. In the seventeenth
+century more than a million witches were burnt--alike in the Protestant
+North, the Catholic South, and even the communities in America and
+India. Joyless and sour are the duty-doctrines of Islam (_fikh_), with
+its hard intellectuality, and the Westminster Catechisms of 1643, and
+the Jansenist ethics (Jansen’s _Augustinus_, 1640) as well--for in the
+realm of Loyola, too, there was of inward necessity a Puritan movement.
+Religion is livingly experienced metaphysic, but the company of the
+“godly,” as the Independents called themselves, and the Pythagoreans,
+and the disciples of Mohammed, all alike experienced it, not with the
+senses, but primarily as a concept. Parshva, who about 600 B.C. founded
+the sect of the “Unfettered”[525] on the Ganges, taught, like the
+other Puritans of his time, that salvation came, not from sacrifices
+and rights, but only from knowledge of the identity of Atman and
+Brahman. In all Puritan poetry the place of the old Gothic visions is
+taken by an unbridled, yet withal jejune, spirit of allegory. In the
+waking-consciousness of these ascetics the concept is the only real
+power. Pascal’s wrestlings were about concepts and not, like Meister
+Eckart’s, about shapes. Witches were burnt because they were proved,
+and not because they were seen in the air o’ nights; the Protestant
+jurists employed the witches’ hammer of the Dominicans because it was
+built on concepts. The Madonnas of the early Gothic had appeared to
+their suppliants, but those of Bernini no man ever saw. They exist
+because they are proved--and there came to be a positive enthusiasm for
+existence of this sort. Milton, Cromwell’s great secretary of state,
+clothed concepts with shapes, and Bunyan brings a whole mythology of
+concepts into ethical-allegorical activity. From that it is but a step
+to Kant, in whose conceptual ethics the Devil assumes his final shape
+as the Radically Evil.
+
+We have to emancipate ourselves from the surfaces of history--and,
+especially, to thrust aside the artificial fences in which the
+methodology of Western sciences has paddocked it--before we can see
+that Pythagoras, Mohammed, and Cromwell embody one and the same
+movement in three Cultures.
+
+Pythagoras was not a philosopher. According to all statements of the
+Pre-Socratics, he was a saint, prophet and founder of a fanatically
+religious society that forced its truths upon the people around it
+by every political and military means. The destruction of Sybaris by
+Croton--an event which, we may be sure, has survived in historical
+memory only because it was the climax of a wild religious war--was
+an explosion of the same hate that saw in Charles I and his gay
+Cavaliers not merely doctrinal error, but also worldly disposition
+as something that must be destroyed root and branch. A myth purified
+and conceptually fortified, combined with rigorous ethical precepts,
+imbued the Pythagoreans with the conviction that they would attain
+salvation before all other men. The gold tablets found in Thurii and
+Petelia, which were put into the hand of the dead initiate, carried the
+assurance of the god: “Happy and blessed one, thou shalt be no more a
+mortal, but a god.” It is the same certainty that the Koran gave to
+all believers who fought in the holy war against the infidel--“The
+monasticism of Islam is the religious war,” says a hadith of the
+Prophet--the same which filled Cromwell’s Ironsides when they scattered
+the King’s “Philistines” and “Amalekites” at Marston Moor and Naseby.
+
+Islam was no more a religion of the desert in particular than Zwingli’s
+faith was a religion of the high mountains in particular. It is
+incident, and no more, that the Puritan movement for which the Magian
+world was ripe proceeded from a man of Mecca and not from a Monophysite
+or a Jew. For in the northern Arabian desert there were the Christian
+states of the Ghassanids and Lakhmids, and in the Sabæan South there
+were religious wars waged between Christians and Jews that involved
+the world of states from Assuan to the Sassanid Empire. The Congress
+of Princes at Marib[526] was attended by hardly a single pagan, and
+shortly after this date South Arabia came under Persian--that is,
+Mazdaist--government. Mecca was a little island of ancient Arabian
+paganism in the midst of a world of Jews and Christians, a mere relic
+that had long been mined by the ideas of the great Magian religions.
+The little of this paganism that filtered into the Koran was later
+explained away by the Commentary of the Sunna and its Syro-Mesopotamian
+intellect. At most Islam was a new religion only to the same extent
+as Lutheranism was one.[527] Actually, it was the prolongation of the
+great early religions. Equally, its expansion was not (as is even
+now imagined) a “migration of peoples” proceeding from the Arabian
+Peninsula, but an onslaught of enthusiastic believers, which like an
+avalanche bore along with it Christians, Jews, and Mazdaists and set
+them at once in its front rank as fanatical Moslems. It was Berbers
+from the homeland of St. Augustine who conquered Spain, and Persians
+from Irak who drove on to the Oxus. The enemy of yesterday became
+the front-rank comrade of to-morrow. Most of the “Arabs” who in 717
+attacked Constantinople for the first time, had been born Christians.
+About 650 Byzantine literature[528] quite suddenly vanished, and the
+deeper meaning of the fact has so far never been noticed--it was just
+that the Arabian literature took up the tale. The soul of the Magian
+Culture found at last its true expression in Islam, and therewith
+became truly the “Arabian,” free thenceforth from all bondage to
+the Pseudomorphosis. The Iconoclastic movement, led by Islam, but
+long prepared by Monophysites and Jews, advanced to and even beyond
+Byzantium, where the Syrian Leo III (717-41) raised this Puritan
+movement of Islamic-Christian sects--the Paulicians about 650 and the
+Bogomils later[529]--to predominance.
+
+The great figures of Mohammed’s entourage, such as Abu Bekr and
+Omar, are the near relatives of the Pyms and Hampdens of the English
+Revolution, and we should see this relationship to be nearer still if
+we knew more than we do about the Hanifs, the Arabian Puritans before
+and about the Prophet. All of them had won out of Predestination
+the guarantee that they were God’s elect. The grand Old Testament
+exaltation of Parliament and the camps of Independency--which
+left behind it, in many an English family, even to the nineteenth
+century,[530] the belief that the English are the descendants of the
+ten Lost Tribes of Israel, a nation of saints predestined to govern
+the world--dominated also the emigration to America which began with
+the Pilgrim Fathers of 1620. It formed that which may be called the
+American religion of to-day, and bred and fostered the trait which
+gives the Englishman even now his particular political insouciance,
+an assurance that is essentially religious and has its roots in
+predestination. The Pythagoreans themselves, too (an unheard-of thing
+in the religious history of the Classical world) assumed political
+power for the furtherance of religious ends and sought to advance their
+puritanism from Polis to Polis. Everywhere else unit cults reigned in
+unit states, each of which left the other unconcernedly to its own
+religious duties; here and here only do we find a community of saints,
+and their practical energy as far surpassed that of the old Orphics as
+fighting Independency surpassed the spirit of the Reformation wars.
+
+But in Puritanism there is hidden already the seed of Rationalism,
+and after a few enthusiastic generations have passed, this bursts
+forth everywhere and makes itself supreme. This is the step from
+Cromwell to Hume. Not cities in general, not even the great cities,
+but a few particular cities now become the theatre of intellectual
+history--Socratic Athens, Abbassid Baghdad, eighteenth-century London
+and Paris.[531] “Enlightenment” is the cliché of that time. The sun
+bursts forth--but what is it that clears off the heavens of the
+critical consciousness to make way for that sun?
+
+Rationalism signifies the belief in the data of critical understanding
+(that is, of the “reason”) _alone_. In the Springtime men could
+say “_Credo quia absurdum_,” because they were certain that the
+comprehensible and the incomprehensible were _both_ necessary
+constituents of the world--the nature which Giotto painted, in which
+the Mystics immersed themselves, and into which reason can penetrate,
+but only so far as the deity permits it to penetrate. But now a
+secret jealousy breeds the notion of the Irrational--that which, as
+incomprehensible, is _therefore_ valueless. It may be scorned openly
+as superstition, or privily as metaphysic. Only critically-established
+understanding possesses value. And secrets are merely evidences
+of ignorance. The new _secretless_ religion is in its highest
+potentialities called wisdom (σοφία), its priests philosophers, and
+its adherents “educated” people. According to Aristotle, the old
+religion is indispensable only to the uneducated,[532] and his view
+is Confucius’s and Gotama Buddha’s, Lessing’s and Voltaire’s. Men go
+away from Culture “back to nature,” but this nature is not something
+livingly experienced, but something proved, something born of, and
+accessible only to, the intellect--a Nature that has no existence at
+all for a peasantry, a Nature by which one is not in the least overawed
+but merely put into a condition of sensibility. Natural religion,
+rational religion, Deism--all this is not lived metaphysics, but a
+comprehended mechanics, called by Confucius the “Laws of Heaven” and
+by Hellenism τύχη. Formerly philosophy was the handmaid of transcendent
+religiousness, but now comes sensibility, and philosophy must therefore
+become scientific as epistemology and critique of nature and critique
+of values. No doubt there was a feeling that this philosophy was, even
+so, nothing but a diluted dogmatism, for the idea that pure knowledge
+was _possible_ itself involved a belief. Systems were woven out of
+phenomenally guaranteed beginnings, but in the long run the result was
+merely to say “Force” instead of “God,” and “Conservation of Energy”
+instead of “Eternity.” Under all Classical rationalism is to be found
+Olympus, under all Western the dogma of the sacraments. And so our
+Western philosophy swings to and fro between religion and technical
+science, and is defined thus, or thus, according as the author of the
+definition is a man with some relic of priesthood still in him, or is a
+pure expert and technician of thought.
+
+“_Weltanschauung_” is the characteristic expression for an enlightened
+waking-consciousness that, under the guidance of the critical
+understanding, looks about it in a godless light-world and, when
+sense-perceptions are found not to square with sound human reason,
+treats sense as a “lying jade.” That which was once myth--the actualest
+of the actual--is now subjected to the methods of what is called
+Euhemerism. The learned Euhemerus, about 300 B.C., “explained” the
+Classical divinities to the public that they had formerly served so
+well, and the process occurs under one form or another in every “age
+of enlightenment.” We have our Euhemeristic interpretations of Hell
+as a guilty conscience, the Devil as evil desire, and God as the
+beauty of nature, and it is the same tendency that declares itself
+when Attic tomb-inscriptions of about 400 invoke, not the city-goddess
+Athene, but a goddess “Demos”--a near relation, by the way, of the
+Jacobins’ Goddess of Reason--and where the δαιμονίον for Socrates,
+νοῦς for other philosophers, take the place of Zeus. Confucius says
+“heaven” instead of “Shang-ti,” which means that he believes only
+in laws of nature. The “collection” and “ordering” of the canonical
+writings of China by the Confucians was a colossal act of Euhemerism,
+in which actually almost all the old religious works were literally
+destroyed and the residue subjected to rationalist falsification. Had
+it been possible, the enlighteners of our eighteenth century would no
+doubt have served the Gothic heritage in the same way.[533] Confucius
+belongs to the Chinese “eighteenth century” through and through.
+Lao-tse (who despised him) stands at a midpoint in the Taoist movement,
+which manifested traits of Protestantism, Puritanism, and Pietism in
+turn, and both finally propagated a practical world-tone based upon a
+wholly mechanistic world-view. The word “_tao_” underwent in the Late
+period of China just the same continuous alteration of its fundamental
+content, and in the same mechanistic direction, as the word “Logos” in
+the history of Classical thought from Heraclitus to Posidonius, and
+as the word “Force” between Galileo’s day and ours. That which once
+had been grandly moulded myth and cult is called, in this “religion
+of educated people,” _Nature_ and _Virtue_--but this Nature is a
+reasonable mechanism, and this Virtue is knowledge.[534] Confucius and
+Buddha, Socrates and Rousseau are at one in this. Confucius contains
+little of prayer or of meditation upon the life after death, and
+nothing at all of revelation. To busy oneself overmuch with sacrifices
+and rites stamps one as uneducated and unreasoning. Gotama Buddha and
+his contemporary Mahavira, the founder of Jainism[535]--both of whom
+came from the political world of the lower Ganges, east of the old
+Brahmanic Culture-field--recognized, as everyone knows, neither the
+idea of God nor myth and cult. Of the real teaching of Buddha little
+can now be ascertained--for it all appears in the colours of the later
+fellah-religion baptized by his name--but one of the unquestionably
+authentic ideas concerning “conditioned arising”[536] is the derivation
+of suffering _from ignorance_--ignorance, namely, of the “Four Noble
+Truths.” This is true rationalism. Nirvana, for them, is a purely
+intellectual release and corresponds exactly with the “Autarkeia” and
+“Eudaimonia” of the Stoics. It is that condition of the understanding
+and waking-consciousness for which Being no longer is.
+
+The great ideal of the educated of such periods is the Sage. The sage
+goes back to Nature--to Ferney or Ermenonville, to Attic gardens
+or Indian groves--which is the most intellectual way of being a
+megalopolitan. The sage is the man of the Golden Mean. His askesis
+consists in a judicious depreciation of the world in favour of
+meditation. The wisdom of the enlightenment never interferes with
+comfort. Moral with the great Myth to back it is always a sacrifice,
+a cult, even to extremes of asceticism, even to death; but Virtue
+with Wisdom at its back is a sort of secret enjoyment, a superfine
+intellectual egoism. And so the ethical teacher who is outside real
+religion becomes the Philistine. Buddha, Confucius, Rousseau, are
+arch-Philistines, for all the nobility of their ordered ideas, and the
+pedantry of the Socratic life-wisdom is insurmountable.
+
+Along with this (shall we call it) scholasticism of sane reason, there
+must of inner necessity be a rationalistic mysticism of the educated.
+The Western Enlightenment is of English origin and Puritan parentage.
+The rationalism of the Continent comes wholly from Locke. In opposition
+to it there arose in Germany the Pietists (Herrnhut, 1700, Spener and
+Francke, and in Württemberg Oetinger) and in England the Methodists
+(Wesley “awakened” by Herrnhut, 1738). It was Luther and Calvin over
+again--the English at once organized themselves for a world-movement
+and the Germans lost themselves in mid-European conventicles. The
+Pietists of Islam are to be found in _Sufism_, which is not of
+“Persian” but of common Aramæan origin and in the eighth century spread
+all over the Arabian world. Pietists or Methodists, too, are the Indian
+lay preachers, who shortly before Buddha’s time were teaching release
+from the cycle of life (_sansara_) through immersion in the identity
+of Atman and Brahman. But Pietists or Methodists, too, are Lao-tse
+and his disciples and--notwithstanding their rationalism--the Cynic
+mendicants and itinerant preachers and the Stoic tutors, domestic
+chaplains, and confessors of early Hellenism.[537] And Pietism may
+ascend even to the peak of rationalist vision, of which Swedenborg is
+the great example, which created for Stoics and Sufists whole worlds
+of fancy, and by which Buddhism was prepared for its reconstruction
+as Mahayana. The expansion of Buddhism and that of Taoism in their
+original significations are closely analogous to the Methodist
+expansion in America, and it is no accident that they both reached
+their full maturity in those regions (lower Ganges and south of the
+Yang-tse-kiang) which had cradled the respective Cultures.
+
+
+VI
+
+Two centuries after Puritanism the mechanistic conception of the world
+stands at its zenith. It is the effective religion of the time. Even
+those who still thought themselves to be religious in the old sense,
+to be “believers in God,” were only mistaking the world in which their
+waking-consciousness was mirroring itself. Religious truths were always
+in their understanding mechanistic truths, and in general it was only
+the habit of traditional words that imparted a colour-wash of myth to
+a Nature that was in reality regarded scientifically. Culture is ever
+synonymous with religious creativeness. Every great Culture begins with
+a mighty theme that rises out of the pre-urban country-side, is carried
+through in the cities of art and intellect, and closes with a finale of
+materialism in the world-cities. But even the last chords are strictly
+in the key of the whole. There are Chinese, Indian, Classical, Arabian,
+Western materialisms, and each is nothing but the original stock of
+myth-shapes, cleared of the elements of experience and contemplative
+vision and viewed mechanistically.
+
+Confucianism as reasoned out by Yang-Chu concluded in this sense.
+The system of Lakayata was the prolongation of the contempt for a
+de-souled world which had been the common characteristic of Gotama
+Buddha, Mahavira, and the contemporary Pietists, and which they in turn
+had derived from Sankhya atheism. Socrates is alike the heir of the
+Sophists and the ancestor of the Cynic itinerants and of Pyrrhonian
+skepsis. All are manifestations of the superiority of the megalopolitan
+intellect that has done with the irrational for good and all and
+despises any waking-consciousness that still knows or acknowledges
+mysteries. Gothic men shrank at every step before the fathomless, more
+awe-inspiring still as presented in dogmatic truths. But to-day even
+the Catholic has arrived at the point of feeling these dogmas as a
+successful systematic exposition of the riddle of the universe. The
+miracle is regarded as a physical occurrence of a higher order, and
+an English bishop professes his belief in the possibility of electric
+power and the power of prayer both originating in one homogeneous
+nature-system.[538] The belief is belief in force and matter, even if
+the words used be “God” and “world,” “Providence” and “man.”
+
+Unique and self-contained, again, is the Faustian materialism, in
+the narrower sense of the word. In it the technical outlook upon the
+world reached fulfilment. The whole world a dynamic system, exact,
+mathematically disposed, capable down to its first causes of being
+experimentally probed and numerically fixed so that man can dominate
+it--this is what distinguishes our particular “return to Nature”
+from all others. That “Knowledge is Virtue” Confucius also believed,
+and Buddha, and Socrates, but “Knowledge is Power” is a phrase that
+possesses meaning only within the European-American Civilization.
+“Return to nature” here means the elimination of all forces that
+stand between the practical intelligence and nature--everywhere
+else materialism has contented itself with establishing (by way of
+contemplation or logic, as the case may be) supposedly simple units
+whose causal play accounts for everything without any residue of
+secrets, the supernatural being put down to want of knowledge. But the
+grand intellectual myth of Energy and Mass is at the same time a vast
+_working hypothesis_. It draws the picture of nature in such a way
+that men can _use_ it. The Destiny element is mechanized as evolution,
+development, progress, and put into the centre of the system; the Will
+is an albumen-process; and all these doctrines of Monism, Darwinism,
+Positivism, and what not are elevated into the fitness-moral which is
+the beacon of American business men, British politicians, and German
+progress-Philistines alike--and turns out, in the last analysis, to be
+nothing but an intellectualist caricature of the old justification by
+faith.
+
+Materialism would not be complete without the need of now and again
+easing the intellectual tension, by giving way to moods of myth,
+by performing rites of some sort, or by enjoying with an inward
+light-heartedness the charms of the irrational, the unnatural, the
+repulsive, and even, if need be, the merely silly. This tendency, which
+is visible enough, even to us, in the times of Meng-tse (372-289) and
+in those of the first Buddhist brotherhoods, is present also (and with
+the same significance) in Hellenism, of which indeed it is a leading
+characteristic. About 312 poetical scholars of the Callimachus type in
+Alexandria invented the Serapis-cult and provided it with an elaborate
+legend. The Isis-cult in Republican Rome was something very different
+both from the emperor-worship that succeeded it and from the deeply
+earnest Isis-religion of Egypt; it was a religious pastime of high
+society, which at times provoked public ridicule and at times led to
+public scandal and the closing of the cult-centres.[539] The Chaldean
+astrology was in those days a _fashion_,[540] very far removed from
+the genuine Classical belief in oracles and from the Magian faith in
+the might of the hour. It was “relaxation,” a “let’s pretend.” And,
+over and above this, there were the numberless charlatans and fake
+prophets who toured the towns and sought with their pretentious rites
+to persuade the half-educated into a renewed interest in religion.
+Correspondingly, we have in the European-American world of to-day
+the occultist and theosophist fraud, the American Christian Science,
+the untrue Buddhism of drawing-rooms, the religious arts-and-crafts
+business (brisker in Germany than even in England) that caters for
+groups and cults of Gothic or Late Classical or Taoist sentiment.
+Everywhere it is just a toying with myths that no one really believes,
+a tasting of cults that it is hoped might fill the inner void. The real
+belief is always the belief in atoms and numbers, but it requires this
+highbrow hocus-pocus to make it bearable in the long run. Materialism
+is shallow and honest, mock-religion shallow and dishonest. But the
+fact that the latter is possible at all foreshadows a new and genuine
+spirit of seeking that declares itself, first quietly, but soon
+emphatically and openly, in the civilized waking-consciousness.
+
+This next phase I call the _Second Religiousness_. It appears in
+all Civilizations as soon as they have fully formed themselves as
+such and are beginning to pass, slowly and imperceptibly, into the
+non-historical state in which time-periods cease to mean anything. (So
+far as the Western Civilization is concerned, therefore, we are still
+many generations short of that point.) The Second Religiousness is
+the necessary counterpart of Cæsarism, which is the final _political_
+constitution of Late Civilizations; it becomes visible, therefore, in
+the Augustan Age of the Classical and about the time of Shi-hwang-ti’s
+time in China. In both phenomena the creative young strength of the
+Early Culture is lacking. But both have their greatness nevertheless.
+That of the Second Religiousness consists in a deep piety that fills
+the waking-consciousness--the piety that impressed Herodotus in
+the (Late) Egyptians and impresses West-Europeans in China, India,
+and Islam--and that of Cæsarism consists in its unchained might of
+colossal facts. But neither in the creations of this piety nor in the
+form of the Roman Imperium is there anything primary and spontaneous.
+Nothing is built up, no idea unfolds itself--it is only as if a mist
+cleared off the land and revealed the old forms, uncertainly at
+first, but presently with increasing distinctness. The material of
+the Second Religiousness is simply that of the first, genuine, young
+religiousness--only otherwise experienced and expressed. It starts
+with Rationalism’s fading out in helplessness, then the forms of the
+Springtime become visible, and finally the whole world of the primitive
+religion, which had receded before the grand forms of the early faith,
+returns to the foreground, powerful, in the guise of the popular
+syncretism that is to be found in every Culture at this phase.
+
+Every “Age of Enlightenment” proceeds from an unlimited optimism of
+the reason--always associated with the type of the megalopolitan--to
+an equally unqualified scepticism. The sovereign waking-consciousness,
+cut off by walls and artificialities from living nature and the
+land about it and under it, cognises nothing outside itself. It
+applies criticism to its imaginary world, which it has cleared of
+everyday sense-experience, and continues to do so till it has found
+the last and subtlest result, the form of the form--itself: namely,
+nothing. With this the possibilities of physics as a critical mode
+of world-understanding are exhausted, and the hunger for metaphysics
+presents itself afresh. But it is not the religious pastimes of
+educated and literature-soaked cliques, still less is it the intellect,
+that gives rise to the Second Religiousness. Its source is the naïve
+belief that arises, unremarked but spontaneous, among the masses
+that there is some sort of mystic constitution of actuality (as to
+which formal proofs are presently regarded as barren and tiresome
+word-jugglery), and an equally naïve heart-need reverently responding
+to the myth with a cult. The forms of neither can be foreseen, still
+less chosen--they appear of themselves, and as far as we are ourselves
+concerned, we are as yet far distant from them.[541] But already the
+opinions of Comte and Spencer, the Materialism and the Monism and the
+Darwinism, which stirred the best minds of the nineteenth century to
+such passion, have become the world-view proper to country cousins.
+
+The Classical philosophy had exhausted its ground by about 250 B.C.
+From that time on, “knowledge” was no longer a continually tested
+and augmented stock, but a belief therein, due basically to force of
+habit, but still able to convince, thanks to an old and well-tried
+methodology. In the time of Socrates there had been Rationalism as the
+religion of educated men, with, above it, the scholar-philosophy and,
+below it, the “superstition” of the masses. Now, philosophy developed
+towards an intellectual, and the popular syncretism towards a tangible,
+religiousness. The tendency was the same in both, and myth-belief
+and piety spread, not downwards, but upwards. Philosophy had much to
+receive and little to give. The Stoa had begun in the materialism of
+the Sophists and Cynics, and had explained the whole mythology on
+allegorical lines, but the prayer to Zeus at table--one of the most
+beautiful relics of the Classical Second Religiousness[542]--dates
+from as early as Cleanthes (d. 232). In Sulla’s time there was an
+upper-class Stoicism that was religious through and through, and a
+popular syncretism which combined Phrygian, Syrian, and Egyptian
+cults with numberless Classical mysteries that had become almost
+forgotten--corresponding exactly to the development of Buddha’s
+enlightened wisdom into Hinayana for the learned and Mahayana for the
+masses, and to the relation between learned Confucianism and Taoism as
+the vessel of Chinese syncretism which it soon became.
+
+Contemporary with the “Positivist” Meng-tse (372-289) there suddenly
+began a powerful movement towards alchemy, astrology, and occultism.
+It has long been a favourite topic of dispute whether this was
+something new or a recrudescence of old Chinese myth-feeling--but
+a glance at Hellenism supplies the answer. This syncretism appears
+“simultaneously” in the Classical, in India and China, and in popular
+Islam. It starts always on rationalist doctrines--the Stoa, Lao-tse,
+Buddha--and carries these through with peasant and springtime and
+exotic motives of every conceivable sort. From about 200 B.C. the
+Classical Syncretism--which must not be confused with that of the
+later Magian Pseudomorphosis[543]--raked in motives from Orphism, from
+Egypt, from Syria; from 67 B.C. the Chinese brought in Indian Buddhism
+in the popular Mahayana form, and the potency of the holy writings
+as charms, and the Buddha-figures as fetishes, was thought to be all
+the greater for their alien origin. The original doctrine of Lao-tse
+disappeared very quickly. At the beginning of Han times (_c._ A.D. 200)
+the troops of the Sen had ceased to be “moral representations” and
+become kindly beings. The wind-, cloud-, thunder-, and rain-gods came
+back. Crowds of cults which purported to drive out the evil spirits
+by the aid of the gods acquired a footing. It was in that time that
+there arose--doubtless out of some basic principle of pre-Confucian
+philosophy--the myth of Pan-ku, the prime principle from which the
+series of mythical emperors descended. As we know, the Logos-idea
+followed a similar line of development.[544]
+
+The theory and practice of the conduct of life that Buddha taught were
+the outcome of world-weariness and intellectual disgusts, and were
+wholly unrelated to religious questions. And yet at the very beginning
+of the Indian “Imperial” period (250 B.C.) he himself had already
+become a seated god-figure; and the Nirvana-theories, comprehensible
+only to the learned, were giving place more and more to solid and
+tangible doctrines of heaven, hell, and salvation, which were probably
+borrowed, as in other syncretisms, from an alien source--namely,
+Persian Apocalyptic. Already in Asoka’s time there were eighteen
+Buddhist sects. The salvation-doctrine of Mahayana found its first
+great herald in the poet-scholar Asvagosha (_c._ 50 B.C.) and its
+fulfilment proper in Naganjuna (_c._ A.D. 150). But side by side with
+such teaching, the whole mass of proto-Indian mythology came back
+into circulation. The Vishnu- and Shiva-religions were already in 300
+B.C. in definite shape, and, moreover, in syncretic form, so that the
+Krishna and the Rama legends were now transferred to Vishnu. We have
+the same spectacle in the Egyptian New Empire, where Amen of Thebes
+formed the centre of a vast syncretism, and again in the Arabian
+world of the Abbassids, where the folk-religion, with its images of
+Purgatory, Hell, Last Judgment, the heavenly Kaaba, Logos-Mohammed,
+fairies, saints, and spooks drove pristine Islam entirely into the
+background.[545]
+
+There are still in such times a few high intellects like Nero’s tutor
+Seneca and his antitype Psellus[546] the philosopher, royal tutor and
+politician of Byzantium’s Cæsarism-phase; like Marcus Aurelius the
+Stoic and Asoka the Buddhist, who were themselves the Cæsars;[547]
+like the Pharaoh Amenhotep IV (Akhenaton), whose deeply significant
+experiment was treated as heresy and brought to naught by the powerful
+Amen-priesthood--a risk that Asoka, too, had, no doubt, to face from
+the Brahmins.
+
+But Cæsarism itself, in the Chinese as in the Roman Empire, gave birth
+to an emperor-cult, and thereby concentrated Syncretism. It is an
+absurd notion that the veneration of the Chinese for the living emperor
+is a relic of ancient religion. During the whole course of the Chinese
+Culture there were no emperors at all. The rulers of the States were
+called Wang (that is, kings), and scarcely a century before the final
+victory of the Chinese Augustus Meng-tse wrote--in the vein of our
+nineteenth century--“The people is the most important element in the
+country; next come the useful gods of the soil and the crops, and least
+in importance comes the ruler.” The mythology of the pristine emperors
+was without doubt put together by Confucius and his contemporaries,
+its constitutional and social-ethical form was dictated by their
+rationalist aims, and from this myth the first Chinese Cæsar borrowed
+both title and cult-idea. The elevation of men to divinity is the
+full-cycle return to the springtime in which gods were converted into
+heroes--exactly like these very emperors and the figures of Homer--and
+it is a distinguishing trait of almost all religions of this second
+degree. Confucius himself was deified in A.D. 57, with an official
+cult, and Buddha had been so long before. Al Ghazali (_c._ 1050), who
+helped to bring about the “Second Religiousness” of the Islamic world,
+is now, in the popular belief, a divine being and is beloved as a saint
+and helper. In the philosophy-schools of the Classical there was a
+cult of Plato, and of Epicurus, and Alexander’s claim to descent from
+Heracles and Cæsar’s to descent from Venus lead directly to the cult of
+the _Divus_, in which immemorial Orphic imaginings and family religions
+crop up afresh, just as the cult of Hwang-ti contains traits of the
+most ancient mythology of China.
+
+But with the coming of the emperor-cults there begins at once, in each
+of the two, an attempt to bring the Second Religiousness into fixed
+organizations, which, however named--sects, orders, Churches--are
+always stiff re-constructions of what had been living forms of the
+Springtime, and bear the same relation to these as “caste” bears to
+“status.”
+
+There are signs of the tendency even in the Augustan reforms, with
+their artificial revival of long-dead city-cults, such as the
+rites of the Fratres Arvales, but it is only with the Hellenistic
+mystery-religions, or even with Mithraism,[548] that community or
+Church organization proper begins, and its development is broken off
+in the ensuing downfall of the Classical. The corresponding feature
+in Egypt is the theocratic state set up by the priest-kings of Thebes
+in the eleventh century. The Chinese analogue is the Tao churches of
+the Han period and especially that founded by Chang-lu, which gave
+rise to the fearful insurrection of the Yellow Turbans (recalling the
+religious provincial rebellions of the Roman Empire), which devastated
+whole regions and brought about the fall of the Han dynasty.[549] And
+the very counterpart of these ascetic Churches of Taoism, with their
+rigidity and wild mythology, is to be found in the late Byzantine
+monk-states such as Studion and the autonomous group of monasteries on
+Athos, founded in 1100, which are as suggestive of Buddhism as anything
+could well be.
+
+In the end Second Religiousness issues in the _fellah-religions_. Here
+the opposition between cosmopolitan and provincial piety has vanished
+again, as completely as that between primitive and higher Culture.
+What this means, the conception of the fellah people, discussed in an
+earlier chapter,[550] tells us. Religion becomes entirely historyless;
+where formerly decades constituted an epoch, now whole centuries
+pass unimportantly, and the ups and downs of superficial changes only
+serve to show the unalterable finality of the inner state. It matters
+nothing that “Chufucianism” appeared in China (1200) as a variant of
+the Confucian state-doctrine, when it appeared, and whether or not
+it succeeded. Equally, it signifies nothing that Indian Buddhism,
+long become a polytheistic religion of the people, went down before
+Neo-Brahmanism (whose great divine, Sankhara, lived about 800), nor
+is it of importance to know the date at which the latter passed over
+into the Hinduism of Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva. There always are and
+always will be a handful of superlatively intellectual, thoughtful,
+and perfectly self-sufficing people, like the Brahmins in India, the
+Mandarins in China, and the Egyptian priests who amazed Herodotus.
+But the fellah-religion itself is once more primitive through and
+through--the animal-cults of the Egyptian XXVIth dynasty; the composite
+of Buddhism, Confucianism, and Taoism that constitutes the state
+religion of China; the Islam of the present-day East. The religion of
+the Aztecs was very likely another case in point, for, as Cortez found
+it, it seems remote indeed from the intensely intellectualized religion
+of the Mayas.
+
+
+VII
+
+The religion of Jewry, too, is a fellah-religion since the time of
+Jehuda ben Halevi who (like his Islamic teacher, Al Ghazali) regarded
+scientific philosophy with an unqualified scepticism, and in the
+_Kuzari_ (1140) refused to it any rôle save that of handmaid of the
+orthodox theology. This corresponds exactly to the transition from
+Middle Stoicism to the later form of the Imperial period, and to the
+extinction of Chinese speculation under the Western Han Dynasty. Still
+more significant is the figure of Moses Maimonides,[551] who in 1175
+collected the entire dogmatic material of Judaism, as something fixed
+and complete, in a great work of the type of the Chinese _Li-ki_,
+entirely regardless of whether the particular items still retained
+any meaning or not.[552] Neither in this period nor in any other is
+Judaism unique in religious history, though from the view-point that
+the Western Culture has taken up on its own ground, it may seem so. Nor
+is it peculiar to Jewry that, unperceived by those who bear it, its
+name is for ever changing in meaning, for the same has happened, step
+by step, in the Persian story.
+
+In their “Merovingian” period--approximately the last five centuries
+before the birth of Christ--both Jewry and Persia evolve from tribal
+groups into nations of Magian cast, without land, without unity of
+origin, and (even so soon) with the characteristic ghetto mode of life
+that endures unchanged to-day for the Jews of Brooklyn and the Parsees
+of Bombay alike.
+
+In the Springtime (first five centuries of the Christian era) this
+landless Consensus spread geographically from Spain to Shantung. This
+was the Jewish Age of Chivalry and its “Gothic” blossoming-time of
+religious creative-force. The later Apocalyptic, the Mishnah, and also
+primitive Christianity (which was not cast off till after Trajan’s and
+Hadrian’s time) are creations of this nation. It is well known that in
+those days the Jews were peasants, artisans, and dwellers in little
+towns, and “big business” was in the hands of Egyptians, Greeks, and
+Romans--that is, members of the Classical world.
+
+About 500[553] begins the Jewish Baroque, which Western observers are
+accustomed to regard, very one-sidedly, as part of the picture of
+Spain’s age of glory. The Jewish Consensus, like the Persian, Islamic,
+and Byzantine, now advances to an urban and intellectual awareness,
+and thenceforward it is master of the forms of city-economics and
+city-science. Tarragona, Toledo, and Granada are predominantly Jewish
+cities. Jews constitute an essential element in Moorish high society.
+Their finished forms, their _esprit_, their knightliness, amazed the
+Gothic nobility of the Crusades, which tried to imitate them; but the
+diplomacy also, and the war-management and the administration of the
+Moorish cities would all have been unthinkable without the Jewish
+aristocracy, which was every whit as thoroughbred as the Islamic.
+As once in Arabia there had been a Jewish _Minnesang_, so now here
+there was a high literature of enlightened science. It was under the
+guidance of the Rabbi Isaac Hassan, and by the hand of Jewish and
+Islamic as well as Christian savants, that Alfonso X’s new work on
+the planets was prepared (_c._ 1250);[554] in other words, it was an
+achievement of Magian and not of Faustian world-thought.[555] But
+Spain and Morocco after all contained but a very small fraction of
+the Jewish Consensus, and even this Consensus itself had not merely a
+worldly but also (and predominantly) a spiritual significance. In it,
+too, there occurred a Puritan movement, which rejected the Talmud and
+tried to get back to the pure Torah. The community of the Qaraites,
+preceded by many a forerunner, arose about 760 in northern Syria, the
+selfsame area which gave birth a century earlier to the Paulician
+iconoclasts and a century later to the Sufism of Islam--three Magian
+tendencies whose inner relationship is unmistakable. The Qaraites, like
+the Puritans of all other Cultures, were combated by both orthodoxy
+and enlightenment. Rabbinical counterblasts appeared from Cordova
+and Fez to southern Arabia and Persia. But in that period appeared
+also--an outcome of “Jewish Sufism,” and suggestive in places of
+Swedenborg--the _chef-d’œuvre_ of rational mysticism, the Yesirah,
+germane in its Kabbalistic root-ideas to Byzantine image-symbolism
+and the contemporary magic of Greek “second-degree Christianity,” and
+equally so to the folk-religion of Islam.
+
+But an entirely new situation was created when, from about the year
+1000, the Western portion of the Consensus found itself suddenly in
+the field of the young Western Culture. The Jews, like the Parsees,
+the Byzantines, and the Moslems, had become by then civilized and
+cosmopolitan, whereas the German-Roman world lived in the townless
+land, and the settlements that had just come (or were coming)
+into existence around monasteries and market-places were still
+many generations short of possessing souls of their own. While
+the Jews were already almost fellaheen, the Western peoples were
+still almost primitives. The Jew could not comprehend the Gothic
+inwardness, the castle, the Cathedral; nor the Christian the Jew’s
+superior, almost cynical, intelligence and his finished expertness
+in “money-thinking.” There was mutual hate and contempt, due not
+to race-distinction, but to _difference of phase_. Into all the
+hamlets and country towns the Jewish Consensus built its essentially
+megalopolitan--proletarian--ghettos. The _Judengasse_ is a thousand
+years in advance of the Gothic town. Just so, in Jesus’s days,
+the Roman towns stood in the midst of the villages on the Lake of
+Genesareth.
+
+But these young nations were, besides, bound up with the soil and the
+idea of a fatherland, and the landless “Consensus,” which was cemented,
+not by deliberate organization, but by a wholly unconscious, wholly
+metaphysical impulse--an expression of the Magian world-feeling in its
+simplest and directest form--appeared to them as something uncanny
+and incomprehensible. It was in this period that the legend of the
+Wandering Jew arose. It meant a good deal for a Scottish monk to visit
+a Lombard monastery, and nostalgia soon took him home again, but when
+a rabbi of Mainz--in 1000 the seat of the most important Talmudic
+seminary of the West--or of Salerno betook himself to Cairo or Merv
+or Basra, he was at home in every ghetto. In this tacit cohesion lay
+the very idea of the Magian nation[556]--although the contemporary
+West was unaware of the fact, it was for the Jews, as for the Greeks
+of the period and the Parsees and Islam, State and Church and people
+all in one. This State had its own jurisprudence and (what Christians
+never perceived) its own public life,[557] and despised the surrounding
+world of the host-peoples as a sort of outland; and it was a veritable
+treason-trial that expelled Spinoza and Uriel Acosta--an event of which
+these host-peoples could not possibly grasp the under meaning. And in
+1799 the leading thinker among the Eastern Hasidim, Senior Salman, was
+handed over by the rabbinical opposition to the Petersburg Government
+as though to a foreign state.
+
+Jewry of the West-European group had entirely lost the relation to
+the open land which had still existed in the Moorish period of Spain.
+There were no more peasants. The smallest ghetto was a fragment,
+however miserable, of megalopolis, and its inhabitants (like those
+of hardened India and China) split into castes--the Rabbi is the
+Brahmin or Mandarin of the ghetto--and a coolie-mass characterized
+by civilized, cold, superior intelligence and an undeviating eye to
+business. But this phenomenon, again, is not unique if our historical
+sense takes in the wider horizon, for _all_ Magian nations have been in
+this condition since the Crusade period. The Parsee in India possesses
+exactly the same business-power as the Jews in the European-American
+world and the Armenians and Greeks in southern Europe. The same
+phenomenon occurs in every other Civilization, when it pushes into a
+younger _milieu_--witness the Chinese in California (where they are the
+targets of a true Anti-Semitism of western America), in Java, and in
+Singapore; that of the Indian trader in East Africa; and that of _the
+Romans in the Early Arabian World_. In the last instance, indeed, the
+conditions were the exact reverse of those of to-day, for the “Jews” of
+those days were the Romans, and the Armæan felt for them an apocalyptic
+hatred that is very closely akin to our West-European Anti-Semitism.
+The outbreak of 88, in which, at a sign from Mithridates, a hundred
+thousand Roman business-people were murdered by the exasperated
+population of Asia Minor, was a veritable _pogrom_.
+
+Over and above these oppositions there was that of race, which
+passed from contempt into hate in proportion as the Western Culture
+itself caught up with the Civilization and the “difference of
+age,” expressed in the way of life and the increasing primacy of
+intelligence, became smaller. But all this has nothing to do with the
+silly catchwords “Aryan” and “Semite” that have been borrowed from
+philology. The “Aryan” Persians and Armenians are in our eyes entirely
+indistinguishable from the Jews, and even in South Europe and the
+Balkans there is almost no bodily difference between the Christian
+and Jewish inhabitants. The Jewish nation is, like every other nation
+of the Arabian Culture, the result of an immense _mission_, and up to
+well within the Crusades it was changed and changed again by accessions
+and secessions _en masse_.[558] One part of Eastern Jewry conforms
+in bodily respects to the Christian inhabitants of the Caucasus,
+another to the South-Russian Tatars, and a large portion of Western
+Jewry to the North African Moors. What has mattered in the West more
+than any other distinction is the difference _between the race-ideal
+of the Gothic springtime_,[559] which has bred its human type, and
+that of the Sephardic Jew, which first formed itself in the ghettos
+of the West and was likewise the product of a particular spiritual
+breeding and training under exceedingly hard external conditions--to
+which, doubtless, we must add the effectual spell of the land and
+people about him, and his metaphysical defensive reaction to that
+spell, especially after the loss of the Arabic language had made this
+part of the nation a self-contained world. This feeling of being
+“different” is the more potent on both sides, the more breed the
+individual possesses. It is _want_ of race, and nothing else, that
+makes intellectuals--philosophers, doctrinaires, Utopists--incapable
+of understanding the depth of this metaphysical hatred, which is the
+beat-difference of two currents of being manifested as an unbearable
+dissonance, a hatred that may become tragic for both, the same hatred
+as has dominated the Indian Culture in setting the Indian of race
+against the Sudra. During the Gothic age this difference is deep and
+religious, and the object of hatred is the Consensus as religion;
+only with the beginning of the Western Civilization does it become
+materialist, and begin to attack Jewry on its intellectual and business
+sides, on which the West suddenly finds itself confronted by an even
+challenger.
+
+But the deepest element of separation and bitterness has been one of
+which the full tragedy has been least understood. While Western man,
+from the days of the Saxon emperors to the present, has (in the most
+significant sense of the words) _lived_ his history, and lived it with
+a consciousness of it that no other Culture can parallel, the Jewish
+Consensus ceased to have a history at all.[560] Its problems were
+solved, its inner form was complete, conclusive, and unalterable. For
+it, as for Islam, the Greek Church, and the Parsees, centuries ceased
+to mean anything, and consequently no one belonging inwardly to the
+Consensus can even begin to comprehend the passion with which Faustians
+livingly experience the short crowded epochs in which their history
+and destiny take decisive turns--the beginning of the Crusades, the
+Reformation, the French Revolution, the German Wars of Liberation,
+and each and every turning-point in the existence of the several
+peoples. All this, for the Jew, lies thirty generations back. Outside
+him history on the grand style flowed on and past. Epochs succeeded
+to epochs, every century witnessed fundamental human changes, but in
+the ghetto and in the souls of its denizens all stood still. And even
+when he regarded himself as a member of the people amongst whom he
+sojourned and took part in their good and evil fortune--as happened in
+so many countries in 1914--he lived these experiences, not really as
+something _his own_, but as a partisan, a supporter; he judged them
+as an interested spectator, and hence it is just the deepest meanings
+of the struggle that must ever remain hidden from him. A Jewish
+cavalry-general fought in the Thirty Years’ War (he lies buried in the
+old Jewish cemetery at Prague[561])--but what did the ideas of Luther
+or Loyola mean to him? What did the Byzantines--near relatives of the
+Jews--comprehend of the Crusades? Such things are among the tragic
+necessities of the higher history that consists in the life-courses
+of individual Cultures, and often have they repeated themselves. The
+Romans, then an ageing people, cannot possibly have understood what
+was at issue for the Jews in the trial of Jesus or the rising of
+Barcochebas.[562] The European-American world has displayed a complete
+incomprehension of the fellah-revolutions of Turkey (1908) and China
+(1911); the inner life and thought of these peoples, and consequently,
+even their notions of state and sovereignty (the Caliph in the one, the
+Son of Heaven in the other) being of an utterly different cast and,
+therefore, a sealed book, the course of events could neither be weighed
+up, nor even reckoned upon in advance. The member of an alien Culture
+can be a spectator, and therefore also a descriptive historian of the
+past, but he can never be a statesman, a man who feels the future
+working in him. If he does not possess the material power to enable
+him to act in the cadre of his own Culture, ignoring or manipulating
+those of the alien (which, of course, may occur, as with the Romans
+in the young East or Disraeli in England), he stands helpless in the
+midst of events. The Roman and the Greek always mentally projected the
+life-conditions of his Polis into the alien event; the modern European
+always regards alien Destinies in terms of constitution, parliament,
+and democracy, although the application of such ideas to other Cultures
+is ridiculous and meaningless; and the Jew of the Consensus follows
+the history of the present (which is nothing but that of the Faustian
+Civilization spread over continents and oceans) with the fundamental
+feelings of Magian mankind, even when he himself is firmly convinced of
+the Western character of his thought.
+
+As every Magian Consensus is non-territorial and geographically
+unlimited, it involuntarily sees in all conflicts concerning the
+_Faustian_ ideas of fatherland, mother tongue, ruling house, monarchy,
+constitution, a return from forms that are thoroughly alien (therefore
+burdensome and meaningless) to him towards forms matching with his own
+nature. Hence the word “international,” whether it be coupled with
+socialism, pacificism, or capitalism, can excite him to enthusiasm,
+but what he hears in that word is _the essence of his landless and
+boundless Consensus_. While for the European-American democracy
+constitutional struggles and revolutions mean an evolution towards the
+Civilized ideal, for him they mean (as he almost never consciously
+realizes) the breaking-down of all that is of other build than himself.
+Even when the force of the Consensus in him is broken and the life
+of his host-people exercises an outward attraction upon him to the
+point of an induced patriotism, yet the party that he supports is
+always that of which the aims are most nearly comparable with the
+Magian essence. Hence in Germany he is a democrat and in England
+(like the Parsee in India) an imperialist. It is exactly the same
+misunderstanding as when West Europeans regard Young Turks and Chinese
+reformers as kindred spirits--that is, as “constitutionalists.” If
+there is inward relationship, a man affirms even where he destroys; if
+inward alienness, his effect is negative even where his desire is to be
+constructive. What the Western Culture has destroyed, by reform-efforts
+of its own type where it has had power, hardly bears thinking of; and
+Jewry has been equally destructive where it has intervened. The sense
+of the inevitableness of this reciprocal misunderstanding leads to the
+appalling hatred that settles deep in the blood and, fastening upon
+visible marks like race, mode of life, profession, speech, leads both
+sides to waste, ruin, and bloody excesses wherever these conditions
+occur.[563]
+
+This applies also, and above all, to the religiousness of the Faustian
+world, which feels itself to be threatened, hated, and undermined by
+an alien metaphysic in its midst. From the reforms of Hugh of Cluny
+and St. Bernard and the Lateran Council of 1215 to Luther, Calvin, and
+Puritanism and thence to the Age of Enlightenment, what a tide flowed
+through our waking-consciousness, when for the Jewish religion history
+had long ceased altogether! Within the West-European Consensus we see
+Joseph Qaro in his _Schulehan Arukh_ (1565) restating the Maimonides
+material in another form, and this could equally well have been
+done in 1400 or 1800, or for that matter not at all. In the fixity
+of modern Islam of Byzantine Christianity since the Crusades (and,
+equally, of the life of Late China and of Late Egypt) all is formal
+and rolled even, not only the food-prohibitions, the prayer-runes, the
+phylacteries, but also the Talmudic casuistry, which is fundamentally
+the same as that applied for centuries to the Vendidad in Bombay and
+the Koran in Cairo. The mysticism, too, of Jewry (which is _pure
+Sufism_) has remained, like that of Islam, unaltered since the
+Crusades; and in the last centuries it has produced three more saints
+in the sense of Oriental Sufism--though to recognize them as such we
+have to see through a colour-wash of Western thought-forms. Spinoza,
+with his thinking in substances instead of forces and his thoroughly
+Magian dualism, is entirely comparable with the last stragglers of
+Islamic philosophy such as Murtada and Shirazi. He makes use of the
+notions of his Western Baroque armoury, living himself into mode of
+imagination of that _milieu_ so thoroughly as to deceive even himself,
+but below the surface movements of his soul he remains the unchanged
+descendant of Maimonides and Avicenna and Talmudic “_more geometrico_”
+methodology. In Baal Shem, the founder of the Hasidim sect (born in
+Volhynia about 1698), a true Messiah arose. His wanderings through
+the world of the Polish ghettos teaching and performing miracles are
+comparable only with the story of primitive Christianity;[564] here
+was a movement that had its sources in ancient currents of Magian,
+Kabbalistic mysticism, that gripped a large part of Eastern Jewry and
+was undoubtedly a potent fact in the religious history of the Arabian
+Culture; and yet, running its course as it did in the midst of an alien
+mankind, it passed practically unnoticed by it. The peaceful battle
+that Baal Shem waged for God-immanent against the Talmudic pharisees
+of his time, his Christlike figure, the wealth of legends that were
+rapidly woven about his person and the persons of his disciples--all
+this is of the pure Magian spirit, and at bottom as alien to us of
+the West as primitive Christianity itself. The thought-processes of
+Hasidist writings are to non-Jews practically unintelligible, and so
+also is the ritual. In the excitement of the service some fall into
+convulsions and others begin to dance like the dervishes of Islam.[565]
+The original teaching of Baal Shem was developed by one of the
+disciples in Zaddikism, and this too, which was a belief in successive
+divine embassies of saints (Zaddiks), whose mere proximity brought
+salvation, has obvious kinship with Islamic Mahdism and still more with
+the Shiite doctrine of the imams in whom the “Light of the Prophet”
+takes up its abode. Another disciple, Solomon Maimon--of whom a
+remarkable autobiography exists--stepped from Baal Shem to Kant (whose
+abstract kind of thought has always possessed an immense attraction for
+Talmudic intellects). The third is Otto Weininger, whose moral dualism
+is a purely Magian conception and whose death in a spiritual struggle
+of essentially Magian experience is one of the noblest spectacles ever
+presented by a Late religiousness.[566] Something of the sort Russians
+may be able to experience, but neither the Classical nor the Faustian
+soul is capable of it.
+
+In the “Enlightenment” of the eighteenth century the Western Culture
+in turn becomes megalopolitan and intellectual, and so, suddenly,
+accessible to the intelligentsia of the Consensus. And the latter, thus
+dumped into the middle of an epoch corresponding, for them, to the
+remote past of a long-expired Sephardic life-current, were inevitably
+stirred by echo-feelings, but these echoes were of the _critical and
+negative side only_, and the tragically unnatural outcome was that
+a cohesion already historically complete and incapable of organic
+progress was swept into the big movement of the host-peoples, which
+it shook, loosened, displaced, and vitiated to its depths. For, for
+the Faustian spirit, the Enlightenment was a step forward along its
+own road--a step over débris, no doubt, but still affirmative at
+bottom--whereas for Jewry it was destruction and nothing else, the
+demolition of an alien structure that it did not understand. And
+this is why we so often see the spectacle--paralleled by the case
+of the Parsees in India, of the Chinese and Japanese in a Christian
+_milieu_, and by modern Americans in China--of enlightenment, pushed
+to the point of cynicism and unqualified atheism, opposing an alien
+religion, while the fellah-practices of its own folk go on wholly
+unaffected. There are Socialists who superficially--and yet quite
+sincerely--combat every sort of religion, and yet in their own case
+follow the food-prohibitions and routine prayers and phylacteries
+with an anxious exactitude. More frequent actually is inward lapse
+from the Consensus qua creed--the spectacle that is presented to us
+by the Indian student who, after an English university-training in
+Locke and Mill, acquires the same cynical contempt for Indian and
+Western faiths alike and must himself be crushed under the ruins of
+both. Since the Napoleonic era the old-civilized Consensus has mingled
+unwelcome with the new-civilized Western “society” of the cities and
+has taken their economic and scientific methods into use with the cool
+superiority of age. A few generations later, the Japanese, also a very
+old intellect, did the same, and probably with still greater success.
+Yet another example is afforded by the Carthaginians, a rear-guard of
+the Babylonian Civilization, who, already highly developed when the
+Classical Culture was still in the Etrusco-Doric infancy, ended by
+surrendering to Late Hellenism[567]--petrified in an end-state in all
+that concerned religion and art, but far superior to the Greeks and
+Romans as men of business, and hated accordingly.
+
+To-day this Magian nation, with its ghetto and its religion, itself
+is in danger of disappearing--not because the metaphysics of the two
+Cultures come closer to one another (for that is impossible), but
+because the intellectualized upper stratum of each side is ceasing to
+be metaphysical at all. It has lost every kind of inward cohesion,
+and what remains is simply a cohesion for practical questions. The
+lead that this nation has enjoyed from its long habituation to
+thinking in business terms becomes ever less and less (_vis-à-vis_ the
+American, it has already almost gone), and with the loss of it will
+go the last potent means of keeping up a Consensus that has fallen
+regionally into parts. In the moment when the civilized methods of the
+European-American world-cities shall have arrived at full maturity, the
+destiny of Jewry--at least of the Jewry in our midst (that of Russia is
+another problem)--will be accomplished.
+
+Islam has _soil_ under it. It has practically absorbed the Persian,
+Jewish, Nestorian, and Monophysite Consensus into itself.[568] The
+relic of the Byzantine nation, the modern Greeks, also occupy their
+own land. The relic of the Parsees in India dwells in the midst of
+the stiffened forms of a yet older and more fellahized Civilization
+and is thereby secured in its footing. But the West-European-American
+part of the Jewish Consensus, which has drawn to itself and bound to
+its destiny most of the other parts of Jewry, has now fallen into the
+machinery of a young Civilization. Detached from any land-footing
+since, centuries ago, it saved its life by shutting itself off in the
+ghetto, it is fragmented and faced with dissolution. But that is a
+Destiny, not _in_ the Faustian Culture, but of the Magian.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE STATE
+
+(A)
+
+THE PROBLEM OF THE ESTATES--NOBILITY AND PRIESTHOOD
+
+
+I[569]
+
+A fathomless secret of the cosmic flowings that we call Life is their
+separation into two sexes. Already in the earth-bound existence-streams
+of the plant world they are trying to part from one another, as
+the symbol of the flower tells us--into a something that _is_ this
+existence and a something that keeps it going. Animals are free, little
+worlds in a big world--the cosmic--closed off as microcosms and set
+up against the macrocosm. And, more and more decisively as the animal
+kingdom unfolds its history, the dual direction of dual being, of the
+masculine and the feminine, manifests itself.
+
+The feminine stands closer to the Cosmic. It is rooted deeper in the
+earth and it is immediately involved in the grand cyclic rhythms
+of Nature. The masculine is freer, more animal, more mobile--as to
+sensation and understanding as well as otherwise--more awake and more
+tense.
+
+The male livingly experiences Destiny, and he _comprehends_ Causality,
+the causal logic of the Become. The female, on the contrary, _is
+herself_ Destiny and Time and the organic logic of the Becoming, and
+for that very reason the principle of Causality is for ever alien to
+her. Whenever Man has tried to give Destiny any tangible form, he
+has felt it as of feminine form, and he has called it Moirai, Parcæ,
+Norns. The supreme deity is never itself Destiny, but always either its
+representative or its master--just as man represents or controls woman.
+Primevally, too, woman is the seeress, and not because she knows the
+future, but because she _is_ the future. The priest merely interprets
+the oracle; the woman is the oracle itself, and it is Time that speaks
+through her.
+
+The man _makes_ History, the woman _is_ History. Here, strangely
+clear yet enigmatic still, we have a dual significance of all living
+happenings--on the one hand we sense cosmic flow as such, and on
+the other hand the chain and train of successive individuals brings
+us back to the microcosms themselves as the recipients, containers,
+and preservers of the flowing. It is this “second” history that is
+characteristically masculine--political, social, more conscious, freer,
+and more agitated than the other. It reaches back deep into the animal
+world, and receives highest symbolic and world-historical expression
+in the life-courses of the great Cultures. Feminine, on the contrary,
+is the primary, the eternal, the maternal, the plantlike (for the
+plant ever has something female in it), _the cultureless history of
+the generation-sequence_, which never alters, but uniformly and stilly
+passes through the being of all animal and human species, through all
+the short-lived individual Cultures. In retrospect, it is synonymous
+with Life itself. This history, too, is not without its battles and
+its tragedies. Woman in childbed wins through to her victory. The
+Aztecs--the Romans of the Mexican Culture--honoured the woman in labour
+as a battling warrior, and if she died, she was interred with the same
+formulæ as the fallen hero. Policy for Woman is eternally the conquest
+of the Man, through whom she can become mother of children, through
+whom she can become History and Destiny and Future. The target of her
+profound shyness, her tactical finesse, is ever the father of her son.
+The man, on the contrary, whose centre of gravity lies essentially in
+the other kind of History, wants that son as _his_ son, as inheritor
+and carrier of his blood and historical tradition.
+
+Here, in man and in woman, _the two kinds of History_ are fighting for
+power. Woman is strong and wholly what she is, and she experiences
+the Man and the Sons only in relation to herself and her ordained
+rôle. In the masculine being, on the contrary, there is a certain
+contradiction; he is this man, and he is something else besides, which
+woman neither understands nor admits, which she feels as robbery
+and violence upon that which to her is holiest. This secret and
+fundamental war of the sexes has gone on ever since there were sexes,
+and will continue--silent, bitter, unforgiving, pitiless--while they
+continue. In it, too, there are policies, battles, alliances, treaties,
+treasons. Race-feeling of love and hate, which originate in depths of
+world-yearning and primary instincts of directedness, prevail between
+the sexes--and with a still more uncanny potency than in the other
+History that takes place between man and man. There are love-lyrics
+and war-lyrics, love-dances and weapon-dances, there are two kinds of
+tragedy--_Othello_ and _Macbeth_. But nothing in the political world
+even begins to compare with the abysses of a Clytæmnestra’s or a
+Kriemhild’s vengeance.
+
+And so woman despises that other History--man’s politics--which she
+never comprehends, and of which all that she sees is that it takes her
+sons from her. What for her is a triumphant battle that annihilates
+the victories of a thousand childbeds? Man’s history sacrifices
+woman’s history to itself, and no doubt there is a female heroism too,
+that proudly brings the sons to the sacrifice (Catherine Sforza on
+the walls of Imola), but nevertheless there was and is and ever will
+be a secret politic of the woman--of the female of the animal world
+even--that seeks to draw away her male from his kind of history and
+to weave him body and soul into her own plantlike history of generic
+succession--that is, into herself. And yet all that is accomplished in
+the man-history is accomplished under the battle-cries of hearth and
+home, wives and children, race and the like, and its very object is
+the covering and upholding of this history of birth and death. The
+conflict of man and man is ever on account of the blood, of woman.
+_Woman, as Time, is that for which there is history at all._
+
+The woman with race in her feels this even when she does not know it.
+She is Destiny, she plays Destiny. The play begins with the fight of
+men for the possession of her--Helen, and the tragedy of Carmen, and
+Catherine II, and the story of Napoleon and Désirée Clary, who in the
+end took Bernadotte over to the side of his enemies--and it is not a
+human play only, for this fight begins down in the animal world and
+fills the history of whole species. And it culminates in her swaying,
+as mother or wife or mistress, the Destiny of empires--Hallgerd in the
+Njal saga, the Frankish queen Brunhilde, Marozia who gave the Holy See
+to men of her choice. The man climbs up in _his_ history until he has
+the future of a country in his hands--and then woman comes and forces
+him to his knees. Peoples and states may go down in ruin over it, but
+she in _her_ history has conquered. This, in the last analysis, is
+always the aim of political ambition in a woman of race.[570]
+
+Thus history has two meanings, neither to be blasphemed. It is cosmic
+or politic, it _is_ being or it _preserves_ being. There are two
+sorts of Destiny, two sorts of war, two sorts of tragedy--_public
+and private_. Nothing can eliminate this duality from the world.
+It is radical, founded in the essence of the animal that is both
+microcosm and participant in the cosmic. It appears at all significant
+conjunctures in the form of a conflict of duties, which exists only
+for the man, not for the woman, and in the course of a higher Culture
+it is never overcome, but only deepened. There are public life and
+private life, public law and private law, communal cults and domestic
+cults. As Estate,[571] Being is “in form” for the one history; as race,
+breed, it is in flow as _itself_ the other history. This is the old
+German distinction between the “sword side” and the “spindle side” of
+blood-relationships. The double significance of directional Time finds
+its highest expression in the ideas of _the State_ and _the Family_.
+
+The ordering of the family is in living material what the form of the
+house is in dead.[572] A change in the structure and import of family
+life, and the plan of the house changes also. To the Classical mode
+of housing corresponds the agnate family of Classical style. This
+is ever more sharply defined in Hellenic city-law than in the later
+Roman.[573] It refers entirely to the Estate as present in a Euclidean
+here-and-now, just as the Polis is conceived as an aggregate of bodies
+availably present. Blood-relationship, therefore, is neither necessary
+nor sufficient for it; it ceases at the limit of _patria potestas_,
+of the “house.” The mother as such is not agnatically related to the
+offspring of her own body; only in so far as, like them, she is subject
+to the _patria potestas_ of her living husband is she the agnatic
+sister of her children.[574] To the “Consensus,” on the other hand,
+corresponds the Magian cognate family (Hebrew, “_Mishpasha_”) which
+is representatively extended by both the paternal _and_ the maternal
+blood-relationships, and possesses a “spirit,” a little consensus, of
+its own, but no special head.[575] It is significant of the extinction
+of the Classical soul and the unfolding of the Magian that the “Roman”
+law of Imperial times gradually passes from _agnatio_ to _cognatio_.
+Justinian’s 118th and 127th novels reforming the law of inheritance
+affirm the victory of the Magian family-idea.[576]
+
+On the other side, we see masses of individual beings streaming past,
+growing and passing, but _making_ history. The purer, deeper, stronger,
+more taken-for-granted the common beat of these sequent generations is,
+the more blood, the more race they have. Out of the infinite they rise,
+every one with its soul,[577] bands that feel themselves in the common
+wave-beat of their being, as a whole--not mind-communities like orders,
+craft-guilds, or schools of learning, which are linked by common
+truths, but blood-confederates in the mêlée of fighting life.
+
+There are streams of being which are “in form” in the same sense
+in which the term is used in sports. A field of steeplechasers is
+“in form” when the legs swing surely over the fences, and the hoofs
+beat firmly and rhythmically on the flat. When wrestlers, fencers,
+ball-players are “in form,” the riskiest acts and moves come off easily
+and naturally. An art-period is in form when its tradition is second
+nature, as counterpoint was to Bach. An army is in form when it is like
+the army of Napoleon at Austerlitz and the army of Moltke at Sedan.
+Practically everything that has been achieved in world-history, in
+war and in that continuation of war by intellectual means[578] that
+we call politics; in all successful diplomacy, tactics, strategy; in
+the competition of states or social classes or parties; has been the
+product of living unities that found themselves “in form.”
+
+The word for race- or breed-education is “training” (_Zucht_,
+_Züchtung_), as against the shaping (_Bildung_) which creates
+communities of waking-consciousness on a basis of uniform teachings or
+beliefs. Books, for example, are shaping agents, while the constant
+felt pulse and harmony of _milieu_ into which one feels oneself,
+_lives_ oneself--like a novice or a page of early Gothic times--are
+training influences. The “good form” and ceremonies of a given society
+are sense-presentations of the beat of a given species of Being, and
+to master them one must _have_ the beat of them. Hence women, as
+more instinctive and nearer to cosmic rhythms, adapt themselves more
+readily than men to the forms of a new _milieu_. Women from the bottom
+strata move in elegant society with entire certainty after a few
+years--and sink again as quickly. But men alter slowly, because they
+are more awake and aware. The proletarian man never becomes wholly an
+aristocrat, the aristocrat never wholly a proletarian--only in the sons
+does the beat of the new _milieu_ make its appearance.
+
+The profounder the form, the stricter and more repellent it is. To the
+outsider, therefore, it appears to be a slavery; the member, on the
+contrary, has a perfect and easy command of it. The Prince de Ligne
+was, no less than Mozart, master of the form and not its slave; and the
+same holds good of _every_ born aristocrat, statesman, and captain.
+
+In all high Cultures, therefore, there is a _peasantry_, which is
+breed, stock, in the broad sense (and thus to a certain extent nature
+herself), and a _society_ which is assertively and emphatically “in
+form.” It is a set of classes or Estates, and no doubt artificial
+and transitory. But the history of these classes and estates is
+_world-history at highest potential_. It is only in relation to it that
+the peasant is seen as historyless. The whole broad and grand history
+of these six millennia has accomplished itself in the life-courses of
+the high Cultures, _because_ these Cultures themselves placed their
+creative foci in Estates possessing breed and training, and so in the
+course of fulfilment became trained and bred. A Culture is Soul that
+has arrived at self-expression in sensible forms, but these forms are
+living and evolving.[579] Their matrix is in the intensified Being of
+individuals or groups--that is, in that which I have just called Being
+“in form.” And when, and not until, this Being is sufficiently formed
+to that high rightness, it becomes representative of a representable
+Culture.[580]
+
+This Culture is not only a grand thing, but wholly unlike any other
+thing in the organic world. It is the one point at which man lifts
+himself above the powers of Nature and becomes himself a Creator.
+Even as to race, breed, he is Nature’s creature--he _is_ bred. But,
+as Estate, he breeds himself just as he breeds the noble kinds of
+animal-plant with which he surrounds himself--and that process, too, is
+in the deepest and most final sense “Culture.” Culture and class[581]
+are interchangeable expressions; they arise together and they vanish
+together. The breeding of select types of wines or fruit or flowers,
+the breeding of blood horses, _is_ Culture, and the culture, in exactly
+the same sense, of the human élite arises as the expression of a Being
+that has brought itself into high “form.”
+
+For that very reason, there is found in every Culture a sharp sense
+of whether this or that man belongs thereto or not. The Classical
+notion of the Barbarian, the Arabian of the Unbeliever (Amhaarez,
+Giaour), the Indian of the Sudra--however differently the lines of
+cleavage were arrived at--are alike in that the words do not primarily
+express contempt or hatred, but establish that there are differences
+in pulse of Being which set an impassable barrier against all contacts
+on the deeper levels. This perfectly clear and unambiguous idea has
+been obscured by the Indian concept of a “fourth caste,” which caste,
+as we know now, has never existed at all.[582] The Code of Manu,
+with its celebrated regulations for the treatment of the Sudra, is
+the outcome of the fully developed state of fellahdom in his India,
+and--irrespective of practical actualities under either existing or
+even obtainable legislation--described the misty idea of Brahmanism
+by the negative mode of dealing with its opposite, very much as the
+Late Classical philosophy used the notion of the working Banausos. The
+one has led us into misunderstanding caste as a specifically Indian
+phenomenon, the other to a basically false idea of the attitude of
+Classical man towards work.
+
+In all such cases what really confronts us is the _residue_ which does
+not count for the inward life of the Culture and its symbolism, and
+is in principle left out of every really significant classification,
+somewhat as the “outcast” is ignored in the far East. The Gothic
+expression “_corpus christianum_” indicates explicitly in its very
+terms that the Jewish Consensus does not belong to it. In the Arabian
+Culture the other-believer is merely tolerated within the respective
+domains of the Jewish, the Persian, the Christian, and, above all, the
+Islamic, nations, and contemptuously left to his own administration and
+his own jurisdiction. In the Classical World it was not only barbarians
+that were “outcasts”--so also in a measure were slaves, and especially
+the relics of the autochthonous population like the Penestæ in Thessaly
+and the Helots of Sparta, whom their masters treated in a way that
+reminds us of the conduct of the Normans in Anglo-Saxon England and
+the Teutonic Knights in the Slavonic East. The Code of Manu preserves,
+as designations of Sudra classes, the names of ancient peoples of the
+“Colonial” region of the Lower Ganges. (As Magadha is amongst them,
+Buddha himself may have been a Sudra, like the “Cæsar” Asoka, whose
+grandfather Chandragupta was of the most humble origin.) Others are
+names of callings, and this again reminds us that also in the West and
+elsewhere certain callings were outcast--the beggars, for example (who
+in Homer are a class), smiths, singers, and the professional poor, who
+have been bred literally _en masse_ by the _caritas_ of the Church and
+the benevolence of laymen in the Early Gothic.
+
+But, in sum, “caste” is a word that has been at least as much abused as
+it has been used. There were no castes in the Old and Middle Kingdoms
+of Egypt, nor in India before Buddha, nor in China before Han times. It
+is only in very Late conditions that they appear, and then we find them
+in all Cultures. From the XXIst Dynasty onwards (_c._ 1100 B.C.) Egypt
+was in the hands, now of the Theban priest-caste, now of the Libyan
+warrior-caste; and thereafter the hardening process went on steadily
+till the time of Herodotus--whose view of the conditions of his day
+as characteristically Egyptian is just as inaccurate as our view of
+those prevailing in India. _The distinction between Estate and Caste is
+that between earliest Culture and latest Civilization._ In the rise of
+the prime Estates--noble and priest--the Culture is unfolding itself,
+while the castes are the expression of its definitive fellah-state.
+The Estate is the most living of all, Culture launched on the path of
+fulfilment, “the form that living must itself unfold.”[583] The caste
+is absolute finished-ness, the phase in which development has been
+succeeded by immutable fixation.
+
+But the great Estates are something quite different from
+_occupation-groups_ like those of artisans, officials, artists, which
+are professionally held together by technical tradition and the spirit
+of their work. They are, in fact, _emblems in flesh and blood_, whose
+entire being, as phenomenon, as attitude, and as mode of thought,
+possesses symbolic meaning. Within every Culture, moreover--while
+peasantry is a piece of pure nature and growth and, therefore, a
+completely _impersonal_ manifestation--nobility and priesthood are
+the results of high breeding and forming and therefore express a
+_thoroughly personal Culture_, which, by the height of its form,
+rejects not merely barbarians, but presently also all who are not of
+their status, as a _residue_--regarded by the nobility as the “people”
+and by clergy as the “laity.” And this _style of personality_ is
+the material that, when the fellah-age arrives, petrifies into the
+type of a caste, which thereafter endures unaltered for centuries.
+As in the living Culture race and estate are in antithesis as the
+impersonal and the personal, in fellah-times _the mass and the caste_,
+the coolie and the Brahmin, _are in antithesis as the formless and
+the formal_. The living form has become formula, still possessing
+style, but possessing it as stylistic rigidity. This petrified style
+of the caste is of an extreme subtlety, dignity, and intellectuality,
+and feels itself infinitely superior to the developing mankind of a
+Culture--we can hardly form an idea of the lofty height from which the
+Mandarin or the Brahmin looks down upon European thoughts and actions,
+or how fundamentally the Egyptian priest must have despised a visiting
+Pythagoras or Plato. It moves impassive through time with the Byzantine
+dignity of a soul that has left all its problems and enigmas far behind
+it.
+
+
+II
+
+In the Carolingian pre-Culture men distinguished _Knechte_, _Freie_,
+and _Edle_. This is a primitive differentiation based merely on the
+facts of external life. But in Early Gothic times it runs:
+
+ God hath shapen lives three,
+ Boor and knight and priest they be.[584]
+
+Here we have status-differences of a high Culture that has just
+awakened. And the stole and the sword stand together in face of the
+plough in strongest assertiveness as estates _vis-à-vis_ the rest,
+the Non-Estate, that which, like themselves, is fact, but, unlike
+themselves, fact without deeper significance. The separation, inward
+and felt, is so destined, so potent, that no understanding can ignore
+it. Hatred wells up out of the villages, contempt flashes back from the
+castles. Neither possession nor power nor calling produced this abyss
+between the “lives.” Logical justification for it there is none. It is
+metaphysical nature.
+
+Later, with the cities, but younger than they, _burgherdom,
+bourgeoisie_, arises as the “Third Estate.” The burgher, too, now
+looks with contempt upon the countryside, which lies about him dull,
+unaltered, and patient, and in contrast to which he feels himself more
+awake and freer and therefore further advanced on the road of the
+Culture. He despises also the primary estates, “squire and parson,” as
+something lying intellectually below him and historically behind him.
+Yet, as compared with these two, the burgher is, as the boor was, a
+residue, a non-estate. In the minds of the “privileged” the peasant
+hardly now counts at all--the burgher counts, but as an opposite and a
+background. He is the foil against which the others become conscious
+of their own significance and of the fact that this significance is
+something lying outside all practical considerations. When we find that
+in all Cultures the same occurs in exactly the same form, and that,
+however different the symbolism of one Culture from that of another,
+their history fulfils itself everywhere in and by opposition of these
+groups--impulsive peasant wars in the Springtime, intellectually-based
+_civil_ wars in the later period--then it is evident that the meaning
+of the facts must be looked for in the deepest foundations of Life
+itself.
+
+It is an _idea_ that lies at the base of these two prime Estates, and
+only these. It gives them the potent feeling of a rank derived from
+a divine investiture and therefore beyond all criticism--a standing
+which imposes self-respect and self-consciousness, but the sternest
+self-discipline as well (and death itself if need be), as a duty and
+imbues both with the historical superiority, the soul-magic, that does
+not draw upon power but actually generates it. Those who--inwardly,
+and not merely nominally--belong to these Estates are _actually_
+something other than the residue; their lives, in contrast to those of
+burgher and peasant, are sustained in every part by a symbolic dignity.
+These lives do not exist in order to be merely lived, but to have
+meaning. It is the two sides of all freely moving life that come to
+expression in these Estates; _the one is wholly being, the other wholly
+waking-consciousness_.
+
+Every nobility is a living symbol of _Time_, every priesthood of
+_Space_. Destiny and sacred Causality, History and Nature, the When
+and the Where, race and language, sex-life and feeling-life--all
+these attain in them to the highest possible expression. The noble
+lives in a world of facts, the priest in one of truths; the one
+has shrewdness, the other knowledge; the one is a doer, the other
+a thinker. Aristocratic world-feeling is essentially pulse-sense;
+priestly world-feeling proceeds entirely by tensions. Between the
+time of Charlemagne and that of Conrad II something formed itself in
+the time-stream that cannot be elucidated, but has to be felt if we
+are to understand the dawn of the new Culture. There had long been
+noblemen and ecclesiastics, but then first--and not for long--there
+were nobility and clergy, in the grand sense of the words and the full
+force of their symbolic significance.[585] So mighty is this onset of
+a symbolism that at first all other distinctions, such as those of
+country, people, and language, fall into the background. In all the
+lands from Ireland to Calabria the Gothic hierarchy was a single great
+community; the Early Classical chivalry before Troy, or the Early
+Gothic before Jerusalem, seems to us as of _one_ great family. The old
+Egyptian nomes and the feudal states of the first Chóu times appear, in
+comparison with such Estates as these (and _because_ of the comparison)
+just as colourless as Burgundy and Lorraine in the Hohenstaufen period.
+There is a cosmopolitan condition both at the beginning and at the end
+of every Culture, but in the first case it exists because the symbolic
+might of aristocratic-hierarchic forms still towers above those of
+nationality, and in the second because the formless mass sinks below
+them.
+
+The two Estates in principle exclude one another. The prime opposition
+of cosmic and microcosmic, which pervades all being that moves
+freely in space, underlies this dual existence also. Each is possible
+and necessary only through the other. The Homeric world maintained
+a conspiracy of hostile silence towards the Orphic, and in turn
+(as we see from the Pre-Socratics) the former became an object of
+anger and contempt for the latter. In Gothic times the reforming
+spirits set themselves with a sacred enthusiasm across the path of
+the Renaissance-natures. State and Church have never really come to
+equilibrium, and in the conflict of Empire and Papacy their opposition
+rose to an intensity only possible for Faustian man.
+
+Of the two, moreover, it is the nobility that is the true Estate, the
+sum of blood and race, being-stream in the fullest imaginable form.
+And therefore nobility is a higher peasantry. Even in 1250 the West
+had a widespread proverb: “One who ploughs in the forenoon jousts
+in the afternoon,” and it was quite usual for a knight to marry the
+daughter of a peasant. In contrast to the cathedral, the castle was a
+development, by way of the country noble’s house of Frankish times,
+from the peasant-dwelling. In the Icelandic sagas peasants’ crofts are
+besieged and stormed like castles. Nobility and peasantry are plantlike
+and instinctive, deep-rooted in the ancestral land, propagating
+themselves in the family tree, breeding and bred. In comparison with
+them the priesthood is essentially the counter-estate, the estate of
+negation, of non-race, of detachment from earth--of free, timeless,
+and historyless waking-consciousness. In every peasant village, in
+every peasant family from the Stone Age to the peaks of the Culture,
+world-history plays itself out in little. Substitute for peoples
+families, and for lands farms--still the ultimate meaning of their
+strivings is the same--the maintenance of the blood, the succession of
+the generations, the cosmic, woman, power. _Macbeth_ and _King Lear_
+might perfectly well have been thought out as village tragedies--and
+the fact is a proof of their tragic truth. In all Cultures nobility
+and peasantry appear in forms of _family descent_, and language itself
+connects them with the sexes, through which life propagates itself,
+has history, and is history. And as woman _is_ history, the inward
+rank of peasant and noble families is determined by how much of race
+their women have in them, how far they _are_ Destiny. And, therefore,
+there is deep meaning in the fact that the purer and more race-pervaded
+world-history is, the more the stream of its public life passes into
+and adapts itself to the private lives of individual great families.
+This, of course, is the basis of the dynastic principle, and not only
+that, but the basis of the idea of world-historical personality. The
+existence of entire states comes to depend on a few private destinies,
+vastly magnified. The history of Athens in the fifth century is in
+the main that of the Alcmæonidæ, the history of Rome is that of a few
+families of the type of the Fabii or the Claudii. The history of states
+in the Baroque is, broadly speaking, that of the operations of Habsburg
+and Bourbon family-politics, and its crises take form as marriages
+and wars of succession. The history of Napoleon’s second marriage
+comprises also the burning of Moscow and the battle of Leipzig. The
+history of the Papacy is, right into the eighteenth century, that of
+a few noble families which competed for the tiara in order to found
+princely family-fortunes. This is true equally of Byzantine dignitaries
+and English premiers (witness the Cecils) and even, in numerous
+instances, of great revolution-leaders.
+
+Of all this the priesthood (and philosophy so far as it is priesthood)
+is the direct negative. The Estate of pure waking-consciousness and
+eternal truths combats time and race and sex in every sense. Man
+as peasant or noble turns towards, man as priest turns away from,
+woman. Aristocracy runs the danger of dissipating and losing the
+broad being-stream of public life in the petty channels of its minor
+ancestors and relatives. The true priest, on the other hand, refuses in
+principle to recognize private life, sex, family, the “house.” For the
+man of race death begins to be real and appalling only when it is death
+without heirs--Icelandic sagas no less than Chinese ancestor-worship
+teach us this. He does not entirely die who lives on in sons and
+nephews. But for the true priest _media vita in morte sumus_; what
+he shall bequeath is intellectual, and rejected woman bears no part
+in it. The phenomenal forms of this second Estate that occur again
+and again are celibacy, cloister, battlings with sex-impulse fought
+to the extreme of self-emasculation, and a contempt for motherhood
+which expresses itself in orgiasm and hallowed prostitution, and not
+less in the intellectual devaluation of sexual life down to the level
+of Kant’s vile definition of marriage.[586] Throughout the Classical
+world it was the rule that in the sacred precinct, the Temenos, no
+one must be born or die. The timeless must not come into contact with
+time. It is possible for the priest to have an intellectual recognition
+of the great moments of generation and birth, and to honour them
+sacramentally, but experience them he may not.
+
+For while nobility _is_ something, priesthood _signifies_ something,
+and this alone would be enough to tell us that it is the opposite
+of all that is Destiny and Race and Estate. The castle, with its
+chambers and towers, walls and moats, tells of a strong-flowing life,
+but the cathedral, with its vaulting and pillars and choir, is,
+through and through, Meaning--that is to say, Ornament--and every
+venerable priesthood has developed itself up to that marvellous
+gravity and beauty of bearing in which every item, from facial
+expression and voice-inflection to costume and walk, is ornament,
+from which private life and even inward life have been eliminated as
+unessential--whereas that which a ripe aristocracy (such as that of
+eighteenth-century France) displays and parades is a finished living.
+It was Gothic thought that developed out of the priest-concept the
+_character indelebilis_, which makes the idea indestructible and
+wholly independent of the worthiness of its bearer’s life in the
+world-as-history--but every priesthood, and consequently also all
+philosophy (in the sense of the schools), contain it implicitly. If a
+priest has race, he leads an outward existence like peasant, knight,
+or prince. The Pope and cardinals of the Gothic period were feudal
+princes, leaders of armies, fond of the chase, connoisseurs and adepts
+in family politics. Among the Brahmins of the pre-Buddha “Baroque”
+were great landowners, well-groomed abbés, courtiers, spendthrifts,
+gourmets.[587] But it was the early period that had learned to
+distinguish the idea from the person--a notion diametrically opposed to
+the essence of nobility--and not until the Age of Enlightenment did the
+priest come to be judged, as priest, by his private life, and then not
+because that age had acquired sharper eyes, but because it had lost the
+idea.
+
+The noble is the _man as history_, the priest is _the man as nature_.
+History of the high kind is always the expression and effect of the
+being of a noble society; and the criterion for the relative importance
+of its different events is always the pulse of this stream of being.
+That is why the battle of Cannæ matters much and the battles of
+Late Roman emperors matter not at all. The coming of a Springtime
+consistently coincides with the birth of a primary nobility, in whose
+sentiments the prince is merely “_primus inter pares_” and an object of
+mistrust. For not only does a strong race not need the big individual,
+but his existence is a reflection upon its worth; hence vassal-wars are
+pre-eminently the form in which the history of Early periods fulfils
+itself, and thenceforth the nobility has the fate of the Culture in
+hand. With a creative force that is all the more impressive because
+it is silent, Being is brought into form and “condition.” The pulse
+in the blood is heightened and confirmed, _and for good_. For what
+this creative rise to living form is to the Spring--every Spring--the
+_might of tradition_ is for the Late--every Late--period--namely,
+the old firm discipline, the life-beat, so sure that it outlives the
+extinction of all the old families and continually draws under its
+spell new men and new being-streams out of the deep. Beyond a shadow
+of doubt, all the history of Late periods, in respect of form and
+beat and tempo, is inherent (and irrevocably so) in the very earliest
+generations. Its successes are neither more nor less than the strength
+of the tradition in the blood. In politics, as in all other great and
+mature arts, success presupposes a being in high condition, a great
+stock of pristine experiences unconsciously and unquestioningly stored
+up as instincts and impulses. There is no other sort of political
+_maestria_ but this. The big individual is only something better than
+an incident, only master of the future, in that he is effective (or
+is made effective), is Destiny (or has Destiny), in and through this
+form. This is what distinguishes necessary from superfluous art and
+therefore, also, _historically necessary from unnecessary politics_. It
+matters little if many of the big men come up out of the “people” (that
+is, the aggregate of the traditionless) into the governing stratum, or
+even if they are the only ones left to occupy it--the great tide of
+tradition takes charge of them, all unwitting, forms their intellectual
+and practical conduct, and rules their methods. And this tradition is
+nothing but the pulse of ancient and long-extinguished lines.
+
+But Civilization, the real “return to Nature,” is the extinction of
+nobility--not as physical stock (which would not matter), but as living
+tradition--and the supplanting of destiny-pulse by causal intelligence.
+With this, nobility becomes no more than a prefix. And, for that very
+reason, Civilized history is superficial history, directed disjointedly
+to obvious aims, and so become formless in the cosmic, dependent on
+the accident of great individuals, destitute of inward sureness, line,
+and meaning. With Cæsarism history relapses back into the historyless,
+the old beat of primitive life, with endless and meaningless battles
+for material power, such as those of the Roman soldier-emperors of
+the third century and the corresponding “Sixteen States” of China
+(265-420), which differ only in unessentials from the events of
+beast-life in a jungle.
+
+
+III
+
+It follows from this that true history is _not_ “cultural” in the
+sense of anti-political, as the philosophers and doctrinaires of all
+commencing Civilizations assert. On the contrary, it is breed history,
+war history, diplomatic history, the history of being-streams in the
+form of man and woman, family, people, estate, state, reciprocally
+defensive and offensive in the wave-beat of grand facts. _Politics
+in the highest sense is life, and life is politics._ Every man
+is willy-nilly a member of this battle-drama, as subject or as
+object--there is no third alternative. The kingdom of the spirit is
+_not_ of this world. True, but it presupposes it, as waking-being
+presupposes being. It is only possible as a consistent _saying_ of
+“no” to the actuality that nevertheless exists and, indeed, must exist
+before it can be renounced. Race can dispense with language, but the
+very speaking of a language is an expression of antecedent race,[588]
+as are religions and arts and styles of thought and everything else
+that happens in the history of the spirit--and that there _is_ such
+a history is shown by the power that blood possesses over feeling
+and reason. For all these are active waking-consciousness “in form,”
+expressive, in their evolution and symbolism and passion, of the blood
+(again the blood) that courses through these forms in the waking-being
+of generation after generation. A hero does not need to know anything
+at all of this second world--he is life through and through--but a
+saint can only by the severest asceticism beat down the life that is
+in him and gain solitary communion with his spirit--and his strength
+for this again comes from life itself. The hero despises death and the
+saint life, but in the contrast between the heroism of great ascetics
+and martyrs and the piety of most (which is of the kind described in
+Revelation iii, 16[589]) we discover that greatness, even in religion,
+presupposes Race, that life must be strong indeed to be worthy of such
+wrestlers. The rest is mere philosophy.
+
+For this very reason nobility in the world-historical sense is much
+more than comfortable Late periods consider it; it is not a sum of
+titles and privileges and ceremonies, but an inward possession, hard
+to acquire, hard to retain--worth, indeed, for those who understand,
+the sacrifice of a whole life. An old family betokens not simply a
+set of ancestors (we all have ancestors), but ancestors who lived
+through whole generations on the heights of history; who not merely had
+Destiny, but were Destiny; in whose blood the form of happening was
+bred up to its perfection by the experience of centuries. As history
+in the grand sense begins with the Culture, it was mere panache for a
+Colonna to trace back his ancestry into Late Roman times. But it was
+not meaningless for the grandee of Late Byzantium to derive himself
+from Constantine, nor is it so for an American of to-day to trace his
+ancestry to a _Mayflower_ immigrant of 1620. In actual fact Classical
+nobility begins with the Trojan period and not the Mycenæan, and the
+Western with the Gothic and not the Franks and Goths--in England with
+the Normans and not the Saxons. Only from these real starting-points
+is there History, and, therefore, only from then can there be an
+original aristocracy, as distinct from nobles and heroes. That which
+in the first chapter of this volume[590] called cosmic beat or pulse
+receives in this aristocracy its fulfilment. For all that in riper
+times we call diplomatic and social “tact”--which includes strategic
+and business flair, the collector’s eye for precious things, and the
+subtle insight of the judge of men--and generally all that which one
+has and does not learn; which arouses the impotent envy of the rest who
+cannot participate; which as “form” directs the course of events; is
+nothing but a particular case of the same cosmic and dreamlike sureness
+that is visibly expressed in the circlings of a flock of birds or the
+controlled movements of a thoroughbred horse.
+
+The priest _circumscribes_ the world-as-nature and deepens his picture
+of it by _thinking_ into it. The noble _lives_ in the world-as-history
+and deepens it by altering its picture. Both evolve towards the great
+tradition, but the evolution of the one comes of shaping and that of
+the other from training. This is a fundamental difference between the
+two Estates, and consequently only one of them is truly an Estate, and
+the other only _appears_ to be such because of the completeness of
+the contrast. The field of effect of breed and training is the blood,
+and they pass on, therefore, from the fathers to the sons. Shaping
+(_Bildung_), on the other hand, presupposes talents, and consequently
+a true and strong priesthood is always a sum of individual gifts--a
+community of waking-consciousness--having no relation to origin in the
+race sense; and thus, in this respect as in others, it is a negation
+of Time and History. Intellectual affinity and blood-affinity--ponder
+and probe into the depths of these contrasted expressions! Heritable
+priesthood is a contradiction in terms. It existed indeed, in a sense,
+in Vedic India, but the basis of that existence was the fact that there
+was a second nobility, which reserved the privilege of priesthood to
+the gifted members of its own circle.[591] And elsewhere celibacy
+made an end even of this much infringement of principle. The “priest
+in the man”--whether the man be noble or not--stands for a focus of
+sacred Causality in the world. The priestly power is itself of a causal
+nature, brought about by higher causes and itself in turn an efficient
+cause. The priest is the _middleman_ in the timeless extended that
+is stretched taut between the waking-consciousness and the ultimate
+secret; and, therefore, the importance of the clergy in each Culture
+is determined by its prime-symbol. The Classical soul denies Space and
+therefore needs no middleman for dealings with it, and so the Classical
+priesthood disappears in its very beginnings. Faustian man stands face
+to face with the Infinite, nothing _a priori_ shields him from the
+crushing force of this aspect, and so the Gothic priesthood elevated
+itself to the heights of the Papal idea.
+
+As two world-outlooks, two modes of blood-flow in the veins and
+of thought in the daily being and doing, are interwoven, there
+arise in the end (in every Culture) two sorts of moral, of which
+each looks down upon the other--namely, noble custom, and priestly
+askesis, reciprocally censured as worldly and as servile. It has
+been shown already[592] how the one proceeds from the castle and the
+other from the cloister and the minster, the one from full being in
+the flood of History and the other, aloof therefrom, out of pure
+waking-consciousness in the ambiance of a God-pervaded nature. The
+force with which these primary impressions act upon men is something
+that later periods will be unable even to imagine. The secular and
+the spiritual class-feeling are starting on their upward career, and
+cutting out for themselves an ethical _class-ideal_ which is accessible
+only to the right people, and even to them only by way of long and
+strict schooling. The _great_ being-stream _feels_ itself as a unit as
+against the residue of dull, pulseless, and aimless blood. The _great_
+mind-community _knows_ itself as a unit as against the residue of
+uninitiated. These units are the band of heroes and the community of
+saints.
+
+It will always remain the great merit of Nietzsche that he was the
+first to recognize the dual nature of all moral.[593] His designations
+of “master-” and “slave-” moral were inexact, and his presentation
+of “Christianity” placed it much too definitely on the one side of
+the dividing line, but at the basis of all his opinions this lies
+strong and clear, that _good and bad are aristocratic, and good and
+evil priestly, distinctions_. Good and bad, which are Totemistic
+distinctions among primitive groups of men and tribes, describe, not
+dispositions, but men, and describe them comprehensively in respect
+of their living-being. The good are the powerful, the rich, the
+fortunate. Good means strong, brave, thoroughbred, in the idiom of
+every Springtime. Bad, cheap, wretched, common, in the original sense,
+are the powerless, propertyless, unfortunate, cowardly, negligible--the
+“sons of nobody” as ancient Egypt said.[594] Good and evil, Taboo
+concepts, assign value to a man according to his perceptions and
+reason--that is, his waking disposition and his _conscious_ actions. To
+offend against love-ethic in the race sense is ungentle, to sin against
+the Church’s love-command is wicked. The noble habit is the perfectly
+unconscious result of a long and continuous training. It is learned in
+intercourse and not from books. It is a felt rhythm, and not a notion.
+But the other moral is enunciated, ordered on the basis of cause and
+consequence, and therefore learnable and expressive of a _conviction_.
+
+The one is historical through and through, and recognizes
+rank-distinctions and privileges as actual and axiomatic. Honour is
+always class-honour--there is no such thing as an “honour of humanity.”
+The duel is not an obligation of unfree persons. Every man, be he
+Bedouin or Samurai or Corsican, peasant or workman, judge or bandit,
+has his own binding notions of honour, loyalty, courage, revenge, that
+do not apply to other kinds of life. Every life _has_ custom-ethic--it
+is unthinkable without it. Children have it already in their play;
+they know at once, of themselves, what is fitting. No one has laid
+down these rules, but they exist. They arise, quite unconsciously, out
+of the “we” that has formed itself out of the uniform pulse of the
+group. Here, too, each being is “in form.” Every crowd that, under one
+or another stimulus, has collected in the street has for the moment
+its own ethic, and anyone who does not absorb it and stand for it as
+self-evident--to say “follow it” would presume more rationality in the
+action than there is--is a poor, mean creature, an outsider. Uneducated
+people and children possess an astonishingly fine reactivity to this.
+Children, however, are also required to learn the Catechism, and in it
+they hear about the good and evil that are laid down--and are any thing
+rather than self-evident. Custom-ethic is not that which is _true_, but
+that which is _there_; it is a thing of birth and growth, feeling and
+organic logic. Moral, in contrast to this, is never actuality (for,
+if it were, all the world would be saintly), but an eternal demand
+hanging over the consciousness--and, _ex hypothesi_, over that of all
+men alike, irrespective of all differences of actual life and history.
+And, therefore, all moral is negative and all custom-ethic affirmative.
+In the latter “devoid of honour” is the worst, in the former “devoid of
+sin” is the highest, that can be said of anyone.
+
+The basic concept of all living custom-ethic is honour. Everything
+else--loyalty, modesty, bravery, chivalry, self-control,
+resolution--is comprised in it. And honour is a matter of the blood and
+not of the reason. One does not reflect on a point of honour--that is
+already dishonour. To lose honour means to be annulled so far as Life
+and Time and History are concerned. The honour of one’s class, one’s
+family, of man and woman, of one’s people and one’s country, the honour
+of peasant and soldier and even bandit--honour means that the life in
+a person is something that has worth, historical dignity, delicacy,
+nobility. It belongs to directional Time, as sin belongs to timeless
+Space. To have honour in one’s body means about the same as to have
+race. The opposite sort are the Thersites-natures, the mud-souled, the
+riff-raff, the “kick-me-but-let-me-live’s.” To submit to insult, to
+forget a humiliation, to quail before an enemy--all these are signs of
+a life become worthless and superfluous. But this is not at all the
+same thing as priestly moral, for that moral does not cleave to life at
+any cost of degradation, but rather rejects and abstains from life as
+such, and therefore incidentally from honour. As has been said already,
+every moral action is, at the very bottom, a piece of askesis and a
+killing of being. And _eo ipso_ it stands outside the field of life and
+the world of history.
+
+
+IV
+
+Here it is necessary to anticipate somewhat, and to consider whence
+it is that world-history (especially in the Late periods of the
+grand Cultures and the beginnings of the Civilizations) derives its
+rich variety of colour and the profound symbolism of its events. The
+primary Estates, nobility and clergy, are the purest expressions of
+the two sides of life, but they are not the only ones. In very early
+times--often, indeed, foreshadowed in the Primitive Age itself--yet
+other being-streams and waking-linkages break forth, in which the
+symbolism of Time and Space comes to living expression, and which, when
+(and not until) combined with these two, make up the whole fullness of
+what we call _social organization_ or _society_.
+
+While Priesthood is microcosmic and animal-like, Nobility is cosmic and
+plantlike (hence its profound connexion with the land). It is itself a
+plant, strongly rooted in the soil, established on the soil--in this,
+as in so many other respects, a supreme peasantry. It is from this kind
+of cosmic boundness that the idea of _property_ arises, which to the
+microcosm as such, freely moving in space, is wholly alien. Property
+is a primary feeling and not a concept; it belongs to Time and History
+and Destiny, and not to Space and Causality. It cannot be logically
+based, but it is there.[595] “Having” begins with the plant, and
+propagates itself in the history of higher mankinds just to the precise
+extent that history contains plant-character and race. Hence property
+in the most genuine sense is always ground-property, and the impulse
+to convert other acquisitions into ground and soil is an evidence of
+sound stock. The plant _possesses_ the ground in which it roots. It is
+its property,[596] which it defends to the utmost, with the desperate
+force of its whole being, against alien seeds, against overshadowing
+neighbour plants, against all nature. So, too, a bird defends the nest
+in which it is hatching. The bitterness fights over property occur--not
+in the Late periods of great Cultures, between rich and poor, and
+about movable goods--but here in the beginnings of the plant-world.
+When, in a wood, one feels all about one the silent, merciless battle
+for the soil that goes on day and night, one is appalled by the depth
+of an impulse that is almost identical with life itself. Here is a
+yearlong, tenacious, embittered wrestle, a hopeless resistance of the
+weak against the strong, that goes on to the point that the victor
+too is broken--such as is only paralleled in the most primitive of
+mankind when an old peasant-family is expelled from the clod, _from
+the nest_, or a family of noble stock is uprooted or, more truly, cut
+off from its roots, by money.[597] The far more conspicuous conflicts
+in the later cities have quite another meaning, for here--in communism
+of all kinds--it is not the experience of possessing, but the idea of
+property purely as material means that is fought for. The negation of
+property is never race-impulse, but the doctrinaire protest of the
+purely intellectual, urban, uprooted, anti-vegetal waking-consciousness
+of saints, philosophers, and idealists. The same reason actuates the
+monk of the hermitage and the scientific Socialist--be his name Moh-ti,
+Zeno, or Marx--to reject the plantlike; the same feeling impels men of
+race to defend it. Here, as ever, fact and truth are opposed. “Property
+is theft” is the ultra-materialistic form of the old thought: “What
+shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own
+soul?” When the priest gives up property, he is giving up something
+dangerous and alien; when a noble does so, he is giving up himself.
+
+This brings us to a duality of the property-idea feeling--_Having
+as power_ and _Having as spoil_. Both, in primitive men of race,
+lie immediately together. Every Bedouin or Viking intends both. The
+sea-hero is always a sea-robber also; every war is concerned with
+possessions and, above all, possessions in land. But a step, and the
+knight becomes the robber-knight, the adventurer becomes conqueror and
+king, like Rurik the Norman in Russia and many an Achæan and Etruscan
+pirate in Homeric times. In all heroic poetry we find, side by side
+with the strong and natural satisfaction of winning battles and power
+and women, and the unbridled outbursts of joy and grief, anger, and
+love, the immense delight of “having.” When Odysseus lands at home, the
+first thing he does is to count the treasures in his boat, and when,
+in the Icelandic Saga, the peasants Hjalmar and Ölvarod perceive each
+that the other has no goods in his ship, they abandon their duel at
+once--he who fights from pride and for honour is a fool for his pains.
+In the Indian hero-epic, eagerness for battle means eagerness for
+cattle, and the “colonizing” Greeks of the tenth century were primarily
+corsairs like the Normans. On the high seas an alien ship is _a priori_
+good prize. But out of the feuds of South-Arabian and Persian Knights
+of A.D. 200, and the “private wars” of the Provençal barons of A.D.
+1200--which were hardly more than cattle-raids--there developed at the
+end of the feudal period the war proper, the great war with acquisition
+of land and people as its object. All this, in the end, brings the
+aristocratic Culture to the “top of its form,” while, correspondingly,
+priests and philosophers despise it.
+
+As the Culture rises to its height, these two primary urges trend
+widely apart, and hostility develops between them. _The history of this
+hostility is almost the same thing as world-history. From the feeling
+of power come conquest and politics and law; from that of spoil, trade
+and economy and money._ Law is the property of the powerful. Their law
+is the law of all. Money is the strongest weapon of the acquiring: with
+it he subdues the world. Economics likes and intends a state that is
+weak and subservient to it. Politics demands that economic life shall
+adapt itself to and within the State--Adam Smith and Friedrich List,
+Capitalism and Socialism. All Cultures exhibit at the outset a war-
+and a trade-nobility, then a land- and a money-nobility, and finally
+a military and an economic war-management and a ceaseless struggle of
+money against law.
+
+Equally, on the other hand, _priesthood_ and _learning_ separate out.
+Both are directed towards, not the factual, but the true; both belong
+to the Taboo side of life and to Space. Fear before death is the
+source, not merely of all religion, but of all philosophy and natural
+science as well. Now, however, there develops a profane Causality
+in contrast to the sacred. “Profane” is the new counter-concept to
+“religious,” which so far had tolerated learning only as a handmaiden.
+The whole of Late criticism, its spirit, its method, its aims, are
+profane--and the Late theology, even, is no exception to the rule.
+But invariably, nevertheless, the learning of all Cultures moves
+in the forms of the preceding priesthood--thus showing that it is
+merely a product of the contradiction itself, and how dependent it is
+and remains, in every particular, upon the primary image. Classical
+science, therefore, lives in cult-communities of the Orphic style,
+such as the school of Miletus, the Pythagorean society, the medical
+schools of Croton and Cos, the Attic schools of the Academy, the
+Peripatos, and the Stoa, every one of whose leaders belongs to the
+type of the sacrificial priest and seer, and even the Roman legal
+schools of the Sabiniani and Proculiani. The sacred book, the Canon
+is, scientifically as in other respects, Arabian--the scientific
+canon of Ptolemy (Almagest), the medical of Ibn Sina (Avicenna),
+and the philosophical corpus designated “Aristotle,” but so largely
+spurious--so also the (mostly unwritten) laws and methods of
+quotation:[598] the Commentary as the form of thought-development;
+the universities as cloisters (Medrashim) which provided teachers and
+students with cell, food, and clothing; and tendencies in scholarship
+taking form as brotherhoods. The learned world of the West possesses
+unmistakably the form of the Catholic Church, and more particularly so
+in Protestant regions. The connecting link between the learned orders
+of the Gothic period and the order-like schools of the nineteenth
+century--the schools of Hegel, of Kant, of historical jurisprudence,
+and not a few of the English university colleges--is formed by the
+Maurists and Bollandists[599] of France, who from 1650 on mastered
+and largely created the ancillary “science” of history. In all the
+specialist sciences (medicine and lecture-room philosophy included)
+there are fully developed hierarchies leading up to school-popes,
+grades, and dignities (the doctor’s degree as an ordination),
+sacraments and councils. The uninitiate is rigorously treated as the
+“layman,” and the idea of a generalized priesthood residing in the
+believers themselves, which is manifested in “popular” science--for
+example, Darwinism--is passionately combated. The language of learning
+was originally Latin, but to-day all sorts of special languages
+have formed themselves which (in the domain of radioactivity, for
+example, or that of the law of contract) are unintelligible save to
+those who have received the higher initiation. There are founders of
+sects, such as many of Kant’s and Hegel’s disciples were; there are
+missionaries to the unbelievers, like the Monists. There are heretics,
+like Schopenhauer and Nietzsche, there is the weapon of the ban, and
+there is the Index in the form of the Conspiracy of Silence. There are
+ethical truths (for example, in Law the division of the objects into
+persons and things) and dogmas (like that of energy and mass, or the
+theory of inheritance), a ritual in the citation of orthodox writings,
+and even a scientific sort of beatification.[600]
+
+More, the savant-type of the West (which in the nineteenth century
+reached its zenith, corresponding to the nadir of true priesthood) has
+brought to high perfection the study as the cell of a profane monachism
+that has its unconscious vows--of Poverty, in the shape of honourable
+disdain for fat living and wealth; and unfeigned contempt for the
+commercial professional and for all exploitation of scientific results
+for gain; of Chastity, which has evolved a veritable celibacy of
+science, with Kant as exemplar and culmination; and of Obedience, even
+to the point of sacrificing oneself to the standpoint of the School.
+Further, and lastly, there is a sort of estrangement from the world
+which is the profane echo of the Gothic flight from it, and leads to an
+almost complete disregard of the life in public and the forms of good
+society--little “breeding,” much too much “shaping.” Nobility, even
+in its later ramifications--the judge, the squire, the officer--still
+retains the old root-strong natural satisfaction in carrying on the
+stock, in possessions and honour, but the scientist counts these things
+as little beside the possession of a pure scientific conscience and the
+carrying on of a method or a view unimpaired by the commercialism of
+the world. The fact that the savant to-day has ceased to be remote from
+the world, and puts his science at the service of (not seldom, indeed,
+most shrewdly applies it to) technics and money-making, is a sign that
+the pure type is entering upon its decline and that the great age of
+intellectual optimism that is livingly expressed in him belongs already
+to the past.
+
+In sum, we see that the Estates have a natural build which in its
+evolution and action forms the basic structure of every Culture’s
+life-course. No specific decision made it; revolutions only alter
+it when they are forms of the evolution and not results of some
+private will. It never, in its full cosmic significance, enters
+the consciousness of men as doers and thinkers, because it lies
+too deep in human being to be other than a self-evident datum. It
+is merely from the surface that men take the catchwords and causes
+over which they fight on that side of history which theory regards
+as horizontally layered, but which in actuality is an aggregate of
+inseparable interpenetrations. First, nobility and priesthood arise
+out of the open landscape, and figure the pure symbolism of Being and
+Waking-Being, Time and Space. Then out of the one under the aspect
+of booty, and out of the other under the aspect of research, there
+develop doubled types of lower symbolic force, which in the urban Late
+periods rise to prepotency in the shapes of _economy_ and _science_.
+In these two being-streams the ideas of Destiny and Causality are
+thought out to their limit, unrelentingly and anti-traditionally.
+Forces emerge which are separated by a deadly enmity from the old
+class-ideals of heroism and saintliness--these forces are _money and
+intellect_, and they are related to those ideals as the city to the
+country. Henceforward property is called riches, and world-outlook
+knowledge--a desanctified Destiny and a profane Causality. But science
+is in contradiction with Nobility too, for this does not prove or
+investigate, but _is_. “_De omnibus dubitandum_” is the attitude of a
+burgher and not of an aristocrat, while at the same time it contradicts
+the basic feeling of priesthood, for which the proper rôle of critique
+is that of a handmaid. Economy, too, finds an enemy here, in the shape
+of the ascetic moral which rejects money-getting, just as the genuine
+land-based nobility despises it. Even the old merchant-nobility has in
+many cases perished (e.g., Hanse Towns, Venice, Genoa), because with
+its traditions it could not and would not fall in with the business
+outlook of the big city. And, with all this, economy and science are
+themselves at enmity; once more, in the conflicts of money-getting and
+knowledge, _between counting-house and study_, business liberalism and
+doctrinaire liberalism, we meet the old great oppositions of action and
+contemplation, castle and cathedral. In one form or in another this
+order of things emerges in the structure of every Culture--hence the
+possibility of a comparative morphology in the social as in the other
+aspects of history.
+
+Wholly outside the category of the true Estates are the calling-classes
+of the craftsmen, officials, artists, and labourers, whose organization
+in guilds (e.g., of smiths in China, of scribes in Egypt, and of
+singers in the Classical world) dates from pristine antiquity, and
+who because of their professional segregation (which sometimes goes
+as far as to cut off their _connubium_ with others) actually develop
+into genuine tribes, as, for instance, the Falasha[601] of Abyssinia
+and some of the Sudra classes named in Manu’s code. Their separation
+is due merely to their technical accomplishments and therefore not
+to their being vessels of the symbolism of Time and Space. Their
+tradition, likewise, is limited to their techniques and does not refer
+to a customary-ethic or a moral _of their own_, such as is always
+found in economy and science as such. As derived from a nobility,
+judges and officers are classes, whereas officials are a profession;
+as derived from priesthood, scholars are a class, while artists are
+a profession. Sense of honour, conscience, adhere in one case to the
+status, in the other to the achievement. There is something, slight
+though it may be, of symbolism in every category on the one side,
+and none in any category on the other. And consequently something of
+strangeness, irregularity, often disgrace, clings to them--consider,
+for example, executioners, actors, and strolling singers, or the
+Classical estimation of the artist. Their classes or guilds separate
+from general society, or seek the protection of other orders of society
+(or individual patrons and Mæcenases), but fit themselves in with that
+society they cannot, and their inability to do so finds expression in
+the guild-wars of the old cities and in uncouthness of every sort in
+the instincts and manners of artists.
+
+
+V
+
+A history of estates or classes, ignoring in principle that of
+profession-classes, is therefore a presentation of the metaphysical
+element in higher mankind, so far as this rises to grand symbolism in
+species of onflowing life, species in and along which the history of
+the Cultures moves to fulfilment.
+
+At the very beginning, the sharply defined type of the peasant is
+something new. In Carolingian times, and under the Tsarist system of
+the “Mir” in Russia,[602] there were freemen and hinds cultivating
+the soil, _but no peasantry_. Only when there emerges the feeling
+of being different from the two symbolic “lives”--Freidank’s
+_Bescheidenheit_[603] comes into our minds--does this life become
+an Estate, the _nourishing_ estate in the fullest sense of the
+word, the root of the great plant Culture, which has driven its
+fibres deep into Mother Earth and darkly, industriously, draws all
+juices into itself and sends them to the upper parts, where trunks
+and branches tower up in the light of history. It serves the great
+lives not merely by the nourishment that it wins out of the soil
+for them, but also with that other harvest of mother earth--its own
+blood; for blood flowed up for centuries from the villages into
+the high places, received there the high forms, and maintained the
+high lives. The relation is called (from the noble’s point of view)
+_vassalage_, and we find it arising--whatever the superficial causes
+may be in each case--in the West between 1000 and 1400 and in the
+other Cultures at the “contemporary” periods. The Helotry of Sparta
+belongs with it, and equally so the old Roman _clientela_, from
+which after 471 the _rural_ Plebs--that is, a free yeomanry--grew
+up.[604] Astonishing indeed is the force of this striving towards
+symbolic form in the Pseudomorphosis of the Late Roman East, where
+the caste system of the principate founded by Augustus (with its
+division into senatorial and equestrian officialdom) evolved backwards
+until, about 300, it had returned, wherever the Magian world-feeling
+prevailed, to a condition parallel to that of the Gothic in 1300--the
+condition, in fact, of the Sassanid Empire of its own time.[605] Out
+of the officialdom of a highly Civilized administration came a minor
+nobility of decurions, village knights, and town politicians, who were
+responsible to the sovereign in body and goods for all outgoings--a
+feudalism formed backwards--and gradually made their positions
+heritable, just as happened under the Egyptian Vth dynasty and the
+first Chóu centuries[606] and the Europe of the Crusades. Military
+status, of officers and soldiers alike, became hereditary in the same
+way,[607] and service as a feudal obligation, and all the rest of
+what Diocletian presently reduced to formal law. The individual was
+firmly bound to the status (_corpori adnexus_), and the principle
+was extended as compulsory guild-membership to all trades, as in the
+Gothic or in old Egypt. But, above all, there necessarily arose from
+the ruins of the Late Classical slave-economy of “Latifundia”[608] the
+colonate of hereditary small farmers, while the great estates became
+administrative districts and the lord was made responsible for its
+taxes and its recruit-quota.[609] Between 250 and 300 the “colonus”
+became legally bound to the soil (_adscriptus glebæ_). And with that
+the differentiation of feudal lord and vassal _as class and class_[610]
+was reached.
+
+Every new Culture has potentially its nobility and its priesthood.
+The apparent exceptions to this are due merely to the absence to
+tangible tradition. We know to-day that a real priesthood existed in
+ancient China[611] and we may assume as self-evident that there was
+a priest-estate in the beginnings of Orphism in the eleventh century
+B.C.--the more confidently as we have plain indications of it in the
+epic figures of Calchas and Tiresias. Similarly the development of the
+feudal constitution in Egypt presupposes a primitive nobility as early
+as the IIIrd Dynasty.[612] But the form in which, and the force with
+which, these Estates first realized themselves and then took charge
+of the course of history--shaped it, carried it, and even represented
+it in their own destinies--depend upon the Prime-symbol on which each
+individual Culture, with its entire form-language, is based.
+
+The nobility, wholly plantlike, proceeds everywhere from the land,
+which is its primary property and with which it is fast bound. It
+possesses everywhere the basic form of the family, the gens (in which,
+therefore, the “other” gender of history, the feminine, is expressed
+also), and it manifests itself through the will-to-duration--duration,
+namely, of the blood--as the great symbol of Time and History. It
+will appear that the early officialdom of the vassal state, based
+on personal trustworthiness, everywhere--in China and Egypt, in
+the Classical and the Western World--[613] goes through the same
+development, first creating quasi-feudal court offices and dignities,
+then seeking hereditary connexion with the soil, and so finally
+becoming the origin of noble family-lines.
+
+The Faustian will-to-infinity comes to expression in the _genealogical
+principle_, which--strange as it may seem--is peculiar to this Culture.
+And in this Culture, moreover, it intimately permeates and moulds all
+the historical forms, and supremely those of the states themselves.
+The historical sense that insists upon getting to know the destinies
+of its own blood backwards through the centuries and seeing _archival_
+proofs of dates and provenances up to the first ancestors; the
+careful ordering of the genealogical tree, which is potent enough to
+make present possession and inheritance dependent upon the fortunes
+of a single marriage contracted perhaps five hundred years ago; the
+conceptions of _pure blood_, birth-equivalence, _mésalliance_--all this
+is will-to-direction in time, will towards Time’s remote distances.
+There is no second example of it, save perhaps in the Egyptian
+nobility, and there the comparable forms that were attained were far
+weaker.
+
+Nobility of the Classical style, on the contrary, relates to the
+present estate of the agnatic family, and from it straight to a
+_mythical_ origin, which does not imply the historical sense in
+the least, but only a craving, sublimely regardless of historic
+probability, for splendid backgrounds to the here and now of the
+living. Only thus can we explain the otherwise baffling naïveté with
+which an individual saw behind his grandfather Theseus and Heracles in
+one plane, and fashioned himself a family tree (or several, perhaps,
+as Alexander did), and the light-heartedness with which respectable
+Roman families would forge the names of reputed ancestors into the
+old consular lists. At the funeral of a Roman noble the wax masks of
+great forefathers were introduced into the cortège, but it was only
+for the number and sound of the famous names and not in the least on
+account of any genealogical connexion with the present. This trait
+appears throughout the Classical nobility, which like the Gothic
+formed, structurally and spiritually, one inward unit from Etruria to
+Asia Minor. On it rested the power that, even at the beginning of the
+Late period, was still in the possession of order-like family-groupings
+throughout the cities (phylæ, phratriæ, tribus, and what not) which
+maintained a purely present membership and unity by means of sacral
+forms--for example, the three Doric and the four Ionic phylæ, and
+the three Etruscan tribes that appear in the earlier Roman history
+as Tities, Ramnes, and Luceres. In the Vedas the “father-” and the
+“mother-”souls had claims to soul-rites only in respect of three nearer
+and three further generations,[614] after which the past claimed them;
+and nowhere do we find the Classical cult of souls reaching any further
+back than the Indian. It is the very reverse of the ancestor-worship
+of the Chinese and the Egyptians, which was by hypothesis without end,
+and therefore maintained the family in a definite ordering even beyond
+bodily death. In China there still lives to-day a duke, Kong, who is
+the descendant of Confucius and equally the descendant of Lao-tse, of
+Chang-lu, and others. It is not a question of a many-branched tree, but
+of carrying the line, the _tao_ of being, straight on--if necessary,
+frankly by adoption (the adopted member, pledged to the ancestor-cult,
+is thereby spiritually incorporated in the family) or other expedients.
+
+An unbridled joy of life streams through the flourishing centuries of
+this estate, _the_ Estate _par excellence_, which is direction and
+destiny and race through and through. Love, because woman _is_ history,
+and war because fighting _makes_ history, are the acknowledged foci
+of its thoughts and feelings. The Northern skald-poetry and the
+Southern _Minnesang_ correspond to the old love-songs of the Chinese
+age of chivalry in the Shi-King,[615] which were sung in the Pi-Yung,
+the places of noble training (_hiao_). And the ceremonial public
+archery-displays, like the Early Classical agon, and the Gothic and the
+Persian-Byzantine[616] tourney, were manifestations of the life on its
+Homeric side.
+
+In opposition to this side stands the _Orphic_--the expression
+of the space-experience of a Culture through the style of its
+priesthood. It was in accord with the Euclidean character of Classical
+extension--which needed no intermediaries for intercourse with near
+and corporeal gods--that in this case priesthood, from beginnings as
+an estate, rapidly degenerated into city-officialdom. Similarly, it
+was expressive of the Chinese _tao_ that the place of the original
+hereditary priesthood came to be taken by professional classes of
+praying men, scribes, and oracle-priests, who could accompany the
+religious performances of the authorities and heads of families
+with the prescribed rites. It was in conformity, again, with the
+Indian world-feeling that lost itself in measureless infinity that
+the priest-class there became a second nobility, which with immense
+power, intruding upon every sort of life, planted itself between the
+people and its wilderness of gods. It is an expression, lastly, of the
+“cavern” feeling that the priest of true Magian cast is the monk and
+the hermit, and becomes more and more so, while the secular clergy
+steadily loses in symbolic significance.
+
+In contrast to all these there is the Faustian priesthood, which, still
+without any profound import or dignity in 900, rose up thereafter to
+that sublime rôle of intermediary which placed it in principle between
+humanity (_all_ humanity) and a macrocosm strained to all imaginable
+expanse by the Faustian passion of the third dimension. Excluded from
+history by celibacy and from time by its _character indelebilis_, it
+culminated in the Papacy, which represented the highest symbol of God’s
+dynamic Space that it was possible to conceive; even the Protestant
+idea of a generalized priesthood has not destroyed it, but merely
+decentralized it from one point and one person into the heart of each
+individual believer.
+
+The contradiction between being and waking-being that exists in every
+microcosm necessarily drives the two Estates against one another.
+Time seeks to absorb and subordinate Space, Space Time. Spiritual
+and worldly power are magnitudes so different in structure and
+tendency that any reconciliation, or even understanding, between them
+seems impossible. But this conflict has not in all Cultures come to
+world-historical expression. In China it promoted the _tao_ idea
+that primacy should reside securely in an aristocracy. In India the
+conception of Space as infinite-indefinite required a primacy of the
+priesthood. In the Arabian Culture the Magian world-feeling involved
+in principle the inclusion of the worldly visible society of believers
+as a constituent in the grand consensus, and therefore the unity of
+spiritual and temporal polity, law, and sovereignty. Not that there
+was not friction between the two estates; far from it; in the Sassanid
+Empire there were bloody feuds between the country aristocracy of the
+Dikhans and the party of the Magi--even in some instances murders
+of sovereigns--and in Byzantium the whole fifth century is full
+of the struggles between the Imperial power and the clergy, which
+from an ever-present background to the Monophysite and Nestorian
+controversies.[617] But the basic interconnexion of the two orders was
+not in dispute.
+
+In the Classical world, which abhorred the infinite in every sense,
+Time was reduced to the present and Extension to tangible unit-bodies;
+as the result, the grand symbolic estates became so voided of meaning
+that, as compared with the city-state, which expressed the Classical
+prime-symbol in the strongest imaginable form, they did not count as
+independent forces at all. In the history of Egyptian mankind, on the
+other hand, which is the history of striving with equal force towards
+distances of time and of space, the struggle of the two estates and
+their symbolisms is constantly recognizable right into the period of
+complete fellahdom. For the transition from the IVth to the Vth Dynasty
+is accompanied also by a visible triumph of the priestly over the
+knightly world-feeling; the Pharaoh, from being the body and vessel of
+the supreme deity, becomes its servant, and the Re sanctuary overpowers
+the tomb-temple of the ruler both in architectural and in suggestive
+force. The New Empire witnessed, immediately after its great Cæsars,
+the political autocracy of the Amen priesthood, Thebes, and then again
+the revolution of the “heretic” king Amenophis IV (Akhenaton)--in
+which one feels unmistakably a political as well as a religious
+side--and so on until after interminable conflicts between warrior- and
+priestly-castes, the Egyptian world ended in foreign domination.
+
+In the Faustian Culture this battle between two high symbols of equal
+force has been waged in somewhat the same spirit, but with far greater
+passion still than in the Egyptian--so that, from the early Gothic
+onward, only armistice, never peace, has seemed possible between State
+and Church. But in this conflict the handicap against waking-being
+tells--it would shake off its dependence upon being, but it cannot.
+The mind needs the blood, but the blood does not need the mind. War
+belongs to the world of time and history--_intellectual battle is only
+a fight with reasons, only disputation_--and, therefore a _militant_
+Church must step from the world of truths into the world of facts--from
+the world of Jesus into that of Pilate. And so it becomes an element
+in race-history and subject to the formative powers of the _political_
+side of life. From early Feudalism to modern Democracy it fights with
+sword and cannon, poison and dagger, bribery and treason, all the
+weapons of party conflict in use at the time. It sacrifices articles
+of belief to worldly advantages, and allies itself with heretics and
+unbelievers against orthodox powers. The Papacy _as an idea_ has a
+history of its own, but this bears no relation to the position of the
+popes in the sixth and seventh centuries as Byzantine viceroys of
+Syrian and Greek provenance; or to their later evolution into powerful
+landowners, with crowds of subject peasants; or to the Patrimonium
+Petri of the early Gothic--a sort of duchy in the possession of great
+families of the Campagna (Colonna, Orsini, Savelli, Frangipani),
+which alternately set up the popes, until finally the general Western
+feudalism prevailed here also, and the Holy See came to be an object of
+investiture within the families of the Roman baronage, so that each new
+pope, like a German or a French king, had to confirm the rights of his
+vassals. In 1032 the Counts of Tusculum nominated a twelve-year-old boy
+as pope. In those days eight hundred castle-towers stood up in the city
+area of Rome amongst and upon the Classical ruins. In 1045 three popes
+entrenched themselves in the Vatican, the Lateran, and Santa Maria
+Maggiore respectively, and were defended by their noble supporters.
+
+Now supervened the city with its own soul, first emancipating itself
+from the soul of the countryside, then setting up as an equal to it,
+and finally seeking to suppress and extinguish it. But this evolution
+accomplished itself in _kinds of life_, and it also, therefore, is part
+of the history of the estates. The _city-life_ as such emerges--through
+the inhabitants of these small settlements acquiring a common soul,
+and becoming conscious that the life within is something different
+from the life outside--and at once the spell of _personal freedom_
+begins to operate and to attract within the walls life-streams of
+more and more new kinds. There sets in a sort of passion for becoming
+urban and for propagating urban life. It is this, and not material
+considerations, that produced the fever of the colonization period in
+the Classical world, which is still recognizable to us in its last
+offshoots, and which it is not quite exact to speak of as colonization
+at all. For it was a creative enthusiasm in the man of the city that
+from the tenth century B.C. (and “contemporaneously” in other Cultures)
+drew generation after generation under the spell of a new life, with
+which there emerges for the first time in human history the idea of
+_freedom_. This idea is not of political (still less of abstract)
+origin, but is something bringing to expression the fact that within
+the city walls plantlike attachment to a soil has ceased, and that the
+threads that run through the whole life of the countryside have been
+snapped. And consequently the freedom-idea ever contains a negative;
+it looses, redeems, defends, always frees a man _from_ something.
+Of _this_ freedom the city is the expression; the city-spirit is
+understanding become free, and everything in the way of intellectual,
+social, and national movements that bursts forth in Late periods under
+the name of Freedom leads back to an origin _in this one prime fact of
+detachment from the land_.
+
+But the city is older than the “citizen.” It attracts first the
+calling-classes, which as such are outside the symbolic estates, and,
+when urban, take form as guilds. Then it draws in the primary estates
+themselves; the minor nobility moves its castles, the Franciscans their
+cloisters, within the contour. As yet, not much is inwardly altered.
+Not only Papal Rome, but all Italian cities of this time are filled
+with the fortified towers of the families, who issued thence to fight
+out their feuds in the streets. In a well-known fourteenth-century
+picture of Siena these towers stand up like factory chimneys round the
+market-place.[618] As for the Florentine palace of the Renaissance,
+if, in respect of the bright life within, it is the successor of
+Provençal courts, it is equally, with its “rusticated” façade, an
+offshoot of the Gothic castles that the French and German knights were
+still building on their hills. It was, in fact, only slowly that the
+new life separated out. Between 1250 and 1450, throughout the West,
+the immigrant families concentrated, _vis-à-vis_ the guilds, into the
+patriciate, and in so doing detached themselves, spiritually as in
+other respects, from the country nobility. It was exactly the same in
+early China, Egypt, and the Byzantine Empire, and it is only in the
+light of this that we become able to understand the older Classical
+city-leagues (such as the Etruscan and, it may be, even the Latin) and
+the sacral connexions of colonial daughter-cities with their mother
+city. It was not the Polis as such, so far, that was the backbone
+of events, but the patriciate of phylæ and phratriæ within it. _The
+original Polis is identical with the nobility_, as Rome was up to 471,
+and Sparta and the Etruscan cities throughout. Synœcism grew out of it,
+and the city-state was formed by it. But here, as in other Cultures,
+the difference between country- and city-nobility was at first quite
+unimportant as compared with the strong and deep distinction between
+the nobility (in general) and the residue.
+
+The burgher proper emerges when the fundamental distinction between
+town and country has brought the “families and the guilds,” in spite
+of their otherwise implacable hostility to one another, to a sense
+of unity _vis-à-vis_ the old nobility, the feudal system generally,
+and the feudal position of the Church. The notion of the “Third
+Estate” (to use the catchword of 1789) is essentially only a unit of
+_contradiction_, incapable of definition by positive content, and
+having neither customary-ethic of its own--for the higher bourgeois
+society took after the nobility, and the urban piety after the older
+priesthood--nor symbolism of its own--for the idea that life was not
+for the service of practical aims, but for the consistent expression
+of a symbolism of Time and Space, and could claim true dignity only
+to the extent that it was the worthy vessel of these, was necessarily
+repugnant to the urban reason as such. This reason, which dominates the
+entire political literature of the Late period, asserts a new grouping
+of estates as from the rise of cities--at first only in theory, but
+finally, when rationalism becomes omnipotent, in practice, even the
+bloody practice of revolutions. Nobility and clergy, so far as they are
+still extant, appear rather markedly as _privileged_ classes, the tacit
+significance of the emphasis being that their claim to prescriptive
+rights on the ground of historical status is (from the point of view
+of timeless rational or “natural” law) obsolete nonsense. They now
+have their centre in the _capital city_ (this also a Late-period idea)
+and now, and now only, develop aristocratic forms to that imposing
+combination of hauteur and elegance that we see, for example, in the
+portraits of Reynolds and Lawrence. In opposition to them stand the
+intellectual powers of the now supreme city, _economy and science_,
+which in conjunction with the mass of artisans, functionaries, and
+labourers feel themselves as a party, diverse in its constituents, but
+invariably solid at the call to battle for freedom--that is, for urban
+independence of the great old-time symbols and the rights that flowed
+from them. As components of the Third Estate, which counts by heads
+and not by rank, they are all, in all Late periods of all Cultures,
+“liberal” in one way or another--namely, free from the inward powers
+of non-urban life. Economy is freed to make money, science freed to
+criticize. And so in all the great decisions we perceive the intellect
+with its books and its meetings having the word (“Democracy”), and
+money obtaining the advantages (“Plutocracy”)--and it is never ideas,
+but always capital, that wins. But this again is just the opposition of
+truths and facts, in the form in which it develops from the city-life.
+
+Moreover, by way of protest against the ancient symbols of the
+soil-bound life, the city opposes to the aristocracy of birth the
+notion of an aristocracy of money and an aristocracy of intellect--the
+one not very explicit as a claim, but all the more effective as a fact;
+the other a truth, but nothing more than that and, as a spectacle for
+the eye, not very convincing. In every Late period there grows on to
+the ancient nobility--that in which some big bit of history (say,
+Crusades, or Norman conquest) has become stored as form and beat, but
+which often has inwardly decayed at the great courts--a genuine second
+crop. Thus in the fourth century B.C. the entry of great plebeian
+families as _conscripti_ into the Roman Senate of _patres_ produced
+within the senatorial order an aristocracy of “_nobiles_”--a nobility
+holding lands, but entitled by office. In just the same way a nobility
+of nepotism arose in Papal Rome; in 1650 there were scarcely fifty
+families of more than three centuries’ status. In the Southern States
+of the American Union there grew up, from Baroque times onward, that
+planter-aristocracy which was annihilated by the money-powers of the
+North in the Civil War of 1861-5. The old merchant-nobility of the type
+of the Fugger, Welser, and Medici and the great Venetian and Genoese
+houses--to this type, too, must be assigned practically the whole of
+the patriciate of the Hellenic colonial cities of 800--had always
+something of aristocracy in them,[619] race, tradition, high standards,
+and the nature-impulse to re-establish connexion with the soil by
+acquiring lands (although the old family house in town was no bad
+substitute). But the new money-aristocracy of deals and speculations
+rapidly acquired a taste for polite forms and at last forced its way
+into the birth-nobility--in Rome, as Equites, from the first Punic War,
+in France under Louis XIV[620]--which it disintegrated and corrupted,
+while the intellectual aristocracy of the Enlightenment, for its part,
+overwhelmed it with scorn. The Confucians took the old Chinese idea
+of _Shi_ from the ethic of nobility and put it into the virtue of
+intellect, and made the Pi-Yung, from a centre of knightly battle-play,
+into an “intellectual wrestling-school,” a gymnasium--quite in the
+spirit of our eighteenth century.
+
+With the close of the Late period of every Culture the history of its
+estates also comes to a more or less violent end. The mere desire
+to live in rootless freedom prevails over the great imperative
+Culture-symbols, which a mankind now wholly dominated by the city no
+longer comprehends or tolerates. Finance sheds every trace of feeling
+for earth-bound immovable values, and scientific criticism every
+residue of piety. Another such victory also, in a measure, is the
+liberation of the peasant, which consists in relieving him from the
+pressure of servage, but hands him over to the power of money, which
+now proceeds to turn the land into movable property--which happened
+in our case in the eighteenth century; in Byzantium about 740 under
+the Nomos Georgikos of the legislator Leo III[621] (after which the
+colonate slowly disappeared); in Rome along with the founding of the
+Plebeian order in 471. In Sparta the simultaneous attempt of Pausanias
+to emancipate the Helots failed.
+
+_This Plebs is the Third Estate in the form in which it is
+constitutionally recognised as a unit_; its representatives are the
+Tribunes, not officials, but trusted persons armed with a guaranteed
+immunity. The reform of 471,[622] which _inter alia_ replaced the
+old three Etruscan tribes by four urban tribes or wards (a highly
+suggestive fact in itself), has been variously regarded as a pure
+emancipation of peasantry[623] or as an organization of the trading
+class.[624] But the Plebs, as Third Estate, as residue, is only
+susceptible of negative definition--as meaning everyone who does
+not belong to the land-nobility or is not the incumbent of a great
+priestly office. The picture is as variegated as that of the French
+“_Tiers État_” of 1789. Only the protest holds it together. In it are
+traders, craftsmen, day-labourers, clerks. The gens of the Claudii
+contained patrician _and_ plebeian families--that is, great landlords
+and prosperous yeomen (for example, the Claudii Marcelli). The Plebs
+in the Classical city-state is what a combination of peasant and
+burgher is in a Baroque state of the West, when it protests in an
+assembled states-general against the autocracy of a prince. Outside
+politics--that is, socially--the plebs, as a unit distinguished from
+nobility and priesthood, has no existence, but falls apart at once into
+special callings that are perfectly distinct in interests. It is a
+_Party_, and what it stands for as such is freedom in the urban sense
+of the word. The fact emerges still more distinctly from the success
+which the Roman land-nobility won immediately afterwards, in adding
+sixteen country tribes, designated by family names and unchallengeably
+controlled by themselves, to the four urban tribes that stood for
+bourgeoisie proper--namely, money and mind. Not until the great social
+conflict during the Samnite wars (contemporary with Alexander, and
+corresponding exactly to the French Revolution), which ended with the
+Lex Hortensia of 287, was the status-idea legally abolished and the
+history of the symbolic Estates closed. _The Plebs became the Populus
+Romanus_ in the same way as in 1789 the “_Tiers État_” constituted
+itself the Nation. From this point on, in every Culture, it is
+something fundamentally different that happens under the label of
+social conflict.
+
+The nobility of every Springtime had been _the_ Estate in the most
+primary sense, history become flesh, race at highest potential. The
+priesthood was its _counter-estate_, saying no wherever nobility said
+yes and thus displaying the other side of life in a grand symbol.
+
+The Third Estate, without proper inward unity, was the non-estate--the
+protest, in estate-form, against the existence of estates; not against
+this or that estate, but against the symbolic view of life in general.
+It rejects all differences not justified by reason or practically
+useful. And yet it does mean something itself, and means it very
+distinctly--_the city-life as estate_ in contradistinction to that of
+the country, _freedom as a condition_ in contrast to attachment. But,
+looked at from within its own field, it is by no means the unclassified
+residue that it appears in the eyes of the primary estates. The
+bourgeoisie has definite limits; it belongs to the Culture; it
+embraces, in the best sense, all who adhere to it, and under the name
+of people, _populus, demos_, rallies nobility and priesthood, money and
+mind, craftsman and wage-earner, as constituents of itself.
+
+This is the idea that Civilization finds prevailing when it comes
+on the scene, and this is what it destroys by its notion of the
+Fourth Estate, _the Mass_, which rejects the Culture and its matured
+forms, lock, stock, and barrel. It is the absolute of formlessness,
+persecuting with its hate every sort of form, every distinction of
+rank, the orderliness of property, the orderliness of knowledge. It
+is the new nomadism of the Cosmopolis,[625] for which slaves and
+barbarians in the Classical world, Sudras in the Indian, and in
+general anything and everything that is merely human, provide an
+undifferentiated floating something that falls apart the moment it is
+born, that recognizes no past and possesses no future. Thus the Fourth
+Estate becomes the expression of the passing of a history over into the
+historyless. The mass is the end, the radical nullity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE STATE
+
+(B)
+
+STATE AND HISTORY
+
+
+I
+
+Within the world-as-history, in which we are so livingly woven that
+our perception and our reason constantly obey our feelings, the
+cosmic flowings appear as that which we call actuality, real life,
+being-streams in bodily form. Their common badge is Direction. But
+they can be grasped differently according as it is the _movement_ or
+_the thing moved_ that is looked at. The former aspect we call history
+and the latter family or stock or estate or people, but the one is
+only possible and existent through the other. History exists only as
+the history of something. If we are referring to the history of the
+great Cultures, then nation is the thing moved. State, _status_, means
+condition, and we obtain our impression of the State when, as a Being
+in moved Form flows past us, we fix in our eyes the Form as such, as
+something extended and timelessly standing fast, and entirely ignore
+direction and Destiny. State is history regarded as at the halt,
+history the State regarded as on the move. The State of actuality is
+the physiognomy of a historical unit of being; only the planned State
+of the theorist is a system.
+
+A movement _has_ form, and that which is moved is “_in form_,” or, to
+use another sporting expression, when it is “going all out” it is in
+perfect condition. This is equally true for a racehorse or a wrestler
+and for an army or a people. The form abstracted from the life-stream
+of a people is the “condition” of that people with respect to its
+wrestle in and with history. But only the smallest part of this can be
+got at and identified by means of the reason. No real constitution,
+when taken by itself and brought down to paper as a system, is
+complete. The unwritten, the indescribable, the usual, the felt, the
+self-evident, so outweigh everything else that--though theorists never
+see it--the description of a state or its constitutional archives
+cannot give us even the silhouette of that which underlies the
+living actuality of a state as its essential form; an existence-unit
+of history is spoilt when we seriously subject its movement to the
+constraint of a written constitution.
+
+The individual class or family is the smallest, the nation the largest
+unit in the stream of history.[626] Primitive peoples are subject to
+a movement that is not historical in the higher sense--the movement
+may be a jog-trot or may be a charge, but it has no organic character
+and no profound importance. Nevertheless, these primitive peoples are
+in motion through and through, to such an extent, indeed, as to seem
+perfectly formless to the hasty observer. Fellaheen, on the contrary,
+are the rigid objects of a movement that comes from outside and
+impinges on them unmeaningly and fortuitously. The former includes
+the “State” of the Mycenæan period; that of the Thinite period;
+that of the Shang dynasty in China up to, say, the migration to Yin
+(1400); the Frankish realm of Charlemagne; the Visigothic Kingdom to
+Eurich; and Petrine Russia--state-forms often ample and efficient, but
+still destitute of symbolism and necessity. To the latter belong the
+Roman, Chinese, and other Imperia, whose form has ceased to have any
+expressive content whatever.
+
+But between primitive and fellah lies the history of the great Culture.
+A people in the style of a Culture--a historical people, that is--is
+called a Nation.[627] A nation, as a living and battling thing,
+possesses a State not merely as a condition of movement, but also
+(above all) _as an idea_. The State in the simplest sense of the term
+may be as old as free-moving life itself. Swarms and herds of even very
+lowly animal genera may have “constitutions” of some sort--and those of
+the ants, of the bees, of many fish, or migrating birds, of beavers,
+have reached an astounding degree of perfection--but the State of the
+grand style is as old as and no older than its two prime Estates,
+nobility and priesthood. These emerge _with_ the Culture, they vanish
+into it, their Destinies are to a high degree identical. Culture is the
+being of nations in State-form.
+
+A people is _as_ State, a kindred is _as_ family, “in form”--that is,
+as we have seen, the difference between political and cosmic history,
+public and private life, _res publica_ and _res privata_. And both,
+moreover, are symbols of care.[628] The woman _is_ world-history. By
+conceiving and giving birth she cares for the perpetuation of the
+blood. The mother with the child at her breast is the grand emblem of
+cosmic life. Under this aspect, the life of man and woman is “in form”
+as marriage. The man, however, _makes_ history, which is an unending
+battle for the preservation of that other life. Maternal care is
+supplemented and paralleled by paternal. The man with weapon in hand is
+the other grand emblem of the will-to-duration. A people “in condition”
+is originally a band warriorhood, a deep and intimately felt community
+of men fit for arms. State is the affair of man, it is Care for the
+preservation of the whole (including the spiritual self-preservation
+called honour and self-respect), the thwarting of attacks, the
+foreseeing of dangers, and, above all, the positive aggressiveness
+which is natural and self-evident to every life that has begun to soar.
+
+If all life were _one_ uniform being-stream, the words “people,”
+“state,” “war,” “policy,” “constitution,” would never have been heard
+of. But the eternal forceful _variety_ of life, which the creative
+power of the Culture elevates to the highest intensities, is a fact,
+and historically we have no choice but to accept it as such, with
+all that flows therefrom. Plant-life is only plant-life in relation
+to animal life; nobility and priesthood reciprocally condition
+one another. _A people is only really such in relation to other
+peoples_, and the substance of this actuality comes out in natural and
+ineradicable oppositions, in attack and defence, hostility and war.
+War is the creator of all great things. All that is meaningful in the
+stream of life has emerged through victory and defeat.
+
+A people shapes history inasmuch as it is “in condition” for the task
+of doing so. It livingly experiences an inward history--which gets
+it into this “condition,” in which alone it becomes creative--and
+an outward history, which _consists_ in this creation. Peoples as
+State, then, are the real forces of all human happening. In the
+world-as-history there is nothing beyond them. They _are_ Destiny.
+
+_Res publica_, the public life, the “sword side” of human
+being-currents, is in actuality invisible. The alien sees merely the
+men and not their inner connexion, for indeed this resides very deep
+in the stream of life, and even there is felt rather than understood.
+Similarly, we do not in actuality see the family, but only certain
+persons, whose cohesion in a perfectly definite sense we know and grasp
+by way of our own inward experience. But for each such mental picture
+there exists a group of constituent persons who are bound together as
+a life-unit by a like constitution of outer and inner being. This form
+in the flow of existence is called _customary ethic_ (_Sitte_) when it
+arises of itself in the beat and march and is unconscious before it is
+conscious; and _law_ (_Recht_) when it is _deliberately stated_ and put
+forth for _acceptance_.
+
+Law--irrespective of whether its authority derives from the feelings
+and impulse (unwritten law, customary law, English “equity”) or has
+been abstracted by reflection, probed, and brought into system as
+Statute Law (_Gesetz_)--is the _willed_ form of Being. The jural
+facts that it embraces are of the two kinds, though both possess
+time-symbolism--Care in two modes, prevision and provision--but,
+from the very difference in the proportions of consciousness that
+they respectively contain, it follows that throughout real history
+there must be two laws in opposition--the law of the fathers, of
+tradition, the inherited, grown, and well-tried law, sacrosanct
+because immemorially old, derived from the experience of the blood
+and therefore dependable; and the thought and planned law of reason,
+nature, and broad humanity, the product of reflection and therefore
+first cousin to mathematics, a law that may not be very workable,
+but is at any rate “just.” It is in these two orders of law that
+the opposition between land-life and city-life, life-experience and
+study-experience, ripens till it bursts out in that revolutionary
+embitterment in which men take a law instead of being given it, and
+break a law that will not yield.
+
+A law that has been laid down by a community expresses a _duty_ for
+every member, but it is no proof of every member’s _power_. On the
+contrary, it is a question of Destiny, who makes the law and for whom
+it is made. There are subjects and there are objects in the _making_ of
+laws, although everyone is an object as to the validity thereof--and
+this holds good without distinction for the inner law of families,
+guilds, estates, and states. But for the State, which is the highest
+law-subject existing in historical actuality, there is, besides, an
+external law that it imposes upon aliens by hostilities. Ordinary civil
+law is a case of the first kind, a peace treaty of the second. But in
+all cases the law of the stronger is the law of the weaker also. To
+“have the right” is an expression of power. This is a historical fact
+that every moment confirms, but it is not acknowledged in the realm
+of truth, which is not of this world. In their conceptions of right,
+therefore, as in other things, being and waking-being, Destiny and
+Causality, stand implacably opposed. To the priestly and idealistic
+moral of good and evil belongs the _moral distinction of right and
+wrong_, but in the race-moral of good and bad the distinction is
+between those who give and those who receive the law. An abstract idea
+of justice pervades the minds and writings of all whose spirit is noble
+and strong and whose blood is weak, pervades all religions and all
+philosophies--but the fact-world of history knows only the _success_
+which turns the law of the stronger into the law of all. Over ideals it
+marches without pity, and if ever a man or a people renounces its power
+of the moment in order to remain righteous--then, certainly, his or its
+theoretical fame is assured in the second world of thought and truth,
+but assured also is the coming of a moment in which it will succumb to
+another life-power that has better understood realities.
+
+So long as a historical power is so superior to its constituent
+units--as the State or the estate so often is to families and
+calling-classes, or the head of the family to its children--a just law
+_between_ the weaker is possible as a gift from the all-powerful hand
+of the disinterested. But Estates seldom, and states almost never,
+feel a power of this magnitude over themselves, and consequently
+between them the law of the stronger acts with immediate force--as
+is seen in a victor’s treaty, unilateral in terms and still more so
+in interpretation and observance. That is the difference between
+the _internal_ and the _external_ rights of historical life-units.
+In the first the will of an arbiter to be impartial and just can be
+effective--although we are apt to deceive ourselves badly as to the
+degree of effective impartiality even in the best codes of history,
+even in those which call themselves “civil” or “_bürgerlich_,” for the
+very adjective indicates that _an estate_ has possessed the superior
+force to impose them on everyone.[629] Internal laws are the result of
+strict logical-causal thought centring upon truths, but for that very
+reason their validity is ever dependent upon the material power of
+their author, be this Estate or State. A revolution that annihilates
+this power annihilates also these laws--they remain true, but they
+are no longer actual. External laws on the other hand, such as all
+peace treaties, are essentially never true and always actual--indeed
+appallingly so. They set up no pretension whatever of being just--it
+is quite enough that they are valid. Out of them speaks _Life_, which
+possesses no causal and moral logic, but is organically all the more
+consistent and consequent for the lack of it. Its will is to possess
+validity _itself_; it feels with an inward certainty what is required
+to that end and, seeing that, knows what is law for itself and _has
+to be made_ law for others. This logic is seen in every family, and
+particularly in old true-born peasant families as soon as authority is
+shattered and someone other than the head tries to determine “what is.”
+It appears in every state, as soon as one party therein dominates the
+position. Every feudal age is filled with the contests between lords
+and vassals over the “right to rights.” In the Classical world this
+conflict ended almost everywhere with the unconditional victory of the
+First Estate, which deprived the kingship of its legislative powers and
+made it an object of its own law-making--as the origin and significance
+of the Archons in Athens and the Ephors in Sparta prove beyond doubt.
+But the same happened in the Western field too--for a moment in France
+(institution of the States-General, 1302), and for good in England,
+where in 1215 the Norman baronage and the higher clergy imposed Magna
+Charta and thus sowed the seed that was to ripen into the effective
+sovereignty of Parliament. Hence it was that the old Norman law of the
+Estates here remained permanently valid. In Germany, on the contrary,
+the weak Imperial power, hard-pressed by the claims of the great
+feudatories, called in the “Roman” law of Justinian (that is, the law
+of the unlimited central power) to aid it against the early German
+land-laws.[630]
+
+The Draconian Constitution, the πατρίος πολιτεία of the Oligarchs,
+was dictated by the nobility like the strictly patrician law of
+the Twelve Tables in Rome;[631] but by then the Late period of the
+Culture was well under way and the power of the city and of money were
+already fully developed, so that laws directed against these powers
+necessarily gave way very promptly to laws of the Third Estate (Solon,
+the Tribunate). Yet these, too, were estate-founded laws not less than
+their predecessors. The struggle between the two primary estates for
+the right of law-making has filled the entire history of the West, from
+the early Gothic conflict of secular and canon law for supremacy, to
+the controversy (not ended even to-day) concerning civil marriage.[632]
+And, for that matter, what are the constitutional conflicts that have
+occurred since the end of the eighteenth century but the acquisition
+by the _Tiers État_ (which, according to Sieyès’s famous remark in
+1789, “was nothing, but could be all”) of the right to legislate
+bindingly upon all, producing a law that is just as much burghers
+law as ever Gothic was nobles’ law. The nakedest form in which right
+appears as the expression of might is (as I have already observed) in
+interstate treaty-making, in peace treaties, and in that Law of Nations
+of which already Mirabeau could say it is the law of the strong of
+which the observance is imposed upon the weak. A large part of the
+decisions of world-history is contained in laws of this kind. They are
+the constitution under which militant history progresses, so long as it
+does not revert to the original form of the armed conflict--original,
+and also basic; for every treaty that is valid and is meant to have
+real effects is an intellectual continuation thereof. If policy is war
+by other means,[633] the “right to give the law” is the spoil of the
+successful party.
+
+
+II
+
+It is clear, then, that on the heights of history two such life-forms,
+Estate and State, contend for supremacy, both being-streams of great
+inward form and symbolic force, each resolved to make its own destiny
+the Destiny of the whole. _That_--if we try to understand the matter
+in its depths and unreservedly put aside our everyday conceptions
+of people, economy, society, and politics--_is the meaning of the
+opposition between the social and the political conduct of events_.
+Social and political ideas do not begin to be differentiated till a
+great Culture has dawned, or even till feudalism is declining and
+the lord-vassal relation represents the social, and the king-people
+relation the political, side. But the social powers of the early time
+(nobility and priesthood) not less actively than those of the later
+(money and mind)--and the vocational groups of the craftsmen and
+officials and workers, too, as they were rising to their power in the
+growing cities--sought, each for itself, to subordinate the State-ideal
+to its own Estate-ideal, or more usually to its estate interests. And
+so there arose, at all planes from that of the national unit to that of
+the individual consciousness, a fight over the respective limits and
+claims of each--the result of which, in extreme cases, is that the one
+element succeeds so completely as to make the other its tool.[634]
+
+In all cases, however, it is the State that determines the _external_
+position, and therefore the historical relations between peoples
+are always of _a political and not a social nature_. In domestic
+politics, on the contrary, the situation is so dominated by
+class-oppositions that at first sight social and political tactics
+appear inseparable, and indeed, in the thought of people who (as, for
+example, a bourgeoisie) equate their own class-ideal with historical
+actuality--and consequently cannot think in external politics at
+all--identical. In the external battle the State seeks alliances
+with other States, in the internal it is always in alliance with one
+or another Estate--the sixth-century Tyrannis, for instance, rested
+upon the combination of the State-idea with the interests of the
+Third Estate _vis-à-vis_ the ancient noble oligarchy, and the French
+Revolution became inevitable from the moment that the _Tiers_--that
+is, intellect and money--left its friend the Crown in the lurch and
+joined the two other Estates (from the Assembly of Notables, 1787).
+We are thoroughly right therefore in feeling a distinction between
+State-history and class-history,[635] between political (horizontal)
+and social (vertical) history, war and revolution.[636] But it is a
+grave error of modern doctrinaires to regard the spirit of domestic
+history as that of history in general. _World-history is, and always
+will be, State-history._ The inner constitution of a nation aims always
+at being “_in condition_” for the outer fight (diplomatic, military,
+or economic) and anyone who treats a nation’s constitution as an aim
+and ideal in itself is merely ruining the nation’s body. But, from the
+other point of view, it falls to the inner-political pulse-sense of a
+ruling stratum (whether belonging to the First or to the Fourth Estate)
+so to manage the internal class-oppositions that the focus and ideas
+of the nation are not tied up in party conflict, nor treason to the
+country thought of as an ace of trumps.
+
+And here it becomes manifest that _the State and the first Estate_
+are cognate down to the roots--akin, not merely by reason of their
+symbolism of Time and Care, their common relation to race and the
+facts of genealogical succession, to the family and to the primary
+impulses of all peasantry (on which in the last analysis every State
+and every nobility is supported)--not merely in their relation to
+the soil, the clan-domain (be this heritable estate or fatherland),
+which even in nations of the Magian style is lowered in significance
+only because there the dignity of orthodoxy so completely surpasses
+everything else--but above all in high practice amidst all the facts
+of the historical world, in the unforced unity of pulse and impulse,
+diplomacy, judgment of men, the art of command and masculine will to
+keep and extend power, which even in earliest times differentiated a
+nobility and a people out of the one and the same war-gathering; and,
+lastly, in the feeling for honour and bravery. Hence, right up to the
+latest phases, that State stands firmest in which the nobility or the
+tradition shaped by the nobility is wholly at the service of the common
+cause--as it was in Sparta as compared with Athens, in Rome _vis-à-vis_
+Carthage, in Tsin as against the _tao_-coloured state of Tsu.
+
+The distinction is that a nobility self-contained as a class--or for
+that matter _any_ Estate--experiences the residue of the nation only
+with reference to itself, and only desires to exercise power in that
+sense, whereas the very principle of the State is that it cares for
+all, and cares for the nobility as such only in relation to the major
+care. But a genuine old nobility _assimilates itself_ to the State,
+and cares for all as though for a property. This care, in fact, is one
+of its grandest duties and one of which it is most deeply conscious;
+it feels it, indeed, an innate _privilege_, and regards service in the
+army and the administration as its special vocation.
+
+It is, however, a distinction of quite another kind that holds as
+between the State-idea and the idea of any one of the other Estates.
+All these are inwardly alien to the State as such, and the State-ideals
+that they fashion out of their own lives have not grown up out of the
+spirit and the political forces of actual history--hence, indeed, the
+conscious emphasis with which they are labelled as social. And while in
+Early times the situation is simply that historical facts oppose the
+Church-community in its efforts to actualize _religious_ ideals, in
+Late periods both the _business_ ideal of the free economic life, and
+the _Utopian_ ideal of the enthusiast who would actualize this or that
+abstraction, also come into the field.
+
+But in the historical world there are no ideals, but only facts--no
+truths, but only facts. There is no reason, no honesty, no equity, no
+final aim, but only facts, and anyone who does not realize this should
+write books on politics--let him not try to _make_ politics. In the
+real world there are no states built according to ideals, but only
+states that have _grown_, and these are nothing but living peoples
+“in form.” No doubt it is “the form impressed that living doth itself
+unfold,” but the impress has been that of the blood and beat of a
+_being_, wholly instinctive and involuntary; and as to the unfolding,
+if it is guided by the master of politics, it takes the direction
+inherent in the blood; if by the idealist, that dictated by his own
+convictions--in other words, the way to nullity.
+
+But the destiny question, for States that exist in reality and not
+merely in intellectual schemes, is not that of their ideal task or
+structure, _but that of their inner authority_, which cannot in the
+long run be maintained by material means, but only by a belief--of
+friend _and_ foe--in their effectiveness. The decisive problems lie,
+not in the working-out of constitutions, but in the organization of
+a sound working government; not in the distribution of political
+rights according to “just” principles (which at bottom are simply the
+idea that a _class_ forms of its own legitimate claims), but in the
+efficient pulse of the whole (efficient in the sense that the play
+of muscle and sinew is efficient when an extended racehorse nears
+the winning-post), in that rhythm which attracts even strong genius
+into syntony; not, lastly, in any world-alien moral, but in the
+steadiness, sureness, and superiority of political leadership. The
+more self-evident all these things are, the less is said or argued
+about them; the more fully matured the State, the higher the standing,
+the historical capacity, and therefore the Destiny of the Nation.
+State-majesty, sovereignty, is a life-symbol of the first order. It
+distinguishes _subjects and objects_[637] in political events not
+only in inner, but also (which is far more important) in external,
+history. Strength of leadership, which comes to expression in the
+clear separation of these two factors, is the unmistakable sign of
+the life-force in a political unity--so much so that the shattering
+of existing authority (for example, by the supporters of an opposed
+constitutional ideal) almost always results not in this new party’s
+making itself the subject of domestic policy, but in the whole nation’s
+becoming the object of alien policy--and not seldom for ever.
+
+For this reason, in every healthy State the letter of the written
+constitution is of small importance compared with the practice of the
+living constitution, the “form” (to use again the sporting term), which
+has developed of itself out of the experience of Time, the situation,
+and, above all, the race-properties of the Nation. The more powerfully
+the _natural_ form of the body politic has built itself up, the more
+surely it works in unforeseen situations; indeed, in the limit, it
+does not matter whether the actual leader is called King or Minister
+or party-leader, or even (as in the case of Cecil Rhodes) that he has
+no defined relation to the State. The nobility which managed Roman
+politics in the period of the three Punic Wars had, from the point of
+view of constitutional law, no existence whatever.[638] The leader’s
+responsibility is always to a minority that possesses the instincts of
+statesmanship and represents the rest of the nation in the struggle of
+history.
+
+The fact, therefore, express and unequivocal, is that
+class-States--that is, States in which particular classes rule--are
+the _only_ States. This must not be confused with the class-States
+to which the individual is merely _attached_ in view of belonging to
+an estate, as in the case of the older Polis, the Norman States of
+England and Sicily, the France of the Constitution of 1791, and Soviet
+Russia to-day. The true class-State is an expression of the general
+historical experience that it is always a single social stratum
+which, constitutionally or otherwise, provides the political leading.
+It is always a definite minority that represents the world-historical
+tendency of a State; and, within that again, it is a more or less
+self-contained minority that in virtue of its aptitudes (and often
+enough against the spirit of the Constitution) actually holds the
+reins. And, if we ignore, as exceptions proving the rule, revolutionary
+interregna and Cæsarian conditions, in which individuals and fortuitous
+groupings maintain their power merely by material means (and often
+without any aptitude for ruling), it is always the minority _within an
+Estate_ that rules by tradition. In by far the greater number of cases
+this minority is one within the nobility--for example, the “gentry”
+which governed the Parliamentary style of England, the _nobiles_ at the
+helm of Roman politics in Punic War times, the merchant-aristocracy
+of Venice, the Jesuit-trained (nobles who conducted the diplomacy of
+the Papal Curia in the Baroque).[639] Similarly, we find the political
+aptitude in self-contained groups within the religious Estate--not only
+in the Roman Catholic Church, but also in Egypt and India and still
+more in Byzantium and Sassanid Persia. In the Third Estate--though
+this seldom produces it, not being in itself a life-unit--there are
+cases such as those of third-century Rome, where a stratum of the
+plebs contains men trained in commerce, and France since 1789, where
+an element of the bourgeoisie has been trained in law; in these cases,
+it is ensured by a closed circle of persons possessing homogeneous
+practical gifts, which constantly recruits itself and preserves in its
+midst the whole sum of unwritten political tradition and experience.
+
+That is the organization of _actual_ states in contradistinction to
+those conceived on paper and in the minds of pedants. There is no best,
+or true, or right State that could possibly be actualized according to
+plan. Every State that emerges in history exists as it is but once and
+for a moment; the next moment it has, unperceived, become different,
+whatever the rigidity of its legal-constitutional crust. Therefore,
+words like “republic,” “absolutism,” “democracy,” mean something
+different in every instance, and what turns them into catchwords is
+their use as definite concepts by philosophers and ideologues. A
+history of States is physiognomic and not systematic. Its business is
+not to show how “humanity” advances to the conquest of its eternal
+rights, to freedom and equality, to the evolving of a super-wise and
+super-just State, but to describe the political units that really exist
+in the fact-world, how they grow and flourish and fade, and how they
+are really nothing but actual life “in form.” Let us make the attempt
+on this basis.
+
+
+III
+
+History in the high style begins in every Culture with the feudal
+State, which is not a State in the coming sense of the word, but
+an ordering of the common life with reference to an _Estate_. The
+noblest fruit of the soil, its race in the proudest sense, here
+builds itself up in a rank-order from the simple knighthood to the
+_primus inter pares_, the feudal Overlord amongst his Peers. This
+sets in simultaneously with the architecture of the great cathedrals
+and the Pyramids--the stone and the blood elevated into symbols, the
+one _meaning_, the other _being_. The idea of feudalism, which has
+dominated all Springtimes, is the transition from the primitive, purely
+practical and factual, relationship of potentate to those who obey him
+(whether they have chosen him or have been subdued by him) into the
+_private-law_ (and, therefore, deeply symbolical) relation of the lord
+to the vassal. This relation rests entirely upon the ethic of nobility,
+honour, and loyalty, and conjures up the cruellest conflicts between
+duty to one’s lord and duty to one’s own family. The decadence of Henry
+the Lion[640] is a tragic example of it.
+
+The “State” exists here only to the extent of the limits of the feudal
+tie, and it expands its domain by the entry of alien vassals therein.
+Service to, and agency for, the ruler--originally personal and limited
+in time--very soon became the permanent fief which, if it escheated,
+_had_ to be reassigned (already by 1000 the principle of the West was
+“No land without a lord”), and from that presently passed to the stage
+of being hereditary (law of Emperor Conrad II, 28th May 1037). Thereby
+the formerly immediate subjects of the ruler were mediatized, and
+henceforth they were only his subjects as being subjects of a vassal of
+his. Nothing but the strong social interbonding of the Estate ensured
+the cohesion of what must be called, even under these conditions, the
+State.
+
+The idea of power and booty are seen here in classic union. When, in
+1066, William and his Norman chivalry conquered England, the whole
+land was made King’s property and fee, and it remains so in name
+to this day. Here is a true Viking delight in “having,” the care
+of an Odysseus who begins by counting his treasure.[641] From this
+booty-sense of shrewd conquerors there came, quite suddenly, the
+famous exchequer-practice and officialdom of the early Cultures. It
+is well to distinguish these officials from the incumbents of the
+great confidential offices which had arisen out of the older personal
+agency;[642] they were _clerici_ or clerks, and not _ministeriales_ or
+ministers--“servants,” but in a prouder sense now. The financial and
+clerical officialdom is an expression of Care, and it develops in exact
+proportion with the development of the dynastic idea. Thus in Egypt
+it reached an astonishingly high level at the very beginning of the
+Old Kingdom.[643] The early Chinese official-State described in the
+_Tshou-li_ is so comprehensive and complicated that the authenticity
+of the book has been doubted,[644] but in spirit and tendency it
+corresponds exactly with that of Diocletian, which enabled a feudal
+order to arise out of an immense fiscal machinery.[645] In the early
+Classical world it is markedly absent. “_Carpe diem_” was the motto of
+Classical economics from the first to last, and in this domain as in
+others Improvidence, the _autarkeia_ of the Stoics, was elevated into a
+principle. Even the best calculators were no exception--thus Eubulus in
+Athens, 330 B.C., managed business with an eye to surpluses, but only
+to distribute them, when gained, amongst the citizens.
+
+The extreme contrast to Eubulus’s finance is afforded by the canny
+Vikings of the early West, who by the financial administration of their
+Norman states laid the foundations of the Faustian economics that
+extend to-day over the whole world. It is from the chequered table in
+the Norman counting-house of Robert the Devil (1028-35) that we have
+the name of the English “Exchequer” and hence the word “cheque.” Here
+also originated the words “control,” “quittance,” “record.”[646] Here
+it was that after 1066 England was organized as booty, with ruthless
+reduction of the Anglo-Saxons, to serfdom, and here too originated the
+Norman State of Sicily--for it was not upon nothing that Frederick II
+of Hohenstaufen later built; his most personal work, the constitutions
+of Melfi (1231) he did not create, but only (by methods borrowed
+from the money-economics of high Arabian Civilization) polished and
+perfected. From this centre the methodic and descriptive technique of
+finance spread into the business world of Lombardy and so into all the
+trading cities and administrations of the West.
+
+But in Feudalism build-up and breakdown lie close together. When
+the primary estates were still in full bloom and vigour, the future
+nations, and with them the germ of the State-idea proper, were stirring
+into life. The opposition between temporal and spiritual power and that
+between crown and vassals was cut across again and again by oppositions
+of nationhood--German-French even from Otto the Great’s times;
+German-Italian, which rent Italy between the Guelphs and Ghibellines
+and destroyed the German Empire; French-English, which brought about
+the English dominion over western France. Still, all this was far less
+important than the great decisions within the feudal order itself,
+where the idea of nationality was unknown. England was broken up into
+60,251 fiefs, catalogued in the Domesday Book of 1084 (consulted
+even to-day upon occasion), and the strictly organized central power
+required allegiance to itself even from the sub-tenants of the peers,
+but all the same it was less than a hundred and fifty years later that
+Magna Charta was forced through (1215), and actual power transferred
+from the King to the Parliament of the vassals--made up of great
+barons and ecclesiastics in the Upper house, gentry and patricians
+in the Lower--which thenceforward became the support and champion of
+_national_ development. In France the baronage, in conjunction with
+the clergy and the towns, forced the calling of the States-General
+in 1302; the General Privilege of Saragossa in 1283 made Aragon into
+a quasi-republic of nobles ruled by its Cortes, and in Germany a few
+decades earlier a group of great vassals made the election of the
+German Kingship dependent upon themselves as Electors.
+
+The mightiest expression that the feudal idea found for itself--not
+merely in the West, but in any Culture--came out in the struggle
+between Empire and Papacy, both of which dreamed of a consummation in
+which the entire world was to become an immense feudal system, and so
+intimately enwove themselves into the dream that, with the decay of
+feudalism, both together fell from their heights in lamentable ruin.
+
+The idea of a Ruler whose writ should run throughout the whole
+historical world, whose Destiny should be that of all mankind, has
+taken visible shape in, so far, three instances--firstly, in the
+conception of the Pharaoh as Horus;[647] secondly, in the great Chinese
+imagining of the Ruler of the Middle, whose domain is _tien-hia_,
+everything lying below the heavens;[648] and, thirdly, in early Gothic
+times. In 962 Otto the Great, answering to the deep mystical sense and
+yearning for historical and spatial infinity that was sweeping through
+the world of those days, conceived the idea of the “Holy Roman Empire,
+German by nation.” But even earlier, Pope Nicolas I (860), still
+completely involved in Augustinian--that is, Magian--lines of thought,
+had dreamed of a Papal democracy which was to stand above the princes
+of this world, and from 1059 Gregory VII with all the prime force of
+his Faustian nature set out to actualize a papal world-dominion under
+the forms of a universal feudalism, with kings as vassals. The Papacy
+itself, indeed, under its domestic aspect, constituted the small feudal
+State of the Campagna, whose noble families controlled the election
+of popes, and which very rapidly converted the college of cardinals
+(to which the duty was entrusted from 1059 on) into a sort of noble
+oligarchy. But under the broader aspect of external policy Gregory
+VII actually _obtained_ feudal supremacy over the Norman states of
+England and Sicily, both of which were created with his support, and
+actually awarded the Imperial crown as Otto the Great had awarded the
+tiara. But a little later Henry VI of Hohenstaufen succeeded in the
+opposite sense; even Richard Cœur-de-Lion swore the vassal’s oath to
+him for England, and the universal Empire was on the point of becoming
+a fact when the greatest of all popes, Innocent III (1198-1216) made
+the papal overlordship of the world real for a short time. England
+became a Papal fief in 1213; Aragon and Leon and Portugal, Denmark
+and Poland and Hungary, Armenia and the recently founded Latin Empire
+in Byzantium followed. But with Innocent’s death disintegration set
+in within the Church itself, and the great spiritual dignitaries,
+whom their investitures turned into vassals of the Pope as overlord,
+soon followed the lay vassals’ example and set about limiting him by
+means of representative institutions for their order.[649] The notion
+that a General Council stood higher than a pope was not of religious
+origin, but arose primarily out of the feudal principle. Its tendency
+corresponded precisely to that which the English magnates had made good
+in Magna Charta. In the councils of Constance (1414) and Basel (1431)
+the last attempts were made to turn the Church, under its temporal
+aspect, into a clerical feudalism, in which an oligarchy of cardinals
+would have become the representative of the whole Clerical Estate of
+the West and taken the place hitherto held by the Roman nobility.
+But by that time the feudal idea had long taken second place to that
+of the State, and so the Roman barons won the victory. The field of
+candidature for the Papacy was limited to the narrowest environs of
+Rome, and unlimited power over the organizations of the Church was
+_ipso facto_ secured to the centre. As for the Empire, it had long ago
+become a venerated shadow, like the Egyptian and the Chinese.
+
+In comparison with the immense dynamism of these decisions, the
+building-up of feudalism in the Classical world was slow, static,
+almost noiseless, so that it is hardly recognizable save from the
+traces of transition. In the Homeric epos as we have it now, every
+locality possesses its Basileus, who, it is fairly evident, was once
+a great vassal--we can see in the figure of Agamemnon the conditions
+in which the ruler of a wide region took the field with the train
+of his peers. But in the Greek world the dissolution of the feudal
+world was associated with the formation of the _city_-state, the
+political “point.” In consequence, the hereditary court-offices,
+the _archai_ and _timai_, the _prytaneis_, the Archons, and perhaps
+the original Prætor,[650] were all urban in nature; and the great
+families therefore developed, not separately in their counties, as in
+Egypt, China, and the West, but in the closest touch with the city,
+where they obtained possession of the rights of the King, one after
+the other, until nothing was left to the ruling house but that which
+could not be touched because of the gods--namely, the title attaching
+to its sacrificial function (hence the _rex sacrorum_). In the later
+parts of the Homeric epic (_c._ 800) it is the nobles who invite the
+king to take his seat, and even unseat him. The Odyssey really knows
+the kingship only as part of the saga--the actual Ithaca that it shows
+us is a city dominated by oligarchs.[651] The Spartiates, like the
+Roman partriciate of the Comitia Curiata, are the product of a feudal
+relation.[652] In the _phiditiæ_[653] there are evident remains of
+the old open table of the noble, but the power of the king has sunk
+to the shadowy dignity of the _rex sacrorum_ of Rome, or the “kings”
+of Sparta, who were liable to be imprisoned or removed at any time by
+the Ephors. The essential similarity of these conditions forces us to
+presume that in Rome the Tarquinian Tyrannis of 500 was preceded by a
+period of oligarchical dominance, and this view is supported by the
+unquestionably genuine tradition of the _Interrex_, a person appointed
+by the council of the nobles (the Senate) from amongst its own members
+to act until it should please them to elect a king again.
+
+Here, as elsewhere, there comes a time in which feudalism is falling
+into decay, but the coming State is not yet completed, the nation not
+yet “in form.” This is the fearful crisis that emerges everywhere
+in the shape of the Interregnum, and forms the boundary _between
+the feudal union and the class-State_. In Egypt feudalism was fully
+developed by about the middle of the Vth Dynasty. The Pharaoh Asosi
+gave away his domains literally piece by piece to the vassals, and,
+further, the rich fiefs of the priesthood were (exactly as in the
+West) free of taxation and gradually became the permanent property
+(“mortmain,” as we should say) of the great temples.[654] With the
+Vth Dynasty (_c._ 2530 B.C.) the “Hohenstaufen” age comes to an end.
+Under the shadow-kingship of the short-lived VIth Dynasty the princes
+(_rpati_) and counts (_hetio_) become independent; the high offices are
+all hereditary and the tomb-inscriptions show us more and more proud
+stress upon ancient lineage. That which later Egyptian historians have
+hidden under the reputed VIIth and VIIIth dynasties[655] is really
+half a century of anarchy and lawless conflicts between princes for
+each other’s domains or for the Pharaoh-title. In China, even I-Wang
+(934-909) was obliged by his vassals to give out all conquered lands,
+and to do so to sub-tenants nominated by them. In 842 Li-Wang was
+forced, with his heir, to flee, and the administration of the Empire
+was carried on by two individual princes. In this interregnum began the
+fall of the House of Chóu and the decline of the Imperial name into an
+honourable but meaningless title. It is the corresponding picture to
+that of the Interregnum in Germany, which began in 1254 and brought the
+Imperial power to its nadir of 1400 under Wenceslaus, simultaneously
+with the Renaissance-style of the _condottieri_ and the complete decay
+of the Papal power. After the death of Boniface VIII, who in 1302 had
+once again asserted the feudal power of the Papacy in the Bull _Unam
+sanctam_ and had consequently been arrested by the representatives
+of France, the Papacy experienced a century of banishment, anarchy,
+and impotence, while in the following century the Norman nobility of
+England for the most part perished in the contest of the houses of York
+and Lancaster for the throne.
+
+
+IV
+
+What this fall of Papacy and Empire meant was the victory of State
+over Estate. At the root of the feudal system there had been the
+feeling that the purpose of existence was that a “life” should be led
+in the light of what it meant. History was exhaustively comprised
+in the destinies of noble blood. But now the feeling sprang up that
+there was _something else_ besides, something to which even nobility
+was subordinate, and which it shared with all other classes (whether
+of status or of vocation), something intangible, an idea. Events
+came to be viewed, no longer from a frankly private-law standpoint,
+but under a “public”-law aspect. The State might (and almost without
+exception did) remain aristocratic to its core; its outward appearance
+might be scarcely altered by the transition from the feudal group to
+the Class-State; the idea that those outside the Estates possessed
+rights as well as duties might be still unknown; _but_ the feeling
+had become different, and the consciousness that Life existed to be
+lived on the heights of history had given way to the other sentiment,
+that it contained a _task_. The difference becomes very distinct when
+we contrast the policy of Rainald van Dassel (d. 1167)--one of the
+greatest German statesmen of all periods--with that of the Emperor
+Charles IV (d. 1378), and consider in parallel therewith the transition
+in Classical feeling from the “Themis” of the knightly age to the
+“Dike” of the growing Polis.[656] Themis involves only a claim, Dike
+implies a task as well.
+
+The State-idea in its sturdy youth is always--and self-evidently,
+with a naturalness rooted deep in animality itself--bound up with the
+conception of an individual ruler. The same holds good, with the same
+self-evidence, for every roused crowd in every decisive situation--as
+every riotous assembly and every moment of sudden danger demonstrates
+afresh.[657] Such crowds are units of feeling, but blind. They are
+“in form” for the onrush of events only when they are in the hands of
+the leader, who suddenly appears in their midst, is set at the head
+in a moment by that very unity of feeling, and finds an unconditional
+obedience. This process repeats itself in the formation of the great
+life-units that we call peoples and States, only more slowly and with
+surer meaning. In the high Cultures it is sometimes set aside or set
+back in favour of other modes of being “in form,” for the sake of a
+great symbol and artificially; but even then under the mask of these
+forms we practically always find _de facto_ an individual rulership,
+whether it be that of a King’s adviser or a party leader; and in every
+revolutionary upheaval the original state of things reappears.
+
+With this cosmic fact is bound up one of the most intimately inward
+traits of all directional life, the _inherited will_, which presents
+itself with the force of a natural phenomenon in every strong race
+and compellingly urges even the momentary leader (often quite
+unconsciously) to uphold his rank for the duration of his personal
+existence or, beyond it, for that of his blood streaming on through
+children and grandchildren. The same deep and plantlike trait inspires
+every real following, which feels in the continuance of the blood
+of leadership both a surety for and a symbol of the continuance of
+its own. It is precisely in revolutions that this primitive instinct
+comes out, full and strong and regardless of all principles. Precisely
+because of it the France of 1800 saw not only Napoleon, but also
+his hereditary position, as the true fulfilment of the Revolution.
+Theorists who, like Marx and Rousseau, start from conceptual ideals
+instead of from blood-facts have never grasped this immense force that
+dwells in the historical world, and have in consequence labelled its
+manifested effects as damnable and reactionary. But they are there,
+and with a force so insistent that even the symbolism of the high
+Cultures can only override them temporarily and artificially, as is
+shown in the engrossing of elective officers by particular families in
+the Classical, and the nepotism of the Baroque popes in our own case.
+Behind the fact that leadership is very often freely resigned, and
+the saying that “merit should rule,” there is practically always the
+rivalry of magnates, who have no objection in principle to hereditary
+rulership, but prevent it in practice because each one of them secretly
+claims it for his own blood. This state of active, creative jealousy is
+the foundation on which the forms of Classical oligarchy are built up.
+
+The combination of both elements produces the idea of Dynasty. This
+is so deeply rooted in the Cosmic and so closely interwoven into the
+factual web of historical life that the State-ideas of each and all the
+Cultures are _modifications of this one principle_, from the passionate
+affirmative of the Faustian to the resolute negative of the Classical
+Soul. The ripening of the State-idea of a Culture is associated with
+the city and even the adolescence of the city. Nations, historical
+peoples, are town-building peoples.[658] The _capital_ takes the place
+of the castle and the palace as the centre of high history, and in it
+the feeling of the exercise of power, Themis, transforms itself into
+that of government, Dike. Here feudal unity is inwardly overcome by
+national, even in the consciousness of the First Estate itself, and
+here the bare fact of rulership elevates itself into the symbol of
+_Sovereignty_.
+
+And so, with the sinking of feudalism, Faustian history becomes
+dynastic history. From little centres where princely families have
+their seats (whence they “spring,” as the phrase goes, reminding us
+of plant and property), the shaping of nations proceeds--nations
+of strictly aristocratic constitution, but yet so that the State
+conditions the being of the Estate. The genealogical principle already
+ruling in the feudal nobility and the yeoman families, the expression
+of the feeling for expanse and the will-to-history, has become so
+powerful that the appearance of nations transcending the strong
+unities of language and landscape is dependent upon the destinies
+of ruling houses. Marriages and deaths sever or unite the blood of
+whole populations.[659] Where a Lotharingian and a Burgundian dynasty
+failed to take shape, there also nations already embryonic failed to
+develop. The doom that overhung the Hohenstaufen involved more than the
+imperial crown. For Germany and Italy it meant for centuries a deep
+unsatisfied longing for a united German-Italian nation, while the House
+of Habsburg, on the contrary, enabled, not a German, but an Austrian
+nation to develop.
+
+In the Magian world, with its cavern-feeling, the dynastic principle
+was quite otherwise constituted. The Classical princeps, the legitimate
+successor of tyrants and tribunes, was the embodiment of the Demos.
+As Janus was the door and Vesta the hearth, so Cæsar was the people.
+He was the last creation of Orphic religiousness. The “Dominus et
+Deus,” on the contrary, was Magian, a Shah participating in the divine
+Fire (the _hvareno_ of the Mazdaist empire of the Sassanids, which
+becomes the aureole in Pagan and Christian Byzantium), which radiates
+about him and makes him _pius, felix, invictus_ (the last-named, from
+Commodus’s reign, his official title).[660] In Byzantium in the third
+century of our era the ruler-type underwent the same transition as
+was implied in the taking-down of Augustus’s civil-service state to
+build Diocletian’s feudalism. “The new creation begun by Aurelian and
+Probus and built up on the ruins by Diocletian and Constantine was
+about as alien to the Classical world and the principate as the empire
+of Charlemagne.”[661] The Magian ruler governed the visible portion of
+the general Consensus of the orthodox, which was Church, State, and
+Nation in one,[662] as Augustine described it in his _Civitas Dei_. The
+Western ruler is by the grace of God monarch in the _historical_ world;
+his people is subordinated to him because God has invested him with it.
+But in matters of faith he is himself a subordinate--to God’s Vicar
+on earth, or to his own conscience, as the case may be. That is the
+separation of State authority and Church authority, the great Faustian
+conflict between Time and Space. When, in 800, the Pope crowned the
+Emperor, he _chose_ a new ruler for himself in order that he himself
+might thrive. Whereas the Emperor in Byzantium was, according to
+Magian world-feeling, his spiritual as well as his secular superior,
+an Emperor in the Frank lands was his _servant_ in spiritual matters,
+besides being (perhaps) his arm in secular affairs. As an idea, the
+Papacy could arise only by separation from the Caliphate, for the Pope
+is _included_ in the Caliph.
+
+For this very reason, however, the choice of the Magian ruler cannot
+be bound down to a genealogical succession-law. It issues from the
+consensus of the ruling blood-kindred, out of whom the Holy Ghost
+speaks and designates the Chosen One. When Theodosius died, in 550, a
+relative, the nun Pulcheria, formally gave her hand to the old senator
+Marcianus, thereby incorporating this statesman in the family and
+securing the throne to him and continuance to the “dynasty”;[663] and
+this act, like many similar occurrences in the Sassanid and Abbassid
+houses, was taken as the outcome of a hint from above.
+
+In China, the Emperor-idea of the early Chóu period, which was strictly
+bound up with feudalism, soon became a dream, which, rapidly and with
+increasing distinctness, came to reflect a whole preceding world
+in the form of three dynasties of Emperors and myth-Emperors more
+ancient still.[664] But, for the dynasties of the system of states
+that thereupon grew up (in which the title King, _Wang_, came at last
+into perfectly general use) strict rules came into force for royal
+successions, legitimacy--a notion quite alien to the early time--became
+a power to conjure with,[665] and extinction of lines, adoptions and
+_mésalliances_ led, as in the Baroque of the West, to innumerable wars
+of succession.[666] Some principle of legitimacy, too, surely underlay
+the remarkable fact that the rulers of the Egyptian XIIth dynasty,
+with whom the late period of the Culture ended, had their sons crowned
+during their own lifetime.[667] The inward relationship between these
+three dynastic ideas is yet another proof that Being in these three
+Cultures was akin.
+
+It requires a close insight into the political form-language of the
+Classical world to perceive that here also the course of things was
+exactly the same, and that it comprised not only the transition from
+feudal union to class-State, but even the dynastic principle as well.
+Classical being, indeed, said no to everything that might draw it
+into distances either of space or of time, and even in the fact-world
+of history ringed itself with creations that had something of the
+defensive in them. But all this narrowing and curtailing presupposes
+the thing against which it is striving to maintain itself. The
+Dionysiac squandering, and the Orphic negation, of the Classical body
+contained in the very _form_ of their protest the Apollinian ideal of
+perfect bodily being.
+
+Individual rulership and the will to transmit to heirs were
+unmistakably taken for granted in the oldest kingship.[668] But they
+had become questionable even by 800, as the rôle of Telemachus in the
+older parts of the Odyssey indicates. The royal title was frequently
+borne by great vassals and the most conspicuous of the nobles. In
+Sparta and in Lycia there were two of them, and in the Phæacian city
+of the epic and in many actual cities there were more. Next comes the
+splitting-off of offices from dignities. Lastly, the kingship itself
+becomes an office which the nobility confers (though at first, perhaps,
+only upon members of the old royal family); thus in Sparta the Ephors,
+as representing the First Estate, were in no wise limited in their
+choice by rule; and in Corinth from about 750 the royal clan of the
+Bacchiadæ abolished hereditary succession, and on each occasion set up
+a _prytaneus_ with royal rank from within their own body. The great
+offices, which likewise were hereditary at first, came to be for one
+life only, then were limited to a term, and lastly became annual, and,
+further, were so arranged that there were more holders than offices,
+and the leadership was exercised by each in turn--the custom which,
+as is well known, led to the disaster of Cannæ. These annual offices,
+from the Etruscan annual dictature[669] to the Doric ephorate (which
+is found in Heraclea and Messene as well as Sparta) are firmly bound
+up with the essence of the Polis, and they reach their full structure
+about 650. Exactly at the corresponding date of the Western class-State
+(end of the fifteenth century), the hereditary power of dynasties was
+being secured by the Emperor Maximilian and his marriage-politics
+(against the claims of the Electors), by Ferdinand of Aragon, Henry VII
+of England, and Louis XI of France.[670]
+
+But with the increasing emphasis upon the Classical here and now, the
+priesthood, which had the beginnings of an Estate in it, became _pari
+passu_ a mere aggregate of city officials. The capital, so to call it,
+of the Homeric kingship, instead of being the centre for the radiation
+of State influence in all directions into the distance, contracted
+its magic circle until State and city became identical. Thereby, of
+course, the nobility was fused with the patriciate, and if even in the
+Gothic the representation of the young cities (for example, the English
+Commons or the French States-General) was exclusively by patricians,
+how much more so in the powerful city-state of the Classical! Not
+indeed in idea, _but in fact_, it was a pure kingless aristocratic
+State. The strictly Apollinian “form” of the growing Polis is called
+_oligarchy_.
+
+And thus, at the close of the early periods of both these Cultures, we
+see two principles parallel and contrasted, the Faustian-genealogical
+and the Apollinian-oligarchic; two kinds of constitutional law, of
+Dike. The one is supported by an unmeasured sense of expanse, reaches
+back deep into the past with form-tradition, thinks forward with the
+same intense will-to-endure into the remotest future; but in the
+present, too, works for political effectiveness over broad expanses by
+well-considered dynastic marriages and by the truly Faustian, dynamic,
+and contrapuntal politics that we call _diplomacy_. The other, wholly
+corporeal and statuesque, is self-limited by its policy of _autarkeia_
+to the nearest and the most immediate present, and at every point
+stoutly denies that which Western being affirms.
+
+Both the dynastic state and the city-state presuppose the city itself.
+But there is this difference, that a seat of government in the West,
+though it may be (and frequently is) far from being the greatest city
+of the land, is a force-centre in a field of political tensions such
+that every occurrence, in however remote a corner, vibrates generally
+throughout the whole--whereas in the Classical, life huddles closer
+and closer until it reaches the grotesque phenomenon of Synœcism--the
+very acme of the Euclidean will-to-form in the political world. It
+is impossible to imagine the State unless and until the nation sits
+physically concentrated in one heap, as one _body_; it must be _seen_,
+and even seen “at a glance.” And while the Faustian tendency is more
+and more to diminish the number of dynastic centres--so that even
+Maximilian I could see looming in the distance a dynastically secure
+universal monarchy of his house--the Classical world fell apart into
+innumerable petty points, which, almost as soon as they came into
+existence, started to do that which for Classical mankind was almost
+a necessity of thought and the purest expression of _autarkeia_--to
+destroy one another.[671]
+
+Synœcism with its consequence, the creation of the Polis-type proper,
+was exclusively the work of _aristocracy_. It was they that established
+the Classical city-state, and for themselves alone; it was the
+drawing-together of country nobility and patriciate that brought it
+into form. The vocational classes were already on the spot, and the
+peasantry ceased to count from the class point of view. And by the
+concentration of noble power at one point the kingship of the feudal
+period was shattered.
+
+With these glimpses into Greece to go upon, we may venture, though
+under all reserves of course, to outline the history of primitive
+Rome. The Roman synœcism--the assembling of widely scattered noble
+families--is identical with the “founding” of the city, an Etruscan
+undertaking of the beginning of the seventh century.[672] Facing
+the royal stronghold of the Capitol, there had long been two other
+settlements on the Palatine and the Quirinal. To the first of these
+belonged the ancient goddess Diva Rumina[673] and the Etruscan Ruma
+clan;[674] the god of the second was Quirinus Pater. From these comes
+the dual name of Romans and “Quirites,” and the dual priesthoods
+of the Salii and Luperci, which adhered to the two hills. Now, as
+the three blood-tribes named Ramnes, Tities, and Luceres are in all
+probability common to all Etruscan localities,[675] they must have
+existed in both of those which concern us here; and thus are explained,
+on the one hand, the number _six_ of centuries of equites, of military
+tribunes, of aristocratic Vestals, and, on the other, the number
+_two_ of the prætors (or consuls) who were, quite early, attached
+to the King as representatives of the nobles and gradually deprived
+him of all influence. Already by 600 the constitution of Rome must
+have been a strong oligarchy of “Patres” with a shadow-kingship[676]
+as figure-head. Thus both the older theory of an expulsion of the
+kings, and the newer of a slow disintegration of the royal power, can
+stand side by side after all, the former as referring to the fall of
+the Tarquinian Tyrannis, which (as everywhere else in the Classical
+world--Pisistratus in Athens, for example) had set itself up in
+opposition to the oligarchy about the middle of the sixth century;
+the latter as referring to the slow disintegration of the feudal power
+of the (may we say) Homeric kingship by the aristocratic city-state,
+_before_ the “foundation,” so-called--the crisis, probably, in which
+the prætors emerged, as the Archons and Ephors emerged elsewhere.
+
+This Polis was no less strictly aristocratic than the Western
+class-State, with its nobility, clergy, and higher burgesses. The
+residue of the people belonging to it was merely its _object_, but--in
+the West the object of its political _care_, and in the Classical the
+object of its political _carelessness_. For here “_Carpe diem_” was the
+motto of the oligarchy as well as of others. It proclaims itself aloud
+in the poems of Theognis and the Song of Hybrias the Cretan. It made
+Classical finance till right into its latest phases--from the piracy
+practised by Polycrates upon his own people to the proscriptions of the
+Roman Triumvirs--into a more or less hand-to-mouth seizing of resources
+for the moment. In jurisprudence it emerges with unparalleled logic in
+the limitation of Roman edict-law to the term of office of the one-year
+prætor.[677] And, lastly, it is seen in the ever-growing practice of
+filling military, legal, and administrative offices (particularly
+the _more_ important of them) by lot--a kind of homage to Tyche, the
+goddess of the Moment.
+
+This was the Classical world’s manner of being politically “in form”
+and, correspondingly, of thinking and feeling. There are no exceptions.
+The Etruscans were as much under its domination as the Dorians and
+the Macedonians.[678] When Alexander and his successors dotted the
+Orient far and wide with their Hellenistic cities, they did so
+without conscious choice, for they could not imagine any other form
+of political organization. Antioch was to be Syria, and Alexandria
+Egypt. The latter, under the Ptolemies and later under the Cæsars,
+was, not indeed legally, but certainly in practice, a Polis on a vast
+scale--for the country outside, long reverted to townless fellahdom
+and managed by immemorial precedents, stood at its gates like an alien
+frontier.[679] The Roman Imperium was nothing but the last and greatest
+Classical city-state standing on foundations of a colossal synœcism.
+Under Marcus Aurelius the rhetor Aristides could say with perfect
+justification that it had “brought together this world in the name of
+one city: wheresoever a man may be born in it, it is at its centre that
+he dwells.” Even the conquered populations of the Empire--the wandering
+desert-tribes, the upland-valley communities of the Alps--were
+constituted as _civitates_. Livy thinks invariably in the forms of
+the city-state, and for Tacitus provincial history simply does not
+exist. When, in 49, Pompey, withdrawing before Cæsar, gave up Rome as
+militarily unimportant and betook himself to the East to create there
+a firm base of operations, he was doomed. Giving up the city, he had,
+in the eyes of the ruling classes, given up the State. To them Rome was
+all.[680]
+
+These city-states were in principle inextensible. Their number could
+increase, but not their ambit. The notion that the transformation of
+the Roman _clientela_ into a voting _plebs_, and the creation of the
+country tribes, meant a breach in the Polis-idea is incorrect. It was
+in Rome as in Attica--the whole life of the State remained as before
+limited to one point, which was the Agora, the Forum. However far away
+those to whom citizenship was granted might live--in Hannibal’s day
+it might be anywhere in Italy, and later anywhere in the world--the
+_exercise_ of his political right depended upon _personal presence_
+in the Forum. Hence the majority of the citizens were, not legally,
+but practically without influence in political business.[681] What
+citizenship meant for them, therefore, was simply the duty of military
+service and the enjoyment of the city’s domestic law.[682] But even
+for the citizen coming to Rome, political power was limited by a
+second and _artificial_ synœcism which came into existence after, and
+as the result of, enfranchisement of the peasant, and can only be
+understood as an unconscious effort to maintain the idea of the Polis
+strictly unimpaired; the new citizens were inscribed, regardless of
+their numbers, in a very few tribes (eight, under the Lex Julia), and
+were always, therefore, in a minority in the Comitia relatively to the
+citizens of the older franchise.
+
+And naturally so, for this _civitas_ was regarded through and through
+as one body, a σῶμα. That which did not belong to it was out of
+its law, _hostis_. The gods and the heroes stood above, the slave
+(not quite to be called human, according to Aristotle) below, this
+aggregate of persons.[683] But the individual was a ζῶον πολιτικόν
+in a sense that would be regarded by us, who think and live in our
+expanse-feeling, as an utter slavery; he existed _only_ by reason of
+his membership of an individual Polis. Owing to this Euclidean feeling,
+the nobility as a self-contained body was at first synonymous with
+the Polis--to such an extent, indeed, that even in the Twelve Tables
+marriage between patricians and plebeians was forbidden and the Spartan
+Ephors began their term of office, according to ancient custom, with
+a declaration of war against the Helots. The relation was reversed
+whenever in consequence of a revolution the non-noble became _the_
+Demos--but its meaning remained. As in inward, so also in outward
+relationships, the _body_ politic was the foundation of all events
+throughout Classical history. The cities, hundreds of them, lay in wait
+for each other, each as self-gathered, politically and economically,
+as it was possible to make it, ready to bite, letting fly on the
+smallest excuse, and having as its war-aim, not the extension of its
+own state, but the extinction of the other side’s. Wars ended with the
+destruction of the enemy’s city and the killing or enslavement of his
+citizens, just as revolutions ended with the massacre or expulsion of
+the losers and the confiscation of their property by the victorious
+party. The natural interstate condition of the West is a close network
+of diplomatic relations, which may be broken through by wars; but the
+Classical law of nations assumes war as a normal condition, interrupted
+from time to time by peace treaties, and a declaration of war merely
+re-established the natural state of policy. Only so do the forty- and
+fifty-year peace treaties, _spondai_ (such as the famous one of Nicias
+in 421), become intelligible, as temporary guarantee-treaties.
+
+These two State-forms, with the styles of policy appropriate to each,
+are assured by the close of the Early period. The State-idea has
+triumphed over the feudal union, but it is the Estates that carry that
+idea, and the nation has political existence only as their sum.
+
+
+V
+
+With the beginning of the Late period there is a decisive turn, where
+city and country are in equilibrium and the powers proper to the city,
+money and brains, have become so strong that they feel themselves, as
+non-estate, an equal match for the old Estates. It is the moment when
+the State-idea finally rises superior to the Estates and begins to set
+up _in their place_ the concept of the Nation.
+
+The State has fought and won to its rights along a line of advance
+from feudal union to the aristocratic State. In the latter the Estates
+exist only with reference to the State, instead of vice versa, but, on
+the other hand, the disposition of things is such that the Government
+only meets the governed nation when and in so far as the nation is
+class-ordered. Everyone belongs to the nation, but only an élite to the
+classes, and these alone count politically.
+
+But the nearer the State approaches its pure form, and the more it
+becomes _absolute_--that is, independent of any other form-ideal--the
+more heavily the concept of the nation tells against that of class,
+and there comes a moment when the nation is governed _as such_,
+and distinctions of “standing” become purely social. Against this
+evolution--which is one of the necessities of the Culture, inevitable,
+irrevocable--the old noble and priestly classes make one more effort
+of resistance. For them, now, _everything_ is at stake--the heroic and
+the saintly, the old law, rank, blood--and, from their point of view,
+against what?
+
+In the West this struggle of the old Estates against the State-power
+took the form of the _Fronde_. In the Classical world, where there
+was no dynasty to represent the future and the aristocracy alone
+had political existence, we find that a dynastic or quasi-dynastic
+embodiment of the State-idea actually _formed itself_, and, supported
+by the non-privileged part of the nation, raised this latter for the
+first time to power. That was the mission of the _Tyrannis_.
+
+In this change from the class-State to the absolute State, which
+allowed no measures of validity but its own, the dynasties of the
+West--and those of Egypt and of China likewise--called the non-estate
+to their aid, _thereby recognizing it as a political quantity_. Herein
+lies the real importance of the struggle against the Fronde, in which,
+initially, the powers of the greater cities could not but see advantage
+to themselves, for here the ruler was standing forth in the name of the
+State, the care of all, and he was fighting the nobility because it
+wanted to uphold the _Estate_ as a political magnitude.
+
+In the Polis, on the contrary, where the State consisted exclusively
+in the form and embodied no hereditary head, the necessity of bringing
+out the unclassed on behalf of the State-idea produced the Tyrannis,
+in which a family or a faction of the nobility itself assumed the
+dynastic rôle, without which action on the part of the Third Estate
+would have been impossible. Late Classical historians were too remote
+from this process to seize its meaning, and dealt with it merely in
+terms of externals of private life. In reality, the Tyrannis was _the
+State_, and oligarchy opposed it under the banner of class. It rested,
+therefore, upon the support of peasants and burghers--in Athens (_c._
+580) the Diakrii and Paralii parties. Therefore, again, it backed the
+Dionysiac and Orphic cults against the Apollinian; thus in Attica
+Pisistratus forced the worship of Dionysus[684] on the peasantry,
+in Sicyon Clisthenes forbade the recital of the Homeric poems,[685]
+and in Rome it was almost certainly in the time of the Tarquins that
+the trinity Demeter (Ceres)-Dionysus-Kore was introduced.[686] Its
+temple was dedicated in 483 by Spurius Cassius, the same who perished
+later in an attempt to reintroduce the Tyrannis. The Ceres temple
+was the sanctuary of the Plebs, and its managers, the ædiles, were
+their trusted spokesmen before the tribunate was ever heard of.[687]
+The Tyrants, like the princes of the Western Baroque, were liberals
+in a broad sense of the word that ceased to be possible for them in
+the subsequent stage of bourgeois dominance. But the Classical also
+began at that time to pass round the word that “money makes the man
+(χρήματ’ ἀνήρ).”[688] The sixth-century Tyrannis brought the Polis-idea
+to its conclusions and created the constitutional concept of the
+Citizen, the _Polites_, the _Civis_, the sum of these, irrespective of
+their class-provenance, forming the _soma_ of the city-state. When,
+therefore, the oligarchy contrived to win after all--thanks once more
+to the Classical craving for the present, and the consequent fear and
+hatred evoked by the quasi-will-to-duration of the dynasts--the concept
+of the citizen was there, firmly established, and the non-patrician had
+learned to regard _himself_ as an estate _vis-à-vis_ a “rest.” He had
+become a political party--the word “democracy” (in its specifically
+Classical sense) now acquired a really serious content--and what he
+set himself to do was, no longer to come to the aid of the State, but
+_to be himself the State_ as the nobility had been before. He began to
+count--money and heads, for the money-census and the general franchise
+are alike bourgeois weapons--whereas an aristocracy does not count,
+but values, and votes not by heads, but by classes. As the absolute
+State came out of Fronde and First Tyrannis, so it perished in French
+Revolution and Second Tyrannis. In this second conflict, which is
+already one of defence, the dynasty returns to the side of the nobility
+in order to guard the State-idea against a new class-rule, that of the
+bourgeois.
+
+In Egypt, too, the period between Fronde and Revolution is hall-marked.
+It is the Middle Kingdom. The XIIth Dynasty (2000-1788)--in particular
+Amenemhet I and Sesostris I--had established the absolute State
+in severe conflicts with the baronage. The first of these rulers,
+as a famous poem of the time relates, barely escaped from a court
+conspiracy, and the biography of Sinuhet[689] shows us that after
+his death, which was kept secret for a time, rebellion threatened.
+The third was murdered by palace officials. We learn from the
+inscriptions in the family grave of the earl Chmenotep[690] that the
+cities had become rich and almost independent, and warred with each
+other. Certainly they cannot have been smaller at that time than the
+Greek cities at the time of the Persian Wars. It was on them and on
+a certain number of loyal magnates that the dynasty rested.[691]
+Finally, Sesostris III (1887-1850) succeeded in completely abolishing
+feudal nobility. Thenceforward there was only a court-nobility and a
+single, admirably ordered bureau-State;[692] but already some lamented
+that people of standing were reduced to misery and that the “sons of
+nobodies” enjoyed rank and consideration.[693] Democracy was beginning
+and the great social evolution of the Hyksos period was brewing.
+
+The corresponding place in China is that of the Ming-Chu (or Pa,
+685-591). These were Protectors of princely origin, who exercised
+an unconstitutional, but none the less real, power over a world of
+states weltering in anarchy, and called congresses of princes for
+the restoration of order and the recognition of stable political
+principles, even summoning the “Ruler of the Middle” himself (now
+become totally unimportant) out of the house of Chóu. The first was
+Hwang of Tsi (d. 645), who called the Diet of 659 and of whom Confucius
+wrote that he had rescued China from a reversion to barbarism. Their
+name Ming-dshu became later, like the word “tyrant,” a term of obloquy,
+because later men were unwilling to see in the phenomenon anything
+but a power unauthorized by law--but it is beyond all question that
+these great diplomatists were an element working with a devoted care
+for the State and the historical future against the old Estates, and
+supported by the young classes of mind and money. It is a high Culture
+that speaks to us in the little that we so far know about them from
+Chinese sources. Some were writers; others selected philosophers to be
+their ministers. It is a matter of indifference whether we mentally
+parallel them with Richelieu or with Wallenstein or with Periander--in
+any case it is with them that the “people” first emerges as a political
+quantity.[694] It is the outlook and high diplomacy of genuine
+Baroque--the absolute State sets itself up in principle as the opponent
+of the aristocratic State, and wins through.
+
+In this lies the close parallelism of these events with the Fronde
+of Western Europe. In France the Crown after 1614 ceased to summon
+the State-General, this body having shown itself to be too strong
+for the united forces of State and bourgeoisie. In England Charles I
+similarly tried to govern without Parliament after 1628. In Germany,
+at the same time, the Thirty Years’ War broke out. The magnitude of
+its religious significance is apt to overshadow for us the other issue
+involved, and it must not be forgotten that it was also an effort to
+bring to a decision the struggle between imperial power and the Fronde
+of the _great_ electors, and that between the individual princes and
+the lesser Frondes of their local estate-assemblies. But the centre
+of world-politics then lay in _Spain_. There, in conjunction with the
+high courtesies generally, the diplomatic style of the Baroque had
+evolved in the cabinet of Philip II; and the dynastic principle--which
+embodied the absolute State _vis-à-vis_ the Cortes--had attained to its
+highest development in the course of the long struggle with the House
+of Bourbon. The attempt to align England also in the Spanish system had
+failed under Philip II, when Queen Mary, his wife, was disappointed of
+an heir already expected and announced. But now, under Philip IV, the
+idea of a universal monarchy spanning the oceans revived--no longer
+the mystic dream-monarchy of the early Gothic, the “Holy Roman Empire,
+German by nation,” but the tangible ideal of a world-dominion in
+Habsburg hands, which was to centre in Madrid and to have the solid
+possession of India and America and the already sensible power of
+money as its foundations. It was at this time, too, that the Stuarts
+were tempted to secure their endangered position by marrying the heir
+of the English and Scottish thrones to a Spanish Infanta; but in the
+end Madrid preferred to link itself with its own collateral line in
+Vienna, and so James I readdressed his marriage-alliance proposals to
+the opposition party of the Bourbons. The futile complications of this
+family policy contributed more than anything else to bind the Puritan
+movement and the English Fronde into one great Revolution.
+
+In these great decisions the actual occupants of the thrones were--as
+in “contemporary” China--only secondary figures compared with great
+individual statesmen, in whose hands the fate of the West rested for
+whole decades. Olivarez in Madrid and the Spanish Ambassador Oñate
+in Vienna were then the most powerful personages in Europe. Their
+opponents were Wallenstein, standing for the Empire-idea in Germany,
+and Richelieu, standing for the absolute State in France--and these
+were succeeded a little later by Mazarin in France, Cromwell in
+England, Oldenbarneveldt in Holland, Oxenstierna in Sweden. Not until
+the Great Elector of Brandenburg do we meet again a monarch having
+political importance of his own.
+
+Wallenstein, unconsciously, began where the Hohenstaufen had stopped.
+Since the death of Frederick II, in 1250, the power of the Estates
+of the Empire had become unlimited, and it was against them, and as
+champion of an absolute emperor’s state, that he fought during the
+first tenure of command. Had he been a greater diplomatist, had he
+been clearer and above all more resolute (for actually he was timid in
+the presence of decisive turnings), and had he, in particular, taken
+the trouble as Richelieu did to bring the person of the monarch under
+his influence--then probably it would have been all up with princedom
+within the Empire. He saw in these princes rebels, to be unseated
+and dispossessed of their lands; at the peak of his power (end of
+1629), when militarily he held Germany in the hollow of his hand, he
+said aloud in conversation that the Emperor ought to be master in the
+Empire as the Kings of France and Spain were masters of their own. His
+army, which was “self-supporting” and by reason of its numbers also
+independent of the Estates, was the first instance in German history
+of an Imperial army of European significance; in comparison with
+it Tilly’s army of the Fronde (for that was what the League really
+was) counted for little. When Wallenstein, in 1628, leaguered before
+Stralsund, visualizing a Habsburg sea-power in the Baltic wherewith
+to take the Bourbon system in the rear--and just then Richelieu was
+besieging La Rochelle, with better fortune--hostilities between himself
+and the League had become almost unavoidable. He absented himself
+from the Diet of Regensburg in 1630, saying that its seat “would
+presently be in Paris.” This was the most serious political error
+of his life, for in his absence the Frondist Electors defeated the
+Emperor by threatening to displace him in favour of Louis XIII, and
+forced him to dismiss his general. And with that, though it did not
+realize the consequence of the step, the central power in Germany gave
+away its army. Henceforth Richelieu supported the greater Fronde in
+Germany with the object of breaking the Spanish power there, while on
+the other side Olivarez, and Wallenstein as soon as he regained his
+power, allied themselves with the French aristocrats, who thereupon
+took the offensive under the Queen-mother and Gaston of Orléans. But
+the Imperial power had missed its grand chance. The Cardinal won in
+both games. In 1632 he executed the last of the Montmorencys[695]
+and brought the Catholic Electors of Germany into open alliance with
+France. And thenceforward Wallenstein, becoming unsure of his own final
+purposes, learned more and more against the Spanish idea, thinking
+that he could keep the Empire-idea clear of it, and so _ipso facto_
+approached nearer and nearer to the standpoint of the Estates--like
+Marshal Turenne in the French Fronde a few years later. _This was the
+decisive turn in later German history._ With Wallenstein’s secession
+the absolute emperor-state became impossible, and his murder in 1634
+did not remedy matters, for the Emperor had no substitute to take his
+place.
+
+And yet it was just then that the conjuncture was favourable once more.
+For in 1640 the decisive conflict between Crown and estates broke
+out simultaneously in Spain, France, and England. In almost every
+Spanish province the Cortes rose against Olivarez; Portugal, and with
+it India and Africa, fell away for ever, and it took years to regain
+even Catalonia and Naples. In England--just as in the Thirty Years’
+War--the constitutional conflict between the Crown and the gentry
+who dominated the Commons was carefully separated from the religious
+side of the Revolution, deep as was the interpenetration of the two.
+But the growing resistance that Cromwell encountered in the lower
+class in particular--which drove him, all unwillingly, into military
+dictatorship--and the later popularity of the restored monarchy
+show the extent to which, over and above all religious differences,
+aristocratic interest had been concerned in bringing about the fall of
+the dynasty.
+
+At the very time of Charles I’s trial and execution an insurrection in
+Paris was forcing the French Court to flee. Men shouted for a republic
+and built barricades. Had Cardinal de Retz been more of a Cromwell,
+victory of the Estates over Mazarin would have been at least a
+possibility. But the issue of this grand general crisis of the West was
+determined by the weight and the destinies of a few personalities, and
+took shape in such a way that it was in England _alone_ that the Fronde
+(represented by Parliament) subjected the State and the kingship to its
+control--confirming this control, in the “glorious Revolution” of 1688,
+so permanently that even to-day essential parts of the old Norman State
+continue established. In France and Spain the kingship won unqualified
+victory. In Germany the Peace of Westphalia placed the Fronde of the
+greater princes in an English relation towards the Emperor and in the
+French relation towards the lesser Fronde of the local princes. In
+the Empire as such, the Estates ruled; in its provinces, the Dynasty.
+Thenceforth the Imperial dignity, like the English kingship, was a
+name, surrounded by relics of Spanish stateliness dating from the early
+Baroque; while the individual princes, like the leading families of
+the English aristocracy, succumbed to the model of Paris and their
+duodecimo absolutism was, politically and socially, bound in the
+Versailles style. So, in this field and in that, the decision fell in
+favour of the Bourbons and against the Habsburgs, a decision already
+visible to all men in the Peace of the Pyrenees of 1659.
+
+With this epochal turn the State, which as a possibility is inherent
+in every Culture, was actualized and attained to such a height of
+“condition” as could neither be surpassed nor for long maintained.
+Already there is a quiet breath of autumn in the air when Frederick
+the Great is entertaining at Sans Souci. These are the years too, in
+which the great special arts attain to their last, most refined, and
+most intellectual maturity--side by side with the fine orators of the
+Athenian Agora there are Zeuxis and Praxiteles, side by side with the
+filigree of Cabinet-diplomacy the music of Bach and Mozart.
+
+This cabinet-politics has itself become a high art, an artistic
+satisfaction to all who have a finger in it, marvellous in its
+subtlety and elegance, courtly, refined, working mysteriously at great
+distances--for already Russia, the North American colonies, even
+the Indian states are put into play in order by the mere weight of
+surprising combinations to bring about decisions at quite other points
+on the globe. It is a game with strict rules, a game of intercepted
+letters and secret confidants, of alliances and congresses within a
+system of governments which even then was called (with deep meaning)
+the “concert” of the powers--full of _noblesse_ and _esprit_, to use
+the phrases of the period, a mode of keeping history “in form” never
+and nowhere else imagined, or even imaginable.
+
+In the Western world, whose sphere of influence is already almost the
+sphere itself, the period of the absolutist State covers scarcely a
+century and a half--from 1660, when Bourbon triumphed over Habsburg in
+the Peace of the Pyrenees and the Stuarts returned to England, to the
+Coalition Wars directed against the French Revolution, in which London
+triumphed over Paris, or, if one prefers it so, over that Congress of
+Vienna in which the old diplomacy, that of blood and not money, gave
+the world its grand farewell performance. Corresponding periods are
+the Age of Pericles between the First and the Second Tyrannis, and the
+Tshun-tsiu, “Spring and Autumn,” as the Chinese call the time, between
+the Protectors and the “Contending States.”
+
+In this last phase of dignified politics with forms traditional but
+not popular, familiar but not smiled at, the culminating points are
+marked by the extinction of the two Habsburg lines in quick succession
+and the diplomatic and warlike events that throng in 1700-10 round the
+Spanish, and in 1740-60 round the Austrian succession.[696] It is the
+climax also of the genealogical principle. _Bella gerant alii; tu,
+felix Austria, nube!_ was indeed “an extension of war by other means.”
+The phrase indeed was coined long before (in connexion with Maximilian
+I), but it was not until now that it reached its fullest effects.
+Fronde Wars pass over into Succession Wars, decided upon in cabinets
+and fought out chivalrously by small armies and according to strict
+conventions.[697] What was contended for was the heritage of half the
+world which the marriage-politics of early Baroque had brought together
+in Habsburg hands. The State is still “well up to form”; the nobility
+has become a loyal aristocracy of court and service, carrying on the
+wars of the Crown and organizing its administration. Side by side with
+the France of Louis XIV, there presently arose in Prussia a masterpiece
+of State organization. From the conflicts of the Great Elector with
+his Estates (1660) to the death of Frederick the Great (who received
+Mirabeau in audience three years before the Fall of the Bastille)
+Prussia’s road is the same as France’s, and the outcome in each case is
+a State which was in every point the opposite of the English order.
+
+For the situation was otherwise in the Empire and in England. There
+the Frondes had won, and the nations were governed, not absolutely,
+but aristocratically. But between England and the Empire, again, there
+was the immense difference that England, as an island, could largely
+dispense with governmental watchfulness, and that her peers in the
+Upper House and her gentry in the Lower founded their actions on the
+self-evidentness of England’s greatness;[698] whereas in the Empire
+the upper stratum of the land-princes--with the Diet at Regensburg as
+their Upper House--were chiefly concerned with educating into distinct
+“peoples” the fragments of the nation that had accidentally fallen to
+their respective hands, and with marking off their scattered bits of
+fatherland as strictly as possible from other “peoples’” bits. In place
+of the world-horizon that there had been in Gothic days, provincial
+horizon was cultivated by thought and deed. The idea of the Nation
+itself was abandoned to the realm of dreams--that _other_ world which
+is not of race but of language, not of Destiny but of Causality. And in
+it arose the idea, and finally the fact, of the “people” as conceived
+by poets and thinkers, who founded themselves a republic in the clouds
+of verse and logic and at last came to believe that politics consisted
+in idealistic writing and reading and speaking, and not in deed and
+resolve--so that even to-day real deeds and resolves are confused with
+mere expressions of inclination.
+
+In England the victory of the gentry and the Declaration of Rights
+(1689) in reality put an end to the State. Parliament put William III
+on his throne, just as later it prevented George I and George II from
+vacating theirs, in the interest of its class. The word “State,” which
+had been current as early as the Tudors, fell into disuse--it has
+become impossible to translate into English either Louis XIV’s “_L’état
+c’est moi_” or Frederick the Great’s “_Ich bin der erste Diener meiner
+Staates_.” On the other hand, the word “society” established itself
+as the expression of the fact that the nation was “in form” under
+the class- and not under the state-régime; the same word that with a
+significant misunderstanding Rousseau and the Continental rationalists
+generally took over to express the hatred of the Third Estate for
+authority.[699] But in England authority as “the Government” was
+clear-cut and well understood. From George I onwards its centre was the
+Cabinet, a body which constitutionally did not exist at all[700] and
+factually was an executive committee of the faction of the nobility
+in command for the time being. Absolutism existed, but it was the
+absolutism of a class-delegation. The idea of “_lèse-majeste_” was
+transferred to Parliament, as the immunity of the Roman kings passed
+to the tribunes. The genealogical principle is there, too, but it
+is expressed in the family relations within the higher nobility and
+the influence of the same upon the parliamentary situation. Even in
+1902 Lord Salisbury acted as a Cecil in proposing his nephew Balfour
+as his successor as against Joseph Chamberlain. The noble factions
+of Tory and Whig separated themselves more and more distinctly, very
+often, indeed, within the same family, according to whether the
+“power-” outweighed the “booty-” outlook--that is, according as land
+was valued above money[701]--or vice versa, a contrast that even in
+the eighteenth century was expressed within the higher bourgeoisie by
+the words “respectable” and “fashionable,” standing for two opposed
+conceptions of the gentleman. The State’s care for all is frankly
+replaced by class-interest. It is for this that the individual claims
+his freedom--that is what “freedom” means in English--but the insular
+existence and the build of “society” have created such relations that
+in the last resort everyone _who belongs to it_ (which is a matter of
+moment in a status-dictatorship) finds his interests represented by
+those of one or the other noble party.
+
+This steadiness of last, deepest, and ripest form, which springs
+from the historical feeling of Western mankind, was denied to the
+Classical. Tyrannis vanished. Strict oligarchy vanished. The Demos
+which the politics of the sixth century had created as the sum of all
+men belonging to the Polis burst into factions and spasmodic shocks
+of noble _versus_ non-noble, and conflicts began within states, _and
+between states_, in which each party tried to exterminate the other
+lest it should itself be exterminated. When in 511--that is, still in
+the age of the Tyrants--Sybaris was annihilated by the Pythagoreans,
+the event, the first of its kind, shocked the entire Classical world;
+even in distant Miletus mourning was worn. But now the elimination
+of a Polis or a party was so usual that a regular form and choice
+of methods--corresponding to the typical peace-treaties of Western
+Baroque--arose for the disposal of the vanquished--for example, the
+inhabitants might be massacred or sold into slavery, the houses
+razed or divided as spoil. The will to absolutism is there--after
+the Persian Wars it is universal, in Rome and Sparta no less than in
+Athens--but the _willed_ narrowness of the Polis, the point-politic,
+and the _willed_ brevity of office-holding and immediacy of schemes
+made it impossible ever to reach a firm decision as to who should be
+“the State.”[702] The high craft of diplomacy, which in the West was
+practised by cabinets inspired by a tradition, was here handicapped by
+an amateurism founded not on any accidental inadequacy of persons--the
+men were available--but solely in the political form itself. The course
+of this form from the First to the Second Tyrannis is unmistakable
+and corresponds to the same evolution in all other Late periods; but
+the specifically Classical style of it appears in the disorder and
+subjection to incidentals which naturally and inevitably followed from
+a life that could not and would not dissociate itself from the moment.
+
+The most important example of this is the evolution of Rome during the
+fifth century--a period over which hitherto historians have wrangled,
+precisely because they have tried to find in it a consistency that can
+no more have existed there than anywhere else in the Classical State.
+A further source of misunderstanding is that the conditions of that
+development have been regarded as something quite primitive, whereas
+in fact even the city of the Tarquins must have already been in a very
+advanced state, and primitive Rome lay much further back. The relations
+of the fifth century are on a small scale in comparison with those of
+Cæsar’s age, but they were not antiquated. Because written tradition
+is defective (as it was everywhere save in Athens), the literary
+movement which followed the Punic Wars set itself to fill the blanks
+with poetry and in particular (as was to be expected in the Hellenistic
+age) with the evocation of an idyllic past, as, for example, in the
+story of Cincinnatus. And modern scholarship, though it has ceased to
+believe these legends, has nevertheless remained under the influence
+of the taste that inspired their invention, and continues to look at
+the conditions of the time through its eyes--the more readily as Greek
+and Roman history are treated as two separate worlds, and the evil
+practice of identifying the beginning of history with the beginning of
+sure documentation is followed as usual. In truth, the conditions of
+500 B.C. are anything but Homeric. The trace of its walls shows that
+Rome under the Tarquins was, with Capua, the greatest city in Italy
+and bigger than the Athens of Themistocles.[703] A city that concludes
+commercial treaties with Carthage is no peasant commune. And it follows
+that the population in the four city tribes of 471 must have been very
+numerous, probably greater than the whole total of the sixteen country
+tribes scattered insignificantly in space.
+
+The great success of the landowning nobility in overthrowing a
+Tyrannis that was almost certainly very popular, and establishing
+unrestricted senatorial rule, was nullified again by a series of
+violent events about 471--the replacement of the family tribes by
+four great city-wards, the representation of these by tribunes (who
+were sacrosanct--i.e., who enjoyed a _royal_ privilege that no single
+official of the aristocratic administration possessed) and lastly the
+liberation of the small peasantry from the _clientela_ of the nobility.
+
+The Tribunate was the happiest inspiration, not only of this period,
+but of the Classical Polis generally. It was _the Tyrannis raised
+to the position of an integral part of the Constitution_, and set
+in parallel, moreover, with the old oligarchical offices, all of
+which continued in being. This meant that the social revolution also
+was carried out in _legal forms_, so that what was elsewhere a wild
+discharge in shock and countershock became here a forum-contest,
+limited as a rule to debate and vote. There was no need to evoke
+the tyrant, for he was there already. The Tribune possessed rights
+inherent in position, not rights arising out of an office, and with his
+immunity he could carry out revolutionary acts that would have been
+inconceivable without street-fighting in any other Polis. This creation
+was an incident, but no other of its creations helped Rome to rise as
+this did. In Rome alone the transition from the First to the Second
+Tyrannis, and the further development therefrom till beyond the days
+of Zama, was accomplished, not indeed without shocks, but at any rate
+without catastrophe. The Tribune was the link between the Tarquins and
+Cæsar. With the Lex Hortensia of 287 he became all-powerful, _he is
+the Second Tyrannis in constitutional “form.”_ In the second century,
+tribunes caused consuls and censors to be arrested. The Gracchi were
+tribunes, Cæsar assumed the perpetual tribunate, and in the principate
+of Augustus the tribunician dignity was the essential element of his
+position, the only one in virtue of which he possessed sovereign rights.
+
+The crisis of 471 was not unique but generically Classical. Its
+target was the oligarchy, which even now, within the Demos created
+by the Tyrannis, strove to be the impulsive force in affairs. It
+was no longer, as in Hesiod’s day, the oligarchy as estate _versus_
+non-estate, but the _oligarchic party against a second party_--both in
+the cadre of the absolute state, which as such was not brought into
+the controversy. In Athens, 487 B.C., the archons were overthrown and
+their rights transferred to the college of strategi.[704] In 461 the
+Areopagus, the Athenian equivalent of the Senate, was overthrown. In
+Sicily (where relations with Rome were close) the democracy triumphed
+at Acragas (Agrigentum) in 471, at Syracuse in 465, at Rhegium and
+Messana in 461. In Sparta the kings Cleomenes (488) and Pausanias (470)
+tried in turn, without success, to free the Helots--in Roman terms,
+the Clientela--and thereby to acquire for the kingship, _vis-à-vis_
+the oligarchic Ephors, the importance of the tribunate in Rome. The
+missing element in this case, which was present (though overlooked
+by our scholars) in that of Rome, was the population-strength of the
+mercantile city that gives such movements both weight and leadership;
+it was on this that even the great Helot rising of 464 broke down (an
+event which probably inspired the Roman legends of a secession of the
+Plebs to the Mons Sacer).
+
+In a Polis, the country nobility and the patriciate fuse (that is the
+object of synœcism, as we have seen), but not so the burgher and the
+peasant. So far as concerns their struggle with the oligarchy these
+are a single party--namely, the democratic--but otherwise they are
+_two_. This is what comes to expression in the next crisis. In this
+(_c._ 450) the Roman patriciate sought to re-establish its power _as a
+party_--for so we must interpret the introduction of the Decemvirs and
+the abolition of the Tribunate; the legislation of the Twelve Tables by
+which the plebs, which had recently attained political existence, was
+denied “Connubium” and “Commercium”; and above all the creation of the
+small country tribes in which the influence of the old families (not
+legally but in fact) predominated and which (in the Comitia Tributa
+now set up alongside the old Centuriata) enjoyed the unchallengeable
+majority of 16 to 4. This, of course, meant the disfranchisement of the
+townspeople by the peasantry, and there can be no doubt that it was a
+move of the Patrician party to make effective in one common blow the
+common antipathy of the countryside and themselves towards the money
+economics of the city.
+
+The counterstroke came quickly; it is recognizable in the number _ten_
+of the tribunes who appear after the withdrawal of the Decemvirs,[705]
+but there were other events too that cannot but have belonged with
+it--the attempt of Sp. Mælius to set up a Tyrannis (439), the
+setting-up of Consular Tribunes by the army in place of the civil
+officials (438), and the Lex Canuleia (445) which made an end of the
+prohibition of connubium between patricians and plebeians.
+
+There can be no doubt, of course, that there were factions within both
+the patrician and the plebeian parties which would have liked to upset
+this fundamental trait of the Roman Polis, the opposition of Senate
+and Tribunate, by abolishing the one or the other; but the form turned
+out to be so right that it was never seriously challenged. With the
+enforcement by the Army of plebeian eligibility to the highest offices
+(399) the contest took a quite different turn. The fifth century
+may be summed up, under the aspect of internal politics, as that of
+the struggle for lawful Tyrannis; thenceforward the polarity of the
+constitution was admitted, and the parties contended no longer for
+the abolition, but for the capture, of the great offices. This was
+the substance of the revolution that took place in the period of the
+Samnite Wars. From 287 the Plebes had the entrée to _all_ offices, and
+the proposals of the tribunes, when approved by them, automatically
+became law; on the other hand, it was thenceforward always practicable
+for the Senate by corruption or otherwise to induce some one tribune to
+exercise his veto and thus to deprive the institution of its power. It
+was in the _struggle of two competent authorities_ that the juristic
+subtlety of the Romans was developed. Elsewhere decisions were usually
+by way of fist and bludgeon--the technical word is “Cheirocracy”--but
+in this “best” period of Roman constitutional law, the fourth century,
+the habit was formed of using the weapons of thesis and interpretation,
+a mode of contest in which the slightest points of legal wording could
+be decisive.
+
+But Rome was unique in all Classical history in this equilibrium of
+Senate and Tribunate. Everywhere else it was a matter not of swaying
+balance, but of sheer alternatives, namely Oligarchy _or_ Ochlocracy.
+The absolute Polis and the Nation which was identical with it were
+accepted as given premisses, but of the inward forms none possessed
+stability. The victory of one party meant the abolition of all the
+institutions of the other, and people became accustomed to regard
+nothing as either venerable enough or useful enough to be exempt
+from the chances of the day’s battle. Sparta’s “form,” so to say,
+was senatorial, Athens’s tribunician, and by the beginning of the
+Peloponnesian War, in 431, the idea that forms must be alternative was
+so firmly fixed that only radical solutions were henceforth possible.
+
+With this, the future was set for Rome. It was the one state in which
+political passions had persons only, and no longer institutions,
+as their target; the only one which was firmly in “form.” _Senatus
+Populusque Romanus_--that is, _Senate and Tribunate_--was the form of
+forged bronze that no party would henceforward batter, whereas all the
+rest, with the narrowness of their individual power-horizons in the
+world of Classical states, were only able to prove once more the fact
+that domestic politics exist simply in order that foreign politics may
+be possible.
+
+
+VI
+
+At this point, when the Culture is beginning to turn itself into the
+Civilization, the non-Estate intervenes in affairs decisively--and
+for the first time--as an independent force. Under the Tyrannis and
+the Fronde, the State has invoked its aid against the Estates proper,
+and it has for the first time learned to feel itself a power. Now it
+employs its strength _for itself_, and does so as a class standing for
+its freedom against the rest. It sees in the absolute State, in the
+Crown, in rooted institutions, the natural allies of the old Estates
+and the true and last representatives of symbolic tradition. This is
+the difference between the First and the Second Tyrannis, between
+Fronde and Bourgeois Revolution, between Cromwell and Robespierre.
+
+The State, with its heavy demands on each individual in it, is felt by
+urban reason as a burden. So, in the same phase, the great forms of the
+Baroque arts begin to be felt as restrictive and become Classicist or
+Romanticist--that is, sickly or unformed; German literature from 1770
+is one long revolt of strong individual personalities against strict
+poetry. The idea of the whole nation being “in training” or “in form”
+for anything becomes intolerable, for the individual himself inwardly
+is no longer in condition. This holds good in morals, in arts, and
+in modes of thought, but most of all in politics. Every bourgeois
+revolution has as its scene the great city, and as its hall-mark the
+incomprehension of old symbols, which it replaces by tangible interests
+and the craving (or even the mere wish) of enthusiastic thinkers and
+world-improvers to see their conceptions actualized. Nothing now has
+value but that which can be justified by reason. But, deprived thus
+of the exaltation of a form that is essentially symbolical and works
+metaphysically, the national life loses the power of keeping its head
+up in the being-streams of history. Follow the desperate attempts of
+the French Government--the handful of capable and farsighted men under
+the mediocre Louis XVI--to keep their country in “condition” when,
+after the death of Vergennes in 1787, the whole gravity of the external
+situation had become manifest. With the death of this diplomatist
+France disappeared for years from the political combinations of Europe;
+at the same time the great reform that the Crown had carried through
+against all resistances--above all, the general administrative reform
+of that year, based on the freest self-management--remained completely
+ineffective, because in view of the pliancy of the State, the question
+of the moment for the Estates became, suddenly, the question of
+power.[706] As a century before and a century afterwards, European war
+was drawing visibly nearer with an inexorable necessity, but no one now
+took any notice of the external situation. The nobility as an Estate
+had rarely, but the bourgeoisie as an Estate had never, thought in
+terms of foreign policy and world-history. Whether the State in its new
+form would be able to hold its own at all amongst the other States, no
+one asked. All that mattered was whether it secured men’s “rights.”
+
+But the bourgeoisie, the class of urban “freedom,” strong as its
+class-feeling remained for generations (in West Europe even beyond
+1848), was at no time wholly master of its actions. For, first of all,
+it became manifest in every critical situation that its unity was a
+_negative_ unity, only really existent in moments of opposition to
+something, anything, else--“Tiers État” and “Opposition” are almost
+synonymous--and that when something constructive of its own had to be
+done, the interests of the various groups pulled all ways. To be free
+from something--that, all wanted. But the intellectual desired the
+State as an actualization of “justice” against the force of historical
+facts; or the “rights of man”; or freedom of criticism as against the
+dominant religion. And Money wanted a free path to business success.
+There were a good many who desired rest and renunciation of historical
+greatness, or wished this and that tradition and its embodiments, on
+which physically or spiritually they lived, to be spared. But there
+was another element, now and henceforth, that had not existed in the
+conflicts of the Fronde (the English Civil War included) or the first
+Tyrannis, but this time stood for a power--namely, that which is found
+in all Civilizations under different contemptuous labels--dregs,
+_canaille_, mob, _Pöbel_--but with the same tremendous connotation. In
+the great cities, which alone now spoke the decisive words--the open
+land can at most accept or reject _faits accomplis_, as our eighteenth
+century proves[707]--a mass of rootless fragments of population stands
+outside all social linkages. These do not feel themselves as attached
+either to an Estate or to a vocational class, nor even to the real
+working-class, although they are obliged to work. Elements drawn
+from all classes and conditions belong to it instinctively--uprooted
+peasantry, literates, ruined business men, and above all (as the age of
+Catiline shows with terrifying clarity) derailed nobles. Their power
+is far in excess of their numbers, for they are always on the spot,
+always on hand at the big decisions, ready for anything, devoid of
+all respect for orderliness, even the orderliness of a revolutionary
+party. It is from them that events acquire the destructive force
+which distinguishes the French Revolution from the English, and the
+Second Tyrannis from the First. The bourgeoisie looks at these masses
+with real uneasiness, defensively, and seeks to separate itself from
+them--it was to a defensive act of this category, the 13th Vendémiaire,
+that Napoleon owed his rise.[708] But in the pressure of facts
+the separating frontier cannot be drawn; wherever the bourgeoisie
+throws into the scale against the older orders its feeble weight of
+aggressiveness--feeble in relative numbers and feeble because its inner
+cohesion is risked at every moment--this mass has forced itself into
+their ranks, pushed to the front, imparted most of the drive that wins
+the victory, and very often managed to secure the conquered position
+for itself--not seldom with the continued idealistic support of the
+educated who are intellectually captivated, or the material backing of
+the money powers, which seek to divert the danger from themselves on to
+the nobility and the clergy.
+
+There is another aspect, too, under which this epoch has its
+importance--in it for the first time abstract truths seek to intervene
+in the world of facts. The capital cities have become so great, and
+urban man so superior and influential over the waking-consciousness of
+the whole Culture (_this influence is what we call Public Opinion_)
+that the powers of the blood and the tradition inherent in the blood
+are shaken in their hitherto unassailable position. For it must be
+remembered that the Baroque State and the absolute Polis in their final
+development of form are thoroughly living expressions of a _breed_,
+and that history, so far as it accomplishes itself in these forms,
+possesses the full pulse of that breed. Any theory of the State that
+may be fashioned here is one that is deduced from the facts, that
+bows to the greatness of the facts. The idea of the State had finally
+mastered the blood of the first Estate, and put it wholly and without
+reserve at the State’s service. “Absolute” means that the great
+being-stream is _as a unit_ in form, possesses _one_ kind of pulse and
+instinct, whether the manifestations of that pulse be diplomatic or
+strategic flair, dignity of moral and manners, or fastidious taste in
+arts and thoughts.
+
+As the contradictory to this grand fact, now, Rationalism appears and
+spreads, that which has been described above[709] as the _community of
+waking-consciousness in the educated_, whose religion is criticism and
+whose numina are not deities but concepts. Now begins the influence of
+books and general theories upon politics--in the China of Lao-tse as
+in the Athens of the Sophists and the Europe of Montesquieu--and the
+public opinion formed by them plants itself in the path of diplomacy
+as a political magnitude of quite a new sort. It would be absurd to
+suppose that Pisistratus or Richelieu or even Cromwell determined their
+actions under the influence of abstract systems, but after the victory
+of “Enlightenment” that is what actually happens.
+
+Nevertheless the historical rôle of the great concepts of the
+Civilization is very different from the complexion that they presented
+in the minds of the ideologues who conceived them. The effect of
+a truth is always quite different from its tendency. In the world
+of facts, truths are simply _means_, effective in so far as they
+dominate spirits and therefore determine actions. Their historical
+position is determined not by whether they are deep, correct, or
+even merely logical, but by whether they _tell_. We see this in the
+phrase “catchword,” “_Schlagwort_.” What certain symbols, livingly
+experienced, are for the Springtime religions--the Holy Sepulchre for
+the Crusader, the Substance of Christ for the times of the Council
+of Nicæa--that two or three inspiriting word-sounds are for every
+Civilized revolution. It is only the catchwords that are facts--the
+residue of the philosophical or sociological system whence they come
+does not matter to history. But, _as_ catchwords, they are for about
+two centuries powers of the first rank, stronger even than the pulse
+of the blood, which in the petrifying world of the outspread cities is
+beginning to be dulled.
+
+But--the critical spirit is only one of the two tendencies which
+emerge out of the chaotic mass of the Non-Estate. Along with abstract
+concepts abstract Money,--money divorced from the prime values of the
+land--along with the study the counting-house, appear as political
+forces. The two are inwardly cognate and inseparable--the old
+opposition between priest and noble continued, acute as ever, in the
+bourgeois atmosphere and the city framework.[710] Of the two, moreover,
+it is the Money that, as pure fact, shows itself unconditionally
+superior to the ideal truths, which so far as the fact-world is
+concerned exist (as I have just said) only as catchwords, as means.
+If by “democracy” we mean the form which the Third Estate as such
+wishes to impart to public life as a whole, it must be concluded that
+democracy and plutocracy are the same thing under the two aspects of
+wish and actuality, theory and practice, knowing and doing. It is the
+tragic comedy of the world-improvers’ and freedom-teachers’ desperate
+fight against money that they are _ipso facto_ assisting money to be
+effective. Respect for the big number--expressed in the principles of
+equality for all, natural rights, and universal suffrage--is just as
+much a class-ideal of the unclassed as freedom of public opinion (and
+more particularly freedom of the press) is so. These are ideals, but
+in actuality the freedom of public opinion involves the preparation
+of public opinion, which costs money; and the freedom of the press
+brings with it the question of possession of the press, which again
+is a matter of money; and with the franchise comes electioneering, in
+which he who pays the piper calls the tune. The representatives of the
+ideas look at one side only, while the representatives of money operate
+with the other. The concepts of Liberalism and Socialism are set in
+effective motion only by money. It was the Equites, the big-money
+party, which made Tiberius Gracchus’s popular movement possible at
+all; and as soon as that part of the reforms that was advantageous
+to themselves had been successfully legalized, they withdrew and
+the movement collapsed. Cæsar and Crassus financed the Catilinarian
+movement, and so directed it against the Senatorial party instead of
+against property. In England politicians of eminence laid it down
+as early as 1700 that “on ’Change one deals in votes as well as in
+stocks, and the price of a vote is as well known as the price of an
+acre of land.”[711] When the news of Waterloo reached Paris, the price
+of French government stock rose[712]--the Jacobins had destroyed the
+old obligations of the blood and so had emancipated money; now it
+stepped forward as lord of the land.[713] There is no proletarian,
+not even a Communist, movement that has not operated in the interest
+of money, in the directions indicated by money, and for the time
+permitted by money--and that, without the idealist amongst its leaders
+having the slightest suspicion of the fact.[714] Intellect rejects,
+money directs--so it runs in every last act of a Culture-drama, when
+the megalopolis has become master over the rest. And, in the limit,
+intellect has no cause of complaint. For, after all, it _has_ won
+its victory--namely, in its own realm of truths, the realm of books
+and ideals that is not of this world. Its conceptions have become
+venerabilia of the beginning Civilization. But Money wins, through
+these very concepts, in _its_ realm, which is _only_ of this world.
+
+In the Western world of States, it was in England that both sides
+of Third-Estate politics, the ideal and the real, graduated. Here
+alone it was possible for the Third Estate to avoid the necessity of
+marching against an absolute State in order to destroy it and set up
+its own dominion on the ruins. For here it could grow up into the
+strong form of the First Estate, where it found a fully developed
+form of interest-politics, and from whose methods it could borrow for
+its own purposes a traditional tactic such as it could hardly wish to
+improve upon. Here was the home of Parliamentarism, genuine and quite
+inimitable, which had insular position instead of the state as its
+starting-point, and the habits of the First and not the Third Estate
+as its background. Further, there was the circumstance that this form
+had grown up in the full bloom of Baroque and, therefore, had Music
+in it. The Parliamentary style was completely identical with that of
+cabinet-diplomacy;[715] and in this _anti-democratic_ origin lay the
+secret of its successes.
+
+But it was on British soil, too, that the rationalistic catchwords had,
+one and all, sprung up, and their relation to the principles of the
+Manchester School was intimate--Hume was the teacher of Adam Smith.
+“Liberty” self-evidently meant intellectual _and_ trade freedom. An
+opposition between fact-politics and enthusiasm for abstract truths
+was as impossible in the England of George III as it was inevitable
+in the France of Louis XVI. Later, Edmund Burke could retort upon
+Mirabeau that “we demand our liberties, not as rights of man, but as
+rights of Englishmen.” France received her revolutionary ideas without
+exception from England, as she had received the style of her absolute
+monarchy from Spain. To both she imparted a brilliant and irresistible
+shape that was taken as a model far and wide over the Continent, but
+of the practical employment of either she had no idea. The successful
+utilization of the bourgeois catchwords[716] in politics presupposes
+the shrewd eye of a ruling class for the intellectual constitution of
+the stratum which intends to attain power, but will not be capable
+of wielding it when attained. Hence in England it was successful.
+But it was in England too that money was most unhesitatingly used in
+politics--not the bribery of individual high personages which had been
+customary in the Spanish or Venetian style, but the “nursing” of the
+democratic forces themselves. In eighteenth-century England, first the
+Parliamentary elections and then the decisions of the elected Commons
+were systematically managed by money;[717] England, too, discovered
+the ideal of a Free Press, and discovered along with it that the press
+serves him who owns it. It does not spread “free” opinion--it generates
+it.
+
+Both _together_ constitute liberalism (in the broad sense); that
+is, freedom from the restrictions of the soil-bound life, be these
+privileges, forms, or feelings--freedom of the intellect for every
+kind of criticism, freedom of money for every kind of business. But
+both, too, unhesitatingly aim at the domination of a _class_, a
+domination which recognizes no overriding supremacy of the State. Mind
+and money, being both inorganic, want the State, not as a matured
+form of high symbolism to be venerated, but as an engine to serve a
+purpose. Thus the difference between these forces and those of Frondism
+is fundamental, for the latter’s reaction had been a defence of the
+old Gothic against the intrusive Baroque way of living and being “in
+form,”--and now both these are on the defensive together and almost
+indistinguishable. Only in England (it must be emphasized again and
+again) the Fronde had disarmed, not only the State in open battle, but
+also the Third Estate by its inward superiority, and so attained to
+the one kind of first-class form that democracy is capable of working
+up to, a form neither planned nor aped, but naturally matured, the
+expression of an old breed and an unbroken sure tact that can adapt
+itself to the use of every new means that the changes of Time put
+into its hands. Thus it came about that the English Parliament, while
+taking part in the Succession-Wars of the Absolute States, handled them
+as economic wars with business aims. The mistrust felt for high form
+by the inwardly formless Non-Estate is so deep that everywhere and
+always it is ready to rescue its freedom--_from_ all form--by means
+of a dictatorship, which acknowledges no rules and is, therefore,
+hostile to all that has grown up, which, moreover, in virtue of its
+mechanizing tendency, is acceptable to the taste both of intellect and
+of money--consider, for example, the structure of the state-machine of
+France which Robespierre began and Napoleon completed. Dictatorship
+in the interests of a class-ideal appealed to Rousseau, Saint-Simon,
+Rodbertus, and Lassalle as it had to the Classical ideologues of
+the fourth century--Xenophon in the Cyropædia and Isocrates in the
+Nicocles.[718]
+
+But the well-known saying of Robespierre that “the Government of the
+Revolution is the despotism of freedom against tyranny” expresses
+more than this. It lets out the deep fear that shakes every multitude
+which, in the presence of grave conjunctures, feels itself “not up
+to form.” A regiment that is shaken in its discipline will readily
+concede to accidental leaders of the moment powers of an extent and a
+kind which the legitimate command could never acquire, and which _if_
+legitimate would be utterly intolerable. But this, on a larger scale,
+is the position of every commencing Civilization. Nothing reveals
+more tellingly the decline of political form than that upspringing
+of formless powers which we may conveniently designate, from its
+most conspicuous example, _Napoleonism_. How completely the being of
+Richelieu or of Wallenstein was involved in the unshakable antecedents
+of their period! And how instinct with form, under all its outer
+unform, was the English Revolution! Here, just the reverse; the Fronde
+fights _about_ the form, the absolute State _in_ the form, but the
+bourgeoisie _against_ the form. The mere abolition of an order that had
+become obsolete was no novelty--Cromwell and the heads of the First
+Tyrannis had done that. But, that behind the ruins of the visible there
+is no longer the substance of an invisible form; that Robespierre
+and Napoleon find nothing either around or in them to provide the
+_self-evident_ basis essential to any new creation; that for a
+government of high tradition and experience they have no choice but to
+substitute an accidental régime, whose future no longer rests secure on
+the qualities of a slowly and thoroughly trained minority, but depends
+entirely on the chance of the adequate successor turning up--such are
+the distinguishing marks of this turning of the times, and hence comes
+the immense superiority that is enjoyed for generations still by those
+states which manage to retain a tradition longer than others.
+
+The First Tyrannis had completed the Polis with the aid of the
+non-noble; the latter now destroyed it with the aid of the Second
+Tyrannis. As an idea, it perishes in the bourgeois revolutions of
+the fourth century, for all that it may persist as an arrangement or
+a habit or an instrument of the momentary powers that be. Classical
+man never ceased, in fact, to think and live politically in its form.
+But never more was it for the multitude a symbol to be respected and
+venerated, any more than the Divine Right of Kings was venerated in the
+West after Napoleon had almost succeeded in making his own dynasty “the
+oldest in Europe.”
+
+Further, in these revolutions too, as ever in Classical history,
+there were only local and temporary solutions--nothing resembling
+the splendid sweep of the French Revolution from the Bastille to
+Waterloo--and the scenes in them were more atrocious still, for the
+reason that in this Culture, with its basically Euclidean feeling,
+the only possible way seemed to be that of physical collision of
+party against party, and the only possible end for the loser, not
+functional incorporation in the victor’s system as in the West, but
+destruction root and branch. At Corcyra (427) and Argos (370) the
+possessing classes were slaughtered _en masse_; in Leontini (422) they
+were expelled from the city by the lower classes, which carried on
+affairs for a while with slaves until, in fear of an avenging return,
+they evacuated altogether and migrated to Syracuse. The refugees from
+hundreds of these revolutions inundated the cities, recruited the
+mercenary armies of the Second Tyrannis, and infested the routes by
+land and sea. The readmission of such exiled fractions is a standing
+feature in the peace-terms offered by the Diadochi and later by
+the Romans. But the Second Tyrannis itself secured its positions
+by acts of this kind. Dionysius I (407-367) secured his hegemony
+over Syracuse--the city in whose higher society, along with that of
+Athens, centred the ripest culture of Hellas, the city where Æschylus
+had produced his Persian trilogy in 470--by wholesale executions of
+educated people and confiscations of their property; this he followed
+up by entirely rebuilding the population, in the upper levels by
+granting large properties to his adherents, and in the lower by
+raising masses of slaves to the citizenship and distributing amongst
+them (as was not uncommon) the wives and daughters of the victims.[719]
+
+After the characteristically Classical fashion, the type of these
+revolutions was such as to produce always an increase of number, never
+of extent. Multitudes of them happened, but each proceeded purely
+for itself and at one point of its own, and it is only the fact that
+they were contemporary with one another that gives them the character
+of a collective phenomenon, which marks an epoch. Similarly with
+Napoleonism; here again, a formless regimen for the first time raised
+itself above the framework of the State, yet without being able to
+attain to complete inward detachment therefrom. It supported itself
+on the Army, which, _vis-à-vis_ the nation that had lost its “form,”
+began to feel itself as an independent power. That is the brief road
+from Robespierre to Bonaparte--with the fall of the Jacobins the centre
+of gravity passed from the administration to the ambitious generals.
+How deeply this new tendency implanted itself in the West may be seen
+from the example of Bernadotte and Wellington, and even more from the
+story of Frederick William III’s “call to my People” in 1813--in this
+case the continuance of the dynasty would have been challenged by the
+military had not the King stiffened himself to break with Napoleon.[720]
+
+This anti-constitutionality of the Second Tyrannis declared itself
+also in the position taken by Alcibiades and Lysander in the armed
+forces of their respective cities during the latter stages of the
+Peloponnesian War, a position incompatible with the basic form of the
+Polis. The first-named, destitute as an exile of official position,
+and against the will of the home authorities, exercised from 411 the
+_de facto_ command of the Athenian Navy; the second, though not even
+a Spartiate, felt himself entirely independent at the head of an army
+devoted to his person. In the year 408 the contest of the two powers
+for the supremacy over the Ægean world took the form of a contest
+between these two individuals.[721] Shortly after this, Dionysius
+of Syracuse built up the first large-scale professional army and
+introduced engines of war (artillery)[722]--a new form which served as
+a model for the Diadochi and Rome also. Thereafter the spirit of the
+army was a political power on its own account, and it became a serious
+question how far the State was master, and how far tool, of its army.
+The fact that the government of Rome was exclusively in the hands of
+a military committee[723] from 390 to 367[724] reveals pretty clearly
+that the army had a policy of its own. It is well known that Alexander,
+the Romanticist of the Second Tyrannis, fell more and more under the
+influence of his generals, who not only compelled the retreat from
+India but also disposed of his inheritance amongst themselves as a
+matter of course.
+
+This is essentially Napoleonism, and so is the extension of _personal_
+rule over regions united by ties neither national nor jural, but
+merely military and administrative. But extension was just what was
+essentially incompatible with the Polis. The Classical State is the one
+State that was incapable of any organic widening, and the conquests of
+the Second Tyrannis therefore resolved themselves into a _juxtaposition
+of two political units_, the Polis and the subjugated territory, the
+cohesion of which was initially accidental and perpetually in danger.
+Thus arose that strange picture of the Hellenistic-Roman world, the
+true significance of which is not even yet recognized--_a circle of
+border-regions_, and within them a congeries of Poleis to which, small
+as they were, the conception of the State proper, the _res publica_,
+continued to be bound as exclusively as ever. In this middle (indeed,
+so far as concerned each individual, hegemony was in one point) was the
+theatre of all real politics. The “_orbis terrarum_”--a significant
+expression--was merely a means or object to it. The Roman notions of
+“_imperium_”--dictatorial powers of administration outside the city
+moat (which were automatically extinguished when its holder entered the
+Pomœrium)--and of “_provincia_” as the opposite of “_res publica_,”
+express the common Classical instinct, which knew only the city’s
+body as the State and political subject, and the “outside” only in
+relation to it, as object to it. Dionysius made his city of Syracuse
+into a fortress surrounded by a “scrap-heap of states,” and extended
+his field of power thence, over Upper Italy and the Dalmatian coast,
+into the northern Adriatic, where he possessed Ancona and Hatria at
+the mouth of the Po. Philip of Macedon, following the example of his
+teacher Jason of Pheræ (murdered in 370), adopted the reverse plan,
+placing his centre of gravity in the periphery (that is, practically
+in the army) and thence exercising a hegemony over the Hellenic world
+of States. Thus Macedonia came to extend to the Danube, and after
+Alexander’s death there were added to this outer circle the empires of
+the Seleucids and the Ptolemies--each governed from a Polis (Antioch,
+Alexandria), but through the intermediary of existing native machinery,
+which, be it said, was at its lowest better than any Classical
+administration of it could have been. Rome herself in the same period
+(_c._ 326-265) built up her Middle-Italian territory as a _border
+state_, secured in all directions by a system of colonies, allies, and
+settlements with Latin right. Then, from 237, we find Hamilcar Barca
+winning for Carthage, a city old established in the Classical way of
+life, an empire in Spain; C. Flaminius (225) conquering the Po Valley
+for Rome; and finally Cæsar making his Gallic empire. These were the
+foundations upon which rested, first, the Napoleonic struggles of
+the Diadochi in the East, then those of Scipio and Hannibal in the
+West--the limits of the Polis outgrown in both cases--and lastly the
+Cæsarian struggles of the Triumvirs, who supported themselves on the
+total of _all_ the border states and used their means, in order to
+be--“the first in Rome.”
+
+
+VII
+
+In Rome the strong and happily conceived form of the State that was
+reached about 340 kept the social revolution within constitutional
+limits. A Napoleonic figure like Appius Claudius the Censor of 310, who
+built the first aqueduct and the Appian Way, and ruled in Rome almost
+as a tyrant, very soon failed when he tried to eliminate the peasantry
+by means of the great-city masses and so to impart the one-sided
+Athenian direction to politics--for that was his aim in taking up the
+sons of slaves into the Senate, in reorganizing the Centuries on a
+money instead of a land-assessment basis,[725] and in distributing
+freedmen and landless men amongst the country tribes, so that they
+might outvote the rustics (as they were always able to do, since the
+latter rarely attended). But his successors in the censorship lost
+no time in reversing this, and relegated the landless to the great
+city-tribes again. The non-estate itself, well led by a minority of
+distinguished families, saw its aim (as has been said before) not in
+the destruction, but in the acquisition, of the senatorial organs of
+administration. In the end, it forced its way into all offices (even,
+by the Lex Ogulnia, of 300, into the politically important priesthoods
+of the Pontifices and Augurs), and by the outbreak of 287 it secured
+force of law for _plebiscita_ even without the Senate’s approval.
+
+The practical result of this freedom-movement was precisely the reverse
+of that which ideologues would have expected--there were no idealogues
+in Rome. The greatness of its success robbed the non-estate of its
+object and thereby deprived it of its driving force, for positively,
+when not “in opposition,” it was null. After 287 the state-form existed
+for the purpose of being politically _used_, and used, too, in a
+world in which only the states of the great fringe--Rome, Carthage,
+Macedonia, Syria, and Egypt--really counted. It had ceased to be in any
+danger of becoming the passive of “peoples’-rights” activities. And
+it was precisely this security that formed the basis on which the one
+people that had remained “in form” rose to its grandeur.
+
+On the one hand, it had developed within the Plebs, formless and long
+weakened in its race-impulses by the mass-intake of freedmen,[726]
+an upper stratum distinguished by great practical aptitudes, rank,
+and wealth, which joined forces with a corresponding stratum within
+the patriciate. Hence there came into existence a very narrow circle
+of men of the strongest race-quality, dignified life, and broad
+political outlook, in whom the whole stock of experience in governing
+and generalship and negotiation was concentrated and transmitted; who
+regarded the direction of the State as the one profession worthy of
+their status, considered themselves as inheritors of a privilege to
+exercise it, and educated their children solely in the art of ruling
+and the convictions of a measurelessly proud tradition. This nobility,
+which as such had no constitutional existence, found its constitutional
+engine in the Senate, which had originally been a body representing the
+interests of the patricians (that is, the “Homeric” aristocracy), but
+in which from the middle of the fourth century ex-consuls--men who had
+both ruled and commanded--sat as life-members, forming a close group of
+eminent talents that dominated the assembly and, through it, the State.
+Even by 279 the Senate appeared to Cineas, the ambassador of Pyrrhus,
+like a council of kings, and finally its kernel was a small group of
+leading men, holding the titles “_princeps_” and “_clarissimus_,”
+men in every respect--rank, power, and public dignity--the peers
+of those who reigned over the empires of the Diadochi.[727] There
+came into being a government such as no megalopolis in any other
+Culture whatsoever has possessed, and a tradition to which it would
+be impossible to find parallels save perhaps in the Venice and the
+Papal Curia of the Baroque, and there under a wholly different set
+of conditions. Here were no theories such as had been the ruin of
+Athens, none of the provincialism that had made Sparta in the long
+run contemptible, but simply a praxis in the grand style. If “Rome”
+is a perfectly unique and marvellous phenomenon in world-history, it
+is due, not to the Roman “people,” which in itself, like any other,
+was raw material without form, but to this class which brought Rome
+into condition and kept her so, willy-nilly--with the result that this
+particular stream of being, which in 350 was still without importance
+save to middle Italy, gradually drew into its bed the entire history of
+the Classical, and made the last great period of that history a _Roman_
+period.
+
+It was the very perfection of political _flair_ that was displayed
+by this small circle (which possessed no sort of public rights) in
+managing the democratic forms created by the Revolution--forms that
+here as elsewhere derive all value from the use that is made of them.
+The only factor in them that if mishandled would have been dangerous
+in an instant--namely, the interpenetration of two mutually exclusive
+powers--was handled so superbly _and so quietly_ that it was always
+the higher experience that gave the note, while the people remained
+throughout convinced that decisions were made by, and in the sense
+desired by, itself. _To be popular, and yet historically successful in
+the highest degree_--here is the secret of this policy, and for that
+matter the only possibility of policy existing at all in such times, an
+art in which the Roman régime has remained unequalled to this day.
+
+Nevertheless, on the other side of the picture, the result of the
+Revolution was the _emancipation of Money_. Thenceforward money was
+master in the Comitia Centuriata. That which called itself “_populus_”
+there became more and more a tool in the hands of big money, and it
+required all the tactical superiority of the ruling circles to maintain
+a counterpoise in the Plebs, and to keep effective a representation
+of the yeomanry, under the leadership of the noble families, in the
+thirty-one country tribes from which the great city mass continued
+to be excluded. Hence the drastic energy with which the arrangements
+made by Appius Claudius were revoked. The natural alliance between
+high finance and the mass, though we see it actually at work later
+(under the Gracchi and Marius) for the destruction of the tradition of
+the blood,[728] was at any rate made impossible for many generations.
+Bourgeoisie and yeomanry, money and landowning, maintained a reciprocal
+equilibrium of separate organisms, and were held together and made
+efficient by the State-idea (of which the nobility was the incarnation)
+until this inward form fell to pieces, and the two tendencies broke
+apart in enmity. The First Punic War was a traders’ war and directed
+against the agrarian interest, and, therefore, the consul Appius
+Claudius (a descendant of the great Censor) laid the decision of the
+matter in 284 before the Comitia Centuriata. The conquest of the Po
+plain, on the other hand, was in the interests of the peasantry and
+it was, therefore, in the Comita Tributa that it was carried by the
+Tribune C. Flaminius--the first genuinely Cæsarian type in Roman
+history, builder of the Via Flaminia and the Circus Flaminius. But when
+in pursuance of his policy he (as Censor in 220) forbade the Senators
+to engage in trade, and also at the same time made the old noble
+centuries accessible to plebeians, he was practically benefiting only
+the new financial nobility of the First Punic War period, and thus
+(entirely in spite of himself) he became the creator of _high finance
+organized as an Estate_--that is, that of the Equites, who a century
+later put an end to the great age of the nobility. Henceforth, when
+Hannibal (before whom Flaminius had fallen on the field of battle) had
+been disposed of, money steadily became, even for the government as
+such, the “_ultima ratio_” in the accomplishment of its policy--the
+last true State-policy that the Classical world was to know.
+
+When the Scipios and their circle had ceased to be the governing
+influence, nothing remained but the private policies of individuals,
+who followed their own interests without scruple, and looked upon
+the “_orbis terrarum_” as passive booty. The historian Polybius (who
+belonged to that circle) regarded Flaminius as a mere demagogue and
+traced to him all the misfortunes of the Gracchan period. He was
+wholly in error as to Flaminius’s intentions, but he was right as
+to his effect. Flaminius--like the elder Cato, who with the blind
+zeal of the agrarian overthrew the great Scipio on account of his
+world-policy--achieved the reverse of what he intended. Money stepped
+into the place of blood-leadership, and money took less than three
+generations to exterminate the yeomanry.
+
+If it was an improbable piece of good luck in the destinies of the
+Classical peoples that Rome was the only city-state to survive the
+Revolution with an unimpaired constitution, it was, on the contrary,
+almost a miracle that in our West--with its genealogical forms
+deep-rooted in the idea of duration--violent revolution broke out at
+all, even in one place--namely, Paris. It was not the strength, but
+the weakness of French Absolutism which brought the English ideas,
+in combination with the power of money, to the point of an explosion
+which gave living form to the catchwords of the “Enlightenment,”
+which bound together virtue and terror, freedom and despotism, and
+which echoed still even in the minor catastrophes of 1830 and 1848
+and the more recent Socialistic longing for catastrophe.[729] In
+England itself, when the aristocracy ruled more absolutely than ever
+in France, there was certainly a small circle round Fox and Sheridan
+which was enthusiastic for the ideas of the Revolution--all of which
+were of English provenance--and men talked of universal suffrage and
+Parliamentary reform.[730] But that was quite enough to induce both
+parties, under the leadership of a Whig (the younger Pitt), to take the
+sharpest measures to defeat any and every attempt to interfere in the
+slightest degree with the aristocratic régime for the benefit of the
+bourgeoisie. The English nobility let loose the twenty-year war against
+France, and mobilized all the monarchs of Europe to bring about in the
+end, not the fall of Napoleon, but the fall of the Revolution--the
+Revolution that had had the naïve daring to introduce the opinions
+of private English thinkers into practical politics, and so to give
+a position to the Tiers État of which the consequences were all the
+better foreseen in the English lobbies for having been overlooked in
+the Paris salons.[731]
+
+What was called “Opposition” in England was--the attitude of one
+aristocratic party while the other was running the Government. It
+did not mean there, as it meant all over the Continent, professional
+criticism of the work which it was someone else’s profession to do,
+but the practical endeavour to force the activity of Government
+into a form in which the opposition was ready and fit at any moment
+to take it over. But this Opposition was at once--and in complete
+ignorance of its social presuppositions--taken as a model for that
+which the educated in France and elsewhere aimed at creating, namely,
+a class-domination of the Tiers État under the eyes of a dynasty, no
+very clear idea being formed as to the latter’s future. The English
+dispositions were, from Montesquieu onwards, lauded with enthusiastic
+misunderstanding--although these Continental countries, not being
+islands, lacked the first condition precedent for an “English”
+evolution. Only in one point was England really a model. When the
+bourgeoisie had got so far as to turn the absolute state back again
+into an Estate-state, they found over there a picture which in fact had
+never been other than it was. True, it was the aristocracy alone who
+ruled in it--but at least it was not the Crown.
+
+The result of the turn, and the basic form of the Continental States
+at the beginning of the Civilization, is “Constitutional Monarchy,”
+the extremest possibility of which appears as what we call nowadays
+a Republic. It is necessary to get clear, once and for all, of the
+mumblings of the doctrinaires who think in timeless and therefore
+unreal concepts and for whom “Republic” is a form-in-itself. The
+republican ideal of the nineteenth century has no more resemblance to
+the Classical _res publica_, or even to Venice or the original Swiss
+cantons, than the English constitution to a “constitution” in the
+Continental sense. That which _we_ call republic is a _negation_, which
+of inward necessity postulates that the thing denied is an ever-present
+possibility. It is non-monarchy in forms borrowed from the monarchy.
+The genealogical feeling is immensely strong in Western mankind; it
+strains its conscience so far as to pretend that Dynasty determines
+its political conduct even when Dynasty no longer exists at all. The
+historical is embodied therein, and unhistorically we cannot live.
+It makes a great difference whether, as in the case of the Classical
+world, the dynastic principle conveys absolutely nothing to the inner
+feelings of a man, or, as in the case of the West, it is real enough to
+need six generations of educated people to fight it down in themselves.
+Feeling is the secret enemy of all constitutions that are plans and not
+growths; they are in last analysis nothing but defensive measures born
+of fear and mistrust. The urban conception of freedom--freedom _from_
+something--narrows itself to a merely anti-dynastic significance, and
+republican enthusiasm lives only on this feeling.
+
+Such a negation inevitably involves a preponderance of theory. While
+Dynasty and its close congener Diplomacy conserve the old tradition and
+pulse, Constitutions contain an overweight of systems, bookishness,
+and framed concepts--such as is entirely unthinkable in England, where
+nothing negative and defensive adheres to the form of government. It is
+not for nothing that the Faustian is _par excellence_ the reading and
+writing Culture. The printed book is an emblem of temporal, the Press
+of spatial, infinity. In contrast with the immense power and tyranny
+of these symbols, even the Chinese Civilization seems almost empty of
+writing. In Constitutions, literature is put into the field against
+knowledge of men and things, language against race, abstract right
+against successful tradition--regardless of whether a nation involved
+in the tide of events is still capable of work and “maintaining its
+form.” Mirabeau was quite alone and unsuccessful in combating the
+Assembly, which “confused politics with fiction.” Not only the three
+doctrinaire constitutions of the age--the French of 1791, the German
+of 1848 and 1919--but practically all such attempts shut their eyes to
+the great Destiny in the fact-world and imagine that that is the same
+as defeating it. In lieu of unforeseen happenings, the incidents of
+strong personality and imperious circumstances, it is Causality that
+is to rule--timeless, just, unvarying, rational cohesion of cause and
+effect. It is symptomatic that no written constitution knows of money
+as a political force. It is pure theory that they contain, one and all.
+
+This rift in the essence of constitutional monarchy is irremediable.
+Here actual and conceptual, work and critique, are frontally
+opposed, and it is their mutual attrition that constitutes what the
+average educated man calls internal politics. Apart from the cases
+of Prussia-Germany and Austria--where constitutions did come into
+existence at first,[732] but in the presence of the older political
+traditions were never very influential--it was only in England that
+the practice of government kept itself homogeneous. Here, race held
+its own against principle. Men had more than an inkling that real
+politics, politics aiming at historical success, is a matter of
+training and not of shaping. This was no aristocratic prejudice, but
+a cosmic fact that emerges much more distinctly in the experience
+of any English racehorse-trainer than in all the philosophical
+systems in the world. Shaping can refine training, but not replace
+it. And thus the higher society of England, Eton and Balliol, became
+training-grounds where politicians were worked up with a consistent
+sureness the like of which is only to be found in the training of the
+Prussian officer-corps--trained, that is, as connoisseurs and masters
+of the underlying pulse of things (not excluding the hidden course of
+opinions and ideas). Thus prepared, they were able, in the great flood
+of bourgeois-revolutionary principles that swept over the years after
+1832, to preserve and control the being-stream which they directed.
+They possessed “training,” the suppleness and collectedness of the
+rider who, with a good horse under him, feels victory coming nearer
+and nearer. They allowed the great principles to move the mass because
+they knew well that it is money that is the “wherewithal” by which
+motion is imparted to these great principles, and they substituted,
+for the brutal methods of the eighteenth century, methods more refined
+and not less effective--one of the simpler of these being to threaten
+their opponents with the cost of a new election. The doctrinaire
+constitutions of the Continent saw only the one side of the fact
+democracy. Here, where there was no constitution, but men were in
+“condition,” it was seen as a whole.
+
+A vague feeling of all this was never quite lost on the Continent.
+For the absolute State of the Baroque there had been a perfectly
+clear form, but for “constitutional monarchy” there were only
+unsteady compromises, and Conservative and Liberal parties were
+distinguished--not, as in England after Canning, by the possession
+of different but well-tested modes of government, applied
+turn-and-turn-about to the actual work of governing--but according
+to the direction in which they respectively desired to alter the
+constitution--namely, towards tradition or towards theory. Should the
+Parliament serve the Dynasty, or vice versa?--that was the bone of
+contention, and in disputing over it it was forgotten that _foreign_
+policy was the final aim. The “Spanish” and the misnamed “English”
+sides of a constitution would not and could not grow together, and
+thus it befell that during the nineteenth century the diplomatic
+service outwards and the Parliamentary activity inwards developed in
+two divergent directions. Each became in fundamental feeling alien to,
+and contemptuous of, the other. Life fretted itself to soreness in a
+form that it had not developed out of itself. After Thermidor, France
+succumbed to the rule of the Bourse, mitigated from time to time by the
+setting up of a military dictature (1800, 1851, 1871, 1918). Bismarck’s
+creation was in fundamentals of a dynastic nature, with a parliamentary
+component of decidedly subordinate importance, and in it the inner
+friction was so strong as to monopolize the available political energy,
+and finally, after 1916, to exhaust the organism itself. The Army had
+its own history, with a great tradition going back to Frederick William
+I,[733] and so also had the administration. In them was the source
+of Socialism as one kind of true political “training,” diametrically
+opposed to the English[734] but, like it, a full expression of strong
+race-quality. The officer and the official were trained high. But
+the necessity of breeding up a corresponding political type was not
+recognized. Higher policy was handled “administratively” and minor
+policy was hopeless squabbling. And so army and administration finally
+became aims in themselves, after Bismarck’s disappearance had removed
+the one man who even without a supply of real politicians to back him
+(this tradition alone could have produced) was big enough to treat both
+as tools of policy. When the issue of the World War removed the upper
+layers, nothing remained but parties educated for opposition only,
+and these brought the activity of Government down to a level hitherto
+unknown in any Civilization.
+
+But to-day Parliamentarism is in full decay. It was a _continuation of
+the Bourgeois Revolution by other means_, the revolution of the Third
+Estate of 1789 brought into legal form and joined with its opponent
+the Dynasty as one governmental unit. Every modern election, in fact,
+is a civil war carried on by ballot-box and every sort of spoken and
+written stimulus, and every great party-leader is a sort of Napoleon.
+In this form, meant to remain infinitely valid, which is peculiar to
+the Western Culture and would be nonsensical and impossible in any
+other, we discern once more our characteristic tendency to infinity,
+historical foresight[735] and forethought, and _will to order the
+distant future_, in this case according to bourgeois standards of the
+present.
+
+All the same, Parliamentarism is not a summit as the absolute Polis
+and the Baroque State were summits, but a brief transition--namely,
+between the Late-Culture period with its mature forms and the age of
+great individuals in a formless world. It contains, like the houses and
+furniture of the first half of the nineteenth century, a residue of
+good Baroque. The parliamentary habit is English Rococo--but, no longer
+un-self-conscious and in the blood, but superficial-initiative and at
+the mercy of goodwill. Only in the brief periods of first enthusiasms
+has it an appearance of depth and duration, and then only because
+in the flush of victory respect for one’s newly-won status makes it
+incumbent to adopt the high manners of the defeated class. To preserve
+the form, even when it contradicts the advantage, is the convention
+which makes parliamentarism _possible_. But when this convention comes
+to be fully observed, _the very fact that it is so means that the
+essence of parliamentarism has already been evaporated_. The Non-Estate
+falls apart again into its natural interest-groups, and the passion of
+stubborn and victorious defence is over. And as soon as the form ceases
+to possess the attractiveness of a young ideal that will summon men to
+the barricades, unparliamentary methods of attaining an object without
+(and even in spite of) the ballot-box will make their appearance--such
+as money, economic pressure, and, above all, the strike. Neither
+the megalopolitan masses nor the strong individuals have any real
+respect for this form without depth or past, and when the discovery
+is made that it is _only_ a form, it has already become a mark and
+shadow. With the beginning of the twentieth century Parliamentarism
+(even English) is tending rapidly towards taking up itself the rôle
+that it once assigned to the kingship. It is becoming an impressive
+spectacle for the multitude of the Orthodox, while the centre of
+gravity of big policy, already _de jure_ transferred from the Crown to
+the people’s representatives, is passing _de facto_ from the latter
+to unofficial groups and the will of unofficial personages. The World
+War almost completed this development. There is no way back to the old
+parliamentarism from the domination of Lloyd George and the Napoleonism
+of the French militarists. And for America, hitherto lying apart and
+self-contained, rather a region than a State, the parallelism of
+President and Congress which she derived from a theory of Montesquieu
+has, with her entry into world politics, become untenable, and must in
+times of real danger make way for formless powers such as those with
+which Mexico and South America have long been familiar.
+
+
+VIII
+
+With this enters the age of gigantic conflicts, in which we find
+ourselves to-day. It is the _transition from Napoleonism to
+Cæsarism_, a general phase of evolution, which occupies at least two
+centuries and can be shown to exist in all the Cultures. The Chinese
+call it Shan-Kwo, the “period of the Contending States” (480-230,
+corresponding to the Classical 300-50).[736] At the beginning are
+reckoned seven great powers, which, first planlessly, but later with
+clearer and clearer purpose, tend to the inevitable final result of
+this close succession of vast wars and revolutions. A century later
+there are still five. In 441 the ruler of the Chóu dynasty became a
+state-pensioner of the “Eastern Duke,” and the remains of territory
+that he possessed ceased accordingly to figure in later history.
+Simultaneously began in the unphilosophical north-west[737] the swift
+rise of the “Roman” state of Tsin, which extended its influence
+westward and southward over Tibet and Yunnan and enclosed the other
+states in a great arc. The focus of the opposition was in the kingdom
+of Tsu in the Taoist south,[738] whence the Chinese Civilization
+pressed slowly outwards into the still little-known lands south of
+the great river. Here we have in fact the opposition of Rome and
+the Hellenistic--on the one side, hard, clear will-to-power; on the
+other, the tendency to dreaming and world-improvement. In 368-320
+(corresponding to the Second Punic War) the contest intensified itself
+into an uninterrupted struggle of the whole Chinese world, fought with
+mass armies, for which the population was strained to the extreme
+limit. “The allies, whose lands were ten times as great as those of
+Tsin, in vain rolled up a million men--Tsin had ever reserves in hand
+still. From first to last a million men fell,” writes Sze-ma-tsien.
+Su-tsin, who began by being Chancellor of Tsin, but later became a
+supporter of the League of Nations (_hoh-tsung_) idea and went over to
+the Opposition, worked up two great coalitions (333 and 321), which,
+however, collapsed from inward disunity at the first battles. His great
+adversary, the Chancellor Chang-I, resolutely Imperialist, was in 311
+on the point of bringing the Chinese world to voluntary subjection when
+a change of occupancy of the throne caused his combination to miscarry.
+In 294 began the campaigns of Pe-Ki.[739] It was in the prestige of his
+victories that the King of Tsin took the mystic Emperor-title of the
+legendary age,[740] which openly expressed the claim to world-rule, and
+was at once imitated by the ruler of Tsi in the east.[741] With this
+began the second maximum phase of the decisive struggles. The number
+of independent states grew steadily less. In 255 even the home state
+of Confucius, Lu, vanished, and in 249 the Chóu dynasty came to an end.
+In 246 the mighty Wang-Cheng became, at the age of thirteen, Emperor
+of Tsin, and in 241, with the aid of his Chancellor Lui-Shi (the
+Chinese Mæcenas[742]), he fought out to victory the last bout that the
+last opponent, the Empire of Tsu, ventured to challenge. In 221, sole
+ruler in actual fact, he assumed the title Shi (Augustus). This is the
+beginning of the Imperial age in China.
+
+No era confronts its mankind so distinctly with the alternative of
+_great form_ or _great individual powers_ as this “Period of the
+Contending States.” In the degree in which the nations cease to be
+politically in “condition,” in that degree possibilities open up for
+the energetic private person who means to be politically creative,
+who will have power at any price, and who as a phenomenon of force
+becomes the Destiny of an entire people or Culture. Events have become
+unpredictable on the basis of form. Instead of the given tradition that
+can dispense with genius (because it is itself cosmic force at highest
+capacity), we have now the accident of great fact-men. The accident of
+their rise brings a weak people (for example, the Macedonians), to the
+peak of events overnight, and the accident of their death (for example,
+Cæsar’s) can immediately plunge a world from personally secured order
+into chaos.
+
+This indeed had been manifested earlier in critical times of
+transition. The epoch of the Fronde, the Ming-shu, the First Tyrannis,
+when men were not in form, but fought about form, has always thrown
+up a number of great figures who grew too big for definition and
+limitation in terms of office. The change from Culture to Civilization,
+with its typical Napoleonism, does so too. But with this, which is
+the preface to unredeemed historical formlessness, dawns the real
+day of the great individual. For us this period attained almost to
+its climax in the World War; in the Classical World it began with
+Hannibal, who challenged Rome in the name of Hellenism (to which
+inwardly he belonged), but went under because the Hellenistic East, in
+true Classical fashion, apprehended the meaning of the hour too late,
+or not at all. With his downfall began that proud sequence that runs
+from the Scipios through Æmilius Paullus, Flamininus, the Catos, the
+Gracchi, Marius, and Sulla to Pompey, Cæsar, and Augustus. In China,
+correspondingly, during the period of the “Contending States,” a like
+chain of statesmen and generals centred on Tsin as the Classical
+figures centred on Rome. In accordance with the complete want of
+understanding of the political side of Chinese history that prevails,
+these men are usually described as Sophists.[743] They were so, but
+only in the same sense as leading Romans of the same period were
+Stoics--that is, as having been educated in the philosophy and rhetoric
+of the Greek East. All were finished orators and all from time to time
+wrote on philosophy, Cæsar and Brutus no less than Cato and Cicero,
+but they did so not as professional philosophers, but because _otium
+cum dignitate_ was the habit of cultivated gentlemen. In business
+hours they were masters of fact, whether on battle-field or in high
+politics, and precisely the same is true of the Chancellors Chang-I and
+Su-tsin;[744] the dreaded diplomatist Fan-Sui who overthrew Pe-Ki, the
+general; Wei-Yang the legislator of Tsin; Lui-Shi, the first Emperor’s
+Mæcenas, and others.
+
+The Culture had bound up all its forces in strict form. Now they were
+released, and “Nature”--that is, the cosmic--broke forth immediate.
+The change from the absolute State to the battling Society of nations
+that marks the beginning of every Civilization may mean for idealists
+and ideologues what they like--in the world of facts it means the
+transition from government in the style and pulse of a strict tradition
+to the _sic volo, sic jubeo_ of the unbridled personal régime. The
+maximum of symbolic and _super_-personal form coincides with that of
+the Late period of the Culture--in China about 600, in the Classical
+about 450, for ourselves about 1700. The minimum in the Classical
+lies in the time of Sulla and Pompey, and for us will be reached (and
+possibly passed) in the next hundred years. Great interstate and
+internal conflicts, revolutions of a fearful kind, interpenetrate
+increasingly, but the questions at issue in all of them without
+exception are (consciously and frankly or not) questions of unofficial,
+and eventually purely personal, power. It is historically of no
+importance what they themselves aimed at theoretically, and we need not
+know the catchwords under which the Chinese and Arabian revolutions of
+this stage broke out, nor even whether there were such catchwords. None
+of the innumerable revolutions of this era--which more and more become
+blind outbreaks of uprooted megalopolitan masses--has ever attained, or
+ever had the possibility of attaining, an aim. What stands is only the
+_historical fact_ of an accelerated demolition of ancient forms that
+leaves the path clear for Cæsarism.
+
+But the same is true also of the wars, in which the armies and their
+tactical methods become more and more the creation, not of the epoch,
+but of uncontrolled individual captains, who in many cases discovered
+their genius very late and by accident. While in 300 there were _Roman_
+armies, in 100 there were the armies of Marius and Sulla and Cæsar;
+and Octavian’s army, which was composed of Cæsar’s veterans, led its
+general much more than it was led by him. But with this the methods
+of war, its means, and its aims assumed raw-natural and ferocious
+forms,[745] very different from those prevailing before. Their duels
+were not eighteenth-century Trianon duels, encounters in knightly
+forms with fixed rules to determine when a man might declare himself
+exhausted, what maximum of force might be employed, and what conditions
+the chivalry permitted a victor to impose. They were ring-battles of
+infuriated men with fists and teeth, fought to the bodily collapse of
+one and exploited without reserve or restraint by the victor. The first
+great example of this “return to Nature” is afforded by the French
+Revolutionary and Napoleonic armies, which, instead of artificial
+manœuvres with small bodies, practised the mass-onset without regard
+to losses and thereby shattered to atoms the refined strategy of
+the Rococo. To bring the whole muscular force of a nation on to the
+battlefields by the universal-service system was an idea utterly alien
+to the age of Frederick the Great.[746]
+
+Similarly, in every Culture, the technique of war hesitatingly
+followed the advance of craftsmanship, until at the beginning of
+the Civilization it suddenly takes the lead, presses all mechanical
+possibilities of the time relentlessly into its service, and under
+pressure of military necessity even opens up new domains hitherto
+unexploited--but at the same time renders largely ineffectual the
+personal heroism of the thoroughbred, the ethos of the noble, and the
+subtle intellect of the Late Culture. In the Classical world, where the
+Polis made mass-armies essentially impossible--for relatively to the
+general smallness of Classical forms, tactical included, the numbers
+of Cannæ, Philippi, and Actium were enormous and exceptional--the
+second Tyrannis (Dionysius of Syracuse leading) introduced mechanical
+technique into warfare, and on a large scale.[747] Then for the first
+time it became possible to carry out sieges like those of Rhodes (305),
+Syracuse (213), Carthage (146), and Alesia (52), in which also the
+increasing importance of rapidity, even for Classical strategy, became
+evident. It was in line with this tendency that the Roman legion, the
+characteristic structure of which developed only in the Hellenistic
+age, worked like a machine as compared with the Athenian and Spartan
+militias of the fifth century. In China, correspondingly, iron was
+worked up for cutting and thrusting weapons from 474, light cavalry
+of the Mongolian model displaced the heavy war-chariot, and fortress
+warfare suddenly acquired outstanding importance.[748] The fundamental
+craving of Civilized mankind for speed, mobility, and mass-effects
+finally combined, in the world of Europe and America, with the Faustian
+will to domination over Nature and produced dynamic methods of war
+that even to Frederick the Great would have seemed like lunacy, but
+to us of to-day, in close proximity to our technics of transportation
+and industry, are perfectly natural. Napoleon horsed his artillery
+and thereby made it highly mobile (just as he broke up the mass army
+of the Revolution into a system of self-contained and easily moved
+corps), and already at Wagram and Borodino it had augmented its purely
+physical effectiveness to the point of what we should call rapid-fire
+and drum fire.[749] The second stage is--most significantly--marked by
+the American Civil War of 1861-5--which even in the numbers of troops
+it involved far surpassed the order of magnitude of the Napoleonic
+Wars[750] and in which for the first time the railway was used for
+large troop-movements, the telegraph-network for messages, and a steam
+fleet, keeping the sea for months on end, for blockade, and in which
+armoured ships, the torpedo, rifled weapons, and monster artillery
+of extraordinary range were discovered.[751][752] The third stage is
+that of the World War, preluded by the Russo-Japanese conflict;[753]
+here submarine and aircraft were set to work, speed of invention
+became a new arm in itself, and the extent (though most certainly
+not the intensity) of the means used attained a maximum. But to this
+expenditure of force there corresponds everywhere the ruthlessness
+of the decisions. At the very outset of the Chinese Shan-Kwo period
+we find the utter annihilation of the State of Wu--an act which in
+the preceding Chun-tsiu period chivalry would have made impossible.
+Even in the peace of Campo Formio Napoleon outraged the _convenances_
+of the eighteenth century, and after Austerlitz he introduced the
+practice of exploiting military success without regard to any but
+material restrictions. The last step still possible is being taken in
+the peace treaty of the Versailles type, which deliberately avoids
+finality and settlement, and keeps open the possibility of setting up
+new conditions at every change in the situation. The same evolution
+is seen in the chain of the three Punic Wars. The idea of wiping out
+one of the leading great powers of the world--which eventually became
+familiar to everyone through Cato’s deliberately dry insistence on his
+“_Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam_”--never crossed the mind of
+the victor of Zama and, for all the wild war-ethics of the Classical
+Poleis, it would have seemed to Lysander, as he stood victorious in
+Athens, an impiety towards every god.
+
+The Period of the Contending States begins for the Classical world with
+the battle of Ipsus (301) which established the trinity of Eastern
+great powers, and the Roman victory over the Etruscans and Samnites at
+Sentinum (295), which created a mid-Italian great power by the side of
+Carthage. Then, however, the characteristic Classical preference for
+things near and in the present resulted in eyes’ being shut while Rome
+won, first the Italian south in the Pyrrhic adventure, then the sea in
+the first Punic War, and then the Celtic north through C. Flaminius.
+The significance even of Hannibal (probably the only man of his time
+who clearly saw the trend of events) was ignored by all, the Romans
+themselves not excepted. It was at _Zama_, and not merely later at
+Magnesia and Pydna, that the Hellenistic Eastern powers were defeated.
+All in vain the great Scipio, truly anxious in the presence of the
+destiny to which a Polis overloaded with the tasks of a world-dominion
+was marching, sought thereafter to avoid all conquest. In vain his
+entourage forced through the Macedonian War, against the will of every
+party, merely in order that the East could thenceforth be ignored as
+harmless. Imperialism is so necessary a product of any Civilization
+that when a people refuses to assume the rôle of master, it is seized
+and pushed into it. The Roman Empire was _not_ conquered--the “_orbis
+terrarum_” condensed itself into that form and forced the Romans to
+give it their name. It is all very Classical. While the Chinese states
+defended even the mere remnants of their independence with the last
+bitterness, Rome after 146 only took upon herself to transform the
+Eastern land-masses into provinces because there was no other resource
+against anarchy left. And even this much resulted in the inward form
+of Rome--the last which had remained upright--melting in the Gracchan
+disorders. And (what is unparalleled elsewhere) it was not between
+states that the final rounds of the battle for Imperium were fought,
+but between the parties of a city--the form of the Polis allowed of
+no other outcome. Of old it had been Sparta _versus_ Athens, now it
+was Optimate _versus_ Popular Party. In the Gracchan revolution,
+which was already (134) heralded by a first Servile War, the younger
+Scipio was secretly murdered and C. Gracchus openly slain--the first
+who as Princeps and the first who as Tribune were political centres
+in themselves amidst a world become formless. When, in 104, the urban
+masses of Rome for the first time lawlessly and tumultuously invested
+a private person, Marius, with Imperium, the deeper importance of
+the drama then enacted is comparable with that of the assumption of
+the mythic Emperor-title by the ruler of Tsin in 288. The inevitable
+product of the age, Cæsarism, suddenly outlines itself on the horizon.
+
+The heir of the Tribune was Marius, who like him linked mob and high
+finance and in 87 murdered off the old aristocracy in masses. The heir
+of the Princeps was Sulla, who in 82 annihilated the class of the great
+merchants by his proscriptions. Thereafter the final decisions press
+on rapidly, as in China after the emergence of Wang Cheng. Pompey
+the Princeps and Cæsar the Tribune--tribune not in office, but in
+attitude--were still party-leaders, but nevertheless, already at Lucca,
+they were arranging with Crassus and each other for the first partition
+of the world amongst themselves. When the heirs of Cæsar fought his
+murderers at Philippi, both had ceased to be more than groups. By
+Actium the issue was between individuals, and Cæsarism will out, even
+in such a process as this.
+
+In the corresponding evolution within the Arabian world it is, of
+course, the Magian Consensus that takes the place of the bodily
+Polis as the basic form in and through which the facts accomplish
+themselves; and this form, as we have seen, excluded any separation
+of political and religious tendencies to such an extent that even the
+urban bourgeois urge towards freedom (marking, here as elsewhere,
+the beginning of the Period of Contending States) presents itself in
+orthodox disguise, and so has hitherto almost escaped notice.[754]
+It appeared as a will to break loose from the Caliphate, which the
+Sassanids, and Diocletian following them, had created in the forms of
+the feudal state. From the times of Justinian and Chosroës Nushirvan
+this had had to meet the onset of Frondeurs--led by the heads of the
+Greek and Mazdaist Churches, the nobility, both Persian-Mazdaist (above
+all Irak) and Greek (particularly the Asiatic), and the high chivalry
+of Armenia, which was divided into two parts by the difference of
+religion. The absolutism almost attained in the seventh century was
+then suddenly destroyed by the attack of Islam. In its _political_
+beginnings Islam was strictly aristocratic; the handful of Arabian
+families[755] who everywhere kept the leading in their hands, very soon
+formed in the conquered territories a new higher nobility of strong
+breed and immense self-sufficingness which thrust the dynasty down
+to the same level as its English “contemporaries” thrust theirs. The
+Civil War between Othman and Ali (656-661) was the expression of a true
+Fronde, and its movements were all in the interests of two clans and
+their respective adherents. The Islamic Whigs and Tories of the eighth
+century, like the English of the eighteenth, _alone_ practised high
+politics, and their coteries and family quarrels are more important to
+the history of the time than any events in the reigning house of the
+Ommaiyads (661-750).
+
+But with the fall of the gay and enlightened dynasty that has resided
+in Damascus--that is, West-Aramæan and Monophysite Syria--the natural
+centre of gravity of the Arabian Culture reappeared; it was the
+East-Aramæan region. Once the basis of Sassanid and now of Abbassid
+power, but always--irrespective of whether its shaping was Persian or
+Arabian, or its religion Mazdaist, Nestorian, or Islamic--it expressed
+one and the same grand line of development and was the exemplar for
+Syria as for Byzantium alike. From Kufa the movement started which led
+to the downfall of the Ommaiyads and their _ancien régime_, and the
+character of this movement--of which the whole extent has never to this
+day been observed--was that _of a social revolution directed against
+the primary orders of society and the aristocratic tradition_.[756] It
+began among the Mavali, the small bourgeoisie in the East, and directed
+itself with bitter hostility against the Arabs, not _qua_ champions of
+Islam but _qua_ new nobility. The recently converted Mavali, almost all
+former Mazdaists, took Islam more seriously than the Arabs themselves,
+who represented also a class-ideal. Even in the army of Ali the wholly
+democratic and Puritan Qaraites had split off,[757] and in their ranks
+we see for the first time the combination of fanatic sectarianism and
+Jacobinism. Here and now there emerged not only the Shiite tendency,
+but also the first impulses towards the Communistic Karramiyya
+movement, which can be traced to Mazdak[758] and later produced the
+vast outbreaks under Babek. The Abbassids were anything but favourites
+with the insurgents of Kufa, and it was only owing to their great
+diplomatic skill that they were first allowed a footing as officers and
+then--almost like Napoleon--were able to enter into the heritage of a
+Revolution that had spread over the whole East. After their victory
+they built Baghdad--a resurrected Ctesiphon, symbol of the downfall
+of feudal Arabism--and this first world-city of the new Civilization
+became from 800 to 1050 the theatre of the events which led from
+Napoleonism to Cæsarism, _from the Caliphate to the Sultanate_, which,
+in Baghdad no less than in Byzantium, is the Magian type of power
+without form--here also the only kind of power still possible.
+
+We have to recognize quite clearly, then, that in the Arabian world
+as elsewhere democracy was a class-ideal--the outlook of townsmen
+and the expression of their will to be free from the old linkages
+with land, be it a desert or plough-land. The “no” which answered the
+Caliph-tradition could disguise itself in very numerous forms, and
+neither free-thought nor constitutionalism in our sense was necessary
+to it. _Magian mind and Magian money are “free” in quite a different
+way._ The Byzantine monkhood was liberal to the point of turbulence,
+not only against court and nobility, but also against the higher
+ecclesiastical powers, which had developed a hierarchy (corresponding
+to the Gothic) even before the Council of Nicæa. The consensus of the
+Faithful, the “people” in the most daring sense, was looked upon as
+willed by God (“Nature,” Rousseau would have said), as _equal_ and
+free from all powers of the blood. The celebrated scene in which the
+Abbot Theodore of Studion adjured the Emperor Leo V to obey (813) is
+a Storming of the Bastille in Magian forms.[759] Not long afterwards
+there began the revolt of the Paulicians, very pious and in social
+matters wholly radical,[760] who set up a state of their own beyond
+the Taurus, ravaged all Asia Minor, defeated one Imperial levy after
+another, and were not subjugated till 874. This corresponds in every
+way to the communistic-religious movement of the Karramiyya, which
+extended from the Tigris to Merv and whose leader Babek succumbed only
+after a twenty years’ struggle (817-837);[761] and the other like
+outbreak of the Carmathians[762] in the West (890-904), whose liaisons
+reached from Arabia into all the Syrian cities and who propagated
+rebellion as far as the Persian coast. But, besides these, there were
+still other disguises of the political party-battle. When now we are
+told that the Byzantine army was Iconoclast and that the military party
+was consequently opposed by an Iconodule monkish party, we begin to
+see the passions of the century of the image-controversy (740-840)
+in quite a new light, and to understand that the end of the crisis
+(843)--the final defeat of the Iconoclasts and _simultaneously_ of the
+free-church monkish policy--signifies a Restoration in the 1815 sense
+of the word.[763] And, lastly, this period is the time of the fearful
+slave-rebellion in Irak--the kernel of the Abbassids’ realm--which
+throws sudden light upon a series of other social upheavals. Ali, the
+Spartacus of Islam, founded in 869, south of Baghdad, a veritable Negro
+state out of the masses of runaways, built himself a capital, Muktara,
+and extended his power far in the directions of Arabia and Persia
+alike, where he gained the support of whole tribes. In 871 Basra, the
+first great port of the Islamic world, inhabited by nearly a million
+souls, was taken, deluged in massacre, and burnt. Not till 883 was this
+slave-state destroyed.
+
+Thus slowly the Sassanid-Byzantine forms were hollowed out, and in the
+place of the ancient traditions of the higher officialdom and nobility
+there arose the inconsequent and wholly personal power of incidental
+geniuses--_the Sultanate_. For this is the specifically Arabian form,
+and it appears simultaneously in Byzantium and Baghdad and takes its
+steady course from the Napoleonic beginnings about 800 to the completed
+Cæsarism of the Seljuk Turks about 1050. This form is purely Magian,
+belongs only to that Culture, and is incomprehensible without the most
+fundamental axioms of its soul. The Caliphate, a synthesis of political
+(not to say cosmic) beat and style, was not abolished--for the Caliph
+as the representative of God recognized by the Consensus of the elect
+is sacred--but he was deprived of all powers that Cæsarism needed to
+possess, just as Pompey and Augustus in fact, and Sulla and Cæsar in
+fact and in name, abstracted these powers from the old constitutional
+forms of Rome. In the end there remained to the Caliph about as much
+power as the Senate and the Comitias had under Tiberius. The whole
+richness of being in high form--in law, costume, ethic--that had once
+been a symbol, was now mere trappings covering a formless and purely
+factual régime.
+
+So we find by the side of Michael III (842-867) Bardas, and by
+Constantine VII (912-959) Romanos--the latter even formally
+Co-Emperor.[764] In 867 the ex-groom Basileios, a Napoleonic figure,
+overthrew Bardas and founded the sword-dynasty of the Armenians (to
+1081), in which generals instead of Emperors mostly ruled--force-men
+like Romanos, Nicephorus, and Bardas Phocas. The greatest amongst them
+was John Tzimisces (969-976) in Armenian Kiur Zan. In Baghdad it was
+the _Turks_ who played the Armenian rôle; in 842 the Caliph Vathek
+invested one of their leaders for the first time with the title of
+Sultan. From 862 the Turkish prætorians held the ruler in tutelage,
+and in 945 Achmed, the founder of the Sultan-dynasty of the Buyids,
+formally restricted the Abbassid Caliph to his religious dignities.
+And then there set in, in both the world-cities, an unrestrained
+competition between the mighty provincial families for possession
+of the supreme power. In the case of the Christian we find, indeed,
+Basileios II and others challenging the great latifundia lords, but
+this does not in the least mean social purposes in the legislator.
+It was an act of self-defence on the part of the momentary potentate
+against possible heirs, and closely analogous, therefore, to the
+proscriptions of Sulla and the Triumvirs. Half Asia Minor belonged to
+the Dukas, Phocas, and Skleros connexions; the Chancellor Basileios,
+who could keep an army on pay out of his own fabulous resources, has
+long ago been compared with Crassus.[765] But the imperial age proper
+begins only with the Seljuk Turks.[766] Their leader Togrulbek won Irak
+in 1043 and Armenia in 1049, and in 1055 forced the Caliph to grant him
+the _hereditary_ Sultanate. His son Alp Arslan conquered Syria and, by
+the victory of Manzikert, gained eastern Asia Minor. The remnant of the
+Byzantine Empire thenceforward possessed no importance to, or influence
+on, the further destinies of the Turkish Islamic Imperium.
+
+This is the phase, too, which in Egypt is concealed under the name
+of the “Hyksos.” Between the XIIth and the XVIIIth Dynasties lay two
+centuries,[767] which began with the collapse of the _ancien régime_
+which had culminated with Sesostris III,[768] and ended with the
+beginning of the New Empire. The numbering of the dynasties itself
+suffices to disclose something catastrophic. In the lists of kings the
+names appear successive or parallel, usurpers of obscurest origin,
+generals, people with strange titles, often reigning only a few days.
+With the very first king of the XIIIth Dynasty the high-Nile records
+at Semne break off, and with his successor the archives at Kahun come
+to an end. It is the time out of which the Leiden Papyrus portrays
+the great social revolution.[769] The fall of the Government and the
+victory of the mass is followed by outbreaks of the army and the rise
+of ambitious soldiers. In Egypt from about 1680 appears the name of
+the “Hyksos,”[770] a designation with which the historians of the New
+Empire, who no longer understood or wished to understand the meaning
+of the epoch, covered up the shame of these years. These Hyksos, there
+can be no doubt whatever, played the part that the Armenians played in
+Byzantium; and in the Classical world too, the destinies of the Cimbri
+and Teutones, would have gone the same way had they defeated Marius and
+his legions of city _canaille_; they would have filled the armies of
+the Triumvirs again and again, and in the end probably set up barbarian
+chieftains in their place--for the case of Jugurtha shows the lengths
+to which foreigners dared to go with the Rome of those days. The
+provenance or constitution of the intruders does not matter--they might
+be body-guards, insurgent slaves, Jacobins, or purely alien tribes.
+What does matter is what they were for the Egyptian world in that
+century of theirs. In the end they set up a state in the Western Delta
+and built a capital, Auaris, for it.[771] One of their leaders, Khyan
+by name, who styled himself, not Pharaoh, but “Embracer of the Country”
+and “prince of the young men” (names as essentially revolutionary as
+the _Consul sine collega_ or _dictator prepetuus_ of Cæsar’s time) a
+man probably of the stamp of John Tzimisces, ruled over all Egypt and
+spread his renown as far as Crete and the Euphrates. But after him
+began a fight of all the districts for the Imperium, and out of that
+fight Amasis and the Theban dynasty eventually emerged victorious.
+
+For us this time of Contending States began with Napoleon and his
+violent-arbitrary government by order. His head was the first in our
+world to make effective the notion of a military and at the same
+time popular world-domination--something altogether different from
+the Empire of Charles V and even the British Colonial Empire of his
+own day. If the nineteenth century has been relatively poor in great
+wars--and revolutions--and has overcome its worst crises diplomatically
+by means of congresses, this has been due precisely to the continuous
+and terrific war-preparedness which has made disputants, fearful at the
+eleventh hour of the consequences, postpone the definitive decision
+again and again, and led to the substitution of chess-moves for war.
+For this is the century of gigantic permanent armies and universal
+compulsory service. We ourselves are too near to it to see it under
+this terrifying aspect. In all world-history there is no parallel.
+Ever since Napoleon, hundreds of thousands, and latterly millions,
+of men have stood ready to march, and mighty fleets renewed every ten
+years have filled the harbours. It is a war without war, a war of
+overbidding in equipment and preparedness, a war of figures and tempo
+and technics, and the diplomatic dealings have been not of court with
+court, but of headquarters with headquarters. The longer the discharge
+was delayed, the more huge became the means and the more intolerable
+the tension. This is the Faustian, the dynamic, form of “the Contending
+States” during the first century of that period, but it ended with the
+explosion of the World War. For the demand of these four years has been
+altogether too much for the principle of universal service--child of
+the French Revolution, revolutionary through and through, as it is in
+this form--and for all tactical methods evolved from it.[772] The place
+of the permanent armies as we know them will gradually be taken by
+professional forces of volunteer war-keen soldiers; and from millions
+we shall revert to hundreds of thousands. But _ipso facto_ this second
+century will be one of _actually_ Contending States. _These_ armies
+are not substitutes for war--they are _for_ war, and they want war.
+Within two generations it will be they whose will prevails over that
+of all the comfortables put together. In these wars of theirs for the
+heritage of the whole world, continents will be staked, India, China,
+South Africa, Russia, Islam called out, new technics and tactics played
+and counterplayed. The great cosmopolitan foci of power will dispose at
+their pleasure of smaller states--their territory, their economy and
+their men alike--all that is now merely province, passive object, means
+to end, and its destinies are without importance to the great march of
+things. We ourselves, in a very few years, have learned to take little
+or no notice of events that before the War would have horrified the
+world; who to-day seriously thinks about the millions that perish in
+Russia?
+
+Again and again between these catastrophes of blood and terror the cry
+rises up for reconciliation of the peoples and for peace on earth.
+It is but the background and the echo of the grand happening, but,
+as such, so necessary that we have to assume its existence even if,
+as in Hyksos Egypt, in Baghdad and Byzantium, no tradition tells of
+it. Esteem as we may the wish towards all this, we must have the
+courage to face facts as they are--that is the hall-mark of men of
+race-quality and it is by the being of these men that _alone_ history
+is. Life if it would be great, is hard; it lets choose _only_ between
+victory and ruin, not between war and peace, and to the victory belong
+the sacrifices of victory. For that which shuffles querulously and
+jealously by the side of the events is only literature,--written or
+thought or lived literature--mere truths that lose themselves in the
+moving crush of facts. History has never deigned to take notice of
+these propositions. In the Chinese world Hiang-Sui tried, as early as
+535, to found a peace league. In the period of the Contending States,
+imperialism (_Lien-heng_) was opposed by the League of Nations idea
+(_Hoh-tsung_),[773] particularly in the southern regions, but it was
+foredoomed like every half-measure that steps into the path of a whole,
+and it had vanished even before the victory of the North. But both
+tendencies alike rejected the political taste of the Taoists, who, in
+those fearful centuries, elected for intellectual self-disarmament,
+thereby reducing themselves to the level of mere material to be
+used up by others and for others in the grand decisions. Even Roman
+politics--deliberately improvident as the Classical spirit was in all
+other respects--at least made one attempt to bring the whole world
+into one system of equal co-ordinated forces which should do away with
+all necessity for further wars--that is, when at the fall of Hannibal
+Rome forwent the chance of incorporating the East. But reluctance was
+useless; the party of the younger Scipio went over to frank Imperialism
+in order to make an end of chaos, although its clear-sighted
+leader foresaw therein the doom of his city, which possessed (and
+in a high degree) the native Classical incapacity for organizing
+anything whatever. The way from Alexander to Cæsar is unambiguous
+and unavoidable, and the strongest nation of any and every Culture,
+consciously or unconsciously, willing or unwilling, has had to tread it.
+
+From the rigour of these facts there is no refuge. The Hague Conference
+of 1907 was the prelude of the World War; the Washington Conference of
+1921 will have been that of other wars. The history of these times is
+no longer an intellectual match of wits in elegant forms for pluses
+and minuses, from which either side can withdraw when it pleases. The
+alternatives now are to stand fast or to go under--there is no middle
+course. The only moral that the logic of things permits to us now
+is that of the climber on the face of the crag--a moment’s weakness
+and all is over. To-day all “philosophy” is nothing but an inward
+abdication and resignation, or a craven hope of escaping realities by
+means of mysticisms. It was just the same in Roman times. Tacitus tells
+us[774] how the famous Musonius Rufus tried, by exhortations on the
+blessings of peace and the evils of war, to influence the legions that
+in 70 stood before the gates of Rome, and barely escaped alive from
+their blows. The military commander Avidius Cassius called the Emperor
+Marcus Aurelius a “philosophical old woman.”
+
+In these conditions so much of old and great traditions as remains, so
+much of historical “fitness” and experience as has got into the blood
+of the twentieth-century nations, acquires an unequalled potency. For
+us _creative_ piety, or (to use a more fundamental term) the pulse
+that has come down to us from first origins, adheres only to forms
+that are older than the Revolution and Napoleon,[775] forms which grew
+and were not made. Every remnant of them, however tiny, that has kept
+itself alive in the being of any self-contained minority whatever will
+before long rise to incalculable values and bring about historical
+effects which no one yet imagines to be possible. The traditions of an
+old monarchy, of an old aristocracy, of an old polite society, in so
+much as they are still healthy enough to keep clear of professional or
+professorial politics, in so far as they possess honour, abnegation,
+discipline, the genuine sense of a great mission (_race-quality_, that
+is, and training), sense of duty and sacrifice--can become a centre
+which holds together the being-stream of an entire people and enables
+it to outlast this time and make its landfall in the future. To be “in
+condition” is everything. It falls to us to live in the most trying
+times known to the history of a great Culture. The last race to keep
+its form, the last living tradition, the last leaders who have both at
+their back, will pass through and onward, victors.
+
+
+X {sic}
+
+By the term “Cæsarism” I mean that kind of government which,
+irrespective of any constitutional formulation that it may have, is in
+its inward self a return to thorough formlessness. It does not matter
+that Augustus in Rome, and Hwang-ti in China, Amasis in Egypt and Alp
+Arslan in Baghdad disguised their position under antique forms. The
+spirit of these forms was dead,[776] and so all institutions, however
+carefully maintained, were thenceforth destitute of all meaning and
+weight. Real importance centred in the wholly personal power exercised
+by the Cæsar, or by anybody else capable of exercising it in his place.
+It is the _récidive_ of a form-fulfilled world into primitivism, into
+the cosmic-historyless. Biological stretches of time once more take the
+place vacated by historical periods.[777]
+
+At the beginning, where the Civilization is developing to full bloom
+(to-day), there stands the miracle of the Cosmopolis, the great
+petrifact, a symbol of the formless--vast, splendid, spreading in
+insolence. It draws within itself the being-streams of the now impotent
+countryside, human masses that are wafted as dunes from one to another
+or flow like loose sand into the chinks of the stone. Here money and
+intellect celebrate their greatest and their last triumphs. It is the
+most artificial, the cleverest phenomenon manifested in the light-world
+of human eyes--uncanny, “too good to be true,” standing already almost
+beyond the possibilities of cosmic formation.
+
+Presently, however, the idea-less facts come forward again, naked
+and gigantic. The eternal-cosmic pulse has finally overcome the
+intellectual tensions of a few centuries. In the form of democracy,
+money has won. There has been a period in which politics were almost
+its preserve. But as soon as it has destroyed the old orders of the
+Culture, the chaos gives forth a new and overpowering factor that
+penetrates to the very elementals of Becoming--the Cæsar-men. Before
+them the money collapses. _The Imperial Age, in every Culture alike,
+signifies the end of the politics of mind and money_. The powers of the
+blood, unbroken bodily forces, resume their ancient lordship. “Race”
+springs forth, pure and irresistible--the strongest win and the residue
+is their spoil. They seize the management of the world, and the realm
+of books and problems petrifies or vanishes from memory. From now
+on, new destinies in the style of the pre-Culture time are possible
+afresh, and visible to the consciousness without cloaks of causality.
+There is no inward difference more between the lives of Septimius
+Severus and Gallienus and those of Alaric and Odoacer. Rameses,
+Trajan, Wu-ti belong together in a uniform up-and-down of historyless
+time-stretches.[778]
+
+Once the Imperial Age has arrived, there are no more political
+problems. People manage with the situation as it is and the powers
+that be. In the period of Contending States, torrents of blood had
+reddened the pavements of all world-cities, so that the great truths
+of Democracy might be turned into actualities, and for the winning of
+rights without which life seemed not worth the living. Now these rights
+are won, but the grandchildren cannot be moved, even by punishment, to
+make use of them. A hundred years more, and even the historians will
+no longer understand the old controversies. Already by Cæsar’s time
+reputable people had almost ceased to take part in the elections.[779]
+It embittered the life of the great Tiberius that the most capable
+men of his time held aloof from politics, and Nero could not even
+by threats compel the Equites to come to Rome in order to exercise
+their rights. This is the end of the great politics. The conflict of
+intelligences that had served as substitute for war must give place to
+war itself in its most primitive form.
+
+It is, therefore, a complete misunderstanding of the meaning of the
+period to presume, as Mommsen did,[780] a deep design of subdivision
+in the “dyarchy” fashioned by Augustus, with its partition of powers
+between Princeps and Senate. A century earlier this constitution would
+have been a real thing, but that would in itself suffice to make it
+impossible for such an idea to have entered the heads of the present
+force-men. Now it meant nothing but the attempt of a weak personality
+to deceive itself as to inexorable facts by mantling them in empty
+forms. Cæsar saw things as they were and was guided in the exercise of
+his rulership by definite and unsentimental practical considerations.
+The legislation of his last months was concerned wholly with
+transitional provisions, none of which were intended to be permanent.
+This precisely is what has generally been overlooked. He was far too
+deep a judge of things to anticipate development or to settle its
+definitive forms at this moment, with the Parthian War impending. But
+Augustus, like Pompey before him, was not the master of his following,
+but thoroughly dependent upon it and its views of things. The form
+of the Principate was not at all his discovery, but the doctrinaire
+execution of an obsolete party-ideal that Cicero--another weakling--had
+formulated.[781] When, on the 13th January 27, Augustus gave back
+the state-power to the “Senate and People” of Rome--a scene all the
+more meaningless because of its sincerity--he kept the Tribunate for
+himself. In fact, this was the one element of the polity that could
+manifest itself in actuality. The Tribune was the legitimate successor
+of the Tyrant,[782] and as long ago as 122 B.C. Caius Gracchus had put
+into the title a connotation limited no longer by the legal bounds
+of the office, but only by the personal talents of the incumbent.
+From him it is a direct line through Marius and Cæsar to the young
+Nero, who set himself to defeat the political purposes of his mother
+Agrippina. The Princeps,[783] on the other hand, was thenceforth only a
+costume, a rank--very likely a fact in society, certainly not a fact in
+politics. And this, precisely, was the conception invested with light
+and glamour by the theory of Cicero, and _already_--and by him of all
+people--associated with the Divus-idea.[784] The “co-operation” of the
+Senate and People, on the contrary, was an antiquated ceremonial, with
+about as much life in it as the rites of the Fratres Arvales--also
+restored by Augustus. The great parties of the Gracchan age had long
+become retinues--Cæsarians and Pompeians--and finally there only
+remained on the one side the formless omnipotence, the plain brutal
+“fact,” the Cæsar--or whoever managed to get the Cæsar under his
+influence--and on the other side the handful of narrow ideologues who
+concealed dissatisfaction under philosophy and thenceforward sought
+to advance their ideals by conspiracy. What these Stoics were in
+Rome, the Confucians were in China--and, seen thus, the episode of
+the “Burning of the Books,” decreed by the Chinese Augustus in 212,
+begins to be intelligible through the reproach of immense vandalism
+that the minds of later literates fastened upon it. But, after all,
+these Stoic enthusiasts for an ideal that had become impossible
+had killed Cæsar:[785] to the Divus-cult they opposed a Cato- and
+Brutus-cult; the philosophers in the Senate (which by then was only a
+noble club) never wearied of lamenting the downfall of “freedom” and
+fomenting conspiracies such as Piso’s in 65. Had this been the state
+of things at Nero’s death, it would have been Sulla over again; and
+that is why Nero put to death the Stoic Thrasea Pætus, why Vespasian
+executed Helvidius Priscus, and why copies of the history of Cremutius
+Cordus, which lauded Brutus as the last of the Romans, were collected
+and burnt in Rome. These were acts of defensive State necessity
+_vis-à-vis_ blind ideology--acts such as those we know of Cromwell
+and Robespierre--and it was in exactly the same position that the
+Chinese Cæsars found themselves _vis-à-vis_ the school of Confucius,
+which had formerly worked out their ideal of a state-constitution
+and now had no notion of enduring the actuality. This great Burning
+of the Books was nothing but the destruction of one part of the
+politico-philosophical literature and the abolition of propaganda and
+secret organizations.[786] This defensive lasted in both Imperia for a
+century, and then even reminiscences of party-political passions faded
+out and the two philosophies became the ruling world-outlook of the
+Imperial age in its maturity.[787] But the world was now the theatre of
+_tragic family-histories_ into which state-histories were dissolved;
+the Julian-Claudian house destroyed Roman history, and the house of
+Shi-hwang-ti (even from 206 B.C.) destroyed Chinese, and we darkly
+discern something of the same kind in the destinies of the Egyptian
+Queen Hatshepsut and her brothers (1501-1447). It is the last step to
+the definitive. With world-peace--_the peace of high policies_--the
+“sword side”[788] of being retreats and the “spindle side” rules again;
+henceforth there are only _private_ histories, private destinies,
+private ambitions, from top to bottom, from the miserable troubles of
+fellaheen to the dreary feuds of Cæsars for the private possession of
+the world. The wars of the age of world-peace are private wars, more
+fearful than any State wars because they are formless.
+
+For world-peace--which has often existed in fact--involves the private
+renunciation of war on the part of the immense majority, but along with
+this it involves an unavowed readiness to submit to being the booty of
+others who do _not_ renounce it. It begins with the State-destroying
+wish for universal reconciliation, and it ends in nobody’s moving a
+finger so long as misfortune only touches his neighbour. Already under
+Marcus Aurelius each city and each land-patch was thinking of itself,
+and the activities of the ruler were his private affair as other
+men’s were theirs. The remoter peoples were as indifferent to him
+and his troops and his aims as they were to the projects of Germanic
+war-bands. On this _spiritual_ premiss a second Vikingism develops. The
+state of being “in form” passes from nations to bands and retinues of
+adventurers, self-styled Cæsars, seceding generals, barbarian kings,
+and what not--in whose eyes the population becomes in the end merely
+a part of the landscape. There is a deep relation between the heroes
+of the Mycenæan primitive age and the soldier-emperors of Rome, and
+between, say, Menes and Rameses II. In our Germanic world the spirits
+of Alaric and Theodoric will come again--there is a first hint of them
+in Cecil Rhodes--and the alien executioners of the Russian preface,
+from Jenghiz Khan to Trotski (with the episode of Petrine Tsarism
+between them) are, when all is said and done, very little different
+from most of the pretenders of the Latin-American republics, whose
+private struggles have long since put an end to the form-rich age of
+the Spanish Baroque.
+
+With the formed state, high history also lays itself down weary
+to sleep. Man becomes a plant again, adhering to the soil, dumb
+and enduring. The timeless village and the “eternal” peasant[789]
+reappear, begetting children and burying seed in Mother Earth--a busy,
+not inadequate swarm, over which the tempest of soldier-emperors
+passingly blows. In the midst of the land lie the old world-cities,
+empty receptacles of an extinguished soul, in which a historyless
+mankind slowly nests itself. Men live from hand to mouth, with petty
+thrifts and petty fortunes, and endure. Masses are trampled on in the
+conflicts of the conquerors who contend for the power and the spoil
+of this world, but the survivors fill up the gaps with a primitive
+fertility and suffer on. And while in high places there is eternal
+alternance of victory and defeat, those in the depths pray, pray with
+that mighty piety of the Second Religiousness that has overcome all
+doubts for ever.[790] There, in the souls, world-peace, the peace of
+God, the bliss of grey-haired monks and hermits, is become actual--and
+there alone. It has awakened that depth in the endurance of suffering
+which the historical man in the thousand years of his development has
+never known. Only with the end of grand History does holy, still Being
+reappear. It is a drama noble in its aimlessness, noble and aimless as
+the course of the stars, the rotation of the earth, and alternance of
+land and sea, of ice and virgin forest upon its face. We may marvel at
+it or we may lament it--but it is there.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE STATE
+
+(C)
+
+PHILOSOPHY OF POLITICS
+
+
+I
+
+To Politics as an idea we have given more thought than has been good
+for us, since, correspondingly, we have understood all the less about
+the observation of Politics as a reality. The great statesmen are
+accustomed to act immediately and on the basis of a sure flair for
+facts. This is so self-evident, to them, that it simply never enters
+their heads to reflect upon the basic general principles of their
+action--supposing indeed that such exist. In all ages they have known
+what they had to do, and any theory of this knowledge has been foreign
+to both their capacities and their tastes. But the professional
+thinkers who have turned their attention to the _faits accomplis_
+of men have been so remote, inwardly, from these actions that they
+have just spun for themselves a web of abstractions--for preference,
+abstraction-myths like justice, virtue, freedom--and then applied them
+as criteria to past and, especially, future historical happening.
+Thus in the end they have forgotten that concepts are only concepts,
+and brought themselves to the conclusion that there is a political
+science whereby we can form the course of the world according to an
+ideal recipe. As nothing of the kind has ever or anywhere happened,
+political doing has come to be considered as so trivial in comparison
+with abstract thinking that they debate in their books whether there is
+a “genius of action” at all.
+
+Here, on the contrary, the attempt will be made to give, instead of
+an ideological system, a _physiognomy_ of politics as it has actually
+been practised in the course of general history, and not as it might
+or ought to have been practised. The problem was, and is, to penetrate
+to the final meaning of great events, to “see” them, to feel and
+to transcribe the symbolically important in them. The projects of
+world-improvers and the actuality of History have nothing to do with
+one another.[791]
+
+The being-streams of humanity are called History when we regard them
+as movement, and family, estate, people, nation, when we regard them
+as the object moved.[792] Politics is the way in which this fluent
+Being maintains itself, _grows_, triumphs over other life-streams.
+_All living is politics_, in every trait of instinct, in the inmost
+marrow.[793] That which we nowadays like to call life-energy
+(vitality), the “it” in us that at all costs strives forward and
+upward, the blind cosmic drive to validity and power that at the
+same time remains plantwise and racewise, bound up with the earth,
+the “home”-land; the directedness, the need to actualize--it is this
+that appears in every higher mankind, as its political life, seeking
+naturally and inevitably the great decisions that determine whether it
+shall be, or shall suffer, a Destiny. For it grows or _it dies out_;
+there is no third possibility.
+
+For this reason the nobility, as expression of a strong race-quality,
+is the truly political Order, and training and not shaping is the truly
+political sort of education. Every great politician, a centre of forces
+in the stream of happening, has something of the noble in his feeling
+of self-vocation and inward obligation. On the other hand, all that is
+microcosmic and “intellect” is unpolitical, and so there is a something
+of priestliness in all program-politics and ideology. The best
+diplomats are the children; in their play, or when they want something,
+a cosmic “it” that is bound up in the individual being breaks out
+immediately and with the sure tread of the sleep-walker. They do not
+learn, but unlearn, this art of early years as they grow older--hence
+the rarity in the world of adults of the Statesman.
+
+It is only in and between these being-streams that fill the field of
+the high Culture that high policy exists. They are only possible,
+therefore, in the plural. A people _is_, really, only in relation to
+peoples.[794] But the natural, “race,” relation between them is for
+that very reason a relation of war--this is a fact that no truths
+avail to alter. War is the primary politics of _everything_ that
+lives, and so much so that in the deeps battle and life are one, and
+being and will-to-battle expire together. Old Germanic words for
+this, like “_orrusta_” and “_orlog_,” mean seriousness and destiny in
+contrast to jest and play--and the contrast is one of intensity, not
+of qualitative difference. And even though all high politics tries
+to be a substitution of more intellectual weapons for the sword and
+though it is the ambition of the statesman at the culminations of
+all the Cultures to feel able to dispense with war, yet the primary
+relationship between diplomacy and the war-art endures. The character
+of battle is common to both, and the tactics and stratagems, and the
+necessity of material forces in the background to give weight to the
+operations. The aim, too, remains the same--namely, the growth of one’s
+own life-unit (class or nation) at the cost of the other’s. And every
+attempt to eliminate the “race” element only leads to its transfer
+to other ground; instead of the conflict of states we have that of
+parties, or that of areas, or (if there also the will to growth is
+extinct) that of the adventurers’ retinues, to whose doings the rest of
+the population unresistingly adjusts itself.
+
+In every war between life-powers the question at issue is which is
+to govern the whole. It is always a life, never a system, law, or
+program that gives the beat in the stream of happening.[795] To be the
+centre of action and effective focus of a multitude,[796] to make the
+inward form of one’s own personality into that of whole peoples and
+periods, to be history’s commanding officer, with the aim of bringing
+one’s own people or family or purposes to the top of events--that is
+the scarce-conscious but irresistible impulse in every individual
+being that has a historical vocation in it. There is only _personal_
+history, and consequently only _personal_ politics. The struggle of,
+not principles but men, not ideals but race-qualities, for executive
+power is the alpha and omega. Even revolutions are no exception, for
+the “sovereignty of the people” only expresses the fact that the ruling
+power has assumed the title of people’s leader instead of that of king.
+The method of governing is scarcely altered thereby, and the position
+of the governed not at all. And even world-peace, in every case where
+it has existed, has been nothing but the slavery of an entire humanity
+under the regimen imposed by a few strong natures determined to rule.
+
+The conception of executive power implies that the life-unit--even in
+the case of the animals--is subdivided into subjects and objects of
+government. This is so self-evident that no mass-unit has ever for a
+moment, even in the severest crises (such as 1789), lost the sense of
+this inner structure of itself. Only the incumbent vanishes, not the
+office, and if a people does actually, in the tide of events, lose
+all leadership and float on haphazard, it only means that control has
+passed to outside hands, that it has become _in its entirety_ the mere
+object.
+
+Politically gifted _peoples_ do not exist. Those which are supposed
+to be so are simply peoples that are firmly in the hands of a ruling
+minority and in consequence feel themselves to be in good form. The
+English as a people are just as unthinking, narrow, and unpractical in
+political matters as any other nation, but they possess--for all their
+liking for public debate--a _tradition of confidence_. The difference
+is simply that the Englishman is the object of a regimen of very old
+and successful habits, in which he acquiesces because experience has
+shown him their advantage. From an acquiescence that has the outward
+appearance of agreement, it is only one step to the conviction that
+this government depends upon his will, although paradoxically it is
+the government that, for technical reasons of its own, unceasingly
+hammers the notion into his head. The ruling class in England has
+developed its aims and methods quite independently of the “people,”
+and it works with and within an unwritten constitution of which the
+refinements--which have arisen from practice and are wholly innocent of
+theory--are to the uninitiated as opaque as they are unintelligible.
+But the courage of a troop depends on its confidence in the leadership,
+and confidence means involuntary abstention from criticism. It is the
+officer who makes cowards into heroes, or heroes into cowards, and
+this holds good equally for armies, peoples, classes, and parties.
+_Political talent in a people_ is nothing but confidence in its
+leading. But that confidence has to be acquired; it will ripen only in
+its own good time, and success will stabilize it and make it into a
+tradition. What appears as a lack of the feeling of certainty in the
+ruled is really lack of leadership-talent in the ruling classes, which
+generates that sort of uninstinctive and meddlesome criticism which by
+its very existence shows that a people has got “out of condition.”
+
+
+II
+
+How is politics _done?_ The born statesman is above all a valuer--a
+valuer of men, situations, and things. He has the “eye” which
+unhesitatingly and inflexibly embraces the round of possibilities.
+The judge of horses takes in an animal with one glance and knows what
+prospects it will have in a race. To do the correct thing without
+“knowing” it, to have the hands that imperceptibly tighten or ease the
+bit--his talent is the very opposite to that of the man of theory. The
+secret pulse of all being is one and the same in him and in the things
+of history. They sense one another, they exist for one another. The
+fact-man is immune from the risk of practising sentimental or program
+politics. He does not believe in the big words. Pilate’s question is
+constantly on his lips--truths? The born statesman stands beyond true
+and false. He does not confuse the logic of events with the logic of
+systems. “Truths” or “errors”--which here amount to the same--only
+concern him as intellectual currents, and in respect of _workings_. He
+surveys their potency, durability, and direction, and duly books them
+in his calculations for the destiny of the power that he directs. He
+has convictions, certainly, that are dear to him, but he has them as a
+private person; no real politician ever felt himself tied to them when
+in action. “The doer is always conscienceless; no one has a conscience
+except the spectator,” said Goethe, and it is equally true of Sulla
+and Robespierre as it is of Bismarck and Pitt. The great Popes and
+the English party-leaders, so long as they had still to strive for
+the mastery of things, acted on the same principles as the conquerors
+and upstarts of all ages. Take the dealings of Innocent III, who very
+nearly succeeded in creating a world-dominion of the Church, and deduce
+therefrom the catechism of success; it will be found to be in the
+extremest contradiction with all religious moral. Yet without it there
+could have been no bearable existence for any Church, not to mention
+English Colonies, American fortunes, victorious revolutions, or, for
+that matter, states or parties or peoples in general. It is _life_, not
+the individual, that is conscienceless.
+
+The essential, therefore, is to understand the time _for_ which one
+is born. He who does not sense and understand its most secret forces,
+who does not feel in himself something cognate that drives him forward
+on a path neither hedged nor defined by concepts, who believes in the
+surface, public opinion, large phrases and ideals of the day--he is not
+of the stature for its events. He is in their power, not they in his.
+Look not back to the past for measuring-rods! Still less sideways for
+some system or other! There are times, like our own present and the
+Gracchan age, in which there are two most deadly kinds of idealism, the
+reactionary and the democratic. The one believes in the reversibility
+of history, the other in a teleology of history. But it makes no
+difference to the inevitable failure with which both burden a nation
+over whose destiny they have power, whether it is to a memory or to
+a concept that they sacrifice it. The genuine statesman is incarnate
+history, its directedness expressed as individual will and its organic
+logic as character.
+
+But the true statesman must also be, in a large sense of the word,
+an educator--not the representative of a moral or a doctrine, but
+an exemplar in doing.[797] It is a patent fact that a religion has
+never yet altered the style of an existence. It penetrated the
+waking-consciousness, the _intellectual_ man, it threw new light on
+another world, it created an immense happiness by way of humanity,
+resignation, and patience unto death, but over the forces of life
+it possessed no power. In the sphere of the living only the great
+personality--the “it,” the race, the cosmic force bound up in that
+personality--has been creative (not shaping, but breeding and training)
+and has effectively modified the type of entire classes and peoples.
+It is not “the” truth or “the” good or “the” upright, but “the” Roman
+or “the” Puritan or “the” Prussian that is a fact. The sum of honour
+and duty, discipline, resolution, is a thing not learned from books,
+but _awakened_ in the stream of being by a living exemplar; and that
+is why Frederick William I was one of those educators, great for all
+time, whose personal race-forming conduct does not vanish in the course
+of the generations. The genuine statesman is distinguished from the
+“mere politician”--the player who plays for the pleasure of the game,
+the _arriviste_ on the heights of history, the seeker after wealth and
+rank--as also from the schoolmaster of an ideal, by the fact that he
+dares to demand sacrifices--_and_ obtains them, because his feeling
+that he is necessary to the time and the nation is shared by thousands,
+transforms them to the core, and renders them capable of deeds to which
+otherwise they could never have risen.[798]
+
+Highest of all, however, is not action, but the _ability to command_.
+It is this that takes the individual up out of himself and makes him
+the centre of a world of action. There is one kind of commanding that
+makes obedience a proud, free, and noble habit. That kind Napoleon,
+for example, did _not_ possess. A residue of subaltern outlook in him
+prevented him from training men to be men and not bureau-personnel,
+and led him to govern through edicts instead of through personalities;
+as he did not understand this subtlest tact of command and, therefore,
+was obliged to do everything really decisive himself, he slowly
+collapsed from inability to reconcile the demands of his position with
+the limit of human capabilities. But one who, like Cæsar or Frederick
+the Great, possesses this last and highest gift of complete humanity
+feels--on a battle-evening when operations are sweeping to the willed
+conclusion, and the victory is turning out to be conclusive of the
+campaign; or when the last signature is written that rounds off a
+historical epoch--a wondrous sense of power that the man of truths
+can never know. There are moments--and they indicate the maxima of
+cosmic flowings--when the individual feels himself to be identical with
+Destiny, the centre of the world, and his own personality seems to him
+almost as a covering in which the history of the future is about to
+clothe itself.
+
+The first problem is to make oneself somebody; the second--less
+obvious, but harder and greater in its ultimate effects--_to create
+a tradition_, to bring on others so that one’s work may be continued
+with one’s own pulse and spirit, to release a current of like activity
+that does not need the original leader to maintain it in form. And here
+the statesman rises to something that in the Classical world would
+doubtless have been called divinity. He becomes the creator of a new
+life, the _spirit_-ancestor of a young race. He himself, as a unit,
+vanishes from the stream after a few years. But a minority called into
+being by him takes up his course and maintains it indefinitely. This
+cosmic something, this soul of a ruling stratum, an individual _can_
+generate and leave as a heritage, and throughout history it is this
+that has produced the durable effects. The great statesman is rare.
+Whether he comes, or wins through, too soon or too late, incident
+determines. Great individuals often destroy more than they have built
+up--by the gap that their death makes in the flow of happening. But
+_the creation of tradition means the elimination of the incident_. A
+tradition breeds a high average, with which the future can reckon--no
+Cæsar, but a Senate, no Napoleon, but an incomparable officer-corps.
+A strong tradition attracts talents from all quarters, and out of
+small gifts produces great results. The schools of painting of Italy
+and Holland are proof of this, no less than the Prussian army and the
+diplomacy of the Roman Curia. It was the great flaw in Bismarck, as
+compared with Frederick William I, that he could achieve, but could not
+form a tradition; that he did not parallel Moltke’s officer-corps by
+a corresponding race of politicians who would identify themselves in
+feeling with his State and its new tasks, would constantly take up good
+men from below and so provide for the continuance of the Bismarckian
+action-pulse for ever. If this creation of a tradition does not come
+off, then instead of a homogeneous ruling stratum we have a congeries
+of heads that are helpless when confronted by the unforeseen. If it
+does, we have a _Sovereign People_ in the one sense of the phrase that
+is worthy of a people and possible in the world of fact--a highly
+trained, self-replenishing minority with sure and slowly ripened
+traditions, which attracts every talent into the charmed circle and
+uses it to the full, and _ipso facto_ keeps itself in harmony with the
+remainder of the nation that it rules. Such a minority slowly develops
+into a true “breed,” even when it had begun merely as a party, and the
+sureness of its decisions comes to be that of blood, not of reason. But
+this means that what happens in it happens “of itself” and does not
+need the Genius. _Great politics_, so to put it, _takes the place of
+the great politician_.
+
+What, then, _is_ politics? It is the art of the possible--an old
+saying, and almost an all-inclusive saying. The gardener can obtain
+a plant from the seed, or he can improve its stock. He can bring to
+bloom, or let languish, the dispositions hidden in it, its growths
+and colour, its flower and fruit. On his eye for possibilities--and,
+therefore, necessities--depends its fulfilment, its strength, its whole
+Destiny. But the basic form and direction of its being, the stages and
+tempo and direction thereof, are _not_ in his power. It must accomplish
+them or it decays, and the same is true of the immense plant that we
+call a “Culture” and the being-streams of human families that are bound
+up in its form-world. The great statesman is the gardener of a people.
+
+Every doer is born in a time and for a time, and thereby the ambit of
+_his_ attainable achievement is fixed. For his grandfather, for his
+grandson, the data, and therefore the task and the object, are not the
+same. The circle is further narrowed by the limits of his personality,
+the properties of his people, the situation, and the men with whom
+he has to work. It is the hall-mark of the high politician that he
+is rarely caught out in a misappreciation of this limit, and equally
+rarely overlooks anything realizable within it. With this--one cannot
+too often repeat, especially to Germans--goes a sure discrimination
+between what “ought” to be and what _will_ be. The basic forms of the
+state and of political life, the direction and the degree of their
+evolution, are given values unalterably dependent on the given time.
+They are the track of political success and not its goal. On the
+other hand the worshippers of political ideals create out of nothing.
+Their intellectual freedom is astounding, but their castles of the
+mind, built of airy concepts like wisdom and righteousness, liberty
+and equality, are in the end all the same; they are built from the
+top storey downwards. The master of fact, for his part, is content to
+direct imperceptibly that which he sees and accepts as plain reality.
+This does not seem very much, yet it is the very starting-point of
+freedom, in a grand sense of the word. The knack lies in the little
+things, the last careful touch of the helm, the fine sensing of the
+most delicate oscillations of collective and individual souls. The
+art of the statesman consists not only in a clear idea of the main
+lines drawn undeviably before him, _but also_ in the sure handling of
+the single occurrences and the single persons, encountered along those
+lines, which can turn an impending disaster into a decisive success.
+The secret of all victory lies in the organization of the non-obvious.
+An adept in the game can, like Talleyrand, go to Vienna as ambassador
+of the vanquished party and make himself master of the victor. At the
+Lucca meeting, Cæsar, whose position was wellnigh desperate, not only
+made Pompey’s power serviceable to his own ends, but undermined it
+at the same time, and without his opponent’s becoming aware of the
+fact. But the domain of the possible has dangerous edges, and if the
+finished tact of the great Baroque diplomatists almost always managed
+to keep clear, it is the very privilege of the ideologues to be always
+stumbling over it. There have been turns in history in which the
+statescraftman has let himself drift with the current awhile, in order
+not to lose the leadership. Every situation has its elastic limit, and
+in the estimation of that limit not the smallest error is permissible.
+A revolution that reaches explosion-point is always a proof of lack of
+the political pulse in the governors _and_ in their opponents.
+
+Further, the necessary must be done _opportunely_--namely, while it
+is a present wherewith the governing power can buy confidence in
+itself, whereas if it has to be conceded as a sacrifice, it discloses
+a weakness and excites contempt. Political forms are living forms
+whose changes inexorably follow a definite direction, and to attempt
+to prevent this course or to divert it towards some ideal is to
+confess oneself “out of condition.” The Roman nobility possessed this
+congruence of pulse, the Spartan did not. In the period of mounting
+democracy we find again and again (as in France before 1789 and Germany
+before 1918) the arrival of a fatal moment when it is too late for
+the necessary reform to be given as a free gift; _then_ that which
+should be refused with the sternest energy is given as a _sacrifice_,
+and so becomes the sign of dissolution. But those who fail to detect
+the first necessity in good time will all the more certainly fail to
+misunderstand the second situation. Even a journey to Canossa can be
+made too soon or too late--the timing may settle the future of whole
+peoples, whether they shall be Destiny for others, or themselves the
+objects of another’s Destiny. But the declining democracy also repeats
+the same error of trying to hold what was the ideal of yesterday. This
+is the danger of our twentieth century. On the path towards Cæsarism
+there is ever a Cato to be found.
+
+The influence that a statesman--even one in an exceptionally strong
+position--possesses over the _methods_ of politics is very small, and
+it is one of the characteristics of the high-grade statesman that he
+does not deceive himself on this matter. His task is to work in and
+with the historical form that he finds in existence; it is only the
+theorist who enthusiastically searches for more ideal forms. But to
+be politically “in form” means necessarily, amongst other things, an
+unconditional _command of the most modern means_. There is no choice
+about it. The means and methods are premisses pertaining to the time
+and belong to the inner form of the time--and one who grasps at the
+inapposite, who permits his taste or his feelings to overpower the
+pulse in him, loses at once his grip of realities. The danger of an
+aristocracy is that of being conservative in its means, the danger of
+a democracy is the confusion of formula and form. The means of the
+present are, and will be for many years, parliamentary--elections and
+the press. He may think what he pleases about them, he may respect
+them or despise them, but he _must command them_. Bach and Mozart
+_commanded_ the musical means of their times. This is the hall-mark
+of mastery in any and every field, and statecraft is no exception.
+Now, the publicly visible outer form thereof is not the essential but
+merely the disguise, and consequently it may be altered, rationalized,
+and brought down to constitutional texts--without its actualities
+being necessarily affected in the slightest--and hence the ambitions
+of all revolutionaries expend themselves in playing the game of
+rights, principles, and franchises on the surface of history. But the
+statesman knows that the extension of a franchise is quite unimportant
+in comparison with the technique--Athenian or Roman, Jacobin or
+American or present-day German--of _operating_ the votes. How the
+English constitution reads is a matter of small import compared with
+the fact that it is managed by a small stratum of high families, so
+that an Edward VII is simply a minister of his Ministry. And as for the
+modern Press, the sentimentalist may beam with contentment when it is
+constitutionally “free”--but the realist merely asks at whose disposal
+it is.
+
+Politics, lastly, is the form in which is accomplished the history of
+a nation within a plurality of nations. The great art is to maintain
+one’s own nation inwardly “in form” for events outside; this is the
+natural relation of home and foreign politics, holding not only for
+Peoples and States and Estates, but for living units of every kind,
+down to the simplest animal swarms and down into the individual bodies.
+And, as between the two, _the first exists exclusively for the second
+and not vice versa_. The true democrat is accustomed to treat home
+politics as an end in itself; the rank and file of diplomats think
+solely of foreign affairs; but just because of this the individual
+successes of either “cut no ice.” No doubt, the political master
+exhibits his powers most obviously in the tactics of home reform; in
+his economic and social activities; in his cleverness in maintaining
+the public form of the whole, the “rights and liberties,” both in tune
+with the tastes of the period and _at the same time_ effective; and
+in the education of the feelings without which it is impossible for a
+people to be “in condition”--namely, trust, respect for the leading,
+consciousness of power, contentment, and (when necessary) enthusiasm.
+But the value of all this depends upon its relation to this basic fact
+of higher history--that a people is not alone in the world, and that
+its future will be decided by its force-relationships towards other
+peoples and powers and not by its mere internal ordering. And, since
+the ordinary man is not so long-sighted, it is the ruling minority that
+must possess this quality on behalf of the rest, and not unless there
+is such a minority does the statesman find the instrument wherewith he
+can carry his purposes into effect.[799]
+
+
+III
+
+In the early politics of all Cultures the governing powers are
+pre-established and unquestioned. The whole being is strictly in
+patriarchal and symbolic form. The connexions with the mother soil are
+so strong, the feudal tie, and even its successor the aristocratic
+state, so self-evident to the life held in their spell, that politics
+in a Homeric or Gothic age is limited to plain action within the cadre
+of the given forms. In so far as these forms change, they do so more
+or less spontaneously, and the idea that it is a _task_ of politics to
+bring about the changes never definitely emerges into anyone’s mind,
+even if a kingdom be overthrown or a nobility reduced to subjection.
+There is only class-politics, Imperial- or Papal- or vassal-politics.
+Blood and race speak in actions undertaken instinctively or
+half-consciously--even the priest behaves, _qua_ politician, as the
+man of race. The “problems” of the State are not yet awakened. The
+sovereignty, the primary orders, the entire early form-world, are
+God-given, and it is on them as premisses, not about them as objects
+of dispute, that the organic minorities fight their battles. These
+minorities we call _Factions_.
+
+It is of the essence of the Faction that it is wholly inaccessible
+to the idea that the order of things can be changed to a plan. Its
+object is to win for itself status, power, or possessions within this
+order--like all growing things in a growing world. There are groups in
+which relationships of houses, honour and loyalty, bonds of union of
+almost mythic inwardness, play a part, and from which abstract ideas
+are totally excluded. Such were the factions of the Homeric and Gothic
+periods, Telemachus and the suitors in Ithaca, the Blues and Greens
+under Justinian, the Guelphs and Ghibellines, the Houses of Lancaster
+and York, the Protestants,[800] the Huguenots, and even later the
+motive forces of Fronde and First Tyrannis. Machiavelli’s book rests
+entirely on this spirit.
+
+The change sets in as soon as, with the great city, the Non-Estate, the
+bourgeoisie, takes over the leading rôle.[801] Now it is the reverse,
+the political _form_ becomes the object of conflict, the problem.
+Heretofore it was ripened, now it must needs be shaped. Politics
+becomes awake, not merely comprehended, but reduced to comprehensible
+ideas. The powers of intellect and money set themselves up against
+blood and tradition. In place of the organic we have the organized; _in
+place of the Estate, the Party_. A party is not a growth of race, but
+an aggregate of heads, and therefore as superior to the old estates
+in intellect as it is poorer in instinct. It is the mortal enemy of
+naturally matured class-ordering, the mere existence of which is in
+contradiction with its essence. Consequently, the notion of party
+is always bound up with the unreservedly negative, disruptive, and
+socially levelling notion of _equality_. Noble ideals are no longer
+recognized, but only vocational interests.[802] It is the same with the
+freedom-idea, which is likewise a negative.[803] _Parties are a purely
+urban phenomenon._ With the emancipation of the city from the country,
+everywhere (whether we happen to know it evidentially or not) Estate
+politics gives way to party politics--in Egypt at the end of the Middle
+Kingdom, in China with the Contending States, in Baghdad and Byzantium
+with the Abbassid period. In the capitals of the West the parties form
+in the parliamentary style, in the city-states of the Classical they
+are forum-parties, and we recognize parties of the Magian style in the
+Mavali and the monks of Theodore of Studion.[804]
+
+But always it is the Non-Estate, the unit of protest against
+the essence of Estate, whose leading minority--“educated” and
+“well-to-do”--comes forward as a party with a program, consisting of
+aims that are not felt but defined, and of the rejection of everything
+that cannot be rationally grasped. _At bottom, therefore, there is
+only one party_, that of the bourgeoisie, the liberal, and it is
+perfectly conscious of its position as such. It looks on itself as
+coextensive with “the people.” Its opponents (above all, the genuine
+Estates--namely, “squire and parson”) are enemies and traitors to “the
+people,” and its opinions are the “voice of the people”--which is
+inoculated by all the expedients of party-political nursing, oratory in
+the Forum, press in the West, until these opinions do fairly represent
+it.
+
+The prime Estates are nobility and priesthood. The prime Party is that
+of money and mind, the liberal, the megalopolitan. Herein lies the
+profound justification, in _all_ Cultures, of the ideas of Aristocracy
+and Democracy. Aristocracy despises the mind of the cities, Democracy
+despises the boor and hates the countryside.[805] It is the difference
+between Estate politics and party politics, class-consciousness
+and party inclination, race and intellect, growth and construction.
+Aristocracy in the completed Culture, and Democracy in the incipient
+cosmopolitan Civilization, stand opposed till both are submerged in
+Cæsarism. As surely as the nobility is _the_ Estate (and the Tiers État
+never manages to get itself into real form in this fashion), so surely
+the nobility fails to feel as a party, though it may organize itself as
+one.
+
+It has in fact no choice but to do so. All modern constitutions
+repudiate the Estates and are built on the Party as self-evidently
+the basic form of politics. The nineteenth century--correspondingly,
+therefore, the third century B.C.--is the heyday of party politics.
+Its democratic character compels the formation counter-parties, and
+whereas formerly, as late even as the eighteenth century, the “Tiers”
+constituted itself in imitation of the nobility as an Estate, now
+there arises the _defensive_ figure of the Conservative party, copied
+from the Liberal,[806] dominated completely by the latter’s forms,
+bourgeois-ized without being bourgeois, and obliged to fight with
+rules and methods that liberalism has laid down. It has the choice of
+handling these means better than its adversary[807] or of perishing;
+but it is of the intimate structure of an Estate that it does not
+understand the situation and challenges the form instead of the foe,
+and is thus involved in that use of extreme methods which we see
+dominating the inner politics of whole states in the early phases of
+every Civilization, and delivering them helpless into the hands of the
+enemy. The compulsion that there is upon every party to be bourgeois,
+at any rate in appearance, turns to sheer caricature when below the
+bourgeoisie of education and possessions the Residue also organizes
+itself as a party. Marxism, for example, is in theory a negation
+of bourgeoisie, but as a party it is in attitude and leadership
+essentially middle-class. There is a continuous conflict between its
+will--which necessarily steps outside the bounds of party politics
+and therefore of constitutionalism (both being exclusively liberal
+phenomena), and can in honesty only be called civil war--and the
+appearances which it feels obliged, in justice to itself, to keep up.
+But for Marxism, again, these appearances are indispensable, at this
+particular period, if durable success is to be attained. A noble party
+in a parliament is inwardly just as spurious as a proletarian. Only the
+bourgeoisie is in its natural place there.
+
+In Rome, from the introduction of the Tribunes, in 471, to the
+recognition of their legislative omnipotence, in the revolution of
+287,[808] patricians and plebeians had fought their fight essentially
+as Estates, classes. But thereafter these opposite terms possessed
+hardly more than genealogical significance, and there developed instead
+parties, to which the terms liberal and conservative respectively
+may quite reasonably be applied--namely, the Populus,[809] supreme
+in the forum, and the nobility, with its fulcrum in the Senate. The
+latter had transformed itself (about 287) from a family council of
+the old clans into a state council of the administrative aristocracy.
+The associations of the Populus are with the property-graded Comitia
+Centuriata and the big-money group of the Equites, those of the
+nobility with the yeomanry that was influential in the Comitia Tributa.
+Think on the one hand of the Gracchi and Marius, and on the other of
+C. Flaminius, and a little penetration will disclose the complete
+change in the position of the Consuls and the Tribunes. They are no
+longer the chosen trustees of the first and third Estates, with lines
+of conduct determined by that fact, but they represent party, and on
+occasion change it. There were “liberal” consuls like the Elder Cato
+and “conservative” Tribunes like the Octavius who opposed Ti. Gracchus.
+Both parties put up candidates at elections, and used every sort of
+demagogic operation to get them in--and when money had failed to win an
+election, it got to work afterwards with (increasing) success upon the
+person elected.
+
+In England Tories and Whigs constituted themselves, from the beginning
+of the nineteenth century, as parties, both becoming in form bourgeois
+and both taking up the liberal program literally, whereby public
+opinion as usual was completely convinced and set at rest.[810] This
+was a master-stroke, delivered at the correct moment, and prevented the
+formation of a party hostile to the Estate-principle such as arose in
+France in 1789. The members of the lower House, hitherto emissaries of
+the ruling stratum, became popular representatives, but still continued
+to depend financially upon it. The leading remained in the same hands,
+and the opposition of the parties, which from 1830 assumed the titles
+of Liberal and Conservative almost as a matter of course, was always
+one of pluses and minuses, never of blank alternatives. In these same
+years the literary freedom-movement of “young Germany” changed into a
+party-movement, and in America under Andrew Jackson the National-Whig
+and Democratic parties organized themselves as opposites, and open
+recognition was given to the principle that elections were a business,
+and state offices from top to bottom the “spoils of the victors.”[811]
+
+But the form of the governing minority _develops steadily from that of
+the Estate, through that of the Party, towards that of the Individual’s
+following_. The outward sign of the end of Democracy and its transition
+into Cæsarism is not, for example, the disappearance of the party of
+the Tiers État, the Liberal, but the disappearance of party itself
+as a form. The sentiments, the popular aim, the abstract ideals that
+characterize all genuine party politics, dissolve and are supplanted by
+_private_ politics, the unchecked will-to-power of the race-strong few.
+An Estate has instincts, a party has a program, but a following has a
+master. That was the course of events from Patricians and Plebeians,
+through Optimates and Populares, to Pompeians and Cæsarians. The period
+of real party government covers scarcely two centuries, and in our own
+case is, since the World War, well on the decline. That the entire mass
+of the electorate, actuated by a common impulse, should send up men who
+are capable of managing their affairs--which is the naïve assumption
+in all constitutions--is a possibility only in the first rush, and
+presupposes that not even the rudiments of organization by definite
+groups exists. So it was in France in 1789 and in 1848. An assembly has
+only to _be_, and tactical units will form at once within it, whose
+cohesion depends upon the will to _maintain_ the dominant position once
+won, and which, so far from regarding themselves as the mouthpieces of
+their constituents, set about making all the expedients of agitation
+amenable to their influence and usable for their purposes. A tendency
+that has organized itself in the people, has already _ipso facto_
+become the _tool_ of the organization, and continues steadily along the
+same path until the organization also becomes in turn the tool of the
+leader. The will-to-power is stronger than any theory. In the beginning
+the leading and the apparatus come into existence for the sake of the
+program. Then they are held on to defensively by their incumbents for
+the sake of power and booty--as is already universally the case to-day,
+for thousands in every country live on the party and the offices and
+functions that it distributes. Lastly the program vanishes from memory,
+and the organization works for its own sake alone.
+
+With the elder Scipio or Quinctius Flamininus comradeship on campaign
+is still the implication when we speak of their “friends.” But the
+younger Scipio went further and his “Cohors Amicorum” was no doubt the
+first example of an organized following whose activity extended to
+the law-courts and the elections.[812] In the same way the old purely
+_patriarchal and aristocratic relation of loyalty_ between patron and
+client evolved into a community of interest based on very material
+foundations, and even before Cæsar there were written compacts between
+candidates and electors with specific provisions as to payment and
+performances. On the other side, just as in present-day America,[813]
+clubs and election committees were formed, which so controlled or
+frightened the mass of the electors of their wards as to be able to do
+election business with the great leaders, the pre-Cæsars, as one power
+with another. Far from this being the shipwreck of democracy, it is its
+very meaning and necessary issue, and the lamentations of unworldly
+idealists over this destruction of their hopes only show their blind
+ignorance of the inexorable duality of truths and facts and of the
+intimate linkage of intellect and money.
+
+Politico-social theory is only one of the bases of party politics, but
+it is a necessary one. The proud series that runs from Rousseau to Marx
+has its antitype in the line of the Classical Sophists up to Plato and
+Zeno. In the case of China the characteristics of the corresponding
+doctrines have still to be extracted from Confucian and Taoist
+literature; it suffices to name the Socialist Moh-ti. In the Byzantine
+and Arabian literature of the Abbassid period--in which radicalism,
+like everything else, is orthodox-religious in constitution--they
+hold a large place, and they were driving forces in all the crises of
+the ninth century. That they existed in Egypt and in India also is
+proved by the spirit of events in the Hyksos time and in Buddha’s.
+Literary form is not essential to them--they are just as effectively
+disseminated by word of mouth, by sermon and propaganda in sects and
+associations, which indeed is the standard method at the close of the
+Puritan movements (Islam and Anglo-American Christianity amongst them).
+
+Whether these doctrines are “true” or “false” is--we must reiterate
+and emphasize--a question without meaning for political history.
+The refutation of, say, Marxism belongs to the realm of academic
+dissertation and public debates, in which everyone is always right
+and his opponent always wrong. But whether they are _effective_--from
+when, and for how long, the belief that actuality can be ameliorated
+by a system of concepts is a real force that politics must reckon
+with--that does matter. We of to-day find ourselves in a period of
+boundless confidence in the omnipotence of reason. Great general
+ideas of freedom, justice, humanity, progress are sacrosanct. The
+great theories are gospels. Their power to convince does not rest
+upon logical premisses, for the mass of a party possesses neither the
+critical energy nor the detachment seriously to test them, but upon the
+sacramental hypostasis in their keywords. At the same time, the spell
+is limited to the populations of the great cities and the period of
+Rationalism as the “educated man’s religion.”[814] On a peasantry it
+has no hold, and even on the city masses its effect lasts only for a
+certain time. But _for_ that time it has all the irresistibleness of
+a new revelation. They are converted to it, hang fervently upon the
+words and the preachers thereof, go to martyrdom on barricades and
+battle-field and gallows; their gaze is set upon a political and social
+other-world, and dry sober criticism seems base, impious, worthy of
+death.
+
+But for this very reason documents like the _Contrat Social_ and the
+_Communist Manifesto_ are engines of highest power in the hands of
+forceful men who have come to the top in party life and know how to
+form and to use the convictions of the dominated masses.[815]
+
+The power that these abstract ideals possess, however, scarcely extends
+in time beyond the two centuries that belong to party politics, and
+their end comes not from refutation, but from boredom--which has killed
+Rousseau long since and will shortly kill Marx. Men finally give up,
+not this or that theory, but the belief in theory of any kind and with
+it the sentimental optimism of an eighteenth century that imagined
+that unsatisfactory actualities could be improved by the application
+of concepts. When Plato, Aristotle, and their contemporaries defined
+and blended the various kinds of Classical constitution so as to obtain
+a wise and beautiful resultant, all the world listened, and Plato
+himself tried to transform Syracuse in accordance with an ideological
+recipe--and sent the city downhill to its ruin.[816] It appears to me
+equally certain that it was philosophical experimentation of this kind
+that put the Chinese southern states out of condition and delivered
+them up to the imperialism of Tsin.[817] The Jacobin fanatics of
+liberty and equality delivered France, from the Directory onward, into
+the hands of Army and Bourse for ever, and every Socialistic outbreak
+only blazes new paths for Capitalism. But when Cicero wrote his _De
+re publica_ for Pompey, and Sallust his two comminations for Cæsar,
+nobody any longer paid attention. In Tiberius Gracchus we may discover
+perhaps an influence derived from the Stoic enthusiast Blossius, who
+later committed suicide after having similarly brought Aristonicus
+of Pergamum to ruin;[818] but in the first century B.C. theories had
+become a threadbare school-exercise, and thenceforward power and power
+alone mattered.
+
+For us, too--let there be no mistake about it--the age of theory is
+drawing to its end. The great systems of Liberalism and Socialism
+all arose between about 1750 and 1850. That of Marx is already half
+a century old, and it has had no successor. Inwardly it means, with
+its materialist view of history, that Nationalism has reached its
+extreme logical conclusion; it is therefore an end-term. But, as
+belief in Rousseau’s Rights of Man lost its force from (say) 1848, so
+belief in Marx lost its force from the World War. When one contrasts
+the devotion unto death that Rousseau’s ideas found in the French
+Revolution with the attitude of the Socialists of 1918, who had to keep
+up before and in their adherents a conviction that they themselves
+no longer possessed--for the sake, not of the idea, but of the power
+that depended on it--one discerns also the stretches of the road
+ahead, where what still remains of program is doomed to fall by the
+way as being henceforth a mere handicap in the struggle for power.
+Belief in program was the mark and the _glory_ of our grandfathers--in
+our grandsons it will be a proof of provincialism. In its place is
+developing even now the seed of a new resigned piety, sprung from
+tortured conscience and spiritual hunger, whose task will be to found
+a new Hither-side that looks for secrets instead of steel-bright
+concepts and in the end will find them in the deeps of the “Second
+Religiousness.”[819]
+
+
+IV
+
+This is the one side, the verbal side, of the great fact Democracy.
+It remains now to consider the other, the decisive side, that of
+race.[820] Democracy would have remained in minds and on paper
+had there not been amongst its champions true master-natures for
+whom--unconscious though they may be, and often have been, of the
+fact--the people is nothing but an object and the ideal nothing but a
+means. All, even the most irresponsible, methods of demagogy--which
+inwardly is exactly the same as the diplomacy of the _ancien régime_,
+but designed for application to masses instead of to princes and
+ambassadors, to wild opinions and sentiments and will-outbursts
+instead of to choice spirits, an orchestra of brass instead of old
+chamber-music--have been worked out by honest but practical democrats,
+and it was from them that the parties of tradition learnt them.
+
+It is characteristic, however, of the course of democracy, that the
+authors of popular constitutions have never had any idea of the actual
+workings of their schemes--neither the authors of the “Servian”
+Constitution in Rome nor the National Assembly in Paris. Since these
+forms of theirs are not, like feudalism, the result of growth, but of
+thought (and based, moreover, not on deep knowledge of men and things,
+but on abstract ideas of right and justice), a gulf opens between the
+intellectual side of the laws and--the practical habits that silently
+form under the pressure of them, and either adapt them to, or fend them
+off from, the rhythm of actual life. Only experience has ever taught
+the lesson, and only at the end of the whole development has it been
+assimilated, that the rights of the people and the influence of the
+people are two different things. The more nearly universal a franchise
+is, the _less_ becomes the power of the electorate.
+
+In the beginning of a democracy the field belongs to intellect alone.
+History has nothing nobler and purer to show than the night session
+of the 4th August 1789 and the Tennis-Court Oath, or the assembly in
+the Frankfurt Paulskirche on the 18th May 1848--when men, with power
+in their very hands, debated general truths so long that the forces
+of actuality were able to rally and thrust the dreamers aside. But,
+meantime, that other democratic quantity lost no time in making its
+appearance and reminding men of the fact that one can make use of
+constitutional rights only when one has money.[821] That a franchise
+should work even approximately as the idealist supposes it to work
+presumes the absence of any organized leadership operating on the
+electors (in _its_ interest) to the extent that its available money
+permits. As soon as such leadership does appear, the vote ceases to
+possess anything more than the significance of a censure applied by
+the multitude to the individual organizations, over whose structure
+it possesses in the end not the slightest positive influence. So also
+with the ideal thesis of Western constitutions, the fundamental right
+of the mass to choose its own representatives--it remains pure theory,
+for in actuality every developed organization recruits itself.[822]
+Finally the feeling emerges that the universal franchise contains no
+effective rights at all, not even that of choosing between parties.
+For the powerful figures that have grown up on their soil control,
+through money, all the intellectual machinery of speech and script, and
+are able, on the one hand, to guide the individual’s opinions as they
+please _above_ the parties, and, on the other, through their patronage,
+influence, and legislation, to create a firm body of whole-hearted
+supporters (the “Caucus”) which excludes the rest and induces in it a
+vote-apathy which at the last it cannot shake off even for the great
+crises.
+
+In appearance, there are vast differences between the Western,
+parliamentary, democracy and the democracies of the Egyptian, Chinese,
+and Arabian Civilizations, to which the idea of a universal popular
+franchise is wholly alien. But in reality, for us in this age of ours,
+the mass is “in form” as an _electorate_ in exactly the same sense as
+it used to be “in form” as a collectivity of obedience--namely, as an
+_object for a subject_--as it was “in form” in Baghdad as the sects,
+and in Byzantium in its monks, and elsewhere again as a dominant army
+or a secret society or a “state within a state.” Freedom is, as always,
+purely _negative_.[823] It consists in the repudiation of tradition,
+dynasty, Caliphate; but the executive power passes, at once and
+undiminished, from these institutions to new forces--party leaders,
+dictators, presidents, prophets, and their adherents--towards which
+the multitude continues to be unconditionally the passive object.[824]
+“Popular self-determination” is a courteous figure of speech--in
+reality, under a universal-inorganic franchise, election has soon
+ceased to possess its original meaning. The more radical the political
+elimination of the matured old order of Estates and callings, the
+more formless and feckless the electoral mass, the more completely
+is it delivered into the hands of the new powers, the party leaders,
+who dictate their will to the people through all the machinery of
+intellectual compulsion; fence with each other for primacy by methods
+which in the end the multitude can neither perceive nor comprehend;
+and treat public opinion merely as a weapon to be forged and used for
+blows at each other. But this very process, viewed from another angle,
+is seen as an irresistible tendency driving every democracy further and
+further on the road to suicide.[825]
+
+The fundamental rights of a Classical people (demos, populus) extended
+to the holding of the highest state and judicial offices.[826] For
+the exercise of these the people was “in form” in its Forum, where
+the Euclidean point-mass was corporeally assembled, and there it was
+the object of an influencing process in the Classical style; namely,
+by bodily, near, and sensuous means--by a rhetoric that worked upon
+every ear _and eye_; by devices many of which to us would be repellent
+and almost intolerable, such as rehearsed sob-effects and the rending
+of garments;[827] by shameless flattery of the audience, fantastic
+lies about opponents; by the employment of brilliant phrases and
+resounding cadenzas (of which there came to be a perfect repertory
+for this place and purpose) by games and presents; by threats and
+blows; but, above all, by money. We have its beginnings in the Athens
+of 400,[828] and its appalling culmination in the Rome of Cæsar
+and Cicero. As everywhere, the elections, from being nominations
+of class-representatives, have become the battle-ground of party
+candidates, an arena ready for the intervention of money, and, from
+Zama onwards, of ever bigger and bigger money. “The greater became the
+wealth which was capable of concentration in the hands of individuals,
+the more the fight for political power developed into a question of
+money.”[829] It is unnecessary to say more. And yet, in a deeper
+sense, it would be wrong to speak of corruption. It is not a matter of
+degeneracy, it is the democratic ethos itself that is foredoomed of
+necessity to take such forms when it reaches maturity. In the reforms
+of the Censor Appius Claudius (310), who was beyond doubt a true
+Hellenist and constitutional ideologue of the type of Madame Roland’s
+circle, there was certainly no question but that of the franchise as
+such, and not at all of the arts of gerrymandering--but the effect was
+simply to prepare the way for those arts. Not in the scheme as such,
+but from the first applications of it, race-quality emerged, and very
+rapidly it forced its way to complete dominance. And, after all, in a
+dictatorship of money it is hardly fair to describe the employment of
+money as a sign of decadence.
+
+The career of office in Rome from the time when its course took form
+as a series of elections, required so large a capital that every
+politician was the debtor of his entire entourage. Especially was
+this so in the case of the ædileship, in which the incumbent had
+to outbid his predecessors in the magnificance {sic} of his public
+games, in order later to have the votes of the spectators. (Sulla
+failed in his first attempt on the prætorship precisely because he
+had not previously been ædile.) Then again, to flatter the crowd of
+loafers it was necessary to show oneself in the Forum daily with a
+brilliant following. A law forbade the maintenance of paid retainers,
+but the acquisition of persons in high society by lending them money,
+recommending them for official and commercial employments, and covering
+their litigation expenses, in return for their company in the Forum
+and their attendance at the daily levee, was more expensive still.
+Pompey was _patronus_ to half the world. From the peasant of Picenum
+to the kings of the Orient, he represented and protected them all,
+and this was his political capital which he could stake against the
+non-interest-bearing loans of Crassus and the “gilding”[830] of every
+ambitious fellow by the conqueror of Gaul. Dinners were offered to the
+electors of whole wards,[831] or free seats for the gladiatorial shows,
+or even (as in the case of Milo) actual cash, delivered at home--out of
+respect, Cicero says, for traditional morals. Election-capital rose to
+American dimensions, sometimes hundreds of millions of sesterces; vast
+as was the stock of cash available in Rome, the elections of 54 locked
+up so much of it that the rate of interest rose from four to eight per
+cent. Cæsar paid out so much as ædile that Crassus had to underwrite
+him for twenty millions before his creditors would allow him to depart
+to his province, and in his candidature for the office of Pontifex
+Maximus he so overstrained his credit that failure would have ruined
+him, and his opponent Catulus could seriously offer to buy him off.
+But the conquest and exploitation of Gaul--this also an undertaking
+motived by finance--made him the richest man in the world. In truth,
+Pharsalus was won there in advance.[832] For it was for _power_ that
+Cæsar amassed these milliards, like Cecil Rhodes, and not because he
+delighted in wealth like Verres or even like Crassus, who was first and
+foremost a financier and only secondarily a politician. Cæsar grasped
+the fact that on the soil of a democracy constitutional rights signify
+nothing without money and everything with it. When Pompey was still
+dreaming that he could evoke legions by stamping on the ground, Cæsar
+had long since condensed the dream to reality with his money. It must
+be clearly understood, however, that he did not introduce these methods
+but found them in existence, that he made himself master of them but
+never identified himself with them. For practically a century parties
+grouped on principles had been dissolving into personal followings
+grouped upon men who pursued private political aims and were expert in
+handling the political weapons of their time.
+
+Amongst these means, besides money, was influence upon the courts.
+Since Classical assemblies voted, but did not debate, the trial before
+the rostra was _a form of party battle_ and the school of schools for
+political persuasiveness. The young politician began his career by
+indicting and if possible annihilating some great personage,[833] as
+the nineteen-year-old Crassus annihilated the renowned Papirius Carbo,
+the friend of the Gracchi, who had later gone over to the Optimates.
+This was why Cato was tried no less than forty-four times, though
+acquitted in every case. The legal side of the question was entirely
+subordinate in these affairs.[834] The decisive factors were the party
+affinities of the judges, the number of patrons, and the size of the
+crowd of backers--the number of the witnesses was really only paraded
+in order to bring the financial and political power of the plaintiff
+into the limelight. The intention in all Cicero’s oratory against
+Verres was to convince the judges, under the veil of fine ethical
+passion, that the condemnation of the accused was _in the interests of
+their order_. Given the general outlook of the Classical, the courts
+self-evidently existed to serve private and party interests. Democratic
+complainants in Athens were accustomed at the end of their speeches to
+remind the jurymen from the people that they would forfeit their fees
+by acquitting the wealthy defendant.[835] The tremendous power of the
+Roman Senate consisted mainly in their occupancy of every seat of the
+judicial (jurors’) bench, which placed the destinies of every citizen
+at their mercy; hence the far-reachingness of the Gracchan law of 122
+which handed over the judicature to the Equites and delivered over the
+nobility--that is, the official class--to the financial world.[836]
+In 83 Sulla, simultaneously with his proscription of the financial
+magnates, restored the judicature to the Senate, _as political weapon_,
+of course, and the final duel of the potentates finds one more
+expression in the ceaseless changing of the judges selected.
+
+Now, whereas the Classical, and supremely the Forum of Rome, drew
+the mass of the people together as a visible body in order to compel
+it to make that use of its rights which was desired of it, the
+“contemporary” English-American politics have created _through the
+press_ a force-field of world-wide intellectual and financial tensions
+in which every individual unconsciously takes up the place allotted
+to him, so that he must think, will, and act as a ruling personality
+somewhere or other in the distance thinks fit. This is dynamics against
+statics, Faustian against Apollinian world-feeling, the passion of the
+third dimension against the pure sensible present. Man does not speak
+to man;[837] the press and its associate, the electrical news-service,
+keep the waking-consciousness of whole peoples and continents under
+a deafening drum-fire of theses, catchwords, standpoints, scenes,
+feelings, day by day and year by year, so that every Ego becomes a mere
+function of a monstrous intellectual Something. Money does not pass,
+politically, from one hand to the other. It does not turn itself into
+cards and wine. It is turned into _force_, and its quantity determines
+the intensity of its working influence.
+
+Gunpowder and printing belong together--both discovered at the
+culmination of the Gothic, both arising out of Germanic technical
+thought--as _the two_ grand means of Faustian distance-tactics.
+The Reformation in the beginning of the Late period witnessed the
+first flysheets and the first field-guns, the French Revolution in
+the beginning of the Civilization witnessed the first tempest of
+pamphlets of the autumn of 1788 and the first mass-fire of artillery at
+Valmy. But with this the printed word, produced in vast quantity and
+distributed over enormous areas, became an uncanny weapon in the hands
+of him who knew how to use it. In France it was still in 1788 a matter
+of expressing private convictions, but England was already past that,
+and deliberately seeking to produce impressions on the reader. The war
+of articles, flysheets, spurious memoirs, that was waged from London on
+French soil against Napoleon is the first great example. The scattered
+sheets of the Age of Enlightenment transformed themselves into “the
+Press”--a term of most significant anonymity. Now the _press campaign_
+appears as the prolongation--or the preparation--of war by other means,
+and in the course of the nineteenth century the strategy of outpost
+fights, feints, surprises, assaults, is developed to such a degree that
+a war may be lost ere the first shot is fired--because the Press has
+won it meantime.
+
+To-day we live so cowed under the bombardment of this intellectual
+artillery that hardly anyone can attain to the inward detachment
+that is required for a clear view of the monstrous drama. The
+will-to-power operating under a pure democratic disguise has finished
+off its masterpiece so well that the object’s sense of freedom is
+actually flattered by the most thorough-going enslavement that has
+ever existed. The liberal bourgeois mind is _proud_ of the abolition
+of censorship, the last restraint, while the dictator of the
+press--Northcliffe!--keeps the slave-gang of his readers under the
+whip of his leading articles, telegrams, and pictures. _Democracy has
+by its newspaper completely expelled the book from the mental life of
+the people._ The book-world, with its profusion of standpoints that
+compelled thought to select and criticize, is now a real possession
+only for a few. The people reads the _one_ paper, “its” paper, which
+forces itself through the front doors by millions daily, spellbinds the
+intellect from morning to night, drives the book into oblivion by its
+more engaging layout, and if one or another specimen of a book does
+emerge into visibility, forestalls and eliminates its possible effects
+by “reviewing” it.
+
+What is truth? For the multitude, that which it continually reads and
+hears. A forlorn little drop may settle somewhere and collect grounds
+on which to determine “the truth”--but what it obtains is just _its_
+truth. The other, the public truth of the moment, which alone matters
+for effects and successes in the fact-world, is to-day a product
+of the Press. What the Press wills, is true. Its commanders evoke,
+transform, interchange truths. Three weeks of press work, and the
+truth is acknowledged by everybody.[838] Its bases are irrefutable
+for just so long as money is available to maintain them intact. The
+Classical rhetoric, too, was designed for effect and not content--as
+Shakespeare brilliantly demonstrates in Antony’s funeral oration--but
+it did limit itself to the bodily audience and the moment. What the
+dynamism of our Press wants is _permanent_ effectiveness. It must
+keep men’s minds continuously under its influence. Its arguments are
+overthrown as soon as the advantage of financial power passes over to
+the counter-arguments and brings these still oftener to men’s eyes and
+ears. At that moment the needle of public opinion swings round to the
+stronger pole. Everybody convinces himself at once of the new truth,
+and regards himself awakened out of error.
+
+With the political press is bound up the need of universal
+school-education, which in the Classical world was completely lacking.
+In this demand there is an element--quite unconscious--of desiring
+to shepherd the masses, as the object of party politics, into the
+newspaper’s power-area. The idealist of the early democracy regarded
+popular education, without _arrière pensée_, as enlightenment pure
+and simple, and even to-day one finds here and there weak heads that
+become enthusiastic on the Freedom of the Press--but it is precisely
+this that smooths the path for the coming Cæsars of the world-press.
+Those who have learnt to read succumb to their power, and the visionary
+self-determination of Late democracy issues in a thorough-going
+determination of the people by the powers whom the printed word obeys.
+
+In the contests of to-day tactics consists in depriving the opponent
+of this weapon. In the unsophisticated infancy of its power the
+newspaper suffered from official censorship which the champions of
+tradition wielded in self-defence, and the bourgeoisie cried out that
+the freedom of the spirit was in danger. Now the multitude placidly
+goes its way; it has definitively won for itself this freedom. But in
+the background, unseen, the new forces are fighting one another by
+buying the press. Without the reader’s observing it, the paper, _and
+himself with it_, changes masters.[839] Here also money triumphs and
+forces the free spirits into its service. No tamer has his animals
+more under his power. Unleash the people as reader-mass and it will
+storm through the streets and hurl itself upon the target indicated,
+terrifying and breaking windows; a hint to the press-staff and it will
+become quiet and go home. The Press to-day is an army with carefully
+organized arms and branches, with journalists as officers, and readers
+as soldiers. But here, as in every army, the soldier obeys blindly, and
+war-aims and operation-plans change without his knowledge. The reader
+neither knows, nor is allowed to know, the purposes for which he is
+used, nor even the rôle that he is to play. A more appalling caricature
+of freedom of thought cannot be imagined. Formerly a man did not dare
+to think freely. Now he dares, but cannot; his will to think is only
+a willingness to think to order, and this is what he feels as _his_
+liberty.
+
+And the other side of this belated freedom--it is permitted to everyone
+to say what he pleases, _but_ the Press is free to take notice of
+what he says or not. It can condemn any “truth” to death simply by
+not undertaking its communication to the world--a terrible censorship
+of silence, which is all the more potent in that the masses of
+newspaper readers are absolutely unaware that it exists.[840] Here,
+as ever in the birth-pangs of Cæsarism, emerges a trait of the buried
+springtime.[841] The arc of happening is about to close on itself. Just
+as in the concrete and steel buildings the expression-will of early
+Gothic once more bursts forth, but cold, controlled, and Civilized,
+so the iron will of the Gothic Church to power over souls reappears
+as--the “freedom of democracy.” The age of the “book” is flanked on
+either hand by that of the sermon and that of the newspaper. Books
+are a personal expression, sermon and newspaper obey an impersonal
+_purpose_. The years of Scholasticism afford the only example
+in world-history of an intellectual discipline that was applied
+universally and permitted no writing, no speech, no thought to come
+forth that contradicted the _willed_ unity. This is spiritual dynamics.
+Classical, Indian, or Chinese mankind would have been horrified at this
+spectacle. But the same things recur, and as a _necessary_ result of
+the European-American liberalism--“the despotism of freedom against
+tyranny,” as Robespierre put it. In lieu of stake and faggots there
+is the great silence. The dictature of party leaders supports itself
+upon that of the Press. The competitors strive by means of money to
+detach readers--nay, peoples--_en masse_ from the hostile allegiance
+and to bring them under their own mind-training. And all that they
+learn in this mind-training, is what it is considered that they should
+know--a higher will puts together the picture of their world for them.
+There is no need now, as there was for Baroque princes, to impose
+military-service liability on the subject--one whips their souls with
+articles, telegrams, and pictures (Northcliffe!) until they _clamour_
+for weapons and force their leaders into a conflict to which they
+_willed_ to be forced.
+
+This is the end of Democracy. If in the world of truths it is _proof_
+that decides all, in that of facts it is _success_. Success means that
+one being triumphs over the others. Life has won through, and the
+dreams of the world-improvers have turned out to be but the tools of
+_master-natures_. In the Late Democracy, _race_ bursts forth and either
+makes ideals its slaves or throws them scornfully into the pit. It
+was so, too, in Egyptian Thebes, in Rome, in China--but in no other
+Civilization has the will-to-power manifested itself in so inexorable
+a form as in this of ours. The thought, and consequently the action,
+of the mass are kept under iron pressure--for which reason, and for
+which reason only, men are permitted to be readers and voters--that
+is, in a dual slavery--while the parties become the obedient retinues
+of a few, and the shadow of coming Cæsarism already touches them. As
+the English kingship became in the nineteenth century, so parliaments
+will become in the twentieth, a solemn and empty pageantry. As
+then sceptre and crown, so now peoples’ rights are paraded for the
+multitude, and all the more punctiliously the less they really
+signify--it was for this reason that the _cautious_ Augustus never let
+pass an opportunity of emphasizing old and venerated customs of Roman
+freedom. But the power is migrating even to-day, and correspondingly
+elections are degenerating for us into the farce that they were in
+Rome. Money organizes the process in the interests of those who
+possess it,[842] and election affairs become a preconcerted game that
+is staged as popular self-determination. If election was originally
+_revolution in legitimate forms_,[843] it has exhausted those forms,
+and what takes place is that mankind “elects” its Destiny again by the
+primitive methods of bloody violence when the politics of money become
+intolerable.
+
+Through money, democracy becomes its own destroyer, after money has
+destroyed intellect. But, just _because_ the illusion that actuality
+can allow itself to be improved by the ideas of any Zeno or Marx has
+fled away; because men have learned that in the realm of reality
+one power-will _can be overthrown only by another_ (for that is the
+great human experience of Contending States periods); there wakes
+at last a deep yearning for all old and worthy tradition that still
+lingers alive. Men are tired to disgust of money-economy. They hope
+for salvation from somewhere or other, for some real thing of honour
+and chivalry, of inward nobility, of unselfishness and duty. And
+now dawns the time when the form-filled powers of the blood, which
+the rationalism of the Megalopolis has suppressed, reawaken in the
+depths. Everything in the order of dynastic tradition and old nobility
+that has saved itself up for the future, everything that there is of
+high money-disdaining ethic, everything that is intrinsically sound
+enough to be, in Frederick the Great’s words, the _servant_--the
+hard-working, self-sacrificing, caring _servant_--of the State, all
+that I have described elsewhere in one word as Socialism in contrast
+to Capitalism[844]--all this becomes suddenly the focus of immense
+life-forces. Cæsarism _grows_ on the soil of Democracy, but its roots
+thread deeply into the underground of blood tradition. The Classical
+Cæsar derived his power from the Tribunate, and his dignity and
+therewith his permanency from his being the Princeps. Here too the soul
+of old Gothic wakens anew. The spirit of the knightly orders overpowers
+plunderous Vikingism. The mighty ones of the future may possess the
+earth as their private property--for the great political form of the
+Culture is irremediably in ruin--but it matters not, for, formless and
+limitless as their power may be, it has a task. And this task is the
+unwearying care for this world as it is, which is the very opposite of
+the interestedness of the money-power age, and demands high honour and
+conscientiousness. But for this very reason there now sets in the final
+battle between Democracy and Cæsarism, between the leading forces of
+dictatorial money-economics and the _purely political_ will-to-order
+of the Cæsars. And in order to understand this _final battle between
+Economics and Politics_, in which the latter _reconquers_ its realm, we
+must now turn our glance upon the physiognomy of economic history.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE FORM-WORLD OF ECONOMIC LIFE
+
+(A)
+
+MONEY
+
+
+I
+
+The standpoint from which to comprehend the economic history of great
+Cultures is not to be looked for on economic ground. Economic thought
+and action are a side of life that acquires a false appearance when
+regarded as a self-contained _kind_ of life. Least of all is the secure
+standpoint to be had on the basis of the present-day world-economics,
+which for the last 150 years has been mounting fantastically,
+perilously, and in the end almost desperately--an economics, moreover,
+that is exclusively Western-dynamic, anything but common-human.
+
+That which we call national economy to-day is built up on premisses
+that are openly and specifically English. The industry of machines,
+which is unknown to all other Cultures, stands in the centre as though
+it were a matter of course and, without men being conscious of the
+fact, completely dominates the formulation of ideas and the deduction
+of so-called laws. Credit-money, in the special form imparted to it
+by the relations of world-trade and export-industry in a peasantless
+England, serves as the foundation whereupon to define words like
+capital, value, price, property--and the definitions are then
+transferred without more ado to other Culture-stages and life-cycles.
+The insular position of England has determined a conception of
+politics, and of its relation to economics, that rules in all economic
+theories. The creators of this economic _picture_ were David Hume[845]
+and Adam Smith.[846] Everything that has since been written about them
+or against them always presupposes the critical structure and methods
+of their systems. This is as true of Carey and List as it is of Fourier
+and Lassalle. As for Smith’s greatest adversary, Marx, it matters
+little how loudly one protests against English capitalism when one is
+thoroughly imbued with its images; the protest is itself a recognition,
+and its only aim is, through a new kind of accounting, to confer upon
+objects the advantage of being subjects.
+
+From Adam Smith to Marx it is nothing but self-analysis of the economic
+thinking of a single Culture on a particular development-level.
+Rationalistic through and through, it starts from Material and its
+conditions, needs, and motives, instead of from the _Soul_--of
+generations, Estates, and peoples--and its creative power. It looks
+upon men as constituent parts of situations, and knows nothing of
+the big personality and history-shaping will, of individuals or of
+groups, the will that sees in the facts of economics not ends but
+means. It takes economic life to be something that can be accounted for
+without remainder by visible causes and effects, something of which
+the structure is quite mechanical and completely self-contained and
+even, finally, something that stands in some sort of causal relation
+to religion and politics--these again being considered as individual
+self-contained domains. As this outlook is the systematic and not the
+historical, the timeless and universal validity of its concepts and
+rules is an article of faith, and its ambition is to establish the
+one and only correct method of applying “the” science of management.
+And accordingly, wherever its truths have come into contact with the
+facts, it has experienced a complete fiasco--as was the case with the
+prophecies of bourgeois theorists concerning the World War,[847] and
+with those of proletarian theorists on the induction of the Soviet
+economy.
+
+Up to now, therefore, there has been no national economy, in the
+sense of a morphology of the economic _side_ of life and more
+particularly of that side in the life of the high Cultures, with their
+formations--concordant as to stage, tempo, and duration--of economic
+styles. Economics has no system, but a physiognomy. To fathom the
+secret of its inner form, its _soul_, demands the physiognomic flair.
+To succeed in it it is necessary to be a “judge” of it as one is a
+“judge” of men or of horses, and requires even less “knowledge” than
+that which a horseman needs to have of zoölogy. But this faculty
+of “judgment” can be awakened, and the way to awaken it is through
+the sympathetic outlook on history which gives a shrewd idea of
+the race-instincts, which are at work in the economic as in other
+constituents of active existence, symbolically shaping the external
+position--the economic “stuff,” the need--in harmony with their own
+inner character. _All economic life is the expression of a soul-life._
+
+This is a new, a German, outlook upon economics, an outlook from beyond
+all Capitalism and Socialism--both of which were products of the jejune
+rationality of the eighteenth century, and aimed at nothing but a
+material analysis and subsequent synthesis of the economic surface. All
+that has been taught hitherto is no more than preparatory. Economic
+thought, like legal,[848] stands now on the verge of its true and
+proper development, which (for us, as for the Hellenistic-Roman age)
+sets in only where art and philosophy have irrevocably passed away.
+
+The attempt which follows is meant only as a flying survey of the
+possibilities here available.
+
+Economics and politics are sides of the _one_ livingly flowing current
+of being, and not of the waking-consciousness, the intellect.[849] In
+each of them is manifested the pulse of the cosmic flowings that are
+occluded in the sequent generations of individual existences. They may
+be said, not to _have_ history, but to _be_ history. Irreversible Time,
+the When, rules in them. They belong, both of them, to race and not,
+as religion and science belong, to language with its spatial-causal
+tensions; they regard facts, not truths. There are economic _Destinies_
+as there are political, whereas in scientific doctrines, as in
+religious, there is _timeless connexion of cause and effect_.
+
+Life, therefore, has a political and an economic kind of “condition”
+of fitness for history. They overlie, they support, they oppose each
+other, but the political is unconditionally the first. Life’s will is
+to preserve itself and to prevail, or, rather, to make itself stronger
+in order that it may prevail. But in the economic state of fitness the
+being-streams are fit as _self_-regarding, whereas in a political they
+are fit as _other_-regarding. And this holds good all along the series,
+from the simplest unicellular plant to swarms and to peoples of the
+highest free mobility in space. Nourishment and winning-through--the
+difference of dignity between the two sides of life is recognizable
+in their relation to death. There is no contrast so profound as that
+between _hunger-death and hero-death_. Economically life is in the
+widest sense threatened, dishonoured, and _debased_ by hunger--with
+which is to be included stunting of possibilities, straitened
+circumstances, darkness, and pressure not less than starvation in the
+literal sense. Whole peoples have lost the tense force of their race
+through the gnawing wretchedness of their living. Here men die _of_
+something and not _for_ something. Politics sacrifices men for an idea,
+they fall for an idea; but economy merely wastes them away. _War is the
+creator, hunger the destroyer, of all great things._ In war life is
+elevated by death, often to that point of irresistible force whose mere
+existence guarantees victory, but in the economic life hunger awakens
+the ugly, vulgar, and wholly unmetaphysical sort of fearfulness for
+one’s life under which the higher form-world of a Culture miserably
+collapses and the naked struggle for existence of the human beasts
+begins.
+
+The double sense of all history that is manifested in man and woman
+has been discussed in an earlier chapter.[850] There is a private
+history which _represents_ “life in space” as a procreation-series
+of the generations, and a public history that _defends and secures
+it_ as a political “in-form”-ness--the “spindle side” and the “sword
+side” of being. They find expression in the ideas of Family and of
+State, but also in the primary form of the house[851] wherein the good
+spirits of the marriage-bed--the Genius and the Juno of every old
+Roman dwelling--were protected by that of the door, the Janus. To this
+private history of the family the economic now attached itself. The
+duration of a flourishing life is inseparable from its strength; its
+secret of begetting and conceiving is seen at its purest in the being
+of breed-strong peasant stock that is rooted, healthy and fruitful,
+in its soil. And as in the form of the body the organ of sex is bound
+up with that of the circulation,[852] so the middle of the house in
+_another_ sense is formed by the sacred hearths, the Vesta.
+
+For this very reason the significance of economic history is something
+quite different from that of political. In the latter the foreground
+is taken up by the great individual destinies, which fulfil themselves
+indeed in the binding forms of their epoch, but are nevertheless,
+each in itself, strictly personal. The concern of the former, and of
+family history, is the course of development of the form-_language_;
+everything once-occurring and personal is an unimportant
+private-destiny, and only the basic form common to the million cases
+matters. But even so economics is only a foundation, for Being that
+is in any way meaningful. What really signifies is not _that_ an
+individual or a people is “in condition,” well nourished and fruitful,
+but _for what_ he or it is so; and the higher man climbs historically,
+the more conspicuously his political and religious will to inward
+symbolism and force of expression towers above everything in the way
+of form and depth that the economic life as such possesses. It is only
+with the coming of the Civilization, when the whole form-world begins
+to ebb, that mere life-preserving begins to outline itself, nakedly and
+insistently--this is the time when the banal assertion that “hunger and
+love” are the driving forces of life ceases to be ashamed of itself;
+when life comes to mean, not a waxing in strength for the task, but a
+matter of “happiness of the greatest number,” of comfort and ease, of
+“_panem et circenses_”; and when, in the place of grand politics, we
+have economic politics as an end in itself.
+
+Since economics belongs to the race side of life, it possesses, like
+politics, a customary ethic and not a moral--yet again the distinction
+of nobility and priesthood, facts and truths. A vocation-class, like an
+Estate, possesses a _matter-of-course_ feeling for (not good and evil,
+but) good and bad. Not to have this feeling is to be void of honour,
+law. For those engaged _in_ the economic life, too, honour stands as
+central criterion, with its tact and fine flair for what is “the right
+thing”--something quite separate from the sin-idea underlying the
+religious contemplation _of_ the world. There exist, not only a very
+definite vocational honour amongst merchants, craftsmen, and peasants,
+but equally definite gradations downward for the shopkeeper, the
+exporter, the banker, the contractor, and even, as we all know, for
+thieves and beggars, in so far as two or three of them feel themselves
+as fellow practitioners. No one has stated or written out these
+customary-ethics, but they exist, and, like class-ethics everywhere
+and always, they are binding only within the circle of membership.
+Along with the noble virtues of loyalty and courage, chivalry and
+comradeship, which are found in every vocational society, there appear
+clean-cut notions of the ethical value of industry, of success, of
+work, and an astonishing sense of distinction and apartness. This sort
+of thing a man _has_--and without knowing much about it, for custom is
+evidenced to consciousness only when it is infringed--while, on the
+contrary, the prohibitions of religion which are timeless, universally
+valid, but never realizable ideals, must be, learned before a man can
+know or attempt to follow them.
+
+Religious-ascetic fundamentals such as “selfless,” “sinless,” are
+without meaning in the economic life. For the true saint economics in
+itself is sinful,[853] and not merely taking of interest or pleasure
+in riches or the envy of the poor. The saying concerning the “lilies
+of the field” is for deeply religious (and philosophical) natures
+unreservedly true. The whole weight of their being lies outside
+economics and politics and all other facts of “this world.” We see it
+in Jesus’s times and St. Bernard’s and in the Russian soul of to-day;
+we see it too in the way of life of a Diogenes and a Kant. For its sake
+men choose voluntary poverty and itinerancy and hide themselves in
+cells and studies. Economic activity is _never_ found in a religion or
+a philosophy, always only in the political organism of a _church_ or
+the social organism of a theorizing fellowship; it is ever a compromise
+with “this world” and an index of the presence of a will-to-power.[854]
+
+
+II
+
+That which may be called the economic life of the plant is accomplished
+on and in it without its being itself anything but the theatre and
+will-less object of a natural process.[855] This element underlies the
+economy of the human body also, still unalterably vegetal and dreamy,
+pursuing its will-less (in this respect almost alien) existence in
+the shape of the circulatory organs. But when we come to the animal
+body freely mobile in space, being is not alone--it is accompanied
+by waking-being, the comprehending apprehension, and, therefore, the
+compulsion to _provide by independent_ thought for the preservation of
+life. Here begins life-anxiety, leading to touch and scent, sight and
+hearing with ever-sharper senses; and presently to movements in space
+for the purpose of searching, gathering, pursuing, tricking, stealing,
+which develop in many species of animals (such as beavers, ants, bees,
+numerous birds and beasts of prey) into a rudimentary economy-technique
+which presupposes a process of reflection and, therefore, a certain
+emancipation of understanding from sensation. Man is genuinely man
+inasmuch as his understanding has freed itself from sensation and, as
+thought, intervened creatively in the relations between microcosm and
+macrocosm.[856] Quite animal still is the trickery of woman towards
+man, and equally so the peasant’s shrewdness in obtaining small
+advantages--both differing in no wise from the slyness of the fox, both
+consisting in the ability to see into the secret of the victim at _one
+glance_. But on the top of this there supervenes, now, the economic
+_thought_ that sows a field, tames animals, changes and appreciates
+and exchanges things, and finds a thousand ways and means of better
+preserving life and transforming a dependence upon the environment
+into a mastery over it. That is the underlayer of all Cultures. Race
+makes use of an economic thought that can become so powerful as to
+detach itself from given purposes, build up castles of abstraction, and
+finally lose itself in Utopian expanses.
+
+All higher economic life develops itself on and over a peasantry.
+Peasantry, _per se_, does not presuppose any basis but itself.[857]
+It is, so to say, race-in-itself, plantlike and historyless,[858]
+producing and using wholly for itself, with an outlook on the world
+that sweepingly regards every other economic existence as incidental
+and contemptible. To this _producing_ kind of economy there is
+presently opposed an _acquisitive_ kind, which makes use of the former
+as an object--as a source of nourishment, tribute, or plunder. Politics
+and trade are in their beginnings quite inseparable, both being
+masterful, personal, warlike, both with a hunger for power and booty
+that produces quite another outlook upon the world--an outlook not from
+an angle into it, but from above down on its tempting disorder, an
+outlook which is pretty candidly expressed in the choice of the lion
+and the bear, the hawk and the falcon, as armorial badges. Primitive
+war is always also booty-war, and primitive trade intimately related to
+plunder and piracy. The Icelandic sagas narrate how, often, the Vikings
+would agree with a town population for a market-peace of a fortnight,
+after which weapons were drawn and booty-making started.
+
+Politics and trade in developed form--the art of achieving material
+successes over an opponent by means of intellectual superiority--are
+both a replacement of war by other means. Every kind of diplomacy is
+of a business nature, every business of a diplomatic, and both are
+based upon penetrative judgment of men and physiognomic tact. The
+adventure-spirit in great seafarers like the Phœnicians, Etruscans,
+Normans, Venetians, Hanseatics, the spirit of shrewd banking-lords like
+the Fugger and the Medici and of mighty financiers like Crassus and the
+mining and trust magnates of our own day, must possess the strategic
+talent of the _general_ if its operations are to succeed. Pride in the
+clan-house, the paternal heritage, the family tradition, develops and
+counts in the economic sphere as in the political; the great fortunes
+are like the kingdoms and have their history,[859] and Polycrates and
+Solon, Lorenzo de’ Medici and Jürgen Wullenweber are far from being the
+only examples of political ambitions developing out of commercial.
+
+But the genuine prince and statesman wants to rule, and the genuine
+merchant only wants to be wealthy, and here the acquisitive economy
+divides to pursue aim and means separately.[860] One may aim at booty
+for the sake of power, or at power for the sake of booty. The great
+ruler, too, the Hwang-ti, the Tiberius, the Frederick II--has the will
+to wealth, the will to be “rich in land and subjects,” but it is with
+and under a sense of high responsibilities. A man may lay hands on the
+treasurers of the whole world with a good conscience, not to say as
+a matter of course: he may lead a life of radiant splendour or even
+dissipation--if only he feels himself (Napoleon, Cecil Rhodes, the
+Roman Senate of the third century) to be the engine of a mission. When
+he feels so, the idea of private property can scarcely be said to exist
+so far as he is concerned.
+
+He who is out for purely economic advantages--as the Carthaginians
+were in Roman times and, in a far greater degree still, the Americans
+in ours--is correspondingly incapable of purely political _thinking_.
+In the decisions of high politics he is ever deceived and made a
+tool of, as the case of Wilson shows--especially when the absence of
+statesmanlike instinct leaves a chair vacant for moral sentiments.
+This is why the great economic groupings of the present day (for
+example, employers’ and employees’ unions) pile one political failure
+on another, unless indeed they find a real political politician as
+leader, and he--makes use of them. Economic and political thinking, in
+spite of a high degree of consonance of form, are in direction (and
+therefore in all tactical details) basically different. Great business
+successes[861] awaken an unbridled sense of _public_ power--in the very
+word “capital” one catches an unmistakable undertone of this. But it
+is only in a few individuals that the colour and direction of their
+willing and their criteria of situations of things undergo change.
+Only when a man has really ceased to feel his enterprise as “his own
+business,” and its aim as the simple amassing of property, does it
+become possible for the captain of industry to become the statesman,
+the Cecil Rhodes. But, conversely, the men of the political world are
+exposed to the danger of their will and thought for historical tasks
+degenerating into mere provision for their private life-upkeep; then a
+nobility can become a robber-order, and we see emerging the familiar
+types of princes and ministers, demagogues and revolution-heroes,
+whose zeal exhausts itself in lazy comfortableness and the piling-up
+of immense riches--there is little to choose in this respect between
+Versailles and the Jacobin Club, business bosses and trade-union
+leaders, Russian governors and Bolshevists. And in the maturity of
+democracy the politics of those who have “got there” is identical, not
+merely with business, but with speculative business of the dirtiest
+great-city sort.
+
+All this, however, is the very manifestation of the hidden course
+of a high Culture. In the beginning appear the primary orders,
+nobility and priesthood, with their symbolism of Time and Space. The
+political life, like the religious experience, has its fixed place,
+its ordained adepts, and its allotted aims for facts and truths alike,
+in a well-ordered society,[862] and down below, the economic life
+moves unconscious along a sure path. Then the stream of being becomes
+entangled in the stone structures of the town, and intellect and money
+thenceforward take over its historical guidance. The heroic and the
+saintly with their youthful symbolic force become rarer, and withdraw
+into narrower and narrower circles. Cool bourgeois clarity takes their
+place. At bottom, the concluding of a system and the concluding of
+a deal call for one and the same kind of professional intelligence.
+Scarcely differentiated now by any measure of symbolic force, political
+and economic life, religious and scientific experience make each
+other’s acquaintance, jostle one another, commingle. In the frictions
+of the city the stream of being loses its strict rich form. Elementary
+economic factors come to the surface and interplay with the remains of
+form-imbued politics, just as sovereign science at the same time adds
+religion to its stock of objects. Over a life of economics political
+self-satisfaction spreads a critical-edifying world-sentiment. But
+out of it all emerge, in place of the decayed Estates, the individual
+life-courses, big with true political or religious force, that are to
+become destiny for the whole.
+
+And thus we begin to discern the morphology of economic history. First
+there is a _primitive economy_ of “man,” which--like that of plants and
+animals--follows a biological[863] time-scale in the development of its
+forms. It completely dominates the primitive age, and it continues to
+move on, infinitely slowly and confusedly, underneath and between the
+high Cultures. Animals and plants are brought into it and transformed
+by taming and breeding, selection and sowing; fire and metals are
+exploited, and the properties of inorganic nature made by technical
+processes serviceable for the conduct of life. All this is perfused
+with political-religious ethic and meaning, without its being possible
+distinctly to separate Totem and Taboo, hunger, soul-fear, sex-love,
+art, war, sacrificial rites, belief, and experience.
+
+Wholly different from this, both in idea and in evolution, and sharply
+marked off in tempo and duration, are the _economic histories of the
+high Cultures_, each of which has its own economic style. To feudalism
+belongs the economy of the townless countryside. With the State ruled
+radially from cities appears the urban economy of money, and this
+rises, with the oncoming of the Civilization, into the dictature of
+money, simultaneously with the victory of world-city democracy. Every
+Culture has its own independently developed form-world. Bodily money of
+the Apollinian style (that is, the stamped coin) is as antithetical to
+relational money of the Faustian-dynamic style (that is, the booking
+of credit-units) as the Polis is to the State of Charles V. But the
+economic life, just like the social, forms itself pyramidally.[864]
+In the rustic underground a thoroughly primitive condition maintains
+itself almost unaffected by the Culture. The Late urban economy, which
+is already the activity of a resolute minority, looks down with steady
+contempt upon the pristine land-economy that continues all around it,
+while the latter in turn glares sulkily at the intellectualized style
+that prevails within the walls. Finally the cosmopolis brings in a
+Civilized world-economy, which radiates from very small nuclei within a
+few centres, and subjects the rest to itself as a provincial economy,
+while in the remoter landscapes thoroughly primitive (“patriarchal”)
+custom often prevails still. With the growth of the cities the way of
+life becomes ever more artificial, subtle and complex. The great-city
+worker of Cæsar’s Rome, of Haroun-al-Raschid’s Baghdad, and of the
+present-day Berlin feels as self-evidently necessary much that the
+richest yeoman deep in the country regards as silly luxury, but this
+self-evident standard is hard to reach and hard to maintain. In
+every Culture the quantum of work grows bigger and bigger till at
+the beginning of every Civilization we find an intensity of economic
+life, of which the tensions are even excessive and dangerous, and
+which it is impossible to maintain for a long period. In the end a
+rigid, permanent-set condition is reached, a strange hotch-potch of
+refined-intellectual and crude-primitive factors, such as the Greeks
+found in Egypt and we have found in modern India and China--unless, of
+course, the crust is being disintegrated from below by the pressure of
+a young Culture, like the Classical in Diocletian’s time.
+
+Relatively to this economic movement, men are economically “in form” as
+an economic _class_, just as they are in form for world-history as a
+political Estate. Each individual has an economic position _within the
+economic order_ just as he has a grade of some sort in the _society_.
+Now, both these kinds of allegiances make claims upon the feelings,
+thoughts, and relations all at once. A life insists on being, and on
+meaning something as well, and the confusion of our ideas is made
+worse confounded by the fact that, to-day, as in Hellenistic times,
+political parties, in their desire to ameliorate the _upkeep_-standards
+of certain economic groups, have elevated these groups to the dignity
+of a political Estate, as Marx, for instance, elevated the class of
+factory-workers.
+
+Confusion--for the first and genuine Estate is nobility. From it
+the officer and the judge and all concerned in the highest duties
+of government and administration are direct derivatives. They are
+Estate-like formations that _mean_ something. So, too, the body of
+scholars and scientists belongs to the priesthood[865] and has a very
+sharply definite kind of class-exclusiveness. But the grand symbolism
+of the Estates goes out with castle and cathedral. The _Tiers_,
+already, is the Non-Estate, the remainder, a miscellaneous and manifold
+congeries, which means very little as such save in the moments of
+political protest, so that the importance it creates _for itself_ is
+a party importance. The individual is conscious of himself not _as_ a
+bourgeois, but _because_ he is a “liberal” and thus part and parcel
+of a great thing, not indeed as representing it in his person, but as
+_adhering_ to it from conviction. In consequence of this weakness of
+its social “form,” the economic “form” of the bourgeoisie becomes all
+the more relatively conspicuous in its callings, guilds and unions. In
+the cities, at any rate, a man is primarily designated according to the
+way in which he makes his living.
+
+Economically, the first (and anciently almost the only) mode of
+life is that of the peasant,[866] which is pure _production_, and
+therefore the pre-condition of every other mode. Even the primary
+Estates, too, in early times, base their way of life entirely upon
+hunting, stock-keeping, and agricultural landowning, and even in Late
+periods land is regarded by nobles and priests as the only truly
+honourable kind of property. In opposition to it stands trade, the
+mode of the acquisitive _middleman_ or intervener,[867] powerful
+out of all proportion to its numbers, already indispensable even in
+quite early conditions--a refined parasitism, completely unproductive
+and, therefore, land-alien and far-ranging, “free,” and unhampered
+spiritually, too, by the ethic and the practice of the countryside, a
+life sustaining itself on another life. Between the two, now, a third
+kind of economy, the _preparatory_ economy of technics, grows up in
+numberless crafts, industries, and callings, which creatively apply
+reflections upon nature and whose honour and conscience are bound up
+in achievement.[868] Its oldest guild, which reaches back into the
+sheer primitive and fills the picture of this primitive with its dark
+sagas and rites and notions, is the guild of the smiths, who--as the
+result of their proud aloofness from the peasantry and the fear that
+hangs about them, and leads to their being venerated and banned by
+turns--have often become true tribes with a race of their own, as in
+the case of the Abyssinian Falasha or “Black Jews.”[869]
+
+In these three economics of production, preparation, and distribution,
+as in everything else belonging to politics and life at large, there
+are _the subjects and objects of leading_--in this case, whole groups
+that dispose, decide, organize, discover; and other whole groups whose
+function is simply to execute. The grading may be hard and definite
+or it may be scarcely perceptible,[870] promotion may be impossible
+or unimpeded, the relative dignity of the task may be almost equal
+throughout a long scale of slow transitions or different beyond
+comparison. Tradition and law, talent and possessions, population
+numbers, cultural level, and economic situation may effectively
+override this basic antithesis of subjects and objects--but it exists,
+it is as much a premiss as life itself, and it is unalterable.
+Nevertheless, economically _there is no worker-class_; that is an
+invention of theorists who have fixed their eyes on the position
+of factory-workers in England--an industrial, peasantless land in
+a transitional phase--and then extended the resultant scheme so
+confidently over all the Cultures and all the ages that the politicians
+have taken it up and used it as a means of building themselves parties.
+In actuality there is an almost uncountable number of purely serving
+activities in workshop and counting-houses, office and cargo-deck,
+roads, mine-shafts, fields, and meadows. This counting-up, portering,
+running of errands, hammering, serving, and minding often enough
+lacks that element which elevates life above mere upkeep and invests
+work with the dignity and the delight attaching, for example, to the
+status-duties of the officer and the savant, or the personal triumphs
+of the engineer, the manager, and the merchant--but, even apart
+from that, all these things are quite incapable of being compared
+amongst themselves. The brain or brawn of the work, its situation in
+village or in megalopolis, the duration and intensity of the doing of
+it, bring it to pass that farm-labourers, bank clerks, and tailors’
+hands live in perfectly different economic worlds, and it is only, I
+repeat, the party politics of quite Late phases that lures them by
+means of catchwords into a protest-combination, with the intention
+of making use of its aggregate mass. The classical slave, on the
+contrary, is such chiefly in terms of constitutional law--that is, so
+far as the body-Polis was concerned, he simply did not exist[871]--but
+economically he might be land-worker or craftsman, or even director or
+wholesale merchant with a huge capital (_peculium_), with palaces and
+country villas and a host of subordinates--freemen included. And what
+he could become, over and above this, in late Roman times will appear
+in the sequel.
+
+
+III
+
+With the oncoming of Spring there begins in every Culture an economic
+life of settled form.[872] The life of the population is entirely that
+of the peasant on the open land. The experience of the town has not
+yet come. All that elevates itself from amongst the villages, castles,
+palaces, monasteries, temple-closes, is not a city, but a _market_,
+a mere meeting-point of yeomen’s interests, which also acquired, and
+at once, a certain religious and political meaning, but certainly
+cannot be said to have had a special life of its own. The inhabitants,
+even though they might be artisans or traders, would still _feel_ as
+peasants, and even in one way or another work as such.
+
+That which separates out from a life in which everyone is alike
+producer and consumer is _goods_, and traffic in goods is the mark
+of all early intercourse, whether the object be brought from the far
+distance or merely shifted about within the limits of the village or
+even the farm. A piece of goods is that which adheres by some quiet
+threads of its essence to the life that has produced it or the life
+that uses it. A peasant drives “his” cow to market, a woman puts away
+“her” finery in the cupboard. We say that a man is endowed with this
+world’s “goods”; the word “pos_session_” takes us back right into the
+plantlike origin of property, into which this particular being--no
+other--has grown, from the roots up.[873] Exchange in these periods
+is a process whereby goods pass from one circle of life into another.
+They are valued with reference to life, according to a sliding-scale of
+_felt_ relation to the moment. There is neither a conception of value
+nor a kind or amount of goods that constitutes a general measure--for
+gold and coin are goods too, whose rarity and indestructibility causes
+them to be highly prized.[874]
+
+Into the rhythm and course of this barter the dealer only comes as
+an intervener.[875] In the market the acquisitive and the creative
+economics encounter one another, but even at places where fleets and
+caravans unload, trade only appears as the _organ_ of countryside
+traffic.[876] It is the “eternal” form of economy, and is even to-day
+seen in the immemorially ancient figure of the pedlar of the country
+districts remote from towns, and in out-of-the-way suburban lanes where
+small barter-circles form naturally, and in the private economy of
+savants, officials, and in general everyone not actively part of the
+daily economic life of the great city.
+
+With the soul of the town a quite other kind of life awakens.[877] As
+soon as the market has become the town, it is not longer a question of
+mere centres for goods-streams traversing a purely peasant landscape,
+but of a second world within the walls, for which the merely producing
+life “out there” is nothing but object and means, and out of which
+another stream begins to circle. The decisive point is this--the true
+urban man is _not_ a producer in the prime terrene sense. He has not
+the inward linkage with soil or with the goods that pass through his
+hands. He does not live with these, but looks at them from outside and
+appraises them in relation to his own life-upkeep.
+
+With this goods become wares, exchange turnover, _and in place of
+thinking in goods we have thinking in money_.
+
+With this a purely extensional something, a form of limit-defining,
+is abstracted from the visible objects of economics just as
+mathematical thought abstracts something from the mechanistically
+conceived environment. Abstract money corresponds exactly to abstract
+number.[878] Both are entirely inorganic. The economic picture is
+reduced exclusively to quantities, whereas the important point about
+“goods” had been their quality. For the early-period peasant “his” cow
+is, first of all, just what it is, a unit being, and only secondarily
+an object of exchange; but for the economic outlook of the true
+townsman the only thing that exists is an abstract money-value which
+at the moment happens to be in the shape of a cow that can always
+be transformed into that of, say, a bank-note. Even so the genuine
+engineer sees in a famous waterfall not a unique natural spectacle, but
+just a calculable quantum of unexploited energy.
+
+It is an error of all modern money-theories that they start from the
+value-token or even the material of the payment-medium instead of from
+the form of economic thought.[879] In reality, money, like number and
+law, is a _category of thought_. There is a monetary, just as there
+is a juristic and a mathematical and a technical, thinking of the
+world-around. From the sense-experience of a house we obtain quite
+different abstracts, according as we are mentally appraising it from
+the point of view of a merchant, a judge, or an engineer, and with
+reference to a balance-sheet, a lawsuit, or a danger of collapse. Next
+of kin to thinking in money, however, is mathematics. To think in terms
+of business is to calculate. The money-value is a numerical value
+measured by a unit of reckoning.[880] This exact “value-in-itself,”
+like number-in-itself, the man of the town, the man without roots, is
+the first to imagine; for peasants there are only ephemeral felt values
+in relation to now this and now that object of exchange. What he does
+not use, or does not want to possess, has “no value” for him. Only in
+the economy-picture of the real townsman are there objective values and
+kinds of values which have an existence apart from his private needs,
+as thought-elements of a generalized validity, although in actuality
+every individual has his proper system of values and his proper stock
+of the most varied kinds of value, and feels the ruling prices of the
+market as “cheap” or “dear” with reference to these.[881]
+
+Whereas the earlier mankind _compares_ goods, and does so not by
+means of the reason only, the later _reckons_ the values of wares,
+and does so by rigid unqualitative measures. Now gold is no longer
+measured against the cow, but the cow against the gold, and the
+result is expressed by an abstract number, the price. Whether and how
+this measure of value finds symbolic expression in a value-sign--as
+the written, spoken, or represented number-sign is, in a sense,
+number--depends on the economic style of the particular Culture, each
+of which produces a different sort of money. The common condition
+for the appearance of this is the existence of an urban population
+that thinks economically in terms of it, and it is its particular
+character that settles whether the value-token shall serve also
+as payment-medium; thus the Classical coin and _probably_ the
+Babylonian silver did so serve, whereas the Egyptian _deben_ (raw
+copper weighed out in pounds) was a measure of exchange, but neither
+token nor payment-medium. The Western and the “contemporary” Chinese
+bank-note,[882] again, is a medium, but not a measure. In fact we are
+accustomed to deceive ourselves thoroughly as to the rôle played by
+coins of precious metal in _our_ sort of economy; they are just wares
+fashioned in imitation of the Classical custom, and hence, measured
+against book-values of credit money, they have a “price.”
+
+The outcome of this way of thinking is that the old _possession_,
+bound up with life and the soil, gives way to the _fortune_, which is
+essentially mobile and qualitatively undefined: it does not _consist
+in_ goods, but it is _laid out in_ them. Considered by itself, it is a
+purely numerical quantum of money-value.[883]
+
+As the seat of this thinking, the city becomes the money-market, the
+centre of values, and a stream of money-values begins to infuse,
+intellectualize, and command the stream of goods. _And with this the
+trader, from being an organ of economic life, becomes its master._
+Thinking in money is always, in one way or another, trade or business
+thinking. It presupposes the productive economy of the land, and,
+therefore, is always primarily acquisitive, for there is no third
+course. The very words “acquisition,” “gain,” “speculation,” point to
+a profit tricked off from the goods _en route_ to the consumer--an
+_intellectual plunder_--and for that reason are inapplicable to the
+early peasantry. Only by attuning ourselves exactly to the spirit and
+economic outlook of the true townsman can we realize what they mean.
+He works not for needs, but for sales, for “money.” The business view
+gradually infuses itself into every kind of activity. The countryman,
+inwardly bound up with traffic in goods, was at once giver and taker,
+and even the trader of the primitive market was hardly an exception to
+this rule. But with money-traffic there appears between producer and
+consumer, as though between two separate worlds, the third party, the
+_middleman_, whose thought is dominated _a priori_ by the business side
+of life. He forces the producer to offer, and the consumer to inquire
+of him. He elevates mediation to a monopoly and thereafter to economic
+primacy, and forces the other two to be “in form” in _his_ interest, to
+prepare the wares according to _his_ reckonings, and to cheapen them
+under the pressure of _his_ offers.
+
+He who commands this mode of thinking is the master of money.[884]
+In all the Cultures evolution takes this road. Lysias informs us in
+his oration against the corn-merchants that the speculators at the
+Piræus frequently spread reports of the wreck of a grain-fleet or of
+the outbreak of war, in order to produce a panic. In Hellenistic-Roman
+times it was a widespread practice to arrange for land to go out of
+cultivation, or for imports to be held in bond, in order to force up
+prices. In the Egyptian New Empire wheat-corners in the American style
+were made possible by a bill-discounting that is fully comparable
+with the banking operations of the West.[885] Cleomenes, Alexander
+the Great’s administrator for Egypt, was able by book transactions
+to get the whole corn-supply into his own hands, thereby producing a
+famine far and wide in Greece and raking in immense gains for himself.
+To think economically on any terms but these is simply to become a
+mere pawn in the money-operations of the great city. This style of
+thought soon gets hold of the waking-consciousness of the entire
+urban population and, therefore, of everyone who plays any serious
+part in the conduct of economic history. “Peasant” and “burgher”
+stand not only for the difference of country and city, but for that
+of possessions and money as well. The splendid Culture of Homeric and
+Provençal princely courts was something that waxed and waned with
+the men themselves--we can often, even to-day, see it in the life of
+old families in their country-seats--but the more refined culture of
+the bourgeoisie, its “comfort,” is something coming from outside,
+something that can be paid for.[886] All highly developed economy is
+urban economy. World-economy itself, the characteristic economy of all
+Civilizations, ought properly to be called world-city-economy. The
+destinies even of this world-economy are now decided in a few places,
+the “money-markets” of the world[887]--in Babylon, Thebes, and Rome,
+in Byzantium and Baghdad, in London, New York, Berlin, and Paris. The
+residue is a starveling provincial economy that runs on in its narrow
+circles without being conscious of its utter dependence. Finally,
+money is the form of intellectual energy in which the ruler-will, the
+political and social, technical and mental, creative power, the craving
+for a full-sized life, are concentrated. Shaw is entirely right when
+he says: “The universal regard for money is the one hopeful fact in
+our civilization ... the two things [money and life] are inseparable:
+money is the counter that enables life to be distributed socially: it
+_is_ life....”[888] What is here described as Civilization, then, is
+the stage of a Culture at which tradition and personality have lost
+their immediate effectiveness, and every idea, to be actualized, has to
+be put into terms of money. At the beginning a man was wealthy because
+he was powerful--now he is powerful because he has money. Intellect
+reaches the throne only when money puts it there. Democracy is the
+completed equating of money with political power.
+
+Through the economic history of every Culture there runs a desperate
+conflict waged by the soil-rooted tradition of a race, by its _soul_,
+against the spirit of money. The peasant-wars of the beginning of a
+Late period (in the Classical, 700-500; in the Western, 1450-1650; in
+the Egyptian, end of Old Kingdom) are the first reaction of the blood
+against the money that is stretching forth its hand from the waxing
+cities over the soil.[889] Stein’s warning that “he who mobilizes
+the soil dissolves it into dust” points to a danger common to _all_
+Cultures; if money is unable to attack possession, it insinuates itself
+into the thoughts of the noble and peasant possessors, until the
+inherited possession that has grown with the family’s growth begins
+to seem like resources merely “put into” land and soil and, so far as
+their essence is concerned, mobile.[890] Money aims at mobilizing _all_
+things. World-economy is the actualized economy of values that are
+completely detached in thought from the land, and made fluid.[891] The
+Classical money-thinking, from Hannibal’s day, transformed whole cities
+into coin and whole populations into slaves and thereby converted both
+into money that could be brought from everywhere to Rome, and used
+outwards from Rome as a power.
+
+The Faustian money-thinking “opens up” whole continents, the
+water-power of gigantic river-basins, the muscular power of the
+peoples of broad regions, the coal measures, the virgin forests, the
+laws of Nature, and transforms them all into financial energy, which is
+laid out in one way or in another--in the shape of press, or elections,
+or budgets, or armies--for the realization of masters’ plans. Ever new
+values are abstracted from whatever world-stock is still, from the
+business point of view, unclaimed, “the slumbering spirits of gold,” as
+John Gabriel Borkman says; and what the things themselves are, apart
+from this, is of no economic significance at all.
+
+
+IV
+
+As every Culture has its own mode of thinking in money, so also it has
+its proper money-symbol through which it brings to visible expression
+its principle of valuation in the economic field. This something, a
+sense-actualizing of the thought, is in importance fully the equal
+of the spoken, written, or drawn figures and other symbols of the
+mathematic. Here lies a deep and fruitful domain of inquiry, so far
+almost unexplored. Not even the basic notions have been correctly
+enunciated, and it is therefore quite impossible to-day to translate
+intelligibly the money-idea that underlay the barter and the bill
+business of Egypt, the banking of Babylonia, the book-keeping of
+China, and the capitalism of the Jews, Parsees, Greeks, and Arabs from
+Haroun-al-Raschid’s day. All that is possible is to set forth the
+essential opposition of Apollinian and Faustian money--the one, _money
+as magnitude_, and the other, _money as function_.[892]
+
+Economically, as in other ways, Classical man saw his world-around as
+a sum of bodies that changed their place, travelled, drove or hit or
+annihilated one another, as in Democritus’s description of Nature. Man
+was a body among bodies, and the Polis as sum thereof a body of higher
+order. All the needs of life consisted in corporeal quantities, and
+money, too, therefore represented such a body, in the same way as an
+Apollo-statue represented a god. About 650, simultaneously with the
+stone body of the Doric temple and the free statue true-modelled in
+the round, appeared the _coin_, a metal weight of beautiful impressed
+form. Value as a magnitude had long existed--in fact as long as this
+Culture itself. In Homer, a talent is a little aggregate of gold, in
+bullion and decorative objects, of a definite total weight. The Shield
+of Achilles represents “two talents” of gold, and even as late as Roman
+times it was usual to specify silver and gold vessels by weight.[893]
+
+The discovery of the Classically formed money-body, however, is so
+extraordinary that we have not even yet grasped it in its deep and
+purely Classical significance. We regard it as one of the “achievements
+of humanity,” and so we strike these coinages everywhere, just as we
+put statues in our streets and squares. So much and no more it is
+within our power to do; we can imitate the shape, but we cannot impart
+the same economic significance thereto. The coin _as money_ is a purely
+Classical phenomenon--only possible in an environment conceived wholly
+on Euclidean ideas, but there creatively dominant over all economic
+life. Notions like income, resources, debt, capital, meant in the
+Classical cities something quite different from what they mean to us.
+They meant, not economic energy radiating from a point, but a sum of
+valuable objects in hand. Wealth was always a mobile _cash-supply_,
+which was altered by addition and subtraction of valuable objects and
+had nothing at all to do with possessions in land--for in Classical
+thinking the two were completely separate. Credit consisted in the
+lending of cash in the expectation that the loan would be repaid in
+cash. Catiline was poor because, in spite of his wide estates,[894] he
+could find nobody to lend him the cash that he needed for his political
+aims; and the immense debts of Roman politicians[895] had for their
+ultimate security, not their equivalent in land, but the definite
+prospect of a province to be plundered of its movable assets.[896]
+
+In the light of this, and only in the light of this, we begin to
+understand certain phenomena such as the mass-execution of the wealthy
+under the Second Tyrannis, and the Roman proscriptions (with the object
+of seizing a large part of the cash current in the community), and the
+melting down of the Delphian temple-treasure by the Phocians in the
+Sacred War, of the art-treasures of Corinth by Mummius, and of the last
+votive offerings in Rome by Cæsar, in Greece by Sulla, in Asia Minor
+by Brutus and Cassius, without regard to artistic value when the noble
+stuffs and metals and ivory were needed.[897] The captured statues and
+the vessels borne in the triumphs were, in the eyes of the spectators,
+sheer cash, and Mommsen[898] could attempt to determine the site of
+Varus’s disaster by the places in which coin-hoards were unearthed--for
+the Roman veteran carried his whole property in precious metal on his
+person. Classical wealth does not consist in having possessions, but
+piling money; a Classical money-market was not a centre of credit like
+the bourses of our world and of ancient Thebes, but a city in which an
+important part of the world’s cash was actually collected. It may be
+taken that in Cæsar’s time much more than half of the Classical world’s
+gold was in Rome.
+
+But when, from about Hannibal’s time, this world advanced into the
+state of unlimited plutocracy, the naturally limited mass of precious
+metals and materially valuable works of art in its sphere of control
+became hopelessly inadequate to cover needs, and a veritable craving
+set in for new bodies capable of being used as money. Then it was
+that men’s eyes fell upon the slave, who was another sort of body,
+but a thing and not a person[899] and capable, therefore, of being
+thought of as money. From that point Classical slavery became unique
+of its kind in all economic history. The properties of the coin were
+extended to apply to living objects, and the stock of men in the
+regions “opened up” to the plunderings of proconsuls and tax-farmers
+became as interesting as the stock of metal. A curious sort of double
+valuation developed. The slave had a market price, although ground
+and soil had not. He served for the accumulation of great uninvested
+fortunes, and hence the enormous slave-masses of the Roman period,
+which are entirely inexplicable by any other sort of necessity. So
+long as man needed only as many slaves as he could gainfully employ,
+their number was small and easily covered by the prisoners of war and
+judgment-debtors.[900] It was in the sixth century that Chios made a
+beginning with the importation of bought slaves (Argyronetes). The
+difference between these and the far more numerous paid labourers was
+originally of a political and legal, not an economic kind. As the
+Classical economy was static and not dynamic, and was ignorant of the
+systematic opening-up of energy-sources, the slaves of the Roman age
+did not exist to be exploited in work, but were employed--more or
+less--so that the greatest possible number of them could be maintained.
+Specially presentable slaves possessing particular qualifications
+of one sort or another were preferred, because for equal cost of
+maintenance they represented a better asset; they were loaned as cash
+was loaned; and they were allowed to have businesses on their account,
+so that they could become rich;[901] free labour was undersold--all
+this so as to cover at any rate the upkeep of this capital.[902] The
+bulk of them cannot have been employed at all. They answered their
+purpose by simply existing, as a stock of money in hand which was not
+bound up to a natural limit like the stock of metal available in those
+days. And through that very fact the need of slaves grew and grew
+indefinitely and led, not only to wars that were undertaken simply
+for slave-getting, but to slave-hunting by private entrepreneurs all
+along the Mediterranean coasts (which Rome winked at) and to a new
+way of making the proconsuls’ fortunes, which consisted in bleeding
+the population of a region and then selling it into slavery for debt.
+The market of Delos must have dealt with ten thousand slaves a day.
+When Cæsar went to Britain, the disappointment caused in Rome by
+the money-poverty of the Britons was compensated by the prospect of
+rich booty in slaves. When, for example, Corinth was destroyed, the
+melting-down of the statues for coinage and the auctioning of the
+inhabitants at the slave-mart were, for Classical minds, one and the
+same operation--the transformation of corporeal objects into money.
+
+In extremest contrast to this stands the symbol of Faustian
+money--money as Function, the value of which lies in its effect and
+not its mere existence. The specific style of this economic thinking
+appears already in the way in which the Normans of A.D. 1000 organized
+their spoils of men and land into an economic force.[903] Compare the
+pure book-valuation of these ducal officials (commemorated in our words
+“cheque,” “account,” and “checking”)[904] with the “contemporary”
+gold talent of the Iliad, one meets at the very outset of the Culture
+the rudiments of its modern credit-system, which is the outcome of
+confidence in the force and durability of its economic mode, and
+with which the idea of money in our sense is almost identical. These
+financial methods, transplanted to the Roman Kingdom of Sicily by Roger
+II, were developed by the Hohenstaufen Emperor Frederick II (about
+1230) into a powerful system far surpassing the original in dynamism
+and making him the “first capitalist power of the world”;[905] and
+while this fraternization of mathematical thinking-power and royal
+will-to-power made its way from Normandy into France and was applied
+on the grand scale to the exploitation of conquered England (to this
+day English soil is nominally royal demesne) its Sicilian side was
+imitated by the Italian city-republics, and (as their ruling patricians
+soon took the methods of the civic economy into use for their private
+book-keeping,) spread over the commercial thought and practice of the
+whole Western world. Little later, the Sicilian methods were adopted
+by the Order of the Teutonic Knights and by the dynasty of Aragon,
+and it is probably to these origins that we should assign the model
+accountancy of Spain in the days of Philip II, and of Prussia in those
+of Frederick William I.
+
+The decisive event, however, was the invention--“contemporary” with
+that of the Classical coin about 650--of double-entry book-keeping
+by Fra Luca Pacioli in 1494. Goethe calls this in _Wilhelm Meister_
+“one of the finest discoveries of the human intellect,” and indeed
+its author may without hesitation be ranked with his contemporaries
+Columbus and Copernicus. To the Normans we owe our modes of reckoning
+and to the Lombards our book-keeping. These, be it observed, were the
+same two Germanic stocks which created the two most suggestive juristic
+works of the early Gothic,[906] and whose longing into distant seas
+gave the impulses for the two discoveries of America. “Double-entry
+book-keeping is born of the same spirit as the system of Galileo and
+Newton.... With the same means as these, it orders the phenomenon into
+an elegant system, and it may be called the first Cosmos built up on
+the basis of a mechanistic thought. Double-entry book-keeping discloses
+to us the Cosmos of the economic world by the same method as later the
+Cosmos of the stellar universe was unveiled by the great investigation
+of natural philosophy.... Double-entry book-keeping rests on the basic
+principle, logically carried out, of comprehending all phenomena purely
+as quantities.”[907]
+
+_Double-entry book-keeping is a pure Analysis of the space of values,
+referred to a co-ordinate system, of which the origin is the “Firm.”_
+The coinage of the Classical world had only permitted of arithmetical
+compilations with value-_magnitudes_. Here, as ever, Pythagoras and
+Descartes stand opposed. It is legitimate for us to talk of the
+“integration” of an undertaking, and the graphic curve is the same
+optical auxiliary to economics as it is to science. The Classical
+economy-world was ordered, like the cosmos of Democritus, according to
+_stuff and form_. A stuff, in the form of a coin, carries the economic
+movement and presses against the demand-unit of equal value-quantity
+at the place of use. _Our_ economy-world is ordered by _force and
+mass_. A field of money-tensions lies in space and assigns to every
+object, irrespective of its specific kind, a positive or negative
+effect-value,[908] which is represented by a book-entry. “_Quod non est
+in libris, non est in mundo._” But the symbol of the functional money
+thus imagined, that which _alone_ may be compared with the Classical
+coin, is not the actual book-entry, nor yet the share-voucher, cheque,
+or note, _but the act by which the function is fulfilled in writing_,
+and the rôle of the value-paper is merely to be the _generalized
+historical evidence_ of this act.
+
+Yet side by side with this the West, in its unquestioning admiration
+of the Classical, has gone on striking coins, not merely as tokens of
+sovereignty, but in the belief that this evidenced money was money
+corresponding in reality to the economics in thought. In just the
+same way, even within the Gothic age, we took over Roman law with its
+equating of things to bodily magnitudes, and the Euclidean mathematic,
+which was built upon the concept of number as magnitude. And so it
+befell that the evolution of these three intellectual form-worlds of
+ours proceeded, not like the Faustian music in a pure and flowerlike
+unfolding, but in the shape of a _progressive emancipation from the
+notion of magnitude_. The mathematic had already achieved this by the
+close of the Baroque age.[909] The jurisprudence, on the other hand,
+has not yet even recognized its coming task,[910] but this century is
+going to set it, and to demand that which for Roman jurists was the
+self-evident basis of law, namely, the inward congruence of economic
+and legal thought and an equal practical familiarity with both. The
+conception of money that was symbolized in the coin agreed precisely
+with the Classical thing-law, but with us there is nothing remotely
+like such an agreement. Our whole life is disposed dynamically,
+not statically and Stoically; therefore our essentials are forces
+and performances, relations and capacities--organizing talents and
+intuitive intellects, credit, ideas, methods, energy-sources--and not
+mere existence of corporeal things. The “Romanist” thing-thought of
+our jurists, and the theory of money that consciously or unconsciously
+starts from the coin, are equally alien to our life. The vast metallic
+hoard to which, in imitation of the Classical, we were continually
+adding till the World War came, has indeed made a rôle for itself off
+the main road, but with the inner form, tasks, and aims of modern
+economy it has _nothing_ to do; and if as the result of the war it
+were to disappear from currency altogether, nothing would be altered
+thereby.[911]
+
+Unhappily, the modern national economics were founded in the age of
+Classicism. Just as statues and vases and stiff dramas alone counted
+as true art, so also finely stamped coins alone counted as true money.
+What Josiah Wedgwood (1758) aimed at with his delicately toned reliefs
+and cups, that also, at bottom, Adam Smith aimed at in his theory of
+value--namely, the pure present of tangible magnitudes. For it is
+entirely consonant with the illusion that money and pieces of money
+are the same, to measure the value of a thing against the magnitude of
+a quantity of work. Here work is no longer an _effecting_ in a world
+of effects, a working which can differ infinitely from case to case as
+to inward worth and intensity and range, which propagates itself in
+wider and wider circles and like an electric field may be measured but
+not marked off--but the _result_ of the effecting, considered entirely
+materially, _that which is worked-up_, a tangible thing showing nothing
+noteworthy about it except just its extent.
+
+In reality, the economy of the European-American Civilization is built
+up on work of a kind in which distinctions go entirely according to
+the inner quality--more so than ever in China or Egypt, let alone the
+Classical World. It is not for nothing that we live in a world of
+economic dynamism, where the works of the individual are not additive
+in the Euclidean way, but functionally related to one another. The
+purely executive work (which alone Marx takes into account) is in
+reality nothing but the function of an inventive, ordering, and
+organizing work; it is from this that the other derives its meaning,
+relative value, and even possibility of being done at all. The whole
+world-economy since the discovery of the steam-engine has been the
+creation of a quite small number of superior heads, without whose
+high-grade work everything else would never have come into being. But
+this achievement is of creative thinking, not a quantum,[912] and its
+value is not to be weighed against a certain number of coins. Rather
+it _is_ itself money--Faustian money, namely, which is not minted,
+but _thought of as an efficient centre_ coming up out of a life--and
+it is the inward quality of that life which elevates the thought to
+the significance of a fact. _Thinking in money generates money_--that
+is the secret of the world-economy. When an organizing magnate writes
+down a million on paper, that million exists, for the personality as
+an economic centre vouches for a corresponding heightening of the
+economic energy of his field. This, and nothing else, is the meaning
+of the word “Credit” for us. But all the gold pieces in the world
+would not suffice to invest the actions of the manual worker with a
+meaning, and therefore a value, if the famous “expropriation of the
+expropriators” were to eliminate the superior capacities from their
+creations; were this to happen, these would become soulless, will-less,
+empty shells. Thus, in fact, Marx is just as much a Classical, just
+as truly a product of the Romanist law-thought as Adam Smith; he sees
+only the completed magnitude, not the function, and he would like
+to separate the means of production from those whose minds, by the
+discovery of methods, the organization of efficient industries, and the
+acquisition of outlet-markets, alone turn a mass of bricks and steel
+into a factory, and who, if their forces find no field of play, do not
+occur.[913]
+
+If anyone seeks to enunciate a theory of modern work, let him begin
+by thinking of this basic trait of all life. There are subjects and
+objects in every kind of life as lived, and the more important, the
+more rich in form, the life is, the clearer the distinction between
+them. As every stream of Being consists of a minority of leaders
+and a huge majority of led, so _every sort of economy consists in
+leader-work and executive work_. The frog’s perspective of Marx and
+the social-ethical ideologues shows only the aggregate of last small
+things, but these only exist at all in virtue of the first things, and
+the spirit of this world of work can be grasped only through a grasp of
+its highest possibilities. The inventor of the steam-engine and not its
+stoker is the determinant. The _thought_ is what matters.
+
+And, similarly, thinking in money has subjects and objects: those who
+by force of their personality generate and guide money, and those
+who are maintained by money. Money of the Faustian brand is the
+_force_ distilled from economy-dynamics of the Faustian brand, and it
+appertains to the destiny of the individual (on the economic side of
+his life-destiny) that he is inwardly constituted to represent a part
+of this force, or that he is, on the contrary, nothing but mass to it.
+
+
+V
+
+The word “Capital” signifies the centre of this thought--not the
+aggregate of values, but that which _keeps them in movement as such_.
+Capitalism comes into existence only with the world-city existence of
+a Civilization, and it is confined to the very small ring of those
+who represent this existence by their persons and intelligence; its
+opposite is the provincial economy. It was the unconditional supremacy
+achieved by the coin in Classical life (including the political
+side of that life) that generated the static capital, the ἀφορμή or
+starting-point, that by its existence drew to itself, in a sort of
+magnetic attraction, things and again things _en masse_. It was the
+supremacy of book-values, whose abstract system was quickly detached
+from personality by double-entry book-keeping and worked forward by
+virtue of its own inward dynamism, that produced the modern capital
+that spans the whole earth with its field of force.[914]
+
+Under the influence of its own sort of capital the economic life of the
+Classical world took the form of a gold-stream that flowed from the
+provinces to Rome and back, and was ever seeking new areas whose stock
+of worked-up gold had not yet been “opened up.” Brutus and Cassius
+carried the gold of Asia Minor on long mule-trains to the battle-field
+of Philippi--one can imagine what sort of an economic operation the
+plunder of a camp after a battle must have been--and even C. Gracchus,
+almost a century earlier, alluded to the amphoræ that went out from
+Rome to the provinces full of wine and came back full of gold. This
+hunt for the gold possessions of alien peoples corresponds exactly to
+the present-day hunt for coal, which in its deeper meaning is not a
+thing, but a store of energy.
+
+But, equally, the Classical craving for the near and present could
+not but match the Polis-ideal with an _economic ideal of Autarkeia_,
+an economic atomization corresponding to the political. Each of these
+tiny life-units desired to have an economic stream wholly of its own,
+wholly self-contained, circling independently of all others and _within
+the radius of visibility_. The polar opposite of this is the Western
+notion of the _Firm_, which is thought of as an entirely impersonal
+and incorporeal centre of force, from which activity streams out in
+all directions to an indefinite distance, and which the proprietor by
+his ability to think in money does not _represent_, but _possesses and
+directs_--that is, has in his power--like a little cosmos. The duality
+of firm and proprietor would have been utterly unimaginable for the
+Classical mind.[915]
+
+Consequently, as the Western Culture presents a maximum, so the
+Classical shows a minimum, of _organization_. For this was completely
+absent even as an idea from Classical man. His finance was one of
+provisional expedients made rule and habit. The wealthy burgher of
+Athens and Rome could be burdened with the equipment of war-ships.
+The political power of the Roman ædile (and his debts) rested on the
+fact that he not only produced the games and the streets and the
+buildings, but paid for them too--of course, he could recoup himself
+later by plundering his province. Sources of income were thought of
+only when the need of income presented itself, and then drawn upon,
+without any regard for the future, as the moment required--even at
+the cost of entirely destroying them. Plunder of the treasures of
+one’s own temples, sea-piracy against one’s own city, confiscation
+of the wealth of one’s own fellow-citizens were everyday methods of
+finance. If surpluses were available, they were distributed to the
+citizens--a proceeding to which plenty of people besides Eubulus of
+Athens owed their popularity.[916] Budgets were as unknown as any
+other part of financial policy. The “economic management” of Roman
+provinces was a system of robbery, public and private, practised by
+senators and financiers without the slightest consideration as to
+whether the exported values could be replaced. Never did Classical
+man think of systematically intensifying his economic life, but ever
+looked to the result of the moment, the tangible quantum of cash.
+Imperial Rome would have gone down in ruin had it not been fortunate
+enough to possess in old Egypt a Civilization that had for a thousand
+years thought of _nothing_ but the organization of its economy. The
+Roman neither comprehended nor was capable of copying this style of
+life,[917] but the accident that Egypt provided the political possessor
+of this fellah-world with an inexhaustible source of gold rendered it
+unnecessary for him to make a _settled habit_ of proscription at home;
+the last of these financial operations in massacre-form was that of 43,
+shortly before the incorporation of Egypt.[918] The amassed gold of
+Asia Minor that Brutus and Cassius were then bringing up, which meant
+an army and the dominion of the world, made it necessary to put to the
+ban some two thousand of the richest inhabitants of Italy, whose heads
+were brought to the Forum in sacks for the offered rewards. It was no
+longer possible to spare even relatives, children, and grey-heads, or
+people who had never concerned themselves with politics. It was enough
+that they possessed a stock of cash and that the yield would otherwise
+have been too small.
+
+But with the extinction of the Classical world-feeling in the early
+Imperial age, this mode of thinking in money disappeared also.
+_Coins again became wares_--because men were again living the
+peasant life[919]--and this explains the immense outflow of gold
+into the farther East after Hadrian’s reign, which has hitherto
+been unaccountable. And as economic life in forms of gold-streams
+was extinguished in the upheaval of a young Culture, so also the
+slave ceased to be money, and the ebb of the gold was paralleled by
+that mass-emancipation of the slaves which numerous Imperial laws,
+from Augustus’s reign onwards, tried in vain to check--till under
+Diocletian, in whose famous maximum tariff[920] money-economy was no
+longer the standpoint, the type of the Classical slave had ceased to
+exist.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE FORM-WORLD OF ECONOMIC LIFE
+
+(B)
+
+THE MACHINE
+
+
+I
+
+Technique is as old as free-moving life itself. Only the plant--so far
+as we can see into Nature--is the mere theatre of technical processes.
+The animal, in that it moves, has a technique of movement so that it
+may nourish and protect itself.
+
+The original relation between a waking-microcosm and its
+macrocosm--“Nature”--consists in a touch through the senses[921] which
+rises from mere _sense-impressions_ to sense-_judgment_, so that
+already it works critically (that is, separatingly) or, what comes to
+the same thing, _causal-analytically_.[922] The stock of what has been
+determined then is enlarged into a system, as complete as may be, of
+the most primary experiences--identifying marks[923]--a spontaneous
+method by which one is enabled to feel at home in one’s world; in the
+case of many animals this has led to an amazing richness of experience
+that no human science has transcended. But the primary waking-being is
+always an _active_ one, remote from mere theory of all sorts, and thus
+it is in the minor technique of everyday life, and upon things _in so
+far as they are dead_,[924] that these experiences are involuntarily
+acquired. This is the difference between Cult and Myth,[925] for
+at this level there is no boundary line between religion and the
+profane--all waking-consciousness _is_ religion.
+
+The decisive turn in the history of the higher life occurs when the
+_determination_ of Nature (in order to be guided by it) changes
+into a _fixation_--that is, a purposed alteration of Nature.
+With this, technique becomes more or less sovereign and the
+instinctive prime-experience changes into a definitely “conscious”
+prime-_knowing_. Thought has emancipated itself from sensation.
+It is the _language of words_ that brings about this epochal
+change. The liberation of speech from speaking[926] gives rise to
+a stock of signs for communication-speech which are much more than
+identification-marks--they are _names_ bound up with a sense of
+meaning, whereby man has the secret of numina (deities, nature-forces)
+in his power, and _number_ (formulæ, simple laws), whereby the inner
+form of the actual is abstracted form the accidental-sensuous.[927]
+
+With that, the system of identification-marks develops into a
+theory, a _picture_ which detaches itself from the technique of the
+day[928]--whether this be a day of high-level Civilized technics or
+a day of simplest beginnings--by way of _abstraction_, as a piece of
+waking-consciousness uncommitted to activity. One “knows” what one
+wants, but much must have happened for one to have that knowledge, and
+we must make no mistake as to its character. By numerical experience
+man is enabled to switch the secret on and off, but he has not
+discovered it. The figure of the modern sorcerer--a switchboard with
+levers and labels at which the workman calls mighty effects into play
+by the pressure of a finger without possessing the slightest notion of
+their essence--is only the symbol of human technique in general. The
+picture of the light-world around us--in so far as we have developed
+it critically, analytically, as theory, as picture--is nothing but a
+switchboard of the kind, on which particular things are so labelled
+that by (so to say) pressing the appropriate button particular
+effects follow with certainty. The secret itself remains none the
+less oppressive on that account.[929] But through this technique the
+waking-consciousness does, all the same, intervene masterfully in the
+fact-world. Life _makes use_ of thought as an “open sesame,” and at
+the peak of many a Civilization, in its great cities, there arrives
+finally the moment when technical critique becomes tired of being
+life’s servant and makes itself tyrant. The Western Culture is even now
+experiencing an orgy of this unbridled thought, and on a tragic scale.
+
+Man has listened-in to the march of Nature and made notes of its
+indices. He begins to imitate it by means and methods that utilize the
+laws of the cosmic pulse. He is emboldened to play the part of God,
+and it is easy to understand how the earliest preparers and experts
+of these artificial things--for it was here that art came to be, _as
+counter-concept to nature_--and how in particular the guardians of
+the smith’s art, appeared to those around them as something uncanny
+and were regarded with awe or horror as the case might be. The stock
+of such discoveries grew and grew. Often they were made and forgotten
+and made again, were imitated, shunned, improved. But in the end
+they constituted for whole continents a store of _self-evident_
+means--fire, metal-working, instruments, arms, ploughs, boats, houses,
+animal-taming, and husbandry. Above all, the metals, to whose site
+in the earth primitive man is led by some uncannily mystical trait
+in him. Immemoriably old trade-routes lead to ore-deposits that are
+kept secret, through the life of the settled countryside and over
+frequented seas, and along these, later, travel cults and ornaments
+and persistent legends of islands of tin and lands of gold. The
+primary trade of all is the metal trade, and with it the economics
+of production and of work are joined intrusively by a third--alien,
+venturesome, free-ranging over the lands.
+
+On this foundation, now, arises the technique of the higher Cultures,
+expressive in quality and colour and passion of the whole soul of
+these major entities. It need hardly be said that Classical man, who
+felt himself and his environment alike Euclidean, set himself _a
+priori_ in hostile opposition to the very idea of technique. If by
+“Classical” technique we mean something that (along with the rest that
+we comprehend in the adjective) rose with determined effort above
+the universal dead perfection of the Mycenæan age, then there was no
+Classical technique.[930] Its triremes were glorified row-boats, its
+catapults and onagers mere substitutes for arms and fists--not to be
+named in the same breath with the war-engines of Assyria and China--and
+as for Hero and his like, it was flukes and not discoveries that they
+achieved. They lacked the inner weight, the fatedness of their moment,
+the deep necessity. Here and there men played with data (and why not?)
+that probably came from the East, but no one devoted serious attention
+to them and, above all, no one made a real effort to introduce them
+into the ensemble-picture of life.
+
+Very different is the Faustian technics, which with all its passion of
+the third dimension, and from earliest Gothic days, thrusts itself upon
+Nature, with the firm resolve to _be its master_. Here, and only here,
+is the connexion of insight and utilization a matter of course.[931]
+Theory is working hypothesis[932] from the outset. The Classical
+investigator “contemplated” like Aristotle’s deity, the Arabian sought
+as alchemist for magical means (such as the Philosophers’ Stone)
+whereby to possess himself of Nature’s treasures _without effort_,[933]
+but the Western strives to _direct_ the world according to his will.
+
+The Faustian inventor and discoverer is a unique type. The primitive
+force of his will, the brilliance of his visions, the steely energy of
+his practical ponderings, must appear queer and incomprehensible to
+anyone at the standpoint of another Culture, but for us they are in
+the blood. Our whole Culture has a discoverer’s soul. To _dis_-cover
+that which is not seen, to draw it into the light-world of the inner
+eye so as to master it--that was its stubborn passion from the first
+days on. All its great inventions slowly ripened in the deeps, to
+emerge at last with the necessity of a Destiny. All of them were very
+nearly approached by the high-hearted, happy research of the early
+Gothic monks.[934] Here, if anywhere, the religious origins of all
+technical thought are manifested.[935] These meditative discoverers
+in their cells, who with prayers and fastings _wrung_ God’s secret
+out of him, felt that they were _serving_ God thereby. Here is the
+Faust-figure, the grand symbol of a true discovering Culture. The
+_Scientia experimentalis_, as Roger Bacon was the first to call
+nature-research, the _insistent_ questioning of Nature with levers
+and screws, began that of which the issue lies under our eyes as a
+countryside sprouting factory-chimneys and conveyor-towers. But for all
+of them, too, there was the truly Faustian danger of the Devil’s having
+a hand in the game,[936] the risk that he was leading them in spirit to
+that mountain on which he promises all the power of the earth. This is
+the significance of the _perpetuum mobile_ dreamed of by those strange
+Dominicans like Petrus Peregrinus, which would wrest the almightiness
+from God. Again and again they succumbed to this ambition; they forced
+this secret out of God in order themselves to be God. They listened
+for the laws of the cosmic pulse in order to overpower it. And so they
+created the _idea of the machine_ as a small cosmos obeying the will
+of man alone. But with that they overpassed the slender border-line
+whereat the reverent piety of others saw the beginning of sin, and on
+it, from Roger Bacon to Giordano Bruno, they came to grief. Ever and
+ever again, true belief has regarded the machine as of the Devil.
+
+The passion of discovery declares itself as early as the Gothic
+architecture--compare with this the deliberate form-poverty of the
+Doric!--and is manifest throughout our music. Book-printing appeared,
+and the long-range weapon.[937] On the heels of Columbus and Copernicus
+come the telescope, the microscope, the chemical elements, and lastly
+the immense technological corpus of the early Baroque.
+
+Then followed, however, simultaneously with Rationalism, the discovery
+of the steam-engine, which upset everything and transformed economic
+life from the foundations up. Till then nature had rendered services,
+but now she was tied to the yoke as _a slave_, and her work was as
+though in contempt measured by a standard of horse-power. We advanced
+from the muscle-force of the Negro, which was set to work in organized
+routines, to the organic reserves of the Earth’s crust, where the
+life-forces of millennia lay stored as coal; and to-day we cast
+our eyes on inorganic nature, where water-forces are already being
+brought in to supplement coal. As the horse-powers run to millions and
+milliards, the numbers of the population increase and increase, on a
+scale that no other Culture ever thought possible. This growth is a
+_product of the Machine_, which insists on being used and directed, and
+to that end centuples the forces of each individual. For the sake of
+the machine, human life becomes precious. _Work_ becomes the great word
+of ethical thinking; in the eighteenth century it loses its derogatory
+implication in all languages. The machine works and forces the man to
+co-operate. The entire Culture reaches a degree of activity such that
+the earth trembles under it.
+
+And what now develops, in the space of hardly a century, is a drama
+of such greatness that the men of a future Culture, with other soul
+and other passions, will hardly be able to resist the conviction that
+“in those days” nature herself was tottering. The politics stride over
+cities and peoples; even the economics, deeply as they bite into the
+destinies of the plant and animal worlds, merely touch the fringe of
+life and efface themselves. But this technique will leave traces of its
+heyday behind it when all else is lost and forgotten. For this Faustian
+passion has altered the Face of the Earth.
+
+This is the outward- and upward-straining life-feeling--true
+descendant, therefore, of the Gothic--as expressed in Goethe’s Faust
+monologue when the steam-engine was yet young. The intoxicated soul
+wills to fly above space and Time. An ineffable longing tempts him
+to indefinable horizons. Man would free himself from the earth,
+rise into the infinite, leave the bonds of the body, and circle in
+the universe of space amongst the stars. That which the glowing and
+soaring inwardness of St. Bernard sought at the beginning, that which
+Grünewald and Rembrandt conceived in their backgrounds, and Beethoven
+in the trans-earthly tones of his last quartets, comes back now in
+the intellectual intoxication of the inventions that crowd one upon
+another. Hence the fantastic traffic that crosses the continents in a
+few days, that puts itself across oceans in floating cities, that bores
+through mountains, rushes about in subterranean labyrinths, uses the
+steam-engine till its last possibilities have been exhausted, and then
+passes on to the gas-engine, and finally raises itself above the roads
+and railways and flies in the air; hence it is that the spoken word is
+sent in one moment over all the oceans; hence comes the ambition to
+break all records and beat all dimensions, to build giant halls for
+giant machines, vast ships and bridge-spans, buildings that deliriously
+scrape the clouds, fabulous forces pressed together to a focus to obey
+the hand of a child, stamping and quivering and droning works of steel
+and glass in which tiny man moves as unlimited monarch and, at the
+last, feels nature as beneath him.
+
+And these machines become in their forms less and ever less human, more
+ascetic, mystic, esoteric. They weave the earth over with an infinite
+web of subtle forces, currents, and tensions. Their bodies become
+ever more and more immaterial, ever less noisy. The wheels, rollers,
+and levers are vocal no more. All that matters withdraws itself into
+the interior. Man has felt the machine to be devilish, and rightly.
+It signifies in the eyes of the believer the deposition of God. It
+delivers sacred Causality over to man and by him, with a sort of
+foreseeing omniscience is set in motion, silent and irresistible.
+
+
+II
+
+Never save here has a microcosm felt itself superior to its macrocosm,
+but here the little life-units have by the sheer force of their
+intellect made the unliving dependent upon themselves. It is a triumph,
+so far as we can see, unparalleled. Only this our Culture has achieved
+it, and perhaps only for a few centuries.
+
+But for that very reason Faustian man has become _the slave of his
+creation_. His number, and the arrangement of life as he lives it,
+have been driven by the machine on to a path where there is no
+standing still and no turning back. The peasant, the hand-worker,
+even the merchant, appear suddenly as inessential in comparison with
+the _three great figures that the Machine has bred and trained up
+in the cause of its development: the entrepreneur, the engineer,
+and the factory-worker_. Out of a quite small branch of manual
+work--namely, the preparation-economy--there has grown up (_in this
+one Culture alone_) a mighty tree that casts its shadow over all the
+other vocations--namely, _the economy of the machine-industry_.[938]
+It forces the entrepreneur not less than the workman to obedience.
+_Both_ become slaves, and not masters, of the machine, that now for
+the first time develops its devilish and occult power. But although
+the Socialistic theory of the present day has insisted upon looking
+only at the latter’s contribution and has claimed the word “work” for
+him alone, it has all become possible only through the sovereign and
+decisive achievement of the former. The famous phrase concerning the
+“strong arm” that bids every wheel cease from running is a piece of
+wrong-headedness. To stop them--yes! but it does not need a worker
+to do that. To keep them running--no! The centre of this artificial
+and complicated realm of the Machine is the organizer and manager.
+The mind, not the hand, holds it together. But, for that very reason,
+to preserve the ever endangered structure, _one_ figure is even
+more important than all the energy of enterprising master-men that
+make cities to grow out of the ground and alter the picture of the
+landscape; it is a figure that is apt to be forgotten in this conflict
+of politics--the _engineer_, the priest of the machine, the man who
+knows it. Not merely the importance, but the very existence of the
+industry depends upon the existence of the hundred thousand talented,
+rigorously schooled brains that command the technique and develop
+it onward and onward. The quiet engineer it is who is the machine’s
+master and destiny. His thought is as possibility what the machine
+is as actuality. There have been fears, thoroughly materialistic
+fears, of the exhaustion of the coal-fields. But so long as there are
+worthy technical path-finders, dangers of this sort have no existence.
+When, and only when, the crop of recruits for this army fails--this
+army whose thought-work forms one inward unit with the work of the
+machine--the industry must flicker out in spite of all that managerial
+energy and the workers can do. Suppose that, in future generations,
+the most gifted minds were to find their soul’s health more important
+than all the powers of this world; suppose that, under the influence of
+the metaphysic and mysticism that is taking the place of rationalism
+to-day, the very élite of intellect that is now concerned with the
+machine comes to be overpowered by a growing sense of its _Satanism_
+(it is the step from Roger Bacon to Bernard of Clairvaux)--then
+nothing can hinder the end of this grand drama that has been a play of
+intellects, with hands as mere auxiliaries.
+
+The Western industry has diverted the ancient traditions of the other
+Cultures. The streams of economic life move towards the seats of King
+Coal and the great regions of raw material. Nature becomes exhausted,
+the globe sacrificed to Faustian thinking in energies. The _working_
+earth is the Faustian aspect of her, the aspect contemplated by the
+Faust of Part II, the supreme transfiguration of enterprising work--and
+contemplating, he dies. Nothing is so utterly antipodal to the
+motionless satiate being of the Classical Empire. It is the engineer
+who is remotest from the Classical law-thought, and he will see to it
+that his economy has _its own_ law, wherein forces and efficiencies
+will take the place of Person and Thing.
+
+
+III
+
+But titanic, too, is the onslaught of money upon this intellectual
+force. Industry, too, is earth-bound like the yeoman. It has its
+station, and its materials stream up out of the earth. Only high
+finance is _wholly_ free, wholly intangible. Since 1789 the banks, and
+with them the bourses, have developed themselves on the credit-needs
+of an industry growing ever more enormous, as a power on their own
+account, and they will (as money wills in every Civilization) to be
+the only power. The ancient wrestle between the productive and the
+acquisitive economies intensifies now into a silent gigantomachy of
+intellects, fought out in the lists of the world-cities. This battle is
+the despairing struggle of technical thought to maintain its liberty
+against money-thought.[939]
+
+The dictature of money marches on, tending to its material peak, in
+the Faustian Civilization as in every other. And now something happens
+that is intelligible only to one who has penetrated to the essence
+of money. If it were anything tangible, then its existence would be
+for ever--but, as it is a form of thought, _it fades out as soon
+as it has thought its economic world to finality_, and has no more
+material upon which to feed. It thrust into the life of the yeoman’s
+countryside and set the earth a-moving; its thought transformed every
+sort of handicraft; to-day it presses victoriously upon industry to
+make the productive work of entrepreneur and engineer and labourer
+alike its spoil. The machine with its human retinue, the real queen of
+this century, is in danger of succumbing to a stronger power. But with
+this, money, too, is at the end of its success, and the last conflict
+is at hand in which the Civilization receives its conclusive form--the
+conflict _between_ money and blood.
+
+The coming of Cæsarism breaks the dictature of money and its political
+weapon democracy. After a long triumph of world-city economy and its
+interests over political creative force, the political side of life
+manifests itself after all as the stronger of the two. The sword
+is victorious over the money, the master-will subdues again the
+plunderer-will. If we call these money-powers “Capitalism,”[940] then
+we may designate as Socialism the will to call into life a mighty
+politico-economic order that transcends all class interests, a system
+of _lofty_ thoughtfulness and duty-sense that keeps the whole in fine
+condition for the decisive battle of its history, and this battle is
+also the battle of money and law.[941] The _private_ powers of the
+economy want free paths for their acquisition of great resources.
+No legislation must stand in their way. They want to make the laws
+themselves, in their interests, and to that end they make use of the
+tool they have made for themselves, democracy, the subsidized party.
+Law needs, in order to resist this onslaught, a high tradition and
+an ambition of strong families that finds its satisfaction not in
+the heaping-up of riches, but in the tasks of true rulership, above
+and beyond all money-advantage. _A power can be overthrown only by
+another power_, not by a principle, and no power that can confront
+money is left but this one. Money is overthrown and abolished only
+by blood. _Life_ is alpha and omega, the cosmic onflow in microcosmic
+form. It is _the_ fact of facts within the world-as-history. Before
+the irresistible rhythm of the generation-sequence, everything built
+up by the waking-consciousness in its intellectual world vanishes at
+the last. Ever in History it is life and life only--race-quality,
+the triumph of the will-to-power--and not the victory of truths,
+discoveries, or money that signifies. _World-history is the world
+court_, and it has ever decided in favour of the stronger, fuller, and
+more self-assured life--decreed to it, namely, the right to exist,
+regardless of whether its right would hold before a tribunal of
+waking-consciousness. Always it has sacrificed truth and justice to
+might and race, and passed doom of death upon men and peoples in whom
+truth was more than deeds, and justice than power. And so the drama
+of a high Culture--that wondrous world of deities, arts, thoughts,
+battles, cities--closes with the return of the pristine facts of the
+blood eternal that is one and the same as the ever-circling cosmic
+flow. The bright imaginative Waking-Being submerges itself into the
+silent service of Being, as the Chinese and Roman empires tell us.
+Time triumphs over Space, and it is Time whose inexorable movement
+embeds the ephemeral incident of the Culture, on this planet, in the
+incident of Man--a form wherein the incident life flows on for a time,
+while behind it all the streaming horizons of geological and stellar
+histories pile up in the light-world of our eyes.
+
+For us, however, whom a Destiny has placed in this Culture and at this
+moment of its development--the moment when money is celebrating its
+last victories, and the Cæsarism that is to succeed approaches with
+quiet, firm step--our direction, willed and obligatory at once, is
+set for us within narrow limits, and on any other terms life is not
+worth the living. We have not the freedom to reach to this or to that,
+but the freedom to do the necessary or to do nothing. And a task that
+historic necessity has set _will_ be accomplished with the individual
+or against him.
+
+ _Ducunt Fata volentem, nolentem trahunt._
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+Prepared by David M. Matteson
+
+
+ Abbassids, court life, 197;
+ Syncretism, 313;
+ Third Estate and rule, 424
+
+ Abraham, Judah’s silver pieces, 237
+
+ Absolutism. _See_ Dynastic idea; Politics
+
+ Abu Bekr, Puritanism, 304
+
+ Abu Hanifah, as jurist, 75
+
+ Academy, style, 345
+
+ Achikar, as Arabian, 208
+
+ Achmed, and Caliph, 426
+
+ Acosta, Uriel, expulsion, 317
+
+ Acragas, democratic triumph, 396
+
+ Actium, battle, importance, 191;
+ and Cæsarism, 423
+
+ Activity, waking-being and willed, 133
+
+ Actuality, and abstract thought, 144
+
+ Adiabene, Jewish state, 175, 198, 209
+
+ Adrianople, battle, effect, 40
+
+ Adventism, as type of second religiousness, 311 n.
+
+ Æchylus, and being, 272;
+ and religion, 282
+
+ Ælius, _Tripertita_, 66
+
+ Agamemnon, as feudal, 374
+
+ Agathocles, and Mamertines, 160 n.;
+ Syracuse massacre, 406 n.
+
+ Agis III, revolution, 65
+
+ Agriculture, effect on man, 89;
+ farmhouse as symbol, 90;
+ modern, as technic, 479 n., 485 n.
+
+ Ahuramazda, as deity, 207 n.;
+ and Spenta Mainyu and Vohu Mano, 244 n.
+
+ Akhenaton, religiousness, 313;
+ revolution, 353
+
+ Akiba, legends, 250.
+
+ Aksakov, Ivan, on Petersburg, 193
+
+ Al Alblaq, castle, 198
+
+ Alaric, historyless, 432
+
+ Albegensians, Manichæans, 260 n.
+
+ Albert of Saxony, as scientist, 301
+
+ Albertus Magnus, 291;
+ philosophy, 172 n.;
+ and Devil-cult, and technique, 502 n.
+
+ Alcibiades, and army, 406
+
+ Alcmæonidæ, and Athenian history, 336
+
+ Alesia, siege, 421
+
+ Alexander the Great, as follower, 88 n.;
+ political character of empire, 174 n.;
+ divine descent, 314;
+ and polis, 383;
+ control by generals, 407.
+ _See also_ Macedonians
+
+ Alexandria, as world-city, 99;
+ outbreaks, 198 n.;
+ as polis, 383
+
+ Alfonso X of Castile, work on planets, 316
+
+ Al Ghazali, deification, 314;
+ and science, 315
+
+ Ali, war with Othman, 424;
+ power, 426
+
+ Alien, and “proper” in sensation, 6
+
+ “All,” as word, 141
+
+ Al Maimun, Rationalism, 306 n.
+
+ Al Manzor, Christian, 260
+
+ Alp Arslan, power, 427
+
+ Alphabet. _See_ Writing
+
+ Amasis, rise, 428
+
+ Amenemhet I, absolutism, 387
+
+ Amenhotep (Amenophis) IV, city, 101 n.;
+ religiousness, 313;
+ revolution, 353
+
+ Amenophis IV. _See_ Amenhotep
+
+ American Revolution, effect in France, 411 n.;
+ cause, loyalists, 411 n.
+
+ Americans, as race, Indian influence, 119;
+ as people, creation of events, 165;
+ language and nation, 183;
+ and predestination, 305;
+ Civil War, 356, 369 n., 421, 488 n.;
+ fate of government, 416;
+ basis of reverence for constitution, 430 n.;
+ no yeomanry, 449 n.;
+ party and political machine, 450-452;
+ economics and politics, 475
+
+ Ammonius Saccas, conversion, 176
+
+ Amoraim, period, 71, 250;
+ and commentary, 247
+
+ Amos, as Arabian prophet, 205
+
+ Analysis, and double-entry book-keeping, 490
+
+ Anastasius I, demonstration against, 381 n.
+
+ Ancestral worship, Chinese, time-mythology, 286, 351
+
+ Ancient History, as term, 28
+
+ Angelico, Fra, frescoes and the Devil, 292 n.
+
+ Animal, essential character, microcosm in macrocosm, 3, 4, 15;
+ cosmic beat and tension, 4, 5;
+ cosmic organs, blood, sex, 5;
+ microcosmic organ, sense, 5, 6, 115;
+ sense and understanding, 6;
+ sight as supreme sense, 6;
+ being and waking-being, 7;
+ and language, 131-134;
+ and art, 133 n.;
+ involuntary technique, 499
+
+ Anselm, Saint, Arabian contemporaries, 250
+
+ Anti-Semitism, rationale, 317-321
+
+ Antioch, as un-Classical, 101 n.;
+ as capital city, 191;
+ as polis, 383
+
+ Antiochus Epiphanes, persecution, 210
+
+ Antony, Mark, Actium, 191, 423;
+ on Cicero, 433 n.
+
+ Aphrahat, epistles, 252 n.
+
+ Aphrodisias, Pagan conversion, 259
+
+ Apocalyptic, predecessors of Mohammed, 204;
+ related Arabian, 204-207, 209;
+ Arabian development, 208, 245;
+ Jewish law and the prophets, 209;
+ end of Jewish, 211;
+ and Arabian awakening, 212;
+ Jesus’ teaching, 217;
+ and Resurrection, 218;
+ Paul’s attitude, 221;
+ as vision of fable, 237;
+ basis of writing, 245.
+ _See also_ Religion
+
+ Apocrypha, elimination, 71, 248
+
+ Apollinaris, Monophysite, 257
+
+ Apollonian cult, and body, 283;
+ and Tyrannis, 386
+
+ Apollonius, as biographer, 252
+
+ Apologists, period, 71, 250
+
+ Apostles, fictitious authorships, 72 n. _See also_ Gospels
+
+ Appius Claudius. _See_ Claudius
+
+ Arabian Culture, historic, 27;
+ problems of study, 38;
+ as discovery, 42;
+ relation to other Cultures, midmost, 42, 87, 190, 235;
+ landscape, 42;
+ Islam, Civilization and Crusades, 43;
+ pre-cultural law, 75;
+ pre-cultural tribal association, 175;
+ pseudomorphosis, 189, 191;
+ ignorance of inner form, partial study, 190, 191;
+ feudalism, 196-200;
+ Scholasticism and Mysticism, 200, 250;
+ scientific beginnings, 200 n.;
+ space-concept, cavern, 233;
+ time-concept, ordained period, eras, 238-240, 249;
+ future of nations, 323;
+ cognate family, 330;
+ dynastic idea, 330 n., 378, 379;
+ style of priesthood, 325;
+ relation of primary estates, 353;
+ political periods from feudalism to Cæsarism, 423-427;
+ political theory, 453.
+ _See also_ Cultures; Islam; Jews; Pseudomorphosis; Religion;
+ Roman law
+
+ Aragon, control by nobility, 373
+
+ Aramaic, and Christianity, 225;
+ as Jewish church-language, 252
+
+ Archæans, as name, 161, 164
+
+ Archaeology, as Western trait, 79
+
+ Archimedes, futility, 17
+
+ Architecture, Mexican, 45;
+ foreign effects of Western, 46;
+ cultural mixture, 87;
+ Minoan and Mycenæan houses, 88;
+ cosmic and microcosmic, 92, 93;
+ and dwelling-house, 120;
+ as religious and ornament, 123;
+ secular buildings and style, 123;
+ Romanesque soul, 180;
+ basilica and mosque, 230.
+ _See also_ Art
+
+ Archons, urban, 374;
+ overthrow, 398
+
+ Areopagus, overthrow, 396
+
+ Argos, massacre, 405
+
+ Aristides, on Roman polis, 383
+
+ Aristocracy of intellect, as term, 166 n. _See also_ Nobility
+
+ Aristonicus, and Blossius, 454
+
+ Aristotle, universe, 58;
+ and polis, 173 n.;
+ on Calani, 175 n.;
+ and commentary, 247 n.;
+ “Theology,” 248;
+ and Rationalism, 305;
+ corpus, 346
+
+ Arius, and substance controversy, 256
+
+ Armenia, conversion as state, 177, 253;
+ devil-worshippers, 236 n.;
+ nobility, 423;
+ sword-dynasty, 426, 428
+
+ Army, Byzantine system, 199;
+ professional, rise as political power, 406.
+ _See also_ War
+
+ Arnold of Brescia, and reform, 296
+
+ Art, late Minoan and early Mycenæan, 87-89;
+ expression-language and communication-language, 116;
+ taboo and totem sides, in research, 118, 120, 121;
+ in animals, 133 n.;
+ and understanding, 133;
+ forms, 331 n.;
+ lack of Classical financial value, destruction, 487;
+ as counter-concept to native, 500.
+ _See also_ Architecture; Ornament
+
+ Aryan. _See_ Indogermanic
+
+ Asceticism. _See_ Monasticism
+
+ Asclepiades, work, 252
+
+ Asclepiodotus, as Pagan missionary, 259
+
+ Asoka, religiousness, 313;
+ as Sudra, 333
+
+ Asosi, as feudal, 375
+
+ Assuan documents, 209
+
+ Assyrians, as rulers, 40
+
+ Astrakan, Judaic conversion, 259
+
+ Astrology, and Arabian time-concept, 238;
+ as late Classical fad, 310
+
+ Astronomy, Chaldean, 206
+
+ Asvagosha, Mahayana doctrine, 313
+
+ Atargatis, cult, 201
+
+ Athanasius, and Western dogma, 230;
+ and substance controversy, 256;
+ and reform, 296
+
+ Athens, and Alcmæonidæ, 336;
+ _vis-à-vis_: Sparta, 368, Tyrannis, 386;
+ overthrow of oligarchy, 396, 397
+
+ Athos, monasteries as Buddhistic, 314
+
+ Atreus, tomb, 89
+
+ Auaris, as capital, 428
+
+ Augustine, Saint, and Grace, 59, 241;
+ on Classical religion as true, 204;
+ Manichæan, 227;
+ dualism, 234;
+ community of the elect, 243;
+ on ruler, 379
+
+ Augustus, principate and monarchy, 50, 349;
+ and dyarchy, 432, 433
+
+ Aulard, F. Alphonse, on French Revolution, 399 n.
+
+ Aurelian, State religion, 253
+
+ Aureole, significance, 378
+
+ Aurignacian Man, conditions, 34
+
+ Austria, national origin, 182;
+ annihilation, 183.
+ _See also_ Holy Roman Empire
+
+ Autarkeia, Rationalism, 307
+
+ Authority, and authorship, 248 n.
+
+ Authorship, and authority, 248 n.
+
+ Avicenna, Spinoza as heir, 321
+
+ Avidius Cassius, on Marcus Aurelius, 430
+
+ Axum, ignored history, 190;
+ feudalism, 197;
+ and Himaryites, 197;
+ stelæ, 234 n.;
+ State religion, 253
+
+ Aztecs, rule, 45;
+ and jurisprudence, 66;
+ and woman, 328
+
+
+ Baal cults, in Syncretism, 201
+
+ Baal Shem, Gnosis, 228;
+ as Messiah, 311
+
+ Babek, outbreaks, 424, 425
+
+ Babylon, as world-city, 99
+
+ Babylonian Culture, beginning, achievements, rulers, 39, 40;
+ and early Jewish law, 75;
+ and Arabian Culture, 189 n.;
+ and Chaldean, 205 n., 206 n.;
+ astrology, 238 n.
+
+ Bacchiadæ, and succession, 380
+
+ Bach, John Sebastian, Exekias as contemporary, 135 n.
+
+ Bacon, Roger, philosophy, 172 n.;
+ and the Devil, 290 n., 502;
+ as scientist, 301;
+ and technique, 502, 502 n.
+
+ Baghdad, as Islam, 95;
+ as world-city, 99, 425;
+ plan, 100
+
+ Balkuwara Palace, 100 n.
+
+ Banausos, notion, 332
+
+ Bank-note, status, 483
+
+ Banking, cultural basis, 493 n.
+
+ Bantu language, 142
+
+ Baptism, as impersonal, 293;
+ Luther’s concept, 299
+
+ Barcochebas, rising, 319
+
+ Bardas, power, 426
+
+ Bardas Phocas, power, 426
+
+ Bardesanes, period and task, 250, 257;
+ and substance, 255, 256, 258
+
+ Baroque, as microcosmic and urban, 92, 93;
+ science and Gothic religiousness, 270;
+ contemporary Jewish period, 316;
+ political aspect, 391, 405;
+ fifty-year periods, 392 n.
+
+ Barrack-state, 366 n.
+
+ Barter, in early Culture, 97, 480, 481
+
+ Bartolus, as jurist, 77
+
+ Baruch Apocalypse, fictitious, 72 n.;
+ dualism, 234, 248
+
+ Basel, Council of, and feudalism, 374
+
+ Basileios I, power, 426
+
+ Basileios II, and rule, 426
+
+ Basileios, chancellor, power, 427
+
+ Basileus, as feudal, 374
+
+ Basilica, and mosque, 230
+
+ Basilides, and substance, 256
+
+ Basques, race, 165
+
+ Basra, Ali’s capture, 426
+
+ Bavaria, as State, 182
+
+ Baxter, Jedediah H., on American race, 119
+
+ Bayle, Pierre, on understanding, 13 n.
+
+ Beast-deities, Classical, 276;
+ Mycenæan and Egyptian, 276 n.
+
+ Beat, and tension, 4;
+ and being, 7;
+ cosmic, in crowd, 18.
+ _See also_ Being
+
+ Beatification, scientific, 346
+
+ Become, and understanding, 14, 15. _See also_ Microcosm
+
+ Becoming, and understanding, 14, 15. _See also_ Cosmic
+
+ Behistun Inscription, 166, 207
+
+ Being, as cosmic, and waking-being, 7, 11, 13;
+ peasant as, 89;
+ and race, 113;
+ upward series of utterances, 116;
+ and totem, 117;
+ and religion, 265;
+ and faith, 271;
+ and moral negations, 272-274;
+ and truths, 274;
+ and nobility, 335;
+ and idea of property, 343;
+ ultimate triumph, 435, 507;
+ and economics, 470, 471.
+ _See also_ Cosmic; History; Politics; Race; Sex; Time;
+ Waking-being; War
+
+ Bel temple, Palmyra, inscriptions, 206
+
+ Belhomme, Jacques, and aristocrats, 402 n.
+
+ Belisarius, as feudal lord, 350 n.
+
+ Beloch, Julius, on migrant minority, 164
+
+ Benedictines, as rural, 91
+
+ Bernadotte, Jean B. J., and Désirée Clary, 329;
+ rise, 406
+
+ Bernard of Clairvaux, Arabian contemporaries, 250;
+ on love of God, 266 n.;
+ and compassion, 273;
+ and Mary-cult, 288;
+ and contrition, 298
+
+ Bible, fixation of canon, 71, 248;
+ fictitious authorship, 72 n.;
+ law of early books, 75;
+ rise of fetishism, 299.
+ _See also_ Christianity; New Testament; Old Testament; Sacred
+ books
+
+ Biography, in Western Culture, 29;
+ and contrition, 294
+
+ Biology, and primitive history, 48;
+ and post-Civilization history, 48
+
+ Bismarck, Fürst von, dynastic government, 415;
+ flaw in leadership, 444
+
+ Blackstone, Sir William, Commentaries as Germanic, 78
+
+ Blake, William, “tiger” expression, 128 n.
+
+ Blood system, cosmic organ, 5
+
+ Blossius, influence, 454
+
+ Blumenbach, Johann F., race classification, 125
+
+ Boar’s-head attack, 199
+
+ Boas, Franz, on American race, 119
+
+ Boccaccio, Giovanni, and Classicism, 291 n.
+
+ Bodin, Jean, and law of nature, 78
+
+ Body, in Roman law, 67;
+ Classical concept and Western law, 81, 82;
+ and Classical cults, 283;
+ and polis, 384;
+ and Classical money concept, 486
+
+ Böhme, Jakob, and Western religious beginnings, 282
+
+ Boghaz, Keüi, archives, 167
+
+ Bogomils, iconoclasm, 304
+
+ Bollandists, and orders and schools, 346
+
+ Bolshevism, Tolstoi’s relation, as pseudomorphosis, 195;
+ cultural basis of fury, 321 n.
+
+ Bonaventura, Saint, and Devil-cult, 291
+
+ Boniface, Saint, as missionary, 56
+
+ Boniface VIII, pope, and Jacopone, 296;
+ _Unam sanctam_, 376
+
+ Book, expulsion by newspaper, 461;
+ as personal expression, 463
+
+ Book-keeping, double-entry as Western symbol, 490
+
+ Booty, and power, 344, 345, 347, 371, 372, 474
+
+ Borchardt, Ludwig, erroneous chronology, 39 n.
+
+ Borkman, John G., on resources, 486
+
+ Bosch, Hieronymus, paintings and the Devil, 298 n.
+
+ Bourbons, and world-history, 182, 336
+
+ Bourse, as cultural phenomenon, 484 n.
+
+ Boxer Rebellion, cultural basis, 321 n.
+
+ Bracton, Henry de, as jurist, 76
+
+ Brahmanism, Sankhara and Neo-Brahmanism, 315
+
+ Breed. _See_ Race
+
+ Brentano, Clemens, “playing” with expression, 137
+
+ Breughel, Pieter, and the Devil, 289 n.
+
+ Brunhilde, as destiny, 329
+
+ Bruno, Giordano, and machine and Devil, 502
+
+ Brutus, M. Junius, as ideologue, 433 n.
+
+ Buch, Christian L. von, theory, 31
+
+ Buddhism, and Indian philosophy, 49;
+ and landscape, in China, 57, 312, 315;
+ and sport, 103;
+ and depopulation, 106;
+ Rationalism, 305, 307;
+ expansion, 308;
+ Hinayana and Mahayana, 312;
+ and Syncretism, 313;
+ deification of Buddha, 314;
+ and Neo-Brahmanism, 315;
+ and political theory, 453
+
+ Bunyan, John, and concepts, 303
+
+ Burdach, Konrad, on Renaissance and Gothic, 291 n.
+
+ Burghers. _See_ Democracy; Town
+
+ Buridan, Jean, as scientist, 301
+
+ Burkard of Worms, and Devil-cult, 290
+
+ Burke, Edmund, on rights, 403
+
+ Burning of the Books, and Cæsarism, 433, 434, 463 n.
+
+ Bylini, hero-tales, 192
+
+ Byzantine Empire, and inter-Cultures, 89;
+ cult and nationality, State religion, 176, 178, 230, 243, 253,
+ 258;
+ capital city as symbol, 191;
+ and feudalism, army system, 198;
+ literature and Arabian literature, 304;
+ and Crusades, 319;
+ nobility and priesthood, 353;
+ Sassanid pattern, 378 n.;
+ class-basis of political associations, 381 n.;
+ revolution in, 425;
+ Cæsarism in, 426.
+ _See also_ Arabian Culture, Pseudomorphosis; Religion
+
+
+ Cæsar, C. Julius, ahistoric, 24;
+ monarchy and principate, 50;
+ divine descent, 314;
+ demagogy, money and power, 402, 457 n., 458, 459;
+ Gallic conquests, 408;
+ Triumvirate and Cæsarism, 423;
+ and forms, 431 n., 432;
+ killing by ideologues, 433;
+ tact of command, 444;
+ at Lucca, 446
+
+ Cæsarism, and second religiousness, 310, 386 n.;
+ and emperor-cult, 313;
+ transit to, as cultural destiny, 416, 429, 434;
+ era of great fact-men, 418;
+ defined, formless strife for personal power, 418, 431, 434;
+ character of war, 419-422;
+ ruthless peace, 422;
+ Classical evolution, 422, 423, 430;
+ in Arabian Culture, sultanate, 423, 426;
+ in Egypt, 427;
+ coming Western, and overthrow of money, 428, 506, 507;
+ and megalopolitanism and return of race, 431;
+ as end of great politics, 432, 434;
+ completed Roman, and ideologues, 432-434;
+ and passing of Culture, 435;
+ and private politics, 452, 464;
+ battle with democracy, 464.
+ _See also_ Politics
+
+ Cæsarius of Heisterbach, and Devil-cult, 290
+
+ Calani, as term for philosophers, 175 n.
+
+ Calchas, and Classical religious beginnings, 282, 350
+
+ Caliphate, deification, 68;
+ yields to sultanate, 425, 426
+
+ Calvin, John, and Grace, 59;
+ as Gothic, 296;
+ and world-politics, 299;
+ and science, 300
+
+ Camden, battle, 412 n.
+
+ Canada, public-land survey, 101 n.
+
+ Cannæ, battle, importance, 191, 338
+
+ Canon, fixation, 71, 248;
+ as term, 245;
+ Arabian style, 346.
+ _See also_ Bible
+
+ Canon law, development, 77
+
+ Capital, Western, as movement of values, 493;
+ Classical sort, 494.
+ _See also_ Money
+
+ Capital city, domination, 95;
+ of Byzantine Empire, 191;
+ and primary estates, 356;
+ and State-idea, 377;
+ cultural basis, 381
+
+ Capitulations, origin, 177 n.
+
+ Caracalla, citizenship edict, and emperor-worship, 68
+
+ Care, family and State as symbols, 364;
+ legal modes, 365;
+ financial officialdom, 371
+
+ Carey, Henry C., and English economics, 469
+
+ Carmathians, outbreak, 425
+
+ Carolingian Renaissance, character, 87
+
+ Carthage, as Babylonian, 108;
+ in Classical Civilization, 323;
+ _vis-à-vis_ Rome, 368;
+ economy and politics, 475.
+ _See also_ Punic Wars
+
+ Caspian Sea, and intercultural relations, 41
+
+ Cassius, Spurius, and cult, 386
+
+ Caste, meaning, 332, 333
+
+ Castle, as totem, racial expression, 122;
+ and ornament, relation to style, 123;
+ talk, 153
+
+ Catchwords, as term, 401
+
+ Cathedral, as taboo and ornament, 122, 123;
+ speech, 153
+
+ Catholic, Western churches as, 223 n., 229
+
+ Catilinarian movement, financing, 402
+
+ Cato, M. Porcius (Censor), and Scipio, 411;
+ ruthlessness, 422
+
+ Cato, M. Porcius (Uticensis), rise, 409 n.;
+ courts and politics, 459
+
+ Catulus, Q. Lutatius, demagogy, 459
+
+ Caucus, as political means, 452 n.
+
+ Causality, human (microcosmic) type, 16-19;
+ and sex, 327.
+ _See also_ Destiny; Intelligence; Nature; Religion; Space;
+ Town; Waking-being
+
+ Cavern, Arabian symbol, and Chaldean religion, 206, 233, 238
+
+ Cecils, and English history, 337
+
+ Censorship, past and present, 463
+
+ Ceremonial, as expression-language, 134
+
+ Chacmultun, and Mexican Culture, 45
+
+ Chalcedon, Council of, substance controversy, 257;
+ and reform, 296
+
+ Chaldeans, as rulers, 40;
+ tribal association, 175;
+ religion and nation, 176;
+ cult in Syncretism, 201;
+ as term, 205 n.;
+ prophetic religion, 205, 209 n.;
+ and Babylonia, 205 n., 206 n.;
+ astronomy, 206;
+ astrology, 238;
+ oracles as canon, 245;
+ disappearance, 252
+
+ Chamberlain, Joseph, and political machine, 453 n.
+
+ Champutun, and Mexican Culture, 45
+
+ Chandragupta, Sundra, 333
+
+ Chang-I, Imperialism, 417, 419
+
+ Chang-Lu, church, 314
+
+ Charlemagne, and cultural mixture, 87;
+ and Devil-cult, 290
+
+ Charles I of England, and absolutism, 388
+
+ Charles IV, emperor, policy, 376
+
+ Charles Martel, as destiny, 192
+
+ Charondas, character of laws, 63, 64
+
+ Chartres, Arabian contemporaries of school, 250
+
+ Charvaka doctrine, 105
+
+ Chaucer, Geoffrey, and “virtue,” 307 n.
+
+ Cheirocracy, Classical, 397
+
+ Cherusci, importance of victory, 48
+
+ Chian, importance, 50;
+ power, 428
+
+ Chichen Itza, and Mexican Culture, 45
+
+ Chinese Culture, as historic, 28;
+ problems of study, 38;
+ transition to Cæsarism, contending States, 38, 40, 339, 416-419,
+ 454;
+ date of beginning, 39 n.;
+ periods, cultural contemporaries, 40-42;
+ fate, 42;
+ end of real history, 49;
+ and Buddhism, 57, 312, 315;
+ basis of laws, 67 n.;
+ depopulation, 106;
+ nations under, 178 n.;
+ Tsin, 185;
+ and sacred books, 244 n.;
+ Manichæans and Nestorians, 260;
+ beginning of religion, 281, 285;
+ time mythology, 286;
+ dualism, tao, 287;
+ landscape as prime symbol, 287;
+ second religiousness and Syncretism, 312;
+ emperor-cult, 313, 379;
+ fellah State religion, 315;
+ ancient priest-estate, 350;
+ ancestry-worship, 351;
+ tao and priesthood, 352;
+ relation of primary estates, 352;
+ world-power idea, 373;
+ feudalism and interregnum, 375;
+ dynasty-idea, 379;
+ Fronde in, 386;
+ period of protectors, 387;
+ Cæsarism and ideologues, 434;
+ status of early coins, 481 n.;
+ bank notes, 483;
+ money concept, 486, 489 n.;
+ and technique, 501 n.
+ _See also_ Culture
+
+ Chinese language, voice-differentiations, 140 n.;
+ written and spoken, 145, 151;
+ standard script, 152
+
+ Chios, and slaves, 488
+
+ Chivalry, Arabian, 198;
+ and compassion as contemporary, 273
+
+ Chlysti, doctrines, 278
+
+ Chmenotep, inscriptions, 387
+
+ Chosen People, as common Arabian idea, 207
+
+ Chosroës Nushirvan, and Mazdak, 261
+
+ Chóu dynasty, residence, 92;
+ fall, 376;
+ money concept, 489 n.
+
+ Christ, as name, 219 n.
+
+ Christian Science, as fad, 310
+
+ Christianity, Arabian and Western, form and soul, 59, 235, 237, 258;
+ period of Apologists, 71;
+ of Fathers, 71;
+ effect of Justinian, 74;
+ Corpus Juris Canonici, 77;
+ and Arabian nations, 177;
+ nationalism and persecutions, 177;
+ Arabian, and chivalry, 198;
+ Jesus-cult and Syncretism, 201, 220, 252;
+ and Hellenism, 203, 204;
+ Jesus’ life and biography as central point, 212;
+ and Arabian apocalyptic literature, 212;
+ and Turfan manuscripts, 213 n.;
+ and Mandæanism of John the Baptist, 214;
+ self-view of Jesus as prophet and Messiah, townlessness, 215;
+ Jesus and Pilate, symbolism, 216, 473 n.;
+ Jesus and pure metaphysics, 217;
+ effect of Resurrection, Messiah, 218;
+ Arabian cult-nationality and world salvation, 219, 220;
+ Paul and Church, 220, 221;
+ Paul and urban intellect, westward trend, 221;
+ Old Testament and canon, 221, 225, 226, 228, 245;
+ Mark Gospel, 223;
+ cults, Mary-cult, 223;
+ Greek and Latin as languages, 224, 241 n., 252;
+ John Gospel, Mysticism, Logos and Paraclete, 226;
+ Marcionism and early Catholic Church, 227;
+ Arabian West and East division, 228-230;
+ architectural symbols of division, 230;
+ Arabian Logos and Jesus’ world-image, 236, 237;
+ era, 239;
+ and Judaism, separation, 251, 316;
+ early Eastern, 251 n.;
+ Eastern State religions, 253;
+ monasticism in Arabian, 254;
+ Arabian expansion, and inner contradiction, 255;
+ substance controversy and split, 255-258;
+ Greek, 257;
+ obligation to other missionarism, 259, 260;
+ end of Arabian theology, 261;
+ pre-period of Western, 277;
+ Western Mary-cult and Devil-cult, 288-292;
+ Western guilt and free-will, sacraments, 292, 293;
+ Western contrition, 293-295;
+ elements and effect of Reformation, 296-300;
+ present Russian, 495 n.
+ _See also_ Manichæism; Monophysites; Nestorianism; Puritanism;
+ Religion; Roman Catholic
+
+ Chronology, Arabian spirit, 27;
+ cultural, 39 n.;
+ Mexican, 44;
+ Arabian eras, 239
+
+ Chrysostom, John, and conflict of estates, 353 n.
+
+ Chthonian cults, 283, 286
+
+ Chufucianism, fellah character, 315
+
+ Church, and religion, 443 n.
+
+ Church and State, Arabian concept, 168, 174-178, 210, 242, 243, 253,
+ 315, 317;
+ Roman law and established church, 177 n.;
+ and Arabian monasticism, 254;
+ lack of equilibrium, 336
+
+ Church of England, new transubstantiation controversy, 309 n.
+
+ Cicero, M. Tullius, rise, 409 n.;
+ on elections, 432 n.;
+ and party, weakling, 433;
+ and Divus idea, 433;
+ and killing of Cæsar, 433 n.;
+ and demagogy, 458;
+ and Trebatius, 458 n.
+
+ Cimabue, Giovanni, as Gothic, 291
+
+ Cineas, on Roman Senate, 409
+
+ Circus parties, as term, 381 n.
+
+ Citation, deeper meaning, 248
+
+ Citizenship, Caracalla’s edict on Roman, 68;
+ Roman, and polis, 383, 384;
+ Classical idea, 384
+
+ Citizenship, Roman, 166 n., 384
+
+ City. _See_ Megalopolitanism; Town
+
+ City-leagues, Classical, 355
+
+ City planning, soulless chessboard form, 100
+
+ Civil War, American, defeat of aristocracy, 356, 369 n.;
+ and military art, 421;
+ as victory of coal-energy, 488 n.
+
+ Civilization, as term, 31 n.;
+ position of present, 37;
+ of Mexican Culture, 45;
+ exhaustion and historylessness, 48-51;
+ and microcosmic, 92;
+ and dictatorship of money, 98;
+ as tension, 102;
+ rootless forms, world-extension, 107;
+ inner stages, present Western, 109;
+ and style, 109;
+ survivals, 109;
+ superficial history, 109, 339;
+ and utilitarian script, 152, 155;
+ Jewish, in contact with Gothic, 317-319;
+ Jews in Western, 322;
+ economics under, 477, 484, 493;
+ final struggle, money and Cæsarism, 506.
+ _See also_ Cæsarism; Cultures; Fellahism; Megalopolitanism;
+ Politics
+
+ Clary, Désirée, as destiny, 329
+
+ Classes, and history, 96;
+ economic, 477.
+ _See also_ Estates
+
+ Classical Culture, as ahistoric, and script, 24, 27, 36, 150, 152;
+ similarity of Mexican, 43;
+ end of real history, 50;
+ relation of Renaissance, 58;
+ Greek laws, 61;
+ and capital city, 95;
+ Civilization cities, 101;
+ Civilization and sterility, 105;
+ destruction and survivals of Civilization, 109;
+ nations under, polis basis, 173;
+ geographically-limited cults, 200;
+ and revelation, 244 n.;
+ fate in, 267;
+ beast character of deities, 276;
+ obscure religious beginnings, 281-283;
+ Orphism, Ascetism, 283;
+ outline of early religion, 283, 284;
+ Greek and Roman cults, 284;
+ later city-religions, 285;
+ personality-concept, 293 n.;
+ second religiousness and Syncretism, 312;
+ agnate family, 330;
+ ancient priest-estate, 350;
+ style of nobility, 351;
+ style of priesthood, 352;
+ position of primary estates, 353;
+ significance of colonization, 354;
+ city-leagues, 355;
+ capital and financial organization, 372, 383, 493-496;
+ and world-power, 373 n.;
+ feudalism and polis, 374;
+ first Tyrannis, 375, 386;
+ dynasty-ideal and oligarchy, 380, 381;
+ _carpe diem_, 383;
+ and war, 385;
+ inter-Tyrannis period, 394-398;
+ second Tyrannis, 405-408;
+ period of Cæsarism, evolution, 418, 422, 423, 430;
+ military technique of Civilization, 420;
+ trader-master period, 484;
+ money as magnitude, 486, 495;
+ money and land and art value, 487;
+ slaves as money, 488, 496;
+ and technique, 501.
+ _See also_ Cultures; Polis; Pseudomorphosis; Rome
+
+ Claudii, and Roman history, 336;
+ social composition, 357
+
+ Claudius I, importance, 50
+
+ Claudius, Appius, and sons of freedmen, 166 n.;
+ and peasantry, 408, 410;
+ and consul-list, 409 n.;
+ and Punic War, 410;
+ reforms and demagogy, 458
+
+ Clausewitz, Karl von, inversion of phrase, 330 n.;
+ as military writer, 419 n.
+
+ Clearing-house, electrical analogy, 490 n.
+
+ Clement, Saint, period, 250
+
+ Cleomenes I, and helots, 396
+
+ Cleomenes III, fall, 65;
+ and Sphærus, 454 n.
+
+ Cleomenes, Alexander’s administrator, and speculation, 484
+
+ Cleon, as mass-leader, 448 n.
+
+ Clergy. _See_ Priesthood
+
+ Climate, and man’s history, 39 n.
+
+ Clisthenes, and Homer, 386
+
+ Clock, as Western symbol, 300 n.
+
+ Clodius. _See_ Claudius
+
+ Cluniacs, as rural, 92
+
+ Cluny, and reform, 296
+
+ Coal, and slaves, 488 n.
+
+ Code, Civil, position, 76
+
+ Code of Manu, on Sudra, 332
+
+ Coins, and “Money,” 481 n., 483;
+ as Classical symbol, 486;
+ Western attitude, 490
+
+ Coke, Sir Edward, and Roman law, 78, 365 n.
+
+ Collinet, Paul, on Justinian’s Digests, 70 n.
+
+ Colonate, end, 357
+
+ Colonization, significance of Classical, 354, 355;
+ cultural basis, 382 n.
+
+ Colonna, and Papacy, 354
+
+ Colonus, vassalage, 350
+
+ Colosseum, decay, 107 n.
+
+ Colour, symbolism in Western religion, 289
+
+ Comitia Centuriata, and money, 410;
+ and Punic War, 410;
+ supporters, 451
+
+ Comitia Tributa, and conquest, 410;
+ supporters, 451
+
+ Commentary on sacred books, authoritative chain, 247, 248
+
+ Common law, development, 76, 78
+
+ Community. _See_ Consensus
+
+ Comnena, Anna, on crusaders, 89
+
+ Compass, Chinese invention, 501 n.
+
+ Compassion, and being, 273;
+ and chivalry, 273
+
+ Comradeship, and race, 126
+
+ Conception, as sin, 272. _See also_ Sex
+
+ Condés, feudal force, 350 n.
+
+ Confession. _See_ Contrition
+
+ “Confession of Peter,” 220
+
+ Confucianism, and “Persian” religion, 260;
+ as end of culture, 286;
+ Rationalism, 306, 307, 309;
+ Syncretism, 315;
+ and nobility, 357;
+ and Cæsarism, 434
+
+ Confucius, deification, 314;
+ on Hwang, 388
+
+ Congress of Princes, 38, 304
+
+ _Connubium_, cult basis, 69
+
+ Conrad II, emperor, feudal law, 371
+
+ Conscription, as phase of Civilization, 420;
+ as substitute for war, 428;
+ effect of World War, 429
+
+ Consensus, as Arabian principle, 59, 73, 210;
+ Arabian community of elect, 242;
+ and Arabian monasticism, 253;
+ phases of Jewish, 315-317, 320
+
+ Constance, Council of, and feudalism, 374
+
+ Constantine the Great, and Roman law as Christian, 69;
+ and Byzantium, 89;
+ and cult and nationality, 178, 230, 243, 253;
+ as prince and prelate, 204, 258;
+ and Nicæa, 257
+
+ Constantine VII, and Romanos, 426
+
+ Constitutio Antoniana, 68
+
+ Constitutions, incomplete system of written, 361;
+ written and living, 369;
+ doctrinaire government, 413-415;
+ foresight, 415 n.;
+ status of American, 430 n.;
+ character of German (1919), 457 n.
+ _See also_ Politics
+
+ Consuls, origin of term, 374 n.;
+ beginning, 382;
+ and Senate, 409;
+ as forged ancestors, 409 n.;
+ and party, 451
+
+ Contemplation, cultural basis, 242
+
+ Contemporaneity, intercultural, 39-42
+
+ Contending States, period in China, 38, 40, 339, 416-419, 454
+
+ Contrition, Western sacrament and Arabian submission, and Grace,
+ 240-242;
+ as supreme Western religious concept, 293, 295;
+ and happiness, 294;
+ effect of decline, 294, 298, 299;
+ as English idea, 294 n.;
+ and Luther’s faith-concept, 298
+
+ Conversion, and Arabian cult-nationality, 219
+
+ Copan, and Mexican Culture, 44
+
+ Corcyra, massacre, 405
+
+ Cordus, Cremutius, history burnt, 434
+
+ Corinth, royal succession, 380;
+ destruction, 489
+
+ Corporation, and Arabian juridical person, 174 n.
+
+ Corpus Christi, and thanksgiving, 293
+
+ Corpus Juris, position in Arabian Culture, 71, 74;
+ and Western law, 76-78;
+ and canon law, 77
+
+ Corpus Juris Germanici, development, 76-78
+
+ Corruption, political so-called, 458
+
+ Cortes, beginning, 373
+
+ Cortez, Hernando, force in conquest, 44 n.
+
+ Cos, style of school, 345
+
+ Cosmic, relation of plant and animal to, 3, 4, 15;
+ beat, feel, 4, 5;
+ organs, 5;
+ being, 7;
+ crowd and beat, 18;
+ and history, 23, 24;
+ in architecture, 92;
+ and sex, 327;
+ earth and universe, 392 n.
+ _See also_ Being; Landscape; Microcosm; Plant; Race
+
+ Cosmogony, of Genesis, 209 n.
+
+ Cosmopolitanism, and intelligentsia, 184. _See also_
+ Megalopolitanism
+
+ Costume, as expression-language, 134
+
+ Councils, spirit of Arabian and Western Christian, 59;
+ and pope, 374
+
+ Country, cosmic, 89;
+ relation to town, 91, 94;
+ as Gothic, 93;
+ historyless, 96.
+ _See also_ Peasantry
+
+ Courts, Roman, and politics, 459. _See also_ Jurisprudence;
+ Roman law
+
+ Crassus Dives, M. Licinius, and money, 402;
+ Triumvirate and Cæsarism, 423;
+ politics and finance, 458, 459;
+ and court, 459
+
+ Credit-system, Western concept, 489. _See also_ Money
+
+ Crete, Minoan art and Mycenæ, 87-89;
+ and ethnology, 129;
+ and Mycenæan beast-deities, 276 n.
+
+ Criticism, relation to science and history, 24
+
+ Cromwell, Oliver, Puritan manifestation, 302;
+ power, 389;
+ dictatorship, 390
+
+ Cross, and Tree of Knowledge, 180 n.
+
+ Croton, Sybaris, 303;
+ style of school, 345
+
+ Crowd and mob, cosmic beat, 18;
+ and Cultures, 18;
+ ethic, 342;
+ fourth estate, 358;
+ and leaders, 376;
+ rise of power, 399
+
+ Crusades, and Arabian Civilization, 43;
+ as rural, 97;
+ and nationalism, 180;
+ Jewish parallel, 198
+
+ Ctesiphon, school, 200;
+ location, 200 n.
+
+ Cujacius, and Roman law, 77
+
+ Cult, and dogma, cultural attitude, 200, 201;
+ technique, and myth, 268, 499.
+ _See also_ Religion
+
+ Cultures, as beings, cosmic beat, 19, 35;
+ historic and ahistoric, 24, 27;
+ as basis of history, 26, 27, 44, 46-51;
+ primitive, character, 33, 34;
+ mutation, 33, 36;
+ primitive and pre-Culture, 35, 89;
+ comparative study, 36-38;
+ destined course, 37;
+ future, 37;
+ problems of study, 37-39;
+ and landscape study, 39 n., 46;
+ dating, 39 n.;
+ contemporary periods, 39-42;
+ inter-Cultures, 87-89;
+ and “return to nature,” 135;
+ and writing, 150;
+ relation of people, 169, 170;
+ and nations, 170-173, 362;
+ narrow circle of understanding, 280;
+ and religious creativeness, 308;
+ intercultural dissonance, race and time elements, 317-323;
+ passing, 435;
+ economic underlay, 474;
+ distinct economic styles, 477;
+ money-symbols, 486.
+ _See also_ Arabian; Art; Babylonian; Chinese; Civilization;
+ Classical; Economics; Egyptian; Fellahism; History; Indian;
+ Landscape; Language; Mexican; Macrocosm; Morphology; Natural
+ science; Politics; Race; Religion; Russian; Technique; Town;
+ Western
+
+ Cumont, Franz, on old Persian religion, 207
+
+ Customs, purpose, 475 n.
+
+ Cuvier, Baron Georges, theory, 31
+
+ Cynics, Pietism, 308;
+ and Socrates, 309
+
+ Cyprus, massacre, 321 n.
+
+ Cyrene, massacre, 198 n.
+
+
+ Damascenus, John, as Al Manzor, 260
+
+ Damascius, as biographer, 252;
+ anchorite, 254
+
+ Damiani, Petrus, and Mary-cult, 288
+
+ Danai, as name, 161, 164
+
+ Daniel, fictitious, 72 n.
+
+ Dante Alighieri, and Devil-cult, 292;
+ and “virtue,” 307 n.
+
+ Darius the Great, Behistun Inscription, 166, 207
+
+ Darwinism, shallowness, 31;
+ palæontological reputation, mutation, 32;
+ and race determination, 124;
+ and genealogy, 180
+
+ Death, man and fear, 15, 16;
+ relation to light, 265;
+ as punishment, 272;
+ and Classical cults, 283;
+ hunger-death and hero-death, 471
+
+ Decemvirs, code, 65;
+ significance, 396
+
+ Dediticii peregrins, as class, 68
+
+ Dehio, Georg, on houses and architecture, 121
+
+ Deism, as technic, 306
+
+ Delbrück, Hans, on ancient armies, 40 n., 199 n.;
+ on migrant minority, 164
+
+ Delos, slave market, 489;
+ temples as banks, 493 n.
+
+ Demeter cult, Homer’s ignoring, 282;
+ and Pythagoreans, 282;
+ survival, 282 n.;
+ and sex, 283;
+ power, 290 n.
+
+ Demeter-Dionysus-Kore cult, in Rome, 386
+
+ Democracy (Third Estate), urban, 97;
+ relation to other estates, 334;
+ rise as contradiction, 355-358;
+ Plebs, 357, 408-411;
+ rise of Classical, 387;
+ Classical, in inter-Tyrannis period, 394-398;
+ rise as independent force, 398;
+ negative unity, 399;
+ and mob, 399;
+ nationalism, and unity, 400-402, 485, 506;
+ in England, 402;
+ class dictatorship, 403, 404;
+ and Parliamentarism, 416;
+ period in Arabian Culture, 424-426;
+ decay, 433;
+ and party, 449;
+ end, 463-465;
+ social and economic form, 478;
+ and machine industry, 504 n.
+ _See also_ Politics
+
+ Democritus, atomic theory, 58
+
+ Depth-experience, Western, “I” as light-centre, 8;
+ and nations, 179;
+ as prime symbol, 288;
+ and gunpowder and printing, 460;
+ and technique, 501-504
+
+ Descartes, René, and doubt, 12
+
+ Destiny, and cosmic beat, 4;
+ and facts, 12;
+ human (cosmic) type, 16-19;
+ and natural science, 31;
+ in nations, 170;
+ faith, cultural basis of fate, 266;
+ and sex, 327, 329;
+ nobility as, 335, 336, 340;
+ States as, 363;
+ in war, 429, 434.
+ _See also_ Being; Causality; History; Race; Time; Will
+
+ Deutero-Isaiah, Persian influence, 208
+
+ Devil-cult, development of Western, 288-291;
+ Renaissance and, 291;
+ and contrition, 293;
+ and Protestantism, 299;
+ Puritanism, 302;
+ and machine, 502, 504 n., 505.
+ _See also_ Witchcraft
+
+ Diadochi, and Arabian Culture, 190;
+ struggle, 408
+
+ Diakrii, and Tyrannis, 386
+
+ Dictatorship, of class, money and Rationalism 403-405. _See
+ also_ Politics
+
+ Diels, Hermann, on Classical technique, 501 n.
+
+ Dike, age, 376, 378, 381
+
+ Dikhans, aristocracy, 353
+
+ Diocletian, distorted importance, 38;
+ and orthodoxy, 178;
+ and Nicodemia, 191;
+ army, 199;
+ era, 139;
+ Church and State, 243, 253;
+ Syncretism, 252;
+ feudalism, 349, 423;
+ fiscal machinery, 371, 496;
+ and economics, 480 n.
+
+ Diodorus, on Roman tenements, 102
+
+ Dionysiac cult, Homer’s ignoring, 282;
+ survival, 282 n.;
+ power, 290 n.;
+ and Tyrannis, 386
+
+ Dionysius I, executions, 405;
+ and army, 406;
+ and conquered territory, 407;
+ war technique, 420
+
+ Dionysius the Areopagite, fictitious, 72 n.
+
+ Diplomacy, contrapuntal politics, 381;
+ basis, 440;
+ and war, 440
+
+ Direction, historical, 361
+
+ Discovery, and Western history-picture, 28, 46, 501
+
+ Dispensation, and valuation, 267
+
+ Dispersion, Jewish, as misnomer, 210
+
+ Disraeli, Benjamin, Jew and Englishman, 320
+
+ Divorce, English reform, 64 n.;
+ civil and ecclesiastical conflict, 365 n.
+
+ Dodington, George B., on party loyalty, 403 n.
+
+ Dogma, and cult, cultural attitude, 200-202
+
+ Dominicans, as urban, 92;
+ and Mary-cult, 288;
+ and Inquisition, 291
+
+ Donellus, Hugo, and Roman law, 77
+
+ Doomesday-Book, 371 n., 372
+
+ Dorians, no nation, 173
+
+ Doric, as cosmic, 92;
+ name and migration, 161, 162
+
+ Dostoyevski, Feodor M., on Petersburg, 193;
+ and Russian soul, 194-196;
+ and Socialism, 218;
+ religion, 295 n.;
+ and money, 495 n.
+
+ Dracon, laws, 64, 65;
+ class law, 365
+
+ Drama, as urban, 93;
+ origin of Chinese, 286
+
+ Dreams, and cognition, 14
+
+ Druses, and Trinity, 237
+
+ Dualism, in Arabian Culture, 233-236, 244;
+ and substance controversy, 256;
+ Chinese, 287;
+ in moral, 341
+
+ Dukas, power, 427
+
+ Dukhobors, as manifestation, 278
+
+ Duns Scotus, Joannes, will and reason, 241;
+ and Devil-cult, 291
+
+ Dyarchy, Augustinian, 432, 433
+
+ Dynamics. _See_ Force; Motion; Technique
+
+ Dynastic idea, Western, 179-183, 378, 381;
+ and overthrow of monarchy, language struggles, 183;
+ Arabian, 330 n., 378, 379, 423, 424;
+ basis, 336;
+ relation to priesthood, 337;
+ and officialdom, 371;
+ elements, 377, 378;
+ Chinese and Egyptian, 379;
+ Classical, and oligarchy, 380, 381;
+ union with and against non-estate, 386, 387;
+ European absolutism, 388;
+ statesmen as leaders, 389;
+ in Thirty Years’ War, 389;
+ in Fronde struggles, outcome, 390;
+ republic as anti-dynastic, 413.
+ _See also_ Politics
+
+
+ Eastern Empire. _See_ Byzantine Empire
+
+ Ebionites, origin, 220 n.;
+ disappearance, 252
+
+ Eckart, Meister, on Mysticism, 292;
+ and Devil-cult, 303
+
+ Economics, and writing, 152, 155;
+ classes and political estates, 333, 348, 477;
+ relation to politics, power and booty, 344, 345, 347, 474-476;
+ and learning, 347;
+ and estates, 356, 357;
+ and class-history, 367 n.;
+ material basis of English concept, 469;
+ not self-contained, 469;
+ English premisses of usual concept, 469, 479;
+ real, as physiognomic, 470;
+ and politics as sides of being, 470, 471;
+ “in form” as self-regarding, 471;
+ hunger-death, 471;
+ relation to family, 471;
+ significance of history, form-language, 472;
+ customary ethic, 472;
+ and religion, 473;
+ waking-being in, 473;
+ producing and acquisitive, 474;
+ under city life, 476;
+ morphology, 476-480;
+ production, preparation, and distribution, 478;
+ subjects and objects in classes, 479, 493;
+ no worker-class, 479 n.;
+ spring time of Culture, traffic in “goods,” and “possession,” 480;
+ status of dealer then, 481;
+ early small-scale traffic, 481 n.;
+ town life and trade, “wares” and money measure, 481-484;
+ fortune displaces possession, 483;
+ as urban, under Civilization, 484.
+ _See also_ Money; Technique; Waking-being
+
+ Ecstasy, Arabian, 242, 244, 245
+
+ Eddas, and nature and history, 286 n.
+
+ Edessa, location, 200 n.;
+ and substance controversy, 256
+
+ Edinburgh, as intellectual centre, 305 n.
+
+ Education, universal, as instrument of press, 462
+
+ Egyptian Culture, as historic, 28;
+ problems of study, 38;
+ Hyksos Period, 38, 41, 428 n., 453;
+ date of beginning, 39 n.;
+ basis of law, 67 n.;
+ Minoan art, 88;
+ Civilization and depopulation, 106;
+ and sea-folk, 109, 122, 164;
+ alphabetical script, 152;
+ nations under, 178 n.;
+ beast-deities, 276 n.;
+ religion and way symbol, 279, 281;
+ Re religion as Reformation, 296;
+ Syncretism, 313;
+ early nobility, 350;
+ and genealogy, 351;
+ relation of primary estates, 353;
+ Pharaoh as Horus, 373;
+ feudalism and interregnum, 375;
+ dynastic-idea, 379, 380;
+ Fronde in, 386;
+ Middle Kingdom, absolutism, 387;
+ period of Cæsarism, 427, 435;
+ money concept, 486, 489 n., 491 n.;
+ financial organization, 495.
+ _See also_ Cultures
+
+ Elections, as civil war, 415;
+ decay, electorate as objects, 432, 456, 463;
+ as political means, suffrage and technique, 447;
+ size and influence of electorate, 455.
+ _See also_ Democracy
+
+ Electors, rise in Empire, 373;
+ and Thirty Years’ War, 388, 391
+
+ Electricity, clearing-house analogy, 490 n.
+
+ Elephantine documents, 209
+
+ Eleusinian mysteries, 203
+
+ Elkazites, origin, 220 n.;
+ disappearance, 252
+
+ Elxai, sacred book, 220 n.
+
+ Empedocles, suicide, 283
+
+ Emperor-mythology, Chinese, 286, 379
+
+ Emperor-worship, and law of creed-communities, 68;
+ Western and Eastern aspects, 203;
+ and Syncretism, 253;
+ Chinese, 313;
+ Cicero and, 433
+
+ Empire, as Germanic idea, 181. _See also_ Imperialism
+
+ Engineer, as master of Western technique, 504, 505
+
+ England, development of law, 62, 75, 76, 78;
+ and dynastic idea, 183;
+ and Western religious concepts, 294 n.;
+ politics and predestination, 304;
+ property law, 371;
+ Normans and finance, 372;
+ Magna Charta and control by nobility, rise of Parliament, 373;
+ Puritan Revolution, 389, 390;
+ eighteenth-century class absolutism, 392-394;
+ Parliamentarism and democracy, reform, 402-404, 412, 412 n., 414;
+ politics, Rationalism and money, 403, 441;
+ and French Revolution, 411, 412;
+ cessation of yeomanry, 449 n.;
+ political flair, 451;
+ and conception of economics, 469, 479
+
+ Enoch, fictitious, 72 n.
+
+ Ephesus, Council of, and Christian split, 257;
+ and reform, 296
+
+ Ephors, and succession, 380
+
+ Epic, as rural, 93;
+ Russian hero-tales, 192;
+ Arabian period, 250.
+ _See also_ Literature
+
+ Epicurus, cult, 314
+
+ Epimenides, as dogmatist, 282
+
+ Epistemology. _See_ Knowledge
+
+ Epoch, as term, 33 n.
+
+ Equality, and party, 449
+
+ Equities, big-money party, 402;
+ creation, 411;
+ decay, 432;
+ and populus, 451
+
+ Equity, and statute law, 363
+
+ Eras, as Arabian idea, 239
+
+ Erckert, Roderich von, on Jewish type, 175
+
+ Erigena, John Scotus, world-concept, 242 n.
+
+ Essenes, tendency, 211
+
+ Estates, beginning, 280;
+ as term, 329 n.;
+ “in form” and cultural history, 330-332;
+ and residue classes, caste, 332-334;
+ and occupation classes, 333, 348, 477;
+ relation to non-estate, 334;
+ and society, 343;
+ build and course of Cultures, 347;
+ primary, and economy and science, 347;
+ relation to peasantry, vassalage, 348, 349;
+ end of primary, 357;
+ primary and existence of State, 362;
+ and laws, 364;
+ contest with State, 366;
+ final effort for rule, 385, 386;
+ and parties, 449.
+ _See also_ Democracy; Nobility; Politics; Priesthood
+
+ Ethics, and truth, 144;
+ Jesus and morals, 217;
+ meaning of religious, 271, 272;
+ moral defined, negations and being, 272-274;
+ character of social, 273;
+ duality of moral, noble and priestly, 341;
+ custom-ethic, crowd, honour, 342, 343;
+ in economic life, 348, 472;
+ dual moral and law, 363.
+ _See also_ Philosophy; Religion; Truth
+
+ Etruscan language, and Roman cults, 154 n.;
+ as Roman, 395 n.
+
+ Etruscans, as name, and people, 164;
+ no nation, 173
+
+ Eubulus of Athens, and finance, 372, 494
+
+ Eudaimonia, Rationalism, 307
+
+ Eugene IV, pope, insurgent faction, 381 n.
+
+ Euhemerism, 306
+
+ Evolution. _See_ Darwinism
+
+ E’we language, 140
+
+ Exchequer, origin of term, 372
+
+ Exegesis. _See_ Sacred books
+
+ Exekias, vase-painting, 135
+
+ Exilarch, position, 208
+
+ Expansion, political aspect of Classical conquests, 407. _See
+ also_ Imperialism
+
+ Experience, egoistic basis, 26
+
+ Expositio, of German law, 76
+
+ Expression, defined, 133
+
+ Ezekiel, Persian influence, 208;
+ and Talmud, 208;
+ revelation, 245
+
+ Ezra, and Talmud, 208
+
+
+ Fabii, and Roman history, 336
+
+ Factions, political, 448
+
+ Factory-worker, as agent of Western technique, 504
+
+ Facts, and truths, 11, 12;
+ as starting point of history, 47;
+ and politics, 368
+
+ Faith, defined, and intellect, 266, 269, 271;
+ and life, 271;
+ Luther’s concept and contrition, 298;
+ under Rationalism, 308, 309.
+ _See also_ Religion; Truth
+
+ Falasha, as Jews, 176 n.;
+ as tribe, 348, 479
+
+ Family, and State, 329, 336;
+ cultural basis, 330;
+ relation of priesthood, 337;
+ cultural styles of nobility, 350, 351;
+ “in form” relation, 362;
+ inward experience, 365;
+ and economic side of being, 471.
+ _See also_ Sex
+
+ Fan-Sui, character, 419
+
+ _Fas_, and _jus_, 72, 78
+
+ Fate, cultural attitude, 267. _See also_ Destiny; Religion
+
+ Faustian Culture. _See_ Western Culture
+
+ Fear, human, relation to invisible, 8, 12;
+ of death, 15, 16;
+ and “thou,” 133;
+ and speech, 133, 139;
+ and Arabian apocalypse, 212;
+ and religion, 265
+
+ Feeling, and understanding, 136;
+ language and domination of intellect, 144, 145
+
+ Fehbellin, battle, importance, 182
+
+ Fellahism, as post-Civilization residue, 105;
+ as term, 169;
+ of Arabian nations, 178;
+ and pacifism, 185, 186;
+ religious, 314;
+ rigidity, 362
+
+ Ferdinand V of Spain, dynasty-idea, 381
+
+ Feudalism, cultural contemporaries, 39, 40;
+ Arabian, 196-199;
+ Byzantine, 199;
+ vassalage, 349;
+ union of power and booty, fiscal machinery, 371, 372;
+ rise, idea, 371, 376;
+ Western national stirrings, 372;
+ rise of control by Western nobility, 372, 374;
+ world-power idea, Empire-Papacy contest, 373, 374;
+ Classical, and polis, 374;
+ decay, interregnum, 375;
+ economy, 477
+
+ Ficinus, Marcilius, and Devil-cult, 291
+
+ Fictitious authorship, significance in Arabian Culture, 72 n.
+
+ Fifty-year period, cultural rhythm, 392 n.
+
+ Finance, rise of officialdom, 371;
+ classical attitude, 383. _See also_ Money
+
+ Finck, F. N., on word and sentence, 141
+
+ Firm, as Western symbol, 490
+
+ Flaminius, C., significance, 65;
+ conquest, 408;
+ consul-list, 409 n.;
+ and finance, 410, 411;
+ and party, 451
+
+ Flaminius, T. Quinctius, and political organization, 452
+
+ Flavius, Cneius, son of freedman, 166 n.
+
+ Force, alteration in concept, 307;
+ Western dynamic Rationalism, 309.
+ _See also_ Motion; Technique
+
+ Foreign relations, unilateral law, 364-366;
+ in conflict of estates and State, 367;
+ importance of inner authority, 369;
+ as field of high politics, 440, 447;
+ war as primary relation, 440.
+ _See also_ Peace; War
+
+ Form, being “in form,” 330;
+ of historical movement, 361;
+ family and State, 362;
+ Civilization and loss, Cæsarism, 398, 404, 406, 418, 431;
+ economic “in form,” 471
+
+ Fortune, as displacing possession, 483
+
+ Fourier, François, M. C., and English economics, 469
+
+ Fourth Estate, significance, 358. _See also_ Crowd
+
+ Fox, Charles James, and French Revolution, 412
+
+ France, Anatole, on law, 64;
+ and moral, 272 n.
+
+ France, sterility, 106;
+ national origin, 182;
+ States-General, 373;
+ absolutism and Fronde, 388, 390;
+ impractical politics, 403;
+ financial and military rule, 415.
+ _See also_ French Revolution
+
+ Francis of Assisi, and compassion, 273
+
+ Franciscans, as urban, 92
+
+ Francke, August H., Pietism, 308
+
+ Franco-German War, German bankers and French loans, 402 n.
+
+ Frangipani, and Papacy, 354
+
+ Frankish dynasty, notion, 379 n.
+
+ Fratres Arvales, end of records, 255;
+ rites, 314;
+ formal restoration, 433
+
+ Frau Holde, and Mary-cult, 299
+
+ Frederick I Barbarossa, and Henry the Lion, 180 n.
+
+ Frederick II, emperor, and finance, 372, 489
+
+ Frederick the Great of Prussia, and conscription, 420 n.;
+ tact of command, 444;
+ economics and politics, 475
+
+ Frederick William of Brandenburg, as real ruler, 389
+
+ Frederick William I of Prussia, and army, 415;
+ as politician, 443;
+ finance, 489
+
+ Frederick William III of Prussia, and army, 406
+
+ Freedom, rise of idea, significance, 354, 356, 358;
+ as negation, 456;
+ and money, 481 n.
+
+ French Revolution, and dynastic idea, 183;
+ political significance, 387;
+ struggle for internal control, 398;
+ not economic, 399 n.;
+ and mob, 400;
+ English ideas and practices, 403, 411, 412;
+ as unique, 411;
+ and set of incidents, 411 n.
+
+ Frobenius, Leo, on primitive Culture, 33;
+ on Arabian “cavern,” 233
+
+ Fronde, significance, 386, 404;
+ European absolutism, 388;
+ principle in Thirty Years’ War, 389;
+ struggle elsewhere, outcome, 390, 404;
+ period in Arabian Culture, 423
+
+ Fugger, city nobility, 356;
+ small-scale traffic, 481 n.
+
+ Function, Western money concept, 486, 489
+
+ Furniture, race in, 122
+
+
+ Gaia cult, 283
+
+ Gaius, Institutes, 67
+
+ Galba, unimportance, 50
+
+ Gallienus, mounted corps, 199;
+ historyless, 432
+
+ Gamaliel, influence, 209
+
+ Gao-dsung, and Nestorians, 260
+
+ Gathas, Gnosis, 228
+
+ Gelnhausen, cathedral art, 123
+
+ Gelon, and Syracuse, 382 n.
+
+ Genealogy, and fear, 265;
+ time-mythology, 286;
+ as Western-principle, 350;
+ and Chinese ancestry-worship, 351;
+ inherited will, 377;
+ and money, 449 n.
+ _See also_ Dynastic idea
+
+ Genesis, influences, 209 n.
+
+ Georgia, State religion, 253
+
+ Germanic law, development, 75, 76
+
+ Germany, and Roman law, 76, 77;
+ and Western Civilization, 109;
+ dynasty and nationalism, 181-183;
+ politics, army, and administration, 415, 444;
+ character of constitution of 1919, 457 n.
+ _See also_ Holy Roman Empire; Prussia
+
+ Gesture, as sign of language, punctuation, 134;
+ and words, 140 n.
+
+ Ghassanids, court, poetry, 198
+
+ Ghetto, as Jewish mode, 315, 317
+
+ Giotto, as Gothic, 291
+
+ Gnosis, and Chaldean, 176;
+ Eastern and Western forms, 228, 229, 250
+
+ Godwin, William, and Third Estate, 403 n.
+
+ Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, and cosmic beat, 5;
+ historical attunement, 30;
+ form-fulfilment theory, 32, 32 n.;
+ on parts of a Culture, 37 n.;
+ on world-literature, 108;
+ form and untruth, 137 n.;
+ on German nationalism and poetry, 182;
+ on freedom, 267;
+ on confession, 295;
+ on doer, 442;
+ on book-keeping, 490
+
+ Gold reserve and standard, and credit, 491 n. _See also_ Money
+
+ Golden Age, Classical, 239
+
+ Gomdan, stronghold, 197
+
+ Good, as evaluation, 241 n.
+
+ Goods, early traffic, 480
+
+ Goslar, cathedral art, 123
+
+ Gospels, fictitious authorship, 72 n.;
+ character, 212;
+ picture, 217 n.;
+ Mark, 223;
+ John, 226, 234, 244, 245, 250;
+ warrantry, 248
+
+ Gothic, as cosmic, 92, 93;
+ cathedral, 122, 123, 153;
+ and Baroque science, 270;
+ Renaissance as return, 291;
+ and personality, 293;
+ and Reformation, 296;
+ result on Jews of contact, 317-319;
+ and technique, 502, 503
+
+ Gould, Benjamin A., on American race, 119
+
+ Government. _See_ Politics
+
+ Gracchi, importance, 47, 50;
+ and rural citizens, 384 n.;
+ financing, 402;
+ and money, 410, 494;
+ disorders, 423;
+ and Tribunate, 433;
+ and party, 451;
+ and political theory, 454;
+ and electorate, 457 n.;
+ and courts, 460
+
+ Grace, plurality of idea, 59;
+ as Arabian doctrine, 234, 241, 242;
+ Western concept, 292
+
+ Grammar, sentence and word, 141, 145;
+ and syntax, 142;
+ lost origin, 146;
+ and vocabularies as basis of linguistic families, 147;
+ Indogermanic, 148;
+ and writing, 149
+
+ Granada, as world-city, 99;
+ Jewish city, 316
+
+ Gratian, Decretum, 77, 290
+
+ Great Protectors, Chinese period, 40
+
+ Great Wall, contemporary, 41
+
+ Greek, as language of Christianity, 224, 252, 256;
+ as Roman language, 395 n.
+
+ Greek fire, purpose, 502 n.
+
+ Greek Orthodox Church, picture series, 116. _See also_
+ Christianity
+
+ Greeks, no nation, 173;
+ as adherents of Syncretic cults, 176;
+ as Christian Church, 177;
+ modern security as Byzantine relic, 323
+
+ Gregory VII, pope, and world-power, 373
+
+ Gregory of Tours, history and Karamzin’s narrative, 192;
+ religiousness, 277
+
+ Groot, Jan J. M. de, mistake on Chinese religions, 286 n.
+
+ Grosseteste, Robert, philosophy, 8 n., 172 n.;
+ as scientist, 300
+
+ Gudunov {sic}, Boris, period, 192
+
+ Guilds, status, and tribal organization, 348
+
+ Gundisapora, school, 200;
+ location, 200 n.
+
+ Gunpowder, and printing, 460;
+ Chinese discovery, 501 n.;
+ and Greek fire, 502 n.
+
+
+ Habsburgs, and Austrian nation, 182;
+ and world-history, 336
+
+ Hadramaut, Axumite kings, 197 n.
+
+ Hadrian, legal edict, 66
+
+ Hague Conference, as prelude of war, 430
+
+ Halakha, Jewish and Christian, 221
+
+ Hallgerd, as destiny, 329
+
+ Halo, significance, 378
+
+ Halyburton, Thomas, on divine-given torments, 299 n.
+
+ Hamdanids, rule, 197
+
+ Hamilcar Barca, Spanish conquest, 408
+
+ Hammurabi, code, 75 n.
+
+ Han dynasties, 41;
+ fall, 314
+
+ Hanifs, Puritanism, 304
+
+ Hannibal, and Hellenism, 191, 422;
+ and border States, 408
+
+ Hansa, small-scale traffic, 481 n.
+
+ Haoma-drinking, 203, 207
+
+ Hasidim, sect, 255, 321
+
+ Hatshepsut, and Egyptian history, 434
+
+ Hauran, feudalism, 196
+
+ Heaven, Arabian and Western, 292;
+ Western and Russian, 295 n.
+
+ Hebrew, fate of spoken and written, 73 n.
+
+ Hegel, Georg W. F., and law of nature, 78;
+ and numbers, 269 n.
+
+ Hellenes, as name, 161, 173
+
+ Hellenism, as fellah, 185;
+ and Cannæ and Zama, 191, 422;
+ Paganism and Christianity, 203, 204;
+ materialism and myth, 310.
+ _See also_ Pseudomorphosis
+
+ Helots, status, 322, 349;
+ attempt to emancipate, 357
+
+ Henotheism, Arabian, 201. _See also_ Religion
+
+ Henry IV, emperor, contemporaries, 39
+
+ Henry VI, emperor, and world-power, 374
+
+ Henry VII of England, dynasty-idea, 381
+
+ Hermes Trismegistus, fictitious, 72 n.
+
+ Hermetic Pœmander, 213 n.
+
+ Hermetics, collection as canon, 247;
+ period, 250
+
+ Hermopolis, cult, 279, 281
+
+ Hero, and technique, 501
+
+ Herod, Hellenism, 211
+
+ Herodotus, on Persians, 167;
+ inaccuracy on Egypt, 333
+
+ Heroism, and race, 339;
+ hero-death, 471
+
+ Herrnhut, Pietism, 308
+
+ Hesiod, and Classical religious beginnings, 282
+
+ Hia dynasty, mythology, 286, 379 n.
+
+ Hiang-Sui, peace league, 429
+
+ Hidalgo, meaning, 342 n.
+
+ Hierocles, breviary, 252
+
+ Hijra, era, 239
+
+ Himaryites, history, 197 n.;
+ Jewish State religion, 153
+
+ Hinayana doctrine, 312
+
+ Hippodamus of Miletus, city-plan, 100
+
+ History, and cosmic and microcosmic, 23, 24;
+ adjustment to horizon, cultural aspect, 24, 25;
+ subjective basis, 26, 29;
+ cultural history-pictures, 27, 28;
+ Western Culture and infinite, 28;
+ irrational culminative division scheme, 28, 37, 55, 190;
+ Western Culture and individuality in historical attunement,
+ planes,
+ 29;
+ future uniform physiognomic, 30;
+ enlarged possibilities, restoration and prediction, 36;
+ Cultures and significance, 44;
+ true definition and treatment, physiognomic fact, 46, 47;
+ biological sense of primitive, 48;
+ and final objects, 48;
+ Cultures and historical man, 48;
+ exhaustion of Civilization and historylessness, 48-51;
+ actualization of the spiritual, 49;
+ intra- and intercultural, 55;
+ cultural plurality, soul and transfer of form, 55-60;
+ importance of negative cultural influences, 57-59;
+ cultural transfer of Christianity as example, 59, 60;
+ of Roman Law as example, 60-83;
+ city’s “visage” as, 94;
+ and classes, 96;
+ and Civilization, superficial, 109, 339;
+ and race, 116;
+ and writing, 150, 153;
+ relation to people, 165, 169, 170, 181;
+ and nations, 171;
+ and faith and science, 271;
+ and moral, 272;
+ of truths, 274;
+ Western sense, influence of contrition, 294;
+ in intercultural dissonance, 319;
+ sex war, 328;
+ cosmic-politic duality, family and State, 329;
+ “in form” estates and making, 330;
+ cultural tradition, 338;
+ being-streams as true, 339;
+ and State, 361;
+ as court, high decision, 507.
+ _See also_ Being; Cultures; Destiny; Landscape; Nature;
+ Politics; Race; Sex; Time
+
+ Hogarth, William, art sermons, 116
+
+ Hohenstaufens, results of fall, 181
+
+ Hohenzollerns, and Prussia, 182
+
+ Holy Roman Empire, significance, 181;
+ electorate, 373;
+ world-power and contest with Papacy, 373, 374;
+ decay, 376;
+ Thirty Years’ War, Wallenstein, 388-391;
+ provincial horizons, 392
+
+ Holy Synod, 278
+
+ Homer, urban language, 125 n.;
+ indifference to religion, 281;
+ feudal evidences, 374;
+ and talent, 486
+
+ Ho-nan-fu, as royal residence, 92
+
+ Honour, and class, 342;
+ as basic concept of ethics, 343;
+ in economic life, 472
+
+ Horten, Max, on popular Islam, 237 n.
+
+ Horus-hawk cult, end, 279, 373
+
+ Hou-li, as religious source, 286
+
+ House, Minoan and Mycenæan, 88;
+ farmhouse as symbol, 90;
+ megalopolitan, 99;
+ and architecture, 120;
+ as expression of race, 120-122;
+ as totem, history, 121;
+ and ornament, 121;
+ and family, 329;
+ political and economic expression, 471
+
+ Hsinan-tang, in India, 107
+
+ Hugo de St. Victor, Arabian contemporaries, 250
+
+ Huguccio, pun, 77 n.
+
+ Humanism, field, 291 n. _See also_ Renaissance
+
+ Humboldt, Wilhelm von, on language, 117 n.;
+ and State, 366 n.;
+ on politics and literature, 439 n.
+
+ Hume, David, and economic thought, 403, 469
+
+ Hunac Ceel, rule, 45
+
+ Hunger-death, 471
+
+ Huns, Chinese repulse and Western attack, 41
+
+ Hus, John, and reform, 296
+
+ Huxley, Thomas H., race classification, 125
+
+ Hwang of Tsi, as protector, 388
+
+ Hwang-ti, rise, 38;
+ as title, 41;
+ cult, 314;
+ economics and politics, 475
+
+ Hybrias the Cretan, and _carpe diem_, 383
+
+ Hybris, doctrine, 282, 301
+
+ Hyksos Period, meaning, 38, 41;
+ preliminaries, 386;
+ and Cæsarism, 427;
+ as term, 428 n.;
+ and political theory, 453
+
+ Hypothesis, and usefulness, 144
+
+ Hyrcanus, Hellenism, 211
+
+
+ Iamblichus, and Pagan Church, Syncretism, 204, 252;
+ on divine substance, 256;
+ and numbers, 269 n.
+
+ Ibas, and substance controversy, 256
+
+ Ibn Sina, style of canon, 346
+
+ Ibsen, Henrik, and marriage, 105
+
+ Ice Age, man in, 33
+
+ Iconoclasm. _See_ Images
+
+ Ilya Muromyets, hero, 192
+
+ Images, in Pagan churches, 204;
+ basis of worship, 256;
+ Arabian and Greek iconoclasm, 304, 425.
+ _See also_ Monophysites
+
+ Immaculate Conception, as English idea, 294 n.
+
+ Immortality, cultural basis, 59. _See also_ Death
+
+ Imperialism, Chinese, 38, 41;
+ Indian, 41 n.;
+ collapse of Roman, 42;
+ Calvin-Loyola struggle, 299;
+ political aspect of Classical conquests, 407;
+ cultural necessity, 422 n., 424.
+ _See also_ Politics
+
+ Indian Culture, ahistoric, and script, 36, 150, 152;
+ problems of study, 38;
+ and Imperialism, 41 n.;
+ fate in, 267;
+ beginning of religion, 281;
+ Rationalism, 307;
+ style of priesthood, 352;
+ relation of primary estates, 353;
+ and world-power, 373 n.
+ _See also_ Buddhism; Cultures
+
+ Indians, and Americans, 119;
+ gesture language, 140 n., 147
+
+ Indogermanic system, alien words, 148;
+ youth, question of grammar, 148;
+ effect of ahistoric Cultures, 150;
+ basis of coherence, 166;
+ and Persians, 166-169;
+ and Western genealogical ideal, 181
+
+ Industry. _See_ Economics; Technique
+
+ Infinity, in Western Culture, 46. _See also_ Depth-experience
+
+ Innocent III, pope, and world-power, 374;
+ as politician, 442
+
+ Inquisition, and Devil-cult, 291
+
+ Inscriptions, as taboo, 121 n.
+
+ Insula Feliculæ, 101
+
+ Intelligence, as tension, 102;
+ language as vehicle of dominance, 144, 145;
+ and race-traits, 166;
+ aristocracy, 166 n.;
+ and cosmopolitanism, 184;
+ Jesus and, 216-218;
+ Paul’s introduction with Christianity, 221;
+ Jewish period, 316;
+ and primary estates, 356, 357;
+ and Cæsarism, 433.
+ _See also_ Causality; Knowledge; Rationalism; Thought; Town;
+ Understanding; Waking-being
+
+ International law, and Roman _jus gentium_, 61. _See also_
+ Foreign relations
+
+ Internationalism, as element of Jewry, 320
+
+ Interregnum, cultural period, significance, 375
+
+ Interrex, and oligarchy, 375
+
+ Inventions, Western, 501. _See also_ Technique
+
+ Ionic, as microcosmic, 92
+
+ Ipsus, battle, importance, 422
+
+ Irak, slave-rebellion, 426, 428 n.
+
+ Irenæus, and Western Church, 229;
+ and commentary, 247;
+ period, 250
+
+ Irnerius, and Roman law, 77
+
+ Isaac Hassan (ibn Sid), as scientist, 316
+
+ Isaiah, as Arabian prophet, 205
+
+ Isidore, biography, 252
+
+ Isis cult, origin, 201, 310
+
+ Islam, as Puritanism, 74, 302-304;
+ and nationality, 178;
+ Logos, 236;
+ significance as term, 240;
+ community of elect, 243;
+ and substance controversy, 256;
+ Monophysites and starting point, 258;
+ missionarism, 259, 304;
+ earlier Arabian religions and success, 260;
+ as Arabian manifestation, 304;
+ fellahism, 315;
+ basis for endurance, 323;
+ political aristocracy of beginning, 424.
+ _See also_ Arabian Culture; Mohammed; Religion; Sufism
+
+ Isocrates, and class dictatorship, 404
+
+ Israelites, tribal association, 175. _See also_ Jews
+
+ Italy, union as Germanic dynastic creation, 181;
+ city-republic finance, 489
+
+ Ivan III, and Tartars, 192
+
+ Ivan IV, the Terrible, period, 192
+
+ I-Wang, contemporaries, 39;
+ and feudalism, 349 n., 375
+
+
+ Jabna, Council of, on revelation, 245
+
+ Jackson, Andrew, and party, 451
+
+ Jacopone da Todi, and reform, 296
+
+ Jainism, Rationalism, 307
+
+ James, Saint, Gospel, 223 n.
+
+ James I of England, and marriage-alliance, 389
+
+ Jansenists, Puritan manifestation, 302
+
+ Japan, cultural status, 49 n., 108, 323, 421 n.
+
+ Jason of Pheræ, politics, 407
+
+ Jehuda, Rabbi, period, 250
+
+ Jehuda ben Halevi, and science, 315
+
+ Jeremiah, as Arabian prophet, 205
+
+ Jerusalem, relation to Jewry, 204, 208, 210
+
+ Jespersen, Otto, on origin of language, 138
+
+ Jesubocht, Corpus, 75
+
+ Jesuits, as urban, 92. _See also_ Loyola
+
+ Jesujabh III, on conversion to Islam, 260
+
+ Jesus, and ceremonial, 134 n.;
+ life and biography, 212;
+ and John the Baptist, Mandæanism, 214;
+ connotation of “Nazarene,” 214 n.;
+ self-view as prophet and Messiah, 215;
+ townlessness, 215;
+ before Pilate, faith and fact, 216, 473 n.;
+ metaphysical world, 217;
+ effect of Resurrection, 218;
+ romances of birth and childhood, 224, 237, 250;
+ world-image, and apocalyptic, 237, 239;
+ and submission, 240.
+ _See also_ Christianity; Logos; Substance
+
+ Jews, creed basis of law, Talmud, 69;
+ jurisprudence, 71;
+ pre-cultural law, 75;
+ comradeship and race in European, 126, 127;
+ tribal types, 175;
+ ignored phases of religious history, 191;
+ crusade, 198;
+ Yahweh cult in Syncretism, 201;
+ Judaism as Arabian prophetic religion, 204-207;
+ effect of exile, apocalypse and Persian influence, 207;
+ Judaistic minority, Talmudic development, 208;
+ Exilarch majority, 208, 210;
+ law and the prophets as separate, 209;
+ post-exilic (springtime) increase, spirit, 209, 316;
+ Judea and Jewry, fall of Jerusalem as liberation, 209-211;
+ tendencies, rescue from pseudomorphic Hellenism, 210, 211;
+ end of apocalypse, 211;
+ Judaism and exclusive Messiah Christian sects, disappearance, 219,
+ 220, 252;
+ Paul and Judaism, 221;
+ era, 239;
+ and revelation, 245;
+ separation of Christianity, 251;
+ missionarism, 259;
+ Mazdak reformation, end of theology, 261;
+ fellah-religion, 315, 323;
+ Arabian-type nationality and ghetto, 315, 317;
+ intellectual (Baroque) period, in Spain, 316;
+ spiritual character of period, 316;
+ Civilization period, results of contact with Gothic, 317-319;
+ race and piety phases of later antagonism, 318-320;
+ landless consensus and Western patriotism, 320;
+ fixed alien metaphysic phase, 321;
+ and Western Civilization, 322;
+ danger of dissolution, 323;
+ economic rôle, 481 n.;
+ and machine-industry, 504 n.
+ _See also_ Arabian Culture; Religion
+
+ Jezidi, and Trinity, 236
+
+ Joachim of Floris, world-conception, 28;
+ Arabian contemporaries, 250;
+ and reform, 296
+
+ Job, Book of, character, 208;
+ and will, 242
+
+ John Gospel, 226;
+ Mani and, 227, 251 n.;
+ dualism, 234;
+ on God and the Word, 244;
+ as a Koran, 245;
+ and Old Testament, 245;
+ period, 250
+
+ John the Baptist, Mandæanism, and Jesus, 214;
+ order-community, 254
+
+ John Tzimisces, power, 426
+
+ Josephus, on Sadducees, 211
+
+ Judah, Abraham and betrayal money, 237
+
+ Judaism. _See_ Jews
+
+ Judge of men, and speech, 137
+
+ Judith, as Arabian, 208
+
+ Jugurtha, power, 428
+
+ Julian, edict, 66 n.;
+ and cult nation, 176, 204;
+ as prophet, 204;
+ and Syncretism, 253;
+ and monasticism, 254
+
+ Jundaisapur, and Gundisapora, 200 n.
+
+ Junian Latins, 68 n.
+
+ Jupiter Dolichenus cult, 201
+
+ Juridical person, as Arabian concept, 67, 68, 174, 177
+
+ Jurisprudence, as late science, 66;
+ Egyptian and Chinese, 67 n.;
+ future Western, 80-83, 505. _See also_ Roman law
+
+ _Jus_, and _lex_ in Arabian Culture, 71;
+ and _fas_ in Western Culture, 78
+
+ _Jus gentium_, Classical idea, 61;
+ as imperial law, 66
+
+ Justification by faith, and Western Rationalism, 309
+
+ Justinian, Arabian jurisprudence, 70 n., 71, 74;
+ army system, 199;
+ Digests as interpretation, 246;
+ and end of theology, 261;
+ Nika Rebellion, 381 n.;
+ conflict with nobility, 423
+
+
+ Kabbalah, and secret dogma, 247
+
+ Kalaam, and pneuma, 242
+
+ Kama-sutram, and sport, 103
+
+ Kanauj, as world-city, 99
+
+ Kant, Emmanuel, and numbers, 269 n.;
+ gloom, 295;
+ and Devil-cult, 303;
+ and Talmudic intellects, 322;
+ on marriage, 337;
+ and celibacy of science, 346
+
+ Kara Balgassun, inscription, 260
+
+ Karæi, as order, 255;
+ Puritanism, rise, 316
+
+ Karamzin, Nikolai M., narrative, 192
+
+ Karlsruhe, plan, 100 n.
+
+ Karlstadt, as Gothic, 296
+
+ Karna, and civil law, 210
+
+ Karo, Joseph, metaphysic, 321
+
+ Karramiyya movement, 424, 425
+
+ Karun valley, Mandæanism, 214 n.
+
+ Kassites, as rulers, 40
+
+ Khazars, conversion to Judaism, 259
+
+ Khuzistan, Mandæanism, 214 n.
+
+ Ki-Sung, dynasties, 379 n.
+
+ Kierkegaard, Sören, “playing” with religion, 137
+
+ Kinnesrin, school, 200
+
+ Kiur Zan, power, 426
+
+ Knowledge, waking-being and problem of epistemology, 14;
+ technical and theoretical, 25;
+ epistemology and destiny, 267 n.
+ _See also_ Intelligence
+
+ Kobad I, and Mazdak, 261
+
+ Koran, as term, 244. _See also_ Islam
+
+ Kung-Yang, on Middle Kingdom, 373 n.
+
+ Kwan-tse, and pre-Confucian philosophy, 300
+
+ Kwei-ku-tse, character, 419 n.
+
+
+ Labna, and Mexican Culture, 45
+
+ Labor. _See_ Economics
+
+ Laity, _vis-à-vis_ clergy, 333
+
+ Lakayata, system, 309
+
+ Lakhmids, court, poetry, 198
+
+ Lambert, Édouard, on Twelve Tables, 65 n.
+
+ Land, and Classical money wealth, 487. _See also_ Peasantry
+
+ Landscape, necessity of study in man’s history, 39 n.;
+ of Arabian Culture, 42;
+ relation to Culture, 46;
+ and transfer of forms, 57;
+ and town, 90;
+ and race, 113, 119, 129, 130;
+ and language, 119;
+ and plant changes, 130;
+ and religions of Cultures, 278;
+ as Chinese prime symbol, 287
+
+ Language, and emancipation of understanding, 9;
+ of Civilization, 108;
+ defined, development, 114, 115;
+ and race and waking-being, 114, 117;
+ expression and communication, “I” and “thou,” motive and sign,
+ 115,
+ 133;
+ cult-colouring of prime words, 116;
+ and taboo, 116;
+ and speaking, dead languages, 117, 125;
+ independence from landscape, mother-tongue fallacy, 119;
+ essence, wordless, 131, 132;
+ essential element of relations of microcosm, 132;
+ phases of expression, extensiveness, 134;
+ evolution of communication, 134;
+ speech divorced from speaking, rigid signs as system, 134, 144;
+ “knowing” the language, complexity, 135;
+ set language and understanding, 135;
+ signs and meaning, relation to truth, 136, 137;
+ “playing” with expression, 137;
+ spiritual communion and silence, 137;
+ words, origin, incompleteness, 137, 138, 142;
+ vocal and verbal, 138;
+ name and word, 138-141;
+ opposite word-pairs, 140;
+ Chinese voice-differentiations, 140 n.;
+ grammar and sentence, relation to word, 141;
+ sentences and race, 142;
+ acquisition of words, 142;
+ verbs and thought-categories, 143;
+ abstract thinking and intellect and life, 144;
+ stages of history, 145;
+ lost formative history, 146;
+ as ancient class-secret, 146;
+ tempo of history, effect of writing, 147;
+ grammar and vocabulary, linguistic families as grammatical, 147;
+ alien words, 148;
+ as to Aryan, 149;
+ written and colloquial, 150;
+ morphology of Culture-languages, 152-155;
+ birth of cultural, popular talk and cult speech, 153-155;
+ city script-speech, 155;
+ and people, 161;
+ Persian, 166;
+ mother tongue and dynastic idea, 183;
+ and literary history, 190;
+ influence on Christianity, 224, 241 n., 252, 256, 258;
+ of Arabian religions, 252.
+ _See also_ Literature; Race; Words; Writing
+
+ Lao-tse, Taoism, 307;
+ Pietism, 308
+
+ Lao-Tzu, and sterility, 105
+
+ Lassalle, Ferdinand, and class dictatorship, 404;
+ and English economics, 469
+
+ Latin, disappearance from legal life, 75;
+ and Western scholar-languages, 155;
+ and Christianity, 241 n., 258;
+ period, 395 n.
+
+ Latin-America, and Cæsarism, 435
+
+ Law, property as power, 345;
+ defined, 363;
+ as instrument of power, internal and external, 365-367.
+ _See also_ Jurisprudence; Roman law
+
+ League of Nations, Chinese attempt, 38, 417, 429
+
+ Learning, separation from priesthood, 345;
+ priesthood and cultural form of profane, 345-347;
+ and nobility and economics, 347
+
+ Le Bon, Gustave, study of the crowd, 18 n.
+
+ Lechfeld, battle, 259
+
+ Leibniz, Baron von, and evolution, 31
+
+ Leiden, Papyrus, on Hyksos Period, 427
+
+ Lemnos, inscription, 122
+
+ Lenel, Otto, on Roman jurisprudence, 67
+
+ Lenin, Nikolai, as mass-leader, 448 n. _See also_ Bolshevism
+
+ Leo III, emperor, legislation, 75, 357;
+ iconoclasm, 304
+
+ Leo V, and Theodore of Studion, 425
+
+ Leonardo da Vinci, and Gothic, 291
+
+ Leonardo Pisano, on accountancy, 489 n.
+
+ Leontini, destruction, 405
+
+ Lessing, Gotthold E., and German nationalism, 182;
+ and Rationalism, 305
+
+ Letter, as language-picture, 134. _See also_ Writing
+
+ Levites, as term for priesthood, 175
+
+ _Lex_, and _jus_, Arabian, 71
+
+ _Lex Æbutia_, and present law, 62
+
+ _Lex Canuleia_, 69 n., 397
+
+ Lex Hortensia, 358, 396
+
+ Lex Ogulnia, and Plebs, 408
+
+ Li-Ki, ritual work, 312 n., 315
+
+ Li Si, standard script, 152
+
+ Li-Szu, and Wang-Cheng, 41
+
+ Li-Wang, problem, 38;
+ flight, 376
+
+ Libyan problem, 162
+
+ Lidzbarski, Mark, on Jesus as Mandæan, 214 n.
+
+ Lies, and set language, 136, 137
+
+ Life. _See_ Being; Death; Sex; Waking-being
+
+ Light. _See_ Sight
+
+ Limes, Great Wall as, 41
+
+ List, Friedrich, relation to property, 345;
+ and English economics, 469
+
+ Literature, rural and urban, 93;
+ of Culture and Civilization, 107;
+ German and nationalism, 182;
+ and cosmopolitanism, 185;
+ Arabian research, 190;
+ and language history, 190;
+ hero-tales, 192;
+ Arabian Minne, and epic, 198, 250;
+ Chinese drama, 286;
+ Byzantine and Arabian, 304
+
+ Livy, and polis, 383
+
+ Lo-Yang, as royal residence, 92
+
+ Locke, John, and Continental Rationalism, 308
+
+ Logic, and opposites, 141;
+ and truth, 144;
+ and history, 144
+
+ Logos, John Gospel, 226;
+ Pseudomorphic and Arabian, 229;
+ Jezidi view, 236;
+ Arabian indwelling of spirit, light-sensation, 236, 237;
+ alteration in concept, 307.
+ _See also_ Trinity
+
+ Lombarda code, 76
+
+ London, as world-city, 99
+
+ Lorraine, as name, 161, 181
+
+ Louis XI of France, dynasty-idea, 381
+
+ Love, and cosmic beat, 166;
+ and religion, faith 265, 266;
+ and stability, 275;
+ cultural religious, 279;
+ and nobility, 351
+
+ Loyalists, American, 412 n.
+
+ Loyola, Ignatius, on moral, 272;
+ as Gothic, 296;
+ and world-politics, 299;
+ Puritanism, 302
+
+ Lü-pu-Wei, Syncretism, 312 n.
+
+ Lü-Shi Chun-tsiu, 312 n.
+
+ Lucca, Cæsar’s politics, 446
+
+ Luceres, tribe, 351, 382
+
+ Lui-Shi, and Wang-Cheng, 41;
+ as statesman, 418, 419;
+ tutor, 419 n.
+
+ Lukka, as name, 164
+
+ Luschen, Felix von, ethnological research, 129
+
+ Luther, Martin, as Gothic, 296;
+ as urban monk and schoolman, 297, 298;
+ and Devil-cult, 299;
+ lack of practicality, 299;
+ and science, 300
+
+ Lycurgus, laws, 64, 65
+
+ Lyell, Sir Charles, theory as English, 31
+
+ Lysander, and army, 406;
+ as victor, 422
+
+ Lysias, on speculators, 484
+
+
+ Macedonians, as rulers, 40;
+ schools and nationalism, 162 n.;
+ and Arabian Culture, 189.
+ _See also_ Alexander the Great
+
+ Machiavellism, and factions, 448
+
+ Machine. _See_ Technique
+
+ Macrocosm, animal’s microcosmic relation, 3, 4, 15;
+ man’s self-adjustment, 14.
+ _See also_ Cultures; History; Microcosm; Morphology; Nature;
+ Waking-being
+
+ Madrid, as provincial city, 99
+
+ Mælius, Sp., movement, 397
+
+ Magi, as term for priesthood, 175
+
+ Magian Culture. _See_ Arabian Culture
+
+ Magic, technique, 268, 271
+
+ Magna Charta, and control by nobility, 373
+
+ Magnesia, battle, 422
+
+ Magnitude, Classical money-concept, 486-489
+
+ Mahavira, Rationalism, 307
+
+ Mahayana, doctrine, 312, 313
+
+ Mahraspand, Mazdaism, 251
+
+ Maimon, Solomon, and Kant, 322
+
+ Maimonides, Moses, world, 241 n.;
+ collection of dogmas, 315;
+ and Spinoza, 321
+
+ Ma’in, Kingdom of, feudalism, 196;
+ geography, 196 n.
+
+ Mamertines, as people, 160
+
+ Man, lordship of sight, visual thought, 7-9;
+ language and understanding, theoretical thought, 9, 10;
+ and fear of death, 15, 16;
+ destiny and causality types, 16-19;
+ refutation of Darwinism, 32;
+ two great ages, 33;
+ in primitive Culture, 33, 34;
+ effect of agriculture, 89.
+ _See also_ Animal; Being; Microcosm; Sex; Waking-being
+
+ Management, American development, 82 n. _See also_ Technique
+
+ Manchester School, and Rationalism, 403
+
+ Mandæanism, as redemption-religion, 213;
+ John the Baptist and Jesus, 214;
+ survival, 214 n.;
+ disappearance, 252;
+ order-communities, 254
+
+ Maniakes, Turk, 427 n.
+
+ Manichæism, and Chaldean, 176;
+ origins, 209, 251;
+ Logos and Paraclete, 227, 251 n.;
+ development, 251;
+ missionarism, 260;
+ Albegensians, 260 n.
+
+ Mannheim, plan, 100 n.
+
+ Manufacturer, as economic class, 478
+
+ Manzikert, battle, 427
+
+ Mar Shimun, prince-patriarch, 177
+
+ Marcianus, and dynasty, 379
+
+ Marcion, Bible and Church, 225-228, 245;
+ period, 250;
+ and reform, 296
+
+ Marcionites, era, 239
+
+ Marcus Aurelius, as episode, 171;
+ religiousness, 313;
+ and peace, 430;
+ Cæsarism and Stoicism, 434 n.
+
+ Marduk, as deity, 206
+
+ Marib, Congress of Princes, 197, 304
+
+ Marinus, as biographer, 252
+
+ Marius, C., and money, 410;
+ and Cæsarism, 423;
+ and party, 451
+
+ Mark Gospel, 223
+
+ Market, status, 91, 480
+
+ Marozia, as destiny, 339
+
+ Marriage, law, control over it, 78, 365;
+ Civilization type, 105;
+ defined, 344 n.;
+ “in form” relation, 362
+
+ Marx, Karl, and Marxism, and property, 344;
+ and party, 450;
+ and effective theory, 454;
+ end of influence, 454, 45 5;
+ and English economics, 469;
+ and economic classes, 478;
+ and value, 482 n.;
+ and work, 492;
+ in Russia, 495 n.;
+ on machine-industry as bourgeois, 504 n.
+ _See also_ Socialism
+
+ Mary of England, and absolutism, 388
+
+ Mary-cult, Arabian development, 224;
+ victory at Ephesus, 257;
+ Western development, 288;
+ and contrition, 293;
+ effect of Reformation, 299
+
+ Materialism. _See_ Rationalism
+
+ Mathematics, and religion, 268
+
+ Matthew Gospel, Judaic character, 220 n.
+
+ Maule, Sir William H., and divorce laws, 64 n.
+
+ Maurists, and orders and schools, 346
+
+ Maurya and Sunga dynasty, and Imperialism, 41 n.
+
+ Mavali, and revolution, 424
+
+ Maximilian I, emperor, and law, 76;
+ dynasty-idea, 380
+
+ Mayan Culture. _See_ Mexican Culture
+
+ Mayapan, and Mexican Culture, 45
+
+ Mazarin, Jules, Cardinal, power, 389;
+ and Fronde, 390
+
+ Mazdaism, and chivalry, 198;
+ development, 251;
+ as State religion, 253;
+ missionarism, 260;
+ absorption, 260
+
+ Mazdak, reformation, 261;
+ and Karramiyya movement, 424
+
+ Mechanics. _See_ Technique
+
+ Medes, as rulers, 40;
+ as people, 167
+
+ Mediæval History, as term, 28
+
+ Medici, city nobility, 356;
+ economics and politics, 475;
+ small-scale traffic, 481 n.
+
+ Medicine, as priesthood, 478 n.
+
+ Medinet Habet, relief, 164 n.
+
+ Mediterranean region, influence of climatic change, 39 n.
+
+ Medrashim, style, 346
+
+ Megalopolitanism, and nomadism, 90;
+ and country, 94;
+ development, and provinces, 98, 99;
+ absolute intellect, 99;
+ city planning, 100;
+ future Western, 101;
+ Classical inner-town, 101;
+ final phase, death, 102, 107;
+ tension, 102;
+ sport, 103;
+ and sterility, 103-105;
+ and uniform type, 108;
+ and language, 155;
+ and cosmopolitanism, 184;
+ phase in Jewry, 317, 318;
+ and Fourth Estate and mob, 358, 399;
+ and public opinion, 400;
+ and Cæsarism, 431;
+ and economics, 484.
+ _See also_ Town
+
+ Megasthenes, on Calani, 175 n.
+
+ Mehlis, C., on Libyan problem, 162
+
+ Melfi, constitutions, 372
+
+ Memory, and the named, 140
+
+ Meng Tse, materialism and myth, 310, 312
+
+ Mercenaries, and Cæsarism, 428
+
+ Messana, democratic triumph, 396
+
+ Messiah, as common Arabian idea, 206;
+ of Mandæanism, 214;
+ attitude of Jesus, 215;
+ effect of Resurrection, 218
+
+ Metals, primacy, 500. _See also_ Smith
+
+ Metaphysics. _See_ Philosophy; Religion
+
+ Methodism, Pietism, practicality, 308
+
+ Mewes, Rudolf, on weather and war, 392 n.
+
+ Mexican Culture, development, 43;
+ violent death, 43;
+ reconstruction of history, 44, 45;
+ Civilization and Aztecs, 45;
+ jurisprudence, 66;
+ depopulation, 106, 107;
+ religious beginnings, 288;
+ fellah-religion, 315
+
+ Mexico City. _See_ Tenochtitlan
+
+ Meyer, Edward, on Persian host, 40 n., 167;
+ on history, 47, 50;
+ error on Egyptian nobility, 350 n.;
+ correct Egyptian chronology, 427 n.;
+ mistake on Roman Cæsarism, 432 n.
+
+ Michael III, emperor, and Bardas, 426
+
+ Michelangelo, and Devil-cult, 292
+
+ Microcosm, animal as, in macrocosm, 3-5, 15;
+ sense as organ, 6, 7;
+ waking-being, 7;
+ and cosmic beat, crowd, 18;
+ and history and nature, 23, 24;
+ and megalopolitanism, 90;
+ language as essential element, 132;
+ and sex, 327;
+ and Western technique, 504.
+ _See also_ Animal; Cosmic; Waking-being
+
+ Middle Kingdom, Chinese, and world-power, 373
+
+ Middle Kingdom, Egyptian, significance, 387
+
+ Middleman, as economic class, 478;
+ as economic master, 483, 484;
+ as agent of Western technique, 504.
+ _See also_ Economics; Money
+
+ Migrations, and peoples, 162-165;
+ small bands, 163, 167
+
+ Miletus, style of school, 345
+
+ Mill, John Stuart, and Pascal, 273
+
+ Milton, John, and concepts, 303
+
+ Minæans, tribal association, 174
+
+ Ming-Chu, period, 40, 387
+
+ Ming-ti, as ruler, 41
+
+ Minnesänger, Arabian, 198
+
+ Minoan art, and Mycenæ, 87-89;
+ as Egyptian, 88
+
+ Mir, status, 348
+
+ Mirabeau, Comte de, on law of nations, 366
+
+ Mirandola, Francesco della, and Devil-cult, 291
+
+ Mirian of Georgia, State religion, 253
+
+ Mirza Ali Mohammed, Gnosis, 228
+
+ Mishnah, completion, 71;
+ development, 208;
+ as commentary, 247;
+ origin, 316
+
+ Missionarism, Arabian, 259;
+ Islam, 304;
+ Pythagorean, 307;
+ Jewish, 318
+
+ Mithraism, as military order, 198, 254;
+ in Syncretism, 201, 253;
+ and Essenes, 211;
+ liturgy, 213 n.;
+ provenance, 314 n.
+
+ Mithridates, cultural basis of wars, 318, 321 n.
+
+ Mitteis, Ludwig, on Constantine’s legislation, 70 n.
+
+ Mob. _See_ Crowd
+
+ Modern History, as term, 28
+
+ Mohammed, predecessors as prophet, 204;
+ Paul’s analogy, 221;
+ as Logos, 236;
+ and consensus, 243;
+ revelation, 244.
+ _See also_ Islam
+
+ Moh-ti, and property, 344;
+ and military technique, 421 n.;
+ and politics, 453
+
+ Mollahs, law-men, 71
+
+ Moltke, Count Hellmuth von, leadership, 444
+
+ Mommsen, Theodor, false history, 50;
+ on political character of Roman Empire, 174 n.;
+ misunderstanding of Cæsarism, 432;
+ and Varus’ defeat, 487
+
+ Monarchy. _See_ Dynastic idea; Politics
+
+ Monasticism (Asceticism), Western rural and urban, 91, 297;
+ in Paganism, 204;
+ character and development of Arabian, 254;
+ Orphic, 283;
+ and orgiasm, 283;
+ sage, 307
+
+ Money, as urban, abstract, 97, 58;
+ and idea of property, 357;
+ rise as political force, and Rationalism, 401, 402;
+ in English politics, 403;
+ and class dictatorship, 404;
+ in Roman politics, 410, 411, 457-459;
+ Cæsarism and overthrow, 431, 433 n., 464, 506, 507;
+ and genealogy, 449 n.;
+ and democracy, 456;
+ in Western politics, and press, 460, 462;
+ and end of democracy, 463;
+ early status of coin as goods, 481;
+ beginning of concept as category, 481-484;
+ value-token and payment-medium, 483;
+ trader as master, 483, 484;
+ as power of Civilization, 485;
+ struggle against, 485;
+ and mobility, 485;
+ money-mass and value, 485 n.;
+ cultural symbols, 486;
+ Classical magnitude concept, 486, 495;
+ irrelation with Classical land value, 487;
+ Classical slaves as, 488, 496;
+ Western function-concept, book-keeping, 489, 490;
+ Western Culture and metallic, 490, 491;
+ and work, quantity and quality, 491-493;
+ capital, cultural basis, 493;
+ financial organization, cultural basis, 494;
+ Russian attitude, 495 n.;
+ struggle with technique, 505;
+ and Socialism, 506 n.
+ _See also_ Economics
+
+ Monophysites, importance, 47;
+ creed basis of law, 70;
+ as nation, 177;
+ and Mary-cult, 224;
+ origin, 257;
+ and starting-point of Islam, 258;
+ missionarism, 260;
+ and reform, 296
+
+ Monotheism, relation to Arabian Culture, 201 n.
+
+ Montanist movement, 227
+
+ Morale. _See_ Ethics; Spirit; Truth
+
+ Mormons, as people, 160
+
+ Morphology, of Culture languages, 152-155;
+ of peoples, 169;
+ of religious history, 275;
+ of social history, 348;
+ of economic history, 470, 476-480
+
+ Mortgages, Classical land, 487 n.
+
+ Mortmain, and established church, 177 n.;
+ in Egypt, 375
+
+ Moscow, character, 194
+
+ Mosque, and basilica, 230
+
+ Mother tongue, fallacy, 120;
+ and dynastic-idea, 183.
+ _See also_ Language
+
+ Motherhood, “versehen,” 126. _See also_ Demeter; Mary-cult; Sex
+
+ Motion, as problem of thought, 14-16;
+ Western concept and military art, 421;
+ money and mobility, 485.
+ _See also_ Technique
+
+ Motive, and language, 133
+
+ Müller, Frederick, race classification, 125
+
+ “Mufti,” 71
+
+ Muktara, as capital, 426
+
+ Multiplication table, dynamics, 66 n.
+
+ Murtada, philosophy, 321
+
+ Music, basis of charm, 8;
+ in English Parliamentarism, 403
+
+ Musonius Rufus, and peace, 430
+
+ Mutation theory, and Darwinism, 32;
+ and Cultures, 33, 36
+
+ Mutawakil, palace, 100 n.
+
+ Mycenæ, and Crete, 87-89;
+ and beast-formed deities, 276
+
+ Mysteries, Classical, 203. _See also_ Religion
+
+ Mysticism, Sufism, 176, 228, 242;
+ Arabian period, 200, 250;
+ John Gospel and Christian, 226;
+ longing of Western, 292;
+ of Rationalism and Pietism, 308;
+ Yesirah, 316;
+ fixed Jewish, 321
+
+ Myth, as theory, and cult, 268, 499;
+ relation to Greek, 284, 286;
+ time mythology, 286;
+ of Western springtime, 288-290;
+ modern ignorance of it, 290;
+ and Protestantism, 299
+
+
+ Naasenes, Book of, 213 n., 251 n.
+
+ Nabu-Nabid, overthrow, 207
+
+ Naganjuna, Mahayana doctrine, 313
+
+ Nahua, in Mexican Culture, 45
+
+ Names, and words, 138-141;
+ and spiritual change, religion, 139;
+ and the enigmatic, 139;
+ and sentence, 141;
+ and things, 148;
+ and people, 160;
+ and technique, 499
+
+ Napoleon I and Napoleonism, and dynastic-idea, 181;
+ and Désirée Clary, 329;
+ State-machine, formlessness, 404, 405;
+ army and personal rule, 407;
+ and military mobility, 421;
+ ruthlessness as victor, 422;
+ and Cæsarism, 428;
+ as destiny, 439 n.;
+ and tact of command, 444;
+ economics and politics, 475
+
+ Naranjo, and Mexican Culture, 44
+
+ Narses, expedition, 200
+
+ Nation, as term, 170, 362;
+ destiny, 170;
+ and city-building, 171;
+ separation, 171;
+ representation of minority, 172, 180, 183, 184;
+ character of Classical, 173;
+ of Arabian, 174-178;
+ of Western, 178-184;
+ of Chinese and Egyptian, 178 n.;
+ language basis, continued dynastic feeling, 183;
+ nobility as representative, 184;
+ cosmopolitanism, intelligentsia, and pacifism, 184;
+ peace and fellahism, 185, 186;
+ rise of idea, 385.
+ _See also_ Politics; Race
+
+ Nationality, Arabian creed basis, 69, 168, 210, 253, 254, 315, 317;
+ Arabian cult, and world Christianity, 219
+
+ Natural science, religious basis, 13;
+ English type of causality, 31;
+ physiognomic, 31;
+ reputation of Darwinism, 32;
+ beginning of Arabian, 200 n.;
+ dispensation and law, 267;
+ Western Culture and practical mechanics, 300;
+ theoretical basis in other Cultures, 301;
+ as diabolical, 302;
+ Jewish, 316;
+ scientists as priests, 478.
+ _See also_ Art; Nature; Technique
+
+ Nature, and cosmic and microcosmic, 23, 24;
+ adjustment to, cultural development and horizon, 25;
+ technical and theoretical knowledge, 25;
+ and peasant, 89;
+ of Rationalism, 305-308.
+ _See also_ Causality; History; Natural science
+
+ Nazarene, connotation, 214 n.
+
+ Nebo, as deity, 206
+
+ Nebuchadnezzar, henotheism, prayer, 206
+
+ Nehardea, school, 200, 210;
+ as capital of Exilarch, 208
+
+ Neo-Brahmanism, 315
+
+ Neo-Platonists, dualism, 234;
+ and revelation, 245;
+ period, 250;
+ as order, 254
+
+ Neo-Pythagoreans, community, 204, 254;
+ and revelation, 245;
+ period, 250
+
+ Nephesh, connotation, 234;
+ soul stones, 234 n.
+
+ Nero, and elections, 432;
+ and ideologues, 434
+
+ Nestorianism, creed basis of law, 70;
+ as nation, 177;
+ and Mary-cult, 224, 257;
+ formative influences, 228;
+ church language, 252;
+ second-century beginnings, 252 n.;
+ missionarism, 260;
+ and reform, 296
+
+ New Testament, Marcion as creator, 226, 227;
+ Marcion and Catholic, 228.
+ _See also_ Bible; Christianity; Gospels
+
+ New York, as world-city, 99
+
+ Newspaper. _See_ Press
+
+ Ngi-li, as religious source, 286
+
+ Nicæa, Council of, Constantine and, 257;
+ substance controversy, 257, 276
+
+ Nicephorus, power, 426
+
+ Nicholas I, pope, and world-power, 373
+
+ Nicholas of Cusa, as Western, 316 n.
+
+ Nicholas of Oresme, as scientist, 301
+
+ Nicias, treaty, 385
+
+ Nicodemia, as capital, 191
+
+ Nietzsche, Friedrich W., and value of truth, 12;
+ and technique, 302;
+ on duality of moral, 341
+
+ Nika Rebellion, 381 n.
+
+ Nirvana, rationalistic concept, 307
+
+ Nishapur, and Gundisapora, 200 n.
+
+ Nisibis, Jewish defence, 198;
+ location, 200 n.
+
+ Nobility, primary estate, 97;
+ as State, 172, 180, 183, 367;
+ beginning as estate, 280;
+ relation to other estates, 334, 335;
+ symbolic significance, being, destiny, 335-337, 340;
+ and family, 336;
+ big individuals and tradition, 338;
+ dependence of politics on, 339, 440;
+ and “training,” 340;
+ moral, 341;
+ and idea of property, 343;
+ and learning, 347;
+ common cultural land-bound estate, 350;
+ cultural styles, 350, 351;
+ foci of feelings, 351, 352;
+ conflict with priesthood, 352-354;
+ Classical, and polis, 355;
+ city movement, effect, new type, 355-357;
+ and Third Estate, 356;
+ State rule by minority, 370;
+ and absolutist State, 400;
+ development of Roman political, 409-411;
+ and political Islam, 424;
+ and party-form, 450.
+ _See also_ Estates; Feudalism; Oligarchy; Politics
+
+ Nomadism, pre-cultural and megalopolitanism, 89, 90
+
+ Normans, development of law, 75;
+ and finance, concept of money, 372, 489
+
+ Northcliffe, Viscount, and demagogy, 461, 463
+
+ Novel, as megalopolitan, 93
+
+ Novels, Justinians, 71
+
+ Number, and grammar, 146;
+ and religion, 268;
+ abstract, and abstract money, 481, 482;
+ and technique, 499
+
+ Numina, naming, 139
+
+
+ Objects and subjects, 369;
+ in politics, 441;
+ in economics, 479, 493
+
+ Occamists, and Copernican system, 301
+
+ Occupations, status of classes, and primary estates, 333, 348. _See
+ also_ Economics
+
+ Odoacer, historyless, 432
+
+ Oetinger, Friedrich C., Pietism, 308
+
+ Officialdom, common cultural development, 350;
+ rise of financial, 371;
+ Classical tenure and choice, 380, 383
+
+ Oigur realm, Manichæism, 260
+
+ Old Kingdom, as Gothic, 296;
+ money concept, 489 n.
+
+ Old Testament, and Christian canon, 221, 225, 226, 228, 245. _See
+ also_ Bible
+
+ “Old Women,” as phrase, 329 n.
+
+ Oldenbarneveldt, Jan van, power, 389
+
+ Oldendorp, Johann, and law of nature, 78
+
+ Oligarchy, early Roman, 375, 382;
+ and polis, 380-382;
+ and Reformation, 386 n.;
+ Classical democratic contentions, 394-398.
+ _See also_ Nobility
+
+ Olivarez, Count, power, 389
+
+ Oman, Charles W. C., on Byzantine army system, 199 n.
+
+ Omar, Puritanism, 304
+
+ Ommaiyads, overthrow, 424
+
+ Oñate, Conde de, power, 389
+
+ Onias, and the “Law,” 209
+
+ Opposites, word pairs and logic, 140
+
+ Oresme. _See_ Nicholas of Oresme
+
+ Orientation, defined, 133
+
+ Origen, Scholasticism, 229;
+ period, 250
+
+ Ornament, as taboo, 121;
+ cathedral as, 123;
+ and secular buildings, 123;
+ as expression-language, 134;
+ script as, 151;
+ and number, 268;
+ priesthood as, 337
+
+ Orphism, and Classical religious beginnings, 282;
+ asceticism, 283;
+ and reform, 296;
+ and Tyrannis, 386
+
+ Orvieto, frescoes, 292
+
+ Orsini, and Papacy, 354
+
+ Orthodoxy, and Arabian State, 177
+
+ Osrhoene, conversion, 177, 253
+
+ Ostrogoths, as episode, 171
+
+ Othman, war with Ali, 424
+
+ Otto I, and world-power, 373
+
+ Otto II, and Byzantium, 87
+
+ Outsiders, dediticii peregrins, 68 n.
+
+ Oxenstierna, Count Axel, power, 389
+
+
+ Pa Period, 387
+
+ Pachomius, and monasticism, 254
+
+ Pacioli, Luca, book-keeping, 490
+
+ Pætus, Thrasea, death, 434
+
+ Paganism, struggle with Christianity, 202. _See also_ Hellenism;
+ Pseudomorphosis; Syncretic Church
+
+ Paine, Thomas, and Third Estate, 403 n.
+
+ Painting, modern as dishonest, 136
+
+ Pais, Ettore, on Twelve Tables, 65 n.
+
+ Palæontology, refutation of Darwinism, 32
+
+ Palenque, and Mexican Culture, 45
+
+ Paley, William, and Third Estate, 403 n.
+
+ Palmyra, inscriptions, 206
+
+ Pan Ku, myth, 312
+
+ Papacy, pope and councils, 59;
+ as English idea, 294 n.;
+ family history, 337;
+ and dynamic space, 352;
+ idea and facts, 354;
+ control of Curia, 370;
+ world-power and contest with Empire, 373, 374;
+ clerical nobility and pope, 374;
+ decay, 376.
+ _See also_ Roman Catholic Church
+
+ Paper, Chinese invention, 501 n.
+
+ Papias, on Jesus’ teachings, 217 n.
+
+ Papinian, position as jurist, 71, 73
+
+ Papirius Carbo, and Crassius, 459
+
+ Paraclete, doctrine, 227. _See also_ Trinity
+
+ Paradosis, in Arabian creeds, 228
+
+ Paralii, and Tyrannis, 386
+
+ Paris, as France, 95;
+ as world-city, 99
+
+ Parliamentarism, character, 412-415;
+ as transition, 415, 416;
+ as seasonable political means, 446.
+ _See also_ Democracy; England
+
+ Parsees, and ghetto, 315;
+ security, 323
+
+ Parshva, Puritanism, 303
+
+ Parthians, and Persians, 167;
+ chivalry, 198;
+ wars as Jewish, 198
+
+ Party, place in politics, 449;
+ identity with Third Estate, 449;
+ nobility and forms, 450;
+ displacement by private politics, machine, 452, 454, 464.
+ _See also_ Politics
+
+ Pascal, Blaise, and Mill, 273;
+ and Devil-cult, 303
+
+ Pataliputra, as world-city, 99;
+ abandoned, 107
+
+ Patriotism, Western fatherland concept, 179, 183;
+ Jewish attitude, 320
+
+ Patrol-state, 366 n.
+
+ Paul, Hermann, on sentence, 141
+
+ Paul, Saint, position as jurist, 71;
+ and Christian Church, 220, 221;
+ Mohammed’s analogy, 221;
+ system and westward trend of Christianity, 221;
+ and Mark Gospel, 223;
+ and cults, 223;
+ and Greek, 224;
+ dualism, 234;
+ substance controversy as reversal of work, 258
+
+ Paulicians, iconoclasm, 304
+
+ Paullus, L. Æmilius, Pydna, 190 n.
+
+ Pausanias, and helots, 357, 396
+
+ Pavia, and legal study, 76
+
+ Pe-Ki, as general, 417;
+ overthrow, 419
+
+ Peace, Chinese League of Nations attempt, 38, 417, 429;
+ and fellahism, 185, 186;
+ Classical attitude, 385;
+ ruthless, of Cæsarism, 422;
+ as unhistorical, 429, 434;
+ as submission, 434, 441
+
+ Peacock, as Arabian symbol, 236
+
+ Peasantry, as plant, 89;
+ historyless, cosmic, 96;
+ and religion, 280;
+ relation to primary estates, vassalage, 348, 349;
+ reappearance at end of Culture, 435;
+ lack in England and America, 449 n.;
+ as economic class, 478.
+ _See also_ Being; Country
+
+ Pehlevi, as church-language, 252
+
+ Pelasgi, as name, 161
+
+ Pelham, Sir Henry, money in politics, 403 n.
+
+ Penestæ, status, 332
+
+ People, false idea, 113, 159;
+ as conscious linkage, 159;
+ and name, 160, 161;
+ and language, 161;
+ and provenance, and migration, 162-165;
+ and race, 165;
+ as soul unit, and events, 165, 169, 170;
+ Romans and Russians as example, 166-169;
+ morphology, 169;
+ creation of Western, 169;
+ as product of Culture, 169, 170;
+ characteristics of nations, 170, 171;
+ of West as result of events, 181;
+ _vis-à-vis_ nobility, 333;
+ rise of ideal concept, 393.
+ _See also_ Race
+
+ Pergamum, revolt of Aristonicus, 454
+
+ Pericles, age, 391
+
+ Peripatos, style, 345
+
+ Persecution, contrast of Classical and Arabian, 203
+
+ Persephone, cult, 283
+
+ Perseus, defeat, 190 n.
+
+ Persians, chronology, 27;
+ as rulers, 40;
+ language and people, 166;
+ problem of origin of religion, 168, 191;
+ cult and nationality, 168;
+ religion and Jewish, 207;
+ and revelation, 245;
+ end of theology, 261;
+ Arabian-type nation, ghetto, 315.
+ _See also_ Arabian Culture; Mazdaism; Zarathustra
+
+ Person, Classical notion, 60;
+ Arabian concept of incorporeal, 67, 68, 174, 177;
+ Classical concept and Western law, 81, 82
+
+ Personality, and contrition, 293;
+ Classical concept, 293 n.
+ _See also_ Destiny; Will
+
+ Peruvian Culture, destruction, 46
+
+ Peter, Saint, Gospel, 213 n., 223 n.;
+ Paul’s supersession, 221
+
+ Peter the Great, Petersburg plan, 101 n.;
+ and Russian pseudomorphosis, 192
+
+ Peter Lombard, and sacraments, 292
+
+ Petersburg, plan, 101 n.;
+ artificiality, 193
+
+ Petrie, W. M. Flinders, error on Egyptian chronology, 427 n.
+
+ Petrus Peregrinus, as scientist, 300;
+ and technique, 502
+
+ Phallic cults, 283, 286
+
+ Pharaoh, religious position, 279 n.;
+ and world-power, 373
+
+ Pharisees, tendency, 211
+
+ Pherecydes, as dogmatist, 282
+
+ Philip of Macedon, politics, 407
+
+ Philip II of Spain, and absolutism, 388
+
+ Philip IV of Spain, and world-power, 388
+
+ Philippi, battle, and Cæsarism, 423
+
+ Philistines, migration, 164
+
+ Philistinism, and Rationalism, 307
+
+ Philo, and Christianity, 229;
+ dualism, 234
+
+ Philology, Arabian, and research, 191. _See also_ Language
+
+ Philosophy, Buddhism and Indian, 49;
+ Western Culture and Classical, 57;
+ systematic, and untruth, 137 n.;
+ Jesus and metaphysics, 216, 217, 473 n.;
+ Western swing, 306;
+ and economics, 473.
+ _See also_ Ethics; Religion
+
+ Phocas, power, 427
+
+ Phœnicians, economic rôle, 481 n.
+
+ Physical geography. _See_ Landscape
+
+ Physiognomy, and race, 117. _See also_ Destiny
+
+ Pi-Yung, as symbol, 287;
+ and Shi-King, 352;
+ change, 357
+
+ Picture, and expression-language, 116;
+ as sign of language, letter, 134
+
+ Piedras Negras, and Mexican Culture, 45
+
+ Pietism, cultural manifestations, 308
+
+ Pilate, and Jesus, fact and faith, 216, 473 n.
+
+ Pindar, and being, 272;
+ and religion, 282
+
+ Pisistratus, and oligarchy, 382;
+ and peasantry, 386
+
+ Piso, conspiracy, 434
+
+ Pistis-Sophia, 213 n.
+
+ Pitt, William, and French Revolution, 412
+
+ Pittacus, laws, 64
+
+ Plant, essential character, cosmic, 3, 4;
+ being, 7;
+ and race, 115;
+ effect of transplanting, 130;
+ economic life, 473;
+ and technique, 499
+
+ Plantagenets, early, 182 n.
+
+ Plato, “ideas,” 58;
+ and polis, 173 n.;
+ and commentary, 247 n.;
+ and Orphism, 282;
+ cult, 314;
+ theory and Syracuse, 454
+
+ Play, cosmic, and microcosmic sport, 103. _See also_ Sport
+
+ Plebs, political rise and status, 349, 357, 408;
+ and political nobility, 409-411;
+ and populus, 451 n.
+
+ Pliny, on depopulation, 106
+
+ Plotinus, Scholasticism, 229;
+ ecstasy, 242
+
+ Pneuma, as Arabian principle, 57;
+ and law of creed-communities, 68;
+ as truth, 242.
+ _See also_ Dualism
+
+ Poetry, Arabian Minne, 198. _See also_ Literature
+
+ Polis, as Classical nation, 173;
+ and nobility, oligarchy, 355, 381;
+ official tenure and choice, 380, 383;
+ synœcism and aristocracy, 381, 382;
+ _civitas_ and _hostis_, 384;
+ normal war, 385;
+ Tyrannis and non-estate against estates, 386;
+ and democracy, 387;
+ burgher and peasant, 396;
+ destruction as idea, 405;
+ and subjugated territory, 407;
+ and Imperialism, 423;
+ and Classical finance, 494.
+ _See also_ Politics
+
+ Politics, and race, 116;
+ and intercourse by writing, 153;
+ and social ethics, 273;
+ English, and predestination, 304;
+ State and family, 329, 336;
+ estates as term, 329 n.;
+ “in form” estates, 330, 331;
+ as war, 330, 366, 440, 474;
+ estates and history of Cultures, 331;
+ estates and residue classes, 331-334;
+ Third Estate and non-estate, interrelation, 334;
+ nobility and priesthood, symbolic significance, 335, 339, 340;
+ great families, basis of dynastic principle, 336;
+ priesthood as opposite, 337;
+ big individuals and tradition, 338;
+ as life, dependence on nobility, 339, 440;
+ moral, 341;
+ custom-ethic and honour, 342, 343;
+ relation to economics, power and booty, 344, 345, 474-476;
+ State and historical stream, 361;
+ nations defined, primary estates and State, 362, 366;
+ and care and opposition, war as creator of State, 362;
+ State as inward connection, custom-ethic and law, 363;
+ orders of internal law, 363;
+ power and law, internal and external, 363-366;
+ barrack-state, 366 n.;
+ State control of external position, paramountcy, 367;
+ State and nobility as cognate, 367;
+ alienship of other estates, 368;
+ factual control and truths, 368;
+ importance of leadership, subjects and objects, 368, 369, 441,
+ 456;
+ estate rule and minority within class, 369, 370;
+ interregnum between feudalism and State, 375;
+ rise of State idea, 376;
+ individual ruler, inherited will and dynasty-idea, 376-378;
+ Classical oligarchy, 380;
+ rise of nation-idea, 385;
+ estates against monarchy and non-estate, 385-387;
+ non-estate as opposite estate, 387;
+ Chinese and Egyptian absolutism, 387;
+ Western Fronde, 388-391, 404;
+ Western absolutist period, cabinet-politics, 391-394, 400;
+ Classical oligarchic-democratic-alternative period, 394-398;
+ of Civilization, non-estate as independent force, 400-402;
+ Rationalism and money as forces, opposition and dependence,
+ 400-401, 455, 456;
+ Third Estate in England, 402, 403;
+ rational-money, class dictatorship, anti-form, 403, 404;
+ character of Second Tyrannis, 405-408;
+ army as power, 406;
+ polis and conquered territory, 407;
+ Roman State of this period, 408-411;
+ doctrinaire Parliamentarism, 412-415;
+ its decay, 415, 416;
+ Fronde period in Arabian Culture, 423;
+ Third Estate and revolution in Arabian Culture, 424;
+ pre-Civilization relics and future Western, 430;
+ theory and reality, 439;
+ personal, 441;
+ popular talent and leadership, 441;
+ men and measures, 441 n.;
+ conscienceless “doing,” 442;
+ seasonableness, command of means, 443, 446;
+ exemplariness in doing, 443;
+ tact of command, 444;
+ tradition of command, 444;
+ art of the possible, 445;
+ opportuneness, 446;
+ foreign and domestic, 447;
+ early cultural, factions, 448;
+ urban, and parties, 448, party and estates, 449-451;
+ displacement of party by private, machine, 452, 454, 464;
+ place and influence of theory, 453-455;
+ Roman demagogy, elections and courts, 457-460;
+ Western demagogy, press, 460-463;
+ battle between democracy and Cæsarism, 463, 464;
+ hero-death, 471;
+ and religion, 473 n.;
+ and financial credit, 491 n.
+ _See also_ Cæsarism; Church and State; Dynastic idea; Estates;
+ Feudalism; Foreign relations; History; Polis; Sex
+
+ Polybius, on sterility, 104;
+ on Flaminius, 411
+
+ Polycrates, and finance, 383;
+ economics and politics, 475
+
+ Pompey the Great, adventurer, 19;
+ principate and monarchy, 50;
+ and Rome, 383;
+ Triumvirate and Cæsarism, 413;
+ at Lucca, 446;
+ demagogy, 458, 459
+
+ Pompey, Sextus, and Cæsarism, 428 n.
+
+ Pompon, François, technique, 128 n. {sic}
+
+ Population, megalopolitanism and sterility, 103-105;
+ machine and increase, 502
+
+ Porcelain, Chinese invention, 501 n.
+
+ Porphyry, and Greek Church, 176;
+ Scholasticism, 229;
+ ecstasy, 242;
+ community of elect, 243;
+ on divine elements, 252
+
+ Poitiers, importance of Saracen defeat, 192
+
+ Portraiture, physiognomic studies, 126 n.
+
+ Portugal, separation from Spain, 390
+
+ Possession, concept, 480;
+ and fortune, 483;
+ Classical land and money, 487
+
+ Poverty, Western learning and vow, 346. _See also_ Monasticism
+
+ Power and booty, 344, 345, 347, 371, 372, 474
+
+ Prætors, urban, 374;
+ beginning, 382
+
+ Precedent, lack in Roman law, 62;
+ in Arabian law, 72
+
+ Predestination, and English politics, 304. _See also_ Will
+
+ Premonstratensians, as rural, 92
+
+ Press, and free opinion, 405;
+ and spatial infinity, 413;
+ as political means, 447;
+ power in Western demagogy, 460;
+ and gunpowder and war, 460;
+ expulsion of book by newspaper, 461;
+ dictum as public truth, 461;
+ education as instrument of power, 462;
+ syndication, as army, 462;
+ censorship of silence, 463
+
+ Pre-Socratics, asceticism, 283
+
+ Pretinax, edict on untended land, 106
+
+ Priene, plan, 100
+
+ Priesthood, primary class, 97;
+ beginning as estate, and nobility, 280;
+ and time mythology, 286;
+ Western and contrition-concept, 294, 294 n., 298;
+ relation to other estates, 334, 335;
+ symbolic significance, waking-being, causality, 335-338, 340;
+ relation to family and dynasty, 337;
+ as ornament, idea and person, 337, 338;
+ and life, 339;
+ as result of shaping, 340;
+ and heredity, 341;
+ moral, 341;
+ and property, 344;
+ and learning, style influence, 345-347, 478;
+ common cultural estate, 350;
+ cultural styles, 352;
+ conflict with nobility, 352-354;
+ city movement, effect, 355, 356;
+ Western law-making, 365;
+ Classical, as city officials, 381
+
+ Priestley, Joseph, and Third Estate, 403 n.
+
+ Primitive man, Ice Age, 33, 34;
+ and religion, 275.
+ _See also_ Man; Peasantry
+
+ Principate, in Pseudomorphosis, 349;
+ Sulla as heir, 423;
+ Augustus’ dyarchy as nullity, 432
+
+ Printing, symbolism, 413;
+ Chinese invention, 501 n.
+ _See also_ Press
+
+ Priscus, Helvidius, death, 434
+
+ Private law, first systematic, 66;
+ Western, and Roman law, 77, 79
+
+ Proclus, on Chaldean oracles, 245;
+ as Syncretic Father, 252;
+ biography, 252;
+ and substance controversy, hymn, 257 n.
+
+ Procopius, on Narses expedition, 200
+
+ Proculiani, legal school, style, 67, 346
+
+ Profane, as concept, 345
+
+ Proper, and “alien” in sensation, 6
+
+ Property, Classical concept and Western law, 82;
+ farmhouse as, 90;
+ origin of idea, groundness, 343;
+ power and booty, divergence, 344, 345, 347, 371, 372, 474;
+ effect of money, 357;
+ English law, 371.
+ _See also_ Economics; Money; Roman law
+
+ Prophetic religions. _See_ Apocalyptic
+
+ Protestantism. _See_ Puritanism; Reformation
+
+ Provinces, and megalopolitanism, 98, 99
+
+ Prudentes, law-men, 71
+
+ Prussia, as Hohenzollern creation, 182;
+ political rise, 392;
+ origin of finance, 489.
+ _See also_ Germany
+
+ Psalms, period, 249
+
+ Psellus, Michal Constantine, religiousness, 313
+
+ Pseudo-Clementines, romances, 237
+
+ Pseudomorphosis, Justinian, Christianity, and Corpus Juris, 74;
+ as historical term, 189;
+ of Arabian Culture, 189, 190;
+ effect of Actium, 191;
+ Charles Martel and Western avoidance, 192;
+ Russia, 192;
+ falsification of Arabian manifestations, 200;
+ aspects of Syncretism, 201-204;
+ Jewish rescue from, 210, 211;
+ Catholic Church and Marcionism, 227;
+ and substance controversy, 256-258;
+ feudalism, 349;
+ economics, 480 n.
+ _See also_ Religion; Roman law; Syncretic Church
+
+ Psychology, of the crowd, 18;
+ cultural basis, 271
+
+ Ptah of Memphis, and dogma, 281
+
+ Public opinion, rise, status, 400;
+ and press, 405
+
+ Pulcheria, and dynasty, 379
+
+ Pumbeditha, academy, 71
+
+ Punctuation, as language gesture, 134
+
+ Punic Wars, economics in, 410;
+ evolution of ruthlessness, 422
+
+ Purgatory of learning, 346 n.
+
+ Puritan Revolution, as Fronde, 389, 390
+
+ Puritanism, Islam as, 302-304;
+ basis, common cultural manifestation, 302-305;
+ and concepts, 303;
+ Pythagoreans, 303;
+ predestination and politics, 304;
+ and Rationalism, 305;
+ Jewish, 316;
+ and Fronde and Tyrannis, 386 n.;
+ and English Fronde, 389, 390
+
+ Pydna, battle, importance, 190, 409 n., 422
+
+ Pyramids, as cosmic, 92
+
+ Pyrrhonian skepsis, and Socrates, 309
+
+ Pythagoras, fictitious, 72 n.;
+ and commentary, 247 n.;
+ biography, 252
+
+ Pythagoreans, mysteries, 203;
+ and cult, 282;
+ Puritanism, 302, 303;
+ missionarism, 305;
+ style, 345;
+ Sybaris, 394
+
+
+ Qaro, Joseph, as expositor, 321
+
+ Qaraites, Puritanism, rise, 255, 316
+
+ Quirinus Pater, god, 382
+
+ Quirites, origin of name, 382
+
+
+ Rabbi, law-man, 71
+
+ Race, false idea of people, 113, 165;
+ and landscape, no migration, 113, 119, 129;
+ defined, 113;
+ and development of language, being and waking-being, 113, 114;
+ sensation, 114;
+ in plants, 115;
+ and history and politics, 116;
+ and totem, 116;
+ not classification but physiognomic fact, 117, 130;
+ American, 119;
+ house as expression, 120-122;
+ castle as expression, 122;
+ superficial and divergent mechanistic conception, 124, 125, 129;
+ hall-marks, inadequacy of skeletonic determination, 124, 128-130,
+ 175;
+ chaotic “living” elements in determination, 126, 127;
+ race-feeling as race-forming, 126;
+ statistics and ancestry, 127;
+ importance of movement-expression, 128;
+ spiritual differences, 128;
+ and sentences, 142;
+ and writing, 151;
+ and Culture-language, 153, 154;
+ cosmic beat and race hatred, 165, 166, 318;
+ and intellect, 166;
+ absolutist State as expression, 400;
+ Cæsarism and return to power, 431.
+ _See also_ Being; Language; Nation; People; Politics
+
+ Radio, and light, 9 n.;
+ as megalopolitan, 95 n.;
+ and distance, 150 n.;
+ and political tactics, 460
+
+ Rainald van Dassel, policy, 376
+
+ Rameses III, and sea-folks, 122, 164 n.;
+ historyless, 432
+
+ Ramnes, tribe, 351, 382
+
+ Ranke, J. Johannes, on skull forms, 128, 129
+
+ Ranke, Leopold von, on history, 46
+
+ Raskol movement, 278
+
+ Rationalism, and Puritanism, 305;
+ basis, cultural manifestations, 305, 308, 309;
+ sage, 307;
+ Mysticism and Pietism, 308;
+ dynamic character of Western, 309;
+ mock-religion, 310;
+ fading-out, 310;
+ rise in politics, 400;
+ and money, 401, 402;
+ in England, 403;
+ and class dictatorship, 403, 404;
+ and constitutions, 413;
+ and effective political theory, 453, 454
+
+ Ravenna, Theoderich’s tomb, 89
+
+ Re cult, 279, 281;
+ as Reformation, 296
+
+ Reading, defined, 149
+
+ Reason, content, 6;
+ and understanding, 13
+
+ Reflection, and grammar, 141, 143
+
+ Reformation, as general cultural movement, 295-297;
+ Western, as Gothic, 296;
+ and Renaissance, background, 297;
+ narrow circle of understanding, 298;
+ and Devil-cult, 299;
+ Calvin and world-politics, 299;
+ relation to intellectual creation, 300;
+ and oligarchy, 386 n.
+
+ Reger, Max, “playing” with music, 137
+
+ Reitzenstein, Richard, on Jesus as Mandæan, 214 n.
+
+ Religion, fear of the invisible, 8;
+ as basis of science, 13;
+ and causality, 14;
+ and theoretical knowledge, 25;
+ Arabian consensus, 59;
+ Arabian cults and scripts, 73, 150, 227 n.;
+ expression-language and communication-language, 116, 134;
+ and language-linkage, 116;
+ and knowledge, 136;
+ names and religious thought, 139;
+ and rigid language, 154, 155;
+ Persian, 168;
+ and Arabian nationality, 168, 174-178, 210, 242, 243, 253, 315,
+ 317;
+ Arabian, and research, 191;
+ geographical cults of Classical, 200;
+ Arabian fourth period, Mysticism and Scholasticism, 200, 250;
+ Arabian henotheism, 201;
+ Arabian dogmatic, 201;
+ Arabian prophetic, Messianism, 204-207, 209;
+ awakening of Arabian, 208, 249;
+ second or apocalyptic period, 208, 212, 249;
+ as lived metaphysics, 217;
+ distinct Arabian domains, 228;
+ Arabian dualism, spirit and soul, 233-236;
+ inward unity of Arabian, 235, 248;
+ Arabian Logos and light-sensation, 236, 237;
+ Arabian time-concept, 238, 249;
+ Arabian submission, Grace, 240;
+ Arabian community of the elect, 242, 243, 253;
+ Arabian sacred books and revelation, 243-246;
+ infallible word and interpretation, secret revelation, 245-247;
+ third Arabian period, religions of salvation, grand myths, 249;
+ three directions of Arabian forms, 251-253;
+ Arabian monasticism, 254;
+ Arabian missionarism, 259;
+ end of Arabian inner history, 261;
+ and being and waking-being, fear and love, 265, 499;
+ and light, 265;
+ intellect and faith, 266, 269-271;
+ cultural basis of fate, 267;
+ theory and technique, myth and cult, 268, 271;
+ God and soul, cultural basis of understanding of numina, 270;
+ faith and life, 271, 443;
+ works and moral, 271, 272;
+ moral and negations on being, 272-274;
+ and social ethics, 273;
+ cultural basis of truth, 274;
+ morphology of history, 275;
+ primitive organic religiousness, 275, 276, 278;
+ “pre”-periods of Cultures, 276-278;
+ of Cultures and landscape, 278;
+ beginning in Cultures, 279;
+ cultural character and prime symbols, 279;
+ Egyptian, 279, 281;
+ beginning of priesthood estate, 280;
+ peasant, 280;
+ narrow circle of cultural understanding, 280, 282;
+ obscurity of Classical beginning, 281-283;
+ outline of Classical beginning, 283, 284, 290 n.;
+ Classical unity, Greek and Roman cults, 284, 285;
+ later Classical, 285;
+ Chinese beginning, 285-287;
+ Chinese tao, 287;
+ newness of Western, depth-experience as symbol, 288, 294 n.;
+ reformation as general cultural movement, 295-297;
+ and Western practical mechanics, 300-302;
+ Puritanism, 302-305, 316;
+ Rationalism, 305-308;
+ Pietism, 308;
+ cultural basis of mechanistic conception, 308, 309;
+ Rationalism and myth fads, 310;
+ second religiousness, 310-314;
+ historyless fellah, 314;
+ phase in anti-Semitism, 321, 322;
+ phase of Fronde and Tyrannis, 386;
+ and church, 443 n.;
+ and economics, 473;
+ and technique, 502.
+ _See also_ Causality; Christianity; Church and State; Death;
+ Jews; Philosophy; Priesthood; Pseudomorphosis; Puritanism;
+ Reformation; Sacred books; Soul; Spirit; Creeds and sects by
+ name
+
+ Renaissance, history-picture, 28 n.;
+ relation to Classical Culture, 58;
+ style as urban, 93, 297;
+ and Italian nationalism, 182;
+ as Gothic, 291;
+ and personality, 293;
+ and Reformation, 297
+
+ Republic, Western, as negation, 413. _See also_ Democracy;
+ Parliamentarism
+
+ Resaina, school, 200
+
+ Resh-Galutha, 72;
+ position, 177, 208, 210
+
+ Resurrection, as Arabian principle, 59;
+ effect on Christianity, 218
+
+ Retz, Cardinal de, Fronde, 390
+
+ Retzius, Anders A., and skull-forms, 128
+
+ Revelation, Arabian concept, 243-246;
+ secret, 246
+
+ Revolution, period, 387;
+ Classical occurrence, 394, 405;
+ French, as unique manifestation, 411;
+ Parliamentarism as continuance, 415;
+ Arabian period, 424.
+ _See also_ Democracy; Politics
+
+ Rhegium, democratic triumph, 396
+
+ Rhodes, Cecil, actuality of leadership, 369;
+ significance, 435;
+ money and power, 459, 473, 475
+
+ Rhodes, plan, 100;
+ siege, 421
+
+ Rhodesia, oval house, 122
+
+ Richard I of England, imperial vassal, 374
+
+ Richelieu, Cardinal de, power, 389, 390
+
+ Robert the Devil, and finance, 372
+
+ Robespierre, Maximilian, adventurer, 19;
+ State-machine, 404, 405;
+ as mass-leader, 448 n.
+
+ Rodbertus, Johann K., and class dictatorship, 404
+
+ Roe, Sir Thomas, Turkish mission, 43 n.
+
+ Roger II of Sicily, finance, 489
+
+ Roman Catholic Church, Classical survivals in popular, 110;
+ and style of Western learning, 346;
+ changed basis of politics, 451 n.
+ _See also_ Christianity; Papacy
+
+ Roman law, basis in Classical world, _persona_ and _res_,
+ 60;
+ and divine law, 60;
+ as product of practical experience, no legal class, 61;
+ and Greek law, _jus civile_ and _jus gentium_, city law,
+ 61, 62;
+ lack of precedent, English contrast, 62, 63;
+ “collection” not “system,” 63;
+ lack of early stratification, 64;
+ codes as party politics, 64;
+ _jus gentium_ as imperial, 66;
+ Hadrian’s edict and petrification, 66;
+ development of jurisprudence, 66;
+ period of maturity, 66;
+ lack of basic ideas, 67;
+ schools, 67;
+ law of bodies, statics, 67;
+ and Arabian juridical person, 67, 68, 174, 177;
+ and Arabian creed-communities, emperor-worship, 68, 69;
+ Constantine and orthodox Christian law, 69, 70;
+ position of Arabian-Latin law, 70-72;
+ divine origin and Arabian written law, precedent and consensus,
+ 72-74;
+ framing and position of Corpus Juris, religious creation, 74;
+ independent development of Western law-history, 75;
+ development of Norman-English law, 75, 76, 78;
+ Germanic law in Southern Europe, 76;
+ Maximilian’s code, 76;
+ character in Germany and Spain, 76, 77;
+ Corpus Juris Canonici, 77;
+ Western conflict of _fas_ and _jus_, 78;
+ effect on Western culture, book and life, 78-80;
+ Classical bodies and Western functions, 80-82;
+ Western emancipation as future task, 83, 491, 505;
+ and established church, 177 n.;
+ and family, 330;
+ Western estates and, 365
+
+ Romanesque, soul, 180
+
+ Romanos, power, 426
+
+ Romans, origin of name, 382
+
+ Romanticism, and world-literature, 108;
+ and idea of people, 113;
+ and apocalyptic, 236, 237, 250
+
+ Rome, collapse of empire, 42;
+ historyful and historyless, 50;
+ as capital city, 95;
+ as provincial city, 99;
+ Classical block-tenements, 101;
+ suburbs of modern city, 101 n.;
+ decay of city, 107;
+ city as Etruscan, 164;
+ people of city, 166;
+ political character, 173, 174;
+ reason for rise, cultural necessity, 185, 422;
+ cults and Greek cults, 284;
+ family history, 336;
+ first settlements and tribes, 351, 382;
+ Plebs as Third Estate, 357, 408;
+ _vis-à-vis_ Carthage, 368;
+ early oligarchy, 375;
+ aristocratic control, attitude toward residue, 375, 382;
+ empire as polis, 383;
+ polis and citizenship, 383, 384;
+ fifth-century relations, 394-398;
+ status of Tribunate, 395, 415 n.;
+ Senate and Tribunate, opposition as “form,” 397;
+ period of military control, 407;
+ and border states, 407;
+ control by political nobility, Senate as engine, 409-411;
+ money in politics, demagogy, 410, 411, 457-459;
+ evolution and completion of Cæsarism, 422, 423, 430, 432-434;
+ political factions and parties, 450;
+ courts and politics, 459;
+ finance, 487, 494, 495
+
+ Roosevelt, Theodore, on race suicide, 106
+
+ Rossbach, battle, importance, 182
+
+ Rothschilds, founding of fortune, 402 n.
+
+ Rousseau, Jean Jacques, Rationalism, 307;
+ and class dictatorship, 404;
+ end of influence, 454
+
+ Ruach, connotation, 234
+
+ Rubens, Peter Paul, “tigress” expression, 128 n.
+
+ Ruma clan, 382
+
+ Rumina, goddess, 382
+
+ Russian Culture, pseudomorphosis, and Western Culture, 192-194;
+ and towns, 194;
+ Dostoyevski and Tolstoi as types, 194-196;
+ position of Bolshevism, 195;
+ regular and secular clergy, 254;
+ pre-cultural religiousness, 278;
+ soul-character, 295 n.;
+ unreal classes, 335 n.;
+ mir, 348;
+ and money, 495 n.;
+ present Christianity, 495 n.;
+ culture and machine, 504 n.
+
+ Russo-Japanese War, and military art, 421
+
+
+ Saba, ignored history, 190;
+ feudalism, 196-198;
+ geography, 196 n.;
+ religion, 209, 253;
+ chronology, 239
+
+ Sabazius, cult, 201
+
+ Sabbath, Chaldean and Jewish, 207
+
+ Sabiniani, legal school, style, 67, 346
+
+ _Sachsenspiegel_, 64, 76
+
+ Sacraments, Pagan, 203;
+ Western concept, and free will, 293;
+ effect of Reformation, 298.
+ _See also_ Contrition
+
+ Sacred books, Arabian nation, revelation, 243-246;
+ cultural attitude, 244 n.;
+ infallibility, interpretation, secret revelation, 245-247;
+ allegorical exegesis, 247;
+ commentary and authoritative chain, 249, 250.
+ _See also_ Bible
+
+ Sadducees, tendency, 211
+
+ Sage, as ideal, 307
+
+ Sahara, extension, 39 n.
+
+ Saint-Simon, Comte de, and class dictatorship, 404
+
+ Saint-Simon, Duc de, on nobility and nation, 172;
+ on new nobility, 357 n.
+
+ Salisbury, Marquess of, and family, 393
+
+ Salman, trial, 317
+
+ Samarra, plan, 100;
+ area, 101 n.;
+ abandoned, 107
+
+ Samuel, lord of Al Alblaq, 198
+
+ San Gimigniano, fortified towers, 355 n.
+
+ Sankhara, Neo-Brahmanism, 315
+
+ Sapor I, and Mazdaism, 251
+
+ Saracens, Charles Martel’s victory, 192. _See also_ Islam
+
+ Saragossa, General Privilege, 373
+
+ Sarapion, anchorite, 254
+
+ Sards, as name, 164
+
+ Sargon, contemporaries, 39
+
+ Sassanids, study neglected, 38, 190;
+ feudalism, 196-198, 423;
+ Mazdaic State religion, 253;
+ nobility and priesthood, 353;
+ as model for Byzantine ceremonial, 378 n.
+
+ Savelli, and Papacy, 354
+
+ Saviour, as title, 219 n.
+
+ Savonarola, Girolamo, and Renaissance, 291;
+ and reform, urbanism, 296, 297
+
+ Saxony, dynastic influence, 182
+
+ Scævola, Q. Mucius, private-law, 66
+
+ Scent, man’s relation, 7, 115. _See also_ Sense
+
+ Schadow, Johann Gottfried, art, 118
+
+ Schiele, Friedrich M., on Sadducees and Essenes, 211 n.
+
+ Schinkel, Hans F., art, 118
+
+ Scholasticism, Arabian and Pseudomorphic, 71, 200, 228, 229, 250;
+ of Rationalism, 305-308;
+ intellectual discipline, 463
+
+ Schuda, legends, 250
+
+ _Schwabenspiegel_, 76
+
+ Science. _See_ Intelligence, Natural science
+
+ Scipio, P. Cornelius (Africanus Major), and border States, 408;
+ and Cato, 411;
+ and Imperialism, 422;
+ and political organization, 452
+
+ Scipio, P Cornelius (Africanus Minor), murder, 423;
+ and Imperialism, 430;
+ and political organization, 452
+
+ Scots, and divine-given torments, 299 n.
+
+ Script. _See_ Writing
+
+ Sea-folk, and Egypt, 107, 122, 129, 164
+
+ Second religiousness, in Mexican Culture, 45 n.;
+ period and character, 310;
+ Syncretism, 311-313;
+ emperor-cult and fixed organizations, 314;
+ and Cæsarism, 386 n.;
+ Western, 455
+
+ Seibal, and Mexican Culture, 44
+
+ Seleucid Empire, as Arabian, 190;
+ era, 239
+
+ Senate, Roman, and Tribunate, 397, 398;
+ and political nobility, 409;
+ Augustus’ dyarchy as nullity, 432;
+ and courts, 460;
+ economics and politics, 475
+
+ Senatus Populusque Romanus, as Senate and Tribunate, 398;
+ formal restoration, 433
+
+ Seneca, L. Annæus, religiousness, 313
+
+ Sensation-content, 6
+
+ Sense, as microcosmic organ, and understanding, 5, 69;
+ human and animal, 114, 115;
+ and relation of microcosm to macrocosm, 499.
+ _See also_ Sight
+
+ Sentence, origin, and word, 141;
+ and race, 142;
+ verbs, 143.
+ _See also_ Language
+
+ Sentinum, battle, importance, 422
+
+ Sepoy Mutiny, cultural basis, 321 n.
+
+ Septimus Severus, historyless, 432
+
+ Serapis-cult, origin, 310
+
+ Sertorius, Quintus, and Cæsarism, 428 n.
+
+ Sesostris I, absolutism, 387
+
+ Sesostris III, absolutism, 387
+
+ Sethe, Kurt, on Egyptian script, 108 n.
+
+ Seuse, Heinrich, on Mysticism, 292
+
+ Sex, cosmic organ, 5;
+ Civilization and sterility, 103-105;
+ “versehen,” 126;
+ conception as sin, 272;
+ and Classical cults, 283;
+ orgiasm and asceticism, 283;
+ elements of duality, war, 327, 328;
+ and “form,” 331;
+ and State, 362.
+ _See also_ Being; Family; Monasticism
+
+ Sforza, Catherine, heroism, 328
+
+ Shak-el-Arab, Mandæanism, 214 n.
+
+ Shamir Juharish, feudalism, 196
+
+ Shan-Kur {sic} Period, 416
+
+ Shang dynasty, mythology, 286, 379 n.
+
+ Shantung, Manichæans, Nestorians, and Islam, 260, 261
+
+ Shaping, and training, 331, 340
+
+ Shaw, George Bernard, on free woman, 105;
+ Undershaft as type, 475 n.;
+ on money and life, 484
+
+ Sheridan, Richard B. B., and French Revolution, 412
+
+ Shi, as title, 41, 418
+
+ Shi-hwang-ti, and second religiousness, 310;
+ and Chinese history, 434
+
+ Shi-King, as religious source, 286;
+ love songs, 352
+
+ Shia, and Chaldean, 176
+
+ Shiites, Logos-idea, 236 n.;
+ beginning, 424
+
+ Shirazi, philosophy, 321
+
+ Shneor Zalman ben Baruch. _See_ Salman
+
+ Shu-Ching, as religious source, 286
+
+ Shuiski, Vassili, period, 192
+
+ Sibylline books, character of Classical, 244 n.
+
+ Sicily, Norman state, 372, 489;
+ democratic triumph, 396;
+ and Maniakes, 427 n.
+
+ Siculi, as name, 164
+
+ Siena, fortified towers, 355
+
+ Sight, as supreme sense, 6;
+ bodily and mental, 7;
+ and waking-being, 7;
+ lordship in man, 7-9;
+ invisible and fear, 8;
+ and race, 114, 128;
+ and words, 140;
+ and verbs, 143;
+ Arabian light-sensation, “cavern” and Logos, 233, 236, 237;
+ light and religion, 265.
+ _See also_ Sense
+
+ Sign, and language, 134;
+ and script, 149
+
+ Signorelli, Luca, frescoes and the Devil, 292 n.
+
+ Simplicius, and commentary, 247
+
+ Sinuhet, biography, 387
+
+ Skeleton, and race, 124, 128-130, 175;
+ and landscape, 130
+
+ Skleros, power, 427
+
+ Skoptsi, as manifestation, 278
+
+ Skull. _See_ Skeleton
+
+ Slavery, Roman freedmen and citizenship, 166 n.;
+ Classical and money, end, 349 n., 480, 488, 496;
+ Irak rebellion, 426;
+ attitude of Plebs, 451 n.;
+ technique, 479 n., 503;
+ Western status, 488 n.
+
+ Sleep, as vegetable, 7
+
+ Smith, Adam, relation to property, 345;
+ and Hume, 403;
+ and economic thought, 469;
+ theory of value, 491
+
+ Smith, Elliot, ethnological research, 129
+
+ Smiths, guild and tribe, 479
+
+ Socialism, money and movement, 402;
+ effect on Capitalism, 454, 464 n., 506 n.;
+ and Cæsarism, 506.
+ _See also_ Marx
+
+ Society, origin, 343
+
+ Sociology, Jesus’ indifference, 217
+
+ Socrates, Rationalism, 307;
+ as spiritual heir and ancestry, 309
+
+ Sohm, Rudolf, on German jurisprudence, 80
+
+ Sol Invictus, cult, 201;
+ and Syncretism, 253
+
+ Solomon, fictitious, 72 n.;
+ Psalms, 213 n.
+
+ Solon, Egyptian influence, 62 n.;
+ character of law, 63-65;
+ and impiety, 282;
+ economics and politics, 475
+
+ Sombart, Werner, on book-keeping, 490
+
+ Sophists, and Socrates, 309;
+ and Chinese Cæsarism, 418
+
+ Sorel, Albert, and French Revolution, 399 n.
+
+ Soul, cultural and intercultural forms, 56;
+ cultural significance, 59;
+ of town, 90;
+ and language, 137;
+ and people, 165;
+ and spirit in Arabian dualism, indwelling, 234-236;
+ Western and Russian, 295 n.
+ _See_ Religion; Spirit; Will
+
+ Sound, as sign of language, word, 134
+
+ Space, extension and waking-being, 7;
+ and truths, 12;
+ Arabian concept, 233;
+ and time and religion, 265.
+ _See also_ Time
+
+ Spain, physical changes, 39 n.;
+ and Roman law, 77;
+ Jewish Culture, 316;
+ period of absolutism, 388;
+ Fronde conflict, 390;
+ origins of accountancy, 489
+
+ Sparta, helots, 332, 349, 357;
+ _vis-à-vis_ Athens, 368;
+ royal succession, 380;
+ oligarchic-democratic struggle, 396, 397
+
+ Spartacus, and Cæsarism, 428 n.
+
+ Spartiates, as feudal, 375
+
+ Speaking, and language, 117, 125
+
+ Speculators, as cultural phenomenon, 484
+
+ Spence, Lewis, on Mexican chronology, 44 n.
+
+ Spener, Philipp J., Pietism, 308
+
+ Spenta Mainyu, Persian Holy Spirit, 244
+
+ Sphærus, influence, 454 n.
+
+ Spinden, Herbert J., researches in Mexican Culture, 44 n.
+
+ Spinoza, Baruch, Gnosis, 228;
+ Arabian metaphysic, 241, 321;
+ on contemplation, 242;
+ expulsion, 317
+
+ Spirit, Arabian pneuma, 57;
+ and soul in Arabian dualism, indwelling, 234-236.
+ _See also_ Body; Religion; Soul; Waking-being
+
+ Sport, and Civilization, 103
+
+ Stanley, Arthur P., on Islam and Christianity, 304 n.
+
+ State. _See_ Politics
+
+ States-General, calling, 373;
+ overthrow, 388
+
+ Statics, Roman law, 67
+
+ Steam-engine, effect, 502
+
+ Stein, Lorenz von, on money, 485
+
+ Stenography, character, 152
+
+ Sterility, and Civilization, 103-105
+
+ Stoicism, and jurisprudence, 62;
+ Rationalism, 307;
+ Pietism, 308;
+ and second religiousness, 312;
+ style of school, 345;
+ improvidence, 372;
+ and Cæsarism, ideologues and conspiracy, 433, 434;
+ political influence, 454
+
+ Streets, cultural attitude, 94
+
+ Stuarts, and Roman law, 365 n.;
+ and dynasty, 388, 389
+
+ Studion, monk-state, 314
+
+ Style, Western, external effects, 46;
+ intercultural, 87-89;
+ as urban, 92;
+ and Civilization, 108, 109;
+ rigid and living, surface mixture, 123;
+ priesthood and, of learning, 345
+
+ Su-tsin, career, 417;
+ character, 419
+
+ Subjects and objects, 369;
+ in politics, 441;
+ in economics, 479, 493
+
+ Submission, as Arabian concept, 240
+
+ Substance, Arabian religious concept, 244;
+ controversy and Christian split, 255-258.
+ _See also_ Trinity
+
+ Succession Wars, character, 392
+
+ Sudra, as caste, 332;
+ and tribes, 348
+
+ Sufism, and Chaldean, 176;
+ Gnosis, 228;
+ and contemplation, 242;
+ Pietism, 308;
+ and Jewish Mysticism, 321.
+ _See also_ Islam; Mysticism
+
+ Sulla, L. Cornelius, and princeps, 423;
+ and demagogy, 458;
+ and courts, 460
+
+ Sultanate, rise over caliphate, 425, 426
+
+ Sumer, and Arabian Culture, 189 n.
+
+ Sun-tse, on war, 417 n., 419 n.;
+ character, 419 n.;
+ anecdote, 420 n.
+
+ Sura, academy, 71, 200
+
+ Swedenborg, Emanuel, Pietism, 308;
+ and Yesirah, 316
+
+ Sybaris, destruction, 303, 394
+
+ Symbolism, farmhouse, 90;
+ peacock, 236;
+ cultural religious prime symbols, 279, 287, 288;
+ colour, 289;
+ clock, 300 n.;
+ Wandering Jew, 317;
+ printing, 413;
+ Classical coin, 486
+
+ Syncretic Church, and emperor-worship, 68;
+ as name, 68 n.;
+ cults and “Greeks,” 176;
+ Arabian churches in Classical style, 201;
+ reversal, Classical cults as Eastern Church, 102;
+ Paganism and Christianity, sacraments and other elements, 203,
+ 204;
+ Jewish rescue, from, 210;
+ Jesus sects, 220 n.;
+ development, parallelism, 252;
+ State religion, 253;
+ monasticism, 254;
+ westward expansion, 255;
+ missionarism, 259;
+ end of theology, 261.
+ _See also_ Pseudomorphosis; Religion
+
+ Syncretism, in second religiousness, 311-313. _See also_
+ preceding title
+
+ Synesius, as Neo-Platonist, 252
+
+ Synod of a Hundred Chapters, 278
+
+ Synod of Antichrist, 278
+
+ Synœcism, Classical, 173, 355, 381, 382;
+ Roman, 383
+
+ Syntax, and grammar, 142;
+ period, 145
+
+ Syracuse, as provincial city, 99;
+ as megalopolis, 382 n.;
+ democratic triumph, 396;
+ colonization, 405;
+ class proscriptions, 405, 406 n.;
+ siege, 421;
+ and Plato’s theory, 454
+
+ Syrian Law-book, importance, 64, 70
+
+ Sze-ma-tsien, on Contending States, 417;
+ as compiler, 418 n.;
+ biographies, 454 n.
+
+
+ Taboo, relation to waking-being and language, 116, 154;
+ dependence on totem, 117, 265;
+ in art, 118;
+ and cathedral, 122;
+ and script, 151;
+ space-fear, 265;
+ and technique, 268, 271;
+ moral, and negations, 272, 342.
+ _See also_ Totem
+
+ Tacitus, Cornelius, on Decemvirs’ code, 65;
+ philosophical confusion, 238;
+ and polis, 383;
+ on Musonius Rufus, 430;
+ and Cæsarism, 434 n.
+
+ Tai-dsung, and Islam, 261
+
+ Talleyrand-Périgord, Charles de, as politician, 446
+
+ Talmud, as creed law, 69;
+ and Chaldean, 176;
+ development, influences, 208, 209
+
+ Tammany Hall, as type, 452 n.
+
+ Tannaim, class, 71
+
+ Tanvasar, and new Avesta, 250, 251
+
+ Taoism, and Pacifism, 185;
+ principle, 287;
+ alteration in concept, 307;
+ expansion, 308;
+ Syncretism, 312, 315;
+ of Han period, 314;
+ and priesthood, 352;
+ and Cæsarism, 434 n.
+
+ Tarquins, fall, 65
+
+ Tarragona, Jewish city, 316
+
+ Tartars, Russian release, 192
+
+ Taxes, purpose, 475 n.
+
+ Tchun-tsin-fan-lu, 454 n.
+
+ Technique, and truth, 144 n.;
+ and theory in religion, 268, 271;
+ and Classical city-religions, 285;
+ and Western science, 300, 302;
+ and Rationalism, 306;
+ development of military, 420-422;
+ influence on Western economic thought, 469;
+ machines and Western slavery, 488 n.;
+ and plant, 499;
+ of animal movement, involuntary, 499;
+ conscious-knowing, 499;
+ tyrannical theory, 500;
+ development out of nature, 500;
+ under Classical Culture, 500;
+ Western passion, Gothic, 501;
+ effect of steam-engine, 502;
+ religious origin, and Devil, 502, 504, 504 n., 505;
+ Western and infinity, conquest of nature, 503, 504;
+ machine-industry as master of Western Civilization, 504;
+ its agents, 504;
+ machine-industry as Western bourgeois, 504 n.;
+ other cultures and machine, 504 n.;
+ engineer as priest, 505;
+ struggle with money, 505
+
+ Telemachus, and dynasty, 380
+
+ Telescope, Chinese invention, 501 n.
+
+ Tell-el-Amarna letters, 166
+
+ Ten Thousand, as polis, 160 n.
+
+ Tenochtitlan, destruction, 44;
+ founding, character, 45, 99
+
+ Tension, and beat, 4;
+ and waking-being, 7;
+ and Civilization and intelligence, 102.
+ _See also_ Waking-being
+
+ Tertullian, Montanist, 227;
+ and Western Church, 229;
+ period, 250
+
+ Teutoburger Wald, Varus’ defeat, 48 n.
+
+ Teutonic Knights, finance, 489
+
+ Tezcuco, as world-city, 99
+
+ Thebes, as Egypt, 95;
+ as world-city, 99;
+ rise of dynasty, 428
+
+ Themis, and Dike, 376, 378
+
+ Theocritus, “playing” with expression, 137
+
+ Theoderich, tomb, 89
+
+ Theodore of Studion, and Leo V, 425;
+ as party leader, 449
+
+ Theognis, and _carpe diem_, 383
+
+ Theory, development, dominance, 10, 500;
+ and technique in religion, 268, 271;
+ cultural attitude toward scientific, 301;
+ correctness and technical value, 500 n.
+
+ Thing, legal Classical notion, 60
+
+ Third Estate. _See_ Democracy
+
+ Thirty Years’ War, as consequence, 181;
+ political aspect, 388, 391;
+ Wallenstein’s idea and fall, 389
+
+ Thomas, Saint, Gospel, 213 n.;
+ Acts, romances, 236, 251 n.
+
+ Thomas Aquinas, philosophy, 172 n.;
+ and Devil-cult, 291;
+ and sacraments, 293
+
+ Thought, defined, development of theoretical, 10;
+ and life, facts and truths, 11-13;
+ compulsion, 12;
+ causality-men, place in life, 16-19.
+ _See also_ Waking-being
+
+ Thucydides, ahistoric, 24
+
+ Thurii, plan, 100
+
+ Tiberius, as historyful, 171;
+ economics and politics, 432, 475
+
+ Tikal, and Mexican Culture, 44
+
+ Tilly, Count of, and Wallenstein, 389
+
+ Time, and facts, 12;
+ and dynastic-idea, 179;
+ Arabian concept, ordained period, 238-240, 249;
+ and space and religion, 265;
+ and truth, 271;
+ mythology, 286.
+ _See also_ Being; Destiny; History; Space
+
+ Tiresias, and Classical religious beginnings, 282, 350
+
+ Tities, tribe, 351, 382
+
+ Tobit, as Arabian, 208
+
+ Togrulbek, power, 427
+
+ Toledo, Jewish city, 316
+
+ Toleration, Classical and Arabian attitude, 203
+
+ Tolstoi, Leo, Western soul, 194-196;
+ conception of Jesus, 218
+
+ Topinard, Paul, race classification, 125
+
+ Totem, relation to being and race, 116;
+ in art, 118;
+ and dwelling-house, 121;
+ and castle, 122;
+ in language, 154;
+ time-fear and taboo, 265;
+ moral, 342.
+ _See also_ Taboo
+
+ Touch, as primary sense, 6. _See also_ Sense
+
+ Tournament, as manifestation of nobility, 352
+
+ Tours, importance of Saracen defeat, 192
+
+ Town, and Culture, 90;
+ soul, 90;
+ relation to country, 91;
+ cultural type, 91;
+ and market, 91, 480;
+ and style, 92;
+ “visage” as cultural, 93;
+ relation to landscape, 94;
+ city history as world-history, 95, 96;
+ domination of capital city, cultural basis, 95, 381;
+ and intellect, 96;
+ great and little, spiritual distinction, 97;
+ and monetary idea, and dictatorship, 97, 98;
+ Civilization and overflow, 100;
+ and writing, 152;
+ script speech, 155;
+ and nations, 171;
+ Russia and, 194;
+ and Renaissance-Reformation movement, 297;
+ and science, 300;
+ and Puritanism, 302;
+ and Rationalism, 305;
+ consciousness and personal freedom, 354, 356, 358;
+ burgher estate, 355;
+ movement of primary estates to, 355, 356;
+ and State-idea, 377;
+ relation of politics and economics, capitalism, 476, 477, 493;
+ effect on trade, 481, 484.
+ _See also_ Causality; Megalopolitanism; Polis; Politics
+
+ Trade, and politics, 474;
+ as substitute for war, 474.
+ _See also_ Economics
+
+ Tradition, place in cultural history, 338;
+ prevision law, 363;
+ of political leadership, 444
+
+ Training, and shaping, 331, 340
+
+ Trajan, historyless, 432
+
+ Tramilæ, as name, 164
+
+ Transubstantiation, new English controversy, 309 n.
+
+ Trdat of Armenia, State and Church, 253
+
+ Trebatius Testa, C., and Cicero, 458 n.
+
+ Tree of Knowledge, and cross, 180 n.
+
+ Tribes, Arabian pre-cultural associations, solution, 173, 176;
+ as names for priesthoods, 175;
+ occupational, 348, 479
+
+ Tribonian, as jurist, 73
+
+ Tribunate, and Plebs, 357;
+ beginning, status, as lawful Tyrannis, 394-398, 433;
+ consular, 397;
+ and Senate, survival, 397, 398, 433;
+ blind incident, 415 n.;
+ Marius as heir, 423;
+ and party, 451
+
+ Trinity, and Arabian pneuma, 68, 244. _See also_ Logos; Substance
+
+ Triumvirates, and border States, 408;
+ and Cæsarism, 423;
+ first, 454
+
+ Troeltsch, Ernst, on Augustine as Classical, 241 n.
+
+ Trojan War, as beginning of history, 27;
+ feud or crusade, 282
+
+ Troubadours, Arabian, 198;
+ relation to Renaissance, 297
+
+ Truth, and facts, 11, 12, 47;
+ cultural basis, 58;
+ and speech, 137, 144;
+ abstract and living, 147;
+ Arabian pneuma, 242;
+ Arabian sacred book, 243;
+ experience, 268;
+ and time, 271;
+ and current of being, history, 274;
+ and politics, 368;
+ influence of press, 461.
+ _See also_ Ethics; Faith
+
+ _Tshou-li_, on officialdom, 372
+
+ Tshun-tsin, period, 391
+
+ Tsi, in period of Contending States, 417
+
+ Tsin, imperialistic State, 38, 41;
+ and Taoism, 185;
+ and Tsu, 368;
+ rise in period of Contending States, 416-419
+
+ Tsu, and Tsin, 368;
+ in period of Contending States, 417, 418, 454
+
+ Tung Chung-Shu, on Middle Kingdom, 373 n.
+
+ Turfan manuscripts, 213 n., 252
+
+ Turgot, Anne R. J., overthrow, 411 n.
+
+ Turks, and Cæsarism, 426, 427
+
+ Tursha, as name, 164
+
+ Twelve Tables, character, 63, 65;
+ importance, 65 n.;
+ commentary, 66;
+ class law, 365;
+ significance, overthrow, 396
+
+ Tyche, and lot-choice of officials, 383
+
+ Tyrannis, first, preceding oligarchy, 375;
+ fall of Tarquinian, 382;
+ significance, 386;
+ and Tribunate, struggle for lawful, 394-398;
+ character of second, 405-408.
+ _See also_ Politics
+
+
+ Ujjaina, as world-city, 99
+
+ Ulemas, law-men, 71
+
+ Ulpian, as jurist, 71
+
+ _Unam sanctam_ bull, 376
+
+ Understanding, and sensation, 6;
+ language and emancipation, thought, 9, 10;
+ and reason, 13;
+ meaning, 133, 136;
+ as causal, 266;
+ and faith, 266, 269-271
+
+ United States. _See_ Americans
+
+ Ur, tombs, 35 n.
+
+ Uxmal, and Mexican Culture, 45;
+ as world-city, 99
+
+
+ Valentinian III, Law of Citations, 73, 248
+
+ Valentinus, period, 250;
+ and substance, 256
+
+ Value, early lack of concept, 480;
+ money and value-in-itself, 482;
+ theories as subjective, 482 n.;
+ money and standard, 485 n.;
+ irrelation of Classical land and money, 487;
+ Classical attitude toward art, 487;
+ Western concept of work, 491-493.
+ _See also_ Economics
+
+ Varro, M. Terentius, era, 239
+
+ Varus, P. Quintilius, defeat, site, 48, 487
+
+ Vasari, Giorgio, and return to nature, 291
+
+ Vase-painting, Exekias, 135
+
+ Vasili Blazheny, style, 89
+
+ Vassalage, rise and significance, 349;
+ change to money basis, 357.
+ _See also_ Feudalism; Slavery
+
+ Vegetable. _See_ Plant
+
+ Venice, and money-outlook, 97 n.;
+ small-scale traffic, 481 n.
+
+ Verbs, place in language development, 143
+
+ Vergennes, Comte de, as end of period, 398
+
+ Verres, Caius, wealth as object, 459
+
+ Vespasian, war on Judea, 210;
+ and ideologues, 434
+
+ Vesta, and economics, 472
+
+ Village, and town, 91
+
+ Vindex, unimportance, 50
+
+ Virtue, change in concept, 307
+
+ Vladimir of Kiev, epic cycle, 192
+
+ Vohu Mano, as Word of God, 244
+
+ Voltaire, and Rationalism, 305
+
+ Vries, Hugo de, mutation theory, 32 n.
+
+
+ Waking-being, as microcosmic, and being, 7, 11, 13;
+ visual thought, 7-9;
+ language and thought, 9, 10, 114;
+ life and thought, facts and truths, 11-13, 16;
+ adjustment to macrocosm, 14, 24;
+ and causality, 14;
+ and problem of motion, death, 14-16;
+ and intercultural history, 56;
+ and money, 98;
+ upward series of utterances, 116;
+ and taboo, 117;
+ willed activity, 133;
+ and reflection, 141;
+ cultural oppositions, 233;
+ and religion, 265, 499;
+ and priesthood, 335;
+ and economics, 473;
+ and sense, 499;
+ ultimate fall, 507.
+ _See also_ Being; Causality; Economics; Intelligence;
+ Language; Microcosm; Religion; Space; Town
+
+ Wallenstein, Albrecht von, idea, power and fall, 389
+
+ Wandering Jew, symbolism, 317
+
+ Wang, as title, 379
+
+ Wang-Cheng, rule, 41, 418, 423
+
+ War, and politics and economics, 330, 366, 440, 474;
+ and nobility, 351;
+ as great creator, 362;
+ as normal Classical condition, 385;
+ character of Baroque, 392;
+ Pe-Ki as general, 417 n.;
+ Sun-tse as authority, 417 n., 419 n.;
+ change in character under Civilization, 419-422;
+ nineteenth-century substitute, 428;
+ expected Western period, 429;
+ as cultural necessity, 429, 434;
+ relation to press, 460;
+ and hunger, 471.
+ _See also_ Army; Peace
+
+ Wartburg, cathedral art, 123
+
+ Washington, plan, 100 n.
+
+ Washington Conference, as prelude of war, 430
+
+ Wealth. _See_ Economics; Money
+
+ Wedgwood, Josiah, ware, 491
+
+ Wei-Yang, character, 419
+
+ Weill, Raymond, on Hyksos, 428 n.
+
+ Weininger, Otto, Arabian metaphysic, 322
+
+ Weissenberg, Samuel, on Jewish type, 175
+
+ Wellington, Duke of, rise, 406
+
+ Welser, city nobility, 356
+
+ Wenceslaus, as emperor, 376
+
+ Wesley, John, practical Pietism, 308
+
+ Westermann, Diedrich, language investigation, 140
+
+ Western Culture, as historic, 28;
+ and human and universal history, 28;
+ individuality in historical attunement, 29, 30;
+ future historical achievement, 30, 46, 47, 55;
+ landscape and outside effect, 46;
+ transfer of Christianity to, 59, 235, 237, 258;
+ independent legal development, 75, 76;
+ Roman law in, 76-78;
+ effect of Roman law, 78-83;
+ and antique, 79;
+ future jurisprudence, 80-83, 505;
+ future cities, 101;
+ present stage of Civilization, 109;
+ and mother tongue, 120;
+ and script, 150;
+ and people, 169;
+ nations under, dynastic-idea, 179-181, 378, 381;
+ races, nations, and dynasties, 181-183;
+ dynastic-idea and overthrow of monarchy, language-idea, 183;
+ Charles Martel and avoidance of pseudomorphosis, 192;
+ and Russia, 192;
+ newness of religion, depth-experience as symbol, 288, 294 n.;
+ Mary-cult and Devil-cult, 290-294;
+ guilt and free-will, sacraments, 292, 293;
+ contrition, 293-295;
+ personality-concept, 293;
+ Calvin-Loyola opposition and world-politics, 299;
+ and practical mechanics, 300;
+ dynamic character of Rationalism, 309;
+ probable character of second religiousness, 311 n.;
+ religion and style of learning, 346;
+ style of nobility, genealogical principle, 350;
+ style of priesthood, 352;
+ relation of primary estates, 353;
+ capital city, 381;
+ reading and writing, 413;
+ money as function, 489-493;
+ capital and financial organization, 493, 494;
+ future, 507.
+ _See also_ Baroque; Cultures; Gothic; Politics; Technique
+
+ Westminster Confession, on Grace, 242
+
+ Westphalia, Peace of, effect on nobility, 391
+
+ Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, Ulrich von, on patriarchal kingdom, 380 n.
+
+ Will, Arabian attitude, submission, 235, 240;
+ Arabian Grace, 241, 242;
+ Western free-will and sacraments, 292, 293;
+ Russian attitude, 295 n.
+
+ William I of England, and property, 371
+
+ William of Occam, will and reason, 241
+
+ Wilson, Woodrow, as tool, 475
+
+ Winchester, Eng., as royal residence, 92 n.
+
+ Winckler, Hugo, on post-exilic Jews, 205
+
+ Witchcraft, Western cult, 291;
+ persecution, 302
+
+ Woman. _See_ Sex
+
+ Words, cult-colouring of prime, 116;
+ as language sound, 134;
+ as to origin, 137, 138;
+ and names, 138-141;
+ and modern gesture, 140 n.;
+ and sentence, 141;
+ acquisition, 142;
+ vocabularies and grammar, 147;
+ alien provenance, 148;
+ and conscious technique, 499.
+ _See also_ Language
+
+ Work, quantity and quality in Western concept of value, 491-493
+
+ Works, religious technique and moral, 272. _See also_ Faith
+
+ World-city. _See_ Megalopolitanism
+
+ World War, and passage to Cæsarism, 418;
+ effect on universal military service, 429;
+ and military art, 421;
+ and Marxism, 455;
+ guilt question, 461 n.;
+ Allied press propaganda, 462 n., 463
+
+ Worms, Diet of, code, 76
+
+ Writing, cultural relation, 36, 146, 150;
+ Arabian religions and scripts, 73, 150, 227 n.;
+ Egyptian, 108;
+ grammatical decomposition, 145, 146;
+ technique of signs and thoughts, 146;
+ and linguistic history, 147;
+ and “present” training, 149;
+ dependence on grammar, 149;
+ and reading, 149;
+ and extension and duration, 150;
+ and historical endowment, 150;
+ and colloquial language, 150;
+ relation to race, as taboo, ornament, 151;
+ city and utilitarian, standardization, 152, 155;
+ stenography, 152;
+ dependence of world history on, 153.
+ _See also_ Language
+
+ Wu, State, annihilation, 422
+
+ Wu-ti, as ruler, 41
+
+ Wullenweber, Jürgen, economics and politics, 475
+
+ Wundt, Wilhelm M., an origin of language, 138
+
+ Wyclif, John, and reform, 296
+
+
+ Xenophon, and class dictatorship, 404
+
+
+ Yahweh cult, 201
+
+ Yang-Chu, materialism, 309
+
+ Yellow Turbans, insurrection, 314
+
+ Yeomanry, lack in England and United States, 449 n. _See also_
+ Peasantry
+
+ Yesirah, rational Mysticism, 316
+
+ Yiddish, character, 150 n.
+
+ Yorck von Wartenburg, Graf, and Napoleon, 406 n.
+
+
+ Zaddikism, 322
+
+ Zaleucus, laws, 64
+
+ Zama, battle, and Hellenism, 191, 422
+
+ Zarathustra, basis of religious reform, 168;
+ Jewish contemporaries, 205.
+ _See also_ Mazdaism; Zend Avesta
+
+ Zechariah, Persian influence, 208
+
+ Zend Avesta, commentary, 247;
+ new, Mazdaism, 251
+
+ Zeno, and property, 344
+
+ Zimmern, Heinrich, on Jesus as Mandæan, 214 n.
+
+ Zionism, character, 210
+
+ Zoroaster. _See_ Zarathustra
+
+ Zrvanism, rise, 256
+
+ Zwingli, Ulrich, as Gothic, 296
+
+
+
+
+[FOOTNOTES]
+
+
+[1] In what follows I have drawn upon a metaphysical work that I hope
+shortly to be able to publish.
+
+[2] For instance, Vol. I, p. 154.--_Tr._
+
+[3] See Vol. I, p. 54.--_Tr._
+
+[4] Even scientific astronomy, when applied to everyday work, states
+the movements of the heavenly bodies in terms referred to our
+perception of them.--_Tr._
+
+[5] See Vol. I, p. 172.--_Tr._
+
+[6] A very similar notion of the light-world diffused from the
+light-centre forms the cardinal point of the philosophy of Robert
+Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln (1175-1273).--_Tr._
+
+[7] The coming of radio broadcasting has in no way altered, but has
+rather confirmed, the validity of this. The listener either translates
+his aural impressions into those of the light-world or else yields even
+more readily than usual to the “illusion” here discussed.--_Tr._
+
+[8] The original reads: “_An Stelle des völlig einheitlichen
+verstehenden Empfindens erscheint oft und öfter ein Verstehen der
+Bedeutung von kaum noch beachteten Sinneseindrücken._”--_Tr._
+
+[9] Hence we call that which we observe in the faces of men who have
+not the habit of thought “animal”--admiringly or contemptuously as the
+case may be.
+
+[10] See Vol. I, p. 126.--_Tr._
+
+[11] See Vol. I, p. 102.--_Tr._
+
+[12] Hence Bayle’s profound observation that the understanding is
+capable only of discovering errors.
+
+[13] See Vol. I, p. 94.--_Tr._
+
+[14] See Vol. I, pp. 53, et seq.--_Tr._
+
+[15] Original: “_aus dem Erlebnis._”--_Tr._
+
+[16] A.D. 553 (Gibbon, _Decline and Fall_, ch. xliii).--_Tr._
+
+[17] G. Le Bon’s _Psychologie des Foules_ (which has been translated
+into English under the title _The Crowd_) is the pioneer work on this
+subject, and though unduly coloured perhaps by the author’s personal
+prepossessions, still retains its interest and value.--_Tr._
+
+[18] See Vol. I., pp. 139, et seq.--_Tr._
+
+[19] Meaning here names, dates, numbers--the chronology in the usual
+extensive sense, and not the intensive or deep sense. See Vol. I, pp.
+97, 153 (foot-note).--_Tr._
+
+[20] He affirmed, on the first page of his history (about 400 B.C.),
+that before his time nothing of significance had happened (οὐ μεγάλα
+νομίζω γενέσθαι οὔτε κατὰ τοὺς πολέμους οὔτε ἐς τα ἄλλα. Thucydides, I,
+1.)
+
+[21] Original: “_Alles Bedeutende, nämlich das Einmalige der
+Geschichte._”--_Tr._
+
+[22] I suppose the meaning of these words to be that generalization and
+flair are not really opposed, but interdependent.--_Tr._
+
+[23] Original: _(“So geschieht dies stets ...) im Hinblick auf das_ im
+Augenblick geforderte _Bild als der beständigen Funktion der Zeit und
+des Menschen.”_--_Tr._
+
+[24] Even at the level of the Trojan War the timeless mythological
+figures of gods and demigods are still involved, intimately and in
+detail, in the human story. See, on the whole question of the Greek
+attitude towards time and history, Vol. I, p. 9 and _passim_.--_Tr._
+
+[25] See Chapter VIII below.--_Tr._
+
+[26] Introduced in Rome in 522 during the Ostrogoth domination, not
+until Charlemagne’s times did it make headway in the Germanic lands.
+Then, however, its spread was rapid.
+
+[27] See Vol. I, p. 19.--_Tr._
+
+[28] On the other hand--and very significantly--the field of the
+history-picture livingly experienced in the consciousness of the
+sincere Renaissance classicist markedly contracted.
+
+[29] See Vol. I, p. 16.--_Tr._
+
+[30] The Emperor Henry VI reigned 1190-7.--_Tr._
+
+[31] During his Italian sojourn of 1786-8 Goethe made up his mind
+to resign his political offices at Weimar, retaining merely a
+non-executive seat on the Council and definitely devoting himself to
+art and science. This resolution he carried into effect on his return
+to Weimar in 1788; _Tasso_ finally appeared in 1790.--_Tr._
+
+[32] For the special sense in which the word “Civilization” is used
+throughout this work see Vol. I, p. 31. Briefly, the Civilization is
+the outcome of the Culture of which it is in one sense the final phase,
+but in another the distinct and unlike sequel.--_Tr._
+
+[33] Christian Leopold von Buch, 1774-1853; Cuvier, 1769-1832.--_Tr._
+
+[34] The first proof that the basic forms of plants and animals did
+not evolve, but were suddenly there, was given by H. de Vries in his
+_Mutation Theory_ (1886). In the language of Goethe, we see how the
+“impressed form” [See Vol. I, p. 157.--_Tr._] works itself out in the
+individual samples, but not how the die was cut for _the whole genus_.
+
+[35] With this it becomes unnecessary to postulate vast periods of
+time for the original states of man, and we can regard the interval
+between the oldest man-type hitherto discovered and the beginning of
+the Egyptian Culture as a span, greater indeed, but certainly not
+unthinkably greater, than the 5,000 years of recognized cultural
+history.
+
+[36] It is perhaps not unnecessary to remark that the word “epoch” is
+used throughout this book in its proper sense of “turning point” or
+“moment of change” and _not_ in the loose sense of “period” which it
+has acquired.--_Tr._
+
+[37] _Und Afrika Sprach_ (1912); _Paideuma, Umrisse einer Kultur- und
+Seelenlehre_ (1920). Frobenius distinguishes three ages.
+
+[38] This work appeared before the discovery of the Sumerian (or
+Pre-Sumerian) tombs of Ur.--_Tr._
+
+[39] See Vol. I, p. 108.--_Tr._
+
+[40] Goethe, in his little essay “_Geistesepochen_,” has characterized
+the four parts of a Culture--its preliminary, early, late, and
+civilized stages--with such a depth of insight that even to-day there
+is nothing to add. See the tables at the end of Vol. I, which agree
+with this exactly.
+
+[41] Another blank is the history of the countryside or landscape
+(i.e., of the soil, with its plant-mantle and its weathering) in which
+man’s history has been staged for five thousand years. And yet man has
+so painfully wrested himself from the history of the landscape, and
+withal is so held to it still by myriad fibres, that without it life,
+soul, and thought are inconceivable.
+
+So far as concerns the South-European field, from the end of the Ice
+Age, a hitherto rank luxuriance gradually gave place in the plant-world
+to poverty. In the course of the successive Egyptian, Classical,
+Arabian, and Western Cultures, a climatic change developed all around
+the Mediterranean, which resulted in the peasant’s being compelled to
+fight no longer _against_ the plant-world, but _for_ it--first against
+the primeval forest and then against the desert. In Hannibal’s time
+the Sahara lay very far indeed to the south of Carthage, but to-day
+it already penetrates to northern Spain and Italy. Where was it in
+the days of the pyramid-builders, who depicted sylvan and hunting
+scenes in their reliefs? When the Spaniards expelled the Moriscos,
+their countryside of woods and ploughland, already only artificially
+maintained, lost its character altogether, and the towns became oases
+in the waste. In the Roman period such a result could not have ensued.
+
+[42] The new method of comparative morphology affords us a safe test
+of the datings which have been arrived at by other means for the
+beginnings of past Cultures. The same kind of argument which would
+prevent us, even in the absence of positive information, from dating
+Goethe’s birth more than a century earlier than the “_Urfaust_,”
+or supposing the career of Alexander the Great to have been that
+of an elderly man, enables us to demonstrate, from the individual
+characteristics of their political life and the spirit of their art,
+thought, and religion, that the Egyptian Culture dawned somewhere
+about 3000 and the Chinese about 1400. The calculations of French
+investigators and more recently of Borchardt (_Die Annalen und
+die zeitliche Festlegung des Alten Reiches_, 1919) are as unsound
+intrinsically as those of Chinese historians for the legendary Hsia and
+Shang dynasties. Equally, it is impossible that the Egyptian calendar
+should have been introduced in 4241 B.C. As in every chronology we
+have to allow that evolution has been accompanied by radical calendar
+changes, the attempt to fix the exact starting-date _a posteriori_ is
+objectless.
+
+[43] Eduard Meyer (_Gesch. d. Altertums_, III, 97) estimates the
+Persians, probably too highly, at half a million as against the fifty
+millions of the Babylonian Empire. The numerical relation between the
+Germanic peoples and legions of the third-century Roman emperors and
+the Roman population as a whole, and that of the Ptolemaic and Roman
+armies to that of the Egyptian people, was of much the same order.
+
+[H. Delbrück, in his well-known _Gesch. der Kriegskunst_ (1908), Vol.
+I, Part I, chapter i, and elsewhere, deals in considerable detail with
+the strengths of ancient armies.--_Tr._]
+
+[44] A.D. 378. See C. W. C. Oman, _History of the Art of War: Middle
+Ages_ (1898), ch. i; H. Delbrück, _Gesch. der Kriegskunst_, Vol. II,
+book I, ch. x, and book II.--_Tr._
+
+[45] In the case of Rome, the idea of a fixed frontier against
+the barbarian emerged soon after the defeat of Varus, and the
+fortifications of the Limes were laid down before the close of the
+first century of our era.--_Tr._
+
+[46] For at that time imperialistic tendencies found expression even in
+India, in the Maurya and Sunga dynasty; these, however, could only be
+confused and ineffective, Indian nature being what it was.
+
+[47] Chapters vii-ix below.
+
+[48] On the history of the Avesta see _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., articles
+“Zend-Avesta” and “Zoroaster.”--_Tr._
+
+[49] Sir Thomas Roe, 1620. A similar mission went to Turkey on the
+part of Frederick and the Bohemian nobles to ask for assistance and to
+justify to the Turk their action in deposing the Habsburg King. The
+answer they received was what might be expected of a great imperialist
+power asked to intervene in the affairs of lesser neighbours--namely,
+material guarantees of the reality of the movement it was asked to
+support and pledges that no settlement would be made without its
+agreement.--_Tr._
+
+[50] Mexico City, or, better, the agglomeration of towns and villages
+in the valley of Mexico.--_Tr._
+
+[51] According to Prescott, Cortez’s force on landing had thirteen hand
+firearms and fourteen cannon, great and small, altogether. The whole of
+these were lost in the first defeat at Mexico. Later a pure accident
+gave Cortez the contents of a supply-ship from Europe. In a military
+sense horses contributed to the Spanish victories nearly if not quite
+as much as firearms, but these, too, were in small numbers, sixteen at
+the outset.--_Tr._
+
+[52] The following attempt is based upon the data of two American
+works--L. Spence, _The Civilization of Ancient Mexico_ (Cambridge,
+1912); and H. J. Spinden, _Maya Art: Its Subject matter and Historical
+Development_ (Cambridge, 1913)--which independently of one another
+attempt to work out the chronology and which reach a certain measure of
+agreement.
+
+[53] Since the publication of the German original, Spinden’s further
+researches (_Ancient Civilizations of Mexico_) have placed the
+historical zero date at 613 B.C. (and the cosmological zero of
+back-reckoning at 3373 B.C.). This historical zero seems to lie deep in
+the pre-Cultural period, if later events have the dates given in the
+text. But compare Author’s note on p. 39.--_Tr._
+
+[54] These are the names of near-by villages serving as labels; the
+true names are lost.
+
+[55] And was there an element of _panem et circenses_ in the
+mass-sacrifice of captives? May it be that the acceptance of the
+Spaniard as the expected manifestation of the god Quetzalcoatl
+(“_redeunt Saturnia regna_”), and the serious disputations on matters
+of religion that took place between Montezuma and the Christians, were
+presages of the phase which Spengler calls the “Second Religiousness”
+(see below, p. 310) of the Civilization?--_Tr._
+
+[56] “_Zur Theorie und Methodik der Geschichte_” (_Kleine Schriften_,
+1910), which is by far the best piece of historical philosophy ever
+written by an opponent of all philosophy.
+
+[57] Varus’s disaster in the Teutoburger Wald.--_Tr._
+
+[58] The Japanese belonged formerly to the Chinese Civilization and
+again belong to a Civilization--the Western--to-day. A Japanese Culture
+in the genuine sense there has never been. Japanese Americanism must,
+therefore, be judged otherwise than as an outgrowth of what never was
+there.
+
+[59] _Cæsars Monarchie und das Principat des Pompejus_ (1918) pp. 501,
+et seq.
+
+[60] I.e., that sensation consists in the absorption of small particles
+radiated by the object.--_Tr._
+
+[61] See Ch. VIII below.--_Tr._
+
+[62] See R. Hirzel, _Die Person_ (1914), p. 7.
+
+[63] L. Wenger, _Das Recht der Griechen und Römer_ (1914), p. 170; R.
+v. Mayr, _Römische Rechtsgeschichte_, II, 1, p. 87.
+
+[64] A curious sidelight on this appears in the provisions of the
+savage law against recalcitrant debtors, who (after certain delays and
+formalities) could be put to death and even hewn in pieces by their
+creditors, or--“sold as slaves beyond the Tiber.”--_Tr._
+
+[65] A thirteenth-century collection by Eike von Repgow of German
+customs and customary law (ed. K. G. Homeyer, 1861).--_Tr._
+
+[66] And were judged by a different authority, the peregrin
+prætor.--_Tr._
+
+[67] The “dependence” of Classical law upon Egyptian is, as it chances,
+still traceable. Solon the wholesale merchant introduced into his Attic
+legislation provisions concerning debt-slavery, contract, work-shyness,
+and unemployment taken from Egypt. Diodorus, I, 77, 79, 94.
+
+[68] The process is clearly explained in Goudy’s article “Roman Law,”
+_Ency. Brit._, XI ed. Very roughly, the prætor corresponded to the
+judge, and the judges to the jury, of modern English law, but such a
+parallel must not be pressed far.--_Tr._
+
+[69] L. Wenger, _Recht der Griechen und Römer_, pp. 166, et seq.
+
+[70] See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., Vol. XII, p. 502. Fragments of the
+older collection referred to were found in the vicinity.--_Tr._
+
+[71] In English legal theory the judge does not _make law_ by a new
+decision, but _“declares” the law_--i.e., makes explicit what has
+been implicit in the law from the first, though the occasion for its
+manifestation has not hitherto arisen.--_Tr._
+
+[72] See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., Vol XXVI, p. 315.--_Tr._
+
+[73] See Beloch, _Griechische Geschichte_, I, 1, p. 350.
+
+[74] The background of this is Etruscan law, the primitive form of the
+Roman. Rome was an Etruscan city.
+
+[75] Busolt, _Griechische Staatskunde_, p. 528.
+
+[76] Compare the famous ironical judgment of Mr. Justice Maule which
+led to the reform of the divorce laws in England (1857): “... It is
+true that the course which you should legally have taken would have
+cost you many hundreds of pounds, whereas probably you have not as many
+pence. _But the Law knows no distinction between rich and poor._”--_Tr._
+
+[77] What is important to us, therefore, in the Law of the Twelve
+Tables is not the supposed contents (of which scarcely an authentic
+clause survived even in Cicero’s day), but the political act of
+codification itself, the tendency of which corresponded to that of
+the overthrow of the Tarquinian Tyrannis by senatorial Oligarchy--a
+success which, now endangered, it was sought to stabilize for the
+future. The text which schoolboys learned in detail in Cæsar’s time
+must have had the same destiny as the consular lists of the old time,
+in which had been interpolated names upon names of families whose
+wealth and influence was of much later origin. In recent years Pais
+and Lambert have disputed the whole story of the Twelve Tables, and so
+far as concerns the authenticity of the reputed text, they may well be
+right--not so, however, as regards the course of political events in
+the years about 450.
+
+[78] Only half a century separates the traditional dates of these
+events (509, 451), in spite of the wealth of traditional history
+afterwards attached to the period. The “coup,” in the case of the
+Decemvirs, was the capture by the patricians of a machine set up for
+the redress of plebeian grievances.--_Tr._
+
+[79] Cf. Ch. IV below.
+
+[80] Sohm, _Institutionen_ (14) p. 101. [This is the edict of “Julian”
+(Salvius Julianus, urban prætor). Romanists are not agreed as to how
+far, if at all, it included material derived from the decisions of the
+peregrin prætor. See Professor Goudy’s article “Roman Law,” _Ency.
+Brit._, XI ed., p. 563.--_Tr._]
+
+[81] Lenel, _Das Edictum perpetuum_ (1907); L. Wenger, p. 168.
+
+[82] Even the multiplication table of the children assumes the elements
+of dynamics in counting.
+
+[83] V. Mayr, II, 1, p. 85; Sohm, p. 105.
+
+[84] _Enzyklopädie der Rechtswissensch._, I, 357.
+
+[85] Egyptian law of the Hyksos period, and Chinese of the Period of
+Contending States, in contrast to the Classical and the Indian law of
+the Dharmasutras, must have been built up on basic ideas quite other
+than the idea of the corporeality of persons and things. It would be
+a grand emancipation from the load of Roman “antiquities” if German
+research were to succeed in establishing these.
+
+[86] Sohm, p. 220.
+
+[87] Acts XV. Herein lies the germ of the idea of a Church law.
+
+[88] For Islam as a “juristic person” see M. Horten, _Die religiöse
+Gedankenwelt des Volkes im heutigen Islam_ (1917), p. xxiv.
+
+[89] See Ch. VII below. We can venture to make the label so positive
+because the adherents of all the Late Classical cults were bound
+together in devout consensus, just as the primitive Christian
+communities were.
+
+[90] The Persian Church came into the Classical field only in the
+Classical form of Mithraism, which was assimilable in the ensemble of
+Syncretism.
+
+[91] It is difficult to describe this class in a few words. Roughly,
+they (and the “Junian Latins,” so called, who were excepted with
+them) represented a stratum of Roman society, largely composed
+of “undesirables,” which was only just not servile. In the older
+legislation they were necessarily lumped with the outer world as
+peregrins, but when Caracalla made this outer world “Roman,” there were
+obvious reasons against bringing these people into the fold as well. In
+somewhat the same way the word “outsider” is used in colloquial English
+with the dual meaning of a foreigner or non-member, and a socially
+undesirable person.--_Tr._
+
+[92] In the Twelve Tables _connubium_ was disallowed even between
+the patrician and plebian citizens of Rome itself. [The hold of
+the patricians on this privilege, however, was already exceedingly
+precarious, and it vanished a few years later in the _lex
+Canuleia_.--_Tr._]
+
+[93] Cf. Ch. VI below.
+
+[94] Lenel, I, 380.
+
+[95] Here, as in every line of the history of the “Pseudomorphosis,” we
+are reminded of Christ’s parable of new wine and old bottles (Matt. ix,
+17), an expression not of mere abstract shrewdness, as it seems to us
+now, but of intense living force and even passion. It is only one short
+verse, not obligatory in its context, but leaping out of depths.--_Tr._
+
+[96] As long ago as 1891 Mitteis (_Reichsrecht und Volksrecht_, p.
+13) drew attention to the Oriental vein in Constantine’s legislation.
+Collinet (_Études historiques sur le droit de Justinien I_, 1912),
+chiefly on the basis of German researches, throws an immense amount
+back on Hellenistic law; but how much, after all, of this “Hellenistic”
+was really Greek and not merely written in Greek? The results of
+interpolation-research have proved truly devastating for the “Classical
+spirit” in Justinian’s Digests.
+
+[97] See Ch. VII below.
+
+[98] Coupled with the destruction of all other documents.
+
+[99] Fromer, _Der Talmud_ (1920), p. 190. [The English student will
+find a fairly full account of the main groups of Jewish literature in
+the article “Hebrew Literature” and cognate articles in the _Ency.
+Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._]
+
+[100] Mitteis (_Röm. Privatrecht bis auf die Zeit Dioklezians_ (1908),
+preface) remarks how, “while the ancient law-forms were retained, the
+law itself nevertheless became something quite different.”
+
+[101] Head of the exilic Jews under Persian overlordship.--_Tr._
+
+[102] Mayr, IV, pp. 45, et seq.
+
+[103] Hence the fictitious names of authors on innumerable books
+in every Arabian literature--Dionysius the Areopagite, Pythagoras,
+Hermes Trismegistus, Hippocrates, Enoch, Baruch, Daniel, Solomon, the
+Apostle-names attached to the numerous gospels and apocalypses.
+
+[104] For example, Hebrew was supplanted by Aramaic for all ordinary
+purposes as early as the Maccabees--and to such an extent that in the
+synagogues the Scriptures had to be translated for the people--but has
+held its ground as a religious vehicle, and above all as a script,
+even to this day. (The present use of a _spoken_ Hebrew represents a
+revival in more recent times, after the wider dispersion of the early
+Middle Ages had broken the connexion with the Aramaic lands.) In the
+Persian field the older Zend survived alongside the newer Pehlevi. In
+Egypt somewhat similar influences were contemporaneously determining
+the evolution of popular Demotic and official Greek into the Coptic
+language with Greek characters.--_Tr._
+
+[105] M. Horten, _D. rel. Gedankenwelt d. Volkes im heut. Islam_, p.
+xvi. Cf. Chapter VII below.
+
+[106] Mayr, IV, 45, et seq. [_Ency. Brit._, XI ed., Vol. XXIII, p.
+570.--_Tr._]
+
+[107] 471. See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., article “Chalcedon, Council of,”
+and references therein.--_Tr._
+
+[108] Wenger, p. 180.
+
+[109] Krumbacher, _Byzantinische Literatur-Geschichte_, p. 606.
+
+[110] Sachau, _Syrische Rechtsbücher_, Vol. III.
+
+[111] Bertholet, _Kulturgeschichte Israels_, pp. 200, et seq.
+
+[112] We get a hint of this in the famous code of Hammurabi, though
+unfortunately we cannot tell in what relation this single work stood,
+in point of intrinsic importance, to the general level of contemporary
+jurisprudence in the Babylonian world.
+
+[113] See Professor Maitland’s article “English Law” in _Ency. Brit._,
+XI ed., Vol. IX.--_Tr._
+
+[114] Sohm, _Inst._, p. 156.
+
+[115] See J. Janssen, _Hist. German People at the End of the Middle
+Ages_, English translation, Book IV, Ch. I-II.--_Tr._
+
+[116] Lend, I, p. 395.
+
+[117] The punning contrast of Lombard _faex_ (excrement) and Roman
+_lex_ is Huguccio’s (1200).
+
+[118] W. Goetz, _Arch. für Kulturgeschichte_, 10, 28, et seq.
+
+[119] See the article “Canon Law” in _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[120] See Sohm’s last work, _Das altkatholische Kirchenrecht und das
+Dekret Gratians_ (1918).
+
+[121] See Ch. VII below.
+
+[122] See Ch. X below.
+
+[123] The permanently valid element in English law is the constant
+_form_ of an incessant _development_ by the courts.
+
+[124] If the higher courts alone are meant, the number is well below
+fifty for England and Wales. Scots law is independent of English and
+has its own jurisprudence.--_Tr._
+
+[125] _Inst._, p. 170.
+
+[126] Similar problems are now (1927) arising in connexion with radio
+broadcasting.--_Tr._
+
+[127] _Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch_, § 90.
+
+[128] As evidenced in terms of French law like “_Société anonyme_,”
+“_raison sociale_,” “_personne juridique_.”--_Tr._
+
+[129] Note, in this connexion, the remarkable development in modern
+American industry of a professional managerial class, distinct from the
+capitalist, the technician, and the “worker.”--_Tr._
+
+[130] Published 1857. English translation, 1872.--_Tr._
+
+[131] Without Alexander, and even before him, for Alexander neither
+kindled nor spread that light; he did not lead, but followed its path
+to the East.
+
+[132] See G. Glotz’s recent work _La Civilisation égéenne_, 1923
+(English translation, 1927).--_Tr._
+
+[133] This is now recognized by art-research; cf. Salis, _Die Kunst der
+Griechen_ (1919), pp. 3, et seq.; H. Th. Bosser, _Alt-Kreta_ (1921),
+introduction.
+
+[134] D. Fimmen, _Die kretisch-mykenische Kultur_ (1921), p. 210.
+
+[135] Dehio, _Gesch. d. deutsch. Kunst_ (1919), pp. 16, et seq.
+
+[136] Dieterich, _Byzant. Charakterköpfe_, pp. 136, et seq.
+
+[137] Even admitting within itself the animals of its fields.--_Tr._
+
+[138] Dehio, _Gesch. d. deutschen Kunst_ (1919), pp. 13, et seq.
+
+[139] Eduard Meyer, _Gesch. d. Altertums_, I, p. 188.
+
+[140] The English parallel is Winchester.--_Tr._
+
+[141] The phenomenon is perhaps too well known in our days to need
+exemplification. But it is worth while recalling that the usual form of
+disgrace for a minister or courtier of the seventeenth or eighteenth
+century was to be commanded to “retire to his estates,” and that a
+student expelled from the universities is said to be “rusticated.”
+Since this volume was written, a remarkable proof of the reality of
+this spiritual indrawing by the Megalopolis has been given by the
+swift spread of radio broadcasting over the West-European and American
+world. For the country-dweller, radio reception means intimate touch
+with the news, the thought, and the entertainment of the great city,
+and relieves the _grievance_ of “isolation” that the older country-folk
+would never have felt as a grievance at all.--_Tr._
+
+[142] In the case of the Venetians the money-outlook was already
+potent during the earlier Crusades. But the fact that their financial
+exploitation of the great religious adventure was regarded as
+scandalous indicates sufficiently that the rural world of the West was
+not yet face to face with the money-idea.--_Tr._
+
+[143] See Ch. XIII below.
+
+[144] Samarra exhibits, like the Imperial Fora of Rome and the ruins
+of Luxor, truly American proportions. The city stretches for 33
+km. [20 miles] along the Tigris. The Balkuwara Palace, which the
+Caliph Mutawakil built for one of his sons, forms a square of 1250
+m. [say, three-quarters of a mile] on each side. One of the giant
+mosques measures in plan 260 × 180 m. [858 × 594 ft.]. Schwarz, _Die
+Abbasidenresidenz Samarra_ (1910); Herzfeld, _Ausgrabungen von Samarra_
+(1912). [Pataliputra, in the days of Chandragupta and Asoka, measured
+_intra muros_ 10 miles × 2 miles (equal to Manhattan Island or London
+along the Thames from Greenwich to Richmond).--_Tr._]
+
+[145] Karlsruhe, with its fan-scheme, and Mannheim, with its
+rectangles, are earlier than Washington. But both are small places.
+The one is a sort of extension of the prince’s Rococo park and centred
+on his _point de vue_; the other, though its block-numbering, unique
+in Europe, seems to relate it to the American city, was really planned
+as a self-contained military capital, rectangular only within its oval
+enceinte, whereas the American rectangles are meant to be added to. The
+layout of Petersburg by Peter the Great (which has been adhered to to
+this day and is still incompletely filled in in detail) is a much more
+forcible example of the arbitrary planning of a megalopolis. Though
+outside the “European” world, it is of it, for it was the visible
+symbol of Peter’s will to force Europe upon Russia. It is contemporary
+with Mannheim and Karlsruhe (early eighteenth century), but its creator
+conceived of it as a city _of the future_.--_Tr._
+
+[146] In the case of Canada, not merely great regions, but the
+_whole country_ has been picketed out in equal rectangles for future
+development.--_Tr._
+
+[147] It has been left to the _Western_ Civilization of present-day
+Rome to build the garden suburbs that the Classical Civilization could
+have built.--_Tr._
+
+[148] Friedländer, _Sittengeschichte Roms_, I, p. 5. Compare this with
+Samarra, which had nothing like this population. The “Late Classical
+city on Arabian soil was un-Classical in this respect as in others. The
+garden suburb of Antioch was renowned throughout the East.”
+
+[149] The city which the Egyptian “Julian the Apostate,” Amenophis IV
+(Akhenaton) built himself in Tell-el-Amarna had streets up to 45 m.
+[149 ft.] wide.
+
+[150] Pöhlmann, _Aus Altertum und Gegenwart_ (1910), pp. 211, et seq.
+
+[151] Some years ago a French peasant was brought to notice whose
+family had occupied its glebe since the ninth century.--_Tr._
+
+[152] Shaw, _The Quintessence of Ibsen_.
+
+[153] An ancient Hindu materialism.--_Tr._
+
+[154] For what follows see Eduard Meyer, _Kl. Schriften_ (1910), pp.
+145, et seq.
+
+[155] _Hist. Nat._, XVIII, 7.--_Tr._
+
+[156] We know of measures to promote increase of population in China
+in the third century B.C., precisely the Augustan Age of Chinese
+evolution. See Rosthorn, _Das soziale Leben der Chinesen_ (1919), p. 6.
+
+[157] The _amphitheatres_ of Nîmes and Arles were filled up by mean
+townlets that used the outer wall as their fortifications.--_Tr._
+
+[158] Strabo, Pausanias, Dio Chrysostom, Avienus, etc. See E. Meyer,
+_Kl. Schriften_, pp. 164, et seq.
+
+[159] The Colosseum of Rome itself in due course fell into this decay
+and we read in the guide-books that “its flora were once famous”--420
+wild species lived in its ruins. If this could happen in Rome, we need
+not be surprised at the quick, almost catastrophic, conquest of the
+Maya cities by tropical vegetation.--_Tr._
+
+[160] According to the researches of K. Sethe. Cf. Robert Eisler, _Die
+kenitischen Weihinschriften der Hyksoszeit_, etc. (1919).
+
+[161] Henceforward, and indeed throughout this work, the word
+“language” is not to be regarded as limited to spoken and written
+language. As the above definition indicates, it includes all modes of
+intelligible conscious-expression--“affective language” in the widest
+sense.--_Tr._
+
+[162] Obviously, Totemistic facts, so far as they come under the
+observation of the waking-consciousness, obtain a significance of the
+Taboo kind also; much in man’s sexual life, for example, is performed
+with a profound sense of fear, because his will-to-understand is
+baffled by it.
+
+[163] W. von Humboldt (_Über die Verschiedenheit des menschlichen
+Sprachbaues_) was the first to emphasize the fact that a language is
+not a thing, but an activity. “If we would be quite precise, we can
+certainly say _there is no such thing as ‘language,’_ just as there
+is no such thing as ‘intellect’; but man does speak, and does act
+intellectually.”
+
+[164] Hans Friedrich Schinkel (1781-1841), architect of the Opera
+House, the Altes Museum, and the Königswache of Berlin. Gottfried
+Schadow (1764-1850), sculptor (statues of Frederick II, Zieten,
+etc.; Quadriga of Brandenburger Tor), a classicist _malgré lui_
+(not to be confused with two other artists of the same name,
+quasi-contemporaries).--_Tr._
+
+[165] See p. 29 above.
+
+[166] _Gesch. d. Deutsch. Kunst_ (1919), pp. 14, et seq.
+
+[167] This practice of inscription survives till deep into the
+Civilization. Even in 1914 the guns of the German Army, true products
+of the advanced machine-shop though they were, carried a Latin threat
+to the foe. From the magic rune of the blade it is a step to the motto
+on the shield, and then to the motto alone as unity-charm of the
+regiment or the Order.--_Tr._
+
+[168] W. Altmann, _Die ital. Rundbauten_ (1906).
+
+[169] A striking case in point is the Roman military camp. See Vol. I
+(English edition), p. 185, foot-note.--_Tr._
+
+[170] Bulle, _Orchomenos_, pp. 26, et seq.; Noack, _Ovalhaus und
+Palast in Kreta_, pp. 53, et seq. The house-plans still traceable in
+Latin times in the Ægean and Asia Minor may perhaps allow us to order
+our notions of human conditions in the pre-Classical period; but the
+linguistic remains, never.
+
+[171] _Medieval Rhodesia_ (London, 1906).
+
+[172] Cf. Ch. X.
+
+[173] Though magic or prestige may of course be involved in their
+ornamentation, these are supervening and not radical virtues.--_Tr._
+
+[174] In this connexion it ought to be someone’s business to undertake
+physiognomic studies upon the massy, thoroughly peasantish, Roman
+busts; the portraits of Early Gothic; those of the Renaissance, already
+visibly urban; and, most of all, the polite English portraiture from
+the late-eighteenth century onward. The great galleries of “ancestors”
+contain an endless wealth of material.
+
+[175] The sudden fear of some animal or object seen, believed to result
+in her child’s bearing the mark of it. Cf. Jacob and the speckled
+cattle (Genesis xxx, 37). The attitude of biologists to this question
+is not negative, but non-committal.--_Tr._
+
+[176] J. Ranke, _Der Mensch_ (1912), II, p. 205.
+
+[177] This suggestive sentence should, of course, be read with its
+reservation. The cranial evidences of Crete are highly illustrative in
+this connexion; they would not indeed be trusted by a modern historian
+without weighty collateral evidence, but here this evidence exists.
+Up to the latter part of Middle Minoan, the “long” head predominated
+heavily, not only from the outset, but increasingly as the Culture
+rose, until it included two-thirds of the whole, intermediates forming
+a quarter and “short” heads a mere handful. But from about the time
+of the catastrophic fall of Late Minoan II, the long heads fall to
+a startlingly low figure, while intermediates account for half,
+and short heads for more than a third. It marks the end of Minoan
+Civilization and the coming of the Achæans. But just as the Minoan
+skull held its own throughout the Minoan Age, so now, after its fall,
+the short head maintained itself, as stated in the text, through
+all subsequent vicissitudes, from the “Sea-peoples” through Roman,
+Arab, and Turk, to this day. Thus the Cretan landscape has had two
+skull-types successively; but the change from one to the other occurred
+in connexion with an immense cataclysm, nothing less than the collapse
+of a Civilization. The rough deduction that seems to emerge from this
+case is that a great Culture holds its skull, no doubt in the course of
+its striving towards ideal physical type of its own (see p. 127), but
+that where that major organism does not exist, the skull endures as the
+land endures and the peasant endures. This applies also to the Alpine
+region, which has received the deposit of migrations, but has never
+been the centre of a high Culture.--_Tr._
+
+[178] Cf. D. Randall-MacIver, _The Etruscans_ (1928), Ch. I.--_Tr._
+
+[179] Art is fully developed in the animals. So far as man can get
+at it by way of analogy, it consists for them in rhythmic movement
+(“dance”) and sound-formation (“song”). But this is by no means the
+limit of artistic impression _on_ the animal itself.
+
+[180] Jesus says to the Seventy whom he is sending out on mission: “And
+salute no man on the way” (Luke x, 4). The ceremonial of greeting on
+the high-road is so complicated that people in a hurry have to omit it.
+A. Bertholet, _Kulturgeschichte Israels_ (1919), p. 162.
+
+[181] Exekias--represented in the British Museum by his “Achilles
+and Penthesilea” (_Ency. Brit._, XI ed., article “Ceramics,”
+Plate I)--stands at the end of Black Figure as the master of
+the possibilities of refinement in it--on the verge of the
+style-change to Red Figure, yet apart from it. Sebastian Bach is his
+“contemporary.”--_Tr._
+
+[182] “All forms, even those that are most felt, contain an element of
+untruth” (Goethe). In systematic philosophy the intent of the thinker
+coincides neither with the written words nor with the understanding
+of his readers, as it consists in his thinking meanings into words
+in the course of using the words themselves (_da es ein Denken in
+Wortbedeutungen ist, im Verlauf der Darstellung mit sich selbst_).
+
+[183] Jespersen deduces language from poesy, dance, and particularly
+courtship. _Progress in Language_ (1894), p. 357.
+
+[184] See Vol. I, p. 80.--_Tr._
+
+[185] Sentence-like complexes of sound are known also to the dog.
+When the Australian dingo reverted from domestication to the wild
+state, he reverted also from the house-dog’s bark to the wolf’s
+howl--a phenomenon that indicates a transition to very much simpler
+sound-signs, but has nothing to do with “words.”
+
+[186] The gesture-languages of to-day (Delbrück, _Grundfragen d.
+Sprachforsch._, pp. 49, et seq., with reference to the work of Jorio
+on the gestures of the Neapolitans) without exception presuppose
+word-language and are completely dependent upon its intellectual
+systematism. Examples: the mimicry of the actor, and the language
+which the American Indians have formed for themselves for the purpose
+of mutually understanding one another in spite of extreme differences
+and fluidity in the verbal languages of the various tribes. Wundt
+(_Völkerpsychologie_, I, p. 212) quotes the following to show how
+complicated sentences can be handled in this language: “White soldiers,
+led by an officer of high rank, but little intelligence, took the
+Mescalero Indians prisoners.”
+
+[187] See Vol. I, p. 172.--_Tr._
+
+[188] The case of voice-differentiations of the same word in Chinese is
+not analogous. It arose only out of scholars’ work in the later phases
+of the Chinese Civilization as understood in this work. And it is a
+mechanical expedient and not a structural character--i.e., it lacks the
+_polarity_ mentioned in the text. Voice-management distinguishes, not
+“great” from “small,” but “pig” from “God,” “bamboo” from “to dwell.”
+English students will find a clear and understandable account of this
+and other Chinese differential devices in Karlgren’s little book:
+_Sound and Symbol in Chinese_ (English translation, 1923).--_Tr._
+
+[189] Possibly connected with this is the _emphatic antithesis_
+characterizing many of our proverbs and everyday idioms--e.g., “up hill
+and down dale” (“_par monts et vaux_,” “_bergauf bergab_”), meaning
+hardly more than “everywhere.”--_Tr._
+
+[190] _Die Haupttypen des Sprachbaus_, 1910.
+
+[191] See the article “Bantu Languages,” by Sir H. H. Johnston, _Ency.
+Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[192] Even calling something “invisible” is a definition of it under
+the light-aspect.
+
+[193] Only technics are entirely true, for here the words are merely
+the key to actuality, and the sentences are continually modified
+until they are, not “truth,” but actuality. A hypothesis claims, not
+rightness, but usefulness.
+
+[194] See pp. 29, et seq.
+
+[195] The English reader may refer to Karlgren’s _Sound and Symbol in
+Chinese_, already mentioned, for details.--_Tr._
+
+[196] See the article “Indo-European Languages,” _Ency. Brit._, XI
+ed.--_Tr._
+
+[197] Translation, it must be remembered, is normally from older into
+younger linguistic conditions.
+
+[198] See p. 140 above.--_Tr._
+
+[199] See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., Vol. XVI, p. 251b.--_Tr._
+
+[200] See the articles “Sanskrit” and “Indo-European Languages,” _Ency.
+Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[201] P. Jensen, _Sitz. Preuss. Akademie_ (1919), pp. 367, et seq.
+
+[202] L. Hahn, _Rom und Romanismus im griech-röm. Osten_ (1906).
+
+[203] See the article “Book-keeping” in _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[204] Ed. Meyer, _Gesch. des Alt._, I, §§ 455, 465.
+
+[205] See below.
+
+[206] Radio broadcasting does not controvert this. Its characteristic
+quality is not (as is often supposed) dissemination to vast numbers
+irrespective of physical distance, but a special intimacy of address to
+the listening individual.--_Tr._
+
+[207] See the article “Semitic Language,” _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[208] Similarly the modern Jews of the Dispersion write Yiddish, which
+is a modified German, in Hebrew characters.--_Tr._
+
+[209] See Lidzbarski, _Sitz. Berl. Akad._ (1916), p. 1218. There is
+plentiful material in M. Miese, _Die Gesetze der Schriftgeschichte_
+(1919).
+
+[210] P. Kretschmer, in Gercke-Norden, _Einl. i. d.
+Altertumswissenschaft_, I, p. 551.
+
+[211] See the articles “Romance Languages” and “Latin Language,” _Ency.
+Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[212] Cf. p. 122.
+
+[213] For this reason I am one of those who believe that, even quite
+late, Etruscan still played a very important part in the colleges of
+the Roman priesthood.
+
+[214] Precisely for this reason it has to be recognized that the
+Homeric poems, which were first fixed in the colonization period,
+can only give us an urban literary language and not the courtly
+conversation-language in which they were originally declaimed.
+
+[215] So much so that the workers of the great cities call themselves
+_the_ People, thereby excluding the bourgeoisie, with which no
+community feeling conjoins them. The bourgeoisie of 1789 did exactly
+the same.
+
+[216] The dominant nucleus within the Spartan ensemble.--_Tr._
+
+[217] Ed. Meyer, _Ursprung und Geschichte der Mormonen_ (1912), pp.
+128, et seq. [An extended summary of Mormon history will be found in
+the article “Mormons,” _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._]
+
+[218] Ex-mercenaries of Agathocles, tyrant of Syracuse, who seized and
+settled in Messina. The questions arising out of this act precipitated
+the First Punic War.--_Tr._
+
+[219] A still more celebrated case is the “ambulatory Polis” formed by
+Xenophon’s Ten Thousand.--_Tr._
+
+[220] And in numerous Classical instances.--_Tr._
+
+[221] See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., Vol. IX, p. 860.--_Tr._
+
+[222] In Macedonia, in the nineteenth century, Serbs, Bulgars, and
+Greeks all founded schools for the anti-Turkish population. If it
+happens that a village has been taught Serb, even the next generation
+consists of fanatical Serbs. The present strength of the “nations” is
+thus merely a consequence of previous school-policy.
+
+[223] For Beloch’s scepticism concerning the reputed Dorian migration
+see his _Griechische Geschichte_, I, 2, Section VIII. [A brief account
+of the question, by J. L. Myres, is in _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., article
+“Dorians.”--_Tr._]
+
+[224] C. Mehlis, _Die Berberfrage_ (_Archiv für Anthropologie_ 39, pp.
+249, et seq.) where relations between North German and Mauretanian
+ceramics, and even resemblances of toponymy (rivers, mountains) are
+dealt with. The old pyramid buildings of West Africa are closely
+related, on the one hand, to the Nordic dolmens (_Hünengräber_) of
+Holstein and, on the other, to the graves of the Old Kingdom (some
+illustrations in L. Frobenius, _Der kleinafrikanische Grabbau_, 1916).
+
+[225] _Die Bevölkerung der griechisch-römischen Welt_ (1886).
+
+[226] _Geschichte der Kriegskunst_ (from 1900).
+
+[227] Rameses III, who defeated them, portrayed their expedition in the
+relief of Medinet Habet. W. M. Müller, _Asien und Europa_, p. 366.
+
+[228] Which, therefore, have discovered for themselves the nonsensical
+designation “aristocracy of intellect” (_Geistesadel_).
+
+[229] Although--or should we say “thus”?--Rome accorded citizenship
+to freedmen, who in general were of wholly alien blood, and sons of
+ex-slaves were admitted to the Senate even by Appius Claudius the
+Censor in 310. One of them, Flavius, had already been curule ædile.
+
+[230] See articles “Persia (history: ancient),” “Behistun,”
+“Cuneiform,” in _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., or indeed almost any work upon
+Babylonian and Persian antiquities.--_Tr._
+
+[231] Sworn by Louis the German and Charles the Bald in both languages.
+The manuscript of the oath, however, is later--say, 950.--_Tr._
+
+[232] “_Die ältesten datierten Zeugnisse der iranischen Sprache_”
+(_Zeitschr. f. vgl. Sprachf._ 42, p. 26.)
+
+[233] See above, p. 145.
+
+[234] Ed. Meyer, op. cit., pp. 1, et seq.
+
+[235] Compare the absorption of the Norman conquerors into England and
+the subsequent development of an English aristocracy.--_Tr._
+
+[236] For what follows, cf. Ch. VII-IX.
+
+[237] _Geschichte des Altertums_, I, § 590, et seq.
+
+[238] Andreas and Wackernagel, _Nachrichten der Göttingischen
+Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften_ (1911), p. 1, et seq. [On the subject
+generally, see articles by K. Geldner, “Zend-Avesta” and “Zoroaster,”
+and by Ed. Meyer, “Parthia,” in _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._]
+
+[239] See, further, below.
+
+[240] Dynasty I.--_Tr._
+
+[241] Albertus Magnus; St. Thomas Aquinas; Grosseteste, and Roger
+Bacon.--_Tr._
+
+[242] Cf. p. 105.
+
+[243] Cf. Ch. X.
+
+[244] See p. 60 above. The slave did not belong to the nation. On this
+account the enrolment of non-citizens in the army of a city, which on
+occasions of dire crisis was inevitable, was always felt as a profound
+blow to the national idea.
+
+[245] Even in the Iliad we can perceive the tendency to the
+nation-feeling in the small, and even the smallest, aggregates.
+
+[246] And she had rarely to deal with anything more formidable than a
+loose partial confederacy. Often Etruscan cities were in alliance with
+Rome against other Etruscan cities.--_Tr._
+
+[247] It is not to be overlooked that both Plato and Aristotle in
+their political writings were unable to conceive of the ideal people
+otherwise than in the Polis form. But it was equally natural for the
+eighteenth-century thinkers to regard “the Ancients” as nations after
+the fashion of Shaftesbury and Montesquieu--it is _we_ their successors
+who ought not to have stayed on that note.
+
+[248] Mommsen described the Roman Empire as a “universal Empire founded
+upon municipal autonomy.” And even Alexander’s empire was originally
+conceived, and to a great extent actually organized, in this spirit.
+See P. Jouguet, _L’Impérialisme macédonien_ (1926), Ch. IV.--_Tr._
+
+[249] See p. 67.
+
+[250] F. N. Finck, _Die Sprachstämme des Erdkreises_ (1915), pp. 29, et
+seq.
+
+[251] About the end of the second century of our era.
+
+[252] See foot-note, p. 197, et seq.--_Tr._
+
+[253] A loose group of Edomite tribes which, with Moabites,
+Amalekites, Ishmaelites, and others, thus constituted a fairly uniform
+Hebrew-speaking population.
+
+[254] See p. 167.
+
+[255] Aristotle says that “philosophers are called Calani among the
+Indians, and Jews among the Syrians.” Exactly the same is stated by
+Megasthenes, the Seleucid ambassador at Pataliputra, of Brahmins and
+Jews.--_Tr._
+
+[256] The district south of Lake Van, of which the capital was Arbela,
+the old home of the goddess Ishtar.
+
+[257] As evidenced by the Falasha, the black Jews of Abyssinia.
+
+[258] _Arch. f. Anthrop._, Vol. XIX.
+
+[259] _Zeitschr. f. Ethnol._ (1919).
+
+[260] _Digesta_, 50, 15.
+
+[261] Geffcken, _Der Ausgang des griech.-röm. Heidentum_ (1920), p. 57
+[English readers may refer to the article “Neoplatonism” and shorter
+articles under the personal names, in _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._]
+
+[262] See Vol. I, pp. 63, 71.--_Tr._
+
+[263] Which we translate by “Gentiles,” but which literally means “the
+nations” or “peoples.”--_Tr._
+
+[264] See the article “Nestorians,” _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[265] See the articles “Jews” (§ 43), “Exilarch,” and “Gaon,” _Ency.
+Brit._, XI. ed. In Europe, too, far into the Dispersion, there are
+rabbis recognized by the State as governors of their communities, such
+as the famous Rabbi Löw of Prague (1513-1609).--_Tr._
+
+[266] It may not be at all fanciful to connect the Reception of
+“Roman” law in Germany and the rise of the doctrine of _cujus regio,
+ejus religio_ which played so great a part in the religious wars and
+treaties of our sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. At any rate,
+“practical politics” so-called provides an inadequate motive by itself
+to account for the latter. Considering it in contrast to the notion of
+Mortmain, and having regard to the intensity of religious belief in
+many of the princes who applied it, the idea appears as something much
+more positive than a mere formula of compromise.--_Tr._
+
+[267] See p. 70. The “capitulations” under which until recently
+Europeans were exempt from the jurisdiction of Turkish courts are
+regarded nowadays as a right enforced by more civilized powers to
+protect their subjects from the laws of a less civilized state, and
+their abolition is a symbol of the rise of the latter to the rank
+of a civilized power. But originally it was quite the reverse. The
+first “capitulation” was sued for by France in an hour of danger when
+Turkish aid was essential to her. See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., article
+“Capitulations.”--_Tr._
+
+[268] See Vol. I., p. 212.
+
+[269] The author’s meaning may perhaps be precised thus: so much of the
+old Magian nations as was not Arabized became fellah peoples, either
+outside the Magian sphere (as in Europe and India) or within it, under
+the Turkish (Mongol) domination, but even the old Arab-element itself
+was largely ripe for the change into the fellah condition when the
+Turks came.--_Tr._
+
+[270] I am convinced that the nations of China which sprang up in
+members in the middle, Hwang-Ho region at the beginning of the Chóu
+dynasty, as also the regional peoples of the Egyptian Old Kingdom
+(which had each its own capital and its own religion, and as late as
+Roman times fought each other in definitely religious wars), were in
+their inward form more closely akin to the peoples of the West than to
+those of the Classical and the Arabian worlds. However, research into
+such fields has hitherto been conspicuous by its absence.
+
+[271] That the dynasts themselves have contributed heavily to the
+catalogue of perjury and bad faith only reinforces the argument.--_Tr._
+
+[272] His desertion of the emperor Frederick Barbarossa in the Lombard
+war, 1176. The details of the long struggle between Frederick and Henry
+will be found in any fairly full history of Europe or in the respective
+articles devoted to them in the _Ency. Brit._, XI ed. While Frederick
+stood--and with real hopes as well as ideals--for the inclusive
+Empire, Henry through all his vicissitudes stood for Germany’s eastern
+expansion, the colonization of the Slavonic north-east, and the
+development of the Baltic.--_Tr._
+
+[273] In mediæval hymns the cross is symbolically regarded as a tree
+bearing Christ as its last and grandest fruit; it is identified,
+indeed, with the Tree of Knowledge. (See Yrjo Hirn, _The Sacred
+Shrine_.)--_Tr._
+
+[274] And every English schoolboy knows the meaning of the “Early
+Plantagenets.”--_Tr._
+
+[275] Against the Swedes, 1675.--_Tr._
+
+[276] Against the French and their German dependent allies, 1757.--_Tr._
+
+[277] See pp. 166, et seq., and 174, et seq.
+
+[278] Less than one per cent of the population.
+
+[279] It is to be noted that the home of the Babylonian Culture, the
+ancient Sinear, plays no part of any importance in the coming events.
+For the Arabian Culture only the region north of Babylon, not that to
+south, comes into question.
+
+[280] The victory of L. Æmilius Paullus over Perseus, 168 B.C.--_Tr._
+
+[281] This has an important bearing also in the histories of the
+Western literatures. The German is written in part in Latin, and
+English in French.
+
+[282] See Professor Geldner’s article “Zend-Avesta,” _Ency. Brit._, XI
+ed.--_Tr._
+
+[283] See Wollner, _Untersuchungen über die Volksepik des Grossrussen_
+(1879). [A convenient edition of the Kiev Stories is Mary Gill, _Les
+Légendes slaves_ (Paris, 1912).--_Tr._]
+
+[284] The former is dated about 800, the latter about 930.--_Tr._
+
+[285] These two figures--the one an authorized Mayor of the Palace
+before he was Tsar, the other a crude usurper--dominate the period of
+Russian history called the “Period of Troubles”--i.e., that between the
+death of Ivan the Terrible in 1584 and the election of Michael Romanov
+in 1613.--_Tr._
+
+[286] Covering, before its later extensions, Persia and Iraq to the
+Euphrates.--_Tr._
+
+[287] The region south of Damascus and east of the Sea of
+Galilee.--_Tr._
+
+[288] Saba (Sheba) is, roughly, the modern Yemen, though the centre
+of gravity of the Sabæan Kingdom may earlier have been in northern
+Arabia. See Dr. D. H. Müller’s article “Sabaeans” in _Ency. Brit._, XI
+ed.--_Tr._
+
+[289] Schiele, _Die Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart_, I, 647.
+
+[290] The “Minæan” and the Sabæan kingdoms were the two outstanding
+hegemonies of early Arabian history. Ma’in, in southern Arabia, should
+not be confused with the Ma’an which lies north-east of the Gulf of
+Akaba.--_Tr._
+
+[291] Bent, _The Sacred City of the Ethiopians_ (London 1893), pp. 134,
+et seq., deals with the remains of Jeha, the inscriptions of which are
+dated by Glaser between the seventh and fifth centuries before Christ.
+See D. H. Müller, _Burgen and Schlösser Südarabiens_.
+
+[292] Grimme, _Mohammed_, pp. 26, et seq.
+
+[293] German Axum Expedition record (1913), Vol. II.
+
+[294] An ancient trade-route from Persia crossed the straits of Ormus
+and of Bab-el-Mandeb, traversing South Arabia and terminating in
+Abyssinia and the Nile region. It is historically more important than
+the northern route over the Isthmus of Suez.
+
+[295] So little is known as to these events by British (or any other)
+students that a brief record may be useful. The original Himaryites or
+Homerites, a people of the south-west angle of Arabia, had displaced
+the Sabæans in control of South Arabia in the second century B.C.
+The Himaryite hegemony was overthrown by invaders from Axum over the
+water about A.D. 300, and the Axumite rulers were, _inter alia_,
+kings of Hadramaut--hence the mention in the text of the Persian
+Gulf. But a Himaryite opposition continued, and, adopting Judaism
+as a counter-religion, it succeeded for a time in throwing off the
+Abyssinian rule. Axum, however (aided, as a Christian state, by Rome),
+reasserted her dominion in 525 and held it for fifty years, till an
+attack of Sassanid Persians displaced them again. Thereafter southern
+Arabia fell into the swaying chaos in which the coming of Mohammed
+found it.--_Tr._
+
+[296] The capital of Saba.--_Tr._
+
+[297] Grimme, p. 43. Illustrations of these immense ruins of Gomdan,
+ibid., p. 81, and reconstructions in the German Axum report.
+
+[298] The country of Ghassan extends east of the Jordan, parallel to
+and inland of Palestine and Syria, approximately from Petra to the
+middle Euphrates.--_Tr._
+
+[299] The Lakhmids were the ruling dynasty, from the third to the
+sixth century after Christ, of the realm of Hira, which ran in a strip
+between the Euphrates and the present Nejd coast on the one hand and
+the desert of Arabia on the other.--_Tr._
+
+[300] Brockelmann, _Geschichte der arabischen Literatur_, p. 34.
+
+[301] The whole structure of Mithraism (so far as we know it) presents
+strong analogies with that of a military order.--_Tr._
+
+[302] As well as it is said 220,000 at Cyrene. At Alexandria, too,
+there were _émeutes_ and counter-_émeutes_.--_Tr._
+
+[303] Roth, _Sozial- und Kulturgeschichte des Byzantinischen Reiches_,
+p. 15.
+
+[304] Delbrück, _Geschichte der Kriegskunst_, II, p. 222. [For British
+students C. W. C. Oman’s _Art of War: Middle Ages_ will be more readily
+available, although Oman treats the subject more as a matter of formal
+military organization than does Delbrück. Neither writer deals with
+any special features of the change as it worked itself out in the
+East, both being concerned almost entirely with its Western aspects
+and phases. The origin of the late-Byzantine army system, as military
+historians are aware, is an obscure and difficult subject. By what
+stages, after the decadence of the legion, was the “_Landsknecht_” army
+of Justinian reached? Like other elements of middle-East history in the
+epoch of the Arabian Culture, it still awaits the full investigation
+that the West has already had.--_Tr._]
+
+[305] _Gesammelte Schriften_, IV, 532.
+
+[306] _Gefolgstreuen_ in German. The choice of an equivalent
+mediæval term in English is difficult, since any one that may be
+selected carries with it certain implications for students of feudal
+origins.--_Tr._
+
+[307] Domaszewski, _Die Religion der römischen Heeres_, p. 49.
+
+[308] The typical form, for instance, of the Swiss in their
+independence-battles, and of Western infantry generally in the
+fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, during the transition from hand-arm
+to fire-arm warfare.--_Tr._
+
+[309] _Buccellarii_; see Delbrück, op. cit., II, 354.
+
+[310] Georg von Frundsberg (1473-1528). Short article in _Ency. Brit._,
+XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[311] _Gothic War_, IV, 26. [The same holds good for Belisarius’s
+armies.--_Tr._]
+
+[312] Nisibis and Edessa in the up-country between Euphrates and Tigris
+are represented to-day by Nasibin (Nezib) and Urfa respectively;
+just to the west of them, east of the Euphrates above Sura, were the
+three Jewish academies, in which Talmudic Judaism took shape after
+the Dispersion. Kinnesrin lay just south of Aleppo. Ctesiphon is, of
+course, the classical city on the Tigris, still dominant under the
+Sassanids, and Resaina lies in the up-country south-west of Nisibis.
+Gundisapora is Gunder-Shapur (Jundaisapur), near the site of the old
+Elamite capital Susa in Arabistan.--_Tr._
+
+[313] Not “non-existent.” It would be a misconception of the Magian
+world-feeling to attach a Faustian-dynamic meaning to the phrase “true
+God.” In combating the worship of godlings, the reality of godlings and
+dæmons is presupposed. The Israelite prophets never dreamed of denying
+the Baals, and similarly Isis and Mithras for the Early Christians,
+Jehovah for the Christian Marcion, Jesus for the Manichæans, are
+devilish, but perfectly real, powers. _Disbelieving in them_ would have
+had no meaning for the Magian soul--what was required was that one
+should not _turn to them_. To use an expression now long current, it is
+“Henotheism” and not Monotheism.
+
+[314] Schürer, _Geschichte des jüdischen Volkes im Zeitalter Jesu
+Christi_, III, 499; Wendland, _Die hellenistisch-römische Kultur_, p.
+192.
+
+[315] Contrast with this the exactly opposite process in Jewry before
+the Pseudomorphosis had begun to affect it,--to wit, the battle
+against the local “high places” and the concentration of sanctity in
+Jerusalem.--_Tr._
+
+[316] With the result that Syncretism is presented as a mere hotchpotch
+of every conceivable religion. Nothing is further from the truth. The
+process of taking shape moved first from East to West and then from
+West to East.
+
+[317] The Haoma plant symbolized the Tree of Life (Gaokerena) like the
+Soma plant of Brahmanism.--_Tr._
+
+[318] Hence the expression “profaning” the mysteries, which meant, not
+revealing them, but bringing them outside their fane.--_Tr._
+
+[319] J. Geffcken, _Der Ausgang des griechisch-römischen Heidentums_
+(1920), pp. 197, et seq.
+
+[320] Geffcken, op. cit., pp. 131, et seq.
+
+[321] Geffcken, op. cit., p. 292, note 149.
+
+[322] “_Res ipsa, quæ nunc religio Christiana nuncupatur, erat apud
+antiquos nec defecit ab initio generis humani, quousque Christus
+veniret in carnem. Unde vera religio, quæ jam erat coepit appellari
+Christiana_” (_Retractationes_, I, 13).
+
+[323] The name Chaldean signifies, before the Persian epoch, a tribe;
+later, a religious society. See p. 175 above.
+
+[324] A. Bertholet, _Kulturgeschichte Israels_ (1919), pp. 253, et seq.
+[Clear and useful English manuals are G. Moore, _Literature of the Old
+Testament_; R. H. Charles, _Between the Old and the New Testaments_.
+See also the article “Hebrew Religion” in _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._]
+
+[325] According to Williams Jackson’s _Zoroaster_ (1901).
+
+[326] Research has treated the Chaldean, like the Talmudic, as a
+stepchild. The investigator’s whole attention has been concentrated
+on the religion of the Babylonian Culture, and the Chaldean has been
+regarded as its dying echo. Such a view inevitably excludes any real
+understanding of it. The material is not even separated out, but
+is dispersed in all the books on Assyrian-Babylonian religion. (H.
+Zimmern, _Die Keilinschriften und das alte Testament_ II; Gunkel,
+_Schöpfung and Chaos_; M. Jastrow, C. Bezold, etc.) On the other hand
+the subject is assumed by some (e.g., Bousset, _Hauptprobleme der
+Gnosis_, 1907) to have been exhausted.
+
+[327] See Vol. I, p. 184.--_Tr._
+
+[328] The fact that Chaldean science was, in comparison with Babylonian
+empiricism, a new thing has been clearly recognized by Bezold
+(_Astronomie, Himmelsschau und Astrallehre bei den Babyloniern_, 1911,
+pp. 17, et seq.). Its data were taken and developed by different
+Classical savants according to their own way of reasoning--that is, as
+a matter of applied mathematics, and to the exclusion of all feeling
+for distance.
+
+[329] See Jastrow’s articles “Babylonian and Assyrian Religion” and
+“Marduk” in _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[330] J. Hehn, _Hymnen und Gebete an Marduk_ (1905).
+
+[331] For Chaldeans and Persians there was no need to trouble here
+about proof--they had by their God conquered the world. But the Jews
+had only their literature to cling to, and this accordingly turned to
+theoretical proof in the absence of positive. In the last analysis,
+this unique national treasure owes its origin to the constant need
+of reacting against self-depreciation. [For example, the repeated
+restatement of the _date_ of the Messiah’s advent in the successive
+works of the age of the prophets.--_Tr._]
+
+[332] Glaser, _Die Abessinier in Arabien und in Afrika_ (1895), p. 124.
+Glaser is convinced that Abyssinian, Pehlevi, and Persian cuneiform
+inscriptions of the highest importance await discovery there.
+
+[333] The inscription and sculptures of Behistun (on an almost
+inaccessible cliff in the Zagros range on the Baghdad-Hamadan road)
+were reinvestigated by a British Museum expedition in 1904; see _The
+Inscription of Darius the Great at Behistun_ (London, 1907). “Thus
+saith Darius the King. That what I have done I have done altogether by
+the grace of Ahuramazda. Ahuramazda and the other gods that be, brought
+aid to me. For this reason did Ahuramazda and the other gods that be
+bring aid to me because I was not hostile nor a liar nor a wrongdoer,
+neither I nor my family, but according to Rectitude have I ruled” (A.
+V. Williams Jackson, _Persia Past and Present_).--_Tr._
+
+[334] Isaiah xl-lxvi. For the critical questions arising on
+Deutero-Isaiah see Dr. T. K. Cheyne’s article “Isaiah” in the
+_Encyclopedia Biblica_, the same scholar’s summary in _Ency. Brit._, XI
+ed., article “Isaiah,” or G. Moore’s summary, _Literature of the Old
+Testament_, Ch. XVI.--_Tr._
+
+[335] This “King of the Banishment” (Exilarch) was long a conspicuous
+and politically important figure in the Persian Empire. He was only
+removed by Islam.
+
+[336] As Christian and Jewish theology both do--the only difference
+between these is in their respective interpretations of the later
+development of Israelite literature (recast in Judea as the literature
+of Judaism), the one inflecting it towards Evangelism, the others
+towards Talmudism.
+
+[337] Later it occurred to some Pharisee mind to Judaize it by
+interpolating chs. xxxii-xxxvii.
+
+[338] See the articles “Tobit,” etc., in _Jewish Encyclopædia_ and
+_Ency. Biblica_.--_Tr._
+
+[339] If the assumption of a Chaldean prophecy corresponding to Isaiah
+and Zarathustra be correct, it is to this young, inwardly cognate, and
+contemporary astral religion (and not to the Babylonian) that Genesis
+owes its amazingly profound cosmogony, just as it owes to the Persian
+religion its visions of the end of the world.
+
+[340] S. Funk, _Die Entstehung des Talmuds_ (1919), p. 106.
+
+[341] E. Sachau, _Aramäische Papyros und Ostraka aus Elephantine_
+(1911).
+
+[342] Josephus, _Antiq._, 13, 10.
+
+[343] Much as, say, the destruction of the Vatican would be felt by the
+Catholic Church.
+
+[344] See p. 198.--_Tr._
+
+[345] Cf. p. 69.
+
+[346] Pyrrho himself had studied under Magian priests. See, for
+Pyrrhonism, _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., articles “Scepticism,” “Megarian
+School,” “Pyrrho.”--_Tr._
+
+[347] Schiele (_Die Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart_, III, 812)
+reverses the two latter names; this, however, does not affect the
+phenomenon in any way.
+
+[348] The Cosmogony and the Law, in the Zoroastrian Scriptures.--_Tr._
+
+[349] Bousset, _Rel. d. Jud._, p. 532.
+
+[350] Baruch, Ezra IV (2 Esdras), the original text of John’s
+Revelation.
+
+[351] For instance, the Book of Naasenes (P. Wendland,
+_Hellenistisch-römische Kultur_, pp. 177, et seq.); the “Mithras
+Liturgy” (ed. A. Dieterich); the Hermetic Pœmander (ed. Reitzenstein),
+the Psalms of Solomon, the Gospels of Thomas and Peter, the
+Pistis-Sophia, etc. [Information as to these will be found in the
+articles “Ophites,” “Mithras,” “Hermes Trismegistus,” “Apocalyptic
+Literature,” “Apocryphal Literature,” “Gnosticism,” in the _Ency.
+Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._]
+
+[352] Any more than Dostoyevski’s “_Dream of a Ridiculous Person_” is
+so.
+
+[353] Our definitive ideas of this early Magian vision-world we
+owe to the manuscripts of Turfan, which have reached Berlin since
+1903. It was these which at last freed our knowledge and, above
+all, our criteria from the deformations due to the preponderance of
+Western-Hellenistic material--a preponderance that had been augmented
+by Egyptian papyrus finds--and radically transformed all our existing
+views. Now at last the pure, almost unknown, East is seen operative
+in all the apocalypses, hymns, liturgies, and books of edification of
+the Persians, Mandæans, Manichæans, and countless other sects; and
+primitive Christianity for the first time really takes its place in
+the movement to which it owes its spiritual origins (see H. Lüders,
+_Sitzungen der Berliner Akademie_, 1914, and R. Reitzenstein, _Das
+iranische Erlösungsmysterium_, 1921).
+
+[354] Lidzbarski, _Das Johannesbuch der Mandäer_, Ch. LXVI. Also
+W. Bousset, _Hauptprobleme der Gnosis_ (1907) and Reitzenstein,
+_Das Mandäische Buch der Herrn der Grösse_ (1919), an apocalypse
+approximately contemporary with the oldest Gospels. On the Messiah
+texts, the Descent-into-Hell texts, and the Songs of the Dead see
+Lidzbarski, _Mandäische Liturgien_ (1920); also the Book of the
+Dead (especially the second and third books of the left Genza) in
+Reitzenstein’s _Das iranische Erlösungsmysterium_ (especially pp. 43,
+et seq.). [The Mandæan religion survives to-day in the region of the
+Shatt-el-Arab and the Karun valley or Khuzistan.--_Tr._]
+
+[355] See Reitzenstein, pp. 124, et seq., and references there quoted.
+
+[356] In the New Testament, of which the final redaction lies entirely
+in the sphere of Western-Classical thought, the Mandæan religion and
+the sects belonging thereto are no longer understood, and indeed
+everything Oriental seems to have dropped out. Acts xviii-xix,
+however, discloses a perceptible hostility between the then widespread
+John-communities and the Primitive Christians (see Dibelius, _Die
+urchristliche Überlieferung von Johannes dem Täufer_). The Mandæans
+later rejected Christianity as flatly as they had rejected Judaism.
+Jesus was for them a false Messiah. In their Apocalypse of the Lord of
+Greatness the apparition of Enosh was also announced.
+
+[357] According to Reitzenstein (_Das Buch von Herrn der Grösse_)
+Jesus was condemned at Jerusalem as a John-disciple. According to
+Lidzbarski (_Mand. Lit._, 1920, XVI) and Zimmern (_Ztschr. d. D. Morg.
+Gesellschaft_, 1920, p. 429), the expression “Jesus the Nazarene” or
+“Nasorene,” which was later by the Christian communities referred to
+Nazareth (Matthew ii, 23, with a doubtful citation), really indicates
+the membership in a Mandæan Order.
+
+[358] E.g., Mark vi; and then the great change, Mark viii, 27, et seq.
+There is no religion which has given us more honestly the tale of its
+birth.
+
+[359] Similarly in Mark i, 38, et seq., when he arose in the night and
+sought a lonely place in order to fortify himself by prayer.
+
+[360] The method of the present work is historical. It therefore
+recognizes the anti-historical as well as the historical as _a fact_.
+The religious method, on the contrary, necessarily looks upon itself
+as the _true_ and the opposite as _false_. This difference is quite
+insuperable.
+
+[361] Hence Mark xiii, taken from an older document, is perhaps the
+purest example of his usual daily discourse. Paul (1 Thess. iv, 15-17)
+quotes another, which is missing in the Gospels. With these, we have
+the priceless--but, by commentators dominated by the Gospel tone,
+misunderstood--contributions of Papias, who about 100 was still in a
+position to collect much oral tradition. The little that we have of his
+work suffices amply to show us the apocalyptic character of Jesus’s
+daily discourses. It is Mark xiii and not the Sermon on the Mount that
+reproduces the real note of them. But as _his_ teaching became modified
+into a teaching _of Him_, this material likewise was transformed and
+the record of his utterances became the narrative of his manifestation.
+In this one respect the picture given by the Gospels is inevitably
+false.
+
+[362] Jesus himself was aware of this (Matt. xxiv, 5, 11).
+
+[363] Made more uncertain perhaps by the failure of previous prophecies
+that had been so confidently dated--e.g., Jeremiah xxv, 11; xxiv, 5-6;
+reinterpreted in Daniel vii, ix; 1 Enoch lxxxiii-xc; and again to be
+reinterpreted in 2 Baruch xxxvi-xl and 4 Ezra x-xii.--_Tr._
+
+[364] The designation “Messiah (Christ)” was old-Jewish, those
+of “Lord” (κύριος, _divus_) and “Saviour” (σωτήρ, _Asklepios_)
+were east-Aramæan in origin. In the course of the pseudomorphosis
+“Christ” became the _name_ of Jesus, and “Saviour” the _title_; but
+already “Lord” and “Saviour” were titles current in the Hellenistic
+Emperor-worship; and in this was implicit the whole destiny of
+westward-looking Christianity (compare here Reitzenstein, _Das
+iranische Erlösungsmysterium_, p. 132, note).
+
+[365] Acts xv; Gal. ii.
+
+[366] Acts i, 14; cf. Mark vi.
+
+[367] As against Luke, Matthew is the representative of this
+conception. His is the only Gospel in which the word “_Ecclesia_” is
+used, and it denotes the true Jews, in contradistinction to the masses
+that refuse to listen to Jesus. This is not the missionary idea, any
+more than Isaiah was a missionary. Community, in this connexion, means
+an Order within Judaism. The prescriptions of Matt. xviii, 15-20 are
+wholly incompatible with any general dissemination.
+
+[368] It fell apart later into sects, amongst which were the Ebionites
+and the Elkazites (the latter having a strange sacred book, the Elxai;
+see Bousset, _Hauptprobleme der Gnosis_, p. 154). [See the articles
+“Ebionites” and “Sabians” in _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._]
+
+[369] Such sects were attacked in the Acts of the Apostles and in
+all Paul’s Epistles, and indeed there was hardly a Late Classical or
+Aramæan religion or philosophy which did not give rise to some sort of
+Jesus-sect. The danger was indeed real of the Passion story becoming,
+not the nucleus of a new religion, but an integrating element of all
+existing ones.
+
+[370] Of this he was fully aware. Many of his deepest intuitions are
+unimaginable without Persian and Mandæan influences (e.g., Romans vii,
+22-24; 1 Corinthians xv, 26; Ephesians v, 6, et seq., with a quotation
+of Persian origin. See Reitzenstein, _Das iran. Erlös.-Myst._, pp. 6,
+133, et seq.). But this does not prove familiarity with Persian-Mandæan
+literature. The stories were spread in these days as sagas and
+folk-tales were amongst us. One heard about them in childhood as things
+of daily hearsay, but without being in the least aware of how deeply
+one was under their spell.
+
+[371] The early missionary effort in the East has scarcely been
+investigated and is still very difficult to establish in detail.
+Sachau, _Chronik von Arbela_ (1915) and “_Die Ausbreitung der
+Christentums in Asien_” in _Abb. Pr. Akad. d. Wiss._ (1919); Harnack,
+_Mission und Ausbreitung des Christentums_, II, 117, et seq.
+
+[372] The researchers who argue with such over-learnedness about a
+proto-Mark, Source Q, the “Twelve”-source, and so on, overlook the
+essential novelty of Mark, which is _the first “Book” of Christendom_,
+plan-uniform and entire. Work of this sort is never the natural product
+of an evolution, but the merit of an individual man, and it marks, here
+if anywhere, a historical turning-point.
+
+[373] Mark is generally _the_ Gospel; after him the partisan writings
+(Matthew, Luke) begin; the tone of narrative passes into that of legend
+and ends, beyond the Hebrew and John gospels, in Jesus-romances like
+the gospels of Peter and James.
+
+[374] If the word “catholic” be used in its oldest sense (_Ignatius
+ad Smyrn._, 8)--namely, to signify the _sum_ of the cult-communities,
+_both_ the Churches were Catholic. In the East the word had no meaning.
+The Nestorian Church was no more a sum than was the Persian: it was a
+Magian unit.
+
+[375] A brief survey of the Mary doctrine is given in article “Mary,”
+_Ency. Brit._, XI ed. The symbolism involved in the details of the
+story of Mary, as told in writing and in art, is very fully gone into
+in Yrjo Hirn, _The Sacred Shrine_.--_Tr._
+
+[376] Ed. Meyer, _Ursprung und Anfänge des Christentums_ (1921), pp.
+77, et seq.
+
+[377] _C._ 85-155. See the recent work of Harnack, _Marcion: Das
+Evangelium vom fremden Gott_ (1921). [Harnack’s article “Marcion” in
+_Ency. Brit._, XI ed., is dated 1910.--_Tr._]
+
+[378] Harnack, op. cit., pp. 136, et seq.; N. Bonwetsch, _Grundr. d.
+Dogmengesch._ (1919), p. 45, et seq.
+
+[379] This is one of the profoundest ideas in all religious history,
+and one that must for ever remain inaccessible to the pious average
+man. Marcion’s identification of the “Just” with the Evil enables him
+in this sense to oppose the Law of the Old Testament to the Evangel of
+the New.
+
+[380] About A.D. 150. See Harnack, op. cit., pp. 32, et seq.
+
+[381] For the notions of Koran and Logos, see below. Again as in the
+case of Mark, the really important question is, not what the material
+before him was, but how this entirely novel idea for such a book, which
+anticipated and indeed made possible Marcion’s plan for a Christian
+Bible, could arise. The book presupposes a great spiritual movement (in
+eastern Asia Minor?) that knew scarcely anything of Jewish Christianity
+and was yet remote from the Pauline, westerly thought-world. But of the
+region and type of this movement we know nothing whatever.
+
+[382] Vohu Mano, the Spirit of Truth, in the shape of the Saoshyant.
+
+[383] See the article by Harnack and Conybeare “Manichæism,” _Ency.
+Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[384] Bardesanes, too, and the system of the “Acts of Thomas” are very
+near to him and to “John.” [See the articles “Bardaisan,” “Thomas,” and
+“Gnosticism,” _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._]
+
+[385] Harnack, p. 24. The break with the established Church occurred at
+Rome, in 144.
+
+[386] Harnack, pp. 181, et seq.
+
+[387] It had, like each of the other Magian religions, a script of its
+own, and this script steadily came to resemble the Manichæan more and
+more closely.
+
+[388] Matthew xi, 25, et seq., on which see Eduard Meyer, _Urspr. u.
+Anf. d. Christ._, pp. 286, et seq.; here it is the old and Eastern
+(i.e., the genuine) form of gnosis that is described.
+
+[389] See further, below, p. 321.
+
+[390] As a drastic instance, Galatians iv, 24-26.
+
+[391] Loofs, _Nestoriana_ (1905), pp. 176, et seq.
+
+[392] The best exposition of the mass of thought common to both
+Churches is Windelband’s _Geschichte der Philosophie_ (1900), pp. 177,
+et seq.; for the dogmatic history of the Christian Church see Harnack,
+_Dogmengeschichte_ (1914), while--unconsciously--Geffcken (_Der Ausgang
+des griechisch-römischen Heidentums_, 1920) gives the corresponding
+“dogmatic history of the Pagan Church.”
+
+[393] Geffcken, op. cit., p. 69 [article “Neoplatonism” in _Ency.
+Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._].
+
+[394] See the following chapter.
+
+[395] Harnack, _Dogmengeschichte_, p. 165.
+
+[396] See Vol. I, p. 209.
+
+[397] The expression is Leo Frobenius’s (Paideuma, 1920, p. 91). [See
+Vol. I, p. 184.--_Tr._]
+
+[398] The soul-stones on Jewish, Sabæan, and Islamic tombs are also
+called _nephesh_. They are unmistakable symbols of the “upward.” With
+them belong the huge storeyed stelæ of Axum which belong to the first
+to third centuries of our era--i.e., the great period of the early
+Magian religions. The giant stele, long overthrown, is the largest
+monolith known to art-history, larger than any Egyptian obelisk (German
+Axum Expedition report, Vol. II, pp. 28, et seq.).
+
+[399] On this rests the whole theory and practice of Magian law (see p.
+72 above).
+
+[400] Isaiah xxxii, 15; 4 Ezra xiv, 39; Acts ii.
+
+[401] Reitzenstein, _Das iran. Erlösungsmysterium_, pp. 108, et seq.
+
+[402] Bousset, _Kyrios Christos_, p. 142.
+
+[403] Windelband, _Gesch. d. Phil._ (1900), pp. 189, et seq.;
+Windelband-Bonhöffer, _Gesch. d. antiken Phil._ (1912), pp. 328, et
+seq.; Geffcken, _Der Ausgang des griech.-röm. Heidentums_ (1920), pp.
+51, et seq.
+
+[404] Jodl, _Geschichte der Ethik_, I, p. 58.
+
+[405] M. Horten, _Die religiöse Gedankenwelt der Volkes im heutigen
+Islam_ (1917), pp. 381, et seq. By the Shiites the Logos-idea was
+transferred to Ali.
+
+[406] Wolff, _Muhammedanische Eschatologie_, 3, 2, et seq.
+
+[407] Mandæan Book of John, Ch. LXXV.
+
+[408] Usener, _Vortr. u. Aufs._, p. 217.
+
+[409] The “devil-worshippers” in Armenia; M. Horten in _Der neue
+Orient_ (March 1918). The name arose from the fact that they did not
+recognize Satan as a being, and accordingly derived the Evil, by
+a very complicated set of ideas, from the Logos itself. Under old
+Persian influences the Jews also busied themselves with the same
+problem--observe the difference between 2 Samuel xxiv, 1, and 1 Chron.
+xxi, 1.
+
+[410] M. Horten, op. cit., p. xxi. This book is the best introduction
+to the actually existing popular religion of Islam, which deviates
+considerably from the official doctrines.
+
+[411] Baumstark, _Die christl. Literaturen des Orients_, I, p. 64.
+
+[412] Cf. p. 205. The Babylonian view of the heavens had not definitely
+distinguished between astronomical and atmospheric elements; e.g., the
+covering of the moon by clouds was regarded as a kind of eclipse. For
+this soothsaying the momentary _figure_ of the heavens served only
+the same purpose as the inspection of the victim’s liver. But the
+Chaldeans’ intention was to forecast the _actual_ course of the stars;
+here, therefore, astrology presupposed a genuine astronomy.
+
+[413] B. Cohn, “_Die Anfangsepoche der jüd. Kalenders_” (_Sitz. Pr.
+Akad._, 1914). The date of the first day of Creation was on this
+occasion fixed by calculation from a total eclipse of the sun--of
+course with the aid of Chaldean astronomy. [See, in general, the
+articles “Chronology,” “Calendar,” in _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._]
+
+[414] The Persian notion of total time is 12,000 years. The Parsees of
+to-day consider A.D. 1920 as the 11,550th.
+
+[415] M. Horten, _Die religiöse Gedankenwelt des Volkes im heutigen
+Islam_, p. xxvi.
+
+[416] It shows a great gap in our research that although we possess
+a whole library of works on Classical religion and particularly its
+gods and cults, we have not one about Classical religiousness and its
+history.
+
+[417] “He is in truth the conclusion and completion of the Christian
+Classical, its last and greatest thinker, its intellectual practitioner
+and tribune. This is the starting-point from which he must be
+understood. What later ages have made of him is another affair. His own
+real mind, the synthesizer of Classical Culture, ecclesiastical and
+episcopal authority, and intimate mysticism, could not possibly have
+been handed on by those who, environed by different conditions, have to
+deal with different tasks” (E. Troeltsch, _Augustin, die christliche
+Antike und das Mittelalter_, 1915, p. 7). His power, like Tertullian’s,
+rested also on the fact that his writings were not translated into
+Latin, but _thought_ in this language, the _sacred_ language of the
+Western Church; it was precisely this that excluded both from the field
+of Aramæan thought. Cf. p. 224 above.
+
+[418] “_Inspiratio bonæ voluntatis_” (_De corr. et grat._, 3). His
+“good will” and “ill will” are, quite dualistically, a pair of opposite
+substances. For Pelagius, on the contrary, will is an _activity_
+without moral quality as such; only that which is willed has the
+_property_ of being good or evil, and the Grace of God consists in the
+“_possibilitas utriusque partis_,” the freedom to will this or that.
+Gregory I transmuted Augustinian doctrines into Faustian when he taught
+that God rejected individuals because he foreknew their evil will.
+
+[419] All the elements of the Magian metaphysic are to be found in
+Spinoza, hard as he tried to replace the Arabian-Jewish conceptual
+world of his Spanish masters (and above all Moses Maimonides) by
+the Western of early Baroque. The individual human mind is for
+him not an ego, but only a mode of the one divine attribute, the
+“_cogitatio_”--which is just the Pneuma. He protests against notions
+like “God’s Will.” His God is _pure substance_ and in lieu of the
+dynamic causality of the Faustian universe he discovers simply the
+logic of the divine _cogitatio_. All this is already in Porphyry,
+in the Talmud, in Islam; and to Faustian thinkers like Leibniz and
+Goethe it is as alien as anything can possibly be. (_Allgem. Gesch. d.
+Philos._ in _Kultur der Gegenwart_, I, v, p. 484, Windelband.)
+
+[420] Here, therefore, “good” is an evaluation and not a substance.
+
+[421] The period at which it was written corresponds to our
+Carolingian. Whether the latter really brought forth any poetry of like
+rank we do not know, but that it may possibly have done so is shown by
+creations like the Voluspa, Muspilli, the Heliand, and the universe
+conceived by John Scotus Erigena.
+
+[422] See, for example, Bertholet, _Kulturgesch. Israels_, p. 242.
+
+[423] Horten, op. cit., p. xii.
+
+[424] See p. 67 above.
+
+[425] It is almost unnecessary to say that in all religions of the
+Germanic West the Bible stands in a quite other relationship to the
+faith--namely, in that of a _source_ in the strictly historical sense,
+irrespective of whether it is taken as inspired and immune from textual
+criticism or not. The relation of Chinese thought to the canonical
+books is similar.
+
+[426] The Holy Spirit, different from Ahuramazda and yet one with him,
+opposed to the Evil (Angra Mainyu).
+
+[427] Identified by Mani with the Johannine Logos. Compare also Yasht
+13, 31. Ahuramazda’s shining soul is the Word.
+
+[428] _Aletheia_ (Truth) is generally employed in this way in the John
+Gospel, and _drug_ (= lie) is used for Ahriman in Persian cosmology.
+Ahriman is often shown as though a servant of the _drug_.
+
+[429] Sura 96; cf. 80, 11 and 85, 21, where in connexion with another
+vision it is said: “This is a noble Koran on a treasured tablet.”
+The best commentary on all this is Eduard Meyer’s (_Geschichte der
+Mormonen_, pp. 70, et seq.).
+
+[430] Classical man receives, in states of extreme bodily excitation,
+the power of unconsciously predicting future events. But these visions
+are completely unliterary. The Classical Sibylline books (which have no
+connexion with the later Christian works bearing that name) are meant
+to be nothing more than a collection of oracles.
+
+[431] See p. 73.
+
+[432] IV Ezra xiv; S. Funk, _Die Entstehung des Talmuds_, p. 17;
+Hirsch’s commentary on Exodus xxi, 2.
+
+[433] Funk, op. cit., p. 86.
+
+[434] For example, Ed. Meyer, _Urspr. u. Anf. d. Christ._, p. 95.
+
+[435] In the West, Plato, Aristotle, and above all Pythagoras were
+regarded as prophets in this sense. What could be referred back to
+them, was valid. For this reason the succession of the heads of the
+schools became more and more important, and often more work was done in
+establishing--or inventing--them than was done upon the history of the
+doctrine itself.
+
+[436] Fromer, _Der Talmud_, p. 190.
+
+[437] We to-day confuse _authorship_ and _authority_. Arabian thought
+knew not the idea of “intellectual property.” Such would have been
+absurd and sinful, for it is the _one_ divine Pneuma that selects the
+individual as vessel and mouthpiece. Only to that extent is he the
+“author,” and it does not matter even whether he or another actually
+writes down the material. “The Gospel _according to_ Mark” means that
+Mark _vouches for_ the truth of this evangel.
+
+[438] On the pseudonyma and anonyma of Biblical apocryphal literature
+the English reader will find much of interest in three small books
+(already referred to) of the “Home University” series: Moore,
+_Literature of the Old Testament_; Charles, _Between the Old and the
+New Testaments_; and Bacon, _The Making of the New Testament_.--_Tr._
+
+[439] See p. 73.--_Tr._
+
+[440] Vendidad 19, 1; here it is Zarathustra who is tempted.
+
+[441] M. J. ben Gorion, _Die Sagen der Juden_ (1913).
+
+[442] It is reasonable to suppose that he must through oral tradition
+have had a very accurate knowledge of the fundamental doctrines of the
+John Gospel. Even Bardesanes (d. 254), and the “Acts of St. Thomas”
+that originated in his circle, are very far removed indeed from Pauline
+doctrines, an alienation that in Mani rose to downright hostility and
+to the historical Jesus’s being described as an evil demon. We obtain
+here a glimpse into the essence of the almost subterranean Christianity
+of the East, which was ignored by the Greek-writing churches of the
+Pseudomorphosis and for that reason has hitherto escaped the attention
+of Church history. But Marcion and Montanus also came from eastern
+Asia Minor; here originated the Naasene book, basically Persian, but
+overlaid first with Judaism and then with Christianity; and further
+east, probably in the Matthew monastery of Mosul, Aphrahat wrote, about
+340, those strange epistles whose Christianity the Western development
+from Irenæus to Athanasius left wholly unaffected. The history of
+Nestorian Christianity, in fact, was already beginning in the second
+century.
+
+[443] For the later writings of (for example) Tertullian and Augustine
+remained wholly without effect save in so far as they were translated.
+In Rome itself even, Greek was the true language of the Church.
+
+[444] See p. 177.--_Tr._
+
+[445] The Faustian monk represses his evil will, the Magian the evil
+substance in himself. Only the latter is dualistic.
+
+[446] The purity- and food-laws of the Talmud and the Avesta cut far
+deeper into everyday life than, for example, the Benedictine rule.
+
+[447] Asmus, “Damaskios” (_Philos. Bibl._, 125 (1911)). Christian
+anchoritism is _later_ than pagan: Reitzenstein, “Des Athanasius Werk
+über das Leben des Antonius” (_Sitz. Heid. Ak._ (1914), VIII, 12).
+
+[448] Even to the point indicated in Matt. xix, 12, which Origen
+followed to the letter.
+
+[449] See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., article “Qaraites.” The outlook
+of these Protestants so resembled that of the Western Protestants
+that their name was used as a term of contempt for the latter by the
+Catholics, and not greatly resented. It is significant also that this
+movement in Jewry almost coincided in date with the vaster Reformation
+of Islam.--_Tr._
+
+[450] The followers of Baal Shem above mentioned (p. 228) not to be
+confused with the Hasidim or Assideans of the second century.--_Tr._
+
+[451] Wissowa, _Religion und Kulturs der Römer_, p. 493; Geffcken, pp.
+4, 144.
+
+[452] This is the metaphysical basis also of the Christian
+image-worship, which presently set in and of the appearance of
+wonder-working pictures of Mary and the Saints.
+
+[453] See p. 60.
+
+[454] The Nestorians protested against Mary _Theotokos_ (she who bore
+God), opposing to her the concept of Christ the _Theophorus_ (he who
+carried God in him). The deep difference between an image-loving and an
+image-hating religiousness is here clearly manifested.
+
+[455] Note the “Western” outlook on the substance-questions in the
+contemporary writings of Proclus--his double Zeus, his triad of πατήρ,
+δύναμις, νοήσις or νοητόν, and so forth (Zeller, _Philosophie der
+Griechen_, V, pp. 857, et seq.). Proclus’s beautiful “Hymn to Athene”
+is a veritable Ave Maria:
+
+ “But when an evil lapse of my being puts me into bondage
+ (And, ah, I know indeed how I am tossed about by many unholy deeds
+ that in my blindness I have done),
+ Be thou gracious to me, thou gentle one, thou blessing of mankind,
+ And let me not lie upon the earth as prey to fearful punishments,
+ For I am, and I remain, thy chattel.”
+
+ (Hymn VII, Eudociæ Aug. rel. A. Ludwich, 1897.)
+
+
+[456] See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., article “Apollinaris, the
+Younger.”--_Tr._
+
+[457] And Russia, too, though hitherto Russia has kept it as a buried
+treasure.
+
+[458] The Christian missionary efforts of the West very generally
+followed the same method, maintaining the local places of prayer, and
+merely substituting crucifixes or relics for the idols. Gregory the
+Great even sanctioned the sacrifice of animals in Britain.--_Tr._
+
+[459] See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., art. “Khazars.”--_Tr._
+
+[460] The Albigensian movement of the twelfth century.--_Tr._
+
+[461] Hermann, _Chines. Geschichte_ (1912), p. 77.
+
+[462] A third, “contemporary,” movement should follow in the Russian
+world in the first half of the coming millennium.
+
+[463] Cf. pp. 3, et seq. and foot-note p. 3.
+
+[464] See p. 116.
+
+[465] “He who loves God with inmost soul, transforms himself into God”
+(Bernard of Clairvaux).
+
+[466] For religious _thought_ Destiny is always a causal quantity.
+Epistemology knows it, therefore, only as an indistinct word for
+causality. Only so long as we _do not_ think upon it do we really know
+it.
+
+[467] See p. 25.
+
+[468] The distinction between the two is one of _inner_ form. A
+sacrifice made by Socrates is at bottom a prayer; and generally the
+Classical sacrifice is to be looked upon as a _prayer in bodily form_.
+The ejaculated prayer of the criminal, on the contrary, is a sacrifice
+to which fear drives him.
+
+[469] And herein philosophy differs not in the least from soil-sprung
+folk-belief. Think of Kant’s category-table with its 3 × 4 units, of
+Hegel’s method, of Iamblichus’s triads.
+
+[470] See p. 133.
+
+[471] Cf. p. 24.
+
+[472] And even so the thought has a different disposition according as
+it is primitive or cultured; Chinese, Indian, Classical, Magian, or
+Western; and even German, English, or French. In the last resort, there
+are not even two individuals with exactly the same method.
+
+[473] Anatole France’s story _Le Jongleur de Notre Dame_ is something
+deeper than a beautiful fancy.--_Tr._
+
+[474] See p. 33.
+
+[475] Was it that highly civilized Crete, the outpost of Egyptian
+modes of thought, afforded a pattern (see p. 87)? But, after all, the
+numerous local and tribal gods of the primitive Thinite time (before
+3000), which represented the numina of particular beast-_genera_, were
+essentially different in meaning. The more powerful the Egyptian deity
+of this preliminary period is, the more particular individual spirits
+(_ka_) and individual souls (_bai_) he possesses, and these hide and
+lurk in the various animals--Bastet in the cat, Sechmet in the lion,
+Hathor in the cow, Mut in the vulture (hence the human-formed _ka_ that
+figures behind the beast-head in the figures of the gods)--making of
+this earliest world-picture a very abortion of monstrous fear, filling
+it with powers which rage against man even after his death and which
+only the greatest sacrifices avail to placate. The union of the North
+and the South lands was represented by the common veneration of the
+Horus-falcon, whose first _ka_ resided in the Pharaoh of the time. Cf.
+Eduard Meyer, _Gesch. d. Alt._, I, §§ 182, et seq. [See also Moret and
+Davy: _Des clans aux empires_ and Moret: _Le Nil et la civilisation
+égyptienne_ (available in English translations).--_Tr._]
+
+[476] _Eumenides_, 126.
+
+[477] Moreover, in the full maturity of Athens, every little girl of
+the upper classes was consecrated as a bear to this Artemis.--_Tr._
+
+[478] For further information the reader may consult the articles
+“Demeter,” etc., in the _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.; and, for a suggestive
+introduction in the fewest possible words, Dr. Jane Harrison’s
+pamphlet, _Myths of Greece and Rome_.--_Tr._
+
+[479] Bernoulli, _Die Heiligen der Merowinger_ (1900)--a good account
+of this primitive religion.
+
+[480] For an account of Russian sectarian movements see A. P. Stanley,
+_Hist. of the Eastern Church_; for a summary, _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.,
+Vol. XXIII, p. 886.--_Tr._
+
+[481] Kattenbusch, _Lehrb. d. vgl. Konfessionsk._, I (1892), pp. 234,
+et seq.; N. P. Milyukov, _Skizz. russ. Kulturg._ (1901) II, pp. 104, et
+seq.
+
+[482] Borchardt, _Reheiligtum des Newoserrê_, I (1905). The Pharaoh is
+no longer an incarnation of godhead, and not yet, as the theology of
+the Middle Kingdom was to make him, the son of Re; notwithstanding all
+earthly greatness, he is small, a servant, as he stands before the god.
+
+[483] Erman, “_Ein Denkmal memphitsiche Theologie_,” _Ber. Berl. Ak._
+(1911), pp. 916, et seq.
+
+[484] Not, of course, to be connected in any profound sense with that
+which emerged under the name in the Magian Culture.--_Tr._
+
+[485] And because they were the gods of the eternal peasant, they
+outlived the Olympians.
+
+[486] Even though Hesiod is two centuries nearer to the source of his
+Culture than the German mystic is to that of our own. See the article
+“Boehme,” _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[487] Insolent prosperity tempting Nemesis.--_Tr._
+
+[488] The work of J. J. Bachofen in this field has recently been
+assembled in concentrated form under the title _Mythus von Occident und
+Orient_ (1926).--_Tr._
+
+[489] Wissowa, _Religion und Kultus der Römer_, p. 41. What has been
+said above (p. 191) concerning the Talmudic religion applies also to
+the Etruscan religion by which all Italy--i.e., no less than half
+of the Classical field--was so deeply influenced. It lies outside
+the province of both the conventional “Classical” philologies and in
+consequence has been practically ignored, as compared with the Achæan
+and Doric religions. In reality (as its tombs, temples, and myths
+prove), it forms with them a single unit of spirit and evolution.
+
+[490] It is immaterial whether or not Dionysus was “borrowed” from
+Thrace, Apollo from Asia Minor, Aphrodite from Phœnicia. It is the fact
+that out of the thousands of alien motives these particular few were
+chosen and combined in so splendid a unity that implies the fundamental
+newness of the creation--just as does the Mary-cult of the Gothic,
+although in that case the whole form-material was taken over from the
+East.
+
+[491] As in De Groot’s _Universismus_ (1918), where, in fact, the
+systems of Taoists, Confucians, and Buddhists are handled without a
+qualm as _the_ religions of China. This amounts to the same as saying
+that the Classical religion dates from Caracalla.
+
+[492] Conrady, in Wassiljew, _Die Erschliessung Chinas_ (1909), p. 232;
+B. Schindler, _Das Priestertum im alten China_, I (1919).
+
+[493] The Shu-Ching or Canon of History is a collection of ancient
+annals, the Shi-King a canonical anthology of rhymed tales made by
+Confucius.--_Tr._
+
+[494] Conrady, _China_, p. 516.
+
+[495] Of which an outstanding example is the Edda.--_Tr._
+
+[496] See article “Heliand” in _Ency. Brit._, XI edit., and works there
+referred to. A handy edition of the text is included in the “Reclam”
+series.--_Tr._
+
+[497] This idea differs essentially from that of the Egyptian duality
+of the spiritual _ka_ and the soul-bird _bai_, and still more so from
+the Magian duality of soul-substances.
+
+[498] O. Franke, _Studien zur Gesch. des Konfuzianischen Dogmas_
+(1920), p. 202.
+
+[499] Reference may again be made to Yrjo Hirn, _The Sacred
+Shrine_.--_Tr._
+
+[500] Consider, for example, the fantastic paintings of Hieronymus
+Bosch. Breughel’s similar humour, too, is unthinkable without the
+tradition of a rank-and-file of evil creatures.--_Tr._
+
+[501] So also in the Classical, the Homeric figures were for educated
+people of Hellenistic times nothing but literature, representation,
+artistic motive. Even for Plato’s period they were little more than
+this. But in 1100 B.C., Demeter and Dionysus were a fearful actuality
+before which men collapsed.
+
+[502] The stern object of Roger Bacon’s science; see p. 502,
+foot-note.--_Tr._
+
+[503] This is the real conclusion that emerges from Burdach’s
+_Reformation, Renaissance, Humanismus_ (1918).
+
+[504] In this connexion, it is important to observe that the
+education-movement of Humanism took into its field modern Italian,
+Hebrew, etc., as well as the Classical knowledge. A Dante professorship
+was founded in Florence in 1373. As for the Classical itself, side
+by side with all the enthusiasm we find a significant note in
+Boccaccio, who thanks Jesus Christ for a victory over unbelief that has
+delivered up the _enemy’s camp_ to the victor’s enjoyment. Burkhardt,
+_Renaissance_, Vol. I, p. 262 (Reclam edition).--_Tr._
+
+[505] Bezold, _Hist. Zeitschr._, 45, p. 208.
+
+[506] Italian, “Anna Metterza.” The reference is to the St. Anne of the
+Louvre and the Royal Academy Diploma Gallery, London.--_Tr._
+
+[507] Cf. Vol. I, p. 232.--_Tr._
+
+[508] Fra Angelico and Luca Signorelli.--_Tr._
+
+[509] The sense of such a relativity led to a mathematic (the calculus)
+which is literally based on the ignoring of second- and third-order
+magnitudes.--_Tr._
+
+[510] See article “Mysticism” in _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[511] After its confirmation in 1311, the character of this festival as
+one of popular joy became still more marked by its association with the
+nascent drama (see _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., articles “Corpus Christi,”
+“Drama”; and Y. Hirn, op. cit., pp. 144-5).--_Tr._
+
+[512] Or even rediscovered it. For Classical man as a spirit-filled
+body is one amongst many quite independent units, while Faustian
+man is a centre in the universe, which with its soul embraces _the
+whole_. But personality (individuality) means, not something separate
+(_einzelnes_), but something single (_einziges_).
+
+[513] Hence it is that this sacrament has conferred a position of
+such immense power upon the Western priest. He receives the personal
+confession, and speaks personally, in the name of the Infinite, the
+absolution, without which life would be unbearable.
+
+The notion of confession as a _duty_, which was finally established
+in 1215, first arose in England, whence came also the first
+confession-books (Penitentials). In England, too, originated, the idea
+of the Immaculate Conception, and even the _idea_ of the Papacy--at
+a time when Rome itself thought of it as a question of power and
+precedence. It is evidence of the independence of Faustian Christianity
+from Magian that its decisive ideas grew up in those remote parts of
+its field which lay beyond the Frankish Empire.
+
+[514] The immeasurable difference between the Faustian and the Russian
+souls is disclosed in certain word-sounds. The Russian word for heaven
+is “_nyebo_,” which contains in its _n_ a negative element. Western
+man looks up, the Russian looks horizontally into the broad plain. The
+death-impulse, too, of the respective souls is distinguishable, in
+that for the West it is the passion of drive all-ways into infinite
+space, whereas for Russians it is an expressing and expanding of self
+(_Sichentäussern_) till “it” in the man becomes identical with the
+boundless plain itself. It is thus that a Russian understands the
+words “man” and “brother.” He sees even mankind as a plane. The idea
+of a Russian’s being an astronomer! He does not see the stars at all,
+he sees only the horizon. Instead of the vault he sees the down-hang
+of the heavens--something that somewhere combines with the plain
+to form the horizon. For him the Copernican system, be it never so
+mathematical, is spiritually contemptible.
+
+While our German “_Schicksal_” rings like a trumpet call, “_Sud’bá_”
+is a genuflection. There is no room for the upstanding “I” beneath
+this almost flat-roofed heaven. That “_All are responsible for
+all_”--the “it” for the “it” in this boundlessly extended plain--is
+the metaphysical fundament of all Dostoyevski’s creation. That is why
+Ivan Karamasov must name himself murderer although another had done
+the murder. The criminal is the “unfortunate,” the “wretch”--it is the
+utter negation of Faustian personal responsibility. Russian mysticism
+has nothing of that upstriving inwardness of Gothic, of Rembrandt, of
+Beethoven, which can swell up to a heaven-storming jubilation--its
+god is not the azure depth up above. Mystical Russian love is love of
+the plain, the love of brothers under equal pressure all along the
+earth, ever along and along; the love of the poor tortured beasts that
+wander on it, the love of plants--never of birds and clouds and stars.
+The Russian “_volya_,” our “will,” means principally non-compulsion,
+freedom not _for_ something but _from_ something, and particularly
+freedom from compulsion to personal doing. Free-will is seen as
+a condition in which no one else can command “it,” and in which,
+therefore, one may give way to one’s own disposition. “_Geist_,”
+“_esprit_,” “spirit,” go thus: ↗; the Russian “_duch_” goes thus:
+↳. What sort of a Christianity will come forth one day from this
+world-feeling?
+
+[515]
+
+ _“Und wenn die Welt voll Teufel wär’
+ Und wollten uns verschlingen
+ So fürchten wir uns nimmermehr
+ Es soll uns doch gelingen.”_
+
+
+[516] And, as the secession of a reformed Church necessarily transforms
+the parent Church, there was a _Magian counter-reformation_ also. In
+the _Decretum Gelasii_ (_c._ 500, Rome) even Clement of Alexandria,
+Tertullian, and Lactantius, and in the Synod of Byzantium (543) Origen,
+were declared heretical.
+
+[517] Boehmer, _Luther im Lichte der neueren Forschung_ (1918), pp. 54,
+et seq.
+
+[518] See, for instance, H. T. Buckle, _Hist. Civilization in England_,
+Vol. III, ch. iv, for the Scottish outlook, which at times attributed
+all this horror, not even to an anti-God, but to God himself.
+“Consider, who is the contriver of these torments. There have been some
+very exquisite torments contrived by the wit of men ... but all these
+fall as far short of the torments ye are to endure as the wisdom of man
+falls short of that of God.... Infinite wisdom has contrived that evil”
+(_The Great Concern of Salvation_, by T. Halyburton, 1722).--_Tr._
+
+[519] M. Osborn, _Die Teufelsliteratur des 16. Jahrh._ (1893).
+
+[520] Clocks being an outstanding example. See Vol. I, p. 15,
+foot-note.--_Tr._
+
+[521] The famous Bishop of Lincoln (1175-1253), scholar and
+philosopher, scientist and statesman--the British Oresme.--_Tr._
+
+[522] A clear summary of Grosseteste’s, Pierre de Maricourt’s, and
+Roger Bacon’s work and outlook will be found in Ch. ix of E. Gilson’s
+short manual, _La Philosophie au Moyen Âge_ (Paris, 1925). _Ency.
+Brit._, XI ed., may also be consulted for Roger Bacon, but the article
+“Grosseteste” deals almost entirely with the bishop’s political and
+ecclesiastical career.--_Tr._
+
+[523] M. Baumgartner, _Gesch. der Philos. des Mittelalters_ (1915), pp.
+425, 571, 620, et seq. [Brief account in Ch. xi (3) of Gilson’s manual
+above cited.--_Tr._]
+
+[524] See Ch. XIV below.--_Tr._
+
+[525] Nigantha. See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., article “Jains.”--_Tr._
+
+[526] 542. See p. 197.
+
+[527] Mahommedanism must be regarded as an eccentric heretical form of
+Eastern Christianity. This in fact was the ancient mode of regarding
+Mahommet. He was considered, not in the light of the founder of a new
+religion, but rather as one of the chief heresiarchs of the Church.
+Among them he is placed by Dante in the “Inferno.” Dean Stanley,
+_Eastern Church_ (1861), Lecture VIII.--_Tr._
+
+[528] Krumbacher, _Byzant. Literaturgesch._, p. 12.
+
+[529] See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., under these names.--_Tr._
+
+[530] Not to say the twentieth.--_Tr._
+
+[531] To which may be added Edinburgh.--_Tr._
+
+[532] πρὸς τὴν πειθὼ τῶν πολλῶν, _Metaphysics_ XI, 8, p. 1074 (Bekker)
+13.--_Tr._ {sic--XII, 1074b 1-5}
+
+[533] Caliphs like Al Maimun (813-33) and the last Ommayads would have
+entirely approved of similar measures in Islam. In those times there
+was a club in Baghdad in which Christians, Jews, Moslems, and Atheists
+debated, and appeals to the authority of Bible or Koran were “out of
+order.”
+
+[534] Whereas “_virtù_” in Dante always carries a connotation of
+vital force, as also does the older English use of the word; e.g.,
+in Chaucer’s “of which vertue engendred is the flour,” (_Canterbury
+Tales_, Prol. 4) and in the Bible (Mark v, 30). In Mediæval Latin
+“_virtutes_” is used for miracles.--_Tr._
+
+[535] See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., article “Jains.”--_Tr._
+
+[536] E.g., “Given eye and visible object, visual consciousness arises;
+the conjunction of the three is contact; whereby conditioned, arises
+feeling; whereby conditioned, arises perception....” Majjima Nikhaya,
+I, 111 (quoted by Mrs. Rhys Davids, _Buddhism_).--_Tr._
+
+[537] Gercke-Norden, _Einleit. in die Altertumswiss._, II, 210.
+
+[538] Compare the renewed controversy as to Transubstantiation in
+the English Church, 1926-8, in which a bishop actually proposed that
+physical tests could be applied to the altar-miracle.--_Tr._
+
+[539] Which was ordered no less than four times in the decade 58-49.
+
+[540] Horace’s fine lady, Leuconoë.--_Tr._
+
+[541] It is perhaps possible for us to make some guess already as to
+these forms, which (it is self-evident) must lead back to certain
+elements of Gothic Christianity. But be this as it may, what is quite
+certain is that they will not be the product of any literary taste for
+Late-Indian or Late-Chinese speculation, but something of the type, for
+example, of Adventism and suchlike sects.
+
+[542] Arnim, _Stoic. vet. fragm._, 537.
+
+[543] See p. 202.
+
+[544] The Lü-shi Chun-tsiu of Lü-pu-Wei (d. 237 B.C., Chinese Augustan
+Age) is the first monument of this syncretism, of which the final
+deposit was the ritual work _Li-ki_ of the Han period (B. Schindler,
+_Das Priestertum im alten China_, I, 93).
+
+[545] M. Horten, _Die religiöse Gedankenwelt des Volkes im heutigen
+Islam_ (1917).
+
+[546] 1018-78; cf. Dieterich, _Byzant. Charakterköpfe_ (1909), p. 63.
+[Or _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., article “Psellus.”--_Tr._]
+
+[547] It was only in old age and after long and heavy warring that both
+these Cæsars gave themselves up to a mild and weary piety, and both of
+them held aloof from the more definite religions. From the point of
+view of dogma, Asoka was no Buddhist; what he did was to understand the
+currents and take them under his protection (Hillebrandt, _Altindien_,
+p. 143). [Asoka’s life is dealt with in several of the works of Rhys
+Davids; for example, Ch. xv of his _Buddhist India_.--_Tr._]
+
+[548] In so far as it is permissible to reckon Mithraism as Classical
+at all--for it is really a religion of the Magian Spring.
+
+[549] De Groot, _Universismus_ (1918), p. 134.
+
+[550] P. 169.
+
+[551] See the article “Maimonides” in _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[552] Fromer, _Der Talmud_, p. 217. The “red cow” and the ritual
+of anointing a Jewish king were treated in this work with the same
+seriousness as the most important provisions of private law. [See J.
+and J. Tharaud, _Petite Histoire des Juifs_, Ch. I (1927).--_Tr._]
+
+[553] See, for the following paragraphs, the articles “Jews,” “Hebrew
+Religion,” “Hebrew Literature,” “Kabbalah,” “Qaraites,” etc., in _Ency.
+Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[554] Strunz, _Gesch. der Naturwiss. im Mittelalter_, p. 89.
+
+[555] Only with Nicolaus Cusanus was this state of things reversed.
+
+[556] P. 174.
+
+[557] The reader is recommended to study, in the light of all this,
+recent literature of the type of Hajim Bloch’s _Golem_ and the works of
+the brothers Tharaud.--_Tr._
+
+[558] See pp. 259, et seq.; 174, et seq.
+
+[559] P. 127.
+
+[560] P. 48.
+
+[561] Prague contains a veritable corpus of commentary upon these
+pages.--_Tr._
+
+[562] A.D. 132. See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., Vol. XV, p. 402, and Vol.
+III, p. 395.--_Tr._
+
+[563] Instances--besides that of Mithradates and the Cyprus massacre
+(p. 198) quoted above--are the Sepoy Mutiny in India, the Boxer
+Rebellion in China, and the Bolshevist fury of Jews, Letts, and other
+alien peoples against Tsarist Russia.
+
+[564] P. Levertoff, _Die religiöse Denkweise der Chassidim_ (1918),
+pp. 128, et seq.; M. Buber, _Die Legende des Baalschem_ (1907).
+[Brief account in J. and J. Tharaud, _Petite histoire des Juifs_, Ch.
+vii.--_Tr._]
+
+[565] Levertoff, op. cit., p. 136.
+
+[566] O. Weininger, _Taschenbuch_ (1919), above all pp. 19, et seq.
+
+[567] Their ship-building was in Roman times more Classical than
+Phœnician, their state was organized as a Polis, and their educated
+people, like Hannibal, were familiar with Greek.
+
+[568] See p. 260, et seq.
+
+[569] Cf. p. 3 and foot-note.
+
+[570] And not until women cease to have race enough to have or to
+want children, not until they cease to _be_ history, does it become
+possible for them to make or to copy the history of men. Conversely,
+it is deeply significant that we are in the habit of calling thinkers,
+doctrinaires, and humanity-enthusiasts of anti-political tendency “old
+women.” They wish to imitate the other history, the history of woman,
+although they--cannot.
+
+[571] No exact equivalent exists in common English for the German word
+“_Stand_.” “Aristocracy” is too narrow, as under most aspects the
+clergy and under some even the _Tiers_ have to be reckoned in. “Class”
+fails because, for logical completeness, it has to be stretched so
+as to bring in the qualitatively unclassed as a distinct category.
+(A whole social history is contained in the use of these and similar
+words at different periods.) The word “Estate” itself is used nowadays
+for the “masses” (“Fourth Estate” = “Proletariat”), but this very use,
+by Socialists, is an assertion that the masses, as workers, possess a
+qualitative peculiarity and condition of their own, and the word thus
+continues to connote ideas of differentiation, specific constitution,
+and oriented outlook. It may, therefore, be employed here without fear
+of misunderstanding or reproach of pedantry.--_Tr._
+
+[572] Cf. pp. 120, et seq.
+
+[573] Mitteis, _Reichsrecht und Volksrecht_ (1891), p. 63.
+
+[574] Sohm, _Institutionen_ (1911), p. 614. [_Ency. Brit._, XI ed.,
+Vol. XXIII, pp. 540-1.--_Tr._]
+
+[575] This principle formed the basis of the dynastic-idea of the
+Arabian world (Ommayads, Comneni, Sassanids), which is so hard for us
+to grasp. When a usurper had seized a throne, he hastened to marry
+one or another of the female members of the blood-community and so
+prolonged the dynasty; of law-made succession rights there was no
+question, nor under this idea could there be. (See also J. Wellhausen,
+_Ein Gemeinwesen ohne Obrigkeit_ (1900).)
+
+[576] See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., Vol. XXIII, p. 574.--_Tr._
+
+[577] See p. 18.
+
+[578] An inversion of Clausewitz’s famous expression that war is a
+continuation of policy by other means. (_On War_, I, i, § 24).--_Tr._
+
+[579] Not excluding art, although we are not _conscious_ of them save
+through deduction from art-_history_.
+
+[580] Original: “_Sie liegen im gesteigerten Dasein von Einzelnen und
+Kreisen, eben in dem, was soeben ‘Dasein in Form’ genannt worden ist,
+und durch diese Höhe des Geformtseins erst die Kultur repräsentirt._”
+
+[581] So in the German, but see foot-note p. 329. “_Stand_” would have
+expressed the sense better.--_Tr._
+
+[582] R. Fick, _Die soziale Gliederung im nordöstlichen Indien zu
+Buddhas Zeit_ (1897), p. 201; K. Hillebrandt, _Alt-Indien_ (1899), p.
+82. [Also the article “Brahmanism,” _Ency. Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._]
+
+[583] See Vol. I, p. 157.--_Tr._
+
+[584]
+
+ _Got hât driu leben geschaffen
+ Gebûre, ritter, phaffen._
+
+[Note the collective _ge-_ attached to the first-named.--_Tr._]
+
+[585] The ease with which Bolshevism extinguished the four so-called
+estates or classes of Petrine Russia--nobles, merchants, small
+townspeople, and peasants--shows that these were mere imitations and
+administrative conveniences, and destitute of all symbolism--for
+symbolism no power on earth can choke. They correspond to the outward
+differences of rank and possessions that existed in the Visigothic and
+Frankish Kingdoms, and--as glimpses afforded by the earliest parts of
+the Iliad show--in Mycenæan times. It is reserved for the future to
+develop a true nobility and clergy in Russia.
+
+[586] As a treaty of reciprocal possession by the two parties which is
+made effective by the reciprocal use of their sex-properties.
+
+[587] Oldenberg, _Die Lehre der Upanishaden_ (1915), p. 5.
+
+[588] P. 124.
+
+[589] “So, then, because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I
+will spue thee out of my mouth.”
+
+[590] P. 4, et seq.
+
+[591] The case of Egypt is of course similar.--_Tr._
+
+[592] Pp. 272, et seq.
+
+[593] _Jenseits von Gut und Böse_, § 260.
+
+[594] In contrast, the Spanish word “_Hidalgo_” means “son of
+somebody.”--_Tr._
+
+[595] Conversely, it can successfully be controverted--and often
+has been so in the Chinese and Classical, Indian and Western
+philosophies--but it does not get abolished.
+
+[596] The possession of movable things (food, equipment, arms) comes
+later, and is of much lower symbolic weight. It occurs widely in the
+animal world. The bird’s nest, on the contrary, is a property of
+plantlike kind.
+
+[597] Property in this most significant sense--the having grown up with
+something--refers therefore less to the particular person than to the
+family tree to which he belongs. In every quarrel within a peasant or
+even within a princely family, this is the deep and violent element.
+The master for the time being holds possession only in the name of the
+family line. Hence, too, the terror of death without heirs. _Property
+also is a Time-symbol_, and consequently it is closely related to
+marriage, which is a firm plantlike intergrowth and mutual possession
+of two human beings, so real as to be even reflected in an increasing
+facial similarity.
+
+[598] See p. 248.
+
+[599] See these headings in _Ency. Brit._, XI. ed.--_Tr._
+
+[600] After death the teachers of error are excluded from the eternal
+bliss of the text-book and cast into the purgatorial fires of
+foot-notes, whence, purged by the intercession of the believer, they
+ascend into the paradise of the paragraphs.
+
+[601] Black Jews, who are smiths to a man.
+
+[602] The genuinely primitive Mir, contrary to the assertions of
+enthusiastic socialists and pan-slavists, dates only from after 1600,
+and has been abolished since 1861. Here the soil is _communal_ soil,
+and the villagers are as far as possible held fast, in order to ensure
+that the tilling of this soil shall cover the demands of taxation.
+
+[603] See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., Vol. XI, pp. 94, 786, or any histories
+of German literature.--_Tr._
+
+[604] See, further, below.
+
+[605] Brentano, _Byzant. Volkswirtschaft_ (1917), p. 15.
+
+[606] Even I-wang (934-909) was obliged to leave conquered territories
+to his vassals, who put in counts and reeves of their own choice.
+
+[607] See H. Delbrück, _Gesch. der Kriegskunst_, Vol. II, Book I, Ch.
+x; or C. W. C. Oman, _Art of War: Middle Ages_, Ch. i.--_Tr._
+
+[608] The slave in the Classical sense disappears automatically and
+completely in these centuries--one of the most significant indications
+that the Classical world-feeling, and with it its economic feeling,
+were extinct.
+
+[609] Thus, later, under Justinian, Belisarius could furnish seven
+thousand cavalry from his own domains for the Gothic War. Very few
+German princes could have done so much in Charles V’s time. [The last
+of such armies in Western history was the army of the House of Condé in
+the seventeenth century. These centuries of ours “correspond” with the
+period that set in with Justinian.--_Tr._]
+
+[610] Pöhlmann, _Röm. Kaiserzeit_ (Pflugk-Harttungs _Weltgesch._, I,
+pp. 200, et seq.).
+
+[611] See p. 286.
+
+[612] In spite of Ed. Meyer (_Gesch. d. Altertums_, I, § 243).
+
+[613] Our marshal and the Chinese _sse-ma_, chamberlain and _Chen_,
+high steward and _ta-tsai_, high bailiff and _nan_, earl and _peh_ (the
+Chinese ranks as in Schindler, _Das Priestertum im alten China_, p. 61,
+et seq.). Precisely corresponding Egyptian grades in Ed. Meyer, _Gesch.
+des Altertums_, I, § 222; Byzantine in the “_Notitia Dignitatum_”
+(derived in part from the Sassanid Court). In the Classical city-states
+certain official titles of ancient origin suggest court functions
+(Colacretæ, Prytanes, Consuls). See further below.
+
+[614] Hardy, _Indische Religionsgesch._, p. 260.
+
+[615] M. Granet, _Coutumes matrimoniales de la Chine antique, T’oung
+Pao_ (1912), pp. 517, et seq.
+
+[616] The tournament was an institution in the other, western, half of
+the Magian world as well.--_Tr._
+
+[617] The life of John Chrysostom is an instance.
+
+[618] Another example (beloved of artists) stands to this day in the
+town of San Gimigniano, which is almost nothing but a group of family
+towers ranging up to 150 ft. in height.--_Tr._
+
+[619] Ambrogio Spinola is a case in point.--_Tr._
+
+[620] The memoirs of the Duc de Saint Simon give a vivid picture of
+this evolution.
+
+[621] P. 75.
+
+[622] Corresponding to our seventeenth century.
+
+[623] K. J. Neumann, _Die Grundherrschaft der römischen Republik_
+(1900); Ed. Meyer, _Kl. Schriften_, pp. 351, et seq.
+
+[624] A. Rosenberg, _Studien zur Entstehung der Plebs_, Herm. XLVIII
+(1913), pp. 359, et seq.
+
+[625] Pp. 102, et seq.
+
+[626] See pp. 159, et seq.
+
+[627] Pp. 170, et seq.
+
+[628] See Vol. I, pp. 136, et seq.--_Tr._
+
+[629] Hence such codes throw out the privileges of nobility and
+clergy and sustain those of money and intellect, and display a frank
+preference for movable as against real property.
+
+[630] Pp. 75, et seq. The corresponding attempt of the absolutist
+Stuarts to introduce Roman Law into England was defeated chiefly by the
+Puritan jurist Coke (d. 1634)--yet another proof that the spirit of
+laws is always a party-spirit.
+
+[631] See pp. 65, et seq.
+
+[632] Above all in connexion with divorce, in which the civil and the
+ecclesiastical views _both_ hold good, literally side by side.
+
+[633] See p. 330.--_Tr._
+
+[634] Thus come about the much satirized forms of the “patrol-” or
+“barrack-state,” as opponents call it with an unintelligent scorn.
+Similar points of view appear also in Chinese and Greek constitutional
+theories (O. Franke, _Studien zur Geschichte des konfuzianischen
+Dogmas_ (1920), pp. 211, et seq.; Pöhlmann, _Geschichte der sozialen
+Frage und der Sozialismus in der antiken Welt_ (1912)). On the other
+hand, the political tastes of, for example, Wilhelm von Humboldt, who
+as a Classicist opposed the individual to the State, belong, not to
+political history at all, but to literature. For what he looked at
+was, not the capacity of the State to thrive in the real State-world
+around it, but its private existence within itself, without regard to
+the fact that such an ideal could not endure for an instant in the face
+of a neglected outer situation. It is a basic error of the ideologues
+that, in concentrating on the private life and referring to it the
+whole inner structure of the State, they entirely ignore the latter’s
+position in point of outward power, though this in fact completely
+conditions its freedom for the inward development. The difference
+between the French and the German Revolutions, for example, consists in
+the fact that the one commanded the external situation and _therewith_
+the internal also, while the other commanded neither and was foredoomed
+to farce.
+
+[635] Which is most definitely _not_ identical with economic history
+in the sense of the materialist historian. More of this in the next
+chapter.
+
+[636] It is to be noted that the author uses the terms “horizontal” and
+“vertical” here in the reverse sense to that in which they commonly
+figure in present-day _political_ literature, although in _economic_
+works the usage is the same as that of the text.--_Tr._
+
+[637] Attention is drawn to this phrase, so as to avoid misconceptions
+as to the meaning of “subject” in the sequel.--_Tr._
+
+[638] Compare the position of the aristocratic families of the South in
+the history of the United States up to 1850-60.--_Tr._
+
+[639] For in those centuries the high dignities of the Church were
+invariably given to the nobility of Europe, who put the political
+qualities of the blood at her service. From this school in turn
+emanated statesmen like Richelieu, Mazarin, and Talleyrand, to name but
+a few.
+
+[640] See p. 180.
+
+[641] I.e., Domesday Book.--_Tr._
+
+[642] See p. 350.
+
+[643] Ed. Meyer, _Gesch. a. Altertums_, I, § 244.
+
+[644] Even by Chinese critics. See, however, Schindler, _Das
+Priestertum im alten China_, I, pp. 61, et seq.; Conrady, _China_, p.
+533.
+
+[645] See pp. 349, et seq.
+
+[646] “_Compotus_,” “_contrarotulus_” (the counter-roll retained for
+checking), “_quittancia_,” “_recordatum_.”
+
+[647] See p. 279.
+
+[648] “For the ruler of the Middle there is no foreign land”
+(Kung-yang). “The heaven speaks not; it causes its thoughts to be
+promulgated by a man” (Tung Chung-shu). His errors affect the whole
+cosmos and bring about cataclysms in Nature (O. Franke, _Zur Geschichte
+des konfuzianischen Dogmas_ (1920), pp. 212, et seq., 244, et seq.).
+Such mystic universalism was completely alien to Indian and Classical
+state-notions.
+
+[649] It must not be forgotten that the immense domains of the Church
+had become hereditary fiefs of the bishops and archbishops, who were no
+more disposed than the lay peers to permit interferences on the part of
+the overlord.
+
+[650] After the overthrow of the Tyrannis, _c._ 500, the two regents
+of the Roman patriciate bear the title _prætor_ or _judex_. But it
+seems to me probable that these go back beyond the Tyrannis and even
+the preceding oligarchic period into that of the kingship proper,
+and that as court-offices they have the same origin as our _Herzog_,
+duke (_præ-itor_); _Heerwart_, in Athens polemarch; and _Graf_, earl
+(“_Ding-graf_,” hereditary arbiter, in Athens archon). The name
+“_consul_” (from 366) is philologically thoroughly archaic, and
+therefore implies no new creation, but the renascence of a title
+(king’s adviser?) which oligarchic sentiment had long repudiated.
+
+[651] Beloch, _Griechische Geschichte_, I, 1, pp. 214, et seq.
+
+[652] The Spartiates mustered in the best period of the sixth century
+some 4000 warriors, out of a total population of nearly 300,000,
+including Periœci and Helots (Ed. Meyer, _Gesch. d. Alt._, III, §
+264). The Roman families must at that time have been of about the same
+strength relatively to the _clientela_ and the Latins.
+
+[653] Men’s messes. See the article Συσσίτια in Smith’s _Dictionary of
+Classical Antiquities._--_Tr._
+
+[654] Ed. Meyer, _Geschichte des Alt._, I, § 264.
+
+[655] Ed. Meyer, _Gesch. d. Alt._, I, § 267, et seq.
+
+[656] See Ehrenberg, _Die Rechtsidee im frühen Griechentum_ (1921), pp.
+65, et seq.
+
+[657] P. 18.
+
+[658] Pp. 171, et seq.
+
+[659] P. 181, et seq.
+
+[660] F. Cumont, _Mysterien des Mithra_ (1910), pp. 74, et seq. The
+Sassanid government, which about A.D. 300 changed from the feudal
+union to the aristocratic State, was in all respects the pattern for
+Byzantium in ceremonial, in the knightly character of its Empire, in
+administrative management, and above all in the type of its Ruler. Cf.
+also A. Christensen, _L’Empire des Sassanides, le peuple, l’état, la
+cour_ (Copenhagen, 1907).
+
+[661] Ed. Meyer, _Kl. Shriften_, p. 146.
+
+[662] See p. 243.
+
+[663] Krumbacher, _Byzant. Literaturgesch._, p. 918.
+
+[664] A bright light is thrown upon the formation of this picture by
+the fact that the descendants of the repeatedly overthrown dynasties
+of Hia and Shang reigned in the states of Ki-Sung throughout the Chóu
+period (Schindler, _Das Priestertum im alten China_, I, p. 30). This
+shows, firstly, that the picture of the Empire was mirrored back on
+some earlier or even perhaps a contemporary eminence of these states;
+and, secondly and above all, that here too “dynasty” was not what we
+currently mean by the name, but followed some quite different idea of
+the family. We may compare the fiction which made the German King, who
+was always chosen on Frankish territory and crowned in the sepulchral
+chapel of Charlemagne, into a “Frank,” so that if circumstances had
+been different, there might have evolved the notion of a Frankish
+dynasty running from Charles to Conradin (see Amira, _German. Recht_
+in Herm. Paul, _Grundriss_, III, p. 147, note). From the Confucian age
+of enlightenment this picture became the basis of a State-theory, and
+later still it was turned to account by the Cæsars (p. 313).
+
+[665] O. Franke, _Studien zur Gesch. d. Konfuz. Dogmas_, pp. 247, 251.
+
+[666] An illuminating example is the “personal union” of the Ki and
+Tseng states, contested as contrary to law (Franke, op. cit., p. 251).
+
+[667] Ed. Meyer, _Gesch. d. Alt._, I, § 281.
+
+[668] G. Busolt, _Griech. Staatskunde_ (1920), pp. 319, et seq. U.
+von Wilamowitz (_Staat und Gesellschaft der Griechen_, 1910, p. 53),
+in disputing the existence of the patriarchal kingdom, misunderstands
+the immense difference between the conditions of the eighth century,
+indicated in the Odyssey, and those of the tenth.
+
+[669] A. Rosenberg, _Der Staat der alten Italiker_, pp. 75, et seq.
+
+[670] Estate or Class was the basis, too, of the two great political
+associations in Byzantium, which are quite wrongly described as “Circus
+parties.” These Blues and Greens called themselves “Demoi” and had
+their regular leaders. The circus was simply like the Palais Royal of
+1789, the scene of public manifestations, and behind them were the
+class-associations of the Senate. When in 520 Anastasius I gave effect
+to the Monophysite tendency, the Greens sang orthodox hymns all day
+there, and so forced the Emperor publicly to cry off. The Western
+counterpart to this is formed by the Parisian parties under the “three
+Henries” (1580), the Guelphs and Ghibellines of Savonarola’s Florence,
+and above all the insurgent faction in Rome under Pope Eugene IV. The
+suppression of the Nika Rebellion by Justinian in 532 was thus also the
+foundation of State-absolutism _vis-à-vis_ the Estates.
+
+[671] This contrast gives rise to a corresponding contrast in idea of
+colonization. Whereas, e.g., the Prussian sovereigns invited settlers
+to their _land_ (Salzburg Protestants, French Huguenots), Gelon
+forcibly transferred the populations of whole cities into Syracuse,
+which thus became the first megalopolis of the Classical world (_c._
+480).
+
+[672] The Greek lecythi found in graves on the Esquiline date form this
+period.
+
+[673] Wissowa, _Religion der Römer_, p. 242.
+
+[674] W. Schulze, _Zur Geschichte lateinischen Eigennamen_, pp. 379, et
+seq., 580, et seq.
+
+[675] See p. 351.
+
+[676] This is seen also in the relation of the _Pontifex Maximus_ to
+the _Rex Sacrorum_--the latter with the three great Flamens to the
+kingship, the Pontifices and the Vestals to the aristocracy.
+
+[677] See p. 62, et seq.
+
+[678] P. 173, et seq.
+
+[679] This is clearly to be seen from Wilcken, _Grundzüge der
+Papyruskunde_ (1912), pp. 1, et seq.
+
+[680] Ed. Meyer, _Cæsars Monarchie_ (1918), p. 308.
+
+[681] Plutarch and Appian describe the masses of humanity that moved in
+by all the roads of Italy to vote on Tiberius Gracchus’s land-bills.
+But this in itself shows that nothing of the sort had ever happened
+before; and immediately after his violence upon Octavius, Tiberius
+Gracchus saw downfall staring him in the face because the masses had
+streamed off home again and were not to be assembled a second time.
+In Cicero’s day a Comitia often consisted only in speeches by a few
+politicians, without participation by others; but never did it occur
+to a Roman to transfer the place of voting to the residence of the
+individual voter--nor even to the Italians when they were fighting for
+citizenship in 90 B.C. So strong was the feeling of the Polis.
+
+[682] In the Western dynasty-states the domestic law of each is valid
+for its _territory_ and applies therefore to all persons present
+therein, irrespective of allegiance. In the city-state, on the
+contrary, the validity of its domestic law for a person arises from
+that person’s possession of citizenship; _civitas_, therefore, means
+infinitely more than present-day nationality, for without it a man was
+without rights at all--as a “person,” non-existent.
+
+[683] See p. 60.
+
+[684] Gercke-Norden, _Einl. i. d. Alt.-Wiss._, II, p. 202.
+
+[685] Busolt, _Griech. Geschichte_, II, pp. 346, et seq.
+
+[686] Cf. pp. 282 and 305. Fronde and Tyrannis have as intimate
+a connexion with Puritanism--the same epochal phase, but in the
+religious instead of the political world--as the Reformation with the
+aristocratic State, and the “Second Religiousness” with Cæsarism.
+
+[687] G. Wissowa, _Religion der Römer_, pp. 297, et seq.
+
+[688] Beloch, _Griech. Geschichte_, I, 1, p. 354.
+
+[689] Ed. Meyer, _Gesch. d. Alt._, § 281.
+
+[690] Ibid., §§ 280, et seq.
+
+[691] On the means taken to secure the succession, cf. p. 379.
+
+[692] Ed. Meyer, op. cit., § 286.
+
+[693] Ibid., § 283. A. Erman, _Die Mahnworte eines ägyptischen
+Propheten_ (_Sitz. Preuss. Akad._), 1919, pp. 804, et seq.
+
+[694] S. Plath, _Verfassung und Verwaltung Chinas_ (_Abb. Münch. Ak._,
+1864), p. 97, O. Franke, _Studien z. Gesch. d. Konfuz. Dogmas_, pp.
+255, et seq.
+
+[695] After armed rebellion.--_Tr._
+
+[696] The fifty-year interval of these critical points, which is seen
+with special distinctness in the clear historical structure of the
+Baroque, but is recognizable also in the sequence of the three Punic
+Wars, is yet another hint that the Cosmic flowings in the form of
+human lives upon the surface of a minor star are not self-contained
+and independent, but stand in deep harmony with the unending movedness
+of the universe. In a small but noteworthy book, R. Mewes, _Die
+Kriegs- und Geistesperioden im Völkerleben unde Verkündigung des
+nächsten Weltkrieges_ (1896), the relation of those war-periods with
+weather-periods, sun-spot cycles, and certain conjunctures of the
+planets is established, and a great war foretold accordingly for the
+period 1910-20. But these and numerous similar connexions that come
+within the reach of our senses (cf. pp. 5, et seq.) veil a secret that
+we have to respect and not to infringe with causal expositions or
+mystical brain-spectres.
+
+[697] See C. von B(inder)-K(rieglstein), _Geist und Stoff im Kriege_
+(1896); F. N. Maude, _War and the World’s Life_ (1907), and other works
+by the same author; also, in more summary terms, the articles “Army”
+and “French Revolutionary Wars” by the present translator in _Ency.
+Brit._, XI ed.--_Tr._
+
+[698] “Rule, Britannia” is an eighteenth-century product.--_Tr._
+
+[699] For this, and what follows, see my _Preussentum und Sozialismus_,
+pp. 31, et seq.
+
+[700] Mr. Asquith (Lord Oxford) was the first British Prime Minister to
+be officially so styled.--_Tr._
+
+[701] “Landed” and “funded” interests (J. Hatschek, _Engl.
+Verfassungsgeschichte_, 1913, pp. 589, et seq.). Walpole, the organizer
+of the Whig party after 1714, used to describe himself and Townshend
+as “the Firm;” and this “firm” with various changes of proprietorship
+governed without limitation till 1760.
+
+[702] R. von Pöhlmann, _Griech. Gesch._ (1914), pp. 223-45.
+
+[703] Ed. Meyer, _Gesch. d. Alt._ V § 809. If Latin became a literary
+language, only very late--after Alexander--the only deduction to be
+made from the fact is that under the Tarquins Greek and Etruscan must
+have been in general use--which, after all, goes without saying for a
+city that was of a size and position to have relations with Carthage;
+that waged war in alliance with Cyme and made use of the Treasury of
+Massalia at Delphi; whose standard weights and measures were Dorian;
+whose mode of warfare was Sicilian; and whose walls contained a large
+foreign colony. Livy (IX, 36), following older statements, observes
+that about 300 the Roman boy was still brought upon Etruscan culture,
+as he was later on Greek. The ancient form “Ulixes” for Odysseus shows
+that the Homeric sagas were not only known, but popularly known here
+(cf. p. 284). The provisions of the Twelve Tables (_c._ 450) agree with
+the more or less contemporary law of Gortyn in Crete (cf. p. 63), not
+merely as to substance, but even stylistically--so exactly that the
+Roman patricians who drew them up must have been entirely at home with
+juristic Greek.
+
+[704] This measure--a usurpation of the administration by the “nation
+in arms”--corresponds to the setting-up of Consular Tribunes in Rome in
+the military disturbances of 438.
+
+[705] According to B. Niese. Modern investigators are right in the
+view that the Decemvirate was at first intended to be temporary; but
+the question is--what were the views of the party that backed them
+concerning the _new_ constitutional order that was to follow. It was on
+that that a crisis had inevitably to come.
+
+[706] A. Wahl, _Vorgeschichte d. franz. Revolution_, II (1907); this
+work is the only presentation of the subject from the world-historical
+point of view. All Frenchmen, even the most modern, such as Aulard
+and Sorel, see things from one or another partisan angle. It is
+materialistic nonsense to talk of economic causes for a Revolution like
+this. Even the peasantry was better off than in most other countries,
+and in any case it was not among them that it began. It was amongst
+the _educated_ that the catastrophe started, the educated of _all_
+the classes--in the high nobility and the clergy even sooner than in
+the higher bourgeoisie, because the course of the first assembly of
+Notables (1787) had disclosed the possibility of radically reshaping
+the form of government according to class-desires.
+
+[707] Even the highly provincial March Revolution of 1848 in Germany
+was a purely urban matter; hence the vanishingly small proportion of
+the population involved as participants.
+
+[708] Hence also the exclusive bourgeois character of the National
+Guard in France from 1815 to 1851, the period between two phases of
+popular Tyrannis. In the _coup d’état_ by which Napoleon III seized the
+throne, Paris was filled with regular troops, and the National Guard
+was forbidden to assemble on pain of death.--_Tr._
+
+[709] Pp. 97, and 305.
+
+[710] See pp. 348.
+
+[711] J. Hatschek, _Engl. Verfassungsgesch._, p. 588.
+
+[712] On the other side of the Channel, it is well known that the
+Rothschild fortune was founded in a dramatic play upon the varying news
+from the front in Belgium.
+
+In the second phase of the Franco-German War of 1870-1 the bankers
+of Frankfurt took up holdings in the loans floated by the French
+Government of National Defence.--_Tr._
+
+[713] But even during the Reign of Terror in the middle of Paris, there
+flourished the establishment of Dr. Belhomme, in which members of the
+highest aristocracy ate and drank and danced out of all danger for so
+long as they could pay (G. Lenôtre, _Das revolutionäre Paris_, p. 409).
+
+[714] The great movement which makes use of the catchwords of Marx has
+not delivered the entrepreneur into the power of the worker, but both
+into that of the Bourse.
+
+[715] Both the old parties possessed clear lines of tradition back to
+1680.
+
+[716] The moral and political “Enlightenment” movement was in England
+also a product of the Third Estate (Priestley and Paley, Paine,
+Godwin), and for that reason was unable to grasp things with the fine
+discrimination of a Shaftesbury.
+
+[717] Pelham, the successor of Walpole, paid to members of the Commons,
+through his secretary, £500 to £800 at the end of each session
+according to the value of the services rendered by each recipient
+to the Government--i.e., the Whig party. The party agent Dodington
+described his parliamentary activities in these words: “I never
+attended a debate if I could help it, and I never missed a division
+that I could possibly take part in. I heard many arguments that
+convinced me, but never one that influenced my vote.”
+
+[718] Here it was actually the interest of bourgeois and
+“enlightenment” ideals that the personal régime of dictatorship was
+thought to favour, for the opposition to these ideas lay in the strict
+state-ideal of the Polis, which according to Isocrates was marked with
+the curse of inability to die.
+
+[719] Diodorus XIV, 7. The drama was repeated in 317, when Agathocles
+the ex-potter let loose his mercenary bands and the mob upon the new
+upper classes. After the massacre the “people” of the “purified city”
+assembled and conferred the dictature upon the “saviour of true and
+genuine freedom” (Deodorus XIX, 6, et seq.). On the whole movement see
+Busolt, _Griech. Staatskunde_, pp. 396, et seq., and Pöhlmann, _Gesch.
+d. soz. Frage_, I, pp. 416, et seq.
+
+[720] Already that part of the Prussian army which had been in Russia
+had declared against Napoleon--and that, though its general, Yorck, was
+no liberal, but the old strict type of the Frederician officer.--_Tr._
+
+[721] Ed. Meyer, _Gesch. d. Alt._, IV, §§ 626, 630.
+
+[722] H. Delbrück, _Gesch. d. Kriegskunst_ (1908), I, p. 142.
+
+[723] Three to six “_tribuni militares consulari protestate_”
+instead of the Consuls. Just at this juncture, as the result of the
+introduction of pay and longer duration of service with the colours,
+there must have come into being a nucleus of true professional
+soldiers, who would have the election of centurions in their own hands
+and by whom the spirit of the army was determined. It is entirely
+erroneous to speak of a peasant-levy at this stage, quite apart from
+the fact that the four great city-tribes contributed a considerable
+part of the rank and file and a part, too, whose influence was even
+greater than its numerical strength. Even in the “good old days”
+picture presented to us by Livy and others we can clearly perceive
+the influence exerted by the standing formations upon the contests of
+parties.
+
+[724] It is perhaps not a mere coincidence that 367 is the year of
+Dionysius’s death.
+
+[725] According to K. J. Neumann, this goes back to the great Censor.
+
+[726] According to Roman law, the freed slave at once acquired
+citizenship, with some few limitations. As the slave-material came
+from all over the Mediterranean region and most of all from the East,
+it was a vast rootless mass that collected in the four urban tribes,
+alien from all the tendencies of the old Roman blood; and it quickly
+destroyed these when, after the Gracchan movement, it had succeeded in
+bringing its weight of numbers to bear with effect.
+
+[727] From the end of the fourth century the nobility developed into
+a closed circle of families that had, or claimed to have, consuls
+among their ancestors. The more strictly this condition was enforced,
+the more frequent were the falsifications of the old consul-lists
+in order to “legitimize” rising families of strong race and talent.
+The first (and truly revolutionary) outburst of forgery occurs in
+the epoch of Appius Claudius the Censor, when the curule ædile C.
+Flavius, the son of a slave, put the list in order--that was the time
+when even royal cognomina were discovered amongst plebeian families.
+The second was in the days of the battle of Pydna (168), when the
+dominance of the nobility began to assume Cæsarian forms (E. Kornemann,
+_Der Priesterkodex in der Regia_, 1912, pp. 56, et seq.). Of the 200
+Consulates between 232 and 133, 159 fell to 26 families, and thereafter
+blood-quality being exhausted, but the form as such being all the more
+studiously preserved in consequence--the rise of _novi homines_ like
+Cato and Cicero became a rare phenomenon.
+
+[728] Another instance, among many, is its rôle in preparing the German
+crash of 1918.
+
+[729] And even in France, where the judicial class in the parlements
+openly scorned the Government, and with impunity tore down royal
+proclamations from the walls and put up their own _arrêts_ instead (R.
+Holtzmann, _Französ. Verfassungsgesch._, 1910, p. 353); where “orders
+were given, but not obeyed, laws enacted, but not executed” (A. Wahl,
+_Vorgesch. d. franz. Revolution_, I, 29 and passim); where high finance
+could overthrow Turgot and anyone else whose reform-schemes disquieted
+it; where the whole educated world, headed by princes and nobles,
+prelates and generals, was Anglomaniac and applauded opposition in
+any shape or form--even there nothing would have happened but for the
+sudden concurrence of a set of incidents--the fashion which set in
+amongst French officers of aiding the American republicans in their
+struggle with the English King; the diplomatic reverse in Holland (27
+Oct. 1787) in the middle of the reforming activity of the Government;
+and the perpetual change of ministers under pressure from irresponsible
+quarters. In the British Empire, the falling-away of the Colonies was
+the result of attempts of high-Tory circles (in collusion with George
+III, but in reality of course in their own interests) to strengthen the
+Royal power. This party possessed in the Colonies a strong contingent
+of royalists, notably in the South: these elements, fighting on the
+British side, decided the battle of Camden, and after the final victory
+of the rebels mostly emigrated to Canada, which had remained loyal.
+
+[730] In 1793 there were 306 members of the House of Commons who were
+elected by 160 persons in all. Old Sarum, the constituency of the elder
+Pitt, consisted of one tenement, returning two members.
+
+[731] Afterwards--from 1832--the English nobility itself, through a
+series of prudent measures, drew the bourgeoisie into _co-operation_
+with it, but under its continued guidance and, above all, in the
+framework of tradition, within which consequently the young talent
+grew up. Democracy thus actualized itself here so that the Government
+remained strictly “in form”--the old aristocratic form--while the
+individual was free to practise politics according to his bent. This
+transition, in a peasantless society dominated by business interests,
+was the most remarkable achievement of inner politics in the nineteenth
+century.
+
+[732] Early, that is, in the post-revolutionary era here
+considered.--_Tr._
+
+[733] The reassertion of this tradition after the emergency-army of
+the Wars of Liberation (1812-15) had dispersed into the body of the
+community is a remarkable story, in which military and political
+standpoints cannot be separated. See Vidal de la Blache, _La
+Régéneration de l’Armée Prusse_ (1910), Ch. vi.--_Tr._
+
+[734] See _Preussentum und Sozialismus_, pp. 40, et seq.
+
+[735] The genesis of the Roman Tribunate was a blind incident,
+the happy consequences of which no one really foresaw. Western
+Constitutions, on the contrary, have been thoroughly thought out and
+their effects precisely calculated--whether the calculation proved to
+be correct or incorrect, the care is undeniable.
+
+[736] From the few European works that concern themselves with
+questions of ancient Chinese history, it emerges that Chinese
+literature contains a very great amount of material bearing on this
+period, which corresponds in innumerable parallels to our own present
+time. But there is a total lack of any political treatment of it that
+can be taken seriously. References: Hübotter, _Aus den Plänen der
+Kämpfenden Reiche_ (1912); Piton, “The Six Great Chancellors of Tsin,”
+_China Review_, XIII, 202, 255, 365, XIV, 3; Ed. Chavannes, _Mém. hist.
+de Se-ma-tsien_ (1895 and following); Pfizmair, _Sitz. Wien Akad._,
+XLIII (1863) (“Tsin”), XLIV (“Tsu”); A. Tschepe, _Histoire du royaume
+de Ou_ (1896), and _de Tchou_ (1903).
+
+[737] Corresponding more or less to the province of Shen-si.
+
+[738] On the middle Yang-tse-kiang.
+
+[739] Biography 13 of Sze-ma-tsien. So far as the translated evidences
+allow us to judge, the preparation and dispositions of these campaigns,
+the boldness of the operations by which he drove the enemy on to ground
+where he could beat him, and the novel tactical execution of the
+separate battles, stamp Pe-Ki as one of the greatest military geniuses
+of all time, a figure worthy indeed of adequate treatment by a military
+expert. It is from this period that we have the authoritative work of
+Sun-tse on War: Giles, _Sun-Tse on the Art of War_ (1910). [Or Capt. E.
+R. Calthrop, _The Book of War--Sun and Wu_ (1908).--_Tr._]
+
+[740] See pp. 312, et seq.
+
+[741] Now approximately Shan-tung and Pe-chi-li.
+
+[742] Piton, “Lu-puh-Weih,” _China Rev._ XIII, pp. 365 et seq.
+
+[743] Even if the Chinese authors themselves misunderstood the
+expression in the same, or anything like the same, way as their
+Western translators, the fact would only prove that the appreciation
+of political problems vanished as rapidly in the Chinese Imperial Age
+as in fact it did in the Roman--because they were no longer personally
+and livingly experienced. The much-admired Sze-ma-tsien is after all a
+compiler of the same rank as Plutarch (with whom he corresponds in date
+also). The high point of historical comprehension, _which presumes an
+equivalent experience in life_, must for China have lain in the period
+of the Contending States, as it lies for us in the nineteenth century
+and after.
+
+[744] Both, like most of the leading statesmen of the time, were pupils
+of Kwei-ku-tse, whose knowledge of men, deep sense of the historically
+possible, and command of the diplomatic technique of the age (the “Art
+of the vertical and the horizontal”) must have made him one of the most
+influential personalities of the period. Another figure of the same
+sort of weight after him was the thinker and war-theorist above alluded
+to, Sun-tse, who amongst others was the tutor of the Chancellor Lui-Si.
+
+[Sun-Tse’s book of war, as presented in Calthrop’s translation,
+is comparable to nothing in Western military literature short of
+Clausewitz’s _Vom Kriege_. Clausewitz was a contemporary and product of
+the Napoleonic epoch, and the glow of Romanticism has not yet passed
+from him; Sun, on the other hand, came “later,” and his atmosphere is
+the shrewd factual atmosphere of pre-Cæsarism.--_Tr._]
+
+[745] A story is told of Sun, that when for a jest (or a demonstration
+of tactics) opposed forces were made up from the court ladies, one of
+the commanders, the sovereign’s favourite wife, was executed by Sun’s
+command for disobeying an order.--_Tr._
+
+[746] Frederick’s “conscripts” (_Landeskinder_) were a long-service
+element, small in proportion to the population, and of serf status.
+Only the relative poverty of Prussia compelled this much of departure
+from the then normal procedure of recruiting volunteers, to which the
+Prussian army reverted as soon as its treasury could afford to do
+so. Maurice de Saxe is the one outstanding soldier of the period who
+advocated universal citizen service. But the famous “_Rêveries_” were
+written (“in thirteen sleepless nights”) in 1732, before he had held
+high command. The military works of Leibniz touch upon the subject,
+but he was a practical man as well as a philosopher, and his detailed
+proposals are in the spirit of the time. On the contrary, the pure
+philosopher Spinoza definitely advocated universal service.--_Tr._
+
+[747] Large, that is, relatively to the general development of
+Classical technics in other fields, which was of the slightest--not in
+any way outstanding if judged by, say, Assyrian or Egyptian standards.
+
+[748] The book of the Socialist Moh-ti, of this period, treats of
+universal love of mankind in its first part, of fortress artillery in
+its second--a singular example of contraposition of truths and facts.
+Forke in _Ostasiat. Ztschr._, VIII (Hirth number).
+
+[749] A whole literature exists for Napoleon’s “case-shot attack,”
+which was closely studied in the years before 1914 with the definite
+aim of finding a key to victories that the mechanical developments in
+the defensive rifle had made doubtful.--_Tr._
+
+[750] On the side of the North, more than 1½ million men out of barely
+20 million inhabitants.
+
+[The total of men of military age in the North was 4,600,000, of whom
+2,780,000 actually enlisted. The figure of 1,700,000 is a reduction to
+a three-year level--i.e., men who served throughout the war counting
+as 1⅓ each and men who served for one year as ⅓ each. The Southern
+states put into the field, on the same three-years’ basis, 900,000 out
+of 1,065,000 men of military age. (Dodge, _Birds Eye View of our Civil
+War_.)--_Tr._]
+
+[751] To which should be added, though on a small scale, the
+first serious attempts at submarines, machine-guns, and magazine
+rifles.--_Tr._
+
+[752] Amongst the wholly new problems was that of rapidly restoring
+railways and bridges; the bridge at Chattanooga, for the heaviest
+military trains, 240 metres long and 30 metres high, was built in 4½
+days.
+
+[753] Modern Japan belongs to the Western Civilization no less than
+“modern” Carthage of the third century to the Classical.
+
+[754] For the politico-social history of the Arabian World there is the
+same lack of deep and penetrating research as for the Chinese. Only the
+political evolution of the Western margin up to Diocletian, regarded
+hitherto as within the Classical pale, is an exception.
+
+[755] It was a few thousands only that accompanied the first conquerors
+and spread themselves from Tunis to Turkestan, and these everywhere
+constituted themselves a self-contained and close Estate in the
+entourage of the new potentates. An “Arabian _Völkerwanderung_” is out
+of the question.
+
+[756] J. Wellhausen, _Das arabische Reich und sein Sturz_ (1902), pp.
+309, et seq.
+
+[757] Compare the inner divisions of the English Parliamentary army in
+and after the Civil Wars.--_Tr._
+
+[758] See p. 261.
+
+[759] K. Dieterich, _Byz. Charakterköpfe_, p. 54: “Since thou wilt have
+an answer from us, receive it then! Paul has said some in the Church
+are ordained by God to be Apostles, some prophets, but he said nothing
+about Emperors--we will not follow though it were an angel that bade
+us; how much less if thou!”
+
+[760] Cf. p. 316.
+
+[761] Huart, _Gesch. d. Araber_ (1914), I, p. 299.
+
+[762] See _Ency. Brit._, XI ed., art. “Carmathians.”--_Tr._
+
+[763] Krumbacher, _Byz. Lit.-Gesch._, p. 969.
+
+[764] For all this see Krumbacher, op. cit., pp. 969-90; C. Neumann,
+_Die Weltstellung des Byz. Reiches vor den Kreuzzügen_ (1894), pp. 21,
+et seq.
+
+[765] Krumbacher, op. cit., 993.
+
+[766] And perhaps not in Baghdad alone, for the gifted Maniakes, who
+was hailed by the army in Sicily as Emperor and fell in 1043 in his
+march on Byzantium, must have been a Turk.
+
+[767] 1785-1580. See, for the following, Ed. Meyer, _Gesch. d. Alt._ §§
+298, et seq.; Weill, _La Fin du moyen empire égyptien_ (1918). That Ed.
+Meyer’s assignment is correct as compared with the 1670 years of Petrie
+has long been proved by the thickness of the strata in which objects
+have been found and the tempo of the style-evolution (Minoan included).
+Here it is demonstrated afresh by comparison with corresponding
+sections in the other Cultures.
+
+[768] P. 387.
+
+[769] Erman, “_Mahnworte eines ägypt. Propheten_” (_Sitz. Preuss.
+Akad._, 1919, pp. 804, et seq.): “The higher officials are displaced,
+the land robbed of its royalty by a few madmen, and the counsellors of
+the old state pay their court to upstarts; administration has ceased,
+documents are destroyed, all social differences abolished, the courts
+fallen into the hands of the mob. The noble classes go hungry and in
+rags, their children are battered on the wall, and their mummies torn
+from the grave. Mean fellows become rich and swagger in the palaces on
+the strength of the herds and ships that they have taken from their
+rightful owners. Former slave-girls become insolent and aliens lord
+it. Robbery and murder rule, cities are laid waste, public buildings
+burned down. The harvest diminishes, no one thinks now of cleanliness,
+births are few--and oh, that mankind might cease!” Here is the very
+picture of the megalopolitan and Late revolution, as it was enacted
+in the Hellenistic (p. 405) and in 1789 and 1871 in Paris. It is the
+world-city masses, will-less tools of the ambition of leaders who
+demolish every remnant of order, who desire to see in the outer world
+the same chaos as reigns within their own selves. Whether these cynical
+and hopeless attempts start from alien intruders like the Hyksos or the
+Turks, or from slaves as in the case of Spartacus and Ali; whether the
+division of property is shouted for as at Syracuse or has a book for
+banner like Marxism--all this is superficial. It is wholly immaterial
+what slogans scream to the wind while the gates and the skulls are
+being beaten in. Destruction is the true and only impulse, and Cæsarism
+the only issue. The world-city, the land-devouring demon, has set its
+rootless and futureless men in motion; and in destroying they die.
+
+[770] The Papyrus says: the “archer-folk from without”--that is, the
+barbarian mercenary troops. To these the native youth attached itself.
+
+[771] Glance also at the Negro-state in Irak and the “contemporary”
+attempts of Spartacus, Sertorius, and Sextus Pompey, and we get a fair
+idea of the variety of the possibilities. Weill assumes, 1785-1765, the
+collapse of the Kingdom, a usurper (a general); 1765-1675, numerous
+small potentates, in the Delta wholly independent; 1675-1633, struggle
+for unity, especially the rulers of Thebes, with an ever-increasing
+retinue of dependent rulers, including the Hyksos; 1633, victory of
+the Hyksos and defeat of the Thebans; 1591-1571, final triumph of the
+Thebans.
+
+[772] As an inspiriting idea it may be retained; translated into
+actuality it will never be again.
+
+[773] Piton, op. cit., p. 521.
+
+[774] _Hist._, III, 1.
+
+[775] Including the constitution of the United States of America. Only
+thus can we account for the reverence that the American cherishes for
+it, even where he clearly sees its insufficiency.
+
+[776] Cæsar recognized this clearly. “_Nihil esse rem publicam,
+appellationem modo sine corpore ac specie_” (Suetonius, _Cæsar_, 77).
+
+[777] See p. 48.
+
+[778] See p. 48.
+
+[779] Cicero, in his _Pro Sestio_, draws attention to the fact that
+five people for each tribe attended plebiscites, and these really
+belonged to tribes other than that which they were representing. But
+these five were present only in order to have themselves bought by the
+possessors of the real power. Yet it was hardly fifty years since the
+Italians had died in masses for this franchise.
+
+[780] And, strangely, Ed. Meyer also, in his masterpiece _Cæsars
+Monarchie_, the one work of statesmanlike quality yet written
+about this epoch--and previously in his essay on Augustus (_Kleine
+Schriften_, pp. 441, et seq.).
+
+[781] _De Re Publica_, 54 B.C., a monograph intended for Pompey.
+
+[782] P. 395.
+
+[783] See p. 409.
+
+[784] In _Somnium Scipionis_, VI, 26, he is a god who so rules the
+State _quam hunc mundum ille princeps deus_.
+
+[785] It was with every justification that, in the presence of the
+corpse, Brutus called out the name of Cicero, while Antony, on his
+side, denounced him as the intellectual author of the deed. But this
+“freedom” meant nothing but the oligarchy of a few families, for the
+masses had long ago become tired of their rights. Nor is it in the
+least surprising that Money was behind Intellect in the murder, for
+the great fortunes of Rome saw in Cæsarism the beginning of the end of
+their power.
+
+[786] Taoism, on the other hand, was supported, as preaching the entire
+renunciation of politics. Said Shakespeare’s Cæsar:
+
+ “Let me have men about me that are fat,
+ Sleek-headed men and such as sleep o’nights.”
+
+
+[787] Tacitus, even, failed to understand. He hated these first Cæsars,
+because they defended themselves by every imaginable means against a
+stealthy opposition--in _his own_ circles--an opposition that from
+Trajan’s time no longer existed. (Yet a little longer, and the Emperor
+Marcus Aurelius could himself be a Stoic.--_Tr._)
+
+[788] P. 329.
+
+[789] Pp. 89 and 349.
+
+[790] P. 310.
+
+[791] “Empires perish, but a good verse stands,” said W. von Humboldt
+on the field of Waterloo. But, all the same, the personality of
+Napoleon preformed the history of the next century. Good verses!--he
+should have questioned a peasant by the way-side. They “stand”--for
+literary teaching. Plato is eternal--for philologists. But Napoleon
+inwardly rules _us_, all of _us_, our states and our armies, our public
+opinion, the whole of our political outlook, and the more effectually
+the less we are conscious of it.
+
+[792] P. 361.
+
+[793] P. 116 and 339.
+
+[794] P. 363.
+
+[795] This is what is expressed in the English proverb: “Men, not
+measures,” which is the very key to the secrets of all political
+achievement.
+
+[796] Pp. 18 and 364.
+
+[797] See p. 341.
+
+[798] The same, too, holds good of the Churches, which are different
+in kind from the Religion--namely, elements of the world of facts and,
+therefore, political and not religious in the type of their leadership.
+It was not the Christian evangel, but the Christian martyr, who
+conquered the world, and that which gave him his strength was not the
+doctrine, but the example, of the Man on the Cross.
+
+[799] It should scarcely need to be emphasized that this is the basic
+principle, not of an aristocratic régime, but of government itself.
+Cleon, Robespierre, Lenin, every gifted mass-leader, has treated his
+office thus. Anyone who genuinely felt himself as the delegate of
+the multitude, instead of as the regent of such as do not know what
+they want, would not remain master of his house for one day. The only
+question is whether the great popular leaders apply their powers for
+their own benefit or for that of others; and on that much might be said.
+
+[800] Originally an assembly of nineteen princes and free cities (1529).
+
+[801] See pp. 355, 398, et seq.
+
+[802] Hence it is that on the soil of burgher equality the possession
+of money immediately takes the place of genealogical rank.
+
+[803] See p. 354.
+
+[804] Pp. 424, et seq. Compare also Wellhausen, _Die relig.-polit.
+Oppositionsparteien im alten Islam_ (1901).
+
+[805] It is an important factor in the democracy of England and America
+that in the first the yeomanry had died out and in the second has never
+existed. The “farmer” is spiritually a suburban and in practice carries
+on his farming as an industry. Instead of villages, there are only
+fragments of megalopolis.
+
+[806] And wherever, as in Egypt, India, and the West, there exists a
+_political_ opposition between the two primary Estates, there is also a
+clerical party--the party, so to speak, of the Church as distinct from
+religion and of the priest as distinct from the believer.
+
+[807] And with its content of race-strength it has an excellent chance
+of successfully doing so.
+
+[808] P. 409.
+
+[809] _Plebs_ corresponds to the “Tiers” (burghers and yeomen) of
+the eighteenth century, _populus_ to the megalopolitan masses of the
+nineteenth. The difference manifested itself in their respective
+attitudes towards the freed slaves, mostly of non-Italian origin. These
+the Plebs, as an order, sought to thrust away into as few tribes as
+possible, but in the Populus as a party they very soon came to play the
+decisive rôle.
+
+[810] P. 412.
+
+[811] Simultaneously, too, the Roman Catholic Church quietly changed
+the basis of its politics from a class to a party, and did so with a
+strategic sureness that cannot be too much admired. In the eighteenth
+century it had been, as regards the style of its diplomacy, the
+allocation of its offices and the spirit of its higher circles,
+aristocratic through and through. Think of the type of the abbé, and
+of the prince-prelates who became ministers and ambassadors, like
+the young Cardinal Rohan. Now, in the true liberal fashion, opinions
+took the place of origins, working-power that of taste, and the great
+weapons of democracy--press, elections, money--were handled with a
+skill that liberalism proper rarely equalled and never surpassed.
+
+[812] For what follows see M. Gelzer, _Die Nobilität d. röm. Republik_
+(1912), pp. 43, et seq.; A. Rosenberg, _Untersuchungen zur röm.
+Centurienverfassung_(1911), pp. 62, et seq.
+
+[813] The reputation of Tammany Hall in New York is universal, but
+the relations approximate to this condition in all countries ruled
+by parties. The American Caucus, which first distributes the offices
+of State amongst its members and then forces their names upon the
+mass-electorate, was introduced into England by Joseph Chamberlain in
+his “National Liberal Federation,” and in Germany its advances have
+been rapid since 1919.
+
+[814] P. 305.
+
+[815] P. 18, et seq.
+
+[816] For the story of this tragic experiment, see Ed. Meyer, _Gesch.
+d. Alt._, § 987, et seq.
+
+[817] See p. 417. The “plans of the Contending States,” the
+Tchun-tsiu-fan-lu, and the biographies of Sze-ma-tsien are full of
+examples of the pedagogic in interventions of “wisdom” into the
+province of politics.
+
+[818] For this “Sun-state” formed of slaves and day-labourers see
+Pauly-Wissowa, _Realencycl._, 2, 961. Similarly, the revolutionary King
+Cleomenes III of Sparta was likewise under the influence of a Stoic,
+Sphærus. One can understand why “philosophers and rhetors”--i.e.,
+professional politicians, fantastics and subverters--were expelled
+again and again by the Roman Senate.
+
+[819] P. 310.
+
+[820] P. 114.
+
+[821] The early democracy, which in our case reaches up to Lincoln,
+Bismarck, and Gladstone, has to learn this by _experience_. The later
+democracy, in our case mature parliamentarism, starts out from it; here
+truths and facts finally separate out in the form of party ideals and
+party funds. It is the money that gives the real parliamentarian his
+sense of being freed from the dependence which is implicit in the naïve
+idea that the elector has of his delegate.
+
+[822] P. 452.
+
+[823] P. 354.
+
+[824] That the mass all the same _feels_ itself as freed is simply
+another outcome of the profound incompatibility between megalopolitan
+spirit and mature tradition. Its _acts_, so far from being independent,
+are in inward relation with its subjection to money-rule.
+
+[825] The German Constitution of 1919--standing by virtue of its date
+on the verge of the _decline_ of democracy--most naïvely admits a
+dictature of the party machines, which have attracted all rights into
+themselves and are seriously responsible to no one. The notorious
+system of proportional election and the Reichslist [see _Ency. Brit._,
+1922 Supplement, II, 249.--_Tr._] secures their self-recruitment. In
+place of the “people’s” rights, which were axiomatic in the Frankfurt
+Constitution of 1848, there is now only the right of parties, which,
+harmless as it sounds, really nurses within itself a Cæsarism of the
+organizations. It must be allowed, however, that in this respect it
+is the most advanced of all the constitutions. Its issue is visible
+already. A few quite small alterations and it confers unrestricted
+power upon individuals.
+
+[826] And _legislation_, too, was bound up with an office. Even when,
+as a formality, acceptance or rejection by an assembly was requisite,
+the law in question could be brought in only by an official; for
+example, a Tribune. The constitutional demands of the masses, therefore
+(which in any case were mostly instigated by the real power-holders),
+expressed themselves in the issue of the elections to office, as the
+Gracchan period shows.
+
+[827] Even Cæsar, at fifty years of age, was obliged to play this
+comedy at the Rubicon for his soldiers because they were used to it
+and expected it when anything was asked of them. It corresponds to the
+“chest-tones of deep conviction” of our political assemblies.
+
+[828] But the Cleon type must obviously have existed also in
+contemporary Sparta, and in Rome at the time of the Consular Tribunes.
+
+[829] Gelzer, _Nobilität_, p. 94; along with Ed. Meyer’s _Cæsar_ this
+book gives the best survey of Roman democratic methods.
+
+[830] “_Inaurari_,” to which end Cicero recommended his friend
+Trebatius to Cæsar.
+
+[831] “_Tributim ad prandium vocare_,” Cicero, _Pro Murena_, 72.
+
+[832] For from that time sesterces flowed through his hands by the
+million. The votive treasures of the Gallic temples which he put up
+for sale in Italy sent down the value of gold with a rush. From King
+Ptolemy he and Pompey extorted 144,000,000 (and Gabinius another
+240,000,000) as the price of recognition. The Consul Æmilius Paullus
+(50) was bought for 36,000,000, Curio for 60,000,000. We can guess from
+such figures how enviable was the position of his closer associates.
+At the triumph of 46 every soldier in an army of well over 100,000 men
+received 24,000 sesterces, officers and other leaders much more. Yet at
+his death the state treasury was still full enough to secure Antony’s
+position.
+
+[833] Gelzer, op. cit., p. 68.
+
+[834] Extortion and corruption were the usual charges. As in those
+days these things were identical with politics, and the judges and
+plaintiffs had acted precisely in the same way as the defendants,
+the art consisted in using the forms of a well-acted ethical
+passion to cover a party speech, of which the real import was only
+comprehensible to the initiated. This corresponds entirely with the
+modern parliamentary usage. The “people” would be very much astonished
+to see party opponents, after delivering wild speeches in the chamber
+(for the reporters) chatting together in the lobbies, or to be told how
+a party passionately champions a proposal after it has made certain
+by agreement with the other side that it will not be passed. In Rome,
+too, the judgment was not the important thing in these “trials”; it was
+enough if a defendant voluntarily left the city and so retired from the
+occupancy of, or candidature for, office.
+
+[835] See Pöhlmann, _Griech. Gesch._ (1914), pp. 236, et seq. [Cf.
+Aristophanes, _Wasps_.--_Tr._]
+
+[836] Thus it was possible for Rutilius Rufus to be condemned in the
+notorious case of 93, because as proconsul he had in accordance with
+his duty proceeded against the extortions of the concessionnaire
+associations.
+
+[837] Radio broadcasting has now emerged to enable the leader to make
+personal conquests of the million, and no one can foretell the changes
+in political tactic that may ensue therefrom.--_Tr._
+
+[838] The most striking example of this for future generations will be
+the “War-guilt” question, which is the question--_who_ possesses the
+power, through control of press and cable in all parts of the world, to
+establish in world-opinion that truth which he needs for his political
+ends and to maintain it for so long as he needs it? An altogether
+different question (which only in Germany is confused with the first)
+is the purely scientific one--to _whose_ interest was it that an event
+about which there was already a whole literature should occur in the
+summer of 1914 in particular?
+
+[839] In preparation for the World War the press of whole countries
+was brought financially under the command of London and Paris, and
+the peoples belonging to them reduced to an unqualified intellectual
+slavery. The more democratic the inner form of a nation is, the more
+readily and completely it succumbs to this danger. This is the style
+of the twentieth century. To-day a democrat of the old school would
+demand, not freedom for the press, but freedom from the press; but
+meantime the leaders have changed themselves into parvenus who have to
+secure their position _vis-à-vis_ the masses.
+
+[840] The great Burning of the Books in China (p. 433) was innocuous by
+comparison.
+
+[841] P. 434.
+
+[842] Herein lies the secret of why all radical (i.e., poor) parties
+necessarily become the tools of the money-powers, the Equites, the
+Bourse. Theoretically their enemy is capital, but practically they
+attack, not the Bourse, but Tradition on behalf of the Bourse. This is
+as true of to-day as it was for the Gracchan age, and in all countries.
+Fifty per cent of mass-leaders are procurable by money, office, or
+opportunities to “come in on the ground-floor,” and with them they
+bring their whole party.
+
+[843] P. 415.
+
+[844] See _Preussentum und Sozialismus_, p. 41, et seq.
+
+[845] _Political Discourses_, 1752.
+
+[846] The celebrated _Wealth of Nations_, 1776.
+
+[847] It was the opinion of the expert, almost everywhere, that
+the economic consequences of general mobilization would compel the
+breaking-up of hostilities within a few weeks.
+
+[848] P. 81.
+
+[849] Pp. 1, et seq., and 335.
+
+[850] P. 327, et seq.
+
+[851] Pp. 95, 120, et seq.
+
+[852] P. 5.
+
+[853] “_Negotium_” (by which is meant every form of gainful activity;
+business is _commercium_) “_negat otium neque quærit veram quietem quæ
+est deus_,” are the words of the _Decretum Gratiani_ (cf. p. 77).
+
+[854] Pilate’s question settles also the relation of economy to
+science. The religious man will always try in vain, catechism in hand,
+to improve the instincts of his political environment. But it goes
+on its way undisturbed and leaves him to his thoughts. The saint can
+only choose between adapting himself to this environment--and then
+he becomes a Church politician and conscienceless--and fleeing from
+it into a hermitage or even into the Beyond. But the same happens
+also--and here not without a comic side to it--in the intellectualism
+of the city. The philosopher who has built up an ethical-social system
+that is replete with virtue and (of course) the only true one, may
+enlighten the economic life as to how it should behave and at what it
+should aim. It is even the same spectacle, whether labelled liberal,
+anarchistic, or socialistic, or derived from Plato, Proudhon, or Marx.
+Here, too, economy carries on undisturbed and leaves the thinker to
+choose between withdrawing to pour out on paper his lamentations of
+this world, and entering it as an economic politician, in which case he
+either makes himself ridiculous, or else promptly throws his theory to
+the devil and starts to win himself a leading place.
+
+[855] See pp. 1, et seq.
+
+[856] See p. 6.
+
+[857] Exactly the same is true of wandering bands of hunters and
+pastorals. But the economic foundation of the great Culture is always a
+mankind that adheres fast to the soil, and nourishes and supports the
+higher economic forms.
+
+[858] See p. 331.
+
+[859] Undershaft in Shaw’s _Major Barbara_ is a true ruler-figure of
+this realm.
+
+[860] P. 344. As a means for governments it is called finance-economy
+(financial policy). Here the whole nation is the object of a levy of
+tribute, in the forms of taxes and customs, of which the purpose is not
+to make, so to say, the upkeep of its life more comfortable, but to
+secure its historical position and to enhance its power.
+
+[861] Using the phrase widely, as including, for instance, the rise of
+workmen, journalists, and men of learning to positions of leadership.
+
+[862] P. 331.
+
+[863] P. 31.
+
+[864] See pp. 172 and 280.
+
+[865] Including the medical profession, which indeed is
+indistinguishable in primitive times from the priests and magicians.
+
+[866] Herdsmen, fishermen, and hunters included. There is, moreover, a
+strange and very profound relation between peasant and miner, evidenced
+in ancient sagas and rites. The metals are coaxed out of the shaft as
+the corn out of the earth, and the game out of the thicket. And for the
+real miner even metal is something that _lives_ and grows.
+
+[867] This is true from the earliest sea-voyaging to the Bourse of the
+world-city, and all traffic, whether by river, road, or rail belongs
+with it.
+
+[868] With this belong the machine industry, with its purely Western
+type of the inventor and engineer, and practically, also, a great part
+of the modern agronomy, as, for instance, in America.
+
+[869] Even to-day the mining and metal industries are felt to be
+somehow nobler than, for example, the chemical and electrical. They
+possess the most ancient patent of nobility in the technical world, and
+a relic of cult-mystery lies over them.
+
+[870] That is, up to the limit of servage and slavery, although very
+often--as in the present-day East and as in Rome in the case of
+“vernæ”--slavery itself may be nothing but a form of compulsory-labour
+contract and, apart from that, hardly sensible. The free employee often
+lives in far stricter subjection and enjoys far less respect, and his
+formal right to “give notice” is in many cases practically valueless to
+him.
+
+[British readers will recall in this connexion the “Chinese slavery”
+controversy in South Africa in 1904, and the questions of indentured
+labour that come to the surface not infrequently in Australian
+politics. And in an older generation defenders of slavery as practised
+in the sugar islands of the West Indies are still to be found--not to
+mention the survivors and tradition-bearers of the “Old South” in the
+United States.--_Tr._]
+
+[871] P. 60.
+
+[872] We know this accurately for the Egyptian and the Gothic
+beginnings, and in general terms for the Chinese and the Classical;
+as for the _economic pseudomorphosis_ of the Arabian (see pp. 189,
+et seq., 349) it may be summarized, after Hadrian, as a process
+of disintegration of the highly civilized Classical money-economy
+culminating in the appearance, under Diocletian, of a Springtime
+barter-economy with, in the East, the true Magian element of bargaining
+visibly superposed.
+
+[873] P. 343.
+
+[874] Neither the copper pieces of the Italian Villanova-graves of
+early Homeric times (Willers, _Gesch. d. röm. Kupferprägung_, p. 18)
+nor the early Chinese bronze coins in the form of women’s drapery
+(_pu_), bells, rings, or knives (_tsien_, Conrady, _China_, p. 504)
+are described as money, but quite distinctly symbols of goods. And the
+coins struck by the governments of early Gothic times (in imitation of
+the Classical) as signs of sovereignty figured in economic life only as
+wares; a piece of gold is worth as much as a cow, _but not vice versa_.
+
+[875] Hence it is that so often he is not an outcome of the fixed and
+self-contained life of the countryside, but an alien appearing in it,
+an alien having neither importance nor antecedents. This is the rôle
+of the Phœnicians in the earliest period of the Classical; of the
+Romans in the East in Mithradates’s time; of the Jews, and with them
+Byzantines, Persians, and Armenians, in the Gothic West; of the Arabs
+in the Sudan; of the Indians in East Africa; and of the West-Europeans
+in present-day Russia.
+
+[876] And, consequently, on a very small scale. As foreign trade was in
+those days highly adventurous and appealed to the imagination, it was
+as a rule immensely exaggerated. The “great” merchants of Venice and
+the Hansa about 1300 were hardly the equals of the more distinguished
+craftsmen. The turnover of even the Medici or the Fugger about 1400
+was equivalent to that of a shop-business in a small town to-day. The
+largest merchant vessels, in which usually several traders held part
+shares, were much smaller than modern German river-barges, and made
+only _one_ considerable voyage each year. The celebrated wool-export
+of England, a main element of Hanseatic trade, amounted about 1270 to
+hardly as much as the contents of two modern goods-trains (Sombart,
+_Der moderne Kapitalismus_, I, pp. 280, et seq.).
+
+[877] P. 91.
+
+[878] Cf. Vol. I, Ch. II.
+
+[879] Marks and dollars are no more “money” than metres and grammes are
+“forces.” _Pieces_ of money are real values. It is only our ignorance
+of Classical physics that has saved us from confusing gravitation with
+a pound-weight--in our mathematics, with its Classical basis, we still
+mix number with magnitude, and our imitation of Classical coinage has
+brought about the same confusion between money and pieces of money.
+
+[880] Conversely, therefore, we can call the metric system (cm., g.)
+a valuation, and in fact all money-measures proceed from the weight
+theories of physics.
+
+[881] Similarly all value-theories, however objective they are meant to
+be, are developed--and inevitably so--out of a subjective principle.
+That of Marx, for example, defines value in the way that promotes the
+interest of the manual worker, the effort of the discoverer or the
+organizer seeming to him, therefore, valueless. But it would be wrong
+to describe this as “erroneous.” All these theories are “right” for
+their supporters and “wrong” for their opponents, and it is not reasons
+but _life_ that settles whether one is a supporter or an opponent.
+
+[882] The Western introduced (on a very modest scale) by the Bank of
+England from the end of the eighteenth century, the Chinese dating from
+the period of the Contending States.
+
+[883] And is thought of as “amount,” whereas we speak of the “extent”
+of a property in goods.
+
+[884] Even to the modern pirates of the money-market who intervene
+amongst the interveners and gamble with money as “wares.”
+
+[885] Preisigke, _Girowesen im griechischen Ægypten_ (1910). These
+trading forms of the Ptolemaic period were already in vogue, and at the
+same high level, under the XVIIIth Dynasty.
+
+[886] So also with the bourgeois ideal of freedom. In theory and,
+therefore, constitutionally, a man may be free _in principle_, but
+_actually_, in the economic private-life of the cities, he is made free
+only by money.
+
+[887] The name “bourse” can be applied even in other Cultures, if by
+that word we mean the thought-organ of a developed money-economy.
+
+[888] Preface to _Major Barbara_ (Constable, London 1909).
+
+[889] P. 343.
+
+[890] The “farmer” is the man whose connexion with the piece of land is
+no longer anything more than practical.
+
+[891] The increasing intensity of this thinking appears in the
+economic picture as a _growth of the available money-mass_, which is
+abstract and imagined and has nothing to do with the visible supply
+of gold as a ware. The “stiffening” of the money-market, for example,
+is a purely intellectual process played out in the hands of a small
+handful of men. The increasing energy of money-thinking consequently
+awakens, in every Culture, the feeling that the “value of money is
+going down”--enormously so, for example, in the time between Solon and
+Alexander--with reference, namely, to the unit of calculation. What
+actually happens is that the mercantile units of value have become
+artificial and no longer comparable with the primary and livingly
+experiential values of the peasant economy. In the end it ceases to
+matter in what figures the Attic treasure of the Delian League (454) or
+the sums involved in the peace-treaties of 241 and 201, or the booty
+of Pompey in 64 are reckoned, and whether we ourselves shall pass in a
+few decades from the milliards--still unknown in 1850, but commonplace
+to-day--to the billions. There is no common standard for the value of
+a talent in 430 and in 30 B.C., for gold, like cattle and corn, has
+continually altered not only its own numeration, but its significance
+within an ever-advancing urban economy. The only steady element is
+the fact that quantity of money--not to be confused with the stock of
+tokens and the means of payment--is an _alter ego_ mirroring thought in
+money.
+
+[892] Cf. Vol. I, Ch. II.
+
+[893] Friedländer, _Röm. Sittengesch._, IV (1921), p. 301.
+
+[894] Sallust, _Catilina_, 35, 3.
+
+[895] P. 458.
+
+[896] How difficult it was for Classical man to figure to himself the
+transformation of a physically indefinable asset like land into bodily
+money is shown by the stone posts (ὅροι) on land in Greece, which were
+meant to _represent_ the mortgages on it, and by the Roman method of
+sale _per æs et libram_, in which a clod of earth was handed over for
+a coin in the presence of witnesses. Consequently, trade in goods
+(properly so called) never existed, nor anything like, for example, a
+current price for arable land. A regular relation between land-value
+and money-value was as unthinkable to the Classical mind as such a
+relation between artistic value and money-value. Intellectual--i.e.,
+incorporeal--products like dramas and frescoes possessed economically
+no value at all. For the Classical idea of law, cf. p. 81.
+
+[897] Not very much can have been left of Classical art-treasures even
+by Augustus’s time. The refined Athenians themselves thought far too
+unhistorically to be moved to spare a chryselephantine statue merely
+because it was the work of Phidias. It is worth remembering that the
+gold parts of the famous Athene-figure of the Parthenon cella were made
+removable and tested for weight from time to time. Economic use of
+them, therefore, was provided for from the outset.
+
+[898] _Ges. Schriften_, IV, 200, et seq.
+
+[899] P. 600.
+
+[900] The belief that slaves ever constituted, even in Athens or
+Ægina, as much as a third of the population is a complete delusion. On
+the contrary, the revolutions of the period after 400 presuppose an
+enormous surplus of free paupers.
+
+[901] P. 480.
+
+[902] Herein lies the difference between this slavery and the
+sugar-slavery of our own Baroque. The latter represents a threshold
+phase of our _machine industry_, an organization of “living” energy,
+which began with man-fuel, but presently passed over to coal-fuel; and
+slavery came to be considered immoral only when coal had established
+itself. Looked at from this angle, the victory of the North in
+the American Civil War (1865) meant the economic victory of the
+concentrated energy of coal over the simple energy of the muscles.
+
+[903] Pp. 371, et seq. The resemblance with the Egyptian administration
+under the Old Kingdom and the Chinese in the earliest Chóu period is
+unmistakable.
+
+[904] The _clerici_ of these exchequer offices were the archetype of
+the modern bank-clerk. Cf. p. 371.
+
+[905] Hampe, _Deutsche Kaisergeschichte_, p. 246. Leonardo Pisano,
+whose _Liber Abaci_ (1202) was authoritative in accountancy till well
+beyond the Renaissance, and who introduced, besides the Arabian system
+of numerals, negative numbers to indicate debit, was promoted by the
+great Hohenstaufen.
+
+[906] P. 75.
+
+[907] Sombart, _Der moderne Kapitalismus_, II, p. 119.
+
+[908] There is a close relation between our picture of the nature of
+electricity and the process of the “clearing-house,” in which the
+positive and negative money-positions of several firms (centres of
+tension) are equated amongst themselves by a purely mental act and the
+true position made presentable by a booking. Cf. Vol. I, Ch. XI.
+
+[909] Vol. I, ch. II.
+
+[910] P. 81.
+
+[911] In our Culture the credit of a country rests upon its economic
+capacity and the political organization thereof--which imparts
+to the operations and bookings of finance the character of real
+money-creations--and not on any quantity of gold that may be put
+into this or that. It is the Classicist superstition that raises the
+gold reserve to the status of an actual measure of credit--actual in
+that the level of credit is thereby made dependent, not upon “will,”
+but upon “can.” But the current coins are _wares_, which, relatively
+to national credit, possess a _price_--the poorer the credit, the
+higher the price of gold--so that thenceforth it can only be upheld
+against that of _other_ wares. Thus gold is measured like other wares
+against the unit of book-reckoning, and not vice versa as the term
+“gold standard” suggests. It serves also as means of payment in minor
+transactions, as for that matter a postage-stamp does. In old Egypt
+(whose money-thought is astoundingly like the Western) there was
+nothing resembling the coin even under the New Empire. The written
+transfer was entirely sufficient, and the Classical coins that filtered
+in from 650 to the founding of Alexandria and the Hellenistic régime
+were usually cut to pieces and reckoned by weight as a ware.
+
+[912] That is why it does not exist for our (present) jurisprudence.
+
+[913] All this equally holds good for the case of “workers” taking over
+the leadership of the works. Either they are incapable of management,
+and the business collapses, or they are capable of something, and then
+they themselves become inwardly entrepreneurs and think thenceforward
+only of maintaining their power. No theory can eliminate this fact from
+the world, for so life _is_.
+
+[914] Thus it is only since 1770 that the banks have become centres of
+an economic power which made its first intervention with politics at
+the Congress of Vienna. Till then the banker had in the main concerned
+himself with bill business. The Chinese, and even the Egyptian, banks
+had a different significance, and the Classical banks, even in the Rome
+of Cæsar’s day, may best be described as cash-tills. They collected
+the yield of taxes in cash, and lent cash against replacement; thus
+the temples, with their stock of precious metal in the form of votive
+offerings, became “banks.” The temple of Delos, through several
+centuries, lent at ten per cent.
+
+[915] The idea of the Firm took shape even in Late Gothic times as
+“_ratio_” [hence the modern French phrase “_raison sociale_”--_Tr._] or
+“_negotiatio_.” It is impossible to render it exactly in a Classical
+language. _Negotium_ meant for the Romans a concrete process, a “deal”
+and not a “business.”
+
+[916] Pöhlmann, _griech. Geschichte_ (1914), p. 216, et seq.
+
+[917] Gercke-Norden, _Einl. in der Altertumswissensch._, III, p. 291.
+
+[918] Kromayer, in Hartmann’s _Röm. Gesch._, p. 150.
+
+[919] The “Jews” of those times were the Romans (p. 318), and the
+Jews themselves were peasants and artizans and small traders (Pârvan,
+_Die Nationalität der Kaufleute im röm. Kaiserreiche_, 1909; also
+Mommsen, _Röm. Gesch._, V, p. 471); that is, they followed the very
+callings that in the Gothic period became the _object_ of their
+merchant activity. Present-day “Europe” is in exactly the same position
+_vis-à-vis_ the Russians whose profoundly mystical inner life feels
+“thinking in money” _as a sin_. (The Pilgrim in Gorki’s _Night-asylum_,
+and Tolstoi’s thought generally; pp. 194, 278.) Here to-day as in the
+Syria of Jesus’s time we have two economic worlds juxtaposed (pp. 192,
+et seq.): an upper, alien, and civilized world intruded from the West
+(the Bolshevism of the first years, totally Western and un-Russian,
+is the lees of this infiltration), and a townless barter-life that
+goes on deep below, uncalculating and exchanging only for immediate
+needs. We have to think of the catchwords of the surface as a voice,
+in which the Russian, simple and busied wholly with his soul, hears
+resignedly the will of God. Marxism amongst Russians is based on an
+inward misunderstanding. They bore with the higher economic life of
+Petrinism, but they neither created it nor recognized it. The Russian
+does not fight Capital, but he does not _comprehend_ it. Anyone who
+understands Dostoyevski will sense in these people a young humanity
+_for which as yet no money exists_, but only goods in relation to a
+life whose centre of gravity does _not_ lie on the economical side. The
+horror of values supervening from nowhere which before the war drove
+many to suicide is a misconstrued literary disguise of the fact that,
+for a townless barter-thinking, money-getting by means of money is an
+impiety, and (from the view-point of the coming Russian religion) a
+sin. To-day, with the towns of Tsarism in ruin and the mankind in them
+living the village life under the crust (temporarily) of urban-thinking
+Bolshevism, he has freed himself from the Western economy. His
+apocalyptic hatred--the same that the simple Jew of Jesus’s day bore
+to the Roman--is directed against Petersburg, as a city and the seat
+of a political power of Western stamp, but also as the centre of
+a thinking in Western money that has poisoned and misdirected the
+whole life. The Russian of the deeps to-day is bringing into being a
+third kind of Christianity, still priestless, and built _on the John
+Gospel_--a Christianity that stands much nearer to the Magian than to
+the Faustian and, consequently, rests upon a new symbolism of baptism,
+and looks neither at Rome nor at Wittenberg, but past Byzantium towards
+Jerusalem, with premonitions of coming crusades. This is the _only_
+thing that this new Russia really cares about. And it will no doubt let
+itself fall once again under the economy of the West, as the primitive
+Christian submitted to the Romans and the Gothic Christian to the Jews.
+But inwardly it has no part nor lot therein. (Cf. pp. 192, 226, 278,
+293, 295.)
+
+[920] See the article “Diocletian, Edict of,” _Ency. Brit._, XI
+ed.--_Tr._
+
+[921] P. 6.
+
+[922] Pp. 9 et seq.
+
+[923] P. 25.
+
+[924] P. 25.
+
+[925] P. 268.
+
+[926] P. 134.
+
+[927] Pp. 25, et seq.; 267, et seq.
+
+[928] And not vice versa. Cf. p. 268.
+
+[929] The “correctness” of physical data (i.e., their applicability
+never disproved up to date, and therefore ranking as an
+_interpretation_) is wholly independent of their technical value. An
+undoubtedly wrong, and even self-contradictory, theory may be more
+valuable for practical purposes than a “correct” and profound one, and
+physical science has long been careful to avoid applying the words
+“right” and “wrong” in the popular sense, and to regard their syntheses
+as images rather than flat formulæ.
+
+[930] What Diels has managed to assemble in his work _Antike Technik_
+amounts to a comprehensive nullity. If we take away from it what
+belongs to the older Babylonian Civilization (such as water clocks and
+sun-dials) and to the younger Arabian Springtime (such as chemistry or
+the wonder-clock of Gaza), there is nothing left but devices, such as
+door-locks of a sort, that it would be an insult to attribute to any
+other Culture.
+
+[931] The Chinese Culture, too, made almost all these European
+discoveries on its own account--including compass, telescope, printing,
+gunpowder, paper, porcelain--but the Chinese did not wrest, but
+_wheedled_, things out of Nature. No doubt he felt the advantages of
+his knowledge and turned it to account, but he did not hurl himself
+upon it to exploit it.
+
+[932] P. 301.
+
+[933] It is the same spirit that distinguishes the Jewish, Parsee,
+Armenian, Greek, and Arab ideas of business from that of the Western
+peoples.
+
+[934] P. 301. Albertus Magnus lived on in legend as the great magician.
+Roger Bacon meditated upon steam-engines, steamships, and aircraft. (F.
+Strunz, _Gesch. d. Naturwiss. im Mittelalter_, 1910, p. 88.)
+
+[935] P. 268. According to Roger Bacon the “third rôle of science,”
+which is not relative to the other sciences, consists in the power that
+makes it to search the secrets of nature, to discover past and future,
+and to produce so many marvellous results that power is assured to
+those who possess it.... The Church should take it into consideration
+in order to spare Christian blood in the struggle with the infidel and
+above all in preparation for the perils that will menace us in the days
+of Antichrist (E. Gilson, _Philosophie au Moyen Âge_, p. 218).--_Tr._
+
+[936] P. 288.
+
+[937] Greek fire was only to terrify and to ignite, but here the tense
+force of the gases of explosion are converted into energy of motion.
+Anyone who seriously compares the two does not understand the spirit of
+the Western technique.
+
+[938] Marx is quite right; it is one of the creations (and what is
+more, the proudest creation) of the bourgeoisie. But, spellbound as he
+is by the ancient-mediæval-modern scheme, he has failed to note that it
+is only the bourgeoisie of this one single Culture that is master of
+the destiny of the Machine. So long as it dominates the earth, every
+non-European tries and will try to fathom the secret of this terrible
+weapon. Nevertheless, inwardly he abhors it, be he Indian or Japanese,
+Russian or Arab. It is something fundamental in the essence of the
+Magian soul that leads the Jew, as entrepreneur and engineer, to stand
+aside from the creation proper of machines and devote himself to the
+business side of their production. But so also the Russian looks with
+fear and hatred at this tyranny of wheels, cables, and rails, and if he
+adapts himself for to-day and to-morrow to the inevitable, yet there
+will come a time when he will _blot out the whole thing from his memory
+and his environment_, and create about himself a wholly new world, in
+which nothing of this Devil’s technique is left.
+
+[939] Compared with this mighty contest between the two handfuls of
+steel-hard men of race and of immense intellect--which the simple
+citizen neither observes nor comprehends--the battle of mere interests
+between the employing class and the workers’ Socialism sinks into
+insignificance when regarded from the distant world-historical
+view-point. The working-class movement is what its leaders _make_ of
+it, and hatred of the owner has long enlisted itself in the service of
+the bourse. Practical communism with its “class-war”--to-day a long
+obsolete and adulterated phrase--is nothing but the trusty henchman of
+big Capital, which knows perfectly well how to make use of it.
+
+[940] In this sense the interest-politics of the workers’ movements
+also belong to it, in that their object is not to overcome the
+money-values, but to possess them.
+
+[941] P. 345.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber’s notes
+
+
+Apparent typographical errors in English were silently corrected, while
+non-English text is almost always rendered as printed, with occasional
+corrections (especially in citations) when further inquiry was made.
+The index contained dozens of incorrectly spelled or variant proper
+nouns; where this was noticed, the index spelling was made consistent
+with the main text. The index entry was not moved even if the new
+spelling would require it.
+
+Any “{sic}” in this text is the transcriber’s.
+
+Italics are shown by _underscores_.
+
+Redundant part-title pages for chapters have been removed. This
+accounts for three-page gaps in page numbering (including associated
+blank pages) in the formats that display page numbers.
+
+Chapter XI lacks a section numbered IX. This error was not corrected in
+later reprints (e.g. Knopf 1965). Chapter IV does not have an explicit
+section I.
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78914 ***
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+
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+ vertical-align: super;
+ font-size: 0.7em;
+ text-decoration: none;
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+
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+
+/* uncomment the next line for centered poetry */
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+
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+ border-spacing: 0;
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+
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+.page-table td {
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+</head>
+
+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78914 ***</div>
+
+
+<div class="center" style="margin-top:4em;">
+<span class="larger"><b>THE DECLINE<br>
+OF THE WEST</b></span><br>
+<br>
+[DER UNTERGANG DES<br>
+ABENDLANDES]<br>
+<br>
+<span class="smaller">BY</span><br>
+OSWALD SPENGLER<br>
+<br>
+<span class="allsmcap">VOLUME ONE</span><br>
+FORM AND ACTUALITY<br>
+[<span class="allsmcap">GESTALT UND WIRKLICHKEIT</span>]<br>
+<br>
+<span class="allsmcap">VOLUME TWO</span><br>
+PERSPECTIVES OF<br>
+WORLD-HISTORY<br>
+[<span class="allsmcap">WELTHISTORISCHE PERSPEKTIVEN</span>]
+</div>
+
+<hr class="front">
+
+<div class="center">
+<h1>
+THE DECLINE<br>
+OF THE WEST
+<span class="subtitle">PERSPECTIVES OF WORLD-HISTORY</span>
+</h1>
+<br>
+BY<br>
+<span class="xlarge">OSWALD SPENGLER</span><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<i>AUTHORIZED TRANSLATION<br>
+WITH NOTES BY</i><br>
+CHARLES FRANCIS ATKINSON<br>
+<br><br><br>
+VOLUME TWO<br>
+<br>
+MCMXXVIII: ALFRED A KNOPF: NEW YORK
+</div>
+
+<hr class="front">
+
+<p class="center smaller">
+COPYRIGHT 1928 BY ALFRED A. KNOPF, INC.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Originally published as<br>
+Der Untergang des Abendlandes<br>
+Welthistorische Perspektiven</i><br>
+<br>
+<i>Copyright 1922 by<br>
+C. H. Becksche, Verlagsbuchhandlung,<br>
+München</i><br>
+<br>
+MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+</p>
+
+<hr class="front">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="pv">[v]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="TRANSLATORS_NOTE">
+ TRANSLATOR’S NOTE
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>In the annotations to this volume I have followed the same course as in the
+first—namely, that of giving primary references to the <cite>Encyclopædia Britannica</cite>
+as being the most considerable work of the kind that is really widely
+distributed in both the English-speaking fields, though occasionally special
+encyclopaedias or other works are referred to. Owing to the more definitely
+historical character of this volume, as compared with its predecessor, and
+particularly its stressing of a history that scarcely figures as yet in a regular
+education—the “Magian”—such references are necessarily more numerous.
+Even so, more might perhaps have been inserted with advantage. The Translator’s
+notes have no pretension to be critical in themselves, though here
+and there an argument is pointed with an additional example, or an obvious
+criticism anticipated. In each domain they will no doubt be resented by an
+expert, but the same expert will, it is hoped, find them useful for domains not his
+own.</p>
+
+<p>In the first volume of the English version, references to the second were
+necessarily given according to the pagination of the German. A comparative
+table of English and German page numbers has therefore been inserted. A list
+of corrigenda to Vol. I is also issued with this volume.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+ C. F. A.
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent"><i>London, July 1928</i></p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="pvii">[vii]</span></p>
+
+<h2>TABLE OF GERMAN AND ENGLISH PAGES</h2>
+</div>
+
+<table class="page-table">
+ <thead>
+ <tr>
+ <th><span class="smcap">German</span><br>VOL. II</th>
+ <th><span class="smcap">English</span><br>VOL. II</th>
+ <th><span class="smcap">German</span><br>VOL. II</th>
+ <th><span class="smcap">English</span><br>VOL. II</th>
+ </tr>
+ </thead>
+ <tbody>
+ <tr><td>11</td><td>9</td><td>166</td><td>138</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>13</td><td>10</td><td>180</td><td>149</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>16</td><td>13</td><td>182</td><td>151</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>18</td><td>14</td><td>207</td><td>173</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>19</td><td>15</td><td>212</td><td>176</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>20</td><td>16</td><td>227</td><td>189</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>25</td><td>23</td><td>231</td><td>192</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>27</td><td>25</td><td>238</td><td>196</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>31</td><td>27</td><td>240</td><td>199</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>33</td><td>29</td><td>241</td><td>200</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>34</td><td>30</td><td>243</td><td>202</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>36</td><td>32</td><td>244</td><td>203</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>38</td><td>33</td><td>253</td><td>209</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>41</td><td>35</td><td>269</td><td>220</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>42</td><td>36</td><td>275</td><td>225</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>51</td><td>43</td><td>293</td><td>240</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>58</td><td>48</td><td>294</td><td>241</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>68</td><td>60</td><td>296</td><td>242</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>80</td><td>68</td><td>298</td><td>243</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>101</td><td>87</td><td>304</td><td>248</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>104</td><td>89</td><td>305</td><td>249</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>109</td><td>92</td><td>306</td><td>249</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>110</td><td>93</td><td>307</td><td>250</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>116</td><td>98</td><td>314</td><td>255</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>117</td><td>99</td><td>315</td><td>256</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>122</td><td>103</td><td>316</td><td>257</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>135</td><td>115</td><td>318</td><td>258</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>137</td><td>116</td><td>323</td><td>265</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>138</td><td>118</td><td>324</td><td>265</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>142</td><td>120</td><td>327</td><td>268</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>159</td><td>133</td><td>328</td><td>268</td></tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="pviii"></a>[viii]</span></p>
+
+<table class="page-table">
+ <thead>
+ <tr>
+ <th><span class="smcap">German</span><br>VOL. II</th>
+ <th><span class="smcap">English</span><br>VOL. II</th>
+ <th><span class="smcap">German</span><br>VOL. II</th>
+ <th><span class="smcap">English</span><br>VOL. II</th>
+ </tr>
+ </thead>
+ <tbody>
+<tr><td>334</td><td>273</td><td>403</td><td>327</td></tr>
+<tr><td>342</td><td>279</td><td>421</td><td>340</td></tr>
+<tr><td>343</td><td>280</td><td>427</td><td>345</td></tr>
+<tr><td>345</td><td>281</td><td>441</td><td>355</td></tr>
+<tr><td>346</td><td>282</td><td>482</td><td>388</td></tr>
+<tr><td>350</td><td>286</td><td>488</td><td>392</td></tr>
+<tr><td>354</td><td>288</td><td>521</td><td>416</td></tr>
+<tr><td>357</td><td>291</td><td>529</td><td>422</td></tr>
+<tr><td>358</td><td>292</td><td>539</td><td>430</td></tr>
+<tr><td>359</td><td>293</td><td>562</td><td>449</td></tr>
+<tr><td>360</td><td>293</td><td>577</td><td>460</td></tr>
+<tr><td>362</td><td>295</td><td>589</td><td>471</td></tr>
+<tr><td>363</td><td>296</td><td>603</td><td>481</td></tr>
+<tr><td>365</td><td>297</td><td>607</td><td>484</td></tr>
+<tr><td>368</td><td>299</td><td>610</td><td>486</td></tr>
+<tr><td>369</td><td>300</td><td>616</td><td>490</td></tr>
+<tr><td>370</td><td>301</td><td>618</td><td>492</td></tr>
+<tr><td>373</td><td>303</td><td>624</td><td>499</td></tr>
+<tr><td>376</td><td>306</td><td>625</td><td>500</td></tr>
+<tr><td>378</td><td>307</td><td>626</td><td>501</td></tr>
+<tr><td>382</td><td>310</td><td>627</td><td>501</td></tr>
+<tr><td>385</td><td>313</td><td>631</td><td>504</td></tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="pix"></a>[ix]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS_OF_VOLUME_II">
+ CONTENTS OF VOLUME II
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<table>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Translator’s Note</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#pv">v</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">References from Volume I</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#pvii">vii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Chapter I. Origin and Landscape. (A) The Cosmic and The Microcosm</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p1">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ Plant and animal, <a href="#p3">p. 3</a>. Being and waking-being, <a href="#p6">p. 6</a>. Feeling, understanding, thinking, <a href="#p9">p. 9</a>.
+ The motion problem, <a href="#p14">p. 14</a>. Mass-soul, <a href="#p18">p. 18</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Chapter II. Origin and Landscape. (B) The Group of the Higher Cultures</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p21">21</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ History-picture and nature-picture, <a href="#p23">p. 23</a>. Human and world history, <a href="#p28">p. 28</a>. Two ages:
+ primitive and high Cultures, <a href="#p33">p. 33</a>. Survey of the high Cultures, <a href="#p39">p. 39</a>. Historyless mankind,
+ <a href="#p48">p. 48</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Chapter III. Origin and Landscape. (C) The Relations between the Cultures</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p53">53</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ “Influence,” <a href="#p55">p. 55</a>. Roman law, <a href="#p60">p. 60</a>. Magian law, <a href="#p67">p. 67</a>. Western law, <a href="#p75">p. 75</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Chapter IV. Cities and Peoples. (A) The Soul of the City</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p85">85</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ Mycenæ and Crete, <a href="#p87">p. 87</a>. The peasant, <a href="#p89">p. 89</a>. World-history is urban history, <a href="#p90">p. 90</a>.
+ Figure of the city, <a href="#p92">p. 92</a>. City and intellect, <a href="#p96">p. 96</a>. Spirit of the world-city, <a href="#p99">p. 99</a>.
+ Sterility and disintegration, <a href="#p103">p. 103</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Chapter V. Cities and Peoples. (B) Peoples, Races, Tongues</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p111">111</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ Streams of being and linkages of waking-being, <a href="#p114">p. 114</a>. Expression-language and communication-language, <a href="#p115">p. 115</a>.
+ Totem and Taboo, <a href="#p116">p. 116</a>. Speech and speaking, <a href="#p117">p. 117</a>. The house as race-expression, <a href="#p120">p. 120</a>.
+ Castle and cathedral, <a href="#p122">p. 122</a>. Race, <a href="#p124">p. 124</a>. Blood and soil, <a href="#p127">p. 127</a>. Speech, <a href="#p131">p. 131</a>.
+ Means and meaning, <a href="#p134">p. 134</a>. Word, grammar, <a href="#p137">p. 137</a>. Language-history, <a href="#p145">p. 145</a>. Script, <a href="#p149">p. 149</a>.
+ Morphology of the Culture-languages, <a href="#p152">p. 152</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Chapter VI. Cities and Peoples. (C) Primitives, Culture-Peoples, Fellaheen</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p157">157</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ People-names, languages, races, <a href="#p159">p. 159</a>. Migrations, <a href="#p161">p. 161</a>. People and soul, <a href="#p165">p. 165</a>.
+ The Persians, <a href="#p166">p. 166</a>. Morphology of peoples, <a href="#p169">p. 169</a>. People and nation, <a href="#p170">p. 170</a>.
+ Classical, Arabian, and Western nations, <a href="#p173">p. 173</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Chapter VII. Problems of the Arabian Culture. (A) Historic Pseudomorphoses</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p187">187</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ “Pseudomorphosis,” <a href="#p189">p. 189</a>. Actium, <a href="#p191">p. 191</a>. Russia, <a href="#p192">p. 192</a>. Arabian chivalry, <a href="#p196">p. 196</a>.
+ Syncretism, <a href="#p200">p. 200</a>. Jews, Chaldeans, Persians of the pre-Culture, <a href="#p204">p. 204</a>. Mission, <a href="#p209">p. 209</a>.
+ Jesus, <a href="#p212">p. 212</a>. Paul, <a href="#p220">p. 220</a>. John, Marcion, <a href="#p225">p. 225</a>. The pagan and Christian cult-churches, <a href="#p228">p. 228</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td>
+ <span class="pagenum" id="px">[x]</span>
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter VIII. Problems of the Arabian Culture. (B) The Magian Soul</span>
+ </td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p231">231</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ Dualism of the World-cavern, <a href="#p233">p. 233</a>. Time-feeling (era, world-history, grace), <a href="#p238">p. 238</a>.
+ Consensus, <a href="#p242">p. 242</a>. The “Word” as substance, the Koran, <a href="#p244">p. 244</a>. Secret Torah, commentary, <a href="#p246">p. 246</a>.
+ The group of the Magian religions, <a href="#p248">p. 248</a>. The Christological controversy, <a href="#p255">p. 255</a>.
+ Being as extension (mission), <a href="#p258">p. 258</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Chapter IX. Problems of the Arabian Culture. (C) Pythagoras, Mohammed, Cromwell</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p263">263</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ Essence of religion, <a href="#p265">p. 265</a>. Myth and cult, <a href="#p268">p. 268</a>. Moral as sacrifice, <a href="#p271">p. 271</a>.
+ Morphology of religious history, <a href="#p275">p. 275</a>. The pre-Culture: Franks, Russians, <a href="#p277">p. 277</a>.
+ Egyptian early period, <a href="#p279">p. 279</a>. Classical, <a href="#p281">p. 281</a>. China, <a href="#p285">p. 285</a>.
+ Gothic (Mary and Devil, baptism and contrition), <a href="#p288">p. 288</a>. Reformation, <a href="#p295">p. 295</a>.
+ Science, <a href="#p300">p. 300</a>. Rationalism, <a href="#p305">p. 305</a>. “Second Religiousness,” <a href="#p310">p. 310</a>.
+ Roman and Chinese emperor-worship, <a href="#p313">p. 313</a>. Jewry, <a href="#p315">p. 315</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Chapter X. The State. (A) The Problem of the Estates: Nobility and Priesthood</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p325">325</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ Man and woman, <a href="#p327">p. 327</a>. Stock and estate, <a href="#p329">p. 329</a>. Peasantry and society, <a href="#p331">p. 331</a>.
+ Estate, caste, calling, <a href="#p332">p. 332</a>. Nobility and priesthood as symbols of Time and Space, <a href="#p335">p. 335</a>.
+ Training and shaping, customary-ethic and moral, <a href="#p340">p. 340</a>. Property, power, and booty, <a href="#p343">p. 343</a>.
+ Priest and savant, <a href="#p345">p. 345</a>. Economics and science, money and intellect, <a href="#p347">p. 347</a>.
+ History of the estates, early period, <a href="#p348">p. 348</a>. The Third Estate, City-Freedom, <i>Bourgeoisie</i>, <a href="#p354">p. 354</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XI. The State. (B) State and History</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p359">359</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ Movement and thing-moved; Being “in form,” <a href="#p361">p. 361</a>. Right and might, <a href="#p363">p. 363</a>.
+ Estate and State, <a href="#p366">p. 366</a>. The feudal State, <a href="#p371">p. 371</a>. From feudal union to Estate-State, <a href="#p375">p. 375</a>.
+ Polis and Dynasty, <a href="#p376">p. 376</a>. The Absolute State, Fronde, and Tyrannis, <a href="#p385">p. 385</a>. Wallenstein, <a href="#p389">p. 389</a>.
+ Cabinet politics, <a href="#p391">p. 391</a>. From First Tyrannis to Second, <a href="#p394">p. 394</a>. The bourgeois revolution, <a href="#p398">p. 398</a>.
+ Intellect and money, <a href="#p400">p. 400</a>. Formless powers (Napoleonism), <a href="#p404">p. 404</a>. Emancipation of money, <a href="#p410">p. 410</a>.
+ “Constitution,” <a href="#p412">p. 412</a>. From Napoleonism to Cæsarism (period of the “Contending States”), <a href="#p416">p. 416</a>.
+ The great wars, <a href="#p419">p. 419</a>. Age of the Romans, <a href="#p422">p. 422</a>. From Caliphate to Sultanate, <a href="#p423">p. 423</a>.
+ Egypt, <a href="#p427">p. 427</a>. The present, <a href="#p428">p. 428</a>. Cæsarism, <a href="#p431">p. 431</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XII. The State. (C) Philosophy of Politics</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p437">437</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ Life is politics, <a href="#p439">p. 439</a>. The political instinct, <a href="#p441">p. 441</a>. The statesman, <a href="#p442">p. 442</a>.
+ Creation of tradition, <a href="#p444">p. 444</a>. Physiognomic (diplomatic) pulse, <a href="#p445">p. 445</a>.
+ Estate and party, <a href="#p448">p. 448</a>. The <i>bourgeoisie</i> as primary party (liberalism), <a href="#p449">p. 449</a>.
+ From Estate, through party, to the magnate’s following, <a href="#p452">p. 452</a>.
+ Theory, from Rousseau to Marx, <a href="#p453">p. 453</a>. Intellect and money (democracy), <a href="#p455">p. 455</a>.
+ The press, <a href="#p460">p. 460</a>. Self-annihilation of democracy through money, <a href="#p464">p. 464</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XIII. The Form-world of Economic Life. (A) Money</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p467">467</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ National economics, <a href="#p469">p. 469</a>. Political and economic sides of life, <a href="#p471">p. 471</a>.
+ Productive and acquisitive economy (agriculture and trade), <a href="#p473">p. 473</a>.
+ Politics and trade (power and spoil), <a href="#p475">p. 475</a>. Primitive economy, and economic style of the high Cultures, <a href="#p476">p. 476</a>.
+ Estate and economic class, <a href="#p477">p. 477</a>. The cityless land, thinking in goods, <a href="#p480">p. 480</a>.
+ The city, thinking in money, <a href="#p481">p. 481</a>. World-economics, mobilization of goods by money, <a href="#p484">p. 484</a>.
+ The Classical idea of money, the coin, <a href="#p486">p. 486</a>. The slave as money, <a href="#p487">p. 487</a>.
+ Faustian thinking in money, the book-value, <a href="#p489">p. 489</a>. Double-entry book-keeping, <a href="#p490">p. 490</a>.
+ The coin in the West, <a href="#p490">p. 490</a>. Money and work, <a href="#p492">p. 492</a>. Capitalism, <a href="#p493">p. 493</a>.
+ Economic organization, <a href="#p494">p. 494</a>. Extinction of money-thought; Diocletian; the economic thought of the Russian, <a href="#p495">p. 495</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td>
+ <span class="pagenum" id="pxi">[xi]</span>
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XIV. The Form-world of Economic Life. (B) The Machine</span>
+ </td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#p497">497</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tocdesc">
+ Spirit of technics, <a href="#p499">p. 499</a>. Primitive technics and style of the high Cultures, <a href="#p500">p. 500</a>.
+ Classical technics, <a href="#p501">p. 501</a>. The will-to-power over nature, the inventor, <a href="#p501">p. 501</a>.
+ Intoxication of modern discovery, <a href="#p502">p. 502</a>. The man as slave of the machine, <a href="#p504">p. 504</a>.
+ Entrepreneurs, workers, engineers, <a href="#p504">p. 504</a>. Struggle between money and industry, <a href="#p505">p. 505</a>.
+ Last battle of money and politics, victory of the blood, <a href="#p507">p. 507</a>.
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Index</span> <span class="allsmcap" style="float:right;">TO FOLLOW</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#pindex-i">507</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p1"></a><a id="p2"></a></span>
+<span class="pagenum" id="p3">[3]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">
+ CHAPTER I
+ <span class="subtitle">
+ ORIGIN AND LANDSCAPE
+ <br>
+ (A)
+ <br>
+ THE COSMIC AND THE MICROCOSM
+ </span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></h3>
+
+<p>Regard the flowers at eventide as, one after the other, they close in the setting
+sun. Strange is the feeling that then presses in upon you—a feeling of
+enigmatic fear in the presence of this blind dreamlike earth-bound existence.
+The dumb forest, the silent meadows, this bush, that twig, do not stir themselves,
+it is the wind that plays with them. Only the little gnat is free—he
+dances still in the evening light, he moves whither he will.</p>
+
+<p>A plant is nothing on its own account. It forms a part of the landscape in
+which a chance made it take root. The twilight, the chill, the closing of
+every flower—these are not cause and effect, not danger and willed answer to
+danger. They are a single process of nature, which is accomplishing itself near,
+with, and in the plant. The individual is not free to look out for itself, will
+for itself, or choose for itself.</p>
+
+<p>An animal, on the contrary, can choose. It is emancipated from the servitude
+of all the rest of the world. This midget swarm that dances on and on, that
+solitary bird still flying through the evening, the fox approaching furtively
+the nest—these are <em>little worlds of their own within another great world</em>. An animalcule
+in a drop of water, too tiny to be perceived by the human eye, though it
+lasts but a second and has but a corner of this drop as its field—nevertheless is
+<em>free and independent in the face of the universe</em>. The giant oak, upon one of whose
+leaves the droplet hangs, is not.</p>
+
+<p>Servitude and freedom—this is in last and deepest analysis the differentia
+by which we distinguish vegetable and animal existence. Yet only the plant
+is wholly and entirely what it is; in the being of the animal there is something
+dual. A vegetable is only a vegetable; an animal is a vegetable and something
+more besides. A herd that huddles together trembling in the presence of danger,
+a child that clings weeping to its mother, a man desperately striving to force a
+way into his God—all these are seeking to return out of the life of freedom
+into the vegetal servitude from which they were emancipated into individuality
+and loneliness.</p>
+
+<p>The seeds of a flowering plant show, under the microscope, two sheath-leaves
+<span class="pagenum" id="p4">[4]</span>which form and protect the young plant that is presently to turn towards
+the light, with its organs of the life-cycle and of reproduction, and in addition
+a third, which contains the future root and tells us that the plant is destined
+irrevocably to become once again part of a landscape. In the higher animals,
+on the contrary, we observe that the fertilized egg forms, in the first hours of its
+individualized existence, an outer sheath by which the inner containers of the
+cyclic and reproductive components—i.e., the plant element in the animal
+body—are enclosed and shut off from the mother body and <em>all the rest of the
+world</em>. This outer sheath symbolizes the essential character of animal existence
+and distinguishes the two kinds in which the Living has appeared on this earth.</p>
+
+<p>There are noble names for them, found and bequeathed by the Classical
+world. The plant is something <em>cosmic</em>, and the animal is additionally <em>a microcosm
+in relation to a macrocosm</em>. When, and not until, the unit has thus separated
+itself from the All and can define its position with respect to the All, it becomes
+thereby a microcosm. Even the planets in their great cycles are in servitude,
+and it is only these tiny worlds that move freely relative to a great one which
+appears in their consciousness as their world-around (environment). Only
+through this individualism of the microcosm does that which the light offers
+to its eyes—our eyes—acquire meaning as “body,” and even to planets we
+are from some inner motive reluctant to concede the property of bodiliness.</p>
+
+<p>All that is cosmic bears the hall-mark of <em>periodicity</em>; it has “beat” (rhythm,
+tact). All that is microcosmic possesses <em>polarity</em>; it possesses “tension.”</p>
+
+<p>We speak of tense alertness and tense thought, but all wakeful states are in
+their essence tensions. Sense and object, I and thou, cause and effect, thing
+and property—each of these is a tension between discretes, and when the
+state pregnantly called “<i lang="fr">détente</i>” appears, then at once fatigue, and presently
+sleep, set in for the microcosmic side of life. A human being asleep, discharged
+of all tensions, is leading only a plantlike existence.</p>
+
+<p>Cosmic beat, on the other hand, is everything that can be paraphrased in
+terms like direction, time, rhythm, destiny, longing—from the hoof-beats of
+a team of thoroughbreds and the deep tread of proud marching soldiers to the
+silent fellowship of two lovers, the sensed tact that makes the dignity of a
+social assembly, and that keen quick judgment of a “judge of men” which I
+have already, earlier in this work,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> called physiognomic tact.</p>
+
+<p>This beat of cosmic cycles goes on notwithstanding the freedom of microcosmic
+movement in space, and from time to time breaks down the tension of the
+waking individual’s being into the <em>one</em> grand felt harmony. If we have ever followed
+the flight of a bird in the high air—how, always in the same way, it
+rises, turns, glides, loses itself in the distance—we must have felt the plantlike
+certainty of the “it” and the “we” in this ensemble of motion, which needs
+no bridge of reason to unite your sense of it with mine. This is the meaning
+<span class="pagenum" id="p5">[5]</span>of war-dances and love-dances amongst men and beasts. In this wise a regiment
+mounting to the assault under fire is forged into a unity, in this wise does
+the crowd collect at some exciting occasion and become a body, capable of
+thinking and acting pitifully, blindly, and strangely for a moment ere it falls
+apart again. In such cases the microcosmic wall is obliterated. <em>It</em> jostles and
+threatens, <em>it</em> pushes and pulls, <em>it</em> flees, swerves, and sways. Limbs intertwine,
+feet rush, <em>one</em> cry comes from every mouth, <em>one</em> destiny overlies all. Out of a
+sum of little single worlds comes suddenly a complete whole.</p>
+
+<p>The perception of cosmic beat we call “feel (<i lang="de">Fühlen</i>),” that of microcosmic
+tensions “feeling (<i lang="de">Empfinden</i>).” The ambiguity of the word “<i lang="de">Sinnlichkeit</i>”
+has obscured this clear difference between the general and plantlike side and
+the specifically animal side of life. If we say for the one race- or sex-life, and
+for the other sense-life, a deep connexion reveals itself between them. The
+former ever bears the mark of periodicity, beat, even to the extent of harmony
+with the great cycles of the stars, of relation between female nature and the
+moon, of this life generally to night, spring, warmth. The latter consists in
+tensions, polarities of light and object illuminated, of cognition and that which
+is cognized, of wound and the weapon that has caused it. Each of these sides of
+life has, in the more highly developed genera, taken shape in special organs,
+and the higher the development, the clearer the emphasis on each side. We
+possess <em>two cyclic organs of the cosmic existence</em>, the blood system and the sex-organ,
+<em>and two differentiating organs of microcosmic mobility</em>, senses and nerves. We have
+to assume that in its origin the <em>whole</em> body has been both a cyclic and a tactual
+organ.</p>
+
+<p>The blood is for us the symbol of the living. Its course proceeds without
+pause, from generation to death, from the mother body in and out of the body of
+the child, in the waking state and in sleep, never-ending. The blood of the
+ancestors flows through the chain of the generations and binds them in a
+great linkage of destiny, beat, and time. Originally this was accomplished
+only by a process of division, redivision, and ever new division of the cycles,
+until finally a specific organ of sexual generation appeared and made <em>one moment</em>
+into a symbol of duration. And how thereafter creatures begat and conceived,
+how the plantlike in them drove them to reproduce themselves for the maintenance
+beyond themselves of the eternal cycle, how the <em>one</em> great pulse-beat
+operates through all the detached souls, filling, driving, checking, and often
+destroying—that is the deepest of all life’s secrets, the secret that all religious
+mysteries and all great poems seek to penetrate, the secret whose tragedy
+stirred Goethe in his “<i lang="de">Selige Sehnsucht</i>” and “<i lang="de">Wahlverwandtschaften</i>,” where
+the child has to die because, brought into existence out of discordant cycles of
+the blood, it is the fruit of a cosmic sin.</p>
+
+<p>To these cosmic organs the microcosm as such adds (in the degree to which
+it possesses freedom of movement <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the macrocosm) the organ “sense,”
+<span class="pagenum" id="p6">[6]</span>which is originally touch-sense and nothing else. Even now, at our own high
+level of development, we use the word “touch” quite generally of contacts by
+eye, by ear, and even by the understanding, for it is the simplest expression of
+the mobility of a living creature that needs constantly to be establishing
+its relation to its world-around. But to “establish” here means to fix <em>place</em>,
+and thus all senses, however sophisticated and remote from the primitive they
+may seem, are essentially <em>positive senses</em>; there are no others. Sensation of all
+kinds distinguishes proper and alien. And for the positional definition of the
+alien with respect to the proper the scent of the hound serves just as much as the
+hearing of the stag and the eye of the eagle. Colour, brightness, tones, odours,
+all conceivable modes of sensation, imply detachment, distance, extension.</p>
+
+<p>Like the cosmic cycle of the blood, the differentiating activity of sense is
+originally a unity. The active sense is always an understanding sense also.
+In these simple relations seeking and finding are one—that which we most appositely
+call “touch.” It is only later, in a stage wherein considerable demands
+are made upon developed senses, that sensation and understanding of sensation
+cease to be identical and the latter begins to detach itself more and more clearly
+from the former. In the outer sheath the critical organ separates itself from the
+sense-organ (as the sex-organ does from that of blood-circulation). But our
+use of words like “keen,” “sensitive,” “insight,” “poking our nose,” and
+“flair,” not to mention the terminology of logic, all taken from the visual
+world, shows well enough that we regard all understanding as derived from sensation,
+and that even in the case of man the two still work hand in hand.</p>
+
+<p>We see a dog lying indifferent and then in a moment tense, listening, and
+scenting—what he merely senses he is seeking to understand as well. He is
+able, too, to reflect—that is a state in which the understanding is almost alone
+at work and playing upon mat sensations. The older languages very clearly expressed
+this graduation, sharply distinguishing each degree as an activity of a
+specific kind by means of a specific label—e.g., hear, listen, listen for (<i lang="de">lauschen</i>);
+smell, scent, sniff; see, spy, observe. In such series as these the reason-content
+becomes more and more important relative to the sensation-content.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, however, a supreme sense develops among the rest. A something in
+the All, which for ever remains inaccessible to our will-to-understand,
+evokes for itself a bodily organ. The eye comes into existence—and in and with
+the eye, as its opposite pole, light. Abstract thinking about light may lead (and
+has led) to an ideal light representable by an ensemble picture of waves and rays,
+but the significance of this development in actuality was that thenceforward
+life was embraced and taken in <em>through the light-world of the eye</em>. This is the supreme
+marvel that makes everything human what it is. Only with this light-world
+of the eye do distances come into being as colours and brightnesses;
+only in this world are night and day and things and motions visible in the extension
+of illumined space, and the universe of infinitely remote stars circling
+<span class="pagenum" id="p7">[7]</span>above the earth, and that light-horizon of the individual life which stretches
+so far beyond the environs of the body.</p>
+
+<p>In the world of this light—not the light which science has deduced indirectly
+by the aid of mental concepts, themselves derived from visions (“theory”
+in the Greek sense)—it comes to pass that seeing, human herds wander upon
+the face of this little earth-star, and that circumstances of light—the full
+southern flood over Egypt and Mexico, the greyness of the north—contribute
+to the determination of their entire life. It is for his <em>eye</em> that man develops the
+magic of his architecture, wherein the constructional elements given by touch
+are restated in relations generated by light. Religion, art, thought, have all
+arisen for light’s sake, and all differentiations reduce to the one point of whether
+it is the bodily eye or the mind’s eye that is addressed.</p>
+
+<p>And with this there emerges in all clarity yet another distinction, which is
+normally obscured by the use of the ambiguous word “consciousness (<i lang="de">Bewusstsein</i>).”
+I distinguish <em>being</em> or “being there” (<i lang="de">Dasein</i>) from <em>waking-being</em>
+or waking-consciousness (<i lang="de">Wachsein</i>).&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> Being possesses beat and direction,
+while waking-consciousness is tension and extension. In being a destiny rules,
+while waking-consciousness distinguishes causes and effects. The prime question
+is for the one “when and wherefore?” for the other “where and how?”</p>
+
+<p>A plant leads an existence that is without waking-consciousness. In sleep
+all creatures become plants, the tension of polarity to the world-around is
+extinguished, and the beat of life goes on. A plant knows only a relation to the
+when and the wherefore. The upthrust of the first green shoots out of the
+wintry earth, the swelling of the buds, the whole mighty process of blooming,
+scent, colour glory, and ripening—all this is desire to fulfil a destiny, constant
+yearning towards a “when?”</p>
+
+<p>“Where?” on the other hand can have no meaning for a plant existence. It
+is the question with which awakening man daily orients himself afresh with
+respect to the world. For it is only the pulse-beat of Being that endures throughout
+the generations, whereas waking-consciousness begins anew for each microcosm.
+And herein lies the distinction between procreation and birth, the first
+being a pledge of duration, the second a beginning. A plant, therefore, is bred,
+but it is not born. It “is there,” but no awakening, no birthday, expands a
+sense-world around it.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>With this we are brought face to face with man. In man’s waking-consciousness
+nothing disturbs the now pure lordship of the eye. The sounds of the night,
+the wind, the panting of beasts, the odour of flowers, all stimulate in him <em>a
+“whither” and a “whence” in the world of light</em>. Of the world of scent, in which
+even our closest comrade the dog still co-ordinates his visual impressions, we
+<span class="pagenum" id="p8">[8]</span>have no conception whatever. We know nothing of the world of the butterfly,
+whose crystalline eye projects no synthetic picture, or of those animals which,
+while certainly not destitute of senses, are blind. <em>The only space that remains to
+us is visual space</em>, and in it places have been found for the relics of other sense-worlds
+(such as sounds, scents, heat and cold) as <em>properties and effects of light-things</em>—it
+is a seen fire that warmth comes from, it is a seen rose in illumined
+space that gives off the scent and we speak of a certain tone as violin-tone. As to
+the stars, our conscious relations with them are limited to seeing them—over
+our heads they shine, describing their visible path.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> But of these sense-worlds
+there is no doubt that animals and even primitive men still have sensations that
+are wholly different from ours; some of these sensations we are able to figure
+to ourselves indirectly by the aid of scientific hypotheses, but the rest now escape
+us altogether.</p>
+
+<p>This impoverishment of the sensual implies, however, an immeasurable
+deepening. Human waking-consciousness is no longer a mere tension between
+body and environment. It is now life <em>in</em> a self-contained light-world. The body
+moves <em>in</em> the space that is seen. The depth-experience&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> is a mighty out-thrust
+<em>into the visible distance</em> from a light-centre&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>—the point which we call “I.”
+“I” is a light-concept. From this point onward the life of an “I” becomes
+essentially a life in the sun, and night is akin to death. And out of it, too,
+there arises a new feeling of fear which absorbs all others within itself—<em>fear
+before the invisible</em>, fear of that which one hears or feels, suspects, or observes
+in its effects without seeing. Animals indeed experience fear in other forms,
+but man finds these forms puzzling, and even uneasiness in the presence of stillness
+to which primitive men and children are subject (and which they seek
+to dispel by noise and loud talking) is disappearing in the higher types of mankind.
+It is fear of the invisible that is the essence and hall-mark of human
+religiousness. Gods are surmised, imagined, envisaged light-actualities, and
+the idea of an “invisible” god is the highest expression of human transcendence.
+Where the bounds of the light-world are, there lies the beyond, and salvation
+is emancipation from the spell of the light-world and its facts.</p>
+
+<p>In precisely this resides the ineffable charm and the very real power of emancipation
+that music possesses for us men. For music is the only art whose means
+lie outside the light-world that has so long become coextensive with our total
+world, and music alone, therefore, can take us right out of this world, break
+up the steely tyranny of light, and let us fondly imagine that we are on the verge
+of reaching the soul’s final secret—an illusion due to the fact that our waking
+consciousness is now so dominated by one sense only, so thoroughly adapted
+<span class="pagenum" id="p9">[9]</span>to the eye-world, that it is incapable of forming, out of the impressions it receives,
+a world of the ear.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
+
+<p>Man’s thought, then, is visual thought, our concepts are derived from vision,
+and the whole fabric of our logic is a light-world in the imagination.</p>
+
+<p>This narrowing and consequent deepening, which has led to all our sense-impressions
+being adapted to and ordered with those of sight, has led also to
+the replacement of the innumerable methods of thought-communication known
+to animals by the one single medium of language, which is a bridge <em>in the light-world</em>
+between two persons present to one another’s bodily or imaginative eyes.
+The other modes of speaking of which vestiges remain at all have long been
+absorbed into language in the form of mimicry, gesture, or emphasis. The
+difference between purely human speech and general animal utterance is that
+words and word-linkages constitute a domain of inward light-ideas, which
+has been built up under the sovereignty of the eyes. Every word-meaning has
+a light-value, even in the case of words like “melody,” “taste,” “cold,” or of
+perfectly abstract designations.</p>
+
+<p>Even among the higher animals, the habit of reciprocal understanding by
+means of a sense-link has brought about a marked difference between <em>mere</em>
+sensation and <em>understanding</em> sensation. If we distinguish in this wise <em>sense-impressions</em>
+and <em>sense-judgments</em> (e.g., scent-judgment, taste-judgment, or aural-judgment),
+we find that very often, even in ants and bees, let alone birds of
+prey, horses, and dogs, the centre of gravity has palpably shifted towards the
+judgment side of waking-being. But it is only under the influence of language
+that there is set up within the waking-consciousness a definite <em>opposition</em> between
+sensation and understanding, a tension that in animals is quite unthinkable
+and even in man can hardly have been at first anything more than a rarely
+actualized possibility. The development of language, then, brought along
+with it a determination of fundamental significance—<em>the emancipation of understanding
+from sensation</em>.</p>
+
+<p>More and more often there appears, in lieu of the simple comprehension of
+the gross intake, a comprehension of the significances of the component sense-impressions,
+which have hardly been noticed as such before.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> Finally these
+impressions themselves are discarded and replaced by the felt connotations of
+familiar word-sounds. The word, originally the name of a visual thing, changes
+imperceptibly into the label of a mental thing, the “concept.” We are far from
+being able to fix exact meanings to such names—that we can do only with
+wholly new names. We never use a word twice with identical connotation,
+and no one ever understands exactly as another does. But mutual comprehension
+<span class="pagenum" id="p10">[10]</span>is possible, in spite of this, because of the common world-outlook that has
+been induced in both, with and by the use of a common language; in an ambiance
+common to the lives and activities of both, mere word-sounds suffice to evoke
+cognate ideas. It is this mode of comprehending by means of sounds at once
+derived and detached (abstract) from actual seeing which, however rarely we
+can find it definitely evidenced at the primitive level, does in fact sharply separate
+the generic-animal kind of waking-consciousness from the purely human
+kind which supervenes. Just so, at an earlier stage, the appearance of waking-consciousness
+as such fixed a frontier between the general plantlike and the
+specifically animal existence.</p>
+
+<p><em>Understanding detached from sensation is called thought.</em> Thought has introduced
+a permanent disunity into the human waking-consciousness. From early times
+it has rated understanding and sensibility as “higher” and “lower” soul-power.
+It has created the fateful opposition between the light-world of the eye, described
+as a figment and an illusion, and the world-imagined (“<i lang="de">vorgestellte</i>,” “set
+before” oneself), in which the concepts, with their faint but ineffaceable tinge
+of light-coloration, live and do business. And henceforth for man, so long as
+he “thinks,” this is the true world, the world-in-itself. At the outset the ego
+was waking-being as such (in so far, that is, as, having sight, it felt itself as
+the centre of a light-world); now it becomes “spirit”—namely, pure understanding,
+which “cognizes” itself as such and very soon comes to regard not
+only the world <em>around</em> itself, but even the remaining component of life, its own
+body, as qualitatively <em>below itself</em>. This is evidenced not only in the upright
+carriage of man, but in the thoroughly intellectualized formation of his head,
+in which the eyes, the brow, and the temples become more and more the vehicles
+of expression.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
+
+<p>Clearly, then, thought, when it became independent, discovered a new mode
+of activity for itself. To the practical thought which is directed upon the constitution
+of the light-things in the world-around, with reference to this or
+that practical end, there is added the theoretical, penetrating, subtilizing
+thought which sets itself to establish the constitution of these things “in
+themselves,” the <i lang="la">natura rerum</i>. From that which is seen, the light is abstracted,
+the depth-experience of the eye intensifies itself in a grand and unmistakable
+course of development into a depth-experience within the tinted realm of word-connotations.
+Man begins to believe that it is not impossible for his inner eye
+to see right through into the things that actually are. Concept follows upon concept,
+and at last there is a mighty thought-architecture made up of buildings
+that stand out with full clarity under the inner light.</p>
+
+<p>The development of theoretical thought within the human waking-consciousness
+gives rise to a kind of activity that makes inevitable a fresh conflict—that
+<span class="pagenum" id="p11">[11]</span>between Being (existence) and Waking-Being (waking-consciousness).
+The animal microcosm, in which existence and consciousness are joined in a
+self-evident unity of living, knows of consciousness <em>only as the servant</em> of existence.
+The animal “lives” simply and does not reflect upon life. Owing, however,
+to the unconditional monarchy of the eye, life is presented as the life of a
+visible entity in the light; understanding, then, when it becomes interlocked
+with speech, promptly forms a <em>concept</em> of thought and with it a <em>counter-concept</em>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>
+of life, and in the end it distinguishes life as it is from that which might be.
+Instead of straight, uncomplicated living, we have the antithesis represented
+in the phrase “thought and action.” That which is not possible at all in the
+beasts becomes in every man not merely a possibility, but a fact and in the end
+an alternative. The entire history of mature humanity with all its phenomena
+has been formed by it, and the higher the form that a Culture takes, the more
+fully this opposition dominates the significant moments of its conscious being.</p>
+
+<p>The plantlike-cosmic, Being heavy with Destiny, blood, sex, possess an
+immemorial mastery and keep it. They <em>are</em> life. The other only serves life.
+But this other wills, not to serve, but to rule; moreover, it believes that it does
+rule, for one of the most determined claims put forward by the human spirit
+is its claim to possess power over the body, over “nature.” But the question
+is: Is not this very belief a service to life? Why does our thought think just
+so? Perhaps because the cosmic, the “it,” wills that it shall? Thought shows
+off its power when it calls the body a notion, when it establishes the pitifulness
+of the body and commands the voices of the blood to be silent. But in truth
+the blood rules, in that silently it commands the activity of thought to begin
+and to cease. There, too, is a distinction between speech and life—Being can
+do without consciousness and the life of understanding, but not vice versa.
+Thought rules, after all, in spite of all, only in the “realm of thought.”</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>It only amounts to a verbal difference whether we say that thought is a
+creation of man, or higher mankind a creation of thought. But thought itself
+persistently credits itself with much too high a rank in the ensemble of life,
+and through its ignorance of, or indifference to, the fact that there are other
+modes of ascertainment besides itself, forfeits its opportunity of surveying the
+whole without prejudice. In truth, all professors of thought—and in every
+Culture they have been almost the only authorized spokesmen—have taken
+it as self-evident that cold abstract thought is <em>the</em> way of approach to “last
+things.” Moreover, they have assumed, also as self-evident, that the “truth”
+which they reach on this line of advance is the same as the truth which they
+have set before themselves as an aim, and not, as it really is, a sort of imaginary
+picture which takes the place of the unknowable secrets.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p12">[12]</span></p>
+
+<p>For, although man is a thinking being, it is very far from the fact that his
+being consists in thinking. This is a difference that the born subtilizer fails to
+grasp. The aim of thought is called “truth,” and truths are “established”—i.e.,
+brought out of the living impalpability of the light-world into the form
+of concepts and assigned permanently to places in a system, which means a
+kind of intellectual space. Truths are absolute and eternal—i.e., they have
+nothing more to do with life.</p>
+
+<p>But for an animal, not truths, but only facts exist. Here is the difference
+between practical and theoretical understanding. Facts and truths&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> differ as
+time and space, destiny and causality. A fact addresses itself to the whole
+waking-consciousness, for the service of being, and not to that side of the waking-consciousness
+which imagines it can detach itself from being. Actual life,
+history, knows only facts; life experience and knowledge of men deal only
+in facts. The active man who does and wills and fights, daily measuring himself
+against the power of facts, looks down upon mere truths as unimportant.
+The real statesman knows only political facts, not political truths. Pilate’s
+famous question is that of every man of fact.</p>
+
+<p>It is one of the greatest achievements of Nietzsche that he confronted science
+with the problem of the <em>value</em> of truth and knowledge—cheap and even blasphemous
+though this seems to the born thinker and savant, who regards his
+whole <i lang="fr">raison d’être</i> as impugned by it. Descartes meant to doubt everything,
+but certainly not the value of his doubting.</p>
+
+<p>It is one thing, however, to pose problems and quite another to believe in
+solutions of them. The plant lives and knows not that it lives. The animal
+lives and knows that it lives. Man is astounded by his life and asks questions
+about it. But even man cannot give an answer to his own questions, he can
+only <em>believe</em> in the correctness of his answer, and in that respect there is no
+difference between Aristotle and the meanest savage.</p>
+
+<p>Whence comes it, then, that secrets must be unravelled and questions answered?
+Is it not from that fear which looks out of even a child’s eyes, that
+terrible dowry of human waking-consciousness which compels the understanding,
+free now from sensation and brooding on images, to probe into every deep
+for solutions that mean release? Can a desperate faith in knowledge free us
+from the nightmare of the grand questions?</p>
+
+<p>“Shuddering awe is mankind’s noblest part.” He to whom that gift has
+been denied by fate must seek to discover secrets, to attack, dissect, and destroy
+the awe-inspiring, and to extract a booty of knowledge therefrom. The will-to-system
+is a will to kill something living, to “establish,” stabilize, stiffen it,
+to bind it in the train of logic. The intellect has <em>conquered</em> when it has completed
+the business of making rigid.</p>
+
+<p>This distinction that is usually drawn between “reason” (<i lang="de">Vernunft</i>) and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p13">[13]</span>“understanding” (<i lang="de">Verstand</i>) is really that between the divination and flair
+belonging to our plant side, which merely <em>makes use</em> of the language of eye
+and word, and the understanding proper, belonging to our animal side, which
+is <em>deduced from</em> language. “Reason” in this sense is that which calls ideas
+into life, “understanding” that which finds truths. Truths are lifeless and can
+be imparted (<i lang="de">mitgeteilt</i>); ideas belong to the living self of the author and can
+only be sympathetically evoked (<i lang="de">mitgefühlt</i>). Understanding is essentially
+critical, reason essentially creative.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> The latter begets the object of its
+activity, the former starts from it. In fact, understanding criticism is first
+practised and developed in association with ordinary sensations—it is in
+sensation-judgments that the child learns to comprehend and to differentiate.
+Then, abstracted from this connexion and henceforward busied with itself,
+criticism needs a substitute for the sensation-activity that had previously
+served as its object. And this cannot be given it but by an <em>already existing</em> mode
+of thought, and it is upon this that criticism now works. This, only this,
+and not something building freely on nothingness, is Thought.</p>
+
+<p>For quite early, before he has begun to think abstractly, primitive man
+forms for himself a religious world-picture, and this is the object upon which
+the understanding begins to operate critically. Always science has grown
+up on a religion and under all the spiritual prepossessions of that religion, and
+always it signifies nothing more or less than an abstract melioration of these
+doctrines, considered as false because less abstract. Always it carries along
+the kernel of a religion in its ensemble of principles, problem-enunciations,
+and methods. Every new truth that the understanding finds is nothing but a
+critical judgment upon some other that was already there. The polarity between
+old and new knowledge involves the consequence that in the world of
+the understanding there is only the relatively correct—namely, judgments of
+greater convincingness than other judgments. Critical knowledge rests upon
+the belief that the understanding of to-day is better than that of yesterday.
+And that which forces us to this belief, is again, life.</p>
+
+<p>Can criticism then, as criticism, solve the great questions, or can it merely
+pose them? At the beginning of knowledge we believe the former. But the
+more we know, the more certain we become of the latter. So long as we hope,
+we call the secret a problem.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, for mankind aware, there is a double problem, that of Waking-Being
+and that of Being; or of Space and of Time; or of the world-as-nature&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>
+and the world as history; or of pulse and tension. The waking consciousness
+seeks to understand not only itself, but in addition something that is akin to
+itself. Though an inner voice may tell one that here all possibilities of knowledge
+<span class="pagenum" id="p14">[14]</span>are left behind, yet, in spite of it, fear overpersuades—everyone—and
+one goes on with the search, preferring even the pretence of a solution to the
+alternative of looking into nothingness.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>Waking-consciousness consists of sensation and understanding, and their
+common essence is a continuous self-adjustment in relation to the macrocosm.
+To that extent waking-consciousness is identical with ascertainment (<i lang="de">Feststellen</i>),
+whether we consider the touch of an infusorian, or human thinking
+of the highest order. Feeling, now, for touch with itself in this wise, the
+waking-consciousness first encounters the epistemological problem. What do
+we mean by cognition, or by the knowledge of cognition? And what is the
+relation between the original meanings of these terms and their later formulations
+in words? Waking and sleep alternate, like day and night, according to
+the course of the stars, and so, too, cognition alternates with dreams. How do
+these two differ?</p>
+
+<p>Waking-consciousness, however—whether it be that of sensation or that
+of understanding—is synonymous with the existence of oppositions, such as
+that between cognition and the object cognized, or thing and property, or
+object and event. Wherein consists the essence of these oppositions? And so
+arises the second problem, that of <em>causality</em>. When we give the names “cause”
+and “effect” to a pair of sensuous elements, or “premiss” and “consequence”
+to a pair of intellectual elements, we are fixing between them a relation of
+power and rank—when one is there, the other must be there also. In these
+relations, observe, time does not figure at all. We are concerned not with
+facts of destiny, but with causal truths, not with a “When?” but with a law-fixed
+dependence. Beyond doubt this is the understanding’s most promising
+line of activity. Mankind perhaps owes to discoveries of this order his happiest
+moments; and thus he proceeds, from these oppositions in the near and
+present things of everyday life that strike him immediately, forward in an
+endless series of conclusions to the first and final causes in the structure of nature
+that he calls God and the meaning of the world. He assembles, orders, and
+reviews his system, his dogma of law-governed connexions, and he finds in it
+a refuge from the unforeseen. He who can demonstrate, fears no longer. But
+wherein consists the essence of causality? Does it lie in knowing, in the
+known, or in a unity of both?</p>
+
+<p>The world of tensions is necessarily in itself stiff and dead—namely,
+“eternal truth,” something beyond all time, something that is a state. The
+actual world of waking-consciousness, however, is full of changes. This
+does not astonish an animal in the least, but it leaves the thought of the thinker
+powerless, for rest and movement, duration and change, become and becoming,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>
+<span class="pagenum" id="p15">[15]</span>are oppositions denoting something that in its very nature “passeth all understanding”
+and <em>must</em> therefore (from the point of view of the understanding)
+contain an absurdity. For is that a fact at all which proves to be incapable of
+distillation from the sense-world in the form of a truth? On the other hand,
+though the world is cognized as timeless, a time element nevertheless adheres
+to it—tensions appear as beat, and direction associates itself with extension.
+And so all that is problematical for the understanding consciousness somehow
+gathers itself together in one last and gravest problem, <em>the problem of motion</em>.
+And on that problem free and abstract thought breaks down, and we begin
+to discern that the microcosmic is after all as dependent as ever upon the
+cosmic, just as the individualness of a being from its first moment is constituted
+not by a body, but by the sheath of a body. Life can exist without
+thought, but thought is only one mode of life. High as may be the objectives
+that thought sets before itself, in actuality life makes use of thought for <em>its</em>
+ends and gives it a living objective quite apart from the solution of abstract
+problems. For thought the solutions of problems are correct or erroneous—for
+life they are valuable or valueless, and if the will-to-know breaks down
+on the motion problem, it may well be because life’s purpose has at that point
+been achieved. In spite of this, and indeed because of this, the motion problem
+remains the centre of gravity of all higher thought. All mythology and all
+natural science has arisen out of man’s wonder in the presence of the mystery
+of motion.</p>
+
+<p>The problem of motion touches, at once and immediately, the secrets of
+existence, which are alien to the waking-consciousness and yet inexorably
+press upon it. In posing motion as a problem we affirm our will to comprehend
+the incomprehensible, the when and wherefore, Destiny, blood, all that
+our intuitive processes touch in our depths. Born to see, we strive to set it
+before our eyes in the light, so that we may in the literal sense grasp it, assure
+ourselves of it as of something tangible.</p>
+
+<p>For this is the decisive fact, of which the observer is unconscious—his
+whole effort of seeking is aimed not at life, but at the seeing of life, and not at
+death, but at the seeing of death. We try to grasp the cosmic as it appears
+in the macrocosm to the microcosm, <em>as the life of a body in the light-world</em> between
+birth and death, generation and dissolution, and with that differentiation
+of body and soul that follows of deepest necessity from our ability to
+experience&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> the inward-proper as a sensuous alien.</p>
+
+<p>That we do not merely live but <em>know</em> about “living” is a consequence of
+our bodily existence in the light. But the beast knows only life, not death.
+Were we pure plantlike beings, we should die unconscious of dying, for to
+feel death and to die would be identical. But animals, even though they hear
+the death-cry, see the dead body, and scent putrefaction, behold death without
+<span class="pagenum" id="p16">[16]</span>comprehending it. Only when understanding has become, through language,
+detached from visual awareness and pure, does death appear to man as
+the great enigma of the light-world about him.</p>
+
+<p>Then, and only then, life becomes the short span of time between birth
+and death, and it is in relation to death that that other great mystery of generation
+arises also. Only then does the diffuse animal fear of everything become
+the definite human fear of death. It is <em>this</em> that makes the love of man and
+woman, the love of mother and child, the tree of the generations, the family,
+the people, and so at last world-history itself the infinitely deep facts and
+problems of destiny that they are. To death, as the common lot of every human
+being born into the light, adhere the ideas of guilt and punishment, of existence
+as a penance, of a new life beyond the world of this light, and of a salvation
+that makes an end of the death-fear. In the knowledge of death is originated
+that world-outlook which we possess as being men and not beasts.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>There are born destiny-men and causality-men. A whole world separates
+the purely living man—peasant and warrior, statesman and general, man
+of the world and man of business, everyone who wills to prosper, to rule, to
+fight, and to dare, the organizer or entrepreneur, the adventurer or bravo or
+gambler—from the man who is destined either by the power of his mind or
+the defect of his blood to be an “intellectual”—the saint, priest, savant,
+idealist, or ideologue. Being and waking-being, pulse and tension, motives
+and ideas, cyclic organs and touch-organs—there has rarely been a man of
+any significance in whom the one side or the other has not markedly predominated.
+All that motives and urges, the eye for men and situations, the
+belief in his star which every born man of action possesses and which is something
+wholly different from belief in the correctness of a standpoint, the voices
+of the blood that speak in moments of decision, and the immovably quiet
+conviction that justifies any aim and any means—all these are denied to the
+critical, meditative man. Even the footfall of the fact-man sounds different from,
+sounds more planted than, that of the thinker, in whom the pure microcosmic
+can acquire no firm relation with earth.</p>
+
+<p>Destiny has made the man so or so—subtle and fact-shy, or active and
+contemptuous of thought. But the man of the active category is a whole man,
+whereas in the contemplative a single organ can operate without (and even
+against) the body. All the worse, then, when this organ tries to master
+actuality as well as its own world, for then we get all those ethico-politico-social
+reform-projects which demonstrate, unanswerably, how things
+ought to be and how to set about making them so—theories that without
+exception rest upon the hypothesis that all men are as rich in ideas and as
+poor in motives as the author is (or thinks he is). Such theories, even when
+<span class="pagenum" id="p17">[17]</span>they have taken the field armed with the full authority of a religion or the
+prestige of a famous name, have not in one single instance effected the slightest
+alteration in life. They have merely caused us to <em>think</em> otherwise than before
+about life. And this, precisely, is the doom of the “late” ages of a Culture,
+the ages of much writing and much reading—that they should perpetually
+confuse the opposition of life and thought with the opposition between thought-about-life
+and thought-about-thought. All world-improvers, priests, and
+philosophers are unanimous in holding that life is a fit object for the nicest
+meditation, but the life of the world goes its own way and cares not in the
+least what is said about it. And even when a community succeeds in living
+“according to rule,” all that it achieves is, at best, a note on itself in some
+future history of the world—if there is space left after the proper and only
+important subject-matter has been dealt with.</p>
+
+<p>For, in the last resort, only the active man, the man of destiny, lives in
+the <em>actual</em> world, the world of political, military, and economic decisions, in
+which concepts and systems do not figure or count. Here a shrewd blow is
+more than a shrewd conclusion, and there is sense in the contempt with which
+statesmen and soldiers of all times have regarded the “ink-slinger” and the
+“bookworm” who think that world-history exists for the sake of the intellect
+or science or even art. Let us say it frankly and without ambiguity: the
+understanding divorced from sensation is only one, and not the decisive, side
+of life. A history of Western thought may not contain the name of Napoleon,
+but in the history of actuality Archimedes, for all his scientific discoveries,
+was possibly less effective than that soldier who killed him at the storming of
+Syracuse.</p>
+
+<p>Men of theory commit a huge mistake in believing that their place is at
+the head and not in the train of great events. They misunderstand completely
+the rôle played, for example, by the political Sophists in Athens or by Voltaire
+and Rousseau in France. Often enough a statesman does not “know” what he
+is doing, but that does not prevent him from following with confidence just
+the one path that leads to success; the political doctrinaire, on the contrary,
+always knows what should be done, and yet his activity, once it ceases to be
+limited to paper, is the least successful and therefore the least valuable in
+history. These intrusions happen only too frequently in times of uncertainty,
+like that of the Attic enlightenment, or the French or the German revolutions,
+when the ideologue of word or pen is eager to be busy with the actual history
+of the people instead of with systems. He mistakes his place. He belongs
+with his principles and programs to no history but the history of a literature.
+Real history passes judgment on him not by controverting the theorist, but by
+leaving him and all his thoughts to himself. A Plato or a Rousseau—not to
+mention the smaller intellects—could build up abstract political structures,
+but for Alexander, Scipio, Cæsar, and Napoleon, with their schemes and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p18">[18]</span>battles and settlements, they were entirely without importance. The thinker
+could discuss destiny if he liked; it was enough for these men to be destiny.</p>
+
+<p>Under all the plurality of microcosmic beings, we are perpetually meeting
+with the formation of <em>inspired mass-units</em>, beings of a higher order, which,
+whether they develop slowly or come into existence in a moment, contain
+all the feelings and passions of the individual, enigmatic in their inward character
+and inaccessible to reasoning—though the connoisseur can see into and
+reckon upon their reactions well enough. Here too we distinguish the generic
+animal unities which are sensed, the unities profoundly dependent upon Being
+and Destiny—like the way of an eagle in the air or the way of the stormers
+on the breach—from the purely human associations which depend upon the
+understanding and cohere on the basis of like opinions, like purposes, or like
+knowledge. Unity of cosmic pulse one has without willing to have it; unity
+of common ground is acquired at will. One can join or resign from an intellectual
+association as one pleases, for only one’s waking-consciousness is
+involved. But to a cosmic unity one is <em>committed</em>, and committed with one’s
+entire being. Crowds of this order of unity are seized by storms of enthusiasm
+or, as readily, of panic. They are noisy and ecstatic at Eleusis or Lourdes, or
+heroically firm like the Spartans of Thermopylæ and the last Goths in the
+battle of Vesuvius.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> They form themselves to the music of chorales, marches,
+and dances, and are sensitive like human and animal thoroughbreds to the effects
+of bright colours, decoration, costume, and uniform.</p>
+
+<p>These inspired aggregates are born and die. Intellectual associations are
+mere sums in the mathematical sense, varying by addition and subtraction,
+unless and until (as sometimes happens) a mere coincidence of opinion strikes so
+impressively as to reach the blood and so, suddenly, to create out of the sum
+a Being. In any political turning-point words may become fates and opinions
+passions. A chance crowd is herded together in the street and has <em>one</em> consciousness,
+<em>one</em> sensation, <em>one</em> language—until the short-lived soul flickers out
+and everyone goes his way again. This happened every day in the Paris of
+1789, whenever the cry of “<i lang="fr">A la lanterne!</i>” fell upon the ear.</p>
+
+<p>These souls have their special psychology,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> and the knowledge of this
+psychology is for the public man an essential. A single soul is the mark of
+every genuine order or class, be it the chivalry and military orders of the
+Crusades, the Roman Senate or the Jacobin club, polite society under Louis XIV
+or the Prussian country “<i>Adel</i>,” peasantry or guilds, the masses of the big
+city or the folk of the secluded valley, the peoples and tribes of the migrations
+or the adherents of Mohammed and generally, of any new-founded religion
+or sect, the French of the Revolution or the Germans of the Wars of Liberation.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p19">[19]</span>The mightiest beings of this kind that we know are the higher Cultures,
+which are born in great spiritual upheavals, and in a thousand years of existence
+weld all aggregates of lower degree—nations, classes, towns, generations—into
+one unit.</p>
+
+<p>All grand events of history are carried by beings of the cosmic order, by
+peoples, parties, armies, and classes, while the history of the intellect runs its
+course in loose associations and circles, schools, levels of education, “tendencies”
+and “isms.” And here again it is a question of destiny whether such
+aggregates at the decisive moments of highest effectiveness find a leader or are
+driven blindly on, whether the chance headmen are men of the first order or
+men of no real significance tossed up, like Robespierre or Pompey, by the surge
+of events. It is the hall-mark of the statesman that he has a sure and penetrating
+eye for these mass-souls that form and dissolve on the tide of the times,
+their strength and their duration, their direction and purpose. And even so,
+it is a question of Incident&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> whether he is one who <em>can</em> master them or one who
+is swept away by them.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p20"></a><a id="p21"></a><a id="p22"></a><a id="p23"></a>[23]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">
+ CHAPTER II
+ <br>
+ <span class="subtitle">ORIGIN AND LANDSCAPE
+ <br>
+ (B)
+ <br>
+ THE GROUP OF THE HIGHER CULTURES</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>Now, man—no matter whether it is for life or for thought that he is born
+into the world—so long as he is acting or is thinking, is awake and therefore
+<em>in focus</em>—i.e., adjusted to the one significance that for the moment his light-world
+holds for him. Everyone knows that it is almost sharply painful to
+switch off suddenly in the middle of, say, an experiment in physics, in order
+to think about some event of the day. I have said earlier that the innumerable
+settings that take turns in man’s waking consciousness fall into two distinct
+groups—the worlds of destiny and pulsation, and the worlds of causes and tensions.
+The two pictures I have called <em>world-as-history</em> and <em>world-as-nature</em>. In
+the first, life makes use of critical understanding. It has the eye under command,
+the felt pulsation becomes the inwardly imagined wave-train, and the
+shattering spiritual experience becomes pictured as the epochal peak. In the second,
+thought itself rules, and its causal criticism turns life into a rigorous process,
+the living content of a fact into an abstract truth, and tension into formula.</p>
+
+<p>How is this possible? Each is an eye-picture, but in the one the seer is giving
+himself up to the never-to-be-repeated facts, and in the other he is striving
+to catch truths for an ever-valid system. In the history-picture, that in which
+knowledge is simply an <em>auxiliary</em>, the cosmic makes use of the microcosmic.
+In the picture which we call memory and recollection, things are present to us
+as bathed in an inner light and swept by the pulsation of our existence. But
+the chronological element&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> tells us that history, as soon as it becomes <em>thought</em>
+history, is no longer immune from the basic conditions of all waking-consciousness.
+In the nature- (or science-) picture it is the ever-present subjective
+that is alien and illusive, but in the history-picture it is the equally ineliminable
+objective, Number, that leads into error.</p>
+
+<p>When we are working in the domain of Nature (science), our settings and
+self-adjustments should be and can be up to a certain point impersonal—one
+“forgets oneself”—but every man, class, nation, or family sees the
+picture of history <em>in relation to itself</em>. The mark of Nature is an extension that
+is inclusive of everything, but History is that which comes up out of the darkness
+<span class="pagenum" id="p24">[24]</span>of the past, presents itself to the <em>seer</em>, and from him sweeps onward into the
+future. He, as the present, is always its middle point, and it is quite impossible
+for him to order the facts with any meaning if he ignores their direction—which
+is an element proper to life and not to thought. Every time, every
+land, every living aggregate has its own historical horizon, and it is the mark
+of the genuine historical thinker that he actualizes the picture of history that
+his time demands.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Nature and History are distinguishable like pure and impure criticism—meaning
+by “criticism” the opposite of lived experience. Natural science
+<em>is</em> criticism and nothing else. But in History, criticism can do no more than
+scientifically prepare the field over which the historian’s eye is to sweep.
+<em>History is that ranging glance itself</em>, whatever the direction in which it ranges.
+He who possesses such an eye can understand every fact and every situation
+“historically.” Nature is a system, and systems can be learnt.</p>
+
+<p>The process of <em>historical</em> self-adjustment begins for everyone with the earliest
+impressions of childhood. Children’s eyes are keen, and the facts of the nearest
+environment, the life of the family and the house and the street, are sensed
+and felt right down to the core, long before the city and its population come
+into their visual field, and while the words “people,” “country,” “state,”
+are still quite destitute of tangible meaning to them. Just so, and so thoroughly,
+primitive man knows all that is presented to his narrow field of view
+as history, as living—and above all Life itself, the drama of birth and death,
+sickness and eld; the history of passionate war and passionate love, as experienced
+in himself or observed in others; the fate of relatives, of the clan,
+of the village, their actions and their motives; tales of long enmity, of fights,
+victory, and revenge. The life-horizon widens, and shows not lives, but Life
+coming and going. The pageant is not now of villages and clans, but of remote
+races and countries; not of years, but of centuries. The history that is actually
+lived with and participated in never reaches over more than a grandfather’s
+span—neither for ancient Germans and present-day Negroes, nor for
+Pericles and Wallenstein. Here the horizon of living ends, and a new plane
+begins wherein the picture is based upon hearsay and historical tradition, a
+plane in which direct sympathies are adapted to a mind-picture that is both
+distinct and, from long use, stable. The picture so developed shows very
+different amplitudes for the men of the different Cultures. For us Westerners
+it is with this secondary picture that genuine history begins, for we live under
+the aspect of eternity, whereas for the Greeks and Romans it is just then that
+history ceases. For Thucydides&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> the events of the Persian Wars, for Cæsar
+those of the Punic Wars, were already devoid of living import.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p25">[25]</span></p>
+
+<p>And beyond this plane again, other historic unit-pictures rise to the view—pictures
+of the destinies of the plant world and the animal world, the landscape,
+the stars—which at the last fuse with the last pictures of natural science
+into mythic images of the creation and the end of the world.</p>
+
+<p>The nature- (science-) picture of the child and the primitive develops out
+of the petty technique of every day, which perpetually forces both of them to
+turn away from the fearful contemplation of wide nature to the critique of the
+facts and situations of their near environment. Like the young animal, the
+child discovers its first truths through play. Examining the toy, cutting
+open the doll, turning the mirror round to see what is behind it, the feeling of
+triumph in having established something as correct for good and all—no
+nature-research whatsoever has got beyond this. Primitive man applies this
+critical experience, as he acquires it, to his arms and tools, to the materials
+for his clothing, food, and housing—i.e., to things <em>in so far as they are dead</em>.
+He applies it to animals as well when suddenly they cease to have meaning
+for him as living beings whose movements he watches and divines as pursuer
+or pursued, and are apprehended mechanically instead of vitally, as aggregates
+of flesh and bone for which he has a definite use—exactly as he is conscious
+of an event, now as the act of a dæmon and a moment afterwards as a
+sequence of cause and effect. The mature man of the Culture transposes in
+exactly the same way, every day and every hour. Here, too, is a “nature”-horizon,
+and beyond it lies the secondary plane formed of our impressions of
+rain, lightning, and tempest, summer and winter, moon-phases and star-courses.
+But at that plane religiousness, trembling with fear and awe, forces upon man
+criteria of a far higher kind. Just as in the history-picture he sounds the ultimate
+facts of life, so here he seeks to establish the ultimate truths of nature.
+What lies beyond any attainable frontier of knowledge he calls God, and
+all that lies within that frontier he strives to comprehend—as action, creation,
+and manifestation of God—causally.</p>
+
+<p>Every group of scientifically established elements, therefore, has a dual
+tendency, inherent and unchanged since primitive ages. The one tendency
+urges forwards the completest possible system of <em>technical</em> knowledge, for the
+service of practical, economical, and warlike ends, which many kinds of animals
+have developed to a high degree of perfection, and which from them leads,
+through primitive man and his acquaintance with fire and metals, directly to
+the machine-technics of our Faustian Culture. The other tendency took shape
+only with the separation of strictly human thought from physical vision by
+means of language, and the aim of its effort has been an equally complete
+<em>theoretical</em> knowledge, which we call in the earlier phases of the Culture <em>religious</em>,
+and in the later <em>scientific</em>. Fire is for the warrior a weapon, for the craftsman
+part of his equipment, for the priest a sign from God, and for the scientist
+a problem. But in all these aspects alike it is proper to the “natural,” the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p26">[26]</span>scientific, mode of waking-consciousness. In the world-as-history we do not
+find fire as such, but the conflagration of Carthage and the flames of the faggots
+heaped around John Hus and Giordano Bruno.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_1">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>I repeat, every being livingly experiences every other being and its destiny
+<em>only in relation to itself</em>. A flock of pigeons is regarded by the farmer on whose
+fields it settles quite otherwise than by the nature-lover in the street or the
+hawk in the air. The peasant sees in his son the future and the heritage, but
+what the neighbour sees in him is a peasant, what the officer sees is a soldier,
+what the visitor sees is a native. Napoleon experienced men and things very
+differently as Emperor and as lieutenant. Put a man in a new situation, make
+the revolutionary a minister, the soldier a general, and at once history and the
+key men of history become for him something other than what they were.
+Talleyrand saw through the men of his time because he belonged with them,
+but had he been suddenly plumped down in the company of Crassus, Cæsar,
+Catiline, and Cicero, his understanding of their measures and views would
+have been either null or erroneous. There is no history-in-itself. The history
+of a family is taken differently by each member of it, that of a country differently
+by each party, that of the age by each nation. The German looks upon the
+World War otherwise than the Englishman, the workman upon economic
+history otherwise than the employer, and the historian of the West has a quite
+other world-history before his eyes than that of the great Arabian and Chinese
+historians. The history of an era could be handled objectively only if it were
+very distant in time, and the historian were radically disinterested; and we
+find that our best historians cannot judge of or describe even the Peloponnesian
+Wars and Actium without being in some measure influenced by present interests.</p>
+
+<p>It is not incompatible with, rather it is essential to, a profound knowledge
+of men that the appraiser should see through glasses of his own colour. This
+knowledge, indeed, is exactly the component that we discern to be wanting in
+those generalizations that distort or altogether ignore that all-important fact,
+the uniqueness of the constituent event in history&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>—the worst example of
+this being the “materialistic” conception of history, about which we have
+said almost all there is to say when we have described it as physiognomic
+barrenness. But both in spite of this and on account of this&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> there is for every
+man, <em>because</em> he belongs to a class and a time and a nation and a Culture, a
+typical picture of history as it ought to appear in relation to himself, and
+equally there are typical pictures specific to the time or class or Culture, <i>qua</i>
+<span class="pagenum" id="p27">[27]</span>time or class or Culture. The supreme generalization possible to each Culture
+as a major being is a primary and, for it, symbolical image of its own world-as-history,
+and all self-attunements of the individual—or of the group livingly
+effective as individual—are with reference to that image. Whenever we
+describe another person’s ideas as profound or superficial, original or trivial,
+mistaken or obsolete, we are unwittingly judging them with reference to a
+picture which springs up to answer for the value at the moment of a continuous
+function of our time and our personality.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
+
+<p>Obviously, then, every man of the Faustian Culture possesses his own
+picture of history and, besides, innumerable other pictures from his youth
+upwards, which fluctuate and alter ceaselessly in response to the experiences
+of the day and the year. And how different, again, are the typical history-images
+of men and different eras and classes, the world of Otto the Great and
+that of Gregory VII, that of a Doge of Venice and that of a poor pilgrim!
+In what different worlds lived Lorenzo de’ Medici, Wallenstein, Cromwell,
+Marat, and Bismarck, a serf of the Gothic age, a savant of the Baroque, the
+army officer of the Thirty Years’ War, the Seven Years’ War, and the Wars of
+Liberation respectively! Or, to consider our own times alone, a Frisian peasant
+whose life of actuality is limited to his own countryside and its folk, a
+high merchant of Hamburg, and a professor of physics! And yet to all of
+these, irrespective of individual age, status, and period, there is a common
+basis that differentiates the ensemble of these figures, their prime-image,
+from that of every other Culture.</p>
+
+<p>But, over and above this, there is a distinction of another kind which
+separates the Classical and the Indian history-pictures from those of the Chinese,
+the Arabian, and, most of all, the Western Cultures—the <em>narrow horizon</em>
+of the two first-named. Whatever the Greeks may (and indeed must) have
+known of ancient Egyptian history, they never allowed it to penetrate into
+their peculiar history-picture, which for the majority was limited to the field
+of events that could be related by the oldest surviving participant, and which
+even for the finer minds stopped at the Trojan War, a frontier beyond which
+they would not concede that there had been historical life at all.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Arabian Culture,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> on the other hand, very early dared the astounding
+gesture—we see it in the historical thought alike of the Jews and of the
+Persians from Cyrus’s time—of connecting the legend of creation to the present
+by means of a genuine chronology; the Persians indeed comprised the future
+as well in the sweep of the gesture, and predated the last judgment and the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p28">[28]</span>coming of the Messiah. This exact and very narrow definition of human
+history—the Persian reckoning allows twelve millennia from first to last,
+the Jewish counts less than six up to the present—is a necessary expression of
+the Magian world-feeling and fundamentally distinguishes the Judæo-Persian
+creation-sagas from those of the Babylonian Culture, from which so many of
+their external traits are derived.</p>
+
+<p>Different, again, are the primary feelings which give historical thought
+in the Chinese and the Egyptian Cultures its characteristically wide and
+unbounded horizons, represented by chronologically stated sequences of
+dynasties which stretch over millennia and finally dissolve into a grey
+remoteness.</p>
+
+<p>The Faustian picture of world-history, again, prepared in advance by the
+existence of a Christian chronology,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> came into being suddenly, with an immense
+extension and deepening of the Magian picture which the Western
+Church had taken over, an extension and deepening that was to give Joachim
+of Floris&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> in the high Gothic the basis of his wonderful interpretation of all
+world-destinies as a sequence of three æons under the aspects of the Father,
+the Son, and the Holy Ghost. Parallel with this there was an immense widening
+of the geographical horizon, which even in Gothic times (thanks to Vikings
+and Crusaders) came to extend from Iceland to the remotest ends of Asia;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> and
+from 1500 onwards, the developed man of the Baroque is able to do what none
+of his peers in the other Cultures could do and—for the first time in human
+history—to regard the whole surface of the planet as its field. Thanks to compass
+and telescope, the savant of that mature age could for the first time not
+merely posit the sphericity of the earth as a matter of theory, but actually feel
+that he was living upon a sphere in space. The land-horizon is no more. So,
+too, time-horizons melt in the double endlessness of the calendar before and after
+Christ. And to-day, under the influence of this picture, which comprises the
+whole planet and will eventually embrace all the high Cultures, the old Gothic
+division of history into “ancient,” “mediæval,” and modern, long become
+trite and empty, is visibly dissolving.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></p>
+
+<p>In all other Cultures the aspects of world-history and of man-history coincide.
+The beginning of the world is the beginning of man, and the end of
+man is the end of the world. But the Faustian infinity-craving for the first
+time separated the two notions during the Baroque, and now it has made
+human history, for all its immense and still unknown span, <em>a mere episode in
+world-history</em>, while the Earth—of which other Cultures had seen not even
+<span class="pagenum" id="p29">[29]</span>the whole, but only superficial fractions as “the world”—has become a
+little star amongst millions of solar systems.</p>
+
+<p>The extension of the historical world-picture makes it even more necessary
+in this Culture than in any other to distinguish between the everyday self-attunements
+of ordinary people and that extreme self-attunement of which
+only the highest minds are capable, and which even in them holds only for
+moments. The difference between the historical view-field of Themistocles
+and that of an Attic husbandman is probably very small, but this difference
+is already immense as between Henry VI and a hind of his day,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> and as the
+Faustian Culture mounts up and up, the power of self-focusing attains to such
+heights and depths that the circle of adepts grows ever smaller and smaller.
+In fact, there is formed a sort of pyramid of possibilities, in which individuals
+are graded according to their endowments; every individual, according
+to his constitution, stands at the level which he is capable at his best focus
+of holding. But it follows from this that between Western men there are
+limitations to the possibilities of reciprocal understanding of historical life-problems,
+limitations that do not apply to other Cultures, at any rate in such
+fateful rigour as they do to ours. Can a workman to-day really understand
+a peasant? Or a diplomat a craftsman? The historico-geographical horizon
+that determines for each of them the questions worth asking and the form in
+which these are asked is so different from the horizons of the others that what
+they can exchange is not a communication, but passing remarks. It is, of
+course, the mark of the real appraiser of man that he understands how “the
+other man” is adjusted and regulates his intercourse with him accordingly
+(as we all do in talking to children), but the art of appraising in this sense
+some man of the past (say Henry the Lion or Dante), of living oneself into his
+history-picture so thoroughly that his thoughts, feelings, and decisions take on
+a character of self-evidence, is, owing to the vast difference between the one’s
+and the other’s waking consciousness, so rare that up to the eighteenth century
+it was not even seen that the historian ought to attempt it. Only since 1800
+has it become a desideratum for the writing of history, and it is one very seldom
+satisfied at that.</p>
+
+<p>The typically Faustian separation of human history, as such, from the far
+wider history of the world has had the result that since the end of the Baroque
+our world-picture has contained several horizons disposed one behind the other
+in as many planes. For the exploration of these, individual sciences, more
+or less overtly historical in character, have taken shape. Astronomy, geology,
+biology, anthropology, one after the other follow up the destinies of the star-world,
+the earth’s crust, life, and man, and only then do we come to the
+“world”-history—as it is still called even to-day—of the higher Cultures, to
+which, again, are attached the histories of the several cultural elements, family
+<span class="pagenum" id="p30">[30]</span>history, and lastly (that highly developed speciality of the West) biography.</p>
+
+<p>Each of these planes demands a particular self-focusing, and the moment
+the special focus becomes sharp the narrower and the broader planes cease to
+be live Being and become mere given facts. If we are investigating the battle
+of the Teutoburger Wald, the growing up of this forest in the plant-world of
+the North German plain is presupposed. If, on the other hand, we are examining
+into the history of the German tree-world, the geological stratification
+of the earth is the presupposition, though it is just a fact whose particular
+destiny need not be further followed out in this connexion. If, again, our
+question is the origin of the Cretaceous, the existence of the Earth itself as a
+planet in the solar system is a datum, not a problem. Or, to express it otherwise,
+that there is an Earth in the star-world, that the phenomenon “life”
+occurs in the Earth, that within this “life” there is the form “man,” that
+within the history of man there exists the organic form of the Culture, is in
+each case an incident in the picture of the next higher plane.</p>
+
+<p>In Goethe, from his Strassburg period to his first Weimar residence, the
+inclination to attune himself to “world”-history was very strong—as evidenced
+in his Cæsar, Mohammed, Socrates, Wandering Jew, and Egmont
+sketches. And after that painful renunciation of the prospect of high political
+achievement&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a>—the pain which calls to us in <i>Tasso</i> even through the sober
+resignedness of its final form—this precisely was the attunement that he chose
+to cut out of his life; and thereafter he limits himself, almost fiercely, to
+the picture-planes of plant-history, animal-history, and earth-history (his
+“living nature”) on the one hand and to biography on the other.</p>
+
+<p>All these “pictures,” developed in the same man, have the same structure.
+Even the history of plants and animals, even that of the earth’s crust or that of
+the stars, is a <i lang="fr">fable convenue</i> and mirrors in outward actuality the inward tendency
+of the ego’s being. The student of the animal world or of stratification
+is a man, living in a period and having a nationality and a social status, and
+it is no more possible to eliminate his subjective standpoint from his treatment
+of these things than it would be to obtain a perfectly abstract account of the
+French Revolution or the World War. The celebrated theories of Kant,
+Laplace, Cuvier, Lyell, Darwin, have also a politico-economic tinting, and
+their very power and impressiveness for the lay public show that the mode of
+outlook upon all these historical planes proceeds from a single source. And
+what is accomplishing itself to-day is the final achievement of which Faustian
+history-thinking is capable—the organic linking and disposition of these
+historical planes in a single vast world-history of uniform physiognomic that
+<span class="pagenum" id="p31">[31]</span>shall enable our glance to range from the life of the individual man without a
+break to the first and last destinies of the universe. The nineteenth century—in
+mechanistic (i.e., unhistorical) form—enunciated the problem. It is
+one of the preordained tasks of the twentieth to solve it.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_1">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>The picture that we possess of the history of the Earth’s crust and of life
+is at present still dominated by the ideas which civilized&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> English thought
+has developed, since the Age of Enlightenment, out of the English habit of
+life—Lyell’s “phlegmatic” theory of the formation of the geological strata,
+and Darwin’s of the origin of species, are actually but derivatives of the development
+of England herself. In place of the incalculable catastrophes and
+metamorphoses such as von Buch and Cuvier&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> admitted, they put a methodical
+evolution over very long periods of time and recognize as causes only <em>scientifically
+calculable</em> and indeed <em>mechanical utility-causes</em>.</p>
+
+<p>This “English” type of causality is not only shallow, but also far too
+narrow. It limits possible causal connexions, in the first place, to those which
+work out their <em>entire</em> course on the earth’s surface; but this immediately excludes
+all great cosmic relations between earthly life-phenomena and the
+events of the solar system and the stellar universe, and assumes the impossible
+postulate that the exterior face of the earth-ball is a completely insulated region
+of natural phenomena. And, secondly, it assumes that connexions which
+are not comprehensible by the means at present available to the human consciousness—namely,
+sensation refined by instruments and thought precised
+by theory—do not even exist.</p>
+
+<p>It will be the characteristic task of the twentieth century, as compared with
+the nineteenth, to get rid of this system of superficial causality, whose roots
+reach back into the rationalism of the Baroque period, and to put in its place
+a pure physiognomic. We are sceptics in regard to any and every mode of
+thought which “explains” causally. We let things speak for themselves, and
+confine ourselves to sensing the Destiny immanent in them and contemplating
+the form-manifestations that we shall never penetrate. The extreme to which
+we can attain is the discovery of causeless, purposeless, purely existent forms
+underlying the changeful picture of nature. For the nineteenth century the
+word “evolution” meant progress in the sense of increasing fitness of life to
+purposes. For Leibniz—whose <i>Protogæa</i> (1691), a work full of significant
+thought, outlines, on the basis of studies made in the Harz silver-mines, a
+picture of the world’s infancy that is Goethian through and through—and for
+Goethe himself it meant fulfilment in the sense of increasing connotation of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p32">[32]</span>the form. The two concepts, Goethe’s form-fulfilment and Darwin’s evolution,
+are in as complete opposition as destiny to causality, and (be it added)
+as German to English thought, and German to English history.</p>
+
+<p>There is no more conclusive refutation of Darwinism than that furnished by
+palæontology. Simple probability indicates that fossil hoards can only be
+test samples. Each sample, then, should represent a different stage of evolution,
+and there ought to be merely “transitional” types, no definition and no
+species. Instead of this we find perfectly stable and unaltered forms persevering
+through long ages, forms that have not developed themselves on the fitness
+principle, but <em>appear suddenly and at once in their definitive shape</em>; that do not
+thereafter evolve towards better adaptation, but become rarer and finally
+disappear, while quite different forms crop up again. What unfolds itself, in
+ever-increasing richness of form, is the great classes and kinds of living beings
+which <em>exist aboriginally and exist still, without transition types</em>, in the grouping
+of to-day. We see how, amongst fish, the Selachians, with their simple form,
+appear first in the foreground of history and then slowly fade out again, while
+the Teleostians slowly bring a more perfected fish-type to predominance. The
+same applies to the plant-world of the ferns and horsetails, of which only the
+last species now linger in the fully developed kingdom of the flowering plants.
+But the assumption of utility-causes or other visible causes for these phenomena
+has no support of actuality.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> It is a Destiny that evoked into the world
+life as life, the ever-sharper opposition between plant and animal, each single
+type, each genus, and each species. And along with this existence there is
+given also a definite <em>energy</em> of the form—by virtue of which in the course of
+its self-fulfilment it keeps itself pure or, on the contrary, becomes dull and
+unclear or evasively splits into numerous varieties—and finally a <em>life-duration
+of this form</em>, which (unless, again, incident intervenes to shorten it) leads naturally
+to a senility of the species and finally to its disappearance.</p>
+
+<p>As for mankind, discoveries of the Diluvial age indicate more and more
+pointedly that the man-forms existing then correspond to those living now;
+there is not the slightest trace of evolution towards a race of greater utilitarian
+“fitness.” And the continued failure to find man in the Tertiary discoveries indicates
+more and more clearly that the human life-form, like every other, originates
+in a sudden mutation (<i lang="de">Wandlung</i>) of which the “whence,” “how,” and “why”
+remain an impenetrable secret. If, indeed, there were evolution in the English
+sense of the word, there could be neither defined earth-strata nor specific animal-classes,
+but only a single geological mass and a chaos of living singular
+forms which we may suppose to have been left over from the struggle for existence.
+But all that we see about us impels us to the conviction that again and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p33">[33]</span>again profound and very sudden changes take place in the being of plants and
+animals, changes which are of a cosmic kind and nowise restricted to the earth’s
+surface, which are beyond the ken of human sense and understanding in respect
+of causes, if not indeed in all respects.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> So, too, we observe that swift and deep
+changes assert themselves in the history of the great Cultures, without assignable
+causes, influences, or purposes of any kind. The Gothic and the
+Pyramid styles come into full being as suddenly as do the Chinese imperialism
+of Shi-hwang-ti and the Roman of Augustus, as Hellenism and Buddhism and
+Islam. It is exactly the same with the events in the individual life of every
+person who counts at all, and he who is ignorant of this knows nothing of men
+and still less of children. Every being, active or contemplative, strides on to its
+fulfilment by <em>epochs</em> and we have to assume just such epochs in the history of
+solar systems and the world of the fixed stars. The origins of the earth, of life,
+of the free-moving animal <em>are</em> such epochs, and, therefore, mysteries that we
+can do no more than accept.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_1">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>That which we know of man divides clearly into two great ages of his being.
+The first is, as far as our view is concerned, limited on the one side by that
+profound fugue of planetary Destiny which we call the beginning of the Ice
+Age—and about which we can (within the picture of world-history) say no
+more than <em>that</em> a cosmic change took place—and on the other by the beginnings
+of high cultures on Nile and Euphrates, with which the whole meaning of
+human existence became suddenly different. We discover everywhere the sharp
+frontier of Tertiary and Diluvial, and on the hither side of it we see man as a
+completely formed type, familiar with custom, myth, wit, ornament, and
+technique and endowed with a bodily structure that has not materially altered
+up to the present day.</p>
+
+<p>We will consider the first age as that of the primitive Culture. The only
+field in which this Culture endured throughout the second age (though certainly
+in a very “late” form) and is found alive and fairly intact to-day is
+north-west Africa. It is the great merit of Leo Frobenius&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> that he recognized
+this quite clearly, beginning with the assumption that in this field a <em>whole
+world</em> of primitive life (and not merely a greater or less number of primitive
+tribes) remained remote from the influences of the high Cultures. The ethnologist-psychologist,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p34">[34]</span>on the contrary, delights in collecting, from all over the
+five continents, fragments of peoples who really have nothing in common but
+the negative fact of living a subordinate existence in the middle of one or
+another of the high Cultures, without participation in its inner life. The
+result is a congeries of tribes, some stationary, some inferior, and some decadent,
+whose respective modes of expression, moreover, are indiscriminately
+lumped together.</p>
+
+<p>But the primitive Culture is not fragmentary, but something <em>strong and
+integral</em>, something highly vital and effectual. Only, this Culture is so different
+from everything that we men of a higher Culture possess in the way of spiritual
+potentialities that we may question whether even those people which have
+carried the first age very deep into the second are good evidence, in their present
+modes of being and waking-being, for the condition of the old time.</p>
+
+<p>For some thousands of years now the waking-consciousness of man has
+had the impression of constant mutual touch between the tribes and peoples
+as an obvious everyday fact. But in dealing with the first age we must not
+forget that in it man, cohering in a very few small groups, is completely lost
+in the immensity of the landscape, the ruling element therein being the mighty
+masses of the great animal-herds. The rarity of our finds sufficiently proves
+this. At the time of Aurignacian Man there were perhaps a dozen hordes,
+each a few hundred strong, wandering in the whole area of France, and such
+hordes must have regarded it as a deeply impressive and puzzling event when
+(if ever) they became aware that fellow men existed. Can we imagine even
+in the least degree what it was to live in a world almost empty of men—we
+for whom all nature has long since become a background for the human multitude?
+How man’s world-consciousness must have changed when, besides the
+forests and the herds of beasts, other men “just like himself” began to be met
+with, more and more frequently, in the country-side. The increase of man’s
+numbers—this, too, doubtless took place very suddenly—made experience
+of “fellow men” habitual, and replaced the impression of astonishment by the
+feelings of pleasure or hostility, and these again evoked a whole new world of
+experiences and of involuntary and inevitable relations. It was for the history
+of the human soul perhaps the deepest and most pregnant of all events. It
+was in relation to alien life-forms that man first became conscious of his own,
+and now the interior organization of the clan was enriched by a wealth of
+intertribal forms of relation, which thereafter completely dominated primitive
+life and thought. For it was then that, out of very simple modes of sensuous
+understanding, the rudiments of verbal language (and, therefore, of abstract
+thought) came into being, amongst them the particularly fortunate few, which—though
+we can form no idea of their structure—we may assume as the
+origins of the later Indogermanic and Semitic language-groups.</p>
+
+<p>Then, out of this general primitive Culture of a humanity linked by intertribal
+<span class="pagenum" id="p35">[35]</span>relations,
+ there shot up suddenly (about 3000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a>) the Culture of Egypt
+and Babylonia. Probably for a millennium before that date both these fields
+had been nursing something that differed radically from every primitive Culture
+in kind and in intent, something having an inward unity common to all its
+forms of expression and directional in all its life. To me it seems highly probable
+that, if not indeed all over the earth’s surface, at any rate in man’s essence
+a change was accomplished at that time; and if so, then any primitive Culture
+worthy of the name that is still found living later, ever dwindling, in the midst
+of higher Cultures, should itself be something different from the Culture of
+the first Age. But, with reference to primitive Culture of any sort, that which
+I call the pre-Culture (and which can be shown to occur as a uniform process
+in the beginning of every high Culture) is something different in kind, something
+entirely new.</p>
+
+<p>In all primitive existence the “it,” the Cosmic, is at work with such immediacy
+of force that all microcosmic utterances, whether in myth, custom,
+technique, or ornament, obey only the pressures of the very instant. For us,
+there are no ascertainable rules for the duration, tempo, and course of development
+of these utterances. We observe, say, an ornamental form-language—not
+to be called a style&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>—ruling over the population of a wide area, spreading,
+changing, and at last dying out. Alongside this, and perhaps with quite
+different fields of extension, we may find modes of fashioning and using weapons,
+tribal organizations, religious practices, each developing in a special way
+of its own, with epochal points of its own, beginnings and ends of its own,
+completely influenced by other form-domains. When in some prehistoric
+stratum we have identified an accurately known type of pottery, we cannot
+safely argue from it to the customs and religion of the population to which it
+belonged. And if by chance the same area does hold for a particular form of
+marriage and, say, a certain type of tattooing, this never signifies a common
+basic idea such as is indicated, for example, by the discovery of gunpowder
+and that of perspective in painting. No necessary connexions come to light
+between ornament and organization by age-classes, or between the cult of a god
+and the kind of agriculture practised. Development in these cases means
+always some development of one or another individual aspect or trait of the
+primitive Culture, never of that Culture itself. This, as I have said before, is
+essentially chaotic; the primitive Culture is neither an organism nor a sum of
+organisms.</p>
+
+<p>But with the type of the higher Culture this “it” gives way to a strong and
+undiffused <em>tendency</em>. Within the primitive Culture tribes and clans are the only
+quickened beings—other than the individual men of course. <em>Here, however, the
+Culture itself is such a being.</em> Everything primitive is a sum—a sum of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p36">[36]</span>expression-forms of primitive groupings. The high Culture, on the contrary,
+is the waking-being of a single huge organism which makes not only custom,
+myths, technique, and art, but the very peoples and classes incorporated in
+itself the vessels of one single form-language and one single history. The
+oldest speech that we know of belongs to the primitive Culture, and has lawless
+destinies of its own which cannot be deduced from those of, say, Ornament or
+Marriage. But the history of script belongs integrally with the expression-history
+of the several higher Cultures. That the Egyptian, Chinese, Babylonian,
+and Mexican each formed a special script in its pre-Cultural age—that
+the Indian and the Classical on the other hand did not do so, but took over
+(and very late) the highly developed writing of a neighbouring Civilization—that
+in the Arabian, again, every new religion and sect immediately formed
+its particular script—all these are facts that stand in a deeply intimate relation
+to the generic form-history of these Cultures and its inner significance.</p>
+
+<p>To these two ages our knowledge of man is restricted, and they certainly do
+not suffice to justify conclusions of any sort about possible or certain new eras
+or about their “when” and “how”—quite apart from the fact that in any
+case the cosmic connexions that govern the history of man as a genus are entirely
+inaccessible to our measures.</p>
+
+<p>My kind of thought and observation is limited to the physiognomy of the
+actual. At the point when the experience of the “judge of men” <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> his
+environment, and that of the “man of action” <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> his facts, become ineffective,
+there also this insight finds its limit. The existence of these two
+ages is a <em>fact of historical experience</em>; more, our experiencing of the primitive
+Culture consists not only in surveying, in its relics, a self-contained and closed-off
+thing, but also in reacting to its deeper meaning by virtue of an inward
+relation to it which persists in us. But the second age opens to us another and
+quite different kind of experience. It was an incident, the sense of which
+cannot now be scrutinized, that the type of the higher Culture appeared suddenly
+in the field of human history. Quite possibly, indeed, it was some
+sudden event in the domain of earth-history that brought forth a new and
+different form into phenomenal existence. But the fact that we have before us
+eight such Cultures, all of the same build, the same development, and the
+same duration, justifies us in <em>looking at them comparatively</em>, and therefore justifies
+our treating them as comparable, studying them comparatively, and obtaining
+from our study a knowledge which we can extend backwards over lost periods
+and forwards over the future—provided always that a Destiny of a different
+order does not replace this form-world, suddenly and basically, by another.
+Our licence to proceed thus comes from general experience of organic being.
+As in the history of the Raptores or the Coniferæ we cannot prophesy whether
+and when a new species will arise, so in that of Cultural history we cannot say
+whether and when a new Culture shall be. But from the moment when a
+<span class="pagenum" id="p37">[37]</span>new being is conceived in the womb, or a seed sinks into the earth, we do know
+<em>the inner form of this new life-course</em>; and we know that the quiet course of its
+development and fulfilment may be disturbed by the pressure of external powers,
+but never altered.</p>
+
+<p>This experience teaches, further, that the Civilization which at this present
+time has gripped the earth’s whole surface is not a third age, but a stage—a
+necessary stage—of the Western Culture, distinguished from its analogues
+only by the forcefulness of its extension-tendency. Here experience ends,
+and all speculation on what new forms will govern the life of future mankind
+(or, for that matter, whether there will be any such new forms) all building of
+majestic card-houses on the foundation of “it should be, it shall be” is mere
+trifling—far too futile, it seems to me, to justify one single life of any value
+being expended on it.</p>
+
+<p>The group of the high Cultures is not, as a group, an organic unit. That
+they have happened in just this number, at just these places and times, is, for
+the human eye, an incident without deeper intelligibility. The ordering of
+the individual Cultures, on the contrary, has stood out so distinctly that the
+historical technique of the Chinese, the Magian, and the Western worlds—often,
+indeed, the mere common consent of the educated in these Cultures—has
+been able to fashion a set of names upon which it would be impossible to
+improve.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
+
+<p>Historical thought, therefore, has the double task of dealing comparatively
+with <em>the individual life-courses of the Cultures</em>, and of examining the incidental
+and irregular relations of the Cultures amongst themselves in respect of their
+meaning. The necessity of the first of these tasks, obvious enough, has yet
+been overlooked hitherto. The second has been handled, but only by the lazy
+and shallow method of imposing causality over the whole tangle and laying
+it out tidily along the “course” of a hypothetical “world”-history, thereby
+making it impossible to discover either the psychology of these difficult, but
+richly suggestive, relations or to discover that of the inner life of any particular
+Culture. In truth, the condition for solving the first problem is that the second
+has been solved already. The relations are very different, even under the simple
+aspect of time and space. The Crusades brought a Springtime face to face with
+an old and ripe Civilization; in the Cretan-Mycenæan world seed-time and
+golden autumn are seen together. A Civilization may stream over from immense
+remoteness, as the Indian streamed into the Arabian from the East, or
+lie senile and stifling over an infancy, as the Classical lay upon its other side.
+But there are differences, too, of kind and strength; the Western Culture seeks
+out relations, the Egyptian tries to avoid them; the former is beaten by them
+<span class="pagenum" id="p38">[38]</span>again and again in tragic crises, while the Classical gets all it can out of them,
+without suffering. But all these tendencies have their roots in the spirituality
+of the Culture itself—and sometimes they tell us more of this Culture than does
+its own language, which often hides more than it communicates.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V_1">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>A glance over the group of the Cultures discloses task after task. The
+nineteenth century, in which historical research was guided by natural science,
+and historical thought by the ideas of the Baroque, has simply brought us
+to a pinnacle whence we see the new world at our feet. Shall we ever take
+possession of that new world?</p>
+
+<p>Even to-day uniform treatment of these grand life-courses is immensely
+difficult, because the more remote fields have not been seriously worked up at
+all. Once more, it is the lordly outlook of the West European—he will only
+notice that which approaches him from one or another antiquity by the proper
+and respectful route of a Middle Age, and that which goes its own ways will
+get but little of his attention. Thus, of the things of the Chinese and the
+Indian worlds, certain kinds are now beginning to be tackled—art, religion,
+philosophy—but the political history is dealt with, if at all, “chattily.”
+It does not occur to anyone to treat the great constitutional problems of Chinese
+history—the Hohenstaufen-destiny of the Li-Wang (842), the first
+Congress of Princes (659), the struggle of principle between the imperialism
+(Lien-heng) of the “Roman” state of Tsin and the League-of-Nations idea
+(Ho-tsung) between 500 and 300, the rise of the Chinese Augustus, Hwang-ti
+(221)—with anything of the thoroughness that Mommsen devoted to the
+principate of Augustus. India, again; however completely the Indians themselves
+have forgotten their state-history, we have after all more available material
+for Buddha’s time than we have for history of the Classical ninth and
+eighth centuries, and yet even to-day we act as though “the” Indian had lived
+entirely in his philosophy, just as the Athenians (so our classicists would
+have us believe) spent their lives in beauty-philosophizing on the banks of the
+Ilissus. But even Egyptian politics receive little reflective attention. The
+later Egyptian historian concealed under the name “Hyksos period” the same
+crisis which the Chinese treat of under the name “Period of the Contending
+States”—here, too, is something never yet investigated. And interest in the
+Arabian world has reached to the frontier of the Classical tongues and no
+further. With what endless assiduity we have described the constitution of
+Diocletian, and assembled material for the entirely unimportant administrative
+history of the provinces of Asia Minor—because it is written in Greek. But
+the Sassanid state, the precedent and in every respect the model of Diocletian’s,
+comes into the picture only occasionally, and then as Rome’s <em>opponent</em> in war.
+What about <em>its own</em> administrative and juristic history? What is the poor
+<span class="pagenum" id="p39">[39]</span>sum-total of material that we have assembled for the law and economics of
+Egypt, India, and China&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> in comparison with the work that has been done on
+Greek and Roman law.</p>
+
+<p>About 3000&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> after a long “Merovingian” period, which is still distinctly
+perceptible in Egypt, the two oldest Cultures began, in exceedingly limited
+areas on the lower Nile and the lower Euphrates. In these cases the distinctions
+between early and late periods have long ago been labelled as Old and
+Middle Kingdom, Sumer and Akkad. The outcome of the Egyptian feudal
+period marked by the establishment of a hereditary nobility and the decline
+(from Dynasty VI) of the older Kingship, presents so astounding a similarity
+with the course of events in the Chinese springtime from I-Wang (934–909)
+and that in the Western from the Emperor Henry IV (1056–1106) that a unified
+comparative study of all three might well be risked. At the beginning of the
+Babylonian “Baroque” we see the figure of the great Sargon (2500), who
+pushed out to the Mediterranean coast, conquered Cyprus, and styled himself,
+like Justinian I and Charles V, “lord of the four parts of the earth.” And in
+due course, about 1800 on the Nile and rather earlier in Sumer-Akkad, we perceive
+the beginnings of the first Civilizations. Of these the Asiatic displayed
+immense expansive power. The “achievements of the Babylonian Civilization”
+(as the books say), many things and notions connected with measuring,
+numbering, and accounting, travelled probably as far as the North and the
+Yellow Seas. Many a Babylonian trademark upon a tool may have come to be
+<span class="pagenum" id="p40">[40]</span>honoured, out there in the Germanic wild, as a magic symbol, and so may have
+originated some “Early-German” ornament. But meantime the Babylonian
+realm itself passed from hand to hand. Kassites, Assyrians, Chaldeans, Medes,
+Persians, Macedonians—all of these small&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> warrior-hosts under energetic
+leaders—successively replaced one another in the capital city without any
+serious resistance on the part of its people.</p>
+
+<p>It is a first example—soon paralleled in Egypt—of the Roman Empire
+style. Under the Kassites rulers were set up and displaced by prætorians;
+the Assyrians, like the later soldier-emperors of Rome (after Commodus),
+maintained the old constitutional forms; the Persian Cyrus and the Ostrogoth
+Theodoric regarded themselves as managers of the Empire, and the warrior
+bands, Mede and Lombard, as master-peoples in alien surroundings. But
+these are constitutional rather than factual distinctions; in intent and purpose
+the legions of Septimius Severus, the African, did not differ from the Visigoths
+of Alaric, and by the battle of Adrianople&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> “Romans” and “barbarians”
+have become almost indistinguishable.</p>
+
+<p>After 1500 three new Cultures begin—first, the Indian, in the upper
+Punjab; then, a hundred years later, the Chinese on the middle Hwang-Ho;
+and then, about 1100, the Classical, on the Ægean Sea. The Chinese historians
+speak of the three great dynasties of Hsia, Shang, and Chóu in much the same
+way as Napoleon regarded himself as a fourth dynasty following the Merovingians,
+the Carolingians, and the Capetians—in reality, the third coexisted
+with the Culture right through its course in each case. When in 441 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> the
+titular Emperor of the Chóu dynasty became a state pensioner of the “Eastern
+Duke” and when in <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1793 “Louis Capet” was executed, the Culture in
+each case passed into the Civilization. There are some bronzes of very great
+antiquity preserved from late Chang times, which stand towards the later art
+in exactly the same relation as Mycenæan to Early Classical pottery and Carolingian
+to Romanesque art. In the Vedic, Homeric, and Chinese springtimes,
+with their “<i lang="de">Pfalzen</i>” and “<i lang="de">Burgen</i>,” their knighthood and feudal rulership,
+can be seen the whole image of our Gothic, and the “period of the Great
+Protectors” (Ming-Chu, 685–691) corresponds precisely to the time of Cromwell,
+Wallenstein, and Richelieu and to the First Tyrannis of the Greek world.</p>
+
+<p>The period 480–230 is called by the Chinese historians the “Period of the
+Contending States”; it culminated in a century of unbroken warfare between
+<span class="pagenum" id="p41">[41]</span>mass-armies with frightful social upheavals, and out of it came the “Roman”
+state of Tsin as founder of a Chinese Imperium. This phase Egypt experienced
+between 1780 and 1580, of which the last century was the “Hyksos” time.
+The Classical experienced it from Chæronea (338), and, at the high pitch of
+horror, from the Gracchi (133) to Actium (31 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>). And it is the destiny of
+the West-European-American world for the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.</p>
+
+<p>During this period the centre of gravity changes—as from Attica to
+Latium, so from the Hwang-ho (at Ho-nan-fu) to the Yang-tse (modern province
+of Hu-pei). The Si-Kiang was as vague for the Chinese savants of those
+days as the Elbe for the Alexandrian geographer, and of the existence of India
+they had as yet no notion.</p>
+
+<p>As on the other side of the globe there arose the principes of the Julian-Claudian
+house, so here in China there arose the mighty figure of Wang-Cheng,
+who led Tsin through the decisive struggle to sole supremacy and in 221 assumed
+the title of Shi (literally equivalent to “Augustus”) and the Cæsar-name
+Hwang-ti. He founded the “<i lang="la">Pax Serica</i>,” as we may call it, carried out a
+grand social reform in the exhausted Empire, and—as promptly as Rome&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_45" href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a>—began
+to build his “<i lang="de">Limes</i>,” the famous Great Wall, for which in 214 he annexed
+a part of Mongolia. He was the first, too, to subdue the barbarians
+south of the Yang-tse, in a series of large-scale campaigns followed and confirmed
+by military roads, castles, and colonies. But “Roman,” too, was his
+family history—a Tacitean drama with Lui-Shi (Chancellor and stepfather
+of the Emperor) and Li-Szu, the great statesman (the Agrippa of his day, and
+unifier of the Chinese script), playing parts, and one that quickly closed in
+Neronic horrors. Followed then the two Han dynasties (Western, 206 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>-<span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>
+23; Eastern, <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 25–220), under which the frontiers extended more and
+more, while in the capital eunuch-ministers, generals, and soldiery made and
+unmade the rulers at their pleasure. At certain rare moments, as under Wu-ti
+(140–86) and Ming-ti (58–76), the Chinese-Confucian, the Indian-Buddhist,
+and the Classical-Stoic world-forces approached one another so closely in the
+region of the Caspian that they might easily have come into actual touch.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a></p>
+
+<p>Chance decreed that the heavy attacks of the Huns should break themselves
+in vain upon the Chinese “Limes,” which at each crisis found a strong emperor
+to defend it. The decisive repulse of the Huns took place in 124–119 under the
+Chinese Trajan, Wu-ti; and it was he, too, who finally incorporated Southern
+China in the Empire, with the object of obtaining a route into India, and built
+a grand embattled road to the Tarim. And so the Huns turned westward, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p42">[42]</span>in due course they appear, impelling a swarm of Germanic tribes, in face of the
+Limes of the Roman world. This time they succeeded. The Roman Imperium
+collapsed, and thus two only of the three empires continued, and still continue,
+as desirable spoil for a succession of different powers. To-day it is the “red-haired
+barbarian” of the West who is playing before the highly civilized eyes
+of Brahman and Mandarin the rôle once played by Mogul and Manchu, playing
+it neither better nor worse than they, and certain like them to be superseded in
+due course by other actors. But in the colonization-field of foundering Rome,
+on the other hand, the future Western Culture was ripening underground
+in the north-west, while in the east the Arabian Culture had flowered already.</p>
+
+<p>The Arabian Culture&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> is a discovery. Its unity was suspected by late
+Arabians, but it has so entirely escaped Western historical research that not
+even a satisfactory name can be found for it. Conformably to the dominant
+languages, the seed-time and the spring might be called the Aramaic and the
+later time the Arabian, but there is no really effectual name. In this field the
+Cultures were close to one another, and the extension of the corresponding
+Civilizations led to much overlaying. The pre-Cultural period of the Arabian,
+which we can follow out in Persian and Jewish history, lay completely within
+the area of the old Babylonian world, but the springtime was under the mighty
+spell of the Classical Civilization, which invaded from the West with all the
+power of a just-attained maturity, and the Egyptian and Indian Civilizations
+also made themselves distinctly felt. And then in turn the Arabian spirit—under
+Late Classical disguises for the most part—cast its spell over the nascent
+Culture of the West. The Arabian Civilization stratified over a still surviving
+Classical in the popular soul of south Spain, Provence, and Sicily, and became
+the model upon which the Gothic soul educated itself. The proper landscape
+of this Culture is remarkably extended and singularly fragmented. Let one
+put oneself at Palmyra or Ctesiphon, and, musing, look outwards all round.
+In the north is Osrhoene; Edessa became the Florence of the Arabian spring.
+To the west are Syria and Palestine—the home of the New Testament and of
+the Jewish Mishna, with Alexandria as a standing outpost. To the east Mazdaism
+experienced a mighty regeneration, which corresponded to the birth of
+Jesus in Jewry and about which the fragmentary state of Avesta literature
+enables us to say only <em>that</em> it happened.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_48" href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> Here, too, were born the Talmud and
+the religion of Mani. Deep in the south, the future home of Islam, an age of
+chivalry was able to develop as fully as in the realm of the Sassanids; even
+to-day there survive, unexplored, the ruins of castles and strongholds whence
+the decisive wars were waged between the Christian state of Axum and the
+Jewish state of the Himyarites on the two shores of the Red Sea, with Roman
+<span class="pagenum" id="p43">[43]</span>and Persian diplomacy poking the fire. In the extreme north was Byzantium,
+that strange mixture of sere, civilized, Classical, with vernal and chevaleresque
+which is manifested above all in the bewildering history of the Byzantine army
+system. Into this world Islam at last—and far too late—brought a consciousness
+of unity, and this accounts for the self-evident character of its victorious
+progress and the almost unresisting adhesion of Christians, Jews, and
+Persians alike. Out of Islam in due course arose the Arabian Civilization
+which was at the peak of its intellectual completeness when the barbarians
+from the West broke in for a moment, marching on Jerusalem. How, we may
+ask ourselves, did this inroad appear in the eyes of cultivated Arabians of the
+time? Somewhat like Bolshevism, perhaps? For the statecraft of the Arabian
+World the political relations of “Frankistan” were something on a lower plane.
+Even in our Thirty Years’ War—from that point of view a drama of the “Far
+West”—when an English envoy&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_49" href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> strove to stir up the Porte against the house
+of Habsburg, the statesman who handled policy over a field stretching from
+Morocco to India, evidently judged that the little predatory states on the
+horizon were of no real interest. And even when Napoleon landed in Egypt,
+there were still many without an inkling of the future.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime yet another new Culture developed in Mexico. This lay so remote
+from the rest that no word even passed between them. All the more astonishing,
+therefore, is the similarity of its development to that of the Classical. No
+doubt the archæologist standing before a teocalli would be horrified to think of
+his Doric temple in such a connexion; yet it was a thoroughly Classical trait—feebleness
+of the will-to-power in the matter of technics—that kept the
+Aztecs ill armed and so made possible their catastrophe.</p>
+
+<p>For, as it happens, this is the one example of a Culture ended by violent
+death. It was not starved, suppressed, or thwarted, but murdered in the full
+glory of its unfolding, destroyed like a sunflower whose head is struck off by
+one passing. All these states—including a world-power and more than one
+federation—with an extent and resources far superior to those of the Greek
+and Roman states of Hannibal’s day; with a comprehensive policy, a carefully
+ordered financial system, and a highly developed legislation; with administrative
+ideas and economic tradition such as the ministers of Charles V could
+never have imagined; with a wealth of literature in several languages, an
+intellectually brilliant and polite society in great cities to which the West
+could not show one single parallel—all this was not broken down in some
+desperate war, but washed out by a handful of bandits in a few years, and so
+<span class="pagenum" id="p44">[44]</span>entirely that the relics of the population retained not even a memory of it all.
+Of the giant city Tenochtitlan&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> not a stone remains above ground. The cluster
+of great Mayan cities in the virgin forests of Yucatan succumbed swiftly to the
+attack of vegetation, and we do not know the old name of any one of them.
+Of the literature three books survive, but no one can read them.</p>
+
+<p>The most appalling feature of the tragedy was that it was not in the least a
+necessity of the Western Culture that it should happen. It was a private affair
+of adventurers, and at the time no one in Germany, France, or England had any
+idea of what was taking place. This instance shows, as no other shows, that
+<em>the history of humanity has no meaning whatever</em> and that deep significances reside
+only in the life-courses of the separate Cultures. Their inter-relations are unimportant
+and accidental. In this case the accident was so cruelly banal, so
+supremely absurd, that it would not be tolerated in the wildest farce. A few
+cannon and handguns began and ended the drama.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_51" href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a></p>
+
+<p>A sure knowledge of even the most general history of this world is now for
+ever impossible. Events as important as our Crusades and Reformation have
+vanished without leaving a trace. Only in recent years has research managed
+to settle the outline, at any rate, of the later course of development, and with
+the help of these data comparative morphology may attempt to widen and
+deepen the picture by means of those of other Cultures.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_52" href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> On this basis the
+epochal points of this Culture lie about two hundred years later than those of
+the Arabian and seven hundred years before those of our own. There was a
+pre-Cultural period which, as in China and Egypt, developed script and calendar,
+but of this we now know nothing. The time-reckoning began with an
+initial date which lies far behind the birth of Christ, but it is impossible now to
+fix it with certainty relative to that event.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_53" href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> In any case, it shows an extraordinarily
+strongly developed history-sense in Mexican mankind.</p>
+
+<p>The springtime of the “Hellenic” Maya states is evidenced by the dated
+relief-pillars of the old cities of Copan (in the south), Tikal, and somewhat
+later Chichen Itza (in the north), Naranjo, and Seibal&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_54" href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a>—about 160–450.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p45">[45]</span>At the end of this period Chichen Itza was a model of architecture that was
+followed for centuries. The full glory of Palenque and Piedras Negras (in the
+west) may correspond to our Late Gothic and Renaissance (450–600 = European
+1250–1400?). In the Baroque or Late period Champutun appears as the
+centre of style-formation, and now the “Italic” Nahua peoples of the high
+plateau of Anahuac began to come under the cultural influence. Artistically
+and spiritually these peoples were mere recipients, but in their political instincts
+they were far superior to the Maya (about 600–960, = Classical 750–400
+= Western 1400–1750?). And now Maya entered on the “Hellenistic”
+phase. About 960 Uxmal was founded, soon to be a cosmopolis of the first
+rank, an Alexandria or Baghdad, founded like these on the threshold of the
+Civilization. With it we find a series of brilliant cities like Labna, Mayapan,
+Chacmultun, and a revived Chichen Itza. These places mark the culminating
+point of a grandiose architecture, which thereafter produced no new style,
+but applies the old motives with taste and discrimination to mighty masses.
+Politically this is the age of the celebrated League of Mayapan, an alliance of
+three leading states, which appears to have maintained the position successfully—if
+somewhat artificially and arbitrarily—in spite of great wars and repeated
+revolutions (960–1165 = Classical 350–150 = Western 1800–2000).</p>
+
+<p>The end of this period was marked by a great revolution, and with it the
+definitive intervention of the (“Roman”) Nahua powers in the Maya affair.
+With their aid Hunac Ceel brought about a general overthrow and destroyed
+Mayapan (about 1190 = Classical 150). The sequel was typical of the history
+of the over-ripened Civilization in which different peoples contend for military
+lordship. The great Maya cities sink into the same bland contentment as
+Roman Athens and Alexandria, but out on the horizon of the Nahua lands was
+developing the last of these peoples, the Aztecs—young, vigorous, barbaric,
+and filled with an insatiable will-to-power. In 1325 (= the Age of Augustus)
+they founded Tenochtitlan, which soon became the paramount and capital
+city of the whole Mexican world. About 1400 military expansion began on
+the grand scale. Conquered regions were secured by military colonies and a
+network of military roads, and a superior diplomacy kept the dependent states
+in check and separated. Imperial Tenochtitlan grew enormous and housed a
+cosmopolitan population speaking every tongue of this world-empire.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_55" href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> The
+Nahua provinces were politically and militarily secure, the southward thrust
+was developing rapidly, and a hand was about to be laid on the Maya states;
+there is no telling what the course of the next centuries would have been. And
+suddenly—the end.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p46">[46]</span></p>
+
+<p>At that date the West was at a level which the Maya had already overpassed
+by 700; nothing short of the age of Frederick the Great would have been ripe
+enough to comprehend the politics of the Mayapan League, and what the
+Aztecs of <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1500 were organizing lies for us well in the future. But that
+which distinguished Faustian man, even then, from the man of any other
+Culture was his irrepressible urge into distance. It was this, in the last resort,
+that killed and even annihilated the Mexican and Peruvian Culture—the
+unparalleled drive that was ready for service in any and every domain. Certainly
+the Ionic style was imitated in Carthage and in Persepolis, and Hellenistic
+taste in the Gandara art of India found admirers. Future investigation
+will probably find some Chinese in the primitive German wood-architecture.
+The Mosque style ruled from Farther India to North Russia, to West Africa,
+and to Spain. But all that amounts to nothing as compared with the expansion-power
+of the Western Soul. The true style-history of that soul, it need
+hardly be said, accomplished itself only on the mother soil, but its resultant
+effects knew no bounds. On the spot where Tenochtitlan had stood, the Spaniards
+erected a Baroque cathedral adorned with masterpieces of Spanish painting
+and plastic. Already at that date the Portuguese had got to work in Hither
+India and Late-Baroque architects from Spain and Italy in the heart of Poland
+and Russia. The English Rococo, and especially Empire, made for themselves
+a broad province in the Plantation States of North America, whose wonderful
+rooms and furniture are far less well known in Germany than they
+ought to be. Classicism was at work already in Canada and at the Cape, and
+presently there were no limits at all. It was just the same in every other domain
+of form; the relation between this forceful young Civilization and the still
+remaining old ones—is that it covers them, all alike, with ever-thickening
+layers of West-European-American life-forms under which, slowly, the ancient
+native form disappears.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VI">
+ VI
+</h3>
+
+<p>In the presence of this picture of the world of man—which is destined to
+displace the older one of “Ancient-Mediæval-Modern” that is still firmly
+established even in the best minds—it will become possible, too, to give a
+new answer (and for our Civilization, I think, a final answer) to the old question:
+What is History?</p>
+
+<p>Ranke, in the preface of his <cite>World History</cite> says: “History only begins when
+the monuments become intelligible, and trustworthy written evidences are
+available.” This is the answer of a collector and arranger of data; obviously,
+it confuses that which has happened with that which happened within the
+field of view open at the particular time to the particular student. Mardonius
+was defeated at Platæa—has this ceased to be history if two thousand years
+later it has somehow dropped out of the ken of the historians? For a fact to
+be a fact, must it be mentioned in books?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p47">[47]</span></p>
+
+<p>The weightiest historian since Ranke, Eduard Meyer,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_56" href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> says: “Historic
+is that which is, or has been, effective.... Only through historical treatment
+does the individual process, lifted by history from among the infinite mass
+of contemporary processes, become the historical event.” The remark is
+thoroughly in the manner and spirit of Hegel. Firstly, its starting-point is
+the fact and not any accidental knowledge or ignorance of the fact, and if there
+is any mode of picturing history which necessarily imposes such a starting-point,
+it is that presented in these pages, since it compels us to assume the
+existence of facts of the first order in majestic sequences, even when we do not
+(and never will) know them in the scientific sense. We have to learn to handle
+the unknown in the most comprehensive way. Secondly, truths exist for the
+mind, facts only in relation to life. Historical treatment—in my terminology,
+<em>physiognomic fact</em>—is decided by the <em>blood</em>, the gift of judging men broadened
+out into past and future, the innate flair for persons and situations, for the
+event, for that which had to be, must have been. It does <em>not</em> consist in bare
+scientific criticism and knowing of data. The scientific mode of experience is,
+for every true historian, something additional or subordinate. It addresses to
+the waking-consciousness, by the way of understanding and imparting, laborious
+and repetitive proof of that which <em>one moment</em> of illumination has already,
+and instantly, demonstrated to Being.</p>
+
+<p>Just because the force of our Faustian being has by now worked up about us
+a circumcircle of inner experiences such as no other men and no other time could
+acquire—just because for us the remotest events become increasingly significant
+and disclose relationships that no one else, not even the closest contemporaries
+of these events, could perceive—much has now become history
+(i.e., life in tune with our life) that centuries ago was not history. Tacitus
+probably “knew” the data concerning Tiberius Gracchus’s revolution, but
+for him it no longer meant anything effectively, whereas for us it is full of
+meaning. The history of the Monophysites and their relation to Mohammed’s
+<i lang="fr">milieu</i> signify nothing whatever to the Islamic believer, but for <em>us</em> it is recognizably
+the story of English Puritanism in another setting. For the world-view
+of a Civilization which has made the whole earth its stage, nothing is in
+the last resort quite unhistorical. The scheme of ancient-mediæval-modern
+history, as understood by the nineteenth century, contained only a selection of
+the more obvious relations. But the influence that old Chinese and Mexican
+history are beginning to exercise on us to-day is of a subtler and more intellectual
+kind. There we are sounding the last necessities of life itself. We are learning
+out of another life-course to know ourselves what we are, what we must be,
+what we shall be. It is the great school of our future. We who have history
+still, are making history still, find here on the extreme frontiers of historical
+humanity what history <em>is</em>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p48">[48]</span></p>
+
+<p>A battle between two Negro tribes in the Sudan, or between the Cherusci
+and Chatti of Cæsar’s time, or—what is substantially the same—between
+ant-communities, is merely a drama of “living Nature.” But when the Cherusci
+beat the Romans, as in the year 9,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_57" href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> or the Aztecs the Tlascalans, it is
+<em>history</em>. Here the “when” is of importance and each decade, or even year,
+matters, for here one is dealing with the march of a grand life-course, in which
+every decision takes rank as an epoch. Here there is an object towards which
+every happening impels, a being that strives to fulfil its predestination, a tempo,
+an organic duration—and not the disorderly ups and downs of Scythians,
+Gauls, or Caribs, of which the particular detail is as unimportant as that of
+doings in a colony of beavers or a steppe-herd of gazelles. These are <em>zoölogical
+happenings</em> and have their place in an altogether different orientation of our
+outlook, that in which we are concerned not with the destiny of individual
+peoples or herds, but with that of “man,” or “the” gazelle, or “the” ants, <em>as
+species</em>. Primitive man has history only in the biological sense, and all prehistoric
+study boils down to the investigation of this sense. The increasing familiarity
+of men with fire, stone tools, and the mechanical laws which make weapons
+effective, characterizes only the development of the type and of its latent possibilities.
+The objects for which one tribe employed these weapons against
+another tribe are of no importance in this plane of history. Stone Age and
+Baroque are age-grades in the existence of respectively a genus and a Culture—i.e.,
+two organisms belonging to two fundamentally different settings.
+And here I would protest against two assumptions that have so far vitiated
+all historical thought: the assertion of an ultimate aim of mankind as a whole
+and the denial of there being ultimate aims at all. The life <em>has</em> an aim. It is the
+fulfilment of that which was ordained at its conception. But the individual
+belongs by birth to the particular high Culture on the one hand and to the type
+Man on the other—there is no third unit of being for him. His destiny must
+lie either in the zoölogical or in the world-historical field. “Historical” man,
+as I understand the word and as all great historians have meant it to be taken, is
+the man of a Culture that is in full march towards self-fulfilment. Before this,
+after this, outside this, man is <em>historyless</em>; and the destinies of the people to
+which he belongs matter as little as the Earth’s destiny matters when the plane
+of attention is the astronomical and not the geological.</p>
+
+<p>From this there follows a fact of the most decisive importance, and one that
+has never before been established: that man is not only historyless before the
+birth of the Culture, but again becomes so as soon as a Civilization has worked
+itself out fully to the definitive form which betokens the end of the living
+development of the Culture and the exhaustion of the last potentialities of its
+significant existence. That which we see in the Egyptian Civilization after
+Seti I (1300) and in the Chinese, the Indian, the Arabian to this day is—notwithstanding
+<span class="pagenum" id="p49">[49]</span>all the cleverness of the religious, philosophical and, especially,
+political forms in which it is wrapped—just the old zoölogical up-and-down
+of the primitive age again. Whether the lords sitting in Babylon
+were wild war-hordes like the Kassites or refined inheritors like the Persians,
+when, for how long, and with what success they kept their seats, signified
+nothing from the standpoint of Babylon. The comfort of the population was
+affected by such things, naturally, but they made no difference either way to
+the fact that the soul of this world was extinct and its events, therefore, void
+of any deep meaning. A new dynasty, native or foreign, in Egypt, a revolution
+or a conquest in China, a new Germanic people in the Roman Empire, were
+elements in the history of the landscape like a change in the fauna or the migration
+of a flock of birds.</p>
+
+<p>In the history, the genuine history, of higher men the stake fought for and
+the basis of the animal struggle to prevail is ever—even when driver and
+driven are completely unconscious of the symbolic force of their doings, purposes,
+and fortunes—the actualization of something that is essentially spiritual,
+the translation of an idea into a living historical form. This applies
+equally to the struggle of big style-tendencies in art (Gothic and Renaissance),
+of philosophy (Stoics and Epicureans), of political ideals (Oligarchy and
+Tyrannis), and of economic forms (Capitalism and Socialism). But the post-history
+is void of all this. All that remains is the struggle for mere power,
+for animal advantage <i>per se</i>. Whereas previously power, even when to all
+appearance destitute of any inspiration, was always serving the Idea somehow
+or other, in the late Civilization even the most convincing illusion of an idea
+is only the mask for purely zoölogical strivings.</p>
+
+<p>The distinction between Indian philosophy before and after Buddha is that
+the former is a grand movement towards attaining the aim of Indian thought
+by and in the Indian soul, and the latter the perpetual turning-up of new facets
+of a now crystallized and undevelopable thought-stock. The solutions are
+there, for good, though the fashions of expressing them change. The same is
+true of Chinese painting before and after the Han dynasties—whether we
+know it or not—and of Egyptian architecture before and after the beginning
+of the New Empire. So also with technics. The West’s discoveries of the
+steam-engine and of electricity are accepted by the Chinese to-day in just the
+same way—and with just the same religious awe—as bronze and the plough
+were accepted four thousand years ago, and fire in a still remoter age. Both,
+spiritually, differ <i>in toto</i> from the discoveries which the Chinese made for
+themselves in the Chóu period and which in each instance signified an epoch in
+their inner history.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_58" href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> Before and after that time, centuries play a vastly less
+<span class="pagenum" id="p50">[50]</span>important rôle than decades and even years within the Culture, <em>for the spans of
+time are gradually returning to the biological order</em>. This it is that confers upon
+these very Late conditions—which to the people living in them seem almost
+self-evident—that character of changeless pageantry which the genuine
+Culture-man—e.g., Herodotus in Egypt and the Western successors of Marco
+Polo in China—has found so astonishing in comparison with his own vigorous
+pulse of development. It is the changelessness of non-history.</p>
+
+<p>Is not Classical history at an end with Actium and the <i lang="la">Pax Romana?</i> There
+are no more of those great decisions which concentrate the inner meaning of a
+whole Culture. Unreason, biology, is beginning to dominate, and it is becoming
+a matter of indifference for the world—though not for the actions of the
+private individual—whether an event turns out thus or thus. All great
+political questions are solved, as they are solved sooner or later in every Civilization,
+inasmuch as questions are no longer felt as questions and are not asked.
+Yet a little while, and man will cease to understand what problems were really
+involved in the earlier catastrophes; what is not livingly experienced of oneself
+cannot be livingly experienced of another. When the later Egyptians
+speak of the Hyksos time, or the later Chinese of the corresponding period of
+the “Contending States,” they are judging the outward picture according to
+the criteria of their own ways of life, in which there are no riddles more. They
+see in these things merely struggles for power, and they do not see that those
+desperate wars, external and internal, wars in which men stirred up the alien
+against their own kin, were fought for an idea. To-day we understand what
+was taking place, in fearful alternations of tension and discharge, round the
+murder of Tiberius Gracchus and that of Clodius. In 1700 we could not have
+done so, and in 2200 we shall again be unable to do so. It is just the same with
+that of Chian, a Napoleonic figure, in whom later Egyptian historians could
+discover nothing more characterized than a “Hyksos king.” Had it not been
+for the coming of the Germans, Roman historians a thousand years later might
+have put the Gracchi, Marius, Sulla, and Cicero together as a dynasty which
+was overthrown by Cæsar.</p>
+
+<p>Compare the death of Tiberius Gracchus with the death of Nero, when
+Rome received the news of Galba’s rising, or the victory of Sulla over the
+Marian party with that of Septimius Severus over Pescennius Niger. If in these
+later cases the event had gone otherwise, would the course of the Imperial
+Age have been altered in any way? The distinction so carefully drawn by
+Mommsen and Eduard Meyer&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_59" href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> between the “principate” of Pompey and
+Augustus and the “monarchy” of Cæsar misses the mark completely. At that
+stage, the point is merely a constitutional one, though fifty years before it
+would still have signified an opposition between ideas. When Vindex and
+Galba in 68 set out to restore “the Republic,” they were gambling on a notion in
+<span class="pagenum" id="p51">[51]</span>days when notions having genuine symbolic force had ceased to be, and the only
+question was who should have the plain material power. The struggle for the
+Cæsar-title became steadily more and more negroid, and might have gone on
+century after century in increasingly primitive and, therefore, “eternal” forms.</p>
+
+<p>These populations no longer possessed a soul. Consequently they could
+no longer have a history proper to themselves. At best they might acquire
+some significance as an object in the history of an alien Culture, and whatever
+deeper meaning this relation possessed would be derived entirely from the will
+of the alien Life. Any effective historical happening that does take place on
+the soil of an old Civilization acquires its consistency as a course of events from
+elsewhere and never from any part played in it by the man of that soil. And
+so once again we find ourselves regarding the phenomenon of “world-history”
+under the two aspects—life-courses of the great Cultures and relations between
+them.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p52"></a><a id="p53"></a><a id="p54"></a><a id="p55"></a>[55]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">
+ CHAPTER III
+ <br>
+ <span class="subtitle">ORIGIN AND LANDSCAPE
+ <br>
+ (C)
+ <br>
+ THE RELATIONS BETWEEN THE CULTURES</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>Although consideration of the Cultures themselves should logically precede
+that of the relations between them, modern historical thought generally
+reverses the order. The less it really knows of the life-courses which together
+make up a seeming unity of world-happenings, the more zealously it searches
+for life in the web of relations, and the less it understands even of these. What
+a wealth of psychology there is in the probings, rejections, choices, transvaluations,
+errors, penetrations, and welcomings!—and not only between
+Cultures which immediately touch one another, wonder at one another, fight
+one another, but also as between a living Culture and the form-world of a dead
+one whose remains still stand visible in the landscape. And how narrow and
+poor, on the other hand, are the conceptions which the historians label “influence,”
+“continuity,” and “permanent effects”!</p>
+
+<p>This is pure nineteenth century. What is sought is just a chain of causes
+and effects. Everything follows and nothing is prime. Since every young
+Culture superficially shows form-elements of older Cultures, these elements
+are supposed to have had continuing effect (<i lang="de">fortgewirkt</i>), and when a set of such
+effects has been strung together, the historian regards it with satisfaction as
+a sound piece of work.</p>
+
+<p>At bottom, this mode of treatment rests upon that idea which inspired the
+great Gothics long ago, the idea of a significant singleness in the history of all
+mankind. They saw how, on earth, men and peoples changed, but ideas
+stayed, and the powerful impressiveness of the picture has not worn itself out
+even to-day. Originally it was seen as a plan that God was working out by
+means of the human instrument. And it could still be regarded as such at a
+far later stage, in fact so long as the spell of the “ancient-mediæval-modern”
+scheme lasted and its parade of permanence prevented us from noting that
+actuality was ever changing. But meantime our outlook also has altered
+and become cooler and wider. Our knowledge has long overpassed the limits
+of this chart, and those who are still trying to sail by it are beating about in
+vain. It is not products that “influence,” but creators that absorb. Being
+has been confused with waking-being, life with the means by which it expresses
+itself. The critical thought, or even simple waking-consciousness, sees everywhere
+<span class="pagenum" id="p56">[56]</span>theoretical units subjected to motion. That is truly dynamic and Faustian,
+for in no other Culture have men imagined history thus. The Greek, with
+his thoroughly corporeal understanding of the world, would never have traced
+“effects” of pure expression-units like “Attic drama” or “Egyptian art.”</p>
+
+<p>Originally what happens is that a name is given to a <em>system of expression-forms</em>
+conjuring up in our minds a particular complex of relations. But this
+does not last long, and soon one is suppositing {sic} under the name a being, and under
+the relation an effect. When we speak to-day of Greek philosophy, or
+Buddhism, or Scholasticism, we mean something that is somehow living, a
+power-unit that has grown and grown until it is mighty enough to take
+possession of men, to subject their waking-consciousness and even their being,
+and in the end to force them into an active conformity, which prolongs the
+direction followed by its own “life.” It is a whole mythology, and, significantly,
+it is only men of the Western Culture—the only mankind that lives
+with and in this picture is the Western—whose myth contains plenty of
+dæmons of this sort—“electricity” and “positional energy,” for example.</p>
+
+<p>In reality these systems only exist in the human waking-consciousness, and
+they exist as modes of activity. Religion, science, art, are <em>activities of waking-consciousness</em>
+that are based on a being. Faith, meditation, creation, and whatever
+of visible activity is required as outcome of these invisibles—as sacrifice,
+prayer, the physical experiment, the carving of a statue, the statement of
+an experience in communicable words—are activities of the waking-consciousness
+and nothing else. Other men see only the visible and hear only
+words. In so doing they experience something in themselves, but they cannot
+give any account of the relation between this experience and that which
+the creator lived in himself. We see a form, but we do not know what in the
+other’s soul begat that form; we can only have some belief about the matter,
+and we believe by putting in our own soul. However definitely and distinctly
+a religion may express itself in words, they are words, and the hearer puts his
+own sense into them. However impressive the artist’s notes or colours, the
+beholder sees and hears in them only himself, and if he cannot do so, the work
+is for him meaningless. (The extremely rare and highly modern gift, possessed
+by a few intensely historical men, of “putting oneself in the other’s place”
+need not be considered in this connexion.) The German whom Boniface converted
+did not transfer himself into the missionary’s soul. It was a springtide
+quiver that passed in those days through the whole young world of the
+North, and what it meant was that each man found suddenly in conversion
+a language wherein to express his own religiousness. Just so the eyes of a
+child light up when we tell it the name of the object in its hand.</p>
+
+<p>It is not, then, microcosmic units that move, but cosmic entities that pick
+amongst them and appropriate them. Were it otherwise—were these systems
+very beings that could exercise an activity (for “influence” is an organic
+<span class="pagenum" id="p57">[57]</span>activity)—the picture of history would be quite other than what it is. Consider
+how every maturing man and every living Culture is continuously bathed
+in innumerable potential influences. Out of all these, only some few are <em>admitted</em>
+as such—the great majority are not. Is choice concerned with the
+works, or with the men?</p>
+
+<p>The historian who is intent upon establishing causal series counts only the
+influences that are present, and the other side of the reckoning—those that
+are not—does not appear. With the psychology of the “positive” influences
+is associated that of the “negative.” This is a domain into which no one has
+yet ventured, but here, if anywhere, there are fruits to be reaped, and it must
+be tackled unless the answer to the whole question is to be left indeterminate;
+for if we try to evade it, we are driven into illusory visions of world-historical
+happening as a continuous process in which everything is properly accounted
+for. Two Cultures may touch between man and man, or the man of one Culture
+may be confronted by the dead form-world of another as presented in its communicable
+relics. In both cases the agent is the man himself. The closed-off
+act of A can be vivified by B only out of his own being, and <i lang="la">eo ipso</i> it becomes
+B’s, his inward property, his work, and part of himself. There was no movement
+of “Buddhism” from India to China, but an acceptance of part of the
+Indian Buddhists’ store of images by Chinese of a certain spiritual tendency,
+who fashioned out a <em>new</em> mode of religious expression having meaning for
+Chinese, and only Chinese, Buddhists. What matters in all such cases is not the
+original meanings of the forms, but the forms themselves, as disclosing to the
+active sensibility and understanding of the observer potential modes of his own
+creativeness. Connotations are not transferable. Men of two different kinds
+are parted, each in his own spiritual loneliness, by an impassable gulf. Even
+though Indians and Chinese in those days both felt as Buddhists, they were
+spiritually as far apart as ever. The same words, the same rites, the same
+symbol—but two different souls, each going its own way.</p>
+
+<p>Searching through all Cultures, then, one will always find that the continuation
+of earlier creations into a later Culture is only apparent, and that in
+fact the younger <em>being</em> has set up a few (very few) relations to the older <em>being</em>,
+always without regard to the original meanings of that which it makes its own.
+What becomes, then, of the “permanent conquests” of philosophy and science?
+We are told again and again how much of Greek philosophy still lives on to-day,
+but this is only a figure of speech without real content, for first Magian and then
+Faustian humanity, each with the deep wisdom of its unimpaired instincts,
+rejected that philosophy, or passed unregarding by it, or retained its formulæ
+under radically new interpretations. The naïve credulity of erudite enthusiasm
+deceives itself here—Greek philosophic notions would make a long catalogue,
+and the further it is taken, the more vanishingly small becomes the proportion
+of the alleged survivals. Our custom is simply to overlook as incidental
+<span class="pagenum" id="p58">[58]</span>“errors” such conceptions as Democritus’s theory of atomic images,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_60" href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a>
+ the very
+corporeal world of Plato’s “ideas,” and the fifty-two hollow spheres of Aristotle’s
+universe, as though we could presume to know what the dead meant
+better than they knew themselves! These things are truths and essential—only,
+not for us. The sum total of the Greek philosophy that we possess,
+actually and not merely superficially, is practically nil. Let us be honest
+and take the old philosophers at their word; not one proposition of Heraclitus
+or Democritus or Plato is true for us unless and until we have accommodated
+it to ourselves. And how much, after all, have we taken over of the methods,
+the concepts, the intentions, and the means of Greek science, let alone its
+basically incomprehensible terms? The Renaissance, men say, was completely
+under the “influence” of Classical art. But what about the form of the Doric
+temple, the Ionic column, the relation of column to architrave, the choice of
+colour, the treatment of background and perspective in painting, the principles
+of figure-grouping, vase-painting, mosaic, encaustic, the structural element in
+statuary, the proportions of Lysippus? Why did all this exercise no “influence?”</p>
+
+<p><em>Because that which one</em> (here, the Renaissance artist) <em>wills to express is in him
+a priori</em>. Of the stock of dead forms that he had in front of him, he really saw
+only the few that he wanted to see, and saw them as he wanted them—namely,
+in line with his own intention and not with the intention of the original
+creator, for no living art ever seriously considers that. Try to follow, element
+by element, the “influence” of Egyptian plastic upon early Greek, and you will
+find in the end that there is none at all, but that the Greek will-to-form took
+out of the older art-stock some few characteristics that it would in any case have
+discovered in some shape for itself. All round the Classical landscape there
+were working, or had worked, Egyptians, Cretans, Babylonians, Assyrians,
+Hittites, Persians, and Phœnicians, and the works of these peoples—their
+buildings, ornaments, art-works, cults, state-forms, scripts, and sciences—were
+known to the Greeks in profusion. But how much out of all this mass did
+the Classical soul extract as its own means of expression? I repeat, it is only the
+relations that are <em>accepted</em> that we observe. But what of those that were <em>not</em> accepted?
+Why, for example, do we fail to find in the former category the pyramid,
+pylon, and obelisk of Egypt, or hieroglyphic, or cuneiform? What of the
+stock of Byzantium and of the Moorish East was <em>not</em> accepted by Gothic art and
+thought in Spain and Sicily? It is impossible to overpraise the wisdom (quite
+unconscious) that governed the choice and the unhesitating transvaluation of
+what was chosen. Every relation that was accepted was not only an exception,
+but also a misunderstanding, and the inner force of a Being is never so clearly
+evidenced as it is in this <em>art of deliberate misunderstanding</em>. The more enthusiastically
+we laud the principles of an alien thought, the more fundamentally in
+<span class="pagenum" id="p59">[59]</span>truth we have denatured it. Only consider the praises addressed by the West
+to Plato! From Bernard of Chartres and Marsilius Ficinus to Goethe and
+Schelling! And the more humble our acceptance of an alien religion, the more
+certain it is that that religion has already assumed the form of the new soul.
+Truly, someone ought to have written the history of the “three Aristotles”—Greek,
+Arabian, and Gothic—who had not one concept or thought in
+common. Or the history of the transformation of Magian Christianity into
+Faustian! We are told in sermon and book that this religion extended from the
+old Church into and over the Western field without change of essence. Actually,
+Magian man evolved out of the deepest depths of his dualistic world-consciousness
+a language of his own religious awareness that we call “the”
+Christian religion. So much of this experience as was communicable—words,
+formulæ, rites—was accepted by the man of the Late-Classical Civilization
+as a means of expression for his religious need; then it passed from man to
+man, even to the Germans of the Western pre-Culture, in words always the same
+and in sense always altering. Men would never have dared to <em>improve upon</em> the
+original meanings of the holy words—it was simply that they did not know
+these meanings. If this be doubted, let the doubter study “the” idea of Grace,
+as it appears under the dualistic interpretation of Augustine affecting a substance
+in man, and under the dynamic interpretation of Calvin, affecting a
+will in man. Or that Magian idea, which we can hardly grasp at all, of the
+consensus (Arabic <i>ijma</i>)&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_61" href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> wherein, as a consequence of the presence in each man
+of a <i>pneuma</i> emanating from the divine <i>pneuma</i>, the unanimous opinion of the
+elect is held to be immediate divine Truth. It was this that gave the decisions
+of the early Church Councils their authoritative character, and it underlies
+the scientific methods that rule in the world of Islam to this day. And it was
+because Western men did not understand this that the Church Councils of later
+Gothic times amounted, for him, to nothing more than a kind of parliament for
+limiting the spiritual mobility of the Papacy. This idea of what a Council
+meant prevailed even in the fifteenth century—think of Constance and Basel,
+Savonarola and Luther—and in the end it disappeared, as futile and meaningless,
+before the conception of Papal Infallibility. Or, again, the idea, universal
+in the Early Arabian world, of the resurrection of the flesh, which again presupposed
+that of divine and human <i>pneuma</i>. Classical man assumed that the
+soul, as the form and meaning of the body, was somehow co-created herewith,
+and Greek thought scarcely mentions it. Silence on a matter of such gravity
+may be due to one or the other of two reasons—the idea’s not being there
+at all, or being so self-evident as not to emerge into consciousness as a problem.
+With Arabian man it was the latter. But just as self-evident for him was the
+notion that his <i>pneuma</i> was an emanation from God that had taken up residence
+in his body. Necessarily, therefore, there had to be something from which the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p60">[60]</span>human soul should rise again on the Day of Judgment, and hence resurrection
+was thought of as ἔκ νεκρῶν, “out of the corpses.” This, in its deeper meaning,
+is utterly incomprehensible for the West. The words of Holy Scripture
+were not indeed doubted, but unconsciously another meaning was substituted
+by the finer minds amongst Catholics; this other meaning, unmistakable already
+in Luther and to-day quite general, is the conception of immortality as the
+continued existence to all eternity of the soul as a centre of force. Were
+Paul or Augustine to become acquainted with our ideas of Christianity, they
+would reject all our dogmas, all our books, and all our concepts as utterly
+erroneous and heretical.</p>
+
+<p>As the strongest example of a system that to all appearance has travelled
+unaltered through two millennia, and yet actually has passed through
+three whole courses of evolution in three Cultures, with completely different
+meanings in each, we may take <em>Roman law</em>.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_2">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p><em>Law</em>, in the Classical world, <em>is law made by citizens for citizens</em> and presupposes
+that the state-form is that of the Polis. It was this basic form of public life
+that led—and self-evidently—to the notion of the person as identical with
+the man who, added to others like him, made up the body (σῶμα)&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_62" href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> of the
+State. From this formal fact of Classical world-feeling grew up the whole
+structure of Classical law.</p>
+
+<p><em>“Persona” then is a specifically Classical notion, possessing meaning and valency
+only in the Classical Culture.</em> The individual person is a body which belongs to
+the stock of the Polis. It is with reference to him that the law of the Polis
+is ordered, downwards into the law of Things—with, as a marginal case, the
+slave who was body, but not person—and upward into the law of Gods—with,
+as a marginal case, the hero who from being person had attained godhead
+and the legal right to a cult, like Lysander and Alexander in the Greek
+cities and <i lang="la">Divus Julius</i> and his successors in Rome. This tendency, becoming
+more and more definite in the development of Classical jurisprudence, explains
+also the notion of <i lang="la">capitis deminutio media</i>, which is so alien to our Western ideas;
+for we can imagine a person (in our sense of the word) as deprived of certain
+rights and even of all rights, but the Classical man under this punishment
+<em>ceased to be a person</em> although living on as a body. And the specifically Classical
+idea of the thing, <i lang="la">res</i>, is only intelligible in contrast to and as the object of
+<i lang="la">persona</i>.</p>
+
+<p>As Classical religion was State religion through and through, there is no
+distinction made as to the fount of law; real law and divine law were made,
+like personal law, by the citizen, and the relations of things and of gods to
+persons were precise and definite. Now, it was a fact of decisive significance
+<span class="pagenum" id="p61">[61]</span>for the Classical jurisprudence that it was always the product of immediate
+public experience—and, moreover, not the professional experience of the
+jurists, but the practical everyday experience of men who counted in political
+and economic life generally. The man who followed the public career in Rome
+had necessarily to be jurist, general, administrator, and financial manager.
+When he gave judgment as prætor, he had behind him a wide experience of
+many fields other than law. A judicial <em>class</em>, professionally (let alone theoretically)
+specialized in law as its sole activity, was entirely unknown to the
+Classical. The whole outlook of the later jurisprudence was determined by
+this fact. The Romans were here neither systematists nor historians nor
+theorists, but just splendidly practical. Their jurisprudence is an <em>empirical
+science of individual cases</em>, a refined technique, and not in the least a structure of
+abstractions.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_63" href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a></p>
+
+<p>It would give an incorrect idea to oppose Greek and Roman law to one
+another as quantities of the same order. Roman law in its whole development
+is an individual city law, one amongst hundreds of such, and Greek law as a unity
+never existed at all. Although Greek-speaking cities very often had similar
+laws, this did not alter the fact that the law of each was its own and no other’s.
+Never did the idea of a general Doric, still less a general Hellenic, legislation
+arise. Such notions were wholly alien to Classical thought. The <i lang="la">jus civile</i>
+applied only to Quirites—foreigners, slaves and the whole world outside the
+city&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_64" href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>
+ simply did not count in the eyes of the law, whereas even the <i lang="de">Sachsenspiegel</i>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_65" href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a>
+evidences already our own deep-felt idea that there can only really be one
+law. Until far into Imperial times the strict distinction was maintained between
+the <i lang="la">jus civile</i> of citizens and the <i lang="la">jus gentium</i> for “other people” who came
+within the cognizance of Rome’s jurisdiction as sojourners.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_66" href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> (It need hardly
+be added that this “law of nations” has no sort of resemblance to that which we
+call by the same name.) It was only because Rome as a unit-city attained—as
+under other conditions Alexandria might have attained—to “Imperium”
+over the Classical world that Roman law became pre-eminent, not because of its
+intrinsic superiority, but firstly through Rome’s political success and afterwards
+because of Rome’s monopoly of practical experience on the large scale. The
+formation of a general Classical jurisprudence of Hellenistic cast—if we are
+entitled to call by that name an affinity of spirit in a large number of separate
+legal systems—falls in a period when Rome was still politically a third-rate
+power. And when Roman law began to assume bigger forms, this was only one
+<span class="pagenum" id="p62">[62]</span>aspect of the fact that Roman intellect had subjugated Hellenism. The work of
+forming later Classical law passed from Hellenism to Rome—i.e., from a sum
+of city-states, which one and all had been impressively made aware of their individual
+impotence, to one single city whose whole activity was in the end
+devoted to the upholding and exploitation of an effective primacy. Thus it
+came about that Hellenism never formed a jurisprudence in the Greek tongue.
+When the Classical world entered upon a stage in which it was ripe for this
+science (the latest of all), there was but <em>one</em> lawgiving city that counted in the
+matter.</p>
+
+<p>In reality, insufficient regard has been paid to the fact that Greek and
+Roman law are not parallel in time but successive. Roman law is the younger
+and presupposes the long experience of the elder;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_67" href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> it was built up, in fact,
+late and, with this exemplar before it, very swiftly. It is not without significance
+that the flowering-time of the Stoic philosophy, which deeply affected
+juridical ideas, followed that of Greek, but preceded that of Roman, law.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_2">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>This jurisprudence, however, was built up by the mind of an intensely
+ahistorical species of man. Classical law, consequently, is law <em>of the day
+and even the moment</em>; it was in its very idea occasional legislation for particular
+cases, and when the case was settled, it ceased to be law. To extend its validity
+over subsequent cases would have been in contradiction to the Classical sense
+of the present.</p>
+
+<p>The Roman prætor, at the beginning of his year of office, issued an edict in
+which he set forth the rules that he intended to follow, but his successor next
+year was in nowise bound to them. And even this limitation of a year on the
+validity of the rules did not mean that this was actually the duration of the
+rules. On the contrary (particularly after the <i lang="la">Lex Æbutia</i>) the prætor formulated
+in each individual case the concrete rule of law for the judges&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_68" href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> to whom
+he remitted the matter for judgment, which had to be according to this rule
+and no other. That is, the prætor produced, and indeed generated, a <em>present</em>
+law without duration.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_69" href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a></p>
+
+<p>Similar in appearance, but so profoundly different in meaning as to leave no
+doubt as to the great gap which is set between Classical and Western Law, is
+that inspired and truly Germanic notion of English jurisprudence, the creative
+power of the judge who “declares” the law. His business is to apply a law
+<span class="pagenum" id="p63">[63]</span>which in principle possesses eternal validity. Even the application of the
+existing body of laws he can regulate, according to the situations disclosed in
+the course of the case, by means of his “rules” (which have nothing in common
+with the prætor’s). And if he should conclude in the presence of a particular
+set of facts that current law is defective in respect of these, he can <em>fill the gap
+at once</em>, and thus in the very middle of a trial create new law, which (if concurred
+in by the judicial body in the due forms) <em>becomes thereafter part and parcel
+of the permanent stock of law</em>. This is what makes it so completely un-Classical.
+In the old jurisprudence, the gradual formation of a stock of rules was due purely
+to the fact that public life followed a substantially homogeneous course
+throughout a particular period, and produced again and again the same situations
+to be dealt with—rules <em>not</em> deliberately invested with validity for the future,
+but more or less recreated again and again as empirical rulings <i>ad hoc</i>. The
+sum of these rulings—not a system, but a collection—came to constitute
+“the law” as we find it in the later legislation by prætor’s edict, each successive
+prætor having found it practically convenient to take over substantial portions
+of his predecessor’s work.</p>
+
+<p>Experience, then, means for the ancient lawgiver something different from
+what it means to us. It means, not the comprehensive outlook over a consistent
+mass of law that contains implicitly every possible case, associated with practical
+skill in applying it, but the experimental knowledge that certain jural
+situations are for ever recurring, so that one can save oneself the trouble of
+forming new law on every occasion.</p>
+
+<p>The genuine Classical form for the slow accretion of legal material is an
+almost automatic summation of individual νομοί <i lang="la">leges, edicta</i>, as we find it in
+the heyday of the Roman prætor. All the so-called legislations of Solon,
+Charondas, and the Twelve Tables are nothing but occasional collections of
+such edicts as had been found to be useful. The Law of Gortyn,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_70" href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> which is more
+or less contemporary with the Twelve, is a supplement to some older collection.
+A newly-founded city would promptly provide itself with such a collection,
+and in the process a certain amount of dilettantism would slip in (cf. the lawmakers
+satirized by Aristophanes in <cite>The Birds</cite>). But there is never system in
+them, still less any intention of establishing enduring law thereby.</p>
+
+<p>In the West it is conspicuously the other way about. The tendency is from
+the first to bring the entire living body of law into a general code, ordered
+for ever and exhaustively complete, containing in advance the decision of
+every conceivable future problem.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_71" href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> All Western law bears the stamp of the
+future, all Classical the stamp of the moment.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p64">[64]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_2">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>But this, it may be said, is contradicted by the fact that there actually were
+Classical law-works compiled by professional jurists for permanent use. Undoubtedly
+so. But we must remember that we are completely ignorant of
+Early Classical law (1100–700) and it is pretty certain that the customary law
+of the country-side and the nascent town was never noted down as that of the
+Gothic age was set forth in the <i lang="de">Sachsenspiegel</i> or that of the Early Arabian in
+the <cite>Syrian Law-book</cite>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_72" href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> The earliest stratification that we can now detect consists
+of the collections (from 700 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) ascribed to mythical or semi-mythical
+personages like Lycurgus, Zaleucus, Charondas, and Dracon,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_73" href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> and certain
+Roman kings.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_74" href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> That these existed the form of the saga shows, but of their
+real authors, the actual process of their codification, and their original contents
+even the Greeks of the Persian War period were ignorant.</p>
+
+<p>A second stratification, corresponding to Justinian’s code and to the “Reception”
+of Roman Law in Germany, is connected with the names of Solon
+(600), Pittacus (550), and others. Here the laws have already attained to a
+structure and are inspired by the city; they are described as “politeiai,”
+“nomoi,” in contrast to old “thesmai” and “rhetrai.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_75" href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a> In reality, therefore,
+we only know the history of <em>late</em> Classical law. Now, why these sudden codifications?
+A mere look at these names shows that at bottom they were not
+processes of putting down the results of pure experience, but <em>decisions of political
+power problems</em>.</p>
+
+<p>It is a grave error to suppose that a law that surveys all things evenly and
+without being influenced by political and economic interests can exist at all.
+Such a state of things can be pictured, and is always being pictured, by those
+who suppose that the imagining of political possibilities is a political activity.
+But nothing alters the fact that such a law, born of abstractions, does not
+exist in real history. Always the law contains in abstract form the world-picture
+of its author, and every historical world-picture contains a political-economic
+<em>tendency</em> dependent, not upon what this man or that thinks, but upon
+what is practically intended by the class which in fact commands the power
+and, with it, the legislation. Every law is established by a class in the name of
+the generality. Anatole France once said that “our law in majestic equality
+forbids the rich no less than the poor to steal bread and to beg in the street.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_76" href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a>
+<span class="pagenum" id="p65">[65]</span>A one-sided justice no doubt. But equally the other side will always try to
+win sole authority for laws derived from <em>its</em> outlook upon life. These legislative
+codes are one and all political acts, and party-political acts at that—in
+the case of Solon a democratic constitution (πολιτεία) combined with private
+laws (νομοί) of the same stamp, in that of Dracon and the Decemvirs&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_77" href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> an oligarchic
+constitution fortified by private law. It was left to Western historians,
+accustomed to their own durable law, to undervalue the importance of this
+connexion; Classical man was under no misapprehension as to what really
+happened in these cases. The product of the Decemvirs was in Rome the last
+code of purely patrician character. Tacitus calls it the end of right law (“<i lang="la">finis
+æqui juris</i>,” <cite>Annals</cite>, III, 27). For, just as the fall of the Decemvirs was followed
+very significantly by the rise of another Ten, the Tribunes, so immediately the
+<i lang="la">jus</i> of the Twelve Tables and the constitution on which it was founded began
+to be attacked by the undermining process of the <i lang="la">lex rogata</i> (people’s law),
+which set itself with Roman constancy to do what Solon had achieved in one
+act in the case of Dracon’s work, the πατρίος πολιτεία which was the law-ideal
+of the Attic oligarchy. Thenceforward Dracon and Solon were the “slogans”
+in the long battle between Oligarchy and Demos, which in Rome meant Senate
+and Tribunate. The Spartan constitution associated with the name “Lycurgus”
+not only stood for the ideal of Dracon and the Twelve Tables, but concreted
+it. We can see, parallel with the closely related course of events in Rome, the
+tendency of the two Spartan kings to evolve from the condition of Tarquinian
+tyrants to that of tribunes of the Gracchan kind; the fall of the last Tarquins
+or the institution of the Decemvirs—a <i lang="fr">coup d’état</i> of one kind or another
+against the tribunician tendency&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_78" href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a>—corresponds more or less to the fall
+of Cleomenes (488) and of Pausanias (470); and the revolution of Agis III and
+Cleomenes III (about 240) aligns itself with the political activity of C. Flaminius,
+which began only a few years later. But never in Sparta were the kings
+able to achieve any thorough-going success over the senatorial element represented
+by the Ephors.</p>
+
+<p>In the period of these struggles, Rome had become a megalopolis of the late-Classical
+<span class="pagenum" id="p66">[66]</span>type. The rustic instincts were more and more pushed back by the
+intelligence of the city.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_79" href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> Consequently from about 350 we find side by side
+with the <i lang="la">lex rogata</i> of the people the <i lang="la">lex data</i>, the administrative law, of the
+prætor. With this the Twelve Tables idea drops out of the contest and it is
+the prætor’s edict that becomes the football of the party battle.</p>
+
+<p>It did not take long for the prætor to become the centre of both legislation
+and judicial practice. And presently, corresponding to the political extension
+of the city’s power, the jurisdiction of the prætor and the field of his <i lang="la">jus civile</i>—the
+law of the citizens—begin to diminish in significance and the peregrin
+prætor with his <i lang="la">jus gentium</i>—the law of the alien—steps into the foreground.
+And when finally the whole population of the Classical world, save the small
+part possessing Roman citizenship, was comprised in the field of this alien law,
+the <i lang="la">jus peregrinum</i> of the city of Rome became practically an imperial law. All
+other cities—and even Alpine tribes and migrant Bedouin clans were <i lang="la">civitates</i>
+from the administrative point of view—retained their local laws only as
+supplements, not alternatives, to the peregrin law of Rome.</p>
+
+<p>It marked the close of Classical law-making, therefore, when Hadrian
+(about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 130) introduced the <i lang="la">Edictum perpetuum</i>, which gave final form to the
+well-established corpus of the annual pronouncements of the prætors and forbade
+further modifications thereof. It was still, as before, the prætor’s duty
+to publish the “law of his year,” but, even though this law had no greater degree
+of validity than corresponded to his administrative powers and was not the
+law of the Empire, he was obliged thenceforth to stick to the established text.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_80" href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a>
+It is the very symbol of the petrified “Late” Civilization.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_81" href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a></p>
+
+<p>With the Hellenistic age began jurisprudence, the <em>science</em> of law, the systematic
+comprehension of the law which men actually apply. Since legal thought
+presupposes a substance of political and economic relations, in the same way as
+mathematical thought presupposes physical and technical elements of knowledge,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_82" href="#Footnote_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a>
+Rome very soon became <em>the home of Classical jurisprudence</em>. Similarly in the
+Mexican world it was the conquering Aztecs whose academies (e.g., Tezcuco)
+made law the chief subject of study. Classical jurisprudence was the Roman’s
+science, and his only one. At the very moment when the creative mathematic
+closes off with Archimedes, juristic literature begins with Ælius’s <cite lang="la">Tripertita</cite>, a
+commentary on the Twelve (198 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>).&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_83" href="#Footnote_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a> The first systematic private law was
+written by M. Scævola about 100. The genuine maturity of Classical law is in
+the two centuries 200–0—although we to-day, with quaint perversity, apply
+<span class="pagenum" id="p67">[67]</span>the time to a period which was really that of Early Arabian law. And from the
+relics of these two literatures we can measure the greatness of the gap that
+separates the thought of two Cultures. The Romans treat only of cases and
+their classification; they never analyse a basic idea such as, for instance,
+judicial error. They distinguish carefully the sorts of contracts, but they have
+no conception of Contract as an idea, or of any theories as to invalidity or
+unsoundness. “Taking everything into account,” says Lenel,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_84" href="#Footnote_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> “it is clear that
+the Romans cannot possibly be regarded as exemplars of scientific method.”</p>
+
+<p>The last phase is that of the schools of the Sabiniani and Proculiani (Augustus
+to about 160 <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>). They are scientific schools like the philosophical
+schools in Athens, and in them, possibly, the expiring stages of the conflict
+between the senatorial and the tribunician (Cæsarian) conceptions of law were
+fought, for amongst the best of the Sabiniani were two descendants of Cæsar’s
+slayers and one of the Proculiani was picked upon by Trajan as his potential
+successor. While the method was to all intents and purposes settled and concluded,
+the practical fusion of the citizen’s statute-law (<i lang="la">jus civile</i>) and the
+prætor’s edict (<i lang="la">jus honorarium</i>) was carried out here.</p>
+
+<p>The last landmark of Classical jurisprudence, so far as we know, was the
+<cite>Institutes</cite> of Gaius (about 161).</p>
+
+<p><em>Classical law is a law of bodies.</em> In the general stock composing the world it
+distinguishes bodily Persons and bodily Things and, like a sort of Euclidean
+mathematic of public life, establishes ratios between them. The affinity between
+mathematical and legal thought is very close. The intention, in both,
+is to take the prima facie data, to separate out the sensuous-incidental, and to
+find the intellectually basic principle—the <em>pure</em> form of the object, the <em>pure</em>
+type of the situation, the <em>pure</em> connexity of cause and effect. Life, in the
+Classical, presents itself to the critical waking-consciousness of the Classical
+man in a form penetrated with Euclidean character, and the image that is generated
+in the legal mind is one of bodies, of positional relations between bodies,
+and of reciprocal effects of bodies by contact and reaction—just as with
+Democritus’s atoms. It is juristic statics.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_85" href="#Footnote_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V_2">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>The first creation of “Arabian” law was <em>the concept of the incorporeal person</em>.</p>
+
+<p>Here is an element entirely absent in Classical law,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_86" href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> and appearing quite
+suddenly in the “Classical” jurists (who were all Aramæans), which cannot be
+estimated at its full value, or in its symbolic importance as an index of the new
+<span class="pagenum" id="p68">[68]</span>world-feeling, unless we realize the full extent of the field that this Arabian
+law covered.</p>
+
+<p>The new landscape embraces Syria and northern Mesopotamia, southern
+Arabia and Byzantium. In all these regions a new law was coming into being,
+an oral or written customary law of the same “early” type as that met with in
+the <i lang="de">Sachsenspiegel</i>. Wonderfully, the <em>law of individual cities</em> which is so self-evident
+on Classical ground is here silently transmuted into a <em>law of creed-communities</em>.
+It is Magian, magic, through and through. Always <em>one</em> Pneuma, <em>one</em> like spirit,
+<em>one</em> identical knowledge and comprehension of whole and sole truth, welds the
+believers of the same religion into a unit of will and action, <em>into one juristic
+person</em>. A juristic person is thus a collective entity which has intentions,
+resolutions, and responsibilities as an entity. In Christianity we see the idea
+already actual and effective in the primitive community at Jerusalem,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_87" href="#Footnote_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a> and
+presently it soars to the conception of a triune Godhead of three Persons.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_88" href="#Footnote_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a></p>
+
+<p>Before Constantine, even, the Late Classical law of imperial decrees (<i lang="la">constitutiones,
+placita</i>) though the Roman form of city law was strictly kept, was
+genuinely a law for the <em>believers of the “Syncretic Church,”</em>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_89" href="#Footnote_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a> that mass of cults
+perfused by one single religiousness. In Rome itself, it is true, law was conceived
+of by a large part of the population as city-state law, but this feeling became
+weaker and weaker with every step towards the East. The fusion of the faithful
+into a single <em>jural community</em> was effected in express form by the Emperor-cult,
+which was religious law through and through. In relation to this law
+Jews and Christians&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_90" href="#Footnote_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> were infidels who ensconced themselves with their own
+laws in another field of law. When in 212 the Aramæan Caracalla, by the
+<i lang="la">Constitutio Antoniana</i>, gave Roman citizenship to all inhabitants except <i lang="la">dediticii</i>
+peregrins,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_91" href="#Footnote_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a> the form of his act was purely Classical, and no doubt there were
+plenty of people who understood it in the Classical spirit—i.e., as literally an
+incorporation of the citizens of every other city in the city of Rome. But the
+Emperor himself conceived it quite otherwise. It made everyone subject to the
+“Ruler of the Faithful,” the head of the cult-religion venerated as <i>Divus</i>. With
+<span class="pagenum" id="p69">[69]</span>Constantine came the great change; he turned Imperial Caliph law on to the
+creed-community of Christianity in lieu of that of Syncretism, and thereby <em>constituted
+the Christian Nation</em>. The labels “devout” and “unbeliever” changed places.
+From Constantine onwards the quiet transformation of “Roman” law into
+<em>orthodox Christian law</em> proceeded more and more decisively, and it was as such
+that converted Asiatics and Germans received and adopted it. Thus a perfectly
+new law came into being in old forms. According to the old marriage-law it was
+impossible for a Roman burgher to marry the daughter of, say, a Capuan burgher
+if legal community, <i lang="la">connubium</i>, was not in force between the two cities.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_92" href="#Footnote_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a> But
+now the question was whether a Christian or a Jew—irrespective of whether
+he was Roman, Syrian, or Moor—could legally marry an infidel. For
+in the Magian law-world there was no <i lang="la">connubium</i> between those of different
+faiths. There was not the slightest difficulty about an Irishman in Constantinople
+marrying a Negress if both were Christians, but how could a
+Monophysite Christian marry a Nestorian maiden who was his neighbour in
+their Syrian village? Racially they were probably indistinguishable, but they
+belonged to legally different nations.</p>
+
+<p>This Arabian concept of nationality is a new and wholly decisive fact.
+The frontiers between “home” and “abroad” lay in the Apollinian world
+between every two towns, and in the Magian between every two creed-communities.
+What the “enemy,” the peregrin, was to the Roman, the Pagan
+was to the Christian, the Amhaarez to the Jew. What the acquisition of Roman
+citizenship meant for the Gaul or the Greek in Cæsar’s time, Christian baptism
+meant for him now—entry into the leading nation of the leading Culture.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_93" href="#Footnote_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a>
+The Persians of the Sassanid period no longer conceived of themselves, as their
+predecessors of Achæmenid times had done, as a unit by virtue of origin and
+speech, but as a unit of Mazdaist believers, <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> unbelievers, irrespective of
+the fact that the latter might be of pure Persian origin (as indeed the bulk of
+the Nestorians were). So also with the Jews, and later the Mandæans and
+Manichæans, and later again the Monophysite and the Nestorian Christians—each
+body felt itself a nation, a legal community, a juristic person in a new
+sense.</p>
+
+<p>Thus there arises a group of Early Arabian laws, differentiated according to
+religions as decisively as Classical laws are differentiated according to cities.
+In the realm of the Sassanids schools arose for the teaching the Zoroastrian
+law proper to them; the Jews, who formed an exceedingly large portion of the
+population from Armenia to Sabæa, created their proper law in the Talmud,
+which was completed and closed some few years before the <cite lang="la">Corpus Juris</cite>. Each
+one of these Churches had its peculiar jurisdiction, independent of the geographical
+<span class="pagenum" id="p70">[70]</span>frontiers of the moment—as in the East to-day—and the judge
+representing the ground-lord judged only cases between parties of different
+faiths. The self-jurisdiction of the Jews within the Empire had never been
+contested by anyone, but the Nestorians and the Monophysites also began,
+very soon after their separation, to create and to apply laws of their own,
+and thus by a negative process—i.e., by the gradual withdrawal of all heterodox
+communities—Roman imperial law came to be the law of the Christians
+who confessed the same creed as the Emperor. Hence the importance of the
+Roman-Syrian law-book, which has been preserved in several languages. It
+was probably&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_94" href="#Footnote_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a> pre-Constantinian and written in the chancery of the Patriarch
+of Antioch; it is quite unmistakably Early Arabian law in Late Classical form,
+and, as its many translations indicate, it owed its currency to the opposition
+to the orthodox Imperial Church. It was without doubt the basis of Monophysite
+law, and it reigned till the coming of Islam over a field far larger than
+that of the <cite lang="la">Corpus Juris</cite>.</p>
+
+<p>The question arises, what in such a tapestry of laws could have been the real
+practical value of the part of them which was written in Latin? The law
+historians, with all the one-sidedness of the expert, have hitherto looked at
+this part alone and therefore have not yet realized that there is a problem here
+at all. Their texts were “Law” unqualified, the law that descended from
+Rome to us, and they were concerned only to investigate the history of these
+texts and not their real significance in the lives of the Eastern peoples. What
+in reality we have here is the highly civilized law of an aged Culture forced
+upon the springtime of a young one.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_95" href="#Footnote_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> It came over as learned literature, and in
+the train of political developments which were quite other than they would
+have been had Alexander or Cæsar lived longer or had Antony won at Actium.
+We must look at Early Arabian law from the standpoint of Ctesiphon and not
+from that of Rome. The law of the distant West had long before reached inward
+fulfilment—could it be here more than a mere literature? What part
+did it play, if any, in the active law-study, law-making, and law-practice
+of this landscape? And, indeed we must further ask how much of Roman—or
+for that matter of Classical generally—is contained in this literature
+itself.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_96" href="#Footnote_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p71">[71]</span></p>
+
+<p>The history of this Latin-written law belongs after 160 to the Arabian
+East, and it says a great deal that it can be traced in exactly parallel courses
+into the history of Jewish, Christian, and Persian literature.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_97" href="#Footnote_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> The “Classical”
+jurists (160–220), Papinian, Ulpian, and Paul, were Aramæans, and Ulpian
+described himself with pride as a Phœnician from Tyre. They came, therefore,
+from the same population as the Tannaim who perfected the Mishnah shortly
+after 200, and most of the Christian Apologists (Tertullian 160–223). Contemporary
+with them is the fixation of canon and text for the New Testament by
+Christian, for the Hebrew Old Testament by Jewish,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_98" href="#Footnote_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> and for the Avesta by
+Persian, scholars. It is the high Scholasticism of the Arabian Springtime.
+The digests and commentaries of these jurists stand towards the petrified legal
+store of the Classical in exactly the same relation as the Mishnah to the Torah
+of Moses (and as, much later, the Hadith to the Koran)—they are “Halakhoth”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_99" href="#Footnote_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a>—a
+new customary law grasped in the forms of an authoritative and
+traditional law-material. The casuistic method is everywhere the same. The
+Babylonian Jews possessed a well-developed civil law which was taught in the
+academies of Sura and Pumbeditha. Everywhere a class of law-men formed
+itself—the <i lang="la">prudentes</i> of the Christians, the rabbis of the Jews, later the ulemas
+(in Persian, mollahs) of the Islamic nation—who enunciated opinions, <i lang="la">responsa</i>
+(Arabic, <i>Fetwa</i>). If the Ulema was acknowledged by the State, he was called
+“Mufti” (Byzantine, <i lang="la">ex auctoritate principis</i>). Everywhere the forms are exactly
+the same.</p>
+
+<p>About 200 the Apologists pass into the Fathers proper, the Tannaim into
+the Amoraim, the great casuists of juridical law (<i lang="la">jus</i>) into the exegetes and
+codifiers of constitutional law (<i lang="la">lex</i>). The constitutions of the Emperors, from
+200 the sole source of new “Roman” law, are again a new “Halakhah” laid
+down over that in the jurists’ writings, and therefore correspond exactly to the
+Gemara, which rapidly evolved as an outlier of the Mishnah. The new
+tendencies reached fulfilment simultaneously in the <i lang="la">Corpus Juris</i> and the
+Talmud.</p>
+
+<p>The opposition between <i lang="la">jus</i> and <i lang="la">lex</i> in Arabian-Latin usage comes to expression
+very clearly in the work of Justinian. Institutes and Digests are
+<i lang="la">jus</i>; they have essentially the significance of canonical texts. Constitutions
+and Novels are <i lang="la">leges</i>, new law in the form of elucidations. The canonical books
+of the New Testament and the traditions of the Fathers are related to one
+another in the same way.</p>
+
+<p>As to the Oriental character of the thousands of constitutions, no one now
+has any doubts. It is pure customary law of the Arabian world that the living
+<span class="pagenum" id="p72">[72]</span>pressure of evolution forced under the texts of the learned.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_100" href="#Footnote_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a>
+ The innumerable
+decrees of the Christian rulers of Byzantium, of the Persian of Ctesiphon, of the
+Jewish (the Resh-Galuta&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_101" href="#Footnote_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a>) in Babylonia, and finally of the Caliphs of Islam
+have all exactly the same significance.</p>
+
+<p>But what significance had the <em>other</em> part of pseudo-Classical, the old jurists’,
+law? Here it is not enough to explain texts, and we must know what was the
+relation between texts, jurisprudence, and court decisions. It can happen
+that one and the same law-book is, in the waking-consciousness of two groups
+of peoples, equivalent to two fundamentally different works.</p>
+
+<p>It was not long before it became the habit, not to apply the old laws of the
+city of Rome to the fact-material of the given case, but to quote the jurists’
+texts like the Bible.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_102" href="#Footnote_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a> What does this signify? For our Romanists it is a sign
+of decadence, but looked at from the view-point of the Arabian world, it is just
+the reverse—a proof that Arabian man did eventually succeed in making an
+alien and imposed literature inwardly his own, in the form admissible for his
+own world-feeling. With this the completeness of the opposition between
+the Classical and the Arabian world-feeling becomes manifest.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VI_1">
+ VI
+</h3>
+
+<p>Whereas the Classical law was made by burghers on the basis of practical
+experience, the Arabian came from God, who manifested it through the intellect
+of chosen and enlightened men. The Roman distinction between <i lang="la">jus</i>
+and <i lang="la">fas</i> (such as it was, for the content even of <i lang="la">fas</i> had proceeded from human
+reflection) became meaningless. The law, of whatever kind, spiritual or secular,
+came into being, as stated in the first words of Justinian’s Digests, <cite lang="la">Deo
+auctore</cite>. The authoritativeness of Classical laws rests upon their success, that
+of the Arabian on the majesty of the name that they bear.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_103" href="#Footnote_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> But it matters very
+considerably indeed in a man’s feelings whether he regards law as an expression
+of some fellow man’s will or as an element of the divine dispensation. In the
+one case he either sees for himself that the law is right or else yields to force,
+but in the other he devoutly acknowledges (“<i>Islam</i>” = to commit, devote).
+The Oriental does not ask to see either the practical object of the law that is applied
+to him or the logical grounds of its judgments. The relation of the cadi to
+the people, therefore, has nothing in common with that of the prætor to the
+citizens. The latter bases his decisions upon an insight trained and tested in
+high positions, the former upon a spirit that is effective and immanent in him
+<span class="pagenum" id="p73">[73]</span>and speaks through his mouth. But it follows from this that their respective relations
+to written law—the prætor’s to his edict, the cadi’s to the jurists’ texts—must
+be entirely different. It is a quintessence of concentrated experience that
+the prætor makes his own, but the texts are a sort of oracle that the cadi esoterically
+questions. It does not matter in the least to the cadi what a passage originally
+meant or why it was framed. He consults the words—<em>even the letters</em>—and
+he does so not at all for their everyday meanings, but for the <em>magic</em> relations
+in which they must stand towards the case before him. We know this
+relation of the “spirit” to the “letter” from the Gnosis, from the early-Christian,
+Jewish, and Persian apocalyptic and mystical literature, from the
+Neopythagorean philosophy, from the Kabbalah; and there is not the slightest
+doubt that the Latin codices were used in exactly the same way in the minor
+judicial practice of the Aramæan world. The conviction that the letters contain
+secret meanings, penetrated with the Spirit of God, finds imaginative expression
+in the fact (mentioned above) that all religions of the Arabian world
+formed scripts of their own, in which the holy books had to be written and
+which maintained themselves with astounding tenacity as badges of the respective
+“nations” even after changes of language.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_104" href="#Footnote_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a></p>
+
+<p>But even in law the basis of determining the truth by a majority of texts is the
+fact of the consensus of the spiritual elect, the <i>ijma</i>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_105" href="#Footnote_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> This theory Islamic science
+worked out to its logical conclusions. We seek to find the truth, each for
+himself, by personal pondering, but the Arabian savant feels for and ascertains
+the general conviction of his associates, which cannot err because the mind of
+God and the mind of the community are the same. If <em>consensus</em> is found, truth is
+established. “<i>Ijma</i>” is the key of all Early Christian, Jewish, and Persian
+Councils, but it is the key, too, of the famous Law of Citations of Valentinian
+III (426), which the law-men have universally ridiculed without in the
+least understanding its spiritual foundations. The law limits the number of
+great jurists whose texts were allowed to be cited to five, and thus set up a
+canon—in the same sense as the Old and New Testaments, both of which also
+were summations of texts which might be cited as canonical. If opinions
+differed, the law of Valentinian laid it down that a majority should prevail,
+or if the texts were equally divided, the authority of Papinian.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_106" href="#Footnote_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a> The interpolation
+method, used on a large scale by Tribonian for the Digest of Justinian,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p74">[74]</span>is a product of this same outlook. A canonical text is in its very idea true and
+incapable of improvement. But the actual needs of the spirit alter, and so
+there grew up a technique of secret modifications which outwardly kept up the
+fiction of inalterability and which is employed very freely indeed in all religious
+writings of the Arabian world, the Bible included.</p>
+
+<p>After Mark Antony, Justinian is the most fateful personality of the Arabian
+world. Like his “contemporary” Charles V he ruined everything for which
+he was invoked. Just as in the West the Faustian dream of a resurrection of
+the Holy Roman Empire runs through all the political romanticism that
+darkened the sense of fact during and beyond the age of Napoleon—and even
+that of the princely fools of 1848—so also Justinian was possessed with a
+Quixotic urgency to recover the entire Imperium. It was always upon distant
+Rome instead of upon his proper world, the Eastern, that his eyes were
+fixed. Even before he ascended the throne, he was already in negotiation with
+the Pope of Rome, who was still subordinate to the great Patriarch of Christendom
+and not yet generally recognized even as <i lang="la">primus inter pares</i>. It was at the
+Pope’s instance that the dual-nature symbol was introduced at Chalcedon,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_107" href="#Footnote_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a> a
+step which lost the Monophysite countries wholly and for ever. The consequence
+of Actium was that Christianity in its first two decisive and formative
+centuries was pulled over into the West, into Classical territories, where the
+higher intellectual stratum held aloof. Then the Early Christian spirit rose
+afresh with the Monophysites and Nestorians. But Justinian thrust this revival
+back upon itself, and the result was that in the realms of Eastern Christianity
+the reformist movement, when in due course it appeared, was not a
+Puritanism but the <em>new religion</em> of Islam. And in the same way, at the very
+moment when the Eastern customary law had become ripe for codification, he
+framed a Latin codex which, for language reasons in the East and for political
+reasons in the West, was condemned from the first to remain a literary product.</p>
+
+<p>The work itself, like the corresponding codes of Dracon and Solon, came
+into being at the threshold of a “Late” period, and with political intentions.
+In the West, where the fiction of a continuing <i lang="la">Imperium Romanum</i> produced the
+utterly meaningless campaigns of Belisarius and Narses, Latin codes had been
+put together (about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 500) by Visigoths, Burgundians and Ostrogoths for
+subjugated Romans, and so Byzantium must needs get out a genuine Roman
+code in opposition. In the East the Jewish nation has already settled its code,
+the Talmud, while, for the immense numbers of people who were subject to
+the Emperor’s law, a code proper for the Emperor’s own nation, the Christian,
+had become a necessity.</p>
+
+<p>For the <i lang="la">Corpus Juris</i> with its topsy-turviness and its technical faults is, in spite
+of everything, an Arabic—in other words, a <em>religious</em>—creation, as evidenced
+<span class="pagenum" id="p75">[75]</span>in the Christian tendency of many interpolations;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_108" href="#Footnote_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a>
+ in the fact that the constitutions
+relative to ecclesiastical law, which had been put at the end even in the
+Theodosian codex, were now placed at the beginning; and very markedly in
+the preambles of many of the Novels. Yet the book is not a beginning, but an
+end. Latin, which had long become valueless, now disappears completely from
+legal life (even the Novels are mostly in Greek), and with it the work so misguidedly
+written in that language. But the history of the law pursues the way
+that the Syrian-Roman law-book had indicated to it, and in the eighth century
+arrives at works in the mode of our eighteenth, such as the Ecloga of the
+Emperor Leo&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_109" href="#Footnote_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a>
+ and the Corpus of the great Persian jurist Archbishop Jesubocht.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_110" href="#Footnote_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a>
+In that time, too, came the greatest figure of Islamic jurisprudence, Abu Hanifah.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VII">
+ VII
+</h3>
+
+<p>The law-history of the West begins in total independence of Justinian’s
+creation. At that time it was in complete oblivion, so thoroughly unimportant,
+in fact, that of its main element, the Pandects (Digest), there was but one
+manuscript, which by accident (an unfortunate one) was discovered about
+1050.</p>
+
+<p>The pre-Cultural phase, from about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 500, had thrown up a series of
+Germanic tribal codes—the Visigothic, Ostrogothic, Burgundian, Frankish,
+and Lombard—which correspond to those of the Arabian pre-Culture that
+survives for us only in the Jewish&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_111" href="#Footnote_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a> Deuteronomy (<i>c.</i> 621, more or less our
+Deuteronomy xii-xxvi) and Priestly History (<i>c.</i> 450, now represented
+by the second, third, and fourth books of the Pentateuch). Both are concerned
+with the values of basic significance for a primitive existence—family
+and chattels—and both make use, crudely, yet shrewdly, of an old
+and civilized law—the Jews (and no doubt the Persians and others) working
+upon the late Babylonian,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_112" href="#Footnote_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a> and the Germans upon some few relics of Urbs Roma.</p>
+
+<p>The political life of the Gothic springtime, with its peasant, feudal, and
+simple burgher laws, leads very soon to particular development in three great
+branches of law which have remained distinct to this day—and there has been
+no unifying comparative history of law in the West to probe the deep meaning
+of this development.</p>
+
+<p>The most important by far, owing to the political destinies in which it was
+involved, was the Norman law, which was borrowed from the Frankish. After
+the Conquest of England in 1066, this drove out the native Saxon, and since
+<span class="pagenum" id="p76">[76]</span>that day in England “the law of the great men has become the law of the
+whole people.” Its purely German spirit has developed it, without a catastrophe,
+from a feudal régime of unparalleled stringency into the institutions
+of the present day which have become law in Canada, India, Australia,
+South Africa, and the United States. Even apart from the extent of its power,
+it is the most instructive in West Europe. Its development, unlike that of the
+rest, did <em>not</em> lie in the hands of theoretical jurists. The study of Roman law at
+Oxford was not allowed to touch practice; and at Merton in 1236 the higher
+nobility expressly rejected it. The Bench itself continued to develop the old
+law-material by means of creative precedents, and it was these practical decisions
+(“Reports”) that formed the basis of law-books such as that of Bracton.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_113" href="#Footnote_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a>
+Since then, and to this day, a statute law, kept living and progressive
+by the court decisions, and a common law, which always vividly underlies the
+legislation, exist side by side, without its ever becoming necessary for the
+representatives of the people to make single large efforts at codification.</p>
+
+<p>In the South, the law of the German-Roman codices above mentioned prevailed—in
+southern France the Visigothic (called the <i lang="fr">droit écrit</i> in contrast
+to the Frankish <i lang="fr">droit coutumier</i> of the north), and in Italy the Lombard
+(which was the most important of them, was almost purely Germanic,
+and held its own till well into the Renaissance). Pavia became a study-centre
+for German law and produced about 1070 the “<i lang="la">Expositio</i>,” by far the greatest
+achievement of juridical science in the age, and immediately after it a code, the
+“<i>Lombarda</i>.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_114" href="#Footnote_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> The legal evolution of the entire South was broken off by
+Napoleon’s <i lang="fr">Code Civil</i>, which took its place. But this in turn has become in all
+Latin lands and far beyond them the basis for further creative work—and
+hence, after the English, it is the most important.</p>
+
+<p>In Germany, the movement that set in so powerfully with the Gothic
+tribal laws (<i lang="de">Sachsenspiegel</i>, 1230; <i lang="de">Schwabenspiegel</i>, 1274) frittered itself away to
+nullity. A host of petty civic and territorial rights went on springing up
+until indignation with the facts induced an unreal political romanticism in
+dreamers and enthusiasts, the Emperor Maximilian among them, and law came
+under attack with the rest. The Diet of Worms in 1495 framed its “<i lang="de">Kammergerichtsordnung</i>”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_115" href="#Footnote_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a>
+after an Italian model. Now there was not only the “Holy
+Roman Empire” on German ground, but “Roman law” as German common-law.
+The old German procedures were exchanged for Italian. The judges
+had to study their law beyond the Alps, and obtained their experience not from
+the ambient life, but from a logic-chopping philology. In this country alone
+are to be found, later, the ideologues for whom the <i lang="la">Corpus Juris</i> is an ark to be
+defended against the profanation of realities.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p77">[77]</span></p>
+
+<p>What, in fact, was it that under the high-sounding name passed into the
+intellectual keeping of a handful of Gothic men? About 1100, at the University
+of Bologna, a German, Irnerius, had made that unique manuscript of the
+Pandects the object of a veritable Scholasticism. He transferred the Lombard
+method to the new text, “the truth of which, as a <i lang="la">ratio scripta</i>, was believed in
+as implicitly as the Bible and Aristotle.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_116" href="#Footnote_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a> Truth!—but the Gothic understanding,
+tied to the Gothic life-content, was incapable even of distantly
+guessing at the spirit of these texts, for the principles fixed in them were the
+principles of a civilized and megalopolitan life. This school of the glossators,
+like Scholasticism in general, stood under the spell of concept-realism; as
+they held the genuine real, the substance of the world, to be not in things, but
+in universal concepts, so they maintained that the law was to be found not in
+custom and usage as displayed in the despised&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_117" href="#Footnote_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> <i>Lombarda</i>, but in the manipulation
+of abstract notions. Their interest in the book was purely dialectical&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_118" href="#Footnote_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a>—never
+was it in their minds to apply their work to life. It was only after
+1300, and then slowly, that their anti-Lombard glosses and summæ made their
+way into the cities of the Renaissance. The jurists of the Late Gothic, above
+all Bartolus, had fused canon and Germanic law into one whole with a definitely
+practical intention, and into it they brought ideas of actuality—here, as in
+Dracon’s code and the Imperial Edicts from Theodosius to Justinian, the actuality
+of a Culture that is on the threshold of its “Late” stage. It was <em>the
+creation of Bartolus that became effective</em> in Spain and Germany as “Roman law”;
+only in France did the jurists of the Baroque, after Cujacius and Donellus, get
+back from the Scholastic to the Byzantine text.</p>
+
+<p>But Bologna witnessed, besides Irnerius’s achievement in abstraction, an
+event of quite other and decisive import—the famous Decretum of Gratian,
+written about 1140.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_119" href="#Footnote_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a> This created the Western <em>science of spiritual law</em>. For by
+bringing the old-Catholic, Magian, church-law,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_120" href="#Footnote_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a> founded in the Early-Arabian
+sacrament of baptism,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_121" href="#Footnote_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a> into a system, it provided the very form that the new-Catholic,
+Faustian Christianity needed for the jural expression of its own being,
+which reached back to the prime sacrament of an altar and a consecrated priesthood.
+With the <i lang="la">Liber extra</i> of 1234 the main body of the <i lang="la">Corpus Juris Canonici</i> is
+complete. What the Empire had failed to accomplish—the creation, out of
+the immense undeveloped profusion of tribal laws, of a general Western “<i lang="la">Corpus
+Juris Germanici</i>”—the Papacy achieved. There came into existence a complete
+private law, with sanctions and processes, produced with German method
+out of the ecclesiastical and secular law-material of the Gothic. This is the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p78">[78]</span>law called “Roman” which presently, after Bartolus, was infused into all
+study of the texts of Justinian themselves. And it shows us, in the domain of
+jurisprudence as elsewhere, that great dissidence, inherent in the Faustian,
+which produced the gigantic conflict between the Papacy and the Empire.
+The destruction between <i lang="la">fas</i> and <i lang="la">jus</i>, impossible in the Arabian world, was
+inevitable in the Western. They are two expressions of a will-to-power over
+the infinite, but the will behind “temporal” legislation is rooted in custom
+and lays hands on the generations of the future, while that of “spiritual”
+originates in mystical certainty and pronounces a timeless and eternal law.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_122" href="#Footnote_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a>
+This battle between equally matched opponents has never yet been ended, and
+it is visible even to-day in our law of marriage, with its opposition of the
+ecclesiastical and the civil wedding.</p>
+
+<p>With the dawn of the Baroque, life, having by that time assumed urban
+and money-economic forms, begins to demand a law like that of the Classical
+city-states after Solon. The purpose of the prevailing law was now perfectly
+clear. But it was a fateful legacy from the Gothic that the creation of “the
+law inborn in us” was looked upon as the privilege of a learned class, and this
+privilege no one succeeded in shaking.</p>
+
+<p>Urban rationalism turned, as in the case of the Sophists and the Stoics, to
+busy itself with the “law of nature,” from its foundation by Oldendorp and
+Bodinus to its destruction by Hegel. In England the great Coke successfully
+defended Germanic self-developing practical law against the last attempts of
+the Tudors to introduce Pandect law. But on the Continent the systems of the
+learned evolved in <em>Roman</em> forms right down to the state codes of Germany and
+the schemes of the <i lang="fr">Ancien Régime</i> in France on which the Code Napoléon was
+based. And therefore Blackstone’s <cite>Commentaries on the Laws of England</cite> (1765) is
+the one purely Germanic Code, and it appeared when the Faustian Culture had
+already reached the threshold of its Civilization.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VIII">
+ VIII
+</h3>
+
+<p>With this I reach the objective and look around me. I see three law-histories,
+connected merely by the elements of verbal and syntactical form, taken
+over by one from another, voluntarily or perforce, but never revealing to the
+new user the nature of the alien being which underlay them. Two of these
+histories are complete. The third is that in which we ourselves are standing—standing,
+too, at a decisive point where we embark in our turn upon the big
+constructive task that Rome and Islam, each for itself and in its season, have
+accomplished before us.</p>
+
+<p>What has “Roman” law been for us hitherto? What has it spoilt? What
+can it be for us in the future?</p>
+
+<p>All through our legal history runs, as basic motive, the conflict between
+<span class="pagenum" id="p79">[79]</span>book and life. The Western book is not an oracle or magician’s text with
+Magian under-sense, but <em>a piece of preserved history</em>. It is compressed Past that
+wants to become Future, through us who read it and in whom its content lives
+anew. Faustian man does not aim, like Classical man, at bringing his life to a
+self-contained perfection, but at carrying on a life that emerged long before
+him and will draw to its end long after him. For Gothic man—so far as he reflected
+about himself at all—the question was not whether he should look for
+linkages of his being and history, but in what direction to look for them.
+He required a past in order to find meaning and depth in the present. On the
+spiritual side the past which presented itself to him was ancient Israel; on the
+mundane it was ancient Rome, whose relics he saw all about him. What was
+revered was revered not because it was great, but because it was old and distant.
+If these men had known Egypt, they would hardly have noticed Rome, and the
+language of our Culture would have developed differently.</p>
+
+<p>As it was a Culture of books and readers, Classical texts were “received”
+in any and every field as Roman law was “received” in Germany, and their
+further development assumed the form of a slow and unwilling self-emancipation.
+“Reception” of Aristotle, of Euclid, of the <i lang="la">Corpus Juris</i>, means in this
+Culture (in the Magian East it was different) discovering a ready-made vessel
+for our own thought a great deal too soon, with the result of making a historically
+built kind of man into a slave of concepts. The alien life-feeling, of course,
+did not and could not enter into his thought, but it was a hindrance to his own
+life-feeling’s development of an unconstrained speech of its own.</p>
+
+<p>Now, legal thought is forced to attach itself to something tangible—there
+must be something before it can abstract its concepts; it must have
+something from which to abstract. And it was the misfortune of Western
+jurisprudence that, instead of quarrying in strong, firm custom of social and
+economic life, it abstracted prematurely and in a hurry from Latin writings.
+The Western jurist became a philologist, and practical experience of life was
+replaced by scholarly experience in the purely logical separation and disposition
+of legal concepts on self-contained foundations.</p>
+
+<p>Owing to this, we have been completely cut off from touch with the fact
+that <em>private law is meant to represent the social and economic existence of its period</em>.
+Neither the Code Napoléon nor the Prussian Landrecht, neither Grotius nor
+Mommsen, was definitely conscious of this fact. Neither in the training of the
+legal profession nor in its literature do we detect the slightest inkling of this—the
+genuine—“source” of valid law.</p>
+
+<p>And consequently we possess a private law that rests on the shadowy
+foundations of <em>the Late Classical economy</em>. The intense embitterment which, in
+these beginnings of our Civilization’s economy, opposes the name of Capitalism
+to the name of Socialism comes very largely from the fact that scholarly
+jurisprudence, and under its influence educated thought generally, have tied
+<span class="pagenum" id="p80">[80]</span>up such all-important notions as person, thing, and property to the conditions
+and the dispositions of Classical life. The book puts itself between the facts
+and the perception of them. The learned—meaning thereby the book-learned—weigh
+up everything to this day in scales that are essentially Classical. The
+man who is merely active and not trained to judgment feels himself misunderstood.
+He sees the contradiction between the life of the times and the law’s
+outlook upon it, and calls for the heads of those who—to gain their private
+ends, as he thinks—have promoted this opposition.</p>
+
+<p>Again the question is: By whom and for whom is Western law made?
+The Roman prætor was a landowner, a military officer, a man experienced in
+administrative and financial questions; and it was just this experience that
+was held to qualify him for the inseparable functions of expounder and maker
+of the law. The peregrin prætor developed his aliens’ law as a law of commercial
+intercourse adapted to the Late Classical megalopolis—without plan,
+without tendency, out of the cases that came before him and nothing else.</p>
+
+<p>But the Faustian will-to-duration demands a book, something valid “for
+evermore,”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_123" href="#Footnote_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a> a system that is intended to provide in advance for every possible
+case, and this book, a work of learning, necessarily called for a scholarly class
+of jurists and judges—the doctors of the faculties, the old German legal families,
+and the French “<i lang="fr">noblesse de robe</i>.” The English judges, who number
+hardly over a hundred,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_124" href="#Footnote_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a> are drawn indeed from an upper class of advocates (the
+“barristers”), but they actually rank above many members of the Government.</p>
+
+<p>A scholar-class is alien to the world, and despises experience that does not
+originate in thought. Inevitably conflict arises between the “state of knowledge”
+as the scholar will accept it and the flowing custom of practical life.
+That manuscript of the Pandect of Irnerius became, and for centuries remained,
+the “world” in which learned jurists lived. Even in England, where there are
+no law faculties (in the European sense), it was exclusively the legal profession
+that controlled further growth, so that even here the development of legal
+ideas diverged from the development of general life.</p>
+
+<p>Thus what we have hitherto called juristic science is in fact either the
+philology of law-language, or the scholarship of law-ideas. It is now the only
+science that still continues to deduce the meaning of life from “eternally valid”
+principles. “The German jurisprudence of to-day,” says Sohm,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_125" href="#Footnote_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a> “represents
+very largely indeed an inheritance from mediæval Scholasticism. We have
+not yet begun to consider in deep earnest the bearing of the basic values of the
+<em>actual</em> life about us upon legal theory. We do not even yet know what these
+values are.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p81">[81]</span></p>
+
+<p>Here, then, is the task that German thought of the future has to perform.
+From the practical life of the present it has to develop the deepest principles of
+that life and elevate them into basic law-ideas. If our great arts lie behind us,
+our great jurisprudence is yet to come.</p>
+
+<p>For the work of the nineteenth century—however creative that century
+believed itself to be—was merely preparatory. <em>It freed us from the book of
+Justinian, but not from the concepts.</em> The ideologues of Roman law among scholars
+no longer count, but scholarship of the old cast remains. It is another kind of
+jurisprudence that is needed now to free us from the schematism of these concepts.
+Philological expertness must give place to social and economic.</p>
+
+<p>A glance at German civil and penal law will make the position clear. They
+are systems ringed with a chaplet of minor laws—it was impossible to embody
+the material of these in the main law. Conceptually, and therefore
+syntactically, that which could not be understood in terms of the Classical
+scheme separates itself from that which can be so understood.</p>
+
+<p>How was it that in 1900 the theft of electric power—after grotesque
+discussions as to whether the matter in dispute was a corporeal thing&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_126" href="#Footnote_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a>—had
+to be dealt with under an <i lang="la">ad hoc</i> statute? Why was it impossible to work the
+substance of patent law into the ensemble of the law about things? Why was
+copyright law unable conceptually to differentiate the intellectual creation,
+its communicable form the manuscript, and the objective product in print?
+Why, in contradiction with the law of things, had the artistic and the material
+property in a picture to be distinguished by separating acquisition of the
+original from acquisition of the right to reproduce it? Why is the misappropriation
+of a business idea or a scheme of organization unpunishable, and theft
+of the piece of paper on which it is set forth punishable? Because even to-day
+we are dominated by the Classical idea of the material thing.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_127" href="#Footnote_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a> We <em>live</em> otherwise.
+Our instinctive experience is subject to <em>functional</em> concepts, such as working
+power, inventiveness, enterprise, such as intellectual and bodily, artistic and
+organizing, energies and capacities and talents. In our physics (of which the
+theory, advanced though it is, is but a copy of our present mode of life) the
+old idea of a body has in principle ceased to exist—as in this very instance of
+electrical power. Why is our law conceptually helpless in the presence of the
+great facts of modern economics? Because <em>persons, too</em>, are known to it <em>only as
+bodies</em>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_128" href="#Footnote_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a></p>
+
+<p>If the Western jurisprudence took over ancient words, yet only the most superficial
+elements of the ancient meanings still adhered to them. The consistency
+of the text disclosed only the <em>logical</em> use of the words, not the life that
+underlay them. No practice can reawaken the silent metaphysic of old jural
+<span class="pagenum" id="p82">[82]</span>ideas. No laws in the world make this last and deepest element explicit, because—just
+because—it is self-evident. In all of them the essential is tacitly
+presupposed; in application it is not only the formula but also, and primarily,
+the inexpressible element beneath it that the people inwardly understands and
+can practise. Every law is, to the extent that it would be impossible to exaggerate,
+customary law. Let the statute define the words; it is life that
+explains them.</p>
+
+<p>If, however, a scholars’ law-language of alien origin and alien scheme tries
+to bind the native and proper law, the ideas remain void and the life remains
+dumb. Law becomes, not a tool, but a burden, and actuality marches on, not
+with, but apart from legal history.</p>
+
+<p>And thus it is that the law-material that our Civilization needs fits only
+in externals, or even not at all, with the Classical scheme of the law-books,
+and for the purposes of our proper jurisprudence and our educated thought
+generally is still formless and therefore unavailable.</p>
+
+<p>Are persons and things, in the sense of present-day legislation, law-<em>concepts</em>
+at all? No! They merely serve to draw the ordinary distinction, the zoölogical
+distinction, so to say, between man and the rest. But of old the whole
+metaphysic of Classical being adhered to the notion of “<i lang="la">persona</i>.” The distinction
+between man and deity, the essence of the Polis, of the hero, of the
+slave, the Cosmos of stuff and form, the life-ideal of Ataraxia, were the self-evident
+premisses, and these premisses have for us completely perished. In
+our thought the word “property” is tied up with the Classical <em>static</em> definition,
+and consequently, in every application to the dynamism of our way of living
+it falsifies. We leave such definitions to the world-shy abstract professors
+of ethics, jurists, and philosophers and to the unintelligent debate of political
+doctrinaires—and this although the <em>whole</em> understanding of the economic history
+of this day <em>rests upon the metaphysic of this one notion</em>.</p>
+
+<p>It must be emphasized then—and with all rigour—that Classical law
+was a law of <em>bodies</em>, while ours is a law of <em>functions</em>. The Romans created a
+juristic statics; our task is juristic dynamics. For us persons are not bodies,
+but units of force and will; and things are not bodies, but aims, means, and
+creations of these units. The Classical relation between bodies was positional,
+but the relation between forces is called action. For a Roman the slave was a
+thing which produced new things. A writer like Cicero could never have
+conceived of “intellectual property,” let alone property in a practical notion
+or in the potentialities of talent; for us, on the contrary, the organizer or inventor
+or promoter is <em>a generative force which works upon other, executive, forces</em>, by
+giving direction, aim, and means to their action.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_129" href="#Footnote_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a> Both belong to economic life,
+not as possessors of things, but as carriers of energies.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p83">[83]</span></p>
+
+<p>The future will be called upon to transpose our entire legal thought into
+alignment with our higher physics and mathematics. Our whole social, economic,
+and technical life is waiting to be understood, at long last, in this wise.
+We shall need a century and more of keenest and deepest thought to arrive at
+the goal. And the prerequisite is a wholly new kind of preparatory training
+in the jurist. It demands:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>1. An immediate, extended, and practical experience in the economic
+life of the present.</p>
+
+<p>2. An exact knowledge of the legal history of the West, with constant
+comparison of German, English, and “Roman” development.</p>
+
+<p>3. Knowledge of Classical jurisprudence, not as a model for principles
+of present-day validity, but as a brilliant example of how a law can develop
+strong and pure out of the <em>practical life</em> of its time.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Roman law has ceased to be our source for principles of eternal validity.
+But the relation between Roman existence and Roman law-ideas gives it a
+renewed value for us. We can learn from it how we have to build up <em>our</em> law
+out of <em>our</em> experiences.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p84"></a><a id="p85"></a><a id="p86"></a><a id="p87"></a>[87]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">
+ CHAPTER IV
+ <br>
+ <span class="subtitle">CITIES AND PEOPLES
+ <br>
+ (A)
+ <br>
+ THE SOUL OF THE CITY</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>About the middle of the second millennium before Christ, two worlds lay
+over against one another on the Ægean Sea. The one, darkly groping, big with
+hopes, drowsy with the intoxication of deeds and sufferings, ripening quietly
+towards its future, was the Mycenæan. The other, gay and satisfied, snugly
+ensconced in the treasures of an ancient Culture, elegant, light, with all its
+great problems far behind it, was the Minoan of Crete.</p>
+
+<p>We shall never really comprehend this phenomenon, which in these days is
+becoming the centre of research-interest, unless we appreciate the abyss of
+opposition that separates the two souls. The man of those days must have
+felt it deeply, but hardly “cognised” it. I see it before me: the humility of
+the inhabitant of Tiryns and Mycenæ before the unattainable <i lang="fr">esprit</i> of life in
+Cnossus, the contempt of the well-bred of Cnossus for the petty chiefs and their
+followers, and withal a secret feeling of superiority in the healthy barbarians,
+like that of the German soldier in the presence of the elderly Roman dignitary.</p>
+
+<p>How are we in a position to know this? There are several such moments in
+which the men of two Cultures have looked into one another’s eyes. We know
+more than one “Inter-Culture” in which some of the most significant tendencies
+of the human soul have disclosed themselves.</p>
+
+<p>As it was (we may confidently say) between Cnossus and Mycenæ, so it was
+between the Byzantine court and the German chieftains who, like Otto II,
+married into it—undisguised wonder on the part of the knights and counts,
+answered by the contemptuous astonishment of a refined, somewhat pale and
+tired Civilization at that bearish morning vigour of the German lands which
+Scheffel has described in <i lang="de">Ekkehard</i>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_130" href="#Footnote_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a></p>
+
+<p>In Charlemagne the mixture of a primitive human spirituality, on the
+threshold of its awakening, with a superposed Late intellectuality, becomes
+manifest. Certain characteristics of his rulership would lead us to name him
+the Caliph of Frankistan, but on his other side he is but the chief of a Germanic
+tribe; and it is the mingling of the two that makes him symbolic, in the same
+way as the form of the Aachen palace-chapel—no longer mosque, not
+yet cathedral. The Germanic-Western pre-Culture meanwhile is moving on,
+but slowly and underground, for that sudden illumination which we most
+ineptly call the Carolingian Renaissance is a ray from Baghdad. It must not be
+<span class="pagenum" id="p88">[88]</span>overlooked that the period of Charles the Great is an episode of the surface,
+ending, as accidentals do end, without issue. After 900, after a new deep depression,
+there begins something really new, something having the telling
+force of a Destiny and the depth that promises duration. But in 800 it was the
+sun of the Arabian Civilization passing on from the world-cities of the East
+to the countryside of the West. Even so the sunshine of Hellenism had spread
+to the distant Indus.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_131" href="#Footnote_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a></p>
+
+<p>That which stands on the hills of Tiryns and Mycenæ is <i lang="de">Pfalz</i> and <i lang="de">Burg</i> of
+root-Germanic type. The palaces of Crete—which are not kings’ castles,
+but huge cult-buildings for a crowd of priests and priestesses—are equipped
+with megalopolitan—nay, Late-Roman—luxury. At the foot of those hills
+were crowded the huts of yeoman and vassals, but in Crete (Gournia, Hagia
+Triada) the excavation of towns and villas has shown that the requirements
+were those of high civilization, and the building-technique that of a long
+experience, accustomed to catering for the most pampered taste in furniture
+and wall-decoration, and familiar with lighting, water-circulation, staircases,
+and suchlike problems.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_132" href="#Footnote_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a> In the one, the plan of the house is a strict life-symbol;
+in the other, the expression of a refined utilitarianism. Compare
+the Kamares vases and the frescoes of smooth stucco with everything that is
+genuinely Mycenæan—they are, through and through, the product of an
+industrial art, clever and empty, and not of any grand and deep art of heavy,
+clumsy, but forceful symbolism like that which in Mycenæ was ripening towards
+the geometric style. It is, in a word, not a style but a taste.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_133" href="#Footnote_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a> In Mycenæ
+was housed a primitive race which chose its sites according to soil-value
+and facilities for defence, whereas the Minoan population settled in business
+foci, as may be observed very clearly in the case of Philakopi on Melos which
+was established for the export trade in obsidian. A Mycenæan palace is a
+promise, a Minoan something that is ending. But it was just the same in the
+West about 800—the Frankish and Visigothic farms and manor-houses
+stretched from the Loire to the Ebro, while south of them lay the Moorish
+castles, villas, and mosques of Cordova and Granada.</p>
+
+<p>It is surely no accident that the peak of this Minoan luxury coincides with
+the period of the great Egyptian revolution, and particularly the Hyksos time
+(1780–1580 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>).&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_134" href="#Footnote_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> The Egyptian craftsmen may well have fled in those days
+to the peaceful islands and even as far as the strongholds of the mainland, as in
+a later instance the Byzantine scholars fled to Italy. For it is axiomatic that
+the Minoan Culture is a part of the Egyptian, and we should be able to realize
+<span class="pagenum" id="p89">[89]</span>this more fully were it not that the part of Egypt’s art-store which would have
+been decisive in this connexion—viz.: what was produced in the Western Delta—has
+perished from damp. We only know the Egyptian Culture in so far as it
+flourished on the dry soil of the south, but it has long been admitted as certain
+that the centre of gravity of its evolution lay elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>It is not possible to draw a strict frontier between the late Minoan and the
+young Mycenæan art. Throughout the Egyptian-Cretan world we can observe
+a highly modern fad for these alien and primitive things, and vice versa the
+war-band kings of the mainland strongholds stole or bought Cretan <i lang="fr">objets
+d’art</i> wherever and however they could come by them, admiring and imitating—even
+as the style of the Migrations, once supposed to be, and prized as, proto-German,
+borrows the whole of its form-language from the East.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_135" href="#Footnote_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a> They had
+their palaces and tombs built and decorated by captive or invited craftsmen.
+The “Treasure-house” (Tomb) of Atreus in Mycenæ, therefore, is exactly
+analogous to the tomb of Theoderich at Ravenna.</p>
+
+<p>In this regard Byzantium itself is a marvel. Here layer after layer has to be
+carefully separated. In 326 Constantine, rebuilding on the ruins of the great
+city destroyed by Septimus Severus, created a <em>Late Classical cosmopolis</em> of the
+first rank, into which presently streamed hoary Apollinism from the West and
+youthful Magism from the East. And long afterwards again, in 1096, it is
+a <em>Late Magian</em> cosmopolis, confronted in its last autumn days with spring in the
+shape of Godfrey of Bouillon’s crusaders, whom that clever royal lady Anna
+Comnena&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_136" href="#Footnote_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a> portrays with contempt. As the easternmost of the Classical West,
+this city bewitched the Goths; then, a millennium later, as the northernmost
+of the Arabian world, it enchanted the Russians. And the amazing Vasili
+Blazheny in Moscow (1554), the herald of the Russian pre-Culture, stands
+“between styles,” just as, two thousand years before, Solomon’s Temple had
+stood between Babylon the Cosmopolis and early Christianity.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_3">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>Primeval man is a <em>ranging</em> animal, a being whose waking-consciousness
+restlessly feels its way through life, all microcosm, under no servitude of place
+or home, keen and anxious in its senses, ever alert to drive off some element of
+hostile Nature. A deep transformation sets in first with agriculture—for that
+is something <em>artificial</em>, with which hunter and shepherd have no touch. He
+who digs and ploughs is seeking not to plunder, but to <em>alter</em> Nature. To plant
+implies, not to take something, but to produce something. <em>But with this, man
+himself becomes plant</em>—namely, as peasant. He roots in the earth that he
+tends, the soul of man discovers a soul in the countryside, and a new earth-boundness
+of being, a new feeling, pronounces itself. Hostile Nature becomes
+<span class="pagenum" id="p90">[90]</span>the friend; earth becomes <em>Mother</em> Earth. Between sowing and begetting,
+harvest and death, the child and the grain, a profound affinity is set up. A new
+devoutness addresses itself in chthonian cults to the fruitful earth that grows up
+along with man. And as completed expression of this life-feeling, we find
+everywhere the <em>symbolic shape of the farmhouse</em>, which in the disposition of the
+rooms and in every line of external form tells us about the blood of its inhabitants.
+The peasant’s dwelling is the great symbol of settledness. It is itself
+plant, thrusts its roots deep into its “own” soil.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_137" href="#Footnote_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a> It is <em>property</em> in the most
+sacred sense of the word. The kindly spirits of hearth and door, floor and chamber—Vesta,
+Janus, Lares and Penates—are as firmly fixed in it as the man himself.</p>
+
+<p>This is the condition precedent of every Culture, which itself in turn grows
+up out of a mother-landscape and renews and intensifies the intimacy of man
+and soil. What his cottage is to the peasant, that the town is to the Culture-man.
+As each individual house has its kindly spirits, so each town has its
+tutelary god or saint. The town, too, is a plantlike being, as far removed as a
+peasantry is from nomadism and the purely microcosmic. Hence the development
+of a high form-language is linked always to a landscape. Neither an art
+nor a religion can alter the site of its growth; only in the Civilization with its
+giant cities do we come again to despise and disengage ourselves from these
+roots. Man as civilized, as <em>intellectual nomad</em>, is again wholly microcosmic,
+wholly homeless, as free <em>intellectually</em> as hunter and herdsman were free sensually.
+“<i lang="la">Ubi bene, ibi patria</i>” is valid <em>before</em> as well as <em>after</em> a Culture. In the
+not-yet-spring of the Migrations it was a Germanic yearning—virginal, yet
+already maternal—that searched the South for a home in which to nest its
+future Culture. To-day, at the end of this Culture, the rootless intellect ranges
+over all landscapes and all possibilities of thought. But between these limits
+lies the time in which a man held a bit of soil to be something <em>worth dying for</em>.</p>
+
+<p>It is a conclusive fact—yet one hitherto never appreciated—that all
+great Cultures are town-Cultures. Higher man of the Second Age is a town-tied
+animal. Here is the real criterion of “world-history” that differentiates
+it with utter sharpness from man’s history—<em>world-history is the history of civic
+man</em>. Peoples, states, politics, religion, all arts, and all sciences rest upon <em>one</em>
+prime phenomenon of human being, the town. As all thinkers of all Cultures
+themselves live in the town (even though they may reside bodily in the country),
+they are perfectly unaware of what a bizarre thing a town is. To feel
+this we have to put ourselves unreservedly in the place of the wonder-struck
+primitive who for the first time sees this mass of stone and wood set in the
+landscape, with its stone-enclosed streets and its stone-paved squares—a
+domicile, truly, of strange form and strangely teeming with men!</p>
+
+<p>But the real miracle is the birth of the <em>soul</em> of a town. A mass-soul of a
+wholly new kind—whose last foundations will remain hidden from us for
+<span class="pagenum" id="p91">[91]</span>ever—suddenly buds off from the general spirituality of its Culture. As soon
+as it is awake, it forms for itself a visible body. Out of the rustic group of
+farms and cottages, each of which has its own history, arises a <em>totality</em>. And
+the whole lives, breathes, grows, and acquires a face and an inner form and
+history. Thenceforward, in addition to the individual house, the temple,
+the cathedral, and the palace, the town-figure itself becomes a unit objectively
+expressing the form-language and style-history that accompanies the Culture
+throughout its life-course.</p>
+
+<p>It goes without saying that what distinguishes a town from a village is not
+size, but the presence of a soul. Not only in primitive conditions, such as
+those of central Africa, but in Late conditions too—China, India, and industrialized
+Europe and America—we find very large settlements that are
+nevertheless not to be called cities. They are centres of landscape; they do not
+inwardly form worlds in themselves. They have no soul. Every primitive
+population lives wholly as peasant and son of the soil—the being “City”
+does not exist for it. That which in externals develops from the village is not
+the city, but the market, a mere meeting-point of rural life-interests. Here
+there can be no question of a separate existence. The inhabitant of a market
+may be a craftsman or a tradesman, but he lives and thinks as a peasant. We
+have to go back and sense accurately what it means when out of a primitive
+Egyptian or Chinese or Germanic village—a little spot in a wide land—a
+city comes into being. It is quite possibly not differentiated in any outward
+feature, but spiritually it is <em>a place from which the countryside is henceforth regarded,
+felt, and experienced as “environs,”</em> as something different and subordinate.
+From now on there are two lives, that of the inside and that of the outside,
+and the peasant understands this just as clearly as the townsman. The village
+smith and the smith in the city, the village headman and the burgomaster, live
+in two different worlds. The man of the land and the man of the city are different
+essences. First of all they feel the difference, then they are dominated by
+it, and at last they cease to understand each other at all. To-day a Brandenburg
+peasant is closer to a Sicilian peasant than he is to a Berliner. From the
+moment of this specific attunement, the City comes into being, and it is this
+attunement which underlies, as something that goes without saying, the entire
+waking-consciousness of every Culture.</p>
+
+<p>Every springtime of a Culture is <i lang="la">ipso facto</i> the springtime of a new city-type
+and civism. The men of the pre-Culture are filled with a deep uneasiness in the
+presence of these types, with which they cannot get into any inward relation.
+On the Rhine and the Danube the Germans frequently, as at Strassburg, settled
+down at the gates of Roman cities that remained uninhabited.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_138" href="#Footnote_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a> In Crete the
+conquerors built, on the ruins of the burnt-out cities like Gournia and Cnossus—villages.
+The Orders of the Western pre-Culture, the Benedictines, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p92">[92]</span>particularly the Cluniacs and Premonstratensians, settled like the knights on
+free land; it was the Franciscans and Dominicans who began to build in the
+Early Gothic city. There the new soul had just awakened. But even there a
+tender melancholy still adheres to the architecture, as to Franciscan art as a
+whole—an almost mystical fear of the individual in presence of the new and
+bright and conscious, which as yet was only dully accepted by the generality.
+Man hardly yet dared to cease to be peasant; the first to live with the ripe and
+considered alertness of genuine megalopolitans are the Jesuits. It is a sign that
+the countryside is still unconditionally supreme, and does not yet recognize
+the city, when the ruler shifts his court every spring from palace to palace.
+In the Egyptian Old Kingdom the thickly-populated centre of the administration
+was at the “White Wall” (Memphis), but the residences of the Pharaohs
+changed incessantly as in Sumerian Babylon and the Carolingian Empire.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_139" href="#Footnote_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a>
+The Early Chinese rulers of the Chóu dynasty had their court as a rule at Lo-Yang
+(the present Ho-nan-fu) from about 1160, but it was not until 770—corresponding
+to our sixteenth century—that the locality was promoted to
+be the permanent royal residence.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_140" href="#Footnote_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a></p>
+
+<p>Never has the feeling of earth-boundness, of the plantwise-cosmic, expressed
+itself so powerfully as it did in the architecture of the petty early towns,
+which consisted of hardly more than a few streets about a market-place or a
+castle or a place of worship. Here, if anywhere, it is manifest that every grand
+style is itself plantlike. The Doric column, the Egyptian pyramid, the Gothic
+cathedral, <em>grow out of</em> the ground, earnest, big with destiny, Being without
+waking-consciousness. The Ionic column, the buildings of the Middle Kingdom
+and those of the Baroque, calmly aware and conscious of themselves, free
+and sure, <em>stand on</em> the ground. There, separated from the power of the land—cut
+off from it, even, by the pavement underfoot—Being becomes more and
+more languid, sensation and reason more and more powerful. Man becomes
+intellect, “free” like the nomads, whom he comes to resemble, but narrower
+and colder than they. “Intellect,” “<i lang="de">Geist</i>,” “<i lang="fr">esprit</i>,” is the specific urban form
+of the understanding waking-consciousness. All art, all religion and science,
+become slowly intellectualized, alien to the land, incomprehensible to the
+peasant of the soil. With the Civilization sets in the climacteric. The immemorially
+old roots of Being are dried up in the stone-masses of its cities.
+And the free intellect—fateful word!—appears like a flame, mounts splendid
+into the air, and pitiably dies.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_3">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>The new Soul of the City speaks a new language, which soon comes to be
+tantamount to the language of the Culture itself. The open land with its
+<span class="pagenum" id="p93">[93]</span>village-mankind is wounded; it no longer understands that language, it is
+nonplussed and dumb. All genuine style-history is played out in the cities.
+It is exclusively the city’s destiny and the life-experience of urban men that
+speaks to the eye in the logic of visible forms. The very earliest Gothic was
+still a growth of the soil and laid hold of the farmhouse with its inhabitants
+and its contents. But the Renaissance style flourished only in the Renaissance
+<em>city</em>, the Baroque only in the Baroque <em>city</em>—not to mention the wholly megalopolitan
+Corinthian column or Rococo. There was perhaps some quiet
+infiltration from these into the landscape; but the land itself was no longer
+capable of the smallest creative effort—only of dumb aversion. The peasant
+and his dwelling remained in all essentials Gothic, and Gothic it is to this day.
+The Hellenic <em>countryside</em> preserved the geometric style, the Egyptian village
+the cast of the Old Kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>It is, above all, the expression of the city’s “visage” that has a history.
+The play of this facial expression, indeed, is almost the spiritual history of the
+Culture itself. First we have the little proto-cities of the Gothic and other
+Early Cultures, which almost efface themselves in the landscape, which are
+still genuine peasant-houses crowded under the shadow of a stronghold or a
+sanctuary, and without inward change become town-houses merely in the sense
+that they have neighbour-houses instead of fields and meadows around them.
+The peoples of the Early Culture gradually became town-peoples, and accordingly
+there are not only specifically Chinese, Indian, Apollinian, and Faustian
+town-forms, but, moreover, Armenian and Syrian, Ionian and Etruscan, German
+and French and English town-physiognomies. There is a city of Phidias,
+a city of Rembrandt, a city of Luther. These designations, and the mere names
+of Granada, Venice, and Nürnberg conjure up at once quite definite images,
+for all that the Culture produces in religion, art, and knowledge has been
+produced in such cities. While it was still the spirit of knights’ castles and
+rural monasteries that evoked the Crusades, the Reformation is urban and belongs
+to narrow streets and steep-gabled houses. The great Epic, which speaks
+and sings of the blood, belongs to <i lang="de">Pfalz</i> and <i lang="de">Burg</i>, but the Drama, in which
+<em>awakened</em> life tests itself, is city-poetry, and the great Novel, the survey of all
+things human by the <em>emancipated</em> intellect, presupposes the world-city. Apart
+from really genuine folk-song, the only lyrism is of the city. Apart from the
+“eternal” peasant-art, there is only urban painting and architecture, with a
+swift and soon-ended history.</p>
+
+<p>And these stone visages that have incorporated in their light-world the
+humanness of the citizen himself and, like him, are all eye and intellect—how
+distinct the language of form that they talk, how different from the rustic
+drawl of the landscape! The silhouette of the great city, its roofs and chimneys,
+the towers and domes on the horizon! What a language is imparted
+to us through <em>one</em> look at Nürnberg or Florence, Damascus or Moscow, Peking
+<span class="pagenum" id="p94">[94]</span>or Benares. What do we know of the Classical cities, seeing that we do not
+know the lines that they presented under the Southern noon, under clouds in
+the morning, in the starry night? The courses of the streets, straight or crooked,
+broad or narrow; the houses, low or tall, bright or dark, that in all Western
+cities turn their façades, <em>their faces</em>, and in all Eastern cities turn their backs,
+blank wall and railing, towards the street; the spirit of squares and corners,
+impasses and prospects, fountains and monuments, churches or temples or
+mosques, amphitheatres and railway stations, bazaars and town-halls! The
+suburbs, too, of neat garden-villas or of jumbled blocks of flats, rubbish-heaps
+and allotments; the fashionable quarter and the slum area, the Subura of
+Classical Rome and the Faubourg Saint-Germain of Paris, ancient Baiæ and
+modern Nice, the little town-picture like Bruges and Rothenburg and the sea
+of houses like Babylon, Tenochtitlan, Rome, and London! All this has history
+and <em>is</em> history. One major political event—and the visage of the town
+falls into different folds. Napoleon gave to Bourbon Paris, Bismarck gave to
+worthy little Berlin, a new mien. But the Country stands by, uninfluenced,
+suspicious and irritated.</p>
+
+<p>In the earliest time the <em>landscape-figure alone</em> dominates man’s eyes. It gives
+form to his soul and vibrates in tune therewith. Feelings and woodland rustlings
+beat together; the meadows and the copses adapt themselves to its shape,
+to its course, even to its dress. The village, with its quiet hillocky roofs, its
+evening smoke, its wells, its hedges, and its beasts, lies completely fused and
+embedded in the landscape. The country town <em>confirms</em> the country, is an intensification
+of the picture of the country. It is the Late city that first defies
+the land, contradicts Nature in the lines of its silhouette, <em>denies</em> all Nature.
+It wants to be something different from and higher than Nature. These high-pitched
+gables, these Baroque cupolas, spires, and pinnacles, neither are, nor
+desire to be, related with anything in Nature. And then begins the gigantic
+megalopolis, the <em>city-as-world</em>, which suffers nothing beside itself and sets
+about <em>annihilating</em> the country picture. The town that once upon a time humbly
+accommodated itself to that picture now insists that it shall be the same as
+itself. <i lang="la">Extra muros</i>, chaussées and woods and pastures become a park, mountains
+become tourists’ view-points; and <i lang="la">intra muros</i> arises an imitation Nature,
+fountains in lieu of springs, flower-beds, formal pools, and clipped hedges in
+lieu of meadows and ponds and bushes. In a village the thatched roof is still
+hill-like and the street is of the same nature as the baulk of earth between fields.
+But here the picture is of deep, long gorges between high, stony houses filled
+with coloured dust and strange uproar, and men dwell in these houses, the like
+of which no nature-being has ever conceived. Costumes, even faces, are adjusted
+to a background of stone. By day there is a street traffic of strange colours
+and tones, and by night a new light that outshines the moon. And the
+yokel stands helpless on the pavement, understanding nothing and understood
+<span class="pagenum" id="p95">[95]</span>by nobody, tolerated as a useful type in farce and provider of this world’s
+daily bread.</p>
+
+<p>It follows, however—and this is the most essential point of any—that
+we cannot comprehend political and economic history at all unless we realize
+that the city, with its gradual detachment from and final bankrupting of the
+country, is the determinative form to which the course and sense of higher
+history generally conforms. <em>World history is city history.</em></p>
+
+<p>An obvious case in point is, of course, the Classical world, in which the
+Euclidean feeling of existence connected the city-idea with its need of minimizing
+extension and thus, with ever-increasing emphasis, identified the State
+with the stone body of the individual Polis. But, quite apart from this instance,
+we find in every Culture (and very soon) the type of the <em>capital city</em>. This, as its
+name pointedly indicates, is that city whose spirit, with its methods, aims, and
+decisions of policy and economics, dominates the land. The land with its
+people is for this controlling spirit a tool and an object. The land does not
+understand what is going on, and is not even asked. In all countries of all Late
+Cultures, the great parties, the revolutions, the Cæsarisms, the democracies,
+the parliaments, are the form in which the spirit of the capital tells the country
+what it is expected to desire and, if called upon, to die for. The Classical forum,
+the Western press, are, essentially, intellectual engines of the ruling City.
+Any country-dweller who really understands the meaning of politics in such
+periods, and feels himself on their level, moves into the City, not perhaps in
+the body, but certainly in the spirit.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_141" href="#Footnote_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> The sentiment and public opinion of the
+peasant’s country-side—so far as it can be said to exist—is prescribed and
+guided by the print and speech of the city. Egypt is Thebes, the <i lang="la">orbis terrarum</i>
+is Rome, Islam is Baghdad, France is Paris. The history of every springtime
+phase is played out in the many small centres of many separate districts. The
+Egyptian nomes, the Greek peoples of Homer, the Gothic counties and
+free cities, were the makers of history of old. But gradually Policy gathers
+itself up into a very few capitals, and everything else retains but a shadow of
+political existence. Even in the Classical world, the atomizing tendency
+towards city-states did not hold out against the major movement. As early
+as the Peloponnesian War it was only Athens and Sparta that were really
+handling policy, the remaining cities of the Ægean being merely elements
+within the hegemony of the one or the other; of policies of <em>their own</em> there is no
+<span class="pagenum" id="p96">[96]</span>longer any question. Finally it is the Forum of the City of Rome alone that is
+the scene of Classical history. Cæsar might campaign in Gaul, his slayers in
+Macedonia, Antony in Egypt, but, whatever happened in these fields, <em>it was
+from their relation to Rome that events acquired meaning</em>.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_3">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>All effectual history begins with the primary classes, nobility and priesthood,
+forming themselves and elevating themselves above the peasantry as
+such. The opposition of greater and lesser nobility, between king and vassal,
+between worldly and spiritual power, is the basic form of all primitive politics,
+Homeric, Chinese, or Gothic, until with the coming of the City, the burgher, the
+<i lang="fr">Tiers État</i>, history changes its style. But it is exclusively in these classes as
+such, in their class-consciousness, that the whole meaning of history inheres.
+<em>The peasant is historyless.</em> The village stands outside world-history, and all
+evolution from the “Trojan” to the Mithridatic War, from the Saxon emperors
+to the World War of 1914, passes by these little points on the landscape, occasionally
+destroying them and wasting their blood, but never in the least touching
+their inwardness.</p>
+
+<p>The peasant is the eternal man, independent of every Culture that ensconces
+itself in the cities. He precedes it, he outlives it, a dumb creature propagating
+himself from generation to generation, limited to soil-bound callings and
+aptitudes, a mystical soul, a dry, shrewd understanding that sticks to practical
+matters, the origin and the ever-flowing source of the blood that makes world-history
+in the cities.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever the Culture up there in the city conceives in the way of state-forms,
+economic customs, articles of faith, implements, knowledge, art, he
+receives mistrustfully and hesitatingly; though in the end he may accept these
+things, never is he altered in kind thereby. Thus the West-European peasant
+outwardly took in all the dogmas of the Councils from the great Lateran to
+that of Trent, just as he took in the products of mechanical engineering and
+those of the French Revolution—but he remains what he was, what he already
+was in Charlemagne’s day. The present-day piety of the peasant is older than
+Christianity; his gods are more ancient than those of any higher religion.
+Remove from him the pressure of the great cities and he will revert to the state
+of nature without feeling that he is losing anything. His real ethic, his real
+metaphysic, which no scholar of the city has yet thought it worth while to
+discover, lie outside all religious and spiritual history, have in fact no history
+at all.</p>
+
+<p>The city is intellect. The Megalopolis is “free” intellect. It is in resistance
+to the “feudal” powers of blood and tradition that the burgherdom or bourgeoisie,
+the intellectual class, begins to be conscious of its own separate existence.
+It upsets thrones and limits old rights in the name of reason and above all
+<span class="pagenum" id="p97">[97]</span>in the name of “the People,” which henceforward means exclusively the people
+of the city. Democracy is the political form in which the townsman’s outlook
+upon the world is demanded of the peasantry also. The urban intellect reforms
+the great religion of the springtime and sets up by the side of the old religion
+of noble and priest, the new religion of the Tiers État, <em>liberal science</em>. The city
+assumes the lead and control of economic history in replacing the primitive
+values of the land, which are for ever inseparable from the life and thought of
+the rustic, by the <em>absolute idea of money</em> as distinct from goods. The immemorial
+country word for exchange of goods is “barter”; even when one of the things
+exchanged is precious metal, the underlying idea of the process is not yet
+<em>monetary</em>—i.e., it does not involve the abstraction of value from things and its
+fixation in metallic or fictitious quantities intended to <em>measure</em> things qua
+“commodities.” Caravan expeditions and Viking voyages in the springtime are
+made between land-settlements and imply barter or booty, whereas in the Late
+period they are made between cities and mean “money.” This is the distinction
+between the Normans before and the Hansa and Venetians after the Crusades,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_142" href="#Footnote_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a>
+and between the seafarers of Mycenæan times and those of the later colonization
+period in Greece. The City means not only intellect, but also money.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_143" href="#Footnote_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a></p>
+
+<p>Presently there arrived an epoch when the development of the city had
+reached such a point of power that it had no longer to defend itself against
+country and chivalry, but on the contrary had become a despotism against which
+the land and its basic orders of society were fighting a hopeless defensive battle—in
+the spiritual domain against nationalism, in the political against
+democracy, in the economic against money. At this period the number of cities
+that really counted as historically dominant had already become very small.
+And with this there arose the profound distinction—which was above all a
+spiritual distinction—between the great city and the little city or town.
+The latter, very significantly called the country-town, was a part of the no
+longer co-efficient countryside. It was not that the difference between townsman
+and rustic had become lessened in such towns, but that this difference
+had become negligible as compared with the new difference between them and
+the great city. The sly-shrewdness of the country and the intelligence of the
+megalopolis are two forms of waking-consciousness between which reciprocal
+understanding is scarcely possible. Here again it is evident that what counts
+is not the number of inhabitants, but the spirit. It is evident, moreover, that
+in all great cities nooks remained in which relics of an almost rural mankind
+lived in their byeways much as if they were on the land, and the people on the
+two sides of the street were almost in the relation of two villages. In fact, a
+<span class="pagenum" id="p98">[98]</span>pyramid of mounting civism, of decreasing number and increasing field of
+view, leads up from such quasi-rural elements, in ever-narrowing layers, to the
+small number of genuine megalopolitans at the top, who are at home wherever
+their spiritual postulates are satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>With this the notion of money attains to full abstractness. It no longer
+merely <em>serves</em> for the understanding of economic intercourse, but <em>subjects</em> the
+exchange of goods to <em>its own</em> evolution. It values things, no longer as between
+each other, but <em>with reference to itself</em>. Its relation to the soil and to the man of
+the soil has so completely vanished, that in the economic thought of the leading
+cities—the “money-markets”—it is ignored. Money has now become
+a power, and, moreover, a power that is wholly intellectual and merely figured
+in the metal it uses, a power the reality of which resides in the waking-consciousness
+of the upper stratum of an economically active population, a power
+that makes those concerned with it just as dependent upon itself as the peasant
+was dependent upon the soil. There is monetary thought, just as there is
+mathematical or juristic.</p>
+
+<p>But the earth is actual and natural, and money is abstract and artificial, a
+mere “category”—like “virtue” in the imagination of the Age of Enlightenment.
+And therefore every primary, pre-civic economy is dependent upon and
+held in bondage by the cosmic powers, the soil, the climate, the type of man,
+whereas money, as the pure form of economic intercourse within the waking-consciousness,
+is no more limited in potential scope by actuality than are the
+quantities of the mathematical and the logical world. Just as no view of facts
+hinders us from constructing as many non-Euclidean geometries as we please, so
+in the developed megalopolitan economics there is no longer any inherent
+objection to increasing “money” or to thinking, so to say, in other money-dimensions.
+This has nothing to do with the availability of gold or with any
+values in actuality at all. There is no standard and no sort of goods in which
+the value of the talent in the Persian Wars can be compared with its value in
+the Egyptian booty of Pompey. Money has become, for man as an economic
+animal, a form of the activity of waking-consciousness, having no longer any
+roots in Being. This is the basis of its monstrous power over every beginning
+Civilization, which is always an unconditional <em>dictatorship of money</em>, though
+taking different forms in different Cultures. But this is the reason, too, for the
+want of solidity, which eventually leads to its losing its power and its meaning,
+so that at the last, as in Diocletian’s time, it disappears from the thought of the
+closing Civilization, and the primary values of the soil return anew to take its
+place.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, there arises the monstrous symbol and vessel of the completely
+emancipated intellect, the world-city, the centre in which the course of a world-history
+ends by winding itself up. A handful of gigantic places in each Civilization
+disfranchises and disvalues the entire motherland of its own Culture
+<span class="pagenum" id="p99">[99]</span>under the contemptuous name of “the provinces.” The “provinces” are now
+everything whatsoever—land, town, <em>and</em> city—except these two or three
+points. There are no longer noblesse and bourgeoisie, freemen and slaves, Hellenes
+and Barbarians, believers and unbelievers, <em>but only cosmopolitans and provincials</em>.
+All other contrasts pale before this one, which dominates all events,
+all habits of life, all views of the world.</p>
+
+<p>The earliest of all world-cities were Babylon and the Thebes of the New
+Empire—the Minoan world of Crete, for all its splendour, belonged to the
+Egyptian “provinces.” In the Classical the first example is Alexandria, which
+reduced old Greece at one stroke to the provincial level, and which even Rome,
+even the resettled Carthage, even Byzantium, could not suppress. In India the
+giant cities of Ujjaina, Kanauj, and above all Pataliputra were renowned even
+in China and Java, and everyone knows the fairy-tale reputation of Baghdad and
+Granada in the West. In the Mexican world, it seems, Uxmal (founded in 950)
+was the first world-city of the Maya realms, which, however, with the rise
+of the Toltec world-cities Tezcuco and Tenochtitlan sank to the level of the
+provinces.</p>
+
+<p>It should not be forgotten that the word “province” first appears as a
+constitutional designation given by the Romans to Sicily; the subjugation of
+Sicily, in fact, is the first example of a once pre-eminent Culture-landscape
+sinking so far as to be purely and simply an object. Syracuse, the first real
+great-city of the Classical world, had flourished when Rome was still an unimportant
+country town, but thenceforward, <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> Rome, it becomes a
+provincial city. In just the same way Habsburg Madrid and Papal Rome,
+leading cities in the Europe of the seventeenth century, were from the outset
+of the eighteenth depressed to the provincial level by the world-cities of Paris
+and London. And the rise of New York to the position of world-city during
+the Civil War of 1861–5 may perhaps prove to have been the most pregnant
+event of the nineteenth century.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V_3">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>The stone Colossus “Cosmopolis” stands at the end of the life’s course of
+every great Culture. The Culture-man whom the land has spiritually formed
+is seized and possessed by his own creation, the City, and is made into its creature,
+its executive organ, and finally its victim. This stony mass is the <em>absolute</em>
+city. Its image, as it appears with all its grandiose beauty in the light-world
+of the human eye, contains the whole noble death-symbolism of the definitive
+thing-become. The spirit-pervaded stone of Gothic buildings, after a millennium
+of style-evolution, has become the soulless material of this dæmonic
+stone-desert.</p>
+
+<p>These final cities are <em>wholly</em> intellect. Their houses are no longer, as those
+of the Ionic and the Baroque were, derivatives of the old peasant’s house,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p100">[100]</span>whence the Culture took its spring into history. They are, generally speaking,
+no longer houses in which Vesta and Janus, Lares and Penates, have any sort of
+footing, but mere premises which have been fashioned, not by blood but by
+requirements, not by feeling but by the spirit of commercial enterprise. So
+long as the hearth has a pious meaning as the actual and genuine centre of a
+family, the old relation to the land is not wholly extinct. But when <em>that</em>, too,
+follows the rest into oblivion, and the mass of tenants and bed-occupiers in the
+sea of houses leads a vagrant existence from shelter to shelter like the hunters
+and pastors of the “pre-” time, then the intellectual nomad is completely
+developed. This city is a world, is <em>the</em> world. Only as a whole, as a human
+dwelling-place, has it meaning, the houses being merely the stones of which
+it is assembled.</p>
+
+<p>Now the old mature cities with their Gothic nucleus of cathedral, town-halls,
+and high-gabled streets, with their old walls, towers, and gates, ringed
+about by the Baroque growth of brighter and more elegant patricians’ houses,
+palaces, and hall-churches, begin to overflow in all directions in formless
+masses, to eat into the decaying country-side with their multiplied barrack-tenements
+and utility buildings, and to destroy the noble aspect of the old
+time by clearances and rebuildings. Looking down from one of the old towers
+upon the sea of houses, we perceive in this petrification of a historic being
+the exact epoch that marks the end of organic growth and the beginning of an
+inorganic and therefore unrestrained process of massing without limit. And
+now, too, appears that artificial, mathematical, utterly land-alien product of a
+pure intellectual satisfaction in the appropriate, the city of the city-architect.
+In all Civilizations alike, these cities aim at the chessboard form, which is the
+symbol of soullessness. Regular rectangle-blocks astounded Herodotus in
+Babylon and Cortez in Tenochtitlan. In the Classical world the series of
+“abstract” cities begins with Thurii, which was “planned” by Hippodamus
+of Miletus in 441. Priene, whose chessboard scheme entirely ignores the ups
+and downs of the site, Rhodes, and Alexandria follow, and become in turn
+models for innumerable provincial cities of the Imperial Age. The Islamic
+architects laid out Baghdad from 762, and the giant city of Samarra a century
+later, according to plan.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_144" href="#Footnote_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a> In the West-European and American world the
+lay-out of Washington in 1791 is the first big example.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_145" href="#Footnote_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a> There can be no doubt
+<span class="pagenum" id="p101">[101]</span>that the world-cities of the Han period in China and the Maurya dynasty in
+India possessed this same geometrical pattern. Even now the world-cities of the
+Western Civilization are far from having reached the peak of their development.
+I see, long after <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 2000, cities laid out for ten to twenty million inhabitants,
+spread over enormous areas of country-side, with buildings that will dwarf the
+biggest of to-day’s and notions of traffic and communication that we should
+regard as fantastic to the point of madness.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_146" href="#Footnote_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a></p>
+
+<p>Even in this final shape of his being, the Classical man’s form-ideal remains
+the corporeal point. Whereas the giant cities of our present confess our irresistible
+tendency towards the infinite—our suburbs and garden cities,
+invading the wide country-side, our vast and comprehensive network of
+roads, and within the thickly built areas a controlled fast traffic on, below,
+and above straight, broad streets—the genuine Classical world-city ever
+strove, not to expand, but to thicken—the streets narrow and cramped,
+impossible for fast traffic (although this was fully developed on the great
+Roman roads), entire unwillingness to live in suburbs or even to make suburbs
+possible.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_147" href="#Footnote_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a> Even at that stage the city must needs be a body, thick and round,
+σῶμα in the strictest sense. The synœcism that in the early Classical had
+gradually drawn the land-folk into the cities, and so created the type of the
+Polis, repeated itself at the last in absurd form; everyone wanted to live in
+the middle of the city, in its densest nucleus, for otherwise he could not feel
+himself to be the urban man that he was. All these cities are only <i lang="fr">cités</i>, inner
+towns. The new synœcism formed, instead of suburban zones, <em>the world of the
+upper floors</em>. In the year 74 Rome, in spite of its immense population, had the
+ridiculously small perimeter of nineteen and a half kilometres [twelve miles].&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_148" href="#Footnote_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a>
+Consequently these city-bodies extended in general not in breadth, but more
+and more upward. The block-tenements of Rome such as the famous Insula
+Feliculæ, rose, with a street breadth of only three to five metres [ten to seventeen
+feet]&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_149" href="#Footnote_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a> to heights that have never been seen in Western Europe and are
+<span class="pagenum" id="p102">[102]</span>seen in only a few cities in America. Near the Capitol, the roofs already
+reached to the level of the hill-saddle.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_150" href="#Footnote_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a> But always the splendid mass-cities
+harbour lamentable poverty and degraded habits, and the attics and mansards,
+the cellars and back courts are breeding a new type of raw man—in
+Baghdad and in Babylon, just as in Tenochtitlan and to-day in London and
+Berlin. Diodorus tells of a deposed Egyptian king who was reduced to living
+in one of these wretched upper-floor tenements of Rome.</p>
+
+<p>But no wretchedness, no compulsion, not even a clear vision of the madness
+of this development, avails to neutralize the attractive force of these
+dæmonic creations. The wheel of Destiny rolls on to its end; the birth of the
+City entails its death. Beginning and end, a peasant cottage and a tenement-block
+are related to one another as soul and intellect, as blood and stone.
+But “Time” is no abstract phrase, but a name for the actuality of Irreversibility.
+Here there is only forward, never back. Long, long ago the country
+bore the country-town and nourished it with her best blood. Now the giant
+city sucks the country dry, insatiably and incessantly demanding and devouring
+fresh streams of men, till it wearies and dies in the midst of an almost uninhabited
+waste of country. Once the full sinful beauty of this last marvel of all
+history has captured a victim, it never lets him go. Primitive folk can loose
+themselves from the soil and wander, but the intellectual nomad never. Homesickness
+for the great city is keener than any other nostalgia. Home is for
+him any one of these giant cities, but even the nearest village is alien territory.
+He would sooner die upon the pavement than go “back” to the land. Even
+disgust at this pretentiousness, weariness of the thousand-hued glitter, the
+<i lang="la">tædium vitæ</i> that in the end overcomes many, does not set them free. They take
+the City with them into the mountains or on the sea. They have lost the
+country within themselves and will never regain it outside.</p>
+
+<p>What makes the man of the world-cities incapable of living on any but
+this artificial footing is that the cosmic beat in his being is ever decreasing, while
+the tensions of his waking-consciousness become more and more dangerous.
+It must be remembered that in a microcosm the animal, waking side supervenes
+upon the vegetable side, that of being, and not vice versa. Beat and
+tension, blood and intellect, Destiny and Causality are to one another as the
+country-side in bloom is to the city of stone, as something existing <i lang="la">per se</i> to
+something existing dependently. Tension without cosmic pulsation to animate
+it is the transition to nothingness. But Civilization is nothing but
+tension. The head, in all the outstanding men of the Civilizations, is dominated
+exclusively by an expression of extreme tension. Intelligence is only the
+capacity for understanding at high tension, and in every Culture these heads
+are the types of its final men—one has only to compare them with the peasant
+heads, when such happen to emerge in the swirl of the great city’s street-life.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p103">[103]</span>The advance, too, from peasant wisdom—“slimness,” mother wit,
+instinct, based as in other animals upon the sensed beat of life—through
+the city-spirit to the cosmopolitan intelligence—the very word with its
+sharp ring betraying the disappearance of the old cosmic foundation—can
+be described as a steady diminution of the Destiny-feeling and an unrestrained
+augmentation of needs according to the operation of a Causality. Intelligence
+is the replacement of unconscious living by exercise in thought, masterly, but
+bloodless and jejune. The intelligent visage is similar in all races—what is
+recessive in them is, precisely, race. The weaker the feeling for the necessity
+and self-evidence of Being, the more the habit of “elucidation” grows, the
+more the fear in the waking-consciousness comes to be stilled by causal methods.
+Hence the assimilation of knowledge with demonstrability, and the substitution
+of scientific theory, the causal myth, for the religious. Hence, too, money-in-the-abstract
+as the pure causality of economic life, in contrast to rustic
+barter, which is pulsation and not a system of tensions.</p>
+
+<p>Tension, when it has become intellectual, knows no form of recreation but
+that which is specific to the world-city—namely, <i lang="fr">détente</i>, relaxation, distraction.
+Genuine play, <i lang="fr">joie de vivre</i>, pleasure, inebriation, are products of the
+cosmic beat and as such no longer comprehensible in their essence. But the
+relief of hard, intensive brain-work by its opposite—conscious and practised
+fooling—of intellectual tension by the bodily tension of sport, of bodily
+tension by the sensual straining after “pleasure” and the spiritual straining
+after the “excitements” of betting and competitions, of the pure logic of the
+day’s work by a consciously enjoyed mysticism—all this is common to the
+world-cities of all the Civilizations. Cinema, Expressionism, Theosophy,
+boxing contests, nigger dances, poker, and racing—one can find it all in
+Rome. Indeed, the connoisseur might extend his researches to the Indian,
+Chinese, and Arabian world-cities as well. To name but one example, if one
+reads the Kama-sutram one understands how it was that Buddhism <em>also</em> appealed
+to men’s tastes, and then the bullfighting scenes in the Palace of Cnossus
+will be looked at with quite different eyes. A cult, no doubt, underlay them,
+but there was a savour over it all, as over Rome’s fashionable Isis-cult in the
+neighbourhood of the Circus Maximus.</p>
+
+<p>And then, when Being is sufficiently uprooted and Waking-Being sufficiently
+strained, there suddenly emerges into the bright light of history a
+phenomenon that has long been preparing itself underground and now steps
+forward to make an end of the drama—the <em>sterility of civilized man</em>. This is
+not something that can be grasped as a plain matter of Causality (as modern
+science naturally enough has tried to grasp it); it is to be understood as an
+essentially <em>metaphysical</em> turn towards death. The last man of the world-city
+no longer <em>wants</em> to live—he may cling to life as an individual, but as a type,
+as an aggregate, no, for it is a characteristic of this collective existence that it
+<span class="pagenum" id="p104">[104]</span>eliminates the terror of death. That which strikes the true peasant with a
+deep and inexplicable fear, the notion that the family and the name may be
+extinguished, has now lost its meaning. The continuance of the blood-relation
+in the visible world is no longer a duty of the blood, and the destiny of
+being the last of the line is no longer felt as a doom. Children do not happen,
+not because children have become impossible, but principally because intelligence
+at the peak of intensity can no longer find any reason for their existence.
+Let the reader try to merge himself in the soul of the peasant. He has sat on
+his glebe from primeval times,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_151" href="#Footnote_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a> or has fastened his clutch in it, to adhere to it
+with his blood. He is rooted in it as the descendant of his forbears and as
+the forbear of future descendants. <em>His</em> house, <em>his</em> property, means, here, not
+the temporary connexion of person and thing for a brief span of years, but an
+enduring and inward union of <em>eternal</em> land and <em>eternal</em> blood. It is only from this
+mystical conviction of settlement that the great epochs of the cycle—procreation,
+birth, and death—derive that metaphysical element of wonder
+which condenses in the symbolism of custom and religion that all land-bound
+people possess. For the “last men” all this is past and gone. Intelligence and
+sterility are allied in old families, old peoples, and old Cultures, not merely
+because in each microcosm the overstrained and fettered animal-element is
+eating up the plant element, but also because the waking-consciousness assumes
+that being is normally regulated by causality. That which the man
+of intelligence, most significantly and characteristically, labels as “natural
+impulse” or “life-force,” he not only knows, but also values, causally, giving
+it the place amongst his other needs that his judgment assigns to it. When
+the ordinary thought of a highly cultivated people begins to regard “having
+children” as a question of <i>pro’s</i> and <i>con’s</i>, the great turning-point has come.
+For Nature knows nothing of <i>pro</i> and <i>con</i>. Everywhere, wherever life is
+actual, reigns an inward organic logic, an “it,” a drive, that is utterly independent
+of waking-being, with its causal linkages, and indeed not even
+observed by it. The abundant proliferation of primitive peoples is a <em>natural
+phenomenon</em>, which is not even thought about, still less judged as to its utility or
+the reverse. When reasons have to be put forward at all in a question of life,
+life itself has become questionable. At that point begins prudent limitation
+of the number of births. In the Classical world the practice was deplored by
+Polybius as the ruin of Greece, and yet even at his date it had long been established
+in the great cities; in subsequent Roman times it became appallingly
+general. At first explained by the economic misery of the times, very soon
+it ceased to explain itself at all. And at that point, too, in Buddhist India
+as in Babylon, in Rome as in our own cities, a man’s choice of the woman who
+is to be, not mother of his children as amongst peasants and primitives, but
+<span class="pagenum" id="p105">[105]</span>his own “companion for life,” becomes a problem of mentalities. The Ibsen
+marriage appears, the “higher spiritual affinity” in which both parties are
+“free”—free, that is, as intelligences, free from the plantlike urge of the blood
+to continue itself, and it becomes possible for a Shaw to say “that unless
+Woman repudiates her womanliness, her duty to her husband, to her children,
+to society, to the law, and to everyone but herself, she cannot emancipate
+herself.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_152" href="#Footnote_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a> The primary woman, the peasant woman, is <em>mother</em>. The whole
+vocation towards which she has yearned from childhood is included in that
+one word. But now emerges the Ibsen woman, the comrade, the heroine of a
+whole megalopolitan literature from Northern drama to Parisian novel. Instead
+of children, she has soul-conflicts; marriage is a craft-art for the achievement
+of “mutual understanding.” It is all the same whether the case against
+children is the American lady’s who would not miss a season for anything,
+or the Parisienne’s who fears that her lover would leave her, or an Ibsen heroine’s
+who “belongs to herself”—they all belong to themselves and they are
+all unfruitful. The same fact, in conjunction with the same arguments, is to be
+found in the Alexandrian, in the Roman, and, as a matter of course, in every
+other civilized society—and conspicuously in that in which Buddha grew
+up. And in Hellenism and in the nineteenth century, as in the times of Lao-Tzu
+and the Charvaka doctrine,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_153" href="#Footnote_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a> there is an ethic for childless intelligences, and
+a literature about the inner conflicts of Nora and Nana. The “quiverful,”
+which was still an honourable enough spectacle in the days of Werther, becomes
+something rather provincial. The father of many children is for the
+great city a subject for caricature; Ibsen did not fail to note it, and presented
+it in his <cite>Love’s Comedy</cite>.</p>
+
+<p>At this level all Civilizations enter upon a stage, which lasts for centuries,
+of appalling depopulation. The whole pyramid of cultural man vanishes.
+It crumbles from the summit, first the world-cities, then the provincial forms,
+and finally the land itself, whose best blood has incontinently poured into the
+towns, merely to bolster them up awhile. At the last, only the primitive
+blood remains, alive, but robbed of its strongest and most promising elements.
+This residue is the <em>Fellah type</em>.</p>
+
+<p>If anything has demonstrated the fact that Causality has nothing to do with
+history, it is the familiar “decline” of the Classical, which accomplished
+itself long before the irruption of Germanic migrants.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_154" href="#Footnote_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a> The Imperium enjoyed
+the completest peace; it was rich and highly developed; it was well organized;
+and it possessed in its emperors from Nerva to Marcus Aurelius a series of rulers
+such as the Cæsarism of no other Civilization can show. And yet the population
+dwindled, quickly and wholesale. The desperate marriage-and-children
+<span class="pagenum" id="p106">[106]</span>laws of Augustus—amongst them the <i lang="la">Lex de maritandis ordinibus</i>, which dismayed
+Roman society more than the destruction of Varus’s legions—the
+wholesale adoptions, the incessant plantation of soldiers of barbarian origin
+to fill the depleted country-side, the immense food-charities of Nerva and
+Trajan for the children of poor parents—nothing availed to check the process.
+Italy, then North Africa and Gaul, and finally Spain, which under the early
+Cæsars had been one of the most densely populated parts of the Empire, become
+empty and desolate. The famous saying of Pliny—so often and so
+significantly quoted to-day in connexion with national economics—“<i lang="la">Latifundia
+perdidere Italiam, jam, vero et provincias</i>,”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_155" href="#Footnote_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a> inverts the order of the process;
+the large estates would never have got to this point if the peasantry had not
+already been sucked into the towns and, if not openly, at any rate inwardly,
+surrendered their soil. The terrible truth came out at last in the edict of Pertinax,
+<span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 193, by which anyone in Italy or the provinces was permitted to
+take possession of untended land, and if he brought it under cultivation, to
+hold it as his legal property. The historical student has only to turn his
+attention seriously to other Civilizations to find the same phenomenon everywhere.
+Depopulation can be distinctly traced in the background of the Egyptian
+New Empire, especially from the XIX dynasty onwards. Street widths
+like those to Amenophis IV at Tell-el-Amarna—of fifty yards—would have
+been unthinkable with the denser population of the old days. The onset of
+the “Sea-peoples,” too, was only barely repulsed—their chances of obtaining
+possession of the realm were certainly not less promising than those of the
+Germans of the fourth century <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the Roman world. And finally the
+incessant infiltration of Libyans into the Delta culminated when one of their
+leaders seized the power, in 945 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>—precisely as Odoacer seized it in <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 476.
+But the same tendency can be felt in the history of political Buddhism after
+the Cæsar Asoka.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_156" href="#Footnote_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a> If the Maya population literally vanished within a very
+short time after the Spanish conquest, and their great empty cities were
+reabsorbed by the jungle, this does not prove merely the brutality of the conqueror—which
+in this regard would have been helpless before the self-renewing
+power of a young and fruitful Culture-mankind—but an extinction from
+within that no doubt had long been in progress. And if we turn to our own
+civilization, we find that the old families of the French noblesse were not, in
+the great majority of cases, eradicated in the Revolution, but have died out
+since 1815, and their sterility has spread to the bourgeoisie and, since 1870, to the
+peasantry which that very Revolution almost re-created. In England, and still
+more in the United States—particularly in the east, the very states where the
+stock is best and oldest—the process of “race suicide” denounced by Roosevelt
+set in long ago on the largest scale.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p107">[107]</span></p>
+
+<p>Consequently we find everywhere in these Civilizations that the provincial
+cities at an early stage, and the giant cities in turn at the end of the evolution,
+stand empty, harbouring in their stone masses a small population of fellaheen
+who shelter in them as the men of the Stone Age sheltered in caves and pile-dwellings.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_157" href="#Footnote_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a>
+Samarra was abandoned by the tenth century; Pataliputra, Asoka’s
+capital, was an immense and completely uninhabited waste of houses when
+the Chinese traveller Hsinan-tang visited it about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 635, and many of the
+great Maya cities must have been in that condition even in Cortez’s time.
+In a long series of Classical writers from Polybius onward&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_158" href="#Footnote_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a> we read of old,
+renowned cities in which the streets have become lines of empty, crumbling
+shells, where the cattle browse in forum and gymnasium, and the amphitheatre
+is a sown field,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_159" href="#Footnote_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a> dotted with emergent statues and herms. Rome had in the
+fifth century of our era the population of a village, but its Imperial palaces
+were still habitable.</p>
+
+<p>This, then, is the conclusion of the city’s history; growing from primitive
+barter-centre to Culture-city and at last to world-city, it sacrifices first the
+blood and soul of its creators to the needs of its majestic evolution, and then
+the last flower of that growth to the spirit of Civilization—and so, doomed,
+moves on to final self-destruction.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VI_2">
+ VI
+</h3>
+
+<p>If the Early period is characterized by the birth of the City out of the
+country, and the Late by the battle between city and country, the period of
+Civilization is that of the victory of city over country, whereby it frees itself
+from the grip of the ground, but to its own ultimate ruin. Rootless, dead
+to the cosmic, irrevocably committed to stone and to intellectualism, it develops
+a form-language that reproduces every trait of its essence—not the
+language of a becoming and growth, but that of a becomeness and completion,
+capable of alteration certainly, but not of evolution. Not now Destiny, but
+Causality, not now living Direction, but Extension, rules. It follows from
+this that whereas every form-language of a Culture, together with the history
+of its evolution, adheres to the original spot, civilized forms are at home
+anywhere and capable, therefore, of unlimited extension as soon as they appear.
+It is quite true that the Hanse Towns in their north-Russian staples built Gothically,
+and the Spaniards in South America in the Baroque style, but that even
+the smallest chapter of Gothic style-<em>history</em> should <em>evolve</em> outside the limits of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p108">[108]</span>West Europe was impossible, as impossible as that Attic or English drama,
+or the art of fugue, or the Lutheran or the Orphic religion should be propagated,
+or even inwardly assimilated, by men of alien Cultures. But the essence
+of Alexandrinism and of our Romanticism is something which belongs to all urban
+men without distinction. Romanticism marks the beginning of that which
+Goethe, with his wide vision, called world-literature—the literature of the
+leading world-<em>city</em>, against which a provincial literature, native to the soil
+but negligible, struggles everywhere with difficulty to maintain itself. The
+state of Venice, or that of Frederick the Great, or the English Parliament (as
+an effective reality), cannot be reproduced, but “modern constitutions” can be
+“introduced” into any African or Asiatic state as Classical Poleis could be set up
+amongst Numidians and ancient Britons. In Egypt the writing that came into
+common use was not the hieroglyphic, but the letter-script, which was without
+doubt a technical discovery of the Civilization Age.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_160" href="#Footnote_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> And so in general—it
+is not true Culture-languages like the Greek of Sophocles or the German
+of Luther, but world-languages like the Greek Koine and Arabic and
+Babylonian and English, the outcome of daily practical usage in a world-city,
+which are capable of being acquired by anybody and everybody. Consequently,
+in all Civilizations the “modern” cities assume a more and more
+uniform type. Go where we may, there are Berlin, London, and New York
+for us, just as the Roman traveller would find his columnar architecture,
+his fora with their statuary, and his temples in Palmyra or Trier or Timgad
+or the Hellenistic cities that extended out to the Indus and the Aral. But that
+which was thus disseminated was no longer a style, but a taste, not genuine
+custom but mannerism, not national costume but the fashion. This, of
+course, makes it possible for remote peoples not only to accept the “permanent”
+gains of a Civilization, but even to re-radiate them in an independent form.
+Such regions of “moonlight” civilization are south China and especially
+Japan (which were first Sinized at the close of the Han period, about
+<span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 220); Java as a relay of the Brahman Civilization; and Carthage, which
+obtained its forms from Babylon.</p>
+
+<p>All these are forms of a waking-consciousness now acute to excess, mitigated
+or limited by no cosmic force, purely intellectual and extensive, but on that
+very account capable of so powerful an output that their last flickering rays
+reach out and superpose effects over almost the whole earth. Fragments of
+the forms of Chinese Civilization are probably to be found in Scandinavian wood-architecture,
+Babylonian measures probably in the South Seas, Classical coins
+in South Africa, Egyptian and Indian influences probably in the land of the
+Incas.</p>
+
+<p>But while this process of extension was overpassing all frontiers, the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p109">[109]</span>development of inner form of the Civilization was fulfilling itself with impressive
+consistency. Three stages are clearly to be distinguished—the release
+from the Culture, the production of the thoroughbred Civilization-form,
+and the final hardening. For us this development has now set in, and, as I
+see it, it is Germany that is destined, as the last nation of the West, to crown
+the mighty edifice. In this stage all questions of the life—the Apollinian,
+Magian, or Faustian life—have been thought upon to the limit, and brought
+to a final clear condition of knowledge and not-knowledge. For or about
+ideas men fight no more. The last idea—that of the Civilization itself—is
+formulated in outline, and technics and economics are, as <em>problems</em>, enunciated
+and prepared for handling. But this is only the beginning of a vast task;
+the postulates have to be unfolded and these forms applied to the whole existence
+of the earth. Only when this has been accomplished and the Civilization
+has become definitely established not only in shape, but in mass,
+does the hardening of the form set in. Style, in the Cultures, has been the
+<em>rhythm of the process of self-implementing</em>. But the Civilized style (if we may
+use the word at all) arises as the <em>expression of the state of completeness</em>. It attains—in
+Egypt and China especially—to a splendid perfection, and imparts
+this perfection to all the utterances of a life that is now inwardly unalterable,
+to its ceremonial and mien as to the superfine and studied forms of its
+art-practice. Of history, in the sense of an urge towards a form-ideal, there
+can now be no question, but there is an unfailing and easy superficial adaptiveness
+which again and again manages to coax fresh little art-problems
+and solutions out of the now basically stable language. Of this kind is the
+whole “history” of Chinese-Japanese painting (as we know it) and of Indian
+architecture. And just as the real history of the Gothic style differs from this
+pseudo-history, so the Knight of the Crusades differs from the Chinese Mandarin—<em>the
+becoming state from the finished</em>. The one <em>is</em> history; the other has
+long ago overcome history. “Long ago,” I say; for the history of these
+Civilizations is merely apparent, like their great cities, which constantly
+change in face, but never become other than what they are. In these cities
+there is no Soul. They are land in petrified form.</p>
+
+<p>What is it that perishes here? And what that survives? It is a mere incident
+that German peoples, under pressure from the Huns, take possession of
+the Roman landscape and so prevent the Classical from prolonging itself in a
+“Chinese” end-state. The movement of the “Sea-peoples” (similar to the
+Germanic, even down to the details) which set in against the Egyptian Civilization
+from 1400 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> succeeded only as regards the Cretan island-realm—their
+mighty expeditions against the Libyan and Phœnician coasts, with the
+accompaniment of Viking fleets, failed, as those of the Huns failed against
+China. And thus the Classical is our one example of a Civilization broken off
+in the moment of full splendour. Yet the Germans only destroyed the upper
+<span class="pagenum" id="p110">[110]</span>layer of the forms and replaced it by the life of their own pre-Culture. The
+“eternal” layer was never reached. It remains, hidden and completely shrouded
+by a new form-language, in the underground of the whole following history,
+and to this day in southern France, southern Italy, and northern Spain tangible
+relics of it endure. In these countries the popular Catholicism is tinged from
+beneath with a Late Classical colouring, that sets it off quite distinctly from
+the Church Catholicism of the West-European layer above it. South Italian
+Church-festivals disclose Classical (and even pre-Classical) cults, and generally
+in this field there are to be found deities (saints) in whose worship the Classical
+constitution is visible behind the Catholic names.</p>
+
+<p>Here, however, another element comes into the picture, an element with
+a significance of its own. We stand before the problem of Race.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p111"></a><a id="p112"></a><a id="p113"></a>[113]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">
+ CHAPTER V
+ <br>
+ <span class="subtitle">CITIES AND PEOPLES
+ <br>
+ (B)
+ <br>
+ PEOPLES, RACES, TONGUES</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>Throughout the nineteenth century the scientific picture of history was
+vitiated by a notion that was either derived from, or at any rate brought to a
+point by, Romanticism—the idea of the “People” in the moral-enthusiastic
+sense of the word. If, here and there, in earlier time a new religion, a new
+ornamentation, a new architecture, or a new script appeared, the question
+that it raised presented itself to the investigator thus—What was the name
+of the <em>people</em> who produced the phenomenon? This enunciation of the problem
+is peculiar to the Western spirit and the present-day cast of that spirit; but
+it is so false at every point that the picture that it evokes of the course of
+events must necessarily be erroneous. “The people” as the absolute basic form
+in which men are historically effective, the original home, the original settlement,
+the migrations of “the” peoples—all this is a reflection of the vibrant
+idea expressed in the “<cite>Nation</cite>” of 1789, of the “<i lang="de">Volk</i>” of 1813, both of which,
+in last analysis, are derived from the self-assuredness of England and Puritanism.
+But the very intensity of passion that the idea contains has protected it only
+too well from criticism. Even acute investigators have unwittingly made it
+cover a multitude of utterly dissimilar things, with the result that “peoples”
+have developed into definite and supposedly well-understood unit-quantities
+by which all history is <em>made</em>. For us, to-day, world-history means—what it
+cannot be asserted to mean self-evidently, or to mean for, e.g., the Greeks
+and the Chinese—the history of Peoples. Everything else, Culture, speech,
+wit, religion, is created by the peoples. The State is the form of a people.</p>
+
+<p>The purpose of this chapter is to demolish this romantic conception. What
+has inhabited the earth since the Ice Age is man, not “peoples.” In the first
+instance, their Destiny is determined by the fact that the bodily succession of
+parents and children, the bond of the blood, forms natural groups, which disclose
+a definite tendency to take root in a landscape. Even nomadic tribes
+confine their movements within a limited field. Thereby the cosmic-plantlike
+side of life, of Being, is invested with a character of duration. This I call <em>race</em>.
+Tribes, septs, clans, families—all these are designations for the fact of a blood
+which circles, carried on by procreation, in a narrow or a wide landscape.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p114">[114]</span></p>
+
+<p>But these human beings possess also the microcosmic-animal side of life,
+in waking-consciousness and receptivity and reason. And the form in which
+the waking-consciousness of one man gets into relation with that of another
+I call <em>language</em>, which begins by being a mere unconscious living expression
+that is received as a sensation, but gradually develops into a conscious <em>technique
+of communication</em> that depends upon a common sense of the meanings attaching
+to signs.</p>
+
+<p>In the limit, every race is a single great body, and every language&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_161" href="#Footnote_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a> the
+efficient form of <em>one</em> great waking-consciousness that connects many individual
+beings. And we shall never reach the ultimate discoveries about either unless
+they are treated together and constantly brought into comparison with one
+another.</p>
+
+<p>But, further, we shall never understand man’s higher history if we ignore
+the fact that man, as constituent of a race and as possessor of a language, as
+derivative of a blood-unit and as member of an understanding-unit, has different
+Destinies, that of his being and that of his waking-being. That is, the origin,
+development, and duration of his race side and the origin, development, and
+duration of his language side are <em>completely independent of one another</em>. Race is
+<em>something cosmic and psychic</em> (<i lang="de">Seelenhaft</i>), periodic in some obscure way, and in its
+inner nature partly conditioned by major astronomical relations.</p>
+
+<p>Languages, on the other hand, are causal forms, and operate through the
+polarity of their means. We speak of race-instincts and of the spirit of a language.
+But they are two distinct <em>worlds</em>. To Race belong the deepest meanings
+of the words “time” and “yearning”; to language those of the words “space”
+and “fear.” But all this has been hidden from us, hitherto, by the overlying
+idea of “peoples.”</p>
+
+<p>There are, then, <em>currents of being</em> and <em>linkages of waking-being</em>. The former
+have physiognomy, the latter are based on system. Race, as seen in the picture
+of the world-around, is the aggregate of all bodily characters so far as these
+exist for the sense-perceptions of conscious creatures. Here we have to remember
+that a body develops and fulfils from childhood to old age the specific
+inner form that was assigned to it at the moment of its conception, while at
+the same time that which the body is (considered apart from its form) is perpetually
+being renewed. Consequently nothing of the body actually remains
+in the man except the living meaning of his existence, and of this all that we
+know is so much as presents itself in the world of waking-consciousness.
+Man of the higher sort is limited, as to the impression of race that he can receive,
+almost wholly to what appears in the light-world of his eye, so that for
+him race is essentially a sum of <em>visible</em> characters. But even for him there are not
+<span class="pagenum" id="p115">[115]</span>inconsiderable relics of the power to observe non-optical characters such as
+smell, the cries of animals, and, above all, the modalities of human speech. In
+the other higher animals, on the contrary, the capacity to receive the impression
+of race is decidedly <em>not</em> dominated by sight. Scent is stronger, and, besides, the
+animals have modes of sensation that entirely elude human understanding. It is,
+however, only men and animals that can <em>receive the impression of race</em>, and not the
+plants, and yet these too <em>have</em> race, as every nurseryman knows. It is, to me, a
+sight of deep pathos to see how the spring flowers, craving to fertilize and be
+fertilized, cannot for all their bright splendour attract one another, or even see
+one another, but must have recourse to animals, for whom alone these colours
+and these scents exist.</p>
+
+<p>“Language” I call the entire free activity of the waking microcosm in so far
+as it brings something to expression <em>for others</em>. Plants have no waking-being,
+no capacity of being moved, and therefore no language. The waking-consciousness
+of animal existences, on the contrary, is through and through a speaking,
+whether individual acts are intended to tell or not, and even if the conscious
+or the unconscious purpose of the doing lies in a quite other direction. A
+peacock is indubitably speaking when he spreads his tail, but a kitten playing
+with a cotton-reel also speaks to us, unconsciously, through the quaint charm
+of its movements. Everyone knows the difference there is in one’s movements
+according as one is conscious or unconscious of being observed; one suddenly
+begins to speak, consciously, in all one’s actions.</p>
+
+<p>This, however, leads at once to the very significant distinction between
+two genera of language—the language which is only an <em>expression for the
+world</em>, an inward necessity springing from the longing inherent in all life to
+actualize itself before witnesses, to display its own presence to itself, and the
+language that is meant to be <em>understood by definite beings</em>. There are, therefore,
+<em>expression-languages</em> and <em>communication-languages</em>. The former assume only a
+state of waking-being, the latter a connexion of waking-beings. To understand
+means to respond to the stimulus of a signal with one’s own feeling of its
+significance. To understand one another, to hold “conversation,” to speak to
+a “thou,” supposes, therefore, a sense of meanings in the other that corresponds
+to that in oneself. Expression-language before witnesses merely proves the
+presence of an “I,” but communication-language postulates a “thou.” The
+“I” is that which speaks, and the “thou” that which is meant to understand
+the speech of the “I.” For primitives a tree, a stone, or a cloud can be a “thou.”
+Every deity is a “thou.” In fairy-tales there is nothing that cannot hold
+converse with men, and we need only look at our own selves in moments of
+furious irritation or of poetic excitement to realize that anything can become
+a “thou” for us even to-day. And it is by some “thou” that we first came to
+the knowledge of an “I.” “I,” therefore, is a designation for the fact that a
+bridge exists to some other being.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p116">[116]</span></p>
+
+<p>It is impossible, however, to delimit an exact frontier between religious
+and artistic expression-languages and pure communication-languages. This is
+true also (and indeed specially) of the higher Cultures with the separate development
+of their form-domains. For, on the one hand, no one can speak without
+putting into his mode of speech some significant trait of emphasis that has
+nothing to do with the needs of communication as such; and, on the other
+hand, we all know the drama in which the poet wants to “say” something
+that he could have said equally well or better in an exhortation, and the painting
+whose contents are meant to instruct, warn, or improve—the picture-series
+in any Greek Orthodox church, which conforms to a strict canon and has
+the avowed purpose of making the truths of religion clear to a beholder to whom
+the book says nothing; or Hogarth’s substitute for sermons; or, for that matter,
+even prayer, the direct address to God, which also can be replaced by the
+performance before one’s eyes of cult-ritual that speaks to one intelligibly.
+The theoretical controversy concerning the purpose of art rests upon the postulate
+that an artistic expression-language should in no wise be a communication-language,
+and the phenomenon of priesthood is based upon the persuasion
+that the priest alone knows the language in which man can communicate with
+God.</p>
+
+<p>All currents of Being bear a historical, and all linkages of Waking-Being a
+religious, stamp. What we know to be inherent in every genuine religious or
+artistic form-language, and particularly in the history of every script (for writing
+is verbal language for the eye), holds good without doubt for the origin of
+human articulate speech in general—indeed the prime words (of the structure
+of which we now know nothing whatever) must also certainly have had a
+cult-colouring. But there is a corresponding linkage on the other side between
+Race and everything that we call life (as struggle for power), History (as
+Destiny), or, to-day, politics. It is perhaps too fantastic to argue something
+of political instinct in the search of a climbing plant for points of attachment
+that shall enable it to encircle, overpower, and choke the tree in order finally to
+rear itself high in the air above the tree-top—or something of religious world-feeling
+in the song of the mounting lark. But it is certain that from such
+things as these the utterances of being and of waking-being, of pulse and tension,
+form an uninterrupted series up to the perfected political and religious
+forms of every modern Civilization.</p>
+
+<p>And here at last is the key to those two strange words which were discovered
+by the ethnologists in two entirely different parts of the world in rather limited
+applications, but have since been quietly moving up into the foreground of
+research—“<em>totem</em>” and “<em>taboo</em>.” The more enigmatic and indefinable these
+words became, the more it was felt that in them we were touching upon an
+ultimate life-basis which was not that of merely primitive man. And now, as
+the result of the above inquiry, we have clear meanings for both before us.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p117">[117]</span>Totem and Taboo describe the ultimate meanings of Being and Waking-Being,
+Destiny and Causality, Race and Language, Time and Space, yearning and
+fear, pulse and tension, politics and religion. The Totem side of life is plantlike
+and inheres in all being, while the Taboo side is animal and presupposes
+the free movement of a being in a world. Our Totem organs are those of the
+blood-circulation and of reproduction, our Taboo organs those of the senses
+and the nerves. All that is of Totem has physiognomy, all that is of Taboo
+has system. In the Totemistic resides the common feeling of beings that
+belong to the same stream of existence. It cannot be acquired and cannot be
+got rid of; it is a fact, <em>the</em> fact of all facts. That which is of Taboo, on the
+other hand, is the characteristic of linkages of waking-consciousness, it is
+learnable and acquirable, and on that very account guarded as a secret by
+cult-communities, philosophers’ schools, and artists’ guilds—each of which
+possesses a sort of cryptic language of its own.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_162" href="#Footnote_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a></p>
+
+<p>But Being can be thought of without waking-consciousness, whereas the
+reverse is not the case—i.e., there are race-beings without language, but no
+languages without race. All that is of race, therefore, possesses its proper
+expression, independent of any kind of waking-consciousness and common to
+plant and animal. This expression—not to be confounded with the expression-<em>language</em>
+which consists in an <em>active alteration</em> of the expression—is not
+meant for witnesses, but is simply there; it is physiognomy. Not that it stops
+at the plant; in every living language, too (and how significant the word
+“living”!) we can detect, besides the Taboo side that is learnable, an entirely
+untransferable quality of race that the old vessels of the language cannot pass
+on to alien successors; it lies in melody, rhythm, stress; in colour, ring, and
+tempo of the expression; in idiom, in accompanying gesture. On this account
+it is necessary to distinguish between language and speaking, the first being in
+itself a dead stock of signs, and the second the activity that operates with the
+signs.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_163" href="#Footnote_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a> When we cease to be able to hear and see directly how a language is
+spoken, thenceforward it is only its ossature and not its flesh that we can know.
+This is so with Sumerian, Gothic, Sanskrit, and all other languages that we
+have merely deciphered from texts and inscriptions, and we are right in calling
+these languages dead, for the human communities that were formed by them
+have vanished. We know the Egyptian tongue, but not the tongues of the
+Egyptians. Of Augustan Latin we know approximately the sound-values of
+the letters and the meaning of the words, but we do not know how the oration
+<span class="pagenum" id="p118">[118]</span>of Cicero sounded from the rostra and still less how Hesiod and Sappho spoke
+their verses, or what a conversation in the Athenian market-place was really
+like. If in the Gothic age Latin came into actual speech again, it was as a
+new language; this Gothic Latin did not take long to pass from the formation
+of rhythms and sounds characteristic of itself (but which our imagination
+to-day cannot recapture, any more than those of old Latin) to encroachments
+upon the word-meanings and the syntax as well. But the anti-Gothic Latin
+of the Humanists, too, which was meant to be Ciceronian, was anything but
+a revival. The whole significance of the race-element in language can be
+measured by comparing the German of Nietzsche and of Mommsen, the French
+of Diderot and of Napoleon, and observing that in idiom Voltaire and Lessing
+are much closer together than Lessing and Hölderlin.</p>
+
+<p>It is the same with the most telling of all the expression-languages, art.
+The Taboo side—namely, the stock of forms, the rules of convention, and
+style in so far as it means an armoury of established expedients (like vocabulary
+and syntax in verbal language)—stands for the language itself, which can
+be learned. And it is learned and transmitted in the tradition of the great
+schools of painting, the cottage-building tradition, and generally in the
+strict craft-discipline which every genuine art possesses as a matter of course
+and which in all ages has been meant to give the sure command of the idiom
+that at a particular time is quite definitely living idiom of that time. For
+in this domain, too, there are living and dead languages. The form-language
+of an art can only be called living, when the artist corps as a whole employs it
+like a mother tongue, which one uses without even thinking about its structure.
+In this sense Gothic in the sixteenth century and Rococo in 1800 were both
+dead languages. Contrast the unqualified sureness with which architects
+and musicians of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries expressed themselves
+with the hesitations of Beethoven, the painfully acquired, almost self-taught,
+<em>philological</em> art of Schinkel and Schadow,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_164" href="#Footnote_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a> the manglings of the Pre-Raphaelites
+and the Neo-Gothics, and the baffled experimentalism of present-day artists.</p>
+
+<p>In an artistic form-language, as presented to us by its products, the voice of
+the Totem side, the race, makes itself heard, and not less so in individual
+artists than in whole generations of artists. The creators of the Doric temples
+of South Italy and Sicily, and those of the brick Gothic of North Germany were
+emphatically race-men, and so too the German musicians from Heinrich
+Schütz to Johann Sebastian Bach. To the Totem side belong the influences of
+the cosmic cycles—the importance of which in the structure of art-history
+has hardly been suspected, let alone established—and the creative times of
+spring and love-stirrings which (apart altogether from the executive sureness in
+<span class="pagenum" id="p119">[119]</span>imparting form) determine the force of the forms and the depth of the conceptions.
+The formalists are explained by depth of world-fear or by defect of
+“race,” and the great formless ones by plethora of blood or defect of discipline.
+We comprehend that there is a difference between the history of artists and that
+of styles, and that the language of an art may be carried from country to country,
+but mastery in speaking it, never.</p>
+
+<p>A race has roots. Race and landscape belong together. Where a plant takes
+root, there it dies also. There is certainly a sense in which we can, without
+absurdity, work backwards from a race to its “home,” but it is much more
+important to realize that the race adheres permanently to this home with some
+of its most essential characters of body and soul. If in that home the race
+cannot now be found, this means that the race has ceased to exist. A race does
+not migrate. Men migrate, and their successive generations are born in ever-changing
+landscapes; but the landscape exercises a secret force upon the plant-nature
+in them, and eventually the race-expression is completely transformed by
+the extinction of the old and the appearance of a new one. Englishmen and
+Germans did not migrate to America, but human beings migrated thither <em>as</em>
+Englishmen and Germans, and their descendants are there <em>as</em> Americans. It
+has long been obvious that the soil of the Indians has made its mark upon them—generation
+by generation they become more and more like the people they
+eradicated. Gould and Baxter have shown that Whites of all races, Indians,
+and Negroes have come to the same average in size of body and time of maturity—and
+that so rapidly that Irish immigrants, arriving young and developing
+very slowly, come under this power of the landscape within the same generation.
+Boas has shown that the American-born children of long-headed Sicilian and
+short-headed German Jews at once conform to the same head-type. This is not a
+special case, but a general phenomenon, and it should serve to make us very
+cautious in dealing with those migrations of history about which we know
+nothing more than some names of vagrant tribes and relics of languages (e.g.,
+Danai, Etruscans, Pelasgi, Achæans, and Dorians). As to the race of these
+“peoples” we can conclude nothing whatever. That which flowed into the
+lands of southern Europe under the diverse names of Goths, Lombards, and
+Vandals was without doubt a race in itself. But already by Renaissance times
+it had completely grown itself into the root characters of the Provençal, Castilian,
+and Tuscan soil.</p>
+
+<p>Not so with language. The home of a language means merely the accidental
+place of its formation, and this has no relation to its inner form. Languages
+migrate in that they spread by carriage from tribe to tribe. Above all, they
+are capable of being, and are, exchanged—indeed, in studying the early history
+of races we need not, and should not, feel the slightest hesitation about postulating
+such speech-changes. It is, I repeat, the form-content and not the
+speaking of a language that is taken over, and it is taken over (as primitives
+<span class="pagenum" id="p120">[120]</span>are for ever taking over ornament-motives) in order to be used with perfect
+sureness as elements of their own form-language. In early times the fact that a
+people has shown itself the stronger, or the feeling that its language possesses
+superior efficacy, is enough to induce others to give up their own language and—with
+genuinely religious awe—to take its language to themselves. Follow
+out the speech-changes of the Normans, whom we find in Normandy, England,
+Sicily, and Constantinople with different languages in each place, and ever
+ready to exchange one for another. Piety towards the mother tongue—the
+very term testifies to deep ethical forces, and accounts for the bitterness of
+our ever-recurring language-battles—is a trait of the <em>Late</em> Western soul, almost
+unknowable for the men of other Cultures and entirely so for the primitive.
+Unfortunately, our historians not only are sensible of this, but tacitly extend
+it as a postulate over their entire field, which leads to a multitude of fallacious
+conclusions as to the bearing of linguistic discoveries upon the fortunes of
+“peoples”—think of the reconstruction of the “Dorian migration,” argued
+from the distribution of later Greek dialects. It is impossible, therefore, to
+draw conclusions as to the fortunes of the race side of peoples from mere place-names,
+personal names, inscriptions, and dialects. Never do we know <i lang="la">a priori</i>,
+whether a folkname stands for a language-body, or a race-part, or both, or
+neither—besides which, folk-names themselves, and even land-names, have,
+as such, Destinies of their own.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_4">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>Of all expressions of race, the purest is the House. From the moment when
+man, becoming sedentary, ceases to be content with mere shelter and builds
+himself a dwelling, this expression makes its appearance and marks off, within
+the race “man” (which is the element of the <em>biological</em> world-picture&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_165" href="#Footnote_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a>) the
+human races of world-history proper, which are streams of being of far greater
+spiritual significance. The prime form of the house is everywhere a product of
+feeling and of growth, never at all of knowledge. Like the shell of the nautilus,
+the hive of the bee, the nest of the bird, it has an innate self-evidentness, and
+every trait of original custom and form of being, of marriage, of family life, and
+of tribal order is reflected in the place and in the room-organization of parterre,
+hall, wigwam, atrium, court, chamber, and gynæceum. One need only compare
+the lay-out of the old Saxon and that of the Roman house to feel that the soul
+of the men and the soul of the house were in each case identical.</p>
+
+<p>This domain art-history ought never to have laid its hands on. It was an
+error to treat the building of the dwelling-house as a branch of the art of architecture.
+It is a form that arises in the obscure courses of being and not for the
+eye that looks for forms in the light; no room-scheme of the boor’s hovel was
+ever thought out by an architect as the scheme of a cathedral was thought out.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p121">[121]</span>This significant frontier line has escaped the observation of art-research—although
+Dehio&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_166" href="#Footnote_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a> in one place remarks that the old German wooden house
+has nothing to do with the later great architecture, which arose quite independently—and
+the result has been a perpetual perplexity in method, of which
+the art-savant is sensible enough, but which he cannot understand. His science
+gathers, indiscriminately in all the “pre-” and “primitive” periods, all sorts of
+gear, arms, pottery, fabrics, funerary monuments, and houses, and considers
+them from the point of view of form as well as that of decoration; and, proceeding
+thus, it is not until he comes to the <em>organic</em> history of painting, sculpture,
+and architecture (i.e., the self-contained and differentiated arts) that he finds
+himself on firm ground. But, unknowing, he has stepped over a frontier between
+two worlds, that of soul-<em>expression</em> and that of visual expression-<em>language</em>.
+The house, and like it the completely unstudied basic (i.e., customary) forms
+of pots, weapons, clothing, and gear, belong to the Totem side. They characterize,
+not a taste, but a way of fighting, of dwelling, of working. Every
+primitive seat is the offset of a racial mode of body-posing, every jar-handle an
+extension of the supple arm. Domestic painting and dressmaking, the garment
+as ornament, the decoration of weapons and implements, belong, on the contrary,
+to the Taboo side of life, and indeed for primitive man the patterns and
+motives on these things possess even magical properties.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_167" href="#Footnote_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a> We all know the
+Germanic sword-blades of the Migrations with their Oriental ornamentation,
+and the Mycenæan strongholds with their Minoan artistry. It is the distinction
+between blood and sense, race and speech, <em>politics and religion</em>.</p>
+
+<p>There is, in fact, as yet no world-history of the House and its Races, and
+to give us such a history should be one of the most urgent tasks of the researcher.
+But we must work with means quite other than those of art-history. The
+peasant dwelling is, as compared with the tempo of all <em>art</em>-history, something
+constant and “eternal” like the peasant himself. It stands outside the Culture
+and therefore outside the higher history of man; it recognizes neither the
+temporal nor the spacial limits of this history and it maintains itself, unaltered
+ideally, throughout all the changes of architecture, which it witnesses,
+but in which it does not participate. The round hut of ancient Italy is still
+found in Imperial times.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_168" href="#Footnote_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> The form of the Roman rectangular house, the
+existence-mark of a second race, is found in Pompeii and even in the Imperial
+palaces. Every sort of ornament and style was borrowed from the Orient, but
+no Roman would ever think of imitating the Syrian house,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_169" href="#Footnote_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a> any more than the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p122">[122]</span>Hellenistic city-architect tampered with the megaron form of Mycenæ and
+Tiryns and the old Greek peasant-house described by Galen. The Saxon and
+Franconian peasant-house kept its essential nucleus unimpaired right from the
+country farm, through the burgher-house of the old Free Cities, up to the patrician
+buildings of the eighteenth century, while Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque,
+and Empire styles glided over it one after the other, clothing it from cellar to
+garret with <em>their</em> essences, but never perverting the Soul of the House. And
+the same is true of the furniture-forms, in which we have to distinguish carefully
+the psychological from the artistic treatment. In particular, the evolution
+of the Northern seat-furniture is, right up to the club arm-chair, a piece of race-history
+and not of what is called style-history. Every other character can
+deceive us as to the fortunes of race—the Etruscan names amongst the “Sea-folk”
+defeated by Rameses III, the enigmatic inscription of Lemnos, the wall-paintings
+in the tombs of Etruria, afford no sure evidences of the bodily
+connexion of these men. Although towards the end of the Stone Age a telling
+ornamentation arose and continued in the vast region east of the Carpathians,
+it is perfectly possible that race superseded race there. If we possessed in
+western Europe only pottery remains for the centuries between Trojan
+and Chlodwig, we should not have the least inkling of the event that we know
+as the “great Migrations.” But the presence of an oval house in the Ægean
+region&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_170" href="#Footnote_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a>
+ and of another and very striking example of it in Rhodesia,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_171" href="#Footnote_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a> and the
+much-discussed concordance of the Saxon peasant-house with that of the Libyan
+Kabyle disclose a piece of race-history. Ornaments spread when a people
+incorporates them in its form-language, but a house-type is only transplanted
+along with its race. The disappearance of an ornament means no more than a
+change of language, <em>but when a house-type vanishes it means that race is extinguished</em>.</p>
+
+<p>It follows that art-history, besides taking care to begin properly with the
+Culture, must not neglect even in its course to separate the race side carefully
+from the language proper. At the outset of a Culture two well-defined forms of
+a higher order rise up over the peasant village, as expressions of being and
+language of waking-being. They are the <em>castle</em> and the <em>cathedral</em>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_172" href="#Footnote_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a> In them the
+distinction between Totem and Taboo, longing and fear, blood and intellect,
+rises to a grand symbolism. The ancient Egyptian, the ancient Chinese, the
+Classical, the South-Arabian, and the Western castle stands, as the home of
+continuing generations, very near to the peasant cottage, and both, as copies
+of the realities of living, breeding, and dying, lie outside all art-history. The
+history of the German <i lang="de">Burgen</i> is a piece of race-history throughout. On them
+both, early ornament does indeed venture to spread itself, beautifying here
+<span class="pagenum" id="p123">[123]</span>the beams, there the door, and there again the staircase, but it can be so, or so,
+at choice, or omitted altogether, for there is no inward bond between the
+structure and the ornament. The cathedral, on the other hand, is not ornamented,
+but <em>is itself ornament</em>. Its history is coincident with that of the Gothic
+style, and the same is true of the Doric temple and all other Early Culture
+buildings. So complete is the congruence, in the Western and every other
+Culture whose art we know at all, that it has never occurred to anyone to be
+astonished at the fact that strict architecture (which is simply the highest
+form of pure ornament) is entirely confined to religious building. All the
+beauty of architecture that there is in Gelnhausen, Goslar, and the Wartburg
+has been <em>taken over</em> from cathedral art; it is decoration and not essence. A
+castle or a sword or a pitcher can do without this decoration altogether without
+losing its meaning or even its form.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_173" href="#Footnote_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a> But in a Cathedral, or an Egyptian
+pyramid-temple, such a distinction between essence and art is simply inconceivable.</p>
+
+<p>We distinguish, then, the building that <em>has a style</em> and the building <em>in which</em>
+men have a style. Whereas in monastery and cathedral it is the stone that possesses
+form and communicates it to the men who are in its service, in farmhouse
+and feudal stronghold it is the full strength of the countryman’s and the knight’s
+life that forms the building forth from itself. Here the man and not the stone
+comes first, and here, too, there is an ornamentation; it is an ornament which
+is proper to man and consists in the strict nature and stable form <em>of manners and
+customs</em>. We might call this living, as distinct from rigid, style. But, just as
+the power of this living form lays hands on the priesthood also, creating in
+Gothic and in Vedic times the type of the knightly priest, so the Romanesque-Gothic
+<em>sacred</em> form-language seizes upon everything pertaining to this secular
+life—costume, arms, rooms, implements, and so forth—and stylizes their
+surface. But art-history must not let itself lose its bearings in this alien world—it
+is only the surface.</p>
+
+<p>In the early cities it is the same; nothing new supervenes. Amongst the
+race-made houses, which now form streets, there are scattered the handful of
+cult-buildings that <em>have</em> style. And, as having it, they are the seats of art-history
+and the sources whence its forms radiate out on to squares, façades,
+and house-rooms. Even though the castle develops into the urban palace and
+patrician residence, and the <i lang="la">palatium</i> and the men’s hall, into guild-house
+and town-hall, one and all they receive and carry a style, they do not <em>have</em> it.
+True, at the stage of real burgherdom the metaphysical creativeness of the
+early religion has been lost. It develops the ornament further, <em>but not the building
+as ornament</em>, and from this point art-history splits up into the histories of
+the separate arts. The picture, the statue, the house, become particular objects
+<span class="pagenum" id="p124">[124]</span>to which the style is to be applied. Even the church itself is now such a house.
+A Gothic cathedral <em>is</em> ornament, but a Baroque hall-church is a building clothed
+with ornament. The process begun in the Ionic style and the sixteenth century is
+completed in the Corinthian and Rococo, wherein the house and its ornament
+are separated for good and all, so completely that even the master-works
+amongst eighteenth-century churches and monasteries cannot mislead us—we
+know that all this art of theirs is secular, is adornment. With Empire
+the style transforms itself into a “taste,” and with the end of this mode architecture
+turns into a craft-art. And that is the end of the ornamental expression-language,
+and of art-history with it. But the peasant-house, with its unaltered
+race-form, lives on.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_4">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>The practical importance of the house as race-expression begins to be appreciated
+as and when one realizes the immense difficulty of approaching the
+kernel of race. I do not refer to its inner essence, its soul—as to that, feeling
+speaks to us clearly enough and we all know a man of race, a “thoroughbred,”
+when we see one. But what are the hall-marks for our sense, and above all
+for our eye, by which we recognize and distinguish races? This is a matter
+that belongs to the domain of Physiognomic just as surely as the classification
+of tongues belongs to that of Systematic. But how immense and how varied
+the material that would be required! How much of it is irretrievably lost by
+destruction, and how much more by corruption! In the most favourable cases,
+what we have of prehistoric men is their skeletons, and how much does a
+skeleton <em>not</em> tell us! Very nearly everything. Prehistoric research in its naïve
+zeal is ready to deduce the incredible from a jaw-bone or an arm-bone. But
+think of one of those mass-graves of the War in northern France, in which we
+<em>know</em> that men of all races, white and coloured, peasants and townsmen, youths
+and men lie together. If the future had no collateral evidence as to their nature,
+it would certainly not be enlightened by anthropological research. In
+other words, immense dramas of race can pass over a land without the investigator
+of its grave-skeletons obtaining the least hint of the fact. It is the <em>living</em>
+body that carries nine-tenths of the expression—not the articulation of the
+parts, but their articulate motions; not the bone of the face, but its mien.
+And, for that matter, how much potentially interpretable race-expression is
+actually observed even by the keenest-sensed contemporary? How much we
+<em>fail</em> to see and to hear! What is it for which—unlike many species of beasts—we
+lack a sense-organ?</p>
+
+<p>The science of the Darwinian age met this question with an easy assurance.
+How superficial, how glib, how mechanistic the conception with which it
+worked! In the first place, this conception groups an aggregate of such grossly
+palpable characters as are observable in the anatomy of the discoveries—that
+<span class="pagenum" id="p125">[125]</span>is, characters that even a corpse displays. As to observing the body qua
+living thing, there is no question of it. Secondly, it investigates only those
+signs which very little perspicacity is needed to detect, and investigates them
+only in so far as they are measurable and countable. The microscope and not
+the pulse-sense determines. When language is used as a differentia, it is to
+classify races, not according to their <em>way of speaking</em>, but according to the grammatical
+<em>structure of the speech</em>, which is just anatomy and system of another
+sort. No one as yet has perceived that the investigation of these <em>speech-races</em>
+is one of the most important tasks that research can possibly set itself. In the
+actuality of daily experience we all know perfectly well that the way of
+speaking is one of the most distinctive traits in present-day man—examples
+are legion; each of us knows any number of them. In Alexandria the same
+Greek was spoken in the most dissimilar race-modes, as we can see even to-day
+from the script of the texts. In North America the native-born speak exactly
+alike, whether in English, in German, or for that matter in Indian. What in
+the speech of East-European Jews is a race-trait of the land, and present therefore
+in Russian also, and what is a race-trait of the blood common to all Jews,
+independent of their habitat and their hosts, in their speaking of any of the
+European “mother”-tongues? What in detail are the relations of the sound-formations,
+the accentuations, the placing of words?</p>
+
+<p>But science has completely failed to note that race is not the same for rooted
+plants as it is for mobile animals, that with the microcosmic side of life a
+fresh group of characters appears, and that for the animal world it is decisive.
+Nor again has it perceived that a completely different significance must be attached
+to “races” when the word denotes subdivisions <em>within the integral race
+“Man.”</em> With its talk of adaptation and of inheritance it sets up a soulless
+causal concatenation of superficial characters, and blots out the fact that here
+the blood and there the power of the land over the blood are expressing themselves—secrets
+that cannot be inspected and measured, but only livingly experienced
+and felt from eye to eye.</p>
+
+<p>Nor are the scientists at one as to the relative rank of these superficial
+characters amongst themselves. Blumenbach classified the races of man according
+to skull-forms, Friedrich Müller (as a true German) by hair and language-structure,
+Topinard (as a true Frenchman) by skin-colour and shape of
+nose, and Huxley (as a true Englishman) by, so to say, sport characteristics.
+This last is undoubtedly in itself a very suitable criterion, but any judge of
+horses would tell him that breed-characteristics cannot be hit off by scientific
+terminology. These “descriptions” of races are without exception as worthless
+as the descriptions of “wanted” men on which policemen exercise their theoretical
+knowledge of men.</p>
+
+<p>Obviously, the <em>chaotic</em> in the total expression of the human body is not in
+the least realized. Quite apart from smell (which for the Chinese, for example,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p126">[126]</span>is a most characteristic mark of race) and sound (the sound of speech, song,
+and, above all, laughter, which enables us accurately to sense deep differences
+inaccessible to scientific method) the profusion of images before the eye is so
+embarrassingly rich in details, either actually visible or sensible to the inner
+vision, that the possibility of marshalling them under a few aspects is simply
+unthinkable. And all these sides to the picture, all these traits composing it,
+are independent of one another and have each their individual history. There
+are cases in which the bony structure (and particularly the skull-form) completely
+alter without the expression of the fleshy parts—i.e., the face—becoming
+different. The brothers and sisters of the same family may all present
+almost every differentia posited by Blumenbach, Müller, and Huxley, and yet
+the identity of their living race-expression may be patent to anyone who looks
+at them. Still more frequent is similarity of bodily build accompanied by
+thorough diversity of living expression—I need only mention the immeasurable
+difference between genuine peasant-stock, like the Frisians or the Bretons,
+and genuine city-stock.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_174" href="#Footnote_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a> But besides the energy of the blood—which coins
+the same living features (“family” traits) over and over again for centuries—and
+the power of the soil—evidenced in its stamp of man—there is that
+mysterious cosmic force of the syntony of close human connexions. What is
+called the “<i lang="de">Versehen</i>” of a pregnant woman&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_175" href="#Footnote_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a> is only a particular and not very
+important instance of the workings of a very deep and powerful formative
+principle inherent in all that is of the race side. It is a matter of common
+observation that elderly married people become strangely like one another,
+although probably Science with its measuring instruments would “prove”
+the exact opposite. It is impossible to exaggerate the formative power of this
+living pulse, this strong inward feeling for the perfection of one’s own type.
+The feeling for race-beauty—so opposite to the conscious taste of ripe urbans
+for intellectual-individual traits of beauty—is immensely strong in primitive
+men, and for that very reason never emerges into their consciousness. But
+such a feeling is race-forming. It undoubtedly moulded the warrior- and hero-type
+of a nomad tribe more and more definitely on <em>one bodily ideal</em>, so that it
+would have been quite unambiguous to speak of the race-figure of Romans or
+Ostrogoths. The same is true of any ancient nobility—filled with a strong
+and deep sense of its own unity, it achieves the formation of a bodily ideal.
+Comradeship breeds races. French <i lang="fr">noblesse</i> and Prussian <i lang="nl">Landadel</i> are genuine
+race-denotations. But it is just this, too, that has bred the types of the European
+<span class="pagenum" id="p127">[127]</span>Jew, with his immense race-energy and his thousand years of ghetto life;
+and it always will forge a population into a race whenever it has stood for long
+together spiritually firm and united in the presence of its Destiny. Where a
+race-ideal exists, as it does, supremely, in the Early period of the Culture—the
+Vedic, the Homeric, the knightly times of the Hohenstaufen—the yearning
+of a ruling class towards this ideal, its will to be just <em>so</em> and not otherwise,
+operates (quite independently of the choosing of wives) towards actualizing
+this ideal and eventually achieves it. Further, there is a statistical aspect of the
+matter which has received far less attention than it should. For every human
+being alive to-day there were a million ancestors even in <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1300 and ten
+million in <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1000. This means that every German now living, without
+exception, is a blood-relative of every European of the age of the Crusades
+and that the relationship becomes a hundred and a thousand times more intensely
+close as we narrow the limits of its field, so that within twenty generations
+or less the population of a land grows together into <em>one single family</em>;
+and this, together with the choice and voice of the blood that courses through
+the generations, ever driving congeners into one another’s arms, dissolving and
+breaking marriages, evading or forcing all obstacles of custom, leads to innumerable
+procreations that in utter unconsciousness fulfil the <em>will of the race</em>.</p>
+
+<p>Primarily, this applies to the vegetal race-traits, the “physiognomy of
+position,” as apart from movement of the mobile—i.e., everything which
+does <em>not</em> differ in the living and in the dead animal-body and cannot but express
+itself even in stiffened members. There is undoubtedly something cognate
+in the growth of an ilex or a Lombardy poplar and that of a man—“thickset,”
+“slim,” “drooping,” and so forth. Similarly, the outline of
+the back of a dromedary, or the striping of a tiger- or zebra-skin is a vegetal
+race-mark. And so, too, are the motion-actions of nature <em>upon and with a creature</em>—a
+birch-tree or a delicately built child, which both sway in the wind, an
+oak with its splintered crown, the steady circles or frightened flutterings of
+birds in the storm, all belong to the plant side of race. But on which side of
+the line do such characters stand when <em>blood and soil contend for the inner form of the
+“transplanted” species</em>, human or animal? And how much of the constitution of
+the soul, the social code, the house, is of this kind?</p>
+
+<p>It is quite another picture that presents itself when we attune ourselves to
+receive the impressions of the purely animal. The difference between plantwise
+being and animalwise waking-being (to recall what has been said earlier)
+is such that we are here concerned, not simply with waking-being itself and its
+language, but with the combination of cosmic and microcosmic to form a freely
+moving body, a microcosm <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> a macrocosm, whose independent life-activity
+possesses an expression peculiar to itself, which makes use in part of
+the organs of waking-consciousness and which—as the corals show—is
+mostly lost again with the cessation of mobility.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p128">[128]</span></p>
+
+<p>If the race-expression of the plant consists predominantly in the physiognomy
+of position, the animal-expression resides in <em>a physiognomy of movement</em>—namely,
+in the form as having motion, in the motion itself, and in the set of
+the limbs as figuring the motion. Of this race-expression not very much is
+revealed in the sleeping animal, and far less still in the dead animal, whose parts
+the scientist explores; we have practically nothing to learn now about the
+skeleton of the vertebrate. Hence it is that in vertebrates the limbs are more
+expressive than the bones. Hence it is that the limb-masses are the true seat of
+expressiveness in contrast to the ribs and skull-bones—the jaw being an
+exception in that its structure discloses the character of the animal’s food,
+whereas the plant’s nutrition is a mere <em>process of nature</em>. Hence it is, again, that
+the insect’s skeleton, which clothes its body, is fuller of expression than the
+bird’s, which is clothed by its body. It is pre-eminently the organs of the outer
+sheath that more and more forcefully gather the race-expression to themselves—the
+eye, not as a thing of form and colour, but as <em>glance</em> and expressive
+<em>visage</em>; the mouth, which becomes through the usage of speech the expression
+of understanding; and the head (not the skull), with its lineaments formed by
+the flesh, which has become the very throne of the non-vegetable side of life.
+Consider how, on the one hand, we breed orchids and roses and, on the other,
+we breed horses and dogs—and would like human beings to be bred, too.
+But it is not, I repeat, the mathematical form of the visible parts, but exclusively
+the expression of the movement, that displays this physiognomy.
+When we seize at a glance the race-expression of a motionless man, it is because
+our experienced eye sees the appropriate motion already potentially in the
+limbs. The real race-appearance of a bison, a trout, a golden eagle, is not to be
+reproduced by any reckoning of the creature’s plane or solid dimensions; and
+the deep attractiveness that they possess for the creative artist comes precisely
+from the fact that the secret of race can reveal itself in the picture <em>by way of the
+soul</em> and not by any mere imitation of the visible. One has to see and, seeing,
+to feel how the immense energy of this life concentrates upon head and neck,
+how it speaks in the bloodshot eye, in the short compact horn, in the “aquiline”
+beak and profile of the bird of prey—to mention one or two only of the
+innumerable points that cannot be communicated by words and are only expressible,
+by me for you, in the language of an art.</p>
+
+<p>But with such hall-marks as those quoted, characterizing the noblest sorts
+of animals, we come very near to the concept of race which enables us to perceive
+within the type “mankind” differences of a higher sort than either the
+vegetable or the animal—differences that are spiritual rather, and <i lang="la">eo ipso</i>
+less accessible to scientific methods. The coarse characters of the skeletal
+structure have ceased to possess independent importance. Already Retzius
+(d. 1860) had put an end to the belief of Blumenbach that race and skull-formation
+are coincident, and J. Ranke summarizes his tenets in these
+<span class="pagenum" id="p129">[129]</span>words:&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_176" href="#Footnote_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a>
+ “What in point of variety of skull-formation is displayed by mankind
+in general is displayed also on the smaller scale by every tribe (<i lang="de">Volksstamm</i>)
+and even by many fair-sized communities—a union of the different skull-forms
+with the extremes led up to through finely graduated intermediate forms.”
+No one would deny that it is reasonable to seek for ideal basic forms, but the
+researcher ought not to lose sight of the fact that these are ideals and that,
+for all the objectivity of his measurements, it is his taste that really fixes his
+limits and his classification. Much more important than any attempts to
+discover an ordering principle is the fact that within the unit “humanity” all
+these forms occur and have occurred from the earliest ice-times, that they
+have never markedly varied, and that they are found indiscriminately even
+within the same families. The one certain result of science is that observed
+by Ranke, that when skull-forms are arranged serially with respect to transitions,
+certain averages emerge which are characteristic not of “race,” but of
+the land.</p>
+
+<p>In reality, the race-expression of a human head can associate itself with
+any conceivable skull-form, the decisive element being not the bone, but the
+flesh, the look, the play of feature. Since the days of Romanticism we have
+spoken of an “Indogermanic” race. But is there such a thing as an Aryan or
+a Semitic skull? Can we distinguish Celtic and Frankish skulls, or even Boer
+and Kaffir? And if not, what may not the earth have witnessed in the way of
+history unknown to us, for which not the slightest evidences, but only bones,
+remain! How unimportant these are for that which we call race in higher
+mankind can be shown by a drastic experiment. Take a set of men with every
+conceivable race-difference, and, while mentally picturing “race,” observe
+them in an X-ray apparatus. The result is simply comic. As soon as light is
+let through it, “race” vanishes suddenly and completely.</p>
+
+<p>It cannot be too often repeated, moreover, that the little that is really
+illustrative in skeletal structure is a growth of the landscape and never a function
+of the blood. Elliot Smith in Egypt and von Luschen in Crete have examined
+an immense material yielded by graves ranging from the Stone Age to
+the present day. From the “Sea-peoples” of the middle of the second millennium
+<span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> to the Arabs and the Turks one human stream after another has passed
+over this region, but the average bone-structure has remained unaltered. It
+would be true, in a measure, to say that “race” has travelled as flesh over the
+fixed skeleton-form of the land.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_177" href="#Footnote_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a> The Alpine region to-day contains “peoples”
+<span class="pagenum" id="p130">[130]</span>of the most diverse origins—Teuton, Latin, Slav—and we need only glance
+backward to discover Etruscans and Huns there also. Tribe follows tribe.
+But the skeletal structure in the mankind of the region in general is ever the
+same, and only on the edges, towards the plains, does it gradually disappear
+in favour of other forms, which are themselves likewise fixed. As to race,
+therefore, and the race-wanderings of primitive men, the famous finds of prehistoric
+bones, Neanderthal to Aurignacian, prove nothing. Apart from some
+conclusions from the jaw-bone as to the kinds of food eaten, they merely indicate
+the basic land-form that is found there to this day.</p>
+
+<p>Once more, it is the mysterious power of the soil, demonstrable at once in
+every living being as soon as we discover a criterion independent of the heavy
+hand of the Darwinian age. The Romans brought the vine from the South to
+the Rhine, and there it has certainly not visibly—i.e., botanically—changed.
+But in this instance “race” can be determined in other ways. There is a soil-born
+difference not merely between Southern and Northern, between Rhine
+and Moselle wines, but even between the products of every different site on
+every different hill-side; and the same holds good for every other high-grade
+vegetable “race,” such as tea and tobacco. Aroma, a genuine growth of the
+country-side, is one of the hall-marks (all the more significant because they
+cannot be measured) of true race. But noble races of men are differentiated in
+just the same intellectual way as noble wines. There is a like element, only
+sensible to the finest perceptions, a faint aroma in every form, that underneath
+all higher Culture connects the Etruscans and the Renaissance in Tuscany,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_178" href="#Footnote_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> and
+the Sumerians, the Persians of 500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, and the Persians of Islam on the Tigris.</p>
+
+<p>None of this is accessible to a science that measures and weighs. It exists
+for the feelings—with a plain certainty and at the first glance—but not
+for the savant’s treatment. And the conclusion to which I come is that Race,
+like Time and Destiny, is a decisive element in every question of life, something
+which everyone knows clearly and definitely so long as he does not try to set
+himself to comprehend it by way of rational—i.e., soulless—dissection
+and ordering. Race, Time, and Destiny belong together. But the moment
+scientific thought approaches them, the word “Time” acquires the significance
+<span class="pagenum" id="p131">[131]</span>of a dimension, the word “Destiny” that of causal connexion, while Race,
+for which even at that stage of scientific <i>askesis</i> we still retain a very sure feeling,
+becomes an incomprehensible chaos of unconnected and heterogeneous characters
+that (under headings of land, period, culture, stock) interpenetrate
+without end and without law. Some adhere toughly and permanently to a
+stock and are transmissible; others glide over a population like mere cloud-shadows;
+and many are, as it were, dæmons of the land, which possess everyone
+who inhabits it for as long as he stays in it. Some expel one another, some
+seek one another. A strict classification of races—the ambition of all ethnology—is
+impossible. The attempt is foredoomed from the start, as it contradicts
+this very essence of the racial, and every systematic lay-out always has
+been and will be, inevitably, a falsification and misapprehension of the nature of
+its subject. Race, in contrast to speech, is unsystematic through and through.
+In the last resort every individual man and every individual moment of his
+existence have their own race. And therefore the only mode of approach to the
+Totem side is, not classification, but physiognomic fact.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_4">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>He who would penetrate into the essence of language should begin by
+putting aside all the philologist’s apparatus and observe how a hunter speaks
+to his dog. The dog follows the outstretched finger. He listens, tense, to
+the sound of the word, but shakes his head—this kind of man-speech he does
+not understand. Then he makes one or two sentences to indicate <em>his</em> idea;
+he stands still and barks, which in his language is a sentence containing the
+question: “Is that what Master means?” Then, still in dog language, he
+expresses his pleasure at finding that he was right. In just the same way two
+men who do not really possess a single word in common seek to understand
+one another. When a country parson explains something to a peasant-woman,
+he looks at her keenly, and, unconsciously, he puts into his look the essence
+that she would certainly never be able to understand from a parsonic mode of
+expression. The locutions of to-day, without exception, are capable of comprehension
+only in association with other modes of speech—adequate by
+themselves they are not, and never have been.</p>
+
+<p>If the dog, now, wants something, he wags his tail; impatient of Master’s
+stupidity in not understanding this perfectly distinct and expressive speech,
+he adds a vocal expression—he barks—and finally an expression of attitude—he
+mimes or makes signs. Here the man is the obtuse one who has not yet
+learned to talk.</p>
+
+<p>Finally something very remarkable happens. When the dog has exhausted
+every other device to comprehend the various speeches of his master, he suddenly
+plants himself squarely, and his eye bores into the eye of the human.
+Something deeply mysterious is happening here—the immediate contact
+<span class="pagenum" id="p132">[132]</span>of Ego and Tu. The look emancipates from the limitations of waking-consciousness.
+Being understands itself without signs. Here the dog has become
+a “judge” of men, looking his opposite straight in the eye and grasping,
+behind the speech, the speaker.</p>
+
+<p>Languages of these kinds we habitually use without being conscious of the
+fact. The infant speaks long before it has learned its first word, and the
+grown-up talks with it without even thinking of the ordinary meanings of the
+words he or she is using—that is, the sound-forms in this case subserve a language
+that is quite other than that of words. Such languages also have their
+groups and dialects; they, too, can be learned, mastered, and misunderstood,
+and they are so indispensable to us that verbal language would mutiny if we
+were to attempt to make it do all the work without assistance from tone- and
+gesture-language. Even our script, which is verbal language for the eye, would
+be almost incomprehensible but for the aid that it gets from gesture-language in
+the form of punctuation.</p>
+
+<p>It is the fundamental mistake of linguistic science that it confuses language
+in general with human word-language—and that not merely theoretically,
+but habitually in the practical conduct of all its investigations. As a result,
+it has remained immensely ignorant of the vast profusion of speech-modes
+of different kinds that are in common use amongst beasts and men. The domain
+of speech, taken as a whole, is far wider, and verbal speech, with its incapacity
+to stand alone (an incapacity not wholly shaken off, even now) has really
+a much more modest part in it, than its students have observed. As to the
+“origin of human speech,” the very phrase implies a wrong enunciation
+of the problem. Verbal speech—for that is what is meant—never had
+origins at all in the sense here postulated. It is not primary, and it is not
+unitary. The vast importance to which it has attained, since a certain stage in
+man’s history, must not deceive us as to its position in the history of free-moving
+entity. An investigation into speech certainly ought not to begin
+with man.</p>
+
+<p>But the idea of a beginning for animal language, too, is erroneous. Speaking
+is so closely bound up with the living being of the animal (in contradiction
+to the mere being of the plant) that not even unicellular creatures devoid of all
+sense-organs can be conceived of as speechless. To be a microcosm in the
+macrocosm is one and the same thing as having a power to communicate oneself
+to another. To speak of a beginning of speech in animal history is meaningless.
+For that microcosmic existences are <em>in plurality</em> is a matter of simple self-evidence.
+To speculate on other possibilities is mere waste of time. Granted that Darwinian
+fancies about an original generation and first pairs of ancestors belong
+with the Victorian rearguard and should be left there, still the fact remains
+that swarms also are awake and aware, inwardly and livingly sensible, of a
+“we,” and reaching out to one another for linkages of waking-consciousness.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p133">[133]</span></p>
+
+<p>Waking-being is activity in the extended; and, further, is willed activity.
+This is the distinction between the movements of a microcosm and the mechanical
+mobility of the plant, the animal, or the man in the plant-state—i.e.,
+asleep. Consider the animal activity of nutrition, procreation, defence,
+attack—one side of it regularly consists in getting into touch with the macrocosm
+by means of the senses, whether it be the undifferentiated sensitivity of
+the unicellular creature or the vision of a highly developed eye that is in question.
+Here there is a definite <em>will to receive impression</em>; this we call orientation.
+But, besides, there exists from the beginning a <em>will to produce impression in the
+other</em>—what we call expression—and with that, at once, we have <em>speaking
+as an activity of the animal waking-consciousness</em>. Since then nothing fundamentally
+new has supervened. The world-languages of high Civilizations are nothing
+but exceedingly refined expositions of potentialities that were all implicitly
+contained in the fact of willed impressions of unicellular creatures upon one
+another.</p>
+
+<p>But the foundations of this fact lie in the primary feeling of fear. The waking-consciousness
+makes a cleft in the cosmic, projects a space between particulars,
+and alienates them. To feel oneself alone is one’s first impression in the
+daily awakening, and hence the primitive impulse to crowd together in
+the midst of this alien world, to assure oneself sensibly of the proximity of the
+other, to seek a conscious connexion with him. The “thou” is deliverance
+from the fear of the being-alone. <em>The discovery of the Thou</em>, the sense of another
+self resolved organically and spiritually out of the world of the alien, is the
+grand moment in the early history of the animal. Thereupon animals <em>are</em>.
+One has only to look long and carefully into the tiny world of a water-droplet
+under the microscope to be convinced that the discovery of the Thou, and <em>with
+it that of the I</em> has been taking place here in its simplest imaginable form. These
+tiny creatures know not only the Other, but also the Others; they possess not
+merely waking-consciousness but also relations of waking-consciousness, and
+therewith not only expression, but the elements of an expression-<em>speech</em>.</p>
+
+<p>It is well to recall here the distinction between the two great speech-groups.
+Expression-speech treats the Other as witness, and aims purely at effects upon
+him, while communication-speech regards him as a collocutor and expects
+him to answer. To understand means to receive impressions with one’s own
+feeling of their significance, and it is on this that the effect of the highest form
+of human expression-speech, art, depends.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_179" href="#Footnote_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a> To come to an understanding,
+to hold a conversation, postulates that the Other’s feeling of significances is
+the same as one’s own. The elementary unit of an expression-speech before
+witnesses is called the Motive. Command of the motive is the basis of all
+<span class="pagenum" id="p134">[134]</span>expression-technique. On the other hand, the impression produced for the
+purpose of an understanding is called the Sign, and is the elementary unit of all
+communication-technique—including, therefore, at the highest level, human
+speech.</p>
+
+<p>Of the extensiveness of both these speech-worlds in the waking-consciousness
+of man we to-day can scarcely form an idea. Expression-speech, which
+appears in the earliest times with all the religious seriousness of the Taboo,
+includes not only weighty and strict ornament—which in the beginning
+coincides completely with the idea of art and makes every stiff, inert thing into
+a vehicle of the expression—but also the solemn ceremonial—whose web
+of formulæ spreads over the whole of public life, and even over that of the
+family&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_180" href="#Footnote_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a>—and the language of costume, which is contained in clothing,
+tattooing, and personal adornment, all of which have a <em>uniform</em> significance.
+The investigators of the nineteenth century vainly attempted to trace the origin
+of clothing to the feeling of shame or to utilitarian motives. It is in fact intelligible
+only as the means of an expression-speech, and as such it is developed
+to a grandiose level in all the high Civilizations, including our own of to-day.
+We need only think of the dominant part played by the “mode” in our whole
+public life and doings, the regulation attire for important occasions, the nuances
+of wear for this and that social function, the wedding-dress, mourning; of
+the military uniform, the priest’s robes, orders and decorations, mitre and
+tonsure, periwig and queue, powder, rings, styles of hairdressing; of all the
+significant displays and concealments of person, the costume of the mandarin
+and the senator, the odalisque and the nun; of the court-state of Nero, Saladin
+and Montezuma—not to mention the details of peasant costumes, the language
+of flowers, colours, and precious stones. As for the language of religion,
+it is superfluous to mention it, for all this <em>is</em> religion.</p>
+
+<p>The communication-languages, in which every kind of sense-impression
+that it is possible to conceive more or less participates, have gradually evolved
+(so far as the peoples of the higher Cultures are concerned) three outstanding
+signs—picture, sound, and gesture, which in the script-speech of the Western
+Civilization have crystallized into a unit of letter, word, and punctuation mark.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of this long evolution there comes about at the last the <em>detachment
+of speaking from speech</em>. Of all processes in the history of language,
+none has a wider bearing than this. Originally all motives and signs are unquestionably
+the product of the moment and meant only for a single individual
+act of the active waking-consciousness. Their actual and their felt and willed
+significances are one and the same. But this is no longer so when a <em>definite stock
+of signs offers itself</em> for the living act of giving the sign, for with that not only
+<span class="pagenum" id="p135">[135]</span>is the activity differentiated from its means, but the means are differentiated
+<em>from their significance</em>. The unity of the two not only ceases to be a matter of
+self-evidence, it ceases even to be a possibility. The feeling of significance is a
+living feeling and, like everything else belonging with Time and Destiny,
+it is uniquely occurring and non-recurring. No sign, however well known
+and habitually used, is ever repeated with exactly the same connotation; and
+hence it is that originally no sign ever recurred in the same form. The domain
+of the rigid sign is unconditionally one of things-become of the pure extended;
+it is <em>not an organism, but a system</em>, which possesses its own <em>causal</em> logic and brings
+the irreconcilable opposition of space and time, intellect and mood, also into
+the waking connexions of two beings.</p>
+
+<p>This fixed stock of signs and motives, with its ostensibly fixed meanings,
+must be acquired by learning and practice if one wishes to belong to the community
+of waking-consciousness with which it is associated. <em>The necessary
+concomitant of speech divorced from speaking is the notion of the school.</em> This is fully
+developed in the higher animals; and in every self-contained religion, every
+art, every society, it is presupposed as the background of the believer, the
+artist, the “well-brought-up” human being. And from this point each community
+has its sharply defined frontier; to be a member one must know its
+language—i.e., its articles of faith, its ethics, its rules. In counterpoint and
+Catholicism alike, bliss is not to be compassed by mere feeling and goodwill.
+Culture means a hitherto unimagined intensification of the depth and strictness
+of the form-language in every department; for each individual belonging to it,
+it consists—as his <em>personal</em> Culture, religious, ethical, social, artistic—in a
+lifelong process of education and training <em>for</em> this life. And consequently in all
+great arts, in the great Churches, mysteries and orders, there is reached such
+a command of form as astonishes the human being himself, and ends by breaking
+itself under the stress of its own exigences—whereupon, in every Culture
+alike, there is set up (expressly or tacitly) the slogan of a “return to nature.”
+This <i>maestria</i> extends also to verbal language. Side by side with the social
+polish of the period of the Tyrannis or of the troubadours, with the fugues of
+Bach and the vase-paintings of Exekias,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_181" href="#Footnote_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a> we have the art of Attic oratory and
+that of French conversation, both presupposing, like any other art, a strict
+and carefully matured convention and a long and exacting training of the
+individual.</p>
+
+<p>Metaphysically the significance of this separating-off of a set language can
+hardly be over-estimated. The daily practice of intercourse in settled forms,
+and the command of the entire waking-consciousness through such forms—of
+which there is no longer a sensed process of formation <i lang="la">ad hoc</i>, but which are
+<span class="pagenum" id="p136">[136]</span>just simply there, and require understanding in the strictest sense of the word—lead
+to an ever-sharper distinction between understanding and feeling within
+the waking-consciousness. An incipient language is felt understandingly;
+the practice of speaking requires one, first, to feel the <em>known</em> speech-medium
+and, secondly, to understand the intention put into it on <em>this</em> occasion. Consequently
+the kernel of all schooling lies in the acquisition of elements of
+knowledge. Every Church proclaims unhesitatingly that not feeling but
+knowledge leads into its ways of salvation; all true artistry rests on the
+sure knowledge of forms that the individual has not to discover, but to learn.
+“Understanding” is knowledge conceived of as a being. It is that which is
+completely alien to blood, race, time; from the opposition of rigid speech to
+coursing blood and developing history come the <em>negative</em> ideals of the absolute,
+the eternal, the universally valid—the ideals of Church and School.</p>
+
+<p>But just this, in the last analysis, makes languages incomplete and leads to
+the eternal contradiction between what is in fact spoken and what was willed
+or meant by the speaking. We might indeed say that lies came into the world
+with the separation of speech from speaking. The signs are fixed, but not so
+their meaning—from the outset we feel that this is so, then we know it,
+and finally we turn our knowledge to account. It is an old, old, experience
+that when one wills to say something, the words “fail” one (<i lang="de">versagen</i>, mis-say);
+that one does not “express oneself aright” and in fact says something other
+than what was meant; that one may speak accurately and be understood
+inaccurately. And so finally we get to the art—which is widespread even
+amongst animals (e.g., cats)—of “using words to conceal thoughts.” One
+says not everything, one says something quite different, one speaks formally
+about nothing, one talks briskly to cover the fact that one has said something.
+Or one imitates the speech of another. The red-backed shrike (<i>Lanius collurio</i>)
+imitates the strophes of small song-birds in order to lure them. This is a well-known
+hunter’s dodge, but here again established motives and signs are precedent
+for it, just as much as they are a condition for the faking in antiques or
+the forgery of a signature. And all these traits, met with in attitude and mien
+as in handwriting and verbal utterance, reappear in the language of every
+religion, every art, every society—we need only refer to the ideas expressed
+by the words “hypocrite,” “orthodox,” “heretic,” the English “cant,”
+the secondary senses of “diplomat,” “Jesuit,” “actor,” the masks and warinesses
+of polite society, and the painting of to-day, in which nothing is honest
+more and which in every gallery offers the eye untruth in every imaginable
+form.</p>
+
+<p>In a language that one stammers, one cannot be a diplomat. But in the real
+command of a language there is the danger that the relation between the
+means and the meaning may be made into a new means. There arises an intellectual
+art of <em>playing</em> with expression, practised by the Alexandrines and the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p137">[137]</span>Romantics—by Theocritus and Brentano in lyric poetry, by Reger in music,
+by Kierkegaard in religion.</p>
+
+<p><em>Finally, speech and truth exclude one another.</em>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_182" href="#Footnote_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a> And in fact this is just what
+brings up, in the age of fixed language, the typical “judge of men,” who is
+all race and knows how to take the being that is speaking. To look a man
+keenly in the eyes, to size up the speaker behind the stump speech or the philosophical
+discourse, to know behind the prayer the heart, and behind the common
+good-tone the more intimate levels of social importance—and that instantaneously,
+immediately, and with the self-evident certainty that characterizes
+everything cosmic—that is what is lacking to the real Taboo-man, for whom
+<em>one</em> language at any rate carries conviction. A priest who is also a diplomat
+cannot be genuinely a priest. An ethical philosopher of the Kant stamp is
+never a “judge of men.”</p>
+
+<p>The man who lies in his verbal utterances betrays himself, without observing
+it, in his demeanour. One who uses demeanour to dissimulate with betrays
+himself in his tone. It is precisely because rigid speech separates means and
+intent that it never carries it off with the keen appraiser. The adept reads
+between the lines and understands a man as soon as he sees his walk or his
+handwriting. The deeper and more intimate a spiritual communion, the more
+readily it dispenses with signs and linkages through waking-consciousness.
+A real comradeship makes itself understood with few words, a real faith is
+silent altogether. The purest symbol of an understanding that has again got
+beyond language is the old peasant couple sitting in the evening in front of
+their cottage and entertaining one another without a word’s being passed,
+each knowing what the other is thinking and feeling. Words would only
+disturb the harmony. From such a state of reciprocal understanding something
+or other reaches back, far beyond the collective existence of the higher
+animal-world, deep in the primeval history of free-moving life. Here deliverance
+from the waking-consciousness is, at moments, very nearly achieved.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V_4">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>Of all the signs that have come to be fixed, none has led to greater consequences
+than that which in its present state we call “word.” It belongs, no
+doubt, to the purely human history of speech, but nevertheless the idea, or at
+any rate the conventional idea, of an “origin” of verbal language is as meaningless
+and barren as that of a zero-point for speech generally. A precise
+beginning is inconceivable for the latter because it is compresent with and contained
+in the essence of the microcosm, and for the former because it presupposes
+<span class="pagenum" id="p138">[138]</span>many fully developed kinds of communication-speech and constitutes
+only one element—though in the end the dominant element—of a slow and
+quiet evolution. It is a fundamental error in all theories (however diametrically
+opposed to each other) like those of Wundt and of Jespersen&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_183" href="#Footnote_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a> that they investigate
+speaking in words as if it were something new and self-contained, which
+inevitably leads them into a radically false psychology. In reality verbal
+language is a very late phenomenon, not a young shoot, but the last blossom
+borne by one of the ramifications of the parent stem of all vocal speeches.</p>
+
+<p>In actuality a pure word-speech does not exist. No one speaks without
+employing, in addition to the set vocabulary, quite other modes of speech,
+such as emphasis, rhythm, and facial play, which are much more primary than
+the language of the word, and with which, moreover, it has become completely
+intertwined. It is highly necessary, therefore, to avoid regarding the ensemble
+of present-day word-languages, with its extreme structural intricacy, as an
+inner unity with a homogeneous history. Every word-language known to us
+has very different sides, and each of these sides has its own Destiny within the
+history of the whole. There is not one sense-perception that would be wholly
+irrelevant to an adequate history of the use of words. Further, we must distinguish
+very strictly between vocal and verbal languages; the former is
+familiar even to the simpler genera of animals, the latter is in certain characters—individual
+characters, it is true, but all the more significant for that—a
+radically different thing. For every animal voice-language, further, expression-motives
+(a roar of anger) and communication-signs (a cry of warning)
+can be clearly distinguished, and doubtless the same may be said of the earliest
+words. But was it, then, as an expression- or as a communication-language
+that verbal language <em>arose</em>? Was it in quite primitive conditions, independent,
+more or less, of any and every visual language such as picture and gesture?
+To such questions we have no answer, since we have no inkling of what the
+pre-forms of the “word,” properly so called, were. Naïve indeed is the philology
+which uses what we of to-day call “primitive” languages (in reality,
+incomplete pictures of very <em>late</em> language-conditions) as premisses for conclusions
+as to the origin of words and the Word. The word is in them an
+already established, highly developed, and self-evident means—i.e., precisely
+what anything “originally” is <em>not</em>.</p>
+
+<p>There can be no doubt that the sign which made it possible for the future
+word-language to detach itself from the general vocal speech of the animal world
+was that which I call “name”—a vocal image serving to denote a Something
+in the world-around, which was felt as a being, and by the act of naming
+became a numen.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_184" href="#Footnote_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a> It is unnecessary to speculate as to how the first names came
+<span class="pagenum" id="p139">[139]</span>to be—no human speech accessible to us at this time of day gives us the least
+<i lang="fr">point d’appui</i> here. But, contrary to the view of modern research, I consider
+that the decisive turn came not from a change of the throat-formation or from
+a peculiarity of sound-formation or from any other physiological factor—if
+any such changes ever took place at all, it would be the race side that they
+would affect—not even an increased capacity for self-expression by existing
+means, like, say, the transition from word to sentence (H. Paul&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_185" href="#Footnote_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a>), but <em>a profound
+spiritual change</em>. With the Name comes a new world-outlook. And if speech
+in general is the child of fear, of the unfathomable terror that wells up when
+the waking-consciousness is presented with the facts, that impels all creatures
+together in the longing to prove each other’s reality and proximity—then
+the first word, the Name, is a mighty leap upward. The Name grazes the
+<em>meaning</em> of consciousness and the <em>source</em> of fear alike. The world is not merely
+existent, a secret is felt in it. Above and apart from the more ordinary objects
+of expression- and communication-language, man names <em>that which is enigmatic</em>.
+It is the beast that knows no enigmas. Man cannot think too solemnly,
+reverently, of this first name-giving. It was not well always to speak the name,
+it should be kept secret, a dangerous power dwelt in it. <em>With the name the step
+is taken from the everyday physical of the beast to the metaphysical of man.</em> It was
+the greatest turning-point in the history of the human soul. Our epistemology
+is accustomed to set speech and thought side by side, and it is quite right, if we
+take into consideration only the languages that are still accessible at the present
+day. But I believe that we can go much deeper than this and say that with
+the Name religion in the proper sense, <em>definite</em> religion in the midst of formless
+quasi-religious awe, came into being. Religion in this sense means religious
+<em>thought</em>. It is the new conception of the creative understanding emancipated
+from sensation. We say, in a very significant idiom, that we “reflect on,”
+“think <em>over</em>,” something. With the understanding of things-named the formation
+of a <em>higher</em> world, <em>above</em> all sensational existence, is begun—“higher”
+both according to obvious symbolism and in reference to the position of the
+head which man guesses (often with painful distinctness) to be the home of
+his thoughts. It gives to the primary feeling of fear both an object and a glimpse
+of liberation. On this religious first thought all the philosophical, scholarly,
+scientific thought of later times has been and remains dependent for its very
+deepest foundations.</p>
+
+<p>These first names we have to think of as quite separate and individual
+elements in the stock of signs of a highly developed sound- and gesture-language,
+the richness of which we can no longer imagine, since these other means have
+come to be subordinate to the word-languages, and their further developments
+<span class="pagenum" id="p140">[140]</span>have been in dependent connexion therewith.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_186" href="#Footnote_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a>
+ One thing, however, was assured
+when the name inaugurated the transformation and spiritualization of communication-technique—the
+pre-eminence of the eye over the other sense-organs.
+Man’s awakeness and awareness was in an illuminated space, his
+depth-experience&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_187" href="#Footnote_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a> was a radiation outward towards light-sources and light-resistances,
+and he conceived of his ego as a middle point in the light.
+“Visible” or “invisible” was the alternative which governed the state of
+understanding in which the first names arose. Were the first <i>numina</i>, perhaps,
+things of the light-world that were felt, heard, observed in their effects, <em>but not
+seen</em>? No doubt the group of names, like everything else that marks a turning-point
+in the course of world-happenings, must have developed both rapidly and
+powerfully. The entire light-world, in which everything possesses the properties
+of position and duration in space, was—in the midst of what tensions of
+cause and effect, thing and property, object and subject!—very soon listed
+with innumerable names, and so anchored in the memory, for what we now
+call “memory” is the capacity of storing for the understanding, by means
+of the name, <em>the named</em>. Over the realm of understood visuals (<i lang="de">Sehdinge</i>) supervenes
+a more intellectual realm of namings, which shares with it the logical
+property of being purely extensive, disposed in polarity, and ruled by the causal
+principle. All word-types like cases and pronouns and prepositions (which
+arise, of course, much later) have a causal or local meaning in respect of named
+units; adjectives, and verbs also, have frequently come into existence in pairs
+of opposites; often (as in the E’we languages of West Africa investigated by
+Westermann) the same word is pronounced low or high to denote for example
+great and small, far and near, passive and active.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_188" href="#Footnote_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a> Later these relics of gesture-language
+pass completely into the word-form,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_189" href="#Footnote_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> as we see clearly, for example,
+in the Greek μακρός and μικρός and the <i>u</i>-sounds of Egyptian designations of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p141">[141]</span>suffering. It is the form of thinking in opposites which, starting from these
+antithetical word-pairs, constitutes the foundation of all inorganic logic, and
+turns every scientific discovery of truths into a movement of conceptual contraries,
+of which the most universal instance is that of an old view and a new
+one being contrasted as “error” and “truth.”</p>
+
+<p>The second great turning-point was the use of <em>grammar</em>. Besides the name
+there was now the sentence, besides the verbal designation the verbal relation,
+and thereupon reflection—which is a thinking in word-relations that follows
+from the perception of things for which word-labels exist—became the
+decisive characteristic of man’s waking-consciousness. The question whether
+the communication-languages already contained effective “sentences” before
+the appearance of the genuine “name” is a difficult one. The sentence, in the
+<em>present</em> acceptation of the word, has indeed developed within these languages
+according to its own conditions and with its own phases, but nevertheless it
+postulates the <em>prior</em> existence of the name. Sentences as conceptual relations
+become possible only with the intellectual change that accompanied
+their birth. And we must assume further that within the highly developed
+wordless languages one character or trait after another, in the course of continuous
+practical use, was transformed into verbal form and as such fell into its
+place in an increasingly solid structure, the prime form of our present-day
+languages. Thus the inner build of all verbal languages rests upon foundations
+of far older construction, and for its further development is <em>not</em> dependent upon
+the stock of words and its destiny.</p>
+
+<p>It is in fact just the reverse. For with syntax the original group of individual
+<em>names</em> was transformed into a system of words, whose character was given, not
+by their proper, but by their grammatical significance. The name made its
+appearance as something novel and entirely self-contained. But word-species
+arose as elements of the sentence, and thereafter the contents of waking-consciousness
+streamed in overflowing profusion into this world of words, demanding
+to be labelled and represented in it, until finally even “all” became, in one
+shape or another, a word and available for the thought-process.</p>
+
+<p>Thenceforward the sentence is the decisive element—we speak in sentences
+and not words. Attempts to define the two have been frequent, but never
+successful. According to F. N. Finck, word-formation is an analytical and
+sentence-formation a synthetical activity of the mind, the first preceding the
+second. It is demonstrable that the same actuality received as impression is
+variously understood, and words, therefore, are definable from very different
+points of view.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_190" href="#Footnote_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a> But according to the usual definition, a sentence is the verbal
+expression of a <em>thought</em>, a symbol (says H. Paul) for the connexion of several
+<em>ideas</em> in the soul of the speaker. It seems to me quite impossible to settle the
+nature of the sentence from its contents. The fact is simply that we call the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p142">[142]</span>relatively largest mechanical units employed “sentences” and the relatively
+smallest “words.” Over this range extends the validity of grammatical <em>laws</em>.
+But as soon as we pass from theory to practice, we see that language as currently
+used is no longer such a mechanism; it obeys not laws, but <em>pulse</em>. Thus
+a race-character is involved, <i lang="la">a priori</i>, in the way in which the matter to be
+communicated is set in sentences. Sentences are not the same for Tacitus and
+Napoleon as for Cicero and Nietzsche. The Englishman orders his material
+syntactically in a different way from the German. Not the ideas and thoughts,
+but the thinking, the kind of life, <em>the blood</em>, determine in the primitive, Classical,
+Chinese, and Western speech-communities the type of the sentence-unit,
+and with it the <em>mechanical</em> relation of the word to the sentence. The boundary
+between grammar and syntax should be placed at the point where the mechanical
+of speech ceases and the organic of speaking begins—usages, custom, the
+<em>physiognomy</em> of the way that a man employs to express himself. The other
+boundary lies where the mechanical structure of the word passes into the
+organic factors of sound-formation and expression. Even the children of immigrants
+can often be recognized by the way in which the English “<i>th</i>” is
+pronounced—a race-trait of the land. Only that which lies between these
+limits is the “language,” properly so called, which has system, is a technical
+instrument, and can be invented, improved, changed, and worn out; enunciation
+and expression, on the contrary, adhere to the <em>race</em>. We recognize a person
+known to us, without seeing him, by his pronunciation, and not only that, but
+we can recognize a member of an alien race even if he speaks perfectly correct
+German. The great sound-modifications, like the Old High German in Carolingian
+times and the Middle High German in the Late Gothic, have territorial
+frontiers and affect only the speaking of the language, not the inner form
+of sentence and word.</p>
+
+<p>Words, I have just said, are the relatively smallest mechanical units in the
+sentence. There is probably nothing that is so characteristic of the thinking
+of a human species as the way in which these units are acquired by it. For the
+Bantu Negro a thing that he sees belongs first of all to a very large number of
+categories of comprehension. Correspondingly the word for it consists of a
+kernel or root and a number of monosyllabic prefixes. When he speaks of a
+woman in a field, his word is something like this: “living, one, big, old, female,
+outside, <em>human</em>”; this makes seven syllables, but it denotes a single,
+clear-headed, and to us quite alien act of comprehension.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_191" href="#Footnote_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a> There are languages
+in which the word is almost coextensive with the sentence.</p>
+
+<p>The gradual replacement of bodily or sonic by grammatical gestures is
+thus the decisive factor in the formation of sentences, but it has never been
+completed. There are no purely verbal languages. The activity of speaking, in
+words, as it emerges more and more precise, consists in this, that through word-sounds
+<span class="pagenum" id="p143">[143]</span>we awaken significance-feelings, which in turn through the sound of
+the word-connexions evoke further relation-feelings. Our schooling in speech
+trains us to understand in this abbreviated and indicative form not only light-things
+and light-relations, but also thought-things and thought-relations.
+Words are only named, not used definitively, and the hearer has to feel what
+the speaker means. This and this alone amounts to speech, and hence mien
+and tone play a much greater part than is generally admitted in the understanding
+of modern speech. Substantive signs may conceivably exist for many
+of the animals even, but verb-signs never.</p>
+
+<p>The last grand event in this history, which brings the formation of verbal
+speech more or less to a close, is the coming of the verb. This assumes at the
+outset a very high order of abstraction. For substantives are words whereby
+things sense-defined in illuminated space&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_192" href="#Footnote_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a> become evocable also in after-thought,
+while verbs describe <em>types</em> of change, which are not seen, but are extracted from
+the unendingly protean light-world, by noting the special characters of the
+individual cases, and generating concepts from them. “Falling stone” is
+originally a unit impression, but we first separate movement and thing moved
+and then isolate falling as one <em>kind</em> of movement from innumerable other sorts
+and shades thereof—sinking, tottering, stumbling, slipping. We do not
+“see” the distinction, we “know” it. The difference between fleeing and
+running, or between flying and being wafted, altogether transcends the visual
+impression they produce and is only apprehensible by a word-trained consciousness.
+But now, with this verb-thinking, even life itself has become accessible
+to reflection. Out of the living impress made on the waking-consciousness,
+out of the ambiance of the becoming (which gesture-speech, being merely imitative,
+leaves unquestioned and unprobed) that which is life itself—namely,
+singularity of occurrence—is unconsciously eliminated, and the rest, as effect
+of a cause (the wind wafts, lightning flashes, the peasant ploughs), is put, under
+purely extensive descriptions, into suitable places in the sign-system. One has
+to bury oneself completely in the solid definiteness of subject and predicate,
+active and passive, present and perfect, to perceive how entirely the understanding
+here masters the senses and unsouls actuality. In substantives one
+can still regard the mental thing (the idea) as a copy of the visual thing, but
+in the verb <em>something inorganic has been put in place of something organic</em>. The fact
+that we live—namely, that we at this instant perceive something—becomes
+eventually a <em>property</em> of the something perceived. In terms of word-thought,
+the perceived endures—“is.” Thus, finally, are formed the categories of
+thought, graded according to what is and what is not natural to it; thus
+Time appears as a dimension, Destiny as a cause, the living as chemical or
+psychical mechanism. It is in this wise that the style of mathematical, judicial,
+and dogmatic thought arises.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p144">[144]</span></p>
+
+<p>And in this wise, too, arises that disunity which seems to us inseparable
+from the essence of man, but is really only the expression of the dominance of
+word-language in his waking-consciousness. This instrument of communication
+between Ego and Tu has, by reason of its perfection, fashioned out of the
+animal understanding of sensation, a thinking-in-words which stands proxy
+for sensation. Subtle thinking—“splitting hairs,” as it is called—is conversing
+with oneself in word-significances. It is the activity that no kind of
+language but the language of words can subserve, and it becomes, with the
+perfection of the language, distinctive of the life-habit of whole classes of
+human beings. The divorce of speech, rigid and devitalized, from speaking,
+which makes it impossible to include the whole truth in a verbal utterance,
+has particularly far-reaching consequences in the sign-system of words.
+Abstract thinking consists in the use of a finite word-framework into which
+it is sought to squeeze the whole infinite content of life. Concepts kill Being
+and falsify Waking-Being. Long ago in the springtime of language-history,
+while understanding had still to struggle in order to hold its own with sensation,
+this mechanization was without importance for life. But now, from
+a being who occasionally thought, man has become a thinking being, and
+it is the ideal of every thought-system to subject life, once and for all, to the
+domination of intellect. This is achieved in theory by according validity only
+to the known and branding the actual as a sham and a delusion. It is achieved
+in practice by forcing the voices of the blood to be silent in the presence of
+universal ethical principles.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_193" href="#Footnote_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a></p>
+
+<p>Both, logic and ethics alike, are systems of absolute and eternal truths for
+the intellect, and correspondingly untruths for history. However completely
+the inner eye may triumph over the outer in the domain of thought, in the realm
+of facts the belief in eternal truths is a petty and absurd stage-play that exists
+only in the heads of individuals. A true system of thoughts emphatically cannot
+exist, for no sign can replace actuality. Profound and honest thinkers are
+always brought to the conclusion that all cognition is conditioned <i lang="la">a priori</i> by
+its own form and can never reach that which the words mean—apart, again,
+from the case of technics, in which the concepts are instruments and not aims
+in themselves. And this <i>ignorabimus</i> is in conformity also with the intuition
+of every true sage, that abstract principles of life are acceptable only as figures
+of speech, trite maxims of daily use underneath which life flows, as it has always
+flowed, onward. Race, in the end, is stronger than languages, and thus it is that,
+under all the great names, it has been thinkers—who are personalities—and
+not systems—which are mutable—that have taken effect upon life.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p145">[145]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VI_3">
+ VI
+</h3>
+
+<p>So far, then, the inner history of word-languages shows three stages. In
+the first there appears, within highly developed but wordless communication-languages,
+the first names—units in a new sort of understanding. The world
+awakens <em>as a secret</em>, and religious thought begins. In the second stage, a complete
+communication-speech is gradually transformed into grammatical values.
+The gesture becomes the sentence, and the sentence transforms the names into
+words. Further, the sentence becomes the great school of understanding <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i>
+sensation, and an increasingly subtle significance-feeling for abstract
+relations within the mechanism of the sentence evokes an immense profusion
+of inflexions, which attach themselves especially to the substantive and the
+verb, the space-word and the time-word. This is the blossoming time of
+grammar, the period of which we may probably (though under all reserves)
+take as the two millennia preceding the birth of the Egyptian and Babylonian
+Culture. The third stage is marked by a rapid decay of inflexions and a simultaneous
+replacement of grammar by syntax. The intellectualization of
+man’s waking-consciousness has now proceeded so far that he no longer needs
+the sense-props of inflexion and, discarding the old luxuriance of word-forms,
+communicates freely and surely by means of the faintest nuances of idiom
+(particles, position of words, rhythm). By dint of speaking in words, the
+understanding has attained supremacy over the waking-consciousness, and
+to-day it is in process of liberating itself from the restrictions of sensible-verbal
+machinery and working towards pure mechanics of the intellect. Minds and
+not senses are making the contact.</p>
+
+<p>In this third stage of linguistic history, which as such takes place in the
+biological plane&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_194" href="#Footnote_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a> and therefore belongs to <em>man as a type</em>, the history of the higher
+Cultures now intervenes with an entirely new speech, the speech of the distance—writing—an
+invention of such inward forcefulness that again there is a sudden
+decisive turn in the destinies of the word-languages.</p>
+
+<p>The written language of Egypt is already by 3000 in a state of rapid grammatical
+decomposition; likewise the Sumerian literary languages called <i>eme-sal</i>
+(women’s language). The written language of China—which <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the
+vernaculars of the Chinese world has long formed a language apart—is, even
+in the oldest known texts, so entirely inflexionless that only recent research has
+established that it ever had inflexions at all.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_195" href="#Footnote_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a> The Indogermanic system
+is known to us only in a state of complete break-down. Of the Case in Old
+Vedic (about 1500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) the Classical languages a thousand years later retained
+only fragments.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_196" href="#Footnote_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a> From Alexander the Great’s time the dual disappeared from
+<span class="pagenum" id="p146">[146]</span>the declension of ordinary Hellenistic Greek, and the passive vanished from the
+conjugation entirely. The Western languages, although of the most miscellaneous
+provenance imaginable—the Germanic from primitive and the Romanic
+from highly civilized stock—modify in the same direction, the Romanic
+cases having become reduced to one, and the English, after the Reformation,
+to zero. Ordinary German definitely shed the genitive at the beginning of the
+nineteenth century and is now in process of abolishing the dative. Only after
+trying to translate a piece of difficult and pregnant prose—say of Tacitus or
+Mommsen—“back”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_197" href="#Footnote_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a> into some very ancient language rich in inflexions
+does one realize how meantime the technique of signs has vaporized into a
+technique of thoughts, which now only needs to employ the signs—abbreviated,
+but replete with meaning—merely as the counters in a game that only the
+initiates of the particular speech-communion understand. This is why to a
+west-European, the sacred Chinese texts must always be in the fullest sense a
+sealed book; but the same holds good also for the primary words of every
+other Culture-language—the Greek λογός and ἀρχή, the Sanskrit <i>Atman</i> and
+<i>Braman</i>—indications of the world-outlook of their respective Cultures that
+no one not bred in the Culture can comprehend.</p>
+
+<p>The external history of languages is as good as lost to us in just its most
+important parts. Its springtime lies deep in the primitive era, in which (to
+repeat what has been said earlier), we have to imagine “humanity” in the
+form of scattered and quite small troops, lost in the wide spaces of the earth.
+A spiritual change came when reciprocal contacts became habitual (and eventually
+natural) to them, but correspondingly there can be no doubt that this
+contact was first sought for and then regulated, or fended off, by means of speech,
+and that it was the impression of an earth filled with men that first brought the
+waking-consciousness to the point of tense intelligent shrewdness, forcing verbal
+language under pressure to the surface. So that, perhaps, the birth of grammar
+is connected with the race hall-mark of the grand Number.</p>
+
+<p>Since then, no other grammatical system has ever come into existence, but
+only novel derivatives of what was already there. Of these <em>authentic</em> primitive
+languages and their structure and sound we know nothing. As far as our backward
+look takes us, we see only complete and developed linguistic systems,
+used by everyone, learned by every child, as something perfectly natural. And
+we find it more than difficult to imagine that once upon a time things may have
+been different, that perhaps a shudder of fear accompanied the hearing of such
+strange and enigmatic language—an awe like that which in historic times
+has been and still is excited by script. And yet we have to reckon with the
+possibility that at one time, in a world of wordless communication, verbal
+language constituted an aristocratic privilege, a jealously preserved class-secret.
+We have a thousand examples—the diplomats with their French, the scholars
+<span class="pagenum" id="p147">[147]</span>with their Latin, the priests with their Sanskrit—to suggest that there may
+have been such a tendency. It is part of the thoroughbred’s pride to be able to
+speak to one another in a way that outsiders cannot understand—a language
+for everybody is a vernacular. To be “on conversational terms with” someone
+is a privilege or a pretension. So, too, the use of literary language in talking
+with educated people, and contempt for dialect, mark the true bourgeois pride.
+It is only we who live in a Civilization wherein it is just as normal for children
+to learn to write as to learn to walk—in all earlier Cultures it was a rare
+accomplishment, to which few could aspire. And I am convinced that it was
+just so once with verbal language.</p>
+
+<p>The tempo of linguistic history is immensely rapid; here a mere century
+signifies a great deal. I may refer again to the gesture-language of the North
+Indians,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_198" href="#Footnote_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a> which became necessary because the rapidity of changes in the tribal
+dialects made intertribal understanding impossible otherwise. Compare, too,
+the Latin of the recently discovered Forum inscription&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_199" href="#Footnote_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a> (about 500) with the
+Latin of Plautus (about 200) and this again with the Latin of Cicero (about 50).
+If we assume that the oldest Vedic texts have preserved the linguistic state of
+1200 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, then even that of 2000 may have differed from it far more completely
+than any Indogermanic philologists working by <i>a posteriori</i> methods can even
+surmise.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_200" href="#Footnote_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a> But <i>allegro</i> changes to <i>lento</i> in the moment when script, the language
+of duration, intervenes and ties down and immobilizes the systems at entirely
+different age-levels. This is what makes this evolution so opaque to research;
+all that we possess is remains of written languages. Of the Egyptian and Babylonian
+linguistic world we do possess originals from as far back as 3000, but the
+oldest Indogermanic relics are <em>copies</em>, of which the linguistic state is much
+younger than the contents.</p>
+
+<p>Very various, under all these determinants, have been the destinies of the
+different grammars and vocabularies. The first attaches to the intellect, the
+second to things and places. Only grammatical systems are subject to natural
+inward change. The use of words, on the contrary, psychologically presupposes
+that, although the expression may change, inner mechanical structure
+is maintained (and all the more firmly) as being the basis on which denomination
+essentially rests. <em>The great linguistic families are purely grammatical families.</em>
+The words in them are more or less homeless and wander from one to another.
+It is a fundamental error in philological (especially Indogermanic) research
+that grammar and vocabulary are treated as a unit. All specialist vocabularies—the
+jargon of hunter, soldier, sportsman, seaman, savant—are in reality
+<em>only stocks of words</em>, and can be used within any and every grammatical system.
+The semi-Classical vocabulary of chemistry, the French of diplomacy, and the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p148">[148]</span>English of the racecourse have become naturalized in all modern languages
+alike. We may talk of “alien” words, but the same could have been said at
+some time or other of most of the “roots,” so-called, in all the old languages.
+All names adhere to the things that they denote, and share their history. In
+Greek the names for metals are of alien provenance; words like ταῦρος, χιτῶν,
+οἶνος are Semitic. Indian numerals are found in the Hittite texts of Boghaz
+Keüi,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_201" href="#Footnote_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a> and the contexts in which they occur are technical expressions which
+came into the country with horse-breeding. Latin administrative terms invaded
+the Greek East,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_202" href="#Footnote_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> German invaded Petrine Russia in multitudes, Arabic
+words permeate the vocabulary of Western mathematics, chemistry, and astronomy.
+The Normans, themselves Germanic, inundated English with French
+words. Banking, in German-speaking regions, is full of Italian expressions,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_203" href="#Footnote_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a>
+and similarly and to a far greater extent masses of designations relating to
+agriculture and cattle-breeding, to metals and weapons, and in general to all
+transactions of handicraft, barter, and intertribal law, must have migrated
+from one language to another, just as geographical nomenclature always passed
+into the proper vocabulary of the dominant language, with the result that Greek
+contains numerous Carian and German Celtic place-names. It is no exaggeration
+to say that the more widely an Indogermanic word is distributed, the
+<em>younger</em> it is, the more likely it is to be an “alien” word. It is precisely the
+very oldest names that are hoarded as private possessions. Latin and Greek
+have only quite young words in common. Or do “telephone,” “gas,” “automobile,”
+belong to the word-stock of the “primitive” people? Suppose, for
+the sake of argument that three-fourths of the Aryan “primitive” words came
+from the Egyptian or the Babylonian vocabularies of the third millennium; we
+should not find a trace of the fact in Sanskrit after a thousand years of unwritten
+development, for even in German thousands of Latin loan-words have long
+ago become completely unrecognizable. The ending “-ette” in “Henriette”
+is Etruscan—how many genuine Aryan and genuine Semitic endings, notwithstanding
+their thoroughly alien origin, defy us to prove them intruders?
+What is the explanation of the astounding similarity of many words in the
+Australian and the Indogermanic languages?</p>
+
+<p>The Indogermanic system is certainly the youngest, and therefore the most
+intellectual. The languages derived from it rule the earth to-day, but did it
+really exist at all in 2000 as a specific grammatical edifice? As is well known, a
+single initial form for Aryan, Semitic, and Hamitic is nowadays assumed as
+probable. The oldest Indian texts preserve the linguistic conditions of (probably)
+before 1200, the oldest Greek those of (probably) 700. But Indian personal
+and divine names occur in Syria and Palestine,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_204" href="#Footnote_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a> simultaneously with the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p149">[149]</span>horse, at a much later date, the bearers of these names being apparently first
+soldiers of fortune and afterwards potentates.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_205" href="#Footnote_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a> May it be that about 1600 these
+land-Vikings, these first <i lang="de">Reiter</i>—men grown up inseparable from their horses,
+the terrifying originals of the Centaur-legend—established themselves
+more or less everywhere in the Northern plains as adventurer-chiefs, bringing
+with them the speech and divinities of the Indian feudal age? And the
+same with the Aryan aristocratic ideals of breed and conduct. According
+to what has been said above on race, this would explain the race-ideal of Aryan-speaking
+regions without any necessity for “migrations” of a “primitive”
+folk. After all, it was in this way that the knightly Crusaders founded their
+states in the East—and in exactly the same locality as the heroes with Mitanni
+names had done so twenty-five hundred years before.</p>
+
+<p>Or was this system of about 3000 merely an unimportant dialect of a language
+that is lost? The Romanic language-family about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1600 dominated
+all the seas. About 400 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> the “original” language on the Tiber possessed a
+domain of little more than a thousand square miles. It is certain that the
+geographical picture of the grammatical families at about 4000 was still very
+variegated. The Semitic-Hamitic-Aryan group (<em>if</em> it ever did form a unit)
+can hardly have been of much importance at that time. We stumble at every
+turn upon the relics of old speech-families—Etruscan, Basque, Sumerian,
+Ligurian, the ancient tongues of Asia Minor, and others—that in their day
+must have belonged to very extensive systems. In the archives of Boghaz-Keüi
+eight new languages have so far been identified, all of them in use about the
+year 1000. With the then prevailing tempo of modification, Aryan may in
+2000 have formed a unit with languages that we should never dream of associating
+with it.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VII_1">
+ VII
+</h3>
+
+<p>Writing is an entirely new kind of language, and implies a complete change
+in the relations of man’s waking-consciousness, in that it <em>liberates it from the
+tyranny of the present</em>. Picture-languages which portray objects are far older,
+older probably than any words; but here the picture is no longer an immediate
+denotation of some sight-object, but primarily the sign of a word—i.e., something
+already abstract from sensation. It is the first and only example of a language
+that demands, without itself providing, the necessary preparatory training.</p>
+
+<p>Script, therefore, presupposes a fully developed grammar, since the activity
+of writing and reading is infinitely more abstract than that of speaking and
+hearing. Reading consists in scanning a script-image <em>with a feeling of the significances
+of corresponding word-sounds</em>; what script contains is not signs for things,
+but signs for other signs. The grammatical sense must be enlarged by instantaneous
+comprehension.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p150">[150]</span></p>
+
+<p>The word is a possession of man generally, whereas writing belongs exclusively
+to Culture-men. In contrast to verbal language it is conditioned,
+not merely partially, but entirely, by the political and religious Destinies of
+world-history. All scripts come into being in the <em>individual</em> Cultures and are to
+be reckoned amongst their profoundest symbols. But hitherto a comprehensive
+history of script has never been produced, and a psychology of its forms and
+their modifications has never even been attempted. <em>Writing is the grand symbol
+of the Far</em>, meaning not only extension-distance, but also, and above all, duration
+and future and the will-to-eternity. Speaking and listening take place only
+in proximity and the present,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_206" href="#Footnote_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a> but through script one speaks to men whom one
+has never seen, who may not even have been born yet; the voice of a man is
+heard centuries after he has passed away. It is one of the first distinguishing
+marks of the <em>historical</em> endowment. But for that very reason nothing is more
+characteristic of a Culture than its inward relation to writing. If we know as
+little as we do about Indogermanic, it is because the two earliest Cultures
+whose people made use of this system—the Indian and the Classical—were
+so <em>a-historic</em> in disposition that they not only formed no script of their own,
+but even fought off alien scripts until well into the Late period of their course.
+Actually, the whole art of Classical prose is designed immediately for the ear.
+One read it as if one were speaking, whereas we, by comparison, speak everything
+as though we were reading it—with the result that in the eternal seesaw
+between script-image and word-sound we have never attained to a prose style
+that is perfect in the Attic sense. In the Arabian Culture, on the other hand,
+each religion developed its own script and kept it even through changes of
+verbal language; the duration of the sacred books and teachings and the
+script as symbol of duration belong together. The oldest evidences of alphabetical
+script are found in southern Arabia in the Minæan and Sabæan scripts—differentiated,
+without doubt, according to sect—which probably go back to
+the tenth century before Christ.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_207" href="#Footnote_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a> The Jews, Mandæans, and Manichæans in
+Babylonia spoke Eastern Aramaic, but all of them had scripts of their own.
+From the Abbassid period onward Arabic ruled, but Christians and Jews wrote
+it in their own characters.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_208" href="#Footnote_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a> Islam spread the Arabic script universally amongst
+its adherents, irrespective of whether their spoken language was Semitic,
+Mongolian, Aryan, or a Negro tongue.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_209" href="#Footnote_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a> The growth of the writing habit
+brings with it, everywhere and inevitably, the distinction between the written
+and the colloquial languages. The written language brings the symbolism
+<span class="pagenum" id="p151">[151]</span>of duration to bear upon its own grammatical condition, which itself yields
+only slowly and reluctantly to the progressive modifications of the colloquial
+language—the latter, therefore, always representing at any given moment a
+younger condition. There is not one Hellenic κοινή, but two,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_210" href="#Footnote_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a> and the immense
+distance between the written and the living Latin of Imperial times is
+sufficiently evidenced in the structure of the early Romance languages.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_211" href="#Footnote_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a> The
+older a Civilization becomes, the more abrupt is the distinction, until we have
+the gap that to-day separates written Chinese from Kuan-Chua, the spoken
+language of educated North Chinese—a matter no longer of two dialects but
+of two reciprocally alien languages.</p>
+
+<p>Here, it should be observed, we have direct expression of the fact that
+writing is above everything a matter of status, and more particularly an ancient
+privilege of priesthood. The peasantry is without history <em>and therefore without
+writing</em>. But, even apart from this, there is in Race an unmistakable antipathy
+to script. It is, I think, a fact of the highest importance to graphology that
+the more the writer has race (breed), the more cavalierly he treats the ornamental
+structure of the letters, and the more ready he is to replace this by personal
+line-pictures. Only the Taboo-man evidences a certain respect for the
+proper forms of the letters and ever, if unconsciously, tries to reproduce them.
+It is the distinction between the man of action, who makes history, and the
+scholar, who merely puts it down on paper, “eternalizes” it. In all Cultures
+the script is in the keeping of the priesthood, in which class we have to count
+also the poet and the scholars. The nobility despises writing; it has people
+to write for it. From the remotest times this activity has had something
+intellectual-sacerdotal about it. Timeless truths came to be such, not at all
+through speech, but only when there came to be script for them. It is the opposition
+of castle and cathedral over again: which shall endure, deed or truth? The
+archivist’s “sources” preserve facts, the holy scripture, truths. What chronicles
+and documents mean in the first-named, exegesis and library mean in the second.
+And thus there is something besides cult-architecture that is not decorated
+with ornament, but <em>is</em> ornament&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_212" href="#Footnote_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a>—the <em>book</em>. The art-history of all Cultural
+springtimes ought to begin with the script, and the cursive script even before
+the monumental. Here we can observe the essence of the Gothic style, or of the
+Magian, at its purest. No other ornament possesses the inwardness of a letter-shape
+or a manuscript page; nowhere else is arabesque as perfect as it is in the
+Koran texts on the walls of a mosque. And, then, the great art of initials, the
+architecture of the marginal picture, the plastic of the covers! In a Koran in
+the Kufi script every page has the effect of a piece of tapestry. A Gothic book of
+the Gospels is, as it were, a little cathedral. As for Classical art, it is very significant
+<span class="pagenum" id="p152">[152]</span>that the one thing that it did not beautify with its touch was the
+script and the book-roll—an exception founded in its steady hatred of that
+which endures, the contempt for a technique which insists on being more than
+a technique. Neither in Hellas nor in India do we find an art of monumental
+inscription as in Egypt. It does not seem to have occurred to anybody that a
+sheet of handwriting of Plato was a relic, or that a fine edition of the dramas
+of Sophocles ought to be treasured up in the Acropolis.</p>
+
+<p>As the city lifted up its head over the countryside, as the burgher joined
+the noble and the priest and the urban spirit aspired to supremacy, writing,
+from being a herald of nobles’ fame and of eternal truths, became a means of
+commercial and scientific intercourse. The Indian and the Classical Cultures
+rejected the pretension and met the working requirement by importation from
+abroad; it was as a humble tool of everyday use that alphabetical script slowly
+won their acceptance. With this event rank, as contemporaneous and like in
+significance, the introduction into China of the phonetic script about 800,
+and the discovery of book-printing in the West in the fifteenth century; the
+symbol of duration and distance was reinforced in the highest degree by making
+it accessible to the large number. Finally the Civilizations took the last step
+and brought their scripts into utilitarian form. As we have seen, the discovery
+of alphabetical script in the Egyptian Civilization, about 2000, was a purely
+technical innovation. In the same way Li Si, Chancellor to the Chinese Augustus,
+introduced the Chinese standard script in 227. And lastly, amongst ourselves—though
+as yet few of us have appreciated the real significance of the
+fact—a new kind of writing has appeared. That Egyptian alphabetic script
+is in no wise a final and perfected thing is proved by the discovery of its fellow,
+our <em>stenography</em>, which means no mere shortening of writing, but <em>the overcoming
+of the alphabetic script by a new and highly abstract mode of communication</em>. It is not
+impossible, indeed, that in the course of the next centuries script-forms of the
+shorthand kind may displace letters completely.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VIII_1">
+ VIII
+</h3>
+
+<p>May the attempt be made, thus early, to write a morphology of the Culture-languages?
+Certainly, science has not as yet even discovered that there is such
+a task. Culture-languages are languages of <em>historical</em> men. Their Destiny
+accomplishes itself not in biological spaces of time, but in step with the organic
+evolution of strictly limited lifetimes. <em>Culture languages are historical languages</em>,
+which means, primarily, that there is no historical event and no political
+institution that will not have been determined in part by the spirit of the
+language employed in it and, conversely, that will not have its influence upon
+the spiritual form of that language. The build of the Latin sentence is yet
+another consequence of Rome’s battles, which in giving her conquests compelled
+the nation as a whole to think administratively; German prose bears
+<span class="pagenum" id="p153">[153]</span>traces even to-day of the Thirty Years’ War in its want of established norms,
+and early Christian dogma would have acquired a different shape if the oldest
+Scriptures, instead of being one and all written in Greek, and been set down in
+Syriac form like those of the Mandæans. But secondarily it means that world-history
+is dependent—to a degree that students have hitherto scarcely imagined—<em>upon
+the existence of script as the essentially historical means of communication</em>.
+The State (in the higher sense of the word) presupposes intercourse by writing;
+the style of all politics is determined absolutely by the significance that the
+politico-historical thought of the nation attaches in each instance to charters
+and archives, to signatures, to the products of the publicist; the battle of
+legislation is a fight for or against a written law; constitutions replace material
+force by the composition of paragraphs and elevate a piece of writing to
+the dignity of a weapon. Speech belongs with the present, and writing with
+duration, but equally, oral understanding pairs with practical experience, and
+writing with theoretical thought. The bulk of the inner political history of
+all Late periods can be traced back to this opposition. The ever-varying facts
+resist the “letter,” while <em>truths demand it</em>—that is the world-historical opposition
+of two parties that in one form or another is met with in the great crises
+of all Cultures. The one lives in actuality, the other flourishes a text in its face;
+all great revolutions presuppose a literature.</p>
+
+<p>The group of Western Culture-languages appeared in the tenth century.
+The available bodies of language—namely, the Germanic and Romance dialects
+(monkish Latin included)—were developed into script-languages under
+a single spiritual influence. It is <em>impossible</em> that there should not be a common
+character in the development of German, English, Italian, French, and Spanish
+from 900 to 1900, as also in the history of the Hellenic and Italic (Etruscan
+included) between 1100 and the Empire. But what is it that, irrespective of the
+area of extension of language-families or races, acquires specific unity from the
+landscape-limit of the Culture alone? What modifications have Hellenistic
+and Latin in common after 300—in pronunciation and idiom, metrically,
+grammatically, and stylistically? What is present in German and Italian after
+1000, but not in Italian and Rumanian? These and similar questions have
+never yet been systematically investigated.</p>
+
+<p>Every Culture at its awakening finds itself in the presence of <em>peasant-languages</em>,
+speeches of the cityless countryside, “everlasting,” and almost unconcerned
+with the great events of history, which have gone on through late
+Culture and Civilization as unwritten dialects and slowly undergone imperceptible
+changes. On the top of this now the language of the two primary
+Estates raises itself as the first manifestation of a waking relation that <em>has</em>
+Culture, that <em>is</em> Culture. Here, in the ring of nobility and priesthood, languages
+become Culture-languages, and, more particularly, <em>talk belongs with the castle,
+and speech to the cathedral</em>. And thus on the very threshold of evolution the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p154">[154]</span>plantlike separates itself from the animal, the destiny of the living from the
+destiny of the dead, that of the organic side from that of the mechanical side of
+understanding. For the Totem side affirms and the Taboo side denies, blood and
+Time. Everywhere we meet, and very early indeed, rigid cult-languages whose
+sanctity is guaranteed by their inalterability, systems long dead, or alien to life
+and artificially fettered, which have the strict vocabulary that the formulation
+of eternal truths requires. Old Vedic stiffened as a religious language, and
+with it Sanskrit as a savant-language. The Egyptian of the Old Kingdom was
+perpetuated as priests’ language, so that in the New Empire sacred formulæ
+were no more understandable than the <cite>Carmen Saliare</cite> and the hymn of the
+Fratres Arvales in Augustan times.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_213" href="#Footnote_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> In the Arabian pre-Cultural period Babylonian,
+Hebrew, and Avestan simultaneously went out of use as workaday
+languages—probably in the second century before Christ—indeed on that
+very account Jews and Persians used them in their Scriptures as in opposition to
+Aramaic and Pehlevi. The same significance attached to Gothic Latin for the
+Church, Humanists’ Latin for the learning of the Baroque, Church Slavonic
+in Russia, and no doubt Sumerian in Babylonia.</p>
+
+<p>In contrast with this, the nursery of talk is in the early castles and palaces
+of assize. Here the <em>living</em> Culture-languages have been formed. Talk is the
+custom of speech, its manners—“good form” in the intonation and idiom,
+fine tact in choice of words and mode of expression. All these things are a
+mark of <em>race</em>; they are learned not in the monastery cell or the scholar’s study,
+but in polite intercourse and from living examples. In noble society, and as a
+hall-mark of nobility, the language of Homer,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_214" href="#Footnote_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a> as also the old French of the
+Crusades and the Middle High German of the Hohenstaufen, were erected out
+of the ordinary talk of the country-side. When we speak of the great epic
+poets, the Skalds, the Troubadours, as creators of language, we must not
+forget that they began by being trained for their task, <em>in language as in other
+things</em>, by moving in noble circles. The great art by which the Culture finds its
+tongue is the achievement of a race and not that of a craft.</p>
+
+<p>The clerical language on the other hand starts from concepts and conclusions.
+It labours to improve the dialectical capacities of the words and sentence-forms
+to the maximum. There sets in, consequently, an ever-increasing
+differentiation of scholastic and courtly, of the idiom of intellectual from that
+of social intercourse. Beyond all divisions of language-families there is a
+component common to the expression of Plotinus and Thomas Aquinas, of
+Veda and Mishna. Here we have the starting-point of all the ripe scholar-languages
+of the West—which, German and English and French alike, bear
+<span class="pagenum" id="p155">[155]</span>to this day the unmistakable signs of their origin in scholars’ Latin—and,
+therefore, the starting point of all the apparatus of technical expression and
+logical sentence-form. This opposition between the modes of understanding of
+“Society” and of Science renews itself again and again till far into the Late
+period. The centre of gravity in the history of French was decisively on the
+side of race; i.e., of talk. At the Court of Versailles, in the salons of Paris,
+the <i lang="fr">esprit précieux</i> of the Arthurian romances evolves into the “conversation,”
+the classical art of talk, whose dictature the whole West acknowledges. The
+fact that Ionic-Attic, too, was fashioned entirely in the halls of the tyrants
+and in symposia created great difficulties for Greek philosophy: for later on,
+it was almost impossible to discuss the syllogism in the language of Alcibiades.
+On the other hand, German prose, in the decisive phase of Baroque, had no
+central point on which it could rise to excellence, and so even to-day it oscillates
+in point of style between French and Latin—courtly and scholarly—according
+as the author’s intuition is to express himself well or accurately. Our
+Classical writers, thanks to their linguistic origin in office or study and their
+stay as tutors in the castles and the little courts, arrived indeed at personal
+styles, and others are able to imitate these styles, but a specifically German
+prose, standard for all, they were unable to create.</p>
+
+<p>To these two class-languages the rise of the city added a third, the language
+of the bourgeoisie, which is the true script-speech, reasoned and utilitarian,
+prose in the strictest sense of the word. It swings gently between the expression-modes
+of elegant society and of learning, in the one direction thinking
+for ever of new turns and words <i lang="fr">à la mode</i>, in the other keeping sturdy hold on
+its existing stock of ideas. But in its inner essence it is of a <em>mercantile</em> nature.
+It feels itself frankly as a class badge <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the historyless-changeless phrasing
+of the “people” which Luther and others employed, to the great scandal
+of their superficial contemporaries. With the final victory of the city the
+urban speech absorbs into itself that of elegance and that of learning. There
+arises in the upper strata of megalopolitan populations the uniform, keenly
+intelligent, practical κοινή, the child and symbol of its Civilization, equally
+averse from dialect and poetry—something perfectly mechanical, precise,
+cold, leaving as little as possible to gesture. These final homeless and rootless
+languages can be learned by every trader and porter—Hellenistic in Carthage
+and on the Oxus, Chinese in Java, English in Shanghai—and for their comprehension
+talk has no importance or meaning. And if we inquire what really
+created these languages, we find not the spirit of a race or of a religion, but the
+spirit of economics.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p156"></a><a id="p157"></a><a id="p158"></a><a id="p159"></a>[159]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">
+ CHAPTER VI
+ <br>
+ <span class="subtitle">CITIES AND PEOPLES
+ <br>
+ (C)
+ <br>
+ PRIMITIVES, CULTURE-PEOPLES, FELLAHEEN</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>Now at last it is possible to approach—if with extreme precaution—the
+conception “people,” and to bring order into that chaos of people-forms that the
+historical research of the present day has only succeeded in making worse
+confounded than before. There is no word that has been used more freely and
+more utterly uncritically, yet none that calls for a stricter critique, than this.
+Very careful historians, even, after going to much trouble to clear their theoretical
+basis (up to a point) slide back thereafter into treating peoples, race-parts,
+and speech-communities as completely equivalent. If they find the name
+of a people, it counts without more ado as the designation of a language as
+well. If they discover an inscription of three words, they believe they have
+established a racial connexion. If a few “roots” correspond, the curtain
+rises at once on a primitive people with a primitive habitat in the background.
+And the modern nationalist spirit has only enhanced this “thinking in terms
+of peoples.”</p>
+
+<p>But is it the Hellenes, the Dorians, or the Spartans that are a people? If
+the Romans were a people, what are we to say about the Latins? And what
+kind of a unit within the population of Italy at <i>c.</i> 400 do we mean by the
+name “Etruscan?” Has not their “nationality,” like that of Basques and
+Thracians, been made actually to depend upon the build of their language?
+What ethnic idea underlies the words “American,” “Swiss,” “Jew,” “Boer”?
+Blood, speech, faith, State, landscape—what in all these is determinative
+in the formation of a people? In general, relationships of blood and language
+are determined only by way of scholarship, and the ordinary individual is
+perfectly unconscious of them. “Indogermanic” is purely and simply a
+scientific, more particularly a philological, concept. The attempt of Alexander
+the Great to fuse Greeks and Persians together was a complete failure, and we
+have recently had experience of the real strength of Anglo-German community
+of feeling. But “people” is a linkage of which one is <em>conscious</em>. In ordinary
+usage, one designates as one’s “people”—and with feeling—that community,
+out of the many to which one belongs, which inwardly stands nearest
+<span class="pagenum" id="p160">[160]</span>to one.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_215" href="#Footnote_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a>
+ And then he extends the use of this concept, which is really quite
+particular and derived from personal experience, to collectivities of the most
+varied kinds. For Cæsar the Arverni were a “<i lang="la">civitas</i>”; for us the Chinese
+are a “nation.” On this basis, it was the Athenians and not the Greeks who
+constituted a nation, and in fact there were only a few individuals who, like
+Isocrates, felt themselves <em>primarily</em> as Hellenes. On this basis, one of two
+brothers may call himself a Swiss and the other, with equal right, a German.
+These are not philosophical concepts, but historical facts. A people is an
+aggregate of men which feels itself a unit. The Spartiates&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_216" href="#Footnote_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a> felt themselves a
+people in <em>this</em> sense; the “Dorians” of 1100, too, probably, but those of 400
+certainly not. The Crusaders became genuinely a people in taking the oath of
+Clermont; the Mormons in their expulsion from Missouri, in 1839;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_217" href="#Footnote_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a> the
+Mamertines&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_218" href="#Footnote_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a>
+ by their need of winning for themselves a stronghold of refuge.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_219" href="#Footnote_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a>
+Was the formative principle very different with the Jacobins and Hyksos? How
+many peoples may have originated in a chief’s following or a band of fugitives?
+Such a group can change race, like the Osmanli, who appeared in Asia Minor
+as Mongols; or language, like the Sicilian Normans; or name, like Achæans
+and Danaoi. So long as the common feeling is there, the people as such is there.</p>
+
+<p>We have to distinguish the destiny of a people from its name. The latter
+is often the only thing about which information remains to us; but can we
+fairly conclude from a name anything about the history, the descent, the
+language, or even merely the identity of those who bore it? Here again the
+historical researcher is to blame, in that, whatever his theory may have been,
+he has in practice treated the relation between name and bearer as simply as he
+would treat, say, the personal names of to-day. Have we any conception of
+the number of unexplored possibilities in this field? To begin with, the very
+act of name-giving is of enormous importance in early associations. For with
+a name the human group consciously sets itself up with a sort of sacral dignity.
+But, here, cult- and war-names may exist side by side; others the land or
+the heritage may provide; the tribal name may be exchanged for that of an
+eponymous hero, as with the Osmanli;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_220" href="#Footnote_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a> lastly, an unlimited number of alien
+names can be applied along the frontiers of a group without more than a part of
+the community ever hearing them at all. If only such names as these be handed
+<span class="pagenum" id="p161">[161]</span>down, it becomes practically inevitable that conclusions about the bearers of
+them will be wrong. The indubitably sacral names of Franks, Alemanni, and
+Saxons have superseded a host of names of the period of the Varus battle—but
+if we did not happen to know this, we should long ago have been convinced that
+an expulsion or annihilation of old tribes by new intruders had taken place
+here. The names “Romans” and “Quirites,” “Spartans” and “Lacedæmonians,”
+“Carthaginian” and “Punic” have endured side by side—here again
+there was a risk of supposing two peoples instead of one. In what relation the
+names “Pelasgi,” “Achæans,” “Danai,” stand to one another we shall never
+learn, and had we nothing more than these names, the scholar would long ago
+have assigned to each a separate people, complete with language and racial
+affinities. Has it not been attempted to draw from the regional designation
+“Doric” conclusions as to the course of the Dorian migration? How often may
+a people have adopted a land-name and taken it along with them? This is the
+case with the modern Prussians, but also with the modern Parsees, Jews, and
+Turks, while the opposite is the case in Burgundy and Normandy. The name
+“Hellenes” arose about 650, and, therefore, cannot be connected with any movement
+of population. Lorraine (Lothringen) received the name of a perfectly unimportant
+prince, and that, in connexion with the decision of a heritage and
+not a folk-migration. Paris called the Germans Allemands in 1814, Prussians
+in 1870, Boches in 1914—in other circumstances three distinct peoples might
+have been supposed to be covered by these names. The West-European is
+called in the East a Frank, the Jew a Spaniole—the fact is readily explained
+by historical circumstances, but what would a philologist have produced from
+the <em>words alone</em>?</p>
+
+<p>It is not to be imagined at what results the scholars of <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 3000 might arrive
+if they worked by present-day methods on names, linguistic remains,
+and the notion of original homes and migration. For example, the Teutonic
+Knights about 1300 drove out the heathen “Prussians,” and in 1870 these
+people suddenly appear on their wanderings at the gates of Paris! The Romans,
+pressed by the Goths, emigrate from the Tiber to the lower Danube! Or a part
+of them perhaps settled in Poland, where Latin was spoken? Charlemagne on
+the Weser defeated the Saxons, who thereupon emigrated to the neighbourhood
+of Dresden, their places being taken by the Hanoverians, whose original settlement,
+according to the dynasty-name, was on the Thames! The historian
+who writes down the history of names instead of that of peoples, forgets that
+names, too, have their destinies. So also languages, which, with their migrations,
+modifications, victories, and defeats, are inconclusive even as to the
+existence of peoples associated with them. This is the basic error of Indo-Germanic
+research in particular. If in historic times the names “Pfalz” and
+“Calabria” have moved about, if Hebrew has been driven from Palestine to
+Warsaw, and Persian from the Tigris to India, what conclusions can be drawn
+<span class="pagenum" id="p162">[162]</span>from the history of the Etruscan name and the alleged “Tyrsenian” inscription
+at Lemnos?&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_221" href="#Footnote_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a> Or did the French and the Haytian Negroes, as shown by their
+common language, once form a single primitive people? In the region between
+Budapest and Constantinople to-day two Mongolian, one Semitic, two Classical,
+and three Slavonic languages are spoken, and these speech-communities
+all feel themselves essentially as peoples.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_222" href="#Footnote_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a> If we were to build up a migration-story
+here, the error of the method would be manifested in some singular results.
+“Doric” is a dialect designation—that we know, and that is all we know.
+No doubt some few dialects of this group spread rapidly, but that is no proof
+of the spread or even of the existence of a human stock belonging with it.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_223" href="#Footnote_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_5">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>Thus we come to the pet idea of modern historical thought. If a historian
+meets a people that has achieved something, he feels that he owes it to these
+people to answer the question: Whence did it come? It is a matter of dignity
+for a people to have come from somewhere and to have an original home.
+The notion that it is at home in the place where we find it is almost an insulting
+assumption. Wandering is a cherished saga-motive of primitive mankind,
+but its employment in serious research also has become a sheer mania.
+<em>Whether</em> the Chinese invaded China or the Egyptians Egypt no one inquires, the
+question being always <em>when</em> and <em>whence</em> they did so. It would be less of an effort
+to originate the Semites in Scandinavia or the Aryans in Canaan than to abandon
+the notion of an original home.</p>
+
+<p>Now, the fact that all early populations were highly mobile is unquestionable.
+In it, for example, lies the secret of the Libyan problem. The Libyans or
+their predecessors spoke Hamitic, but, as shown even by old Egyptian reliefs,
+they were all blond and blue-eyed and, therefore, doubtless of North-European
+provenance.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_224" href="#Footnote_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a> In Asia Minor at least three migration-strata since 1300 have
+been determined, which are related probably to the attacks of the “Sea-peoples”
+in Egypt, and something similar has been shown in the Mexican Culture.
+But as to the nature of these movements we know nothing at all. In any case,
+there can be no question of migrations such as modern historians like to picture—movements
+<span class="pagenum" id="p163">[163]</span>of close-pressed peoples traversing the lands in great masses,
+pushing and being pushed till finally they come to rest somewhere or other.
+It is not the alterations in themselves, but the conceptions we have formed
+about them, that have spoilt our outlook upon the nature of the peoples.
+Peoples in the modern sense of the word do not wander, and that which of old
+<em>did</em> wander needs to be very carefully examined before it is labelled, as the
+label will not always stand for the same thing. The motive, too, that is everlastingly
+assigned to these migrations is colourless and worthy of the century
+that invented it—material necessity. Hunger would normally lead to efforts
+of quite a different sort, and it has certainly been only the last of the motives
+that drove men of race out of their nests—although it is understandable
+that it would very frequently make itself felt when such bands suddenly encountered
+a military obstacle. It was doubtless, in this simple and strong
+kind of man, the primary microcosmic urgency to move in free space which
+sprang up out of the depths of his soul as love of adventure, daring, liking for
+power and booty; as a blazing desire, to us almost incomprehensible, for deeds,
+for joy of carnage, for the death of the hero. Often, too, no doubt, domestic
+strife or fear of the revenge of the stronger, was the motive, but again a strong
+and manly one. Motives like these are infectious—the “man who stays
+at home” is a coward. Was it common bodily hunger, again, that induced
+the Crusades, or the expeditions of Cortez and Pizarro, or in our time the ventures
+of “wild west” pioneers? Where, in history, we find the little handful
+invading wide lands, it is ever the voices of the blood, the longing for high
+destinies, that drive them.</p>
+
+<p>Further, we have to consider the position in the country traversed by the
+invaders. Its characteristics are always modified more or less, but the modifications
+are due not merely to the influence of the immigrants, but more and
+more to the nature of the settled population, which in the end becomes numerically
+overwhelming.</p>
+
+<p>Obviously, in spaces almost empty of men it is easy for the weaker simply
+to evade the onslaught, and as a rule he was able to do so. But in later and
+denser conditions, the inroad spelt dispossession for the weaker, who must
+either defend himself successfully or else win new lands for old. Already
+there is the out-thrust into space. No tribe lives without constant contacts
+on all sides and a mistrustful readiness to stand to arms. The hard necessity
+of war breeds men. Peoples grow by, and against, other peoples to inward
+greatness. Weapons become weapons against men and not beasts. And finally
+we have the only migration-form that counts in historic times—warrior
+bands sweep through thoroughly populated countries, whose inhabitants
+remain, undisturbed and upstanding, as an essential part of the spoils of victory.
+And then, the victors being in a minority, completely new situations arise.
+Peoples of strong inward form spread themselves on top of much larger but
+<span class="pagenum" id="p164">[164]</span>formless populations, and the further transformations of peoples, languages,
+and races depend upon very complicated factors of detail. Since the decisive
+investigations of Beloch&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_225" href="#Footnote_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a>
+ and Delbrück&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_226" href="#Footnote_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a> we know that all migrant peoples—and
+the Persians of Cyrus, the Mamertines and the Crusaders, the Ostrogoths
+and the “Sea-peoples” of the Egyptian inscriptions were all peoples in this
+sense—were, in comparison with the inhabitants of the regions they occupied,
+very small in numbers, just a few thousand warriors, superior to the natives
+only in respect of their determination to <em>be</em> a Destiny and not to submit to
+one. It was not inhabitable, but inhabited, land of which they took possession,
+and thus the relation between the two peoples became a question of status, the
+migration turned into the campaign, and the process of settling down became
+a political process. And here again, in presence of the fact that at a historic
+distance of time the successes of a small war-band, with the consequent spread
+of the victor’s names and language, may all too easily be taken for a “migration
+of peoples,” it is necessary to repeat our question, what, in fact, the
+men, things, and factors are that <em>can</em> migrate.</p>
+
+<p>Here are some of the answers—the name of a district or that of a collectivity
+(or of a hero, adopted by his followers), in that it spreads, becomes
+extinct here and is taken by or given to a totally different population there:
+in that it may pass from land to people and travel with the latter or vice versa—the
+language of the conqueror or that of the conquered, or even a third
+language, adopted for reciprocal understanding—the war-band of a chief which
+subdues whole countries and propagates itself through captive women, or some
+accidental group of heterogeneous adventurers, or a tribe with its women and
+children, like the Philistines of 1200, who quite in the Germanic fashion
+trekked with their ox-wagons along the Phœnician coast to Egypt.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_227" href="#Footnote_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a> In such
+conditions, we may again ask, can conclusions be drawn from the destinies of
+names and languages as to those of peoples and races? There is only one possible
+answer, a decided negative.</p>
+
+<p>Amongst the “Sea-peoples” that repeatedly attacked Egypt in the thirteenth
+century appear the <em>names</em> of Danai and Achæans—but in Homer both
+are almost mythical designations—the <em>name</em> of the Lukka—which adhered
+later to Lycia, though the inhabitants of that country called themselves
+Tramilæ—and the <em>names</em> of the Etruscans, the Sards, the Siculi—but this in
+no wise proved that these “Tursha” spoke the later Etruscan, nor that there
+was the slightest physical connexion with the like-named inhabitants of
+Italy or anything else entitling us to speak of “one and the same people.”
+Assuming that the Lemnos inscription is Etruscan, and Etruscan an Indogermanic
+language, much could be deduced therefrom in the domain of linguistic
+<span class="pagenum" id="p165">[165]</span>history, but in that of racial history nothing whatever. Rome was an
+Etruscan city, but is not the fact completely without bearing upon the <em>soul</em>
+of the Roman people? Are the Romans Indogermanic because they happen to
+speak a Latin dialect? The ethnologists recognize a Mediterranean Race
+and an Alpine Race, and north and south of these an astonishing physical
+resemblance between North-Germans and Libyans; but the philologists know
+that the Basques are in virtue of their speech a “pre-Indogermanic”—Iberian—population.
+The two views are mutually exclusive. Were the builders of
+Mycenæ and Tiryns “Hellenes”?—it would be as pertinent to ask were the
+Ostrogoths Germans. I confess that I do not comprehend why such questions
+are formulated at all.</p>
+
+<p>For me, the “people” is a <em>unit of the soul</em>. The great events of history were
+not really achieved by peoples; <em>they themselves created the peoples</em>. Every act
+alters the soul of the doer. Even when the event is preceded by some grouping
+around or under a famous name, the fact that there is a people and not merely
+a band behind the prestige of that name is not a condition, but a result of the
+event. It was the fortunes of their migrations that made the Ostrogoths and
+the Osmanli what they afterwards were. The “Americans” did <em>not</em> immigrate
+from Europe; the name of the Florentine geographer Amerigo Vespucci designates
+to-day not only a continent, but also a people in the true sense of the
+word, whose specific character was born in the spiritual upheavals of 1775 and,
+above all, 1861–5.</p>
+
+<p>This is the one and only connotation of the word “people.” Neither unity
+of speech nor physical descent is decisive. That which distinguishes the
+people from the population, raises it up out of the population, and will one
+day let it find its level again in the population is always the inwardly lived
+experience of the “we.” The deeper this feeling is, the stronger is the <i lang="la">vis viva</i>
+of the people. There are energetic and tame, ephemeral and indestructible, forms
+of peoples. They can change speech, name, race, and land, but so long as
+their soul lasts, they can gather to themselves and transform human material
+of any and every provenance. The Roman name in Hannibal’s day meant a
+people, in Trajan’s time nothing more than a population.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, it is often quite justifiable to align peoples with races, but “race”
+in this connexion must not be interpreted in the present-day Darwinian sense
+of the word. It cannot be accepted, surely, that a people was ever held together
+by the mere unity of physical origin, or, if it were, could maintain that
+unity even for ten generations. It cannot be too often reiterated that this
+physiological provenance has no existence except for science—never for folk-consciousness—and
+that no people was ever yet stirred to enthusiasm for
+<em>this</em> ideal of blood-purity. In race there is nothing material, but something
+cosmic and directional, the felt harmony of a Destiny, the single cadence of the
+march of historical Being. It is inco-ordination of this (wholly metaphysical)
+<span class="pagenum" id="p166">[166]</span>beat that produces race-hatred, which is just as strong between Germans and
+Frenchmen as it is between Germans and Jews, and it is resonance on this beat
+that makes the true love—so akin to hate—between man and wife. He who
+has not race knows nothing of this perilous love. If a part of the human multitude
+that now speaks Indogermanic languages, cherishes a certain race-ideal,
+what is evidenced thereby is not the existence of the prototype-people
+so dear to the scholar, but the metaphysical force and power of the ideal. It
+is highly significant that this ideal is expressed, never in the whole population,
+but mainly in its warrior-element and pre-eminently in its genuine nobility—that
+is, in men who live entirely in a world of facts, under the spell of historical
+becoming, destiny-men who will and dare—and it was precisely in the early
+times (another significant point) that a born alien of quality and dignity could
+without particular difficulty gain admittance to the ruling class, and wives in
+particular were chosen for their “breed” and not their descent. Correspondingly,
+the impress of race-traits is weakest (as may be observed even to-day) in
+the true priestly and scholarly natures,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_228" href="#Footnote_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a> even though these often do stand in
+close blood-relationship to the others. A strong spirit trains up the body into a
+product of art. The Romans formed, in the midst of the confused and even
+heteroclite tribes of Italy, a race of the firmest and strictest inward unity that
+was neither Etruscan nor Latin nor merely “Classical,” but quite specifically
+Roman.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_229" href="#Footnote_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a> Nowhere is the force that cements a people set before us more plainly
+than in Roman busts of the late Republican period.</p>
+
+<p>I will cite yet another example, than which none more clearly exhibits the
+errors that these scholars’ notions of people, language, and race inevitably
+entail, and in which lies the ultimate, perhaps the determining reason why the
+Arabian Culture has never yet been recognized as an organism. It is that of
+the Persians. Persian is an Aryan language, hence “the Persians” are an
+“Indogermanic people,” and hence Persian history and religion are the affair
+of “Iranian” philology.</p>
+
+<p>To begin with, is Persian a language of equal rank with the Indian, derived
+from a common ancestor, <em>or is it merely an Indian dialect?</em> Seven centuries of
+linguistic development, scriptless and therefore very rapid, lie between the
+Old Vedic of the Indian texts and the Behistun Inscription&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_230" href="#Footnote_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a> of Darius. It is
+almost as great a gap as that between the Latin of Tacitus and the French of
+the Strassburg Oath of 842.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_231" href="#Footnote_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a> Now the Tell-el-Amarna letters and the archives
+<span class="pagenum" id="p167">[167]</span>of Boghaz Keüi tell us many “Aryan” names of persons and gods of the middle
+of the second millennium <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>—that is, the Vedic Age of Chivalry. It is
+Palestine and Syria that furnish these names. Nevertheless, Eduard Meyer
+observes&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_232" href="#Footnote_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a> that they are Indian and not Persian, and the same holds good for
+the numerals that have now been discovered.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_233" href="#Footnote_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a> There is not a unit of Persians,
+or of any other “people” in the sense of our historical writers. They were
+Indian heroes, who rode westward and with their precious weapon the warhorse
+and their own ardent energy made themselves felt as a power far and wide
+in the ageing Babylonian Empire.</p>
+
+<p>About 600 there appears in the middle of this world Persis, a little district
+with a politically united population of peasant barbarians. Herodotus says
+that of its tribes only three were of genuine Persian nationality. Had the
+language of these knights of old lived on in the hills, and is “Persians” really
+a land-name that passed to a people? The Medes, who were very similar, bear
+only the name of a land where an upper warrior-stratum had learned through
+great political successes to feel itself as a unit. In the Assyrian archives of
+Sargon and his successors (about 700) are found, along with the non-Aryan
+place-names, numerous “Aryan” names of persons, all leading figures, but
+Tiglath-Pileser IV (745–727) calls the people black-haired.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_234" href="#Footnote_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a> It can only have
+been later that the “Persian people” of Cyrus and Darius was formed, out of
+men of varied provenance, but forged to a strong inner unity of lived experience.
+But when, scarce two centuries later, the Macedonians put an end to their
+lordship—was it that the Persians in this form were <em>no longer in existence</em>?
+(Was there still a Lombard people at all in Italy in <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 900?) It is certain that
+the very wide diffusion of the empire-language of Persia, and the distribution
+of the few thousands of adult males from Persia over the immense system of military
+and administrative business, must long ago have led to the dissolution of
+the Persian nation and set up in its place, as carriers of the Persian name
+in upper-class conscious of itself as a <em>political</em> unit, of whose members very
+few could have claimed descent from the invaders from Persia.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_235" href="#Footnote_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a> There is,
+indeed, not even a country that can be considered as the theatre of Persian
+history. The events of the period from Darius to Alexander took place partly
+in northern Mesopotamia (that is, in the midst of an Aramaic-speaking population),
+partly lower down in old Sinear, anywhere but in Persis, where the handsome
+buildings begun by Xerxes were never carried out. The Parthians of the
+succeeding Achæmenid period were a Mongol tribe which had adopted a Persian
+dialect and in the midst of this people sought to embody the Persian national
+feeling in themselves.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p168">[168]</span></p>
+
+<p>Here the Persian religion emerges as a problem no less difficult than those
+of race and language.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_236" href="#Footnote_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a> scholarship has associated it with these as though the
+association were self-evident, and has, therefore, treated it always with reference
+to India. But the religion of these land-Vikings was not related to, it was
+identical with the Vedic, as shown by the divine pairs Mitra-Varuna and Indra-Nasatya
+of the Boghaz Keüi texts. And within this religion which held up its
+head in the middle of the Babylonian world Zarathustra now appeared, from
+out of the lower ranks of the people, as reformer. It is known that he was not
+a Persian. That which he created (as I hope to show) was a transfer of <em>Vedic</em>
+religion into the forms of the <em>Aramæan</em> world-contemplation, in which already
+there were the faint beginnings of the Magian religiousness. The <i>dævas</i>, the
+gods of the old Indian beliefs, grew to be the demons of the Semitic and the
+jinn of the Arabian. Yahweh and Beelzebub are related to one another precisely
+as Ahuramazda and Ahriman in this peasant-religion, which was essentially
+Aramæan and, therefore, founded in an ethical-dualistic world-feeling.
+Eduard Meyer&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_237" href="#Footnote_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a> has correctly established the difference between the Indian
+and the Iranian view of the world, but, owing to his erroneous premisses, has
+not recognized its origin. <em>Zarathustra is a travelling-companion of the prophets of
+Israel</em>, who like him, and at the same time, transformed the old (Mosaic-Canaanitish)
+beliefs of the people. It is significant that the whole eschatology
+is a common possession of the Persian and Jewish religions, and that the Avesta
+texts were originally written in Aramaic (in Parthian times) and only afterwards
+translated into Pehlevi.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_238" href="#Footnote_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a></p>
+
+<p>But already in Parthian times there occurred amongst both Persians and
+Jews that profoundly intimate change which makes no longer tribal attachment
+but orthodoxy the hall-mark of nationality.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_239" href="#Footnote_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a> A Jew who went over to
+the Mazda faith <em>became thereby a Persian</em>; a Persian who became a Christian
+belonged to the Nestorian “people.” The very dense population of northern
+Mesopotamia—the motherland of the Arabian Culture—is partly of
+Jewish and partly of Persian nationality in this sense of the word, which is
+not at all concerned with race and very little with language. Even before
+the birth of Christ, “Infidel” designates the non-Persian as it designates the
+non-Jew.</p>
+
+<p>This nation is the “Persian people” of the Sassanid empire, and, connected
+with the fact, we find that Pehlevi and Hebrew die out simultaneously, Aramaic
+becoming the mother tongue of both communities. If we speak in terms
+of Aryans and Semites, the Persians in the time of the Tell-el-Amarna Correspondence
+<span class="pagenum" id="p169">[169]</span>were Aryans, but no “people”: in that of Darius a people, but without
+race: in Sassanid times a community of believers, but of Semitic origin.
+There is no proto-Persian “people” branched off from the Aryan, nor a general
+history of the Persians, and for the three special histories, which are held together
+only by certain linguistic relations, there is not even a common historical
+theatre.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_5">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>With this are laid, at last, the foundations for a <em>morphology of peoples</em>. Directly
+its essence is seen, we see also an inward order in the historical stream of
+the peoples. They are neither linguistic nor political nor zoölogical, but
+spiritual, units. And this leads at once to the further distinction between
+<em>peoples before, within, and after a Culture</em>. It is a fact that has been profoundly
+felt in all ages that Culture-peoples are <em>more distinct</em> in character than the rest.
+Their predecessors I will call primitive peoples. These are the fugitive and
+heterogeneous associations that form and dissolve without ascertainable rule,
+till at last, in the presentiment of a still unborn Culture (as, for example, in the
+pre-Homeric, the pre-Christian, and the Germanic periods), phase by phase,
+becoming ever more definite in type, they assemble the human material of a
+population into groups, though all the time little or no alteration has been occurring
+in the stamp of man. Such a superposition of phases leads from the
+Cimbri and Teutones through the Marcomanni and Goths to the Franks, Lombards,
+and Saxons. Instances of primitive peoples are the Jews and Persians of
+the Seleucid age, the “Sea-peoples,” the Egyptian Nomes of Menes’s time.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_240" href="#Footnote_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a>
+And that which follows a Culture we may call—from its best-known example,
+the Egyptians of post-Roman times—fellah-peoples.</p>
+
+<p>In the tenth century of our era the Faustian soul suddenly awoke and manifested
+itself in innumerable shapes. Amongst these, side by side with the
+architecture and the ornament, there appears a distinctly characterized form
+of “people.” Out of the people-shapes of the Carolingian Empire—the Saxons,
+Swabians, Franks, Visigoths, Lombards—arise suddenly the German, the
+French, the Spaniards, the Italians. Hitherto (consciously and deliberately or
+not) historical research has uniformly regarded these Culture-peoples as something
+in being, as primaries, and have treated the Culture itself as secondary, as
+their product. The creative units of history, accordingly, were simply the
+Indians, the Greeks, the Romans, the Germans, and so on. As the Greek Culture
+was the work of the Hellenes, they must have been in existence as such far
+earlier; therefore they must have been immigrants. Any other idea of creator
+and creation seemed inconceivable.</p>
+
+<p>I regard it, therefore, as a discovery of decisive importance that the facts
+here set forth lead to the reverse conclusion. It will be established in all rigour
+<span class="pagenum" id="p170">[170]</span>that the great Cultures are entities, primary or original, that arise out of the
+deepest foundations of spirituality, and that the peoples under the spell of a
+Culture are, alike in their inward form and in their whole manifestation, its
+products and not its authors. These shapes in which humanity is seized and
+moulded possess style and style-history no less than kinds of art and modes of
+thought. The people of Athens is a symbol not less than the Doric temple,
+the Englishman not less than modern physics. There are peoples of Apollinian,
+Magian, Faustian cast. The Arabian Culture was <em>not</em> created by “the Arabs”—quite
+the contrary; for the Magian Culture begins in the time of Christ, and
+the Arabian people represents its last great creation of that kind, a community
+bonded by Islam as the Jewish and Persian communities before it had been
+bonded by their religions. World-history is the history of the great Cultures,
+and peoples are but the symbolic forms and vessels in which the men of these
+Cultures fulfil their Destinies.</p>
+
+<p>In each of these Cultures, Mexican and Chinese, Indian and Egyptian, there
+is—whether our science is aware of it or not—<em>a group of great peoples of identical
+style</em>, which arises at the beginning of the springtime, forming states and carrying
+history, and throughout the course of its evolution bears its fundamental
+form onward to the goal. They are in the highest degree unlike amongst
+themselves—it is scarcely possible to conceive of a sharper contrast than that
+between Athenians and Spartans, Germans and Frenchmen, Tsin and Tsu—and
+all military history shows national hatred as the loftiest method of inducting
+historic decisions. But the moment that a people alien to the Culture
+makes an appearance in the field of history, there awakens everywhere an overpowering
+feeling of spiritual relationship, and the notion of the barbarian—meaning
+the man who inwardly does <em>not</em> belong to the Culture—is as clear-cut
+in the peoples of the Egyptian settlements and the Chinese world of states as it
+is in the Classical. The energy of the form is so high that it grasps and recasts
+neighbouring peoples, witness the Carthaginians of Roman times with their
+half-Classical style, and the Russians who have figured as a people of Western
+style from Catherine the Great to the fall of Petrine Tsardom.</p>
+
+<p>Peoples in the style of their Culture we will call <em>Nations</em>, the word itself
+distinguishing them from the forms that precede and that follow them. It is
+not merely a strong feeling of “we” that forges the inward unity of its most
+significant of all major associations; <em>underlying the nation there is an Idea</em>. This
+stream of a collective being possesses a very deep relation to Destiny, to Time,
+and to History, a relation that is different in each instance and one, too, that
+determines the relation of the human material to race, language, land, state,
+and religion. As the styles of the Old Chinese and the Classical peoples differ,
+so also the styles of their histories.</p>
+
+<p>Life as experienced by primitive and by fellaheen peoples is just the zoölogical
+up-and-down, a planless happening without goal or cadenced march in
+<span class="pagenum" id="p171">[171]</span>time, wherein occurrences are many, but, in the last analysis, devoid of significance.
+The only historical peoples, the peoples whose existence <em>is world-history</em>,
+are the nations. Let us be perfectly clear as to what is meant by this. The
+Ostrogoths suffered a great destiny, and therefore, inwardly, they have no
+history. Their battles and settlements were not necessary and therefore were
+episodic; their end was insignificant. In 1500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> that which lived about
+Mycenæ and Tiryns was not <em>as yet</em> a nation, and that which lived in Minoan
+Crete was <em>no longer</em> a nation. Tiberius was the last ruler who tried to lead a
+Roman nation further on the road of history, who sought to <em>retrieve</em> it for history.
+By Marcus Aurelius there was only a Romanic population to be defended—a
+field for occurrences, but no longer for history. How many free pre-generations
+of Mede or Achæan or Hun folk there were, in what sort of social groups
+their predecessors and their descendants lived, cannot be determined and depends
+upon no rule. But of a nation the life-period <em>is</em> determinate, and so are
+the pace and the rhythm in which its history moves to fulfilment. From the
+beginning of the Chóu period to the rulership of Shih-Hwang-ti, from the events
+on which the Troy legend was founded to Augustus, and from Thinite times to
+the XVIII Dynasty, the numbers of generations are more or less the same. The
+“Late” period of the Culture, from Solon to Alexander, from Luther to Napoleon,
+embraces no more than about ten generations. Within such limits the
+destiny of the genuine Culture-people, and with it that of world-history in
+general, reach fulfilment. The Romans, the Arabs, the Prussians, are late-born
+nations. How many generations of Fabii and Junii had already come and gone
+<em>as Romans</em> by the time Cannæ was fought?</p>
+
+<p>Further, nations are <em>the true city-building peoples</em>. In the strongholds they
+arose, with the cities they ripen to the full height of their world-consciousness,
+and in the world-cities they dissolve. Every town-formation that has character
+has also <em>national</em> character. The village, which is wholly a thing of race, does
+not yet possess it; the megalopolis possesses it no longer. Of this essential,
+which so characteristically colours the nation’s public life that its slightest
+manifestation identifies it, we cannot exaggerate—we can scarcely imagine—the
+force, the self-sufficingness, and the <em>loneliness</em>. If between the souls of two
+Cultures the screen is impenetrable, if no Western may ever hope completely to
+understand the Indian or the Chinese, this is equally so, even more so, as between
+well-developed nations. Nations understand one another as little as
+individuals do so. Each understands merely a self-created picture of the other,
+and individuals with the insight to penetrate deeper are few and far between.
+<i lang="fr">Vis-à-vis</i> the Egyptians, all the Classical peoples necessarily felt themselves
+as relatives in one whole, but as between themselves they never understood each
+other. What sharper contrast is there than that between the Athenian and the
+Spartan spirit? German, French, and English modes of philosophical thinking
+are distinct, not merely in Bacon, Descartes, and Leibniz, but already in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p172">[172]</span>age of Scholasticism;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_241" href="#Footnote_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a>
+ and even now, in modern physics and chemistry, the
+scientific method, the choice and type of experiments and hypotheses, their inter-relations,
+and their relative importance for the course and aim of the investigation
+are markedly different in every nation. German and French piety,
+English and Spanish social ethics, German and English habits of life, stand so
+far apart that for the average man, and, therefore, for the public opinion of his
+community, the real inwardness of every foreign nation remains a deep secret and
+a source of continual and pregnant error. In the Roman Empire men began
+generally to understand one another, but this was precisely because there had
+ceased to be anything worth understanding in the Classical city. With the
+advent of mutual comprehension this particular humanity ceased to live in
+nations, <em>and ipso facto ceased to be historic</em>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_242" href="#Footnote_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a></p>
+
+<p>Owing to the very depth of these experiences, it is not possible for a whole
+people to be <em>uniformly and throughout</em> a Culture-people, a nation. Amongst
+primitives each individual man has the same feeling of group-obligations, but
+the awakening of a nation into self-consciousness invariably takes place in
+gradations—that is, pre-eminently in the particular class that is strongest of
+soul and holds the others spellbound by a power derived from what it has experienced.
+<em>Every nation is represented in history by a minority.</em> At the beginning of
+the springtime it is the nobility,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_243" href="#Footnote_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a> which in that period of its first appearance
+is the fine flowering of the people, the vessel in which the national character—unconscious,
+but felt all the more strongly in its cosmic pulse—receives its
+destined Style. The “we” is the knightly class, in the Egyptian feudal period
+of 2700 not less than in the Indian and the Chinese of 1200. The Homeric
+heroes <em>are</em> the Danai; the Norman barons <em>are</em> England. Centuries later, Saint-Simon—the
+embodiment, it is true, of an older France—used to say that
+“all France” was assembled in the King’s ante-room, and there was a time in
+which Rome and the Senate were actually identical. With the advent of the
+town the burgher becomes the vessel of nationality, and (as we should expect
+from the growth of intellectuality) of a national <em>consciousness</em> that it gets
+from the nobility and carries through to its fulfilment. Always it is particular
+circles, graduated in fine shades, that <em>in the name of</em> the people live, feel, act, and
+know how to die, but these circles become larger and larger. In the eighteenth
+century arose the Western <em>concept</em> of the Nation which sets up (and on occasion
+energetically insists upon) the claim to be championed by everybody without
+exception; but in reality, as we know, the <i lang="fr">émigrés</i> were just as convinced as the
+Jacobins that they were <em>the</em> people, <em>the</em> representatives of the French nation.
+A Culture-people which is coincident with “all” does not exist—this is
+possible only in primitive and fellaheen peoples, only in a mere joint being without
+<span class="pagenum" id="p173">[173]</span>depth or historical dignity. So long as a people is a nation and works out
+the Destiny of a nation, there is in it a minority which in the name of all represents
+and fulfils its history.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_5">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>The Classical nations, in accordance with the static-Euclidean soul of their
+Culture, were corporeal units of the smallest imaginable size. It was not
+Hellenes or Ionians that were nations, but in each city the Demos, a union of
+adult men, legally and <em>by the same token nationally</em> defined between the type of the
+hero as upper limit and the slave as lower.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_244" href="#Footnote_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a> Synœcism, that mysterious process
+of early periods in which the inhabitants of a countryside give up their villages
+and assemble themselves as a town, marks the moment at which, having arrived
+at self-consciousness, the Classical nation constitutes itself as such. We can still
+trace the way in which this form of the nation steadily makes good from
+Homeric times&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_245" href="#Footnote_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a> to the epoch of the great colonizations. It responds exactly to
+the Classical prime-symbol: each folk was a body, visible and surveyable, a σῶμα,
+the express negation of the idea of geographical space.</p>
+
+<p>It is of no importance to Classical history whether or not the Etruscans in
+Italy were identical physically or linguistically with the bearers of this name
+amongst the “Sea-peoples,” or what the relation was between the pre-Homeric
+units of the Pelasgi or Danai and the later bearers of the Doric or the Hellenic
+name. If, about 1100, there are Doric and Etruscan primitive peoples (as is
+probable), nevertheless <em>a Doric or an Etruscan nation never existed</em>. In Tuscany as
+in the Peloponnese there were only City-states, <em>national points</em> which in the
+period of colonization <em>could only multiply, never expand</em>. The Etruscan wars of
+Rome were always waged against one or more cities,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_246" href="#Footnote_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a> and the nations that the
+Persians and the Carthaginians confronted were of this same type. To speak of
+“the Greeks and the Romans” as the eighteenth century did (and as we still do)
+is completely erroneous. A Greek “nation” in our sense is a misconception—the
+Greeks themselves never knew such an idea at all. The name of “Hellenes,”
+which arose about 500, did not denote a people, but the aggregate of Classical
+Culture-men, the <em>sum</em> of their nations,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_247" href="#Footnote_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a> in contradistinction to the “Barbarian”
+world. And the Romans, a true urban people, could not conceive of their
+<span class="pagenum" id="p174">[174]</span>Empire otherwise than in the form of innumerable nation-points, the <i lang="la">civitates</i>
+into which, juridically as in other respects, they dissolved all the primitive
+peoples of their Imperium.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_248" href="#Footnote_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a> When national feeling in <em>this</em> shape is extinguished,
+there is an end to Classical history.</p>
+
+<p>It will be the task—one of the heaviest tasks of historians—to trace,
+generation by generation, the quiet fading-out of the Classical nations in the
+eastern Mediterranean during the “Late Classical” age, and the ever stronger
+inflow of a new nation-spirit, the Magian.</p>
+
+<p>A nation of the Magian type is the community of co-believers, the group of
+all who know the right way to salvation and are inwardly linked to one another
+by the <i>ijma</i>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_249" href="#Footnote_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a> of this belief. Men belonged to a Classical nation by virtue of the
+possession of citizenship, but to a Magian nation by virtue of a sacramental
+act—circumcision for the Jews, specific forms of baptism for the Mandæans
+or the Christians. An unbeliever was for a Magian folk what an alien was for
+a Classical—no intercourse with him, no <i lang="la">connubium</i>—and this national
+separation went so far that in Palestine a Jewish-Aramaic and a Christian-Aramaic
+dialect formed themselves side by side.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_250" href="#Footnote_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a> The Faustian nation, though
+necessarily bound up with a particular religiousness, is not so with a particular
+confession; the Classical nation is by type non-exclusive in its relations to
+different cults; but <em>the Magian nation comprises neither more nor less than is covered
+by the idea of one or another of the Magian Churches</em>. Inwardly the Classical nation
+is linked with the city, and the Western with a landscape, but the Arabian
+knows neither fatherland nor mother tongue. Outwardly its specific world-outlook
+is only expressed by the distinctive script which each such nation develops
+as soon as it is born. But for that very reason the inwardness and hidden
+force—the magic, in fact—of a Magian nation-feeling impresses us Faustians,
+who notice the absence of the home-idea, as something entirely enigmatic and
+uncanny. This tacit, self-secure cohesion (that of the Jews, for example, in the
+homes of the Western peoples) is what entered “Roman Law” (called by a
+Classical label <em>but worked out by Aramæans</em>) as the concept of the “juridical person,”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_251" href="#Footnote_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a>
+which is nothing but the Magian notion of a community. Post-exilic
+Judaism was a juridical person long before anyone had discovered the concept
+itself.</p>
+
+<p>The primitives who preceded this evolution were predominantly tribal
+associations, among them the South-Arabian Minæans,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_252" href="#Footnote_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a> who appear about the
+beginning of the first millennium, and whose name vanishes in the first century
+<span class="pagenum" id="p175">[175]</span>before Christ; the Aramaic-speaking Chaldeans, who, likewise about 1000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>,
+sprang up as clan-groups and from 659 to 539 ruled the Babylonian world; the
+Israelites before the Exile;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_253" href="#Footnote_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a>
+ and the Persians of Cyrus.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_254" href="#Footnote_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a> So strongly already the
+populations felt this form that the priesthoods which developed here, there,
+and everywhere after the time of Alexander received the names of foundered or
+fictitious tribes. Amongst the Jews and the South-Arabian Sabæans they were
+called Levites; amongst the Medes and Persians, Magi (after an extinct Indian
+tribe); and amongst the adherents of the new Babylonian religion Chaldeans
+(also after a disintegrated clan-grouping).&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_255" href="#Footnote_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a> But here, as in all other Cultures,
+the energy of the national <i>consensus</i> completely overrode the old tribal arrangements
+of the primitives. Just as the <i lang="la">Populus Romanus</i> unquestionably contained
+folk-elements of very varied provenance, and as the nation of the French took
+in Salian Franks and Romanic and Old Celtic natives alike, so the Magian nation
+also ceased to regard origin as a distinguishing mark. The process, of
+course, was an exceedingly long one. The tribe still counts for much with the
+Jews of the Maccabæan period and even with the Arabs of the first Caliphs;
+but for the inwardly ripened Culture-peoples of this world, such as the Jews
+of the Talmudic period, it no longer possessed any meaning. He who belongs
+to the Faith belongs to the Nation—it would have been blasphemy even to
+admit any other distinction. In early Christian times the Prince of Adiabene&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_256" href="#Footnote_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a>
+went over to Judaism with his people in a body, and they were all <i lang="la">ipso facto</i>
+incorporated in the Jewish nation. The same applies to the nobility of Armenia
+and even the Caucasian tribes (which at that period must have Judaized on a
+large scale) and, in the opposite direction, to the Beduins of Arabia, right down
+to the extreme south, and beyond them again to African tribes as far afield as
+Lake Chad.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_257" href="#Footnote_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a> Here evidently is a national common feeling proof even against
+such race-distinctions as these. It is stated that even to-day Jews can amongst
+themselves distinguish very different races at the first glance, and that in the
+ghettos of eastern Europe the “tribes” (in the Old Testament sense) are clearly
+recognized. But none of this constitutes a difference of <em>nation</em>. According to
+von Erckert&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_258" href="#Footnote_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a> the West-European Jew-type is universally distributed within the
+non-Jewish Caucasian peoples, whereas according to Weissenberg&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_259" href="#Footnote_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a> it does not
+occur at all amongst the long-headed Jews of southern Arabia, where the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p176">[176]</span>Sabæan tomb-sculptures show a human type that might almost claim to be
+Roman or Germanic and is the ancestor of these Jews who were converted by
+missionary effort at least by the birth of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>But this resolution of the tribal primitives into the Magian nations of Persians,
+Jews, Mandæans, Christians, and the rest must have occurred quite
+generally and on an immense scale. I have already drawn attention to the decisive
+fact that long before the beginning of our era the Persians represented simply
+a religious community, and it is certain that their numbers were indefinitely increased
+by accessions to the Mazdaist faith. The Babylonian religion vanished
+at that time—which means that its adherents became in part Jews and in part
+Persians—but emerging from it there is a <em>new</em> religion, inwardly alien to both
+Jewish and Persian, an astral religion, which bears the name of the Chaldees
+and whose adherents constituted a genuine Aramaic-speaking nation. From
+this Aramæan population of Chaldean-Jewish-Persian nationality came, firstly
+the Babylonian Talmud, the Gnosis, and the religion of Mani, and secondly,
+in Islamic times, Sufism and the Shia.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, as seen from Edessa, the inhabitants of the Classical world, they
+also, appear as nations in the Magian style. “The Greeks” in the Eastern idiom
+means the aggregate of all who adhered to the Syncretic cults and were bound
+together by the <i>ijma</i> of the Late Classical religiousness. The Hellenistic city-nations
+are no longer in the picture, which shows only <em>one</em> community of believers,
+the “worshippers of the mysteries,” who under the names of Helios,
+Jupiter, Mithras, θεός ὕψιστος, worshipped a kind of Yahweh or Allah.
+Throughout the East, Greekness is a definite <em>religious</em> notion, and for that matter
+one completely concordant with the facts as they then were. The feeling
+of the Polis is almost extinct, and a Magian nation needs neither home nor
+community of origin. Even the Hellenism of the Seleucid Empire, which made
+converts in Turkestan and on the Indus, was related in inward form to Persian
+and post-exilic Judaism. Later, the Aramæan Porphyry, the pupil of Plotinus,
+attempted to organize this Greekness as a cult-Church on the model of the
+Christian and the Persian, and the Emperor Julian raised it to the dignity of
+being the State Church—an act not merely religious, but also and above all
+national. When a Jew sacrificed to Sol or to Apollo, he thereby became a Greek.
+So, for example Ammonius Saccas (d. 242), the teacher of Plotinus and probably
+also of Origen, went over “from the Christians to the Greeks”; so also Porphyry,
+born Malchus and (like the “Roman” jurist Ulpian)&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_260" href="#Footnote_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a> a Phœnician of
+Tyre.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_261" href="#Footnote_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a> In these cases we see jurists and State officials taking Latin, and philosophers
+Greek, names—and for the philological spirit of modern and religious
+research, this is quite historical enough to justify these men’s being regarded
+<span class="pagenum" id="p177">[177]</span>as Roman and Greek in the Classical city-national sense! But how many of
+the great Alexandrines may have been Greeks only in the Magian sense of the
+term? In point of birth were not Plotinus and Diophantus&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_262" href="#Footnote_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a> perhaps Jews or
+Chaldeans?</p>
+
+<p>Now, the Christians also felt themselves from the outset as a nation of the
+Magian cast, and, moreover, the others, Greeks (“heathen”) and Jews alike,
+regarded them as such. Quite logically the latter considered their secession from
+Judaism as high treason, and the former their missionary infiltration into the
+Classical cities as an invasion and conquest, while the Christians, on their side,
+designated people of other faiths as τὰ ἔθνη.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_263" href="#Footnote_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a> When the Monophysites and
+the Nestorians separated themselves from the Orthodox, new nations came into
+being as well as new Churches. The Nestorians since 1450 have been governed
+by the Mar Shimun,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_264" href="#Footnote_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a> who was at once prince and patriarch of his people and,
+<i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the Sultan, occupied exactly the same position as, long before, the
+Jewish Resh Galutha had occupied in the Persian Empire.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_265" href="#Footnote_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a> This nation-consciousness,
+derived from particular and defined world-feeling and therefore self-evident
+with an <i lang="la">a priori</i> sureness, cannot be ignored if we are to understand the
+later persecutions of the Christians. The Magian State is inseparably bound up
+with the concept of orthodoxy. Caliphate, nation, and Church form an intimate
+unit. It was as <em>states</em> that Adiabene went over to Judaism, Osrhoene about 200
+(so soon!) from Greekdom to Christendom, Armenia in the sixth century from
+the Greek to the Monophysite Church. Each of these events expresses the fact
+that the State was identical with the orthodox community as a juridical person.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_266" href="#Footnote_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a>
+If Christians lived in the Islamic State, Nestorians in the Persian, Jews in the
+Byzantine, they did not and could not as unbelievers belong to it, and consequently
+were thrown back upon their own jurisdictions.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_267" href="#Footnote_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a> If by reason of their
+numbers or their missionary spirit they became a threat to the continuance
+<span class="pagenum" id="p178">[178]</span>of the identity of state and creed-community, persecution became a national
+duty. It was on this account that first the “orthodox” (or “Greek”) and then
+the Nestorian Christians suffered in the Persian Empire. Diocletian also, who
+as “Caliph”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_268" href="#Footnote_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a> (<i lang="la">Dominus et Deus</i>) had linked the Imperium with the pagan cult-Churches
+and saw himself in all sincerity as Commander of <em>these</em> Faithful,
+could not evade the duty of suppressing the second Church. Constantine
+changed the “true” Church <em>and in that act changed the nationality</em> of the Byzantine
+Empire. From that point on, the Greek name slowly passed over to the Christian
+nation, and specifically to that Christian nation which the Emperor as
+Head of the Faithful recognized and allowed to sit in the Great Councils.
+Hence the uncertain lines of the picture of Byzantine history—in 290 the organization
+that of a Classical Imperium, but the substance already a Magian
+national state; in 312 a change of nationality without change of name. Under
+this name of “Greeks,” first Paganism as a nation fought the Christians, and
+then Christianity as a nation fought Islam. And in the latter fight, Islam itself
+being a nation also (the Arabian), nationality stamped itself more and more
+deeply upon events. Hence the present-day Greeks are a creation of the Magian
+Culture, developed first by the Christian Church, then by the sacred language
+of this Church, and finally by the name of this Church. Islam brought with it
+from the home of Mohammed the Arab name as the badge of its nationality.
+It is a mistake to equate these “Arabs” with the Beduin tribes of the desert.
+What created the new nation, with its passionate and strongly characteristic
+soul, was the <i>consensus</i> of the new faith. Its unity is no more derived from race
+and home than that of the Christian, Jewish, or Persian, and therefore it did
+not “migrate”; rather it owes its immense expansion to the incorporation
+within itself of the greater part of the early Magian nations. With the end of
+the first millennium of our era these nations one and all pass over into the form
+of fellah-peoples, and it is as fellaheen that the Christian peoples of the
+Balkans under Turkish rule, the Parsees in India, and the Jews in Western Europe
+have lived ever since.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_269" href="#Footnote_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the West, nations of Faustian style emerge, more and more distinctly, from
+the time of Otto the Great (936–973), and in them the primitive peoples of the
+Carolingian period are swiftly dissolved.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_270" href="#Footnote_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a> Already by <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1000 the men who
+<span class="pagenum" id="p179">[179]</span>“mattered most” were everywhere beginning to sense themselves as Germans,
+Italians, Spaniards, Frenchmen; whereas hardly six generations earlier their
+ancestors had been to the depths of their souls Franks, Lombards, and Visigoths.</p>
+
+<p>The people-form of this Culture is founded, like its Gothic architecture
+and its Infinitesimal Calculus upon a tendency to the Infinite, in the spatial as
+well as the temporal sense. The nation-feeling comprises, to begin with, a
+geographical horizon that, considering the period and its means of communication,
+can only be called vast, and is not paralleled in any other Culture. The
+fatherland as <em>extent</em>, as a region whose boundaries the individual has scarcely,
+if ever, seen and which nevertheless he will defend and die for, is something that
+in its symbolic depth and force men of other Cultures can never comprehend.
+The Magian nation does not as such possess an earthly home; the Classical
+possesses it only as a point-focus. The actuality that, even in Gothic times,
+united men from the banks of the Adige with men in the Order-castles of Lithuania
+in an association of feeling would have been inconceivable even in ancient
+China and ancient Egypt, and stands in the sharpest opposition to the actuality
+of Rome and Athens, where every member of the Demos had the rest constantly
+in sight.</p>
+
+<p>Still stronger is the sensitivity to distance <em>in time</em>. Before the fatherland-idea
+(which is a <em>consequence</em> of the existence of the nation) emerged at all, this
+passion evolved another idea to which the Faustian nations owe that existence—the
+<em>dynastic</em> idea. Faustian peoples are historical peoples, communities that
+feel themselves bound together not by place or consensus, but by history; and
+the eminent symbol and vessel of the common Destiny is the ruling “house.”
+For Egyptian and for Chinese mankind the dynasty is a symbol of quite other
+meaning. Here what it signifies, as a will and an activity, <em>is Time</em>. All that
+we have been, all that we would be, is manifested in the being of the one generation;
+and our sense of this is much too profound to be upset by the worthlessness
+of a regent. What matters is not the person, but the idea, and it is for the
+sake of the idea that thousands have so often marched to their deaths with
+conviction in a genealogical quarrel. Classical history was for Classical eyes
+only a chain of incidents leading from moment to moment; Magian history
+was for its members the progressive actualization in and through mankind
+of a world-plan laid down by God and accomplished between a creation and a
+cataclysm; but Faustian history is in our eyes a single grand willing of conscious
+logic, in the accomplishment of which nations are led and represented by their
+rulers. It is a trait of race. Rational foundations it has not and cannot have—it
+has simply been felt so, and because it has been felt so, the companion-trust of
+the Germanic migration-time developed on into the feudal troth of the Gothic,
+the loyalty of the Baroque, and the merely seemingly undynastic patriotism of
+the nineteenth century. We must not misjudge the depth and dignity of this
+<span class="pagenum" id="p180">[180]</span>feeling
+ because there is an endless catalogue of perjured vassals and peoples&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_271" href="#Footnote_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a> and
+an eternal comedy in the cringing of courtiers and the abjectness of the vulgar.
+All great symbols are spiritual and can be comprehended only in their highest
+forms. The private life of a pope bears no relation to the idea of the Papacy.
+Henry the Lion’s very defection&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_272" href="#Footnote_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a> shows how fully in a time of nation-forming
+a real ruler feels the destiny of “his” people incorporated in himself. He represents
+that destiny in the face of history, and at times it costs him his honour to
+do so.</p>
+
+<p>All nations of the West are of dynastic origins. In the Romanesque and even
+in Early Gothic architecture the soul of the Carolingian primitives still quivers
+through. There is no French or German Gothic, but Salian, Rhenish, and
+Suabian, as there is Visigothic (northern Spain, southern France) and Lombard
+and Saxon Romanesque. But over it all there spreads soon the minority,
+composed of men of race, that feels membership in a nation as a great historical
+vocation. From it proceed the Crusades, and in them there truly were French
+and German chivalries. It is the hall-mark of Faustian peoples that they are
+conscious of the direction of their history. But this direction attaches to the
+sequence of the generations, and so the nature of the race-ideal is <em>genealogical</em>
+through and through—Darwinism, even, with its theories of descent and inheritance
+is a sort of caricature of Gothic heraldry—and the world-as-history,
+when every individual lives in the plane of it, contains not only the tree of the
+individual family, ruling or other, but also the tree of the people as the basic
+form of all its happenings.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_273" href="#Footnote_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a> It needs very exact observation to perceive that this
+Faustian-genealogical principle, with its eminently historical notions of
+“<i lang="de">Ebenbürtigkeit</i>” (equivalence by virtue of birth) and of purity of blood, is just
+as alien to the Egyptians and Chinese, for all their historical disposition, as it
+is to the Roman nobility and the Byzantine Empire. On the other hand, neither
+our peasantry nor the patriciate of the cities is conceivable without it. The
+scientific conception of the people, which I have dissected above, is derived
+essentially from the genealogical sense of the Gothic period. The notion that
+the peoples have their trees has made the Italians proud to be the heirs of Rome,
+and the Germans proud to recall their Teuton forefathers, and that is something
+quite different from the Classical belief in timeless descent from heroes and gods.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p181">[181]</span>And eventually, when after 1789 the notion of mother tongue came to be fitted
+on to the dynastic principle, the once merely scientific fancy of a primitive
+Indogermanic people transformed itself into a deeply felt genealogy of “the
+Aryan race,” and in the process the word “race” became almost a designation
+for Destiny.</p>
+
+<p>But the “races” of the West are not the creators of the great nations, but
+<em>their result</em>. Not one of them had yet come into existence in Carolingian times.
+It was the class-ideal of chivalry that worked creatively in different ways upon
+Germany, England, France, and Spain and impressed upon an immense area that
+which within the individual nations is felt and experienced as race. On this
+rest (as I have said before) the nations—so <em>historical</em>, so alien to the Classical—of
+equivalence by birth (<em>peer</em>-age, <i lang="de">Ebenbürtigkeit</i>) and blood-purity. It was
+because the blood of the ruling family incorporated the destiny, the being, of
+the whole nation, that the state-system of the Baroque was of genealogical
+structure and that most of the grand crises assumed the form of wars of dynastic
+succession. Even the catastrophic ruin of Napoleon, which settled the world’s
+political organization for a century, took its shape from the fact than an adventurer
+dared to drive out with his blood that of the old dynasties, and that
+his attack upon a symbol made it historically a sacred duty to resist him. For
+all these peoples were the <em>consequence</em> of dynastic destinies. That there is a
+Portuguese people, and a Portuguese Brazil in the midst of Spanish America,
+is the result of the marriage of Count Henry of Burgundy in 1095. That there
+are Swiss and Hollanders is the result of a reaction against the House of Habsburg.
+That Lorraine is the name of a land and not of a people is a consequence
+of the childlessness of Lothar II.</p>
+
+<p>It was the Kaiser-idea that welded the disjunct primitives of Charlemagne’s
+time into the German nation. Germany and Empire are inseparable ideas.
+The fall of the Hohenstaufens meant the replacement of one great dynasty by
+a handful of small and tiny ones; and the German nation of Gothic style was
+inwardly shattered even before the beginning of the Baroque—that is, at the
+very time when the nation-idea was being raised to higher levels of intellect in
+leader-cities like Paris, Madrid, London, and Vienna. The Thirty Years’ War,
+so conventional history says, destroyed Germany in its flower. Not so; the
+fact that it could occur at all in this wretched form simply confirmed and showed
+up a long-completed decadence—it was the final consequence of the fall of
+the Hohenstaufens. There could hardly be a more convincing proof that
+Faustian nations are dynastic units. But then again, the Salians and the Hohenstaufens
+created also—at least in idea—an Italian nation out of Romans,
+Lombards, and Normans. Only the Empire made it possible for them to stretch
+a hand back to the age of Rome. Even though alien power evoked the hostility
+of the townsmen, and split the two primary orders, the nobles to the Emperor,
+the priests to the Pope; even though in these conflicts of Guelph and Ghibelline
+<span class="pagenum" id="p182">[182]</span>the nobility soon lost its importance and the Papacy rose through the anti-dynastic
+cities to political supremacy; even though at the last there was but a
+tangle of predatory states whose “Renaissance”-politics opposed the soaring
+world-policy of the Gothic Empire, as Milan of old had defied the will of
+Frederick Barbarossa—yet the ideal of <i>Una Italia</i>, the ideal for which Dante
+sacrificed the peace of his life, was a pure dynastic creation of the great Germany
+emperors. The Renaissance, whose historical horizon was that of the urban
+patriciate, led the nation as far out of the path of self-fulfilment as it is possible
+to imagine. All through the Baroque and Rococo the land was depressed to the
+state of being a mere pawn in the power-politics of alien houses. And not until
+after 1800 did Romanticism arise and reawaken the Gothic feeling with an intensity
+that made of it a political power.</p>
+
+<p>The French people was forged out of Franks and Visigoths by its kings. It
+learned to feel itself as a whole for the first time at Bouvines in 1214.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_274" href="#Footnote_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a> Still
+more significant is the creation of the House of Habsburg, which, out of a
+population linked neither by speech nor folk-feeling nor tradition caused to
+arise the Austrian nation, which proved its nationhood in defending Maria
+Theresa and in resisting Napoleon—its first tests, and its last. The political
+history of the Baroque age is in essentials the history of the Houses of Bourbon
+and Habsburg. The rise of the House of Wettin in place of that of Welf is the
+reason why “Saxony” was on the Weser in 800, and is on the Elbe to-day.
+Dynastic events, and finally the intervention of Napoleon, brought it about that
+half of Bavaria has shared in the history of Austria and that the Bavarian State
+consists for the most part of Franconia and Suabia.</p>
+
+<p>The latest nation of the West is the Prussian, a creation of the Hohenzollerns
+as the Roman was the last creation of the Classical Polis-feeling, and the Arabian
+the last product of a religious <i>consensus</i>. At Fehbellin&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_275" href="#Footnote_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a> the young nation gained
+its recognition; at Rossbach&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_276" href="#Footnote_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a> it won for Germany. It was Goethe who with
+his infallible eye for historic turning-points described the then new “Minna von
+Barnhelm” as the first German poetry of specifically national content. It is one
+more example, and a deeply significant one, to show how dynastically the
+Western nations defined themselves, that Germany thus at one stroke re-discovered
+her poetic language. The collapse of the Hohenstaufen rule had been
+accompanied by that of Germany’s Gothic literature also. What did emerge
+here and there in the following centuries—the golden age of all the Western
+literatures—was undeserving of the name. But with the victories of Frederick
+the Great a new poesy began. “From Lessing to Hebbel” means the same as
+“from Rossbach to Sedan.” The attempts that were made to restore the lost
+connexion by consciously leaning upon, first the French, and then Shakespeare,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p183">[183]</span>upon the Volkslied, and finally (in Romanticism) upon the poetry of the age
+of chivalry, produced at least the unique phenomenon of an art-history which,
+though it never really attained one aim, was constituted, for the greater part,
+of flashes of genius.</p>
+
+<p>The end of the eighteenth century witnessed the accomplishment of that
+remarkable turn with which national consciousness sought to emancipate itself
+from the dynastic principle. To all appearance this had happened in England
+long before. In this connexion Magna Charta (1215) will occur to most readers,
+but some will not have failed to observe that on the contrary, the very recognition
+of the nation involved in the recognition of its representatives gave the
+dynastic feeling a fresh-enforced depth and refinement to which the peoples
+of the Continent remained almost utter strangers. If the modern Englishman
+is (without appearing so) the most conservative human being in the world, and
+if in consequence his political management solves its problems so much by wordless
+harmony of national pulse instead of express discussion, and therefore has
+been the most successful up to now, the underlying cause is the <em>early emancipation
+of the dynastic feeling</em> from its expression in monarchical power.</p>
+
+<p>The French Revolution, on the contrary, was in this regard only a victory
+of Rationalism. It set free not so much the nation as the concept of the nation.
+The dynastic has penetrated into the blood of the Western races, and on that
+very account it is a vexation to their intellect. For a dynasty represents history,
+it is the history-become-flesh of a land, and intellect is timeless and unhistorical.
+The ideas of the Revolution were all “eternal” and “true.” Universal human
+rights, freedom, and equality are literature and abstraction and not facts. Call
+all this republican if you will, in reality it was one more case of a minority
+striving in the name of all to introduce the new ideal into the world of fact.
+It became a power, but at the cost of the ideal, and all it did was to replace
+the old felt adherence by the reasoned patriotism of the nineteenth century;
+by a civilized nationalism, only possible in our Culture, which in France itself
+and even to-day is unconsciously dynastic; and by the concept of the <em>fatherland
+as dynastic unit</em> which emerged first in the Spanish and Prussian uprisings against
+Napoleon and then in the German and Italian wars of <em>dynastic</em> unification. Out
+of the opposition of race and speech, blood and intellect, a new and specifically
+Western ideal arose to confront the genealogical ideal—that of the mother
+tongue. Enthusiasts there were in both countries who thought to replace the
+unifying force of the Emperor- and King-idea by the linking of republic and
+poetry—something of the “return to nature” in this, but a return of history
+to nature. In place of the wars of succession came language-struggles, in which
+one nation sought to force its language and therewith its nationality upon the
+fragments of another. But no one will fail to observe that even the rationalistic
+conception of a nation as a linguistic unit can at best ignore, never abolish,
+the dynastic feeling, any more than a Hellenistic Greek could inwardly overcome
+<span class="pagenum" id="p184">[184]</span>his Polis-consciousness or a modern Jew the national <i>ijma</i>. The mother
+tongue does not arise out of nothing, but is itself a product of dynastic history.
+Without the Capetian line there would have been no French language, but a
+Romance-Frankish in the north and a Provençal in the south. The Italian written-language
+is to be credited to the German Emperors and above all to Frederick
+II. The modern nations are primarily the populations of an old dynastic history.
+Yet in the nineteenth century the second concept of the nation as a unit
+of written language has annihilated the Austrian, and probably created the
+American. Thenceforward there have been in all countries two parties representing
+the nation in two opposed aspects, as dynastic-historical unit and as
+intellectual unit—the race party and the language party—but these are reflections
+that evoke too soon problems of politics that must await a later chapter.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V_5">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>At first, when the land was still without cities, it was the nobility that
+represented, in the highest sense of the word, the nation. The peasantry,
+“everlasting” and historyless, was a people <em>before</em> the dawn of the Culture, and
+in very fundamental characters it continued to be the primitive people, surviving
+when the form of the nation had passed away again. “The nation,” like every
+other grand symbol of the Culture, is intimately the cherished possession of a
+few; those who have it are born to it as men are born to art or philosophy, and
+the distinctions of creator, critic, and layman, or something like them, hold for
+it also—alike in a classical Polis, a Jewish consensus, and a Western people.
+When a nation rises up ardent to fight for its freedom and honour, it is always
+a minority that really fires the multitude. The people “awakens”—it is more
+than a figure of speech, for only thus and then does the waking-consciousness of
+the whole become manifested. All these individuals whose “we”-feeling yesterday
+went content with a horizon of family and job and perhaps home-town
+are suddenly to-day men of nothing less than the People. Their thought and
+feeling, their Ego, and therewith the “it” in them have been transformed to the
+very depths. It has become <em>historic</em>. And then even the unhistorical peasant
+becomes a member of the nation, and a day dawns for him in which he experiences
+history and not merely lets it pass him by.</p>
+
+<p>But in the world-cities, besides a minority which has history and livingly
+experiences, feels, and seeks to lead the nation, there arises another minority
+of timeless a-historic, literary men, men not of destiny, but of reasons and
+causes, men who are inwardly detached from the pulse of blood and being, wide-awake
+thinking consciousnesses, that can no longer find any “reasonable”
+connotation for the nation-idea. Cosmopolitanism is a mere waking-conscious
+association of intelligentsias. In it there is hatred of Destiny, and above all of
+history as the expression of Destiny. Everything national belongs to race—so
+<span class="pagenum" id="p185">[185]</span>much so that it is incapable of finding language for itself, clumsy in all that
+demands thought, and shiftless to the point of fatalism. <em>Cosmopolitanism is
+literature</em> and remains literature, very strong in reasons, very weak in defending
+them otherwise than with more reasons, in defending them with the blood.</p>
+
+<p>All the more, then, this minority of far superior intellect chooses the intellectual
+weapon, and all the more is it able to do so as the world cities are pure
+intellect, rootless, and by very hypothesis the common property of the civilization.
+The born world-citizens, world-pacifists, and world-reconcilers—alike
+in the China of the “Contending States,” in Buddhist India, in the Hellenistic
+age, and in the Western world to-day—are the <em>spiritual leaders of fellaheen</em>.
+<em>“Panem et circenses” is only another formula for pacifism.</em> In the history of all
+Cultures there is an anti-national element, whether we have evidences of it or
+not. Pure self-directed thinking was ever alien to life, and therefore alien to
+history, unwarlike, raceless. Consider our Humanism and Classicism, the Sophists
+of Athens, Buddha and Lao-tze—not to mention the passionate contempt
+of all nationalisms displayed by the great champions of the ecclesiastical
+and the philosophical world-view. However the cases differ amongst themselves
+otherwise, they are alike in this, that the world-feeling of race; the political
+(and therefore national) instinct for fact (“my country, right or
+wrong!”); the resolve to be the subject and not the object of evolution (for one
+or the other it has to be)—in a word, the <em>will</em>-to-power—has to retreat and
+make room for a tendency of which the standard-bearers are most often men
+without original impulse, but all the more set upon their logic; men at home in
+a world of truths, ideals, and Utopias; bookmen who believe that they can replace
+the actual by the logical, the might of facts by an abstract justice, Destiny
+by Reason. It begins with the everlastingly fearful who withdraw themselves
+out of actuality into cells and study-chambers and spiritual communities, and
+proclaim the nullity of the world’s doings, and it ends in every Culture with the
+apostles of world-peace. Every people has such (historically speaking) waste-products.
+Even their heads constitute physiognomically a group by themselves.
+In the “history of intellect” they stand high—and many illustrious names are
+numbered amongst them—but regarded from the point of view of actual history,
+they are inefficients.</p>
+
+<p>The Destiny of a nation plunged in the events of its world depends upon how
+far its race-quality is successful in making these events historically ineffective
+against it. It could perhaps be demonstrated even now that in the Chinese
+world of states the realm of Tsin won through (250 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) because it alone had
+kept itself free from Taoist sentiments. Be this as it may, the Roman people
+prevailed over the rest of the Classical world because it was able to insulate its
+conduct of policy from the fellah-instincts of Hellenism.</p>
+
+<p>A nation is humanity brought into living form. The practical result of
+world-improving theories is consistently a <em>formless and therefore historyless mass</em>.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p186">[186]</span>All world-improvers and world-citizens stand for fellaheen ideals, whether they
+know it or not. <em>Their success means the historical abdication of the nation in favour,
+not of everlasting peace, but of another nation.</em> World-peace is always a one-sided
+resolve. The <i lang="la">Pax Romana</i> had for the later soldier-emperors and Germanic
+band-kings only the one practical significance that it made a formless population
+of a hundred millions a mere object for the will-to-power of small warrior-groups.
+This peace cost the peaceful sacrifices beside which the losses of Cannæ
+seem vanishingly small. The Babylonian, Chinese, Indian, Egyptian worlds
+pass from one conqueror’s hands to another’s, and it is their own blood that pays
+for the contest. That is their—peace. When in 1401 the Mongols conquered
+Mesopotamia, they built a victory memorial out of the skulls of a hundred
+thousand inhabitants of Baghdad, which had not defended itself. From the
+intellectual point of view, no doubt, the extinction of the nations puts a fellaheen-world
+above history, civilized at last and <em>for ever</em>. But in the realm of
+facts it reverts to a state of nature, in which it alternates between long submissiveness
+and brief angers that for all the bloodshed—world-peace never
+diminishes that—alter nothing. Of old they shed their blood for themselves;
+now they must shed it for others, often enough for the mere entertainment of
+others—that is the difference. A resolute leader who collects ten thousand
+adventurers about him can do as he pleases. Were the whole world a single
+Imperium, it would thereby become merely the maximum conceivable field for
+the exploits of such conquering heroes.</p>
+
+<p>“<i lang="fy">Lever doodt als Sklav</i> (better dead than slave)” is an old Frisian peasant-saying.
+The reverse has been the choice of every Late Civilization, and every
+Late Civilization has had to experience how much that choice costs it.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p187"></a><a id="p188"></a><a id="p189"></a>[189]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">
+ CHAPTER VII
+ <br>
+ <span class="subtitle">PROBLEMS OF THE ARABIAN CULTURE
+ <br>
+ (A)
+ <br>
+ HISTORIC PSEUDOMORPHOSES</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>In a rock-stratum are embedded crystals of a mineral. Clefts and cracks occur,
+water filters in, and the crystals are gradually washed out so that in due course
+only their hollow mould remains. Then come volcanic outbursts which explode
+the mountain; molten masses pour in, stiffen, and crystallize out in their
+turn. But these are not free to do so in their own special forms. They must fill
+up the spaces that they find available. Thus there arise distorted forms, crystals
+whose inner structure contradicts their external shape, stones of one kind presenting
+the appearance of stones of another kind. The mineralogists call this
+phenomenon <em>Pseudomorphosis</em>.</p>
+
+<p>By the term “historical pseudomorphosis” I propose to designate those
+cases in which an older alien Culture lies so massively over the land that a
+young Culture, born in this land, cannot get its breath and fails not only
+to achieve pure and specific expression-forms, but even to develop fully its own
+self-consciousness. All that wells up from the depths of the young soul is cast in
+the old moulds, young feelings stiffen in senile works, and instead of rearing
+itself up in its own creative power, it can only hate the distant power with a
+hate that grows to be monstrous.</p>
+
+<p>This is the case of the Arabian Culture. Its pre-history lies entirely within
+the ambit of the ancient Babylonian Civilization,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_277" href="#Footnote_277" class="fnanchor">[277]</a> which for two thousand years
+had been the prey of successive conquerors. Its “Merovingian period” is
+marked by the dictatorship of a small&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_278" href="#Footnote_278" class="fnanchor">[278]</a> Persian clan, primitive as the Ostrogoths,
+whose domination of two hundred years, scarcely challenged, was
+founded on the infinite weariness of a fellah-world. But from 300 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> onwards
+there begins and spreads a great awakening in the young Aramaic-speaking&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_279" href="#Footnote_279" class="fnanchor">[279]</a>
+peoples between Sinai and the Zagros range. As at the epoch of the Trojan
+War and at that of the Saxon emperors, a new relation of man to God, a wholly
+new world-feeling, penetrated all the current religions, whether these bore the
+name of Ahuramazda, Baal, or Yahweh, impelling everywhere to a great effort
+of creation. But precisely at this juncture there came the Macedonians—so
+<span class="pagenum" id="p190">[190]</span>appositely that some inner connexion is not altogether impossible, for the
+Persian power had rested on spiritual postulates, and it was precisely these that
+had disappeared. To Babylon these Macedonians appeared as yet another
+swarm of adventurers like the rest. They laid down a thin sheet of Classical
+Civilization over the lands as far as Turkestan and India. The kingdoms of the
+Diadochi might indeed have become, insensibly, states of pre-Arabian spirit—the
+Seleucid Empire, which actually coincided geographically with the region of
+Aramaic speech, was in fact such a state by 200 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> But from the battle of
+Pydna&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_280" href="#Footnote_280" class="fnanchor">[280]</a> onwards it was, in its western part, more and more embodied in the
+Classical Imperium and so subjected to the powerful workings of a spirit which
+had its centre of gravity in a distant region. And thus was prepared the Pseudomorphosis.</p>
+
+<p>The Magian Culture, geographically and historically, is the midmost of
+the group of higher Cultures—the only one which, in point both of space
+and of time, was in touch with practically all others. The structure of its
+history as a whole in our world-picture depends, therefore, entirely on our recognizing
+the true inner form which the outer moulds distorted. Unhappily, that is
+just what we do not yet know, thanks to theological and philological prepossessions,
+and even more to the modern tendency of over-specialization which
+has unreasonably subdivided Western research into a number of separate branches—each
+distinguished from the others not merely by its materials and its methods,
+but by its very way of thinking—and so prevented the big problems from being
+even seen. In this instance the consequences of specialization have been graver
+perhaps than in any other. The historians proper stayed within the domain of
+Classical philology and made the Classical language-frontier their eastern horizon;
+hence they entirely failed to perceive the deep unity of development on
+both sides of their frontier, which spiritually had no existence. The result is a
+perspective of “Ancient,” “Mediæval,” and “Modern” history, ordered and
+defined by the use of the Greek and Latin languages. For the experts of the old
+languages, with their “texts,” Axum, Saba, and even the realm of the Sassanids
+were unattackable, and the consequence is that in “history” these scarcely
+exist at all. The literature-researcher (he also a philologist) confuses the spirit of
+the language with the spirit of the work. Products of the Aramæan region, if
+they happen to be written in Greek or even merely preserved in Greek, he embodies
+in his “Late Greek literature” and proceeds to classify as a special period
+of that literature. The cognate texts in other languages are outside his department
+and have been brought into other groups of literature in the same artificial
+way. And yet here was the strongest of all proofs that the history of a literature
+never coincides with the history of a language.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_281" href="#Footnote_281" class="fnanchor">[281]</a> Here, in reality, was a self-contained
+<span class="pagenum" id="p191">[191]</span>ensemble of Magian national literature, single in spirit, but written
+in several languages—the Classical amongst others. For a nation of Magian
+type has no mother tongue. There are Talmudic, Manichæan, Nestorian,
+Jewish, or even Neopythagorean national literatures, but <em>not</em> Hellenistic or
+Hebrew.</p>
+
+<p>Theological research, in its turn, broke up its domain into subdivisions
+according to the different West-European confessions, and so the “philological”
+frontier between West and East came into force, and still is in force, for Christian
+theology also. The Persian world fell to the student of Iranian philology, and
+as the Avesta texts were disseminated, though not composed, in an Aryan
+dialect, their immense problem&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_282" href="#Footnote_282" class="fnanchor">[282]</a> came to be regarded as a minor branch of the
+Indologist’s work and so disappeared absolutely from the field of vision of
+Christian theology. And lastly the history of Talmudic Judaism, since Hebrew
+philology became bound up in one specialism with Old Testament research,
+not only never obtained separate treatment, but has been <em>completely forgotten</em>
+by all the major histories of religions with which I am acquainted, although
+these find room for every Indian sect (since folk-lore, too, ranks as a specialism)
+and every primitive Negro religion to boot. Such is the preparation of scholarship
+for the greatest task that historical research has to face to-day.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_6">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>The Roman world of the Imperial period had a good idea of its own state.
+The later writers are full of complaints concerning the depopulation and
+spiritual emptiness of Africa, Spain, Gaul, and, above all, the mother countries
+Italy and Greece. But those provinces which belong to the Magian world are
+consistently excepted in these mournful surveys. Syria in particular is densely
+peopled and, like Parthian Mesopotamia, flourishes in blood and spirit.</p>
+
+<p>The preponderance of the young East, palpable to all, had sooner or later
+to find political expression also. Viewing the scene from this standpoint, we
+see behind the epic and pageant of Marius and Sulla, Cæsar and Pompey, Antony
+and Octavian, this East striving ever more intensely to free itself from the
+historically dying West, the fellah-world waking up. The transfer of the
+capital to Byzantium was a great symbol. Diocletian had selected Nicodemia;
+Cesar had had thoughts of Alexandria or Troy. A better choice than any would
+have been Antioch. But the act came too late by three centuries, and these had
+been the decisive period of the Magian Springtime.</p>
+
+<p>The Pseudomorphosis began with Actium; there <em>it should have been Antony
+who won</em>. It was not the struggle of Rome and Greece that came there to an
+issue—that struggle had been fought out at Cannæ and Zama, where it was
+the tragic fate of Hannibal to stand as champion not for his own land, but for
+Hellenism. At Actium it was the unborn Arabian Culture that was opposed to
+<span class="pagenum" id="p192">[192]</span>iron-grey Classical Civilization; the issue lay between Principate and Caliphate.
+Antony’s victory would have freed the Magian soul; his defeat drew over its
+lands the hard sheet of Roman <i lang="la">Imperium</i>. A comparable event in the history
+of the West is the battle between Tours and Poitiers, <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 732. Had the Arabs
+won it and made “Frankistan” into a caliphate of the North-east, Arabic
+speech, religion, and customs would have become familiar to the ruling classes,
+giant cities like Granada and Kairawan would have arisen on the Loire and
+the Rhine, the Gothic feeling would have been forced to find expression in the
+long-stiffened forms of Mosque and Arabesque, and instead of the German
+mysticism we should have had a sort of Sufism. That the equivalent of these
+things actually happened to the Arabian world was due to the fact that the
+Syro-Persian peoples produced no Charles Martel to battle along with Mithradates
+or Brutus and Cassius or Antony (or for that matter without them) against
+Rome.</p>
+
+<p>A second pseudomorphosis is presented to our eyes to-day in Russia. The
+Russian hero-tales of the Bylini culminated in the epic cycle of Prince Vladimir
+of Kiev (<i>c.</i> <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1000), with his Round Table, and in the popular hero Ilya
+Muromyets.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_283" href="#Footnote_283" class="fnanchor">[283]</a> The whole immense difference between the Russian and the
+Faustian soul is already revealed in the contrast of these with the “contemporary”
+Arthur, Ermanarich, and Nibelungen sagas of the Migration-period in
+the form of the <i lang="de">Hildebrandslied</i> and the <i lang="de">Waltharilied</i>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_284" href="#Footnote_284" class="fnanchor">[284]</a> The Russian “Merovingian”
+period begins with the overthrow of the Tatar domination by Ivan III
+(1480) and passes, by the last princes of the House of Rurik and the first of the
+Romanovs, to Peter the Great (1689–1725). It corresponds exactly to the
+period between Clovis (481–511) and the battle of Testry (687), which
+effectively gave the Carolingians their supremacy. I advise all readers to read
+the Frankish history of Gregory of Tours (to 591) in parallel with the corresponding
+parts of Karamzin’s patriarchal narrative, especially those dealing with
+Ivan the Terrible, and with Boris Godunov and Vassili Shuiski.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_285" href="#Footnote_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a> There could
+hardly be a closer parallel. This Muscovite period of the great Boyar families
+and Patriarchs, in which a constant element is the resistance of an Old Russia
+party to the friends of Western Culture, is followed, from the founding of
+Petersburg in 1703, by the pseudomorphosis which forced the primitive Russian
+soul into the alien mould, first of full Baroque, then of the Enlightenment, and
+then of the nineteenth century. The fate-figure in Russian history is Peter the
+Great, with whom we may compare the Charlemagne who deliberately and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p193">[193]</span>with all his might strove to impose the very thing which Charles Martel had
+just prevented, the rule of the Moorish-Byzantine spirit. The possibility was
+there of treating the Russian world in the manner of a Carolingian or that of
+Seleucid—that is, of choosing between Old Russian and “Western” ways,
+and the Romanovs chose the latter. The Seleucids liked to see Hellenes and
+not Aramæans about them. The primitive tsarism of Moscow is the only form
+which is even to-day appropriate to the Russian world, but in Petersburg it was
+distorted to the dynastic form of western Europe. The pull of the sacred South—of
+Byzantium and Jerusalem—strong in every Orthodox soul, was twisted
+by the worldly diplomacy which set its face to the West. The burning of
+Moscow, that mighty symbolic act of a primitive people, that expression of
+Maccabæan hatred of the foreigner and heretic, was followed by the entry of Alexander
+I into Paris, the Holy Alliance, and the concert of the Great Powers
+of the West. And thus a nationality whose destiny should have been to live
+without a history for some generations still was forced into a false and artificial
+history that the soul of Old Russia was simply incapable of understanding.
+Late-period arts and sciences, enlightenment, social ethics, the materialism of
+world-cities, were introduced, although in this pre-cultural time religion was
+the only language in which man understood himself and the world. In the
+townless land with its primitive peasantry, cities of alien type fixed themselves
+like ulcers—false, unnatural, unconvincing. “Petersburg,” says Dostoyevski,
+“is the most abstract and artificial city in the world.” Born in it though
+he was, he had the feeling that one day it might vanish with the morning mist.
+Just so ghostly, so incredible, were the Hellenistic artifact-cities scattered in the
+Aramaic peasant-lands. Jesus in his Galilee knew this. St. Peter must have felt
+it when he set eyes on Imperial Rome.</p>
+
+<p>After this everything that arose around it was felt by the true Russdom as
+lies and poison. A truly apocalyptic hatred was directed on Europe, and
+“Europe” was all that was not Russia, including Athens and Rome, just as
+for the Magian world in its time Old Egypt and Babylon had been antique,
+pagan, devilish. “The first condition of emancipation for the Russian soul,”
+wrote Aksakov in 1863 to Dostoyevski, “is that it should hate Petersburg
+with all its might and all its soul.” Moscow is holy, Petersburg Satanic. A
+widespread popular legend presents Peter the Great as Antichrist. Just so the
+Aramaic Pseudomorphosis cries out in all the Apocalypses from Daniel and
+Enoch in Maccabæan times to John, Baruch, and Ezra IV after the destruction
+of Jerusalem, against Antiochus the Antichrist, against Rome the Whore of
+Babylon, against the cities of the West with their refinement and their splendour,
+against the whole Classical Culture. All its works are untrue and unclean;
+the polite society, the clever artistry, the classes, the alien state with its
+civilized diplomacy, justice, and administration. The contrast between Russian
+and Western, Jew-Christian and Late-Classical nihilisms is extreme—the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p194">[194]</span>one kind is hatred of the alien that is poisoning the unborn Culture in the
+womb of the land, the other a surfeited disgust of one’s own proper overgrowths.
+Depths of religious feeling, flashes of revelation, shuddering fear of
+the great awakening, metaphysical dreaming and yearning, belong to the
+beginning, as the pain of spiritual clarity belongs to the end of a history. In
+these pseudomorphoses they are mingled. Says Dostoyevski: “Everyone in
+street and market-place now speculates about the nature of Faith.” So might
+it have been said of Edessa or Jerusalem. Those young Russians of the days
+before 1914—dirty, pale, exalted, moping in corners, ever absorbed in metaphysics,
+seeing all things with an eye of faith even when the ostensible topic is
+the franchise, chemistry, or women’s education—are the Jews and early
+Christians of the Hellenistic cities, whom the Romans regarded with a mixture
+of surly amusement and secret fear. In Tsarist Russia there was no bourgeoisie
+and, in general, no true class-system, but merely, as in the Frankish dominions,
+lord and peasant. There were no Russian towns. Moscow consisted of a
+fortified residency (the Kreml) round which was spread a gigantic market.
+The imitation city that grew up and ringed it in, like every other city on the
+soil of Mother Russia, is there for the satisfaction and utilities of the Court,
+the administration, the traders, but that which lives in it is, on the top, an
+embodiment of fiction, an Intelligentsia bent on discovering problems and conflicts,
+and below, an uprooted peasantry, with all the metaphysical gloom, anxiety,
+and misery of their own Dostoyevski, perpetually homesick for the open
+land and bitterly hating the stony grey world into which Antichrist has tempted
+them. Moscow had no proper soul. The spirit of the upper classes was Western,
+and the lower had brought in with them the soul of the countryside. Between
+the two worlds there was no reciprocal comprehension, no communication,
+no charity. To understand the two spokesmen and victims of the pseudomorphosis,
+it is enough that Dostoyevski is the peasant, and Tolstoi the man of
+Western society. The one could never in his soul get away from the land; the
+other, in spite of his desperate efforts, could never get near it.</p>
+
+<p><em>Tolstoi is the former Russia, Dostoyevski the coming Russia.</em> The inner Tolstoi
+is tied to the West. He is the great spokesman of Petrinism even when he is
+denying it. The West is never without a negative—the guillotine, too, was
+a true daughter of Versailles—and rage as he might against Europe, Tolstoi
+could never shake it off. Hating it, he hates himself and so becomes the father
+of Bolshevism. The utter powerlessness of this spirit, and “its” 1917 revolution,
+stands confessed in his posthumously published <cite>A Light Shines in the Darkness</cite>.
+This hatred Dostoyevski does not know. His passionate power of
+living is comprehensive enough to embrace all things Western as well—“I
+have two fatherlands, Russia and Europe.” He has passed beyond both Petrinism
+and revolution, and from <em>his</em> future he looks back over them as from afar.
+His soul is apocalyptic, yearning, desperate, but of this future <em>certain</em>. “I will
+<span class="pagenum" id="p195">[195]</span>go to Europe,” says Ivan Karamazov to his brother, Alyosha; “I know well
+enough that I shall be going only to a churchyard, but I know too that that
+churchyard is dear, very dear to me. Beloved dead lie buried there, every
+stone over them tells of a life so ardently lived, so passionate a belief in its own
+achievements, its own truth, its own battle, its own knowledge, that I know—even
+now I know—I shall fall down and kiss these stones and weep over
+them.” Tolstoi, on the contrary, is essentially a great understanding, “enlightened”
+and “socially minded.” All that he sees about him takes the
+Late-period, megalopolitan, and Western form of a <em>problem</em>, whereas Dostoyevski
+does not even know what a problem is. Tolstoi is an event within and of
+Western Civilization. He stands midway between Peter and Bolshevism, and
+neither he nor these managed to get within sight of Russian earth. The thing
+they are fighting against reappears, recognizable, in the very form in which
+they fight. Their kind of opposition is not apocalyptic but intellectual.
+Tolstoi’s hatred of property is an economist’s, his hatred of society a social
+reformer’s, his hatred of the State a political theorist’s. Hence his immense
+effect upon the West—he belongs, in one respect as in another, to the band of
+Marx, Ibsen, and Zola.</p>
+
+<p>Dostoyevski, on the contrary, belongs to no band, unless it be the band of
+the Apostles of primitive Christianity. His “Dæmons” were denounced by the
+Russian Intelligentsia as reactionaries. But he himself was quite unconscious
+of such conflicts—“conservative” and “revolutionary” were terms of the
+West that left him indifferent. Such a soul as his can look beyond everything
+that we call social, for the things of this world seem to it so unimportant as
+not to be worth improving. No genuine religion aims at improving the world
+of facts, and Dostoyevski, like every primitive Russian, is fundamentally unaware
+of that world and lives in a second, metaphysical world beyond. What
+has the agony of a soul to do with Communism? A religion that has got as
+far as taking social problems in hand has ceased to be a religion. But the reality
+in which Dostoyevski lives, even during this life, is a religious creation directly
+present to him. His Alyosha has defied all literary criticism, even
+Russian. His life of Christ, had he written it—as he always intended to
+do—would have been a genuine gospel like the Gospels of primitive Christianity,
+which stand completely outside Classical and Jewish literary forms.
+Tolstoi, on the other hand, is a master of the Western novel—<cite>Anna Karenina</cite>
+distances every rival—and even in his peasant’s garb remains a man of polite
+society.</p>
+
+<p>Here we have beginning and end clashing together. Dostoyevski is a
+saint, Tolstoi only a revolutionary. From Tolstoi, the true successor of Peter,
+and from him only, proceeds Bolshevism, which is not the contrary, but the
+final issue of Petrinism, the last dishonouring of the metaphysical by the
+social, and <i lang="la">ipso facto</i> a new form of the Pseudomorphosis. If the building of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p196">[196]</span>Petersburg was the first act of Antichrist, the self-destruction of the society
+formed of that Petersburg is the second, and so the peasant soul must feel it.
+For the Bolshevists are not the nation, or even a part of it, but the lowest
+stratum of this Petrine society, alien and western like the other strata, yet not
+recognized by these and consequently filled with the hate of the downtrodden.
+It is all megalopolitan and “Civilized”—the social politics, the Intelligentsia,
+the literature that first in the romantic and then in the economic jargon champions
+freedoms and reforms, before an audience that itself belongs to the society.
+The real Russian is a disciple of Dostoyevski. Although he may not
+have read Dostoyevski or anyone else, nay, perhaps <em>because</em> he cannot read, he is
+himself Dostoyevski in substance; and if the Bolshevists, who see in Christ a
+mere social revolutionist like themselves, were not intellectually so narrowed,
+it would be in Dostoyevski that they would recognize their prime enemy.
+What gave this revolution its momentum was not the intelligentsia’s hatred.
+It was the people itself, which, <em>without hatred</em>, urged only by the need of throwing
+off a disease, destroyed the old Westernism in one effort of upheaval, and
+will send the new after it in another. For what this townless people yearns
+for is its own life-form, its own religion, its own history. Tolstoi’s Christianity
+was a misunderstanding. He spoke of Christ and he meant Marx. But to
+Dostoyevski’s Christianity the next thousand years will belong.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_6">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>Outside the Pseudomorphosis, and the more vigorously in proportion as
+the Classical influence is weaker over the country, there spring up all the forms
+of a genuine feudal age. Scholasticism, mysticism, feudal fealty, minstrelsy,
+the crusade spirit, all existed in the first centuries of the Arabian Culture and
+will be found in it as soon as we know how to look for them. The legion
+existed in name even after Septimius Severus, but in the East, legions look for
+all the world like ducal retinues. Officials are nominated, but what nomination
+amounts to in reality is the investiture of a count with his fief. While in the
+West the Cæsar-title fell into the hands of chieftains, the East transformed
+itself into an early Caliphate amazingly like the feudal state of mature Gothic.
+In the Sassanid Empire,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_286" href="#Footnote_286" class="fnanchor">[286]</a> in Hauran,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_287" href="#Footnote_287" class="fnanchor">[287]</a>
+ in southern Arabia, there dawned a pure
+feudal period. The exploits of a king of Saba,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_288" href="#Footnote_288" class="fnanchor">[288]</a> Shamir Juharish, are immortalized
+like those of a Roland or an Arthur, in the Arabic saga which tells of his advance
+through Persia as far as China.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_289" href="#Footnote_289" class="fnanchor">[289]</a>
+ The Kingdom of Ma’in&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_290" href="#Footnote_290" class="fnanchor">[290]</a> existed side by
+<span class="pagenum" id="p197">[197]</span>side with the realm of Israel during the millennium before Christ, and its remains
+(which suggest comparisons with Mycenæ and Tiryns) extend deeply
+into Africa.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_291" href="#Footnote_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a> But now the feudal age flowered throughout Arabia and even in
+the mountains of Abyssinia.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_292" href="#Footnote_292" class="fnanchor">[292]</a> In Axum there arose during early Christian times
+mighty castles and kings’ tombs with the largest monoliths in the world.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_293" href="#Footnote_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a>
+Behind the kings stands a feudal nobility of counts (<i>kail</i>) and wardens (<i>kabir</i>),
+vassals of often questionable loyalty whose great possessions more and more
+narrowed the power of the king and his household. The endless Christian-Jewish
+wars between south Arabia and the kingdom of Axum&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_294" href="#Footnote_294" class="fnanchor">[294]</a> have essentially
+the character of chivalry-warfare, frequently degenerating into baronial feuds
+based on the castles. In Saba ruled the Hamdanids—who later became
+Christian. Behind them stood the Christian realm of Axum, in alliance with
+Rome, which about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 300 stretched from the White Nile to the Somali
+coast and the Persian Gulf, and in 525 overthrew the Jewish-Himaryites.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_295" href="#Footnote_295" class="fnanchor">[295]</a>
+In 542 there was a diet of princes at Marib&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_296" href="#Footnote_296" class="fnanchor">[296]</a> to which both the Roman and the
+Sassanid Empires sent ambassadors. Even to-day the country is full of innumerable
+relics of mighty castles, which in Islamic times were popularly
+attributed to supernatural builders. The stronghold of Gomdan is a work of
+twenty tiers.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_297" href="#Footnote_297" class="fnanchor">[297]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the Sassanid Empire ruled the Dikhans, or local lords, while the brilliant
+court of these early-Eastern “Hohenstaufen” was in every respect a model for
+that of the Byzantines who followed Diocletian. Even much later the Abbassids
+in their new capital of Baghdad could think of nothing better than to
+imitate, on a grand scale, the Sassanid ideal of court life. In northern Arabia,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p198">[198]</span>at the courts of the Ghassanids&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_298" href="#Footnote_298" class="fnanchor">[298]</a>
+ and at those of the Lakhmids,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_299" href="#Footnote_299" class="fnanchor">[299]</a> there sprang up
+a genuine troubadour and <i>Minne</i> poetry; and knightly poets, in the days of the
+Early Fathers, fought out their duels with “word, lance, and sword.” One of
+them was the Jew Samuel, lord of the castle of Al Alblaq, who stood a famous
+siege by the King of Hira for the sake of five precious suits of armour.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_300" href="#Footnote_300" class="fnanchor">[300]</a> In
+relation to this lyric poetry, the Late-Arabic which flourished, especially in
+Spain, from 800 stands as Uhland and Eichendorff stand to Walter von der
+Vogelweide.</p>
+
+<p>For this young world of the first centuries of our era our antiquarians and
+theologians have had no eyes. Busied as they are with the state of Late Republican
+and Imperial Rome, the conditions of the Middle East seem to them
+merely primitive and void of all significance. But the Parthian bands that
+again and again rode at the legions of Rome were a chivalry exalted by Mazdaism;
+in their armies there was the spirit of crusade. So, too, might it
+have been with Christianity if it had not been wholly bound under the power
+of the pseudomorphosis. The spirit was there—Tertullian spoke of the
+“<i lang="la">militia Christi</i>,” and the sacrament was the soldier’s oath of fidelity.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_301" href="#Footnote_301" class="fnanchor">[301]</a> But it
+was only later that Christ became the hero for whom his vassals went out
+against the heathen; for the time being, the hither side of the Roman frontier
+knew not Christian lords and knights, but only Roman legates; not the castle,
+but the <i lang="la">castra</i>; not tournaments, but executions. Yet in spite of all this it was
+not, strictly speaking, a Parthian war, but a true crusade of Jewry that blazed
+out in 115 when Trajan marched into the East, and it was as a reprisal for the
+destruction of Jerusalem that the whole infidel (“Greek”) population of
+Cyprus—traditionally 240,000 souls—was massacred.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_302" href="#Footnote_302" class="fnanchor">[302]</a> Nisibis, defended by
+Jews, made an illustrious resistance. Warlike Adiabene (the upper Tigris
+plain) was a Jewish state. In all the Parthian and Persian wars against Rome
+the gentry and peasantry, the feudal levy, of Jewish Mesopotamia fought in the
+front line.</p>
+
+<p>Byzantium, even, was not able entirely to evade the influence of the Arabian
+feudal age, and, under a crust of Late Classical administrative forms, the fief
+system (especially in the interior of Asia Minor) came into existence. There
+there were powerful families whose loyalty was doubtful and whose ambition
+was to possess the Imperial throne. “Originally tied to the capital, which they
+<span class="pagenum" id="p199">[199]</span>were not allowed to leave without the Emperor’s permission, this nobility
+settled down later on its broad estates in the provinces. From the fourth century
+onwards this provincial nobility was <i lang="la">de facto</i> an ‘Estate of the realm,’
+and in course of time it claimed a certain independence of Imperial control.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_303" href="#Footnote_303" class="fnanchor">[303]</a></p>
+
+<p>The “Roman Army” in the East, meanwhile, was transformed in less than
+two centuries from an army of modern type to one of the feudal order. The
+Roman legion disappeared in the reorganization of the age of Severus,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_304" href="#Footnote_304" class="fnanchor">[304]</a> about
+<span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 200. While in the West the army degenerated into hordes, in the East there
+arose, in the fourth century a genuine, if belated, knighthood—a fact that
+Mommsen long ago pointed out, without, however, seeing the significance of
+it.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_305" href="#Footnote_305" class="fnanchor">[305]</a> The young noble received a thorough education in single combat, horsemanship,
+use of bow and lance. About <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 260 the Emperor Gallienus—the
+friend of Plotinus and the builder of the Porta Nigra of Trier, one of the
+most striking and most unfortunate figures of the period of the soldier-emperors—formed,
+from Germans and Moors, a new type of mounted force, the
+personal military suite.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_306" href="#Footnote_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a> A significant light is thrown upon the changes by the
+fact that the old city-gods give way, in the religion of the army, to the German
+gods of personal heroism, under the labels of Mars and Hercules.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_307" href="#Footnote_307" class="fnanchor">[307]</a> Diocletian’s
+<i lang="la">palatini</i> are not a substitute for the prætorians abolished by Septimius Severus,
+but a small, well-disciplined knight-army, while the <i lang="la">comitatenses</i>, the general
+levy, are organized in “<i lang="la">numeri</i>” or companies. The tactics are those of every
+Early period, with its pride of personal courage. The attack takes the Germanic
+form of the so-called “boar’s head”—the deep mass technically called the
+<i lang="de">Gevierthaufe</i>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_308" href="#Footnote_308" class="fnanchor">[308]</a> Under Justinian we find, fully developed, a system corresponding
+precisely to the <i lang="de">Landsknecht</i> system of Charles V, in which condottieri&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_309" href="#Footnote_309" class="fnanchor">[309]</a> of the
+Frundsberg type&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_310" href="#Footnote_310" class="fnanchor">[310]</a> raise professional forces on a territorial basis. The expedition
+<span class="pagenum" id="p200">[200]</span>of Narses is described by Procopius&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_311" href="#Footnote_311" class="fnanchor">[311]</a>
+ just as one might describe the great recruiting-operations
+of Wallenstein.</p>
+
+<p>But there appeared also in these early centuries a brilliant Scholasticism
+and Mysticism of Magian type, domesticated in the renowned schools of the
+Aramæan region—the Persian schools of Ctesiphon, Resaina, Gundisapora,
+the Jewish of Sura, Nehardea, Kinnesrin.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_312" href="#Footnote_312" class="fnanchor">[312]</a> These are flourishing headquarters
+of astronomy, philosophy, chemistry, medicine. But towards the west these
+grand manifestations, too, become falsified by the Pseudomorphosis. The
+characteristically Magian elements of this knowledge assume at Alexandria the
+forms of Greek philosophy and at Beyrout those of Roman jurisprudence; they
+are committed to writing in the Classical languages, squeezed into alien and
+long-petrified literary forms, and perverted by the hoary logic of a Civilization of
+quite other structure. It is in this, and not in the Islamic, time that Arabian
+science began. Yet, as our philologists only unearthed what had been put in
+Late Classical dress at Alexandria and Antioch, and had not an inkling either of
+the immense wealth of the Arabian spring or of the real pivots of its researches
+and ideas, there arose the preposterous notion that the Arabs were spiritual
+epigoni of the Classical. In reality, practically everything that was produced on
+the “other” side—from Edessa’s point of view—of the philologist’s frontier,
+though seeming to the Western eye an offspring of a “Late Classical” spirit, is
+nothing but a reflection of Early Arabian inwardness. And so we come to consider
+what the Pseudomorphosis did for the Arabian religion.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_6">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>The Classical religion lived in its vast number of <em>separate cults</em>, which in this
+form were natural and self-evident to Apollinian man, essentially inaccessible
+to any alien. As soon as cults of this kind arise, we have a Classical Culture,
+and when their essence changes, in later Roman times, then the soul of this
+Culture is at an end. Outside the Classical landscape they have never been
+genuine and living. The divinity is always <em>bound to and bounded by one locality</em>,
+in conformity with the static and Euclidean world-feeling. Correspondingly
+the relation of man to the divinity takes the shape of a local cult, in which
+the significances lie in the <em>form</em> of its ritual procedure and not in a dogma underlying
+them. Just as the population was scattered geographically in innumerable
+<em>points</em>, so spiritually its religion was subdivided into these petty cults, each of
+which was entirely independent of the rest. <em>Only their number, and not their
+<span class="pagenum" id="p201">[201]</span>scope, was capable of increase.</em> Within the Classical religion multiplication was
+the only form of growth, and missionary effort of any sort was excluded, for
+men could practise these cults without <em>belonging</em> to them. There were no communities
+of fellow believers. Though the later thought of Athens reached
+somewhat more general ideas of God and his service, it was philosophy and
+not religion that it achieved; it appealed to only a few thinkers and had not
+the slightest effect on the feeling of the nation—that is, the Polis.</p>
+
+<p>In the sharpest contrast to this stands the visible form of the Magian religion—the
+Church, the brotherhood of the faithful, which has no home and knows
+no earthly frontier, which believes the words of Jesus, “when two or three
+are gathered together in My name, there am I in the midst of them.” It is self-evident
+that every such believer must believe that only one good and true God
+can be, and that the gods of the others are evil and false.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_313" href="#Footnote_313" class="fnanchor">[313]</a> The relation between
+this God and man rests, not in expression or profession, but in the secret force,
+the magic, of certain symbolic performances, which if they are to be effective
+must be exactly known in form and significance and practised accordingly.
+The knowledge of this significance belongs to the Church—in fact, it is the
+Church itself, qua community of the instructed. And, therefore, the centre of
+gravity of every Magian religion lies not in a cult, but in a doctrine, in <em>the
+creed</em>.</p>
+
+<p>As long as the Classical remained spiritually strong, pseudomorphosis of all
+the Churches of the East into the style of the West continued. This is a most
+important aspect of Syncretism. The Persian religion enters in the shape of the
+Mithras cult, the Chaldean-Syrian element as the cults of the star-gods and
+Baals (Jupiter Dolichenus, Sabazius, Sol Invictus, Atargatis), the Jewish religion
+in the form of a Yahweh-cult (for no other name can be applied to the Egyptian
+communities of the Ptolemaic period&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_314" href="#Footnote_314" class="fnanchor">[314]</a>), and primitive Early-Christianity too—as
+the Pauline Epistles and the Catacombs of Rome clearly show—took
+substance as a Jesus-cult. And however loudly each of these various religions
+(which from about Hadrian’s time drove the genuine old Classical deities completely
+into the background) might proclaim itself as the revelation of the
+one true faith—Isis styled herself <i lang="la">deorum dearumque facies uniformis</i>—in reality
+they carry, one and all, marks of the Classical separatism—that is, they
+multiply to infinity; every community stands for itself and is local; all the
+temples, catacombs, Mithræa, house chapels, are holy places to which (in
+<span class="pagenum" id="p202">[202]</span>feeling, even though not in formal expression) the deity is considered to be
+attached.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_315" href="#Footnote_315" class="fnanchor">[315]</a> Nevertheless, there is Magian feeling even in this piety. Classical
+cults are <em>practised</em>, and one may practise as many of them as one pleases, but of
+these newer, <em>a man belongs to one and one alone</em>. In the old, propaganda is unthinkable;
+in the new it goes without saying, and the purport of religious
+exercises tends more and more to the doctrinal side.</p>
+
+<p>From the second century onwards, with the fading of the Apollinian and the
+flowering of the Magian soul, the relations are reversed. The consequences
+of the Pseudomorphosis continue, <em>but it is now cults of the West which tend to
+become a new Church of the East</em>—that is, from the sum of separate cults there
+evolves a community of those who believe in these gods and their rituals—and
+so there arises, by processes like those of the Early Persian and the Early
+Judaic, a Magian Greek nationality. Out of the rigorously established forms
+of detail-procedure in sacrifices and mysteries grows a sort of dogma concerning
+the inner significance of these acts. The cults can now represent each other,
+and men no longer practise or perform them in the old way, but become “adherents”
+of them. And the little god <em>of</em> the place becomes—without the
+gravity of the change being noticed by anyone—the great God really present
+in the place.</p>
+
+<p>Carefully as Syncretism has been examined in recent years, the clue to its
+development—the transformation of Eastern Churches into Western cults,
+and then the reverse process of transformation of Western cults into Eastern
+Churches—has been missed.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_316" href="#Footnote_316" class="fnanchor">[316]</a> Yet without this key it is quite impossible
+to understand the religious history of Early Christianity. The battle that in
+Rome was between Christ and Mithras as cult-deities took the form, east of
+Antioch, of a contest between the Persian and the Christian Churches. But the
+heaviest battle that Christianity had to fight, after it came itself under the influence
+of the Pseudomorphosis and began to develop spiritually with its face
+to the West, was not that against the true Classical deities. With these it was
+never face to face, for the public city-cults had long been inwardly dead and
+possessed no hold whatever on men’s souls. The formidable enemy was Paganism,
+or Hellenism, emerging as <em>a powerful new Church</em> and born of the selfsame
+spirit as Christianity itself. In the end there were in the east of the Roman
+Empire not one cult-Church, but two, and if one of these comprised exclusively
+the followers of Christ, the other, too, was made up of communities which,
+under a thousand different labels, consciously worshipped one and the same
+divine principle.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p203">[203]</span></p>
+
+<p>Much has been written on the Classical toleration. The nature of a religion
+may perhaps be most clearly seen in the limits of its tolerance, and there were
+such limits in Classical religions as in others. It was, indeed, one essential
+character of these religions that they were numerous, and another that they
+were religions of pure performance; for them, therefore, the question of toleration,
+as the word is usually understood, did not arise. But respect for the
+cult-formalities as such was postulated and required, and many a philosopher,
+even many an unwitting stranger, who infringed this law by word or deed,
+was made to realize the limits of Classical toleration. The reciprocal persecutions
+of the Magian Churches are something different from this; there it was
+the duty of the henotheist to his own faith that forbade him to recognize false
+tenets. Classical <em>cults</em> would have tolerated the Jesus-cult as one of their own
+number. But the <em>cult-Church</em> was bound to attack the Jesus-Church. All the
+great persecutions of Christians (corresponding therein exactly to the later
+persecutions of Paganism) came, not from the “Roman” State, but from this
+cult-Church, and they were only political inasmuch as the cult-Church was
+both nation and fatherland. It will be observed that the mask of Cæsar-worship
+covered <em>two</em> religious usages. In the Classical cities of the West, Rome
+above all, the special cult of the <i lang="la">Divus</i> arose as a last expression of that Euclidean
+feeling which required that there should be legal and therefore sacral means
+of communication between the body-unit man and the body-unit God. In
+the East, on the other hand, the product was a creed of Cæsar as Saviour, God-man,
+Messiah of all Syncretists, which this Church brought to expression in a
+supremely national form. The sacrifice for the Emperor was the most important
+<em>sacrament</em> of the Church—exactly corresponding to the baptism of the
+Christians—and it is easy, therefore, to understand the symbolic significance
+in the days of persecution of the command and the refusal to do these acts.
+<em>All</em> these Churches had their sacraments: holy meals like the Haoma-drinking
+of the Persians,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_317" href="#Footnote_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a> the Passover of the Jews, the Lord’s Supper of the Christians,
+similar rites for Attis and Mithras, and baptismal ceremonies amongst the
+Mandæans, the Christians, and the worshippers of Isis and Cybele. Indeed,
+the individual cults of the Pagan Church might be regarded almost as sects and
+orders—a view which would lead to a much better understanding of their
+reciprocal propaganda.</p>
+
+<p>All true Classical mysteries, such as those of Eleusis and those founded by
+the Pythagoreans in the South-Italian cities about 500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, had been place-bound,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_318" href="#Footnote_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a>
+and had consisted in some symbolical act or process. Within the field
+of the Pseudomorphosis these freed themselves from their localities; they could
+<span class="pagenum" id="p204">[204]</span>be performed wherever initiates were gathered, and had now as their object the
+Magian ecstasy and the ascetic change of life. The visitors to the holy place
+had transformed themselves into practising Orders. The community of the
+Neopythagoreans, formed about 50 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> and closely related to the Jewish
+Essenes, is anything but a Classical “school of philosophy”; it is a pure monastic
+order, and it is not the only such order in the Syncretic movement that
+anticipated the ideals of the Christian hermits and the Mohammedan dervishes.
+These Pagan Churches had their anchorites, saints, prophets, miraculous
+conversions, scriptures, and revelations.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_319" href="#Footnote_319" class="fnanchor">[319]</a> In the significance of images there
+came about a very remarkable transformation, which still awaits research.
+The greatest of Plotinus’s followers, Iamblichus, finally, about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 300,
+evolved a mighty system of orthodox theology, ordered hierarchy, and rigid
+ritual for the Pagan Church, and his disciple Julian devoted, and finally sacrificed,
+his life to the attempt to establish this Church for all eternity.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_320" href="#Footnote_320" class="fnanchor">[320]</a> He sought
+even to create cloisters for meditating men and women and to introduce ecclesiastical
+penance. This great work was supported by a great enthusiasm
+which rose to the height of martyrdom and endured long after the Emperor’s
+death. Inscriptions exist which can hardly be translated but by the formula:
+“There is but one god and Julian is his Prophet.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_321" href="#Footnote_321" class="fnanchor">[321]</a> Ten years more, and this
+Church would have become a historic, permanent fact. In the end not only
+its power, but also in important details its very form and content were inherited
+by Christianity. It is often stated that the Roman Church adapted
+itself to the structure of the Roman State; this is not quite correct. The latter
+structure was itself by hypothesis a Church. There was a period when the two
+were in touch—Constantine the Great acted simultaneously as convener of
+the Council of Nicæa and as Pontifex Maximus, and his sons, zealous Christians
+as they were, made him <i lang="la">Divus</i> and paid to him the prescribed rites. St. Augustine
+dared to assert that the true religion had existed before the coming of
+Christianity in the form of the Classical.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_322" href="#Footnote_322" class="fnanchor">[322]</a></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V_6">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>For the understanding of Judaism as a whole between Cyrus and Titus it is
+necessary constantly to bear in mind three facts, of which scholarship is quite
+aware, but which, owing to philological and theological <i lang="fr">parti pris</i>, it refuses
+to admit as factors in its discussions. First, the Jews are a “nation without a
+land,” a <i>consensus</i>, and in the midst, moreover, of a world of pure nations of
+the same type. Secondly, Jerusalem is indeed a Mecca, a holy centre, but it is
+<span class="pagenum" id="p205">[205]</span>neither the home nor the spiritual focus of the people. Lastly, the Jews are a
+peculiar phenomenon in world-history only so long as we insist on treating
+them as such.</p>
+
+<p>It is true that the post-exilic Jews, in contradistinction to the pre-exilic
+Israelites are—as Hugo Winckler was the first to recognize—a people of
+quite new type. But they are not the only representatives of the type. The
+Aramæan world began in those days to arrange itself in a great number of
+such peoples, including Persians and Chaldeans,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_323" href="#Footnote_323" class="fnanchor">[323]</a> all living in the same district,
+yet in stringent aloofness from each other, and even then practising the
+truly Arabian way of life that we call the ghetto.</p>
+
+<p>The first heralds of the new soul were the <em>prophetic religions</em>, with their magnificent
+inwardness, which began to arise about 700 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> and challenged the
+primeval practices of the people and their rulers. They, too, are an essentially
+Aramæan phenomenon. The more I ponder Amos, Isaiah, and Jeremiah on the
+one hand, Zarathustra on the other, the more closely related they appear to me
+to be. What seems to separate them is not their new beliefs, but the objects
+of their attack. The first battled with that savage old-Israel religion, which
+in fact is a whole bundle of religious elements&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_324" href="#Footnote_324" class="fnanchor">[324]</a>—belief in holy stones and
+trees, innumerable place-gods (Dan, Bethel, Hebron, Shechem, Beersheba,
+Gilgal), a single Yahweh (or Elohim), whose name covers a multitude of most
+heterogeneous numina, ancestor-worship and human sacrifices, dervish-dancing
+and sacral prostitution—intermixed with indistinct traditions of Moses and
+Abraham and many customs and sagas of the Late Babylonian world, now after
+long establishment in Canaan degenerated and hardened into peasant forms.
+The second combated the old Vedic beliefs of heroes and Vikings, similarly
+coarsened, no doubt, and certainly needing to be recalled to actuality, time and
+again, by glorifications of the sacred cattle and of the care thereof. Zarathustra
+lived about 600 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, often in want, persecuted and misunderstood, and met his
+end as an old man in war against the unbelievers&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_325" href="#Footnote_325" class="fnanchor">[325]</a>—a worthy contemporary
+of the unfortunate Jeremiah, who for his prophesying was hated by his countrymen,
+imprisoned by his king, and after the catastrophe carried off by the fugitives
+to Egypt and there put to death. And it is my belief that this great epoch
+brought forth yet a third prophet-religion, the Chaldean.</p>
+
+<p>This, with its penetrating astronomy and its ever-amazing inwardness, was,
+I venture to guess, evolved at that time and by creative personalities of the Isaiah
+stature from relics of the old Babylonian religion.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_326" href="#Footnote_326" class="fnanchor">[326]</a> About 1000, the Chaldeans
+<span class="pagenum" id="p206">[206]</span>were a group of Aramaic-speaking tribes like the Israelites, and lived in the south
+of Sinear—the mother tongue of Jesus is still sometimes called Chaldean. In
+Seleucid times the name was applied to a widespread religious community, and
+especially to its priests. The Chaldean religion was an astral religion, which
+before Hammurabi the Babylonian was <em>not</em>. It is the deepest of all interpretations
+of the Magian universe, the World-Cavern&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_327" href="#Footnote_327" class="fnanchor">[327]</a> and Kismet working therein,
+and consequently it remained the fundamental of Islamic and Jewish speculation
+to their very latest phases. It was by it, and not by the Babylonian Culture,
+that after the seventh century there was formed an astronomy worthy to be
+called an exact science—that is, a priestly technique of observation of marvellous
+acuteness.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_328" href="#Footnote_328" class="fnanchor">[328]</a> It replaced the Babylonian moon-week by the planet-week.
+Ishtar, the most popular figure of the old religion, the goddess of life and fruitfulness,
+now became a planet, and Tammuz, the ever-dying and ever-revived
+god of vegetation, a fixed star. Finally, the henotheistic feeling announced
+itself; for Nebuchadnezzar the Great Marduk&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_329" href="#Footnote_329" class="fnanchor">[329]</a> was the one true god, the
+god of mercy, and Nebo, the old god of Borsippa, was his son and envoy to
+mankind. For a century (625–539) Chaldean kings were world-rulers, but they
+were also the heralds of the new religion. When temples were being built,
+they themselves carried bricks. The accession-prayer of Nebuchadnezzar, the
+contemporary of Jeremiah, to Marduk is still extant, and in depth and purity
+it is in nowise surpassed by the finest passages of Israelite prophecy. The Chaldean
+penitential psalms, closely related in rhythm and inner structure to those
+of the Jews, know the sin of which man is unconscious and the suffering that
+contrite avowal before the incensed god can avert. It is the same trust in the
+mercy of the Deity that finds a truly Christian expression in the inscriptions of
+the Bel temple of Palmyra.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_330" href="#Footnote_330" class="fnanchor">[330]</a></p>
+
+<p>The kernel of the prophetic teachings is already Magian. There is <em>one</em> god—be
+he called Yahweh, Ahuramazda or Marduk-Baal—who is the principle
+of good, and all other deities are either impotent or evil. To this doctrine there
+attached itself the hope of a Messiah, very clear in Isaiah, but also bursting out
+everywhere during the next centuries, under pressure of an inner necessity. It
+<span class="pagenum" id="p207">[207]</span>is the basic idea of Magian religion, for it contains implicitly the conception
+of the world-historical struggle between Good and Evil, with the power of Evil
+prevailing in the middle period, and the Good finally triumphant on the Day
+of Judgment. This moralization of history is common to Persians, Chaldees,
+and Jews. But with its coming, the idea of the localized people <i lang="la">ipso facto</i>
+vanished and the genesis of Magian nations without earthly homes and boundaries
+was at hand. The idea of the Chosen People emerged.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_331" href="#Footnote_331" class="fnanchor">[331]</a> But it is easy to
+understand that men of strong blood, and in particular the great families, found
+these too spiritual ideas repugnant to their natures and harked back to the stout
+old tribal faiths. According to Cumont’s researches the religion of the Persian
+kings was polytheistic and did not possess the Haoma sacrament—that is, it
+was not wholly Zoroastrian. The same is true of most of the kings of Israel,
+and in all probability also of the last Chaldean Nabu-Nabid (Nabonidus),
+whose overthrow by Cyrus and his own subjects was in fact made possible by
+his rejection of the Marduk faith. And it was in the Captivity that circumcision
+and the (Chaldean) Sabbath were first acquired, as rites, by the Jews.</p>
+
+<p>The Babylonian exile, however, did set up an important difference between
+the Jews and the Persians, in respect, not of the ultimate truths of conscious
+piety, but of all the facts of actuality and consequently men’s inward attitude to
+these facts. It was the Yahweh believers who <em>were permitted</em> to go home and
+the adherents of Ahuramazda who <em>allowed</em> them to do so. Of two small tribes
+that two hundred years before had probably possessed equal numbers of fighting
+men, the one had taken possession of a world—while Darius crossed the
+Danube in the north, his power extended in the south through eastern Arabia
+to the island of Sokotra on the Somali coast&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_332" href="#Footnote_332" class="fnanchor">[332]</a>—and the other had become an
+entirely unimportant pawn of alien policy.</p>
+
+<p>This is what made one religion so lordly, the other so humble. Let the
+student read, in contrast to Jeremiah, the great Behistun inscription&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_333" href="#Footnote_333" class="fnanchor">[333]</a> of Darius—what
+a splendid pride of the King in his victorious god! And how despairing
+are the arguments with which the Israelite prophets sought to preserve intact
+<span class="pagenum" id="p208">[208]</span>the image of their god. Here, in exile, with every Jewish eye turned by the
+Persian victory to the Zoroastrian doctrine, the pure Judaic prophecy (Amos,
+Hosea, Isaiah, Jeremiah) passes into <i>Apocalypse</i> (Deutero-Isaiah,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_334" href="#Footnote_334" class="fnanchor">[334]</a> Ezekiel, Zechariah).
+All the new visions of the Son of Man, of Satan, of archangels, of the
+seven heavens, of the last judgment, are <em>Persian presentations of the common world-feeling</em>.
+In Isaiah xli appears Cyrus himself, hailed as Messiah. Did the great
+composer of Deutero-Isaiah draw his enlightenment from a Zoroastrian disciple?
+Is it possible that the Persians released the Jews out of a feeling of the
+inward relationship of their two teachings? It is certain at any rate that both
+shared one popular idea as to last things, and felt and expressed a common
+hatred of the old Babylonian and Classical religions, of unbelievers generally,
+which they did not feel towards one another.</p>
+
+<p>We must not, however, forget to look at the “return from captivity” also
+from the point of view of Babylon. The great mass, strong in race-force, was
+in reality far removed from these ideas, or regarded them as mere visions and
+dreams; and the solid peasantry, the artisans, and no doubt the nascent land-aristocracy
+quietly remained in its holdings <em>under a prince of their own</em>, the Resh
+Galutha, whose capital was Nehardea.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_335" href="#Footnote_335" class="fnanchor">[335]</a> Those who returned “home” were
+the small minority, the stubborn, the zealots. They numbered with their wives
+and children forty thousand, a figure which cannot be one-tenth or even one-twentieth
+of the total, and anyone who confuses these settlers and their destiny
+with Jewry as a whole&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_336" href="#Footnote_336" class="fnanchor">[336]</a> must necessarily fail to read the inner meaning of all
+following events. The <em>little world of Judaism lived a spiritually separate life</em>, and
+the nation as a whole, while regarding this life with respect, certainly did not
+share in it. In the East apocalyptic literature, the heiress of prophecy, blossomed
+richly. It was a genuine native poetry of the people, of which we still
+have the masterpiece, the Book of Job—a work in character Islamic and decidedly
+un-Jewish&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_337" href="#Footnote_337" class="fnanchor">[337]</a>—while a multitude of its other tales and sagas, such as
+Judith, Tobit, Achikar,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_338" href="#Footnote_338" class="fnanchor">[338]</a> are spread as motives over all the literatures of the
+“Arabian” world. In Judea only the Law flourished; the Talmudic spirit
+appears first in Ezekiel (chs. xl, et seq.) and after 450 is made flesh in the
+scribes (Sopherim) headed by Ezra. From 300 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> to <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 200 the Tannaim
+(“Teachers”) expounded the Torah and developed the Mishnah. Neither the
+coming of Jesus nor the destruction of the Temple interrupted this abstract
+<span class="pagenum" id="p209">[209]</span>scholarship. Jerusalem became for the rigid believer a Mecca, and his Koran
+was a Code of laws to which was gradually added a whole primitive history compounded
+of Chaldeo-Persian motives reset according to Pharisaic ideas.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_339" href="#Footnote_339" class="fnanchor">[339]</a> But
+in this atmosphere there was no room for a worldly art, poetry, or learning.
+All that the Talmud contains of astronomical, medical, and juristic knowledge
+is exclusively of Mesopotamian origin.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_340" href="#Footnote_340" class="fnanchor">[340]</a> It is probable, too, that it was in
+Mesopotamia, and <em>before</em> the end of the Captivity, that there began that Chaldean-Persian-Jewish
+formation of sects which developed into the formation of
+great religions at the beginning of the Magian Culture, and reached its climax in
+the teaching of Mani. “The Law and the Prophets”—<em>these two nouns practically
+define the difference between Judea and Mesopotamia</em>. In the late Persian and in every
+other Magian theology both tendencies are united; it is only in the case here
+considered that they were separated in space. The decisions of Jerusalem were
+recognized everywhere, but it is a question how widely they were obeyed.
+Even as near as Galilee the Pharisees were the object of suspicion, while in
+Babylonia no Rabbi could be consecrated. For the great Gamaliel, Paul’s
+teacher, it was a title to fame that his rulings were followed by the Jews “even
+abroad.” How independent was the life of the Jews in Egypt is shown by the recently
+discovered documents of Elephantine and Assuan.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_341" href="#Footnote_341" class="fnanchor">[341]</a> About 170, Onias asked
+the King for permission to build a temple “according to the measurements of the
+Temple in Jerusalem,” on the ground that the numerous non-conforming temples
+that existed were the cause of eternal bickerings amongst the communities.</p>
+
+<p>One other subject must be considered. Jewry, like Persia, had since the
+Exile increased enormously beyond the old small clan-limits; this was owing to
+conversions and secessions—<em>the only form of conquest open to a landless nation
+and, therefore, natural and obvious to the Magian religions</em>. In the north it very
+early drove, through the Jew State of Adiabene, to the Caucasus; in the south
+(probably along the Persian Gulf) it penetrated to Saba; in the west it was dominant
+in Alexandria, Cyrene, and Cyprus. The administration of Egypt and
+the policy of the Parthian Empire were largely in Jewish hands.</p>
+
+<p>But this movement <em>came out of Mesopotamia alone</em>, and the spirit in it was the
+Apocalyptic and not the Talmudic. Jerusalem was occupied in creating yet
+more legal barriers against the unbeliever. It was not enough even to abandon
+the practice of making converts. A Pharisee permitted himself to summon the
+universally beloved King Hyrcanus (135–106) to lay down the office of High
+Priest because his mother had once been in the power of the infidels.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_342" href="#Footnote_342" class="fnanchor">[342]</a> This is
+<span class="pagenum" id="p210">[210]</span>the same narrowness which in the primitive Christian brotherhood of Judea
+took the form of opposing the preaching of the Gospel to the heathen. In the
+East it would simply never have occurred to anyone to draw such barriers,
+which were contrary to the whole idea of the Magian nation. But in that
+very fact was based <em>the spiritual superiority</em> of the wide East. The Synedrion in
+Jerusalem might possess unchallenged religious authority, but politically, and
+therefore historically, the power of the Resh Galutha was a very different matter.
+Christian and Jewish research alike have failed to perceive these things.
+So far as I am aware, no one has noticed the important fact that the persecution
+of Antiochus Epiphanes was directed not against “Jewry” but against Judea.
+And this brings us to another fact, of still greater importance.</p>
+
+<p>The destruction of Jerusalem hits only a very small part of the nation, one
+moreover that was spiritually and politically by far the least important. It is
+not true that the Jewish people has lived “in the Dispersion” since that day, for
+it had lived for centuries (and so too had the Persian and others) in a form which
+was independent of country. On the other hand, we realize equally little the
+impression made by this war upon the real Jewry which Judea thought of and
+treated as an adjunct. The victory of the heathen and the ruin of the Sanctuary
+was felt in the inmost soul,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_343" href="#Footnote_343" class="fnanchor">[343]</a>
+ and in the crusade of 115&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_344" href="#Footnote_344" class="fnanchor">[344]</a> a bitter revenge was
+taken for it; but the ideal outraged and vindicated was the ideal of Jewry and
+not that of Judaism. Zionism then, as in Cyrus’s day and in ours, was a reality
+only for a quite small and spiritually narrow minority. If the calamity had been
+really felt in the sense of a “loss of home” (as we figure it to ourselves with the
+Western mind), a hundred opportunities after Marcus Aurelius’s time could have
+been seized to win the city back. But that would have contradicted the Magian
+sense of the nation, whose ideal organic form was the synagogue, the pure <i>consensus</i>—like
+the early Catholic “visible Church” and like Islam—and it was
+precisely the annihilation of Judea and the clan spirit of Judea that <em>for the
+first time completely actualized this ideal</em>.</p>
+
+<p>For Vespasian’s War, directed against Judea, was a liberation of Jewry.
+In the first place, it ended both the claim of the people of this petty district to be
+the genuine nation, and the pretensions of their bald spirituality to equivalence
+with the soul-life of the whole. The research, the scholasticism, and the
+mysticism of the Oriental academies entered into possession of their rights;
+so, for instance, the judge Karna—the contemporary, more or less, of Ulpian
+and Papinian—formulated at the academy of Nehardea the first code of civil
+law.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_345" href="#Footnote_345" class="fnanchor">[345]</a> In the second place, it rescued this religion from the dangers of that
+pseudomorphosis to which Christianity in that same period was succumbing.
+Since 200 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> there had existed a half-Hellenistic Jewish literature. The
+<span class="pagenum" id="p211">[211]</span>“Preacher” (Ecclesiastes, Koheleth) contains Pyrrhonic ideas.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_346" href="#Footnote_346" class="fnanchor">[346]</a>
+ The Wisdom
+of Solomon, 2 Maccabees, Theodotion, the Aristeas Letter, etc., follow; there
+are things like the Menander collection of Maxims, as to which it is impossible
+to say whether they ought to be regarded as Jewish or as Greek. There were,
+about 160, high priests who were so Hellenistic in spirit that they combated the
+Jewish religion, and later there were rulers like Hyrcanus and Herod who did the
+same by political methods. This danger came to an end instantly and for good
+in <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 70.</p>
+
+<p>In the time of Jesus there were in Jerusalem three tendencies which can be
+described as generally Aramæan, represented respectively by the Pharisees, the
+Sadducees, and the Essenes. Although the connotations of these names varied,
+and although both in Christian and in Jewish research most diverse views are
+held about them, it may at any rate be said that the first of these tendencies
+is found in greatest purity in Judaism, the second in Chaldeanism, the third in
+Hellenism.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_347" href="#Footnote_347" class="fnanchor">[347]</a> Essene is the rise of the cult (almost the Order) of Mithras in the
+east of Asia Minor. The Sadducees, although in Jerusalem they appear as a
+small and distinguished group—Josephus compares them with the Epicureans—are
+thoroughly Aramæan in their apocalyptic and eschatological views, in
+virtue of a certain element which makes them, so to say, the Dostoyevskis of
+this Early period. They stand to the Pharisees in the relation of mysticism to
+scholasticism, of John to Paul, of Bundahish to Vendidad&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_348" href="#Footnote_348" class="fnanchor">[348]</a> in the Persian world.
+The Apocalyptic is popular, and many of its traits are spiritually common property
+throughout the Aramæan world; the Talmudic and Avestan Pharisaism
+is exclusive and tries to rule out every other religion with uncompromising
+rigour.</p>
+
+<p>The Essenes appear in Jerusalem as a monastic order like the Neopythagoreans.
+They possessed secret texts.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_349" href="#Footnote_349" class="fnanchor">[349]</a> In the broad sense they are representative
+of the Pseudomorphosis, and in consequence they disappear from Jewry completely
+after <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 70, while precisely in this period Christian literature was becoming
+purely Greek—not in the least of the causes of this being that the
+Hellenized Western Jews left Judaism to retreat into its East, and gradually
+adopted Christianity.</p>
+
+<p>But also Apocalyptic, which is an expression-form of townless and town-fearing
+mankind, soon came to an end within the Synagogue, after a last wonderful
+reaction to the stimulus of the great catastrophe.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_350" href="#Footnote_350" class="fnanchor">[350]</a> When it had become
+evident that the teaching of Jesus would lead not to a reform of Judaism,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p212">[212]</span>but to a new religion, and when, about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 100, the daily imprecation-formula
+against the Jew-Christians was introduced, Apocalyptic for the short remainder
+of its existence resided in the young Church.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VI_4">
+ VI
+</h3>
+
+<p>The incomparable thing which lifted the infant Christianity out above all
+religions of this rich Springtime is the figure of Jesus. In all the great creations
+of those years there is nothing which can be set beside it. Tame and empty all
+the legends and holy adventures of Mithras, Attis, and Osiris must have seemed
+to any man reading or listening to the still recent story of Jesus’s sufferings—the
+last journey to Jerusalem, the last anxious supper, the hours of despair in
+Gethsemane, and the death on the cross.</p>
+
+<p>Here was no matter of philosophy. Jesus’s utterances, which stayed in the
+memory of many of the devoted, even in old age, are those of a child in the
+midst of an alien, aged, and sick world. They are not sociological observations,
+problems, debatings. Like a quiet island of bliss was the life of these fishermen
+and craftsmen by the Lake of Gennesareth in the midst of the age of the great
+Tiberius, far from all world-history and innocent of all the doings of actuality,
+while round them glittered the Hellenistic towns with their theatres and temples,
+their refined Western society, their noisy mob-diversions, their Roman cohorts,
+their Greek philosophy. When the friends and disciples of the sufferer had
+grown grey and his brother was president of their group in Jerusalem, they put
+together, from the sayings and narratives generally current in their small communities,
+a biography so arresting in its inward appeal that it evolved a presentation-form
+of its own, of which neither the Classical nor the Arabian Culture
+has any example—the Gospel. Christianity is the one religion in the history
+of the world in which the fate of a man of the immediate present has become the
+emblem and the central point of the whole creation.</p>
+
+<p>A strange excitement, like that which the Germanic world experienced
+about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1000, ran in those days through the whole Aramæan land. The
+Magian soul was awakened. That element which lay in the prophetic religions
+like a presentiment, and expressed itself in Alexander’s time in metaphysical
+outlines, came now to the state of fulfilment. And this fulfilment awakened,
+in indescribable strength, the primitive feeling of Fear. The birth of the Ego,
+and of the world-anxiety with which it is identical, is one of the final secrets
+of humanity and of mobile life generally. In front of the Microcosm there
+stands up a Macrocosm wide and overpowering, an abyss of alien, dazzling
+existence and activity that frightens the small lonely ego back into itself.
+Even in the blackest hours of life no adult experiences fear like the fear which
+sometimes overpowers a child in the crisis of awakening. Over the dawn of
+the new Culture likewise lay this deathly anxiety. In this early morning of
+Magian world-feeling, timorous and hesitant and ignorant of itself, young
+<span class="pagenum" id="p213">[213]</span>eyes saw the end of the world at hand—it is the first thought in which every
+Culture to this day has come to knowledge of itself. All but the shallower
+souls trembled before revelations, miracles, glimpses into the very fundament of
+things. Men now lived and thought only in apocalyptic images. Actuality
+became appearance. Strange and terrifying visions were told mysteriously by
+one to another, read out from fantastic veiled texts, and seized at once with an
+immediate inward certainty. These writings travelled from community to
+community, village to village, and it is quite impossible to assign them to any
+one particular religion.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_351" href="#Footnote_351" class="fnanchor">[351]</a> Their colouring is Persian, Chaldean, Jewish, but they
+have absorbed all that was circulating in men’s minds. Whereas the canonical
+books are national, the apocalyptic literature is international in the literal
+sense of the word. It is there, and no one seems to have composed it. Its
+content is fluid—to-day it reads thus and to-morrow otherwise. But this
+does not mean that it is a “poetry”—it is not.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_352" href="#Footnote_352" class="fnanchor">[352]</a> These creations resemble the
+terrible figures of the Romanesque cathedral-porches in France, which also are
+not “art,” but fear turned into stone. Everyone knows those angels and devils,
+the ascent to heaven and descent to hell of divine Essence, the Second Adam,
+the Envoy of God, the Redeemer of the last days, the Son of Man, the eternal
+city, and the last judgment.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_353" href="#Footnote_353" class="fnanchor">[353]</a> In the alien cities and the high positions of strict
+Judaic and Persian priesthoods the different doctrines might be tangibly
+defined and argued about, but below in the mass of the people there was practically
+no specific religion, but a general Magian religiousness which filled all
+souls and attached itself to glimpses and visions of every conceivable origin.
+The Last Day was at hand. Men expected it and knew that on that day “He”
+of whom all these revelations spoke would appear. Prophets arose. More and
+more new communities and groups gathered, believing themselves to have
+found either a better understanding of the traditional religion, or the true
+religion itself. In this time of amazing, ever-increasing tension, and in the
+very years around Jesus’s birth-year, there arose, besides endless communities
+and sects, another redemption-religion, the Mandæan, as to which we know
+<span class="pagenum" id="p214">[214]</span>nothing of founder or origins. In spite of its hatred of the Judaism of Jerusalem
+and its definite preference for the Persian idea of redemption, the Mandæan
+religion seems to have stood very close to the popular beliefs of Syrian Jewry.
+One after another, pieces of its wonderful documents are becoming available,
+and they consistently show us a “Him,” a Son of Man, a Redeemer who is
+sent down into the depths, who himself must be redeemed and is the goal of
+man’s expectations. In the Book of John, the Father high upraised in the House
+of Fulfilment, bathed in light, says to his only begotten Son: “My Son, be to
+me an ambassador; go into the world of darkness, where no ray of light is.”
+And the Son calls up to him: “Father, in what have I sinned that thou hast
+sent me into the darkness?” And finally: “Without sin did I ascend and there
+was no sin and defect in me.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_354" href="#Footnote_354" class="fnanchor">[354]</a></p>
+
+<p>All the characters of the great prophetic religions and of the whole store of
+profound glimpses and visions later collected into apocalypses are seen here as
+foundations. Of Classical thought and feeling not a breath reached this Magian
+underworld. No doubt the beginnings of the new religion are lost irrevocably.
+But <em>one</em> historical figure of Mandæanism stands forth with startling distinctness,
+as tragic in his purpose and his downfall as Jesus himself—John the Baptist.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_355" href="#Footnote_355" class="fnanchor">[355]</a>
+He, almost emancipated from Judaism, and filled with as mighty a hatred of
+the Jerusalem spirit as that of primitive Russia for Petersburg, preached the
+end of the world and the coming of the Barnasha, the Son of Man, <em>who is no
+longer the longed-for national Messiah of the Jews</em>, but the bringer of the world-conflagration.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_356" href="#Footnote_356" class="fnanchor">[356]</a>
+To him came Jesus and was his disciple.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_357" href="#Footnote_357" class="fnanchor">[357]</a> He was thirty years
+old when the awakening came over him. Thenceforth the apocalyptic, and in
+particular the Mandæan, thought-world filled his whole being. The other
+world of historical actuality lying round him was to him as something sham,
+alien, void of significance. That “He” would now come and make an end
+<span class="pagenum" id="p215">[215]</span>of this unreal reality was his magnificent certainty, and like his master John,
+he stepped forth as its herald. Even now we can see, in the oldest Gospels that
+were embodied into the New Testament, gleams of this period in which he was,
+in his consciousness, nothing but a prophet.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_358" href="#Footnote_358" class="fnanchor">[358]</a></p>
+
+<p>But there was a moment in his life when an inkling, and then high certainty,
+came over him—“Thou art thyself It!” It was a secret that he at first hardly
+admitted to himself, and only later imparted to his nearest friends and companions,
+who thereafter shared with him, in all stillness, the blessed mission,
+till finally they dared to reveal the truths before all the world by the momentous
+journey to Jerusalem. If there is anything at all that clouds the complete purity
+and honour of his thought, it is that doubt as to whether he has deceived himself
+which from time to time seizes him, and of which, later, his disciples told
+quite frankly. He comes to his home. The village crowds to him, recognizes
+the former carpenter who left his work, is angered. The family—mother
+and all the brothers and sisters—are ashamed of him and would have arrested
+him. And with all these familiar eyes upon him he was confused and felt the
+magic power depart from him (Mark vi). In Gethsemane doubts of his mission&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_359" href="#Footnote_359" class="fnanchor">[359]</a>
+mingled themselves in the terrible fear of coming things, and even on the
+cross men heard the anguished cry that God had forsaken him.</p>
+
+<p>Even in these last hours he lived entirely in the form of his own apocalyptic
+world, which alone was ever real to him. What to the Roman sentries standing
+below him was reality was for him an object of helpless wonder, an illusion
+that might at any moment without warning vanish into nothingness. He
+possessed the pure and unadulterated soul of the townless land. The life of the
+cities and their spirit were to him utterly alien. Did he really see the semi-Classical
+Jerusalem, into which he rode as the Son of Man, and understand
+its historical nature? This is what thrills us in the last days—and the collision
+of facts with truths, of two worlds that will never understand one another, and
+his entire incomprehension of what was happening about him.</p>
+
+<p>So he went, proclaiming his message without reservation, through his
+country. But this country was Palestine. He was born in the Classical Empire
+and lived under the eyes of the Judaism of Jerusalem, and when his soul, fresh
+from the awful revelation of its mission, looked about, it was confronted by the
+actuality of the Roman State and that of Pharisaism. His repugnance for the
+stiff and selfish ideal of the latter, which he shared with all Mandæanism and
+doubtless with the peasant Jewry of the wide East, is the hall-mark of all his
+discourses from first to last. It angered him that this wilderness of cold-hearted
+formulæ was reputed to be the only way to salvation. Still, thus far it was only
+<span class="pagenum" id="p216">[216]</span>another kind of piety that his conviction was asserting against Rabbinical logic.
+Thus far it is only the Law versus the Prophets.</p>
+
+<p>But when Jesus was taken before Pilate, then <em>the world of facts and the world of
+truths were face to face in immediate and implacable hostility</em>. It is a scene appallingly
+distinct and overwhelming in its symbolism, such as the world’s history had
+never before and has never since looked at. The discord that lies at the root of
+all mobile life from its beginning, in virtue of its very <em>being</em>, of its having both
+existence <em>and</em> awareness, took here the highest form that can possibly be conceived
+of human tragedy. In the famous question of the Roman Procurator:
+“What is truth?”—the one word that is race-pure in the whole Greek Testament—lies
+<em>the entire meaning of history</em>, the exclusive validity of the deed, the
+prestige of the State and war and blood, the all-powerfulness of success and the
+pride of eminent fitness. Not indeed the mouth, but the silent feeling of Jesus
+answers this question by that other which is decisive in all things of religion—<em>What
+is actuality?</em> For Pilate actuality was all; for him nothing. Were it
+anything, indeed, pure religiousness could never stand up against history and
+the powers of history, or sit in judgment on active life; or if it does, it ceases to
+be religion and is subjected itself to the spirit of history.</p>
+
+<p><em>My kingdom is not of this world.</em> This is the final word which admits of no
+gloss and on which each must check the course wherein birth and nature have
+set him. A being that makes use of a waking-consciousness, or a waking-consciousness
+which subjects being to itself; pulsation or tension, blood or
+intellect, history or nature, politics or religion—here it is one or the other,
+there is no honest way of compromise. A statesman can be deeply religious, a
+pious man can die for his country—but they must, both, know on which
+side they are really standing. The born politician despises the inward thought-processes
+of the ideologue and ethical philosopher in a world of fact—and
+rightly. For the believer, all ambition and succession of the historical world
+are sinful and without lasting value—he, too, is right. A ruler who wishes
+to improve religion in the direction of political, practical purposes is a fool.
+A sociologist-preacher who tries to bring truth, righteousness, peace, and
+forgiveness into the world of actuality is a fool also. No faith yet has altered
+the world, and no fact can ever rebut a faith. There is no bridge between directional
+Time and timeless Eternity, between the <em>course</em> of history and the <em>existence</em>
+of a divine world-order, in the structure of which the word “providence”
+or “dispensation” denotes the form of causality. <em>This is the final meaning of the
+moment in which Jesus and Pilate confronted one another.</em> In the one world, the
+historical, the Roman caused the Galilean to be crucified—that was his Destiny.
+In the other world, Rome was cast for perdition and the Cross became
+the pledge of Redemption—that was the “will of God.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_360" href="#Footnote_360" class="fnanchor">[360]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p217">[217]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>Religion is metaphysic and nothing else—“Credo quia absurdum”</em>—and this
+metaphysic is not the metaphysic of knowledge, argument, proof (which is
+mere philosophy or learnedness), but <em>lived and experienced</em> metaphysic—that is,
+the unthinkable as a certainty, the supernatural as a fact, life as existence in a
+world that is non-actual, but true. Jesus never lived one moment in any other
+world but this. He was no moralizer, and to see in moralizing the final aim of
+religion is to be ignorant of what religion is. Moralizing is nineteenth-century
+Enlightenment, humane Philistinism. To ascribe social purposes to Jesus is a
+blasphemy. His occasional utterances of a social kind, so far as they are
+authentic and not merely attributed sayings, tend merely to edification. They
+contain nothing whatever of new doctrine, and they include proverbs of the
+sort then in general currency. His <em>teaching</em> was the proclamation, nothing but
+the proclamation, of those Last Things with whose images he was constantly
+filled, the dawn of the New Age, the advent of heavenly envoys, the last judgment,
+a new heaven and a new earth.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_361" href="#Footnote_361" class="fnanchor">[361]</a> Any other conception of religion was
+never in Jesus, nor in any truly deep-feeling period of history. <em>Religion is, first and
+last, metaphysic</em>, other-worldliness (<i lang="de">Jenseitigkeit</i>), awareness in a world of which
+the evidence of the senses merely lights the foreground. It is life in and with
+the supersensible. And where the capacity for this awareness, or even the
+capacity for believing in its existence, is wanting, real religion is at an end.
+“My kingdom is <em>not</em> of this world,” and only he who can look into the depths
+that this flash illumines can comprehend the voices that come out of them.
+It is the Late, city periods that, no longer capable of seeing into depths, have
+turned the remnants of religiousness upon the external world and replaced
+religion by humanities, and metaphysic by moralization and social ethics.</p>
+
+<p>In Jesus we have the direct opposite. “Give unto Cæsar the things that are
+Cæsar’s” means: “Fit yourselves to the powers of the fact-world, be patient,
+suffer, and ask it not whether they are ‘just.’” What alone matters is the
+salvation of the soul. “Consider the lilies” means: “Give no heed to riches
+<em>and poverty</em>, for both fetter the soul to cares of this world.” “Man cannot
+serve both God and Mammon”—by Mammon is meant the <em>whole</em> of actuality.
+It is shallow, and it is cowardly, to argue away the grand significance of this
+demand. Between working for the increase of one’s own riches, and working
+for the social ease of everyone, he would have felt no difference whatever.
+When wealth affrighted him, when the primitive community in Jerusalem—which
+<span class="pagenum" id="p218">[218]</span>was a strict Order and not a socialist club—rejected ownership, it was
+the most direct opposite of “social” sentiment that moved them. Their conviction
+was, not that the visible state of things was all, but that it was nothing:
+that it rested not on appreciation of comfort in this world, but on unreserved
+contempt of it. Something, it is true, must always exist to be set against and to
+nullify worldly fortune, and so we come back to the contrast of Tolstoi and
+Dostoyevski. Tolstoi, the townsman and Westerner, saw in Jesus only a social
+reformer, and in his metaphysical impotence—like the whole civilized West,
+which can only think about <em>distributing</em>, never <em>renouncing</em>—elevated primitive
+Christianity to the rank of a social revolution. Dostoyevski, who was poor,
+but in certain hours almost a saint, never thought about social ameliorations—of
+what profit would it have been to a man’s <em>soul</em> to abolish <em>property</em>?</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VII_2">
+ VII
+</h3>
+
+<p>Amongst Jesus’s friends and disciples, stunned as they were by the appalling
+outcome of the journey to Jerusalem, there spread after a few days the news of
+his resurrection and reappearance. The impression of this news on such souls
+and in such a time can never be more than partially echoed in the sensibilities
+of a Late mankind. It meant the actual fulfilment of all the Apocalyptic of that
+Magian Springtime—the end of the present æon marked by the ascension of the
+redeemed Redeemer, the second Adam, the Saoshyant, Enosh, Barnasha, or
+whatever other name man attached to “Him,” into the light-realm of the
+Father. And therewith the foretold future, the new world-æon, “the Kingdom
+of Heaven,” became immediately present. They felt themselves at the
+decisive point in the history of redemption.</p>
+
+<p>This certainty completely transformed the world-outlook of the little
+circles. “His” teachings, as they had flowed from his mild and noble nature—his
+inner feeling of the relation between God and man and of the high meaning
+of the times, and were exhaustively comprised in and defined by the word
+“love”—fell into the background, and their place was taken by the <em>teaching
+of Him</em>. As the Arisen he became for his disciples a new figure, in and of the
+Apocalyptic, and (what was more) its most important and final figure. But
+therewith their image of the future took form as an image of memory. Now,
+this was something of quite decisive importance, unheard-of in the world of
+Magian thought—the transference of an actuality, lived and experienced, on
+to the plane of the high story itself. The Jews (amongst them the young Paul)
+and the Mandæans (amongst them the disciples of John the Baptist) fought
+against it with passion and made of Jesus a “False Messiah” such as had been
+spoken of in the earliest Persian texts.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_362" href="#Footnote_362" class="fnanchor">[362]</a> For them “He” was still to come from
+afar; for the little community “He” had already been—had they not seen
+him and lived with him? We have to enter into this conception unreservedly
+<span class="pagenum" id="p219">[219]</span>if we are to appreciate the enormous superiority it had in those times. Instead
+of an uncertain glimpse into the distance,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_363" href="#Footnote_363" class="fnanchor">[363]</a> a compelling present; instead of
+fearful waiting for a liberating certainty, instead of a saga, a lived and shared
+human destiny—truly they were “glad tidings” that were proclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>But to whom? Even in the first days the question arose which decided the
+whole Destiny of the new revelation. Jesus and his friends were Jews by birth,
+but they did not belong to the land of Judea. Here in Jerusalem men looked
+for the Messiah of their old sacred books, a Messiah who was to appear for
+the “Jewish people,” in the old tribal sense, and only for them. But all the
+rest of the Aramæan world waited upon the Saviour of the <em>world</em>, the Redeemer
+and Son of Man, the figure of all apocalyptic literature, whether written out in
+Jewish, Persian, Chaldean, or Mandæan terms.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_364" href="#Footnote_364" class="fnanchor">[364]</a> In the one view the death and
+resurrection of Jesus were merely local events; in the other they betokened a
+world-change. For, while everywhere else the Jews were a Magian nation
+without home or unity of birth, Jerusalem held firmly to the tribal idea. The
+conflict was not one between “preaching to the Jews” and “preaching to the
+Gentiles”—it went far deeper. The word “mission” had essentially here a
+twofold meaning. In the Judaic view there was essentially no need for recruiting—quite
+the reverse, as it was a contradiction to the Messiah-idea.
+The words “tribe” and “mission” are reciprocally exclusive. The members
+of the Chosen People, and in particular the priesthood, had merely to convince
+<em>themselves</em> that their longing was now fulfilled. But to the Magian nation,
+based on <i>consensus</i> or community of feeling, what the Resurrection conveyed was
+a full and definitive truth, and consensus in the matter of this truth gave the
+<em>principle of the true nation</em>, which must necessarily expand till it had taken in all
+older and conceptually incomplete principles. “A Shepherd and his sheep”
+was the formula of the new world-nation. The nation of the Redeemer was
+identical with mankind. When, therefore, we survey the early history of
+this Culture, we see that the controversy in the Apostles’ Council&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_365" href="#Footnote_365" class="fnanchor">[365]</a> had been
+already decided, five hundred years before, by facts. Post-exilic Jewry (with
+the sole exception of self-contained Judea) had, like the Persians, Chaldeans,
+and others, recruited widely amongst the heathen, from Turkestan to inner
+Africa, regardless of home and origin. As to this there is now no controversy.
+It never at any time entered the heads of this community to be anything but
+<span class="pagenum" id="p220">[220]</span>what it really was. It was itself already the result of <em>a national existence in dispersion</em>.
+In utter contrast to the old-Jewish texts—which were a carefully
+preserved treasure, and of which the right interpretation, the Halakha, was
+reserved by the Rabbis to themselves—the apocalyptic literature was written
+so that it could reach all the souls to be wakened, and interpreted so that it
+might strike home in everyone.</p>
+
+<p>It is easy to see which of these conceptions was that of Jesus’s oldest friends,
+for they established themselves as a community of the Last Days in Jerusalem
+and frequented the Temple. For these simple folk—amongst them his brothers,
+who erstwhile had openly rejected him, and his mother, who now believed
+in her executed Son&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_366" href="#Footnote_366" class="fnanchor">[366]</a>—the power of the Judaic tradition was even stronger
+than the spirit of Apocalypse. In their object of convincing the Jews they failed
+(although at first even Pharisees came over to them) and so they remained as
+one of the numerous sects within Judaism, and their product, the “Confession
+of Peter,” may fairly be characterized as an express assertion that they themselves
+were the true Jewry and the Synedrion the false.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_367" href="#Footnote_367" class="fnanchor">[367]</a></p>
+
+<p>The final destiny of this circle&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_368" href="#Footnote_368" class="fnanchor">[368]</a> was to fall into oblivion when, as very
+soon happened, the whole world of Magian thought and feeling responded to
+the new apocalyptic teaching. Amongst the later disciples of Jesus were many
+who were definitely and purely Magian, and wholly free from the Pharisaic
+spirit. Long before Paul, they had tacitly settled the mission question. Not
+to preach, for them, was not to live at all, and presently they had assembled,
+everywhere from the Tigris to the Tiber, small circles in which the figure of
+Jesus, in every conceivable presentation, merged with the mass of prior visions.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_369" href="#Footnote_369" class="fnanchor">[369]</a>
+Out of this, a new discord arose, as between mission to the heathen and mission
+to the Jews, and this was far more important than the conflict between Judea
+and the world on issues already decided. Jesus had lived in Galilee. Was his
+teaching to look west or east? Was it to be a Jesus-cult or an Order of the
+Saviour? Was it to seek intimacy with the Persian or with the Syncretic
+Church, both of which were in process of formation?</p>
+
+<p>This was the question decided by Paul—the first great personality in the
+new movement, and the first who had the sense not only of truths, but of facts.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p221">[221]</span>As a young rabbi from the West, and a pupil of one of the most famous of the
+Tannaim, he had persecuted the Christians qua Jewish sectaries. Then, after
+an awakening of the sort that often happened in those days, he turned to the
+numerous small cult-communities of the West and forged out of them a Church
+of <em>his own</em> modelling: so that thenceforward, the Pagan and the Christian cult-Churches
+evolved in parallel, and with constant reciprocal action, up to Iamblichus
+and Athanasius (about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 330). In the presence of this great ideal,
+Paul had for the Jesus-communities of Jerusalem a scarcely veiled contempt.
+There is nothing in the New Testament more express and exact than the beginning
+of the Epistle to the Galatians; his activity is a self-assumed task;
+he has taught how it pleased him and he has built how it pleased him. Finally,
+after fourteen years, he goes to Jerusalem in order, by force of his superior
+mentality, his success, and his effective independence of the old comrades of
+Jesus, to compel them there to agree that his, Paul’s, creation contained the
+true doctrine. Peter and his people, alien to actualities, failed to seize and
+appreciate the far-reaching significance of the discussion. And from that
+moment the primitive community was superfluous.</p>
+
+<p>Paul was a rabbi in intellect and an apocalyptic in feeling. He recognized
+Judaism, but as a <em>preliminary</em> development. And thus there came to be two
+Magian religions with the same Scriptures (namely, the Old Testament), but a
+double Halakha, the one setting towards the Talmud—developed by the
+Tannaim at Jerusalem from 300 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> onwards—and the other, founded by
+Paul and completed by the Fathers, in the direction of the Gospel. But, further,
+Paul drew together the whole fullness of Apocalypse and salvation-yearning
+then circulating in these fields&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_370" href="#Footnote_370" class="fnanchor">[370]</a> into a salvation-<em>certainty</em>, the certainty immediately
+revealed to him and to him <em>alone</em> near Damascus. “<em>Jesus is the Redeemer
+and Paul is his Prophet</em>”—this is the whole content of his message.
+The analogy with Mohammed could scarcely be closer. They differed neither
+in the nature of the awakening, nor in prophetic self-assuredness, nor in the
+consequent assertion of sole authority and unconditional truth for their respective
+expositions.</p>
+
+<p>With Paul, urban man and his “intelligence” come on the scene. The
+others, though they might know Jerusalem or Antioch, never grasped the
+essence of these cities. They lived soil-bound, rural, wholly soul and feeling.
+But now there appeared a spirit that had grown up in the great cities of Classical
+cast, that could only live in cities, that neither understood nor respected the
+peasant’s countryside. An understanding was possible with Philo, but with
+<span class="pagenum" id="p222">[222]</span>Peter never. Paul was the first by whom the Resurrection-experience was
+<em>seen as a problem</em>; the ecstatic awe of the young countryman changed in his brain
+into a conflict of spiritual principles. For what a contrast!—the struggle of
+Gethsemane, and the hour of Damascus: Child and Man, soul-anguish and
+intellectual decision, self-devotion to death and resolve to change sides! Paul
+had begun by seeing in the new Jewish sect a danger to the Pharisaism of
+Jerusalem; now, suddenly, he comprehended that the Nazarenes “were right”—a
+phrase that is inconceivable on the lips of Jesus—and took up their cause
+against Judaism, thereby setting up as an <em>intellectual quantity</em> that which had
+previously consisted in the knowledge of an experience. An intellectual
+quantity—but in making his cause into this he unwittingly drove it close to
+the other intellectual powers, <em>the cities of the West</em>. In the ambiance of pure
+Apocalyptic there is no “intellect.” For the old comrades it was simply not
+possible to understand him in the least—and mournfully and doubtfully
+they must have looked at him while he was addressing them. Their living
+image of Jesus (whom Paul had never seen) paled in this bright, hard light of
+concepts and propositions. Thenceforward the holy memory faded into a
+Scholastic system. But Paul had a perfectly exact feeling for the true home of
+his ideas. His missionary journeys were all directed westward, and the East he
+ignored. <em>He never left the domain of the Classical city.</em> Why did he go to Rome,
+to Corinth, and not to Edessa or Ctesiphon? And why was it that he worked
+<em>only in the cities, and never from village to village?</em></p>
+
+<p>That things developed thus was due to Paul <em>alone</em>. In the face of his practical
+energy the feelings of all the rest counted for nothing, and so the young Church
+took the urban and Western tendency decisively, so decisively that later it could
+describe the remaining heathen as “<i>pagani</i>,” country-folk. Thus arose an
+immense danger that only youth and vernal force enabled the growing Church
+to repel; the fellah-world of the Classical cities grasped at it with both hands,
+and the marks of that grasp are visible to-day. But—how remote already
+from the essence of Jesus, whose entire life had been bound to country and the
+country-folk! The Pseudomorphosis in which he was born he had simply not
+noticed; his soul contained not the smallest trace of its influence—and now,
+a generation after him, probably within the lifetime of his mother, that which
+had grown up out of his death had already become a centre of formative purpose
+for that Pseudomorphosis. The Classical City was soon the only theatre
+of ritual and dogmatic evolution. Eastward the community extended only furtively
+and unobtrusively.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_371" href="#Footnote_371" class="fnanchor">[371]</a> About <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 100 there were already Christians beyond
+the Tigris, but as far as the development of the Church was concerned they and
+their beliefs might almost have been non-existent.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p223">[223]</span></p>
+
+<p>It was a second creation, then, that came out of Paul’s immediate entourage,
+and it was this creation that, essentially, defined the form of the new Church.
+The personality and the story of Jesus cried aloud to be put into poetic form,
+and yet it is due to one man alone, Mark, that Gospels came into existence at
+all.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_372" href="#Footnote_372" class="fnanchor">[372]</a> What Paul and Mark had before them was a firm tradition in the community,
+<em>the</em> “Gospel,” a continued and propagated hearsay, supported by
+formless and insignificant notes in Aramaic and Greek, but in no way set out.
+In any case, of course, serious documents would have come into existence some
+time or another, but their natural form as products of the spirit of those who
+had <em>lived</em> with Jesus (and of the spirit of the East generally) would have been a
+canonical collection of his sayings, amplified, conclusively defined, and provided
+with an exegesis by the Councils and pivoting upon the Second Advent. But
+any tentatives in this direction were completely broken off by the Gospel of
+Mark, which was written down about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 65, at the same time as the last
+Pauline Epistles, and, like them, in Greek. The writer had no suspicion, perhaps,
+of the significance of his little work, but it made him one of the supremely
+important personalities not only of Christianity, but of the Arabian Culture
+generally. All older attempts vanished, leaving writings in Gospel-form as the
+sole sources concerning Jesus. (So much so that “<i>Evangelium</i>,” from signifying
+the content of glad tidings, came to mean the form itself.) The work was the
+outcome of the wishes of Pauline, literate, circles that had never heard any one
+of Jesus’s companions discourse about him. It is <em>an apocalyptic life-picture from a
+distance</em>; lived experience is replaced by narrative, and narrative so plain and
+straightforward that the apocalyptic tendency passes quite unperceived.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_373" href="#Footnote_373" class="fnanchor">[373]</a>
+And yet Apocalyptic is its condition precedent. It is not the words of Jesus, but
+the doctrine of Jesus in the Pauline form, that constitutes the substance of
+Mark. The first Christian book emanates from the Pauline creation. But very
+soon the latter itself becomes unthinkable without the book and its successors.</p>
+
+<p>For presently there arose something which Paul, the born schoolman,
+had never intended, but which nevertheless had been made inevitable by the
+tendency of his work—the <em>cult-church of Christian nationality</em>. While the
+Syncretic creed-community, in proportion as it attained to consciousness of
+itself, drew the innumerable old city-cults and the new Magian together and
+by means of a supreme cult endowed the structure with henotheistic form, the
+Jesus-cult of the oldest Western communities was so long dissected and enriched
+that it also came to consist of just such another mass of cults.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_374" href="#Footnote_374" class="fnanchor">[374]</a> Around the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p224">[224]</span>birth of Jesus, of which the Disciples knew nothing, grew up a story of his
+childhood. In the Mark Gospel it has not yet come into existence. Already
+in the old Persian apocalyptic, indeed, the Saoshyant as Saviour of the Last
+Day was said to be born of a virgin. But the new western myth was of quite
+other significance and had incalculable consequences. For within the Pseudomorphosis-region
+there arose presently beside Jesus a figure to which he was
+Son, which transcended his figure—that of the Mother of God. She, like her
+Son, was a simple human destiny of such arresting and attractive force that she
+towered above all the hundred and one Virgins and Mothers of Syncretism—Isis,
+Tanit, Cybele, Demeter—and all the mysteries of birth and pain, and
+finally drew them into herself. For Irenæus she is the Eve of a new mankind.
+Origen champions her continued virginity. By giving birth to Redeemer-God
+it is <em>she</em> really who has redeemed the world. Mary the “Theotokos” (she
+who bare God) was the great stumbling-block for the Christians outside the
+Classical frontier, and it was the doctrinal developments of this idea that led
+Monophysites and Nestorians to break away and re-establish the pure Jesus-religion.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_375" href="#Footnote_375" class="fnanchor">[375]</a>
+But the Faustian Culture, again, when it awoke and needed a symbol
+whereby to express its primary feeling for Infinity in time and to manifest its
+sense of the succession of generations, <em>set up the “Mater Dolorosa” and not the
+suffering Redeemer</em> as the pivot of the German-Catholic Christianity of the Gothic
+age; and for whole centuries of bright fruitful inwardness this woman-figure
+was the very synthesis of Faustian world-feeling and the object of all art,
+poetry, and piety. Even to-day in the ritual and the prayers of the Roman
+Catholic Church, and above all in the thoughts of its people, Jesus takes second
+place after the Madonna.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_376" href="#Footnote_376" class="fnanchor">[376]</a></p>
+
+<p>Along with the Mary-cult there arose the innumerable cults of the saints,
+which certainly exceeded in number those of the antique place-gods; when the
+Pagan Church finally expired, the Christian had been able to absorb the whole
+store of local cults in the form of the veneration of saints.</p>
+
+<p>Paul and Mark were decisive in yet another matter of inestimably wide
+import. It was a result of Paul’s mission that, contrary to all the initial probabilities,
+Greek became the language of the Church and—following the lead
+of the first Gospel—of a sacred <em>Greek</em> literature. Let the reader consider what
+this meant, in one way and another. The Jesus Church was artificially separated
+from its spiritual origins and attached to an alien and scholarly element. Touch
+with the folk-spirit of the Aramæan motherland was lost. Thenceforward
+both the cult-Churches possessed the same language, the same conceptual
+<span class="pagenum" id="p225">[225]</span>traditions, the same book-literature from the same schools. The far less sophisticated
+Aramaic literatures of the East—the truly Magian, written and
+thought in the language of Jesus and his companions—were cut off from cooperating
+in the life of the Church. They could not be read, they dropped out
+of sight, and finally they were forgotten altogether. After all, notwithstanding
+that the Persian Scriptures were set down in Avestan and the Jewish in Hebrew,
+the language of their authors and exegetes; the language of the whole Apocalyptic
+from which the teachings of Jesus, and secondarily the teachings
+about Jesus, sprang; the language, lastly, of the scholars of all the Mesopotamian
+universities—was Aramaic. All this vanished from the field of view,
+to be replaced by Plato and Aristotle, both of whom were taken up, worked
+upon in common, and misunderstood in common by the Schoolmen of the two
+cult-Churches.</p>
+
+<p>A final step in this direction was attempted by a man who was the equal
+of Paul in organizing talent and greatly his superior in intellectual creativeness,
+but who was inferior to him in the feeling for possibilities and actualities, and
+consequently failed to achieve his grandly conceived schemes—Marcion.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_377" href="#Footnote_377" class="fnanchor">[377]</a>
+He saw in Paul’s creation and its consequences only the basis on which to
+found the true religion of salvation. He was sensible of the absurdity of two
+religions that were unreservedly at war with one another possessing the same
+Holy Writ—namely, the <em>Jewish</em> canon. To us to-day it seems almost inconceivable
+that this should have been, but in fact it was so, for a century—but
+we have to remember what a sacred text meant in every kind of Magian religiousness.
+In these texts Marcion saw the real “conspiracy against the
+truth” and the most urgent danger for the doctrines intended by Jesus and,
+in his view, not yet actualized. Paul the prophet had declared the Old Testament
+as fulfilled and concluded—Marcion the founder pronounced it defeated
+and cancelled. He strove to cut out everything Jewish, down to the last detail.
+From end to end he was fighting nothing but Judaism. Like every true founder,
+like every religiously creative period, like Zarathustra, the prophets of Israel,
+like the Homeric Greeks, and like the Germans converted to Christianity,
+he transformed the old gods into defeated powers.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_378" href="#Footnote_378" class="fnanchor">[378]</a> Jehovah as the Creator-God,
+the Demiurge, is the “Just” <em>and therefore the Evil</em>: Jesus as the incarnation of the
+Saviour-God in this evil creation is the “alien”—that is, the good Principle.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_379" href="#Footnote_379" class="fnanchor">[379]</a>
+The foundation of Magian, and in particular Persian, feeling is perfectly unmistakable
+here. Marcion came from Sinope, the old capital of that Mithradatic
+<span class="pagenum" id="p226">[226]</span>Empire whose religion is indicated in the very name of its kings. Here
+of old, too, the Mithras cult had originated.</p>
+
+<p>But to the new doctrine properly belonged new Scriptures. The “Law and
+Prophets” which had hitherto been canonical for the whole of Christendom
+was the <em>Bible of the Jewish God</em>, and in fact it had just been given final shape as
+such by the Synedrion at Jabna. Thus, it was a Devil’s book that the Christian
+had in his hands, and Marcion, therefore, now set up against it the Bible of the
+Redeemer-God—likewise an assemblage and ordering of writings that had
+hitherto been current in the community&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_380" href="#Footnote_380" class="fnanchor">[380]</a> as simple edification-books without
+canonical claims. In place of the Torah he puts the—<em>one and true</em>—Gospel,
+which he builds up uniformly out of various separate, and, in his view, corrupted
+and falsified, Gospels. In place of the Israelite prophets he sets up the
+Epistles of the <em>one prophet of Jesus</em>, who was Paul.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Marcion became the real creator of the New Testament. But for that
+reason it is impossible to ignore the mysterious personage, closely related to
+him, who not long before had written the Gospel “according to John.” The
+intention of this writer was neither to amplify nor to supersede the Gospels
+proper; what he did—and, unlike Mark, consciously did—was to create
+something quite new, <em>the first sacred book</em> of Christianity, the Koran of the new
+religion.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_381" href="#Footnote_381" class="fnanchor">[381]</a> The book proves that this religion was already conceived of as something
+complete and enduring. The idea of the immediately impending end of
+the world, with which Jesus was filled through and through and which even
+Paul and Mark in a measure shared, lies far behind “John” and Marcion.
+Apocalyptic is at an end, and Mysticism is beginning. Their content is not
+the teaching of Jesus, nor even the Pauline teaching about Jesus, but the enigma
+of the universe, the World-Cavern. There is here no question of a Gospel;
+not the figure of the Redeemer, but the principle of the Logos, is the meaning
+and the means of happening. The childhood story is rejected again; a god is
+not “born,” he is “there,” and wanders in human form over the earth. And
+this god is a Trinity—God, the Spirit of God, the Word of God. This sacred
+book of earliest Christianity contains, for the first time, the Magian problem
+of “Substance,” which dominated the following centuries to the exclusion of
+everything else and finally led to the religion’s splitting up into three churches.
+And—what is significant in more respects than one—the solution of that
+problem to which “John” stands closest is that which the Nestorian East
+stood for as the true one. It is, in virtue of the Logos idea (Greek though
+<span class="pagenum" id="p227">[227]</span>the word happens to be) the “easternmost” of the Gospels, and presents Jesus,
+emphatically not as the bringer of the final and total revelation, but as the
+second envoy, who is to be <em>followed by a third</em> (the Comforter, Paraclete, of
+John xiv, 16, 26; xv, 26). This is the astounding doctrine that Jesus himself
+proclaims, and the decisive note of this enigmatic book. Here is unveiled,
+quite suddenly, the faith of the Magian East. If the Logos does not go, the
+Paraclete&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_382" href="#Footnote_382" class="fnanchor">[382]</a> cannot come (John xvi, 7), but between them lies the last Æon,
+the rule of Ahriman (xiv, 30). The Church of the Pseudomorphosis, ruled by
+Pauline intellect, fought long against the John Gospel and gave it recognition
+only when the offensive, darkly hinted doctrine had been covered over by a
+Pauline interpretation. The real state of affairs is disclosed in the Montanist
+movement (Asia Minor, 160) which harked back to oral tradition and proclaimed
+in Montanus the manifested Paraclete and the end of the world. Its
+popularity was immense. Tertullian went over to it at Carthage in 207. About
+245 Mani,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_383" href="#Footnote_383" class="fnanchor">[383]</a>
+ who was intimately in touch with the currents of Eastern Christianity,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_384" href="#Footnote_384" class="fnanchor">[384]</a>
+cast out the Pauline, human Jesus as a demon and confessed the Johannine
+Logos as the true Jesus, but announced himself as the Paraclete of the
+fourth Gospel. In Carthage, Augustine became a Manichæan, and it is a
+highly suggestive fact that both movements finally fused with Marcionism.</p>
+
+<p>To return to Marcion himself, it was he who carried through the idea of
+“John” and created a Christian Bible. And then, verging on old age, when the
+communities of the extreme west recoiled from him in horror,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_385" href="#Footnote_385" class="fnanchor">[385]</a> he set out to
+build the masterly structure of his own Redeemer-Church.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_386" href="#Footnote_386" class="fnanchor">[386]</a> From 156 to 190 this
+was a power, and it was only in the following century that the older Church
+succeeded in degrading the Marcionites to the rank of heretics. Even so, in the
+broad East and as far out as Turkestan, it was still important at a much later
+date, and it ended, in a way deeply significant of its essential feeling, by fusing
+with the Manichæans.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_387" href="#Footnote_387" class="fnanchor">[387]</a></p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, though in the fullness of his conscious superiority he had
+underestimated the <i lang="la">vis inertiæ</i> of existing conditions, his grand effort was not
+in vain. He was, like Paul before him and Athanasius after him, the deliverer
+of Christianity at a moment when it threatened to break up, and the grandeur
+of his idea is in no wise diminished by the fact that union came about in opposition
+to, instead of through, him. The early Catholic Church—that is, the
+<em>Church of the Pseudomorphosis</em>—arose in its greatness only about 190, and then
+<span class="pagenum" id="p228">[228]</span>it was in self-defence against the Church of Marcion and with the aid of an
+organization taken from that Church. Further, it replaced Marcion’s Bible by
+another of similar structure—Gospels and apostolic Epistles—which it
+then proceeded to combine with the Law and the Prophets in one unit. And
+finally, this act of linking the two Testaments having in itself settled the
+Church’s attitude towards Judaism, it proceeded to combat Marcion’s third
+creation, his Redeemer-doctrine, by making a start with a theology of its own
+on the basis of <em>his</em> enunciation of the problem.</p>
+
+<p>This development, however, took place on Classical soil, and, therefore,
+even the Church that arose in opposition to Marcion and his anti-Judaism
+was looked upon by Talmudic Jewry (whose centre of gravity lay entirely in
+Mesopotamia and its universities) as a mere piece of Hellenistic paganism.
+The destruction of Jerusalem was a conclusive event that in the world of fact
+no spiritual power could nullify. Such is the intimacy of inward relationship
+between waking-consciousness, religion, and speech that the complete severance
+after 70 of the Greek Pseudomorphosis and the Aramaic (that is, the truly
+Arabian) region was bound to result in the formation of two distinct domains
+of Magian religious development. On the Western margin of the young
+Culture the Pagan cult-Church, the Jesus-Church (removed thither by Paul),
+and the Greek-speaking Judaism of the Philo stamp were in point of language
+and literature so interlocked that the last-named fell into Christianity even in
+the first century, and Christianity and Hellenism combined to form a <em>common</em>
+early philosophy. In the Aramaic-speaking world from the Orontes to the
+Tigris, on the other hand, Judaism and Persism interacted constantly and intimately,
+each creating in this period its own strict theology and scholastic in the
+Talmud and the Avesta; and from the fourth century both these theologies exercised
+<em>the most potent influence upon the Aramaic-speaking Christendom that resisted the
+Pseudomorphosis</em>, so that finally it broke away in the form of the Nestorian Church.</p>
+
+<p>Here in the East the difference, inherent in every human waking-consciousness,
+between sense-understanding and word-understanding—and, therefore
+between eye and letter—led up to purely Arabian methods of mysticism and
+scholasticism. The apocalyptic certainty, “Gnosis” in the first-century sense,
+that Jesus intended to confer,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_388" href="#Footnote_388" class="fnanchor">[388]</a> the divining contemplation and emotion, is that
+of the Israelite prophets, the Gathas, Sufism, and we have it recognizable still
+in Spinoza, in the Polish Messiah Baal Shem&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_389" href="#Footnote_389" class="fnanchor">[389]</a> and in Mirza Ali Mohammed,
+the enthusiast-founder of Bahaism, who was executed in Teheran in 1850.
+The other way, “Paradosis,” is the characteristically Talmudic method of
+word-exegesis, of which Paul was a master;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_390" href="#Footnote_390" class="fnanchor">[390]</a> it pervades all later Avestan
+works, the Nestorian dialectic,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_391" href="#Footnote_391" class="fnanchor">[391]</a> the entire theology of Islam alike.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p229">[229]</span></p>
+
+<p>On the other side, the Pseudomorphosis is single and whole both in its
+Magian believing acceptance (Pistis) and its metaphysical introversion
+(Gnosis).&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_392" href="#Footnote_392" class="fnanchor">[392]</a> The Magian belief in its Westerly shape was formulated for the
+Christians by Irenæus and, above all, by Tertullian, whose famous aphorism
+“<i lang="la">Credo quia absurdum</i>” is the very summation of this certainty in belief. The
+Pagan counterpart is Plotinus in his Enneads and even more so Porphyry in his
+treatise <cite>On the Return of the Soul to God</cite>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_393" href="#Footnote_393" class="fnanchor">[393]</a> But for the great schoolmen of the
+Pagan Church too, there were Father (Nus), Son, and the middle Being, just
+as already for Philo the Logos had been first-born Son and second God. Doctrines
+concerning ecstasy, angels and demons, and the dual substance of soul
+were freely current amongst them, and we see in Plotinus and Origen, both
+pupils of the same master, that the scholasticism of the Pseudomorphosis
+consisted in the development of Magian concepts and thoughts, by systematic
+transvaluation of the texts of Plato and Aristotle.</p>
+
+<p>The characteristic <em>central idea of the whole thought of the Pseudomorphosis is the
+Logos</em>,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_394" href="#Footnote_394" class="fnanchor">[394]</a> in use and development its faithful image. There is no possibility here
+of any “Greek,” in the sense of Classical, influence; there was not a man alive
+in those days whose spiritual disposition could have accommodated the smallest
+trace of the Logos of Heraclitus and the Stoa. But, equally, the theologies
+that lived side by side in Alexandria were never able to develop in full purity
+the Logos-notion as they meant it, whereas both in Persian and Chaldean
+imaginings—as Spirit or Word of God—and in Jewish doctrine—as Ruach
+and Memra—it played a decisive part. What the Logos-teaching in the West
+did was to develop a Classical formula, by way of Philo and the John Gospel
+(the enduring effect of which on the West was its mark upon the schoolmen)
+not only into an element of Christian mysticism, but, eventually, into a dogma.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_395" href="#Footnote_395" class="fnanchor">[395]</a>
+This was inevitable. This dogma which <em>both</em> the Western Churches held,
+corresponded, on the side of knowledge, to that which, on the side of faith, was
+represented <em>both by</em> the syncretic cults and the cults of Mary and the Saints. And
+against the whole thing, dogma and cult, the feeling of the East revolted from
+the 4th century on.</p>
+
+<p>For the eye the history of these thoughts and feelings is repeated in the
+history of Magian architecture.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_396" href="#Footnote_396" class="fnanchor">[396]</a> <em>The basic form of the Pseudomorphosis is the
+Basilica</em>, which was known to the Jews of the West and to the Hellenistic sects
+of the Chaldeans even before the time of Christ. As the Logos of the John
+Gospel is a Magian fundamental in Classical shape, so the Basilica is a Magian
+<span class="pagenum" id="p230">[230]</span>room whose inner walls correspond to the outer surfaces of the old Classical
+temple, the cult-building introverted. The architectural form of the pure
+East is the <em>cupola building, the Mosque</em>, which without doubt existed long before
+the oldest Christian Churches in the temples of the Persians and Chaldeans,
+the synagogues of Mesopotamia, and probably the temples of Saba as well.
+The attempts to reconcile East and West in the Church Councils of the Byzantine
+period were finally symbolized in the mixed form of the domed basilica.
+For this item of the history of ecclesiastical architecture is really another expression
+of the great change that set in with Athanasius and Constantine, the
+last great champions of Christianity. The one created the firm western dogma
+and also Monasticism, into whose hands dogma gradually passed from those
+of the ageing schools. The other founded the State of Christian nationality,
+to which likewise the name of “Greek” passed in the end. And of this transition
+the domed basilica is the symbol.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p231"></a><a id="p232"></a><a id="p233"></a>[233]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ <br>
+ <span class="subtitle">PROBLEMS OF THE ARABIAN CULTURE
+ <br>
+ (B)
+ <br>
+ THE MAGIAN SOUL</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>The world, as spread out for the Magian waking-consciousness, possesses a
+kind of extension that may be called cavern-like,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_397" href="#Footnote_397" class="fnanchor">[397]</a> though it is difficult for
+Western man to pick upon any word in his vocabulary that can convey anything
+more than a hint of the meaning of Magian “space.” For “space” has essentially
+unlike meanings for the perceptions of the two Cultures. The world-as-cavern
+is just as different from the world-as-extent of the passionate,
+far-thrusting Faustian as it is from the Classical world-as-sum-of-bodily-things.
+The Copernican system, in which the earth, as it were, loses itself, must necessarily
+seem crazy and frivolous to Arabian thought. The Church of the West
+was perfectly right when it resisted an idea so incompatible with the world-feeling
+of Jesus, and the Chaldean <em>cavern-astronomy</em>, which was wholly natural
+and convincing for Persians, Jews, peoples of the Pseudomorphosis, and Islam,
+became accessible to the few genuine Greeks who knew of it at all only after a
+process of transvaluing its basic notions of space.</p>
+
+<p>The tension between Macrocosm and Microcosm (which is identical with
+the waking-consciousness) leads, in the world-picture of every Culture, to further
+oppositions of symbolic importance. All a man’s sensations or understanding,
+faith or knowledge, receive their shape from a primary opposition
+which makes them not only activities of the individual, but also expressions of
+the totality. In the Classical the opposition that universally dominates the
+waking-consciousness is the opposition of matter and form; in the West it is
+that of force and mass. In the former the tension loses itself in the small and
+particular, and in the latter it discharges itself in the character of work. In the
+World-Cavern, on the other hand, it persists in traversing and swaying to and
+fro in unsure strugglings, and so becomes that “Semitic” primary-dualism
+which, ever the same under its thousand forms, fills the Magian world. The
+light shines through the cavern and battles against the darkness (John i, 5).
+Both are Magian substances. Up and down, heaven and earth become powers
+that have entity and contend with one another. But these polarities in the
+most primary sensations mingle with those of the refined and critical understanding,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p234">[234]</span>like good and evil, God and Satan. Death, for the author of the
+John Gospel as for the strict Moslem, is not the end of life, but a Something, a
+death-force, that contends with a life-force for the possession of man.</p>
+
+<p>But still more important than all this is the opposition of Spirit and Soul
+(Hebrew <i>Ruach</i> and <i>nephesh</i>, Persian <i>ahu</i> and <i>urvan</i>, Mandæan <i>monuhmed</i> and
+<i>gyan</i>, Greek <i>pneuma</i> and <i>psyche</i>) which first comes out in the basic feeling of the
+prophetic religions, then pervades the whole of Apocalyptic, and finally forms
+and guides the world-contemplations of the awakened Culture—Philo, Paul
+and Plotinus, Gnostics and Mandæans, Augustine and the Avesta, Islam and
+the Kabbalah. <i>Ruach</i> means originally “wind” and <i>nephesh</i> “breath.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_398" href="#Footnote_398" class="fnanchor">[398]</a> The
+<i>nephesh</i> is always in one way or another related to the bodily and earthly, to
+the below, the evil, the darkness. Its effort is the “upward.” The <i>ruach</i>
+belongs to the divine, to the above, to the light. Its effects in man when it
+descends are the heroism of a Samson, the holy wrath of an Elijah, the enlightenment
+of the judge (the Solomon passing judgment,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_399" href="#Footnote_399" class="fnanchor">[399]</a>) and all kinds of divination
+and ecstasy. It is poured out.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_400" href="#Footnote_400" class="fnanchor">[400]</a> From Isaiah xi, 2, the Messiah becomes
+the incarnation of the <i>ruach</i>. Philo and the Islamic theology divide mankind
+into born Psychics and born Pneumatics (the “elect,” a concept thoroughly
+proper to the world-cavern and Kismet). All the sons of Jacob are pneumatics.
+For Paul (1 Cor. xv) the meaning of the Resurrection lies in the opposition of a
+psychic and a pneumatic body, which alike for him and Philo and the author
+of the Baruch apocalypse coincides with the opposition of heaven and earth,
+light and darkness.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_401" href="#Footnote_401" class="fnanchor">[401]</a>
+ For Paul, the Saviour is the heavenly Pneuma.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_402" href="#Footnote_402" class="fnanchor">[402]</a> In the
+John Gospel he fuses as Logos with the Light; in Neoplatonism he appears
+as <i>Nus</i> or, in the Classical terminology, the All-One opposed to <i>Physis</i>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_403" href="#Footnote_403" class="fnanchor">[403]</a> Paul
+and Philo, with their “Classical” (that is, western) conceptual criteria, equated
+soul and body with good and bad respectively, Augustine, as a Manichæan&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_404" href="#Footnote_404" class="fnanchor">[404]</a>
+with Persian-Eastern bases of distinction, lumps soul and body together as
+the naturally bad, in contrast to God as the sole Good, and finds in this opposition
+the source of his doctrine of Grace, which developed also, in the same
+form (though quite independently of him) in Islam.</p>
+
+<p>But souls are at bottom discrete entities, whereas the Pneuma is one and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p235">[235]</span>ever the same. The man <em>possesses</em> a soul, but he only <em>participates</em> in the spirit
+of the Light and the Good; the divine descends into him, thus binding all the
+individuals of the Below together with the one in the Above. This primary
+feeling, which dominates the beliefs and opinions of all Magian men, is something
+perfectly singular, and not only characterizes their world-view, but
+marks off the essence and kernel of their religiousness in all its forms from that
+of every other kind of man. This Culture, as has been shown, was characteristically
+the Culture of the middle. It could have borrowed forms and ideas
+from most of the others, and the fact that it did not do so, that in the face of all
+pressure and temptation it remained so profoundly mistress of its own inward
+form, attests an unbridgeable gulf of difference. Of all the wealth of Babylonian
+and Egyptian religion it admitted hardly more than a few names; the Classical
+and the Indian Cultures, or rather the Civilizations heir to them—Hellenism
+and Buddhism—distorted its expression to the point of pseudomorphosis, but
+its essence they never touched. All religions of the Magian Culture, from the
+creations of Isaiah and Zarathustra to Islam, constitute a complete inward
+unit of world-feeling; and, just as in the Avestan beliefs there is not to be found
+one trait of Brahmanism nor in early Christianity one breath of Classical feeling,
+but merely names and figures and outward forms, so also not a trace of this
+Jesus-religion could be absorbed by the Germanic-Catholic Christianity of the
+West, even though the stock of tenets and observances was taken over in its
+entirety.</p>
+
+<p>Whereas the Faustian man is an “I” that in the last resort draws its own
+conclusions about the Infinite; whereas the Apollinian man, as one <i>soma</i> among
+many, represents only himself; the Magian man, with his spiritual kind of
+being, is only a <em>part of a pneumatic “We”</em> that, descending from above, is one
+and the same in all believers. As body and soul he belongs to himself alone,
+but something else, something alien and higher, dwells in him, making him
+with all his glimpses and convictions just a member of a consensus which, as
+the emanation of God, excludes error, but excludes also all possibility of the
+self-asserting Ego. Truth is for him something other than for us. All our
+epistemological methods, resting upon the <em>individual</em> judgment, are for him
+madness and infatuation, and its scientific results a work of the Evil One,
+who has confused and deceived the spirit as to its true dispositions and purposes.
+Herein lies the ultimate, for us unapproachable, secret of Magian thought in its
+cavern-world—the impossibility of a thinking, believing, and knowing Ego
+is the presupposition inherent in all the fundamentals of all these religions.
+While Classical man stood before his gods as one body before another; whereas
+the Faustian willing “I” in its wide world feels itself confronted by deity, also
+Faustian, also willing, effective everywhere; the Magian deity is the indefinite,
+enigmatic Power on high that pours out its Wrath or its Grace, descends itself
+into the dark or raises the soul into the light as it sees fit. The idea of individual
+<span class="pagenum" id="p236">[236]</span>wills is simply meaningless, for “will” and “thought” in man are not prime,
+but already effects of the deity upon him. Out of this unshakable root-feeling,
+which is merely re-expressed, never essentially altered, by any conversions,
+illumination or subtilizing in the world—there emerges of necessity the idea
+of the Divine Mediator, of one who transforms this state from a torment into
+a bliss. All Magian religions are by this idea bound together, and separated
+from those of all other Cultures.</p>
+
+<p>The Logos-idea in its broadest sense, an abstraction of the Magian light-sensation
+of the Cavern, is the exact correlative of this sensation in Magian
+thought. It meant that from the unattainable Godhead its Spirit, its “Word,”
+is released as carrier of the light and bringer of the good, and enters into relation
+with human being to uplift, pervade, and redeem it. This distinctness of
+three substances, which does not contradict their oneness in religious thought,
+was known already to the prophetic religions. Ahuramazda’s light-gleaming
+soul is the Word (Yasht 13, 31), and in one of the earliest Gathas his Holy
+Spirit (<i>spenta mainyu</i>) converses with the Evil Spirit (<i>angra mainyu</i>, Yasna 45, 2).
+The same idea penetrates the whole of the old Jewish literature. The thought
+which the Chaldeans built up on the separation of God and His Word and the
+opposition of Marduk and Nabu, which breaks forth with power in the whole
+Aramæan Apocalyptic remained permanently active and creative; by Philo
+and John, Marcion and Mani, it entered into the Talmudic teachings and thence
+into the Kabbalistic books Yesirah and Sohar, into the Church Councils and the
+works of the Fathers, into the later Avesta, and finally into Islam, in which a
+Mohammed gradually became the Logos and, as the mystically respent, <em>living</em>
+Mohammed of the popular religion, fused into the figure of Christ.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_405" href="#Footnote_405" class="fnanchor">[405]</a> This
+conception is for Magian man so self-evident that it was able to break through
+even the strictly monotheistic structure of the original Islam and to appear with
+Allah as the Word of God (<i>kalimah</i>), the Holy Spirit (<i>ruh</i>), and the “light of
+Mohammed.”</p>
+
+<p>For, for the popular religion, the first light that comes forth from the
+world-creation is that of Mohammed, in the shape of a peacock&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_406" href="#Footnote_406" class="fnanchor">[406]</a> “formed of
+white pearls” and walled about by veilings. But the peacock is the Envoy
+of God and the prime soul&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_407" href="#Footnote_407" class="fnanchor">[407]</a> as early as the Mandæans, and it is the emblem of
+immortality on Early Christian sarcophagi. The light-diffusing pearl that
+illumines the dark house of the body is the Spirit entered into man, and thought
+of as substance, for the Mandæans as in the Acts of Thomas.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_408" href="#Footnote_408" class="fnanchor">[408]</a>
+ The Jezidi&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_409" href="#Footnote_409" class="fnanchor">[409]</a>
+<span class="pagenum" id="p237">[237]</span>reverence the Logos as peacock and light; next to the Druses they have preserved
+most purely the old Persian conception of the substantial Trinity.</p>
+
+<p>Thus again and again we find the Logos-idea getting back to the light-sensation
+from which the Magian understanding derived it. <em>The world of Magian
+mankind is filled with a fairy-tale feeling.</em>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_410" href="#Footnote_410" class="fnanchor">[410]</a> Devils and evil spirits threaten man;
+angels and fairies protect him. There are amulets and talismans, mysterious
+lands, cities, buildings, and beings, secret letters, Solomon’s Seal, the Philosophers’
+Stone. And over all this is poured the quivering cavern-light that the
+spectral darkness ever threatens to swallow up. If this profusion of figures
+astonishes the reader, let him remember that Jesus lived in it, and Jesus’s teachings
+are only to be understood from it. Apocalyptic is only a vision of fable
+intensified to an extreme of tragic power. Already in the Book of Enoch we
+have the crystal palace of God, the mountains of precious stone, and the imprisonment
+of the apostate stars. Fantastic, too, are the whole overpowering
+idea-world of the Mandæans, that of the Gnostics and the Manichæans, the
+system of Origen, and the figures of the Persian “Bundahish”; and when the
+time of the great visions was over, these ideas passed into a legend-poesy and
+into the innumerable religious romances of which we have Christian specimens
+in the gospels concerning Jesus’s childhood, the Acts of Thomas and the anti-Pauline
+Pseudo-Clementines. One such story is that of Abraham’s having
+minted the thirty pieces of silver of Judas. Another is the tale of the “treasure-cave”
+in which, deep under the hill of Golgotha, are stored the golden treasure
+of paradise and the bones of Adam.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_411" href="#Footnote_411" class="fnanchor">[411]</a> Dante’s poetic material was after all poetic,
+but this was sheer actuality, the only world in which these people lived continuously.
+Such sensations are unapproachably remote from men who live in
+and with a dynamical world-picture. If we would obtain some inkling of how
+alien to us all the inner life of Jesus is—a painful realization for the Christian
+of the West, who would be glad indeed if he could make that inner life the
+point of contact for his own inward piety—if we would discover why nowadays
+only a pious Moslem has the capacity livingly to experience it, we should
+sink ourselves in this wonder-element of a world-image that was Jesus’s world-image.
+And then, and only then, shall we perceive how little Faustian Christianity
+has taken over from the wealth of the Church of the Pseudomorphosis—of
+its world-feeling nothing, of its inward form little, and of its concepts
+and figures much.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p238">[238]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_7">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>The When, for the Magian Soul, issues from the Where. Here too, is no
+Apollinian clinging to pointlike Present, nor Faustian thrust and drive towards
+an infinitely distant goal. Here Being has a different pulse, and consequently
+Waking-being has another sense of time, which is the counter-concept to
+Magian space. The prime thing that the humanity of this Culture, from
+poor slaves and porters to the prophets and the caliphs themselves, feels as the
+Kismet above him is not a limitless flight of the ages that never lets a lost moment
+recur, but a Beginning and an End of “This Day,” which is irrevocably
+ordained and in which the human existence takes the place assigned to it from
+creation itself. Not only world-space, but world-time also is cavern-like.
+Hence comes the thoroughly Magian certainty that <em>everything has “a” time</em>,
+from the origins of the Saviour, whose hour stood written in ancient texts, to
+the smallest detail of the everyday, in which Faustian hurry would be meaningless
+and unimaginable. Here, too, is the basis of the Early Magian (and in
+particular the Chaldean) astrology, which likewise presupposes that all things
+are written down in the stars and that the scientifically calculable course of
+the planets authorized conclusions as to the course of earthly things.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_412" href="#Footnote_412" class="fnanchor">[412]</a> The
+Classical oracle answered the only question that could perturb Apollinian man—the
+form, the “How?” of coming things. But the question of the Cavern is
+“When?” The whole of Apocalyptic, the spiritual life of Jesus, the agony of
+Gethsemane, and the grand movement that arose out of his death are unintelligible
+if we have not grasped this primary question of Magian being and the
+presuppositions lying behind it. It is an infallible sign of the extinction of the
+Classical Soul that astrology in its westward advance drove the oracle step by
+step before it. Nowhere is the stage of transition more clearly visible than in
+Tacitus, whose entire history is dominated by the confusion and dislocation
+of his world-picture. First of all, as a true Roman, he brings in the power of
+the old city-deities; then, as an intelligent cosmopolitan, he regards this
+very belief in their intervention as a superstition; and finally, as a Stoic (by
+that time the spiritual outlook of the Stoa had become <em>Magian</em>), he speaks of
+the power of the seven planets that rule the fortunes of men. And thus it comes
+about that in the following centuries Time itself as vessel of fate—namely, the
+Vault of Time, limited each way and therefore capable of being grasped as an
+entity by the inner eye—is by Persian mysticism set above the light of God
+as Zrvan, and rules the world-conflict of Good and Evil. Zrvanism was the
+State religion of Persia in 438–457.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p239">[239]</span></p>
+
+<p>Fundamentally, too, it is this belief that all stands written in the stars, that
+makes the Arabian Culture characteristically that of “eras”—that is, of time-reckonings
+that begin at some event felt as a peculiarly significant act of Providence.
+The first and most important is the generic Aramæan era, which begins
+about 300 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> with the growth of apocalyptic tension and is the “Seleucid era.”
+It was followed by many others, amongst them the Sabæan (about 115 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>),
+the starting-point of which is not exactly known to us; that of Diocletian; the
+Jewish era, beginning with the Creation, which was introduced by the Synedrion
+in 346;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_413" href="#Footnote_413" class="fnanchor">[413]</a> the Persian, from the accession of the last Sassanid Jezdegerd in
+632; and the Hijra, by which at last the Seleucid was displaced in Syria and
+Mesopotamia. Outside this land-field there is mere imitation for practical ends,
+like Varro’s “<i lang="la">ab urbe condita</i>”; that of the Marcionites, beginning with Marcion’s
+breach with the Church in 144; and that of the Christians, introduced
+shortly after 500 and beginning with the birth of Jesus.</p>
+
+<p>World-history is the picture of the living world into which man sees himself
+woven by birth, ancestry, and progeny, and which he strives to comprehend
+from out of his world-feeling. The historical picture of Classical man concentrates
+itself upon the pure Present. Its content is no true Becoming, but a foreground
+Being with a conclusive background of timeless myth, rationalized as
+“the Golden Age.” This Being, however, was a variegated swarming of ups
+and downs, good and ill fortune, a blind “thereabouts,” an eternal alteration,
+yet ever in its changes the same, without direction, goal, or “Time.” The
+cavern-feeling, on the contrary, requires a surveyable history consisting in a
+beginning and an end to the world <em>that is also the beginning and the end of man</em>—acts
+of God of mighty magic—and between these turns, spellbound to the
+limits of the Cavern and the ordained period, the battle of light and darkness, of
+the angels and Jazatas with Ahriman, Satan, and Eblis, in which Man, his
+Soul, and his Spirit are involved. The present Cavern God can destroy and replace
+by a new creation. The Persian-Chaldean apocalyptic offers to the gaze
+a whole series of such æons, and Jesus, along with his time, stood in expectation
+of the end of the existing one.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_414" href="#Footnote_414" class="fnanchor">[414]</a> The consequence of this is a historic outlook
+like that which is natural to Islam even to-day—the view over a given time.
+“The world-view of the people falls naturally into three major parts—world-beginning,
+world-development, and world-catastrophe. For the Moslem who
+feels so deeply ethically, the chief essentials in world-development are the salvation-story
+and the ethical way of life, knit into one as the ‘life’ of man.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p240">[240]</span>This debouches into the world-catastrophe, which contains the sanction of the
+moral history of humanity.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_415" href="#Footnote_415" class="fnanchor">[415]</a></p>
+
+<p>But, further, for the Magian human-existence, the issue of the feeling of <em>this</em>
+sort of Time and the view of <em>this</em> sort of space is a quite peculiar type of piety,
+which likewise we may put under the sign of the Cavern—a <em>will-less</em> resignation,
+to which the spiritual “I” is unknown, and which feels the spiritual
+“We” that has entered into the quickened body as simply a reflection of the
+divine Light. The Arab word for this is Islam (= submission) but this Islam
+was equally Jesus’s normal mode of feeling and that of every other personality
+of religious genius that appeared in this Culture. Classical piety is something
+perfectly different,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_416" href="#Footnote_416" class="fnanchor">[416]</a> while, as for that of our own Culture, if we could mentally
+abstract from the piety of St. Theresa and Luther and Pascal their Ego—that
+Ego which wills to maintain itself against, to submit to, or even to be extinguished
+by the Divine Infinite—there would be nothing left. The Faustian
+prime-sacrament of Contrition presupposes the strong and free will that can
+overcome itself. But it is precisely the <em>impossibility of an Ego as a free power</em> in
+the face of the divine that constitutes “Islam.” Every attempt to meet the operations
+of God with a personal purpose or even a personal opinion is “<i>masiga</i>,”—that
+is, not an evil willing, but an evidence that the powers of darkness and evil
+have taken possession of a man and expelled the divine from him. The Magian
+waking-consciousness is merely the <em>theatre</em> of a battle between these two powers
+and not, so to say, a power in itself. Moreover, in this kind of world-happening
+there is no place for individual causes and effects, let alone any universally
+effective dynamic concatenation thereof, and consequently there is no <em>necessary</em>
+connexion between sin and punishment, no <em>claim</em> to reward, no old-Israelitish
+“righteousness.” Things of this order the true piety of this Culture regards as
+far beneath it. The laws of nature are not something settled for ever that God
+can alter only by the method of miracle—they are (so to put it) the ordinary
+state of an autocratic divine will, not possessing in themselves anything of the
+logical necessity that they have for Faustian souls. In the entire world-cavern
+there is but <em>one</em> Cause, which lies <em>immediately</em> behind all visible workings, and
+this is the Godhead, which, as itself, acts without causes. Even to speculate
+upon causes in connexion with God is sinful.</p>
+
+<p>From this basic feeling proceeds the Magian idea of Grace. This underlies
+all sacraments of this Culture (especially the Magian proto-sacrament of Baptism)
+and forms a contrast of the deepest intensity with the Faustian idea of
+Contrition. Contrition presupposes the will of an Ego, but Grace knows of no
+such thing. It was Augustine’s high achievement to develop this essentially
+Islamic thought with an inexorable logic, and with a penetration so thorough
+<span class="pagenum" id="p241">[241]</span>that since Pelagius the Faustian Soul has tried by any and every route to circumvent
+this certainty—which for <em>it</em> constitutes an imminent danger of self-destruction—and
+in using Augustinian propositions to express its own proper
+consciousness of God has ever misunderstood and transvalued them. Actually,
+Augustine was the last great thinker of Early Arabian Scholasticism, anything
+but a Western intellect.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_417" href="#Footnote_417" class="fnanchor">[417]</a> Not only was he at times a Manichæan, but he remained
+so even as a Christian in some important characteristics, and his closest
+relations are to be found amongst the Persian theologians of the later Avesta,
+with their doctrines of the Store of Grace of the Holy and of absolute guilt. For
+him grace is the substantial inflowing of something divine into the human
+Pneuma, itself also substantial.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_418" href="#Footnote_418" class="fnanchor">[418]</a> The Godhead radiates it; man receives it, but
+does not acquire it. From Augustine, as from Spinoza so many centuries later,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_419" href="#Footnote_419" class="fnanchor">[419]</a>
+the notion of force is absent, and for both the problem of freedom refers not to
+the Ego and its Will, but to the part of the universal Pneuma that is infused into
+a man and its relation to the rest of him. Magian waking-being is the <em>theatre</em> of
+a conflict between the two world-substances of light and darkness. The Early
+Faustian thinkers such as Duns Scotus and William of Occam, on the contrary,
+see a contest inherent in dynamic waking-consciousness <em>itself</em>, a contest of the
+two forces of the Ego—namely, will and reason,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_420" href="#Footnote_420" class="fnanchor">[420]</a> and so imperceptibly the
+question posed by Augustine changes into another, which he himself would have
+been incapable of understanding—are willing and thinking free forces, or are
+they not? Answer this question as we may, one thing at any rate is certain, that
+the individual ego has <em>to wage</em> this war and not to suffer it. The Faustian Grace
+refers to the success of the Will and not to the species of a substance. Says the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p242">[242]</span>Westminster Confession of the Presbyterians (1646): “The rest of Mankind,
+God was pleased, according to the unsearchable Counsel of his own Will,
+whereby he extendeth, or withholdeth Mercy, as he pleaseth, for the Glory
+of his Sovereign Power over his Creatures, to pass by; and to ordain them to
+Dishonour and Wrath, for their Sin, to the Praise of his glorious Justice.”
+The other conception, that the idea of Grace excludes every individual will and
+every cause but the One, that it is sinful even to question why man suffers, finds
+an expression in one of the most powerful poems known to world-history, a
+poem that came into being in the midst of the Arabian pre-Culture and is in
+inward grandeur unparalleled by any product of that Culture itself—the Book
+of Job.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_421" href="#Footnote_421" class="fnanchor">[421]</a> It is not Job, but his friends who look for a sin as the cause of his
+troubles. They—like the bulk of mankind in this and every other Culture,
+present-day readers and critics of the work, therefore, included—lack the
+metaphysical depth to get near the ultimate meaning of suffering within the
+world-cavern. Only the Hero himself fights through the fulfilment, to pure
+Islam, and he becomes thereby the only possible figure of tragedy that Magian
+feeling can set up by the side of our Faust.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_422" href="#Footnote_422" class="fnanchor">[422]</a></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_7">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>The waking-consciousness of every Culture allows of two ways of inwardness,
+that in which contemplative feeling spreads into understanding, and that in
+which the reverse takes place. The Magian contemplation is called by Spinoza
+“intellectual love of God,” and by his Sufist contemporaries in Asia “extinction
+in God” (<i>mahw</i>); it may be intensified to the Magian ecstasy that was vouchsafed
+to Plotinus several times, and to his pupil Porphyry once in old age. The
+other side, the rabbinical dialectic, appears in Spinoza as geometrical method
+and in the Arabian-Jewish “Late” philosophy in general as Kalaam. Both,
+however, rest upon the fact that there in Magian there is no individual-ego, but
+a single Pneuma present simultaneously in each and all of the elect, which is
+likewise Truth. It cannot be too strongly emphasized that the resultant root-idea
+of the <i>ijma</i> is much more than a concept or notion, that it can be a lived
+experience of even overwhelming force, and that all community of the Magian
+kind rests upon it and, as doing so, is removed from community in any other
+Culture. “The mystic Community of Islam extends from the here into the
+beyond; it reaches beyond the grave, in that it comprises the dead Moslems
+of earlier generations, nay, even the righteous of the times before Islam. The
+Moslem feels himself bound up in one unity with them all. They help him, and
+he, too, can in turn increase their beatitude by the application of his own
+<span class="pagenum" id="p243">[243]</span>merit.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_423" href="#Footnote_423" class="fnanchor">[423]</a>
+ The same, precisely, was what the Christians and the Syncretists
+of the Pseudomorphosis meant when they used the words <i lang="la">Polis</i> and <i lang="la">Civitas</i>—these
+words, which had formerly implied a sum of bodies, now denoted a consensus
+of fellow believers. Augustine’s famous <i lang="la">Civitas Dei</i> was neither a Classical
+Polis nor a Western Church, but a unity of believers, blessed, and angels,
+exactly as were the communes of Mithras, of Islam, of Manichæism, and of
+Persia. As the community was based upon consensus, it was in spiritual things
+infallible. “My people,” said Mohammed, “can never agree in an error,” and
+the same is premised in Augustine’s State of God. With him there was not and
+could not be any question of an infallible Papal ego or of any other sort of
+authority to settle dogmatic truths; that would completely destroy the Magian
+concept of the Consensus. And the same applied in this Culture generally—not
+only to dogma, but also to law&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_424" href="#Footnote_424" class="fnanchor">[424]</a> and to the State. The Islamic community,
+like that of Porphyry and that of Augustine, embraces the <em>whole</em> of the world-cavern,
+the here and the beyond, the orthodox and the good angels and spirits,
+and within this community the State only formed a <em>smaller unit of the visible side</em>,
+a unit, therefore, of which the operations were governed by the major whole.
+In the Magian world, consequently, the separation of politics and religion is
+theoretically impossible and nonsensical, whereas in the Faustian Culture the
+battle of Church and State is inherent in the very conceptions—logical, necessary,
+unending. In the Magian, civil and ecclesiastical law are simply identical.
+Side by side with the Emperor of Constantinople stood the Patriarch, by the
+Shah was the Zarathustratema, by the Exilarch the Gaon, by the Caliph the
+Sheikh-ul-Islam, at once superiors and subjects. There is not in this the slightest
+affinity to the Gothic relation of Emperor and Pope; equally, all such ideas were
+alien to the Classical world. In the constitution of Diocletian this Magian
+embedding of the State in the community of the faithful was for the first time
+actualized, and by Constantine it was carried into full effect. It has been
+shown already that State, Church, and Nation formed a spiritual unit—namely,
+that part of the orthodox consensus which manifested itself in the living man.
+And hence for the Emperor, as ruler of the Faithful—that is, of that portion of
+the Magian community which God had entrusted to him—it was a self-evident
+duty to conduct the Councils so as to bring about the consensus of the elect.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_7">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>But besides the consensus there is another sort of revelation of Truth—namely,
+the “Word of God,” in a perfectly definite and purely Magian sense of
+the phrase, which is equally remote from Classical and from Western thought,
+and has, in consequence, been the source of innumerable misunderstandings.
+The sacred book in which it has become visibly evident, in which it has been
+captured by the spell of a sacred script, is part of the stock of every Magian
+<span class="pagenum" id="p244">[244]</span>religion.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_425" href="#Footnote_425" class="fnanchor">[425]</a>
+ In this conception three Magian notions are interwoven each of
+which, even by itself, presents extreme difficulties for us, while their simultaneous
+separateness and oneness is simply inaccessible to our religious thought,
+often though that thought has managed to persuade itself to the contrary.
+These ideas are: God, the Spirit of God, the Word of God. That which is
+written in the prologue of the John Gospel—“In the beginning was the Word,
+and the Word was with God, and the Word was God”—had long before come
+to perfectly natural expression as something self-evident in the Persian ideas of
+Spenta Mainyu,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_426" href="#Footnote_426" class="fnanchor">[426]</a> and Vohu Mano,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_427" href="#Footnote_427" class="fnanchor">[427]</a>
+ and in corresponding Jewish and Chaldean
+conceptions. And it was the kernel for which the conflicts of the fourth and
+fifth centuries concerning the substance of Christ were fought. But, for Magian
+thought, truth is itself a substance,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_428" href="#Footnote_428" class="fnanchor">[428]</a> and lie (or error) second substance—again
+the same dualism that opposes light and darkness, life and death, good and evil.
+As substance, truth is identical now with God, now with the Spirit of God,
+now with the Word. Only in the light of this can we comprehend sayings like
+“I am the truth and the life” and “My word is the truth,” sayings to be understood,
+as they were meant, with reference to substance. Only so, too, can we
+realize with what eyes the religious man of this Culture looked upon his sacred
+book: in it the invisible truth has entered into a visible kind of existence, or,
+in the words of John i, 14: “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us.”
+According to the Yasna the Avesta was sent down from heaven, and according
+to the Talmud Moses received the Torah volume by volume from God. A
+Magian revelation is a mystical process in which the eternal and unformed word
+of God—or the Godhead as Word—enters into a man in order to assume
+through him the manifest, sensible form of sounds and especially of letters.
+<em>“Koran” means “reading.”</em> Mohammed in a vision saw in the heaven treasured
+rolls of scripture that he (although he had never learned how to read) was able
+to decipher “in the name of the Lord.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_429" href="#Footnote_429" class="fnanchor">[429]</a> This is a form of revelation that in the
+Magian Culture is the rule and in other Cultures is not even the exception,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_430" href="#Footnote_430" class="fnanchor">[430]</a> but
+<span class="pagenum" id="p245">[245]</span>it was only from the time of Cyrus that it began to take shape. The old Israelitish
+prophets, and no doubt Zarathustra also, see and hear in ecstasy things that
+afterwards they spread abroad. The Deuteronomic code (621) was given out as
+having been “found in the Temple,” which meant that it was to be taken as
+the wisdom of the Father. The first (and a very deliberate) example of a
+“Koran” is the book of Ezekiel, which the author received in a thought-out
+vision from God and “swallowed” (iii, 1–3). Here, expressed in the crudest
+imaginable form, is the basis on which later the idea and shape of all apocalyptic
+writing was founded. But by degrees this <em>substantial</em> form of reception came to
+be one of the requisites for any book to be canonical. It was in post-Exilic times
+that the idea arose of the Tables of the Law received by Moses on Sinai; later
+such an origin came to be assumed for the whole Torah, and about the Maccabæan
+period for the bulk of the Old Testament. From the Council of Jabna
+(about 90 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) the whole word was regarded as inspired and delivered in the
+most literal sense. But the same evolution took place in the Persian religion up
+to the sanctification of the Avesta in the third century, and the same idea of a
+literal delivery appears in the second vision of Hermas, in the Apocalypses, and
+in the Chaldean and Gnostic and Mandæan writings; lastly, it underlies, as a
+tacit natural basis, all the ideas that the Neo-Pythagoreans and the Neo-Platonists
+formed of the writings of their old masters. “Canon” is the technical
+expression for the totality of writings that are accepted by a religion as delivered.
+It was as canons in this sense that the Hermetic collection and the
+corpus of Chaldean oracles came into being from 200—the latter a sacred book
+of the Neoplatonists which alone was admitted by Proclus, the “Father” of
+this Church, to stand with Plato’s <cite>Timæus</cite>.</p>
+
+<p>Originally, the young Jesus-religion, like Jesus himself, recognized the
+Jewish canon. The first Gospels set up no sort of claim to be the Word made
+visible. <em>The John Gospel is the first Christian writing of which the evident purpose is
+that of a Koran</em>, and its unknown author is the originator of the idea that there
+could be and must be a Christian Koran. The grave and difficult decision
+whether the new religion should break with that which Jesus had believed in
+clothed itself of deep necessity in the question whether the Jewish scriptures
+might still be regarded as incarnations of the one truth. The answer of the John
+Gospel was tacitly, and that of Marcion openly, no, but that of the Fathers was,
+quite illogically, yes.</p>
+
+<p>It followed from this metaphysical conception of the essence of a sacred book
+that the expressions “God speaks” and “the Scripture says” were, in a manner
+wholly alien to our thought, completely identical. To us it is suggestive of the
+Arabian Nights that God himself should be spellbound in these words and
+letters and could be unsealed and compelled to reveal the truth by the adepts
+of this magic. Exegesis no less than inspiration and delivery is a process of
+mystical under-meaning (Mark i, 22). Hence the reverence—in diametrical
+<span class="pagenum" id="p246">[246]</span>opposition to the Classical feeling—with which these precious manuscripts
+were cared for, their ornamentation by every means known to the young
+Magian art, and the appearance again and again of new scripts which, in the
+eyes of their users, alone possessed the power of capturing the truth sent down.</p>
+
+<p>But such a Koran is by its very nature unconditionally right, and therefore
+unalterable and incapable of improvement.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_431" href="#Footnote_431" class="fnanchor">[431]</a> There arose, in consequence, the
+habit of secret interpretations meant to bring the text into harmony with the
+convictions of the time. A masterpiece of this kind is Justinian’s Digests, but
+the same applies not only to every book of the Bible, but also (we need not
+doubt) to the Gathas of the Avesta and even to the then current manuscripts
+of Plato, Aristotle, and other authorities of the Pagan theology. More important
+still is the assumption, traceable in every Magian religion, of a secret
+revelation, or a secret meaning of the Scriptures, preserved not by being written
+down, but in the memory of adepts and propagated orally. According to Jewish
+notions, Moses received at Sinai not only the written, but <em>also a secret oral Torah</em>,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_432" href="#Footnote_432" class="fnanchor">[432]</a>
+which it was forbidden to commit to writing. “God foresaw,” says the Talmud,
+“that one day a time would come when the Heathen would possess themselves
+of the Torah and would say to Israel: ‘We, too, are sons of God.’ Then
+will the Lord say: ‘Only he who knows my secrets is my son.’ And what
+are the secrets of God? The oral teachings.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_433" href="#Footnote_433" class="fnanchor">[433]</a> The Talmud, then, in the form
+in which it is generally accessible, contains only a part of the religious material,
+and it is the same with Christian texts of the early period. It has often been
+observed&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_434" href="#Footnote_434" class="fnanchor">[434]</a> that Mark speaks of the Visitation and of the Resurrection only in
+hints, and that John only touches upon the doctrine of the Paraclete and omits
+the institution of the Lord’s Supper entirely. The initiates understood what was
+meant, and the unbeliever ought not to know it. Later there was a whole
+“secret discipline” which bound Christians to observe silence in the presence
+of unbelievers concerning the baptismal confession and other matters. With
+the Chaldeans, Neopythagoreans, Cynics, Gnostics, and especially the sects
+from Jewish to Islamic, this tendency went to such lengths that the greater part
+of their secret doctrines is unknown to us. Concerning the Word thus preserved
+only in the minds there was a <em>consensus of silence</em>, the more so as each believer was
+certain that the other “knew.” We ourselves, as it is upon the most important
+things that we are most emphatic and forthright, run the risk of misinterpreting
+Magian doctrines through taking the part that was expressed for the whole that
+existed, and the profane literal meaning of words for their real significance.
+Gothic Christianity had no secrets and hence it doubly mistrusted the Talmud,
+which it rightly regarded as being only the foreground of Jewish doctrine.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p247">[247]</span></p>
+
+<p>Pure Magian, too, is the Kabbalah, which out of numbers, letter-forms,
+points, and strokes, unfolds secret significances, and therefore cannot but be as
+old as the Word itself that was sent down as Substance. The secret dogma of
+the creation of the world out of the two-and-twenty letters of the Hebrew
+alphabet, and that of the throne-chariot of Ezekiel’s Vision, are already traceable
+in Maccabæan times. Closely related to this is the allegorical exegesis of
+the sacred texts. All the tractates of the Mishnah, all the Fathers, all the Alexandrian
+philosophers are full of it; in Alexandria the whole Classical mythology
+and even Plato were treated in this way and brought into analogy (Moses =
+Musæus) with the Jewish prophets.</p>
+
+<p>The only strictly <em>scientific</em> method that an unalterable Koran leaves open for
+progressive opinion is that of commentary. As by hypothesis the “word” of
+an authority cannot be improved upon, the only resource is reinterpretation.
+No one in Alexandria would ever have asserted that Plato was in “error”;
+instead, he was glossed upon. It was done in the strictly constructed forms of
+the Halakha, and the fixation of this exegesis in writing takes the commentary
+shape that dominates all religious, philosophical, and savant literatures of this
+Culture. Following the procedure of the Gnostics, the Fathers compiled
+written commentaries upon the Bible, and similarly the Pehlevi commentary
+of the Zend appeared by the side of the Avesta, and the Midrash by the side of
+the Jewish canon. But the “Roman” jurists of about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 200 and the “Late
+Classical” philosophers—that is, the Schoolmen of the growing cult-Church—went
+just the same way; the Apocalypse of this Church, commented over
+and over again after Posidonius, was the <cite>Timæus</cite> of Plato. The Mishnah is one
+vast commentary upon the Torah. And when the oldest exegetes had become
+themselves authorities and their writings Korans, commentaries were written
+upon commentaries, as by Simplicius, the last Platonist, in the West, by the
+Amoraim, who added the Gemara to the Mishnah in the East, and by the
+jurists who compiled the Imperial Constitutions into the Digests at Byzantium.</p>
+
+<p>This method, which fictitiously refers back every saying to an immediate
+inspired delivery, was brought to its keenest edge in the Talmudic and the
+Islamic theologies. A new Halakha or a Hadith is only valid when it can be
+referred through an unbroken chain of guarantors back to Moses or Mohammed.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_435" href="#Footnote_435" class="fnanchor">[435]</a>
+The solemn formula for this in Jerusalem was “Let it come over me! So
+have I heard it from my teacher.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_436" href="#Footnote_436" class="fnanchor">[436]</a> In the Zend the citation of the chain of
+warranty is the rule, and Irenæus justifies his theology by the fact that a chain
+goes back from him through Polycarp to the primitive Community. Into the
+Early Christian literature this Halakha-form entered so self-evidently that no
+<span class="pagenum" id="p248">[248]</span>one remarked it for what it was. Apart altogether from the constant references
+to the Law and the Prophets, it appears in the superscription of the four Gospels
+(“<em>according to</em>” Mark), each of which had thus to present its warrant if authority
+was to be claimed for the words of the Lord that it presented.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_437" href="#Footnote_437" class="fnanchor">[437]</a> This established
+the chain back to the Truth that was incarnate in Jesus, and it is impossible to
+exaggerate the intense reality of this in the world-idea of an Augustine or a
+Jerome. This is the basis of the practice, which spread even more widely from
+the time of Alexander onwards, of providing religious and philosophical writings
+with names,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_438" href="#Footnote_438" class="fnanchor">[438]</a> like Enoch, Solomon, Ezra, Hermes, Pythagoras—guarantors
+and vessels of divine wisdom, in whom, therefore, the Word had been made
+Flesh of old. We still possess a number of Apocalypses bearing the name of
+Baruch, who was then compared with Zarathustra, and we can scarcely form
+an idea of what in the way of literature circulated under the names of Aristotle
+and Pythagoras. The “Theology of Aristotle” was one of the most influential
+works of Neoplatonism. And, lastly, this the metaphysical presupposition
+for the style and the deeper meaning of <em>citation</em>, which was employed by Fathers,
+Rabbis, “Greek” philosophers, and “Roman” jurists, and eventuated on the
+one hand in the Law of Valentinian III,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_439" href="#Footnote_439" class="fnanchor">[439]</a> and on the other in the elimination
+from the Jewish and Christian canons of apocryphal writings—a fundamental
+notion, which differentiated the literary stock according to difference of <em>substance</em>.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V_7">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>With such researches to build upon, it will become possible in the future
+to write a history of the <em>Magian group of religions</em>. It forms an inseparable
+unit of spirit and evolution, and let no one imagine that any individual one of
+them can be really comprehended without reference to the rest. Their birth,
+unfolding, and inward confirmation occupy the period 0–500. It corresponds
+exactly to the rise of the Western religion from the Cluniac movement to the
+Reformation. A mutual give-and-take, a confusingly rich blossoming, ripening,
+transformation—overlayings, migrations, adaptations, rejections—fill
+these centuries, without any sort of dependence of one system upon the others
+being demonstrable. But only the forms and the structures change; in the
+depths it is one and the same spirituality, and in all the languages of this world
+of religions it is always itself that it brings to expression.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p249">[249]</span></p>
+
+<p>In the wide realm of old-Babylonian fellahdom young peoples lived. There
+everything was making ready. The first premonitions of the future awoke
+about 700 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> in the prophetic religions of the Persians, Jews, and Chaldeans.
+An image of creation of the same kind that later was to be the preface of the
+Torah showed itself in clear outlines, and with that an orientation, a direction,
+a goal of desire, was set. Something was descried in the far future, indefinitely
+and darkly still, but with a profound certainty that it would come. From that
+time on men lived with the vision of this, with the feeling of a mission.</p>
+
+<p>The second wave swelled up steeply in the Apocalyptic currents after 300.
+Here it was the Magian waking-consciousness that arose and built itself a
+metaphysic of Last Things, based already upon the prime-symbol of the coming
+Culture, the Cavern. Ideas of an awful End of the World, of the Last Judgment,
+of Resurrection, Paradise, and Hell, and with them the grand thought of a
+process of salvation in which earth’s destiny and man’s were one, burst forth
+everywhere—we cannot say what land or people it was that created them—mantled
+in wondrous scenes and figures and names. The Messiah-figure presents
+itself, complete at one stroke. Satan’s temptation of the Saviour&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_440" href="#Footnote_440" class="fnanchor">[440]</a> is told as a
+tale. But simultaneously there welled up a deep and ever-increasing fear before
+this certainty of an implacable—and imminent—limit of all happening,
+before the moment in which there would be only Past. Magian Time, the
+“hour,” directedness under the Cavern, imparted a new pulse to life and a new
+import to the word “Destiny.” Man’s attitude before the Deity suddenly
+became completely different. In the dedicatory inscription of the great basilica
+of Palmyra (which was long thought to be Christian) Baal was called the
+good, the compassionate, the mild; and this feeling penetrated, with the
+worship of Rahman, right to southern Arabia. It fills the psalms of the Chaldeans
+and the teachings <em>about</em> the God-sent Zarathustra that took the place of
+his teachings. And it stirred the Jewry of Maccabæan time—most of the psalms
+were written then—and all the other communities, long forgotten now, that
+lay between the Classical and the Indian worlds.</p>
+
+<p>The third upheaval came in the time of Cæsar and brought to birth the
+great religions of Salvation. And with this the Culture rose to bright day,
+and what followed continuously throughout one or two centuries was an
+intensity of religious experience, both unsurpassable and at long last unbearable.
+Such a tension bordering upon the breaking point the Gothic, the
+Vedic, and every other Culture-soul has known, once and once only, in its
+young morning.</p>
+
+<p>Now arose in the Persian, the Mandæan, the Jewish, the Christian, circles
+of belief, and in that of the Western Pseudomorphosis as well—just as in the
+Indian, the Classical, and the Western ages of Chivalry—the Grand Myth.
+In this Arabian Culture religious and national heroism are no more distinctly
+<span class="pagenum" id="p250">[250]</span>separable than nation, church, and state, or sacred and secular law. The
+prophet merges with the fighter, and the story of a great Sufferer rises to the
+rank of a national epic. The powers of light and darkness, fabulous beings,
+angels and devils, Satan and the good spirits wrestle together; all nature is a
+battle-ground from the beginning of the world to its annihilation. Down
+below in the world of mankind are enacted the adventures and sufferings of the
+heralds, the heroes, and the martyrs of religion. Every nation, in the sense of
+the word attaching to this Culture, possessed its heroic saga. In the East the
+life of the Persian prophet inspired an epic poetry of grand outlines. At his
+birth the Zarathustra-laughter pealed through the heavens, and all nature
+echoed it. In the West the suffering of Jesus, ever broadening and developing,
+became <em>the veritable epic of the Christian nation</em>, and by its side there grew up a
+chain of legends of his childhood which in the end fructified a whole genre
+of poetry. The figure of the Mother of God and the deeds of the Apostles became,
+like the stories of the Western Crusade-heroes, the centre of extended
+romances (Acts of Thomas, Pseudo-Clementines) which in the second century
+sprang up everywhere from the Nile to the Tigris. In the Jewish Haggada and in
+the Targums is brought together a rich measure of legends about Saul, David, the
+Patriarchs, and the great Tannaim, like Schuda and Akiba,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_441" href="#Footnote_441" class="fnanchor">[441]</a> and the insatiable
+fancy of the age seized also upon what it could reach of the Late-Classical cult-legends
+and founder-stories (lives of Pythagoras, Hermes, Apollonius of Tyana).</p>
+
+<p>With the end of the second century the sounds of this exaltation die away.
+The flowering of epic poetry is past, and the mystical penetration and dogmatic
+analysis of the religious material begin. The doctrines of the new Churches
+are brought into theological systems. Heroism yields to Scholastism, poetry
+to thought, the seer and seeker to the priest. The early Scholasticism which
+ends about 200 (as the Western about 1200) comprises the whole Gnosis—in
+the very broadest sense, the great Contemplation—the author of the John
+Gospel, Valentinus, Bardesanes, and Marcion, the Apologists and the early
+Fathers, up to Irenæus and Tertullian, the last Tannaim up to Rabbi Jehuda,
+the completer of the Mishna, the Neopythagoreans and Hermetics of Alexandria.
+All this corresponds with, in the West, the School of Chartres, Anselm, Joachim
+of Floris, Bernard of Clairvaux, Hugo de St. Victor. Full Scholasticism begins
+with Neoplatonism, with Clement and Origen, the first Amoraim, and the
+creators of the newer Avesta under Ardeshir (226–241) and Sapor I, the Mazdaist
+high-priest Tanvasar above all. Simultaneously a higher religiousness
+begins to separate from the peasant’s piety of the countryside, which still
+lingered in the apocalyptic disposition, and thenceforth maintained itself almost
+unaltered under various names right into the fellahdom of the Turkish age,
+while in the urban and more intellectual upper world the Persian, Jewish, and
+Christian community was absorbed by that of Islam.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p251">[251]</span></p>
+
+<p>Slowly and steadily now the great Churches moved to fulfilment. It had
+been decided—the most important religious result of the second century—that
+the outcome of the teaching of Jesus was not to be a transformation of
+Judaism, but a new Church, which took its way westward while Judaism,
+without loss of inward strength, turned itself to the East. To the third century
+belong the great mental structures of theology. A <i lang="la">modus vivendi</i> with historical
+actuality had been reached, the end of the world had receded into the distance,
+and a new dogmatic grew up to explain the new world-picture. The arrival of
+mature Scholasticism presupposes faith in the duration of the doctrines that it
+sets itself to establish.</p>
+
+<p>Viewing the results of their efforts, we find that the Aramæan motherland
+developed its forms in three directions. In the East, out of the Zoroastrian
+religion of Achæmenid times and the remains of its sacred literature, there
+formed itself the Mazdaist Church, with a strict hierarchy and laborious ritual,
+with sacraments, mass, and confession (<i lang="la">patet</i>). As mentioned above, Tanvasar
+made a beginning with the collection and ordering of the <em>new</em> Avesta; under
+Sapor I (as contemporaneously in the Talmud) the profane texts of medicine,
+law, and astronomy were added; and the rounding-off was the work of the
+Church magnate Mahraspand under Sapor II (309–379). The immediate accretion
+of a commentary in Pehlevi was only what was to be expected in the Magian
+Culture. The new Avesta, like the Jewish and the Christian Bibles, was a
+canon of separate writings, and we learn that amongst the Nasks (originally
+twenty-one) now lost there was a gospel of Zarathustra, the conversion-story
+of Vishtaspa, a Genesis, a law-book, and a genealogical book with trees
+from the Creation to the Persian kings, while the Vendidad, which Geldner
+calls the Leviticus of the Persians, was—most significantly—preserved
+complete.</p>
+
+<p>A new religious founder appeared in 242, in the reign of Sapor I. This was
+Mani, who, rejecting “redeemerless” Judaism and Hellenism, knit together the
+whole mass of Magian religions in one of the most powerful theological creations
+of all times—for which in 276 the Mazdaist priesthood crucified him.
+Equipped by his father (who quite late in life abandoned his family to enter a
+Mandæan order) with all the knowledge of the period, he unified the basic
+ideas of the Chaldeans and Persians with those of Johannine, Eastern, Christianity—a
+task which had been attempted before in the Christian-Persian
+Gnosis of Bardesanes, but without any idea of founding a new church.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_442" href="#Footnote_442" class="fnanchor">[442]</a> He
+<span class="pagenum" id="p252">[252]</span>conceived of the mystical figures of the Johannine Logos (for him identical
+with the Persian Vohu Mano), the Zarathustra of the Avesta legends, and the
+Buddha of the late texts as divine Emanations, and himself he proclaimed to be
+the Paraclete of the John Gospel and the Saoshyant of the Persians. As we now
+know, thanks to the Turfan discoveries which included parts of Mani’s works
+(till then completely lost), the Church-language of the Mazdaists, Manichæans,
+and Nestorians was—independently of the current languages—Pehlevi.</p>
+
+<p>In the West the two cult-Churches developed (in Greek&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_443" href="#Footnote_443" class="fnanchor">[443]</a>) a theology that
+was not only cognate with this, but to a great extent identical with it. In the
+time of Mani began the theological fusion of the Aramæan-Chaldean sun-religion
+and the Aramæan-Persian Mithras cult into one system, whose first
+great “Father” was Iamblichus (<i>c.</i> 300)—the contemporary of Athanasius,
+but also of Diocletian, the Emperor who in 295 made Mithras the God of a
+henotheistic State-religion. Spiritually, at any rate, its priests were in nowise
+distinguishable from those of Christianity. Proclus (he, too, a true “Father”)
+received in dreams elucidations of a difficult text-passage; to him the <cite>Timæus</cite>
+and the Chaldean oracles were canonical, and he would gladly have seen all
+other writings of the philosophers destroyed. His hymns, tokens of the lacerations
+of a true eremite, implore Helios and other helpers to protect him against
+evil spirits. Hierocles wrote a moral breviary for the believers of the Neopythagorean
+community, which it needs a keen eye to distinguish from Christian
+work. Bishop Synesius was a prince-prelate of Neoplatonism before
+becoming one of Christianity—and the change did not involve an act of
+conversion; he kept his theology and only altered its names. It was possible
+for the Neoplatonist Asclepiades to write a great work on the likeness of all
+theologies. We possess Pagan gospels and hagiologies as well as Christian.
+Apollonius wrote the life of Pythagoras, Marinus that of Proclus, Damascius
+that of Isidore; and there is not the slightest difference between these works,
+which begin and end with prayers, and the Christian Acts of the Martyrs.
+Porphyry describes faith, love, hope, and truth as the four divine elements.</p>
+
+<p>Between these Churches of the East and the West we see, looking south
+from Edessa, the Talmudic Church (the “Synagogue”) with Aramaic as its
+written language. Against these great and firm foundations Jewish-Christians
+(such as Ebionites and Elkazites), Mandæans, and likewise Chaldeans (unless
+we regard Manichæism as a reconstruction of that religion) were unable to
+hold their own. Breaking down into numberless sects, they either faded out
+<span class="pagenum" id="p253">[253]</span>in the shadow of the great Churches or were absorbed in their structure as the
+last Marcionites and Montanists were absorbed into Manichæism. By about
+300, outside the Pagan, Christian, Persian, Jewish, and Manichæan Churches
+no important Magian religions remained in being.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VI_5">
+ VI
+</h3>
+
+<p>Along with this ripe Scholasticism, there set in also, from 200, the effort to
+identify the <em>visible</em> community, as its organization became ever stricter, with the
+organism of the State. This followed of necessity from the world-feeling of
+Magian man, and in turn it led to the transformation of the rulers into caliphs—lords
+of a creed-society far more than of domains—to the idea of orthodoxy
+as the premiss of real citizenship; to the duty of persecuting false religions
+(the “Holy War” of Islam is as old as the Culture itself, and the first centuries
+were full of it); and to a special régime within the State of unbelievers—just
+tolerated and under laws and governance of their own&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_444" href="#Footnote_444" class="fnanchor">[444]</a> (for the law God
+had given was not for heretics)—and, with it, the ghetto manner of living.</p>
+
+<p>First, Osrhoene, in the centre of the Aramæan landscape, adopted Christianity
+as the State religion about 200. Then Mazdaism assumed the same position in
+the Sassanid Empire (226) while under Aurelian (d. 275) and above all Diocletian
+(295) Syncretism as a compound of the Divus, Sol, and Mithras cults
+became the state religion of the Roman Imperium. Constantine in 312, King
+Trdat of Armenia about 321, and King Mirian of Georgia a few years later,
+went over to Christianity. In the far South, Saba must already have become
+Christian in the third century, Axum in the fourth; on the other hand, simultaneously
+with these, the Himaryite State became Jewish, and there was one
+more effort, that of Julian, to bring back the Pagan Church to supremacy.</p>
+
+<p>In opposition to this—likewise in all the religions of this Culture—we
+find the spread of Monasticism, with its radical aversion from State, history,
+and actuality in general. For after all the conflict of being and waking-being—that
+is, of politics and religion, of history and nature—could not be completely
+mastered by the form of the Magian Church and its identification with
+State and nation. Race breaks forth into life in these mind-creations and overpowers
+the divine, precisely because the latter has absorbed the worldly into
+itself. But here there was no conflict of Church and State as in the Gothic age,
+and consequently the split in the nation was between the worldly-pious and the
+ascetics. A Magian religion relates exclusively to the divine spark, the Pneuma,
+in the man, that which he shares with the invisible community of the faithful
+and blessed spirits. The rest of the man belongs to Evil and Darkness. But in
+the man it is the divine that must rule, overcoming, suppressing, destroying
+the other. In this Culture the askete is not only the veritable priest—the
+secular priest, as to-day in Russia, is never really respected, and mostly he is
+<span class="pagenum" id="p254">[254]</span>allowed to marry—but, what is more, he is the true man of piety. Outside
+monasticism it was simply not possible to fulfil the demands of religion, and
+consequently communities of repentance, monasteries, and convents assume
+quite early a position that, for metaphysical reasons, they could never have had
+in India or China—let alone in the West, where the Orders were working and
+fighting—that is, dynamic—units.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_445" href="#Footnote_445" class="fnanchor">[445]</a> Consequently, we must not regard the
+people of the Magian world as divided into the “world” and the “cloister”
+as two definitely separate modes of life, with equal possibilities of fulfilling all
+the demands of religion. Every pious person <em>was</em> a monk in some sort.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_446" href="#Footnote_446" class="fnanchor">[446]</a> Between
+world and cloister there was no opposition, but only a difference of <em>degree</em>.
+Magian churches and orders are homogeneous communities which are only
+to be distinguished from one another by extent. The community of Peter was
+an Order, that of Paul a Church, while the Mithras religion is at once almost
+too wide for the one designation and too narrow for the other.</p>
+
+<p><em>Every Magian Church is itself an Order</em> and it was only in respect of human
+weakness that there were stages and grades of askesis, and these not ordered,
+but only permitted, as among the Marcionites and the Manichæans (<i lang="la">electi,
+auditores</i>). And, in truth, a Magian nation is nothing but the sum, <em>the order of
+all the orders</em>, which, constituted in smaller and smaller, stricter and stricter
+groups, come out finally in the eremites, dervishes, and stylites, in whom
+nothing more is of the world, whose waking-consciousness now belongs only
+to the Pneuma. Setting aside the prophetic religions—out of which, and
+between which, the excitation of Apocalypse generated numerous order-like
+communities—the two cult-Churches of the West produced unnumbered
+monks, friars, and orders, distinguishable from one another in the end only by
+the name of the Deity upon whom they called. All observed fasting, prayer,
+celibacy, poverty. It is very doubtful which of the two Churches in 300 was
+the more ascetic in its tendency. The Neoplatonist monk Sarapion went
+into the desert in order to devote himself entirely to studying the hymns of
+Orpheus. Damascius, guided by a dream, withdrew into a noisome cave in
+order to pray continuously to Cybele.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_447" href="#Footnote_447" class="fnanchor">[447]</a> The schools of philosophy were nothing
+but ascetic orders; the Neopythagoreans stood close to the Jewish Essenes;
+the Mithras cult, a true order, admitted only men to its communion and its
+fraternities; the Emperor Julian had the intention of endowing pagan monasteries.
+The Mandæan religion seems to have been a group of order-communities
+of varying rigour; amongst them was that of John the Baptist. Christian
+monasticism did not begin with Pachomius (320); he was merely the builder of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p255">[255]</span>the first cloister. The movement began with the original community in
+Jerusalem itself. The Gospel of Matthew and almost all “Acts of the Apostles”
+testify to rigorously ascetic sentiment.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_448" href="#Footnote_448" class="fnanchor">[448]</a> The Persian and Nestorian Churches
+developed the monastic idea further, and finally Islam assimilated it to the full.
+To this day Oriental piety is dominated by the Moslem Orders and Brotherhoods.
+And Jewry followed the same line of evolution, from the Karæi&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_449" href="#Footnote_449" class="fnanchor">[449]</a> (Qaraites)
+of the eighth century to the Polish Hasidim of the eighteenth.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_450" href="#Footnote_450" class="fnanchor">[450]</a></p>
+
+<p>Christianity, which even in the second century was hardly more than an
+extended Order, and whose public influence was out of all proportion to the
+number of its adherents, grew suddenly vast about the year 250. This is the
+epochal moment in which the last city-cults of the Classical effaced themselves
+before, <em>not Christianity, but the new-born Pagan Church</em>. The records of the Fratres
+Arvales in Rome break off in 241, and the last cult-inscriptions at Olympia are
+of 265. At the same time, the cumulation of the most diverse priestly characters
+in one man became customary,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_451" href="#Footnote_451" class="fnanchor">[451]</a> implying that these usages were felt no
+longer as specific, but as usages of one single religion. And this religion set out
+to <em>convert</em>, spreading itself far and wide over the lands of the Hellenistic-Roman
+stock. The Christian religion, on the other hand, was alone in spreading
+(<i>c.</i> 300) over the great Arabian field. And for that very reason it was inevitable
+that inner contradiction should now be set up in it. Due, not now to the spiritual
+dispositions of particular men, but to the spirit of the particular landscapes,
+these contradictions led to the break-up of Christianity into several religions—and
+for ever.</p>
+
+<p>The <em>controversy concerning the nature of Christ</em> was the issue on which this
+conflict came up for decision. The matter in dispute was just those problems of
+substance which in the same form and with the same tendency fill the thoughts
+of all other Magian theologies. Neoplatonic Scholasticism, Porphyry, Iamblichus,
+and above all Proclus treated it in a Western formulation, by modes of
+thought closely akin to Philo’s and even to Paul’s. The relation between the
+Primary One, Nus, Logos, the Father, and the Mediator was considered with
+reference to the substantial. Was the process thereof one of emanation, of
+partition, or of pervasion? Was one contained in the other, are they identical,
+or mutually exclusive? Was the Triad at the same time a Monad? In the East a
+different constitution of the problem is evidenced already in the premisses of the
+John Gospel and the Bardesanian Gnosis: the relation of Ahuramazda to the
+Holy Spirit (Spenta Mainyu) and the nature of Vohu Mano gave plenty of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p256">[256]</span>occupation to the Avestan “fathers”; and it was just at the time of the decisive
+Councils of Ephesus and Chalcedon that we find the temporary triumph of
+Zrvanism (438–457), with its primacy of the divine world-course (Zrvan as
+historic Time) over the divine substances marking a peak of dogmatic battle.
+Later, Islam took up the whole subject over again and sought to solve it in
+relation to the nature (<i lang="de">Wesenheit</i>) of Mohammed and the Koran. The problem
+had been there, ever since a Magian mankind had come into being—very
+much as the specifically Western will-problem, our counterpart to the substance-problem,
+was posed in the beginnings of Faustian thought. There is no need
+to look for these problems; they are there as soon as the Culture thinks, they
+are the fundamental form of its thought, and come to the front, uncalled-for
+and sometimes not even perceived, in all its studies.</p>
+
+<p>But the three Christian solutions predetermined by the three landscapes of
+East, West, and South were all present from the first, implicit already in the
+main tendencies of Gnosticism, which we may indicate by the names of Bardesanes,
+Basilides, and Valentinus. Their meeting-point was Edessa, where
+the streets rang with the battle-cries of the Nestorians against the victors of
+Ephesus and, anon, with the εἷς θεός shout of the Monophysites, demanding
+that Bishop Ibas should be thrown to the wild beasts of the circus.</p>
+
+<p>The great question was formulated by Athanasius, whose intellectual origins
+lay in the Pseudomorphosis and who had many affinities with his Pagan contemporary
+Iamblichus. Against Arius, who saw in Christ a demigod, merely
+<em>like</em> in substance to the Father, he maintained that Father and Son were of <em>the
+same</em> substance (θεότης) which in Christ had assumed a human σῶμα. “The
+Word became Flesh”—this formula of the West depends upon visible facts of
+the cult-Churches, and the understanding of the Word upon constant contemplation
+of the picturable. Here in the iconodule West, where in these very times
+Iamblichus wrote his book concerning God-statues in which the divine was
+substantially present and worked miracles,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_452" href="#Footnote_452" class="fnanchor">[452]</a> the abstraction of the Triunity
+was always effectively accompanied by the sensuous-human relation of Mother
+and Son, and it is the latter which it is impossible to eliminate from the thought-processes
+of Athanasius.</p>
+
+<p>With the recognition of the homoousia of Father and Son the real problem
+was for the first time posed—namely, the attitude of the Magian dualism to
+the historical phenomenon of the Son himself. In the world-cavern there was
+divine and human substance, in man a part in divine Pneuma and the individual
+soul somehow related to the “flesh.” But what of Christ?</p>
+
+<p>It was a decisive factor—one of the results of Actium—that the contest
+was fought out in the Greek tongue and in the territory of the Pseudomorphosis—that
+is, under the full influence of the “Caliph” of the Western Church.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p257">[257]</span>Constantine had even been the convener and president of the Council of Nicæa,
+where the doctrine of Athanasius carried the day. In the East, with its Aramaic
+speech and thought, these doings were (as we know from the letters of Aphrahat)
+hardly followed at all; there men saw no cause to quarrel about what, so far
+as they were concerned, had long ago been settled. The breach between East
+and West, a consequence of the Council of Ephesus (431) separated two Christian
+<em>nations</em>, that of the “Persian Church” and that of the Greek Church, but
+this was no more than the manifestation of a difference, inherent from the
+first, between <em>modes of thought</em> proper to the two different landscapes. Nestorius
+and the whole East saw in Christ the Second Adam, the Divine Envoy of the
+last æon. Mary had borne a <em>man</em>-child in whose human and created substance
+(<i>physis</i>) the godly, uncreated element <em>dwelt</em>. The West, on the contrary, saw in
+Mary the Mother of a <em>God</em>: the divine and the human substance formed in his
+body (<i lang="la">persona</i>, in the Classical idiom&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_453" href="#Footnote_453" class="fnanchor">[453]</a>)
+ a unity, named by Cyril ἕνωσις.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_454" href="#Footnote_454" class="fnanchor">[454]</a> When
+the Council of Ephesus had recognized the mother of God, her who gave birth
+to God, the city of Diana’s old renown burst into a truly Classical orgy of
+celebration.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_455" href="#Footnote_455" class="fnanchor">[455]</a></p>
+
+<p>But long ere this the Syrian Apollinaris&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_456" href="#Footnote_456" class="fnanchor">[456]</a> had heralded the “Southern” idea
+of the matter—that in the living Christ there was not merely a substance, but
+a single substance. The divine had transmuted itself into, not mingled itself
+with, a human substance (no κρᾶσις, as Gregory Nazianzen maintained in
+opposition; significantly enough, the best way of expressing the Monophysite
+idea is through concepts of Spinoza—the <em>one</em> substance in another mode). The
+Monophysites called the Christ of the Council of Chalcedon (451, where the
+West once more prevailed) “the idol with the two faces.” They not only fell
+away from the Church, they broke out in fierce risings in Palestine and Egypt;
+and when in Justinian’s time the troops of Persia—that is, of Mazdaism—penetrated
+to the Nile, they were hailed by the Monophysites as liberators.</p>
+
+<p>The fundamental meaning of this desperate conflict which raged for a
+<span class="pagenum" id="p258">[258]</span>century—not over scholarly concepts, but over the soul of a landscape that
+sought to be set free <em>in its people</em>—was the <em>reversal of the work of Paul</em>. If we can
+transport ourselves into the inmost soul of the two new-born nations, making
+no reservations and ignoring all minor points of dogmatics, then we see how the
+direction of Christianity towards the Greek West and its intellectual affinity
+with the Pagan Church culminated in the position that the Ruler of the West
+was the Head of Christianity in general. In the mind of Constantine it was
+self-evident that the Pauline foundation <em>within</em> the Pseudomorphosis was
+synonymous with Christianity. The Jewish Christians of Petrine tendency
+were to him a heretical sect, and the Eastern Christians of “Johannine” type
+he never even noticed. When the spirit of the Pseudomorphosis had, in the
+three determining councils of Nicæa, Ephesus, and Chalcedon, put <em>its</em> seal upon
+dogma, once and for all, the real Arabian world rose up with the force of
+nature and set up a barrier against it. With the end of the Arabian Springtime,
+Christianity fell apart for good into three religions, which can be symbolized
+by the names of Paul, Peter, and John, and of which none can henceforth claim
+to be regarded by the historically and doctrinally unprejudiced eye as <em>the</em> true
+and proper Christianity. These three religions are at the same time three
+nations, living in the old race-areas of Greeks, Jews, and Persians, and the
+tongues that they used were the Church-languages borrowed from them—namely,
+Greek, Aramaic, and Pehlevi.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VII_3">
+ VII
+</h3>
+
+<p>The Eastern Church, since the Council of Nicæa, had organized itself with
+an episcopal constitution, at the head of which stood the Katholikos of Ctesiphon,
+and with councils, liturgy, and law of its own. In 486 the Nestorian
+doctrine was accepted as binding, and the tie with Constantinople was thus
+broken. From that point on, Mazdaists, Manichæans, and Nestorians have a
+common destiny, of which the seed was sown in the Gnosis of Bardesanes. In
+the Monophysite Churches of the South, the spirit of the primitive Community
+emerged again and spread itself further; with its uncompromising monotheism
+and its hatred of images its closest affinity was with Talmudic Judaism, and its
+old battle-cry of εἷς θεός had already marked it to be, with that Judaism, the
+starting-point of Islam (“Allah il Allah”). The Western Church continued to
+be bound up with the fate of the Roman Empire—that is, the cult-Church
+became the State. Gradually it absorbed into itself the adherents of the Pagan
+Church, and thenceforth its importance lay not so much in itself—for Islam
+almost annihilated it—but in the accident that it was <em>from it</em> that the young
+peoples of the Western Culture received the Christian system as the basis for a
+new creation,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_457" href="#Footnote_457" class="fnanchor">[457]</a> receiving it, moreover, in the Latin guise of the extreme West—which
+for the Greek Church itself was unmeaning, since Rome was now a
+<span class="pagenum" id="p259">[259]</span>Greek city, and the Latin language was far more truly at home in Africa and
+Gaul.</p>
+
+<p>The essential and elemental concept of the Magian nation, a being that consists
+in extension, had been from the beginning active in extending itself. All
+these Churches were, deliberately, forcefully, and successfully, missionary
+Churches. But it was not until men had at last ceased to think of the end of
+the world as imminent, and dogma appropriate to prolonged existence in this
+World’s Cavern had been built up, and the Magian religions had taken up their
+standpoint towards the problem of substance, that the extending of the Culture
+took up that swift, passionate tempo that distinguished it from all others and
+found in Islam its most impressive, its last, but by no means its only example.
+Of these mighty facts Western theologians and historians give an entirely false
+picture. All that their gaze, riveted upon the Mediterranean lands, observes is
+the Western direction that fits in with their “Ancient-Mediæval-Modern”
+schema, and even within these limits, accepting the ostensible unity of Christianity,
+they regard it as passing at a certain period from a Greek into a Latin
+form, whereby the Greek residue is lost sight of altogether.</p>
+
+<p>But even before Christianity—and this is a fact of which the immense
+significance has never been observed, which has not even been correctly interpreted
+as <em>mission</em> effort—the Pagan Church had won for the Syncretic
+Cult the greater part of the population of North Africa, Spain, Gaul, Britain,
+and the Rhine and Danube frontiers. Of the Druidism that Cæsar had found
+in Gaul, little remained extant by the time of Constantine. The assimilation of
+indigenous local gods under the names of the great Magian divinities of the
+Cult-Church (and especially Mithras-Sol-Jupiter) from the second century on,
+was essentially a process of conquest, and the same is true of the later emperor-worship.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_458" href="#Footnote_458" class="fnanchor">[458]</a>
+The missionary efforts of Christianity here would have been less
+successful than they were if the other cult-Church—its near relative—had
+not preceded it. But the latter’s propaganda was by no means limited to barbarian
+fields; even in the fifth century the missionary Asclepiodotus converted
+Aphrodisias, a Carian city, from Christianity to Paganism.</p>
+
+<p>The Jews, as has been shown already, directed missionary effort on a large
+scale towards the East and the South. Through southern Arabia they drove into
+the heart of Africa, possibly even before the birth of Christ, while on the side
+of the East their presence in China is demonstrable, even in the second century.
+To the north the realm of the Khazars&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_459" href="#Footnote_459" class="fnanchor">[459]</a> and its capital, Astrakhan, later went
+over to Judaism. From this area came the Mongols of Jewish religion who
+advanced into the heart of Germany and were defeated, along with the
+Hungarians, in the battle of the Lechfeld in 955. Jewish scholars of the Spanish-Moorish
+<span class="pagenum" id="p260">[260]</span>universities petitioned the Byzantine Emperor (in <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1000) for
+safe-conduct for an embassy that was to ask the Khazars whether they were
+the Lost Tribes of Israel.</p>
+
+<p>From the Tigris, Mazdaists and Manichæans penetrated the empires on
+either hand, Roman and Chinese, to their utmost frontiers. Persian, as the
+Mithras cult, invaded Britain; Manichæism had by 400 become a danger
+to Greek Christianity, and there were Manichæan sects in southern France as
+late as the Crusades&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_460" href="#Footnote_460" class="fnanchor">[460]</a>; but the two religions drove eastwards as well, along
+the Great Wall of China (where the great polyglot inscription of Kara Balgassun
+testifies to the introduction of the Manichæan faith in the Oigur realm)
+and even to Shantung. Persian fire-temples arose in the interior of China, and
+from 700 Persian expressions are found in Chinese astrological writings.</p>
+
+<p>The three Christian Churches everywhere followed up the blazed trails.
+When the Western Church converted the Frankish King Chlodwig in 496, the
+missionaries of the Eastern Church had already reached Ceylon and the westernmost
+Chinese garrisons of the Great Wall, and those of the Southern were in the
+Empire of Axum. At the same time as, after Boniface (718), Germany became
+converted, the Nestorian missionaries were within an ace of winning China
+itself. They had entered Shantung in 638. The Emperor Gao-dsung (651–84)
+permitted churches to be built in all provinces of the Empire, in 750 Christianity
+was preached in the Imperial palace itself, and in 781, according to the Aramaic
+and Chinese inscriptions upon a memorial column in Singafu which has been
+preserved, “all China was covered with the palaces of Concord.” But it is in
+the highest degree significant that the Confucians, who cannot be called inexpert
+in religious matters, regarded the Nestorians, Mazdaists, and Manichæans as adherents
+of a single “Persian” religion,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_461" href="#Footnote_461" class="fnanchor">[461]</a> just as the population of the Western
+Roman provinces were unable to discriminate between Mithras and Christ.</p>
+
+<p>Islam, therefore, is to be regarded as the Puritanism of the whole group of
+Early Magian religions, emerging as a religion only formally new, and in the
+domain of the Southern Church and Talmudic Judaism. It is this deeper significance,
+and not merely the force of its warlike onslaught, that gives the key
+to its fabulous successes. Although on political grounds it practised an astounding
+toleration—John Damascenus, the last great dogmatist of the Greek
+Church, was, under the name of Al Manzor, treasurer to the Caliph—Judaism,
+Mazdaism, and the Southern and Eastern churches of Christianity were swiftly
+and almost completely dissolved in it. The Katholikos of Seleucia, Jesujabh III,
+complains that tens of thousands of Christians went over to it as soon as it came
+on the scene, and in North Africa—the home of Augustine—the entire
+population fell away to Islam at once. Mohammed died in 632. In 641 the
+whole domain of the Monophysites and the Nestorians (and, therefore, of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p261">[261]</span>Talmud and the Avesta) were in the possession of Islam. In 717 it stood before
+Constantinople, and the Greek Church was in peril of extinction. Already in
+628 a relative of the prophet had brought presents to the Chinese Emperor Tai-dsung
+and obtained leave to institute a mission. From 700 there were mosques
+in Shantung, and in 720 Damascus sent instructions to the Arabs long established
+in southern France to conquer the realm of the Franks. Two centuries
+later, when in the West a new religious world was arising out of the remains of
+the old Western Church, Islam was in the Sudan and in Java.</p>
+
+<p>For all this, Islam is significant only as a piece of <em>outward</em> religious history.
+The inner history of the Magian religion ends with Justinian’s time, as truly
+as that of the Faustian ends with Charles V and the Council of Trent.
+Any book on religious history shows “<em>the</em>” Christian religion as having had
+<em>two ages of grand thought-movements</em>—0–500 in the East and 1000–1500 in the West.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_462" href="#Footnote_462" class="fnanchor">[462]</a>
+<em>But these are two springtimes of two Cultures</em>, and in them are comprised also the
+non-Christian forms which belong to each religious development. The closing
+of the University of Athens by Justinian in 529 was not, as is always stated, the
+end of Classical philosophy—there had been no Classical philosophy for
+centuries. What he did, forty years before the birth of Mohammed, was to
+end the theology of the Pagan Church by closing this school and—as the
+historians forget to add—<em>to end the Christian theology also</em> by closing those of
+Antioch and Alexandria. Dogma was complete, finished—just as it was in the
+West with the Council of Trent (1564) and the Confession of Augsburg (1540),
+for with the city and intellectualism religious creative force comes to an end.
+So also in Jewry and in Persia, the Talmud was concluded about 500, and when
+Chosroës Nushirvan in 529 bloodily suppressed the Reformation of Mazdak—which
+was not unlike our Anabaptism in its rejection of marriage and worldly
+property, and had been supported by King Kobad I as counteracting the power
+of Church and nobility—Avestan dogma similarly passed into fixity.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p262"></a><a id="p263"></a><a id="p264"></a><a id="p265"></a>[265]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">
+ CHAPTER IX
+ <br>
+ <span class="subtitle">PROBLEMS OF THE ARABIAN CULTURE
+ <br>
+ (C)
+ <br>
+ PYTHAGORAS, MOHAMMED, CROMWELL</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_463" href="#Footnote_463" class="fnanchor">[463]</a></h3>
+
+<p>Religion may be described as the Waking-Being of a living creature in the
+moments when it overcomes, masters, denies, and even destroys Being. Race-life
+and the pulse of its drive dwindle as the eyes gaze into an extended, tense,
+and light-filled world, and <em>Time yields to Space</em>. The plantlike desire for fulfilment
+goes out, and from primary depths there wells up the animal fear of
+the fulfilment, of the ceasing of direction, of death. Not hate and love, but
+fear and love are the basic feelings of religion. Hate and fear differ as Time and
+Space, blood and eye, pulse and tension, heroism and saintliness. And love in
+the race-sense differs from love in the religious sense in the same way.</p>
+
+<p>All religion is turned to light. The extended itself becomes religious as a
+world of the eye comprehended from the ego as centre of light. Hearing and
+touch are adjusted to what is seen and the <em>Invisible</em>, whose workings are sensed,
+becomes the sum of the dæmonic. All that we designate by the words “deity,”
+“revelation,” “salvation,” “dispensation,” is in one way and another an
+element of illumined actuality. Death, for man, is something that he sees, and
+knows by seeing, and in relation to death birth is <em>the other</em> secret. They are the
+two visible limits of the sensible cosmic that is incarnate in a live body in
+lighted space.</p>
+
+<p>There are two sorts of deeper fear—one is fear (known even to the animals)
+<em>in presence of</em> microcosmic freedom in space, before space itself and its powers,
+before death; the other is fear <em>for</em> the cosmic current of being, for life, for
+directional time. The first awakens a dark feeling that freedom in the extended
+is just a new and deeper sort of dependence than that which rules the vegetable
+world, and it leads the individual being, sensible of its weakness, to seek the
+propinquity and alliance of others. Anxiety produces speech, and our sort of
+speech is religion—every religion. Out of the fear of Space arise the numina of
+the <em>world-as-nature</em> and the <em>cults of gods</em>; out of the fear for time arise the numina
+of <em>life</em>, of sex and breed, of the State, centring on <em>ancestor-worship</em>. That is the
+difference between Taboo and Totem&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_464" href="#Footnote_464" class="fnanchor">[464]</a>—for the totemistic, too, always appears
+in religious form, out of holy awe of that which passeth all understanding and
+is for ever alien.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p266">[266]</span></p>
+
+<p>The higher religion requires tense alertness against the powers of blood and
+being that ever lurk in the depths ready to recapture their primeval rights over
+the <em>younger</em> side of life. “<em>Watch</em> and pray, that ye fall not into temptation.”
+Nevertheless, “liberation” is a fundamental word in every religion and an
+eternal wish of every waking-being. In this general, almost prereligious, sense,
+it means the desire for freedom from the anxieties and anguishes of waking-consciousness;
+for relaxation of the tensions of fear-born thought and search;
+for the obliteration and removal of the consciousness of the Ego’s loneliness
+in the universe, the rigid conditionedness of nature, the prospect of the
+immovable boundary of all Being in eld and death.</p>
+
+<p>Sleep, too, liberates—“Death and his brother Sleep.” And holy wine,
+intoxication, breaks the rigour of the spirit’s tension, and dancing, the Dionysus
+art, and every other form of stupefaction and ecstasy. These are modes
+of slipping out of awareness by the aid of being, the cosmic, the “it,” <em>the
+escape out of space into time</em>. But higher than all these stands the genuinely
+religious overcoming of fear <em>by means of the understanding itself</em>. The tension
+between microcosm and macrocosm becomes something that we can love,
+something in which we can wholly immerse ourselves.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_465" href="#Footnote_465" class="fnanchor">[465]</a> We call this <em>faith</em>,
+and it is the beginning of all man’s intellectual life.</p>
+
+<p>Understanding is causal only, whether deductive or inductive, whether
+derived from sensation or not. It is wholly impossible to distinguish being-understood
+from being-caused—both express the same thing. When something
+is “actual” for us, we see it and think it in causal (<i lang="de">ursächlich</i>) form, just as we
+feel and know ourselves and our activities as things originating, causes (<i lang="de">Ursache</i>).
+The assignment of causes is, however, different from case to case, not
+only in the religious, but also generally in the inorganic logic of man. A fact
+is thought of at one moment as having such-and-such, at another moment as
+having something else, as its cause. Every kind of thinking has for every one
+of its domains of application a proper “system.” In everyday life a causal
+connexion in thought is never exactly repeated. Even in modern physics
+working hypotheses—that is, causal systems—which partially exclude one
+another are in use side by side; for instance, the ideas of electrodynamics and
+those of thermodynamics. The significance of the thought is not thereby
+nullified, for during a continuous spell of waking-consciousness we “understand”
+always in the form of single acts of which each has its own causal
+inception. The viewing of the entire world-as-nature in relation to the individual
+consciousness as a single causally-ordered concatenation is something
+perfectly unrealizable by our thought, inasmuch as our thinking proceeds
+always by unit acts. It remains a belief. It is indeed Faith itself, for it is the
+basis of religious understanding of the world, which, wherever something is
+observed, postulates numina as a necessity of thought—ephemeral numina for
+<span class="pagenum" id="p267">[267]</span>incidental events which are not again thought of, and enduring numina as
+place-definite indwellers (of springs, trees, stones, hills, stars, and so forth)
+or as universals (like the gods of Heaven, of War, of Wisdom) which can be
+present anywhere. These numina are limited only in virtue of the individualness
+of each separate act of thought. That which to-day is a property of the
+god is to-morrow itself the god. Others are now a plurality, now a unity,
+now a vague Ent. There are invisibles (shapes) and incomprehensibles
+(principles), which, to those to whom it is vouchsafed, may become phenomenal
+or comprehensible. Fate&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_466" href="#Footnote_466" class="fnanchor">[466]</a> in the Classical (εἰμαρμένη) and in the Indian (<i>rta</i>)
+is something which stands as origin-thing (<i>Ur-Sache</i>) above the picturable
+divinities; Magian Destiny, on the contrary, is the operation of the one and
+formless supreme God. Religious thought ever lets itself graduate values
+and rank within the causal succession, and leads up to supreme beings or principles,
+as very first and “governing” causes; “dispensation” is the word
+used for the most comprehensive of all systems based upon valuation. Science,
+on the contrary, is a mode of understanding which fundamentally abhors
+distinctions of rank amongst causes; what it finds is not dispensation, but
+law.</p>
+
+<p>The understanding of causes sets free. Belief in the linkages discovered
+compels the world-fear to retreat. God is man’s refuge from the Destiny which
+he can feel and livingly experience, but not think on, or figure, or name, and
+which sinks into abeyance for so long—only for so long—as the “critical”
+(literally, the <em>separating</em>) fear-born understanding can establish causes behind
+causes comprehensibly; that is, in order visible to the outer or inner eye. It is
+the desperate dilemma of the higher grade of man that his powerful will to
+understand is in constant contradiction with his being. It has ceased to serve
+his life, but is unable to rule it, and consequently in all important conjunctures
+there remains an insoluble element. “One has merely to declare
+oneself free, and one feels the moment to be conditioned. But if one has
+the courage to declare oneself conditioned, then one has the feeling of being
+free” (Goethe).</p>
+
+<p>We name a causal linkage within the world-as-nature, as to which we are
+convinced that no further reflection can alter it—Truth. Truths are established,
+and they are timeless—“absolute” means detached from Destiny
+and history, but detached also from the facts of our own living and dying—and
+they are an inward liberation, consolation, and salvation, in that they
+disvalue and overcome the incalculable happenings of the world of facts. Or,
+as it mirrors itself in the mind, men may go, but truth remains.</p>
+
+<p>In the world-around something is established—that is, fixed, spellbound.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p268">[268]</span>Understanding man has the secret in the hands, whether this be, as of old, some
+potent charm or, as nowadays, a mathematical formula. A feeling of triumph,
+even to-day, accompanies every experimental step in the realm of Nature
+which determines something—about the purposes and powers of the god of
+heaven or the storm-spirits of the ground-dæmons; or about the numina of
+natural science (atom-nuclei, the velocity of light, gravitation); or even about
+the abstract numina that thought conceives in contemplating its own image
+(concept, category, reason)—and, in determining, fixes it in the prison of an
+unalterable system of causal relations. Experience in this inorganic, killing,
+preserving sense, which is something quite different from life-experience and
+knowledge of men, takes place in two modes—<em>theory and technique</em>,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_467" href="#Footnote_467" class="fnanchor">[467]</a> or, in
+religious language, <em>myth and cult</em>—according as the believer’s intention is to
+open up or to confine the secrets of the world-around. Both demand a high
+development of human understanding. <em>Both may be born of either fear or love.</em>
+There is a mythology of fear, like the Mosaic and the primitive generally, and a
+mythology of love, like that of early Christianity and Gothic mysticism.
+Similarly there is a technique of defensive, and another technique of postulant,
+magic, and this, no doubt the most fundamental, distinction between sacrifice
+and prayer&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_468" href="#Footnote_468" class="fnanchor">[468]</a> distinguishes also primitive and mature mankind. Religiousness
+is a trait of soul, but religion is a talent. “Theory” demands the gift of vision
+that few possess to the extent of luminous insight and many possess not at all.
+It is world-view, “<i lang="de">Weltanschauung</i>” in the most primary sense, whether what
+one sees in that world is the hand and the loom of powers, or (in a colder urban
+spirit, not fearing or loving, but inquisitive) the theatre of law-conform
+forces. The secrets of Taboo and Totem are beheld in god-faiths and soul-faiths,
+and calculated in theoretical physics and biology. “Technique” presupposes
+the intellectual gift of binding and conjuring. The theorist is the critical seer,
+the technician is the priest, the discoverer is the prophet.</p>
+
+<p>The means, however, in which the whole force of intellect concentrates
+itself is the <em>form</em> of the actual, which is abstracted from vision by speech, and of
+which not every waking-consciousness can discern the quintessence—the
+conceptual circumscription, the communicable law, name, number. Hence
+every conjuration of the deity is based on the knowledge of its real name and
+the use of rites and sacraments, known and available only to the initiated, of
+which the form must be exact and the words correct. This applies not merely
+to primitive magic, but just as much to our physical (and particularly our
+medical) technique. It is for this reason that mathematics have a character of
+sanctity and are regularly the product of a religious milieu (Pythagoras,
+Descartes, Pascal); that there is a mysticism of sacred numbers (3, 7, 12) in
+<span class="pagenum" id="p269">[269]</span>every religion,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_469" href="#Footnote_469" class="fnanchor">[469]</a>
+ and that Ornament (of which cult-architecture is the highest
+form) is essentially number felt as shape. It is rigid, compelling forms, expression-motives
+and communication-signs&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_470" href="#Footnote_470" class="fnanchor">[470]</a> that the microcosm employs in the
+world of waking-consciousness to get into touch with the macrocosm. In
+sacerdotal technique they are called precepts, and in scientific, laws—but
+both are really name and number, and primitive man would discover no difference
+between the magic wherewith the priests of his villages command the
+dæmons and that wherewith the civilized technician commands his machines.</p>
+
+<p>The first, and perhaps the only, outcome of man’s will-to-understanding is
+<em>faith</em>. “I believe” is the great word against metaphysical fear, and at the same
+time it is an avowal of love. Even though one’s researches or accumulation of
+knowledge may culminate in sudden illumination or conclusive calculation,
+yet all one’s own sense and comprehension would be meaningless unless there
+were set up along with it an inward certainty of a “something” which as
+other and alien <em>is</em>—and is, moreover, exactly under the ascertained shape—in
+the concatenation of cause and effect. The highest intellectual possession,
+therefore, known to man as a being of speech-deduced thought, is the
+firm and hard-won belief in this something, withdrawn from the courses of
+time and destiny, which he has separated out by contemplation and labelled
+by name and number. But <em>what</em> that something is remains in the last analysis
+obscure. Was it the something of secret logic of the universe that was touched,
+or only a silhouette? And all the struggle and passion starts afresh, and anxious
+investigation directs itself upon this new doubt, which may well turn to despair.
+He needs in his intellectual boring of belief a <em>final</em> something attainable by
+thought, an end of dissection that leaves no remainder of mystery. The corners
+and pockets of his world of contemplation must all be illuminated—nothing
+less will give him his release.</p>
+
+<p>Here belief passes over into the knowledge evoked by mistrust, or, more
+accurately, becomes belief in that knowledge. For the latter form of the understanding
+is radically dependent upon the former; it is posterior, more artificial,
+more questionable. Further, religious theory—that is, the contemplation
+of the believer—<em>leads to</em> priestly practice, but scientific theory, on the contrary,
+<em>liberates itself</em> by contemplation <em>from</em> the technical knowledge of every day
+life.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_471" href="#Footnote_471" class="fnanchor">[471]</a> The firm belief that is bred by illuminations, revelations, sudden deep
+glimpses, can dispense with critical work. But critical knowledge presupposes
+the belief that its methods will lead to just that which is desired—that is,
+not to fresh imaginings, but to the “actual.” History, however, teaches that
+doubt as to belief leads to knowledge, and doubt as to knowledge (after a
+period of critical optimism) back again to belief. As theoretical knowledge
+<span class="pagenum" id="p270">[270]</span>frees itself from confiding acceptance, it is marching to self-destruction, after
+which what remains is simply and solely technical experience.</p>
+
+<p>Belief, in its primitive, unclear condition, acknowledges superior sources
+of wisdom by which things that man’s own subtlety could never unravel are
+more or less manifest—such as prophetic words, dreams, oracles, sacred
+scriptures, the voice of the deity. The critical spirit, on the contrary, wants,
+and believes itself able, to look into everything for itself. It not only mistrusts
+alien truths, but even denies their possibility. Truth, for it, is only knowledge
+that it has proved for itself. But if pure criticism creates its means out of itself
+solely, it did not long go unperceived that this position assumed the reality of
+the result. <i lang="la">De omnibus dubitandum</i> is a proposition that is incapable of being
+actualized. It is apt to be forgotten that critical activity must rest upon a
+<em>method</em>, and the possibility of obtaining this method in turn by the way of
+criticism is only apparent. For, in reality, it follows from the momentary disposition
+of the thought.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_472" href="#Footnote_472" class="fnanchor">[472]</a> That is, the results of criticism themselves are determined
+by the basic method, but this in turn is determined by the stream of
+being which carries and perfuses the waking-consciousness. The belief in a
+knowledge that needs no postulates is merely a mark of the immense naïveté of
+rationalist periods. A theory of natural science is nothing but a historically
+older dogma in another shape. And the only profit from it is that which
+life obtains, in the shape of a successful technique, to which theory has provided
+the key. It has already been said that the value of a working hypothesis resides
+not in its “correctness” but in its usableness. But discoveries of another sort,
+findings of insight, “Truths” in the optimistic sense, cannot be the outcome
+of purely scientific understanding, since this always presupposes an existing
+view upon which its critical, dissecting activity can operate; the natural
+science of the Baroque is one continuous dissection of the religious world-picture
+of the Gothic.</p>
+
+<p>The aim of faith and science, fear and curiosity, is not to experience life,
+but to know the world-as-nature. Of world-as-history they are the express
+negation. But the secret of waking-consciousness is a twofold one; two fear-born,
+causally ordered pictures arise for the inner eye—the “outer world”
+and as its counter-image the “inner world.” In both are true problems, and
+the waking-consciousness is not only a look-out, but is very busy within its
+own domains as well. The Numen out there is called God; in here Soul. By
+the critical understanding the deities of the believer’s vision are transmuted
+in thought into mechanical magnitudes referable to its world, but their essence
+and kernel remain the same—Classical matter and form, Magian light and
+darkness, Faustian force and mass—and its mode is ever the same dissection
+<span class="pagenum" id="p271">[271]</span>of the primitive soul-belief, and its end is ever the same, a <em>predetermined</em> result.
+The physics of the within is called systematic psychology and it discovers in
+man, if it is Classical science, thing-like soul-<em>parts</em> (νοῦς, θυμός, ἐπιθυμία); if
+Magian, soul-substance (ruach, nephesh); if Faustian, soul-<em>forces</em> (thinking, feeling,
+willing). These are the shapes that religious meditation, in fear and in
+love, then follows up in the causal relations of guilt, sin, pardon, conscience,
+reward, and punishment.</p>
+
+<p>Being is a mystery that, as soon as faith and science turn their attention to
+it, illudes them into fateful error. Instead of the cosmic itself being reached
+(which is completely outside the possibilities of the active waking-consciousness)
+the sensible mobility of body in the field of the eye, and the conceptual
+image of a mechanical-causal chain abstracted therefrom, are subjected to
+analysis. But real life <em>is led</em>, not cognised. <em>Only the Timeless is true.</em> Truths lie
+beyond history and life, and vice versa life is something beyond all causes,
+effects, and truths. Criticism in both cases, critique of waking-consciousness
+and critique of being, are contrary to happening and alien to life. But in the
+first case the application of a critique is entirely justified by the critical intention
+and the inner logic of the object that is referred to; in the second case it is not.
+It follows that the distinction between faith and knowledge, or fear and curiosity,
+or revelation and criticism, is not, after all, the ultimate distinction.
+Knowledge is only a late form of belief. But <em>belief and life</em>, love springing from
+the secret fear of the world, and love springing from the secret hate of the sexes,
+knowledge of inorganic and sense of organic logic, Causes and Destinies—<em>this</em>
+is the deepest opposition of all. And here we distinguish men, not according
+to what their modes of thinking are—religious or critical—nor
+according to the objects of their thought, but according to whether they are
+thinkers (no matter about what) <em>or doers</em>.</p>
+
+<p>In the realm of doing the waking-consciousness takes charge only when it
+becomes <em>technique</em>. Religious knowledge, too, is power—man is not only
+ascertaining causations, but handling them. He who knows the secret relationship
+between microcosm and macrocosm commands it also, whether the
+knowledge has come to him by revelation or by eavesdropping. Thus the
+magician and conjuror is truly the Taboo-man. He compels the deity through
+sacrifice and prayer; he practises the true rites and sacraments because they are
+causes of inevitable results, and whosoever knows them, him they must serve.
+He reads in the stars and in the sacred books; in his power lies, timeless and
+immune from all accident, the <em>causal</em> relation of sin and propitiation, repentance
+and absolutions, sacrifice and grace. His chain of sacred origins and results
+makes him himself a vessel of mysterious power and, therefore, a cause of new
+effects, in which one must have faith before one may have them imparted.</p>
+
+<p>From this starting-point we can understand (what the European-American
+world of to-day has wellnigh forgotten) the ultimate meaning of religious
+<span class="pagenum" id="p272">[272]</span>ethics, <em>Moral</em>. It is, wherever true and strong, a relation that has the full import
+of <em>ritual act and practice</em>; it is (to use Loyola’s phrase) “<i lang="la">exercitium spirituale</i>,”
+performed before the deity,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_473" href="#Footnote_473" class="fnanchor">[473]</a> who is to be softened and conjured thereby. “What
+shall I do to be saved?” This “what?” is the key to the understanding of all
+real moral. In its deeps there is ever a “wherefore” and a “why,” even in the
+case of those few sublimate philosophers who have imagined a moral that is
+“for its own sake”—confessing in the very phrase that deep down they feel a
+“wherefore,” even though but a sympathetic few of their own kind can appreciate
+it. <em>There is only causal moral</em>—that is, <em>ethical technique</em>—on the background
+of a convinced metaphysic.</p>
+
+<p>Moral is a conscious and planned causality of the conduct, apart from all
+particulars of actual life and character, something eternal and universally
+valid, not only without time, but hostile to time and for that very reason
+“true.” Even if mankind did not exist, moral would be true and valid—this
+is no mere conceit, but an expression of the ethical inorganic logic of the
+world conceived as system that has actually been used. Never would the
+philosopher concede that it could have a historical evolution and fulfilment.
+Space denies Time; true moral is absolute, eternally complete and the same.
+In the depths of it there is ever a negation of life, a refraining and renunciation
+carried to the point of askesis and death itself. Negation is expressed in its very
+phrases—religious moral contains prohibitions, not precepts. Taboo, even
+where it ostensibly affirms, is a list of disclaimers. To liberate oneself from the
+world of fact, to evade the possibilities of Destiny, always to look upon the
+race in oneself as the lurking enemy—nothing but hard system, doctrine, and
+exercise will give that. No action must be causal or impulsive—that is, left
+to the blood—everything must be considered according to motives and results
+and “carried out” according to orders. Extreme tension of awareness is required
+lest we fall into sin. First of all things, continence in what pertains to
+the blood, love, marriage. Love and hate in mankind are cosmic and evil;
+the love of the sexes is the very polar opposite of timeless love and fear of God,
+and therefore it is the prime sin, for which Adam was cast forth from paradise
+and burdened man with the heritage of guilt. Conception and death define the
+life of the body in space, and the fact that it is the <em>body</em> that is in question makes
+the former sin and the latter punishment. Σῶμα σῆμα (the Classical body a
+grave!) was the confession of the Orphic religion. Æschylus and Pindar comprehended
+Being as a reproach, and the saints of all Cultures feel it as an impiety
+that has to be killed off by askesis or (what is nearly related thereto) orgiastic
+squandering. Action, the field of history, the deed, heroism, delight in battle
+and victory and spoil, are evil. For in them the pulse of cosmic being knocks
+on the door too loudly and disturbingly for contemplativeness and thought.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p273">[273]</span>The whole world—meaning the world-as-history—is infamous. It fights
+instead of renouncing; it does not possess the idea of sacrifice. It prevails over
+truth by means of facts. As it follows impulse, it baffles thought about cause
+and effect. And therefore the highest sacrifice that intellectual man can offer is
+to make a personal present of it to the powers of nature. <em>Every moral action is a
+piece of this sacrifice</em>, and an ethical life-course is an unbroken chain of such
+sacrifices. Above all, the offering of sympathy, com-passion {sic}, in which the
+inwardly strong gives up his superiority to the powerless. The compassionate
+man kills something within himself. But we must not confuse this sympathy
+in the grand religious sense with the vague sentimentality of the everyday man,
+who cannot command himself, still less with the <em>race-feeling of chivalry</em> that is
+not a moral of reasons and rules at all, but an upstanding and self-evident <em>custom</em>
+bred of the unconscious pulsations of a keyed-up life. That which in civilized
+times is called social ethics has nothing to do with religion, and its presence
+only goes to show the weakness and emptiness of the religiousness of the day,
+which has lost that force of metaphysical sureness that is the condition
+precedent of strong, convinced, and self-denying moral. Think for instance of
+the difference between Pascal and Mill. Social ethic is nothing but practical
+politics. It is a very Late product of <em>the same</em> historical world whose Springtime
+(in all Cultures alike) has witnessed the flowering of an ethic of high courage
+and knightliness in a strong stock that does not wince under the life of history
+and fate; an ethic of natural and acquired reactions that polite society to-day
+would call “the instincts of a gentleman”; an ethic of which vulgarity and
+not sin is the antithesis. Once again it is the Castle versus the Cathedral.
+The castle character does not ask about precepts and reasons. In fact, it does
+not ask questions at all. Its code lies in the blood—which is pulse—and its
+fear is not of punishment or requital, but of contempt and especially self-contempt.
+It is not selfless; on the contrary, it springs from the very fullness of a
+strong self. But Compassion likewise demands inward greatness of soul, and
+so it is those selfsame Springtimes that produce the most saintly servants of
+pity, the Francis of Assisi, the Bernard of Clairvaux, in whom renunciation was
+a pervading fragrance, to whom self-offering was bliss, whose <i lang="la">caritas</i> was ethereal,
+bloodless, timeless, historyless, in whom fear of the universe had dissolved
+itself into pure, flawless love, a summit of causal moral of which Late periods
+are simply no longer capable.</p>
+
+<p>To constrain one’s blood, one must have blood. Consequently it is only in
+knightly warrior-times that we find a monasticism of the great style, and the
+highest symbol for the complete victory of Space over Time is the warrior
+become ascetic—not the born dreamer and weakling, who belongs by nature
+to the cloister, nor again the scholar, who works at a moral system in the
+study. Putting cant aside, that which is called moral to-day—a proper affection
+for one’s nearest, or the exercise of worthy inclinations, or the practice of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p274">[274]</span><i lang="la">caritas</i> with an <i lang="fr">arrière-pensée</i> of acquiring political power by that means—is
+not honour-moral, or even a low grade of it, according to Springtime standards.
+To repeat: there is grand moral only with reference to death, and its
+sources are a fear, pervading the whole waking-consciousness, of metaphysical
+causes and consequences, a love that overcomes life, a consciousness that one
+is under the inexorable magic of a causal system of sacred laws and purposes,
+which are honoured as truths and which one must either wholly belong to or
+wholly renounce. Constant tension, self-watching, self-testing, accompany
+the exercise of this moral, which is an art, and in the presence of which the
+world-as-history sinks to nothingness. Let a man be either a hero or a saint.
+In between lies, not wisdom, but banality.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_8">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>If there were truths independent of the currents of being, there could be no
+history of truths. If there were one single eternally right religion, religious
+history would be an inconceivable idea. But, however highly developed the
+microcosmic side of an individual’s life may be, it is nevertheless something
+stretched like a membrane over the developing life, perfused by the pulsing
+blood, ever betraying the hidden drive of cosmic directedness. Race dominates
+and forms all apprehension. It is the destiny of each moment of awareness to
+be a cast of Time’s net over Space.</p>
+
+<p>Not that “eternal truths” do not exist. Every man possesses them—plenty
+of them—to the extent that he exists and exercises the understanding
+faculty in a world of thoughts, in the connected ensemble of which they are, in
+and for the instant of thought, unalterable fixtures—ironbound as cause-effect
+combinations in hoops of premisses and conclusions. Nothing in this
+disposition can become displaced, he believes. But in reality it is just <em>one</em> surge
+of life that is lifting his waking self and its world together. Its unity remains
+integral, but <em>as</em> a unit, a whole, <em>a fact</em>, it has a history. Absolute and relative
+are to one another as transverse and longitudinal sections of a succession of
+generations, the latter ignoring Space, and the former Time. The systematic
+thinker stays in the causal order of a moment; only the physiognomist who
+reviews the sequence of positions realizes the constant alteration of that which
+“is” true.</p>
+
+<p><i lang="de">Alles Vergängliche ist nur ein Gleichnis</i> holds good for the eternal truths also,
+as soon as we follow their course in the stream of history, and watch them move
+on as elements in the world-picture of the generations that live and die. For
+each man, during the short space of his existence, the <em>one</em> religion is eternal and
+true which Destiny, through the time and place of his birth, has ordained for
+him. With it he feels, out of it he forms, the views and convictions of his days.
+To its words and forms he holds fast, although what he means by them is
+constantly changing. In the world-as-nature there are eternal truths; in the
+world-as-history there is an eternally changing trueness.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p275">[275]</span></p>
+
+<p><em>A morphology of religious history</em>, therefore, is a task that the Faustian spirit
+alone could ever formulate, and one that it is only now, at this present stage of
+its development, fit to deal with. The problem is enunciated, and we must dare
+the effort of getting completely away from our own convictions and seeing before
+us everything indifferently as equally alien. And how hard it is! He who undertakes
+the task must possess the strength not merely to imagine himself in an
+illusory detachment from the truths of his world-understanding—illusory
+even to one for whom truths are just a set of concepts and methods—but
+actually to penetrate his own system physiognomically to its very last cells.
+And even then is it possible, in a single language, which structurally and
+spiritually carries the whole metaphysical content of its own Culture, to capture
+transmissible ideas of the truths of other-tongued men?</p>
+
+<p>There is, to begin with, over the thousands of years of the first age,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_474" href="#Footnote_474" class="fnanchor">[474]</a> the
+colourless throng of primitive populations, which stand fearfully agape in the
+presence of the chaotic environment, whose enigmas continually weigh upon
+them, for no man amongst them is able logically to master it. Lucky in comparison
+with them is the animal, who is awake and yet not thinking. An
+animal knows fear only from case to case, whereas early man trembles before the
+whole world. Everything inside and outside him is dark and unresolved. The
+everyday and the dæmonic are tangled together without clue and without rule.
+The day is filled with a frightened and painful religiousness, in which it is rare
+to find even the suggestion of a religion of confidence—for from this elementary
+form of the world-fear no way leads to the understanding love. Every
+stone on which a man stumbles, every tool that he takes in his hand, every insect
+buzzing past him, food, house, weather, all can be dæmonic; but the man believes
+in the powers that lurk in them only so long as he is frightened or so long
+<em>as he uses them</em>—there are quite enough of them even so. But one can love
+something only if one believes in its <em>continued</em> existence. Love presupposes the
+thought of a world-order that has acquired stability. Western research has
+been at great pains, not only to set in order individual observations gathered
+from all parts of the world, but to arrange them according to assumed gradations
+that “lead up” from animism (or other beginnings, as you please) to the beliefs
+that it holds itself. Unfortunately, it is one particular religion that has
+provided the values of the scheme, and Chinese or Greeks would have built
+it quite differently. In reality no such gradation, leading a general human
+evolution up to one goal, exists. Primitive man’s chaotic world-around, born
+of his discontinuous understanding of separate moments and yet full of impressive
+meaning, is always something grown-up, self-complete, and closed off,
+often with chasms and terrors of deep metaphysical premonition. Always
+it contains a system, and it matters little whether this is partially abstracted
+from the contemplation of the light-world or remains wholly within it. Such
+<span class="pagenum" id="p276">[276]</span>a world-picture does not “progress”; nor is it a fixed sum of particulars from
+which this one and that one ought to be (though usually they are) picked out
+for comparison irrespective of time, land, and people. In reality they form a
+<em>world of organic religions</em>, which, all over the world, possessed (and, where they
+linger, still possess) proper and very significant modes of originating, growing,
+expanding, and fading out, and a well-established specific character in point of
+structure, style, tempo, and duration. The religions of the high Cultures are
+not developed from these, but different. They lie clearer and more intellectual
+in the light, they know what understanding love means, they have problems
+and ideas, theories and techniques, of strict intellect, but the religious symbolism
+of everyday light they know no more. The primitive religiousness penetrates
+everything; the later and individualized religions are self-contained
+form-worlds of their own.</p>
+
+<p>All the more enigmatic, therefore, are the “pre-” periods of the grand
+Cultures, still primitive through and through, and yet more and more distinctly
+anticipating and pointing in a definite direction. It is just these periods, of
+some centuries’ duration, that ought to have been accurately examined and compared
+amongst themselves and for themselves. In what shape does the coming
+phenomenon prepare itself? In the case of the Magian religions the threshold
+period, as we have seen, produced the type of the Prophetic religion, which
+led up to the Apocalyptic. How comes it that this particular form is more
+deeply grounded in the essence of this particular Culture? Or why is it that the
+Mycenæan prelude of the Classical is filled from one end to the other with
+imaginings of beast-formed deities?&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_475" href="#Footnote_475" class="fnanchor">[475]</a> They are not the gods of the warriors
+up in the megaron of the Mycenæan castle, where soul- and ancestor-worship
+was practised with a high and noble piety evidenced still in the monuments,
+but the gods of down below, the powers believed in in the peasant’s hut. The
+great menlike gods of the Apollinian religion, which must have arisen about
+1100 out of a mighty religious upheaval, bear traces of their dark past on all
+sides. Hardly one of these figures is without some cognomen, attribute, or
+telltale transformation-myth indicative of its origin. To Homer Hera is invariably
+the cow-eyed; Zeus appears as a bull, and the Poseidon of the Thelpusan
+<span class="pagenum" id="p277">[277]</span>legend as a horse. Apollo comes to be the name for countless primitive numina;
+now he was wolf (Lycæus) like the Roman Mars, now dolphin (Delphinius),
+and now serpent (the Pythian Apollo of Delphi). A serpent, too, is the form
+of Zeus Meilichios on Attic grave-reliefs and of Asclepios, and of the Furies even
+in Æschylus;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_476" href="#Footnote_476" class="fnanchor">[476]</a> and the sacred snake kept on the Acropolis was interpreted as
+Erichthonios. In Arcadia the horse-headed figure of Demeter in the temple of
+Phigalia was still to be seen by Pausanias; the Arcadian Artemis-Callisto
+appears as a she-bear, but in Athens too the priestesses of Artemis Brauronia
+were called “<i>arktoi</i>” (bears).&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_477" href="#Footnote_477" class="fnanchor">[477]</a> Dionysus—now a bull, now a stag—and Pan
+retained a certain beast-element to the end. Psyche (like the Egyptian corporal-soul,
+<i>bai</i>) is the soul-bird. And upon all this supervened the innumerable semi-animal
+figures like sirens and centaurs that completely fill up the Early Classical
+nature-picture.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_478" href="#Footnote_478" class="fnanchor">[478]</a></p>
+
+<p>But what are the features, now, of the primitive religion of Merovingian
+times that foreshadow the mighty uprising of the Gothic that was at hand?
+That both are <em>ostensibly</em> the same religion, Christianity, proves nothing when
+we consider the entire difference in their deeps. For (we must be quite clear in
+our own mind on this) the primitive character of a religion does not lie in its
+stock of doctrines and usages, but in the specific spirituality of the mankind
+that adopts them and feels, speaks, and thinks with them. The student has to
+familiarize himself with the fact that primitive Christianity (more exactly, the
+early Christianity of the Western Church) has twice subsequently become the
+expression-vehicle of a primitive piety, and therefore itself a primitive religion—namely,
+in the Celtic-Germanic West between 500 and 900, and in Russia up
+to this day. Now, how did the world mirror itself to these “converted”
+minds? Leaving out of account some few clerics of, say, Byzantine education,
+what did one actually think and imagine about these ceremonies and dogmas.
+Bishop Gregory of Tours, who, we must remember, represents the highest
+intellectual outlook of his generation, once lauded the powder rubbed from a
+saint’s tombstone in these words: “O divine purgative, superior to all doctors’
+recipes, which cleanses the belly like scammony and washes away all stains
+from our conscience!” For him the death of Jesus was a crime which filled him
+with indignation, but no more; the Resurrection, on the contrary, which
+hovered before him vaguely, he felt deep down as an athletic <i lang="fr">tour de force</i> that
+stamped the Messiah as the grand wizard and so legitimated him as the true
+Saviour. Of any mystic meaning in the story of the Passion he has not an
+inkling.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_479" href="#Footnote_479" class="fnanchor">[479]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p278">[278]</span></p>
+
+<p>In Russia the conclusions of the “Synod of a Hundred Chapters,” of 1551,
+evidence a wholly primitive order of belief. Shaving of the beard and wrong
+handling of the cross both figure here as deadly sins—they were affronts to
+the dæmons. The “Synod of Antichrist,” of 1667, led to the vast secession of
+the Raskol movement, because thenceforward the sign of the cross was to be
+made with three fingers instead of two, and the name “Jesus” was to be pronounced
+“Yissus” instead of “Issus”—whereby, for the strict believer, the
+power of this magic over the dæmons would be lost.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_480" href="#Footnote_480" class="fnanchor">[480]</a> But this effect of fear is,
+after all, not the only one nor even the most potent. Why is it that the Merovingian
+period shows not the slightest trace of that glowing inwardness and
+longing to sink into the metaphysical that suffuses the Magian seed-time of
+Apocalyptic and the closely analogous period of the Holy Synod (1721–1917) in
+Russia? What was it that from Peter the Great’s time on led all those martyr-sects
+of the Raskolniki to celibacy, poverty, pilgrimage, self-mutilation, and
+asceticism in its most fearful forms, and in the seventeenth century had driven
+thousands, in religious frenzy, to throw themselves <i lang="fr">en masse</i> into the flames?
+The doctrines of the Chlysti, with their “Russian Christs” (of whom seven
+are counted so far); the Dukhobors with their Book of Life, which they use as
+their Bible and hold to contain psalms of Jesus orally transmitted; the Skoptsi
+with their ghastly mutilation-precepts—manifestations, one and all, of something
+without which Tolstoi, Nihilism, and the political revolutions are incomprehensible&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_481" href="#Footnote_481" class="fnanchor">[481]</a>—how
+is it that in comparison the Frankish period seems so
+dull and shallow? Is it that only Aramæans and Russians possess religious
+genius—and, if so, what have we to expect of the Russia that is to come, now
+that (just in the decisive centuries) the obstacle of scholarly orthodoxy has
+been destroyed?</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_8">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>Primitive religions have something homeless about them, like the clouds
+and the wind. The mass-souls of the proto-peoples have accidentally and
+fugitively condensed into <em>one</em> being, and accidental, therefore, is and remains
+the “where”—which is an “anywhere”—of the linkages of waking-consciousness
+arising from the fear and defensiveness that spread over them.
+Whether they stay or move on, whether they alter or not, is immaterial so far
+as concerns their inward significance.</p>
+
+<p>From life of this order the high Cultures are separated by a deep soil-boundness.
+Here there is a mother-landscape behind all expression-forms, and just
+as the State, as temple and pyramid and cathedral, <em>must</em> fulfil their history <em>there</em>
+where their idea originated, so too the great religion of every Springtime is
+<span class="pagenum" id="p279">[279]</span>bound by all the roots of its being to the land over which its world-image has
+risen. Sacral practices and dogmas may be carried far and wide, but their
+inner evolution stays spellbound in the place of their birth. It is simply an
+impossibility that the slightest trace of evolution of Classical city-cults should
+be found in Gaul, or a dogmatic advance of Faustian Christianity in America.
+Whatever disconnects itself from the land becomes rigid and hard.</p>
+
+<p>It begins, in every case, like a great cry. The dull confusedness of terror and
+defence suddenly passes into a pure awakening of inwardness that blossoms up,
+wholly plantwise, from mother earth, and sees and comprehends the depth of
+the light-world with <em>one</em> outlook. Wherever introspectiveness exists as a living
+sense, this change is felt and welcomed as an inward rebirth. In this moment—never
+earlier, and never (at least with the same deep intensity) later—it
+traverses the chosen spirits of the time like a grand light, which dissolves all
+fear in blissful love and lets the invisible appear, all suddenly, in a metaphysical
+radiance.</p>
+
+<p>Every Culture actualizes here its prime symbol. Each has its own sort
+of love—we may call it heavenly or metaphysical as we choose—with
+which it contemplates, comprehends, and takes into itself its godhead, and
+which remains to every other Culture inaccessible or unmeaning. Whether the
+world be something set under a domed light-cavern, as it was for Jesus and his
+companions, or just a vanishingly small bit of a star-filled infinity, as Giordano
+Bruno felt it; whether the Orphics take their bodily god into themselves, or
+the spirit of Plotinus, soaring in ecstasy, fuses in henosis with the spirit of God,
+or St. Bernard in his “mystic union” becomes one with the operation of infinite
+deity—the deep urge of the soul is governed always by the prime symbol of the
+particular Culture and of no other.</p>
+
+<p>In the Vth Dynasty of Egypt (2680–2540), which followed that of the great
+pyramid-builders, the cult of the Horus-falcon, whose <i>ka</i> dwelt in the reigning
+monarch, faded. The old local cults and even the profound Thot religion
+of Hermopolis fell into the background. The sun-religion of Re appears.
+Out from his palace westward every king erects a Re-sanctuary by his tomb-temple,
+the latter a symbol of a life directional from birth to sarcophagus-chamber,
+the former a symbol of grand and eternal nature. Time and Space,
+being and waking-being, Destiny and sacred Causality are set face to face in
+this mighty twin-creation as in no other architecture in the world. To both a
+covered way leads up; that to the Re is accompanied by reliefs figuring the
+power of the sun-god over the plant and animal worlds and the changings of
+seasons. No god-image, no temple, but only an altar of alabaster adorns the
+mighty terrace on which at day-break, high above the land, the Pharaoh advances
+out of the darkness to greet the great god who is rising up in the East.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_482" href="#Footnote_482" class="fnanchor">[482]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p280">[280]</span></p>
+
+<p>This youthful inwardness proceeds always out of a townless country-side,
+out of villages, hovels, sanctuaries, solitary cloisters, and hermitages. Here is
+formed the community of high awareness, of the spiritual elect, which inwardly
+is separated by a whole world from the great being-currents of the
+heroic and the knightly. The two prime estates, priesthood and nobility—contemplation
+in the cathedral and deeds before the castles, askesis and <i>Minne</i>,
+ecstasy and high-bred custom—begin their special histories from this point.
+Though the Caliph was also worldly ruler of the faithful, though the Pharaoh
+sacrificed in both holy places, though the German King built his family vault
+under the cathedral, nothing gets rid of the abyssal opposition of Time and Space
+that is reflected in the contrast of these two social orders. Religious history and
+political history, the histories of truths and facts, stand opposed and irreconcilable.
+Their opposition begins in cathedral and castle, it propagates itself in
+the ever-growing towns as the opposition of wisdom and business, and in the
+last stages of historical capacity it closes as a wrestle of intellect and power.</p>
+
+<p>But both these movements take place on the <em>heights</em> of humanity. Peasantdom
+remains historyless under it all, comprehending politics as little as it
+understands dogmatics. Out of the strong young religion of saintly groups,
+scholasticism and mysticism develop in the early towns; reformation, philosophy,
+and worldly learning in the increasing tumult of streets and squares;
+enlightenment and irreligion in the stone masses of the late megalopolis. The
+beliefs of the peasant outside remain “eternal” and always the same. The
+Egyptian hind understood nothing of this Re. He heard the name, but while a
+grand chapter of religious history was passing over his head in the cities, he
+went on worshipping the old Thinite beast-gods, until with the XXVIth
+Dynasty and its fellah-religion they regained supremacy. The Italian peasant
+prayed in Augustus’s time just as he had done long before Homer and as he does
+to-day. Names and dogmas of big religions, blossoming and dying in turn,
+have penetrated to him from the towns and have altered the sounds of his words—but
+the meaning remains ever the same. The French peasant lives still in the
+Merovingian Age. Freya or Mary, Druids or Dominicans, Rome or Geneva—nothing
+touches the innermost kernel of his beliefs.</p>
+
+<p>But even in the towns one stratum hangs back, historically, relatively to
+another. Over the primitive religion of the country-side there is another
+popular religion, that of the small people in the underground of the towns and
+in the provinces. The higher a Culture rises—Middle Kingdom, Brahman
+period, Pre-Socratics, Pre-Confucians, Baroque—the narrower becomes the
+circle of those who possess the final truths of their time as reality and not as
+mere name and sound. How many of those who lived with Socrates, Augustine,
+and Pascal understood them? In religion as otherwise the human pyramid rises
+with increasing sharpness, till at the end of the Culture it is complete—thereafter,
+bit by bit, to crumble.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p281">[281]</span></p>
+
+<p>About 3000 in Egypt and Babylon two great religions began their life-courses.
+In Egypt the “reformation” period at the end of the Old Kingdom
+saw solar monotheism firmly founded as the religion of priests and educated
+persons. All other gods and goddesses—whom the peasantry and the humble
+people continued to worship in their former meaning—are now only incarnations
+or servants of the one Re. Even the particular religion of Hermopolis,
+with its cosmology, was adapted to the grand system, and a theological
+negotiation brought even the Ptah of Memphis into harmony with dogma
+as an abstract prime-principle of creation.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_483" href="#Footnote_483" class="fnanchor">[483]</a> Exactly as in the times of Justinian
+and Charles V, the city-spirit asserted mastery over the soul of the land; the
+formative power of the Springtime had come to an end; the dogma was essentially
+complete, and its subsequent treatment by rational processes took
+down more of the structure than it improved. Philosophy began. In respect
+of dogma, the Middle Kingdom was as unimportant as the Baroque.</p>
+
+<p>From 1500 three new religious histories begin—first the Vedic in the
+Punjab, then the Early Chinese in the Hwang-ho, and lastly the Classical on
+the north of the Ægean Sea. Distinctly as the Classical man’s world-picture
+and his prime symbol of the unit body is presented to us, it is difficult even to
+guess the details of the great Early Classical religion. For this lacuna we have
+to thank the Homeric poems, which hinder rather than help us in comprehending
+it. The new notion of godhead that was the special ideal of this Culture
+is the human-formed body in the light, the hero as mediator between man and
+god—so much, at any rate, the Iliad evidences. This body might be light-transfigured
+by Apollo or disjected to the winds by Dionysus, but in every case
+it was the basic form of Being. The σῶμα as ideal of the extended, the cosmos
+as sum of these unit bodies, “Being” and “the one” as the extended-in-itself
+and “Logos”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_484" href="#Footnote_484" class="fnanchor">[484]</a> as the order thereof in the light—all this came up before the
+eyes of priest-men, grandly visible and having the full force of a new religion.</p>
+
+<p>But the Homeric poetry is purely aristocratic. Of the two worlds—that of
+the noble and that of the priest, that of Taboo and that of Totem, that of
+heroism and that of sanctity—only the one is here living. It not only does
+not understand, but actually despises, the other. As in the Edda, so in Homer,
+it is the greatest glory of an immortal to know the way and code of nobility.
+The thinkers of the Classical Baroque, from Xenophanes to Plato, regarded
+these scenes of god-life as impudent and trivial, and they were right; they felt
+exactly as the theology and philosophy of the later West felt about the
+Germanic hero-sagas and even about Gottfried of Strassburg, Wolfram, and
+Walther. If the Homeric epics did not vanish as the hero-songs collected by
+Charlemagne vanished, it was only because there was no fully formed Classical
+<span class="pagenum" id="p282">[282]</span>priesthood, with the result that the Classical cities, when they arose, were
+intellectually dominated by a knightly and not a religious literature. The
+original doctrines of this religion, which out of opposition to Homer linked
+themselves with the (probably) still older name of Orpheus, were never written
+down.</p>
+
+<p>All the same, they existed. Who knows what and how much is hidden behind
+the figures of Calchas and Tiresias? A mighty upheaval there must have
+been at the beginning of this Culture, as at that of others—an upheaval extending
+from the Ægean Sea as far as Etruria—but the Iliad shows as few signs of it
+as the lays of the Nibelungs and of Roland show of the inwardness and mysticism
+of Joachim of Floris, St. Francis, and the Crusades, or of the inner fire of that
+<cite lang="la">Dies Iræ</cite> of Thomas of Celano, which would probably have excited mirth at a
+thirteenth-century court of love. Great personalities there must have been to
+give a mystical-metaphysical form to the new world-outlook, but we know
+nothing of them and it is only the gay, bright, easy side of it that passed into
+the song of knightly halls. Was the “Trojan War” a feud, or was it also a
+Crusade? What is the meaning of Helen? Even the Fall of Jerusalem has been
+looked at from a worldly point of view as well as from a spiritual.</p>
+
+<p>In the nobles’ poetry of Homer, Dionysus and Demeter, as priests’ gods, are
+unhonoured.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_485" href="#Footnote_485" class="fnanchor">[485]</a> But even in Hesiod, the herdsman of Ascra, the enthusiast-searcher
+inspired by his folk-beliefs, the ideas of the great early time are not to
+be found pure, any more than in Jakob Böhme the cobbler.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_486" href="#Footnote_486" class="fnanchor">[486]</a> That is the second
+difficulty. <em>The great early religions, too, were the possession of a class</em>, and neither
+accessible to nor understandable by the generality; the mysticism of earliest
+Gothic, too, was confined to small elect circles, sealed by Latin and the difficulty
+of its concepts and figures, and neither nobility nor peasantry had any
+distinct idea of its existence. And excavation, therefore, important as it is in
+respect of the Classical country-faiths, can tell us as little about the Early
+Classical <em>religion</em> as a village church can tell us about Abelard or Bonaventura.</p>
+
+<p>But Æschylus and Pindar, at any rate, were under the spell of a great priestly
+tradition, and before them there were the Pythagoreans, who made the Demeter-cult
+their centre (thereby indicating where the kernel of that mythology is to
+be sought), and earlier still were the Eleusinian Mysteries and the Orphic
+reformation of the seventh century; and, finally, there are the fragments of
+Pherecydes and Epimenides, who were not the first <em>but the last</em> dogmatists of a
+theology in reality ancient. The idea that impiety was a heritable sin, visited
+upon the children and the children’s children, was known to Hesiod and Solon,
+as well as the doctrine (Apollinian also) of “Hybris.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_487" href="#Footnote_487" class="fnanchor">[487]</a> Plato, however, as an
+<span class="pagenum" id="p283">[283]</span>Orphic opponent of the Homeric conception of life, sets forth very ancient
+doctrines of hell and the judgment of the dead in his <cite>Phædo</cite>. We know the
+tremendous formula of Orphism, the Nay of the mysteries that answered the
+Yea of the agon, which arose, certainly by 1100 at latest, as a protest of Waking-Consciousness
+against Being—σῶμα σῆμα, that splendid Classical body a grave!
+Here man is no longer <em>feeling</em> himself as a thing of breeding, strength, and
+movement; he <em>knows</em> himself and is terrified by what he knows. Here begins
+the Classical askesis, which by strictest rites and expiations, even by voluntary
+suicide, seeks deliverance from this Euclidean body-being. It is an entirely
+erroneous interpretation of the Pre-Socratics to suppose that it was from the
+view-point of enlightenment that they spoke against Homer. It was as <em>ascetics</em>
+that they did so. These “contemporaries” of Descartes and Leibniz were
+brought up in the strict traditions of the old great Orphism, which were as
+faithfully preserved in the almost claustral meditation-schools—old and famous
+holy places—as Gothic Scholasticism was treasured in the wholly intellectual
+universities of the Baroque. From the self-immolation of Empedocles the line
+runs straight forward to the suicide of the Roman Stoic, and straight back to
+“Orpheus.”</p>
+
+<p>Out of these last surviving traces, however, an outline of the Early Classical
+religion emerges bright and distinct. Just as all Gothic inwardness directed
+itself upon Mary, Queen of Heaven and Virgin and Mother, so in that moment
+of the Classical World there arose a garland of myths, images, and figures
+around Demeter, the bearing mother, around Gaia and Persephone, and also
+Dionysus the begetter, chthonian&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_488" href="#Footnote_488" class="fnanchor">[488]</a> and phallic cults, festivals and mysteries of
+birth and death. All this, too, was characteristically Classical, conceived under
+the aspect of present corporeality. The Apollinian religion venerated body,
+the Orphic rejected it, that of Demeter celebrated the moments of fertilization
+and birth, in which body acquired being. There was a mysticism that reverently
+honoured the secret of life, in doctrine, symbol, and mime, but side by side with
+it there was orgiasm too, for the squandering of the body is as deeply and
+closely akin to asceticism as sacred prostitution is to celibacy—both, all, are
+negations of time. It is the reverse of the Apollinian “halt!” that checks on
+the threshold of Hybris; detachment is not kept, but flung away. He who has
+experienced these things in his soul has “from being a mortal become a god.”
+In those days there must have been great saints and seers who towered as far
+above the figures of Heraclitus and Empedocles as the latter above the itinerant
+teachers of Cynicism and Stoicism—things of this order do not happen namelessly
+and impersonally. As the songs of Achilles and Odysseus were dying
+down everywhere, a grand, strict doctrine arose at the famous old cult-places,
+a mysticism and scholasticism with developed educational methods and a secret
+<span class="pagenum" id="p284">[284]</span>oral tradition, as in India. But all that is buried, and the relics of the later
+times barely suffice to prove that it once existed.</p>
+
+<p>By putting the knightly poetry and folk-cults quite aside, then, we can
+even now determine something more of this (<em>the</em>) Classical religion. But in doing
+so there is a third pitfall to be avoided—the opposing of Greek religion to
+Roman religion. For in reality there was no such opposition.</p>
+
+<p>Rome is only <em>one</em> of innumerable city-states that arose during the great
+epoch of colonization. It was built by Etruscans. From the religious point
+of view it was re-created under the Etruscan dynasty of the sixth century, and
+it is possible indeed that the Capitoline group of deities, Jupiter, Juno, Minerva—which
+at that time replaced the ancient trinity, Jupiter, Mars, Quirinus,
+of the “Numa” religion—was in some way connected with the family cult of the
+Tarquins, in which case Minerva, as goddess of the city, is unmistakably a copy
+of Athene Polias.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_489" href="#Footnote_489" class="fnanchor">[489]</a> The cults of this single city are properly comparable only with
+those of <em>individual</em> Greek-speaking cities of the same degree of maturity, say
+Sparta or Thebes, which were in nowise more colourful. The little that in these
+latter discloses itself as generally Hellenic will also prove to be generally
+Italian. And as for the claim that the “Roman” religion is distinguished from
+that of the Greek city-states by the absence of myth—what is the basis of our
+knowledge on the point? We should know nothing at all of the great god-sagas
+of the Springtime if we had only the festival-calendar and the public cults of
+the Greek city-states to go upon, just as we should learn nothing of Jesus’s
+piety from the proceedings of the Council of Ephesus or of that of St. Francis
+from a church constitution of the Reformation. Menelaus and Helen were
+for the Laconian state-cult tree-deities and nothing more. The Classical myth
+derives from a period when the Poleis with their festivals and sacral constitutions
+were not yet in existence, when there was not only no Rome, but no
+Athens. With the religious duties and notions of the cities—which were
+eminently rational—it has no connexion at all. Indeed, myth and cult are
+even less in touch with one another in the Classical Culture than in others.
+The myth, moreover, is in no way a creation of the Hellenic culture-field as a
+whole—it is not “Greek”—but originated (like the stories of Jesus’s childhood
+and the Grail legend) in this and that group, quite local, under pressure
+of deep inward stirrings. For instance, the idea of Olympus arose in Thessaly
+and thence, as a common property of <em>all</em> educated persons, spread out to Cyprus
+and to Etruria, thus, of course, involving Rome. Etruscan painting presupposes
+it as a thing of common knowledge, and therefore the Tarquins and their
+<span class="pagenum" id="p285">[285]</span>court must have been familiar with it. We may attach any implications we
+please to “belief” (whatever that may mean) in this myth; the point is that
+they will be as valid for Romans of the period of the Kings as for the inhabitants
+of Tegea or Corcyra.</p>
+
+<p>That the pictures of Greek and Roman mythology that modern research has
+developed are quite different from this is the result not of the facts, but of the
+<em>methods</em>. In the case of Rome (Mommsen) the festal calendar and the State
+cults, in that of Greece the poetic literature, were taken as the starting-points.
+Apply the “Latin” method which has led up to Wissowa’s picture to the Greek
+cities, and the result is a wholly similar picture, as, for example, in Nilsson’s
+<cite lang="de">Griechische Festen</cite>.</p>
+
+<p>When this is taken into consideration, the Classical religion is seen to be a
+whole possessing an inner unity. The grand god-legends of the eleventh century,
+which have the dew of Spring upon them, and in their tragic holiness
+remind us of Gethsemane, Balder’s death, and Francis, are the purest essence of
+“theoria,” contemplation, a world-picture before the inner eye, and born of the
+common inward awakening of a group of chosen souls from the world of
+chivalry.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_490" href="#Footnote_490" class="fnanchor">[490]</a> But the much later city-religions are wholly <em>technique</em>, formal worship,
+and as such represent only one side (and a different side) of piety. They
+are as far from the great myth as they are from the folk-belief. They are concerned
+neither with metaphysic nor with ethic, but only with the fulfilment of
+sacral acts. And, finally, the choice of cults by the several cities very often
+originated, not, like the myth, from a single world-view, but from the accidental
+ancestor- and family-cults of great houses, which (precisely as in the Gothic)
+made their sacred figures the tutelary deities of the city and at the same time
+reserved to themselves the rights of celebrating and worshipping them. In
+Rome, for example, the Lupercalia in honour of the field-god Faunus were a
+privilege of the Quinctii and Fabii.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese religion, of which the great “Gothic” period lies between
+1300 and 1100 and covers the rise of the Chóu dynasty, must be treated with
+extreme care. In presence of the superficial profundity and pedantic enthusiasm
+of Chinese thinkers of the Confucius and Lao-tse type—who were all born
+in the <i lang="fr">ancien régime</i> period of their state-world—it seems very hazardous to
+try to determine anything at all as to high mysticism and grand legends in the
+beginning. Nevertheless, such a mysticism and such legends must once have
+existed. But it is not from these over-rationalized philosophies of the great
+cities that we shall learn anything about them—as little as Homer can give
+us in the Classical parallel, though for another reason. What should we know
+<span class="pagenum" id="p286">[286]</span>about Gothic piety if all its works had undergone the censorship of Puritans
+and Retioralists like Locke, Rousseau, and Wolff! And yet we treat the Confucian
+<em>close</em> of Chinese inwardness as its beginning—if, indeed, we do not
+go farther and describe the syncretism of Han times as “the” religion of China.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_491" href="#Footnote_491" class="fnanchor">[491]</a></p>
+
+<p>We know nowadays that, contrary to the usual assumption, there was
+a powerful old-Chinese priesthood.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_492" href="#Footnote_492" class="fnanchor">[492]</a> We know that in the text of the Shu-Ching,
+relics of the ancient hero-sagas and god-myths were worked over
+rationalistically, and were thus able to survive, and similarly the Hou-li,
+Ngi-li, and Shi-King&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_493" href="#Footnote_493" class="fnanchor">[493]</a> would still reveal a good deal more if only they were
+attacked with the conviction that there was in them something far deeper
+than Confucius and his like were capable of comprehending. We hear of
+chthonian and phallic cults in early Chóu times; of orgiastic rites in which
+the service of the gods was accompanied by ecstatic mass-dances; of mimic
+representations and dialogues between god and priestess, out of which probably
+(as in Greece) the Chinese drama evolved.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_494" href="#Footnote_494" class="fnanchor">[494]</a> And we obtain an inkling finally
+of why the luxuriant growth of early Chinese god-figures and myths was necessarily
+swallowed up in an emperor-mythology. For not only all saga-emperors,
+but also most of the figures of the Hia and Shang dynasties before 1400 are—all
+dates and chronicles notwithstanding—nothing but nature transformed
+into history. The origins of such a process lie deep in the possibilities of every
+young Culture.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_495" href="#Footnote_495" class="fnanchor">[495]</a> Ancestor-worship ever seeks to gain power over the nature-dæmons.
+All Homeric heroes, and Minos and Theseus and Romulus, are gods
+become kings. In the <cite>Heliand</cite>,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_496" href="#Footnote_496" class="fnanchor">[496]</a> Christ is about to become so. Mary is the
+crowned Queen of Heaven. It is the supreme (and perfectly unconscious)
+mode which enables men of breeding to venerate something—that is, for
+them, what is great must have breeding, race, must be mighty and lordly, the
+ancestor of whole families. A strong priesthood is able to make short work of
+this mythology of Time, but it won through partially in the Classical and
+completely in China—exactly in proportion to the disappearance of the
+priestly element. The old gods are now emperors, princes, ministers, and
+retainers; natural events have become acts of rulers, and onsets of peoples
+social enterprises. Nothing could have suited the Confucians better. Here
+was a myth which could absorb social-ethical tendencies to an indefinite extent,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p287">[287]</span>and all that was necessary was to expunge the traces of the original nature-myth.</p>
+
+<p>To the Chinese waking-consciousness heaven and earth were halves of the
+macrocosm, without opposition, each a mirror-image of the other. In this
+picture there was neither Magian dualism nor Faustian unity of active force.
+Becoming appears in the unconstrained reciprocal working of two principles,
+the <i>yang</i> and the <i>yin</i>, which were conceived rather as periodic than as polar.
+Accordingly, there are two souls in man, the <i>kwei</i> which corresponded with the
+<i>yin</i>, the earthly, the dark, the cold, and disintegrated with the body; and
+the <i>sen</i>, which is higher, light, and permanent.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_497" href="#Footnote_497" class="fnanchor">[497]</a> But, further, there are innumerable
+multitudes of souls of both kinds outside man. Troops of spirits
+fill the air and the water and the earth—all is peopled and moved by <i>kweis</i> and
+<i>sens</i>. The life of nature and that of man are in reality made out of the play of
+such units. Wisdom, will, force, and virtue depend on their relationship.
+Asceticism and orgiasm; the knightly custom of <i>hiao</i>, which requires the noble
+to revenge an impiety towards an ancestor even after centuries, and commands
+him never to survive defeat;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_498" href="#Footnote_498" class="fnanchor">[498]</a> and the reasoning moral of the <i>yen</i>, which,
+according to the judgment of rationalism, followed from knowledge—all
+proceed from conceptions of the forces and possibilities of the <i>kwei</i> and the <i>sen</i>.</p>
+
+<p>All this is concentrated in the basic word “<i>tao</i>.” The conflict between the
+<i>yang</i> and the <i>yin</i> in man is the <i>tao</i> of his life; the warp and woof of the spirit-swarms
+outside him are the <i>tao</i> of Nature. The world possesses <i>tao</i> inasmuch as
+it possesses beat, rhythm, and periodicity. It possesses <i>li</i>, tension, inasmuch as
+man knows it and abstracts from it fixed relationships for future use. Time,
+Destiny, Direction, Race, History—all this, contemplated with the great
+world-embracing vision of the early Chóu times, lies in this one word. The
+path of the Pharaoh through the dark alley to his shrine is related to it, and so
+is the Faustian passion of the third dimension, but <i>tao</i> is nevertheless far removed
+from any idea of the technical conquest of Nature. The Chinese park
+avoids energetic perspective. It lays horizon behind horizon and, instead of
+pointing to a goal, tempts to wander. The Chinese “cathedral” of the early
+time, the Pi-Yung, with its paths that lead through gates and thickets, stairs
+and bridges and courts, has never the inexorable march of Egypt or the drive
+into depth of the Gothic.</p>
+
+<p>When Alexander appeared on the Indus, the piety of these three Cultures—Chinese,
+Indian, Classical—had long been moulded into the historyless forms
+of a broad Taoism, Buddhism, and Stoicism. But it was not long before the
+group of Magian religions arose in the region intermediate between the Classical
+and the Indian field, and it must have been at about the same time that the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p288">[288]</span>religious history of the Maya and Inca, now hopelessly lost to us, began.
+A thousand years later, when here also all was inwardly fulfilled and done with,
+there appeared on the unpromising soil of France, sudden and swiftly mounting,
+Germanic-Catholic Christianity. It was in this case as in every other;
+whether the whole stock of names and practices came from the East, or whether
+thousands of particular details were derived from primeval Germanic and Celtic
+feelings, the Gothic religion is something so new and unheard-of, something
+of which the final depths are so completely incomprehensible by anyone outside
+its faith, that to contrive linkages for them on the historical surface is meaningless
+jugglery.</p>
+
+<p>The mythic world that thereupon formed itself around this young soul, an
+integer of force, will, and direction seen under the symbol of Infinity, a stupendous
+action-into-distance, chasms of terror and of bliss suddenly opening up—it
+was all, for the elect of this early religiousness, something so entirely natural
+that they could not even detach themselves sufficiently to “know” it as a unit.
+They lived in it. To us, on the contrary, who are separated from these ancestors
+by thirty generations, this world seems so alien and overpowering that we always
+seek to grasp it in detail, and so misunderstand its wholeness and undividedness.</p>
+
+<p>The father-godhead men felt as Force itself, eternal, grand, and ever-present
+activity, sacred causality, which could scarcely assume any form comprehensible
+by human eyes. But the whole longing of the young breed, the whole desire
+of this strongly coursing blood, to bow itself in humility before the <em>meaning of
+the blood</em> found its expression in the figure of the Virgin and Mother Mary, whose
+crowning in the heavens was one of the earliest motives of the Gothic art.
+She is a light-figure, in white, blue, and gold, surrounded by the heavenly hosts.
+She leans over the new-born Child; she fells the sword in her heart; she stands
+at the foot of the cross; she holds the corpse of the dead Son. From the turn
+of the tenth century on, Petrus Damiani and Bernard of Clairvaux developed
+her cult; there arose the Ave Maria and the angelic greeting and later, among the
+Dominicans, the crown of roses. Countless legends gathered round her figure.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_499" href="#Footnote_499" class="fnanchor">[499]</a>
+She is the guardian of the Church’s store of Grace, the Great Intercessor.
+Among the Franciscans arose the festival of the Visitation, amongst the English
+Benedictines (even before 1100) that of the Immaculate Conception, which
+elevated her completely above mortal humanity into the world of light.</p>
+
+<p>But this world of purity, light, and utter beauty of soul would have been
+unimaginable without the counter-idea, inseparable from it, an idea that
+constitutes one of the maxima of Gothic, one of its unfathomable creations—one
+that the present day forgets, and <em>deliberately</em> forgets. While she there sits
+enthroned, smiling in her beauty and tenderness, there lies in the background
+another world that throughout nature and throughout mankind weaves and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p289">[289]</span>breeds ill, pierces, destroys, seduces—namely, the realm of the Devil. It
+penetrates the whole of Creation, it lies ambushed everywhere. All around is an
+army of goblins, night-spirits, witches, werewolves, all in human shape.
+No man knows whether or not his neighbour has signed himself away to the
+Evil One. No one can say of an unfolding child that it is not already a devil’s
+temptress. An appalling fear, such as is perhaps only paralleled in the early
+spring of Egypt, weighs upon man. Every moment he may stumble into the
+abyss. There were black magic, and devils’ masses and witches’ sabbaths,
+night feasts on mountain-tops, magic draughts and charm-formulæ. The
+Prince of Hell, with his relatives—mother and grandmother, for as his very
+existence denies and scorns the sacrament of marriage, he may not have wife or
+child—his fallen angels and his uncanny henchmen, is one of the most
+tremendous creations in all religious history. The Germanic Loki is hardly
+more than a preliminary hint of him. Their grotesque figures, with horns,
+claws, and horses’ hoofs, were already fully formed in the mystery plays of
+the eleventh century; everywhere the artist’s fancy abounded in them, and,
+right up to Dürer and Grünewald, Gothic painting is unthinkable without
+them. The Devil is sly, malignant, malicious, but yet in the end the powers
+of light dupe him. He and his brood, bad-tempered, coarse, fiendishly inventive,
+are of a monstrous imaginativeness, incarnations of hellish laughter opposed
+to the illumined smile of the Queen of Heaven, but incarnations, too, of Faustian
+world-humour&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_500" href="#Footnote_500" class="fnanchor">[500]</a> opposed to the panic of the sinner’s contrition.</p>
+
+<p>It is not possible to exaggerate either the grandeur of this forceful, insistent
+picture or the depth of sincerity with which it was believed in. The Mary-myths
+and the Devil-myth formed themselves side by side, neither possible
+without the other. Disbelief in either of them was deadly sin. There was a
+Mary-cult of prayer, and a Devil-cult of spells and exorcisms. Man walked
+continuously on the thin crust of the bottomless pit. Life in this world is a
+ceaseless and desperate contest with the Devil, into which every individual
+plunges as a member of the Church Militant, to do battle for himself and to
+win his knight’s spurs. The Church Triumphant of angels and saints in their
+glory looks down from on high, and heavenly Grace is the warrior’s shield in
+the battle. Mary is the protectress to whose bosom he can fly to be comforted,
+and the high lady who awards the prizes of valour. Both worlds have their
+legends, their art, their scholasticism, and their mysticism—for the Devil,
+too, can work miracles. Characteristic of this alone among the religious
+Springtimes is the symbolism of <em>colour</em>—to the Madonna belong white and blue,
+to the Devil black, sulphur-yellow, and red. The saints and angels float in the
+æther, but the devils leap and crouch and the witches rustle through the night.
+It is the two together, light and night, which fill Gothic art with its indescribable
+<span class="pagenum" id="p290">[290]</span>inwardness—that, and not any “artistic” fancifulness. Every man
+knew the world to be peopled with angel and devil troops. The light-encircled
+angels of Fra Angelico and the early Rhenish masters, and the grimacing things
+on the portals of the great cathedrals, <em>really</em> filled the air. Men saw them, felt
+their presence everywhere. To-day we simply no longer know what a myth is;
+for it is no mere æsthetically pleasing mode of representing something to oneself,
+but a piece of the most lively actuality that mines every corner of the waking-consciousness
+and shakes the innermost structure of being. These creatures were
+about one all the time. They were glimpsed without being seen. They were
+believed in with a faith that felt the very thought of proof as a desecration.
+What we call myth nowadays, our littérateur’s and connoisseur’s taste for
+Gothic colour, is nothing but Alexandrinism. In the old days men did not
+“enjoy” it—behind it stood Death.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_501" href="#Footnote_501" class="fnanchor">[501]</a></p>
+
+<p>For the Devil gained possession of human souls and seduced them into
+heresy, lechery, and black arts. It was war that was waged against him on
+earth,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_502" href="#Footnote_502" class="fnanchor">[502]</a> and waged with fire and sword upon those who had given themselves
+up to him. It is easy enough for us to-day to think ourselves out of such notions,
+but if we eliminate this appalling reality from Gothic, all that remains is mere
+romanticism. It was not only the love-glowing hymns to Mary, but the cries
+of countless pyres as well that rose up to heaven. Hard by the Cathedral were
+the gallows and the wheel. Every man lived in those days in the consciousness
+of an immense danger, and it was hell, not the hangman, that he feared. Unnumbered
+thousands of witches genuinely imagined themselves to be so; they
+denounced themselves, prayed for absolution, and in pure love of truth confessed
+their night rides and bargains with the Evil One. Inquisitors, in tears and compassion
+for the fallen wretches, doomed them to the rack in order to save their
+souls. That is the Gothic myth, out of which came the cathedral, the crusader,
+the deep and spiritual painting, the mysticism. In its shadow flowered that
+profound Gothic blissfulness of which to-day we cannot even form an idea.</p>
+
+<p>In Carolingian times, all this was still strange and far. Charlemagne in the
+first Saxon Capitulary (787) put a ban on the ancient Germanic belief in werewolves
+and night-gangers (<i lang="la">strigæ</i>), and as late as 1120 it was condemned as an
+error in the decree of Burkard of Worms. But twenty years later it was only in
+a dilute form that the anathema reappeared in the <cite lang="la">Decretum Gratiani</cite>. Cæsarius
+of Heisterbach, already, was familiar with the whole devil-legend and in the
+<cite lang="la">Legenda Aurea</cite> it is just as actual and as effective as the Mary-legends. In 1233,
+when the Cathedrals of Mainz and Speyer were being vaulted, appeared the bull
+<cite lang="la">Vox in Rama</cite>, by which the belief in Devil and witch was made canonical.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p291">[291]</span>St. Francis’s “Hymn to the Sun” had not long been written, and the Franciscans
+were kneeling in intimate prayer before Mary and spreading her cult afar, when
+the Dominicans armed themselves for battle with the Devil by setting up the
+Inquisition. Heavenly love found its focus in the Mary-image, and <i lang="la">eo ipso</i>
+earthly love became akin to the Devil. Woman is Sin—so the great ascetics
+felt, as their fellows of the Classical, of China, and of India had felt. The
+Devil rules only through woman. The witch is the propagator of deadly sin.
+It was Thomas Aquinas who evolved the repulsive theory of Incubus and
+Succuba. Inward mystics like Bonaventura, Albertus Magnus, Duns Scotus,
+developed a full metaphysic of the devilish.</p>
+
+<p>The Renaissance had ever the strong faith of the Gothic at the back of its
+world-outlook. When Vasari eulogized Cimabue and Giotto for returning to
+Nature as their teacher, it was this Gothic nature that he had in mind, a nature
+influenced in every nook by the encircling troops of angels and devils that stood
+there, ever threatening, in the light. “Imitation” of Nature meant imitation
+of its soul, not of its surface. Let us be rid at last of the fable of a renewal of
+Classical “Antiquity.” Renaissance, <i lang="it">Rinascita</i>, meant then the Gothic uplift
+from <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1000 onward,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_503" href="#Footnote_503" class="fnanchor">[503]</a> the new <em>Faustian</em>
+ world-feeling, the new personal experience
+of <em>the Ego in the Infinite</em>. For some individual spirits, no doubt, it
+meant a sentimental enthusiasm for the Classical (or what was thought to be
+the Classical), but that was a manifestation of taste, nothing more.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_504" href="#Footnote_504" class="fnanchor">[504]</a> The
+Classical myth was entertainment-material, an allegorical play, through the
+thin veil of which men saw, no less definitely than before, the old Gothic
+actuality. When Savonarola stood up, the antique trappings vanished from the
+surface of Florentine life in an instant. It was all for the church that the Florentines
+laboured, and with conviction. Raphael was the most deeply intimate
+of all Madonna-painters. A firm belief in the realm of Satan, and in deliverance
+from it through the saints, lay at the root of all this art and literature; and
+every one of them, painters, architects, and humanists—however often the
+names of Cicero and Virgil, Venus and Apollo were on their lips—looked
+upon the burning of witches as something entirely natural and wore amulets
+against the devil. The writings of Marsilius Ficinus are full of learned disquisitions
+on devils and witches. Francesco della Mirandola wrote (in elegant
+Latin) his dialogue “The Witch” in order to warn the fine intellects of his circle
+against a danger.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_505" href="#Footnote_505" class="fnanchor">[505]</a> When Leonardo da Vinci, at the summit of the Renaissance,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p292">[292]</span>was working upon his “Anna Selbdritt,”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_506" href="#Footnote_506" class="fnanchor">[506]</a> the “Witches’ Hammer” was
+being written in Rome (1487) in the finest Humanistic Latin. It was <em>these</em> that
+constitute the real myth of the Renaissance, and without them we shall never
+understand the glorious and truly Gothic force of this anti-Gothic movement.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_507" href="#Footnote_507" class="fnanchor">[507]</a>
+Men who did not feel the Devil very near at hand could not have created the
+<cite lang="it">Divina Commedia</cite> or the frescoes of Orvieto&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_508" href="#Footnote_508" class="fnanchor">[508]</a> or the ceiling of the Sistine
+Chapel.</p>
+
+<p>It was the tremendous background of this myth that awakened in the
+Faustian soul a feeling of what it was. An Ego lost in Infinity, an Ego that was
+all force, but a force negligibly weak in an infinity of greater forces;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_509" href="#Footnote_509" class="fnanchor">[509]</a> that was
+all will, but a will full of fear for its freedom. Never has the problem of Free-will
+been meditated upon more deeply or more painfully. Other Cultures have
+simply not known it. But precisely because here Magian resignation was totally
+impossible—because that which thought was not an “it” or particle of an all-soul,
+but an individual, fighting Ego, seeking to maintain itself—every limitation
+upon freedom was felt as a chain that had to be dragged along through
+life, and life in turn was felt as a living death. And if so—why? For <em>what</em>?</p>
+
+<p>The result of this in-looking was that immense sense of guilt which runs
+throughout these centuries like one long, desperate lament. The cathedrals rose
+ever more supplicatingly to heaven, the Gothic vaulting became a joining of
+hands in prayer, and little comfort of light shone through the high windows
+into the night of the long naves. The choking parallel-sequences of the church
+chants, the Latin hymns, tell of bruised knees and flagellations in the nocturnal
+cell. For Magian man the world-cavern had been close and the heaven impending,
+but for Gothic man heaven was infinitely far. No hand seemed to reach
+down from these spaces, and all about the lone Ego the mocking Devil’s world
+lay in leaguer. And, therefore, the great longing of Mysticism was to lose
+created form (as Heinrich Seuse said), to be rid of self and all things (Meister
+Eckart), to abandon selfness (<i lang="de">Theologie deutsch</i>).&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_510" href="#Footnote_510" class="fnanchor">[510]</a> And out of these longings there
+grew up an unending dogged subtilizing on notions which were ever more
+and more finely dissected to get at the “why,” and finally a universal cry for
+Grace—not the Magian Grace coming down as substance, but the Faustian
+Grace that unbinds the Will.</p>
+
+<p><em>To be able to will freely</em> is, at the very bottom, the one gift that the Faustian
+soul asks of heaven. The seven sacraments of the Gothic, felt as one by Peter
+Lombard, elevated into dogma by the Lateran Council of 1215, and grounded
+<span class="pagenum" id="p293">[293]</span>in mystical foundations by Thomas Aquinas, mean this and only this. They
+accompany the unit soul from birth to death and protect it against the diabolical
+powers that seek to nest themselves in its will. For to sell oneself to the Devil
+means to deliver up <em>one’s will</em> to him. The Church Militant on earth is the
+visible community of those who are enabled, by enjoyment of the sacraments,
+to will. This certainty of free being is held to be guaranteed in the altar-sacrament,
+which accordingly suffers a complete change of meaning. The miracle of
+the holy transformation which takes place daily under the hands of the priest—the
+consecrated Host in the high altar of the cathedral, wherein the believer
+sensed the presence of him who of old sacrificed himself to secure for
+his own the <em>freedom to will</em>—called forth a sigh of relief of such depth and
+sincerity as we moderns can hardly imagine. It was in thanksgiving, therefore,
+that the chief feast of the Catholic Church, Corpus Christi, was founded in
+1264.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_511" href="#Footnote_511" class="fnanchor">[511]</a></p>
+
+<p>But more important still—and by far—was the essentially Faustian prime-sacrament
+of Contrition. This ranks with the Mary-myth and the Devil-myth
+as the third great creation of the Gothic. And, indeed, it is from this third
+that the other two derive depth and meaning; it discloses the last secrets of
+this Culture’s soul, and so sets it apart from all other Cultures. The effect of the
+Magian baptism was to incorporate a man in the great <i>consensus</i>—the <em>one</em> great
+“it” of the divine spirit took up its abode in him as in the others, and thereafter
+resignation to all that should happen became his duty. But in the Faustian
+contrition the <em>idea of personality</em> was implicit. It is not true that the Renaissance
+discovered personality&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_512" href="#Footnote_512" class="fnanchor">[512]</a>; what it did was to bring personality up to a brilliant
+surface, whereby it suddenly became visible to everyone. Its birth is in Gothic;
+it is the most intimate and peculiar property of Gothic; it is one and the same
+with Gothic soul. For this contrition is something that each one accomplishes
+for himself alone. He alone can search his own conscience. He alone stands
+rueful in the presence of the Infinite. He alone can and must in confession understand
+and put into words his own past. And even the absolution that frees
+his Ego for new responsible action is personal to himself. Baptism is wholly
+impersonal—one receives it because one is <em>a</em> man, not because one is <em>this</em> man—but
+the idea of contrition presupposes that the value of every act depends
+uniquely upon the man who does it. This is what differentiates the Western
+drama from the Classical, the Chinese, and the Indian. This is what directs
+our legislation more and more with reference to the doer rather than to the deed,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p294">[294]</span>and bases our primary ethical conceptions on individual doing and not typical
+behaviour. Faustian responsibility instead of Magian resignedness, the individual
+instead of the <i>consensus</i>; relief from, instead of submissiveness under,
+burdens—that is the difference between the most active and the most passive
+of all sacraments, and at the back of it again lies the difference between the
+world-cavern and infinity-dynamics. Baptism is something done upon one,
+Contrition something done by oneself within oneself. And, moreover, this
+conscientious searching of one’s own past is both the earliest evidence of, and
+the finest training for, the <em>historical sense</em> of Faustian mankind. There is no other
+Culture in which the personal life of the living man, the conscientious tracing
+of each feature, has been so important, for this alone has required the accounts
+to be rendered in words. If historical research and biography are characteristic
+of the spirit of the West from its beginnings; if both in the last resort are
+self-examination and confession; if our lives are led with an assuredness and
+conscious reference to the historic background that nowhere else has been
+even imagined as possible or tolerable; if, lastly, we habitually look at
+history in terms of millennia, not rhapsodically or decoratively as in the
+Classical World and in China, but directionally and with the almost sacramental
+formula “<i lang="fr">Tout comprendre, c’est tout pardonner</i>” ever in our minds—we
+have this sacrament of the Gothic Church, this continual unburdening of
+the Ego by <em>historical</em> test and justification to thank for it. Every confession
+is an autobiography. This peculiar liberation of the will is to us so necessary
+that the refusal of absolution drives to despair, even to destruction.
+Only he who senses the bliss of such an inward acquittal can comprehend the
+old name of the <i lang="la">sacramentum resurgentium</i>, the sacrament of those who are risen
+again.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_513" href="#Footnote_513" class="fnanchor">[513]</a></p>
+
+<p>When in this heaviest of decisions the soul is left to its own resources,
+something unresolved remains hanging over it like a perpetual cloud. It may
+be said, therefore, that perhaps no institution in any religion has brought so
+much happiness into the world as this. The whole inwardness and heavenly
+love of the Gothic rests upon the certainty of full absolution through the power
+invested in the priest. In the insecurity that ensued from the decline of this
+sacrament, both Gothic joy of life and the Mary-world of the light faded out.
+Only the Devil’s world, with its grim all-presentness, remained. And then,
+in place of the blissfulness irrecoverably lost, came the Protestant, and especially
+<span class="pagenum" id="p295">[295]</span>Puritan, heroism, which could fight on, even hopeless, in a lost position.
+“Auricular confession,” said Goethe once, “ought never to have been taken
+from mankind.” Over the lands in which it had died out, a heavy earnestness
+spread itself. Ethic and costume, art and thought, took on the night-colour
+of the only myth that remained outstanding. Nothing is less sunlit than the
+doctrines of Kant. “Every man his own priest” is a conviction to which men
+could win through, but only as to that part of priesthood that involves duties,
+<em>not as to that which possesses powers</em>. No man confesses himself with the inward
+certainty of absolution. And as the need of the soul to be relieved of its past
+and to be redirected remained urgent as ever, all the higher forms of communication
+were transmuted, and in Protestant countries music and painting,
+letter-writing and memoirs, from being modes of description became modes of
+self-denunciation, penance, and unbounded confession. Even in Catholic regions
+too—in Paris above all—art as psychology set in as doubt in the sacrament
+of Contrition and Absolution grew. Outlook on the world was lost in ceaseless
+mine-warfare within the self. In lieu of the Infinite, contemporaries and descendants
+were called in to be priests and judges. Personal art, in the sense that
+distinguishes Goethe from Dante, and Rembrandt from Michelangelo, was a
+substitute for the sacrament of confession. It was, also, the sign that this
+Culture was already in the condition of a Late period.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_514" href="#Footnote_514" class="fnanchor">[514]</a></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_8">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>In all Cultures, Reformation has the same meaning—the bringing back of
+the religion to the purity of its original idea as this manifested itself in the great
+<span class="pagenum" id="p296">[296]</span>centuries of the beginning. In no Culture is this movement missing, whether
+we know about it, as in the case of Egypt, or not, as in that of China. It means,
+further, that the city and with it the city-spirit are gradually freeing themselves
+from the soul of the country-side, setting up in opposition to the latter’s
+all-power and reconsidering the feelings and thoughts of the primitive pre-urban
+time with reference to its present self. It was Destiny and not intellectual
+necessities of thought that led, in the Magian and Faustian worlds, to the
+budding-off of new religions at this point. We know to-day that, under
+Charles V, Luther was within an ace of becoming the reformer of the whole
+undivided Church.</p>
+
+<p>For Luther, like all reformers in all Cultures, was not the first, but <em>the last
+of a grand succession</em> which led from the great ascetics of the open land to the
+city-priest. Reformation is <em>Gothic</em>, the accomplishment and the testament
+thereof. Luther’s chorale “<cite lang="de">Ein’ feste Burg</cite>” does <em>not</em> belong to the spiritual
+lyrism of the Baroque. There rumbles in it still the splendid Latin of the <cite lang="la">Dies
+iræ</cite>. It is the Church Militant’s last mighty Satan-song.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_515" href="#Footnote_515" class="fnanchor">[515]</a> Luther, like every
+reformer that had arisen since the year 1000, fought the Church not because it
+demanded too much, but because it demanded too little. The great stream
+flows on from Cluny: through Arnold of Brescia, who preached return to
+Apostolic simplicity and was burned in 1155; through Joachim of Floris, who
+was the first to use the world “<i>reformare</i>;” the spirituals of the Franciscan
+Order; Jacopone da Todi, revolutionary and singer of the <cite>Stabat Mater</cite>, the
+knight whom the death of a young wife turned into an ascetic and who tried
+to overthrow Boniface VIII for governing the Church too slackly; through
+Wyclif and Hus and Savonarola; to Luther, Karlstadt, Zwingli, Calvin, and—Loyola.
+The intention of these men, one and all, was not to overcome the
+Christianity of the Gothic, but to bring it to inward fulfilment. So also with
+Marcion, Athanasius, the Monophysites, and the Nestorians, who sought in
+the Councils of Ephesus and Chalcedon to purify the faith and lead it back to
+its origins.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_516" href="#Footnote_516" class="fnanchor">[516]</a> But so also the Orphics of the Classical seventh century were the
+last and not the first of a series that must have begun even before 1000 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> So
+with the establishment of the Re religion in Egypt at the close of the Old
+Kingdom, the Egyptian Gothic. It is an ending, not a new beginning, that these
+<span class="pagenum" id="p297">[297]</span>signify. Just so, again, a reform-fulfilment happened in the Vedic religion
+about the tenth century and was followed by the setting-in of late Brahmanism.
+And in the ninth century a corresponding epochal point must have occurred in
+the religious history of China.</p>
+
+<p>However widely the Reformations of the various Cultures may differ amongst
+themselves, the purpose is the same for all—to bring the faith, which had
+strayed all too far into the world-as-history and time-secularism (“<i lang="de">Zeitlichkeit</i>”),
+back into the realm of Nature, clean waking-consciousness, and pure cause-controlled
+and cause-pervaded Space; out of the world of economics (“wealth”)
+into that of science (“poverty”), out of patrician and cavalier society (which
+was also that of Renaissance and Humanism) into that of spirituals and ascetics;
+and lastly (as significant as it is impossible) out of the political ambitions of
+vestmented human thoroughbreds into the realm of holy Causality that is
+not of this world.</p>
+
+<p>In those times the West—and the situation was the same in the other
+Cultures—divided the <i lang="la">Corpus Christianorum</i> of the population into the three
+classes of <i>status policticus, ecclesiasticus, and œconomicus</i> (that is, urban), but as the
+outlook was that of the city and no longer that of the castle and the village,
+officials and judges belonged to the first-named class, men of learning to the
+second—and the peasant was forgotten. This is the key to the opposition of
+the Renaissance and Reformation, which was an opposition of class and not a
+difference in world-feeling like that of Renaissance and Gothic. Castle-taste and
+cloister-soul moved into town, and remained there, as before, in opposition—as
+in Florence the Medici to Savonarola, and as in old Greece the noble families
+of the cities—with their Homer now finally written down—to the last
+Orphics—these, too, writers. The Renaissance artists and Humanists are the
+legitimate successors of the Troubadours and Minnesingers, and just as there is a
+line from Arnold of Brescia to Luther, so there is a line from Bertrand de Born
+and Peire Cardinal, through Petrarch, to Ariosto. The castle has become the
+town-house, the knight the patrician. The whole movement adhered to palaces,
+as courts; it limits itself to those fields of expression that affect and interest
+polite society; it is bright and gay, like Homer, because it is courtly—an atmosphere
+where problems were bad taste, where Dante and Michelangelo cannot
+but have felt themselves out of place—and it spread over the Alps to the courts
+of the North, not as a new world-outlook, but as a new taste. The “Northern”
+Renaissance of the mercantile and capital cities consisted simply in the fact that
+the <i>bon ton</i> of the Italian patriciate replaced that of the French chivalry.</p>
+
+<p>But the last reformers, too, the Luthers and Savonarolas, were <em>urban</em> monks,
+and this differentiates them profoundly from the Joachims and the Bernards.
+Their intellectual and urban askesis is the stepping-stone from the hermitages
+of quiet valleys to the scholar’s study of the Baroque. The mystic experience
+of Luther which gave birth to his doctrine of justification is the experience,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p298">[298]</span>not of a St. Bernard in the presence of woods and hills and clouds and stars, but
+of a man who looks through narrow windows on the streets and house walls
+and gables. Broad God-perfused nature is remote, outside the city wall; and
+the free intellect, detached from the soil, is inside it. Within the urban, stonewalled
+waking-consciousness sense and reason part company and become
+enemies, and the city-mysticism of the last reformers is thus a mysticism of
+pure reason through and through, and not one of the eye—an illumination of
+concepts, in presence of which the brightly coloured figures of the old myth
+fade into paleness.</p>
+
+<p>Necessarily, therefore, it was, in its real depths, a thing of the few. Nothing
+was left of that sensible content that formerly had offered even to the poorest
+something to grip. The mighty act of Luther was a purely intellectual decision.
+Not for nothing has he been regarded as the last great Schoolman of the line
+of Occam.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_517" href="#Footnote_517" class="fnanchor">[517]</a> He completely liberated the Faustian personality—the intermediate
+person of the priest, which had formerly stood between it and the
+Infinite, was removed. And now it was wholly alone, self-oriented, its own
+priest and its own judge. But the common people could only feel, not
+understand, the element of liberation in it all. They welcomed, enthusiastically,
+indeed, the tearing-up of visible duties, but they did not come to realize that
+these had been replaced by intellectual duties that were still stricter. Francis of
+Assisi had given much and taken little, but the urban Reformation took much
+and, as far as the majority of people were concerned, gave little.</p>
+
+<p>The holy Causality of the Contrition-sacrament Luther replaced by the
+mystic experience of inward absolution “by faith alone.” He came very near
+to Bernard of Clairvaux in this concept of contrition as lifelong, as a continuous
+intellectual askesis in contrast to the askesis of outward and visible works.
+Both of them understood absolution as a divine miracle: in so far as the man
+changes himself, it is God changing him. But what no purely intellectual
+mysticism can replace is the “Tu” outside, in free nature. The one and the
+other preached: “Thou must believe that God has forgiven thee,” but for
+Bernard belief was through the powers of the priest elevated to knowledge,
+whereas for Luther it sank to doubt and desperate insistence. This little “I,”
+detached from the cosmos, nailed up in an individual being and (in the most
+terrific sense of the word) alone, needed the proximity of a powerful “Thou,”
+and the weaker the intellect, the more urgent the need. Herein lies the ultimate
+meaning of the Western priest, who from 1215 was elevated above the rest of
+mankind by the sacrament of ordination and its <i>character indelebilis</i>: he was a
+hand with which even the poorest wretch could grasp God. This <em>visible</em> link
+with the Infinite, Protestantism destroyed. Strong souls could and did win it
+back for themselves, but for the weaker it was gradually lost. Bernard, although
+for him the inward miracle was successful of itself, would not deprive
+<span class="pagenum" id="p299">[299]</span>others of the gentler way, for the very illumination of his soul showed him the
+Mary-world of living nature, all-pervading, ever near, and ever helpful.
+Luther, who knew himself only and not men, set postulated heroism in place
+of actual weakness. For him life was desperate battle against the Devil, and
+that battle he called upon everyone to fight. And everyone who fought it
+fought alone.</p>
+
+<p>The Reformation abolished the whole bright and consoling side of the
+Gothic myth—the cult of Mary, the veneration of the saints, the relics, the
+pilgrimages, the mass. But the myth of devildom and witchcraft remained,
+for it was the embodiment and cause of the inner torture, and now that torture
+at last rose to its supreme horror.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_518" href="#Footnote_518" class="fnanchor">[518]</a> Baptism was, for Luther at least, an exorcism,
+the veritable sacrament of devil-banning. There grew up a large, purely
+Protestant literature about the Devil.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_519" href="#Footnote_519" class="fnanchor">[519]</a> Out of the Gothic wealth of colour,
+there remained black; of its arts, music, in particular organ-music. But
+in the place of the mythic light-world, whose helpful nearness the faith of
+the common people could not, after all, forgo, there rose again out of long-buried
+depths an element of ancient German myth. It came so stealthily that
+even to-day its true significance is not yet realized. The expressions “folktale”
+and “popular custom” are inadequate: it is a true Myth that inheres in
+the firm belief in dwarfs, bogies, nixies, house-sprites, and sweeping clouds of
+the disembodied, and a true Cult that is seen in the rites, offerings, and conjurings
+that are still practised with a pious awe. In Germany, at any rate, the
+Saga took the place, unperceived, of the Mary-myth: Mary was now called
+Frau Holde, and where once the saints had stood, appeared the faithful Eckart.
+In the English people what arose was something that has long been designated
+“Bible-fetishism.”</p>
+
+<p>What Luther lacked—and it is an eternal fatality for Germany—was the
+eye for facts and the power of practical organization. He did not bring his
+doctrines to a clear system, nor did he lead the great movement and choose its
+aim. The one and the other were the work of his great successor Calvin.
+While the Lutheran movement advanced leaderless in central Europe, he viewed
+his rule in Geneva as the starting-point of a systematic subjection of the world
+under a Protestantism unfalteringly thought out to its logical conclusion.
+Therefore he, and he alone, became a world-power; therefore it was the
+decisive struggle between the spirit of Calvin and the spirit of Loyola that
+dominated, from the Spanish Armada on, the world-politics of the Baroque
+<span class="pagenum" id="p300">[300]</span>and the struggle for sea-supremacy. While in mid-Europe Reformation and
+Counter-Reformation struggled for some small imperial city or a few poor
+Swiss cantons, Canada, the mouth of the Ganges, the Cape, the Mississippi,
+were the scenes of great decisions fought to an issue by France and Spain, England
+and Holland. And in these decisions the two grand organizers of the Late
+religion of the West were ever present, ever opposed.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V_8">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>Intellectual creativeness of the Late period begins, not with, but after, the
+Reformation. Its most typical creation is free science. Even for Luther learning
+was still essentially the “handmaid of theology,” and Calvin had the freethinking
+doctor Servet burnt. The thought of the Springtimes—Faustian
+like Egyptian, Vedic, and Orphic—had felt its vocation to be the justification
+of faith by criticism. If criticism did not succeed, the critical method must be
+wrong. Knowledge was faith justified, not faith controverted.</p>
+
+<p>Now, however, the critical powers of the city intellect have become so great
+that it is no longer content to affirm, but must test. The stock of believed
+probables, and especially that part of it which was received by the understanding
+and not the heart, was the first obvious target for dissecting activities.
+This distinguishes the Springtime Scholasticism from the actuality-philosophy
+of the Baroque—as it distinguishes Neoplatonist from Islamic, Vedic from
+Brahmanic, Orphic from Pre-Socratic, thought. The (shall we say) profane
+Causality of human life, the world-around, the process and meaning of cognition,
+become a problem. The Egyptian philosophy of the Middle Kingdom
+measured up the value of life in <em>this</em> sense; and akin to it, in all probability,
+was the late pre-Confucian philosophy of China from 800 to 500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Only the
+book ascribed to Kwan-tse (d. 645) remains to give us some dim idea of this
+philosophy, but the indications, slight though they be, are that epistemological
+and biological problems occupied the centre of the one genuine philosophy
+of China, now utterly lost.</p>
+
+<p>Within Baroque philosophy, Western natural-science stands by itself. No
+other Culture possesses anything like it, and assuredly it must have been from
+its beginnings, not a “handmaid of theology,” but <em>the servant of the technical
+Will-to-Power</em>, oriented to that end both mathematically and experimentally—from
+its very foundations a practical <em>mechanics</em>. And as it is firstly technique and
+only secondly theory, it must be as old as Faustian man himself. Accordingly,
+we find technical works of an astounding energy of combination even by 1000.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_520" href="#Footnote_520" class="fnanchor">[520]</a>
+As early as the thirteenth century Robert Grosseteste&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_521" href="#Footnote_521" class="fnanchor">[521]</a> was treating space as a
+function of light. Petrus Peregrinus in 1289 wrote the best experimentally
+<span class="pagenum" id="p301">[301]</span>based treatise on magnetism that appeared before Gilbert (1600). And Roger
+Bacon, the disciple of both, developed a natural-scientific theory of knowledge
+to serve as basis for his technical investigations.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_522" href="#Footnote_522" class="fnanchor">[522]</a> But boldness in the discovery
+of dynamic interlinkages went further still. The Copernican system was hinted
+at in a manuscript of 1322 and a few decades later was mathematically developed
+by the Paris Occamists, Buridan, Albert of Saxony, and Oresme.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_523" href="#Footnote_523" class="fnanchor">[523]</a> Let us not deceive
+ourselves as to the fundamental motive-power of these explorations. Pure
+contemplative philosophy could have dispensed with experiment for ever, but
+not so the Faustian symbol of the <em>machine</em>, which urged us to mechanical constructions
+even in the twelfth century and made “<i lang="la">Perpetuum mobile</i>” the
+Prometheus-idea of the Western intellect. For us the first thing is ever the
+<em>working hypothesis</em>—the very kind of thought-product that is meaningless to
+other Cultures. It is an astounding fact (to which, however, we must accustom
+ourselves) that the idea of immediately exploiting in practice any knowledge of
+natural relations that may be acquired is alien to every sort of mankind except
+the Faustian (and those who, like Japanese, Jews, and Russians, have to-day
+come under the intellectual spell of its Civilization). The very notion of the
+working hypothesis implicitly contains a dynamic lay-out of the universe.
+Theoria, contemplative vision of actuality, was for those subtly inquiring
+monks only secondary, and, being itself the outcome of the technical passion,
+it presently led them, quite imperceptibly, to the typically Faustian conception
+of God as the Grand Master of the machine, who could accomplish everything
+that they themselves in their impotence only dared to wish. Insensibly the
+world of God became, century by century, more and more like the <i lang="la">Perpetuum
+mobile</i>. And, imperceptibly also, as the scanning of nature became sharper and
+sharper in the school of experiment and technique, and the Gothic myth became
+more and more shadowy, the concepts of monkish working hypotheses
+developed, from Galileo onwards, into the critically illuminated numina of
+modern science, the collisions and the fields, gravitation, the velocity of light,
+and the “electricity” which in our electrodynamic world-picture has absorbed
+into itself the other forms of energy and thereby attained to a sort of physical
+monotheism. They are the concepts that are set up behind the formulæ, to
+endow them with a mythic visibility for the inner eye. The numbers themselves
+are technical elements, levers and screws, overhearings of the world’s secrets.
+The Classical Nature-thought—and that of others also—required no numbers,
+for it strove for no powers. The <em>pure</em> mathematic of Pythagoras and Plato had
+no relation whatever to the nature-views of Democritus and Aristotle.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p302">[302]</span></p>
+
+<p>Just as the Classical mind felt Prometheus’s defiance of the gods as “hybris,”
+so our Baroque felt the machine as diabolical.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_524" href="#Footnote_524" class="fnanchor">[524]</a> The spirit of Hell had betrayed
+to man the secret of mastering the world-mechanism and even of himself
+enacting the part of God. And hence it is that all purely priestly natures, that
+live wholly in the world of the spirit and expect nothing of “this world”—and
+notably the idealist philosophers, the Classicists, the Humanists, and even
+Nietzsche—have for technique nothing but silent hostility.</p>
+
+<p>Every Late philosophy contains this critical protest against the uncritical
+intuitiveness of the Spring. But this criticism of the intellect that is sure of its
+own superiority affects also faith itself and evokes the one great creation in the
+field of religion that is the peculiarity of the Late period—every Late period—namely,
+Puritanism.</p>
+
+<p>Puritanism manifests itself in the army of Cromwell and his Independents,
+iron, Bible-firm, psalm-singing as they rode into battle; in the ranks of the
+Pythagoreans, who in the bitter earnest of their gospel of duty wrecked gay
+Sybaris and branded it for ever as the city without morals; in the armies of the
+early Caliphs, which subdued not only states, but souls. Milton’s <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>,
+many surahs of the Koran, the little that we know of Pythagorean teachings—all
+come to the same thing. They are enthusiasms of a sober spirit, cold intensities,
+dry mysticism, pedantic ecstasy. And yet, even so, a wild piety
+flickers up once more in them. All the transcendent inwardness that the City
+can produce after attaining to unconditional mastery over the soul of the Land
+is here concentrated, with a sort of terror lest it should prove unreal and evanescent,
+and is correspondingly impatient, pitiless, and unforgiving. Puritanism—not
+in the West only, but in all Cultures—lacks the smile that had illumined
+the religion of the Spring—every Spring—the moments of profound joy in
+life, the humour of life. Nothing of the quiet blissfulness that in the Magian
+Springtime flashes up so often in the stories of Jesus’s childhood, or in Gregory
+Nazianzen, is to be found in the Koran, nothing in the palpable blitheness of
+St. Francis’s songs in Milton. Deadly earnest broods over the Jansenist mind
+of Port Royal, over the meetings of the black-clothed Roundheads, by whom
+Shakespeare’s “Merry England”—<em>Sybaris over again</em>—was annihilated in a
+few years. Now for the first time the battle against the Devil, whose bodily
+nearness they all felt, was fought with a dark and bitter fury. In the seventeenth
+century more than a million witches were burnt—alike in the Protestant
+North, the Catholic South, and even the communities in America and India.
+Joyless and sour are the duty-doctrines of Islam (<i>fikh</i>), with its hard intellectuality,
+and the Westminster Catechisms of 1643, and the Jansenist ethics (Jansen’s
+<cite>Augustinus</cite>, 1640) as well—for in the realm of Loyola, too, there was of inward
+necessity a Puritan movement. Religion is livingly experienced metaphysic,
+but the company of the “godly,” as the Independents called themselves,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p303">[303]</span>and the Pythagoreans, and the disciples of Mohammed, all alike experienced it,
+not with the senses, but primarily as a concept. Parshva, who about 600 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>
+founded the sect of the “Unfettered”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_525" href="#Footnote_525" class="fnanchor">[525]</a> on the Ganges, taught, like the other
+Puritans of his time, that salvation came, not from sacrifices and rights, but
+only from knowledge of the identity of Atman and Brahman. In all Puritan
+poetry the place of the old Gothic visions is taken by an unbridled, yet withal
+jejune, spirit of allegory. In the waking-consciousness of these ascetics the
+concept is the only real power. Pascal’s wrestlings were about concepts and
+not, like Meister Eckart’s, about shapes. Witches were burnt because they were
+proved, and not because they were seen in the air o’ nights; the Protestant
+jurists employed the witches’ hammer of the Dominicans because it was built
+on concepts. The Madonnas of the early Gothic had appeared to their suppliants,
+but those of Bernini no man ever saw. They exist because they are
+proved—and there came to be a positive enthusiasm for existence of this sort.
+Milton, Cromwell’s great secretary of state, clothed concepts with shapes, and
+Bunyan brings a whole mythology of concepts into ethical-allegorical activity.
+From that it is but a step to Kant, in whose conceptual ethics the Devil assumes
+his final shape as the Radically Evil.</p>
+
+<p>We have to emancipate ourselves from the surfaces of history—and,
+especially, to thrust aside the artificial fences in which the methodology of
+Western sciences has paddocked it—before we can see that Pythagoras,
+Mohammed, and Cromwell embody one and the same movement in three Cultures.</p>
+
+<p>Pythagoras was not a philosopher. According to all statements of the Pre-Socratics,
+he was a saint, prophet and founder of a fanatically religious society
+that forced its truths upon the people around it by every political and military
+means. The destruction of Sybaris by Croton—an event which, we may be
+sure, has survived in historical memory only because it was the climax of a wild
+religious war—was an explosion of the same hate that saw in Charles I and
+his gay Cavaliers not merely doctrinal error, but also worldly disposition as
+something that must be destroyed root and branch. A myth purified and
+conceptually fortified, combined with rigorous ethical precepts, imbued the
+Pythagoreans with the conviction that they would attain salvation before all
+other men. The gold tablets found in Thurii and Petelia, which were put into
+the hand of the dead initiate, carried the assurance of the god: “Happy and
+blessed one, thou shalt be no more a mortal, but a god.” It is the same certainty
+that the Koran gave to all believers who fought in the holy war against
+the infidel—“The monasticism of Islam is the religious war,” says a hadith
+of the Prophet—the same which filled Cromwell’s Ironsides when they scattered
+the King’s “Philistines” and “Amalekites” at Marston Moor and Naseby.</p>
+
+<p>Islam was no more a religion of the desert in particular than Zwingli’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="p304">[304]</span>faith was a religion of the high mountains in particular. It is incident, and no
+more, that the Puritan movement for which the Magian world was ripe proceeded
+from a man of Mecca and not from a Monophysite or a Jew. For in the
+northern Arabian desert there were the Christian states of the Ghassanids and
+Lakhmids, and in the Sabæan South there were religious wars waged between
+Christians and Jews that involved the world of states from Assuan to the
+Sassanid Empire. The Congress of Princes at Marib&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_526" href="#Footnote_526" class="fnanchor">[526]</a> was attended by hardly a
+single pagan, and shortly after this date South Arabia came under Persian—that
+is, Mazdaist—government. Mecca was a little island of ancient Arabian
+paganism in the midst of a world of Jews and Christians, a mere relic that had
+long been mined by the ideas of the great Magian religions. The little of this
+paganism that filtered into the Koran was later explained away by the Commentary
+of the Sunna and its Syro-Mesopotamian intellect. At most Islam was
+a new religion only to the same extent as Lutheranism was one.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_527" href="#Footnote_527" class="fnanchor">[527]</a> Actually,
+it was the prolongation of the great early religions. Equally, its expansion
+was not (as is even now imagined) a “migration of peoples” proceeding from
+the Arabian Peninsula, but an onslaught of enthusiastic believers, which like
+an avalanche bore along with it Christians, Jews, and Mazdaists and set them
+at once in its front rank as fanatical Moslems. It was Berbers from the homeland
+of St. Augustine who conquered Spain, and Persians from Irak who drove on to
+the Oxus. The enemy of yesterday became the front-rank comrade of to-morrow.
+Most of the “Arabs” who in 717 attacked Constantinople for the
+first time, had been born Christians. About 650 Byzantine literature&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_528" href="#Footnote_528" class="fnanchor">[528]</a> quite
+suddenly vanished, and the deeper meaning of the fact has so far never been
+noticed—it was just that the Arabian literature took up the tale. The soul of
+the Magian Culture found at last its true expression in Islam, and therewith
+became truly the “Arabian,” free thenceforth from all bondage to the Pseudomorphosis.
+The Iconoclastic movement, led by Islam, but long prepared by
+Monophysites and Jews, advanced to and even beyond Byzantium, where the
+Syrian Leo III (717–41) raised this Puritan movement of Islamic-Christian
+sects—the Paulicians about 650 and the Bogomils later&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_529" href="#Footnote_529" class="fnanchor">[529]</a>—to predominance.</p>
+
+<p>The great figures of Mohammed’s entourage, such as Abu Bekr and Omar,
+are the near relatives of the Pyms and Hampdens of the English Revolution,
+and we should see this relationship to be nearer still if we knew more than we
+do about the Hanifs, the Arabian Puritans before and about the Prophet. All
+of them had won out of Predestination the guarantee that they were God’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="p305">[305]</span>elect. The grand Old Testament exaltation of Parliament and the camps of
+Independency—which left behind it, in many an English family, even to the
+nineteenth century,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_530" href="#Footnote_530" class="fnanchor">[530]</a> the belief that the English are the descendants of the ten
+Lost Tribes of Israel, a nation of saints predestined to govern the world—dominated
+also the emigration to America which began with the Pilgrim
+Fathers of 1620. It formed that which may be called the American religion of
+to-day, and bred and fostered the trait which gives the Englishman even now
+his particular political insouciance, an assurance that is essentially religious
+and has its roots in predestination. The Pythagoreans themselves, too (an
+unheard-of thing in the religious history of the Classical world) assumed
+political power for the furtherance of religious ends and sought to advance their
+puritanism from Polis to Polis. Everywhere else unit cults reigned in unit
+states, each of which left the other unconcernedly to its own religious duties;
+here and here only do we find a community of saints, and their practical energy
+as far surpassed that of the old Orphics as fighting Independency surpassed the
+spirit of the Reformation wars.</p>
+
+<p>But in Puritanism there is hidden already the seed of Rationalism, and after
+a few enthusiastic generations have passed, this bursts forth everywhere and
+makes itself supreme. This is the step from Cromwell to Hume. Not cities in
+general, not even the great cities, but a few particular cities now become the
+theatre of intellectual history—Socratic Athens, Abbassid Baghdad, eighteenth-century
+London and Paris.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_531" href="#Footnote_531" class="fnanchor">[531]</a> “Enlightenment” is the cliché of that time. The
+sun bursts forth—but what is it that clears off the heavens of the critical
+consciousness to make way for that sun?</p>
+
+<p>Rationalism signifies the belief in the data of critical understanding (that
+is, of the “reason”) <em>alone</em>. In the Springtime men could say “<i lang="la">Credo quia absurdum</i>,”
+because they were certain that the comprehensible and the incomprehensible
+were <em>both</em> necessary constituents of the world—the nature which
+Giotto painted, in which the Mystics immersed themselves, and into which
+reason can penetrate, but only so far as the deity permits it to penetrate. But
+now a secret jealousy breeds the notion of the Irrational—that which, as
+incomprehensible, is <em>therefore</em> valueless. It may be scorned openly as superstition,
+or privily as metaphysic. Only critically-established understanding
+possesses value. And secrets are merely evidences of ignorance. The new
+<em>secretless</em> religion is in its highest potentialities called wisdom (σοφία), its priests
+philosophers, and its adherents “educated” people. According to Aristotle,
+the old religion is indispensable only to the uneducated,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_532" href="#Footnote_532" class="fnanchor">[532]</a> and his view is Confucius’s
+and Gotama Buddha’s, Lessing’s and Voltaire’s. Men go away from
+Culture “back to nature,” but this nature is not something livingly experienced,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p306">[306]</span>but something proved, something born of, and accessible only to, the
+intellect—a Nature that has no existence at all for a peasantry, a Nature by
+which one is not in the least overawed but merely put into a condition of sensibility.
+Natural religion, rational religion, Deism—all this is not lived metaphysics,
+but a comprehended mechanics, called by Confucius the “Laws of
+Heaven” and by Hellenism τύχη. Formerly philosophy was the handmaid of
+transcendent religiousness, but now comes sensibility, and philosophy must
+therefore become scientific as epistemology and critique of nature and critique of
+values. No doubt there was a feeling that this philosophy was, even so, nothing
+but a diluted dogmatism, for the idea that pure knowledge was <em>possible</em> itself
+involved a belief. Systems were woven out of phenomenally guaranteed beginnings,
+but in the long run the result was merely to say “Force” instead of
+“God,” and “Conservation of Energy” instead of “Eternity.” Under all
+Classical rationalism is to be found Olympus, under all Western the dogma of
+the sacraments. And so our Western philosophy swings to and fro between
+religion and technical science, and is defined thus, or thus, according as the
+author of the definition is a man with some relic of priesthood still in him, or is
+a pure expert and technician of thought.</p>
+
+<p>“<i lang="de">Weltanschauung</i>” is the characteristic expression for an enlightened
+waking-consciousness that, under the guidance of the critical understanding,
+looks about it in a godless light-world and, when sense-perceptions are found
+not to square with sound human reason, treats sense as a “lying jade.” That
+which was once myth—the actualest of the actual—is now subjected to
+the methods of what is called Euhemerism. The learned Euhemerus, about
+300 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, “explained” the Classical divinities to the public that they had
+formerly served so well, and the process occurs under one form or another in
+every “age of enlightenment.” We have our Euhemeristic interpretations of
+Hell as a guilty conscience, the Devil as evil desire, and God as the beauty of
+nature, and it is the same tendency that declares itself when Attic tomb-inscriptions
+of about 400 invoke, not the city-goddess Athene, but a goddess
+“Demos”—a near relation, by the way, of the Jacobins’ Goddess of Reason—and
+where the δαιμονίον for Socrates, νοῦς for other philosophers, take the
+place of Zeus. Confucius says “heaven” instead of “Shang-ti,” which means
+that he believes only in laws of nature. The “collection” and “ordering” of
+the canonical writings of China by the Confucians was a colossal act of Euhemerism,
+in which actually almost all the old religious works were literally destroyed
+and the residue subjected to rationalist falsification. Had it been
+possible, the enlighteners of our eighteenth century would no doubt have
+served the Gothic heritage in the same way.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_533" href="#Footnote_533" class="fnanchor">[533]</a> Confucius belongs to the Chinese
+<span class="pagenum" id="p307">[307]</span>“eighteenth century” through and through. Lao-tse (who despised him)
+stands at a midpoint in the Taoist movement, which manifested traits of
+Protestantism, Puritanism, and Pietism in turn, and both finally propagated a
+practical world-tone based upon a wholly mechanistic world-view. The
+word “<i>tao</i>” underwent in the Late period of China just the same continuous
+alteration of its fundamental content, and in the same mechanistic direction,
+as the word “Logos” in the history of Classical thought from Heraclitus to
+Posidonius, and as the word “Force” between Galileo’s day and ours. That
+which once had been grandly moulded myth and cult is called, in this “religion
+of educated people,” <em>Nature</em> and <em>Virtue</em>—but this Nature is a reasonable
+mechanism, and this Virtue is knowledge.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_534" href="#Footnote_534" class="fnanchor">[534]</a> Confucius and Buddha, Socrates
+and Rousseau are at one in this. Confucius contains little of prayer or of meditation
+upon the life after death, and nothing at all of revelation. To busy
+oneself overmuch with sacrifices and rites stamps one as uneducated and unreasoning.
+Gotama Buddha and his contemporary Mahavira, the founder of
+Jainism&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_535" href="#Footnote_535" class="fnanchor">[535]</a>—both of whom came from the political world of the lower Ganges,
+east of the old Brahmanic Culture-field—recognized, as everyone knows,
+neither the idea of God nor myth and cult. Of the real teaching of Buddha
+little can now be ascertained—for it all appears in the colours of the later
+fellah-religion baptized by his name—but one of the unquestionably authentic
+ideas concerning “conditioned arising”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_536" href="#Footnote_536" class="fnanchor">[536]</a> is the derivation of suffering <em>from ignorance</em>—ignorance,
+namely, of the “Four Noble Truths.” This is true rationalism.
+Nirvana, for them, is a purely intellectual release and corresponds
+exactly with the “Autarkeia” and “Eudaimonia” of the Stoics. It is that
+condition of the understanding and waking-consciousness for which Being no
+longer is.</p>
+
+<p>The great ideal of the educated of such periods is the Sage. The sage goes
+back to Nature—to Ferney or Ermenonville, to Attic gardens or Indian groves—which
+is the most intellectual way of being a megalopolitan. The sage is the
+man of the Golden Mean. His askesis consists in a judicious depreciation of
+the world in favour of meditation. The wisdom of the enlightenment never
+interferes with comfort. Moral with the great Myth to back it is always a
+sacrifice, a cult, even to extremes of asceticism, even to death; but Virtue with
+Wisdom at its back is a sort of secret enjoyment, a superfine intellectual egoism.
+And so the ethical teacher who is outside real religion becomes the Philistine.
+Buddha, Confucius, Rousseau, are arch-Philistines, for all the nobility of their
+<span class="pagenum" id="p308">[308]</span>ordered ideas, and the pedantry of the Socratic life-wisdom is insurmountable.</p>
+
+<p>Along with this (shall we call it) scholasticism of sane reason, there must
+of inner necessity be a rationalistic mysticism of the educated. The Western
+Enlightenment is of English origin and Puritan parentage. The rationalism
+of the Continent comes wholly from Locke. In opposition to it there arose in
+Germany the Pietists (Herrnhut, 1700, Spener and Francke, and in Württemberg
+Oetinger) and in England the Methodists (Wesley “awakened” by Herrnhut,
+1738). It was Luther and Calvin over again—the English at once organized
+themselves for a world-movement and the Germans lost themselves in
+mid-European conventicles. The Pietists of Islam are to be found in <i>Sufism</i>,
+which is not of “Persian” but of common Aramæan origin and in the eighth
+century spread all over the Arabian world. Pietists or Methodists, too, are
+the Indian lay preachers, who shortly before Buddha’s time were teaching
+release from the cycle of life (<i>sansara</i>) through immersion in the identity of
+Atman and Brahman. But Pietists or Methodists, too, are Lao-tse and his
+disciples and—notwithstanding their rationalism—the Cynic mendicants
+and itinerant preachers and the Stoic tutors, domestic chaplains, and confessors
+of early Hellenism.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_537" href="#Footnote_537" class="fnanchor">[537]</a> And Pietism may ascend even to the peak of rationalist
+vision, of which Swedenborg is the great example, which created for Stoics
+and Sufists whole worlds of fancy, and by which Buddhism was prepared for its
+reconstruction as Mahayana. The expansion of Buddhism and that of Taoism
+in their original significations are closely analogous to the Methodist expansion
+in America, and it is no accident that they both reached their full maturity in
+those regions (lower Ganges and south of the Yang-tse-kiang) which had
+cradled the respective Cultures.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VI_6">
+ VI
+</h3>
+
+<p>Two centuries after Puritanism the mechanistic conception of the world
+stands at its zenith. It is the effective religion of the time. Even those who
+still thought themselves to be religious in the old sense, to be “believers in
+God,” were only mistaking the world in which their waking-consciousness
+was mirroring itself. Religious truths were always in their understanding
+mechanistic truths, and in general it was only the habit of traditional words
+that imparted a colour-wash of myth to a Nature that was in reality regarded
+scientifically. Culture is ever synonymous with religious creativeness. Every
+great Culture begins with a mighty theme that rises out of the pre-urban
+country-side, is carried through in the cities of art and intellect, and closes with
+a finale of materialism in the world-cities. But even the last chords are strictly
+in the key of the whole. There are Chinese, Indian, Classical, Arabian, Western
+materialisms, and each is nothing but the original stock of myth-shapes, cleared
+<span class="pagenum" id="p309">[309]</span>of the elements of experience and contemplative vision and viewed mechanistically.</p>
+
+<p>Confucianism as reasoned out by Yang-Chu concluded in this sense. The
+system of Lakayata was the prolongation of the contempt for a de-souled world
+which had been the common characteristic of Gotama Buddha, Mahavira, and
+the contemporary Pietists, and which they in turn had derived from Sankhya
+atheism. Socrates is alike the heir of the Sophists and the ancestor of the Cynic
+itinerants and of Pyrrhonian skepsis. All are manifestations of the superiority
+of the megalopolitan intellect that has done with the irrational for good and all
+and despises any waking-consciousness that still knows or acknowledges
+mysteries. Gothic men shrank at every step before the fathomless, more awe-inspiring
+still as presented in dogmatic truths. But to-day even the Catholic
+has arrived at the point of feeling these dogmas as a successful systematic exposition
+of the riddle of the universe. The miracle is regarded as a physical
+occurrence of a higher order, and an English bishop professes his belief in the
+possibility of electric power and the power of prayer both originating in one
+homogeneous nature-system.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_538" href="#Footnote_538" class="fnanchor">[538]</a> The belief is belief in force and matter, even if
+the words used be “God” and “world,” “Providence” and “man.”</p>
+
+<p>Unique and self-contained, again, is the Faustian materialism, in the narrower
+sense of the word. In it the technical outlook upon the world reached fulfilment.
+The whole world a dynamic system, exact, mathematically disposed,
+capable down to its first causes of being experimentally probed and numerically
+fixed so that man can dominate it—this is what distinguishes our particular
+“return to Nature” from all others. That “Knowledge is Virtue” Confucius
+also believed, and Buddha, and Socrates, but “Knowledge is Power” is a phrase
+that possesses meaning only within the European-American Civilization.
+“Return to nature” here means the elimination of all forces that stand between
+the practical intelligence and nature—everywhere else materialism has contented
+itself with establishing (by way of contemplation or logic, as the case
+may be) supposedly simple units whose causal play accounts for everything
+without any residue of secrets, the supernatural being put down to want of
+knowledge. But the grand intellectual myth of Energy and Mass is at the same
+time a vast <em>working hypothesis</em>. It draws the picture of nature in such a way that
+men can <em>use</em> it. The Destiny element is mechanized as evolution, development,
+progress, and put into the centre of the system; the Will is an albumen-process;
+and all these doctrines of Monism, Darwinism, Positivism, and what not are
+elevated into the fitness-moral which is the beacon of American business men,
+British politicians, and German progress-Philistines alike—and turns out, in
+the last analysis, to be nothing but an intellectualist caricature of the old justification
+by faith.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p310">[310]</span></p>
+
+<p>Materialism would not be complete without the need of now and again
+easing the intellectual tension, by giving way to moods of myth, by performing
+rites of some sort, or by enjoying with an inward light-heartedness the charms
+of the irrational, the unnatural, the repulsive, and even, if need be, the merely
+silly. This tendency, which is visible enough, even to us, in the times of Meng-tse
+(372–289) and in those of the first Buddhist brotherhoods, is present also
+(and with the same significance) in Hellenism, of which indeed it is a leading
+characteristic. About 312 poetical scholars of the Callimachus type in Alexandria
+invented the Serapis-cult and provided it with an elaborate legend. The
+Isis-cult in Republican Rome was something very different both from the
+emperor-worship that succeeded it and from the deeply earnest Isis-religion of
+Egypt; it was a religious pastime of high society, which at times provoked
+public ridicule and at times led to public scandal and the closing of the cult-centres.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_539" href="#Footnote_539" class="fnanchor">[539]</a>
+The Chaldean astrology was in those days a <em>fashion</em>,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_540" href="#Footnote_540" class="fnanchor">[540]</a> very far removed
+from the genuine Classical belief in oracles and from the Magian faith in the
+might of the hour. It was “relaxation,” a “let’s pretend.” And, over and
+above this, there were the numberless charlatans and fake prophets who toured
+the towns and sought with their pretentious rites to persuade the half-educated
+into a renewed interest in religion. Correspondingly, we have in the European-American
+world of to-day the occultist and theosophist fraud, the American
+Christian Science, the untrue Buddhism of drawing-rooms, the religious arts-and-crafts
+business (brisker in Germany than even in England) that caters for
+groups and cults of Gothic or Late Classical or Taoist sentiment. Everywhere
+it is just a toying with myths that no one really believes, a tasting of cults that
+it is hoped might fill the inner void. The real belief is always the belief in
+atoms and numbers, but it requires this highbrow hocus-pocus to make it
+bearable in the long run. Materialism is shallow and honest, mock-religion
+shallow and dishonest. But the fact that the latter is possible at all
+foreshadows a new and genuine spirit of seeking that declares itself, first quietly,
+but soon emphatically and openly, in the civilized waking-consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>This next phase I call the <em>Second Religiousness</em>. It appears in all Civilizations
+as soon as they have fully formed themselves as such and are beginning to pass,
+slowly and imperceptibly, into the non-historical state in which time-periods
+cease to mean anything. (So far as the Western Civilization is concerned, therefore,
+we are still many generations short of that point.) The Second Religiousness
+is the necessary counterpart of Cæsarism, which is the final <em>political</em>
+constitution of Late Civilizations; it becomes visible, therefore, in the Augustan
+Age of the Classical and about the time of Shi-hwang-ti’s time in China. In
+both phenomena the creative young strength of the Early Culture is lacking.
+But both have their greatness nevertheless. That of the Second Religiousness
+<span class="pagenum" id="p311">[311]</span>consists in a deep piety that fills the waking-consciousness—the piety that
+impressed Herodotus in the (Late) Egyptians and impresses West-Europeans in
+China, India, and Islam—and that of Cæsarism consists in its unchained might
+of colossal facts. But neither in the creations of this piety nor in the form of
+the Roman Imperium is there anything primary and spontaneous. Nothing is
+built up, no idea unfolds itself—it is only as if a mist cleared off the land and
+revealed the old forms, uncertainly at first, but presently with increasing
+distinctness. The material of the Second Religiousness is simply that of the
+first, genuine, young religiousness—only otherwise experienced and expressed.
+It starts with Rationalism’s fading out in helplessness, then the forms of the
+Springtime become visible, and finally the whole world of the primitive religion,
+which had receded before the grand forms of the early faith, returns to
+the foreground, powerful, in the guise of the popular syncretism that is to be
+found in every Culture at this phase.</p>
+
+<p>Every “Age of Enlightenment” proceeds from an unlimited optimism of
+the reason—always associated with the type of the megalopolitan—to an
+equally unqualified scepticism. The sovereign waking-consciousness, cut off
+by walls and artificialities from living nature and the land about it and under it,
+cognises nothing outside itself. It applies criticism to its imaginary world,
+which it has cleared of everyday sense-experience, and continues to do so till it
+has found the last and subtlest result, the form of the form—itself: namely,
+nothing. With this the possibilities of physics as a critical mode of world-understanding
+are exhausted, and the hunger for metaphysics presents itself
+afresh. But it is not the religious pastimes of educated and literature-soaked
+cliques, still less is it the intellect, that gives rise to the Second Religiousness.
+Its source is the naïve belief that arises, unremarked but spontaneous, among
+the masses that there is some sort of mystic constitution of actuality (as to
+which formal proofs are presently regarded as barren and tiresome word-jugglery),
+and an equally naïve heart-need reverently responding to the myth
+with a cult. The forms of neither can be foreseen, still less chosen—they
+appear of themselves, and as far as we are ourselves concerned, we are as yet far
+distant from them.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_541" href="#Footnote_541" class="fnanchor">[541]</a> But already the opinions of Comte and Spencer, the
+Materialism and the Monism and the Darwinism, which stirred the best
+minds of the nineteenth century to such passion, have become the world-view
+proper to country cousins.</p>
+
+<p>The Classical philosophy had exhausted its ground by about 250 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> From
+that time on, “knowledge” was no longer a continually tested and augmented
+stock, but a belief therein, due basically to force of habit, but still able to
+convince, thanks to an old and well-tried methodology. In the time of Socrates
+<span class="pagenum" id="p312">[312]</span>there had been Rationalism as the religion of educated men, with, above it,
+the scholar-philosophy and, below it, the “superstition” of the masses. Now,
+philosophy developed towards an intellectual, and the popular syncretism
+towards a tangible, religiousness. The tendency was the same in both, and
+myth-belief and piety spread, not downwards, but upwards. Philosophy had
+much to receive and little to give. The Stoa had begun in the materialism
+of the Sophists and Cynics, and had explained the whole mythology on allegorical
+lines, but the prayer to Zeus at table—one of the most beautiful
+relics of the Classical Second Religiousness&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_542" href="#Footnote_542" class="fnanchor">[542]</a>—dates from as early as Cleanthes
+(d. 232). In Sulla’s time there was an upper-class Stoicism that was religious
+through and through, and a popular syncretism which combined Phrygian,
+Syrian, and Egyptian cults with numberless Classical mysteries that had become
+almost forgotten—corresponding exactly to the development of Buddha’s
+enlightened wisdom into Hinayana for the learned and Mahayana for the
+masses, and to the relation between learned Confucianism and Taoism as the
+vessel of Chinese syncretism which it soon became.</p>
+
+<p>Contemporary with the “Positivist” Meng-tse (372–289) there suddenly
+began a powerful movement towards alchemy, astrology, and occultism. It
+has long been a favourite topic of dispute whether this was something new or a
+recrudescence of old Chinese myth-feeling—but a glance at Hellenism supplies
+the answer. This syncretism appears “simultaneously” in the Classical, in
+India and China, and in popular Islam. It starts always on rationalist doctrines—the
+Stoa, Lao-tse, Buddha—and carries these through with peasant and
+springtime and exotic motives of every conceivable sort. From about 200 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>
+the Classical Syncretism—which must not be confused with that of the later
+Magian Pseudomorphosis&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_543" href="#Footnote_543" class="fnanchor">[543]</a>—raked in motives from Orphism, from Egypt,
+from Syria; from 67 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> the Chinese brought in Indian Buddhism in the popular
+Mahayana form, and the potency of the holy writings as charms, and the
+Buddha-figures as fetishes, was thought to be all the greater for their alien
+origin. The original doctrine of Lao-tse disappeared very quickly. At the
+beginning of Han times (<i>c.</i> <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 200) the troops of the Sen had ceased to be
+“moral representations” and become kindly beings. The wind-, cloud-, thunder-,
+and rain-gods came back. Crowds of cults which purported to drive out
+the evil spirits by the aid of the gods acquired a footing. It was in that time
+that there arose—doubtless out of some basic principle of pre-Confucian philosophy—the
+myth of Pan-ku, the prime principle from which the series of
+mythical emperors descended. As we know, the Logos-idea followed a similar
+line of development.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_544" href="#Footnote_544" class="fnanchor">[544]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p313">[313]</span></p>
+
+<p>The theory and practice of the conduct of life that Buddha taught were
+the outcome of world-weariness and intellectual disgusts, and were wholly
+unrelated to religious questions. And yet at the very beginning of the Indian
+“Imperial” period (250 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) he himself had already become a seated god-figure;
+and the Nirvana-theories, comprehensible only to the learned, were giving
+place more and more to solid and tangible doctrines of heaven, hell, and salvation,
+which were probably borrowed, as in other syncretisms, from an alien
+source—namely, Persian Apocalyptic. Already in Asoka’s time there were
+eighteen Buddhist sects. The salvation-doctrine of Mahayana found its first
+great herald in the poet-scholar Asvagosha (<i>c.</i> 50 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) and its fulfilment proper in
+Naganjuna (<i>c.</i> <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 150). But side by side with such teaching, the whole mass
+of proto-Indian mythology came back into circulation. The Vishnu- and
+Shiva-religions were already in 300 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> in definite shape, and, moreover, in
+syncretic form, so that the Krishna and the Rama legends were now transferred
+to Vishnu. We have the same spectacle in the Egyptian New Empire, where
+Amen of Thebes formed the centre of a vast syncretism, and again in the Arabian
+world of the Abbassids, where the folk-religion, with its images of Purgatory,
+Hell, Last Judgment, the heavenly Kaaba, Logos-Mohammed, fairies, saints,
+and spooks drove pristine Islam entirely into the background.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_545" href="#Footnote_545" class="fnanchor">[545]</a></p>
+
+<p>There are still in such times a few high intellects like Nero’s tutor Seneca
+and his antitype Psellus&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_546" href="#Footnote_546" class="fnanchor">[546]</a> the philosopher, royal tutor and politician of Byzantium’s
+Cæsarism-phase; like Marcus Aurelius the Stoic and Asoka the
+Buddhist, who were themselves the Cæsars;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_547" href="#Footnote_547" class="fnanchor">[547]</a> like the Pharaoh Amenhotep IV
+(Akhenaton), whose deeply significant experiment was treated as heresy and
+brought to naught by the powerful Amen-priesthood—a risk that Asoka, too,
+had, no doubt, to face from the Brahmins.</p>
+
+<p>But Cæsarism itself, in the Chinese as in the Roman Empire, gave birth to
+an emperor-cult, and thereby concentrated Syncretism. It is an absurd notion
+that the veneration of the Chinese for the living emperor is a relic of ancient
+religion. During the whole course of the Chinese Culture there were no emperors
+at all. The rulers of the States were called Wang (that is, kings), and
+scarcely a century before the final victory of the Chinese Augustus Meng-tse
+wrote—in the vein of our nineteenth century—“The people is the most important
+element in the country; next come the useful gods of the soil and the
+crops, and least in importance comes the ruler.” The mythology of the pristine
+emperors was without doubt put together by Confucius and his contemporaries,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p314">[314]</span>its constitutional and social-ethical form was dictated by their rationalist aims,
+and from this myth the first Chinese Cæsar borrowed both title and cult-idea.
+The elevation of men to divinity is the full-cycle return to the springtime in
+which gods were converted into heroes—exactly like these very emperors and
+the figures of Homer—and it is a distinguishing trait of almost all religions
+of this second degree. Confucius himself was deified in <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 57, with an official
+cult, and Buddha had been so long before. Al Ghazali (<i>c.</i> 1050), who helped
+to bring about the “Second Religiousness” of the Islamic world, is now, in the
+popular belief, a divine being and is beloved as a saint and helper. In the philosophy-schools
+of the Classical there was a cult of Plato, and of Epicurus, and
+Alexander’s claim to descent from Heracles and Cæsar’s to descent from Venus
+lead directly to the cult of the <i>Divus</i>, in which immemorial Orphic imaginings
+and family religions crop up afresh, just as the cult of Hwang-ti contains traits
+of the most ancient mythology of China.</p>
+
+<p>But with the coming of the emperor-cults there begins at once, in each of the
+two, an attempt to bring the Second Religiousness into fixed organizations,
+which, however named—sects, orders, Churches—are always stiff re-constructions
+of what had been living forms of the Springtime, and bear the same relation
+to these as “caste” bears to “status.”</p>
+
+<p>There are signs of the tendency even in the Augustan reforms, with their
+artificial revival of long-dead city-cults, such as the rites of the Fratres Arvales,
+but it is only with the Hellenistic mystery-religions, or even with Mithraism,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_548" href="#Footnote_548" class="fnanchor">[548]</a>
+that community or Church organization proper begins, and its development is
+broken off in the ensuing downfall of the Classical. The corresponding feature
+in Egypt is the theocratic state set up by the priest-kings of Thebes in the
+eleventh century. The Chinese analogue is the Tao churches of the Han
+period and especially that founded by Chang-lu, which gave rise to the fearful
+insurrection of the Yellow Turbans (recalling the religious provincial rebellions
+of the Roman Empire), which devastated whole regions and brought about the
+fall of the Han dynasty.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_549" href="#Footnote_549" class="fnanchor">[549]</a> And the very counterpart of these ascetic Churches
+of Taoism, with their rigidity and wild mythology, is to be found in the late
+Byzantine monk-states such as Studion and the autonomous group of monasteries
+on Athos, founded in 1100, which are as suggestive of Buddhism as anything
+could well be.</p>
+
+<p>In the end Second Religiousness issues in the <em>fellah-religions</em>. Here the opposition
+between cosmopolitan and provincial piety has vanished again, as completely
+as that between primitive and higher Culture. What this means, the
+conception of the fellah people, discussed in an earlier chapter,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_550" href="#Footnote_550" class="fnanchor">[550]</a> tells us. Religion
+becomes entirely historyless; where formerly decades constituted an
+<span class="pagenum" id="p315">[315]</span>epoch, now whole centuries pass unimportantly, and the ups and downs of
+superficial changes only serve to show the unalterable finality of the inner state.
+It matters nothing that “Chufucianism” appeared in China (1200) as a variant
+of the Confucian state-doctrine, when it appeared, and whether or not it succeeded.
+Equally, it signifies nothing that Indian Buddhism, long become a
+polytheistic religion of the people, went down before Neo-Brahmanism (whose
+great divine, Sankhara, lived about 800), nor is it of importance to know the
+date at which the latter passed over into the Hinduism of Brahma, Vishnu,
+and Shiva. There always are and always will be a handful of superlatively
+intellectual, thoughtful, and perfectly self-sufficing people, like the Brahmins
+in India, the Mandarins in China, and the Egyptian priests who amazed Herodotus.
+But the fellah-religion itself is once more primitive through and through—the
+animal-cults of the Egyptian XXVIth dynasty; the composite of Buddhism,
+Confucianism, and Taoism that constitutes the state religion of China;
+the Islam of the present-day East. The religion of the Aztecs was very likely
+another case in point, for, as Cortez found it, it seems remote indeed from the
+intensely intellectualized religion of the Mayas.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VII_4">
+ VII
+</h3>
+
+<p>The religion of Jewry, too, is a fellah-religion since the time of Jehuda ben
+Halevi who (like his Islamic teacher, Al Ghazali) regarded scientific philosophy
+with an unqualified scepticism, and in the <cite>Kuzari</cite> (1140) refused to it any
+rôle save that of handmaid of the orthodox theology. This corresponds exactly
+to the transition from Middle Stoicism to the later form of the Imperial period,
+and to the extinction of Chinese speculation under the Western Han Dynasty.
+Still more significant is the figure of Moses Maimonides,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_551" href="#Footnote_551" class="fnanchor">[551]</a> who in 1175 collected
+the entire dogmatic material of Judaism, as something fixed and complete, in a
+great work of the type of the Chinese <cite>Li-ki</cite>, entirely regardless of whether the
+particular items still retained any meaning or not.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_552" href="#Footnote_552" class="fnanchor">[552]</a> Neither in this period nor
+in any other is Judaism unique in religious history, though from the view-point
+that the Western Culture has taken up on its own ground, it may seem so.
+Nor is it peculiar to Jewry that, unperceived by those who bear it, its name is
+for ever changing in meaning, for the same has happened, step by step, in the
+Persian story.</p>
+
+<p>In their “Merovingian” period—approximately the last five centuries
+before the birth of Christ—both Jewry and Persia evolve from tribal groups
+into nations of Magian cast, without land, without unity of origin, and (even
+so soon) with the characteristic ghetto mode of life that endures unchanged to-day
+for the Jews of Brooklyn and the Parsees of Bombay alike.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p316">[316]</span></p>
+
+<p>In the Springtime (first five centuries of the Christian era) this landless
+Consensus spread geographically from Spain to Shantung. This was the
+Jewish Age of Chivalry and its “Gothic” blossoming-time of religious creative-force.
+The later Apocalyptic, the Mishnah, and also primitive Christianity
+(which was not cast off till after Trajan’s and Hadrian’s time) are creations of
+this nation. It is well known that in those days the Jews were peasants,
+artisans, and dwellers in little towns, and “big business” was in the hands of
+Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans—that is, members of the Classical world.</p>
+
+<p>About 500&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_553" href="#Footnote_553" class="fnanchor">[553]</a> begins the Jewish Baroque, which Western observers are accustomed
+to regard, very one-sidedly, as part of the picture of Spain’s age of
+glory. The Jewish Consensus, like the Persian, Islamic, and Byzantine, now
+advances to an urban and intellectual awareness, and thenceforward it is master
+of the forms of city-economics and city-science. Tarragona, Toledo, and
+Granada are predominantly Jewish cities. Jews constitute an essential element
+in Moorish high society. Their finished forms, their <i lang="fr">esprit</i>, their knightliness,
+amazed the Gothic nobility of the Crusades, which tried to imitate them; but
+the diplomacy also, and the war-management and the administration of the
+Moorish cities would all have been unthinkable without the Jewish aristocracy,
+which was every whit as thoroughbred as the Islamic. As once in Arabia there
+had been a Jewish <i lang="de">Minnesang</i>, so now here there was a high literature of enlightened
+science. It was under the guidance of the Rabbi Isaac Hassan, and by
+the hand of Jewish and Islamic as well as Christian savants, that Alfonso X’s
+new work on the planets was prepared (<i>c.</i> 1250);&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_554" href="#Footnote_554" class="fnanchor">[554]</a> in other words, it was an
+achievement of Magian and not of Faustian world-thought.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_555" href="#Footnote_555" class="fnanchor">[555]</a> But Spain and
+Morocco after all contained but a very small fraction of the Jewish Consensus,
+and even this Consensus itself had not merely a worldly but also (and predominantly)
+a spiritual significance. In it, too, there occurred a Puritan movement,
+which rejected the Talmud and tried to get back to the pure Torah. The community
+of the Qaraites, preceded by many a forerunner, arose about 760 in
+northern Syria, the selfsame area which gave birth a century earlier to the
+Paulician iconoclasts and a century later to the Sufism of Islam—three Magian
+tendencies whose inner relationship is unmistakable. The Qaraites, like the
+Puritans of all other Cultures, were combated by both orthodoxy and enlightenment.
+Rabbinical counterblasts appeared from Cordova and Fez to southern
+Arabia and Persia. But in that period appeared also—an outcome of “Jewish
+Sufism,” and suggestive in places of Swedenborg—the <i lang="fr">chef-d’œuvre</i> of rational
+mysticism, the Yesirah, germane in its Kabbalistic root-ideas to Byzantine
+image-symbolism and the contemporary magic of Greek “second-degree
+Christianity,” and equally so to the folk-religion of Islam.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p317">[317]</span></p>
+
+<p>But an entirely new situation was created when, from about the year 1000,
+the Western portion of the Consensus found itself suddenly in the field of the
+young Western Culture. The Jews, like the Parsees, the Byzantines, and the
+Moslems, had become by then civilized and cosmopolitan, whereas the German-Roman
+world lived in the townless land, and the settlements that had just come
+(or were coming) into existence around monasteries and market-places were still
+many generations short of possessing souls of their own. While the Jews were
+already almost fellaheen, the Western peoples were still almost primitives.
+The Jew could not comprehend the Gothic inwardness, the castle, the Cathedral;
+nor the Christian the Jew’s superior, almost cynical, intelligence and his finished
+expertness in “money-thinking.” There was mutual hate and contempt, due not
+to race-distinction, but to <em>difference of phase</em>. Into all the hamlets and country
+towns the Jewish Consensus built its essentially megalopolitan—proletarian—ghettos.
+The <i lang="de">Judengasse</i> is a thousand years in advance of the Gothic town.
+Just so, in Jesus’s days, the Roman towns stood in the midst of the villages on
+the Lake of Genesareth.</p>
+
+<p>But these young nations were, besides, bound up with the soil and the idea
+of a fatherland, and the landless “Consensus,” which was cemented, not by
+deliberate organization, but by a wholly unconscious, wholly metaphysical
+impulse—an expression of the Magian world-feeling in its simplest and directest
+form—appeared to them as something uncanny and incomprehensible. It was
+in this period that the legend of the Wandering Jew arose. It meant a good deal
+for a Scottish monk to visit a Lombard monastery, and nostalgia soon took
+him home again, but when a rabbi of Mainz—in 1000 the seat of the most
+important Talmudic seminary of the West—or of Salerno betook himself
+to Cairo or Merv or Basra, he was at home in every ghetto. In this tacit cohesion
+lay the very idea of the Magian nation&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_556" href="#Footnote_556" class="fnanchor">[556]</a>—although the contemporary West
+was unaware of the fact, it was for the Jews, as for the Greeks of the period
+and the Parsees and Islam, State and Church and people all in one. This State
+had its own jurisprudence and (what Christians never perceived) its own
+public life,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_557" href="#Footnote_557" class="fnanchor">[557]</a> and despised the surrounding world of the host-peoples as a sort
+of outland; and it was a veritable treason-trial that expelled Spinoza and
+Uriel Acosta—an event of which these host-peoples could not possibly grasp
+the under meaning. And in 1799 the leading thinker among the Eastern Hasidim,
+Senior Salman, was handed over by the rabbinical opposition to the
+Petersburg Government as though to a foreign state.</p>
+
+<p>Jewry of the West-European group had entirely lost the relation to the open
+land which had still existed in the Moorish period of Spain. There were no
+more peasants. The smallest ghetto was a fragment, however miserable, of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p318">[318]</span>megalopolis, and its inhabitants (like those of hardened India and China) split
+into castes—the Rabbi is the Brahmin or Mandarin of the ghetto—and a
+coolie-mass characterized by civilized, cold, superior intelligence and an undeviating
+eye to business. But this phenomenon, again, is not unique if our
+historical sense takes in the wider horizon, for <em>all</em> Magian nations have been in
+this condition since the Crusade period. The Parsee in India possesses exactly
+the same business-power as the Jews in the European-American world and the
+Armenians and Greeks in southern Europe. The same phenomenon occurs in
+every other Civilization, when it pushes into a younger <i lang="fr">milieu</i>—witness the
+Chinese in California (where they are the targets of a true Anti-Semitism of
+western America), in Java, and in Singapore; that of the Indian trader in
+East Africa; and that of <em>the Romans in the Early Arabian World</em>. In the last
+instance, indeed, the conditions were the exact reverse of those of to-day, for
+the “Jews” of those days were the Romans, and the Armæan felt for them an
+apocalyptic hatred that is very closely akin to our West-European Anti-Semitism.
+The outbreak of 88, in which, at a sign from Mithridates, a hundred
+thousand Roman business-people were murdered by the exasperated population
+of Asia Minor, was a veritable <i>pogrom</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Over and above these oppositions there was that of race, which passed
+from contempt into hate in proportion as the Western Culture itself caught up
+with the Civilization and the “difference of age,” expressed in the way of
+life and the increasing primacy of intelligence, became smaller. But all this
+has nothing to do with the silly catchwords “Aryan” and “Semite” that have
+been borrowed from philology. The “Aryan” Persians and Armenians are in
+our eyes entirely indistinguishable from the Jews, and even in South Europe
+and the Balkans there is almost no bodily difference between the Christian and
+Jewish inhabitants. The Jewish nation is, like every other nation of the
+Arabian Culture, the result of an immense <em>mission</em>, and up to well within the
+Crusades it was changed and changed again by accessions and secessions <i lang="fr">en
+masse</i>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_558" href="#Footnote_558" class="fnanchor">[558]</a> One part of Eastern Jewry conforms in bodily respects to the Christian
+inhabitants of the Caucasus, another to the South-Russian Tatars, and a large
+portion of Western Jewry to the North African Moors. What has mattered in
+the West more than any other distinction is the difference <em>between the race-ideal of
+the Gothic springtime</em>,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_559" href="#Footnote_559" class="fnanchor">[559]</a> which has bred its human type, and that of the Sephardic
+Jew, which first formed itself in the ghettos of the West and was likewise the
+product of a particular spiritual breeding and training under exceedingly hard
+external conditions—to which, doubtless, we must add the effectual spell of
+the land and people about him, and his metaphysical defensive reaction to that
+spell, especially after the loss of the Arabic language had made this part of the
+nation a self-contained world. This feeling of being “different” is the more
+potent on both sides, the more breed the individual possesses. It is <em>want</em> of race,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p319">[319]</span>and nothing else, that makes intellectuals—philosophers, doctrinaires,
+Utopists—incapable of understanding the depth of this metaphysical hatred,
+which is the beat-difference of two currents of being manifested as an unbearable
+dissonance, a hatred that may become tragic for both, the same hatred as has
+dominated the Indian Culture in setting the Indian of race against the Sudra.
+During the Gothic age this difference is deep and religious, and the object of
+hatred is the Consensus as religion; only with the beginning of the Western
+Civilization does it become materialist, and begin to attack Jewry on its intellectual
+and business sides, on which the West suddenly finds itself confronted
+by an even challenger.</p>
+
+<p>But the deepest element of separation and bitterness has been one of which
+the full tragedy has been least understood. While Western man, from the days
+of the Saxon emperors to the present, has (in the most significant sense of the
+words) <em>lived</em> his history, and lived it with a consciousness of it that no other
+Culture can parallel, the Jewish Consensus ceased to have a history at all.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_560" href="#Footnote_560" class="fnanchor">[560]</a>
+Its problems were solved, its inner form was complete, conclusive, and unalterable.
+For it, as for Islam, the Greek Church, and the Parsees, centuries
+ceased to mean anything, and consequently no one belonging inwardly to the
+Consensus can even begin to comprehend the passion with which Faustians
+livingly experience the short crowded epochs in which their history and destiny
+take decisive turns—the beginning of the Crusades, the Reformation, the
+French Revolution, the German Wars of Liberation, and each and every turning-point
+in the existence of the several peoples. All this, for the Jew, lies
+thirty generations back. Outside him history on the grand style flowed on and
+past. Epochs succeeded to epochs, every century witnessed fundamental human
+changes, but in the ghetto and in the souls of its denizens all stood still. And
+even when he regarded himself as a member of the people amongst whom he
+sojourned and took part in their good and evil fortune—as happened in so
+many countries in 1914—he lived these experiences, not really as something <em>his
+own</em>, but as a partisan, a supporter; he judged them as an interested spectator,
+and hence it is just the deepest meanings of the struggle that must ever remain
+hidden from him. A Jewish cavalry-general fought in the Thirty Years’ War
+(he lies buried in the old Jewish cemetery at Prague&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_561" href="#Footnote_561" class="fnanchor">[561]</a>)—but what did the ideas
+of Luther or Loyola mean to him? What did the Byzantines—near relatives
+of the Jews—comprehend of the Crusades? Such things are among the tragic
+necessities of the higher history that consists in the life-courses of individual
+Cultures, and often have they repeated themselves. The Romans, then an
+ageing people, cannot possibly have understood what was at issue for the Jews
+in the trial of Jesus or the rising of Barcochebas.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_562" href="#Footnote_562" class="fnanchor">[562]</a> The European-American
+<span class="pagenum" id="p320">[320]</span>world has displayed a complete incomprehension of the fellah-revolutions
+of Turkey (1908) and China (1911); the inner life and thought of these peoples,
+and consequently, even their notions of state and sovereignty (the Caliph in
+the one, the Son of Heaven in the other) being of an utterly different cast and,
+therefore, a sealed book, the course of events could neither be weighed up,
+nor even reckoned upon in advance. The member of an alien Culture can be a
+spectator, and therefore also a descriptive historian of the past, but he can never
+be a statesman, a man who feels the future working in him. If he does not
+possess the material power to enable him to act in the cadre of his own Culture,
+ignoring or manipulating those of the alien (which, of course, may occur,
+as with the Romans in the young East or Disraeli in England), he stands helpless
+in the midst of events. The Roman and the Greek always mentally projected
+the life-conditions of his Polis into the alien event; the modern European
+always regards alien Destinies in terms of constitution, parliament, and democracy,
+although the application of such ideas to other Cultures is ridiculous
+and meaningless; and the Jew of the Consensus follows the history of the
+present (which is nothing but that of the Faustian Civilization spread over
+continents and oceans) with the fundamental feelings of Magian mankind,
+even when he himself is firmly convinced of the Western character of
+his thought.</p>
+
+<p>As every Magian Consensus is non-territorial and geographically unlimited,
+it involuntarily sees in all conflicts concerning the <em>Faustian</em> ideas of
+fatherland, mother tongue, ruling house, monarchy, constitution, a return
+from forms that are thoroughly alien (therefore burdensome and meaningless)
+to him towards forms matching with his own nature. Hence the word “international,”
+whether it be coupled with socialism, pacificism, or capitalism,
+can excite him to enthusiasm, but what he hears in that word is <em>the essence of
+his landless and boundless Consensus</em>. While for the European-American democracy
+constitutional struggles and revolutions mean an evolution towards
+the Civilized ideal, for him they mean (as he almost never consciously realizes)
+the breaking-down of all that is of other build than himself. Even when the
+force of the Consensus in him is broken and the life of his host-people exercises
+an outward attraction upon him to the point of an induced patriotism, yet the
+party that he supports is always that of which the aims are most nearly comparable
+with the Magian essence. Hence in Germany he is a democrat and in
+England (like the Parsee in India) an imperialist. It is exactly the same misunderstanding
+as when West Europeans regard Young Turks and Chinese reformers
+as kindred spirits—that is, as “constitutionalists.” If there is
+inward relationship, a man affirms even where he destroys; if inward alienness,
+his effect is negative even where his desire is to be constructive. What the
+Western Culture has destroyed, by reform-efforts of its own type where it has
+had power, hardly bears thinking of; and Jewry has been equally destructive
+<span class="pagenum" id="p321">[321]</span>where it has intervened. The sense of the inevitableness of this reciprocal
+misunderstanding leads to the appalling hatred that settles deep in the blood
+and, fastening upon visible marks like race, mode of life, profession, speech,
+leads both sides to waste, ruin, and bloody excesses wherever these conditions
+occur.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_563" href="#Footnote_563" class="fnanchor">[563]</a></p>
+
+<p>This applies also, and above all, to the religiousness of the Faustian world,
+which feels itself to be threatened, hated, and undermined by an alien metaphysic
+in its midst. From the reforms of Hugh of Cluny and St. Bernard and
+the Lateran Council of 1215 to Luther, Calvin, and Puritanism and thence to
+the Age of Enlightenment, what a tide flowed through our waking-consciousness,
+when for the Jewish religion history had long ceased altogether! Within
+the West-European Consensus we see Joseph Qaro in his <cite>Schulehan Arukh</cite> (1565)
+restating the Maimonides material in another form, and this could equally
+well have been done in 1400 or 1800, or for that matter not at all. In the fixity
+of modern Islam of Byzantine Christianity since the Crusades (and, equally,
+of the life of Late China and of Late Egypt) all is formal and rolled even, not
+only the food-prohibitions, the prayer-runes, the phylacteries, but also the
+Talmudic casuistry, which is fundamentally the same as that applied for centuries
+to the Vendidad in Bombay and the Koran in Cairo. The mysticism,
+too, of Jewry (which is <em>pure Sufism</em>) has remained, like that of Islam, unaltered
+since the Crusades; and in the last centuries it has produced three more saints
+in the sense of Oriental Sufism—though to recognize them as such we have
+to see through a colour-wash of Western thought-forms. Spinoza, with his
+thinking in substances instead of forces and his thoroughly Magian dualism,
+is entirely comparable with the last stragglers of Islamic philosophy such as
+Murtada and Shirazi. He makes use of the notions of his Western Baroque
+armoury, living himself into mode of imagination of that <i lang="fr">milieu</i> so thoroughly
+as to deceive even himself, but below the surface movements of his soul he
+remains the unchanged descendant of Maimonides and Avicenna and Talmudic
+“<i>more geometrico</i>” methodology. In Baal Shem, the founder of the Hasidim
+sect (born in Volhynia about 1698), a true Messiah arose. His wanderings
+through the world of the Polish ghettos teaching and performing miracles
+are comparable only with the story of primitive Christianity;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_564" href="#Footnote_564" class="fnanchor">[564]</a> here was a
+movement that had its sources in ancient currents of Magian, Kabbalistic
+mysticism, that gripped a large part of Eastern Jewry and was undoubtedly a
+potent fact in the religious history of the Arabian Culture; and yet, running
+its course as it did in the midst of an alien mankind, it passed practically unnoticed
+by it. The peaceful battle that Baal Shem waged for God-immanent
+<span class="pagenum" id="p322">[322]</span>against the Talmudic pharisees of his time, his Christlike figure, the wealth
+of legends that were rapidly woven about his person and the persons of his
+disciples—all this is of the pure Magian spirit, and at bottom as alien to us of
+the West as primitive Christianity itself. The thought-processes of Hasidist
+writings are to non-Jews practically unintelligible, and so also is the ritual.
+In the excitement of the service some fall into convulsions and others begin to
+dance like the dervishes of Islam.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_565" href="#Footnote_565" class="fnanchor">[565]</a> The original teaching of Baal Shem was
+developed by one of the disciples in Zaddikism, and this too, which was a
+belief in successive divine embassies of saints (Zaddiks), whose mere proximity
+brought salvation, has obvious kinship with Islamic Mahdism and still more
+with the Shiite doctrine of the imams in whom the “Light of the Prophet”
+takes up its abode. Another disciple, Solomon Maimon—of whom a remarkable
+autobiography exists—stepped from Baal Shem to Kant (whose
+abstract kind of thought has always possessed an immense attraction for Talmudic
+intellects). The third is Otto Weininger, whose moral dualism is a
+purely Magian conception and whose death in a spiritual struggle of essentially
+Magian experience is one of the noblest spectacles ever presented by a Late
+religiousness.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_566" href="#Footnote_566" class="fnanchor">[566]</a> Something of the sort Russians may be able to experience, but
+neither the Classical nor the Faustian soul is capable of it.</p>
+
+<p>In the “Enlightenment” of the eighteenth century the Western Culture in
+turn becomes megalopolitan and intellectual, and so, suddenly, accessible to
+the intelligentsia of the Consensus. And the latter, thus dumped into the middle
+of an epoch corresponding, for them, to the remote past of a long-expired
+Sephardic life-current, were inevitably stirred by echo-feelings, but these echoes
+were of the <em>critical and negative side only</em>, and the tragically unnatural outcome
+was that a cohesion already historically complete and incapable of organic
+progress was swept into the big movement of the host-peoples, which it shook,
+loosened, displaced, and vitiated to its depths. For, for the Faustian spirit,
+the Enlightenment was a step forward along its own road—a step over débris,
+no doubt, but still affirmative at bottom—whereas for Jewry it was destruction
+and nothing else, the demolition of an alien structure that it did not understand.
+And this is why we so often see the spectacle—paralleled by the
+case of the Parsees in India, of the Chinese and Japanese in a Christian <i lang="fr">milieu</i>,
+and by modern Americans in China—of enlightenment, pushed to the point
+of cynicism and unqualified atheism, opposing an alien religion, while the
+fellah-practices of its own folk go on wholly unaffected. There are Socialists
+who superficially—and yet quite sincerely—combat every sort of religion,
+and yet in their own case follow the food-prohibitions and routine prayers
+and phylacteries with an anxious exactitude. More frequent actually is inward
+lapse from the Consensus qua creed—the spectacle that is presented to us by
+<span class="pagenum" id="p323">[323]</span>the Indian student who, after an English university-training in Locke and Mill,
+acquires the same cynical contempt for Indian and Western faiths alike and must
+himself be crushed under the ruins of both. Since the Napoleonic era the old-civilized
+Consensus has mingled unwelcome with the new-civilized Western
+“society” of the cities and has taken their economic and scientific methods
+into use with the cool superiority of age. A few generations later, the Japanese,
+also a very old intellect, did the same, and probably with still greater success.
+Yet another example is afforded by the Carthaginians, a rear-guard of the Babylonian
+Civilization, who, already highly developed when the Classical Culture
+was still in the Etrusco-Doric infancy, ended by surrendering to Late Hellenism&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_567" href="#Footnote_567" class="fnanchor">[567]</a>—petrified
+in an end-state in all that concerned religion and art, but far superior
+to the Greeks and Romans as men of business, and hated accordingly.</p>
+
+<p>To-day this Magian nation, with its ghetto and its religion, itself is in
+danger of disappearing—not because the metaphysics of the two Cultures
+come closer to one another (for that is impossible), but because the intellectualized
+upper stratum of each side is ceasing to be metaphysical at all. It has
+lost every kind of inward cohesion, and what remains is simply a cohesion for
+practical questions. The lead that this nation has enjoyed from its long habituation
+to thinking in business terms becomes ever less and less (<i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the American,
+it has already almost gone), and with the loss of it will go the last potent
+means of keeping up a Consensus that has fallen regionally into parts. In the
+moment when the civilized methods of the European-American world-cities
+shall have arrived at full maturity, the destiny of Jewry—at least of the Jewry
+in our midst (that of Russia is another problem)—will be accomplished.</p>
+
+<p>Islam has <em>soil</em> under it. It has practically absorbed the Persian, Jewish,
+Nestorian, and Monophysite Consensus into itself.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_568" href="#Footnote_568" class="fnanchor">[568]</a> The relic of the Byzantine
+nation, the modern Greeks, also occupy their own land. The relic of the Parsees
+in India dwells in the midst of the stiffened forms of a yet older and more
+fellahized Civilization and is thereby secured in its footing. But the West-European-American
+part of the Jewish Consensus, which has drawn to itself
+and bound to its destiny most of the other parts of Jewry, has now fallen into
+the machinery of a young Civilization. Detached from any land-footing since,
+centuries ago, it saved its life by shutting itself off in the ghetto, it is fragmented
+and faced with dissolution. But that is a Destiny, not <em>in</em> the Faustian Culture,
+but of the Magian.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p324"></a><a id="p325"></a><a id="p326"></a><a id="p327"></a>[327]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">
+ CHAPTER X
+ <br>
+ <span class="subtitle">THE STATE
+ <br>
+ (A)
+ <br>
+ THE PROBLEM OF THE ESTATES—NOBILITY AND PRIESTHOOD</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_569" href="#Footnote_569" class="fnanchor">[569]</a></h3>
+
+<p>A fathomless secret of the cosmic flowings that we call Life is their separation
+into two sexes. Already in the earth-bound existence-streams of the plant
+world they are trying to part from one another, as the symbol of the flower
+tells us—into a something that <em>is</em> this existence and a something that keeps it
+going. Animals are free, little worlds in a big world—the cosmic—closed
+off as microcosms and set up against the macrocosm. And, more and more
+decisively as the animal kingdom unfolds its history, the dual direction of dual
+being, of the masculine and the feminine, manifests itself.</p>
+
+<p>The feminine stands closer to the Cosmic. It is rooted deeper in the earth
+and it is immediately involved in the grand cyclic rhythms of Nature. The
+masculine is freer, more animal, more mobile—as to sensation and understanding
+as well as otherwise—more awake and more tense.</p>
+
+<p>The male livingly experiences Destiny, and he <em>comprehends</em> Causality, the
+causal logic of the Become. The female, on the contrary, <em>is herself</em> Destiny and
+Time and the organic logic of the Becoming, and for that very reason the principle
+of Causality is for ever alien to her. Whenever Man has tried to give
+Destiny any tangible form, he has felt it as of feminine form, and he has called
+it Moirai, Parcæ, Norns. The supreme deity is never itself Destiny, but always
+either its representative or its master—just as man represents or controls
+woman. Primevally, too, woman is the seeress, and not because she knows the
+future, but because she <em>is</em> the future. The priest merely interprets the oracle;
+the woman is the oracle itself, and it is Time that speaks through her.</p>
+
+<p>The man <em>makes</em> History, the woman <em>is</em> History. Here, strangely clear yet
+enigmatic still, we have a dual significance of all living happenings—on the
+one hand we sense cosmic flow as such, and on the other hand the chain and
+train of successive individuals brings us back to the microcosms themselves as
+the recipients, containers, and preservers of the flowing. It is this “second”
+history that is characteristically masculine—political, social, more conscious,
+freer, and more agitated than the other. It reaches back deep into the animal
+world, and receives highest symbolic and world-historical expression in the
+life-courses of the great Cultures. Feminine, on the contrary, is the primary,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p328">[328]</span>the eternal, the maternal, the plantlike (for the plant ever has something
+female in it), <em>the cultureless history of the generation-sequence</em>, which never alters,
+but uniformly and stilly passes through the being of all animal and human
+species, through all the short-lived individual Cultures. In retrospect, it is
+synonymous with Life itself. This history, too, is not without its battles and
+its tragedies. Woman in childbed wins through to her victory. The Aztecs—the
+Romans of the Mexican Culture—honoured the woman in labour as a
+battling warrior, and if she died, she was interred with the same formulæ as
+the fallen hero. Policy for Woman is eternally the conquest of the Man,
+through whom she can become mother of children, through whom she can
+become History and Destiny and Future. The target of her profound shyness,
+her tactical finesse, is ever the father of her son. The man, on the contrary,
+whose centre of gravity lies essentially in the other kind of History, wants
+that son as <em>his</em> son, as inheritor and carrier of his blood and historical tradition.</p>
+
+<p>Here, in man and in woman, <em>the two kinds of History</em> are fighting for power.
+Woman is strong and wholly what she is, and she experiences the Man and the
+Sons only in relation to herself and her ordained rôle. In the masculine being,
+on the contrary, there is a certain contradiction; he is this man, and he is
+something else besides, which woman neither understands nor admits, which
+she feels as robbery and violence upon that which to her is holiest. This
+secret and fundamental war of the sexes has gone on ever since there were
+sexes, and will continue—silent, bitter, unforgiving, pitiless—while they
+continue. In it, too, there are policies, battles, alliances, treaties, treasons.
+Race-feeling of love and hate, which originate in depths of world-yearning and
+primary instincts of directedness, prevail between the sexes—and with a still
+more uncanny potency than in the other History that takes place between man
+and man. There are love-lyrics and war-lyrics, love-dances and weapon-dances,
+there are two kinds of tragedy—<cite>Othello</cite> and <cite>Macbeth</cite>. But nothing in the
+political world even begins to compare with the abysses of a Clytæmnestra’s or
+a Kriemhild’s vengeance.</p>
+
+<p>And so woman despises that other History—man’s politics—which
+she never comprehends, and of which all that she sees is that it takes her sons
+from her. What for her is a triumphant battle that annihilates the victories
+of a thousand childbeds? Man’s history sacrifices woman’s history to itself,
+and no doubt there is a female heroism too, that proudly brings the sons to the
+sacrifice (Catherine Sforza on the walls of Imola), but nevertheless there was
+and is and ever will be a secret politic of the woman—of the female of the
+animal world even—that seeks to draw away her male from his kind of history
+and to weave him body and soul into her own plantlike history of generic
+succession—that is, into herself. And yet all that is accomplished in the man-history
+is accomplished under the battle-cries of hearth and home, wives and
+children, race and the like, and its very object is the covering and upholding of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p329">[329]</span>this history of birth and death. The conflict of man and man is ever on account
+of the blood, of woman. <em>Woman, as Time, is that for which there is history at all.</em></p>
+
+<p>The woman with race in her feels this even when she does not know it.
+She is Destiny, she plays Destiny. The play begins with the fight of men for
+the possession of her—Helen, and the tragedy of Carmen, and Catherine II,
+and the story of Napoleon and Désirée Clary, who in the end took Bernadotte
+over to the side of his enemies—and it is not a human play only, for this fight
+begins down in the animal world and fills the history of whole species. And it
+culminates in her swaying, as mother or wife or mistress, the Destiny of empires—Hallgerd
+in the Njal saga, the Frankish queen Brunhilde, Marozia
+who gave the Holy See to men of her choice. The man climbs up in <em>his</em> history
+until he has the future of a country in his hands—and then woman comes
+and forces him to his knees. Peoples and states may go down in ruin over it,
+but she in <em>her</em> history has conquered. This, in the last analysis, is always the
+aim of political ambition in a woman of race.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_570" href="#Footnote_570" class="fnanchor">[570]</a></p>
+
+<p>Thus history has two meanings, neither to be blasphemed. It is cosmic or
+politic, it <em>is</em> being or it <em>preserves</em> being. There are two sorts of Destiny, two
+sorts of war, two sorts of tragedy—<em>public and private</em>. Nothing can eliminate
+this duality from the world. It is radical, founded in the essence of the animal
+that is both microcosm and participant in the cosmic. It appears at all significant
+conjunctures in the form of a conflict of duties, which exists only for
+the man, not for the woman, and in the course of a higher Culture it is never
+overcome, but only deepened. There are public life and private life, public
+law and private law, communal cults and domestic cults. As Estate,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_571" href="#Footnote_571" class="fnanchor">[571]</a> Being
+is “in form” for the one history; as race, breed, it is in flow as <em>itself</em> the other
+history. This is the old German distinction between the “sword side” and the
+“spindle side” of blood-relationships. The double significance of directional
+Time finds its highest expression in the ideas of <em>the State</em> and <em>the Family</em>.</p>
+
+<p>The ordering of the family is in living material what the form of the house
+is in dead.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_572" href="#Footnote_572" class="fnanchor">[572]</a> A change in the structure and import of family life, and the plan
+<span class="pagenum" id="p330">[330]</span>of the house changes also. To the Classical mode of housing corresponds the
+agnate family of Classical style. This is ever more sharply defined in Hellenic
+city-law than in the later Roman.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_573" href="#Footnote_573" class="fnanchor">[573]</a> It refers entirely to the Estate as present
+in a Euclidean here-and-now, just as the Polis is conceived as an aggregate of
+bodies availably present. Blood-relationship, therefore, is neither necessary
+nor sufficient for it; it ceases at the limit of <i lang="la">patria potestas</i>, of the “house.”
+The mother as such is not agnatically related to the offspring of her own body;
+only in so far as, like them, she is subject to the <i lang="la">patria potestas</i> of her living
+husband is she the agnatic sister of her children.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_574" href="#Footnote_574" class="fnanchor">[574]</a> To the “Consensus,” on the
+other hand, corresponds the Magian cognate family (Hebrew, “<i>Mishpasha</i>”)
+which is representatively extended by both the paternal <em>and</em> the maternal
+blood-relationships, and possesses a “spirit,” a little consensus, of its own,
+but no special head.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_575" href="#Footnote_575" class="fnanchor">[575]</a> It is significant of the extinction of the Classical soul and
+the unfolding of the Magian that the “Roman” law of Imperial times gradually
+passes from <i lang="la">agnatio</i> to <i lang="la">cognatio</i>. Justinian’s 118th and 127th novels reforming
+the law of inheritance affirm the victory of the Magian family-idea.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_576" href="#Footnote_576" class="fnanchor">[576]</a></p>
+
+<p>On the other side, we see masses of individual beings streaming past, growing
+and passing, but <em>making</em> history. The purer, deeper, stronger, more taken-for-granted
+the common beat of these sequent generations is, the more blood,
+the more race they have. Out of the infinite they rise, every one with its soul,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_577" href="#Footnote_577" class="fnanchor">[577]</a>
+bands that feel themselves in the common wave-beat of their being, as a whole—not
+mind-communities like orders, craft-guilds, or schools of learning, which
+are linked by common truths, but blood-confederates in the mêlée of fighting
+life.</p>
+
+<p>There are streams of being which are “in form” in the same sense in which
+the term is used in sports. A field of steeplechasers is “in form” when the legs
+swing surely over the fences, and the hoofs beat firmly and rhythmically on the
+flat. When wrestlers, fencers, ball-players are “in form,” the riskiest acts
+and moves come off easily and naturally. An art-period is in form when its
+tradition is second nature, as counterpoint was to Bach. An army is in form
+when it is like the army of Napoleon at Austerlitz and the army of Moltke at
+Sedan. Practically everything that has been achieved in world-history, in
+war and in that continuation of war by intellectual means&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_578" href="#Footnote_578" class="fnanchor">[578]</a> that we call politics;
+<span class="pagenum" id="p331">[331]</span>in all successful diplomacy, tactics, strategy; in the competition of states or
+social classes or parties; has been the product of living unities that found
+themselves “in form.”</p>
+
+<p>The word for race- or breed-education is “training” (<i lang="de">Zucht</i>, <i lang="de">Züchtung</i>), as
+against the shaping (<i lang="de">Bildung</i>) which creates communities of waking-consciousness
+on a basis of uniform teachings or beliefs. Books, for example, are
+shaping agents, while the constant felt pulse and harmony of <i lang="fr">milieu</i> into which
+one feels oneself, <em>lives</em> oneself—like a novice or a page of early Gothic times—are
+training influences. The “good form” and ceremonies of a given society
+are sense-presentations of the beat of a given species of Being, and to master
+them one must <em>have</em> the beat of them. Hence women, as more instinctive and
+nearer to cosmic rhythms, adapt themselves more readily than men to the forms
+of a new <i lang="fr">milieu</i>. Women from the bottom strata move in elegant society with
+entire certainty after a few years—and sink again as quickly. But men alter
+slowly, because they are more awake and aware. The proletarian man never
+becomes wholly an aristocrat, the aristocrat never wholly a proletarian—only
+in the sons does the beat of the new <i lang="fr">milieu</i> make its appearance.</p>
+
+<p>The profounder the form, the stricter and more repellent it is. To the
+outsider, therefore, it appears to be a slavery; the member, on the contrary,
+has a perfect and easy command of it. The Prince de Ligne was, no less than
+Mozart, master of the form and not its slave; and the same holds good of
+<em>every</em> born aristocrat, statesman, and captain.</p>
+
+<p>In all high Cultures, therefore, there is a <em>peasantry</em>, which is breed, stock, in
+the broad sense (and thus to a certain extent nature herself), and a <em>society</em> which
+is assertively and emphatically “in form.” It is a set of classes or Estates, and
+no doubt artificial and transitory. But the history of these classes and estates
+is <em>world-history at highest potential</em>. It is only in relation to it that the peasant
+is seen as historyless. The whole broad and grand history of these six millennia
+has accomplished itself in the life-courses of the high Cultures, <em>because</em>
+these Cultures themselves placed their creative foci in Estates possessing breed
+and training, and so in the course of fulfilment became trained and bred. A
+Culture is Soul that has arrived at self-expression in sensible forms, but these
+forms are living and evolving.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_579" href="#Footnote_579" class="fnanchor">[579]</a> Their matrix is in the intensified Being of
+individuals or groups—that is, in that which I have just called Being “in
+form.” And when, and not until, this Being is sufficiently formed to that
+high rightness, it becomes representative of a representable Culture.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_580" href="#Footnote_580" class="fnanchor">[580]</a></p>
+
+<p>This Culture is not only a grand thing, but wholly unlike any other thing
+in the organic world. It is the one point at which man lifts himself above
+the powers of Nature and becomes himself a Creator. Even as to race, breed,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p332">[332]</span>he is Nature’s creature—he <em>is</em> bred. But, as Estate, he breeds himself just as
+he breeds the noble kinds of animal-plant with which he surrounds himself—and
+that process, too, is in the deepest and most final sense “Culture.” Culture
+and class&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_581" href="#Footnote_581" class="fnanchor">[581]</a> are interchangeable expressions; they arise together and they vanish
+together. The breeding of select types of wines or fruit or flowers, the breeding
+of blood horses, <em>is</em> Culture, and the culture, in exactly the same sense, of the
+human élite arises as the expression of a Being that has brought itself into high
+“form.”</p>
+
+<p>For that very reason, there is found in every Culture a sharp sense of whether
+this or that man belongs thereto or not. The Classical notion of the Barbarian,
+the Arabian of the Unbeliever (Amhaarez, Giaour), the Indian of the
+Sudra—however differently the lines of cleavage were arrived at—are alike
+in that the words do not primarily express contempt or hatred, but establish
+that there are differences in pulse of Being which set an impassable barrier
+against all contacts on the deeper levels. This perfectly clear and unambiguous
+idea has been obscured by the Indian concept of a “fourth caste,” which caste,
+as we know now, has never existed at all.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_582" href="#Footnote_582" class="fnanchor">[582]</a> The Code of Manu, with its celebrated
+regulations for the treatment of the Sudra, is the outcome of the fully
+developed state of fellahdom in his India, and—irrespective of practical
+actualities under either existing or even obtainable legislation—described the
+misty idea of Brahmanism by the negative mode of dealing with its opposite,
+very much as the Late Classical philosophy used the notion of the working
+Banausos. The one has led us into misunderstanding caste as a specifically
+Indian phenomenon, the other to a basically false idea of the attitude of Classical
+man towards work.</p>
+
+<p>In all such cases what really confronts us is the <em>residue</em> which does not count
+for the inward life of the Culture and its symbolism, and is in principle left
+out of every really significant classification, somewhat as the “outcast” is
+ignored in the far East. The Gothic expression “<i lang="la">corpus christianum</i>” indicates
+explicitly in its very terms that the Jewish Consensus does not belong to it.
+In the Arabian Culture the other-believer is merely tolerated within the respective
+domains of the Jewish, the Persian, the Christian, and, above all, the
+Islamic, nations, and contemptuously left to his own administration and his
+own jurisdiction. In the Classical World it was not only barbarians that were
+“outcasts”—so also in a measure were slaves, and especially the relics of the
+autochthonous population like the Penestæ in Thessaly and the Helots of Sparta,
+whom their masters treated in a way that reminds us of the conduct of the
+Normans in Anglo-Saxon England and the Teutonic Knights in the Slavonic
+East. The Code of Manu preserves, as designations of Sudra classes, the names
+<span class="pagenum" id="p333">[333]</span>of ancient peoples of the “Colonial” region of the Lower Ganges. (As Magadha
+is amongst them, Buddha himself may have been a Sudra, like the “Cæsar”
+Asoka, whose grandfather Chandragupta was of the most humble origin.)
+Others are names of callings, and this again reminds us that also in the West
+and elsewhere certain callings were outcast—the beggars, for example (who
+in Homer are a class), smiths, singers, and the professional poor, who have
+been bred literally <i lang="fr">en masse</i> by the <i lang="la">caritas</i> of the Church and the benevolence of
+laymen in the Early Gothic.</p>
+
+<p>But, in sum, “caste” is a word that has been at least as much abused as it
+has been used. There were no castes in the Old and Middle Kingdoms of
+Egypt, nor in India before Buddha, nor in China before Han times. It is only
+in very Late conditions that they appear, and then we find them in all Cultures.
+From the XXIst Dynasty onwards (<i>c.</i> 1100 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) Egypt was in the hands, now
+of the Theban priest-caste, now of the Libyan warrior-caste; and thereafter
+the hardening process went on steadily till the time of Herodotus—whose
+view of the conditions of his day as characteristically Egyptian is just as inaccurate
+as our view of those prevailing in India. <em>The distinction between Estate
+and Caste is that between earliest Culture and latest Civilization.</em> In the rise of the
+prime Estates—noble and priest—the Culture is unfolding itself, while the
+castes are the expression of its definitive fellah-state. The Estate is the most
+living of all, Culture launched on the path of fulfilment, “the form that living
+must itself unfold.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_583" href="#Footnote_583" class="fnanchor">[583]</a> The caste is absolute finished-ness, the phase in which
+development has been succeeded by immutable fixation.</p>
+
+<p>But the great Estates are something quite different from <em>occupation-groups</em>
+like those of artisans, officials, artists, which are professionally held together
+by technical tradition and the spirit of their work. They are, in fact, <em>emblems
+in flesh and blood</em>, whose entire being, as phenomenon, as attitude, and as mode
+of thought, possesses symbolic meaning. Within every Culture, moreover—while
+peasantry is a piece of pure nature and growth and, therefore, a completely
+<em>impersonal</em> manifestation—nobility and priesthood are the results of high
+breeding and forming and therefore express a <em>thoroughly personal Culture</em>, which,
+by the height of its form, rejects not merely barbarians, but presently also all
+who are not of their status, as a <em>residue</em>—regarded by the nobility as the
+“people” and by clergy as the “laity.” And this <em>style of personality</em> is the material
+that, when the fellah-age arrives, petrifies into the type of a caste, which
+thereafter endures unaltered for centuries. As in the living Culture race and
+estate are in antithesis as the impersonal and the personal, in fellah-times
+<em>the mass and the caste</em>, the coolie and the Brahmin, <em>are in antithesis as the formless
+and the formal</em>. The living form has become formula, still possessing style, but
+possessing it as stylistic rigidity. This petrified style of the caste is of an extreme
+subtlety, dignity, and intellectuality, and feels itself infinitely superior
+<span class="pagenum" id="p334">[334]</span>to the developing mankind of a Culture—we can hardly form an idea of
+the lofty height from which the Mandarin or the Brahmin looks down upon
+European thoughts and actions, or how fundamentally the Egyptian priest
+must have despised a visiting Pythagoras or Plato. It moves impassive through
+time with the Byzantine dignity of a soul that has left all its problems and
+enigmas far behind it.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_9">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>In the Carolingian pre-Culture men distinguished <i lang="de">Knechte</i>, <i lang="de">Freie</i>, and <i lang="de">Edle</i>.
+This is a primitive differentiation based merely on the facts of external life.
+But in Early Gothic times it runs:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">God hath shapen lives three,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Boor and knight and priest they be.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_584" href="#Footnote_584" class="fnanchor">[584]</a></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noindent">Here we have status-differences of a high Culture that has just awakened.
+And the stole and the sword stand together in face of the plough in strongest
+assertiveness as estates <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the rest, the Non-Estate, that which, like themselves,
+is fact, but, unlike themselves, fact without deeper significance. The
+separation, inward and felt, is so destined, so potent, that no understanding
+can ignore it. Hatred wells up out of the villages, contempt flashes back from
+the castles. Neither possession nor power nor calling produced this abyss
+between the “lives.” Logical justification for it there is none. It is metaphysical
+nature.</p>
+
+<p>Later, with the cities, but younger than they, <i>burgherdom, bourgeoisie</i>, arises
+as the “Third Estate.” The burgher, too, now looks with contempt upon the
+countryside, which lies about him dull, unaltered, and patient, and in contrast
+to which he feels himself more awake and freer and therefore further advanced
+on the road of the Culture. He despises also the primary estates, “squire and
+parson,” as something lying intellectually below him and historically behind
+him. Yet, as compared with these two, the burgher is, as the boor was, a
+residue, a non-estate. In the minds of the “privileged” the peasant hardly now
+counts at all—the burgher counts, but as an opposite and a background. He
+is the foil against which the others become conscious of their own significance
+and of the fact that this significance is something lying outside all practical
+considerations. When we find that in all Cultures the same occurs in exactly
+the same form, and that, however different the symbolism of one Culture from
+that of another, their history fulfils itself everywhere in and by opposition of
+these groups—impulsive peasant wars in the Springtime, intellectually-based
+<em>civil</em> wars in the later period—then it is evident that the meaning of the facts
+must be looked for in the deepest foundations of Life itself.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p335">[335]</span></p>
+
+<p>It is an <em>idea</em> that lies at the base of these two prime Estates, and only these.
+It gives them the potent feeling of a rank derived from a divine investiture and
+therefore beyond all criticism—a standing which imposes self-respect and self-consciousness,
+but the sternest self-discipline as well (and death itself if need
+be), as a duty and imbues both with the historical superiority, the soul-magic,
+that does not draw upon power but actually generates it. Those who—inwardly,
+and not merely nominally—belong to these Estates are <em>actually</em>
+something other than the residue; their lives, in contrast to those of burgher
+and peasant, are sustained in every part by a symbolic dignity. These lives do
+not exist in order to be merely lived, but to have meaning. It is the two sides of
+all freely moving life that come to expression in these Estates; <em>the one is wholly
+being, the other wholly waking-consciousness</em>.</p>
+
+<p>Every nobility is a living symbol of <em>Time</em>, every priesthood of <em>Space</em>. Destiny
+and sacred Causality, History and Nature, the When and the Where, race
+and language, sex-life and feeling-life—all these attain in them to the highest
+possible expression. The noble lives in a world of facts, the priest in one of
+truths; the one has shrewdness, the other knowledge; the one is a doer, the
+other a thinker. Aristocratic world-feeling is essentially pulse-sense; priestly
+world-feeling proceeds entirely by tensions. Between the time of Charlemagne
+and that of Conrad II something formed itself in the time-stream that cannot
+be elucidated, but has to be felt if we are to understand the dawn of the new
+Culture. There had long been noblemen and ecclesiastics, but then first—and
+not for long—there were nobility and clergy, in the grand sense of the words
+and the full force of their symbolic significance.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_585" href="#Footnote_585" class="fnanchor">[585]</a> So mighty is this onset of a
+symbolism that at first all other distinctions, such as those of country, people,
+and language, fall into the background. In all the lands from Ireland to Calabria
+the Gothic hierarchy was a single great community; the Early Classical
+chivalry before Troy, or the Early Gothic before Jerusalem, seems to us as of
+<em>one</em> great family. The old Egyptian nomes and the feudal states of the first
+Chóu times appear, in comparison with such Estates as these (and <em>because</em> of
+the comparison) just as colourless as Burgundy and Lorraine in the Hohenstaufen
+period. There is a cosmopolitan condition both at the beginning and at the
+end of every Culture, but in the first case it exists because the symbolic might
+of aristocratic-hierarchic forms still towers above those of nationality, and
+in the second because the formless mass sinks below them.</p>
+
+<p>The two Estates in principle exclude one another. The prime opposition of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p336">[336]</span>cosmic and microcosmic, which pervades all being that moves freely in space,
+underlies this dual existence also. Each is possible and necessary only through
+the other. The Homeric world maintained a conspiracy of hostile silence
+towards the Orphic, and in turn (as we see from the Pre-Socratics) the former
+became an object of anger and contempt for the latter. In Gothic times the
+reforming spirits set themselves with a sacred enthusiasm across the path of
+the Renaissance-natures. State and Church have never really come to equilibrium,
+and in the conflict of Empire and Papacy their opposition rose to an
+intensity only possible for Faustian man.</p>
+
+<p>Of the two, moreover, it is the nobility that is the true Estate, the sum of
+blood and race, being-stream in the fullest imaginable form. And therefore
+nobility is a higher peasantry. Even in 1250 the West had a widespread proverb:
+“One who ploughs in the forenoon jousts in the afternoon,” and it was quite
+usual for a knight to marry the daughter of a peasant. In contrast to the
+cathedral, the castle was a development, by way of the country noble’s house
+of Frankish times, from the peasant-dwelling. In the Icelandic sagas peasants’
+crofts are besieged and stormed like castles. Nobility and peasantry are plantlike
+and instinctive, deep-rooted in the ancestral land, propagating themselves
+in the family tree, breeding and bred. In comparison with them the priesthood
+is essentially the counter-estate, the estate of negation, of non-race, of detachment
+from earth—of free, timeless, and historyless waking-consciousness.
+In every peasant village, in every peasant family from the Stone Age to the peaks
+of the Culture, world-history plays itself out in little. Substitute for peoples
+families, and for lands farms—still the ultimate meaning of their strivings is
+the same—the maintenance of the blood, the succession of the generations,
+the cosmic, woman, power. <cite>Macbeth</cite> and <cite>King Lear</cite> might perfectly well have
+been thought out as village tragedies—and the fact is a proof of their tragic
+truth. In all Cultures nobility and peasantry appear in forms of <em>family descent</em>,
+and language itself connects them with the sexes, through which life propagates
+itself, has history, and is history. And as woman <em>is</em> history, the inward
+rank of peasant and noble families is determined by how much of race their
+women have in them, how far they <em>are</em> Destiny. And, therefore, there is deep
+meaning in the fact that the purer and more race-pervaded world-history is, the
+more the stream of its public life passes into and adapts itself to the private lives
+of individual great families. This, of course, is the basis of the dynastic principle,
+and not only that, but the basis of the idea of world-historical personality.
+The existence of entire states comes to depend on a few private destinies, vastly
+magnified. The history of Athens in the fifth century is in the main that of the
+Alcmæonidæ, the history of Rome is that of a few families of the type of the
+Fabii or the Claudii. The history of states in the Baroque is, broadly speaking,
+that of the operations of Habsburg and Bourbon family-politics, and its crises
+take form as marriages and wars of succession. The history of Napoleon’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="p337">[337]</span>second marriage comprises also the burning of Moscow and the battle of Leipzig.
+The history of the Papacy is, right into the eighteenth century, that of a few
+noble families which competed for the tiara in order to found princely family-fortunes.
+This is true equally of Byzantine dignitaries and English premiers
+(witness the Cecils) and even, in numerous instances, of great revolution-leaders.</p>
+
+<p>Of all this the priesthood (and philosophy so far as it is priesthood) is the
+direct negative. The Estate of pure waking-consciousness and eternal truths
+combats time and race and sex in every sense. Man as peasant or noble turns
+towards, man as priest turns away from, woman. Aristocracy runs the danger
+of dissipating and losing the broad being-stream of public life in the petty
+channels of its minor ancestors and relatives. The true priest, on the other
+hand, refuses in principle to recognize private life, sex, family, the “house.”
+For the man of race death begins to be real and appalling only when it is death
+without heirs—Icelandic sagas no less than Chinese ancestor-worship teach
+us this. He does not entirely die who lives on in sons and nephews. But for
+the true priest <i lang="la">media vita in morte sumus</i>; what he shall bequeath is intellectual,
+and rejected woman bears no part in it. The phenomenal forms of this second
+Estate that occur again and again are celibacy, cloister, battlings with sex-impulse
+fought to the extreme of self-emasculation, and a contempt for motherhood
+which expresses itself in orgiasm and hallowed prostitution, and not less
+in the intellectual devaluation of sexual life down to the level of Kant’s vile
+definition of marriage.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_586" href="#Footnote_586" class="fnanchor">[586]</a> Throughout the Classical world it was the rule that in
+the sacred precinct, the Temenos, no one must be born or die. The timeless
+must not come into contact with time. It is possible for the priest to have an
+intellectual recognition of the great moments of generation and birth, and to
+honour them sacramentally, but experience them he may not.</p>
+
+<p>For while nobility <em>is</em> something, priesthood <em>signifies</em> something, and this
+alone would be enough to tell us that it is the opposite of all that is Destiny
+and Race and Estate. The castle, with its chambers and towers, walls and
+moats, tells of a strong-flowing life, but the cathedral, with its vaulting and
+pillars and choir, is, through and through, Meaning—that is to say, Ornament—and
+every venerable priesthood has developed itself up to that marvellous
+gravity and beauty of bearing in which every item, from facial expression
+and voice-inflection to costume and walk, is ornament, from which private
+life and even inward life have been eliminated as unessential—whereas that
+which a ripe aristocracy (such as that of eighteenth-century France) displays
+and parades is a finished living. It was Gothic thought that developed out of
+the priest-concept the <i>character indelebilis</i>, which makes the idea indestructible
+and wholly independent of the worthiness of its bearer’s life in the world-as-history—but
+<span class="pagenum" id="p338">[338]</span>every priesthood, and consequently also all philosophy (in the
+sense of the schools), contain it implicitly. If a priest has race, he leads an
+outward existence like peasant, knight, or prince. The Pope and cardinals
+of the Gothic period were feudal princes, leaders of armies, fond of the chase,
+connoisseurs and adepts in family politics. Among the Brahmins of the pre-Buddha
+“Baroque” were great landowners, well-groomed abbés, courtiers,
+spendthrifts, gourmets.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_587" href="#Footnote_587" class="fnanchor">[587]</a> But it was the early period that had learned to distinguish
+the idea from the person—a notion diametrically opposed to the
+essence of nobility—and not until the Age of Enlightenment did the priest
+come to be judged, as priest, by his private life, and then not because that age
+had acquired sharper eyes, but because it had lost the idea.</p>
+
+<p>The noble is the <em>man as history</em>, the priest is <em>the man as nature</em>. History of the
+high kind is always the expression and effect of the being of a noble society;
+and the criterion for the relative importance of its different events is always
+the pulse of this stream of being. That is why the battle of Cannæ matters
+much and the battles of Late Roman emperors matter not at all. The coming of
+a Springtime consistently coincides with the birth of a primary nobility, in
+whose sentiments the prince is merely “<i lang="la">primus inter pares</i>” and an object of
+mistrust. For not only does a strong race not need the big individual, but
+his existence is a reflection upon its worth; hence vassal-wars are pre-eminently
+the form in which the history of Early periods fulfils itself, and thenceforth the
+nobility has the fate of the Culture in hand. With a creative force that is all
+the more impressive because it is silent, Being is brought into form and “condition.”
+The pulse in the blood is heightened and confirmed, <em>and for good</em>.
+For what this creative rise to living form is to the Spring—every Spring—the
+<em>might of tradition</em> is for the Late—every Late—period—namely, the old
+firm discipline, the life-beat, so sure that it outlives the extinction of all the
+old families and continually draws under its spell new men and new being-streams
+out of the deep. Beyond a shadow of doubt, all the history of Late
+periods, in respect of form and beat and tempo, is inherent (and irrevocably so)
+in the very earliest generations. Its successes are neither more nor less than the
+strength of the tradition in the blood. In politics, as in all other great and
+mature arts, success presupposes a being in high condition, a great stock of
+pristine experiences unconsciously and unquestioningly stored up as instincts
+and impulses. There is no other sort of political <i>maestria</i> but this. The big
+individual is only something better than an incident, only master of the future,
+in that he is effective (or is made effective), is Destiny (or has Destiny), in and
+through this form. This is what distinguishes necessary from superfluous art
+and therefore, also, <em>historically necessary from unnecessary politics</em>. It matters
+little if many of the big men come up out of the “people” (that is, the aggregate
+of the traditionless) into the governing stratum, or even if they are the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p339">[339]</span>only ones left to occupy it—the great tide of tradition takes charge of them,
+all unwitting, forms their intellectual and practical conduct, and rules their
+methods. And this tradition is nothing but the pulse of ancient and long-extinguished
+lines.</p>
+
+<p>But Civilization, the real “return to Nature,” is the extinction of nobility—not
+as physical stock (which would not matter), but as living tradition—and
+the supplanting of destiny-pulse by causal intelligence. With this, nobility
+becomes no more than a prefix. And, for that very reason, Civilized
+history is superficial history, directed disjointedly to obvious aims, and so
+become formless in the cosmic, dependent on the accident of great individuals,
+destitute of inward sureness, line, and meaning. With Cæsarism history relapses
+back into the historyless, the old beat of primitive life, with endless and
+meaningless battles for material power, such as those of the Roman soldier-emperors
+of the third century and the corresponding “Sixteen States” of China
+(265–420), which differ only in unessentials from the events of beast-life in a
+jungle.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_9">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>It follows from this that true history is <em>not</em> “cultural” in the sense of anti-political,
+as the philosophers and doctrinaires of all commencing Civilizations
+assert. On the contrary, it is breed history, war history, diplomatic history,
+the history of being-streams in the form of man and woman, family, people,
+estate, state, reciprocally defensive and offensive in the wave-beat of grand
+facts. <em>Politics in the highest sense is life, and life is politics.</em> Every man is willy-nilly
+a member of this battle-drama, as subject or as object—there is no
+third alternative. The kingdom of the spirit is <em>not</em> of this world. True, but it
+presupposes it, as waking-being presupposes being. It is only possible as a
+consistent <em>saying</em> of “no” to the actuality that nevertheless exists and, indeed,
+must exist before it can be renounced. Race can dispense with language, but
+the very speaking of a language is an expression of antecedent race,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_588" href="#Footnote_588" class="fnanchor">[588]</a> as are
+religions and arts and styles of thought and everything else that happens in the
+history of the spirit—and that there <em>is</em> such a history is shown by the power
+that blood possesses over feeling and reason. For all these are active waking-consciousness
+“in form,” expressive, in their evolution and symbolism and passion,
+of the blood (again the blood) that courses through these forms in the
+waking-being of generation after generation. A hero does not need to know anything
+at all of this second world—he is life through and through—but a saint
+can only by the severest asceticism beat down the life that is in him and gain
+solitary communion with his spirit—and his strength for this again comes from
+life itself. The hero despises death and the saint life, but in the contrast between
+the heroism of great ascetics and martyrs and the piety of most (which is of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p340">[340]</span>the kind described in Revelation iii, 16&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_589" href="#Footnote_589" class="fnanchor">[589]</a>)
+ we discover that greatness, even in
+religion, presupposes Race, that life must be strong indeed to be worthy of
+such wrestlers. The rest is mere philosophy.</p>
+
+<p>For this very reason nobility in the world-historical sense is much more than
+comfortable Late periods consider it; it is not a sum of titles and privileges and
+ceremonies, but an inward possession, hard to acquire, hard to retain—worth,
+indeed, for those who understand, the sacrifice of a whole life. An old family
+betokens not simply a set of ancestors (we all have ancestors), but ancestors
+who lived through whole generations on the heights of history; who not
+merely had Destiny, but were Destiny; in whose blood the form of happening
+was bred up to its perfection by the experience of centuries. As history in the
+grand sense begins with the Culture, it was mere panache for a Colonna to
+trace back his ancestry into Late Roman times. But it was not meaningless
+for the grandee of Late Byzantium to derive himself from Constantine, nor is it
+so for an American of to-day to trace his ancestry to a <i>Mayflower</i> immigrant of
+1620. In actual fact Classical nobility begins with the Trojan period and not
+the Mycenæan, and the Western with the Gothic and not the Franks and Goths—in
+England with the Normans and not the Saxons. Only from these real
+starting-points is there History, and, therefore, only from then can there be an
+original aristocracy, as distinct from nobles and heroes. That which in the first
+chapter of this volume&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_590" href="#Footnote_590" class="fnanchor">[590]</a> called cosmic beat or pulse receives in this aristocracy
+its fulfilment. For all that in riper times we call diplomatic and social “tact”—which
+includes strategic and business flair, the collector’s eye for precious
+things, and the subtle insight of the judge of men—and generally all that
+which one has and does not learn; which arouses the impotent envy of the rest
+who cannot participate; which as “form” directs the course of events; is nothing
+but a particular case of the same cosmic and dreamlike sureness that is visibly
+expressed in the circlings of a flock of birds or the controlled movements of a
+thoroughbred horse.</p>
+
+<p>The priest <em>circumscribes</em> the world-as-nature and deepens his picture of it by
+<em>thinking</em> into it. The noble <em>lives</em> in the world-as-history and deepens it by
+altering its picture. Both evolve towards the great tradition, but the evolution
+of the one comes of shaping and that of the other from training. This is a
+fundamental difference between the two Estates, and consequently only one of
+them is truly an Estate, and the other only <em>appears</em> to be such because of the completeness
+of the contrast. The field of effect of breed and training is the blood,
+and they pass on, therefore, from the fathers to the sons. Shaping (<i lang="de">Bildung</i>),
+on the other hand, presupposes talents, and consequently a true and strong
+priesthood is always a sum of individual gifts—a community of waking-consciousness—having
+<span class="pagenum" id="p341">[341]</span>no relation to origin in the race sense; and thus, in this
+respect as in others, it is a negation of Time and History. Intellectual affinity
+and blood-affinity—ponder and probe into the depths of these contrasted
+expressions! Heritable priesthood is a contradiction in terms. It existed indeed,
+in a sense, in Vedic India, but the basis of that existence was the fact
+that there was a second nobility, which reserved the privilege of priesthood to
+the gifted members of its own circle.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_591" href="#Footnote_591" class="fnanchor">[591]</a> And elsewhere celibacy made an end even
+of this much infringement of principle. The “priest in the man”—whether
+the man be noble or not—stands for a focus of sacred Causality in the world.
+The priestly power is itself of a causal nature, brought about by higher causes
+and itself in turn an efficient cause. The priest is the <em>middleman</em> in the timeless
+extended that is stretched taut between the waking-consciousness and the
+ultimate secret; and, therefore, the importance of the clergy in each Culture is
+determined by its prime-symbol. The Classical soul denies Space and therefore
+needs no middleman for dealings with it, and so the Classical priesthood disappears
+in its very beginnings. Faustian man stands face to face with the Infinite,
+nothing <i lang="la">a priori</i> shields him from the crushing force of this aspect, and
+so the Gothic priesthood elevated itself to the heights of the Papal idea.</p>
+
+<p>As two world-outlooks, two modes of blood-flow in the veins and of thought
+in the daily being and doing, are interwoven, there arise in the end (in every
+Culture) two sorts of moral, of which each looks down upon the other—namely,
+noble custom, and priestly askesis, reciprocally censured as worldly
+and as servile. It has been shown already&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_592" href="#Footnote_592" class="fnanchor">[592]</a> how the one proceeds from the
+castle and the other from the cloister and the minster, the one from full being
+in the flood of History and the other, aloof therefrom, out of pure waking-consciousness
+in the ambiance of a God-pervaded nature. The force with which
+these primary impressions act upon men is something that later periods will be
+unable even to imagine. The secular and the spiritual class-feeling are starting
+on their upward career, and cutting out for themselves an ethical <em>class-ideal</em>
+which is accessible only to the right people, and even to them only by way of
+long and strict schooling. The <em>great</em> being-stream <em>feels</em> itself as a unit as against
+the residue of dull, pulseless, and aimless blood. The <em>great</em> mind-community
+<em>knows</em> itself as a unit as against the residue of uninitiated. These units are the
+band of heroes and the community of saints.</p>
+
+<p>It will always remain the great merit of Nietzsche that he was the first to
+recognize the dual nature of all moral.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_593" href="#Footnote_593" class="fnanchor">[593]</a> His designations of “master-” and
+“slave-” moral were inexact, and his presentation of “Christianity” placed it
+much too definitely on the one side of the dividing line, but at the basis of all his
+opinions this lies strong and clear, that <em>good and bad are aristocratic, and good and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p342">[342]</span>evil priestly, distinctions</em>. Good and bad, which are Totemistic distinctions
+among primitive groups of men and tribes, describe, not dispositions, but men,
+and describe them comprehensively in respect of their living-being. The good
+are the powerful, the rich, the fortunate. Good means strong, brave, thoroughbred,
+in the idiom of every Springtime. Bad, cheap, wretched, common, in the
+original sense, are the powerless, propertyless, unfortunate, cowardly, negligible—the
+“sons of nobody” as ancient Egypt said.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_594" href="#Footnote_594" class="fnanchor">[594]</a> Good and evil, Taboo
+concepts, assign value to a man according to his perceptions and reason—that
+is, his waking disposition and his <em>conscious</em> actions. To offend against
+love-ethic in the race sense is ungentle, to sin against the Church’s love-command
+is wicked. The noble habit is the perfectly unconscious result of a long
+and continuous training. It is learned in intercourse and not from books. It is
+a felt rhythm, and not a notion. But the other moral is enunciated, ordered
+on the basis of cause and consequence, and therefore learnable and expressive
+of a <em>conviction</em>.</p>
+
+<p>The one is historical through and through, and recognizes rank-distinctions
+and privileges as actual and axiomatic. Honour is always class-honour—there
+is no such thing as an “honour of humanity.” The duel is not an obligation
+of unfree persons. Every man, be he Bedouin or Samurai or Corsican,
+peasant or workman, judge or bandit, has his own binding notions of honour,
+loyalty, courage, revenge, that do not apply to other kinds of life. Every life
+<em>has</em> custom-ethic—it is unthinkable without it. Children have it already in
+their play; they know at once, of themselves, what is fitting. No one has laid
+down these rules, but they exist. They arise, quite unconsciously, out of the
+“we” that has formed itself out of the uniform pulse of the group. Here, too,
+each being is “in form.” Every crowd that, under one or another stimulus,
+has collected in the street has for the moment its own ethic, and anyone who
+does not absorb it and stand for it as self-evident—to say “follow it” would
+presume more rationality in the action than there is—is a poor, mean creature,
+an outsider. Uneducated people and children possess an astonishingly fine
+reactivity to this. Children, however, are also required to learn the Catechism,
+and in it they hear about the good and evil that are laid down—and are any
+thing rather than self-evident. Custom-ethic is not that which is <em>true</em>, but that
+which is <em>there</em>; it is a thing of birth and growth, feeling and organic logic.
+Moral, in contrast to this, is never actuality (for, if it were, all the world would
+be saintly), but an eternal demand hanging over the consciousness—and, <i lang="la">ex
+hypothesi</i>, over that of all men alike, irrespective of all differences of actual life
+and history. And, therefore, all moral is negative and all custom-ethic affirmative.
+In the latter “devoid of honour” is the worst, in the former “devoid of
+sin” is the highest, that can be said of anyone.</p>
+
+<p>The basic concept of all living custom-ethic is honour. Everything else—loyalty,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p343">[343]</span>modesty, bravery, chivalry, self-control, resolution—is comprised
+in it. And honour is a matter of the blood and not of the reason. One does not
+reflect on a point of honour—that is already dishonour. To lose honour
+means to be annulled so far as Life and Time and History are concerned. The
+honour of one’s class, one’s family, of man and woman, of one’s people and one’s
+country, the honour of peasant and soldier and even bandit—honour means
+that the life in a person is something that has worth, historical dignity, delicacy,
+nobility. It belongs to directional Time, as sin belongs to timeless Space.
+To have honour in one’s body means about the same as to have race. The
+opposite sort are the Thersites-natures, the mud-souled, the riff-raff, the “kick-me-but-let-me-live’s.”
+To submit to insult, to forget a humiliation, to quail
+before an enemy—all these are signs of a life become worthless and superfluous.
+But this is not at all the same thing as priestly moral, for that moral does
+not cleave to life at any cost of degradation, but rather rejects and abstains
+from life as such, and therefore incidentally from honour. As has been said
+already, every moral action is, at the very bottom, a piece of askesis and a killing
+of being. And <i lang="la">eo ipso</i> it stands outside the field of life and the world of history.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_9">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>Here it is necessary to anticipate somewhat, and to consider whence it is
+that world-history (especially in the Late periods of the grand Cultures and
+the beginnings of the Civilizations) derives its rich variety of colour and the
+profound symbolism of its events. The primary Estates, nobility and clergy,
+are the purest expressions of the two sides of life, but they are not the only
+ones. In very early times—often, indeed, foreshadowed in the Primitive
+Age itself—yet other being-streams and waking-linkages break forth, in
+which the symbolism of Time and Space comes to living expression, and which,
+when (and not until) combined with these two, make up the whole fullness
+of what we call <em>social organization</em> or <em>society</em>.</p>
+
+<p>While Priesthood is microcosmic and animal-like, Nobility is cosmic and
+plantlike (hence its profound connexion with the land). It is itself a plant,
+strongly rooted in the soil, established on the soil—in this, as in so many
+other respects, a supreme peasantry. It is from this kind of cosmic boundness
+that the idea of <em>property</em> arises, which to the microcosm as such, freely moving
+in space, is wholly alien. Property is a primary feeling and not a concept; it
+belongs to Time and History and Destiny, and not to Space and Causality.
+It cannot be logically based, but it is there.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_595" href="#Footnote_595" class="fnanchor">[595]</a> “Having” begins with the plant,
+and propagates itself in the history of higher mankinds just to the precise
+extent that history contains plant-character and race. Hence property in the
+most genuine sense is always ground-property, and the impulse to convert
+<span class="pagenum" id="p344">[344]</span>other acquisitions into ground and soil is an evidence of sound stock. The
+plant <em>possesses</em> the ground in which it roots. It is its property,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_596" href="#Footnote_596" class="fnanchor">[596]</a> which it defends
+to the utmost, with the desperate force of its whole being, against alien seeds,
+against overshadowing neighbour plants, against all nature. So, too, a bird
+defends the nest in which it is hatching. The bitterness fights over property
+occur—not in the Late periods of great Cultures, between rich and poor, and
+about movable goods—but here in the beginnings of the plant-world. When,
+in a wood, one feels all about one the silent, merciless battle for the soil that
+goes on day and night, one is appalled by the depth of an impulse that is almost
+identical with life itself. Here is a yearlong, tenacious, embittered wrestle,
+a hopeless resistance of the weak against the strong, that goes on to the point
+that the victor too is broken—such as is only paralleled in the most primitive
+of mankind when an old peasant-family is expelled from the clod, <em>from the nest</em>,
+or a family of noble stock is uprooted or, more truly, cut off from its roots, by
+money.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_597" href="#Footnote_597" class="fnanchor">[597]</a> The far more conspicuous conflicts in the later cities have quite
+another meaning, for here—in communism of all kinds—it is not the experience
+of possessing, but the idea of property purely as material means that is
+fought for. The negation of property is never race-impulse, but the doctrinaire
+protest of the purely intellectual, urban, uprooted, anti-vegetal waking-consciousness
+of saints, philosophers, and idealists. The same reason actuates
+the monk of the hermitage and the scientific Socialist—be his name Moh-ti,
+Zeno, or Marx—to reject the plantlike; the same feeling impels men of race
+to defend it. Here, as ever, fact and truth are opposed. “Property is theft”
+is the ultra-materialistic form of the old thought: “What shall it profit a man
+if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul?” When the priest gives
+up property, he is giving up something dangerous and alien; when a noble
+does so, he is giving up himself.</p>
+
+<p>This brings us to a duality of the property-idea feeling—<em>Having as power</em> and
+<em>Having as spoil</em>. Both, in primitive men of race, lie immediately together.
+Every Bedouin or Viking intends both. The sea-hero is always a sea-robber
+also; every war is concerned with possessions and, above all, possessions in
+land. But a step, and the knight becomes the robber-knight, the adventurer
+becomes conqueror and king, like Rurik the Norman in Russia and many an
+Achæan and Etruscan pirate in Homeric times. In all heroic poetry we find,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p345">[345]</span>side by side with the strong and natural satisfaction of winning battles and
+power and women, and the unbridled outbursts of joy and grief, anger, and
+love, the immense delight of “having.” When Odysseus lands at home, the
+first thing he does is to count the treasures in his boat, and when, in the Icelandic
+Saga, the peasants Hjalmar and Ölvarod perceive each that the other
+has no goods in his ship, they abandon their duel at once—he who fights from
+pride and for honour is a fool for his pains. In the Indian hero-epic, eagerness
+for battle means eagerness for cattle, and the “colonizing” Greeks of the tenth
+century were primarily corsairs like the Normans. On the high seas an alien
+ship is <i lang="la">a priori</i> good prize. But out of the feuds of South-Arabian and Persian
+Knights of <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 200, and the “private wars” of the Provençal barons of <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1200—which
+were hardly more than cattle-raids—there developed at the end of the
+feudal period the war proper, the great war with acquisition of land and people
+as its object. All this, in the end, brings the aristocratic Culture to the “top
+of its form,” while, correspondingly, priests and philosophers despise it.</p>
+
+<p>As the Culture rises to its height, these two primary urges trend widely
+apart, and hostility develops between them. <em>The history of this hostility is almost
+the same thing as world-history. From the feeling of power come conquest and politics and
+law; from that of spoil, trade and economy and money.</em> Law is the property of the
+powerful. Their law is the law of all. Money is the strongest weapon of the
+acquiring: with it he subdues the world. Economics likes and intends a
+state that is weak and subservient to it. Politics demands that economic life
+shall adapt itself to and within the State—Adam Smith and Friedrich List,
+Capitalism and Socialism. All Cultures exhibit at the outset a war- and a
+trade-nobility, then a land- and a money-nobility, and finally a military and
+an economic war-management and a ceaseless struggle of money against law.</p>
+
+<p>Equally, on the other hand, <em>priesthood</em> and <em>learning</em> separate out. Both are
+directed towards, not the factual, but the true; both belong to the Taboo side
+of life and to Space. Fear before death is the source, not merely of all religion,
+but of all philosophy and natural science as well. Now, however, there develops
+a profane Causality in contrast to the sacred. “Profane” is the new
+counter-concept to “religious,” which so far had tolerated learning only as a
+handmaiden. The whole of Late criticism, its spirit, its method, its aims, are
+profane—and the Late theology, even, is no exception to the rule. But invariably,
+nevertheless, the learning of all Cultures moves in the forms of the
+preceding priesthood—thus showing that it is merely a product of the contradiction
+itself, and how dependent it is and remains, in every particular, upon
+the primary image. Classical science, therefore, lives in cult-communities
+of the Orphic style, such as the school of Miletus, the Pythagorean society,
+the medical schools of Croton and Cos, the Attic schools of the Academy, the
+Peripatos, and the Stoa, every one of whose leaders belongs to the type of the
+sacrificial priest and seer, and even the Roman legal schools of the Sabiniani
+<span class="pagenum" id="p346">[346]</span>and Proculiani. The sacred book, the Canon is, scientifically as in other respects,
+Arabian—the scientific canon of Ptolemy (Almagest), the medical of
+Ibn Sina (Avicenna), and the philosophical corpus designated “Aristotle,” but
+so largely spurious—so also the (mostly unwritten) laws and methods of quotation:&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_598" href="#Footnote_598" class="fnanchor">[598]</a>
+the Commentary as the form of thought-development; the universities
+as cloisters (Medrashim) which provided teachers and students with cell, food,
+and clothing; and tendencies in scholarship taking form as brotherhoods. The
+learned world of the West possesses unmistakably the form of the Catholic
+Church, and more particularly so in Protestant regions. The connecting link
+between the learned orders of the Gothic period and the order-like schools
+of the nineteenth century—the schools of Hegel, of Kant, of historical jurisprudence,
+and not a few of the English university colleges—is formed by the
+Maurists and Bollandists&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_599" href="#Footnote_599" class="fnanchor">[599]</a> of France, who from 1650 on mastered and largely
+created the ancillary “science” of history. In all the specialist sciences (medicine
+and lecture-room philosophy included) there are fully developed hierarchies
+leading up to school-popes, grades, and dignities (the doctor’s degree as an
+ordination), sacraments and councils. The uninitiate is rigorously treated as
+the “layman,” and the idea of a generalized priesthood residing in the believers
+themselves, which is manifested in “popular” science—for example, Darwinism—is
+passionately combated. The language of learning was originally
+Latin, but to-day all sorts of special languages have formed themselves which
+(in the domain of radioactivity, for example, or that of the law of contract)
+are unintelligible save to those who have received the higher initiation. There
+are founders of sects, such as many of Kant’s and Hegel’s disciples were;
+there are missionaries to the unbelievers, like the Monists. There are heretics,
+like Schopenhauer and Nietzsche, there is the weapon of the ban, and there is
+the Index in the form of the Conspiracy of Silence. There are ethical truths
+(for example, in Law the division of the objects into persons and things) and
+dogmas (like that of energy and mass, or the theory of inheritance), a ritual in
+the citation of orthodox writings, and even a scientific sort of beatification.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_600" href="#Footnote_600" class="fnanchor">[600]</a></p>
+
+<p>More, the savant-type of the West (which in the nineteenth century reached
+its zenith, corresponding to the nadir of true priesthood) has brought to high
+perfection the study as the cell of a profane monachism that has its unconscious
+vows—of Poverty, in the shape of honourable disdain for fat living and
+wealth; and unfeigned contempt for the commercial professional and for all
+exploitation of scientific results for gain; of Chastity, which has evolved a
+veritable celibacy of science, with Kant as exemplar and culmination; and of
+Obedience, even to the point of sacrificing oneself to the standpoint of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p347">[347]</span>School. Further, and lastly, there is a sort of estrangement from the world
+which is the profane echo of the Gothic flight from it, and leads to an almost
+complete disregard of the life in public and the forms of good society—little
+“breeding,” much too much “shaping.” Nobility, even in its later ramifications—the
+judge, the squire, the officer—still retains the old root-strong
+natural satisfaction in carrying on the stock, in possessions and honour, but the
+scientist counts these things as little beside the possession of a pure scientific
+conscience and the carrying on of a method or a view unimpaired by the commercialism
+of the world. The fact that the savant to-day has ceased to be
+remote from the world, and puts his science at the service of (not seldom, indeed,
+most shrewdly applies it to) technics and money-making, is a sign that the pure
+type is entering upon its decline and that the great age of intellectual optimism
+that is livingly expressed in him belongs already to the past.</p>
+
+<p>In sum, we see that the Estates have a natural build which in its evolution
+and action forms the basic structure of every Culture’s life-course. No specific
+decision made it; revolutions only alter it when they are forms of the evolution
+and not results of some private will. It never, in its full cosmic significance,
+enters the consciousness of men as doers and thinkers, because it lies too deep
+in human being to be other than a self-evident datum. It is merely from the
+surface that men take the catchwords and causes over which they fight on that
+side of history which theory regards as horizontally layered, but which in
+actuality is an aggregate of inseparable interpenetrations. First, nobility and
+priesthood arise out of the open landscape, and figure the pure symbolism
+of Being and Waking-Being, Time and Space. Then out of the one under the
+aspect of booty, and out of the other under the aspect of research, there develop
+doubled types of lower symbolic force, which in the urban Late periods
+rise to prepotency in the shapes of <em>economy</em> and <em>science</em>. In these two being-streams
+the ideas of Destiny and Causality are thought out to their limit,
+unrelentingly and anti-traditionally. Forces emerge which are separated
+by a deadly enmity from the old class-ideals of heroism and saintliness—these
+forces are <em>money and intellect</em>, and they are related to those ideals as the city to
+the country. Henceforward property is called riches, and world-outlook knowledge—a
+desanctified Destiny and a profane Causality. But science is in contradiction
+with Nobility too, for this does not prove or investigate, but <em>is</em>.
+“<i lang="la">De omnibus dubitandum</i>” is the attitude of a burgher and not of an aristocrat,
+while at the same time it contradicts the basic feeling of priesthood, for which
+the proper rôle of critique is that of a handmaid. Economy, too, finds an
+enemy here, in the shape of the ascetic moral which rejects money-getting,
+just as the genuine land-based nobility despises it. Even the old merchant-nobility
+has in many cases perished (e.g., Hanse Towns, Venice, Genoa),
+because with its traditions it could not and would not fall in with the business
+outlook of the big city. And, with all this, economy and science are themselves
+<span class="pagenum" id="p348">[348]</span>at enmity; once more, in the conflicts of money-getting and knowledge, <em>between
+counting-house and study</em>, business liberalism and doctrinaire liberalism, we meet
+the old great oppositions of action and contemplation, castle and cathedral.
+In one form or in another this order of things emerges in the structure of every
+Culture—hence the possibility of a comparative morphology in the social
+as in the other aspects of history.</p>
+
+<p>Wholly outside the category of the true Estates are the calling-classes of
+the craftsmen, officials, artists, and labourers, whose organization in guilds
+(e.g., of smiths in China, of scribes in Egypt, and of singers in the Classical
+world) dates from pristine antiquity, and who because of their professional
+segregation (which sometimes goes as far as to cut off their <i lang="la">connubium</i> with
+others) actually develop into genuine tribes, as, for instance, the Falasha&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_601" href="#Footnote_601" class="fnanchor">[601]</a>
+of Abyssinia and some of the Sudra classes named in Manu’s code. Their separation
+is due merely to their technical accomplishments and therefore not to
+their being vessels of the symbolism of Time and Space. Their tradition, likewise,
+is limited to their techniques and does not refer to a customary-ethic or
+a moral <em>of their own</em>, such as is always found in economy and science as such.
+As derived from a nobility, judges and officers are classes, whereas officials
+are a profession; as derived from priesthood, scholars are a class, while artists
+are a profession. Sense of honour, conscience, adhere in one case to the status,
+in the other to the achievement. There is something, slight though it may be,
+of symbolism in every category on the one side, and none in any category on the
+other. And consequently something of strangeness, irregularity, often disgrace,
+clings to them—consider, for example, executioners, actors, and strolling
+singers, or the Classical estimation of the artist. Their classes or guilds separate
+from general society, or seek the protection of other orders of society (or individual
+patrons and Mæcenases), but fit themselves in with that society they
+cannot, and their inability to do so finds expression in the guild-wars of the
+old cities and in uncouthness of every sort in the instincts and manners of artists.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V_9">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>A history of estates or classes, ignoring in principle that of profession-classes,
+is therefore a presentation of the metaphysical element in higher mankind,
+so far as this rises to grand symbolism in species of onflowing life, species
+in and along which the history of the Cultures moves to fulfilment.</p>
+
+<p>At the very beginning, the sharply defined type of the peasant is something
+new. In Carolingian times, and under the Tsarist system of the “Mir” in
+Russia,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_602" href="#Footnote_602" class="fnanchor">[602]</a> there were freemen and hinds cultivating the soil, <em>but no peasantry</em>.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p349">[349]</span>Only when there emerges the feeling of being different from the two symbolic
+“lives”—Freidank’s <i lang="de">Bescheidenheit</i>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_603" href="#Footnote_603" class="fnanchor">[603]</a> comes into our minds—does this life
+become an Estate, the <em>nourishing</em> estate in the fullest sense of the word, the root
+of the great plant Culture, which has driven its fibres deep into Mother Earth
+and darkly, industriously, draws all juices into itself and sends them to the upper
+parts, where trunks and branches tower up in the light of history. It serves
+the great lives not merely by the nourishment that it wins out of the soil for
+them, but also with that other harvest of mother earth—its own blood; for
+blood flowed up for centuries from the villages into the high places, received
+there the high forms, and maintained the high lives. The relation is called
+(from the noble’s point of view) <i>vassalage</i>, and we find it arising—whatever
+the superficial causes may be in each case—in the West between 1000 and
+1400 and in the other Cultures at the “contemporary” periods. The Helotry
+of Sparta belongs with it, and equally so the old Roman <i lang="la">clientela</i>, from which
+after 471 the <em>rural</em> Plebs—that is, a free yeomanry—grew up.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_604" href="#Footnote_604" class="fnanchor">[604]</a> Astonishing
+indeed is the force of this striving towards symbolic form in the Pseudomorphosis
+of the Late Roman East, where the caste system of the principate founded by
+Augustus (with its division into senatorial and equestrian officialdom) evolved
+backwards until, about 300, it had returned, wherever the Magian world-feeling
+prevailed, to a condition parallel to that of the Gothic in 1300—the
+condition, in fact, of the Sassanid Empire of its own time.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_605" href="#Footnote_605" class="fnanchor">[605]</a> Out of the officialdom
+of a highly Civilized administration came a minor nobility of decurions,
+village knights, and town politicians, who were responsible to the sovereign
+in body and goods for all outgoings—a feudalism formed backwards—and
+gradually made their positions heritable, just as happened under the Egyptian
+Vth dynasty and the first Chóu centuries&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_606" href="#Footnote_606" class="fnanchor">[606]</a> and the Europe of the Crusades.
+Military status, of officers and soldiers alike, became hereditary in the same
+way,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_607" href="#Footnote_607" class="fnanchor">[607]</a> and service as a feudal obligation, and all the rest of what Diocletian
+presently reduced to formal law. The individual was firmly bound to the status
+(<i lang="la">corpori adnexus</i>), and the principle was extended as compulsory guild-membership
+to all trades, as in the Gothic or in old Egypt. But, above all, there necessarily
+arose from the ruins of the Late Classical slave-economy of “Latifundia”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_608" href="#Footnote_608" class="fnanchor">[608]</a>
+the colonate of hereditary small farmers, while the great estates became administrative
+districts and the lord was made responsible for its taxes and its
+<span class="pagenum" id="p350">[350]</span>recruit-quota.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_609" href="#Footnote_609" class="fnanchor">[609]</a>
+ Between 250 and 300 the “colonus” became legally bound to
+the soil (<i lang="la">adscriptus glebæ</i>). And with that the differentiation of feudal lord and
+vassal <em>as class and class</em>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_610" href="#Footnote_610" class="fnanchor">[610]</a> was reached.</p>
+
+<p>Every new Culture has potentially its nobility and its priesthood. The
+apparent exceptions to this are due merely to the absence to tangible tradition.
+We know to-day that a real priesthood existed in ancient China&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_611" href="#Footnote_611" class="fnanchor">[611]</a> and we may
+assume as self-evident that there was a priest-estate in the beginnings of Orphism
+in the eleventh century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>—the more confidently as we have plain indications
+of it in the epic figures of Calchas and Tiresias. Similarly the development of
+the feudal constitution in Egypt presupposes a primitive nobility as early as the
+IIIrd Dynasty.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_612" href="#Footnote_612" class="fnanchor">[612]</a> But the form in which, and the force with which, these Estates
+first realized themselves and then took charge of the course of history—shaped
+it, carried it, and even represented it in their own destinies—depend
+upon the Prime-symbol on which each individual Culture, with its entire form-language,
+is based.</p>
+
+<p>The nobility, wholly plantlike, proceeds everywhere from the land, which
+is its primary property and with which it is fast bound. It possesses everywhere
+the basic form of the family, the gens (in which, therefore, the “other” gender
+of history, the feminine, is expressed also), and it manifests itself through the
+will-to-duration—duration, namely, of the blood—as the great symbol of
+Time and History. It will appear that the early officialdom of the vassal state,
+based on personal trustworthiness, everywhere—in China and Egypt, in the
+Classical and the Western World—&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_613" href="#Footnote_613" class="fnanchor">[613]</a> goes through the same development, first
+creating quasi-feudal court offices and dignities, then seeking hereditary connexion
+with the soil, and so finally becoming the origin of noble family-lines.</p>
+
+<p>The Faustian will-to-infinity comes to expression in the <em>genealogical principle</em>,
+which—strange as it may seem—is peculiar to this Culture. And in this
+Culture, moreover, it intimately permeates and moulds all the historical forms,
+and supremely those of the states themselves. The historical sense that insists
+upon getting to know the destinies of its own blood backwards through the
+centuries and seeing <em>archival</em> proofs of dates and provenances up to the first
+<span class="pagenum" id="p351">[351]</span>ancestors; the careful ordering of the genealogical tree, which is potent enough
+to make present possession and inheritance dependent upon the fortunes of a
+single marriage contracted perhaps five hundred years ago; the conceptions of
+<em>pure blood</em>, birth-equivalence, <i lang="fr">mésalliance</i>—all this is will-to-direction in time,
+will towards Time’s remote distances. There is no second example of it, save
+perhaps in the Egyptian nobility, and there the comparable forms that were
+attained were far weaker.</p>
+
+<p>Nobility of the Classical style, on the contrary, relates to the present estate
+of the agnatic family, and from it straight to a <em>mythical</em> origin, which does not
+imply the historical sense in the least, but only a craving, sublimely regardless
+of historic probability, for splendid backgrounds to the here and now of the
+living. Only thus can we explain the otherwise baffling naïveté with which an
+individual saw behind his grandfather Theseus and Heracles in one plane, and
+fashioned himself a family tree (or several, perhaps, as Alexander did), and the
+light-heartedness with which respectable Roman families would forge the
+names of reputed ancestors into the old consular lists. At the funeral of a
+Roman noble the wax masks of great forefathers were introduced into the
+cortège, but it was only for the number and sound of the famous names and not
+in the least on account of any genealogical connexion with the present. This
+trait appears throughout the Classical nobility, which like the Gothic formed,
+structurally and spiritually, one inward unit from Etruria to Asia Minor. On it
+rested the power that, even at the beginning of the Late period, was still in
+the possession of order-like family-groupings throughout the cities (phylæ,
+phratriæ, tribus, and what not) which maintained a purely present membership
+and unity by means of sacral forms—for example, the three Doric and the four
+Ionic phylæ, and the three Etruscan tribes that appear in the earlier Roman history
+as Tities, Ramnes, and Luceres. In the Vedas the “father-” and the
+“mother-”souls had claims to soul-rites only in respect of three nearer and three
+further generations,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_614" href="#Footnote_614" class="fnanchor">[614]</a> after which the past claimed them; and nowhere do we
+find the Classical cult of souls reaching any further back than the Indian. It is
+the very reverse of the ancestor-worship of the Chinese and the Egyptians,
+which was by hypothesis without end, and therefore maintained the family in
+a definite ordering even beyond bodily death. In China there still lives to-day
+a duke, Kong, who is the descendant of Confucius and equally the descendant
+of Lao-tse, of Chang-lu, and others. It is not a question of a many-branched
+tree, but of carrying the line, the <i>tao</i> of being, straight on—if necessary, frankly
+by adoption (the adopted member, pledged to the ancestor-cult, is thereby
+spiritually incorporated in the family) or other expedients.</p>
+
+<p>An unbridled joy of life streams through the flourishing centuries of this
+estate, <em>the</em> Estate <i lang="fr">par excellence</i>, which is direction and destiny and race through
+and through. Love, because woman <em>is</em> history, and war because fighting <em>makes</em>
+<span class="pagenum" id="p352">[352]</span>history, are the acknowledged foci of its thoughts and feelings. The Northern
+skald-poetry and the Southern <i lang="de">Minnesang</i> correspond to the old love-songs of
+the Chinese age of chivalry in the Shi-King,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_615" href="#Footnote_615" class="fnanchor">[615]</a> which were sung in the Pi-Yung,
+the places of noble training (<i>hiao</i>). And the ceremonial public archery-displays,
+like the Early Classical agon, and the Gothic and the Persian-Byzantine&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_616" href="#Footnote_616" class="fnanchor">[616]</a>
+tourney, were manifestations of the life on its Homeric side.</p>
+
+<p>In opposition to this side stands the <em>Orphic</em>—the expression of the space-experience
+of a Culture through the style of its priesthood. It was in accord
+with the Euclidean character of Classical extension—which needed no intermediaries
+for intercourse with near and corporeal gods—that in this case
+priesthood, from beginnings as an estate, rapidly degenerated into city-officialdom.
+Similarly, it was expressive of the Chinese <i>tao</i> that the place of the
+original hereditary priesthood came to be taken by professional classes of praying
+men, scribes, and oracle-priests, who could accompany the religious performances
+of the authorities and heads of families with the prescribed rites.
+It was in conformity, again, with the Indian world-feeling that lost itself in
+measureless infinity that the priest-class there became a second nobility, which
+with immense power, intruding upon every sort of life, planted itself between
+the people and its wilderness of gods. It is an expression, lastly, of the “cavern”
+feeling that the priest of true Magian cast is the monk and the hermit, and becomes
+more and more so, while the secular clergy steadily loses in symbolic
+significance.</p>
+
+<p>In contrast to all these there is the Faustian priesthood, which, still without
+any profound import or dignity in 900, rose up thereafter to that sublime rôle
+of intermediary which placed it in principle between humanity (<em>all</em> humanity)
+and a macrocosm strained to all imaginable expanse by the Faustian passion
+of the third dimension. Excluded from history by celibacy and from time by its
+<i>character indelebilis</i>, it culminated in the Papacy, which represented the highest
+symbol of God’s dynamic Space that it was possible to conceive; even the Protestant
+idea of a generalized priesthood has not destroyed it, but merely decentralized
+it from one point and one person into the heart of each individual
+believer.</p>
+
+<p>The contradiction between being and waking-being that exists in every
+microcosm necessarily drives the two Estates against one another. Time
+seeks to absorb and subordinate Space, Space Time. Spiritual and worldly
+power are magnitudes so different in structure and tendency that any reconciliation,
+or even understanding, between them seems impossible. But this conflict
+has not in all Cultures come to world-historical expression. In China it promoted
+the <i>tao</i> idea that primacy should reside securely in an aristocracy. In
+<span class="pagenum" id="p353">[353]</span>India the conception of Space as infinite-indefinite required a primacy of the
+priesthood. In the Arabian Culture the Magian world-feeling involved in
+principle the inclusion of the worldly visible society of believers as a constituent
+in the grand consensus, and therefore the unity of spiritual and temporal polity,
+law, and sovereignty. Not that there was not friction between the two estates;
+far from it; in the Sassanid Empire there were bloody feuds between the country
+aristocracy of the Dikhans and the party of the Magi—even in some instances
+murders of sovereigns—and in Byzantium the whole fifth century is full of
+the struggles between the Imperial power and the clergy, which from an ever-present
+background to the Monophysite and Nestorian controversies.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_617" href="#Footnote_617" class="fnanchor">[617]</a> But
+the basic interconnexion of the two orders was not in dispute.</p>
+
+<p>In the Classical world, which abhorred the infinite in every sense, Time was
+reduced to the present and Extension to tangible unit-bodies; as the result, the
+grand symbolic estates became so voided of meaning that, as compared with the
+city-state, which expressed the Classical prime-symbol in the strongest imaginable
+form, they did not count as independent forces at all. In the history of
+Egyptian mankind, on the other hand, which is the history of striving with
+equal force towards distances of time and of space, the struggle of the two
+estates and their symbolisms is constantly recognizable right into the period of
+complete fellahdom. For the transition from the IVth to the Vth Dynasty is
+accompanied also by a visible triumph of the priestly over the knightly world-feeling;
+the Pharaoh, from being the body and vessel of the supreme deity,
+becomes its servant, and the Re sanctuary overpowers the tomb-temple of the
+ruler both in architectural and in suggestive force. The New Empire witnessed,
+immediately after its great Cæsars, the political autocracy of the Amen priesthood,
+Thebes, and then again the revolution of the “heretic” king Amenophis
+IV (Akhenaton)—in which one feels unmistakably a political as well as
+a religious side—and so on until after interminable conflicts between warrior-
+and priestly-castes, the Egyptian world ended in foreign domination.</p>
+
+<p>In the Faustian Culture this battle between two high symbols of equal force
+has been waged in somewhat the same spirit, but with far greater passion still
+than in the Egyptian—so that, from the early Gothic onward, only armistice,
+never peace, has seemed possible between State and Church. But in this conflict
+the handicap against waking-being tells—it would shake off its dependence
+upon being, but it cannot. The mind needs the blood, but the blood does not
+need the mind. War belongs to the world of time and history—<em>intellectual
+battle is only a fight with reasons, only disputation</em>—and, therefore a <em>militant</em>
+Church must step from the world of truths into the world of facts—from the
+world of Jesus into that of Pilate. And so it becomes an element in race-history
+and subject to the formative powers of the <em>political</em> side of life. From early Feudalism
+to modern Democracy it fights with sword and cannon, poison and dagger,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p354">[354]</span>bribery and treason, all the weapons of party conflict in use at the time. It sacrifices
+articles of belief to worldly advantages, and allies itself with heretics and
+unbelievers against orthodox powers. The Papacy <em>as an idea</em> has a history of its
+own, but this bears no relation to the position of the popes in the sixth and seventh
+centuries as Byzantine viceroys of Syrian and Greek provenance; or to their
+later evolution into powerful landowners, with crowds of subject peasants; or to
+the Patrimonium Petri of the early Gothic—a sort of duchy in the possession of
+great families of the Campagna (Colonna, Orsini, Savelli, Frangipani), which
+alternately set up the popes, until finally the general Western feudalism prevailed
+here also, and the Holy See came to be an object of investiture within the
+families of the Roman baronage, so that each new pope, like a German or a
+French king, had to confirm the rights of his vassals. In 1032 the Counts of
+Tusculum nominated a twelve-year-old boy as pope. In those days eight hundred
+castle-towers stood up in the city area of Rome amongst and upon the
+Classical ruins. In 1045 three popes entrenched themselves in the Vatican, the
+Lateran, and Santa Maria Maggiore respectively, and were defended by their
+noble supporters.</p>
+
+<p>Now supervened the city with its own soul, first emancipating itself from
+the soul of the countryside, then setting up as an equal to it, and finally seeking
+to suppress and extinguish it. But this evolution accomplished itself in <em>kinds
+of life</em>, and it also, therefore, is part of the history of the estates. The <em>city-life</em>
+as such emerges—through the inhabitants of these small settlements acquiring
+a common soul, and becoming conscious that the life within is something
+different from the life outside—and at once the spell of <em>personal freedom</em> begins
+to operate and to attract within the walls life-streams of more and more new
+kinds. There sets in a sort of passion for becoming urban and for propagating
+urban life. It is this, and not material considerations, that produced the fever
+of the colonization period in the Classical world, which is still recognizable to
+us in its last offshoots, and which it is not quite exact to speak of as colonization
+at all. For it was a creative enthusiasm in the man of the city that from the
+tenth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> (and “contemporaneously” in other Cultures) drew generation
+after generation under the spell of a new life, with which there emerges for
+the first time in human history the idea of <em>freedom</em>. This idea is not of political
+(still less of abstract) origin, but is something bringing to expression the fact
+that within the city walls plantlike attachment to a soil has ceased, and that
+the threads that run through the whole life of the countryside have been
+snapped. And consequently the freedom-idea ever contains a negative; it
+looses, redeems, defends, always frees a man <em>from</em> something. Of <em>this</em> freedom
+the city is the expression; the city-spirit is understanding become free, and
+everything in the way of intellectual, social, and national movements that
+bursts forth in Late periods under the name of Freedom leads back to an origin
+<em>in this one prime fact of detachment from the land</em>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p355">[355]</span></p>
+
+<p>But the city is older than the “citizen.” It attracts first the calling-classes,
+which as such are outside the symbolic estates, and, when urban, take form as
+guilds. Then it draws in the primary estates themselves; the minor nobility
+moves its castles, the Franciscans their cloisters, within the contour. As yet,
+not much is inwardly altered. Not only Papal Rome, but all Italian cities of
+this time are filled with the fortified towers of the families, who issued thence
+to fight out their feuds in the streets. In a well-known fourteenth-century
+picture of Siena these towers stand up like factory chimneys round the market-place.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_618" href="#Footnote_618" class="fnanchor">[618]</a>
+As for the Florentine palace of the Renaissance, if, in respect of the
+bright life within, it is the successor of Provençal courts, it is equally, with its
+“rusticated” façade, an offshoot of the Gothic castles that the French and
+German knights were still building on their hills. It was, in fact, only slowly
+that the new life separated out. Between 1250 and 1450, throughout the West,
+the immigrant families concentrated, <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the guilds, into the patriciate,
+and in so doing detached themselves, spiritually as in other respects, from the
+country nobility. It was exactly the same in early China, Egypt, and the
+Byzantine Empire, and it is only in the light of this that we become able to
+understand the older Classical city-leagues (such as the Etruscan and, it may be,
+even the Latin) and the sacral connexions of colonial daughter-cities with their
+mother city. It was not the Polis as such, so far, that was the backbone of
+events, but the patriciate of phylæ and phratriæ within it. <em>The original Polis is
+identical with the nobility</em>, as Rome was up to 471, and Sparta and the Etruscan
+cities throughout. Synœcism grew out of it, and the city-state was formed by
+it. But here, as in other Cultures, the difference between country- and city-nobility
+was at first quite unimportant as compared with the strong and deep
+distinction between the nobility (in general) and the residue.</p>
+
+<p>The burgher proper emerges when the fundamental distinction between
+town and country has brought the “families and the guilds,” in spite of their
+otherwise implacable hostility to one another, to a sense of unity <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the
+old nobility, the feudal system generally, and the feudal position of the Church.
+The notion of the “Third Estate” (to use the catchword of 1789) is essentially
+only a unit of <em>contradiction</em>, incapable of definition by positive content, and having
+neither customary-ethic of its own—for the higher bourgeois society took
+after the nobility, and the urban piety after the older priesthood—nor symbolism
+of its own—for the idea that life was not for the service of practical aims,
+but for the consistent expression of a symbolism of Time and Space, and could
+claim true dignity only to the extent that it was the worthy vessel of these,
+was necessarily repugnant to the urban reason as such. This reason, which
+dominates the entire political literature of the Late period, asserts a new grouping
+of estates as from the rise of cities—at first only in theory, but finally,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p356">[356]</span>when rationalism becomes omnipotent, in practice, even the bloody practice of
+revolutions. Nobility and clergy, so far as they are still extant, appear rather
+markedly as <em>privileged</em> classes, the tacit significance of the emphasis being that
+their claim to prescriptive rights on the ground of historical status is (from the
+point of view of timeless rational or “natural” law) obsolete nonsense. They
+now have their centre in the <em>capital city</em> (this also a Late-period idea) and now,
+and now only, develop aristocratic forms to that imposing combination of
+hauteur and elegance that we see, for example, in the portraits of Reynolds
+and Lawrence. In opposition to them stand the intellectual powers of the now
+supreme city, <em>economy and science</em>, which in conjunction with the mass of artisans,
+functionaries, and labourers feel themselves as a party, diverse in its constituents,
+but invariably solid at the call to battle for freedom—that is, for urban
+independence of the great old-time symbols and the rights that flowed from
+them. As components of the Third Estate, which counts by heads and not by
+rank, they are all, in all Late periods of all Cultures, “liberal” in one way or
+another—namely, free from the inward powers of non-urban life. Economy is
+freed to make money, science freed to criticize. And so in all the great decisions
+we perceive the intellect with its books and its meetings having the word
+(“Democracy”), and money obtaining the advantages (“Plutocracy”)—and it
+is never ideas, but always capital, that wins. But this again is just the opposition
+of truths and facts, in the form in which it develops from the city-life.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, by way of protest against the ancient symbols of the soil-bound
+life, the city opposes to the aristocracy of birth the notion of an aristocracy
+of money and an aristocracy of intellect—the one not very explicit as a claim,
+but all the more effective as a fact; the other a truth, but nothing more than
+that and, as a spectacle for the eye, not very convincing. In every Late period
+there grows on to the ancient nobility—that in which some big bit of history
+(say, Crusades, or Norman conquest) has become stored as form and beat, but
+which often has inwardly decayed at the great courts—a genuine second crop.
+Thus in the fourth century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> the entry of great plebeian families as <i lang="la">conscripti</i>
+into the Roman Senate of <i lang="la">patres</i> produced within the senatorial order an aristocracy
+of “<i lang="la">nobiles</i>”—a nobility holding lands, but entitled by office. In just
+the same way a nobility of nepotism arose in Papal Rome; in 1650 there were
+scarcely fifty families of more than three centuries’ status. In the Southern
+States of the American Union there grew up, from Baroque times onward, that
+planter-aristocracy which was annihilated by the money-powers of the North
+in the Civil War of 1861–5. The old merchant-nobility of the type of the Fugger,
+Welser, and Medici and the great Venetian and Genoese houses—to this type,
+too, must be assigned practically the whole of the patriciate of the Hellenic
+colonial cities of 800—had always something of aristocracy in them,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_619" href="#Footnote_619" class="fnanchor">[619]</a> race,
+tradition, high standards, and the nature-impulse to re-establish connexion
+<span class="pagenum" id="p357">[357]</span>with the soil by acquiring lands (although the old family house in town was
+no bad substitute). But the new money-aristocracy of deals and speculations
+rapidly acquired a taste for polite forms and at last forced its way into the
+birth-nobility—in Rome, as Equites, from the first Punic War, in France
+under Louis XIV&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_620" href="#Footnote_620" class="fnanchor">[620]</a>—which it disintegrated and corrupted, while the intellectual
+aristocracy of the Enlightenment, for its part, overwhelmed it with scorn.
+The Confucians took the old Chinese idea of <i>Shi</i> from the ethic of nobility and
+put it into the virtue of intellect, and made the Pi-Yung, from a centre of
+knightly battle-play, into an “intellectual wrestling-school,” a gymnasium—quite
+in the spirit of our eighteenth century.</p>
+
+<p>With the close of the Late period of every Culture the history of its estates
+also comes to a more or less violent end. The mere desire to live in rootless
+freedom prevails over the great imperative Culture-symbols, which a mankind
+now wholly dominated by the city no longer comprehends or tolerates. Finance
+sheds every trace of feeling for earth-bound immovable values, and scientific
+criticism every residue of piety. Another such victory also, in a measure, is the
+liberation of the peasant, which consists in relieving him from the pressure of
+servage, but hands him over to the power of money, which now proceeds to
+turn the land into movable property—which happened in our case in the
+eighteenth century; in Byzantium about 740 under the Nomos Georgikos of
+the legislator Leo III&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_621" href="#Footnote_621" class="fnanchor">[621]</a> (after which the colonate slowly disappeared); in Rome
+along with the founding of the Plebeian order in 471. In Sparta the simultaneous
+attempt of Pausanias to emancipate the Helots failed.</p>
+
+<p><em>This Plebs is the Third Estate in the form in which it is constitutionally recognised
+as a unit</em>; its representatives are the Tribunes, not officials, but trusted persons
+armed with a guaranteed immunity. The reform of 471,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_622" href="#Footnote_622" class="fnanchor">[622]</a> which <i lang="la">inter alia</i> replaced
+the old three Etruscan tribes by four urban tribes or wards (a highly suggestive
+fact in itself), has been variously regarded as a pure emancipation of peasantry&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_623" href="#Footnote_623" class="fnanchor">[623]</a>
+or as an organization of the trading class.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_624" href="#Footnote_624" class="fnanchor">[624]</a> But the Plebs, as Third Estate, as
+residue, is only susceptible of negative definition—as meaning everyone who
+does not belong to the land-nobility or is not the incumbent of a great priestly
+office. The picture is as variegated as that of the French “<i lang="fr">Tiers État</i>” of 1789.
+Only the protest holds it together. In it are traders, craftsmen, day-labourers,
+clerks. The gens of the Claudii contained patrician <em>and</em> plebeian families—that
+is, great landlords and prosperous yeomen (for example, the Claudii
+Marcelli). The Plebs in the Classical city-state is what a combination of
+peasant and burgher is in a Baroque state of the West, when it protests in an
+<span class="pagenum" id="p358">[358]</span>assembled states-general against the autocracy of a prince. Outside politics—that
+is, socially—the plebs, as a unit distinguished from nobility and priesthood,
+has no existence, but falls apart at once into special callings that are
+perfectly distinct in interests. It is a <em>Party</em>, and what it stands for as such is
+freedom in the urban sense of the word. The fact emerges still more distinctly
+from the success which the Roman land-nobility won immediately afterwards,
+in adding sixteen country tribes, designated by family names and unchallengeably
+controlled by themselves, to the four urban tribes that stood for bourgeoisie
+proper—namely, money and mind. Not until the great social conflict during
+the Samnite wars (contemporary with Alexander, and corresponding exactly
+to the French Revolution), which ended with the Lex Hortensia of 287, was the
+status-idea legally abolished and the history of the symbolic Estates closed.
+<em>The Plebs became the Populus Romanus</em> in the same way as in 1789 the “<i lang="fr">Tiers État</i>”
+constituted itself the Nation. From this point on, in every Culture, it is something
+fundamentally different that happens under the label of social conflict.</p>
+
+<p>The nobility of every Springtime had been <em>the</em> Estate in the most primary
+sense, history become flesh, race at highest potential. The priesthood was its
+<em>counter-estate</em>, saying no wherever nobility said yes and thus displaying the
+other side of life in a grand symbol.</p>
+
+<p>The Third Estate, without proper inward unity, was the non-estate—the
+protest, in estate-form, against the existence of estates; not against this or
+that estate, but against the symbolic view of life in general. It rejects all
+differences not justified by reason or practically useful. And yet it does mean
+something itself, and means it very distinctly—<em>the city-life as estate</em> in contradistinction
+to that of the country, <em>freedom as a condition</em> in contrast to attachment.
+But, looked at from within its own field, it is by no means the unclassified residue
+that it appears in the eyes of the primary estates. The bourgeoisie has definite
+limits; it belongs to the Culture; it embraces, in the best sense, all who adhere to
+it, and under the name of people, <i lang="la">populus, demos</i>, rallies nobility and priesthood,
+money and mind, craftsman and wage-earner, as constituents of itself.</p>
+
+<p>This is the idea that Civilization finds prevailing when it comes on the
+scene, and this is what it destroys by its notion of the Fourth Estate, <em>the Mass</em>,
+which rejects the Culture and its matured forms, lock, stock, and barrel. It is
+the absolute of formlessness, persecuting with its hate every sort of form, every
+distinction of rank, the orderliness of property, the orderliness of knowledge.
+It is the new nomadism of the Cosmopolis,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_625" href="#Footnote_625" class="fnanchor">[625]</a> for which slaves and barbarians in
+the Classical world, Sudras in the Indian, and in general anything and everything
+that is merely human, provide an undifferentiated floating something
+that falls apart the moment it is born, that recognizes no past and possesses no
+future. Thus the Fourth Estate becomes the expression of the passing of a
+history over into the historyless. The mass is the end, the radical nullity.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p359"></a><a id="p360"></a><a id="p361"></a>[361]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">
+ CHAPTER XI
+ <br>
+ <span class="subtitle">THE STATE
+ <br>
+ (B)
+ <br>
+ STATE AND HISTORY</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>Within the world-as-history, in which we are so livingly woven that our perception
+and our reason constantly obey our feelings, the cosmic flowings appear
+as that which we call actuality, real life, being-streams in bodily form. Their
+common badge is Direction. But they can be grasped differently according as it
+is the <em>movement</em> or <em>the thing moved</em> that is looked at. The former aspect we call
+history and the latter family or stock or estate or people, but the one is only
+possible and existent through the other. History exists only as the history of
+something. If we are referring to the history of the great Cultures, then
+nation is the thing moved. State, <i>status</i>, means condition, and we obtain our
+impression of the State when, as a Being in moved Form flows past us, we fix in
+our eyes the Form as such, as something extended and timelessly standing fast,
+and entirely ignore direction and Destiny. State is history regarded as at the
+halt, history the State regarded as on the move. The State of actuality is the
+physiognomy of a historical unit of being; only the planned State of the theorist
+is a system.</p>
+
+<p>A movement <em>has</em> form, and that which is moved is “<em>in form</em>,” or, to use
+another sporting expression, when it is “going all out” it is in perfect condition.
+This is equally true for a racehorse or a wrestler and for an army or a people.
+The form abstracted from the life-stream of a people is the “condition” of that
+people with respect to its wrestle in and with history. But only the smallest
+part of this can be got at and identified by means of the reason. No real constitution,
+when taken by itself and brought down to paper as a system, is
+complete. The unwritten, the indescribable, the usual, the felt, the self-evident,
+so outweigh everything else that—though theorists never see it—the description
+of a state or its constitutional archives cannot give us even the silhouette
+of that which underlies the living actuality of a state as its essential
+form; an existence-unit of history is spoilt when we seriously subject its movement
+to the constraint of a written constitution.</p>
+
+<p>The individual class or family is the smallest, the nation the largest unit in
+the stream of history.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_626" href="#Footnote_626" class="fnanchor">[626]</a> Primitive peoples are subject to a movement that is not
+historical in the higher sense—the movement may be a jog-trot or may be a
+<span class="pagenum" id="p362">[362]</span>charge, but it has no organic character and no profound importance. Nevertheless,
+these primitive peoples are in motion through and through, to such an
+extent, indeed, as to seem perfectly formless to the hasty observer. Fellaheen,
+on the contrary, are the rigid objects of a movement that comes from outside
+and impinges on them unmeaningly and fortuitously. The former includes the
+“State” of the Mycenæan period; that of the Thinite period; that of the Shang
+dynasty in China up to, say, the migration to Yin (1400); the Frankish realm
+of Charlemagne; the Visigothic Kingdom to Eurich; and Petrine Russia—state-forms
+often ample and efficient, but still destitute of symbolism and
+necessity. To the latter belong the Roman, Chinese, and other Imperia, whose
+form has ceased to have any expressive content whatever.</p>
+
+<p>But between primitive and fellah lies the history of the great Culture.
+A people in the style of a Culture—a historical people, that is—is called a
+Nation.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_627" href="#Footnote_627" class="fnanchor">[627]</a> A nation, as a living and battling thing, possesses a State not merely
+as a condition of movement, but also (above all) <em>as an idea</em>. The State in the
+simplest sense of the term may be as old as free-moving life itself. Swarms
+and herds of even very lowly animal genera may have “constitutions” of some
+sort—and those of the ants, of the bees, of many fish, or migrating birds, of
+beavers, have reached an astounding degree of perfection—but the State of
+the grand style is as old as and no older than its two prime Estates, nobility
+and priesthood. These emerge <em>with</em> the Culture, they vanish into it, their
+Destinies are to a high degree identical. Culture is the being of nations in
+State-form.</p>
+
+<p>A people is <em>as</em> State, a kindred is <em>as</em> family, “in form”—that is, as we have
+seen, the difference between political and cosmic history, public and private
+life, <i lang="la">res publica</i> and <i lang="la">res privata</i>. And both, moreover, are symbols of care.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_628" href="#Footnote_628" class="fnanchor">[628]</a>
+The woman <em>is</em> world-history. By conceiving and giving birth she cares for
+the perpetuation of the blood. The mother with the child at her breast is the
+grand emblem of cosmic life. Under this aspect, the life of man and woman
+is “in form” as marriage. The man, however, <em>makes</em> history, which is an unending
+battle for the preservation of that other life. Maternal care is supplemented
+and paralleled by paternal. The man with weapon in hand is the other
+grand emblem of the will-to-duration. A people “in condition” is originally
+a band warriorhood, a deep and intimately felt community of men fit for arms.
+State is the affair of man, it is Care for the preservation of the whole (including
+the spiritual self-preservation called honour and self-respect), the thwarting of
+attacks, the foreseeing of dangers, and, above all, the positive aggressiveness
+which is natural and self-evident to every life that has begun to soar.</p>
+
+<p>If all life were <em>one</em> uniform being-stream, the words “people,” “state,”
+“war,” “policy,” “constitution,” would never have been heard of. But the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p363">[363]</span>eternal forceful <em>variety</em> of life, which the creative power of the Culture elevates
+to the highest intensities, is a fact, and historically we have no choice but to
+accept it as such, with all that flows therefrom. Plant-life is only plant-life
+in relation to animal life; nobility and priesthood reciprocally condition one
+another. <em>A people is only really such in relation to other peoples</em>, and the substance
+of this actuality comes out in natural and ineradicable oppositions, in attack
+and defence, hostility and war. War is the creator of all great things. All that
+is meaningful in the stream of life has emerged through victory and defeat.</p>
+
+<p>A people shapes history inasmuch as it is “in condition” for the task of
+doing so. It livingly experiences an inward history—which gets it into this
+“condition,” in which alone it becomes creative—and an outward history,
+which <em>consists</em> in this creation. Peoples as State, then, are the real forces of all
+human happening. In the world-as-history there is nothing beyond them.
+They <em>are</em> Destiny.</p>
+
+<p><i lang="la">Res publica</i>, the public life, the “sword side” of human being-currents, is in
+actuality invisible. The alien sees merely the men and not their inner connexion,
+for indeed this resides very deep in the stream of life, and even there is felt rather
+than understood. Similarly, we do not in actuality see the family, but only
+certain persons, whose cohesion in a perfectly definite sense we know and grasp
+by way of our own inward experience. But for each such mental picture there
+exists a group of constituent persons who are bound together as a life-unit by a
+like constitution of outer and inner being. This form in the flow of existence
+is called <em>customary ethic</em> (<i>Sitte</i>) when it arises of itself in the beat and march and
+is unconscious before it is conscious; and <em>law</em> (<i lang="de">Recht</i>) when it is <em>deliberately stated</em>
+and put forth for <em>acceptance</em>.</p>
+
+<p>Law—irrespective of whether its authority derives from the feelings and
+impulse (unwritten law, customary law, English “equity”) or has been abstracted
+by reflection, probed, and brought into system as Statute Law (<i lang="de">Gesetz</i>)—is
+the <em>willed</em> form of Being. The jural facts that it embraces are of the two
+kinds, though both possess time-symbolism—Care in two modes, prevision and
+provision—but, from the very difference in the proportions of consciousness
+that they respectively contain, it follows that throughout real history there
+must be two laws in opposition—the law of the fathers, of tradition, the
+inherited, grown, and well-tried law, sacrosanct because immemorially old,
+derived from the experience of the blood and therefore dependable; and the
+thought and planned law of reason, nature, and broad humanity, the product of
+reflection and therefore first cousin to mathematics, a law that may not be very
+workable, but is at any rate “just.” It is in these two orders of law that the
+opposition between land-life and city-life, life-experience and study-experience,
+ripens till it bursts out in that revolutionary embitterment in which men take a
+law instead of being given it, and break a law that will not yield.</p>
+
+<p>A law that has been laid down by a community expresses a <em>duty</em> for every
+<span class="pagenum" id="p364">[364]</span>member, but it is no proof of every member’s <em>power</em>. On the contrary, it is a
+question of Destiny, who makes the law and for whom it is made. There are
+subjects and there are objects in the <em>making</em> of laws, although everyone is an
+object as to the validity thereof—and this holds good without distinction
+for the inner law of families, guilds, estates, and states. But for the State,
+which is the highest law-subject existing in historical actuality, there is,
+besides, an external law that it imposes upon aliens by hostilities. Ordinary
+civil law is a case of the first kind, a peace treaty of the second. But in all cases
+the law of the stronger is the law of the weaker also. To “have the right”
+is an expression of power. This is a historical fact that every moment confirms,
+but it is not acknowledged in the realm of truth, which is not of this world.
+In their conceptions of right, therefore, as in other things, being and waking-being,
+Destiny and Causality, stand implacably opposed. To the priestly and
+idealistic moral of good and evil belongs the <em>moral distinction of right and wrong</em>,
+but in the race-moral of good and bad the distinction is between those who give
+and those who receive the law. An abstract idea of justice pervades the minds
+and writings of all whose spirit is noble and strong and whose blood is weak,
+pervades all religions and all philosophies—but the fact-world of history
+knows only the <em>success</em> which turns the law of the stronger into the law of all.
+Over ideals it marches without pity, and if ever a man or a people renounces
+its power of the moment in order to remain righteous—then, certainly, his
+or its theoretical fame is assured in the second world of thought and truth, but
+assured also is the coming of a moment in which it will succumb to another
+life-power that has better understood realities.</p>
+
+<p>So long as a historical power is so superior to its constituent units—as the
+State or the estate so often is to families and calling-classes, or the head of the
+family to its children—a just law <em>between</em> the weaker is possible as a gift from
+the all-powerful hand of the disinterested. But Estates seldom, and states
+almost never, feel a power of this magnitude over themselves, and consequently
+between them the law of the stronger acts with immediate force—as is seen
+in a victor’s treaty, unilateral in terms and still more so in interpretation and
+observance. That is the difference between the <em>internal</em> and the <em>external</em> rights
+of historical life-units. In the first the will of an arbiter to be impartial and
+just can be effective—although we are apt to deceive ourselves badly as to the
+degree of effective impartiality even in the best codes of history, even in those
+which call themselves “civil” or “<i lang="de">bürgerlich</i>,” for the very adjective indicates
+that <em>an estate</em> has possessed the superior force to impose them on everyone.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_629" href="#Footnote_629" class="fnanchor">[629]</a>
+Internal laws are the result of strict logical-causal thought centring upon truths,
+but for that very reason their validity is ever dependent upon the material power
+of their author, be this Estate or State. A revolution that annihilates this
+<span class="pagenum" id="p365">[365]</span>power annihilates also these laws—they remain true, but they are no longer
+actual. External laws on the other hand, such as all peace treaties, are essentially
+never true and always actual—indeed appallingly so. They set up no
+pretension whatever of being just—it is quite enough that they are valid.
+Out of them speaks <em>Life</em>, which possesses no causal and moral logic, but is
+organically all the more consistent and consequent for the lack of it. Its will
+is to possess validity <em>itself</em>; it feels with an inward certainty what is required
+to that end and, seeing that, knows what is law for itself and <em>has to be made</em> law
+for others. This logic is seen in every family, and particularly in old true-born
+peasant families as soon as authority is shattered and someone other than the
+head tries to determine “what is.” It appears in every state, as soon as one
+party therein dominates the position. Every feudal age is filled with the contests
+between lords and vassals over the “right to rights.” In the Classical
+world this conflict ended almost everywhere with the unconditional victory
+of the First Estate, which deprived the kingship of its legislative powers and
+made it an object of its own law-making—as the origin and significance of the
+Archons in Athens and the Ephors in Sparta prove beyond doubt. But the same
+happened in the Western field too—for a moment in France (institution of
+the States-General, 1302), and for good in England, where in 1215 the Norman
+baronage and the higher clergy imposed Magna Charta and thus sowed the
+seed that was to ripen into the effective sovereignty of Parliament. Hence it
+was that the old Norman law of the Estates here remained permanently valid.
+In Germany, on the contrary, the weak Imperial power, hard-pressed by the
+claims of the great feudatories, called in the “Roman” law of Justinian (that is,
+the law of the unlimited central power) to aid it against the early German land-laws.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_630" href="#Footnote_630" class="fnanchor">[630]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Draconian Constitution, the πατρίος πολιτεία of the Oligarchs, was dictated
+by the nobility like the strictly patrician law of the Twelve Tables in
+Rome;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_631" href="#Footnote_631" class="fnanchor">[631]</a> but by then the Late period of the Culture was well under way and the
+power of the city and of money were already fully developed, so that laws
+directed against these powers necessarily gave way very promptly to laws of the
+Third Estate (Solon, the Tribunate). Yet these, too, were estate-founded laws
+not less than their predecessors. The struggle between the two primary estates
+for the right of law-making has filled the entire history of the West, from the
+early Gothic conflict of secular and canon law for supremacy, to the controversy
+(not ended even to-day) concerning civil marriage.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_632" href="#Footnote_632" class="fnanchor">[632]</a> And, for that matter,
+what are the constitutional conflicts that have occurred since the end of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p366">[366]</span>eighteenth century but the acquisition by the <i lang="fr">Tiers État</i> (which, according to
+Sieyès’s famous remark in 1789, “was nothing, but could be all”) of the right
+to legislate bindingly upon all, producing a law that is just as much burghers
+law as ever Gothic was nobles’ law. The nakedest form in which right appears
+as the expression of might is (as I have already observed) in interstate treaty-making,
+in peace treaties, and in that Law of Nations of which already Mirabeau
+could say it is the law of the strong of which the observance is imposed upon
+the weak. A large part of the decisions of world-history is contained in laws
+of this kind. They are the constitution under which militant history progresses,
+so long as it does not revert to the original form of the armed conflict—original,
+and also basic; for every treaty that is valid and is meant to have real
+effects is an intellectual continuation thereof. If policy is war by other means,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_633" href="#Footnote_633" class="fnanchor">[633]</a>
+the “right to give the law” is the spoil of the successful party.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_10">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>It is clear, then, that on the heights of history two such life-forms, Estate
+and State, contend for supremacy, both being-streams of great inward form and
+symbolic force, each resolved to make its own destiny the Destiny of the whole.
+<em>That</em>—if we try to understand the matter in its depths and unreservedly put
+aside our everyday conceptions of people, economy, society, and politics—<em>is
+the meaning of the opposition between the social and the political conduct of events</em>.
+Social and political ideas do not begin to be differentiated till a great Culture
+has dawned, or even till feudalism is declining and the lord-vassal relation
+represents the social, and the king-people relation the political, side. But the
+social powers of the early time (nobility and priesthood) not less actively than
+those of the later (money and mind)—and the vocational groups of the craftsmen
+and officials and workers, too, as they were rising to their power in the
+growing cities—sought, each for itself, to subordinate the State-ideal to its
+own Estate-ideal, or more usually to its estate interests. And so there arose, at
+all planes from that of the national unit to that of the individual consciousness,
+a fight over the respective limits and claims of each—the result of which, in
+extreme cases, is that the one element succeeds so completely as to make the
+other its tool.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_634" href="#Footnote_634" class="fnanchor">[634]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p367">[367]</span></p>
+
+<p>In all cases, however, it is the State that determines the <em>external</em> position, and
+therefore the historical relations between peoples are always of <em>a political and
+not a social nature</em>. In domestic politics, on the contrary, the situation is so
+dominated by class-oppositions that at first sight social and political tactics
+appear inseparable, and indeed, in the thought of people who (as, for example,
+a bourgeoisie) equate their own class-ideal with historical actuality—and
+consequently cannot think in external politics at all—identical. In the external
+battle the State seeks alliances with other States, in the internal it is
+always in alliance with one or another Estate—the sixth-century Tyrannis,
+for instance, rested upon the combination of the State-idea with the interests of
+the Third Estate <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the ancient noble oligarchy, and the French Revolution
+became inevitable from the moment that the <i lang="fr">Tiers</i>—that is, intellect
+and money—left its friend the Crown in the lurch and joined the two other
+Estates (from the Assembly of Notables, 1787). We are thoroughly right therefore
+in feeling a distinction between State-history and class-history,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_635" href="#Footnote_635" class="fnanchor">[635]</a> between
+political (horizontal) and social (vertical) history, war and revolution.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_636" href="#Footnote_636" class="fnanchor">[636]</a> But
+it is a grave error of modern doctrinaires to regard the spirit of domestic history
+as that of history in general. <em>World-history is, and always will be, State-history.</em>
+The inner constitution of a nation aims always at being “<em>in condition</em>” for the
+outer fight (diplomatic, military, or economic) and anyone who treats a nation’s
+constitution as an aim and ideal in itself is merely ruining the nation’s
+body. But, from the other point of view, it falls to the inner-political pulse-sense
+of a ruling stratum (whether belonging to the First or to the Fourth
+Estate) so to manage the internal class-oppositions that the focus and ideas of
+the nation are not tied up in party conflict, nor treason to the country thought
+of as an ace of trumps.</p>
+
+<p>And here it becomes manifest that <em>the State and the first Estate</em> are cognate
+down to the roots—akin, not merely by reason of their symbolism of Time and
+Care, their common relation to race and the facts of genealogical succession,
+to the family and to the primary impulses of all peasantry (on which in the
+last analysis every State and every nobility is supported)—not merely in their
+relation to the soil, the clan-domain (be this heritable estate or fatherland),
+which even in nations of the Magian style is lowered in significance only because
+there the dignity of orthodoxy so completely surpasses everything else—but
+above all in high practice amidst all the facts of the historical world, in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p368">[368]</span>unforced unity of pulse and impulse, diplomacy, judgment of men, the art of
+command and masculine will to keep and extend power, which even in earliest
+times differentiated a nobility and a people out of the one and the same war-gathering;
+and, lastly, in the feeling for honour and bravery. Hence, right
+up to the latest phases, that State stands firmest in which the nobility or the
+tradition shaped by the nobility is wholly at the service of the common cause—as
+it was in Sparta as compared with Athens, in Rome <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> Carthage, in
+Tsin as against the <i>tao</i>-coloured state of Tsu.</p>
+
+<p>The distinction is that a nobility self-contained as a class—or for that
+matter <em>any</em> Estate—experiences the residue of the nation only with reference to
+itself, and only desires to exercise power in that sense, whereas the very principle
+of the State is that it cares for all, and cares for the nobility as such only
+in relation to the major care. But a genuine old nobility <em>assimilates itself</em> to
+the State, and cares for all as though for a property. This care, in fact, is one
+of its grandest duties and one of which it is most deeply conscious; it feels it,
+indeed, an innate <em>privilege</em>, and regards service in the army and the administration
+as its special vocation.</p>
+
+<p>It is, however, a distinction of quite another kind that holds as between the
+State-idea and the idea of any one of the other Estates. All these are inwardly
+alien to the State as such, and the State-ideals that they fashion out of their
+own lives have not grown up out of the spirit and the political forces of actual
+history—hence, indeed, the conscious emphasis with which they are labelled
+as social. And while in Early times the situation is simply that historical facts
+oppose the Church-community in its efforts to actualize <em>religious</em> ideals, in Late
+periods both the <em>business</em> ideal of the free economic life, and the <em>Utopian</em> ideal
+of the enthusiast who would actualize this or that abstraction, also come into
+the field.</p>
+
+<p>But in the historical world there are no ideals, but only facts—no truths,
+but only facts. There is no reason, no honesty, no equity, no final aim, but
+only facts, and anyone who does not realize this should write books on politics—let
+him not try to <em>make</em> politics. In the real world there are no states built
+according to ideals, but only states that have <em>grown</em>, and these are nothing
+but living peoples “in form.” No doubt it is “the form impressed that living
+doth itself unfold,” but the impress has been that of the blood and beat of a
+<em>being</em>, wholly instinctive and involuntary; and as to the unfolding, if it is
+guided by the master of politics, it takes the direction inherent in the blood;
+if by the idealist, that dictated by his own convictions—in other words, the
+way to nullity.</p>
+
+<p>But the destiny question, for States that exist in reality and not merely in
+intellectual schemes, is not that of their ideal task or structure, <em>but that of their
+inner authority</em>, which cannot in the long run be maintained by material means,
+but only by a belief—of friend <em>and</em> foe—in their effectiveness. The decisive
+<span class="pagenum" id="p369">[369]</span>problems lie, not in the working-out of constitutions, but in the organization
+of a sound working government; not in the distribution of political rights
+according to “just” principles (which at bottom are simply the idea that a
+<em>class</em> forms of its own legitimate claims), but in the efficient pulse of the whole
+(efficient in the sense that the play of muscle and sinew is efficient when an
+extended racehorse nears the winning-post), in that rhythm which attracts
+even strong genius into syntony; not, lastly, in any world-alien moral, but
+in the steadiness, sureness, and superiority of political leadership. The more
+self-evident all these things are, the less is said or argued about them; the more
+fully matured the State, the higher the standing, the historical capacity, and
+therefore the Destiny of the Nation. State-majesty, sovereignty, is a life-symbol
+of the first order. It distinguishes <em>subjects and objects</em>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_637" href="#Footnote_637" class="fnanchor">[637]</a> in political
+events not only in inner, but also (which is far more important) in external,
+history. Strength of leadership, which comes to expression in the clear separation
+of these two factors, is the unmistakable sign of the life-force in a political
+unity—so much so that the shattering of existing authority (for example,
+by the supporters of an opposed constitutional ideal) almost always results not
+in this new party’s making itself the subject of domestic policy, but in the
+whole nation’s becoming the object of alien policy—and not seldom for ever.</p>
+
+<p>For this reason, in every healthy State the letter of the written constitution
+is of small importance compared with the practice of the living constitution,
+the “form” (to use again the sporting term), which has developed of itself
+out of the experience of Time, the situation, and, above all, the race-properties
+of the Nation. The more powerfully the <em>natural</em> form of the body politic has
+built itself up, the more surely it works in unforeseen situations; indeed,
+in the limit, it does not matter whether the actual leader is called King or
+Minister or party-leader, or even (as in the case of Cecil Rhodes) that he has no
+defined relation to the State. The nobility which managed Roman politics in
+the period of the three Punic Wars had, from the point of view of constitutional
+law, no existence whatever.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_638" href="#Footnote_638" class="fnanchor">[638]</a> The leader’s responsibility is always to a minority
+that possesses the instincts of statesmanship and represents the rest of the nation
+in the struggle of history.</p>
+
+<p>The fact, therefore, express and unequivocal, is that class-States—that is,
+States in which particular classes rule—are the <em>only</em> States. This must not be
+confused with the class-States to which the individual is merely <em>attached</em> in view
+of belonging to an estate, as in the case of the older Polis, the Norman States of
+England and Sicily, the France of the Constitution of 1791, and Soviet Russia
+to-day. The true class-State is an expression of the general historical experience
+<span class="pagenum" id="p370">[370]</span>that it is always a single social stratum which, constitutionally or otherwise,
+provides the political leading. It is always a definite minority that represents
+the world-historical tendency of a State; and, within that again, it is a more
+or less self-contained minority that in virtue of its aptitudes (and often enough
+against the spirit of the Constitution) actually holds the reins. And, if we
+ignore, as exceptions proving the rule, revolutionary interregna and Cæsarian
+conditions, in which individuals and fortuitous groupings maintain their
+power merely by material means (and often without any aptitude for ruling),
+it is always the minority <em>within an Estate</em> that rules by tradition. In by far the
+greater number of cases this minority is one within the nobility—for example,
+the “gentry” which governed the Parliamentary style of England, the <i lang="la">nobiles</i>
+at the helm of Roman politics in Punic War times, the merchant-aristocracy of
+Venice, the Jesuit-trained (nobles who conducted the diplomacy of the Papal
+Curia in the Baroque).&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_639" href="#Footnote_639" class="fnanchor">[639]</a> Similarly, we find the political aptitude in self-contained
+groups within the religious Estate—not only in the Roman Catholic
+Church, but also in Egypt and India and still more in Byzantium and Sassanid
+Persia. In the Third Estate—though this seldom produces it, not being in
+itself a life-unit—there are cases such as those of third-century Rome, where a
+stratum of the plebs contains men trained in commerce, and France since 1789,
+where an element of the bourgeoisie has been trained in law; in these cases, it
+is ensured by a closed circle of persons possessing homogeneous practical gifts,
+which constantly recruits itself and preserves in its midst the whole sum of
+unwritten political tradition and experience.</p>
+
+<p>That is the organization of <em>actual</em> states in contradistinction to those conceived
+on paper and in the minds of pedants. There is no best, or true, or right
+State that could possibly be actualized according to plan. Every State that
+emerges in history exists as it is but once and for a moment; the next moment it
+has, unperceived, become different, whatever the rigidity of its legal-constitutional
+crust. Therefore, words like “republic,” “absolutism,” “democracy,”
+mean something different in every instance, and what turns them into catchwords
+is their use as definite concepts by philosophers and ideologues. A history
+of States is physiognomic and not systematic. Its business is not to show how
+“humanity” advances to the conquest of its eternal rights, to freedom and
+equality, to the evolving of a super-wise and super-just State, but to describe
+the political units that really exist in the fact-world, how they grow and
+flourish and fade, and how they are really nothing but actual life “in form.”
+Let us make the attempt on this basis.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p371">[371]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_10">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>History in the high style begins in every Culture with the feudal State,
+which is not a State in the coming sense of the word, but an ordering of the
+common life with reference to an <em>Estate</em>. The noblest fruit of the soil, its race
+in the proudest sense, here builds itself up in a rank-order from the simple
+knighthood to the <i lang="la">primus inter pares</i>, the feudal Overlord amongst his Peers.
+This sets in simultaneously with the architecture of the great cathedrals and the
+Pyramids—the stone and the blood elevated into symbols, the one <em>meaning</em>,
+the other <em>being</em>. The idea of feudalism, which has dominated all Springtimes,
+is the transition from the primitive, purely practical and factual, relationship of
+potentate to those who obey him (whether they have chosen him or have been
+subdued by him) into the <em>private-law</em> (and, therefore, deeply symbolical)
+relation of the lord to the vassal. This relation rests entirely upon the ethic of
+nobility, honour, and loyalty, and conjures up the cruellest conflicts between
+duty to one’s lord and duty to one’s own family. The decadence of Henry the
+Lion&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_640" href="#Footnote_640" class="fnanchor">[640]</a> is a tragic example of it.</p>
+
+<p>The “State” exists here only to the extent of the limits of the feudal tie,
+and it expands its domain by the entry of alien vassals therein. Service to, and
+agency for, the ruler—originally personal and limited in time—very soon
+became the permanent fief which, if it escheated, <em>had</em> to be reassigned (already
+by 1000 the principle of the West was “No land without a lord”), and from that
+presently passed to the stage of being hereditary (law of Emperor Conrad II,
+28th May 1037). Thereby the formerly immediate subjects of the ruler were
+mediatized, and henceforth they were only his subjects as being subjects of a
+vassal of his. Nothing but the strong social interbonding of the Estate ensured
+the cohesion of what must be called, even under these conditions, the State.</p>
+
+<p>The idea of power and booty are seen here in classic union. When, in 1066,
+William and his Norman chivalry conquered England, the whole land was made
+King’s property and fee, and it remains so in name to this day. Here is a true
+Viking delight in “having,” the care of an Odysseus who begins by counting
+his treasure.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_641" href="#Footnote_641" class="fnanchor">[641]</a> From this booty-sense of shrewd conquerors there came, quite
+suddenly, the famous exchequer-practice and officialdom of the early Cultures.
+It is well to distinguish these officials from the incumbents of the great confidential
+offices which had arisen out of the older personal agency;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_642" href="#Footnote_642" class="fnanchor">[642]</a> they were
+<i lang="la">clerici</i> or clerks, and not <i lang="la">ministeriales</i> or ministers—“servants,” but in a prouder
+sense now. The financial and clerical officialdom is an expression of Care,
+and it develops in exact proportion with the development of the dynastic idea.
+Thus in Egypt it reached an astonishingly high level at the very beginning of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p372">[372]</span>the Old Kingdom.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_643" href="#Footnote_643" class="fnanchor">[643]</a>
+ The early Chinese official-State described in the <i>Tshou-li</i>
+is so comprehensive and complicated that the authenticity of the book has
+been doubted,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_644" href="#Footnote_644" class="fnanchor">[644]</a> but in spirit and tendency it corresponds exactly with that of
+Diocletian, which enabled a feudal order to arise out of an immense fiscal
+machinery.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_645" href="#Footnote_645" class="fnanchor">[645]</a> In the early Classical world it is markedly absent. “<i lang="la">Carpe diem</i>”
+was the motto of Classical economics from the first to last, and in this domain as
+in others Improvidence, the <i>autarkeia</i> of the Stoics, was elevated into a principle.
+Even the best calculators were no exception—thus Eubulus in Athens, 330 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>,
+managed business with an eye to surpluses, but only to distribute them, when
+gained, amongst the citizens.</p>
+
+<p>The extreme contrast to Eubulus’s finance is afforded by the canny Vikings
+of the early West, who by the financial administration of their Norman states
+laid the foundations of the Faustian economics that extend to-day over the
+whole world. It is from the chequered table in the Norman counting-house
+of Robert the Devil (1028–35) that we have the name of the English “Exchequer”
+and hence the word “cheque.” Here also originated the words
+“control,” “quittance,” “record.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_646" href="#Footnote_646" class="fnanchor">[646]</a> Here it was that after 1066 England was
+organized as booty, with ruthless reduction of the Anglo-Saxons, to serfdom,
+and here too originated the Norman State of Sicily—for it was not upon
+nothing that Frederick II of Hohenstaufen later built; his most personal work,
+the constitutions of Melfi (1231) he did not create, but only (by methods borrowed
+from the money-economics of high Arabian Civilization) polished and
+perfected. From this centre the methodic and descriptive technique of finance
+spread into the business world of Lombardy and so into all the trading cities
+and administrations of the West.</p>
+
+<p>But in Feudalism build-up and breakdown lie close together. When the
+primary estates were still in full bloom and vigour, the future nations, and
+with them the germ of the State-idea proper, were stirring into life. The opposition
+between temporal and spiritual power and that between crown and
+vassals was cut across again and again by oppositions of nationhood—German-French
+even from Otto the Great’s times; German-Italian, which rent Italy
+between the Guelphs and Ghibellines and destroyed the German Empire;
+French-English, which brought about the English dominion over western
+France. Still, all this was far less important than the great decisions within
+the feudal order itself, where the idea of nationality was unknown. England
+was broken up into 60,251 fiefs, catalogued in the Domesday Book of 1084
+(consulted even to-day upon occasion), and the strictly organized central power
+<span class="pagenum" id="p373">[373]</span>required allegiance to itself even from the sub-tenants of the peers, but all the
+same it was less than a hundred and fifty years later that Magna Charta was
+forced through (1215), and actual power transferred from the King to the
+Parliament of the vassals—made up of great barons and ecclesiastics in the
+Upper house, gentry and patricians in the Lower—which thenceforward
+became the support and champion of <em>national</em> development. In France the
+baronage, in conjunction with the clergy and the towns, forced the calling of the
+States-General in 1302; the General Privilege of Saragossa in 1283 made Aragon
+into a quasi-republic of nobles ruled by its Cortes, and in Germany a few decades
+earlier a group of great vassals made the election of the German Kingship
+dependent upon themselves as Electors.</p>
+
+<p>The mightiest expression that the feudal idea found for itself—not merely
+in the West, but in any Culture—came out in the struggle between Empire
+and Papacy, both of which dreamed of a consummation in which the entire
+world was to become an immense feudal system, and so intimately enwove
+themselves into the dream that, with the decay of feudalism, both together fell
+from their heights in lamentable ruin.</p>
+
+<p>The idea of a Ruler whose writ should run throughout the whole historical
+world, whose Destiny should be that of all mankind, has taken visible shape
+in, so far, three instances—firstly, in the conception of the Pharaoh as Horus;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_647" href="#Footnote_647" class="fnanchor">[647]</a>
+secondly, in the great Chinese imagining of the Ruler of the Middle, whose
+domain is <i>tien-hia</i>, everything lying below the heavens;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_648" href="#Footnote_648" class="fnanchor">[648]</a> and, thirdly, in
+early Gothic times. In 962 Otto the Great, answering to the deep mystical
+sense and yearning for historical and spatial infinity that was sweeping through
+the world of those days, conceived the idea of the “Holy Roman Empire,
+German by nation.” But even earlier, Pope Nicolas I (860), still completely
+involved in Augustinian—that is, Magian—lines of thought, had dreamed
+of a Papal democracy which was to stand above the princes of this world, and
+from 1059 Gregory VII with all the prime force of his Faustian nature set out to
+actualize a papal world-dominion under the forms of a universal feudalism, with
+kings as vassals. The Papacy itself, indeed, under its domestic aspect, constituted
+the small feudal State of the Campagna, whose noble families controlled
+the election of popes, and which very rapidly converted the college of cardinals
+(to which the duty was entrusted from 1059 on) into a sort of noble oligarchy.
+But under the broader aspect of external policy Gregory VII actually <em>obtained</em>
+feudal supremacy over the Norman states of England and Sicily, both of which
+were created with his support, and actually awarded the Imperial crown as Otto
+<span class="pagenum" id="p374">[374]</span>the Great had awarded the tiara. But a little later Henry VI of Hohenstaufen
+succeeded in the opposite sense; even Richard Cœur-de-Lion swore the vassal’s
+oath to him for England, and the universal Empire was on the point of becoming
+a fact when the greatest of all popes, Innocent III (1198–1216) made the papal
+overlordship of the world real for a short time. England became a Papal fief
+in 1213; Aragon and Leon and Portugal, Denmark and Poland and Hungary,
+Armenia and the recently founded Latin Empire in Byzantium followed. But
+with Innocent’s death disintegration set in within the Church itself, and
+the great spiritual dignitaries, whom their investitures turned into vassals of
+the Pope as overlord, soon followed the lay vassals’ example and set about
+limiting him by means of representative institutions for their order.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_649" href="#Footnote_649" class="fnanchor">[649]</a> The
+notion that a General Council stood higher than a pope was not of religious
+origin, but arose primarily out of the feudal principle. Its tendency corresponded
+precisely to that which the English magnates had made good in Magna
+Charta. In the councils of Constance (1414) and Basel (1431) the last attempts
+were made to turn the Church, under its temporal aspect, into a clerical feudalism,
+in which an oligarchy of cardinals would have become the representative
+of the whole Clerical Estate of the West and taken the place hitherto held by
+the Roman nobility. But by that time the feudal idea had long taken second
+place to that of the State, and so the Roman barons won the victory. The field of
+candidature for the Papacy was limited to the narrowest environs of Rome, and
+unlimited power over the organizations of the Church was <i lang="la">ipso facto</i> secured
+to the centre. As for the Empire, it had long ago become a venerated shadow,
+like the Egyptian and the Chinese.</p>
+
+<p>In comparison with the immense dynamism of these decisions, the building-up
+of feudalism in the Classical world was slow, static, almost noiseless,
+so that it is hardly recognizable save from the traces of transition. In the
+Homeric epos as we have it now, every locality possesses its Basileus, who, it
+is fairly evident, was once a great vassal—we can see in the figure of Agamemnon
+the conditions in which the ruler of a wide region took the field with the
+train of his peers. But in the Greek world the dissolution of the feudal world
+was associated with the formation of the <em>city</em>-state, the political “point.”
+In consequence, the hereditary court-offices, the <i>archai</i> and <i>timai</i>, the <i>prytaneis</i>,
+the Archons, and perhaps the original Prætor,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_650" href="#Footnote_650" class="fnanchor">[650]</a> were all urban in nature; and the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p375">[375]</span>great families therefore developed, not separately in their counties, as in Egypt,
+China, and the West, but in the closest touch with the city, where they obtained
+possession of the rights of the King, one after the other, until nothing was
+left to the ruling house but that which could not be touched because of the
+gods—namely, the title attaching to its sacrificial function (hence the <i lang="la">rex
+sacrorum</i>). In the later parts of the Homeric epic (<i>c.</i> 800) it is the nobles who
+invite the king to take his seat, and even unseat him. The Odyssey really
+knows the kingship only as part of the saga—the actual Ithaca that it shows
+us is a city dominated by oligarchs.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_651" href="#Footnote_651" class="fnanchor">[651]</a> The Spartiates, like the Roman partriciate
+of the Comitia Curiata, are the product of a feudal relation.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_652" href="#Footnote_652" class="fnanchor">[652]</a>
+ In the <i>phiditiæ</i>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_653" href="#Footnote_653" class="fnanchor">[653]</a>
+there are evident remains of the old open table of the noble, but the power of
+the king has sunk to the shadowy dignity of the <i lang="la">rex sacrorum</i> of Rome, or the
+“kings” of Sparta, who were liable to be imprisoned or removed at any time
+by the Ephors. The essential similarity of these conditions forces us to presume
+that in Rome the Tarquinian Tyrannis of 500 was preceded by a period of
+oligarchical dominance, and this view is supported by the unquestionably
+genuine tradition of the <i lang="la">Interrex</i>, a person appointed by the council of the
+nobles (the Senate) from amongst its own members to act until it should please
+them to elect a king again.</p>
+
+<p>Here, as elsewhere, there comes a time in which feudalism is falling into
+decay, but the coming State is not yet completed, the nation not yet “in form.”
+This is the fearful crisis that emerges everywhere in the shape of the Interregnum,
+and forms the boundary <em>between the feudal union and the class-State</em>. In
+Egypt feudalism was fully developed by about the middle of the Vth Dynasty.
+The Pharaoh Asosi gave away his domains literally piece by piece to the vassals,
+and, further, the rich fiefs of the priesthood were (exactly as in the West) free of
+taxation and gradually became the permanent property (“mortmain,” as we
+should say) of the great temples.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_654" href="#Footnote_654" class="fnanchor">[654]</a> With the Vth Dynasty (<i>c.</i> 2530 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) the
+“Hohenstaufen” age comes to an end. Under the shadow-kingship of the short-lived
+VIth Dynasty the princes (<i>rpati</i>) and counts (<i>hetio</i>) become independent;
+the high offices are all hereditary and the tomb-inscriptions show us more and
+more proud stress upon ancient lineage. That which later Egyptian historians
+have hidden under the reputed VIIth and VIIIth dynasties&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_655" href="#Footnote_655" class="fnanchor">[655]</a> is really half a
+century of anarchy and lawless conflicts between princes for each other’s domains
+or for the Pharaoh-title. In China, even I-Wang (934–909) was obliged
+by his vassals to give out all conquered lands, and to do so to sub-tenants
+<span class="pagenum" id="p376">[376]</span>nominated by them. In 842 Li-Wang was forced, with his heir, to flee, and the
+administration of the Empire was carried on by two individual princes. In this
+interregnum began the fall of the House of Chóu and the decline of the Imperial
+name into an honourable but meaningless title. It is the corresponding picture
+to that of the Interregnum in Germany, which began in 1254 and brought the
+Imperial power to its nadir of 1400 under Wenceslaus, simultaneously with the
+Renaissance-style of the <i lang="it">condottieri</i> and the complete decay of the Papal power.
+After the death of Boniface VIII, who in 1302 had once again asserted the feudal
+power of the Papacy in the Bull <cite lang="la">Unam sanctam</cite> and had consequently been
+arrested by the representatives of France, the Papacy experienced a century of
+banishment, anarchy, and impotence, while in the following century the Norman
+nobility of England for the most part perished in the contest of the houses
+of York and Lancaster for the throne.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_10">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>What this fall of Papacy and Empire meant was the victory of State over
+Estate. At the root of the feudal system there had been the feeling that the
+purpose of existence was that a “life” should be led in the light of what it
+meant. History was exhaustively comprised in the destinies of noble blood.
+But now the feeling sprang up that there was <em>something else</em> besides, something
+to which even nobility was subordinate, and which it shared with all other
+classes (whether of status or of vocation), something intangible, an idea.
+Events came to be viewed, no longer from a frankly private-law standpoint,
+but under a “public”-law aspect. The State might (and almost without exception
+did) remain aristocratic to its core; its outward appearance might be
+scarcely altered by the transition from the feudal group to the Class-State;
+the idea that those outside the Estates possessed rights as well as duties might
+be still unknown; <em>but</em> the feeling had become different, and the consciousness
+that Life existed to be lived on the heights of history had given way to the
+other sentiment, that it contained a <em>task</em>. The difference becomes very distinct
+when we contrast the policy of Rainald van Dassel (d. 1167)—one of the
+greatest German statesmen of all periods—with that of the Emperor Charles IV
+(d. 1378), and consider in parallel therewith the transition in Classical feeling
+from the “Themis” of the knightly age to the “Dike” of the growing Polis.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_656" href="#Footnote_656" class="fnanchor">[656]</a>
+Themis involves only a claim, Dike implies a task as well.</p>
+
+<p>The State-idea in its sturdy youth is always—and self-evidently, with a
+naturalness rooted deep in animality itself—bound up with the conception of
+an individual ruler. The same holds good, with the same self-evidence, for
+every roused crowd in every decisive situation—as every riotous assembly and
+every moment of sudden danger demonstrates afresh.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_657" href="#Footnote_657" class="fnanchor">[657]</a> Such crowds are units
+<span class="pagenum" id="p377">[377]</span>of feeling, but blind. They are “in form” for the onrush of events only when
+they are in the hands of the leader, who suddenly appears in their midst, is
+set at the head in a moment by that very unity of feeling, and finds an unconditional
+obedience. This process repeats itself in the formation of the great
+life-units that we call peoples and States, only more slowly and with surer
+meaning. In the high Cultures it is sometimes set aside or set back in favour
+of other modes of being “in form,” for the sake of a great symbol and artificially;
+but even then under the mask of these forms we practically always find <i lang="la">de facto</i>
+an individual rulership, whether it be that of a King’s adviser or a party leader;
+and in every revolutionary upheaval the original state of things reappears.</p>
+
+<p>With this cosmic fact is bound up one of the most intimately inward traits
+of all directional life, the <em>inherited will</em>, which presents itself with the force of
+a natural phenomenon in every strong race and compellingly urges even the
+momentary leader (often quite unconsciously) to uphold his rank for the duration
+of his personal existence or, beyond it, for that of his blood streaming on
+through children and grandchildren. The same deep and plantlike trait inspires
+every real following, which feels in the continuance of the blood of leadership
+both a surety for and a symbol of the continuance of its own. It is precisely in
+revolutions that this primitive instinct comes out, full and strong and regardless
+of all principles. Precisely because of it the France of 1800 saw not only Napoleon,
+but also his hereditary position, as the true fulfilment of the Revolution.
+Theorists who, like Marx and Rousseau, start from conceptual ideals instead
+of from blood-facts have never grasped this immense force that dwells in the
+historical world, and have in consequence labelled its manifested effects as damnable
+and reactionary. But they are there, and with a force so insistent that
+even the symbolism of the high Cultures can only override them temporarily
+and artificially, as is shown in the engrossing of elective officers by particular
+families in the Classical, and the nepotism of the Baroque popes in our own
+case. Behind the fact that leadership is very often freely resigned, and the
+saying that “merit should rule,” there is practically always the rivalry of
+magnates, who have no objection in principle to hereditary rulership, but
+prevent it in practice because each one of them secretly claims it for his own
+blood. This state of active, creative jealousy is the foundation on which the
+forms of Classical oligarchy are built up.</p>
+
+<p>The combination of both elements produces the idea of Dynasty. This is so
+deeply rooted in the Cosmic and so closely interwoven into the factual web of
+historical life that the State-ideas of each and all the Cultures are <em>modifications
+of this one principle</em>, from the passionate affirmative of the Faustian to the resolute
+negative of the Classical Soul. The ripening of the State-idea of a Culture is
+associated with the city and even the adolescence of the city. Nations, historical
+peoples, are town-building peoples.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_658" href="#Footnote_658" class="fnanchor">[658]</a> The <em>capital</em> takes the place of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p378">[378]</span>castle and the palace as the centre of high history, and in it the feeling of the
+exercise of power, Themis, transforms itself into that of government, Dike.
+Here feudal unity is inwardly overcome by national, even in the consciousness
+of the First Estate itself, and here the bare fact of rulership elevates itself into
+the symbol of <em>Sovereignty</em>.</p>
+
+<p>And so, with the sinking of feudalism, Faustian history becomes dynastic
+history. From little centres where princely families have their seats (whence
+they “spring,” as the phrase goes, reminding us of plant and property), the
+shaping of nations proceeds—nations of strictly aristocratic constitution, but
+yet so that the State conditions the being of the Estate. The genealogical
+principle already ruling in the feudal nobility and the yeoman families, the
+expression of the feeling for expanse and the will-to-history, has become so
+powerful that the appearance of nations transcending the strong unities of
+language and landscape is dependent upon the destinies of ruling houses. Marriages
+and deaths sever or unite the blood of whole populations.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_659" href="#Footnote_659" class="fnanchor">[659]</a> Where a
+Lotharingian and a Burgundian dynasty failed to take shape, there also nations
+already embryonic failed to develop. The doom that overhung the Hohenstaufen
+involved more than the imperial crown. For Germany and Italy it
+meant for centuries a deep unsatisfied longing for a united German-Italian nation,
+while the House of Habsburg, on the contrary, enabled, not a German, but an
+Austrian nation to develop.</p>
+
+<p>In the Magian world, with its cavern-feeling, the dynastic principle was
+quite otherwise constituted. The Classical princeps, the legitimate successor of
+tyrants and tribunes, was the embodiment of the Demos. As Janus was the door
+and Vesta the hearth, so Cæsar was the people. He was the last creation of
+Orphic religiousness. The “Dominus et Deus,” on the contrary, was Magian,
+a Shah participating in the divine Fire (the <i>hvareno</i> of the Mazdaist empire of
+the Sassanids, which becomes the aureole in Pagan and Christian Byzantium),
+which radiates about him and makes him <i lang="la">pius, felix, invictus</i> (the last-named,
+from Commodus’s reign, his official title).&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_660" href="#Footnote_660" class="fnanchor">[660]</a> In Byzantium in the third century
+of our era the ruler-type underwent the same transition as was implied in the
+taking-down of Augustus’s civil-service state to build Diocletian’s feudalism.
+“The new creation begun by Aurelian and Probus and built up on the ruins by
+Diocletian and Constantine was about as alien to the Classical world and the
+principate as the empire of Charlemagne.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_661" href="#Footnote_661" class="fnanchor">[661]</a> The Magian ruler governed the
+visible portion of the general Consensus of the orthodox, which was Church,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p379">[379]</span>State, and Nation in one,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_662" href="#Footnote_662" class="fnanchor">[662]</a>
+ as Augustine described it in his <i lang="la">Civitas Dei</i>. The
+Western ruler is by the grace of God monarch in the <em>historical</em> world; his people
+is subordinated to him because God has invested him with it. But in matters
+of faith he is himself a subordinate—to God’s Vicar on earth, or to his own
+conscience, as the case may be. That is the separation of State authority and
+Church authority, the great Faustian conflict between Time and Space. When,
+in 800, the Pope crowned the Emperor, he <em>chose</em> a new ruler for himself in order
+that he himself might thrive. Whereas the Emperor in Byzantium was, according
+to Magian world-feeling, his spiritual as well as his secular superior, an
+Emperor in the Frank lands was his <em>servant</em> in spiritual matters, besides being
+(perhaps) his arm in secular affairs. As an idea, the Papacy could arise only by
+separation from the Caliphate, for the Pope is <em>included</em> in the Caliph.</p>
+
+<p>For this very reason, however, the choice of the Magian ruler cannot be
+bound down to a genealogical succession-law. It issues from the consensus of
+the ruling blood-kindred, out of whom the Holy Ghost speaks and designates
+the Chosen One. When Theodosius died, in 550, a relative, the nun Pulcheria,
+formally gave her hand to the old senator Marcianus, thereby incorporating
+this statesman in the family and securing the throne to him and continuance to
+the “dynasty”;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_663" href="#Footnote_663" class="fnanchor">[663]</a> and this act, like many similar occurrences in the Sassanid
+and Abbassid houses, was taken as the outcome of a hint from above.</p>
+
+<p>In China, the Emperor-idea of the early Chóu period, which was strictly
+bound up with feudalism, soon became a dream, which, rapidly and with increasing
+distinctness, came to reflect a whole preceding world in the form of
+three dynasties of Emperors and myth-Emperors more ancient still.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_664" href="#Footnote_664" class="fnanchor">[664]</a> But, for
+the dynasties of the system of states that thereupon grew up (in which the
+title King, <i>Wang</i>, came at last into perfectly general use) strict rules came into
+force for royal successions, legitimacy—a notion quite alien to the early
+time—became a power to conjure with,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_665" href="#Footnote_665" class="fnanchor">[665]</a> and extinction of lines, adoptions and
+<i lang="fr">mésalliances</i> led, as in the Baroque of the West, to innumerable wars of succession.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_666" href="#Footnote_666" class="fnanchor">[666]</a>
+Some principle of legitimacy, too, surely underlay the remarkable
+<span class="pagenum" id="p380">[380]</span>fact that the rulers of the Egyptian XIIth dynasty, with whom the late period
+of the Culture ended, had their sons crowned during their own lifetime.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_667" href="#Footnote_667" class="fnanchor">[667]</a> The
+inward relationship between these three dynastic ideas is yet another proof that
+Being in these three Cultures was akin.</p>
+
+<p>It requires a close insight into the political form-language of the Classical
+world to perceive that here also the course of things was exactly the same, and
+that it comprised not only the transition from feudal union to class-State, but
+even the dynastic principle as well. Classical being, indeed, said no to everything
+that might draw it into distances either of space or of time, and even in
+the fact-world of history ringed itself with creations that had something of
+the defensive in them. But all this narrowing and curtailing presupposes the
+thing against which it is striving to maintain itself. The Dionysiac squandering,
+and the Orphic negation, of the Classical body contained in the very
+<em>form</em> of their protest the Apollinian ideal of perfect bodily being.</p>
+
+<p>Individual rulership and the will to transmit to heirs were unmistakably
+taken for granted in the oldest kingship.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_668" href="#Footnote_668" class="fnanchor">[668]</a> But they had become questionable
+even by 800, as the rôle of Telemachus in the older parts of the Odyssey indicates.
+The royal title was frequently borne by great vassals and the most
+conspicuous of the nobles. In Sparta and in Lycia there were two of them, and
+in the Phæacian city of the epic and in many actual cities there were more.
+Next comes the splitting-off of offices from dignities. Lastly, the kingship
+itself becomes an office which the nobility confers (though at first, perhaps,
+only upon members of the old royal family); thus in Sparta the Ephors, as
+representing the First Estate, were in no wise limited in their choice by rule;
+and in Corinth from about 750 the royal clan of the Bacchiadæ abolished hereditary
+succession, and on each occasion set up a <i>prytaneus</i> with royal rank from
+within their own body. The great offices, which likewise were hereditary at
+first, came to be for one life only, then were limited to a term, and lastly became
+annual, and, further, were so arranged that there were more holders than offices,
+and the leadership was exercised by each in turn—the custom which, as is well
+known, led to the disaster of Cannæ. These annual offices, from the Etruscan
+annual dictature&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_669" href="#Footnote_669" class="fnanchor">[669]</a> to the Doric ephorate (which is found in Heraclea and
+Messene as well as Sparta) are firmly bound up with the essence of the Polis,
+and they reach their full structure about 650. Exactly at the corresponding
+date of the Western class-State (end of the fifteenth century), the hereditary
+power of dynasties was being secured by the Emperor Maximilian and his
+<span class="pagenum" id="p381">[381]</span>marriage-politics (against the claims of the Electors), by Ferdinand of Aragon,
+Henry VII of England, and Louis XI of France.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_670" href="#Footnote_670" class="fnanchor">[670]</a></p>
+
+<p>But with the increasing emphasis upon the Classical here and now, the
+priesthood, which had the beginnings of an Estate in it, became <i lang="la">pari passu</i>
+a mere aggregate of city officials. The capital, so to call it, of the Homeric
+kingship, instead of being the centre for the radiation of State influence in all
+directions into the distance, contracted its magic circle until State and city
+became identical. Thereby, of course, the nobility was fused with the patriciate,
+and if even in the Gothic the representation of the young cities (for
+example, the English Commons or the French States-General) was exclusively
+by patricians, how much more so in the powerful city-state of the Classical!
+Not indeed in idea, <em>but in fact</em>, it was a pure kingless aristocratic State. The
+strictly Apollinian “form” of the growing Polis is called <em>oligarchy</em>.</p>
+
+<p>And thus, at the close of the early periods of both these Cultures, we see
+two principles parallel and contrasted, the Faustian-genealogical and the
+Apollinian-oligarchic; two kinds of constitutional law, of Dike. The one is
+supported by an unmeasured sense of expanse, reaches back deep into the past
+with form-tradition, thinks forward with the same intense will-to-endure into
+the remotest future; but in the present, too, works for political effectiveness
+over broad expanses by well-considered dynastic marriages and by the truly
+Faustian, dynamic, and contrapuntal politics that we call <em>diplomacy</em>. The
+other, wholly corporeal and statuesque, is self-limited by its policy of <i>autarkeia</i>
+to the nearest and the most immediate present, and at every point stoutly
+denies that which Western being affirms.</p>
+
+<p>Both the dynastic state and the city-state presuppose the city itself. But
+there is this difference, that a seat of government in the West, though it may
+be (and frequently is) far from being the greatest city of the land, is a force-centre
+in a field of political tensions such that every occurrence, in however
+remote a corner, vibrates generally throughout the whole—whereas in the
+Classical, life huddles closer and closer until it reaches the grotesque phenomenon
+of Synœcism—the very acme of the Euclidean will-to-form in the
+political world. It is impossible to imagine the State unless and until the nation
+sits physically concentrated in one heap, as one <em>body</em>; it must be <em>seen</em>, and even
+seen “at a glance.” And while the Faustian tendency is more and more to diminish
+the number of dynastic centres—so that even Maximilian I could see
+<span class="pagenum" id="p382">[382]</span>looming in the distance a dynastically secure universal monarchy of his house—the
+Classical world fell apart into innumerable petty points, which, almost as
+soon as they came into existence, started to do that which for Classical mankind
+was almost a necessity of thought and the purest expression of <i>autarkeia</i>—to
+destroy one another.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_671" href="#Footnote_671" class="fnanchor">[671]</a></p>
+
+<p>Synœcism with its consequence, the creation of the Polis-type proper,
+was exclusively the work of <em>aristocracy</em>. It was they that established the Classical
+city-state, and for themselves alone; it was the drawing-together of country
+nobility and patriciate that brought it into form. The vocational classes
+were already on the spot, and the peasantry ceased to count from the class
+point of view. And by the concentration of noble power at one point the
+kingship of the feudal period was shattered.</p>
+
+<p>With these glimpses into Greece to go upon, we may venture, though under
+all reserves of course, to outline the history of primitive Rome. The Roman
+synœcism—the assembling of widely scattered noble families—is identical
+with the “founding” of the city, an Etruscan undertaking of the beginning of
+the seventh century.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_672" href="#Footnote_672" class="fnanchor">[672]</a> Facing the royal stronghold of the Capitol, there had long
+been two other settlements on the Palatine and the Quirinal. To the first
+of these belonged the ancient goddess Diva Rumina&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_673" href="#Footnote_673" class="fnanchor">[673]</a> and the Etruscan Ruma
+clan;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_674" href="#Footnote_674" class="fnanchor">[674]</a> the god of the second was Quirinus Pater. From these comes the dual
+name of Romans and “Quirites,” and the dual priesthoods of the Salii and
+Luperci, which adhered to the two hills. Now, as the three blood-tribes
+named Ramnes, Tities, and Luceres are in all probability common to all Etruscan
+localities,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_675" href="#Footnote_675" class="fnanchor">[675]</a> they must have existed in both of those which concern us here; and
+thus are explained, on the one hand, the number <em>six</em> of centuries of equites, of
+military tribunes, of aristocratic Vestals, and, on the other, the number <em>two</em>
+of the prætors (or consuls) who were, quite early, attached to the King as
+representatives of the nobles and gradually deprived him of all influence.
+Already by 600 the constitution of Rome must have been a strong oligarchy of
+“Patres” with a shadow-kingship&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_676" href="#Footnote_676" class="fnanchor">[676]</a> as figure-head. Thus both the older theory
+of an expulsion of the kings, and the newer of a slow disintegration of the royal
+power, can stand side by side after all, the former as referring to the fall of the
+Tarquinian Tyrannis, which (as everywhere else in the Classical world—Pisistratus
+in Athens, for example) had set itself up in opposition to the oligarchy
+<span class="pagenum" id="p383">[383]</span>about the middle of the sixth century; the latter as referring to the slow
+disintegration of the feudal power of the (may we say) Homeric kingship by
+the aristocratic city-state, <em>before</em> the “foundation,” so-called—the crisis,
+probably, in which the prætors emerged, as the Archons and Ephors emerged
+elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>This Polis was no less strictly aristocratic than the Western class-State,
+with its nobility, clergy, and higher burgesses. The residue of the people
+belonging to it was merely its <em>object</em>, but—in the West the object of its political
+<em>care</em>, and in the Classical the object of its political <em>carelessness</em>. For here “<i lang="la">Carpe
+diem</i>” was the motto of the oligarchy as well as of others. It proclaims itself
+aloud in the poems of Theognis and the Song of Hybrias the Cretan. It made
+Classical finance till right into its latest phases—from the piracy practised
+by Polycrates upon his own people to the proscriptions of the Roman Triumvirs—into
+a more or less hand-to-mouth seizing of resources for the moment. In
+jurisprudence it emerges with unparalleled logic in the limitation of Roman
+edict-law to the term of office of the one-year prætor.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_677" href="#Footnote_677" class="fnanchor">[677]</a> And, lastly, it is seen in
+the ever-growing practice of filling military, legal, and administrative offices
+(particularly the <em>more</em> important of them) by lot—a kind of homage to Tyche,
+the goddess of the Moment.</p>
+
+<p>This was the Classical world’s manner of being politically “in form” and,
+correspondingly, of thinking and feeling. There are no exceptions. The Etruscans
+were as much under its domination as the Dorians and the Macedonians.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_678" href="#Footnote_678" class="fnanchor">[678]</a>
+When Alexander and his successors dotted the Orient far and wide with their
+Hellenistic cities, they did so without conscious choice, for they could not
+imagine any other form of political organization. Antioch was to be Syria, and
+Alexandria Egypt. The latter, under the Ptolemies and later under the Cæsars,
+was, not indeed legally, but certainly in practice, a Polis on a vast scale—for
+the country outside, long reverted to townless fellahdom and managed by
+immemorial precedents, stood at its gates like an alien frontier.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_679" href="#Footnote_679" class="fnanchor">[679]</a> The Roman
+Imperium was nothing but the last and greatest Classical city-state standing
+on foundations of a colossal synœcism. Under Marcus Aurelius the rhetor
+Aristides could say with perfect justification that it had “brought together
+this world in the name of one city: wheresoever a man may be born in it, it is at
+its centre that he dwells.” Even the conquered populations of the Empire—the
+wandering desert-tribes, the upland-valley communities of the Alps—were
+constituted as <i lang="la">civitates</i>. Livy thinks invariably in the forms of the city-state,
+and for Tacitus provincial history simply does not exist. When, in
+49, Pompey, withdrawing before Cæsar, gave up Rome as militarily unimportant
+and betook himself to the East to create there a firm base of operations, he
+<span class="pagenum" id="p384">[384]</span>was doomed. Giving up the city, he had, in the eyes of the ruling classes,
+given up the State. To them Rome was all.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_680" href="#Footnote_680" class="fnanchor">[680]</a></p>
+
+<p>These city-states were in principle inextensible. Their number could increase,
+but not their ambit. The notion that the transformation of the Roman
+<i lang="la">clientela</i> into a voting <i lang="la">plebs</i>, and the creation of the country tribes, meant a
+breach in the Polis-idea is incorrect. It was in Rome as in Attica—the whole
+life of the State remained as before limited to one point, which was the Agora,
+the Forum. However far away those to whom citizenship was granted might
+live—in Hannibal’s day it might be anywhere in Italy, and later anywhere in
+the world—the <em>exercise</em> of his political right depended upon <em>personal presence</em> in
+the Forum. Hence the majority of the citizens were, not legally, but practically
+without influence in political business.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_681" href="#Footnote_681" class="fnanchor">[681]</a> What citizenship meant for them,
+therefore, was simply the duty of military service and the enjoyment of the city’s
+domestic law.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_682" href="#Footnote_682" class="fnanchor">[682]</a> But even for the citizen coming to Rome, political power was
+limited by a second and <em>artificial</em> synœcism which came into existence after, and
+as the result of, enfranchisement of the peasant, and can only be understood
+as an unconscious effort to maintain the idea of the Polis strictly unimpaired;
+the new citizens were inscribed, regardless of their numbers, in a very few
+tribes (eight, under the Lex Julia), and were always, therefore, in a minority
+in the Comitia relatively to the citizens of the older franchise.</p>
+
+<p>And naturally so, for this <i lang="la">civitas</i> was regarded through and through as one
+body, a σῶμα. That which did not belong to it was out of its law, <i lang="la">hostis</i>. The
+gods and the heroes stood above, the slave (not quite to be called human,
+according to Aristotle) below, this aggregate of persons.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_683" href="#Footnote_683" class="fnanchor">[683]</a> But the individual
+was a ζῶον πολιτικόν in a sense that would be regarded by us, who think and
+live in our expanse-feeling, as an utter slavery; he existed <em>only</em> by reason of his
+membership of an individual Polis. Owing to this Euclidean feeling, the
+nobility as a self-contained body was at first synonymous with the Polis—to
+such an extent, indeed, that even in the Twelve Tables marriage between
+patricians and plebeians was forbidden and the Spartan Ephors began their
+<span class="pagenum" id="p385">[385]</span>term of office, according to ancient custom, with a declaration of war against
+the Helots. The relation was reversed whenever in consequence of a revolution
+the non-noble became <em>the</em> Demos—but its meaning remained. As in inward,
+so also in outward relationships, the <em>body</em> politic was the foundation of all
+events throughout Classical history. The cities, hundreds of them, lay in wait
+for each other, each as self-gathered, politically and economically, as it was
+possible to make it, ready to bite, letting fly on the smallest excuse, and having
+as its war-aim, not the extension of its own state, but the extinction of the
+other side’s. Wars ended with the destruction of the enemy’s city and the
+killing or enslavement of his citizens, just as revolutions ended with the massacre
+or expulsion of the losers and the confiscation of their property by the
+victorious party. The natural interstate condition of the West is a close network
+of diplomatic relations, which may be broken through by wars; but the
+Classical law of nations assumes war as a normal condition, interrupted from
+time to time by peace treaties, and a declaration of war merely re-established the
+natural state of policy. Only so do the forty- and fifty-year peace treaties,
+<i>spondai</i> (such as the famous one of Nicias in 421), become intelligible, as temporary
+guarantee-treaties.</p>
+
+<p>These two State-forms, with the styles of policy appropriate to each, are
+assured by the close of the Early period. The State-idea has triumphed over
+the feudal union, but it is the Estates that carry that idea, and the nation
+has political existence only as their sum.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V_10">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>With the beginning of the Late period there is a decisive turn, where city
+and country are in equilibrium and the powers proper to the city, money and
+brains, have become so strong that they feel themselves, as non-estate, an equal
+match for the old Estates. It is the moment when the State-idea finally rises
+superior to the Estates and begins to set up <em>in their place</em> the concept of the Nation.</p>
+
+<p>The State has fought and won to its rights along a line of advance from feudal
+union to the aristocratic State. In the latter the Estates exist only with reference
+to the State, instead of vice versa, but, on the other hand, the disposition of
+things is such that the Government only meets the governed nation when and
+in so far as the nation is class-ordered. Everyone belongs to the nation, but
+only an élite to the classes, and these alone count politically.</p>
+
+<p>But the nearer the State approaches its pure form, and the more it becomes
+<em>absolute</em>—that is, independent of any other form-ideal—the more heavily the
+concept of the nation tells against that of class, and there comes a moment when
+the nation is governed <em>as such</em>, and distinctions of “standing” become purely
+social. Against this evolution—which is one of the necessities of the Culture,
+inevitable, irrevocable—the old noble and priestly classes make one more
+<span class="pagenum" id="p386">[386]</span>effort of resistance. For them, now, <em>everything</em> is at stake—the heroic and the
+saintly, the old law, rank, blood—and, from their point of view, against what?</p>
+
+<p>In the West this struggle of the old Estates against the State-power took the
+form of the <i>Fronde</i>. In the Classical world, where there was no dynasty to
+represent the future and the aristocracy alone had political existence, we find
+that a dynastic or quasi-dynastic embodiment of the State-idea actually <em>formed
+itself</em>, and, supported by the non-privileged part of the nation, raised this latter
+for the first time to power. That was the mission of the <i>Tyrannis</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In this change from the class-State to the absolute State, which allowed no
+measures of validity but its own, the dynasties of the West—and those of
+Egypt and of China likewise—called the non-estate to their aid, <em>thereby recognizing
+it as a political quantity</em>. Herein lies the real importance of the struggle
+against the Fronde, in which, initially, the powers of the greater cities could
+not but see advantage to themselves, for here the ruler was standing forth in the
+name of the State, the care of all, and he was fighting the nobility because it
+wanted to uphold the <em>Estate</em> as a political magnitude.</p>
+
+<p>In the Polis, on the contrary, where the State consisted exclusively in the
+form and embodied no hereditary head, the necessity of bringing out the unclassed
+on behalf of the State-idea produced the Tyrannis, in which a family
+or a faction of the nobility itself assumed the dynastic rôle, without which
+action on the part of the Third Estate would have been impossible. Late
+Classical historians were too remote from this process to seize its meaning,
+and dealt with it merely in terms of externals of private life. In reality, the
+Tyrannis was <em>the State</em>, and oligarchy opposed it under the banner of class.
+It rested, therefore, upon the support of peasants and burghers—in Athens
+(<i>c.</i> 580) the Diakrii and Paralii parties. Therefore, again, it backed the Dionysiac
+and Orphic cults against the Apollinian; thus in Attica Pisistratus forced
+the worship of Dionysus&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_684" href="#Footnote_684" class="fnanchor">[684]</a> on the peasantry, in Sicyon Clisthenes forbade the
+recital of the Homeric poems,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_685" href="#Footnote_685" class="fnanchor">[685]</a> and in Rome it was almost certainly in the time
+of the Tarquins that the trinity Demeter (Ceres)-Dionysus-Kore was introduced.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_686" href="#Footnote_686" class="fnanchor">[686]</a>
+Its temple was dedicated in 483 by Spurius Cassius, the same who
+perished later in an attempt to reintroduce the Tyrannis. The Ceres temple
+was the sanctuary of the Plebs, and its managers, the ædiles, were their trusted
+spokesmen before the tribunate was ever heard of.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_687" href="#Footnote_687" class="fnanchor">[687]</a> The Tyrants, like the
+princes of the Western Baroque, were liberals in a broad sense of the word
+that ceased to be possible for them in the subsequent stage of bourgeois dominance.
+But the Classical also began at that time to pass round the word that
+<span class="pagenum" id="p387">[387]</span>“money makes the man (χρήματ’ ἀνήρ).”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_688" href="#Footnote_688" class="fnanchor">[688]</a>
+ The sixth-century Tyrannis brought
+the Polis-idea to its conclusions and created the constitutional concept of the
+Citizen, the <i>Polites</i>, the <i>Civis</i>, the sum of these, irrespective of their class-provenance,
+forming the <i>soma</i> of the city-state. When, therefore, the oligarchy
+contrived to win after all—thanks once more to the Classical craving for the
+present, and the consequent fear and hatred evoked by the quasi-will-to-duration
+of the dynasts—the concept of the citizen was there, firmly established,
+and the non-patrician had learned to regard <em>himself</em> as an estate <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> a “rest.”
+He had become a political party—the word “democracy” (in its specifically
+Classical sense) now acquired a really serious content—and what he set himself
+to do was, no longer to come to the aid of the State, but <em>to be himself the
+State</em> as the nobility had been before. He began to count—money and heads,
+for the money-census and the general franchise are alike bourgeois weapons—whereas
+an aristocracy does not count, but values, and votes not by heads, but by
+classes. As the absolute State came out of Fronde and First Tyrannis, so it perished
+in French Revolution and Second Tyrannis. In this second conflict,
+which is already one of defence, the dynasty returns to the side of the nobility
+in order to guard the State-idea against a new class-rule, that of the bourgeois.</p>
+
+<p>In Egypt, too, the period between Fronde and Revolution is hall-marked.
+It is the Middle Kingdom. The XIIth Dynasty (2000–1788)—in particular
+Amenemhet I and Sesostris I—had established the absolute State in severe
+conflicts with the baronage. The first of these rulers, as a famous poem of the
+time relates, barely escaped from a court conspiracy, and the biography of
+Sinuhet&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_689" href="#Footnote_689" class="fnanchor">[689]</a> shows us that after his death, which was kept secret for a time, rebellion
+threatened. The third was murdered by palace officials. We learn from
+the inscriptions in the family grave of the earl Chmenotep&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_690" href="#Footnote_690" class="fnanchor">[690]</a> that the cities had
+become rich and almost independent, and warred with each other. Certainly
+they cannot have been smaller at that time than the Greek cities at the time of
+the Persian Wars. It was on them and on a certain number of loyal magnates that
+the dynasty rested.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_691" href="#Footnote_691" class="fnanchor">[691]</a> Finally, Sesostris III (1887–1850) succeeded in completely
+abolishing feudal nobility. Thenceforward there was only a court-nobility
+and a single, admirably ordered bureau-State;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_692" href="#Footnote_692" class="fnanchor">[692]</a> but already some lamented
+that people of standing were reduced to misery and that the “sons of nobodies”
+enjoyed rank and consideration.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_693" href="#Footnote_693" class="fnanchor">[693]</a> Democracy was beginning and the great
+social evolution of the Hyksos period was brewing.</p>
+
+<p>The corresponding place in China is that of the Ming-Chu (or Pa, 685–591).
+<span class="pagenum" id="p388">[388]</span>These were Protectors of princely origin, who exercised an unconstitutional,
+but none the less real, power over a world of states weltering in anarchy,
+and called congresses of princes for the restoration of order and the recognition
+of stable political principles, even summoning the “Ruler of the Middle”
+himself (now become totally unimportant) out of the house of Chóu. The
+first was Hwang of Tsi (d. 645), who called the Diet of 659 and of whom
+Confucius wrote that he had rescued China from a reversion to barbarism. Their
+name Ming-dshu became later, like the word “tyrant,” a term of obloquy,
+because later men were unwilling to see in the phenomenon anything but a
+power unauthorized by law—but it is beyond all question that these great
+diplomatists were an element working with a devoted care for the State and the
+historical future against the old Estates, and supported by the young classes
+of mind and money. It is a high Culture that speaks to us in the little that we
+so far know about them from Chinese sources. Some were writers; others
+selected philosophers to be their ministers. It is a matter of indifference whether
+we mentally parallel them with Richelieu or with Wallenstein or with Periander—in
+any case it is with them that the “people” first emerges as a political
+quantity.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_694" href="#Footnote_694" class="fnanchor">[694]</a> It is the outlook and high diplomacy of genuine Baroque—the
+absolute State sets itself up in principle as the opponent of the aristocratic
+State, and wins through.</p>
+
+<p>In this lies the close parallelism of these events with the Fronde of Western
+Europe. In France the Crown after 1614 ceased to summon the State-General,
+this body having shown itself to be too strong for the united forces of State
+and bourgeoisie. In England Charles I similarly tried to govern without
+Parliament after 1628. In Germany, at the same time, the Thirty Years’ War
+broke out. The magnitude of its religious significance is apt to overshadow
+for us the other issue involved, and it must not be forgotten that it was also an
+effort to bring to a decision the struggle between imperial power and the Fronde
+of the <em>great</em> electors, and that between the individual princes and the lesser
+Frondes of their local estate-assemblies. But the centre of world-politics then
+lay in <em>Spain</em>. There, in conjunction with the high courtesies generally, the
+diplomatic style of the Baroque had evolved in the cabinet of Philip II; and the
+dynastic principle—which embodied the absolute State <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the Cortes—had
+attained to its highest development in the course of the long struggle with
+the House of Bourbon. The attempt to align England also in the Spanish system
+had failed under Philip II, when Queen Mary, his wife, was disappointed of an
+heir already expected and announced. But now, under Philip IV, the idea of a
+universal monarchy spanning the oceans revived—no longer the mystic
+dream-monarchy of the early Gothic, the “Holy Roman Empire, German by
+nation,” but the tangible ideal of a world-dominion in Habsburg hands, which
+<span class="pagenum" id="p389">[389]</span>was to centre in Madrid and to have the solid possession of India and America
+and the already sensible power of money as its foundations. It was at this time,
+too, that the Stuarts were tempted to secure their endangered position by
+marrying the heir of the English and Scottish thrones to a Spanish Infanta;
+but in the end Madrid preferred to link itself with its own collateral line in
+Vienna, and so James I readdressed his marriage-alliance proposals to the
+opposition party of the Bourbons. The futile complications of this family
+policy contributed more than anything else to bind the Puritan movement and
+the English Fronde into one great Revolution.</p>
+
+<p>In these great decisions the actual occupants of the thrones were—as in
+“contemporary” China—only secondary figures compared with great individual
+statesmen, in whose hands the fate of the West rested for whole decades.
+Olivarez in Madrid and the Spanish Ambassador Oñate in Vienna were then the
+most powerful personages in Europe. Their opponents were Wallenstein,
+standing for the Empire-idea in Germany, and Richelieu, standing for the
+absolute State in France—and these were succeeded a little later by Mazarin
+in France, Cromwell in England, Oldenbarneveldt in Holland, Oxenstierna
+in Sweden. Not until the Great Elector of Brandenburg do we meet again a
+monarch having political importance of his own.</p>
+
+<p>Wallenstein, unconsciously, began where the Hohenstaufen had stopped.
+Since the death of Frederick II, in 1250, the power of the Estates of the Empire
+had become unlimited, and it was against them, and as champion of an absolute
+emperor’s state, that he fought during the first tenure of command.
+Had he been a greater diplomatist, had he been clearer and above all more
+resolute (for actually he was timid in the presence of decisive turnings), and had
+he, in particular, taken the trouble as Richelieu did to bring the person of the
+monarch under his influence—then probably it would have been all up with
+princedom within the Empire. He saw in these princes rebels, to be unseated
+and dispossessed of their lands; at the peak of his power (end of 1629), when
+militarily he held Germany in the hollow of his hand, he said aloud in conversation
+that the Emperor ought to be master in the Empire as the Kings
+of France and Spain were masters of their own. His army, which was “self-supporting”
+and by reason of its numbers also independent of the Estates, was
+the first instance in German history of an Imperial army of European significance;
+in comparison with it Tilly’s army of the Fronde (for that was what
+the League really was) counted for little. When Wallenstein, in 1628, leaguered
+before Stralsund, visualizing a Habsburg sea-power in the Baltic wherewith to
+take the Bourbon system in the rear—and just then Richelieu was besieging
+La Rochelle, with better fortune—hostilities between himself and the League
+had become almost unavoidable. He absented himself from the Diet of Regensburg
+in 1630, saying that its seat “would presently be in Paris.” This was the
+most serious political error of his life, for in his absence the Frondist Electors
+<span class="pagenum" id="p390">[390]</span>defeated the Emperor by threatening to displace him in favour of Louis XIII,
+and forced him to dismiss his general. And with that, though it did not realize
+the consequence of the step, the central power in Germany gave away its army.
+Henceforth Richelieu supported the greater Fronde in Germany with the
+object of breaking the Spanish power there, while on the other side Olivarez,
+and Wallenstein as soon as he regained his power, allied themselves with the
+French aristocrats, who thereupon took the offensive under the Queen-mother
+and Gaston of Orléans. But the Imperial power had missed its grand chance.
+The Cardinal won in both games. In 1632 he executed the last of the Montmorencys&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_695" href="#Footnote_695" class="fnanchor">[695]</a>
+and brought the Catholic Electors of Germany into open alliance
+with France. And thenceforward Wallenstein, becoming unsure of his own
+final purposes, learned more and more against the Spanish idea, thinking that
+he could keep the Empire-idea clear of it, and so <i lang="la">ipso facto</i> approached nearer
+and nearer to the standpoint of the Estates—like Marshal Turenne in the
+French Fronde a few years later. <em>This was the decisive turn in later German history.</em>
+With Wallenstein’s secession the absolute emperor-state became impossible,
+and his murder in 1634 did not remedy matters, for the Emperor had no substitute
+to take his place.</p>
+
+<p>And yet it was just then that the conjuncture was favourable once more.
+For in 1640 the decisive conflict between Crown and estates broke out simultaneously
+in Spain, France, and England. In almost every Spanish province the
+Cortes rose against Olivarez; Portugal, and with it India and Africa, fell away
+for ever, and it took years to regain even Catalonia and Naples. In England—just
+as in the Thirty Years’ War—the constitutional conflict between the
+Crown and the gentry who dominated the Commons was carefully separated
+from the religious side of the Revolution, deep as was the interpenetration
+of the two. But the growing resistance that Cromwell encountered in the
+lower class in particular—which drove him, all unwillingly, into military
+dictatorship—and the later popularity of the restored monarchy show the
+extent to which, over and above all religious differences, aristocratic interest
+had been concerned in bringing about the fall of the dynasty.</p>
+
+<p>At the very time of Charles I’s trial and execution an insurrection in Paris was
+forcing the French Court to flee. Men shouted for a republic and built barricades.
+Had Cardinal de Retz been more of a Cromwell, victory of the Estates
+over Mazarin would have been at least a possibility. But the issue of this
+grand general crisis of the West was determined by the weight and the destinies
+of a few personalities, and took shape in such a way that it was in England
+<em>alone</em> that the Fronde (represented by Parliament) subjected the State and the
+kingship to its control—confirming this control, in the “glorious Revolution”
+of 1688, so permanently that even to-day essential parts of the old Norman
+State continue established. In France and Spain the kingship won unqualified
+<span class="pagenum" id="p391">[391]</span>victory. In Germany the Peace of Westphalia placed the Fronde of the greater
+princes in an English relation towards the Emperor and in the French relation
+towards the lesser Fronde of the local princes. In the Empire as such, the
+Estates ruled; in its provinces, the Dynasty. Thenceforth the Imperial dignity,
+like the English kingship, was a name, surrounded by relics of Spanish stateliness
+dating from the early Baroque; while the individual princes, like the leading
+families of the English aristocracy, succumbed to the model of Paris and
+their duodecimo absolutism was, politically and socially, bound in the Versailles
+style. So, in this field and in that, the decision fell in favour of the Bourbons
+and against the Habsburgs, a decision already visible to all men in the
+Peace of the Pyrenees of 1659.</p>
+
+<p>With this epochal turn the State, which as a possibility is inherent in every
+Culture, was actualized and attained to such a height of “condition” as could
+neither be surpassed nor for long maintained. Already there is a quiet breath
+of autumn in the air when Frederick the Great is entertaining at Sans Souci.
+These are the years too, in which the great special arts attain to their last,
+most refined, and most intellectual maturity—side by side with the fine
+orators of the Athenian Agora there are Zeuxis and Praxiteles, side by side
+with the filigree of Cabinet-diplomacy the music of Bach and Mozart.</p>
+
+<p>This cabinet-politics has itself become a high art, an artistic satisfaction
+to all who have a finger in it, marvellous in its subtlety and elegance, courtly,
+refined, working mysteriously at great distances—for already Russia, the
+North American colonies, even the Indian states are put into play in order by
+the mere weight of surprising combinations to bring about decisions at quite
+other points on the globe. It is a game with strict rules, a game of intercepted
+letters and secret confidants, of alliances and congresses within a system of
+governments which even then was called (with deep meaning) the “concert”
+of the powers—full of <i lang="fr">noblesse</i> and <i lang="fr">esprit</i>, to use the phrases of the period, a
+mode of keeping history “in form” never and nowhere else imagined, or even
+imaginable.</p>
+
+<p>In the Western world, whose sphere of influence is already almost the sphere
+itself, the period of the absolutist State covers scarcely a century and a half—from
+1660, when Bourbon triumphed over Habsburg in the Peace of the Pyrenees
+and the Stuarts returned to England, to the Coalition Wars directed
+against the French Revolution, in which London triumphed over Paris, or,
+if one prefers it so, over that Congress of Vienna in which the old diplomacy,
+that of blood and not money, gave the world its grand farewell performance.
+Corresponding periods are the Age of Pericles between the First and the Second
+Tyrannis, and the Tshun-tsiu, “Spring and Autumn,” as the Chinese call the
+time, between the Protectors and the “Contending States.”</p>
+
+<p>In this last phase of dignified politics with forms traditional but not popular,
+familiar but not smiled at, the culminating points are marked by the extinction
+<span class="pagenum" id="p392">[392]</span>of the two Habsburg lines in quick succession and the diplomatic and warlike
+events that throng in 1700–10 round the Spanish, and in 1740–60 round the
+Austrian succession.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_696" href="#Footnote_696" class="fnanchor">[696]</a> It is the climax also of the genealogical principle. <i lang="la">Bella
+gerant alii; tu, felix Austria, nube!</i> was indeed “an extension of war by other
+means.” The phrase indeed was coined long before (in connexion with
+Maximilian I), but it was not until now that it reached its fullest effects.
+Fronde Wars pass over into Succession Wars, decided upon in cabinets and
+fought out chivalrously by small armies and according to strict conventions.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_697" href="#Footnote_697" class="fnanchor">[697]</a>
+What was contended for was the heritage of half the world which the marriage-politics
+of early Baroque had brought together in Habsburg hands. The State
+is still “well up to form”; the nobility has become a loyal aristocracy of
+court and service, carrying on the wars of the Crown and organizing its administration.
+Side by side with the France of Louis XIV, there presently arose
+in Prussia a masterpiece of State organization. From the conflicts of the Great
+Elector with his Estates (1660) to the death of Frederick the Great (who received
+Mirabeau in audience three years before the Fall of the Bastille) Prussia’s
+road is the same as France’s, and the outcome in each case is a State which was
+in every point the opposite of the English order.</p>
+
+<p>For the situation was otherwise in the Empire and in England. There the
+Frondes had won, and the nations were governed, not absolutely, but aristocratically.
+But between England and the Empire, again, there was the immense
+difference that England, as an island, could largely dispense with governmental
+watchfulness, and that her peers in the Upper House and her gentry
+in the Lower founded their actions on the self-evidentness of England’s greatness;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_698" href="#Footnote_698" class="fnanchor">[698]</a>
+whereas in the Empire the upper stratum of the land-princes—with
+the Diet at Regensburg as their Upper House—were chiefly concerned with
+educating into distinct “peoples” the fragments of the nation that had accidentally
+fallen to their respective hands, and with marking off their scattered
+bits of fatherland as strictly as possible from other “peoples’” bits. In place
+of the world-horizon that there had been in Gothic days, provincial horizon
+was cultivated by thought and deed. The idea of the Nation itself was abandoned
+<span class="pagenum" id="p393">[393]</span>to the realm of dreams—that <em>other</em> world which is not of race but of
+language, not of Destiny but of Causality. And in it arose the idea, and finally
+the fact, of the “people” as conceived by poets and thinkers, who founded
+themselves a republic in the clouds of verse and logic and at last came to believe
+that politics consisted in idealistic writing and reading and speaking, and not
+in deed and resolve—so that even to-day real deeds and resolves are confused
+with mere expressions of inclination.</p>
+
+<p>In England the victory of the gentry and the Declaration of Rights (1689) in
+reality put an end to the State. Parliament put William III on his throne, just
+as later it prevented George I and George II from vacating theirs, in the interest
+of its class. The word “State,” which had been current as early as the Tudors,
+fell into disuse—it has become impossible to translate into English either
+Louis XIV’s “<i lang="fr">L’état c’est moi</i>” or Frederick the Great’s “<i lang="de">Ich bin der erste Diener
+meiner Staates</i>.” On the other hand, the word “society” established itself as
+the expression of the fact that the nation was “in form” under the class- and
+not under the state-régime; the same word that with a significant misunderstanding
+Rousseau and the Continental rationalists generally took over to
+express the hatred of the Third Estate for authority.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_699" href="#Footnote_699" class="fnanchor">[699]</a> But in England authority
+as “the Government” was clear-cut and well understood. From George I
+onwards its centre was the Cabinet, a body which constitutionally did not
+exist at all&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_700" href="#Footnote_700" class="fnanchor">[700]</a> and factually was an executive committee of the faction of the
+nobility in command for the time being. Absolutism existed, but it was the
+absolutism of a class-delegation. The idea of “<i lang="fr">lèse-majeste</i>” was transferred to
+Parliament, as the immunity of the Roman kings passed to the tribunes. The
+genealogical principle is there, too, but it is expressed in the family relations
+within the higher nobility and the influence of the same upon the parliamentary
+situation. Even in 1902 Lord Salisbury acted as a Cecil in proposing his nephew
+Balfour as his successor as against Joseph Chamberlain. The noble factions
+of Tory and Whig separated themselves more and more distinctly, very often,
+indeed, within the same family, according to whether the “power-” outweighed
+the “booty-” outlook—that is, according as land was valued above money&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_701" href="#Footnote_701" class="fnanchor">[701]</a>—or
+vice versa, a contrast that even in the eighteenth century was expressed
+within the higher bourgeoisie by the words “respectable” and “fashionable,”
+standing for two opposed conceptions of the gentleman. The State’s care for
+all is frankly replaced by class-interest. It is for this that the individual claims
+his freedom—that is what “freedom” means in English—but the insular
+existence and the build of “society” have created such relations that in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p394">[394]</span>last resort everyone <em>who belongs to it</em> (which is a matter of moment in a status-dictatorship)
+finds his interests represented by those of one or the other noble
+party.</p>
+
+<p>This steadiness of last, deepest, and ripest form, which springs from the
+historical feeling of Western mankind, was denied to the Classical. Tyrannis
+vanished. Strict oligarchy vanished. The Demos which the politics of the
+sixth century had created as the sum of all men belonging to the Polis burst
+into factions and spasmodic shocks of noble <i>versus</i> non-noble, and conflicts
+began within states, <em>and between states</em>, in which each party tried to exterminate
+the other lest it should itself be exterminated. When in 511—that is, still in
+the age of the Tyrants—Sybaris was annihilated by the Pythagoreans, the
+event, the first of its kind, shocked the entire Classical world; even in distant
+Miletus mourning was worn. But now the elimination of a Polis or a party
+was so usual that a regular form and choice of methods—corresponding to the
+typical peace-treaties of Western Baroque—arose for the disposal of the
+vanquished—for example, the inhabitants might be massacred or sold into
+slavery, the houses razed or divided as spoil. The will to absolutism is there—after
+the Persian Wars it is universal, in Rome and Sparta no less than in
+Athens—but the <em>willed</em> narrowness of the Polis, the point-politic, and the
+<em>willed</em> brevity of office-holding and immediacy of schemes made it impossible
+ever to reach a firm decision as to who should be “the State.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_702" href="#Footnote_702" class="fnanchor">[702]</a> The high craft
+of diplomacy, which in the West was practised by cabinets inspired by a tradition,
+was here handicapped by an amateurism founded not on any accidental
+inadequacy of persons—the men were available—but solely in the political
+form itself. The course of this form from the First to the Second Tyrannis is
+unmistakable and corresponds to the same evolution in all other Late periods;
+but the specifically Classical style of it appears in the disorder and subjection
+to incidentals which naturally and inevitably followed from a life that could
+not and would not dissociate itself from the moment.</p>
+
+<p>The most important example of this is the evolution of Rome during the
+fifth century—a period over which hitherto historians have wrangled,
+precisely because they have tried to find in it a consistency that can no more
+have existed there than anywhere else in the Classical State. A further source
+of misunderstanding is that the conditions of that development have been regarded
+as something quite primitive, whereas in fact even the city of the
+Tarquins must have already been in a very advanced state, and primitive Rome
+lay much further back. The relations of the fifth century are on a small scale
+in comparison with those of Cæsar’s age, but they were not antiquated. Because
+written tradition is defective (as it was everywhere save in Athens), the
+literary movement which followed the Punic Wars set itself to fill the blanks
+with poetry and in particular (as was to be expected in the Hellenistic age)
+<span class="pagenum" id="p395">[395]</span>with the evocation of an idyllic past, as, for example, in the story of Cincinnatus.
+And modern scholarship, though it has ceased to believe these legends,
+has nevertheless remained under the influence of the taste that inspired their
+invention, and continues to look at the conditions of the time through its
+eyes—the more readily as Greek and Roman history are treated as two separate
+worlds, and the evil practice of identifying the beginning of history with the
+beginning of sure documentation is followed as usual. In truth, the conditions
+of 500 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> are anything but Homeric. The trace of its walls shows that Rome
+under the Tarquins was, with Capua, the greatest city in Italy and bigger than
+the Athens of Themistocles.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_703" href="#Footnote_703" class="fnanchor">[703]</a> A city that concludes commercial treaties with
+Carthage is no peasant commune. And it follows that the population in the
+four city tribes of 471 must have been very numerous, probably greater than
+the whole total of the sixteen country tribes scattered insignificantly in space.</p>
+
+<p>The great success of the landowning nobility in overthrowing a Tyrannis
+that was almost certainly very popular, and establishing unrestricted senatorial
+rule, was nullified again by a series of violent events about 471—the replacement
+of the family tribes by four great city-wards, the representation of these
+by tribunes (who were sacrosanct—i.e., who enjoyed a <em>royal</em> privilege that
+no single official of the aristocratic administration possessed) and lastly the
+liberation of the small peasantry from the <i lang="la">clientela</i> of the nobility.</p>
+
+<p>The Tribunate was the happiest inspiration, not only of this period, but
+of the Classical Polis generally. It was <em>the Tyrannis raised to the position of an
+integral part of the Constitution</em>, and set in parallel, moreover, with the old oligarchical
+offices, all of which continued in being. This meant that the social
+revolution also was carried out in <em>legal forms</em>, so that what was elsewhere a
+wild discharge in shock and countershock became here a forum-contest, limited
+as a rule to debate and vote. There was no need to evoke the tyrant, for he was
+there already. The Tribune possessed rights inherent in position, not rights
+arising out of an office, and with his immunity he could carry out revolutionary
+acts that would have been inconceivable without street-fighting in any other
+Polis. This creation was an incident, but no other of its creations helped Rome
+to rise as this did. In Rome alone the transition from the First to the Second
+Tyrannis, and the further development therefrom till beyond the days of Zama,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p396">[396]</span>was accomplished, not indeed without shocks, but at any rate without catastrophe.
+The Tribune was the link between the Tarquins and Cæsar. With
+the Lex Hortensia of 287 he became all-powerful, <em>he is the Second Tyrannis in
+constitutional “form.”</em> In the second century, tribunes caused consuls and censors
+to be arrested. The Gracchi were tribunes, Cæsar assumed the perpetual tribunate,
+and in the principate of Augustus the tribunician dignity was the
+essential element of his position, the only one in virtue of which he possessed
+sovereign rights.</p>
+
+<p>The crisis of 471 was not unique but generically Classical. Its target was the
+oligarchy, which even now, within the Demos created by the Tyrannis, strove
+to be the impulsive force in affairs. It was no longer, as in Hesiod’s day, the
+oligarchy as estate <i>versus</i> non-estate, but the <em>oligarchic party against a second party</em>—both
+in the cadre of the absolute state, which as such was not brought into
+the controversy. In Athens, 487 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, the archons were overthrown and their
+rights transferred to the college of strategi.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_704" href="#Footnote_704" class="fnanchor">[704]</a> In 461 the Areopagus, the Athenian
+equivalent of the Senate, was overthrown. In Sicily (where relations with
+Rome were close) the democracy triumphed at Acragas (Agrigentum) in 471, at
+Syracuse in 465, at Rhegium and Messana in 461. In Sparta the kings Cleomenes
+(488) and Pausanias (470) tried in turn, without success, to free the Helots—in
+Roman terms, the Clientela—and thereby to acquire for the kingship,
+<i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the oligarchic Ephors, the importance of the tribunate in Rome. The
+missing element in this case, which was present (though overlooked by our
+scholars) in that of Rome, was the population-strength of the mercantile city
+that gives such movements both weight and leadership; it was on this that
+even the great Helot rising of 464 broke down (an event which probably inspired
+the Roman legends of a secession of the Plebs to the Mons Sacer).</p>
+
+<p>In a Polis, the country nobility and the patriciate fuse (that is the object of
+synœcism, as we have seen), but not so the burgher and the peasant. So far as
+concerns their struggle with the oligarchy these are a single party—namely,
+the democratic—but otherwise they are <em>two</em>. This is what comes to expression
+in the next crisis. In this (<i>c.</i> 450) the Roman patriciate sought to re-establish
+its power <em>as a party</em>—for so we must interpret the introduction of the Decemvirs
+and the abolition of the Tribunate; the legislation of the Twelve Tables by
+which the plebs, which had recently attained political existence, was denied
+“Connubium” and “Commercium”; and above all the creation of the small
+country tribes in which the influence of the old families (not legally but in
+fact) predominated and which (in the Comitia Tributa now set up alongside the
+old Centuriata) enjoyed the unchallengeable majority of 16 to 4. This, of
+course, meant the disfranchisement of the townspeople by the peasantry, and
+there can be no doubt that it was a move of the Patrician party to make effective
+<span class="pagenum" id="p397">[397]</span>in one common blow the common antipathy of the countryside and themselves
+towards the money economics of the city.</p>
+
+<p>The counterstroke came quickly; it is recognizable in the number <em>ten</em> of the
+tribunes who appear after the withdrawal of the Decemvirs,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_705" href="#Footnote_705" class="fnanchor">[705]</a> but there were
+other events too that cannot but have belonged with it—the attempt of Sp.
+Mælius to set up a Tyrannis (439), the setting-up of Consular Tribunes by the
+army in place of the civil officials (438), and the Lex Canuleia (445) which
+made an end of the prohibition of connubium between patricians and plebeians.</p>
+
+<p>There can be no doubt, of course, that there were factions within both the
+patrician and the plebeian parties which would have liked to upset this fundamental
+trait of the Roman Polis, the opposition of Senate and Tribunate, by
+abolishing the one or the other; but the form turned out to be so right that it
+was never seriously challenged. With the enforcement by the Army of plebeian
+eligibility to the highest offices (399) the contest took a quite different turn.
+The fifth century may be summed up, under the aspect of internal politics, as
+that of the struggle for lawful Tyrannis; thenceforward the polarity of the
+constitution was admitted, and the parties contended no longer for the abolition,
+but for the capture, of the great offices. This was the substance of the revolution
+that took place in the period of the Samnite Wars. From 287 the Plebes had the
+entrée to <em>all</em> offices, and the proposals of the tribunes, when approved by them,
+automatically became law; on the other hand, it was thenceforward always
+practicable for the Senate by corruption or otherwise to induce some one tribune
+to exercise his veto and thus to deprive the institution of its power. It was
+in the <em>struggle of two competent authorities</em> that the juristic subtlety of the Romans
+was developed. Elsewhere decisions were usually by way of fist and bludgeon—the
+technical word is “Cheirocracy”—but in this “best” period of Roman
+constitutional law, the fourth century, the habit was formed of using the
+weapons of thesis and interpretation, a mode of contest in which the slightest
+points of legal wording could be decisive.</p>
+
+<p>But Rome was unique in all Classical history in this equilibrium of Senate
+and Tribunate. Everywhere else it was a matter not of swaying balance, but of
+sheer alternatives, namely Oligarchy <em>or</em> Ochlocracy. The absolute Polis and
+the Nation which was identical with it were accepted as given premisses, but
+of the inward forms none possessed stability. The victory of one party meant
+the abolition of all the institutions of the other, and people became accustomed
+to regard nothing as either venerable enough or useful enough to be exempt
+from the chances of the day’s battle. Sparta’s “form,” so to say, was senatorial,
+Athens’s tribunician, and by the beginning of the Peloponnesian War,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p398">[398]</span>in 431, the idea that forms must be alternative was so firmly fixed that only
+radical solutions were henceforth possible.</p>
+
+<p>With this, the future was set for Rome. It was the one state in which
+political passions had persons only, and no longer institutions, as their target;
+the only one which was firmly in “form.” <i lang="la">Senatus Populusque Romanus</i>—that
+is, <i>Senate and Tribunate</i>—was the form of forged bronze that no party would
+henceforward batter, whereas all the rest, with the narrowness of their individual
+power-horizons in the world of Classical states, were only able to prove once
+more the fact that domestic politics exist simply in order that foreign politics
+may be possible.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VI_7">
+ VI
+</h3>
+
+<p>At this point, when the Culture is beginning to turn itself into the Civilization,
+the non-Estate intervenes in affairs decisively—and for the first time—as
+an independent force. Under the Tyrannis and the Fronde, the State has
+invoked its aid against the Estates proper, and it has for the first time learned
+to feel itself a power. Now it employs its strength <em>for itself</em>, and does so as a
+class standing for its freedom against the rest. It sees in the absolute State, in
+the Crown, in rooted institutions, the natural allies of the old Estates and the
+true and last representatives of symbolic tradition. This is the difference
+between the First and the Second Tyrannis, between Fronde and Bourgeois
+Revolution, between Cromwell and Robespierre.</p>
+
+<p>The State, with its heavy demands on each individual in it, is felt by urban
+reason as a burden. So, in the same phase, the great forms of the Baroque arts
+begin to be felt as restrictive and become Classicist or Romanticist—that is,
+sickly or unformed; German literature from 1770 is one long revolt of strong
+individual personalities against strict poetry. The idea of the whole nation
+being “in training” or “in form” for anything becomes intolerable, for the
+individual himself inwardly is no longer in condition. This holds good in
+morals, in arts, and in modes of thought, but most of all in politics. Every
+bourgeois revolution has as its scene the great city, and as its hall-mark the
+incomprehension of old symbols, which it replaces by tangible interests and the
+craving (or even the mere wish) of enthusiastic thinkers and world-improvers
+to see their conceptions actualized. Nothing now has value but that which
+can be justified by reason. But, deprived thus of the exaltation of a form that
+is essentially symbolical and works metaphysically, the national life loses the
+power of keeping its head up in the being-streams of history. Follow the desperate
+attempts of the French Government—the handful of capable and
+farsighted men under the mediocre Louis XVI—to keep their country in
+“condition” when, after the death of Vergennes in 1787, the whole gravity of
+the external situation had become manifest. With the death of this diplomatist
+France disappeared for years from the political combinations of Europe;
+<span class="pagenum" id="p399">[399]</span>at the same time the great reform that the Crown had carried through against
+all resistances—above all, the general administrative reform of that year,
+based on the freest self-management—remained completely ineffective, because
+in view of the pliancy of the State, the question of the moment for the Estates
+became, suddenly, the question of power.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_706" href="#Footnote_706" class="fnanchor">[706]</a> As a century before and a century
+afterwards, European war was drawing visibly nearer with an inexorable
+necessity, but no one now took any notice of the external situation. The
+nobility as an Estate had rarely, but the bourgeoisie as an Estate had never,
+thought in terms of foreign policy and world-history. Whether the State in
+its new form would be able to hold its own at all amongst the other States, no
+one asked. All that mattered was whether it secured men’s “rights.”</p>
+
+<p>But the bourgeoisie, the class of urban “freedom,” strong as its class-feeling
+remained for generations (in West Europe even beyond 1848), was at no time
+wholly master of its actions. For, first of all, it became manifest in every
+critical situation that its unity was a <em>negative</em> unity, only really existent in
+moments of opposition to something, anything, else—“Tiers État” and “Opposition”
+are almost synonymous—and that when something constructive of
+its own had to be done, the interests of the various groups pulled all ways.
+To be free from something—that, all wanted. But the intellectual desired
+the State as an actualization of “justice” against the force of historical facts;
+or the “rights of man”; or freedom of criticism as against the dominant religion.
+And Money wanted a free path to business success. There were a good
+many who desired rest and renunciation of historical greatness, or wished this
+and that tradition and its embodiments, on which physically or spiritually
+they lived, to be spared. But there was another element, now and henceforth,
+that had not existed in the conflicts of the Fronde (the English Civil War included)
+or the first Tyrannis, but this time stood for a power—namely, that
+which is found in all Civilizations under different contemptuous labels—dregs,
+<i lang="fr">canaille</i>, mob, <i lang="de">Pöbel</i>—but with the same tremendous connotation.
+In the great cities, which alone now spoke the decisive words—the open land
+can at most accept or reject <i lang="fr">faits accomplis</i>, as our eighteenth century proves&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_707" href="#Footnote_707" class="fnanchor">[707]</a>—a
+mass of rootless fragments of population stands outside all social linkages.
+These do not feel themselves as attached either to an Estate or to a vocational
+class, nor even to the real working-class, although they are obliged to work.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p400">[400]</span>Elements drawn from all classes and conditions belong to it instinctively—uprooted
+peasantry, literates, ruined business men, and above all (as the age of
+Catiline shows with terrifying clarity) derailed nobles. Their power is far in
+excess of their numbers, for they are always on the spot, always on hand at the
+big decisions, ready for anything, devoid of all respect for orderliness, even
+the orderliness of a revolutionary party. It is from them that events acquire the
+destructive force which distinguishes the French Revolution from the English,
+and the Second Tyrannis from the First. The bourgeoisie looks at these masses
+with real uneasiness, defensively, and seeks to separate itself from them—it
+was to a defensive act of this category, the 13th Vendémiaire, that Napoleon
+owed his rise.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_708" href="#Footnote_708" class="fnanchor">[708]</a> But in the pressure of facts the separating frontier cannot be
+drawn; wherever the bourgeoisie throws into the scale against the older orders
+its feeble weight of aggressiveness—feeble in relative numbers and feeble
+because its inner cohesion is risked at every moment—this mass has forced
+itself into their ranks, pushed to the front, imparted most of the drive that wins
+the victory, and very often managed to secure the conquered position for itself—not
+seldom with the continued idealistic support of the educated who are
+intellectually captivated, or the material backing of the money powers, which
+seek to divert the danger from themselves on to the nobility and the clergy.</p>
+
+<p>There is another aspect, too, under which this epoch has its importance—in
+it for the first time abstract truths seek to intervene in the world of facts.
+The capital cities have become so great, and urban man so superior and influential
+over the waking-consciousness of the whole Culture (<em>this influence is what we call
+Public Opinion</em>) that the powers of the blood and the tradition inherent in the
+blood are shaken in their hitherto unassailable position. For it must be remembered
+that the Baroque State and the absolute Polis in their final development
+of form are thoroughly living expressions of a <em>breed</em>, and that history, so
+far as it accomplishes itself in these forms, possesses the full pulse of that breed.
+Any theory of the State that may be fashioned here is one that is deduced from
+the facts, that bows to the greatness of the facts. The idea of the State had
+finally mastered the blood of the first Estate, and put it wholly and without
+reserve at the State’s service. “Absolute” means that the great being-stream is
+<em>as a unit</em> in form, possesses <em>one</em> kind of pulse and instinct, whether the manifestations
+of that pulse be diplomatic or strategic flair, dignity of moral and manners,
+or fastidious taste in arts and thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>As the contradictory to this grand fact, now, Rationalism appears and
+spreads, that which has been described above&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_709" href="#Footnote_709" class="fnanchor">[709]</a> as the <em>community of waking-consciousness
+in the educated</em>, whose religion is criticism and whose numina are
+<span class="pagenum" id="p401">[401]</span>not deities but concepts. Now begins the influence of books and general
+theories upon politics—in the China of Lao-tse as in the Athens of the Sophists
+and the Europe of Montesquieu—and the public opinion formed by them
+plants itself in the path of diplomacy as a political magnitude of quite a new
+sort. It would be absurd to suppose that Pisistratus or Richelieu or even
+Cromwell determined their actions under the influence of abstract systems, but
+after the victory of “Enlightenment” that is what actually happens.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless the historical rôle of the great concepts of the Civilization is
+very different from the complexion that they presented in the minds of the
+ideologues who conceived them. The effect of a truth is always quite different
+from its tendency. In the world of facts, truths are simply <em>means</em>, effective in
+so far as they dominate spirits and therefore determine actions. Their historical
+position is determined not by whether they are deep, correct, or even merely
+logical, but by whether they <em>tell</em>. We see this in the phrase “catchword,”
+“<i lang="de">Schlagwort</i>.” What certain symbols, livingly experienced, are for the Springtime
+religions—the Holy Sepulchre for the Crusader, the Substance of Christ
+for the times of the Council of Nicæa—that two or three inspiriting word-sounds
+are for every Civilized revolution. It is only the catchwords that
+are facts—the residue of the philosophical or sociological system whence they
+come does not matter to history. But, <em>as</em> catchwords, they are for about two
+centuries powers of the first rank, stronger even than the pulse of the blood,
+which in the petrifying world of the outspread cities is beginning to be dulled.</p>
+
+<p>But—the critical spirit is only one of the two tendencies which emerge
+out of the chaotic mass of the Non-Estate. Along with abstract concepts
+abstract Money,—money divorced from the prime values of the land—along
+with the study the counting-house, appear as political forces. The two are inwardly
+cognate and inseparable—the old opposition between priest and noble
+continued, acute as ever, in the bourgeois atmosphere and the city framework.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_710" href="#Footnote_710" class="fnanchor">[710]</a>
+Of the two, moreover, it is the Money that, as pure fact, shows itself unconditionally
+superior to the ideal truths, which so far as the fact-world is
+concerned exist (as I have just said) only as catchwords, as means. If by
+“democracy” we mean the form which the Third Estate as such wishes to
+impart to public life as a whole, it must be concluded that democracy and
+plutocracy are the same thing under the two aspects of wish and actuality,
+theory and practice, knowing and doing. It is the tragic comedy of the world-improvers’
+and freedom-teachers’ desperate fight against money that they are
+<i lang="la">ipso facto</i> assisting money to be effective. Respect for the big number—expressed
+in the principles of equality for all, natural rights, and universal suffrage—is
+just as much a class-ideal of the unclassed as freedom of public
+opinion (and more particularly freedom of the press) is so. These are ideals,
+but in actuality the freedom of public opinion involves the preparation of public
+<span class="pagenum" id="p402">[402]</span>opinion, which costs money; and the freedom of the press brings with it the
+question of possession of the press, which again is a matter of money; and with
+the franchise comes electioneering, in which he who pays the piper calls the
+tune. The representatives of the ideas look at one side only, while the representatives
+of money operate with the other. The concepts of Liberalism and
+Socialism are set in effective motion only by money. It was the Equites, the
+big-money party, which made Tiberius Gracchus’s popular movement possible
+at all; and as soon as that part of the reforms that was advantageous to themselves
+had been successfully legalized, they withdrew and the movement
+collapsed. Cæsar and Crassus financed the Catilinarian movement, and so
+directed it against the Senatorial party instead of against property. In England
+politicians of eminence laid it down as early as 1700 that “on ’Change one deals
+in votes as well as in stocks, and the price of a vote is as well known as the price
+of an acre of land.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_711" href="#Footnote_711" class="fnanchor">[711]</a> When the news of Waterloo reached Paris, the price of
+French government stock rose&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_712" href="#Footnote_712" class="fnanchor">[712]</a>—the Jacobins had destroyed the old obligations
+of the blood and so had emancipated money; now it stepped forward as
+lord of the land.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_713" href="#Footnote_713" class="fnanchor">[713]</a> There is no proletarian, not even a Communist, movement
+that has not operated in the interest of money, in the directions indicated by
+money, and for the time permitted by money—and that, without the idealist
+amongst its leaders having the slightest suspicion of the fact.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_714" href="#Footnote_714" class="fnanchor">[714]</a> Intellect rejects,
+money directs—so it runs in every last act of a Culture-drama, when the
+megalopolis has become master over the rest. And, in the limit, intellect has
+no cause of complaint. For, after all, it <em>has</em> won its victory—namely, in its
+own realm of truths, the realm of books and ideals that is not of this world.
+Its conceptions have become venerabilia of the beginning Civilization. But
+Money wins, through these very concepts, in <em>its</em> realm, which is <em>only</em> of this
+world.</p>
+
+<p>In the Western world of States, it was in England that both sides of Third-Estate
+politics, the ideal and the real, graduated. Here alone it was possible for
+the Third Estate to avoid the necessity of marching against an absolute State
+in order to destroy it and set up its own dominion on the ruins. For here it
+could grow up into the strong form of the First Estate, where it found a fully
+developed form of interest-politics, and from whose methods it could borrow
+for its own purposes a traditional tactic such as it could hardly wish to improve
+<span class="pagenum" id="p403">[403]</span>upon. Here was the home of Parliamentarism, genuine and quite inimitable,
+which had insular position instead of the state as its starting-point, and the
+habits of the First and not the Third Estate as its background. Further, there
+was the circumstance that this form had grown up in the full bloom of Baroque
+and, therefore, had Music in it. The Parliamentary style was completely
+identical with that of cabinet-diplomacy;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_715" href="#Footnote_715" class="fnanchor">[715]</a> and in this <em>anti-democratic</em> origin lay
+the secret of its successes.</p>
+
+<p>But it was on British soil, too, that the rationalistic catchwords had, one
+and all, sprung up, and their relation to the principles of the Manchester
+School was intimate—Hume was the teacher of Adam Smith. “Liberty”
+self-evidently meant intellectual <em>and</em> trade freedom. An opposition between
+fact-politics and enthusiasm for abstract truths was as impossible in the England
+of George III as it was inevitable in the France of Louis XVI. Later, Edmund
+Burke could retort upon Mirabeau that “we demand our liberties, not as rights
+of man, but as rights of Englishmen.” France received her revolutionary ideas
+without exception from England, as she had received the style of her absolute
+monarchy from Spain. To both she imparted a brilliant and irresistible shape
+that was taken as a model far and wide over the Continent, but of the practical
+employment of either she had no idea. The successful utilization of the bourgeois
+catchwords&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_716" href="#Footnote_716" class="fnanchor">[716]</a> in politics presupposes the shrewd eye of a ruling class for
+the intellectual constitution of the stratum which intends to attain power,
+but will not be capable of wielding it when attained. Hence in England it was
+successful. But it was in England too that money was most unhesitatingly
+used in politics—not the bribery of individual high personages which had
+been customary in the Spanish or Venetian style, but the “nursing” of the
+democratic forces themselves. In eighteenth-century England, first the Parliamentary
+elections and then the decisions of the elected Commons were systematically
+managed by money;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_717" href="#Footnote_717" class="fnanchor">[717]</a> England, too, discovered the ideal of a
+Free Press, and discovered along with it that the press serves him who owns
+it. It does not spread “free” opinion—it generates it.</p>
+
+<p>Both <em>together</em> constitute liberalism (in the broad sense); that is, freedom
+from the restrictions of the soil-bound life, be these privileges, forms, or feelings—freedom
+of the intellect for every kind of criticism, freedom of money for
+every kind of business. But both, too, unhesitatingly aim at the domination
+<span class="pagenum" id="p404">[404]</span>of a <em>class</em>, a domination which recognizes no overriding supremacy of the
+State. Mind and money, being both inorganic, want the State, not as a matured
+form of high symbolism to be venerated, but as an engine to serve a
+purpose. Thus the difference between these forces and those of Frondism is
+fundamental, for the latter’s reaction had been a defence of the old Gothic
+against the intrusive Baroque way of living and being “in form,”—and now
+both these are on the defensive together and almost indistinguishable. Only
+in England (it must be emphasized again and again) the Fronde had disarmed,
+not only the State in open battle, but also the Third Estate by its inward
+superiority, and so attained to the one kind of first-class form that democracy
+is capable of working up to, a form neither planned nor aped, but naturally
+matured, the expression of an old breed and an unbroken sure tact that
+can adapt itself to the use of every new means that the changes of Time
+put into its hands. Thus it came about that the English Parliament, while
+taking part in the Succession-Wars of the Absolute States, handled them as
+economic wars with business aims. The mistrust felt for high form by the inwardly
+formless Non-Estate is so deep that everywhere and always it is ready
+to rescue its freedom—<em>from</em> all form—by means of a dictatorship, which
+acknowledges no rules and is, therefore, hostile to all that has grown up, which,
+moreover, in virtue of its mechanizing tendency, is acceptable to the taste both of
+intellect and of money—consider, for example, the structure of the state-machine
+of France which Robespierre began and Napoleon completed. Dictatorship
+in the interests of a class-ideal appealed to Rousseau, Saint-Simon,
+Rodbertus, and Lassalle as it had to the Classical ideologues of the fourth
+century—Xenophon in the Cyropædia and Isocrates in the Nicocles.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_718" href="#Footnote_718" class="fnanchor">[718]</a></p>
+
+<p>But the well-known saying of Robespierre that “the Government of the
+Revolution is the despotism of freedom against tyranny” expresses more than
+this. It lets out the deep fear that shakes every multitude which, in the presence
+of grave conjunctures, feels itself “not up to form.” A regiment that is
+shaken in its discipline will readily concede to accidental leaders of the moment
+powers of an extent and a kind which the legitimate command could never
+acquire, and which <em>if</em> legitimate would be utterly intolerable. But this, on a
+larger scale, is the position of every commencing Civilization. Nothing reveals
+more tellingly the decline of political form than that upspringing of formless
+powers which we may conveniently designate, from its most conspicuous
+example, <em>Napoleonism</em>. How completely the being of Richelieu or of Wallenstein
+was involved in the unshakable antecedents of their period! And how instinct
+with form, under all its outer unform, was the English Revolution! Here, just
+the reverse; the Fronde fights <em>about</em> the form, the absolute State <em>in</em> the form,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p405">[405]</span>but the bourgeoisie <em>against</em> the form. The mere abolition of an order that had
+become obsolete was no novelty—Cromwell and the heads of the First Tyrannis
+had done that. But, that behind the ruins of the visible there is no longer
+the substance of an invisible form; that Robespierre and Napoleon find nothing
+either around or in them to provide the <em>self-evident</em> basis essential to any new
+creation; that for a government of high tradition and experience they have
+no choice but to substitute an accidental régime, whose future no longer rests
+secure on the qualities of a slowly and thoroughly trained minority, but depends
+entirely on the chance of the adequate successor turning up—such
+are the distinguishing marks of this turning of the times, and hence comes the
+immense superiority that is enjoyed for generations still by those states which
+manage to retain a tradition longer than others.</p>
+
+<p>The First Tyrannis had completed the Polis with the aid of the non-noble;
+the latter now destroyed it with the aid of the Second Tyrannis. As an idea, it
+perishes in the bourgeois revolutions of the fourth century, for all that it may
+persist as an arrangement or a habit or an instrument of the momentary powers
+that be. Classical man never ceased, in fact, to think and live politically in its
+form. But never more was it for the multitude a symbol to be respected and
+venerated, any more than the Divine Right of Kings was venerated in the West
+after Napoleon had almost succeeded in making his own dynasty “the oldest
+in Europe.”</p>
+
+<p>Further, in these revolutions too, as ever in Classical history, there were
+only local and temporary solutions—nothing resembling the splendid sweep
+of the French Revolution from the Bastille to Waterloo—and the scenes in
+them were more atrocious still, for the reason that in this Culture, with its
+basically Euclidean feeling, the only possible way seemed to be that of physical
+collision of party against party, and the only possible end for the loser, not
+functional incorporation in the victor’s system as in the West, but destruction
+root and branch. At Corcyra (427) and Argos (370) the possessing classes
+were slaughtered <i lang="fr">en masse</i>; in Leontini (422) they were expelled from the city
+by the lower classes, which carried on affairs for a while with slaves until, in
+fear of an avenging return, they evacuated altogether and migrated to Syracuse.
+The refugees from hundreds of these revolutions inundated the cities, recruited
+the mercenary armies of the Second Tyrannis, and infested the routes by land
+and sea. The readmission of such exiled fractions is a standing feature in the
+peace-terms offered by the Diadochi and later by the Romans. But the Second
+Tyrannis itself secured its positions by acts of this kind. Dionysius I (407–367)
+secured his hegemony over Syracuse—the city in whose higher society, along
+with that of Athens, centred the ripest culture of Hellas, the city where
+Æschylus had produced his Persian trilogy in 470—by wholesale executions
+of educated people and confiscations of their property; this he followed up by
+entirely rebuilding the population, in the upper levels by granting large properties
+<span class="pagenum" id="p406">[406]</span>to his adherents, and in the lower by raising masses of slaves to the citizenship
+and distributing amongst them (as was not uncommon) the wives and
+daughters of the victims.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_719" href="#Footnote_719" class="fnanchor">[719]</a></p>
+
+<p>After the characteristically Classical fashion, the type of these revolutions
+was such as to produce always an increase of number, never of extent. Multitudes
+of them happened, but each proceeded purely for itself and at one point
+of its own, and it is only the fact that they were contemporary with one another
+that gives them the character of a collective phenomenon, which marks an
+epoch. Similarly with Napoleonism; here again, a formless regimen for the
+first time raised itself above the framework of the State, yet without being
+able to attain to complete inward detachment therefrom. It supported itself
+on the Army, which, <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the nation that had lost its “form,” began to
+feel itself as an independent power. That is the brief road from Robespierre to
+Bonaparte—with the fall of the Jacobins the centre of gravity passed from the
+administration to the ambitious generals. How deeply this new tendency
+implanted itself in the West may be seen from the example of Bernadotte and
+Wellington, and even more from the story of Frederick William III’s “call to
+my People” in 1813—in this case the continuance of the dynasty would
+have been challenged by the military had not the King stiffened himself to
+break with Napoleon.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_720" href="#Footnote_720" class="fnanchor">[720]</a></p>
+
+<p>This anti-constitutionality of the Second Tyrannis declared itself also in
+the position taken by Alcibiades and Lysander in the armed forces of their
+respective cities during the latter stages of the Peloponnesian War, a position
+incompatible with the basic form of the Polis. The first-named, destitute as an
+exile of official position, and against the will of the home authorities, exercised
+from 411 the <i lang="la">de facto</i> command of the Athenian Navy; the second, though
+not even a Spartiate, felt himself entirely independent at the head of an army
+devoted to his person. In the year 408 the contest of the two powers for the
+supremacy over the Ægean world took the form of a contest between these two
+individuals.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_721" href="#Footnote_721" class="fnanchor">[721]</a> Shortly after this, Dionysius of Syracuse built up the first large-scale
+professional army and introduced engines of war (artillery)&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_722" href="#Footnote_722" class="fnanchor">[722]</a>—a new
+form which served as a model for the Diadochi and Rome also. Thereafter
+the spirit of the army was a political power on its own account, and it became a
+serious question how far the State was master, and how far tool, of its army.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p407">[407]</span>The fact that the government of Rome was exclusively in the hands of a military
+committee&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_723" href="#Footnote_723" class="fnanchor">[723]</a> from 390 to 367&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_724" href="#Footnote_724" class="fnanchor">[724]</a>
+ reveals pretty clearly that the army had
+a policy of its own. It is well known that Alexander, the Romanticist of the
+Second Tyrannis, fell more and more under the influence of his generals, who
+not only compelled the retreat from India but also disposed of his inheritance
+amongst themselves as a matter of course.</p>
+
+<p>This is essentially Napoleonism, and so is the extension of <em>personal</em> rule over
+regions united by ties neither national nor jural, but merely military and administrative.
+But extension was just what was essentially incompatible with
+the Polis. The Classical State is the one State that was incapable of any organic
+widening, and the conquests of the Second Tyrannis therefore resolved themselves
+into a <em>juxtaposition of two political units</em>, the Polis and the subjugated
+territory, the cohesion of which was initially accidental and perpetually in
+danger. Thus arose that strange picture of the Hellenistic-Roman world, the
+true significance of which is not even yet recognized—<em>a circle of border-regions</em>,
+and within them a congeries of Poleis to which, small as they were, the conception
+of the State proper, the <i lang="la">res publica</i>, continued to be bound as exclusively
+as ever. In this middle (indeed, so far as concerned each individual, hegemony
+was in one point) was the theatre of all real politics. The “<i lang="la">orbis terrarum</i>”—a
+significant expression—was merely a means or object to it. The Roman
+notions of “<i lang="la">imperium</i>”—dictatorial powers of administration outside the city
+moat (which were automatically extinguished when its holder entered the
+Pomœrium)—and of “<i lang="la">provincia</i>” as the opposite of “<i lang="la">res publica</i>,” express the
+common Classical instinct, which knew only the city’s body as the State and
+political subject, and the “outside” only in relation to it, as object to it.
+Dionysius made his city of Syracuse into a fortress surrounded by a “scrap-heap
+of states,” and extended his field of power thence, over Upper Italy and the
+Dalmatian coast, into the northern Adriatic, where he possessed Ancona and
+Hatria at the mouth of the Po. Philip of Macedon, following the example of his
+teacher Jason of Pheræ (murdered in 370), adopted the reverse plan, placing
+his centre of gravity in the periphery (that is, practically in the army) and
+thence exercising a hegemony over the Hellenic world of States. Thus Macedonia
+came to extend to the Danube, and after Alexander’s death there were
+added to this outer circle the empires of the Seleucids and the Ptolemies—each
+<span class="pagenum" id="p408">[408]</span>governed from a Polis (Antioch, Alexandria), but through the intermediary
+of existing native machinery, which, be it said, was at its lowest better
+than any Classical administration of it could have been. Rome herself in the
+same period (<i>c.</i> 326–265) built up her Middle-Italian territory as a <em>border state</em>,
+secured in all directions by a system of colonies, allies, and settlements with
+Latin right. Then, from 237, we find Hamilcar Barca winning for Carthage, a
+city old established in the Classical way of life, an empire in Spain; C. Flaminius
+(225) conquering the Po Valley for Rome; and finally Cæsar making his Gallic
+empire. These were the foundations upon which rested, first, the Napoleonic
+struggles of the Diadochi in the East, then those of Scipio and Hannibal in the
+West—the limits of the Polis outgrown in both cases—and lastly the Cæsarian
+struggles of the Triumvirs, who supported themselves on the total of <em>all</em>
+the border states and used their means, in order to be—“the first in Rome.”</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VII_5">
+ VII
+</h3>
+
+<p>In Rome the strong and happily conceived form of the State that was
+reached about 340 kept the social revolution within constitutional limits.
+A Napoleonic figure like Appius Claudius the Censor of 310, who built the first
+aqueduct and the Appian Way, and ruled in Rome almost as a tyrant, very
+soon failed when he tried to eliminate the peasantry by means of the great-city
+masses and so to impart the one-sided Athenian direction to politics—for
+that was his aim in taking up the sons of slaves into the Senate, in reorganizing
+the Centuries on a money instead of a land-assessment basis,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_725" href="#Footnote_725" class="fnanchor">[725]</a> and in distributing
+freedmen and landless men amongst the country tribes, so that they might
+outvote the rustics (as they were always able to do, since the latter rarely attended).
+But his successors in the censorship lost no time in reversing this, and
+relegated the landless to the great city-tribes again. The non-estate itself, well
+led by a minority of distinguished families, saw its aim (as has been said before)
+not in the destruction, but in the acquisition, of the senatorial organs of
+administration. In the end, it forced its way into all offices (even, by the Lex
+Ogulnia, of 300, into the politically important priesthoods of the Pontifices
+and Augurs), and by the outbreak of 287 it secured force of law for <i lang="la">plebiscita</i>
+even without the Senate’s approval.</p>
+
+<p>The practical result of this freedom-movement was precisely the reverse of
+that which ideologues would have expected—there were no idealogues in
+Rome. The greatness of its success robbed the non-estate of its object and
+thereby deprived it of its driving force, for positively, when not “in opposition,”
+it was null. After 287 the state-form existed for the purpose of being
+politically <em>used</em>, and used, too, in a world in which only the states of the great
+fringe—Rome, Carthage, Macedonia, Syria, and Egypt—really counted.
+It had ceased to be in any danger of becoming the passive of “peoples’-rights”
+<span class="pagenum" id="p409">[409]</span>activities. And it was precisely this security that formed the basis on which the
+one people that had remained “in form” rose to its grandeur.</p>
+
+<p>On the one hand, it had developed within the Plebs, formless and long
+weakened in its race-impulses by the mass-intake of freedmen,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_726" href="#Footnote_726" class="fnanchor">[726]</a> an upper stratum
+distinguished by great practical aptitudes, rank, and wealth, which joined
+forces with a corresponding stratum within the patriciate. Hence there came
+into existence a very narrow circle of men of the strongest race-quality, dignified
+life, and broad political outlook, in whom the whole stock of experience
+in governing and generalship and negotiation was concentrated and transmitted;
+who regarded the direction of the State as the one profession worthy of their
+status, considered themselves as inheritors of a privilege to exercise it, and
+educated their children solely in the art of ruling and the convictions of a
+measurelessly proud tradition. This nobility, which as such had no constitutional
+existence, found its constitutional engine in the Senate, which had
+originally been a body representing the interests of the patricians (that is, the
+“Homeric” aristocracy), but in which from the middle of the fourth century
+ex-consuls—men who had both ruled and commanded—sat as life-members,
+forming a close group of eminent talents that dominated the assembly and,
+through it, the State. Even by 279 the Senate appeared to Cineas, the ambassador
+of Pyrrhus, like a council of kings, and finally its kernel was a small
+group of leading men, holding the titles “<i lang="la">princeps</i>” and “<i lang="la">clarissimus</i>,” men
+in every respect—rank, power, and public dignity—the peers of those who
+reigned over the empires of the Diadochi.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_727" href="#Footnote_727" class="fnanchor">[727]</a> There came into being a government
+such as no megalopolis in any other Culture whatsoever has possessed,
+and a tradition to which it would be impossible to find parallels save perhaps
+in the Venice and the Papal Curia of the Baroque, and there under a wholly
+different set of conditions. Here were no theories such as had been the ruin of
+Athens, none of the provincialism that had made Sparta in the long run contemptible,
+but simply a praxis in the grand style. If “Rome” is a perfectly
+unique and marvellous phenomenon in world-history, it is due, not to the Roman
+<span class="pagenum" id="p410">[410]</span>“people,” which in itself, like any other, was raw material without form,
+but to this class which brought Rome into condition and kept her so, willy-nilly—with
+the result that this particular stream of being, which in 350 was
+still without importance save to middle Italy, gradually drew into its bed the
+entire history of the Classical, and made the last great period of that history a
+<em>Roman</em> period.</p>
+
+<p>It was the very perfection of political <em>flair</em> that was displayed by this small
+circle (which possessed no sort of public rights) in managing the democratic
+forms created by the Revolution—forms that here as elsewhere derive all
+value from the use that is made of them. The only factor in them that if
+mishandled would have been dangerous in an instant—namely, the interpenetration
+of two mutually exclusive powers—was handled so superbly
+<em>and so quietly</em> that it was always the higher experience that gave the note, while
+the people remained throughout convinced that decisions were made by, and
+in the sense desired by, itself. <em>To be popular, and yet historically successful in the
+highest degree</em>—here is the secret of this policy, and for that matter the only
+possibility of policy existing at all in such times, an art in which the Roman
+régime has remained unequalled to this day.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, on the other side of the picture, the result of the Revolution
+was the <em>emancipation of Money</em>. Thenceforward money was master in the Comitia
+Centuriata. That which called itself “<i lang="la">populus</i>” there became more and more
+a tool in the hands of big money, and it required all the tactical superiority of
+the ruling circles to maintain a counterpoise in the Plebs, and to keep effective
+a representation of the yeomanry, under the leadership of the noble families, in
+the thirty-one country tribes from which the great city mass continued to be
+excluded. Hence the drastic energy with which the arrangements made by
+Appius Claudius were revoked. The natural alliance between high finance
+and the mass, though we see it actually at work later (under the Gracchi and
+Marius) for the destruction of the tradition of the blood,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_728" href="#Footnote_728" class="fnanchor">[728]</a> was at any rate
+made impossible for many generations. Bourgeoisie and yeomanry, money and
+landowning, maintained a reciprocal equilibrium of separate organisms, and
+were held together and made efficient by the State-idea (of which the nobility
+was the incarnation) until this inward form fell to pieces, and the two tendencies
+broke apart in enmity. The First Punic War was a traders’ war and directed
+against the agrarian interest, and, therefore, the consul Appius Claudius (a
+descendant of the great Censor) laid the decision of the matter in 284 before the
+Comitia Centuriata. The conquest of the Po plain, on the other hand, was in
+the interests of the peasantry and it was, therefore, in the Comita Tributa that
+it was carried by the Tribune C. Flaminius—the first genuinely Cæsarian type
+in Roman history, builder of the Via Flaminia and the Circus Flaminius.
+But when in pursuance of his policy he (as Censor in 220) forbade the Senators
+<span class="pagenum" id="p411">[411]</span>to engage in trade, and also at the same time made the old noble centuries
+accessible to plebeians, he was practically benefiting only the new financial
+nobility of the First Punic War period, and thus (entirely in spite of himself)
+he became the creator of <em>high finance organized as an Estate</em>—that is, that of the
+Equites, who a century later put an end to the great age of the nobility. Henceforth,
+when Hannibal (before whom Flaminius had fallen on the field of battle)
+had been disposed of, money steadily became, even for the government as such,
+the “<i lang="la">ultima ratio</i>” in the accomplishment of its policy—the last true State-policy
+that the Classical world was to know.</p>
+
+<p>When the Scipios and their circle had ceased to be the governing influence,
+nothing remained but the private policies of individuals, who followed their
+own interests without scruple, and looked upon the “<i lang="la">orbis terrarum</i>” as passive
+booty. The historian Polybius (who belonged to that circle) regarded Flaminius
+as a mere demagogue and traced to him all the misfortunes of the Gracchan
+period. He was wholly in error as to Flaminius’s intentions, but he was right
+as to his effect. Flaminius—like the elder Cato, who with the blind zeal of
+the agrarian overthrew the great Scipio on account of his world-policy—achieved
+the reverse of what he intended. Money stepped into the place of
+blood-leadership, and money took less than three generations to exterminate the
+yeomanry.</p>
+
+<p>If it was an improbable piece of good luck in the destinies of the Classical
+peoples that Rome was the only city-state to survive the Revolution with an
+unimpaired constitution, it was, on the contrary, almost a miracle that in our
+West—with its genealogical forms deep-rooted in the idea of duration—violent
+revolution broke out at all, even in one place—namely, Paris. It was
+not the strength, but the weakness of French Absolutism which brought the
+English ideas, in combination with the power of money, to the point of an
+explosion which gave living form to the catchwords of the “Enlightenment,”
+which bound together virtue and terror, freedom and despotism, and which
+echoed still even in the minor catastrophes of 1830 and 1848 and the more
+recent Socialistic longing for catastrophe.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_729" href="#Footnote_729" class="fnanchor">[729]</a> In England itself, when the aristocracy
+<span class="pagenum" id="p412">[412]</span>ruled more absolutely than ever in France, there was certainly a small
+circle round Fox and Sheridan which was enthusiastic for the ideas of the
+Revolution—all of which were of English provenance—and men talked of
+universal suffrage and Parliamentary reform.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_730" href="#Footnote_730" class="fnanchor">[730]</a> But that was quite enough to
+induce both parties, under the leadership of a Whig (the younger Pitt), to take
+the sharpest measures to defeat any and every attempt to interfere in the slightest
+degree with the aristocratic régime for the benefit of the bourgeoisie. The
+English nobility let loose the twenty-year war against France, and mobilized
+all the monarchs of Europe to bring about in the end, not the fall of Napoleon,
+but the fall of the Revolution—the Revolution that had had the naïve daring
+to introduce the opinions of private English thinkers into practical politics, and
+so to give a position to the Tiers État of which the consequences were all the
+better foreseen in the English lobbies for having been overlooked in the Paris
+salons.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_731" href="#Footnote_731" class="fnanchor">[731]</a></p>
+
+<p>What was called “Opposition” in England was—the attitude of one
+aristocratic party while the other was running the Government. It did not
+mean there, as it meant all over the Continent, professional criticism of the work
+which it was someone else’s profession to do, but the practical endeavour to
+force the activity of Government into a form in which the opposition was
+ready and fit at any moment to take it over. But this Opposition was at once—and
+in complete ignorance of its social presuppositions—taken as a model for
+that which the educated in France and elsewhere aimed at creating, namely,
+a class-domination of the Tiers État under the eyes of a dynasty, no very
+clear idea being formed as to the latter’s future. The English dispositions were,
+from Montesquieu onwards, lauded with enthusiastic misunderstanding—although
+these Continental countries, not being islands, lacked the first condition
+precedent for an “English” evolution. Only in one point was England
+really a model. When the bourgeoisie had got so far as to turn the absolute
+state back again into an Estate-state, they found over there a picture which in
+fact had never been other than it was. True, it was the aristocracy alone
+who ruled in it—but at least it was not the Crown.</p>
+
+<p>The result of the turn, and the basic form of the Continental States at the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p413">[413]</span>beginning of the Civilization, is “Constitutional Monarchy,” the extremest
+possibility of which appears as what we call nowadays a Republic. It is necessary
+to get clear, once and for all, of the mumblings of the doctrinaires who
+think in timeless and therefore unreal concepts and for whom “Republic” is a
+form-in-itself. The republican ideal of the nineteenth century has no more
+resemblance to the Classical <i lang="la">res publica</i>, or even to Venice or the original Swiss
+cantons, than the English constitution to a “constitution” in the Continental
+sense. That which <em>we</em> call republic is a <em>negation</em>, which of inward necessity
+postulates that the thing denied is an ever-present possibility. It is non-monarchy
+in forms borrowed from the monarchy. The genealogical feeling is
+immensely strong in Western mankind; it strains its conscience so far as to
+pretend that Dynasty determines its political conduct even when Dynasty
+no longer exists at all. The historical is embodied therein, and unhistorically
+we cannot live. It makes a great difference whether, as in the case of the
+Classical world, the dynastic principle conveys absolutely nothing to the inner
+feelings of a man, or, as in the case of the West, it is real enough to need six
+generations of educated people to fight it down in themselves. Feeling is the
+secret enemy of all constitutions that are plans and not growths; they are in
+last analysis nothing but defensive measures born of fear and mistrust. The
+urban conception of freedom—freedom <em>from</em> something—narrows itself to a
+merely anti-dynastic significance, and republican enthusiasm lives only on this
+feeling.</p>
+
+<p>Such a negation inevitably involves a preponderance of theory. While
+Dynasty and its close congener Diplomacy conserve the old tradition and pulse,
+Constitutions contain an overweight of systems, bookishness, and framed
+concepts—such as is entirely unthinkable in England, where nothing negative
+and defensive adheres to the form of government. It is not for nothing that
+the Faustian is <i lang="fr">par excellence</i> the reading and writing Culture. The printed book
+is an emblem of temporal, the Press of spatial, infinity. In contrast with the
+immense power and tyranny of these symbols, even the Chinese Civilization
+seems almost empty of writing. In Constitutions, literature is put into the
+field against knowledge of men and things, language against race, abstract
+right against successful tradition—regardless of whether a nation involved
+in the tide of events is still capable of work and “maintaining its form.”
+Mirabeau was quite alone and unsuccessful in combating the Assembly, which
+“confused politics with fiction.” Not only the three doctrinaire constitutions
+of the age—the French of 1791, the German of 1848 and 1919—but
+practically all such attempts shut their eyes to the great Destiny in the fact-world
+and imagine that that is the same as defeating it. In lieu of unforeseen
+happenings, the incidents of strong personality and imperious circumstances,
+it is Causality that is to rule—timeless, just, unvarying, rational cohesion
+of cause and effect. It is symptomatic that no written constitution knows of
+money as a political force. It is pure theory that they contain, one and all.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p414">[414]</span></p>
+
+<p>This rift in the essence of constitutional monarchy is irremediable. Here
+actual and conceptual, work and critique, are frontally opposed, and it is their
+mutual attrition that constitutes what the average educated man calls internal
+politics. Apart from the cases of Prussia-Germany and Austria—where
+constitutions did come into existence at first,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_732" href="#Footnote_732" class="fnanchor">[732]</a> but in the presence of the older
+political traditions were never very influential—it was only in England that
+the practice of government kept itself homogeneous. Here, race held its own
+against principle. Men had more than an inkling that real politics, politics
+aiming at historical success, is a matter of training and not of shaping. This
+was no aristocratic prejudice, but a cosmic fact that emerges much more distinctly
+in the experience of any English racehorse-trainer than in all the
+philosophical systems in the world. Shaping can refine training, but not replace
+it. And thus the higher society of England, Eton and Balliol, became
+training-grounds where politicians were worked up with a consistent sureness
+the like of which is only to be found in the training of the Prussian officer-corps—trained,
+that is, as connoisseurs and masters of the underlying pulse
+of things (not excluding the hidden course of opinions and ideas). Thus
+prepared, they were able, in the great flood of bourgeois-revolutionary principles
+that swept over the years after 1832, to preserve and control the being-stream
+which they directed. They possessed “training,” the suppleness and collectedness
+of the rider who, with a good horse under him, feels victory coming nearer
+and nearer. They allowed the great principles to move the mass because they
+knew well that it is money that is the “wherewithal” by which motion is
+imparted to these great principles, and they substituted, for the brutal methods
+of the eighteenth century, methods more refined and not less effective—one
+of the simpler of these being to threaten their opponents with the cost of a new
+election. The doctrinaire constitutions of the Continent saw only the one side
+of the fact democracy. Here, where there was no constitution, but men were in
+“condition,” it was seen as a whole.</p>
+
+<p>A vague feeling of all this was never quite lost on the Continent. For the
+absolute State of the Baroque there had been a perfectly clear form, but for
+“constitutional monarchy” there were only unsteady compromises, and Conservative
+and Liberal parties were distinguished—not, as in England after
+Canning, by the possession of different but well-tested modes of government,
+applied turn-and-turn-about to the actual work of governing—but according
+to the direction in which they respectively desired to alter the constitution—namely,
+towards tradition or towards theory. Should the Parliament serve the
+Dynasty, or vice versa?—that was the bone of contention, and in disputing
+over it it was forgotten that <em>foreign</em> policy was the final aim. The “Spanish”
+and the misnamed “English” sides of a constitution would not and could not
+grow together, and thus it befell that during the nineteenth century the diplomatic
+<span class="pagenum" id="p415">[415]</span>service outwards and the Parliamentary activity inwards developed in
+two divergent directions. Each became in fundamental feeling alien to, and
+contemptuous of, the other. Life fretted itself to soreness in a form that it
+had not developed out of itself. After Thermidor, France succumbed to the
+rule of the Bourse, mitigated from time to time by the setting up of a military
+dictature (1800, 1851, 1871, 1918). Bismarck’s creation was in fundamentals
+of a dynastic nature, with a parliamentary component of decidedly subordinate
+importance, and in it the inner friction was so strong as to monopolize the
+available political energy, and finally, after 1916, to exhaust the organism
+itself. The Army had its own history, with a great tradition going back to
+Frederick William I,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_733" href="#Footnote_733" class="fnanchor">[733]</a> and so also had the administration. In them was the
+source of Socialism as one kind of true political “training,” diametrically
+opposed to the English&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_734" href="#Footnote_734" class="fnanchor">[734]</a> but, like it, a full expression of strong race-quality.
+The officer and the official were trained high. But the necessity of breeding up
+a corresponding political type was not recognized. Higher policy was handled
+“administratively” and minor policy was hopeless squabbling. And so army
+and administration finally became aims in themselves, after Bismarck’s disappearance
+had removed the one man who even without a supply of real politicians
+to back him (this tradition alone could have produced) was big enough
+to treat both as tools of policy. When the issue of the World War removed the
+upper layers, nothing remained but parties educated for opposition only, and
+these brought the activity of Government down to a level hitherto unknown
+in any Civilization.</p>
+
+<p>But to-day Parliamentarism is in full decay. It was a <em>continuation of the
+Bourgeois Revolution by other means</em>, the revolution of the Third Estate of 1789
+brought into legal form and joined with its opponent the Dynasty as one
+governmental unit. Every modern election, in fact, is a civil war carried on by
+ballot-box and every sort of spoken and written stimulus, and every great
+party-leader is a sort of Napoleon. In this form, meant to remain infinitely
+valid, which is peculiar to the Western Culture and would be nonsensical and
+impossible in any other, we discern once more our characteristic tendency to
+infinity, historical foresight&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_735" href="#Footnote_735" class="fnanchor">[735]</a> and forethought, and <em>will to order the distant future</em>,
+in this case according to bourgeois standards of the present.</p>
+
+<p>All the same, Parliamentarism is not a summit as the absolute Polis and the
+Baroque State were summits, but a brief transition—namely, between the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p416">[416]</span>Late-Culture period with its mature forms and the age of great individuals in a
+formless world. It contains, like the houses and furniture of the first half of
+the nineteenth century, a residue of good Baroque. The parliamentary habit is
+English Rococo—but, no longer un-self-conscious and in the blood, but
+superficial-initiative and at the mercy of goodwill. Only in the brief periods
+of first enthusiasms has it an appearance of depth and duration, and then only
+because in the flush of victory respect for one’s newly-won status makes it
+incumbent to adopt the high manners of the defeated class. To preserve the
+form, even when it contradicts the advantage, is the convention which makes
+parliamentarism <em>possible</em>. But when this convention comes to be fully observed,
+<em>the very fact that it is so means that the essence of parliamentarism has already been
+evaporated</em>. The Non-Estate falls apart again into its natural interest-groups,
+and the passion of stubborn and victorious defence is over. And as soon as the
+form ceases to possess the attractiveness of a young ideal that will summon men
+to the barricades, unparliamentary methods of attaining an object without
+(and even in spite of) the ballot-box will make their appearance—such as
+money, economic pressure, and, above all, the strike. Neither the megalopolitan
+masses nor the strong individuals have any real respect for this form
+without depth or past, and when the discovery is made that it is <em>only</em> a form,
+it has already become a mark and shadow. With the beginning of the twentieth
+century Parliamentarism (even English) is tending rapidly towards taking up
+itself the rôle that it once assigned to the kingship. It is becoming an impressive
+spectacle for the multitude of the Orthodox, while the centre of gravity of
+big policy, already <i lang="la">de jure</i> transferred from the Crown to the people’s representatives,
+is passing <i lang="la">de facto</i> from the latter to unofficial groups and the will of
+unofficial personages. The World War almost completed this development.
+There is no way back to the old parliamentarism from the domination of Lloyd
+George and the Napoleonism of the French militarists. And for America,
+hitherto lying apart and self-contained, rather a region than a State, the parallelism
+of President and Congress which she derived from a theory of Montesquieu
+has, with her entry into world politics, become untenable, and must in
+times of real danger make way for formless powers such as those with which
+Mexico and South America have long been familiar.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VIII_2">
+ VIII
+</h3>
+
+<p>With this enters the age of gigantic conflicts, in which we find ourselves
+to-day. It is the <em>transition from Napoleonism to Cæsarism</em>, a general phase of
+evolution, which occupies at least two centuries and can be shown to exist in
+all the Cultures. The Chinese call it Shan-Kwo, the “period of the Contending
+States” (480–230, corresponding to the Classical 300–50).&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_736" href="#Footnote_736" class="fnanchor">[736]</a> At the beginning
+<span class="pagenum" id="p417">[417]</span>are reckoned seven great powers, which, first planlessly, but later with clearer
+and clearer purpose, tend to the inevitable final result of this close succession
+of vast wars and revolutions. A century later there are still five. In 441 the
+ruler of the Chóu dynasty became a state-pensioner of the “Eastern Duke,”
+and the remains of territory that he possessed ceased accordingly to figure in
+later history. Simultaneously began in the unphilosophical north-west&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_737" href="#Footnote_737" class="fnanchor">[737]</a>
+the swift rise of the “Roman” state of Tsin, which extended its influence westward
+and southward over Tibet and Yunnan and enclosed the other states in a
+great arc. The focus of the opposition was in the kingdom of Tsu in the Taoist
+south,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_738" href="#Footnote_738" class="fnanchor">[738]</a> whence the Chinese Civilization pressed slowly outwards into the still
+little-known lands south of the great river. Here we have in fact the opposition
+of Rome and the Hellenistic—on the one side, hard, clear will-to-power;
+on the other, the tendency to dreaming and world-improvement. In 368–320
+(corresponding to the Second Punic War) the contest intensified itself into an
+uninterrupted struggle of the whole Chinese world, fought with mass armies,
+for which the population was strained to the extreme limit. “The allies, whose
+lands were ten times as great as those of Tsin, in vain rolled up a million men—Tsin
+had ever reserves in hand still. From first to last a million men fell,”
+writes Sze-ma-tsien. Su-tsin, who began by being Chancellor of Tsin, but later
+became a supporter of the League of Nations (<i>hoh-tsung</i>) idea and went over to
+the Opposition, worked up two great coalitions (333 and 321), which, however,
+collapsed from inward disunity at the first battles. His great adversary, the
+Chancellor Chang-I, resolutely Imperialist, was in 311 on the point of bringing
+the Chinese world to voluntary subjection when a change of occupancy of the
+throne caused his combination to miscarry. In 294 began the campaigns of
+Pe-Ki.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_739" href="#Footnote_739" class="fnanchor">[739]</a> It was in the prestige of his victories that the King of Tsin took the
+mystic Emperor-title of the legendary age,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_740" href="#Footnote_740" class="fnanchor">[740]</a> which openly expressed the claim
+to world-rule, and was at once imitated by the ruler of Tsi in the east.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_741" href="#Footnote_741" class="fnanchor">[741]</a> With
+this began the second maximum phase of the decisive struggles. The number
+<span class="pagenum" id="p418">[418]</span>of independent states grew steadily less. In 255 even the home state of Confucius,
+Lu, vanished, and in 249 the Chóu dynasty came to an end. In 246 the
+mighty Wang-Cheng became, at the age of thirteen, Emperor of Tsin, and in
+241, with the aid of his Chancellor Lui-Shi (the Chinese Mæcenas&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_742" href="#Footnote_742" class="fnanchor">[742]</a>), he fought
+out to victory the last bout that the last opponent, the Empire of Tsu, ventured
+to challenge. In 221, sole ruler in actual fact, he assumed the title Shi (Augustus).
+This is the beginning of the Imperial age in China.</p>
+
+<p>No era confronts its mankind so distinctly with the alternative of <em>great form</em>
+or <em>great individual powers</em> as this “Period of the Contending States.” In the degree
+in which the nations cease to be politically in “condition,” in that degree
+possibilities open up for the energetic private person who means to be politically
+creative, who will have power at any price, and who as a phenomenon of force
+becomes the Destiny of an entire people or Culture. Events have become
+unpredictable on the basis of form. Instead of the given tradition that can
+dispense with genius (because it is itself cosmic force at highest capacity), we
+have now the accident of great fact-men. The accident of their rise brings a
+weak people (for example, the Macedonians), to the peak of events overnight,
+and the accident of their death (for example, Cæsar’s) can immediately plunge
+a world from personally secured order into chaos.</p>
+
+<p>This indeed had been manifested earlier in critical times of transition. The
+epoch of the Fronde, the Ming-shu, the First Tyrannis, when men were not in
+form, but fought about form, has always thrown up a number of great figures
+who grew too big for definition and limitation in terms of office. The change
+from Culture to Civilization, with its typical Napoleonism, does so too. But
+with this, which is the preface to unredeemed historical formlessness, dawns
+the real day of the great individual. For us this period attained almost to its
+climax in the World War; in the Classical World it began with Hannibal,
+who challenged Rome in the name of Hellenism (to which inwardly he belonged),
+but went under because the Hellenistic East, in true Classical fashion,
+apprehended the meaning of the hour too late, or not at all. With his downfall
+began that proud sequence that runs from the Scipios through Æmilius Paullus,
+Flamininus, the Catos, the Gracchi, Marius, and Sulla to Pompey, Cæsar, and
+Augustus. In China, correspondingly, during the period of the “Contending
+States,” a like chain of statesmen and generals centred on Tsin as the Classical
+figures centred on Rome. In accordance with the complete want of understanding
+of the political side of Chinese history that prevails, these men are usually
+described as Sophists.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_743" href="#Footnote_743" class="fnanchor">[743]</a> They were so, but only in the same sense as leading
+<span class="pagenum" id="p419">[419]</span>Romans of the same period were Stoics—that is, as having been educated in
+the philosophy and rhetoric of the Greek East. All were finished orators and
+all from time to time wrote on philosophy, Cæsar and Brutus no less than
+Cato and Cicero, but they did so not as professional philosophers, but because
+<i lang="la">otium cum dignitate</i> was the habit of cultivated gentlemen. In business hours
+they were masters of fact, whether on battle-field or in high politics, and precisely
+the same is true of the Chancellors Chang-I and Su-tsin;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_744" href="#Footnote_744" class="fnanchor">[744]</a> the dreaded
+diplomatist Fan-Sui who overthrew Pe-Ki, the general; Wei-Yang the legislator
+of Tsin; Lui-Shi, the first Emperor’s Mæcenas, and others.</p>
+
+<p>The Culture had bound up all its forces in strict form. Now they were
+released, and “Nature”—that is, the cosmic—broke forth immediate.
+The change from the absolute State to the battling Society of nations that
+marks the beginning of every Civilization may mean for idealists and ideologues
+what they like—in the world of facts it means the transition from government
+in the style and pulse of a strict tradition to the <i lang="la">sic volo, sic jubeo</i> of the unbridled
+personal régime. The maximum of symbolic and <em>super</em>-personal form coincides
+with that of the Late period of the Culture—in China about 600, in the Classical
+about 450, for ourselves about 1700. The minimum in the Classical lies in
+the time of Sulla and Pompey, and for us will be reached (and possibly passed)
+in the next hundred years. Great interstate and internal conflicts, revolutions
+of a fearful kind, interpenetrate increasingly, but the questions at issue in all
+of them without exception are (consciously and frankly or not) questions of
+unofficial, and eventually purely personal, power. It is historically of no
+importance what they themselves aimed at theoretically, and we need not know
+the catchwords under which the Chinese and Arabian revolutions of this stage
+broke out, nor even whether there were such catchwords. None of the innumerable
+revolutions of this era—which more and more become blind outbreaks of
+uprooted megalopolitan masses—has ever attained, or ever had the possibility
+of attaining, an aim. What stands is only the <em>historical fact</em> of an accelerated
+demolition of ancient forms that leaves the path clear for Cæsarism.</p>
+
+<p>But the same is true also of the wars, in which the armies and their tactical
+<span class="pagenum" id="p420">[420]</span>methods become more and more the creation, not of the epoch, but of uncontrolled
+individual captains, who in many cases discovered their genius very
+late and by accident. While in 300 there were <em>Roman</em> armies, in 100 there were
+the armies of Marius and Sulla and Cæsar; and Octavian’s army, which was
+composed of Cæsar’s veterans, led its general much more than it was led by
+him. But with this the methods of war, its means, and its aims assumed raw-natural
+and ferocious forms,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_745" href="#Footnote_745" class="fnanchor">[745]</a> very different from those prevailing before. Their
+duels were not eighteenth-century Trianon duels, encounters in knightly forms
+with fixed rules to determine when a man might declare himself exhausted,
+what maximum of force might be employed, and what conditions the chivalry
+permitted a victor to impose. They were ring-battles of infuriated men with
+fists and teeth, fought to the bodily collapse of one and exploited without
+reserve or restraint by the victor. The first great example of this “return to
+Nature” is afforded by the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic armies, which,
+instead of artificial manœuvres with small bodies, practised the mass-onset
+without regard to losses and thereby shattered to atoms the refined strategy of
+the Rococo. To bring the whole muscular force of a nation on to the battlefields
+by the universal-service system was an idea utterly alien to the age of
+Frederick the Great.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_746" href="#Footnote_746" class="fnanchor">[746]</a></p>
+
+<p>Similarly, in every Culture, the technique of war hesitatingly followed the
+advance of craftsmanship, until at the beginning of the Civilization it suddenly
+takes the lead, presses all mechanical possibilities of the time relentlessly into
+its service, and under pressure of military necessity even opens up new domains
+hitherto unexploited—but at the same time renders largely ineffectual the
+personal heroism of the thoroughbred, the ethos of the noble, and the subtle
+intellect of the Late Culture. In the Classical world, where the Polis made
+mass-armies essentially impossible—for relatively to the general smallness of
+Classical forms, tactical included, the numbers of Cannæ, Philippi, and Actium
+were enormous and exceptional—the second Tyrannis (Dionysius of Syracuse
+leading) introduced mechanical technique into warfare, and on a large scale.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_747" href="#Footnote_747" class="fnanchor">[747]</a>
+<span class="pagenum" id="p421">[421]</span>Then for the first time it became possible to carry out sieges like those of Rhodes
+(305), Syracuse (213), Carthage (146), and Alesia (52), in which also the
+increasing importance of rapidity, even for Classical strategy, became evident.
+It was in line with this tendency that the Roman legion, the characteristic
+structure of which developed only in the Hellenistic age, worked like a machine
+as compared with the Athenian and Spartan militias of the fifth century. In
+China, correspondingly, iron was worked up for cutting and thrusting weapons
+from 474, light cavalry of the Mongolian model displaced the heavy war-chariot,
+and fortress warfare suddenly acquired outstanding importance.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_748" href="#Footnote_748" class="fnanchor">[748]</a>
+The fundamental craving of Civilized mankind for speed, mobility, and mass-effects
+finally combined, in the world of Europe and America, with the Faustian
+will to domination over Nature and produced dynamic methods of war that
+even to Frederick the Great would have seemed like lunacy, but to us of to-day,
+in close proximity to our technics of transportation and industry, are perfectly
+natural. Napoleon horsed his artillery and thereby made it highly mobile
+(just as he broke up the mass army of the Revolution into a system of self-contained
+and easily moved corps), and already at Wagram and Borodino it had
+augmented its purely physical effectiveness to the point of what we should
+call rapid-fire and drum fire.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_749" href="#Footnote_749" class="fnanchor">[749]</a> The second stage is—most significantly—marked
+by the American Civil War of 1861–5—which even in the numbers of
+troops it involved far surpassed the order of magnitude of the Napoleonic
+Wars&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_750" href="#Footnote_750" class="fnanchor">[750]</a> and in which for the first time the railway was used for large troop-movements,
+the telegraph-network for messages, and a steam fleet, keeping the
+sea for months on end, for blockade, and in which armoured ships, the torpedo,
+rifled weapons, and monster artillery of extraordinary range were discovered.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_751" href="#Footnote_751" class="fnanchor">[751]</a>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_752" href="#Footnote_752" class="fnanchor">[752]</a>
+The third stage is that of the World War, preluded by the Russo-Japanese conflict;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_753" href="#Footnote_753" class="fnanchor">[753]</a>
+here submarine and aircraft were set to work, speed of invention became
+<span class="pagenum" id="p422">[422]</span>a new arm in itself, and the extent (though most certainly not the intensity)
+of the means used attained a maximum. But to this expenditure of force there
+corresponds everywhere the ruthlessness of the decisions. At the very outset
+of the Chinese Shan-Kwo period we find the utter annihilation of the State of
+Wu—an act which in the preceding Chun-tsiu period chivalry would have
+made impossible. Even in the peace of Campo Formio Napoleon outraged the
+<i lang="fr">convenances</i> of the eighteenth century, and after Austerlitz he introduced the
+practice of exploiting military success without regard to any but material
+restrictions. The last step still possible is being taken in the peace treaty of the
+Versailles type, which deliberately avoids finality and settlement, and keeps
+open the possibility of setting up new conditions at every change in the situation.
+The same evolution is seen in the chain of the three Punic Wars. The
+idea of wiping out one of the leading great powers of the world—which
+eventually became familiar to everyone through Cato’s deliberately dry insistence
+on his “<i lang="la">Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam</i>”—never crossed the
+mind of the victor of Zama and, for all the wild war-ethics of the Classical
+Poleis, it would have seemed to Lysander, as he stood victorious in Athens, an
+impiety towards every god.</p>
+
+<p>The Period of the Contending States begins for the Classical world with the
+battle of Ipsus (301) which established the trinity of Eastern great powers,
+and the Roman victory over the Etruscans and Samnites at Sentinum (295),
+which created a mid-Italian great power by the side of Carthage. Then, however,
+the characteristic Classical preference for things near and in the present resulted
+in eyes’ being shut while Rome won, first the Italian south in the Pyrrhic adventure,
+then the sea in the first Punic War, and then the Celtic north through
+C. Flaminius. The significance even of Hannibal (probably the only man of his
+time who clearly saw the trend of events) was ignored by all, the Romans
+themselves not excepted. It was at <em>Zama</em>, and not merely later at Magnesia
+and Pydna, that the Hellenistic Eastern powers were defeated. All in vain the
+great Scipio, truly anxious in the presence of the destiny to which a Polis
+overloaded with the tasks of a world-dominion was marching, sought
+thereafter to avoid all conquest. In vain his entourage forced through the
+Macedonian War, against the will of every party, merely in order that the
+East could thenceforth be ignored as harmless. Imperialism is so necessary a
+product of any Civilization that when a people refuses to assume the rôle of
+master, it is seized and pushed into it. The Roman Empire was <em>not</em> conquered—the
+“<i lang="la">orbis terrarum</i>” condensed itself into that form and forced the Romans
+to give it their name. It is all very Classical. While the Chinese states defended
+even the mere remnants of their independence with the last bitterness,
+Rome after 146 only took upon herself to transform the Eastern land-masses into
+provinces because there was no other resource against anarchy left. And even
+this much resulted in the inward form of Rome—the last which had remained
+<span class="pagenum" id="p423">[423]</span>upright—melting in the Gracchan disorders. And (what is unparalleled
+elsewhere) it was not between states that the final rounds of the battle for
+Imperium were fought, but between the parties of a city—the form of the
+Polis allowed of no other outcome. Of old it had been Sparta <i>versus</i> Athens,
+now it was Optimate <i>versus</i> Popular Party. In the Gracchan revolution, which
+was already (134) heralded by a first Servile War, the younger Scipio was
+secretly murdered and C. Gracchus openly slain—the first who as Princeps
+and the first who as Tribune were political centres in themselves amidst a
+world become formless. When, in 104, the urban masses of Rome for the first
+time lawlessly and tumultuously invested a private person, Marius, with Imperium,
+the deeper importance of the drama then enacted is comparable with
+that of the assumption of the mythic Emperor-title by the ruler of Tsin in 288.
+The inevitable product of the age, Cæsarism, suddenly outlines itself on the
+horizon.</p>
+
+<p>The heir of the Tribune was Marius, who like him linked mob and high
+finance and in 87 murdered off the old aristocracy in masses. The heir of the
+Princeps was Sulla, who in 82 annihilated the class of the great merchants by
+his proscriptions. Thereafter the final decisions press on rapidly, as in China
+after the emergence of Wang Cheng. Pompey the Princeps and Cæsar the
+Tribune—tribune not in office, but in attitude—were still party-leaders,
+but nevertheless, already at Lucca, they were arranging with Crassus and each
+other for the first partition of the world amongst themselves. When the heirs
+of Cæsar fought his murderers at Philippi, both had ceased to be more than
+groups. By Actium the issue was between individuals, and Cæsarism will out,
+even in such a process as this.</p>
+
+<p>In the corresponding evolution within the Arabian world it is, of course,
+the Magian Consensus that takes the place of the bodily Polis as the basic
+form in and through which the facts accomplish themselves; and this form,
+as we have seen, excluded any separation of political and religious tendencies
+to such an extent that even the urban bourgeois urge towards freedom (marking,
+here as elsewhere, the beginning of the Period of Contending States) presents
+itself in orthodox disguise, and so has hitherto almost escaped notice.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_754" href="#Footnote_754" class="fnanchor">[754]</a> It
+appeared as a will to break loose from the Caliphate, which the Sassanids, and
+Diocletian following them, had created in the forms of the feudal state. From
+the times of Justinian and Chosroës Nushirvan this had had to meet the onset
+of Frondeurs—led by the heads of the Greek and Mazdaist Churches, the
+nobility, both Persian-Mazdaist (above all Irak) and Greek (particularly the
+Asiatic), and the high chivalry of Armenia, which was divided into two parts
+by the difference of religion. The absolutism almost attained in the seventh
+<span class="pagenum" id="p424">[424]</span>century was then suddenly destroyed by the attack of Islam. In its <em>political</em>
+beginnings Islam was strictly aristocratic; the handful of Arabian families&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_755" href="#Footnote_755" class="fnanchor">[755]</a>
+who everywhere kept the leading in their hands, very soon formed in the
+conquered territories a new higher nobility of strong breed and immense self-sufficingness
+which thrust the dynasty down to the same level as its English
+“contemporaries” thrust theirs. The Civil War between Othman and Ali
+(656–661) was the expression of a true Fronde, and its movements were all
+in the interests of two clans and their respective adherents. The Islamic Whigs
+and Tories of the eighth century, like the English of the eighteenth, <em>alone</em>
+practised high politics, and their coteries and family quarrels are more important
+to the history of the time than any events in the reigning house of the
+Ommaiyads (661–750).</p>
+
+<p>But with the fall of the gay and enlightened dynasty that has resided in
+Damascus—that is, West-Aramæan and Monophysite Syria—the natural
+centre of gravity of the Arabian Culture reappeared; it was the East-Aramæan
+region. Once the basis of Sassanid and now of Abbassid power, but always—irrespective
+of whether its shaping was Persian or Arabian, or its religion
+Mazdaist, Nestorian, or Islamic—it expressed one and the same grand line
+of development and was the exemplar for Syria as for Byzantium alike. From
+Kufa the movement started which led to the downfall of the Ommaiyads and
+their <i lang="fr">ancien régime</i>, and the character of this movement—of which the whole
+extent has never to this day been observed—was that <em>of a social revolution directed
+against the primary orders of society and the aristocratic tradition</em>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_756" href="#Footnote_756" class="fnanchor">[756]</a> It began among the
+Mavali, the small bourgeoisie in the East, and directed itself with bitter
+hostility against the Arabs, not <i>qua</i> champions of Islam but <i>qua</i> new nobility.
+The recently converted Mavali, almost all former Mazdaists, took Islam more
+seriously than the Arabs themselves, who represented also a class-ideal. Even
+in the army of Ali the wholly democratic and Puritan Qaraites had split off,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_757" href="#Footnote_757" class="fnanchor">[757]</a>
+and in their ranks we see for the first time the combination of fanatic sectarianism
+and Jacobinism. Here and now there emerged not only the Shiite tendency,
+but also the first impulses towards the Communistic Karramiyya movement,
+which can be traced to Mazdak&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_758" href="#Footnote_758" class="fnanchor">[758]</a> and later produced the vast outbreaks under
+Babek. The Abbassids were anything but favourites with the insurgents of
+Kufa, and it was only owing to their great diplomatic skill that they were
+first allowed a footing as officers and then—almost like Napoleon—were
+able to enter into the heritage of a Revolution that had spread over the whole
+<span class="pagenum" id="p425">[425]</span>East. After their victory they built Baghdad—a resurrected Ctesiphon,
+symbol of the downfall of feudal Arabism—and this first world-city of the
+new Civilization became from 800 to 1050 the theatre of the events which led
+from Napoleonism to Cæsarism, <em>from the Caliphate to the Sultanate</em>, which, in
+Baghdad no less than in Byzantium, is the Magian type of power without form—here
+also the only kind of power still possible.</p>
+
+<p>We have to recognize quite clearly, then, that in the Arabian world as
+elsewhere democracy was a class-ideal—the outlook of townsmen and the
+expression of their will to be free from the old linkages with land, be it a
+desert or plough-land. The “no” which answered the Caliph-tradition could
+disguise itself in very numerous forms, and neither free-thought nor constitutionalism
+in our sense was necessary to it. <em>Magian mind and Magian money are
+“free” in quite a different way.</em> The Byzantine monkhood was liberal to the
+point of turbulence, not only against court and nobility, but also against the
+higher ecclesiastical powers, which had developed a hierarchy (corresponding
+to the Gothic) even before the Council of Nicæa. The consensus of the Faithful,
+the “people” in the most daring sense, was looked upon as willed by God
+(“Nature,” Rousseau would have said), as <em>equal</em> and free from all powers of the
+blood. The celebrated scene in which the Abbot Theodore of Studion adjured
+the Emperor Leo V to obey (813) is a Storming of the Bastille in Magian forms.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_759" href="#Footnote_759" class="fnanchor">[759]</a>
+Not long afterwards there began the revolt of the Paulicians, very pious and in
+social matters wholly radical,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_760" href="#Footnote_760" class="fnanchor">[760]</a> who set up a state of their own beyond the
+Taurus, ravaged all Asia Minor, defeated one Imperial levy after another, and
+were not subjugated till 874. This corresponds in every way to the communistic-religious
+movement of the Karramiyya, which extended from the Tigris to
+Merv and whose leader Babek succumbed only after a twenty years’ struggle
+(817–837);&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_761" href="#Footnote_761" class="fnanchor">[761]</a>
+ and the other like outbreak of the Carmathians&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_762" href="#Footnote_762" class="fnanchor">[762]</a> in the West
+(890–904), whose liaisons reached from Arabia into all the Syrian cities and
+who propagated rebellion as far as the Persian coast. But, besides these, there
+were still other disguises of the political party-battle. When now we are told
+that the Byzantine army was Iconoclast and that the military party was consequently
+opposed by an Iconodule monkish party, we begin to see the passions
+of the century of the image-controversy (740–840) in quite a new light, and
+to understand that the end of the crisis (843)—the final defeat of the Iconoclasts
+and <em>simultaneously</em> of the free-church monkish policy—signifies a Restoration
+in the 1815 sense of the word.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_763" href="#Footnote_763" class="fnanchor">[763]</a> And, lastly, this period is the time of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p426">[426]</span>fearful slave-rebellion in Irak—the kernel of the Abbassids’ realm—which
+throws sudden light upon a series of other social upheavals. Ali, the Spartacus
+of Islam, founded in 869, south of Baghdad, a veritable Negro state out of the
+masses of runaways, built himself a capital, Muktara, and extended his power
+far in the directions of Arabia and Persia alike, where he gained the support of
+whole tribes. In 871 Basra, the first great port of the Islamic world, inhabited
+by nearly a million souls, was taken, deluged in massacre, and burnt. Not till
+883 was this slave-state destroyed.</p>
+
+<p>Thus slowly the Sassanid-Byzantine forms were hollowed out, and in the
+place of the ancient traditions of the higher officialdom and nobility there arose
+the inconsequent and wholly personal power of incidental geniuses—<em>the
+Sultanate</em>. For this is the specifically Arabian form, and it appears simultaneously
+in Byzantium and Baghdad and takes its steady course from the Napoleonic
+beginnings about 800 to the completed Cæsarism of the Seljuk Turks about
+1050. This form is purely Magian, belongs only to that Culture, and is incomprehensible
+without the most fundamental axioms of its soul. The Caliphate,
+a synthesis of political (not to say cosmic) beat and style, was not
+abolished—for the Caliph as the representative of God recognized by the
+Consensus of the elect is sacred—but he was deprived of all powers that
+Cæsarism needed to possess, just as Pompey and Augustus in fact, and Sulla and
+Cæsar in fact and in name, abstracted these powers from the old constitutional
+forms of Rome. In the end there remained to the Caliph about as much power
+as the Senate and the Comitias had under Tiberius. The whole richness of
+being in high form—in law, costume, ethic—that had once been a symbol,
+was now mere trappings covering a formless and purely factual régime.</p>
+
+<p>So we find by the side of Michael III (842–867) Bardas, and by Constantine
+VII (912–959) Romanos—the latter even formally Co-Emperor.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_764" href="#Footnote_764" class="fnanchor">[764]</a> In 867
+the ex-groom Basileios, a Napoleonic figure, overthrew Bardas and founded
+the sword-dynasty of the Armenians (to 1081), in which generals instead of
+Emperors mostly ruled—force-men like Romanos, Nicephorus, and Bardas
+Phocas. The greatest amongst them was John Tzimisces (969–976) in Armenian
+Kiur Zan. In Baghdad it was the <em>Turks</em> who played the Armenian rôle; in
+842 the Caliph Vathek invested one of their leaders for the first time with the
+title of Sultan. From 862 the Turkish prætorians held the ruler in tutelage, and
+in 945 Achmed, the founder of the Sultan-dynasty of the Buyids, formally
+restricted the Abbassid Caliph to his religious dignities. And then there set in,
+in both the world-cities, an unrestrained competition between the mighty
+provincial families for possession of the supreme power. In the case of the
+Christian we find, indeed, Basileios II and others challenging the great latifundia
+lords, but this does not in the least mean social purposes in the legislator.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p427">[427]</span>It was an act of self-defence on the part of the momentary potentate
+against possible heirs, and closely analogous, therefore, to the proscriptions of
+Sulla and the Triumvirs. Half Asia Minor belonged to the Dukas, Phocas, and
+Skleros connexions; the Chancellor Basileios, who could keep an army on pay
+out of his own fabulous resources, has long ago been compared with Crassus.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_765" href="#Footnote_765" class="fnanchor">[765]</a>
+But the imperial age proper begins only with the Seljuk Turks.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_766" href="#Footnote_766" class="fnanchor">[766]</a> Their leader
+Togrulbek won Irak in 1043 and Armenia in 1049, and in 1055 forced the Caliph
+to grant him the <em>hereditary</em> Sultanate. His son Alp Arslan conquered Syria and,
+by the victory of Manzikert, gained eastern Asia Minor. The remnant of the
+Byzantine Empire thenceforward possessed no importance to, or influence on,
+the further destinies of the Turkish Islamic Imperium.</p>
+
+<p>This is the phase, too, which in Egypt is concealed under the name of the
+“Hyksos.” Between the XIIth and the XVIIIth Dynasties lay two centuries,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_767" href="#Footnote_767" class="fnanchor">[767]</a>
+which began with the collapse of the <i lang="fr">ancien régime</i> which had culminated with
+Sesostris III,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_768" href="#Footnote_768" class="fnanchor">[768]</a> and ended with the beginning of the New Empire. The numbering
+of the dynasties itself suffices to disclose something catastrophic. In the
+lists of kings the names appear successive or parallel, usurpers of obscurest
+origin, generals, people with strange titles, often reigning only a few days.
+With the very first king of the XIIIth Dynasty the high-Nile records at Semne
+break off, and with his successor the archives at Kahun come to an end. It is
+the time out of which the Leiden Papyrus portrays the great social revolution.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_769" href="#Footnote_769" class="fnanchor">[769]</a>
+<span class="pagenum" id="p428">[428]</span>The fall of the Government and the victory of the mass is followed by outbreaks
+of the army and the rise of ambitious soldiers. In Egypt from about 1680
+appears the name of the “Hyksos,”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_770" href="#Footnote_770" class="fnanchor">[770]</a> a designation with which the historians
+of the New Empire, who no longer understood or wished to understand the
+meaning of the epoch, covered up the shame of these years. These Hyksos,
+there can be no doubt whatever, played the part that the Armenians played in
+Byzantium; and in the Classical world too, the destinies of the Cimbri and
+Teutones, would have gone the same way had they defeated Marius and his
+legions of city <i lang="fr">canaille</i>; they would have filled the armies of the Triumvirs
+again and again, and in the end probably set up barbarian chieftains in their
+place—for the case of Jugurtha shows the lengths to which foreigners dared
+to go with the Rome of those days. The provenance or constitution of the
+intruders does not matter—they might be body-guards, insurgent slaves,
+Jacobins, or purely alien tribes. What does matter is what they were for the
+Egyptian world in that century of theirs. In the end they set up a state in the
+Western Delta and built a capital, Auaris, for it.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_771" href="#Footnote_771" class="fnanchor">[771]</a> One of their leaders, Khyan
+by name, who styled himself, not Pharaoh, but “Embracer of the Country” and
+“prince of the young men” (names as essentially revolutionary as the <i lang="la">Consul
+sine collega</i> or <i lang="la">dictator prepetuus</i> of Cæsar’s time) a man probably of the stamp of
+John Tzimisces, ruled over all Egypt and spread his renown as far as Crete and
+the Euphrates. But after him began a fight of all the districts for the Imperium,
+and out of that fight Amasis and the Theban dynasty eventually emerged victorious.</p>
+
+<p>For us this time of Contending States began with Napoleon and his violent-arbitrary
+government by order. His head was the first in our world to make
+effective the notion of a military and at the same time popular world-domination—something
+altogether different from the Empire of Charles V and even
+the British Colonial Empire of his own day. If the nineteenth century has been
+relatively poor in great wars—and revolutions—and has overcome its worst
+crises diplomatically by means of congresses, this has been due precisely to the
+continuous and terrific war-preparedness which has made disputants, fearful at
+the eleventh hour of the consequences, postpone the definitive decision again
+and again, and led to the substitution of chess-moves for war. For this is the
+century of gigantic permanent armies and universal compulsory service. We
+ourselves are too near to it to see it under this terrifying aspect. In all world-history
+there is no parallel. Ever since Napoleon, hundreds of thousands, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p429">[429]</span>latterly millions, of men have stood ready to march, and mighty fleets renewed
+every ten years have filled the harbours. It is a war without war, a war of
+overbidding in equipment and preparedness, a war of figures and tempo and
+technics, and the diplomatic dealings have been not of court with court, but of
+headquarters with headquarters. The longer the discharge was delayed, the
+more huge became the means and the more intolerable the tension. This is the
+Faustian, the dynamic, form of “the Contending States” during the first century
+of that period, but it ended with the explosion of the World War. For the
+demand of these four years has been altogether too much for the principle of
+universal service—child of the French Revolution, revolutionary through and
+through, as it is in this form—and for all tactical methods evolved from it.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_772" href="#Footnote_772" class="fnanchor">[772]</a>
+The place of the permanent armies as we know them will gradually be taken
+by professional forces of volunteer war-keen soldiers; and from millions we
+shall revert to hundreds of thousands. But <i lang="la">ipso facto</i> this second century will
+be one of <em>actually</em> Contending States. <em>These</em> armies are not substitutes for war—they
+are <em>for</em> war, and they want war. Within two generations it will be
+they whose will prevails over that of all the comfortables put together. In
+these wars of theirs for the heritage of the whole world, continents will be
+staked, India, China, South Africa, Russia, Islam called out, new technics and
+tactics played and counterplayed. The great cosmopolitan foci of power will
+dispose at their pleasure of smaller states—their territory, their economy and
+their men alike—all that is now merely province, passive object, means to
+end, and its destinies are without importance to the great march of things.
+We ourselves, in a very few years, have learned to take little or no notice of
+events that before the War would have horrified the world; who to-day seriously
+thinks about the millions that perish in Russia?</p>
+
+<p>Again and again between these catastrophes of blood and terror the cry
+rises up for reconciliation of the peoples and for peace on earth. It is but
+the background and the echo of the grand happening, but, as such, so necessary
+that we have to assume its existence even if, as in Hyksos Egypt, in Baghdad
+and Byzantium, no tradition tells of it. Esteem as we may the wish towards
+all this, we must have the courage to face facts as they are—that is the hall-mark
+of men of race-quality and it is by the being of these men that <em>alone</em>
+history is. Life if it would be great, is hard; it lets choose <em>only</em> between victory
+and ruin, not between war and peace, and to the victory belong the sacrifices
+of victory. For that which shuffles querulously and jealously by the side of the
+events is only literature,—written or thought or lived literature—mere
+truths that lose themselves in the moving crush of facts. History has never
+deigned to take notice of these propositions. In the Chinese world Hiang-Sui
+tried, as early as 535, to found a peace league. In the period of the Contending
+States, imperialism (<i>Lien-heng</i>) was opposed by the League of Nations idea
+<span class="pagenum" id="p430">[430]</span>(<i>Hoh-tsung</i>),&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_773" href="#Footnote_773" class="fnanchor">[773]</a>
+ particularly in the southern regions, but it was foredoomed like
+every half-measure that steps into the path of a whole, and it had vanished
+even before the victory of the North. But both tendencies alike rejected the
+political taste of the Taoists, who, in those fearful centuries, elected for intellectual
+self-disarmament, thereby reducing themselves to the level of mere
+material to be used up by others and for others in the grand decisions. Even
+Roman politics—deliberately improvident as the Classical spirit was in all
+other respects—at least made one attempt to bring the whole world into one
+system of equal co-ordinated forces which should do away with all necessity
+for further wars—that is, when at the fall of Hannibal Rome forwent the
+chance of incorporating the East. But reluctance was useless; the party of the
+younger Scipio went over to frank Imperialism in order to make an end of
+chaos, although its clear-sighted leader foresaw therein the doom of his city,
+which possessed (and in a high degree) the native Classical incapacity for
+organizing anything whatever. The way from Alexander to Cæsar is unambiguous
+and unavoidable, and the strongest nation of any and every Culture,
+consciously or unconsciously, willing or unwilling, has had to tread it.</p>
+
+<p>From the rigour of these facts there is no refuge. The Hague Conference of
+1907 was the prelude of the World War; the Washington Conference of 1921
+will have been that of other wars. The history of these times is no longer an
+intellectual match of wits in elegant forms for pluses and minuses, from which
+either side can withdraw when it pleases. The alternatives now are to stand
+fast or to go under—there is no middle course. The only moral that the logic
+of things permits to us now is that of the climber on the face of the crag—a
+moment’s weakness and all is over. To-day all “philosophy” is nothing
+but an inward abdication and resignation, or a craven hope of escaping
+realities by means of mysticisms. It was just the same in Roman times. Tacitus
+tells us&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_774" href="#Footnote_774" class="fnanchor">[774]</a> how the famous Musonius Rufus tried, by exhortations on the blessings
+of peace and the evils of war, to influence the legions that in 70 stood
+before the gates of Rome, and barely escaped alive from their blows. The military
+commander Avidius Cassius called the Emperor Marcus Aurelius a “philosophical
+old woman.”</p>
+
+<p>In these conditions so much of old and great traditions as remains, so much
+of historical “fitness” and experience as has got into the blood of the twentieth-century
+nations, acquires an unequalled potency. For us <em>creative</em> piety, or (to
+use a more fundamental term) the pulse that has come down to us from first
+origins, adheres only to forms that are older than the Revolution and Napoleon,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_775" href="#Footnote_775" class="fnanchor">[775]</a>
+forms which grew and were not made. Every remnant of them, however tiny,
+that has kept itself alive in the being of any self-contained minority whatever
+<span class="pagenum" id="p431">[431]</span>will before long rise to incalculable values and bring about historical effects
+which no one yet imagines to be possible. The traditions of an old monarchy,
+of an old aristocracy, of an old polite society, in so much as they are still healthy
+enough to keep clear of professional or professorial politics, in so far as they
+possess honour, abnegation, discipline, the genuine sense of a great mission
+(<em>race-quality</em>, that is, and training), sense of duty and sacrifice—can become a
+centre which holds together the being-stream of an entire people and enables it
+to outlast this time and make its landfall in the future. To be “in condition”
+is everything. It falls to us to live in the most trying times known to the history
+of a great Culture. The last race to keep its form, the last living tradition,
+the last leaders who have both at their back, will pass through and
+onward, victors.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="X">
+ X {sic}
+</h3>
+
+<p>By the term “Cæsarism” I mean that kind of government which, irrespective
+of any constitutional formulation that it may have, is in its inward self
+a return to thorough formlessness. It does not matter that Augustus in Rome,
+and Hwang-ti in China, Amasis in Egypt and Alp Arslan in Baghdad disguised
+their position under antique forms. The spirit of these forms was dead,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_776" href="#Footnote_776" class="fnanchor">[776]</a> and
+so all institutions, however carefully maintained, were thenceforth destitute
+of all meaning and weight. Real importance centred in the wholly personal
+power exercised by the Cæsar, or by anybody else capable of exercising it in his
+place. It is the <i lang="fr">récidive</i> of a form-fulfilled world into primitivism, into the
+cosmic-historyless. Biological stretches of time once more take the place
+vacated by historical periods.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_777" href="#Footnote_777" class="fnanchor">[777]</a></p>
+
+<p>At the beginning, where the Civilization is developing to full bloom (to-day),
+there stands the miracle of the Cosmopolis, the great petrifact, a symbol of
+the formless—vast, splendid, spreading in insolence. It draws within itself
+the being-streams of the now impotent countryside, human masses that are
+wafted as dunes from one to another or flow like loose sand into the chinks
+of the stone. Here money and intellect celebrate their greatest and their last
+triumphs. It is the most artificial, the cleverest phenomenon manifested in
+the light-world of human eyes—uncanny, “too good to be true,” standing
+already almost beyond the possibilities of cosmic formation.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, however, the idea-less facts come forward again, naked and
+gigantic. The eternal-cosmic pulse has finally overcome the intellectual
+tensions of a few centuries. In the form of democracy, money has won. There
+has been a period in which politics were almost its preserve. But as soon as
+it has destroyed the old orders of the Culture, the chaos gives forth a new and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p432">[432]</span>overpowering factor that penetrates to the very elementals of Becoming—the
+Cæsar-men. Before them the money collapses. <em>The Imperial Age, in every
+Culture alike, signifies the end of the politics of mind and money</em>. The powers of the
+blood, unbroken bodily forces, resume their ancient lordship. “Race” springs
+forth, pure and irresistible—the strongest win and the residue is their spoil.
+They seize the management of the world, and the realm of books and problems
+petrifies or vanishes from memory. From now on, new destinies in the style
+of the pre-Culture time are possible afresh, and visible to the consciousness
+without cloaks of causality. There is no inward difference more between the
+lives of Septimius Severus and Gallienus and those of Alaric and Odoacer.
+Rameses, Trajan, Wu-ti belong together in a uniform up-and-down of historyless
+time-stretches.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_778" href="#Footnote_778" class="fnanchor">[778]</a></p>
+
+<p>Once the Imperial Age has arrived, there are no more political problems.
+People manage with the situation as it is and the powers that be. In the period
+of Contending States, torrents of blood had reddened the pavements of all
+world-cities, so that the great truths of Democracy might be turned into
+actualities, and for the winning of rights without which life seemed not worth
+the living. Now these rights are won, but the grandchildren cannot be moved,
+even by punishment, to make use of them. A hundred years more, and even the
+historians will no longer understand the old controversies. Already by Cæsar’s
+time reputable people had almost ceased to take part in the elections.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_779" href="#Footnote_779" class="fnanchor">[779]</a> It
+embittered the life of the great Tiberius that the most capable men of his time
+held aloof from politics, and Nero could not even by threats compel the Equites
+to come to Rome in order to exercise their rights. This is the end of the great
+politics. The conflict of intelligences that had served as substitute for war
+must give place to war itself in its most primitive form.</p>
+
+<p>It is, therefore, a complete misunderstanding of the meaning of the period to
+presume, as Mommsen did,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_780" href="#Footnote_780" class="fnanchor">[780]</a> a deep design of subdivision in the “dyarchy”
+fashioned by Augustus, with its partition of powers between Princeps and
+Senate. A century earlier this constitution would have been a real thing, but
+that would in itself suffice to make it impossible for such an idea to have entered
+the heads of the present force-men. Now it meant nothing but the attempt of
+a weak personality to deceive itself as to inexorable facts by mantling them in
+empty forms. Cæsar saw things as they were and was guided in the exercise
+of his rulership by definite and unsentimental practical considerations. The
+legislation of his last months was concerned wholly with transitional provisions,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p433">[433]</span>none of which were intended to be permanent. This precisely is what has
+generally been overlooked. He was far too deep a judge of things to anticipate
+development or to settle its definitive forms at this moment, with the Parthian
+War impending. But Augustus, like Pompey before him, was not the master
+of his following, but thoroughly dependent upon it and its views of things.
+The form of the Principate was not at all his discovery, but the doctrinaire
+execution of an obsolete party-ideal that Cicero—another weakling—had
+formulated.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_781" href="#Footnote_781" class="fnanchor">[781]</a> When, on the 13th January 27, Augustus gave back the state-power
+to the “Senate and People” of Rome—a scene all the more meaningless
+because of its sincerity—he kept the Tribunate for himself. In fact, this was
+the one element of the polity that could manifest itself in actuality. The Tribune
+was the legitimate successor of the Tyrant,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_782" href="#Footnote_782" class="fnanchor">[782]</a> and as long ago as 122 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Caius
+Gracchus had put into the title a connotation limited no longer by the legal
+bounds of the office, but only by the personal talents of the incumbent. From
+him it is a direct line through Marius and Cæsar to the young Nero, who set
+himself to defeat the political purposes of his mother Agrippina. The Princeps,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_783" href="#Footnote_783" class="fnanchor">[783]</a>
+on the other hand, was thenceforth only a costume, a rank—very likely a
+fact in society, certainly not a fact in politics. And this, precisely, was the
+conception invested with light and glamour by the theory of Cicero, and
+<em>already</em>—and by him of all people—associated with the Divus-idea.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_784" href="#Footnote_784" class="fnanchor">[784]</a> The
+“co-operation” of the Senate and People, on the contrary, was an antiquated
+ceremonial, with about as much life in it as the rites of the Fratres Arvales—also
+restored by Augustus. The great parties of the Gracchan age had long
+become retinues—Cæsarians and Pompeians—and finally there only remained
+on the one side the formless omnipotence, the plain brutal “fact,” the Cæsar—or
+whoever managed to get the Cæsar under his influence—and on the other
+side the handful of narrow ideologues who concealed dissatisfaction under
+philosophy and thenceforward sought to advance their ideals by conspiracy.
+What these Stoics were in Rome, the Confucians were in China—and, seen
+thus, the episode of the “Burning of the Books,” decreed by the Chinese Augustus
+in 212, begins to be intelligible through the reproach of immense vandalism
+that the minds of later literates fastened upon it. But, after all, these Stoic
+enthusiasts for an ideal that had become impossible had killed Cæsar:&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_785" href="#Footnote_785" class="fnanchor">[785]</a> to the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p434">[434]</span>Divus-cult they opposed a Cato- and Brutus-cult; the philosophers in the Senate
+(which by then was only a noble club) never wearied of lamenting the
+downfall of “freedom” and fomenting conspiracies such as Piso’s in 65. Had
+this been the state of things at Nero’s death, it would have been Sulla over
+again; and that is why Nero put to death the Stoic Thrasea Pætus, why Vespasian
+executed Helvidius Priscus, and why copies of the history of Cremutius
+Cordus, which lauded Brutus as the last of the Romans, were collected and burnt
+in Rome. These were acts of defensive State necessity <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> blind ideology—acts
+such as those we know of Cromwell and Robespierre—and it was in
+exactly the same position that the Chinese Cæsars found themselves <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the
+school of Confucius, which had formerly worked out their ideal of a state-constitution
+and now had no notion of enduring the actuality. This great
+Burning of the Books was nothing but the destruction of one part of the politico-philosophical
+literature and the abolition of propaganda and secret organizations.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_786" href="#Footnote_786" class="fnanchor">[786]</a>
+This defensive lasted in both Imperia for a century, and then even
+reminiscences of party-political passions faded out and the two philosophies
+became the ruling world-outlook of the Imperial age in its maturity.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_787" href="#Footnote_787" class="fnanchor">[787]</a> But the
+world was now the theatre of <em>tragic family-histories</em> into which state-histories
+were dissolved; the Julian-Claudian house destroyed Roman history, and the
+house of Shi-hwang-ti (even from 206 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>) destroyed Chinese, and we darkly discern
+something of the same kind in the destinies of the Egyptian Queen
+Hatshepsut and her brothers (1501–1447). It is the last step to the definitive.
+With world-peace—<em>the peace of high policies</em>—the “sword side”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_788" href="#Footnote_788" class="fnanchor">[788]</a> of being
+retreats and the “spindle side” rules again; henceforth there are only <em>private</em>
+histories, private destinies, private ambitions, from top to bottom, from the
+miserable troubles of fellaheen to the dreary feuds of Cæsars for the private
+possession of the world. The wars of the age of world-peace are private wars,
+more fearful than any State wars because they are formless.</p>
+
+<p>For world-peace—which has often existed in fact—involves the private
+renunciation of war on the part of the immense majority, but along with this
+it involves an unavowed readiness to submit to being the booty of others who
+do <em>not</em> renounce it. It begins with the State-destroying wish for universal
+reconciliation, and it ends in nobody’s moving a finger so long as misfortune
+only touches his neighbour. Already under Marcus Aurelius each city and
+each land-patch was thinking of itself, and the activities of the ruler were his
+<span class="pagenum" id="p435">[435]</span>private affair as other men’s were theirs. The remoter peoples were as indifferent
+to him and his troops and his aims as they were to the projects of Germanic
+war-bands. On this <em>spiritual</em> premiss a second Vikingism develops. The
+state of being “in form” passes from nations to bands and retinues of adventurers,
+self-styled Cæsars, seceding generals, barbarian kings, and what not—in
+whose eyes the population becomes in the end merely a part of the landscape.
+There is a deep relation between the heroes of the Mycenæan primitive age and
+the soldier-emperors of Rome, and between, say, Menes and Rameses II. In our
+Germanic world the spirits of Alaric and Theodoric will come again—there
+is a first hint of them in Cecil Rhodes—and the alien executioners of the
+Russian preface, from Jenghiz Khan to Trotski (with the episode of Petrine
+Tsarism between them) are, when all is said and done, very little different from
+most of the pretenders of the Latin-American republics, whose private struggles
+have long since put an end to the form-rich age of the Spanish Baroque.</p>
+
+<p>With the formed state, high history also lays itself down weary to sleep.
+Man becomes a plant again, adhering to the soil, dumb and enduring. The
+timeless village and the “eternal” peasant&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_789" href="#Footnote_789" class="fnanchor">[789]</a> reappear, begetting children and
+burying seed in Mother Earth—a busy, not inadequate swarm, over which
+the tempest of soldier-emperors passingly blows. In the midst of the land lie
+the old world-cities, empty receptacles of an extinguished soul, in which a
+historyless mankind slowly nests itself. Men live from hand to mouth, with
+petty thrifts and petty fortunes, and endure. Masses are trampled on in the
+conflicts of the conquerors who contend for the power and the spoil of this
+world, but the survivors fill up the gaps with a primitive fertility and suffer on.
+And while in high places there is eternal alternance of victory and defeat, those
+in the depths pray, pray with that mighty piety of the Second Religiousness that
+has overcome all doubts for ever.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_790" href="#Footnote_790" class="fnanchor">[790]</a> There, in the souls, world-peace, the peace
+of God, the bliss of grey-haired monks and hermits, is become actual—and
+there alone. It has awakened that depth in the endurance of suffering which
+the historical man in the thousand years of his development has never known.
+Only with the end of grand History does holy, still Being reappear. It is a
+drama noble in its aimlessness, noble and aimless as the course of the stars, the
+rotation of the earth, and alternance of land and sea, of ice and virgin forest
+upon its face. We may marvel at it or we may lament it—but it is there.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p436"></a><a id="p437"></a><a id="p438"></a><a id="p439"></a>[439]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">
+ CHAPTER XII
+ <br>
+ <span class="subtitle">THE STATE
+ <br>
+ (C)
+ <br>
+ PHILOSOPHY OF POLITICS</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>To Politics as an idea we have given more thought than has been good for us,
+since, correspondingly, we have understood all the less about the observation of
+Politics as a reality. The great statesmen are accustomed to act immediately
+and on the basis of a sure flair for facts. This is so self-evident, to them, that it
+simply never enters their heads to reflect upon the basic general principles of
+their action—supposing indeed that such exist. In all ages they have known
+what they had to do, and any theory of this knowledge has been foreign to
+both their capacities and their tastes. But the professional thinkers who have
+turned their attention to the <i lang="fr">faits accomplis</i> of men have been so remote, inwardly,
+from these actions that they have just spun for themselves a web of
+abstractions—for preference, abstraction-myths like justice, virtue, freedom—and
+then applied them as criteria to past and, especially, future historical
+happening. Thus in the end they have forgotten that concepts are only concepts,
+and brought themselves to the conclusion that there is a political science
+whereby we can form the course of the world according to an ideal recipe.
+As nothing of the kind has ever or anywhere happened, political doing has
+come to be considered as so trivial in comparison with abstract thinking that
+they debate in their books whether there is a “genius of action” at all.</p>
+
+<p>Here, on the contrary, the attempt will be made to give, instead of an ideological
+system, a <em>physiognomy</em> of politics as it has actually been practised in the
+course of general history, and not as it might or ought to have been practised.
+The problem was, and is, to penetrate to the final meaning of great events, to
+“see” them, to feel and to transcribe the symbolically important in them.
+The projects of world-improvers and the actuality of History have nothing
+to do with one another.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_791" href="#Footnote_791" class="fnanchor">[791]</a></p>
+
+<p>The being-streams of humanity are called History when we regard them as
+movement, and family, estate, people, nation, when we regard them as the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p440">[440]</span>object moved.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_792" href="#Footnote_792" class="fnanchor">[792]</a>
+ Politics is the way in which this fluent Being maintains itself,
+<em>grows</em>, triumphs over other life-streams. <em>All living is politics</em>, in every trait of
+instinct, in the inmost marrow.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_793" href="#Footnote_793" class="fnanchor">[793]</a> That which we nowadays like to call life-energy
+(vitality), the “it” in us that at all costs strives forward and upward,
+the blind cosmic drive to validity and power that at the same time remains
+plantwise and racewise, bound up with the earth, the “home”-land; the
+directedness, the need to actualize—it is this that appears in every higher
+mankind, as its political life, seeking naturally and inevitably the great
+decisions that determine whether it shall be, or shall suffer, a Destiny. For it
+grows or <em>it dies out</em>; there is no third possibility.</p>
+
+<p>For this reason the nobility, as expression of a strong race-quality, is the
+truly political Order, and training and not shaping is the truly political sort of
+education. Every great politician, a centre of forces in the stream of happening,
+has something of the noble in his feeling of self-vocation and inward obligation.
+On the other hand, all that is microcosmic and “intellect” is unpolitical,
+and so there is a something of priestliness in all program-politics and ideology.
+The best diplomats are the children; in their play, or when they want something,
+a cosmic “it” that is bound up in the individual being breaks out immediately
+and with the sure tread of the sleep-walker. They do not learn, but
+unlearn, this art of early years as they grow older—hence the rarity in the
+world of adults of the Statesman.</p>
+
+<p>It is only in and between these being-streams that fill the field of the high
+Culture that high policy exists. They are only possible, therefore, in the plural.
+A people <em>is</em>, really, only in relation to peoples.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_794" href="#Footnote_794" class="fnanchor">[794]</a> But the natural, “race,” relation
+between them is for that very reason a relation of war—this is a fact that
+no truths avail to alter. War is the primary politics of <em>everything</em> that lives, and
+so much so that in the deeps battle and life are one, and being and will-to-battle
+expire together. Old Germanic words for this, like “<i>orrusta</i>” and “<i>orlog</i>,”
+mean seriousness and destiny in contrast to jest and play—and the contrast is
+one of intensity, not of qualitative difference. And even though all high
+politics tries to be a substitution of more intellectual weapons for the sword and
+though it is the ambition of the statesman at the culminations of all the Cultures
+to feel able to dispense with war, yet the primary relationship between diplomacy
+and the war-art endures. The character of battle is common to both,
+and the tactics and stratagems, and the necessity of material forces in the
+background to give weight to the operations. The aim, too, remains the same—namely,
+the growth of one’s own life-unit (class or nation) at the cost of the
+other’s. And every attempt to eliminate the “race” element only leads to its
+transfer to other ground; instead of the conflict of states we have that of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p441">[441]</span>parties, or that of areas, or (if there also the will to growth is extinct) that of
+the adventurers’ retinues, to whose doings the rest of the population unresistingly
+adjusts itself.</p>
+
+<p>In every war between life-powers the question at issue is which is to govern
+the whole. It is always a life, never a system, law, or program that gives the
+beat in the stream of happening.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_795" href="#Footnote_795" class="fnanchor">[795]</a> To be the centre of action and effective focus
+of a multitude,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_796" href="#Footnote_796" class="fnanchor">[796]</a> to make the inward form of one’s own personality into that
+of whole peoples and periods, to be history’s commanding officer, with the
+aim of bringing one’s own people or family or purposes to the top of events—that
+is the scarce-conscious but irresistible impulse in every individual being
+that has a historical vocation in it. There is only <em>personal</em> history, and consequently
+only <em>personal</em> politics. The struggle of, not principles but men, not
+ideals but race-qualities, for executive power is the alpha and omega. Even
+revolutions are no exception, for the “sovereignty of the people” only expresses
+the fact that the ruling power has assumed the title of people’s leader
+instead of that of king. The method of governing is scarcely altered thereby,
+and the position of the governed not at all. And even world-peace, in every
+case where it has existed, has been nothing but the slavery of an entire humanity
+under the regimen imposed by a few strong natures determined to rule.</p>
+
+<p>The conception of executive power implies that the life-unit—even in the
+case of the animals—is subdivided into subjects and objects of government.
+This is so self-evident that no mass-unit has ever for a moment, even in the
+severest crises (such as 1789), lost the sense of this inner structure of itself.
+Only the incumbent vanishes, not the office, and if a people does actually, in
+the tide of events, lose all leadership and float on haphazard, it only means that
+control has passed to outside hands, that it has become <em>in its entirety</em> the mere
+object.</p>
+
+<p>Politically gifted <em>peoples</em> do not exist. Those which are supposed to be
+so are simply peoples that are firmly in the hands of a ruling minority and in
+consequence feel themselves to be in good form. The English as a people are
+just as unthinking, narrow, and unpractical in political matters as any other
+nation, but they possess—for all their liking for public debate—a <em>tradition of
+confidence</em>. The difference is simply that the Englishman is the object of a
+regimen of very old and successful habits, in which he acquiesces because experience
+has shown him their advantage. From an acquiescence that has the
+outward appearance of agreement, it is only one step to the conviction that this
+government depends upon his will, although paradoxically it is the government
+that, for technical reasons of its own, unceasingly hammers the notion into
+his head. The ruling class in England has developed its aims and methods
+<span class="pagenum" id="p442">[442]</span>quite independently of the “people,” and it works with and within an unwritten
+constitution of which the refinements—which have arisen from practice and
+are wholly innocent of theory—are to the uninitiated as opaque as they are
+unintelligible. But the courage of a troop depends on its confidence in the
+leadership, and confidence means involuntary abstention from criticism. It is
+the officer who makes cowards into heroes, or heroes into cowards, and this
+holds good equally for armies, peoples, classes, and parties. <em>Political talent in a
+people</em> is nothing but confidence in its leading. But that confidence has to be
+acquired; it will ripen only in its own good time, and success will stabilize it
+and make it into a tradition. What appears as a lack of the feeling of certainty
+in the ruled is really lack of leadership-talent in the ruling classes, which
+generates that sort of uninstinctive and meddlesome criticism which by its
+very existence shows that a people has got “out of condition.”</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_11">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>How is politics <em>done?</em> The born statesman is above all a valuer—a valuer of
+men, situations, and things. He has the “eye” which unhesitatingly and
+inflexibly embraces the round of possibilities. The judge of horses takes in an
+animal with one glance and knows what prospects it will have in a race. To
+do the correct thing without “knowing” it, to have the hands that imperceptibly
+tighten or ease the bit—his talent is the very opposite to that of the
+man of theory. The secret pulse of all being is one and the same in him and in
+the things of history. They sense one another, they exist for one another.
+The fact-man is immune from the risk of practising sentimental or program
+politics. He does not believe in the big words. Pilate’s question is
+constantly on his lips—truths? The born statesman stands beyond true and
+false. He does not confuse the logic of events with the logic of systems.
+“Truths” or “errors”—which here amount to the same—only concern him
+as intellectual currents, and in respect of <em>workings</em>. He surveys their potency,
+durability, and direction, and duly books them in his calculations for the
+destiny of the power that he directs. He has convictions, certainly, that are
+dear to him, but he has them as a private person; no real politician ever felt
+himself tied to them when in action. “The doer is always conscienceless; no
+one has a conscience except the spectator,” said Goethe, and it is equally true
+of Sulla and Robespierre as it is of Bismarck and Pitt. The great Popes and the
+English party-leaders, so long as they had still to strive for the mastery of
+things, acted on the same principles as the conquerors and upstarts of all ages.
+Take the dealings of Innocent III, who very nearly succeeded in creating a
+world-dominion of the Church, and deduce therefrom the catechism of success;
+it will be found to be in the extremest contradiction with all religious moral.
+Yet without it there could have been no bearable existence for any Church, not
+to mention English Colonies, American fortunes, victorious revolutions, or,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p443">[443]</span>for that matter, states or parties or peoples in general. It is <em>life</em>, not the individual,
+that is conscienceless.</p>
+
+<p>The essential, therefore, is to understand the time <em>for</em> which one is born.
+He who does not sense and understand its most secret forces, who does not feel
+in himself something cognate that drives him forward on a path neither hedged
+nor defined by concepts, who believes in the surface, public opinion, large
+phrases and ideals of the day—he is not of the stature for its events. He is
+in their power, not they in his. Look not back to the past for measuring-rods!
+Still less sideways for some system or other! There are times, like our own
+present and the Gracchan age, in which there are two most deadly kinds of
+idealism, the reactionary and the democratic. The one believes in the reversibility
+of history, the other in a teleology of history. But it makes no difference
+to the inevitable failure with which both burden a nation over whose destiny
+they have power, whether it is to a memory or to a concept that they sacrifice it.
+The genuine statesman is incarnate history, its directedness expressed as individual
+will and its organic logic as character.</p>
+
+<p>But the true statesman must also be, in a large sense of the word, an educator—not
+the representative of a moral or a doctrine, but an exemplar in
+doing.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_797" href="#Footnote_797" class="fnanchor">[797]</a> It is a patent fact that a religion has never yet altered the style of an
+existence. It penetrated the waking-consciousness, the <em>intellectual</em> man, it
+threw new light on another world, it created an immense happiness by way of
+humanity, resignation, and patience unto death, but over the forces of life it
+possessed no power. In the sphere of the living only the great personality—the
+“it,” the race, the cosmic force bound up in that personality—has been
+creative (not shaping, but breeding and training) and has effectively modified
+the type of entire classes and peoples. It is not “the” truth or “the” good or
+“the” upright, but “the” Roman or “the” Puritan or “the” Prussian that is a
+fact. The sum of honour and duty, discipline, resolution, is a thing not learned
+from books, but <em>awakened</em> in the stream of being by a living exemplar; and that
+is why Frederick William I was one of those educators, great for all time,
+whose personal race-forming conduct does not vanish in the course of the
+generations. The genuine statesman is distinguished from the “mere politician”—the
+player who plays for the pleasure of the game, the <i lang="fr">arriviste</i>
+on the heights of history, the seeker after wealth and rank—as also from the
+schoolmaster of an ideal, by the fact that he dares to demand sacrifices—<em>and</em>
+obtains them, because his feeling that he is necessary to the time and the nation
+is shared by thousands, transforms them to the core, and renders them capable
+of deeds to which otherwise they could never have risen.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_798" href="#Footnote_798" class="fnanchor">[798]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p444">[444]</span></p>
+
+<p>Highest of all, however, is not action, but the <em>ability to command</em>. It is this
+that takes the individual up out of himself and makes him the centre of a world
+of action. There is one kind of commanding that makes obedience a proud, free,
+and noble habit. That kind Napoleon, for example, did <em>not</em> possess. A residue
+of subaltern outlook in him prevented him from training men to be men and not
+bureau-personnel, and led him to govern through edicts instead of through
+personalities; as he did not understand this subtlest tact of command and, therefore,
+was obliged to do everything really decisive himself, he slowly collapsed
+from inability to reconcile the demands of his position with the limit of human
+capabilities. But one who, like Cæsar or Frederick the Great, possesses this last
+and highest gift of complete humanity feels—on a battle-evening when
+operations are sweeping to the willed conclusion, and the victory is turning
+out to be conclusive of the campaign; or when the last signature is written that
+rounds off a historical epoch—a wondrous sense of power that the man of
+truths can never know. There are moments—and they indicate the maxima
+of cosmic flowings—when the individual feels himself to be identical with
+Destiny, the centre of the world, and his own personality seems to him almost
+as a covering in which the history of the future is about to clothe itself.</p>
+
+<p>The first problem is to make oneself somebody; the second—less obvious,
+but harder and greater in its ultimate effects—<em>to create a tradition</em>, to bring on
+others so that one’s work may be continued with one’s own pulse and spirit,
+to release a current of like activity that does not need the original leader to
+maintain it in form. And here the statesman rises to something that in the
+Classical world would doubtless have been called divinity. He becomes the
+creator of a new life, the <em>spirit</em>-ancestor of a young race. He himself, as a unit,
+vanishes from the stream after a few years. But a minority called into being by
+him takes up his course and maintains it indefinitely. This cosmic something,
+this soul of a ruling stratum, an individual <em>can</em> generate and leave as a heritage,
+and throughout history it is this that has produced the durable effects. The
+great statesman is rare. Whether he comes, or wins through, too soon or too
+late, incident determines. Great individuals often destroy more than they have
+built up—by the gap that their death makes in the flow of happening. But
+<em>the creation of tradition means the elimination of the incident</em>. A tradition breeds a
+high average, with which the future can reckon—no Cæsar, but a Senate, no
+Napoleon, but an incomparable officer-corps. A strong tradition attracts
+talents from all quarters, and out of small gifts produces great results. The
+schools of painting of Italy and Holland are proof of this, no less than the
+Prussian army and the diplomacy of the Roman Curia. It was the great flaw in
+Bismarck, as compared with Frederick William I, that he could achieve, but
+could not form a tradition; that he did not parallel Moltke’s officer-corps by a
+corresponding race of politicians who would identify themselves in feeling
+with his State and its new tasks, would constantly take up good men from below
+<span class="pagenum" id="p445">[445]</span>and so provide for the continuance of the Bismarckian action-pulse for ever.
+If this creation of a tradition does not come off, then instead of a homogeneous
+ruling stratum we have a congeries of heads that are helpless when confronted
+by the unforeseen. If it does, we have a <em>Sovereign People</em> in the one sense of the
+phrase that is worthy of a people and possible in the world of fact—a highly
+trained, self-replenishing minority with sure and slowly ripened traditions,
+which attracts every talent into the charmed circle and uses it to the full, and
+<i lang="la">ipso facto</i> keeps itself in harmony with the remainder of the nation that it rules.
+Such a minority slowly develops into a true “breed,” even when it had begun
+merely as a party, and the sureness of its decisions comes to be that of blood,
+not of reason. But this means that what happens in it happens “of itself” and
+does not need the Genius. <em>Great politics</em>, so to put it, <em>takes the place of the great
+politician</em>.</p>
+
+<p>What, then, <em>is</em> politics? It is the art of the possible—an old saying, and
+almost an all-inclusive saying. The gardener can obtain a plant from the seed,
+or he can improve its stock. He can bring to bloom, or let languish, the dispositions
+hidden in it, its growths and colour, its flower and fruit. On his
+eye for possibilities—and, therefore, necessities—depends its fulfilment, its
+strength, its whole Destiny. But the basic form and direction of its being, the
+stages and tempo and direction thereof, are <em>not</em> in his power. It must accomplish
+them or it decays, and the same is true of the immense plant that we call a
+“Culture” and the being-streams of human families that are bound up in its
+form-world. The great statesman is the gardener of a people.</p>
+
+<p>Every doer is born in a time and for a time, and thereby the ambit of <em>his</em>
+attainable achievement is fixed. For his grandfather, for his grandson, the
+data, and therefore the task and the object, are not the same. The circle is
+further narrowed by the limits of his personality, the properties of his people,
+the situation, and the men with whom he has to work. It is the hall-mark of
+the high politician that he is rarely caught out in a misappreciation of this
+limit, and equally rarely overlooks anything realizable within it. With this—one
+cannot too often repeat, especially to Germans—goes a sure discrimination
+between what “ought” to be and what <em>will</em> be. The basic forms of the state
+and of political life, the direction and the degree of their evolution, are given
+values unalterably dependent on the given time. They are the track of political
+success and not its goal. On the other hand the worshippers of political ideals
+create out of nothing. Their intellectual freedom is astounding, but their castles
+of the mind, built of airy concepts like wisdom and righteousness, liberty and
+equality, are in the end all the same; they are built from the top storey downwards.
+The master of fact, for his part, is content to direct imperceptibly that
+which he sees and accepts as plain reality. This does not seem very much, yet it
+is the very starting-point of freedom, in a grand sense of the word. The knack
+lies in the little things, the last careful touch of the helm, the fine sensing of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p446">[446]</span>most delicate oscillations of collective and individual souls. The art of the
+statesman consists not only in a clear idea of the main lines drawn undeviably
+before him, <em>but also</em> in the sure handling of the single occurrences and the single
+persons, encountered along those lines, which can turn an impending disaster
+into a decisive success. The secret of all victory lies in the organization of the
+non-obvious. An adept in the game can, like Talleyrand, go to Vienna as
+ambassador of the vanquished party and make himself master of the victor.
+At the Lucca meeting, Cæsar, whose position was wellnigh desperate, not only
+made Pompey’s power serviceable to his own ends, but undermined it at the
+same time, and without his opponent’s becoming aware of the fact. But the
+domain of the possible has dangerous edges, and if the finished tact of the great
+Baroque diplomatists almost always managed to keep clear, it is the very
+privilege of the ideologues to be always stumbling over it. There have been
+turns in history in which the statescraftman has let himself drift with the
+current awhile, in order not to lose the leadership. Every situation has its
+elastic limit, and in the estimation of that limit not the smallest error is permissible.
+A revolution that reaches explosion-point is always a proof of lack
+of the political pulse in the governors <em>and</em> in their opponents.</p>
+
+<p>Further, the necessary must be done <em>opportunely</em>—namely, while it is a
+present wherewith the governing power can buy confidence in itself, whereas
+if it has to be conceded as a sacrifice, it discloses a weakness and excites contempt.
+Political forms are living forms whose changes inexorably follow a
+definite direction, and to attempt to prevent this course or to divert it towards
+some ideal is to confess oneself “out of condition.” The Roman nobility
+possessed this congruence of pulse, the Spartan did not. In the period of mounting
+democracy we find again and again (as in France before 1789 and Germany
+before 1918) the arrival of a fatal moment when it is too late for the necessary
+reform to be given as a free gift; <em>then</em> that which should be refused with the
+sternest energy is given as a <em>sacrifice</em>, and so becomes the sign of dissolution. But
+those who fail to detect the first necessity in good time will all the more certainly
+fail to misunderstand the second situation. Even a journey to Canossa
+can be made too soon or too late—the timing may settle the future of whole
+peoples, whether they shall be Destiny for others, or themselves the objects of
+another’s Destiny. But the declining democracy also repeats the same error of
+trying to hold what was the ideal of yesterday. This is the danger of our
+twentieth century. On the path towards Cæsarism there is ever a Cato to be
+found.</p>
+
+<p>The influence that a statesman—even one in an exceptionally strong position—possesses
+over the <em>methods</em> of politics is very small, and it is one of the
+characteristics of the high-grade statesman that he does not deceive himself on
+this matter. His task is to work in and with the historical form that he finds
+in existence; it is only the theorist who enthusiastically searches for more
+<span class="pagenum" id="p447">[447]</span>ideal forms. But to be politically “in form” means necessarily, amongst other
+things, an unconditional <em>command of the most modern means</em>. There is no choice
+about it. The means and methods are premisses pertaining to the time and belong
+to the inner form of the time—and one who grasps at the inapposite, who
+permits his taste or his feelings to overpower the pulse in him, loses at once his
+grip of realities. The danger of an aristocracy is that of being conservative in
+its means, the danger of a democracy is the confusion of formula and form.
+The means of the present are, and will be for many years, parliamentary—elections
+and the press. He may think what he pleases about them, he may
+respect them or despise them, but he <em>must command them</em>. Bach and Mozart
+<em>commanded</em> the musical means of their times. This is the hall-mark of mastery
+in any and every field, and statecraft is no exception. Now, the publicly
+visible outer form thereof is not the essential but merely the disguise, and consequently
+it may be altered, rationalized, and brought down to constitutional
+texts—without its actualities being necessarily affected in the slightest—and
+hence the ambitions of all revolutionaries expend themselves in playing
+the game of rights, principles, and franchises on the surface of history. But the
+statesman knows that the extension of a franchise is quite unimportant in
+comparison with the technique—Athenian or Roman, Jacobin or American or
+present-day German—of <em>operating</em> the votes. How the English constitution
+reads is a matter of small import compared with the fact that it is managed by a
+small stratum of high families, so that an Edward VII is simply a minister of his
+Ministry. And as for the modern Press, the sentimentalist may beam with
+contentment when it is constitutionally “free”—but the realist merely asks
+at whose disposal it is.</p>
+
+<p>Politics, lastly, is the form in which is accomplished the history of a nation
+within a plurality of nations. The great art is to maintain one’s own nation
+inwardly “in form” for events outside; this is the natural relation of home
+and foreign politics, holding not only for Peoples and States and Estates, but
+for living units of every kind, down to the simplest animal swarms and down
+into the individual bodies. And, as between the two, <em>the first exists exclusively
+for the second and not vice versa</em>. The true democrat is accustomed to treat home
+politics as an end in itself; the rank and file of diplomats think solely of foreign
+affairs; but just because of this the individual successes of either “cut no ice.”
+No doubt, the political master exhibits his powers most obviously in the tactics
+of home reform; in his economic and social activities; in his cleverness in
+maintaining the public form of the whole, the “rights and liberties,” both in
+tune with the tastes of the period and <em>at the same time</em> effective; and in the education
+of the feelings without which it is impossible for a people to be “in
+condition”—namely, trust, respect for the leading, consciousness of power, contentment,
+and (when necessary) enthusiasm. But the value of all this depends
+upon its relation to this basic fact of higher history—that a people is not alone
+<span class="pagenum" id="p448">[448]</span>in the world, and that its future will be decided by its force-relationships towards
+other peoples and powers and not by its mere internal ordering. And, since the
+ordinary man is not so long-sighted, it is the ruling minority that must possess
+this quality on behalf of the rest, and not unless there is such a minority does the
+statesman find the instrument wherewith he can carry his purposes into effect.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_799" href="#Footnote_799" class="fnanchor">[799]</a></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_11">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>In the early politics of all Cultures the governing powers are pre-established
+and unquestioned. The whole being is strictly in patriarchal and symbolic
+form. The connexions with the mother soil are so strong, the feudal tie, and
+even its successor the aristocratic state, so self-evident to the life held in their
+spell, that politics in a Homeric or Gothic age is limited to plain action
+within the cadre of the given forms. In so far as these forms change, they do
+so more or less spontaneously, and the idea that it is a <em>task</em> of politics to bring
+about the changes never definitely emerges into anyone’s mind, even if a kingdom
+be overthrown or a nobility reduced to subjection. There is only class-politics,
+Imperial- or Papal- or vassal-politics. Blood and race speak in actions
+undertaken instinctively or half-consciously—even the priest behaves, <i>qua</i>
+politician, as the man of race. The “problems” of the State are not yet awakened.
+The sovereignty, the primary orders, the entire early form-world, are
+God-given, and it is on them as premisses, not about them as objects of dispute,
+that the organic minorities fight their battles. These minorities we call <em>Factions</em>.</p>
+
+<p>It is of the essence of the Faction that it is wholly inaccessible to the idea
+that the order of things can be changed to a plan. Its object is to win for itself
+status, power, or possessions within this order—like all growing things in a
+growing world. There are groups in which relationships of houses, honour
+and loyalty, bonds of union of almost mythic inwardness, play a part, and
+from which abstract ideas are totally excluded. Such were the factions of the
+Homeric and Gothic periods, Telemachus and the suitors in Ithaca, the Blues
+and Greens under Justinian, the Guelphs and Ghibellines, the Houses of Lancaster
+and York, the Protestants,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_800" href="#Footnote_800" class="fnanchor">[800]</a> the Huguenots, and even later the motive
+forces of Fronde and First Tyrannis. Machiavelli’s book rests entirely on this
+spirit.</p>
+
+<p>The change sets in as soon as, with the great city, the Non-Estate, the
+bourgeoisie, takes over the leading rôle.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_801" href="#Footnote_801" class="fnanchor">[801]</a> Now it is the reverse, the political
+<em>form</em> becomes the object of conflict, the problem. Heretofore it was ripened,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p449">[449]</span>now it must needs be shaped. Politics becomes awake, not merely comprehended,
+but reduced to comprehensible ideas. The powers of intellect and
+money set themselves up against blood and tradition. In place of the organic
+we have the organized; <em>in place of the Estate, the Party</em>. A party is not a growth
+of race, but an aggregate of heads, and therefore as superior to the old estates
+in intellect as it is poorer in instinct. It is the mortal enemy of naturally
+matured class-ordering, the mere existence of which is in contradiction with
+its essence. Consequently, the notion of party is always bound up with the
+unreservedly negative, disruptive, and socially levelling notion of <em>equality</em>.
+Noble ideals are no longer recognized, but only vocational interests.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_802" href="#Footnote_802" class="fnanchor">[802]</a> It is
+the same with the freedom-idea, which is likewise a negative.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_803" href="#Footnote_803" class="fnanchor">[803]</a> <em>Parties are
+a purely urban phenomenon.</em> With the emancipation of the city from the country,
+everywhere (whether we happen to know it evidentially or not) Estate politics
+gives way to party politics—in Egypt at the end of the Middle Kingdom, in
+China with the Contending States, in Baghdad and Byzantium with the Abbassid
+period. In the capitals of the West the parties form in the parliamentary
+style, in the city-states of the Classical they are forum-parties, and we recognize
+parties of the Magian style in the Mavali and the monks of Theodore of Studion.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_804" href="#Footnote_804" class="fnanchor">[804]</a></p>
+
+<p>But always it is the Non-Estate, the unit of protest against the essence of
+Estate, whose leading minority—“educated” and “well-to-do”—comes
+forward as a party with a program, consisting of aims that are not felt but
+defined, and of the rejection of everything that cannot be rationally grasped.
+<em>At bottom, therefore, there is only one party</em>, that of the bourgeoisie, the liberal, and
+it is perfectly conscious of its position as such. It looks on itself as coextensive
+with “the people.” Its opponents (above all, the genuine Estates—namely,
+“squire and parson”) are enemies and traitors to “the people,” and its opinions
+are the “voice of the people”—which is inoculated by all the expedients of
+party-political nursing, oratory in the Forum, press in the West, until these
+opinions do fairly represent it.</p>
+
+<p>The prime Estates are nobility and priesthood. The prime Party is that
+of money and mind, the liberal, the megalopolitan. Herein lies the profound
+justification, in <em>all</em> Cultures, of the ideas of Aristocracy and Democracy. Aristocracy
+despises the mind of the cities, Democracy despises the boor and hates
+the countryside.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_805" href="#Footnote_805" class="fnanchor">[805]</a> It is the difference between Estate politics and party politics,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p450">[450]</span>class-consciousness and party inclination, race and intellect, growth and
+construction. Aristocracy in the completed Culture, and Democracy in the
+incipient cosmopolitan Civilization, stand opposed till both are submerged in
+Cæsarism. As surely as the nobility is <em>the</em> Estate (and the Tiers État never manages
+to get itself into real form in this fashion), so surely the nobility fails
+to feel as a party, though it may organize itself as one.</p>
+
+<p>It has in fact no choice but to do so. All modern constitutions repudiate the
+Estates and are built on the Party as self-evidently the basic form of politics.
+The nineteenth century—correspondingly, therefore, the third century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>—is
+the heyday of party politics. Its democratic character compels the formation
+counter-parties, and whereas formerly, as late even as the eighteenth century,
+the “Tiers” constituted itself in imitation of the nobility as an Estate, now there
+arises the <em>defensive</em> figure of the Conservative party, copied from the Liberal,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_806" href="#Footnote_806" class="fnanchor">[806]</a>
+dominated completely by the latter’s forms, bourgeois-ized without being
+bourgeois, and obliged to fight with rules and methods that liberalism has
+laid down. It has the choice of handling these means better than its adversary&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_807" href="#Footnote_807" class="fnanchor">[807]</a>
+or of perishing; but it is of the intimate structure of an Estate that it does not
+understand the situation and challenges the form instead of the foe, and is thus
+involved in that use of extreme methods which we see dominating the inner
+politics of whole states in the early phases of every Civilization, and delivering
+them helpless into the hands of the enemy. The compulsion that there is upon
+every party to be bourgeois, at any rate in appearance, turns to sheer caricature
+when below the bourgeoisie of education and possessions the Residue also
+organizes itself as a party. Marxism, for example, is in theory a negation of
+bourgeoisie, but as a party it is in attitude and leadership essentially middle-class.
+There is a continuous conflict between its will—which necessarily
+steps outside the bounds of party politics and therefore of constitutionalism
+(both being exclusively liberal phenomena), and can in honesty only be called
+civil war—and the appearances which it feels obliged, in justice to itself,
+to keep up. But for Marxism, again, these appearances are indispensable, at
+this particular period, if durable success is to be attained. A noble party in a
+parliament is inwardly just as spurious as a proletarian. Only the bourgeoisie
+is in its natural place there.</p>
+
+<p>In Rome, from the introduction of the Tribunes, in 471, to the recognition
+of their legislative omnipotence, in the revolution of 287,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_808" href="#Footnote_808" class="fnanchor">[808]</a> patricians and
+plebeians had fought their fight essentially as Estates, classes. But thereafter
+these opposite terms possessed hardly more than genealogical significance,
+and there developed instead parties, to which the terms liberal and conservative
+<span class="pagenum" id="p451">[451]</span>respectively may quite reasonably be applied—namely, the Populus,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_809" href="#Footnote_809" class="fnanchor">[809]</a>
+ supreme
+in the forum, and the nobility, with its fulcrum in the Senate. The latter had
+transformed itself (about 287) from a family council of the old clans into a state
+council of the administrative aristocracy. The associations of the Populus
+are with the property-graded Comitia Centuriata and the big-money group of
+the Equites, those of the nobility with the yeomanry that was influential in the
+Comitia Tributa. Think on the one hand of the Gracchi and Marius, and on
+the other of C. Flaminius, and a little penetration will disclose the complete
+change in the position of the Consuls and the Tribunes. They are no longer the
+chosen trustees of the first and third Estates, with lines of conduct determined
+by that fact, but they represent party, and on occasion change it. There were
+“liberal” consuls like the Elder Cato and “conservative” Tribunes like the
+Octavius who opposed Ti. Gracchus. Both parties put up candidates at elections,
+and used every sort of demagogic operation to get them in—and when
+money had failed to win an election, it got to work afterwards with (increasing)
+success upon the person elected.</p>
+
+<p>In England Tories and Whigs constituted themselves, from the beginning of
+the nineteenth century, as parties, both becoming in form bourgeois and both
+taking up the liberal program literally, whereby public opinion as usual was
+completely convinced and set at rest.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_810" href="#Footnote_810" class="fnanchor">[810]</a> This was a master-stroke, delivered at
+the correct moment, and prevented the formation of a party hostile to the
+Estate-principle such as arose in France in 1789. The members of the lower
+House, hitherto emissaries of the ruling stratum, became popular representatives,
+but still continued to depend financially upon it. The leading remained
+in the same hands, and the opposition of the parties, which from 1830 assumed
+the titles of Liberal and Conservative almost as a matter of course, was always
+one of pluses and minuses, never of blank alternatives. In these same years
+the literary freedom-movement of “young Germany” changed into a party-movement,
+and in America under Andrew Jackson the National-Whig and
+Democratic parties organized themselves as opposites, and open recognition
+was given to the principle that elections were a business, and state offices from
+top to bottom the “spoils of the victors.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_811" href="#Footnote_811" class="fnanchor">[811]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p452">[452]</span></p>
+
+<p>But the form of the governing minority <em>develops steadily from that of the Estate,
+through that of the Party, towards that of the Individual’s following</em>. The outward
+sign of the end of Democracy and its transition into Cæsarism is not, for
+example, the disappearance of the party of the Tiers État, the Liberal, but the
+disappearance of party itself as a form. The sentiments, the popular aim, the
+abstract ideals that characterize all genuine party politics, dissolve and are
+supplanted by <em>private</em> politics, the unchecked will-to-power of the race-strong
+few. An Estate has instincts, a party has a program, but a following has a
+master. That was the course of events from Patricians and Plebeians, through
+Optimates and Populares, to Pompeians and Cæsarians. The period of real
+party government covers scarcely two centuries, and in our own case is, since
+the World War, well on the decline. That the entire mass of the electorate,
+actuated by a common impulse, should send up men who are capable of managing
+their affairs—which is the naïve assumption in all constitutions—is a
+possibility only in the first rush, and presupposes that not even the rudiments
+of organization by definite groups exists. So it was in France in 1789 and in
+1848. An assembly has only to <em>be</em>, and tactical units will form at once within
+it, whose cohesion depends upon the will to <em>maintain</em> the dominant position
+once won, and which, so far from regarding themselves as the mouthpieces of
+their constituents, set about making all the expedients of agitation amenable
+to their influence and usable for their purposes. A tendency that has organized
+itself in the people, has already <i lang="la">ipso facto</i> become the <em>tool</em> of the organization,
+and continues steadily along the same path until the organization also becomes
+in turn the tool of the leader. The will-to-power is stronger than any theory.
+In the beginning the leading and the apparatus come into existence for the sake
+of the program. Then they are held on to defensively by their incumbents for
+the sake of power and booty—as is already universally the case to-day, for
+thousands in every country live on the party and the offices and functions that
+it distributes. Lastly the program vanishes from memory, and the organization
+works for its own sake alone.</p>
+
+<p>With the elder Scipio or Quinctius Flamininus comradeship on campaign is
+still the implication when we speak of their “friends.” But the younger Scipio
+went further and his “Cohors Amicorum” was no doubt the first example of
+an organized following whose activity extended to the law-courts and the
+elections.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_812" href="#Footnote_812" class="fnanchor">[812]</a> In the same way the old purely <em>patriarchal and aristocratic relation of
+loyalty</em> between patron and client evolved into a community of interest based on
+very material foundations, and even before Cæsar there were written compacts
+between candidates and electors with specific provisions as to payment and
+performances. On the other side, just as in present-day America,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_813" href="#Footnote_813" class="fnanchor">[813]</a> clubs and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p453">[453]</span>election committees were formed, which so controlled or frightened the mass
+of the electors of their wards as to be able to do election business with the
+great leaders, the pre-Cæsars, as one power with another. Far from this being
+the shipwreck of democracy, it is its very meaning and necessary issue, and the
+lamentations of unworldly idealists over this destruction of their hopes only
+show their blind ignorance of the inexorable duality of truths and facts and of
+the intimate linkage of intellect and money.</p>
+
+<p>Politico-social theory is only one of the bases of party politics, but it is a
+necessary one. The proud series that runs from Rousseau to Marx has its antitype
+in the line of the Classical Sophists up to Plato and Zeno. In the case of
+China the characteristics of the corresponding doctrines have still to be extracted
+from Confucian and Taoist literature; it suffices to name the Socialist
+Moh-ti. In the Byzantine and Arabian literature of the Abbassid period—in
+which radicalism, like everything else, is orthodox-religious in constitution—they
+hold a large place, and they were driving forces in all the crises of the
+ninth century. That they existed in Egypt and in India also is proved by the
+spirit of events in the Hyksos time and in Buddha’s. Literary form is not
+essential to them—they are just as effectively disseminated by word of
+mouth, by sermon and propaganda in sects and associations, which indeed is
+the standard method at the close of the Puritan movements (Islam and Anglo-American
+Christianity amongst them).</p>
+
+<p>Whether these doctrines are “true” or “false” is—we must reiterate and
+emphasize—a question without meaning for political history. The refutation
+of, say, Marxism belongs to the realm of academic dissertation and public
+debates, in which everyone is always right and his opponent always wrong.
+But whether they are <em>effective</em>—from when, and for how long, the belief that
+actuality can be ameliorated by a system of concepts is a real force that politics
+must reckon with—that does matter. We of to-day find ourselves in a period
+of boundless confidence in the omnipotence of reason. Great general ideas of
+freedom, justice, humanity, progress are sacrosanct. The great theories are
+gospels. Their power to convince does not rest upon logical premisses, for the
+mass of a party possesses neither the critical energy nor the detachment seriously
+to test them, but upon the sacramental hypostasis in their keywords. At the
+same time, the spell is limited to the populations of the great cities and the
+period of Rationalism as the “educated man’s religion.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_814" href="#Footnote_814" class="fnanchor">[814]</a> On a peasantry it
+has no hold, and even on the city masses its effect lasts only for a certain time.
+But <em>for</em> that time it has all the irresistibleness of a new revelation. They are
+converted to it, hang fervently upon the words and the preachers thereof, go to
+<span class="pagenum" id="p454">[454]</span>martyrdom on barricades and battle-field and gallows; their gaze is set upon a
+political and social other-world, and dry sober criticism seems base, impious,
+worthy of death.</p>
+
+<p>But for this very reason documents like the <cite lang="fr">Contrat Social</cite> and the <cite>Communist
+Manifesto</cite> are engines of highest power in the hands of forceful men who have
+come to the top in party life and know how to form and to use the convictions
+of the dominated masses.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_815" href="#Footnote_815" class="fnanchor">[815]</a></p>
+
+<p>The power that these abstract ideals possess, however, scarcely extends in
+time beyond the two centuries that belong to party politics, and their end comes
+not from refutation, but from boredom—which has killed Rousseau long since
+and will shortly kill Marx. Men finally give up, not this or that theory, but
+the belief in theory of any kind and with it the sentimental optimism of an
+eighteenth century that imagined that unsatisfactory actualities could be
+improved by the application of concepts. When Plato, Aristotle, and their
+contemporaries defined and blended the various kinds of Classical constitution
+so as to obtain a wise and beautiful resultant, all the world listened, and
+Plato himself tried to transform Syracuse in accordance with an ideological
+recipe—and sent the city downhill to its ruin.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_816" href="#Footnote_816" class="fnanchor">[816]</a> It appears to me equally certain
+that it was philosophical experimentation of this kind that put the Chinese
+southern states out of condition and delivered them up to the imperialism of
+Tsin.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_817" href="#Footnote_817" class="fnanchor">[817]</a> The Jacobin fanatics of liberty and equality delivered France, from the
+Directory onward, into the hands of Army and Bourse for ever, and every
+Socialistic outbreak only blazes new paths for Capitalism. But when Cicero
+wrote his <cite lang="la">De re publica</cite> for Pompey, and Sallust his two comminations for Cæsar,
+nobody any longer paid attention. In Tiberius Gracchus we may discover
+perhaps an influence derived from the Stoic enthusiast Blossius, who later
+committed suicide after having similarly brought Aristonicus of Pergamum to
+ruin;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_818" href="#Footnote_818" class="fnanchor">[818]</a> but in the first century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> theories had become a threadbare school-exercise,
+and thenceforward power and power alone mattered.</p>
+
+<p>For us, too—let there be no mistake about it—the age of theory is drawing
+to its end. The great systems of Liberalism and Socialism all arose between
+about 1750 and 1850. That of Marx is already half a century old, and it has
+had no successor. Inwardly it means, with its materialist view of history, that
+Nationalism has reached its extreme logical conclusion; it is therefore an
+end-term. But, as belief in Rousseau’s Rights of Man lost its force from (say)
+<span class="pagenum" id="p455">[455]</span>1848, so belief in Marx lost its force from the World War. When one contrasts
+the devotion unto death that Rousseau’s ideas found in the French Revolution
+with the attitude of the Socialists of 1918, who had to keep up before and in
+their adherents a conviction that they themselves no longer possessed—for
+the sake, not of the idea, but of the power that depended on it—one discerns
+also the stretches of the road ahead, where what still remains of program is
+doomed to fall by the way as being henceforth a mere handicap in the struggle
+for power. Belief in program was the mark and the <em>glory</em> of our grandfathers—in
+our grandsons it will be a proof of provincialism. In its place is developing
+even now the seed of a new resigned piety, sprung from tortured conscience
+and spiritual hunger, whose task will be to found a new Hither-side that looks
+for secrets instead of steel-bright concepts and in the end will find them in the
+deeps of the “Second Religiousness.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_819" href="#Footnote_819" class="fnanchor">[819]</a></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_11">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>This is the one side, the verbal side, of the great fact Democracy. It remains
+now to consider the other, the decisive side, that of race.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_820" href="#Footnote_820" class="fnanchor">[820]</a> Democracy would
+have remained in minds and on paper had there not been amongst its champions
+true master-natures for whom—unconscious though they may be, and often have
+been, of the fact—the people is nothing but an object and the ideal nothing
+but a means. All, even the most irresponsible, methods of demagogy—which
+inwardly is exactly the same as the diplomacy of the <i lang="fr">ancien régime</i>, but designed
+for application to masses instead of to princes and ambassadors, to wild opinions
+and sentiments and will-outbursts instead of to choice spirits, an orchestra of
+brass instead of old chamber-music—have been worked out by honest but
+practical democrats, and it was from them that the parties of tradition learnt
+them.</p>
+
+<p>It is characteristic, however, of the course of democracy, that the authors
+of popular constitutions have never had any idea of the actual workings of their
+schemes—neither the authors of the “Servian” Constitution in Rome nor the
+National Assembly in Paris. Since these forms of theirs are not, like feudalism,
+the result of growth, but of thought (and based, moreover, not on deep knowledge
+of men and things, but on abstract ideas of right and justice), a gulf opens
+between the intellectual side of the laws and—the practical habits that silently
+form under the pressure of them, and either adapt them to, or fend them off
+from, the rhythm of actual life. Only experience has ever taught the lesson,
+and only at the end of the whole development has it been assimilated, that the
+rights of the people and the influence of the people are two different things.
+The more nearly universal a franchise is, the <em>less</em> becomes the power of the electorate.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p456">[456]</span></p>
+
+<p>In the beginning of a democracy the field belongs to intellect alone. History
+has nothing nobler and purer to show than the night session of the 4th August
+1789 and the Tennis-Court Oath, or the assembly in the Frankfurt Paulskirche
+on the 18th May 1848—when men, with power in their very hands, debated
+general truths so long that the forces of actuality were able to rally and thrust
+the dreamers aside. But, meantime, that other democratic quantity lost no
+time in making its appearance and reminding men of the fact that one can
+make use of constitutional rights only when one has money.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_821" href="#Footnote_821" class="fnanchor">[821]</a> That a franchise
+should work even approximately as the idealist supposes it to work presumes
+the absence of any organized leadership operating on the electors (in <em>its</em> interest)
+to the extent that its available money permits. As soon as such leadership
+does appear, the vote ceases to possess anything more than the significance of
+a censure applied by the multitude to the individual organizations, over whose
+structure it possesses in the end not the slightest positive influence. So also
+with the ideal thesis of Western constitutions, the fundamental right of the
+mass to choose its own representatives—it remains pure theory, for in actuality
+every developed organization recruits itself.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_822" href="#Footnote_822" class="fnanchor">[822]</a> Finally the feeling emerges
+that the universal franchise contains no effective rights at all, not even that
+of choosing between parties. For the powerful figures that have grown up on
+their soil control, through money, all the intellectual machinery of speech and
+script, and are able, on the one hand, to guide the individual’s opinions as they
+please <em>above</em> the parties, and, on the other, through their patronage, influence,
+and legislation, to create a firm body of whole-hearted supporters (the “Caucus”)
+which excludes the rest and induces in it a vote-apathy which at the last
+it cannot shake off even for the great crises.</p>
+
+<p>In appearance, there are vast differences between the Western, parliamentary,
+democracy and the democracies of the Egyptian, Chinese, and Arabian Civilizations,
+to which the idea of a universal popular franchise is wholly alien.
+But in reality, for us in this age of ours, the mass is “in form” as an <em>electorate</em>
+in exactly the same sense as it used to be “in form” as a collectivity of obedience—namely,
+as an <em>object for a subject</em>—as it was “in form” in Baghdad as
+the sects, and in Byzantium in its monks, and elsewhere again as a dominant
+army or a secret society or a “state within a state.” Freedom is, as always,
+purely <em>negative</em>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_823" href="#Footnote_823" class="fnanchor">[823]</a> It consists in the repudiation of tradition, dynasty, Caliphate;
+but the executive power passes, at once and undiminished, from these institutions
+to new forces—party leaders, dictators, presidents, prophets, and their
+<span class="pagenum" id="p457">[457]</span>adherents—towards which the multitude continues to be unconditionally the
+passive object.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_824" href="#Footnote_824" class="fnanchor">[824]</a> “Popular self-determination” is a courteous figure of speech—in
+reality, under a universal-inorganic franchise, election has soon ceased to
+possess its original meaning. The more radical the political elimination of the
+matured old order of Estates and callings, the more formless and feckless the
+electoral mass, the more completely is it delivered into the hands of the new
+powers, the party leaders, who dictate their will to the people through all
+the machinery of intellectual compulsion; fence with each other for primacy
+by methods which in the end the multitude can neither perceive nor comprehend;
+and treat public opinion merely as a weapon to be forged and used for
+blows at each other. But this very process, viewed from another angle, is seen
+as an irresistible tendency driving every democracy further and further on the
+road to suicide.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_825" href="#Footnote_825" class="fnanchor">[825]</a></p>
+
+<p>The fundamental rights of a Classical people (demos, populus) extended to
+the holding of the highest state and judicial offices.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_826" href="#Footnote_826" class="fnanchor">[826]</a> For the exercise of these
+the people was “in form” in its Forum, where the Euclidean point-mass was
+corporeally assembled, and there it was the object of an influencing process in
+the Classical style; namely, by bodily, near, and sensuous means—by a
+rhetoric that worked upon every ear <em>and eye</em>; by devices many of which to us
+would be repellent and almost intolerable, such as rehearsed sob-effects and the
+rending of garments;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_827" href="#Footnote_827" class="fnanchor">[827]</a> by shameless flattery of the audience, fantastic lies
+about opponents; by the employment of brilliant phrases and resounding
+cadenzas (of which there came to be a perfect repertory for this place and purpose)
+by games and presents; by threats and blows; but, above all, by money.
+We have its beginnings in the Athens of 400,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_828" href="#Footnote_828" class="fnanchor">[828]</a> and its appalling culmination
+<span class="pagenum" id="p458">[458]</span>in the Rome of Cæsar and Cicero. As everywhere, the elections, from being
+nominations of class-representatives, have become the battle-ground of party
+candidates, an arena ready for the intervention of money, and, from Zama
+onwards, of ever bigger and bigger money. “The greater became the wealth
+which was capable of concentration in the hands of individuals, the more
+the fight for political power developed into a question of money.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_829" href="#Footnote_829" class="fnanchor">[829]</a> It is
+unnecessary to say more. And yet, in a deeper sense, it would be wrong to
+speak of corruption. It is not a matter of degeneracy, it is the democratic
+ethos itself that is foredoomed of necessity to take such forms when it reaches
+maturity. In the reforms of the Censor Appius Claudius (310), who was beyond
+doubt a true Hellenist and constitutional ideologue of the type of Madame
+Roland’s circle, there was certainly no question but that of the franchise as
+such, and not at all of the arts of gerrymandering—but the effect was simply to
+prepare the way for those arts. Not in the scheme as such, but from the first
+applications of it, race-quality emerged, and very rapidly it forced its way to
+complete dominance. And, after all, in a dictatorship of money it is hardly
+fair to describe the employment of money as a sign of decadence.</p>
+
+<p>The career of office in Rome from the time when its course took form as a
+series of elections, required so large a capital that every politician was the
+debtor of his entire entourage. Especially was this so in the case of the ædileship,
+in which the incumbent had to outbid his predecessors in the magnificance {sic}
+of his public games, in order later to have the votes of the spectators. (Sulla
+failed in his first attempt on the prætorship precisely because he had not previously
+been ædile.) Then again, to flatter the crowd of loafers it was necessary
+to show oneself in the Forum daily with a brilliant following. A law forbade
+the maintenance of paid retainers, but the acquisition of persons in high society
+by lending them money, recommending them for official and commercial employments,
+and covering their litigation expenses, in return for their company
+in the Forum and their attendance at the daily levee, was more expensive still.
+Pompey was <i lang="la">patronus</i> to half the world. From the peasant of Picenum to the
+kings of the Orient, he represented and protected them all, and this was his
+political capital which he could stake against the non-interest-bearing loans of
+Crassus and the “gilding”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_830" href="#Footnote_830" class="fnanchor">[830]</a> of every ambitious fellow by the conqueror of
+Gaul. Dinners were offered to the electors of whole wards,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_831" href="#Footnote_831" class="fnanchor">[831]</a> or free seats for
+the gladiatorial shows, or even (as in the case of Milo) actual cash, delivered
+at home—out of respect, Cicero says, for traditional morals. Election-capital
+rose to American dimensions, sometimes hundreds of millions of sesterces;
+vast as was the stock of cash available in Rome, the elections of 54 locked
+up so much of it that the rate of interest rose from four to eight per cent. Cæsar
+<span class="pagenum" id="p459">[459]</span>paid out so much as ædile that Crassus had to underwrite him for twenty millions
+before his creditors would allow him to depart to his province, and in
+his candidature for the office of Pontifex Maximus he so overstrained his credit
+that failure would have ruined him, and his opponent Catulus could seriously
+offer to buy him off. But the conquest and exploitation of Gaul—this also an
+undertaking motived by finance—made him the richest man in the world.
+In truth, Pharsalus was won there in advance.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_832" href="#Footnote_832" class="fnanchor">[832]</a> For it was for <em>power</em> that
+Cæsar amassed these milliards, like Cecil Rhodes, and not because he delighted
+in wealth like Verres or even like Crassus, who was first and foremost a financier
+and only secondarily a politician. Cæsar grasped the fact that on the soil of
+a democracy constitutional rights signify nothing without money and everything
+with it. When Pompey was still dreaming that he could evoke legions
+by stamping on the ground, Cæsar had long since condensed the dream to
+reality with his money. It must be clearly understood, however, that he
+did not introduce these methods but found them in existence, that he made
+himself master of them but never identified himself with them. For practically
+a century parties grouped on principles had been dissolving into personal followings
+grouped upon men who pursued private political aims and were expert in
+handling the political weapons of their time.</p>
+
+<p>Amongst these means, besides money, was influence upon the courts. Since
+Classical assemblies voted, but did not debate, the trial before the rostra was
+<em>a form of party battle</em> and the school of schools for political persuasiveness. The
+young politician began his career by indicting and if possible annihilating
+some great personage,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_833" href="#Footnote_833" class="fnanchor">[833]</a> as the nineteen-year-old Crassus annihilated the renowned
+Papirius Carbo, the friend of the Gracchi, who had later gone over to
+the Optimates. This was why Cato was tried no less than forty-four times,
+though acquitted in every case. The legal side of the question was entirely
+subordinate in these affairs.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_834" href="#Footnote_834" class="fnanchor">[834]</a> The decisive factors were the party affinities
+<span class="pagenum" id="p460">[460]</span>of the judges, the number of patrons, and the size of the crowd of backers—the
+number of the witnesses was really only paraded in order to bring the
+financial and political power of the plaintiff into the limelight. The intention
+in all Cicero’s oratory against Verres was to convince the judges, under the veil
+of fine ethical passion, that the condemnation of the accused was <em>in the interests
+of their order</em>. Given the general outlook of the Classical, the courts self-evidently
+existed to serve private and party interests. Democratic complainants
+in Athens were accustomed at the end of their speeches to remind the jurymen
+from the people that they would forfeit their fees by acquitting the wealthy
+defendant.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_835" href="#Footnote_835" class="fnanchor">[835]</a> The tremendous power of the Roman Senate consisted mainly
+in their occupancy of every seat of the judicial (jurors’) bench, which placed
+the destinies of every citizen at their mercy; hence the far-reachingness of the
+Gracchan law of 122 which handed over the judicature to the Equites and delivered
+over the nobility—that is, the official class—to the financial world.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_836" href="#Footnote_836" class="fnanchor">[836]</a>
+In 83 Sulla, simultaneously with his proscription of the financial magnates,
+restored the judicature to the Senate, <em>as political weapon</em>, of course, and the
+final duel of the potentates finds one more expression in the ceaseless changing
+of the judges selected.</p>
+
+<p>Now, whereas the Classical, and supremely the Forum of Rome, drew the
+mass of the people together as a visible body in order to compel it to make
+that use of its rights which was desired of it, the “contemporary” English-American
+politics have created <em>through the press</em> a force-field of world-wide
+intellectual and financial tensions in which every individual unconsciously takes
+up the place allotted to him, so that he must think, will, and act as a ruling
+personality somewhere or other in the distance thinks fit. This is dynamics
+against statics, Faustian against Apollinian world-feeling, the passion of the
+third dimension against the pure sensible present. Man does not speak to man;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_837" href="#Footnote_837" class="fnanchor">[837]</a>
+the press and its associate, the electrical news-service, keep the waking-consciousness
+of whole peoples and continents under a deafening drum-fire of
+theses, catchwords, standpoints, scenes, feelings, day by day and year by year,
+so that every Ego becomes a mere function of a monstrous intellectual Something.
+Money does not pass, politically, from one hand to the other. It does
+not turn itself into cards and wine. It is turned into <em>force</em>, and its quantity
+determines the intensity of its working influence.</p>
+
+<p>Gunpowder and printing belong together—both discovered at the culmination
+of the Gothic, both arising out of Germanic technical thought—as <em>the two</em>
+grand means of Faustian distance-tactics. The Reformation in the beginning of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p461">[461]</span>the Late period witnessed the first flysheets and the first field-guns, the French
+Revolution in the beginning of the Civilization witnessed the first tempest of
+pamphlets of the autumn of 1788 and the first mass-fire of artillery at Valmy.
+But with this the printed word, produced in vast quantity and distributed over
+enormous areas, became an uncanny weapon in the hands of him who knew how
+to use it. In France it was still in 1788 a matter of expressing private convictions,
+but England was already past that, and deliberately seeking to produce
+impressions on the reader. The war of articles, flysheets, spurious memoirs,
+that was waged from London on French soil against Napoleon is the first great
+example. The scattered sheets of the Age of Enlightenment transformed themselves
+into “the Press”—a term of most significant anonymity. Now the
+<em>press campaign</em> appears as the prolongation—or the preparation—of war by
+other means, and in the course of the nineteenth century the strategy of outpost
+fights, feints, surprises, assaults, is developed to such a degree that a war may
+be lost ere the first shot is fired—because the Press has won it meantime.</p>
+
+<p>To-day we live so cowed under the bombardment of this intellectual artillery
+that hardly anyone can attain to the inward detachment that is required for a
+clear view of the monstrous drama. The will-to-power operating under a pure
+democratic disguise has finished off its masterpiece so well that the object’s
+sense of freedom is actually flattered by the most thorough-going enslavement
+that has ever existed. The liberal bourgeois mind is <em>proud</em> of the abolition of
+censorship, the last restraint, while the dictator of the press—Northcliffe!—keeps
+the slave-gang of his readers under the whip of his leading articles,
+telegrams, and pictures. <em>Democracy has by its newspaper completely expelled the book
+from the mental life of the people.</em> The book-world, with its profusion of standpoints
+that compelled thought to select and criticize, is now a real possession
+only for a few. The people reads the <em>one</em> paper, “its” paper, which forces
+itself through the front doors by millions daily, spellbinds the intellect from
+morning to night, drives the book into oblivion by its more engaging layout,
+and if one or another specimen of a book does emerge into visibility, forestalls
+and eliminates its possible effects by “reviewing” it.</p>
+
+<p>What is truth? For the multitude, that which it continually reads and hears.
+A forlorn little drop may settle somewhere and collect grounds on which to
+determine “the truth”—but what it obtains is just <em>its</em> truth. The other, the
+public truth of the moment, which alone matters for effects and successes in
+the fact-world, is to-day a product of the Press. What the Press wills, is true.
+Its commanders evoke, transform, interchange truths. Three weeks of press
+work, and the truth is acknowledged by everybody.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_838" href="#Footnote_838" class="fnanchor">[838]</a> Its bases are irrefutable for
+<span class="pagenum" id="p462">[462]</span>just so long as money is available to maintain them intact. The Classical
+rhetoric, too, was designed for effect and not content—as Shakespeare brilliantly
+demonstrates in Antony’s funeral oration—but it did limit itself to
+the bodily audience and the moment. What the dynamism of our Press wants is
+<em>permanent</em> effectiveness. It must keep men’s minds continuously under its influence.
+Its arguments are overthrown as soon as the advantage of financial
+power passes over to the counter-arguments and brings these still oftener to
+men’s eyes and ears. At that moment the needle of public opinion swings
+round to the stronger pole. Everybody convinces himself at once of the new
+truth, and regards himself awakened out of error.</p>
+
+<p>With the political press is bound up the need of universal school-education,
+which in the Classical world was completely lacking. In this demand there is an
+element—quite unconscious—of desiring to shepherd the masses, as the
+object of party politics, into the newspaper’s power-area. The idealist of the
+early democracy regarded popular education, without <i lang="fr">arrière pensée</i>, as enlightenment
+pure and simple, and even to-day one finds here and there weak heads
+that become enthusiastic on the Freedom of the Press—but it is precisely this
+that smooths the path for the coming Cæsars of the world-press. Those who
+have learnt to read succumb to their power, and the visionary self-determination
+of Late democracy issues in a thorough-going determination of the people
+by the powers whom the printed word obeys.</p>
+
+<p>In the contests of to-day tactics consists in depriving the opponent of this
+weapon. In the unsophisticated infancy of its power the newspaper suffered
+from official censorship which the champions of tradition wielded in self-defence,
+and the bourgeoisie cried out that the freedom of the spirit was in
+danger. Now the multitude placidly goes its way; it has definitively won for
+itself this freedom. But in the background, unseen, the new forces are fighting
+one another by buying the press. Without the reader’s observing it, the paper,
+<em>and himself with it</em>, changes masters.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_839" href="#Footnote_839" class="fnanchor">[839]</a> Here also money triumphs and forces the
+free spirits into its service. No tamer has his animals more under his power.
+Unleash the people as reader-mass and it will storm through the streets and hurl
+itself upon the target indicated, terrifying and breaking windows; a hint to the
+press-staff and it will become quiet and go home. The Press to-day is an army
+with carefully organized arms and branches, with journalists as officers, and
+readers as soldiers. But here, as in every army, the soldier obeys blindly, and
+war-aims and operation-plans change without his knowledge. The reader
+<span class="pagenum" id="p463">[463]</span>neither knows, nor is allowed to know, the purposes for which he is used, nor
+even the rôle that he is to play. A more appalling caricature of freedom of
+thought cannot be imagined. Formerly a man did not dare to think freely.
+Now he dares, but cannot; his will to think is only a willingness to think to
+order, and this is what he feels as <em>his</em> liberty.</p>
+
+<p>And the other side of this belated freedom—it is permitted to everyone to
+say what he pleases, <em>but</em> the Press is free to take notice of what he says or not.
+It can condemn any “truth” to death simply by not undertaking its communication
+to the world—a terrible censorship of silence, which is all the more
+potent in that the masses of newspaper readers are absolutely unaware that it
+exists.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_840" href="#Footnote_840" class="fnanchor">[840]</a> Here, as ever in the birth-pangs of Cæsarism, emerges a trait of the
+buried springtime.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_841" href="#Footnote_841" class="fnanchor">[841]</a> The arc of happening is about to close on itself. Just as in
+the concrete and steel buildings the expression-will of early Gothic once more
+bursts forth, but cold, controlled, and Civilized, so the iron will of the Gothic
+Church to power over souls reappears as—the “freedom of democracy.” The
+age of the “book” is flanked on either hand by that of the sermon and that of
+the newspaper. Books are a personal expression, sermon and newspaper obey
+an impersonal <em>purpose</em>. The years of Scholasticism afford the only example in
+world-history of an intellectual discipline that was applied universally and
+permitted no writing, no speech, no thought to come forth that contradicted
+the <em>willed</em> unity. This is spiritual dynamics. Classical, Indian, or Chinese
+mankind would have been horrified at this spectacle. But the same things
+recur, and as a <em>necessary</em> result of the European-American liberalism—“the
+despotism of freedom against tyranny,” as Robespierre put it. In lieu of stake
+and faggots there is the great silence. The dictature of party leaders supports
+itself upon that of the Press. The competitors strive by means of money to detach
+readers—nay, peoples—<i lang="fr">en masse</i> from the hostile allegiance and to bring
+them under their own mind-training. And all that they learn in this mind-training,
+is what it is considered that they should know—a higher will puts
+together the picture of their world for them. There is no need now, as there
+was for Baroque princes, to impose military-service liability on the subject—one
+whips their souls with articles, telegrams, and pictures (Northcliffe!)
+until they <em>clamour</em> for weapons and force their leaders into a conflict to which
+they <em>willed</em> to be forced.</p>
+
+<p>This is the end of Democracy. If in the world of truths it is <em>proof</em> that decides
+all, in that of facts it is <em>success</em>. Success means that one being triumphs over
+the others. Life has won through, and the dreams of the world-improvers have
+turned out to be but the tools of <em>master-natures</em>. In the Late Democracy, <em>race</em>
+bursts forth and either makes ideals its slaves or throws them scornfully into
+the pit. It was so, too, in Egyptian Thebes, in Rome, in China—but in no
+<span class="pagenum" id="p464">[464]</span>other Civilization has the will-to-power manifested itself in so inexorable
+a form as in this of ours. The thought, and consequently the action, of the
+mass are kept under iron pressure—for which reason, and for which reason
+only, men are permitted to be readers and voters—that is, in a dual slavery—while
+the parties become the obedient retinues of a few, and the shadow of
+coming Cæsarism already touches them. As the English kingship became in
+the nineteenth century, so parliaments will become in the twentieth, a solemn
+and empty pageantry. As then sceptre and crown, so now peoples’ rights are
+paraded for the multitude, and all the more punctiliously the less they really
+signify—it was for this reason that the <em>cautious</em> Augustus never let pass an
+opportunity of emphasizing old and venerated customs of Roman freedom.
+But the power is migrating even to-day, and correspondingly elections are
+degenerating for us into the farce that they were in Rome. Money organizes the
+process in the interests of those who possess it,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_842" href="#Footnote_842" class="fnanchor">[842]</a> and election affairs become a
+preconcerted game that is staged as popular self-determination. If election was
+originally <em>revolution in legitimate forms</em>,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_843" href="#Footnote_843" class="fnanchor">[843]</a> it has exhausted those forms, and what
+takes place is that mankind “elects” its Destiny again by the primitive methods
+of bloody violence when the politics of money become intolerable.</p>
+
+<p>Through money, democracy becomes its own destroyer, after money has
+destroyed intellect. But, just <em>because</em> the illusion that actuality can allow itself
+to be improved by the ideas of any Zeno or Marx has fled away; because men
+have learned that in the realm of reality one power-will <em>can be overthrown only by
+another</em> (for that is the great human experience of Contending States periods);
+there wakes at last a deep yearning for all old and worthy tradition that still
+lingers alive. Men are tired to disgust of money-economy. They hope for
+salvation from somewhere or other, for some real thing of honour and chivalry,
+of inward nobility, of unselfishness and duty. And now dawns the time when
+the form-filled powers of the blood, which the rationalism of the Megalopolis
+has suppressed, reawaken in the depths. Everything in the order of dynastic
+tradition and old nobility that has saved itself up for the future, everything that
+there is of high money-disdaining ethic, everything that is intrinsically sound
+enough to be, in Frederick the Great’s words, the <em>servant</em>—the hard-working,
+self-sacrificing, caring <em>servant</em>—of the State, all that I have described elsewhere
+in one word as Socialism in contrast to Capitalism&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_844" href="#Footnote_844" class="fnanchor">[844]</a>—all this becomes suddenly
+the focus of immense life-forces. Cæsarism <em>grows</em> on the soil of Democracy, but
+its roots thread deeply into the underground of blood tradition. The Classical
+<span class="pagenum" id="p465">[465]</span>Cæsar derived his power from the Tribunate, and his dignity and therewith his
+permanency from his being the Princeps. Here too the soul of old Gothic
+wakens anew. The spirit of the knightly orders overpowers plunderous Vikingism.
+The mighty ones of the future may possess the earth as their private
+property—for the great political form of the Culture is irremediably in ruin—but
+it matters not, for, formless and limitless as their power may be, it has a
+task. And this task is the unwearying care for this world as it is, which is the
+very opposite of the interestedness of the money-power age, and demands
+high honour and conscientiousness. But for this very reason there now
+sets in the final battle between Democracy and Cæsarism, between the leading
+forces of dictatorial money-economics and the <em>purely political</em> will-to-order of
+the Cæsars. And in order to understand this <em>final battle between Economics and
+Politics</em>, in which the latter <em>reconquers</em> its realm, we must now turn our glance
+upon the physiognomy of economic history.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p466"></a><a id="p467"></a><a id="p468"></a><a id="p469"></a>[469]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ <br>
+ <span class="subtitle">THE FORM-WORLD OF ECONOMIC LIFE
+ <br>
+ (A)
+ <br>
+ MONEY</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>The standpoint from which to comprehend the economic history of great
+Cultures is not to be looked for on economic ground. Economic thought and
+action are a side of life that acquires a false appearance when regarded as a
+self-contained <em>kind</em> of life. Least of all is the secure standpoint to be had on the
+basis of the present-day world-economics, which for the last 150 years has been
+mounting fantastically, perilously, and in the end almost desperately—an
+economics, moreover, that is exclusively Western-dynamic, anything but common-human.</p>
+
+<p>That which we call national economy to-day is built up on premisses that
+are openly and specifically English. The industry of machines, which is unknown
+to all other Cultures, stands in the centre as though it were a matter of
+course and, without men being conscious of the fact, completely dominates the
+formulation of ideas and the deduction of so-called laws. Credit-money, in the
+special form imparted to it by the relations of world-trade and export-industry
+in a peasantless England, serves as the foundation whereupon to define words
+like capital, value, price, property—and the definitions are then transferred
+without more ado to other Culture-stages and life-cycles. The insular position
+of England has determined a conception of politics, and of its relation to economics,
+that rules in all economic theories. The creators of this economic
+<em>picture</em> were David Hume&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_845" href="#Footnote_845" class="fnanchor">[845]</a>
+ and Adam Smith.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_846" href="#Footnote_846" class="fnanchor">[846]</a> Everything that has since been
+written about them or against them always presupposes the critical structure
+and methods of their systems. This is as true of Carey and List as it is of Fourier
+and Lassalle. As for Smith’s greatest adversary, Marx, it matters little how
+loudly one protests against English capitalism when one is thoroughly imbued
+with its images; the protest is itself a recognition, and its only aim is, through
+a new kind of accounting, to confer upon objects the advantage of being subjects.</p>
+
+<p>From Adam Smith to Marx it is nothing but self-analysis of the economic
+thinking of a single Culture on a particular development-level. Rationalistic
+through and through, it starts from Material and its conditions, needs, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p470">[470]</span>motives, instead of from the <em>Soul</em>—of generations, Estates, and peoples—and
+its creative power. It looks upon men as constituent parts of situations, and
+knows nothing of the big personality and history-shaping will, of individuals
+or of groups, the will that sees in the facts of economics not ends but means. It
+takes economic life to be something that can be accounted for without remainder
+by visible causes and effects, something of which the structure is quite mechanical
+and completely self-contained and even, finally, something that stands in
+some sort of causal relation to religion and politics—these again being considered
+as individual self-contained domains. As this outlook is the systematic
+and not the historical, the timeless and universal validity of its concepts and
+rules is an article of faith, and its ambition is to establish the one and only correct
+method of applying “the” science of management. And accordingly,
+wherever its truths have come into contact with the facts, it has experienced a
+complete fiasco—as was the case with the prophecies of bourgeois theorists
+concerning the World War,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_847" href="#Footnote_847" class="fnanchor">[847]</a> and with those of proletarian theorists on the
+induction of the Soviet economy.</p>
+
+<p>Up to now, therefore, there has been no national economy, in the sense of a
+morphology of the economic <em>side</em> of life and more particularly of that side in the
+life of the high Cultures, with their formations—concordant as to stage,
+tempo, and duration—of economic styles. Economics has no system, but a
+physiognomy. To fathom the secret of its inner form, its <em>soul</em>, demands the
+physiognomic flair. To succeed in it it is necessary to be a “judge” of it as
+one is a “judge” of men or of horses, and requires even less “knowledge” than
+that which a horseman needs to have of zoölogy. But this faculty of “judgment”
+can be awakened, and the way to awaken it is through the sympathetic
+outlook on history which gives a shrewd idea of the race-instincts, which
+are at work in the economic as in other constituents of active existence, symbolically
+shaping the external position—the economic “stuff,” the need—in
+harmony with their own inner character. <em>All economic life is the expression of
+a soul-life.</em></p>
+
+<p>This is a new, a German, outlook upon economics, an outlook from beyond
+all Capitalism and Socialism—both of which were products of the jejune
+rationality of the eighteenth century, and aimed at nothing but a material
+analysis and subsequent synthesis of the economic surface. All that has been
+taught hitherto is no more than preparatory. Economic thought, like legal,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_848" href="#Footnote_848" class="fnanchor">[848]</a>
+stands now on the verge of its true and proper development, which (for us, as
+for the Hellenistic-Roman age) sets in only where art and philosophy have
+irrevocably passed away.</p>
+
+<p>The attempt which follows is meant only as a flying survey of the possibilities
+here available.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p471">[471]</span></p>
+
+<p>Economics and politics are sides of the <em>one</em> livingly flowing current of being,
+and not of the waking-consciousness, the intellect.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_849" href="#Footnote_849" class="fnanchor">[849]</a> In each of them is manifested
+the pulse of the cosmic flowings that are occluded in the sequent generations
+of individual existences. They may be said, not to <em>have</em> history, but
+to <em>be</em> history. Irreversible Time, the When, rules in them. They belong, both
+of them, to race and not, as religion and science belong, to language with its
+spatial-causal tensions; they regard facts, not truths. There are economic
+<em>Destinies</em> as there are political, whereas in scientific doctrines, as in religious,
+there is <em>timeless connexion of cause and effect</em>.</p>
+
+<p>Life, therefore, has a political and an economic kind of “condition” of
+fitness for history. They overlie, they support, they oppose each other, but the
+political is unconditionally the first. Life’s will is to preserve itself and to prevail,
+or, rather, to make itself stronger in order that it may prevail. But in the
+economic state of fitness the being-streams are fit as <em>self</em>-regarding, whereas in a
+political they are fit as <em>other</em>-regarding. And this holds good all along the series,
+from the simplest unicellular plant to swarms and to peoples of the highest free
+mobility in space. Nourishment and winning-through—the difference of
+dignity between the two sides of life is recognizable in their relation to death.
+There is no contrast so profound as that between <em>hunger-death and hero-death</em>.
+Economically life is in the widest sense threatened, dishonoured, and <em>debased</em>
+by hunger—with which is to be included stunting of possibilities, straitened
+circumstances, darkness, and pressure not less than starvation in the literal
+sense. Whole peoples have lost the tense force of their race through the gnawing
+wretchedness of their living. Here men die <em>of</em> something and not <em>for</em> something.
+Politics sacrifices men for an idea, they fall for an idea; but economy
+merely wastes them away. <em>War is the creator, hunger the destroyer, of all great things.</em>
+In war life is elevated by death, often to that point of irresistible force
+whose mere existence guarantees victory, but in the economic life hunger
+awakens the ugly, vulgar, and wholly unmetaphysical sort of fearfulness for
+one’s life under which the higher form-world of a Culture miserably collapses
+and the naked struggle for existence of the human beasts begins.</p>
+
+<p>The double sense of all history that is manifested in man and woman has been
+discussed in an earlier chapter.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_850" href="#Footnote_850" class="fnanchor">[850]</a> There is a private history which <em>represents</em> “life
+in space” as a procreation-series of the generations, and a public history that
+<em>defends and secures it</em> as a political “in-form”-ness—the “spindle side” and
+the “sword side” of being. They find expression in the ideas of Family and of
+State, but also in the primary form of the house&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_851" href="#Footnote_851" class="fnanchor">[851]</a> wherein the good spirits of the
+marriage-bed—the Genius and the Juno of every old Roman dwelling—were
+protected by that of the door, the Janus. To this private history of the family
+<span class="pagenum" id="p472">[472]</span>the economic now attached itself. The duration of a flourishing life is inseparable
+from its strength; its secret of begetting and conceiving is seen at its
+purest in the being of breed-strong peasant stock that is rooted, healthy and
+fruitful, in its soil. And as in the form of the body the organ of sex is bound up
+with that of the circulation,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_852" href="#Footnote_852" class="fnanchor">[852]</a> so the middle of the house in <em>another</em> sense is formed
+by the sacred hearths, the Vesta.</p>
+
+<p>For this very reason the significance of economic history is something quite
+different from that of political. In the latter the foreground is taken up by the
+great individual destinies, which fulfil themselves indeed in the binding forms
+of their epoch, but are nevertheless, each in itself, strictly personal. The
+concern of the former, and of family history, is the course of development of the
+form-<em>language</em>; everything once-occurring and personal is an unimportant private-destiny,
+and only the basic form common to the million cases matters.
+But even so economics is only a foundation, for Being that is in any way meaningful.
+What really signifies is not <em>that</em> an individual or a people is “in condition,”
+well nourished and fruitful, but <em>for what</em> he or it is so; and the higher
+man climbs historically, the more conspicuously his political and religious
+will to inward symbolism and force of expression towers above everything
+in the way of form and depth that the economic life as such possesses. It
+is only with the coming of the Civilization, when the whole form-world
+begins to ebb, that mere life-preserving begins to outline itself, nakedly and
+insistently—this is the time when the banal assertion that “hunger and love”
+are the driving forces of life ceases to be ashamed of itself; when life comes to
+mean, not a waxing in strength for the task, but a matter of “happiness of the
+greatest number,” of comfort and ease, of “<i lang="la">panem et circenses</i>”; and when, in
+the place of grand politics, we have economic politics as an end in itself.</p>
+
+<p>Since economics belongs to the race side of life, it possesses, like politics, a
+customary ethic and not a moral—yet again the distinction of nobility and
+priesthood, facts and truths. A vocation-class, like an Estate, possesses a
+<em>matter-of-course</em> feeling for (not good and evil, but) good and bad. Not to have
+this feeling is to be void of honour, law. For those engaged <em>in</em> the economic
+life, too, honour stands as central criterion, with its tact and fine flair for what
+is “the right thing”—something quite separate from the sin-idea underlying
+the religious contemplation <em>of</em> the world. There exist, not only a very definite
+vocational honour amongst merchants, craftsmen, and peasants, but equally
+definite gradations downward for the shopkeeper, the exporter, the banker,
+the contractor, and even, as we all know, for thieves and beggars, in so far as
+two or three of them feel themselves as fellow practitioners. No one has
+stated or written out these customary-ethics, but they exist, and, like class-ethics
+everywhere and always, they are binding only within the circle of membership.
+Along with the noble virtues of loyalty and courage, chivalry and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p473">[473]</span>comradeship, which are found in every vocational society, there appear clean-cut
+notions of the ethical value of industry, of success, of work, and an astonishing
+sense of distinction and apartness. This sort of thing a man <em>has</em>—and
+without knowing much about it, for custom is evidenced to consciousness
+only when it is infringed—while, on the contrary, the prohibitions of religion
+which are timeless, universally valid, but never realizable ideals, must be,
+learned before a man can know or attempt to follow them.</p>
+
+<p>Religious-ascetic fundamentals such as “selfless,” “sinless,” are without
+meaning in the economic life. For the true saint economics in itself is sinful,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_853" href="#Footnote_853" class="fnanchor">[853]</a>
+and not merely taking of interest or pleasure in riches or the envy of the poor.
+The saying concerning the “lilies of the field” is for deeply religious (and
+philosophical) natures unreservedly true. The whole weight of their being
+lies outside economics and politics and all other facts of “this world.” We see
+it in Jesus’s times and St. Bernard’s and in the Russian soul of to-day; we see it
+too in the way of life of a Diogenes and a Kant. For its sake men choose voluntary
+poverty and itinerancy and hide themselves in cells and studies. Economic
+activity is <em>never</em> found in a religion or a philosophy, always only in the political
+organism of a <em>church</em> or the social organism of a theorizing fellowship; it is ever
+a compromise with “this world” and an index of the presence of a will-to-power.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_854" href="#Footnote_854" class="fnanchor">[854]</a></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_12">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>That which may be called the economic life of the plant is accomplished on
+and in it without its being itself anything but the theatre and will-less object of
+a natural process.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_855" href="#Footnote_855" class="fnanchor">[855]</a> This element underlies the economy of the human body also,
+still unalterably vegetal and dreamy, pursuing its will-less (in this respect almost
+alien) existence in the shape of the circulatory organs. But when we come to
+the animal body freely mobile in space, being is not alone—it is accompanied
+by waking-being, the comprehending apprehension, and, therefore, the compulsion
+to <em>provide by independent</em> thought for the preservation of life. Here begins
+<span class="pagenum" id="p474">[474]</span>life-anxiety, leading to touch and scent, sight and hearing with ever-sharper
+senses; and presently to movements in space for the purpose of searching,
+gathering, pursuing, tricking, stealing, which develop in many species of
+animals (such as beavers, ants, bees, numerous birds and beasts of prey) into a
+rudimentary economy-technique which presupposes a process of reflection
+and, therefore, a certain emancipation of understanding from sensation. Man
+is genuinely man inasmuch as his understanding has freed itself from sensation
+and, as thought, intervened creatively in the relations between microcosm and
+macrocosm.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_856" href="#Footnote_856" class="fnanchor">[856]</a> Quite animal still is the trickery of woman towards man, and
+equally so the peasant’s shrewdness in obtaining small advantages—both
+differing in no wise from the slyness of the fox, both consisting in the ability
+to see into the secret of the victim at <em>one glance</em>. But on the top of this there
+supervenes, now, the economic <em>thought</em> that sows a field, tames animals, changes
+and appreciates and exchanges things, and finds a thousand ways and means of
+better preserving life and transforming a dependence upon the environment into
+a mastery over it. That is the underlayer of all Cultures. Race makes use of an
+economic thought that can become so powerful as to detach itself from given
+purposes, build up castles of abstraction, and finally lose itself in Utopian expanses.</p>
+
+<p>All higher economic life develops itself on and over a peasantry. Peasantry,
+<i lang="la">per se</i>, does not presuppose any basis but itself.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_857" href="#Footnote_857" class="fnanchor">[857]</a> It is, so to say, race-in-itself,
+plantlike and historyless,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_858" href="#Footnote_858" class="fnanchor">[858]</a> producing and using wholly for itself, with an outlook
+on the world that sweepingly regards every other economic existence as incidental
+and contemptible. To this <em>producing</em> kind of economy there is presently
+opposed an <em>acquisitive</em> kind, which makes use of the former as an object—as a
+source of nourishment, tribute, or plunder. Politics and trade are in their beginnings
+quite inseparable, both being masterful, personal, warlike, both with
+a hunger for power and booty that produces quite another outlook upon the
+world—an outlook not from an angle into it, but from above down on its
+tempting disorder, an outlook which is pretty candidly expressed in the choice
+of the lion and the bear, the hawk and the falcon, as armorial badges. Primitive
+war is always also booty-war, and primitive trade intimately related to plunder
+and piracy. The Icelandic sagas narrate how, often, the Vikings would agree
+with a town population for a market-peace of a fortnight, after which weapons
+were drawn and booty-making started.</p>
+
+<p>Politics and trade in developed form—the art of achieving material successes
+over an opponent by means of intellectual superiority—are both a
+replacement of war by other means. Every kind of diplomacy is of a business
+<span class="pagenum" id="p475">[475]</span>nature, every business of a diplomatic, and both are based upon penetrative
+judgment of men and physiognomic tact. The adventure-spirit in great seafarers
+like the Phœnicians, Etruscans, Normans, Venetians, Hanseatics, the spirit of
+shrewd banking-lords like the Fugger and the Medici and of mighty financiers
+like Crassus and the mining and trust magnates of our own day, must possess the
+strategic talent of the <em>general</em> if its operations are to succeed. Pride in the
+clan-house, the paternal heritage, the family tradition, develops and counts in
+the economic sphere as in the political; the great fortunes are like the kingdoms
+and have their history,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_859" href="#Footnote_859" class="fnanchor">[859]</a> and Polycrates and Solon, Lorenzo de’ Medici and
+Jürgen Wullenweber are far from being the only examples of political ambitions
+developing out of commercial.</p>
+
+<p>But the genuine prince and statesman wants to rule, and the genuine merchant
+only wants to be wealthy, and here the acquisitive economy divides to
+pursue aim and means separately.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_860" href="#Footnote_860" class="fnanchor">[860]</a> One may aim at booty for the sake of power,
+or at power for the sake of booty. The great ruler, too, the Hwang-ti, the
+Tiberius, the Frederick II—has the will to wealth, the will to be “rich in land
+and subjects,” but it is with and under a sense of high responsibilities. A man
+may lay hands on the treasurers of the whole world with a good conscience,
+not to say as a matter of course: he may lead a life of radiant splendour or even
+dissipation—if only he feels himself (Napoleon, Cecil Rhodes, the Roman Senate
+of the third century) to be the engine of a mission. When he feels so, the idea of
+private property can scarcely be said to exist so far as he is concerned.</p>
+
+<p>He who is out for purely economic advantages—as the Carthaginians were
+in Roman times and, in a far greater degree still, the Americans in ours—is
+correspondingly incapable of purely political <em>thinking</em>. In the decisions of high
+politics he is ever deceived and made a tool of, as the case of Wilson shows—especially
+when the absence of statesmanlike instinct leaves a chair vacant
+for moral sentiments. This is why the great economic groupings of the present
+day (for example, employers’ and employees’ unions) pile one political failure
+on another, unless indeed they find a real political politician as leader, and
+he—makes use of them. Economic and political thinking, in spite of a high
+degree of consonance of form, are in direction (and therefore in all tactical details)
+basically different. Great business successes&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_861" href="#Footnote_861" class="fnanchor">[861]</a> awaken an unbridled sense of
+<em>public</em> power—in the very word “capital” one catches an unmistakable undertone
+of this. But it is only in a few individuals that the colour and direction of
+their willing and their criteria of situations of things undergo change. Only
+<span class="pagenum" id="p476">[476]</span>when a man has really ceased to feel his enterprise as “his own business,” and
+its aim as the simple amassing of property, does it become possible for the
+captain of industry to become the statesman, the Cecil Rhodes. But, conversely,
+the men of the political world are exposed to the danger of their will and
+thought for historical tasks degenerating into mere provision for their private
+life-upkeep; then a nobility can become a robber-order, and we see emerging the
+familiar types of princes and ministers, demagogues and revolution-heroes,
+whose zeal exhausts itself in lazy comfortableness and the piling-up of immense
+riches—there is little to choose in this respect between Versailles and the
+Jacobin Club, business bosses and trade-union leaders, Russian governors and
+Bolshevists. And in the maturity of democracy the politics of those who have
+“got there” is identical, not merely with business, but with speculative business
+of the dirtiest great-city sort.</p>
+
+<p>All this, however, is the very manifestation of the hidden course of a high
+Culture. In the beginning appear the primary orders, nobility and priesthood,
+with their symbolism of Time and Space. The political life, like the religious
+experience, has its fixed place, its ordained adepts, and its allotted aims for
+facts and truths alike, in a well-ordered society,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_862" href="#Footnote_862" class="fnanchor">[862]</a> and down below, the economic
+life moves unconscious along a sure path. Then the stream of being becomes
+entangled in the stone structures of the town, and intellect and money thenceforward
+take over its historical guidance. The heroic and the saintly with their
+youthful symbolic force become rarer, and withdraw into narrower and narrower
+circles. Cool bourgeois clarity takes their place. At bottom, the concluding
+of a system and the concluding of a deal call for one and the same kind of
+professional intelligence. Scarcely differentiated now by any measure of
+symbolic force, political and economic life, religious and scientific experience
+make each other’s acquaintance, jostle one another, commingle. In the frictions
+of the city the stream of being loses its strict rich form. Elementary economic
+factors come to the surface and interplay with the remains of form-imbued
+politics, just as sovereign science at the same time adds religion to its stock of
+objects. Over a life of economics political self-satisfaction spreads a critical-edifying
+world-sentiment. But out of it all emerge, in place of the decayed
+Estates, the individual life-courses, big with true political or religious force,
+that are to become destiny for the whole.</p>
+
+<p>And thus we begin to discern the morphology of economic history. First
+there is a <em>primitive economy</em> of “man,” which—like that of plants and animals—follows
+a biological&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_863" href="#Footnote_863" class="fnanchor">[863]</a> time-scale in the development of its forms. It completely
+dominates the primitive age, and it continues to move on, infinitely
+slowly and confusedly, underneath and between the high Cultures. Animals
+and plants are brought into it and transformed by taming and breeding, selection
+<span class="pagenum" id="p477">[477]</span>and sowing; fire and metals are exploited, and the properties of inorganic
+nature made by technical processes serviceable for the conduct of life. All this
+is perfused with political-religious ethic and meaning, without its being possible
+distinctly to separate Totem and Taboo, hunger, soul-fear, sex-love, art, war,
+sacrificial rites, belief, and experience.</p>
+
+<p>Wholly different from this, both in idea and in evolution, and sharply
+marked off in tempo and duration, are the <em>economic histories of the high Cultures</em>,
+each of which has its own economic style. To feudalism belongs the economy
+of the townless countryside. With the State ruled radially from cities appears
+the urban economy of money, and this rises, with the oncoming of the Civilization,
+into the dictature of money, simultaneously with the victory of world-city
+democracy. Every Culture has its own independently developed form-world.
+Bodily money of the Apollinian style (that is, the stamped coin) is as antithetical
+to relational money of the Faustian-dynamic style (that is, the booking
+of credit-units) as the Polis is to the State of Charles V. But the economic life,
+just like the social, forms itself pyramidally.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_864" href="#Footnote_864" class="fnanchor">[864]</a> In the rustic underground a
+thoroughly primitive condition maintains itself almost unaffected by the Culture.
+The Late urban economy, which is already the activity of a resolute
+minority, looks down with steady contempt upon the pristine land-economy
+that continues all around it, while the latter in turn glares sulkily at the intellectualized
+style that prevails within the walls. Finally the cosmopolis brings
+in a Civilized world-economy, which radiates from very small nuclei within a
+few centres, and subjects the rest to itself as a provincial economy, while in
+the remoter landscapes thoroughly primitive (“patriarchal”) custom often
+prevails still. With the growth of the cities the way of life becomes ever more
+artificial, subtle and complex. The great-city worker of Cæsar’s Rome, of
+Haroun-al-Raschid’s Baghdad, and of the present-day Berlin feels as self-evidently
+necessary much that the richest yeoman deep in the country regards
+as silly luxury, but this self-evident standard is hard to reach and hard to maintain.
+In every Culture the quantum of work grows bigger and bigger till at the
+beginning of every Civilization we find an intensity of economic life, of which
+the tensions are even excessive and dangerous, and which it is impossible to
+maintain for a long period. In the end a rigid, permanent-set condition is
+reached, a strange hotch-potch of refined-intellectual and crude-primitive
+factors, such as the Greeks found in Egypt and we have found in modern India
+and China—unless, of course, the crust is being disintegrated from below by
+the pressure of a young Culture, like the Classical in Diocletian’s time.</p>
+
+<p>Relatively to this economic movement, men are economically “in form”
+as an economic <em>class</em>, just as they are in form for world-history as a political
+Estate. Each individual has an economic position <em>within the economic order</em> just
+as he has a grade of some sort in the <em>society</em>. Now, both these kinds of allegiances
+<span class="pagenum" id="p478">[478]</span>make claims upon the feelings, thoughts, and relations all at once. A life
+insists on being, and on meaning something as well, and the confusion of our
+ideas is made worse confounded by the fact that, to-day, as in Hellenistic times,
+political parties, in their desire to ameliorate the <em>upkeep</em>-standards of certain
+economic groups, have elevated these groups to the dignity of a political
+Estate, as Marx, for instance, elevated the class of factory-workers.</p>
+
+<p>Confusion—for the first and genuine Estate is nobility. From it the officer
+and the judge and all concerned in the highest duties of government and administration
+are direct derivatives. They are Estate-like formations that
+<em>mean</em> something. So, too, the body of scholars and scientists belongs to the
+priesthood&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_865" href="#Footnote_865" class="fnanchor">[865]</a> and has a very sharply definite kind of class-exclusiveness. But the
+grand symbolism of the Estates goes out with castle and cathedral. The <i lang="fr">Tiers</i>,
+already, is the Non-Estate, the remainder, a miscellaneous and manifold congeries,
+which means very little as such save in the moments of political protest,
+so that the importance it creates <em>for itself</em> is a party importance. The individual
+is conscious of himself not <em>as</em> a bourgeois, but <em>because</em> he is a “liberal” and thus
+part and parcel of a great thing, not indeed as representing it in his person, but
+as <em>adhering</em> to it from conviction. In consequence of this weakness of its social
+“form,” the economic “form” of the bourgeoisie becomes all the more relatively
+conspicuous in its callings, guilds and unions. In the cities, at any rate,
+a man is primarily designated according to the way in which he makes his
+living.</p>
+
+<p>Economically, the first (and anciently almost the only) mode of life is that
+of the peasant,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_866" href="#Footnote_866" class="fnanchor">[866]</a> which is pure <em>production</em>, and therefore the pre-condition of
+every other mode. Even the primary Estates, too, in early times, base their
+way of life entirely upon hunting, stock-keeping, and agricultural landowning,
+and even in Late periods land is regarded by nobles and priests as the only
+truly honourable kind of property. In opposition to it stands trade, the mode
+of the acquisitive <em>middleman</em> or intervener,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_867" href="#Footnote_867" class="fnanchor">[867]</a> powerful out of all proportion to its
+numbers, already indispensable even in quite early conditions—a refined
+parasitism, completely unproductive and, therefore, land-alien and far-ranging,
+“free,” and unhampered spiritually, too, by the ethic and the practice of the
+countryside, a life sustaining itself on another life. Between the two, now,
+a third kind of economy, the <em>preparatory</em> economy of technics, grows up in numberless
+crafts, industries, and callings, which creatively apply reflections upon
+<span class="pagenum" id="p479">[479]</span>nature and whose honour and conscience are bound up in achievement.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_868" href="#Footnote_868" class="fnanchor">[868]</a>
+ Its
+oldest guild, which reaches back into the sheer primitive and fills the picture
+of this primitive with its dark sagas and rites and notions, is the guild of the
+smiths, who—as the result of their proud aloofness from the peasantry and
+the fear that hangs about them, and leads to their being venerated and banned
+by turns—have often become true tribes with a race of their own, as in the
+case of the Abyssinian Falasha or “Black Jews.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_869" href="#Footnote_869" class="fnanchor">[869]</a></p>
+
+<p>In these three economics of production, preparation, and distribution, as in
+everything else belonging to politics and life at large, there are <em>the subjects and
+objects of leading</em>—in this case, whole groups that dispose, decide, organize,
+discover; and other whole groups whose function is simply to execute. The
+grading may be hard and definite or it may be scarcely perceptible,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_870" href="#Footnote_870" class="fnanchor">[870]</a> promotion
+may be impossible or unimpeded, the relative dignity of the task may be almost
+equal throughout a long scale of slow transitions or different beyond comparison.
+Tradition and law, talent and possessions, population numbers,
+cultural level, and economic situation may effectively override this basic
+antithesis of subjects and objects—but it exists, it is as much a premiss as life
+itself, and it is unalterable. Nevertheless, economically <em>there is no worker-class</em>;
+that is an invention of theorists who have fixed their eyes on the position of
+factory-workers in England—an industrial, peasantless land in a transitional
+phase—and then extended the resultant scheme so confidently over all the
+Cultures and all the ages that the politicians have taken it up and used it as a
+means of building themselves parties. In actuality there is an almost uncountable
+number of purely serving activities in workshop and counting-houses, office
+and cargo-deck, roads, mine-shafts, fields, and meadows. This counting-up,
+portering, running of errands, hammering, serving, and minding often enough
+lacks that element which elevates life above mere upkeep and invests work with
+the dignity and the delight attaching, for example, to the status-duties of
+the officer and the savant, or the personal triumphs of the engineer, the manager,
+and the merchant—but, even apart from that, all these things are quite
+<span class="pagenum" id="p480">[480]</span>incapable of being compared amongst themselves. The brain or brawn of the
+work, its situation in village or in megalopolis, the duration and intensity of
+the doing of it, bring it to pass that farm-labourers, bank clerks, and tailors’
+hands live in perfectly different economic worlds, and it is only, I repeat, the
+party politics of quite Late phases that lures them by means of catchwords into
+a protest-combination, with the intention of making use of its aggregate mass.
+The classical slave, on the contrary, is such chiefly in terms of constitutional
+law—that is, so far as the body-Polis was concerned, he simply did not exist&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_871" href="#Footnote_871" class="fnanchor">[871]</a>—but
+economically he might be land-worker or craftsman, or even director or
+wholesale merchant with a huge capital (<i lang="la">peculium</i>), with palaces and country
+villas and a host of subordinates—freemen included. And what he could
+become, over and above this, in late Roman times will appear in the sequel.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_12">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>With the oncoming of Spring there begins in every Culture an economic life
+of settled form.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_872" href="#Footnote_872" class="fnanchor">[872]</a> The life of the population is entirely that of the peasant on the
+open land. The experience of the town has not yet come. All that elevates
+itself from amongst the villages, castles, palaces, monasteries, temple-closes,
+is not a city, but a <em>market</em>, a mere meeting-point of yeomen’s interests, which
+also acquired, and at once, a certain religious and political meaning, but certainly
+cannot be said to have had a special life of its own. The inhabitants,
+even though they might be artisans or traders, would still <em>feel</em> as peasants, and
+even in one way or another work as such.</p>
+
+<p>That which separates out from a life in which everyone is alike producer and
+consumer is <em>goods</em>, and traffic in goods is the mark of all early intercourse, whether
+the object be brought from the far distance or merely shifted about within the
+limits of the village or even the farm. A piece of goods is that which adheres
+by some quiet threads of its essence to the life that has produced it or the life
+that uses it. A peasant drives “his” cow to market, a woman puts away
+“her” finery in the cupboard. We say that a man is endowed with this world’s
+“goods”; the word “pos<em>session</em>” takes us back right into the plantlike origin
+of property, into which this particular being—no other—has grown, from
+the roots up.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_873" href="#Footnote_873" class="fnanchor">[873]</a> Exchange in these periods is a process whereby goods pass from
+one circle of life into another. They are valued with reference to life, according
+to a sliding-scale of <em>felt</em> relation to the moment. There is neither a conception
+of value nor a kind or amount of goods that constitutes a general measure—for
+<span class="pagenum" id="p481">[481]</span>gold and coin are goods too, whose rarity and indestructibility causes them
+to be highly prized.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_874" href="#Footnote_874" class="fnanchor">[874]</a></p>
+
+<p>Into the rhythm and course of this barter the dealer only comes as an intervener.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_875" href="#Footnote_875" class="fnanchor">[875]</a>
+In the market the acquisitive and the creative economics encounter
+one another, but even at places where fleets and caravans unload, trade only
+appears as the <em>organ</em> of countryside traffic.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_876" href="#Footnote_876" class="fnanchor">[876]</a> It is the “eternal” form of economy,
+and is even to-day seen in the immemorially ancient figure of the pedlar of the
+country districts remote from towns, and in out-of-the-way suburban lanes
+where small barter-circles form naturally, and in the private economy of savants,
+officials, and in general everyone not actively part of the daily economic
+life of the great city.</p>
+
+<p>With the soul of the town a quite other kind of life awakens.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_877" href="#Footnote_877" class="fnanchor">[877]</a> As soon as
+the market has become the town, it is not longer a question of mere centres for
+goods-streams traversing a purely peasant landscape, but of a second world
+within the walls, for which the merely producing life “out there” is nothing
+but object and means, and out of which another stream begins to circle. The
+decisive point is this—the true urban man is <em>not</em> a producer in the prime terrene
+sense. He has not the inward linkage with soil or with the goods that pass
+through his hands. He does not live with these, but looks at them from outside
+and appraises them in relation to his own life-upkeep.</p>
+
+<p>With this goods become wares, exchange turnover, <em>and in place of thinking in
+goods we have thinking in money</em>.</p>
+
+<p>With this a purely extensional something, a form of limit-defining, is abstracted
+from the visible objects of economics just as mathematical thought
+abstracts something from the mechanistically conceived environment. Abstract
+<span class="pagenum" id="p482">[482]</span>money corresponds exactly to abstract number.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_878" href="#Footnote_878" class="fnanchor">[878]</a>
+ Both are entirely inorganic.
+The economic picture is reduced exclusively to quantities, whereas the important
+point about “goods” had been their quality. For the early-period peasant
+“his” cow is, first of all, just what it is, a unit being, and only secondarily an
+object of exchange; but for the economic outlook of the true townsman the
+only thing that exists is an abstract money-value which at the moment happens
+to be in the shape of a cow that can always be transformed into that of, say,
+a bank-note. Even so the genuine engineer sees in a famous waterfall not a
+unique natural spectacle, but just a calculable quantum of unexploited energy.</p>
+
+<p>It is an error of all modern money-theories that they start from the value-token
+or even the material of the payment-medium instead of from the form of
+economic thought.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_879" href="#Footnote_879" class="fnanchor">[879]</a> In reality, money, like number and law, is a <em>category of
+thought</em>. There is a monetary, just as there is a juristic and a mathematical and
+a technical, thinking of the world-around. From the sense-experience of a
+house we obtain quite different abstracts, according as we are mentally appraising
+it from the point of view of a merchant, a judge, or an engineer, and with
+reference to a balance-sheet, a lawsuit, or a danger of collapse. Next of kin to
+thinking in money, however, is mathematics. To think in terms of business is
+to calculate. The money-value is a numerical value measured by a unit of
+reckoning.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_880" href="#Footnote_880" class="fnanchor">[880]</a> This exact “value-in-itself,” like number-in-itself, the man of the
+town, the man without roots, is the first to imagine; for peasants there are only
+ephemeral felt values in relation to now this and now that object of exchange.
+What he does not use, or does not want to possess, has “no value” for him.
+Only in the economy-picture of the real townsman are there objective values
+and kinds of values which have an existence apart from his private needs, as
+thought-elements of a generalized validity, although in actuality every individual
+has his proper system of values and his proper stock of the most varied
+kinds of value, and feels the ruling prices of the market as “cheap” or “dear”
+with reference to these.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_881" href="#Footnote_881" class="fnanchor">[881]</a></p>
+
+<p>Whereas the earlier mankind <em>compares</em> goods, and does so not by means of
+the reason only, the later <em>reckons</em> the values of wares, and does so by rigid unqualitative
+<span class="pagenum" id="p483">[483]</span>measures. Now gold is no longer measured against the cow, but
+the cow against the gold, and the result is expressed by an abstract number,
+the price. Whether and how this measure of value finds symbolic expression
+in a value-sign—as the written, spoken, or represented number-sign is, in a
+sense, number—depends on the economic style of the particular Culture, each
+of which produces a different sort of money. The common condition for the
+appearance of this is the existence of an urban population that thinks economically
+in terms of it, and it is its particular character that settles whether the
+value-token shall serve also as payment-medium; thus the Classical coin and
+<em>probably</em> the Babylonian silver did so serve, whereas the Egyptian <i>deben</i> (raw
+copper weighed out in pounds) was a measure of exchange, but neither token
+nor payment-medium. The Western and the “contemporary” Chinese bank-note,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_882" href="#Footnote_882" class="fnanchor">[882]</a>
+again, is a medium, but not a measure. In fact we are accustomed to
+deceive ourselves thoroughly as to the rôle played by coins of precious metal in
+<em>our</em> sort of economy; they are just wares fashioned in imitation of the Classical
+custom, and hence, measured against book-values of credit money, they have
+a “price.”</p>
+
+<p>The outcome of this way of thinking is that the old <em>possession</em>, bound up with
+life and the soil, gives way to the <em>fortune</em>, which is essentially mobile and
+qualitatively undefined: it does not <em>consist in</em> goods, but it is <em>laid out in</em> them.
+Considered by itself, it is a purely numerical quantum of money-value.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_883" href="#Footnote_883" class="fnanchor">[883]</a></p>
+
+<p>As the seat of this thinking, the city becomes the money-market, the centre
+of values, and a stream of money-values begins to infuse, intellectualize, and
+command the stream of goods. <em>And with this the trader, from being an organ of
+economic life, becomes its master.</em> Thinking in money is always, in one way or
+another, trade or business thinking. It presupposes the productive economy
+of the land, and, therefore, is always primarily acquisitive, for there is no
+third course. The very words “acquisition,” “gain,” “speculation,” point to
+a profit tricked off from the goods <i lang="fr">en route</i> to the consumer—an <em>intellectual
+plunder</em>—and for that reason are inapplicable to the early peasantry. Only by
+attuning ourselves exactly to the spirit and economic outlook of the true townsman
+can we realize what they mean. He works not for needs, but for sales, for
+“money.” The business view gradually infuses itself into every kind of activity.
+The countryman, inwardly bound up with traffic in goods, was at once giver
+and taker, and even the trader of the primitive market was hardly an exception
+to this rule. But with money-traffic there appears between producer and consumer,
+as though between two separate worlds, the third party, the <em>middleman</em>,
+whose thought is dominated <i lang="la">a priori</i> by the business side of life. He forces
+the producer to offer, and the consumer to inquire of him. He elevates mediation
+<span class="pagenum" id="p484">[484]</span>to a monopoly and thereafter to economic primacy, and forces the other two
+to be “in form” in <em>his</em> interest, to prepare the wares according to <em>his</em> reckonings,
+and to cheapen them under the pressure of <em>his</em> offers.</p>
+
+<p>He who commands this mode of thinking is the master of money.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_884" href="#Footnote_884" class="fnanchor">[884]</a> In all
+the Cultures evolution takes this road. Lysias informs us in his oration against
+the corn-merchants that the speculators at the Piræus frequently spread reports
+of the wreck of a grain-fleet or of the outbreak of war, in order to produce a
+panic. In Hellenistic-Roman times it was a widespread practice to arrange for
+land to go out of cultivation, or for imports to be held in bond, in order to force
+up prices. In the Egyptian New Empire wheat-corners in the American style
+were made possible by a bill-discounting that is fully comparable with the
+banking operations of the West.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_885" href="#Footnote_885" class="fnanchor">[885]</a> Cleomenes, Alexander the Great’s administrator
+for Egypt, was able by book transactions to get the whole corn-supply
+into his own hands, thereby producing a famine far and wide in Greece and
+raking in immense gains for himself. To think economically on any terms but
+these is simply to become a mere pawn in the money-operations of the great
+city. This style of thought soon gets hold of the waking-consciousness of the
+entire urban population and, therefore, of everyone who plays any serious part
+in the conduct of economic history. “Peasant” and “burgher” stand not only
+for the difference of country and city, but for that of possessions and money as
+well. The splendid Culture of Homeric and Provençal princely courts was
+something that waxed and waned with the men themselves—we can often,
+even to-day, see it in the life of old families in their country-seats—but the
+more refined culture of the bourgeoisie, its “comfort,” is something coming
+from outside, something that can be paid for.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_886" href="#Footnote_886" class="fnanchor">[886]</a> All highly developed economy
+is urban economy. World-economy itself, the characteristic economy of all
+Civilizations, ought properly to be called world-city-economy. The destinies
+even of this world-economy are now decided in a few places, the “money-markets”
+of the world&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_887" href="#Footnote_887" class="fnanchor">[887]</a>—in Babylon, Thebes, and Rome, in Byzantium and
+Baghdad, in London, New York, Berlin, and Paris. The residue is a starveling
+provincial economy that runs on in its narrow circles without being conscious
+of its utter dependence. Finally, money is the form of intellectual energy in
+which the ruler-will, the political and social, technical and mental, creative
+power, the craving for a full-sized life, are concentrated. Shaw is entirely
+right when he says: “The universal regard for money is the one hopeful fact
+<span class="pagenum" id="p485">[485]</span>in our civilization ... the two things [money and life] are inseparable:
+money is the counter that enables life to be distributed socially: it <em>is</em> life....”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_888" href="#Footnote_888" class="fnanchor">[888]</a>
+What is here described as Civilization, then, is the stage of a Culture at which
+tradition and personality have lost their immediate effectiveness, and every
+idea, to be actualized, has to be put into terms of money. At the beginning a
+man was wealthy because he was powerful—now he is powerful because he
+has money. Intellect reaches the throne only when money puts it there.
+Democracy is the completed equating of money with political power.</p>
+
+<p>Through the economic history of every Culture there runs a desperate conflict
+waged by the soil-rooted tradition of a race, by its <em>soul</em>, against the spirit of
+money. The peasant-wars of the beginning of a Late period (in the Classical,
+700–500; in the Western, 1450–1650; in the Egyptian, end of Old Kingdom)
+are the first reaction of the blood against the money that is stretching forth its
+hand from the waxing cities over the soil.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_889" href="#Footnote_889" class="fnanchor">[889]</a> Stein’s warning that “he who
+mobilizes the soil dissolves it into dust” points to a danger common to <em>all</em>
+Cultures; if money is unable to attack possession, it insinuates itself into the
+thoughts of the noble and peasant possessors, until the inherited possession
+that has grown with the family’s growth begins to seem like resources merely
+“put into” land and soil and, so far as their essence is concerned, mobile.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_890" href="#Footnote_890" class="fnanchor">[890]</a>
+Money aims at mobilizing <em>all</em> things. World-economy is the actualized
+economy of values that are completely detached in thought from the land, and
+made fluid.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_891" href="#Footnote_891" class="fnanchor">[891]</a> The Classical money-thinking, from Hannibal’s day, transformed
+whole cities into coin and whole populations into slaves and thereby converted
+both into money that could be brought from everywhere to Rome, and used
+outwards from Rome as a power.</p>
+
+<p>The Faustian money-thinking “opens up” whole continents, the water-power
+<span class="pagenum" id="p486">[486]</span>of gigantic river-basins, the muscular power of the peoples of broad
+regions, the coal measures, the virgin forests, the laws of Nature, and transforms
+them all into financial energy, which is laid out in one way or in another—in
+the shape of press, or elections, or budgets, or armies—for the realization
+of masters’ plans. Ever new values are abstracted from whatever world-stock
+is still, from the business point of view, unclaimed, “the slumbering spirits of
+gold,” as John Gabriel Borkman says; and what the things themselves are,
+apart from this, is of no economic significance at all.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_12">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>As every Culture has its own mode of thinking in money, so also it has its
+proper money-symbol through which it brings to visible expression its principle
+of valuation in the economic field. This something, a sense-actualizing of the
+thought, is in importance fully the equal of the spoken, written, or drawn figures
+and other symbols of the mathematic. Here lies a deep and fruitful domain of
+inquiry, so far almost unexplored. Not even the basic notions have been correctly
+enunciated, and it is therefore quite impossible to-day to translate intelligibly
+the money-idea that underlay the barter and the bill business of
+Egypt, the banking of Babylonia, the book-keeping of China, and the capitalism
+of the Jews, Parsees, Greeks, and Arabs from Haroun-al-Raschid’s day. All that
+is possible is to set forth the essential opposition of Apollinian and Faustian
+money—the one, <em>money as magnitude</em>, and the other, <em>money as function</em>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_892" href="#Footnote_892" class="fnanchor">[892]</a></p>
+
+<p>Economically, as in other ways, Classical man saw his world-around as a
+sum of bodies that changed their place, travelled, drove or hit or annihilated
+one another, as in Democritus’s description of Nature. Man was a body among
+bodies, and the Polis as sum thereof a body of higher order. All the needs of
+life consisted in corporeal quantities, and money, too, therefore represented such
+a body, in the same way as an Apollo-statue represented a god. About 650,
+simultaneously with the stone body of the Doric temple and the free statue
+true-modelled in the round, appeared the <em>coin</em>, a metal weight of beautiful
+impressed form. Value as a magnitude had long existed—in fact as long as
+this Culture itself. In Homer, a talent is a little aggregate of gold, in bullion
+and decorative objects, of a definite total weight. The Shield of Achilles represents
+“two talents” of gold, and even as late as Roman times it was usual to
+specify silver and gold vessels by weight.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_893" href="#Footnote_893" class="fnanchor">[893]</a></p>
+
+<p>The discovery of the Classically formed money-body, however, is so extraordinary
+that we have not even yet grasped it in its deep and purely Classical
+significance. We regard it as one of the “achievements of humanity,” and so
+we strike these coinages everywhere, just as we put statues in our streets and
+squares. So much and no more it is within our power to do; we can imitate
+<span class="pagenum" id="p487">[487]</span>the shape, but we cannot impart the same economic significance thereto. The
+coin <em>as money</em> is a purely Classical phenomenon—only possible in an environment
+conceived wholly on Euclidean ideas, but there creatively dominant
+over all economic life. Notions like income, resources, debt, capital, meant in
+the Classical cities something quite different from what they mean to us. They
+meant, not economic energy radiating from a point, but a sum of valuable
+objects in hand. Wealth was always a mobile <em>cash-supply</em>, which was altered
+by addition and subtraction of valuable objects and had nothing at all to do with
+possessions in land—for in Classical thinking the two were completely separate.
+Credit consisted in the lending of cash in the expectation that the loan
+would be repaid in cash. Catiline was poor because, in spite of his wide estates,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_894" href="#Footnote_894" class="fnanchor">[894]</a>
+he could find nobody to lend him the cash that he needed for his political
+aims; and the immense debts of Roman politicians&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_895" href="#Footnote_895" class="fnanchor">[895]</a> had for their ultimate
+security, not their equivalent in land, but the definite prospect of a province to
+be plundered of its movable assets.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_896" href="#Footnote_896" class="fnanchor">[896]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the light of this, and only in the light of this, we begin to understand certain
+phenomena such as the mass-execution of the wealthy under the Second
+Tyrannis, and the Roman proscriptions (with the object of seizing a large part
+of the cash current in the community), and the melting down of the Delphian
+temple-treasure by the Phocians in the Sacred War, of the art-treasures of
+Corinth by Mummius, and of the last votive offerings in Rome by Cæsar, in
+Greece by Sulla, in Asia Minor by Brutus and Cassius, without regard to artistic
+value when the noble stuffs and metals and ivory were needed.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_897" href="#Footnote_897" class="fnanchor">[897]</a> The captured
+statues and the vessels borne in the triumphs were, in the eyes of the spectators,
+sheer cash, and Mommsen&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_898" href="#Footnote_898" class="fnanchor">[898]</a> could attempt to determine the site of Varus’s
+disaster by the places in which coin-hoards were unearthed—for the Roman
+veteran carried his whole property in precious metal on his person. Classical
+wealth does not consist in having possessions, but piling money; a Classical
+money-market was not a centre of credit like the bourses of our world and of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p488">[488]</span>ancient Thebes, but a city in which an important part of the world’s cash was
+actually collected. It may be taken that in Cæsar’s time much more than half
+of the Classical world’s gold was in Rome.</p>
+
+<p>But when, from about Hannibal’s time, this world advanced into the state
+of unlimited plutocracy, the naturally limited mass of precious metals and
+materially valuable works of art in its sphere of control became hopelessly
+inadequate to cover needs, and a veritable craving set in for new bodies capable
+of being used as money. Then it was that men’s eyes fell upon the slave, who
+was another sort of body, but a thing and not a person&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_899" href="#Footnote_899" class="fnanchor">[899]</a> and capable, therefore,
+of being thought of as money. From that point Classical slavery became unique
+of its kind in all economic history. The properties of the coin were extended to
+apply to living objects, and the stock of men in the regions “opened up” to the
+plunderings of proconsuls and tax-farmers became as interesting as the stock of
+metal. A curious sort of double valuation developed. The slave had a market
+price, although ground and soil had not. He served for the accumulation of
+great uninvested fortunes, and hence the enormous slave-masses of the Roman
+period, which are entirely inexplicable by any other sort of necessity. So long as
+man needed only as many slaves as he could gainfully employ, their number was
+small and easily covered by the prisoners of war and judgment-debtors.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_900" href="#Footnote_900" class="fnanchor">[900]</a> It
+was in the sixth century that Chios made a beginning with the importation of
+bought slaves (Argyronetes). The difference between these and the far more
+numerous paid labourers was originally of a political and legal, not an economic
+kind. As the Classical economy was static and not dynamic, and was ignorant
+of the systematic opening-up of energy-sources, the slaves of the Roman age
+did not exist to be exploited in work, but were employed—more or less—so
+that the greatest possible number of them could be maintained. Specially
+presentable slaves possessing particular qualifications of one sort or another were
+preferred, because for equal cost of maintenance they represented a better asset;
+they were loaned as cash was loaned; and they were allowed to have businesses
+on their account, so that they could become rich;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_901" href="#Footnote_901" class="fnanchor">[901]</a> free labour was undersold—all
+this so as to cover at any rate the upkeep of this capital.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_902" href="#Footnote_902" class="fnanchor">[902]</a> The bulk of
+them cannot have been employed at all. They answered their purpose by simply
+existing, as a stock of money in hand which was not bound up to a natural limit
+<span class="pagenum" id="p489">[489]</span>like the stock of metal available in those days. And through that very fact the
+need of slaves grew and grew indefinitely and led, not only to wars that were
+undertaken simply for slave-getting, but to slave-hunting by private entrepreneurs
+all along the Mediterranean coasts (which Rome winked at) and to a new
+way of making the proconsuls’ fortunes, which consisted in bleeding the
+population of a region and then selling it into slavery for debt. The market of
+Delos must have dealt with ten thousand slaves a day. When Cæsar went to
+Britain, the disappointment caused in Rome by the money-poverty of the
+Britons was compensated by the prospect of rich booty in slaves. When, for
+example, Corinth was destroyed, the melting-down of the statues for coinage
+and the auctioning of the inhabitants at the slave-mart were, for Classical minds,
+one and the same operation—the transformation of corporeal objects into
+money.</p>
+
+<p>In extremest contrast to this stands the symbol of Faustian money—money
+as Function, the value of which lies in its effect and not its mere existence.
+The specific style of this economic thinking appears already in the way in which
+the Normans of <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1000 organized their spoils of men and land into an economic
+force.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_903" href="#Footnote_903" class="fnanchor">[903]</a> Compare the pure book-valuation of these ducal officials (commemorated
+in our words “cheque,” “account,” and “checking”)&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_904" href="#Footnote_904" class="fnanchor">[904]</a> with
+the “contemporary” gold talent of the Iliad, one meets at the very outset of
+the Culture the rudiments of its modern credit-system, which is the outcome
+of confidence in the force and durability of its economic mode, and with which
+the idea of money in our sense is almost identical. These financial methods,
+transplanted to the Roman Kingdom of Sicily by Roger II, were developed by
+the Hohenstaufen Emperor Frederick II (about 1230) into a powerful system
+far surpassing the original in dynamism and making him the “first capitalist
+power of the world”;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_905" href="#Footnote_905" class="fnanchor">[905]</a> and while this fraternization of mathematical thinking-power
+and royal will-to-power made its way from Normandy into France and
+was applied on the grand scale to the exploitation of conquered England (to
+this day English soil is nominally royal demesne) its Sicilian side was imitated
+by the Italian city-republics, and (as their ruling patricians soon took the
+methods of the civic economy into use for their private book-keeping,) spread
+over the commercial thought and practice of the whole Western world. Little
+later, the Sicilian methods were adopted by the Order of the Teutonic Knights
+and by the dynasty of Aragon, and it is probably to these origins that we
+should assign the model accountancy of Spain in the days of Philip II, and of
+Prussia in those of Frederick William I.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p490">[490]</span></p>
+
+<p>The decisive event, however, was the invention—“contemporary” with
+that of the Classical coin about 650—of double-entry book-keeping by Fra
+Luca Pacioli in 1494. Goethe calls this in <cite lang="de">Wilhelm Meister</cite> “one of the finest
+discoveries of the human intellect,” and indeed its author may without hesitation
+be ranked with his contemporaries Columbus and Copernicus. To the
+Normans we owe our modes of reckoning and to the Lombards our book-keeping.
+These, be it observed, were the same two Germanic stocks which created
+the two most suggestive juristic works of the early Gothic,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_906" href="#Footnote_906" class="fnanchor">[906]</a> and whose longing
+into distant seas gave the impulses for the two discoveries of America.
+“Double-entry book-keeping is born of the same spirit as the system of Galileo
+and Newton.... With the same means as these, it orders the phenomenon
+into an elegant system, and it may be called the first Cosmos built up on the
+basis of a mechanistic thought. Double-entry book-keeping discloses to us the
+Cosmos of the economic world by the same method as later the Cosmos of the
+stellar universe was unveiled by the great investigation of natural philosophy....
+Double-entry book-keeping rests on the basic principle, logically carried
+out, of comprehending all phenomena purely as quantities.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_907" href="#Footnote_907" class="fnanchor">[907]</a></p>
+
+<p><em>Double-entry book-keeping is a pure Analysis of the space of values, referred to a
+co-ordinate system, of which the origin is the “Firm.”</em> The coinage of the Classical
+world had only permitted of arithmetical compilations with value-<em>magnitudes</em>.
+Here, as ever, Pythagoras and Descartes stand opposed. It is legitimate for us
+to talk of the “integration” of an undertaking, and the graphic curve is the
+same optical auxiliary to economics as it is to science. The Classical economy-world
+was ordered, like the cosmos of Democritus, according to <em>stuff and form</em>.
+A stuff, in the form of a coin, carries the economic movement and presses
+against the demand-unit of equal value-quantity at the place of use. <em>Our</em>
+economy-world is ordered by <em>force and mass</em>. A field of money-tensions lies in
+space and assigns to every object, irrespective of its specific kind, a positive or
+negative effect-value,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_908" href="#Footnote_908" class="fnanchor">[908]</a> which is represented by a book-entry. “<i lang="la">Quod non est in
+libris, non est in mundo.</i>” But the symbol of the functional money thus imagined,
+that which <em>alone</em> may be compared with the Classical coin, is not the actual
+book-entry, nor yet the share-voucher, cheque, or note, <em>but the act by which the
+function is fulfilled in writing</em>, and the rôle of the value-paper is merely to be the
+<em>generalized historical evidence</em> of this act.</p>
+
+<p>Yet side by side with this the West, in its unquestioning admiration of the
+Classical, has gone on striking coins, not merely as tokens of sovereignty, but
+in the belief that this evidenced money was money corresponding in reality to
+<span class="pagenum" id="p491">[491]</span>the economics in thought. In just the same way, even within the Gothic age,
+we took over Roman law with its equating of things to bodily magnitudes, and
+the Euclidean mathematic, which was built upon the concept of number as
+magnitude. And so it befell that the evolution of these three intellectual form-worlds
+of ours proceeded, not like the Faustian music in a pure and flowerlike
+unfolding, but in the shape of a <em>progressive emancipation from the notion of magnitude</em>.
+The mathematic had already achieved this by the close of the Baroque age.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_909" href="#Footnote_909" class="fnanchor">[909]</a> The
+jurisprudence, on the other hand, has not yet even recognized its coming task,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_910" href="#Footnote_910" class="fnanchor">[910]</a>
+but this century is going to set it, and to demand that which for Roman jurists
+was the self-evident basis of law, namely, the inward congruence of economic
+and legal thought and an equal practical familiarity with both. The conception
+of money that was symbolized in the coin agreed precisely with the Classical
+thing-law, but with us there is nothing remotely like such an agreement. Our
+whole life is disposed dynamically, not statically and Stoically; therefore our
+essentials are forces and performances, relations and capacities—organizing
+talents and intuitive intellects, credit, ideas, methods, energy-sources—and
+not mere existence of corporeal things. The “Romanist” thing-thought of our
+jurists, and the theory of money that consciously or unconsciously starts from
+the coin, are equally alien to our life. The vast metallic hoard to which, in
+imitation of the Classical, we were continually adding till the World War came,
+has indeed made a rôle for itself off the main road, but with the inner form, tasks,
+and aims of modern economy it has <em>nothing</em> to do; and if as the result of the
+war it were to disappear from currency altogether, nothing would be altered
+thereby.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_911" href="#Footnote_911" class="fnanchor">[911]</a></p>
+
+<p>Unhappily, the modern national economics were founded in the age of Classicism.
+Just as statues and vases and stiff dramas alone counted as true art, so
+also finely stamped coins alone counted as true money. What Josiah Wedgwood
+(1758) aimed at with his delicately toned reliefs and cups, that also, at bottom,
+Adam Smith aimed at in his theory of value—namely, the pure present of
+tangible magnitudes. For it is entirely consonant with the illusion that money
+<span class="pagenum" id="p492">[492]</span>and pieces of money are the same, to measure the value of a thing against the
+magnitude of a quantity of work. Here work is no longer an <em>effecting</em> in a world
+of effects, a working which can differ infinitely from case to case as to inward
+worth and intensity and range, which propagates itself in wider and wider circles
+and like an electric field may be measured but not marked off—but the <em>result</em>
+of the effecting, considered entirely materially, <em>that which is worked-up</em>, a tangible
+thing showing nothing noteworthy about it except just its extent.</p>
+
+<p>In reality, the economy of the European-American Civilization is built up
+on work of a kind in which distinctions go entirely according to the inner
+quality—more so than ever in China or Egypt, let alone the Classical World.
+It is not for nothing that we live in a world of economic dynamism, where the
+works of the individual are not additive in the Euclidean way, but functionally
+related to one another. The purely executive work (which alone Marx takes
+into account) is in reality nothing but the function of an inventive, ordering,
+and organizing work; it is from this that the other derives its meaning, relative
+value, and even possibility of being done at all. The whole world-economy
+since the discovery of the steam-engine has been the creation of a quite small
+number of superior heads, without whose high-grade work everything else
+would never have come into being. But this achievement is of creative thinking,
+not a quantum,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_912" href="#Footnote_912" class="fnanchor">[912]</a> and its value is not to be weighed against a certain number
+of coins. Rather it <em>is</em> itself money—Faustian money, namely, which is not
+minted, but <em>thought of as an efficient centre</em> coming up out of a life—and it is the
+inward quality of that life which elevates the thought to the significance of a
+fact. <em>Thinking in money generates money</em>—that is the secret of the world-economy.
+When an organizing magnate writes down a million on paper, that million
+exists, for the personality as an economic centre vouches for a corresponding
+heightening of the economic energy of his field. This, and nothing else, is the
+meaning of the word “Credit” for us. But all the gold pieces in the world would
+not suffice to invest the actions of the manual worker with a meaning, and
+therefore a value, if the famous “expropriation of the expropriators” were to
+eliminate the superior capacities from their creations; were this to happen,
+these would become soulless, will-less, empty shells. Thus, in fact, Marx is
+just as much a Classical, just as truly a product of the Romanist law-thought
+as Adam Smith; he sees only the completed magnitude, not the function, and
+he would like to separate the means of production from those whose minds, by
+the discovery of methods, the organization of efficient industries, and the
+acquisition of outlet-markets, alone turn a mass of bricks and steel into a factory,
+and who, if their forces find no field of play, do not occur.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_913" href="#Footnote_913" class="fnanchor">[913]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p493">[493]</span></p>
+
+<p>If anyone seeks to enunciate a theory of modern work, let him begin by
+thinking of this basic trait of all life. There are subjects and objects in every
+kind of life as lived, and the more important, the more rich in form, the life is,
+the clearer the distinction between them. As every stream of Being consists of
+a minority of leaders and a huge majority of led, so <em>every sort of economy consists
+in leader-work and executive work</em>. The frog’s perspective of Marx and the social-ethical
+ideologues shows only the aggregate of last small things, but these only
+exist at all in virtue of the first things, and the spirit of this world of work
+can be grasped only through a grasp of its highest possibilities. The inventor
+of the steam-engine and not its stoker is the determinant. The <em>thought</em> is what
+matters.</p>
+
+<p>And, similarly, thinking in money has subjects and objects: those who
+by force of their personality generate and guide money, and those who
+are maintained by money. Money of the Faustian brand is the <em>force</em> distilled
+from economy-dynamics of the Faustian brand, and it appertains to the
+destiny of the individual (on the economic side of his life-destiny) that he is
+inwardly constituted to represent a part of this force, or that he is, on the
+contrary, nothing but mass to it.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V_11">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>The word “Capital” signifies the centre of this thought—not the aggregate
+of values, but that which <em>keeps them in movement as such</em>. Capitalism comes into
+existence only with the world-city existence of a Civilization, and it is confined
+to the very small ring of those who represent this existence by their persons and
+intelligence; its opposite is the provincial economy. It was the unconditional
+supremacy achieved by the coin in Classical life (including the political side
+of that life) that generated the static capital, the ἀφορμή or starting-point, that
+by its existence drew to itself, in a sort of magnetic attraction, things and again
+things <i lang="fr">en masse</i>. It was the supremacy of book-values, whose abstract system
+was quickly detached from personality by double-entry book-keeping and
+worked forward by virtue of its own inward dynamism, that produced the
+modern capital that spans the whole earth with its field of force.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_914" href="#Footnote_914" class="fnanchor">[914]</a></p>
+
+<p>Under the influence of its own sort of capital the economic life of the Classical
+world took the form of a gold-stream that flowed from the provinces to
+Rome and back, and was ever seeking new areas whose stock of worked-up
+gold had not yet been “opened up.” Brutus and Cassius carried the gold of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p494">[494]</span>Asia Minor on long mule-trains to the battle-field of Philippi—one can imagine
+what sort of an economic operation the plunder of a camp after a battle must
+have been—and even C. Gracchus, almost a century earlier, alluded to the
+amphoræ that went out from Rome to the provinces full of wine and came back
+full of gold. This hunt for the gold possessions of alien peoples corresponds
+exactly to the present-day hunt for coal, which in its deeper meaning is not a
+thing, but a store of energy.</p>
+
+<p>But, equally, the Classical craving for the near and present could not but
+match the Polis-ideal with an <em>economic ideal of Autarkeia</em>, an economic atomization
+corresponding to the political. Each of these tiny life-units desired to have
+an economic stream wholly of its own, wholly self-contained, circling independently
+of all others and <em>within the radius of visibility</em>. The polar opposite of
+this is the Western notion of the <em>Firm</em>, which is thought of as an entirely impersonal
+and incorporeal centre of force, from which activity streams out in all
+directions to an indefinite distance, and which the proprietor by his ability to
+think in money does not <em>represent</em>, but <em>possesses and directs</em>—that is, has in his
+power—like a little cosmos. The duality of firm and proprietor would have
+been utterly unimaginable for the Classical mind.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_915" href="#Footnote_915" class="fnanchor">[915]</a></p>
+
+<p>Consequently, as the Western Culture presents a maximum, so the Classical
+shows a minimum, of <em>organization</em>. For this was completely absent even as an
+idea from Classical man. His finance was one of provisional expedients made
+rule and habit. The wealthy burgher of Athens and Rome could be burdened
+with the equipment of war-ships. The political power of the Roman ædile
+(and his debts) rested on the fact that he not only produced the games and the
+streets and the buildings, but paid for them too—of course, he could recoup
+himself later by plundering his province. Sources of income were thought of
+only when the need of income presented itself, and then drawn upon, without
+any regard for the future, as the moment required—even at the cost of entirely
+destroying them. Plunder of the treasures of one’s own temples, sea-piracy
+against one’s own city, confiscation of the wealth of one’s own fellow-citizens
+were everyday methods of finance. If surpluses were available, they were
+distributed to the citizens—a proceeding to which plenty of people besides
+Eubulus of Athens owed their popularity.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_916" href="#Footnote_916" class="fnanchor">[916]</a> Budgets were as unknown as any
+other part of financial policy. The “economic management” of Roman provinces
+was a system of robbery, public and private, practised by senators and
+financiers without the slightest consideration as to whether the exported values
+could be replaced. Never did Classical man think of systematically intensifying
+his economic life, but ever looked to the result of the moment, the tangible
+quantum of cash. Imperial Rome would have gone down in ruin had it not
+<span class="pagenum" id="p495">[495]</span>been fortunate enough to possess in old Egypt a Civilization that had for a
+thousand years thought of <em>nothing</em> but the organization of its economy. The
+Roman neither comprehended nor was capable of copying this style of life,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_917" href="#Footnote_917" class="fnanchor">[917]</a>
+but the accident that Egypt provided the political possessor of this fellah-world
+with an inexhaustible source of gold rendered it unnecessary for him to make a
+<em>settled habit</em> of proscription at home; the last of these financial operations in
+massacre-form was that of 43, shortly before the incorporation of Egypt.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_918" href="#Footnote_918" class="fnanchor">[918]</a> The
+amassed gold of Asia Minor that Brutus and Cassius were then bringing up,
+which meant an army and the dominion of the world, made it necessary to put
+to the ban some two thousand of the richest inhabitants of Italy, whose heads
+were brought to the Forum in sacks for the offered rewards. It was no longer
+possible to spare even relatives, children, and grey-heads, or people who had
+never concerned themselves with politics. It was enough that they possessed
+a stock of cash and that the yield would otherwise have been too small.</p>
+
+<p>But with the extinction of the Classical world-feeling in the early Imperial
+age, this mode of thinking in money disappeared also. <em>Coins again became wares</em>—because
+men were again living the peasant life&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_919" href="#Footnote_919" class="fnanchor">[919]</a>—and this explains the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p496">[496]</span>immense outflow of gold into the farther East after Hadrian’s reign, which has
+hitherto been unaccountable. And as economic life in forms of gold-streams was
+extinguished in the upheaval of a young Culture, so also the slave ceased to be
+money, and the ebb of the gold was paralleled by that mass-emancipation of
+the slaves which numerous Imperial laws, from Augustus’s reign onwards,
+tried in vain to check—till under Diocletian, in whose famous maximum
+tariff&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_920" href="#Footnote_920" class="fnanchor">[920]</a> money-economy was no longer the standpoint, the type of the Classical
+slave had ceased to exist.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p497"></a><a id="p498"></a><a id="p499"></a>[499]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ <br>
+ <span class="subtitle">THE FORM-WORLD OF ECONOMIC LIFE
+ <br>
+ (B)
+ <br>
+ THE MACHINE</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>Technique is as old as free-moving life itself. Only the plant—so far as we
+can see into Nature—is the mere theatre of technical processes. The animal,
+in that it moves, has a technique of movement so that it may nourish and protect
+itself.</p>
+
+<p>The original relation between a waking-microcosm and its macrocosm—“Nature”—consists
+in a touch through the senses&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_921" href="#Footnote_921" class="fnanchor">[921]</a> which rises from mere
+<em>sense-impressions</em> to sense-<em>judgment</em>, so that already it works critically (that is,
+separatingly) or, what comes to the same thing, <em>causal-analytically</em>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_922" href="#Footnote_922" class="fnanchor">[922]</a> The stock
+of what has been determined then is enlarged into a system, as complete as may
+be, of the most primary experiences—identifying marks&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_923" href="#Footnote_923" class="fnanchor">[923]</a>—a spontaneous
+method by which one is enabled to feel at home in one’s world; in the case of
+many animals this has led to an amazing richness of experience that no human
+science has transcended. But the primary waking-being is always an <em>active</em> one,
+remote from mere theory of all sorts, and thus it is in the minor technique of
+everyday life, and upon things <em>in so far as they are dead</em>,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_924" href="#Footnote_924" class="fnanchor">[924]</a> that these experiences
+are involuntarily acquired. This is the difference between Cult and Myth,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_925" href="#Footnote_925" class="fnanchor">[925]</a> for
+at this level there is no boundary line between religion and the profane—all
+waking-consciousness <em>is</em> religion.</p>
+
+<p>The decisive turn in the history of the higher life occurs when the <em>determination</em>
+of Nature (in order to be guided by it) changes into a <em>fixation</em>—that
+is, a purposed alteration of Nature. With this, technique becomes more
+or less sovereign and the instinctive prime-experience changes into a definitely
+“conscious” prime-<em>knowing</em>. Thought has emancipated itself from sensation.
+It is the <em>language of words</em> that brings about this epochal change. The liberation
+of speech from speaking&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_926" href="#Footnote_926" class="fnanchor">[926]</a> gives rise to a stock of signs for communication-speech
+which are much more than identification-marks—they are <em>names</em> bound up with
+a sense of meaning, whereby man has the secret of numina (deities, nature-forces)
+in his power, and <em>number</em> (formulæ, simple laws), whereby the inner
+form of the actual is abstracted form the accidental-sensuous.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_927" href="#Footnote_927" class="fnanchor">[927]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p500">[500]</span></p>
+
+<p>With that, the system of identification-marks develops into a theory, a
+<em>picture</em> which detaches itself from the technique of the day&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_928" href="#Footnote_928" class="fnanchor">[928]</a>—whether this be a
+day of high-level Civilized technics or a day of simplest beginnings—by way of
+<em>abstraction</em>, as a piece of waking-consciousness uncommitted to activity. One
+“knows” what one wants, but much must have happened for one to have that
+knowledge, and we must make no mistake as to its character. By numerical
+experience man is enabled to switch the secret on and off, but he has not discovered
+it. The figure of the modern sorcerer—a switchboard with levers and
+labels at which the workman calls mighty effects into play by the pressure of a
+finger without possessing the slightest notion of their essence—is only the
+symbol of human technique in general. The picture of the light-world around
+us—in so far as we have developed it critically, analytically, as theory, as
+picture—is nothing but a switchboard of the kind, on which particular things
+are so labelled that by (so to say) pressing the appropriate button particular
+effects follow with certainty. The secret itself remains none the less oppressive
+on that account.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_929" href="#Footnote_929" class="fnanchor">[929]</a> But through this technique the waking-consciousness does,
+all the same, intervene masterfully in the fact-world. Life <em>makes use</em> of thought
+as an “open sesame,” and at the peak of many a Civilization, in its great cities,
+there arrives finally the moment when technical critique becomes tired of being
+life’s servant and makes itself tyrant. The Western Culture is even now experiencing
+an orgy of this unbridled thought, and on a tragic scale.</p>
+
+<p>Man has listened-in to the march of Nature and made notes of its indices.
+He begins to imitate it by means and methods that utilize the laws of the cosmic
+pulse. He is emboldened to play the part of God, and it is easy to understand
+how the earliest preparers and experts of these artificial things—for it was
+here that art came to be, <em>as counter-concept to nature</em>—and how in particular the
+guardians of the smith’s art, appeared to those around them as something
+uncanny and were regarded with awe or horror as the case might be. The stock
+of such discoveries grew and grew. Often they were made and forgotten and
+made again, were imitated, shunned, improved. But in the end they constituted
+for whole continents a store of <em>self-evident</em> means—fire, metal-working, instruments,
+arms, ploughs, boats, houses, animal-taming, and husbandry.
+Above all, the metals, to whose site in the earth primitive man is led by some
+uncannily mystical trait in him. Immemoriably old trade-routes lead to ore-deposits
+that are kept secret, through the life of the settled countryside and
+over frequented seas, and along these, later, travel cults and ornaments and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p501">[501]</span>persistent legends of islands of tin and lands of gold. The primary trade of all
+is the metal trade, and with it the economics of production and of work are
+joined intrusively by a third—alien, venturesome, free-ranging over the lands.</p>
+
+<p>On this foundation, now, arises the technique of the higher Cultures, expressive
+in quality and colour and passion of the whole soul of these major
+entities. It need hardly be said that Classical man, who felt himself and his
+environment alike Euclidean, set himself <i lang="la">a priori</i> in hostile opposition to the
+very idea of technique. If by “Classical” technique we mean something that
+(along with the rest that we comprehend in the adjective) rose with determined
+effort above the universal dead perfection of the Mycenæan age, then there was
+no Classical technique.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_930" href="#Footnote_930" class="fnanchor">[930]</a> Its triremes were glorified row-boats, its catapults
+and onagers mere substitutes for arms and fists—not to be named in the same
+breath with the war-engines of Assyria and China—and as for Hero and his
+like, it was flukes and not discoveries that they achieved. They lacked the
+inner weight, the fatedness of their moment, the deep necessity. Here and there
+men played with data (and why not?) that probably came from the East,
+but no one devoted serious attention to them and, above all, no one made a
+real effort to introduce them into the ensemble-picture of life.</p>
+
+<p>Very different is the Faustian technics, which with all its passion of the
+third dimension, and from earliest Gothic days, thrusts itself upon Nature, with
+the firm resolve to <em>be its master</em>. Here, and only here, is the connexion of insight
+and utilization a matter of course.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_931" href="#Footnote_931" class="fnanchor">[931]</a>
+ Theory is working hypothesis&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_932" href="#Footnote_932" class="fnanchor">[932]</a> from the
+outset. The Classical investigator “contemplated” like Aristotle’s deity, the
+Arabian sought as alchemist for magical means (such as the Philosophers’
+Stone) whereby to possess himself of Nature’s treasures <em>without effort</em>,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_933" href="#Footnote_933" class="fnanchor">[933]</a> but the
+Western strives to <em>direct</em> the world according to his will.</p>
+
+<p>The Faustian inventor and discoverer is a unique type. The primitive force
+of his will, the brilliance of his visions, the steely energy of his practical ponderings,
+must appear queer and incomprehensible to anyone at the standpoint of
+another Culture, but for us they are in the blood. Our whole Culture has a
+discoverer’s soul. To <em>dis</em>-cover that which is not seen, to draw it into the
+light-world of the inner eye so as to master it—that was its stubborn passion
+from the first days on. All its great inventions slowly ripened in the deeps,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p502">[502]</span>to emerge at last with the necessity of a Destiny. All of them were very nearly
+approached by the high-hearted, happy research of the early Gothic monks.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_934" href="#Footnote_934" class="fnanchor">[934]</a>
+Here, if anywhere, the religious origins of all technical thought are manifested.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_935" href="#Footnote_935" class="fnanchor">[935]</a>
+These meditative discoverers in their cells, who with prayers and fastings
+<em>wrung</em> God’s secret out of him, felt that they were <em>serving</em> God thereby. Here is
+the Faust-figure, the grand symbol of a true discovering Culture. The <i lang="la">Scientia
+experimentalis</i>, as Roger Bacon was the first to call nature-research, the <em>insistent</em>
+questioning of Nature with levers and screws, began that of which the issue
+lies under our eyes as a countryside sprouting factory-chimneys and conveyor-towers.
+But for all of them, too, there was the truly Faustian danger of the
+Devil’s having a hand in the game,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_936" href="#Footnote_936" class="fnanchor">[936]</a> the risk that he was leading them in spirit
+to that mountain on which he promises all the power of the earth. This is the
+significance of the <i lang="la">perpetuum mobile</i> dreamed of by those strange Dominicans
+like Petrus Peregrinus, which would wrest the almightiness from God. Again
+and again they succumbed to this ambition; they forced this secret out of
+God in order themselves to be God. They listened for the laws of the cosmic
+pulse in order to overpower it. And so they created the <em>idea of the machine</em> as a
+small cosmos obeying the will of man alone. But with that they overpassed
+the slender border-line whereat the reverent piety of others saw the beginning
+of sin, and on it, from Roger Bacon to Giordano Bruno, they came to grief.
+Ever and ever again, true belief has regarded the machine as of the Devil.</p>
+
+<p>The passion of discovery declares itself as early as the Gothic architecture—compare
+with this the deliberate form-poverty of the Doric!—and is manifest
+throughout our music. Book-printing appeared, and the long-range weapon.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_937" href="#Footnote_937" class="fnanchor">[937]</a>
+On the heels of Columbus and Copernicus come the telescope, the microscope,
+the chemical elements, and lastly the immense technological corpus of the
+early Baroque.</p>
+
+<p>Then followed, however, simultaneously with Rationalism, the discovery
+of the steam-engine, which upset everything and transformed economic life
+from the foundations up. Till then nature had rendered services, but now she
+was tied to the yoke as <em>a slave</em>, and her work was as though in contempt measured
+by a standard of horse-power. We advanced from the muscle-force of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p503">[503]</span>Negro, which was set to work in organized routines, to the organic reserves of
+the Earth’s crust, where the life-forces of millennia lay stored as coal; and
+to-day we cast our eyes on inorganic nature, where water-forces are already
+being brought in to supplement coal. As the horse-powers run to millions and
+milliards, the numbers of the population increase and increase, on a scale that
+no other Culture ever thought possible. This growth is a <em>product of the Machine</em>,
+which insists on being used and directed, and to that end centuples the forces of
+each individual. For the sake of the machine, human life becomes precious.
+<em>Work</em> becomes the great word of ethical thinking; in the eighteenth century
+it loses its derogatory implication in all languages. The machine works and
+forces the man to co-operate. The entire Culture reaches a degree of activity
+such that the earth trembles under it.</p>
+
+<p>And what now develops, in the space of hardly a century, is a drama of
+such greatness that the men of a future Culture, with other soul and other
+passions, will hardly be able to resist the conviction that “in those days”
+nature herself was tottering. The politics stride over cities and peoples; even
+the economics, deeply as they bite into the destinies of the plant and animal
+worlds, merely touch the fringe of life and efface themselves. But this technique
+will leave traces of its heyday behind it when all else is lost and forgotten. For
+this Faustian passion has altered the Face of the Earth.</p>
+
+<p>This is the outward- and upward-straining life-feeling—true descendant,
+therefore, of the Gothic—as expressed in Goethe’s Faust monologue when the
+steam-engine was yet young. The intoxicated soul wills to fly above space and
+Time. An ineffable longing tempts him to indefinable horizons. Man would
+free himself from the earth, rise into the infinite, leave the bonds of the body,
+and circle in the universe of space amongst the stars. That which the glowing
+and soaring inwardness of St. Bernard sought at the beginning, that which
+Grünewald and Rembrandt conceived in their backgrounds, and Beethoven in
+the trans-earthly tones of his last quartets, comes back now in the intellectual
+intoxication of the inventions that crowd one upon another. Hence the
+fantastic traffic that crosses the continents in a few days, that puts itself across
+oceans in floating cities, that bores through mountains, rushes about in subterranean
+labyrinths, uses the steam-engine till its last possibilities have been
+exhausted, and then passes on to the gas-engine, and finally raises itself above
+the roads and railways and flies in the air; hence it is that the spoken word is
+sent in one moment over all the oceans; hence comes the ambition to break all
+records and beat all dimensions, to build giant halls for giant machines, vast
+ships and bridge-spans, buildings that deliriously scrape the clouds, fabulous
+forces pressed together to a focus to obey the hand of a child, stamping and
+quivering and droning works of steel and glass in which tiny man moves as
+unlimited monarch and, at the last, feels nature as beneath him.</p>
+
+<p>And these machines become in their forms less and ever less human, more
+<span class="pagenum" id="p504">[504]</span>ascetic, mystic, esoteric. They weave the earth over with an infinite web of
+subtle forces, currents, and tensions. Their bodies become ever more and more
+immaterial, ever less noisy. The wheels, rollers, and levers are vocal no more.
+All that matters withdraws itself into the interior. Man has felt the machine
+to be devilish, and rightly. It signifies in the eyes of the believer the deposition
+of God. It delivers sacred Causality over to man and by him, with a sort
+of foreseeing omniscience is set in motion, silent and irresistible.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_13">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>Never save here has a microcosm felt itself superior to its macrocosm, but
+here the little life-units have by the sheer force of their intellect made the unliving
+dependent upon themselves. It is a triumph, so far as we can see, unparalleled.
+Only this our Culture has achieved it, and perhaps only for a few
+centuries.</p>
+
+<p>But for that very reason Faustian man has become <em>the slave of his creation</em>.
+His number, and the arrangement of life as he lives it, have been driven by the
+machine on to a path where there is no standing still and no turning back.
+The peasant, the hand-worker, even the merchant, appear suddenly as inessential
+in comparison with the <em>three great figures that the Machine has bred and
+trained up in the cause of its development: the entrepreneur, the engineer, and the factory-worker</em>.
+Out of a quite small branch of manual work—namely, the preparation-economy—there
+has grown up (<em>in this one Culture alone</em>) a mighty tree that
+casts its shadow over all the other vocations—namely, <em>the economy of the machine-industry</em>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_938" href="#Footnote_938" class="fnanchor">[938]</a>
+It forces the entrepreneur not less than the workman to obedience.
+<em>Both</em> become slaves, and not masters, of the machine, that now for the first
+time develops its devilish and occult power. But although the Socialistic
+theory of the present day has insisted upon looking only at the latter’s contribution
+and has claimed the word “work” for him alone, it has all become
+possible only through the sovereign and decisive achievement of the former.
+The famous phrase concerning the “strong arm” that bids every wheel cease
+from running is a piece of wrong-headedness. To stop them—yes! but it does
+not need a worker to do that. To keep them running—no! The centre of this
+<span class="pagenum" id="p505">[505]</span>artificial and complicated realm of the Machine is the organizer and manager.
+The mind, not the hand, holds it together. But, for that very reason, to preserve
+the ever endangered structure, <em>one</em> figure is even more important than all
+the energy of enterprising master-men that make cities to grow out of the ground
+and alter the picture of the landscape; it is a figure that is apt to be forgotten
+in this conflict of politics—the <em>engineer</em>, the priest of the machine, the man
+who knows it. Not merely the importance, but the very existence of the
+industry depends upon the existence of the hundred thousand talented, rigorously
+schooled brains that command the technique and develop it onward
+and onward. The quiet engineer it is who is the machine’s master and destiny.
+His thought is as possibility what the machine is as actuality. There have been
+fears, thoroughly materialistic fears, of the exhaustion of the coal-fields. But
+so long as there are worthy technical path-finders, dangers of this sort have no
+existence. When, and only when, the crop of recruits for this army fails—this
+army whose thought-work forms one inward unit with the work of the
+machine—the industry must flicker out in spite of all that managerial energy
+and the workers can do. Suppose that, in future generations, the most gifted
+minds were to find their soul’s health more important than all the powers of
+this world; suppose that, under the influence of the metaphysic and mysticism
+that is taking the place of rationalism to-day, the very élite of intellect that is
+now concerned with the machine comes to be overpowered by a growing sense
+of its <em>Satanism</em> (it is the step from Roger Bacon to Bernard of Clairvaux)—then
+nothing can hinder the end of this grand drama that has been a play of
+intellects, with hands as mere auxiliaries.</p>
+
+<p>The Western industry has diverted the ancient traditions of the other Cultures.
+The streams of economic life move towards the seats of King Coal and
+the great regions of raw material. Nature becomes exhausted, the globe
+sacrificed to Faustian thinking in energies. The <em>working</em> earth is the Faustian
+aspect of her, the aspect contemplated by the Faust of Part II, the supreme
+transfiguration of enterprising work—and contemplating, he dies. Nothing
+is so utterly antipodal to the motionless satiate being of the Classical Empire.
+It is the engineer who is remotest from the Classical law-thought, and he will
+see to it that his economy has <em>its own</em> law, wherein forces and efficiencies will
+take the place of Person and Thing.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_13">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>But titanic, too, is the onslaught of money upon this intellectual force.
+Industry, too, is earth-bound like the yeoman. It has its station, and its materials
+stream up out of the earth. Only high finance is <em>wholly</em> free, wholly
+intangible. Since 1789 the banks, and with them the bourses, have developed
+themselves on the credit-needs of an industry growing ever more enormous, as a
+power on their own account, and they will (as money wills in every Civilization)
+<span class="pagenum" id="p506">[506]</span>to be the only power. The ancient wrestle between the productive and the acquisitive
+economies intensifies now into a silent gigantomachy of intellects,
+fought out in the lists of the world-cities. This battle is the despairing struggle
+of technical thought to maintain its liberty against money-thought.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_939" href="#Footnote_939" class="fnanchor">[939]</a></p>
+
+<p>The dictature of money marches on, tending to its material peak, in the
+Faustian Civilization as in every other. And now something happens that is
+intelligible only to one who has penetrated to the essence of money. If it were
+anything tangible, then its existence would be for ever—but, as it is a form of
+thought, <em>it fades out as soon as it has thought its economic world to finality</em>, and has
+no more material upon which to feed. It thrust into the life of the yeoman’s
+countryside and set the earth a-moving; its thought transformed every sort of
+handicraft; to-day it presses victoriously upon industry to make the productive
+work of entrepreneur and engineer and labourer alike its spoil. The machine
+with its human retinue, the real queen of this century, is in danger of succumbing
+to a stronger power. But with this, money, too, is at the end of its success,
+and the last conflict is at hand in which the Civilization receives its conclusive
+form—the conflict <em>between</em> money and blood.</p>
+
+<p>The coming of Cæsarism breaks the dictature of money and its political
+weapon democracy. After a long triumph of world-city economy and its interests
+over political creative force, the political side of life manifests itself after all as
+the stronger of the two. The sword is victorious over the money, the master-will
+subdues again the plunderer-will. If we call these money-powers “Capitalism,”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_940" href="#Footnote_940" class="fnanchor">[940]</a>
+then we may designate as Socialism the will to call into life a mighty
+politico-economic order that transcends all class interests, a system of <em>lofty</em>
+thoughtfulness and duty-sense that keeps the whole in fine condition for the
+decisive battle of its history, and this battle is also the battle of money and law.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_941" href="#Footnote_941" class="fnanchor">[941]</a>
+The <em>private</em> powers of the economy want free paths for their acquisition of great
+resources. No legislation must stand in their way. They want to make the
+laws themselves, in their interests, and to that end they make use of the tool
+they have made for themselves, democracy, the subsidized party. Law needs,
+in order to resist this onslaught, a high tradition and an ambition of strong
+families that finds its satisfaction not in the heaping-up of riches, but in the
+tasks of true rulership, above and beyond all money-advantage. <em>A power can be
+overthrown only by another power</em>, not by a principle, and no power that can confront
+<span class="pagenum" id="p507">[507]</span>money is left but this one. Money is overthrown and abolished only by blood.
+<em>Life</em> is alpha and omega, the cosmic onflow in microcosmic form. It is <em>the</em> fact
+of facts within the world-as-history. Before the irresistible rhythm of the
+generation-sequence, everything built up by the waking-consciousness in its
+intellectual world vanishes at the last. Ever in History it is life and life only—race-quality,
+the triumph of the will-to-power—and not the victory of truths,
+discoveries, or money that signifies. <em>World-history is the world court</em>, and it has
+ever decided in favour of the stronger, fuller, and more self-assured life—decreed
+to it, namely, the right to exist, regardless of whether its right would
+hold before a tribunal of waking-consciousness. Always it has sacrificed truth
+and justice to might and race, and passed doom of death upon men and peoples
+in whom truth was more than deeds, and justice than power. And so the
+drama of a high Culture—that wondrous world of deities, arts, thoughts,
+battles, cities—closes with the return of the pristine facts of the blood eternal
+that is one and the same as the ever-circling cosmic flow. The bright imaginative
+Waking-Being submerges itself into the silent service of Being, as the
+Chinese and Roman empires tell us. Time triumphs over Space, and it is Time
+whose inexorable movement embeds the ephemeral incident of the Culture, on
+this planet, in the incident of Man—a form wherein the incident life flows on
+for a time, while behind it all the streaming horizons of geological and stellar
+histories pile up in the light-world of our eyes.</p>
+
+<p>For us, however, whom a Destiny has placed in this Culture and at this
+moment of its development—the moment when money is celebrating its last
+victories, and the Cæsarism that is to succeed approaches with quiet, firm step—our
+direction, willed and obligatory at once, is set for us within narrow
+limits, and on any other terms life is not worth the living. We have not the
+freedom to reach to this or to that, but the freedom to do the necessary or to do
+nothing. And a task that historic necessity has set <em>will</em> be accomplished with
+the individual or against him.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<i lang="la">Ducunt Fata volentem, nolentem trahunt.</i>
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-i">[index i]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="INDEX">
+ INDEX
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="center">Prepared by <span class="smcap">David M. Matteson</span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+ <li class="ifrst">Abbassids, court life, <a href="#p197">197</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Syncretism, <a href="#p313">313</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Third Estate and rule, <a href="#p424">424</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Abraham, Judah’s silver pieces, <a href="#p237">237</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Absolutism. <i>See</i> Dynastic idea; Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Abu Bekr, Puritanism, <a href="#p304">304</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Abu Hanifah, as jurist, <a href="#p75">75</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Academy, style, <a href="#p345">345</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Achikar, as Arabian, <a href="#p208">208</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Achmed, and Caliph, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Acosta, Uriel, expulsion, <a href="#p317">317</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Acragas, democratic triumph, <a href="#p396">396</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Actium, battle, importance, <a href="#p191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cæsarism, <a href="#p423">423</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Activity, waking-being and willed, <a href="#p133">133</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Actuality, and abstract thought, <a href="#p144">144</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Adiabene, Jewish state, <a href="#p175">175</a>, <a href="#p198">198</a>, <a href="#p209">209</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Adrianople, battle, effect, <a href="#p40">40</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Adventism, as type of second religiousness, <a href="#p311">311</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Æchylus, and being, <a href="#p272">272</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and religion, <a href="#p282">282</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ælius, <cite lang="la">Tripertita</cite>, <a href="#p66">66</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Agamemnon, as feudal, <a href="#p374">374</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Agathocles, and Mamertines, <a href="#p160">160</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Syracuse massacre, <a href="#p406">406</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Agis III, revolution, <a href="#p65">65</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Agriculture, effect on man, <a href="#p89">89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">farmhouse as symbol, <a href="#p90">90</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">modern, as technic, <a href="#p479">479</a> n., <a href="#p485">485</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ahuramazda, as deity, <a href="#p207">207</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Spenta Mainyu and Vohu Mano, <a href="#p244">244</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Akhenaton, religiousness, <a href="#p313">313</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">revolution, <a href="#p353">353</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Akiba, legends, <a href="#p250">250</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aksakov, Ivan, on Petersburg, <a href="#p193">193</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Al Alblaq, castle, <a href="#p198">198</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Alaric, historyless, <a href="#p432">432</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Albegensians, Manichæans, <a href="#p260">260</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Albert of Saxony, as scientist, <a href="#p301">301</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Albertus Magnus, <a href="#p291">291</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">philosophy, <a href="#p172">172</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Devil-cult, and technique, <a href="#p502">502</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Alcibiades, and army, <a href="#p406">406</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Alcmæonidæ, and Athenian history, <a href="#p336">336</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Alesia, siege, <a href="#p421">421</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Alexander the Great, as follower, <a href="#p88">88</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political character of empire, <a href="#p174">174</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">divine descent, <a href="#p314">314</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and polis, <a href="#p383">383</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">control by generals, <a href="#p407">407</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Macedonians</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Alexandria, as world-city, <a href="#p99">99</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">outbreaks, <a href="#p198">198</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as polis, <a href="#p383">383</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Alfonso X of Castile, work on planets, <a href="#p316">316</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Al Ghazali, deification, <a href="#p314">314</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and science, <a href="#p315">315</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ali, war with Othman, <a href="#p424">424</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">power, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Alien, and “proper” in sensation, <a href="#p6">6</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“All,” as word, <a href="#p141">141</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Al Maimun, Rationalism, <a href="#p306">306</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Al Manzor, Christian, <a href="#p260">260</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Alp Arslan, power, <a href="#p427">427</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Alphabet. <i>See</i> Writing</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Amasis, rise, <a href="#p428">428</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Amenemhet I, absolutism, <a href="#p387">387</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Amenhotep (Amenophis) IV, city, <a href="#p101">101</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">religiousness, <a href="#p313">313</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">revolution, <a href="#p353">353</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Amenophis IV. <i>See</i> Amenhotep</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">American Revolution, effect in France, <a href="#p411">411</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cause, loyalists, <a href="#p411">411</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Americans, as race, Indian influence, <a href="#p119">119</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as people, creation of events, <a href="#p165">165</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">language and nation, <a href="#p183">183</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and predestination, <a href="#p305">305</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Civil War, <a href="#p356">356</a>, <a href="#p369">369</a> n., <a href="#p421">421</a>, <a href="#p488">488</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fate of government, <a href="#p416">416</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">basis of reverence for constitution, <a href="#p430">430</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">no yeomanry, <a href="#p449">449</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">party and political machine, <a href="#p450">450–452</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economics and politics, <a href="#p475">475</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ammonius Saccas, conversion, <a href="#p176">176</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Amoraim, period, <a href="#p71">71</a>, <a href="#p250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and commentary, <a href="#p247">247</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Amos, as Arabian prophet, <a href="#p205">205</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Analysis, and double-entry book-keeping, <a href="#p490">490</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Anastasius I, demonstration against, <a href="#p381">381</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ancestral worship, Chinese, time-mythology, <a href="#p286">286</a>, <a href="#p351">351</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ancient History, as term, <a href="#p28">28</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Angelico, Fra, frescoes and the Devil, <a href="#p292">292</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Animal, essential character, microcosm in macrocosm, <a href="#p3">3</a>, <a href="#p4">4</a>, <a href="#p15">15</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cosmic beat and tension, <a href="#p4">4</a>, <a href="#p5">5</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cosmic organs, blood, sex, <a href="#p5">5</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">microcosmic organ, sense, <a href="#p5">5</a>, <a href="#p6">6</a>, <a href="#p115">115</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">sense and understanding, <a href="#p6">6</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">sight as supreme sense, <a href="#p6">6</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">being and waking-being, <a href="#p7">7</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and language, <a href="#p131">131–134</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and art, <a href="#p133">133</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">involuntary technique, <a href="#p499">499</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Anselm, Saint, Arabian contemporaries, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Anti-Semitism, rationale, <a href="#p317">317–321</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Antioch, as un-Classical, <a href="#p101">101</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as capital city, <a href="#p191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as polis, <a href="#p383">383</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Antiochus Epiphanes, persecution, <a href="#p210">210</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Antony, Mark, Actium, <a href="#p191">191</a>, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Cicero, <a href="#p433">433</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aphrahat, epistles, <a href="#p252">252</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-ii">[ii]</span>Aphrodisias, Pagan conversion, <a href="#p259">259</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Apocalyptic, predecessors of Mohammed, <a href="#p204">204</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">related Arabian, <a href="#p204">204–207</a>, <a href="#p209">209</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian development, <a href="#p208">208</a>, <a href="#p245">245</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish law and the prophets, <a href="#p209">209</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">end of Jewish, <a href="#p211">211</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Arabian awakening, <a href="#p212">212</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jesus’ teaching, <a href="#p217">217</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Resurrection, <a href="#p218">218</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Paul’s attitude, <a href="#p221">221</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as vision of fable, <a href="#p237">237</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">basis of writing, <a href="#p245">245</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Religion</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Apocrypha, elimination, <a href="#p71">71</a>, <a href="#p248">248</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Apollinaris, Monophysite, <a href="#p257">257</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Apollonian cult, and body, <a href="#p283">283</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Tyrannis, <a href="#p386">386</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Apollonius, as biographer, <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Apologists, period, <a href="#p71">71</a>, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Apostles, fictitious authorships, <a href="#p72">72</a> n. <i>See also</i> Gospels</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Appius Claudius. <i>See</i> Claudius</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Arabian Culture, historic, <a href="#p27">27</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">problems of study, <a href="#p38">38</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as discovery, <a href="#p42">42</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to other Cultures, midmost, <a href="#p42">42</a>, <a href="#p87">87</a>, <a href="#p190">190</a>, <a href="#p235">235</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">landscape, <a href="#p42">42</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Islam, Civilization and Crusades, <a href="#p43">43</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">pre-cultural law, <a href="#p75">75</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">pre-cultural tribal association, <a href="#p175">175</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">pseudomorphosis, <a href="#p189">189</a>, <a href="#p191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ignorance of inner form, partial study, <a href="#p190">190</a>, <a href="#p191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">feudalism, <a href="#p196">196–200</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Scholasticism and Mysticism, <a href="#p200">200</a>, <a href="#p250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">scientific beginnings, <a href="#p200">200</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">space-concept, cavern, <a href="#p233">233</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">time-concept, ordained period, eras, <a href="#p238">238–240</a>, <a href="#p249">249</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">future of nations, <a href="#p323">323</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cognate family, <a href="#p330">330</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dynastic idea, <a href="#p330">330</a> n., <a href="#p378">378</a>, <a href="#p379">379</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">style of priesthood, <a href="#p325">325</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation of primary estates, <a href="#p353">353</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political periods from feudalism to Cæsarism, <a href="#p423">423–427</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political theory, <a href="#p453">453</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Cultures; Islam; Jews; Pseudomorphosis; Religion; Roman law</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aragon, control by nobility, <a href="#p373">373</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aramaic, and Christianity, <a href="#p225">225</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Jewish church-language, <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Archæans, as name, <a href="#p161">161</a>, <a href="#p164">164</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Archaeology, as Western trait, <a href="#p79">79</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Archimedes, futility, <a href="#p17">17</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Architecture, Mexican, <a href="#p45">45</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">foreign effects of Western, <a href="#p46">46</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural mixture, <a href="#p87">87</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Minoan and Mycenæan houses, <a href="#p88">88</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cosmic and microcosmic, <a href="#p92">92</a>, <a href="#p93">93</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and dwelling-house, <a href="#p120">120</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as religious and ornament, <a href="#p123">123</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">secular buildings and style, <a href="#p123">123</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Romanesque soul, <a href="#p180">180</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">basilica and mosque, <a href="#p230">230</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Art</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Archons, urban, <a href="#p374">374</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">overthrow, <a href="#p398">398</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Areopagus, overthrow, <a href="#p396">396</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Argos, massacre, <a href="#p405">405</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aristides, on Roman polis, <a href="#p383">383</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aristocracy of intellect, as term, <a href="#p166">166</a> n. <i>See also</i> Nobility</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aristonicus, and Blossius, <a href="#p454">454</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aristotle, universe, <a href="#p58">58</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and polis, <a href="#p173">173</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Calani, <a href="#p175">175</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and commentary, <a href="#p247">247</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“Theology,” <a href="#p248">248</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Rationalism, <a href="#p305">305</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">corpus, <a href="#p346">346</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Arius, and substance controversy, <a href="#p256">256</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Armenia, conversion as state, <a href="#p177">177</a>, <a href="#p253">253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">devil-worshippers, <a href="#p236">236</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nobility, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">sword-dynasty, <a href="#p426">426</a>, <a href="#p428">428</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Army, Byzantine system, <a href="#p199">199</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">professional, rise as political power, <a href="#p406">406</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> War</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Arnold of Brescia, and reform, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Art, late Minoan and early Mycenæan, <a href="#p87">87–89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">expression-language and communication-language, <a href="#p116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">taboo and totem sides, in research, <a href="#p118">118</a>, <a href="#p120">120</a>, <a href="#p121">121</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in animals, <a href="#p133">133</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and understanding, <a href="#p133">133</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">forms, <a href="#p331">331</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">lack of Classical financial value, destruction, <a href="#p487">487</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as counter-concept to native, <a href="#p500">500</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Architecture; Ornament</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aryan. <i>See</i> Indogermanic</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Asceticism. <i>See</i> Monasticism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Asclepiades, work, <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Asclepiodotus, as Pagan missionary, <a href="#p259">259</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Asoka, religiousness, <a href="#p313">313</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Sudra, <a href="#p333">333</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Asosi, as feudal, <a href="#p375">375</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Assuan documents, <a href="#p209">209</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Assyrians, as rulers, <a href="#p40">40</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Astrakan, Judaic conversion, <a href="#p259">259</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Astrology, and Arabian time-concept, <a href="#p238">238</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as late Classical fad, <a href="#p310">310</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Astronomy, Chaldean, <a href="#p206">206</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Asvagosha, Mahayana doctrine, <a href="#p313">313</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Atargatis, cult, <a href="#p201">201</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Athanasius, and Western dogma, <a href="#p230">230</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and substance controversy, <a href="#p256">256</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and reform, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Athens, and Alcmæonidæ, <a href="#p336">336</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i>: Sparta, <a href="#p368">368</a>, Tyrannis, <a href="#p386">386</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">overthrow of oligarchy, <a href="#p396">396</a>, <a href="#p397">397</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Athos, monasteries as Buddhistic, <a href="#p314">314</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Atreus, tomb, <a href="#p89">89</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Auaris, as capital, <a href="#p428">428</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Augustine, Saint, and Grace, <a href="#p59">59</a>, <a href="#p241">241</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Classical religion as true, <a href="#p204">204</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Manichæan, <a href="#p227">227</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dualism, <a href="#p234">234</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">community of the elect, <a href="#p243">243</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on ruler, <a href="#p379">379</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Augustus, principate and monarchy, <a href="#p50">50</a>, <a href="#p349">349</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and dyarchy, <a href="#p432">432</a>, <a href="#p433">433</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aulard, F. Alphonse, on French Revolution, <a href="#p399">399</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aurelian, State religion, <a href="#p253">253</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aureole, significance, <a href="#p378">378</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aurignacian Man, conditions, <a href="#p34">34</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Austria, national origin, <a href="#p182">182</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">annihilation, <a href="#p183">183</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Holy Roman Empire</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Autarkeia, Rationalism, <a href="#p307">307</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Authority, and authorship, <a href="#p248">248</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-iii">[iii]</span>Authorship, and authority, <a href="#p248">248</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Avicenna, Spinoza as heir, <a href="#p321">321</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Avidius Cassius, on Marcus Aurelius, <a href="#p430">430</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Axum, ignored history, <a href="#p190">190</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">feudalism, <a href="#p197">197</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Himaryites, <a href="#p197">197</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">stelæ, <a href="#p234">234</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">State religion, <a href="#p253">253</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aztecs, rule, <a href="#p45">45</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and jurisprudence, <a href="#p66">66</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and woman, <a href="#p328">328</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Baal cults, in Syncretism, <a href="#p201">201</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Baal Shem, Gnosis, <a href="#p228">228</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Messiah, <a href="#p311">311</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Babek, outbreaks, <a href="#p424">424</a>, <a href="#p425">425</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Babylon, as world-city, <a href="#p99">99</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Babylonian Culture, beginning, achievements, rulers, <a href="#p39">39</a>, <a href="#p40">40</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and early Jewish law, <a href="#p75">75</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Arabian Culture, <a href="#p189">189</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Chaldean, <a href="#p205">205</a> n., <a href="#p206">206</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">astrology, <a href="#p238">238</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bacchiadæ, and succession, <a href="#p380">380</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bach, John Sebastian, Exekias as contemporary, <a href="#p135">135</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bacon, Roger, philosophy, <a href="#p172">172</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Devil, <a href="#p290">290</a> n., <a href="#p502">502</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as scientist, <a href="#p301">301</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and technique, <a href="#p502">502</a>, <a href="#p502">502</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Baghdad, as Islam, <a href="#p95">95</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as world-city, <a href="#p99">99</a>, <a href="#p425">425</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">plan, <a href="#p100">100</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Balkuwara Palace, <a href="#p100">100</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Banausos, notion, <a href="#p332">332</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bank-note, status, <a href="#p483">483</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Banking, cultural basis, <a href="#p493">493</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bantu language, <a href="#p142">142</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Baptism, as impersonal, <a href="#p293">293</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Luther’s concept, <a href="#p299">299</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Barcochebas, rising, <a href="#p319">319</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bardas, power, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bardas Phocas, power, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bardesanes, period and task, <a href="#p250">250</a>, <a href="#p257">257</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and substance, <a href="#p255">255</a>, <a href="#p256">256</a>, <a href="#p258">258</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Baroque, as microcosmic and urban, <a href="#p92">92</a>, <a href="#p93">93</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">science and Gothic religiousness, <a href="#p270">270</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">contemporary Jewish period, <a href="#p316">316</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political aspect, <a href="#p391">391</a>, <a href="#p405">405</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fifty-year periods, <a href="#p392">392</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Barrack-state, <a href="#p366">366</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Barter, in early Culture, <a href="#p97">97</a>, <a href="#p480">480</a>, <a href="#p481">481</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bartolus, as jurist, <a href="#p77">77</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Baruch Apocalypse, fictitious, <a href="#p72">72</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dualism, <a href="#p234">234</a>, <a href="#p248">248</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Basel, Council of, and feudalism, <a href="#p374">374</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Basileios I, power, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Basileios II, and rule, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Basileios, chancellor, power, <a href="#p427">427</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Basileus, as feudal, <a href="#p374">374</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Basilica, and mosque, <a href="#p230">230</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Basilides, and substance, <a href="#p256">256</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Basques, race, <a href="#p165">165</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Basra, Ali’s capture, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bavaria, as State, <a href="#p182">182</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Baxter, Jedediah H., on American race, <a href="#p119">119</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bayle, Pierre, on understanding, <a href="#p13">13</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Beast-deities, Classical, <a href="#p276">276</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Mycenæan and Egyptian, <a href="#p276">276</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Beat, and tension, <a href="#p4">4</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and being, <a href="#p7">7</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cosmic, in crowd, <a href="#p18">18</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Being</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Beatification, scientific, <a href="#p346">346</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Become, and understanding, <a href="#p14">14</a>, <a href="#p15">15</a>. <i>See also</i> Microcosm</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Becoming, and understanding, <a href="#p14">14</a>, <a href="#p15">15</a>. <i>See also</i> Cosmic</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Behistun Inscription, <a href="#p166">166</a>, <a href="#p207">207</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Being, as cosmic, and waking-being, <a href="#p7">7</a>, <a href="#p11">11</a>, <a href="#p13">13</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">peasant as, <a href="#p89">89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and race, <a href="#p113">113</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">upward series of utterances, <a href="#p116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and totem, <a href="#p117">117</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and religion, <a href="#p265">265</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and faith, <a href="#p271">271</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and moral negations, <a href="#p272">272–274</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and truths, <a href="#p274">274</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and nobility, <a href="#p335">335</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and idea of property, <a href="#p343">343</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ultimate triumph, <a href="#p435">435</a>, <a href="#p507">507</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and economics, <a href="#p470">470</a>, <a href="#p471">471</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Cosmic; History; Politics; Race; Sex; Time; Waking-being; War</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bel temple, Palmyra, inscriptions, <a href="#p206">206</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Belhomme, Jacques, and aristocrats, <a href="#p402">402</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Belisarius, as feudal lord, <a href="#p350">350</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Beloch, Julius, on migrant minority, <a href="#p164">164</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Benedictines, as rural, <a href="#p91">91</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bernadotte, Jean B. J., and Désirée Clary, <a href="#p329">329</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise, <a href="#p406">406</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bernard of Clairvaux, Arabian contemporaries, <a href="#p250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on love of God, <a href="#p266">266</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and compassion, <a href="#p273">273</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Mary-cult, <a href="#p288">288</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and contrition, <a href="#p298">298</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bible, fixation of canon, <a href="#p71">71</a>, <a href="#p248">248</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fictitious authorship, <a href="#p72">72</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">law of early books, <a href="#p75">75</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise of fetishism, <a href="#p299">299</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Christianity; New Testament; Old Testament; Sacred books</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Biography, in Western Culture, <a href="#p29">29</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and contrition, <a href="#p294">294</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Biology, and primitive history, <a href="#p48">48</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and post-Civilization history, <a href="#p48">48</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bismarck, Fürst von, dynastic government, <a href="#p415">415</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">flaw in leadership, <a href="#p444">444</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Blackstone, Sir William, Commentaries as Germanic, <a href="#p78">78</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Blake, William, “tiger” expression, <a href="#p128">128</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Blood system, cosmic organ, <a href="#p5">5</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Blossius, influence, <a href="#p454">454</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Blumenbach, Johann F., race classification, <a href="#p125">125</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Boar’s-head attack, <a href="#p199">199</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Boas, Franz, on American race, <a href="#p119">119</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Boccaccio, Giovanni, and Classicism, <a href="#p291">291</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bodin, Jean, and law of nature, <a href="#p78">78</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Body, in Roman law, <a href="#p67">67</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical concept and Western law, <a href="#p81">81</a>, <a href="#p82">82</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Classical cults, <a href="#p283">283</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and polis, <a href="#p384">384</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Classical money concept, <a href="#p486">486</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-iv">[iv]</span>Böhme, Jakob, and Western religious beginnings, <a href="#p282">282</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Boghaz, Keüi, archives, <a href="#p167">167</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bogomils, iconoclasm, <a href="#p304">304</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bollandists, and orders and schools, <a href="#p346">346</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bolshevism, Tolstoi’s relation, as pseudomorphosis, <a href="#p195">195</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural basis of fury, <a href="#p321">321</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bonaventura, Saint, and Devil-cult, <a href="#p291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Boniface, Saint, as missionary, <a href="#p56">56</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Boniface VIII, pope, and Jacopone, <a href="#p296">296</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><cite lang="la">Unam sanctam</cite>, <a href="#p376">376</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Book, expulsion by newspaper, <a href="#p461">461</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as personal expression, <a href="#p463">463</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Book-keeping, double-entry as Western symbol, <a href="#p490">490</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Booty, and power, <a href="#p344">344</a>, <a href="#p345">345</a>, <a href="#p347">347</a>, <a href="#p371">371</a>, <a href="#p372">372</a>,
+ <a href="#p474">474</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Borchardt, Ludwig, erroneous chronology, <a href="#p39">39</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Borkman, John G., on resources, <a href="#p486">486</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bosch, Hieronymus, paintings and the Devil, <a href="#p298">298</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bourbons, and world-history, <a href="#p182">182</a>, <a href="#p336">336</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bourse, as cultural phenomenon, <a href="#p484">484</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Boxer Rebellion, cultural basis, <a href="#p321">321</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bracton, Henry de, as jurist, <a href="#p76">76</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Brahmanism, Sankhara and Neo-Brahmanism, <a href="#p315">315</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Breed. <i>See</i> Race</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Brentano, Clemens, “playing” with expression, <a href="#p137">137</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Breughel, Pieter, and the Devil, <a href="#p289">289</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Brunhilde, as destiny, <a href="#p329">329</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bruno, Giordano, and machine and Devil, <a href="#p502">502</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Brutus, M. Junius, as ideologue, <a href="#p433">433</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Buch, Christian L. von, theory, <a href="#p31">31</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Buddhism, and Indian philosophy, <a href="#p49">49</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and landscape, in China, <a href="#p57">57</a>, <a href="#p312">312</a>, <a href="#p315">315</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sport, <a href="#p103">103</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and depopulation, <a href="#p106">106</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Rationalism, <a href="#p305">305</a>, <a href="#p307">307</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">expansion, <a href="#p308">308</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Hinayana and Mahayana, <a href="#p312">312</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Syncretism, <a href="#p313">313</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">deification of Buddha, <a href="#p314">314</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Neo-Brahmanism, <a href="#p315">315</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and political theory, <a href="#p453">453</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bunyan, John, and concepts, <a href="#p303">303</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Burdach, Konrad, on Renaissance and Gothic, <a href="#p291">291</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Burghers. <i>See</i> Democracy; Town</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Buridan, Jean, as scientist, <a href="#p301">301</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Burkard of Worms, and Devil-cult, <a href="#p290">290</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Burke, Edmund, on rights, <a href="#p403">403</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Burning of the Books, and Cæsarism, <a href="#p433">433</a>, <a href="#p434">434</a>, <a href="#p463">463</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bylini, hero-tales, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Byzantine Empire, and inter-Cultures, <a href="#p89">89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cult and nationality, State religion, <a href="#p176">176</a>, <a href="#p178">178</a>, <a href="#p230">230</a>, <a href="#p243">243</a>, <a href="#p253">253</a>,
+ <a href="#p258">258</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">capital city as symbol, <a href="#p191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and feudalism, army system, <a href="#p198">198</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">literature and Arabian literature, <a href="#p304">304</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Crusades, <a href="#p319">319</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nobility and priesthood, <a href="#p353">353</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Sassanid pattern, <a href="#p378">378</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">class-basis of political associations, <a href="#p381">381</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">revolution in, <a href="#p425">425</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Cæsarism in, <a href="#p426">426</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Arabian Culture, Pseudomorphosis; Religion</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Cæsar, C. Julius, ahistoric, <a href="#p24">24</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">monarchy and principate, <a href="#p50">50</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">divine descent, <a href="#p314">314</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">demagogy, money and power, <a href="#p402">402</a>, <a href="#p457">457</a> n., <a href="#p458">458</a>, <a href="#p459">459</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Gallic conquests, <a href="#p408">408</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Triumvirate and Cæsarism, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and forms, <a href="#p431">431</a> n., <a href="#p432">432</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">killing by ideologues, <a href="#p433">433</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">tact of command, <a href="#p444">444</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Lucca, <a href="#p446">446</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cæsarism, and second religiousness, <a href="#p310">310</a>, <a href="#p386">386</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and emperor-cult, <a href="#p313">313</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">transit to, as cultural destiny, <a href="#p416">416</a>, <a href="#p429">429</a>, <a href="#p434">434</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">era of great fact-men, <a href="#p418">418</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">defined, formless strife for personal power, <a href="#p418">418</a>, <a href="#p431">431</a>, <a href="#p434">434</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character of war, <a href="#p419">419–422</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ruthless peace, <a href="#p422">422</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical evolution, <a href="#p422">422</a>, <a href="#p423">423</a>, <a href="#p430">430</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Arabian Culture, sultanate, <a href="#p423">423</a>, <a href="#p426">426</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Egypt, <a href="#p427">427</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">coming Western, and overthrow of money, <a href="#p428">428</a>, <a href="#p506">506</a>, <a href="#p507">507</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and megalopolitanism and return of race, <a href="#p431">431</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as end of great politics, <a href="#p432">432</a>, <a href="#p434">434</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">completed Roman, and ideologues, <a href="#p432">432–434</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and passing of Culture, <a href="#p435">435</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and private politics, <a href="#p452">452</a>, <a href="#p464">464</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">battle with democracy, <a href="#p464">464</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cæsarius of Heisterbach, and Devil-cult, <a href="#p290">290</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Calani, as term for philosophers, <a href="#p175">175</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Calchas, and Classical religious beginnings, <a href="#p282">282</a>, <a href="#p350">350</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Caliphate, deification, <a href="#p68">68</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">yields to sultanate, <a href="#p425">425</a>, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Calvin, John, and Grace, <a href="#p59">59</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Gothic, <a href="#p296">296</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and world-politics, <a href="#p299">299</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and science, <a href="#p300">300</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Camden, battle, <a href="#p412">412</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Canada, public-land survey, <a href="#p101">101</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cannæ, battle, importance, <a href="#p191">191</a>, <a href="#p338">338</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Canon, fixation, <a href="#p71">71</a>, <a href="#p248">248</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as term, <a href="#p245">245</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian style, <a href="#p346">346</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Bible</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Canon law, development, <a href="#p77">77</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Capital, Western, as movement of values, <a href="#p493">493</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical sort, <a href="#p494">494</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Money</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Capital city, domination, <a href="#p95">95</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Byzantine Empire, <a href="#p191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and primary estates, <a href="#p356">356</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and State-idea, <a href="#p377">377</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural basis, <a href="#p381">381</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Capitulations, origin, <a href="#p177">177</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Caracalla, citizenship edict, and emperor-worship, <a href="#p68">68</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Care, family and State as symbols, <a href="#p364">364</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">legal modes, <a href="#p365">365</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">financial officialdom, <a href="#p371">371</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Carey, Henry C., and English economics, <a href="#p469">469</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Carmathians, outbreak, <a href="#p425">425</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Carolingian Renaissance, character, <a href="#p87">87</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Carthage, as Babylonian, <a href="#p108">108</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Classical Civilization, <a href="#p323">323</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-v">[v]</span><i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> Rome, <a href="#p368">368</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economy and politics, <a href="#p475">475</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Punic Wars</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Caspian Sea, and intercultural relations, <a href="#p41">41</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cassius, Spurius, and cult, <a href="#p386">386</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Caste, meaning, <a href="#p332">332</a>, <a href="#p333">333</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Castle, as totem, racial expression, <a href="#p122">122</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and ornament, relation to style, <a href="#p123">123</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">talk, <a href="#p153">153</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Catchwords, as term, <a href="#p401">401</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cathedral, as taboo and ornament, <a href="#p122">122</a>, <a href="#p123">123</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">speech, <a href="#p153">153</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Catholic, Western churches as, <a href="#p223">223</a> n., <a href="#p229">229</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Catilinarian movement, financing, <a href="#p402">402</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cato, M. Porcius (Censor), and Scipio, <a href="#p411">411</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ruthlessness, <a href="#p422">422</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cato, M. Porcius (Uticensis), rise, <a href="#p409">409</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">courts and politics, <a href="#p459">459</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Catulus, Q. Lutatius, demagogy, <a href="#p459">459</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Caucus, as political means, <a href="#p452">452</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Causality, human (microcosmic) type, <a href="#p16">16–19</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sex, <a href="#p327">327</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Destiny; Intelligence; Nature; Religion; Space; Town; Waking-being</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cavern, Arabian symbol, and Chaldean religion, <a href="#p206">206</a>, <a href="#p233">233</a>, <a href="#p238">238</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cecils, and English history, <a href="#p337">337</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Censorship, past and present, <a href="#p463">463</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ceremonial, as expression-language, <a href="#p134">134</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chacmultun, and Mexican Culture, <a href="#p45">45</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chalcedon, Council of, substance controversy, <a href="#p257">257</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and reform, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chaldeans, as rulers, <a href="#p40">40</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">tribal association, <a href="#p175">175</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">religion and nation, <a href="#p176">176</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cult in Syncretism, <a href="#p201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as term, <a href="#p205">205</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">prophetic religion, <a href="#p205">205</a>, <a href="#p209">209</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Babylonia, <a href="#p205">205</a> n., <a href="#p206">206</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">astronomy, <a href="#p206">206</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">astrology, <a href="#p238">238</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">oracles as canon, <a href="#p245">245</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">disappearance, <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chamberlain, Joseph, and political machine, <a href="#p453">453</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Champutun, and Mexican Culture, <a href="#p45">45</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chandragupta, Sundra, <a href="#p333">333</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chang-I, Imperialism, <a href="#p417">417</a>, <a href="#p419">419</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chang-Lu, church, <a href="#p314">314</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Charlemagne, and cultural mixture, <a href="#p87">87</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Devil-cult, <a href="#p290">290</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Charles I of England, and absolutism, <a href="#p388">388</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Charles IV, emperor, policy, <a href="#p376">376</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Charles Martel, as destiny, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Charondas, character of laws, <a href="#p63">63</a>, <a href="#p64">64</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chartres, Arabian contemporaries of school, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Charvaka doctrine, <a href="#p105">105</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chaucer, Geoffrey, and “virtue,” <a href="#p307">307</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cheirocracy, Classical, <a href="#p397">397</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cherusci, importance of victory, <a href="#p48">48</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chian, importance, <a href="#p50">50</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">power, <a href="#p428">428</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chichen Itza, and Mexican Culture, <a href="#p45">45</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chinese Culture, as historic, <a href="#p28">28</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">problems of study, <a href="#p38">38</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">transition to Cæsarism, contending States, <a href="#p38">38</a>, <a href="#p40">40</a>, <a href="#p339">339</a>, <a href="#p416">416–419</a>,
+ <a href="#p454">454</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">date of beginning, <a href="#p39">39</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">periods, cultural contemporaries, <a href="#p40">40–42</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fate, <a href="#p42">42</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">end of real history, <a href="#p49">49</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Buddhism, <a href="#p57">57</a>, <a href="#p312">312</a>, <a href="#p315">315</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">basis of laws, <a href="#p67">67</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">depopulation, <a href="#p106">106</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nations under, <a href="#p178">178</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Tsin, <a href="#p185">185</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sacred books, <a href="#p244">244</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Manichæans and Nestorians, <a href="#p260">260</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beginning of religion, <a href="#p281">281</a>, <a href="#p285">285</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">time mythology, <a href="#p286">286</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dualism, tao, <a href="#p287">287</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">landscape as prime symbol, <a href="#p287">287</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">second religiousness and Syncretism, <a href="#p312">312</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">emperor-cult, <a href="#p313">313</a>, <a href="#p379">379</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fellah State religion, <a href="#p315">315</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ancient priest-estate, <a href="#p350">350</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ancestry-worship, <a href="#p351">351</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">tao and priesthood, <a href="#p352">352</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation of primary estates, <a href="#p352">352</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">world-power idea, <a href="#p373">373</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">feudalism and interregnum, <a href="#p375">375</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dynasty-idea, <a href="#p379">379</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Fronde in, <a href="#p386">386</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period of protectors, <a href="#p387">387</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Cæsarism and ideologues, <a href="#p434">434</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">status of early coins, <a href="#p481">481</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">bank notes, <a href="#p483">483</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money concept, <a href="#p486">486</a>, <a href="#p489">489</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and technique, <a href="#p501">501</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Culture</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chinese language, voice-differentiations, <a href="#p140">140</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">written and spoken, <a href="#p145">145</a>, <a href="#p151">151</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">standard script, <a href="#p152">152</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chios, and slaves, <a href="#p488">488</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chivalry, Arabian, <a href="#p198">198</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and compassion as contemporary, <a href="#p273">273</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chlysti, doctrines, <a href="#p278">278</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chmenotep, inscriptions, <a href="#p387">387</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chosen People, as common Arabian idea, <a href="#p207">207</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chosroës Nushirvan, and Mazdak, <a href="#p261">261</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chóu dynasty, residence, <a href="#p92">92</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fall, <a href="#p376">376</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money concept, <a href="#p489">489</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Christ, as name, <a href="#p219">219</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Christian Science, as fad, <a href="#p310">310</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Christianity, Arabian and Western, form and soul, <a href="#p59">59</a>, <a href="#p235">235</a>, <a href="#p237">237</a>, <a href="#p258">258</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period of Apologists, <a href="#p71">71</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Fathers, <a href="#p71">71</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of Justinian, <a href="#p74">74</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Corpus Juris Canonici, <a href="#p77">77</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Arabian nations, <a href="#p177">177</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nationalism and persecutions, <a href="#p177">177</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian, and chivalry, <a href="#p198">198</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jesus-cult and Syncretism, <a href="#p201">201</a>, <a href="#p220">220</a>, <a href="#p252">252</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Hellenism, <a href="#p203">203</a>, <a href="#p204">204</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jesus’ life and biography as central point, <a href="#p212">212</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Arabian apocalyptic literature, <a href="#p212">212</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Turfan manuscripts, <a href="#p213">213</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Mandæanism of John the Baptist, <a href="#p214">214</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">self-view of Jesus as prophet and Messiah, townlessness, <a href="#p215">215</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jesus and Pilate, symbolism, <a href="#p216">216</a>, <a href="#p473">473</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jesus and pure metaphysics, <a href="#p217">217</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of Resurrection, Messiah, <a href="#p218">218</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian cult-nationality and world salvation, <a href="#p219">219</a>, <a href="#p220">220</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Paul and Church, <a href="#p220">220</a>, <a href="#p221">221</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Paul and urban intellect, westward trend, <a href="#p221">221</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Old Testament and canon, <a href="#p221">221</a>, <a href="#p225">225</a>, <a href="#p226">226</a>, <a href="#p228">228</a>, <a href="#p245">245</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Mark Gospel, <a href="#p223">223</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cults, Mary-cult, <a href="#p223">223</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Greek and Latin as languages, <a href="#p224">224</a>, <a href="#p241">241</a> n., <a href="#p252">252</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-vi">[vi]</span>John Gospel, Mysticism, Logos and Paraclete, <a href="#p226">226</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Marcionism and early Catholic Church, <a href="#p227">227</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian West and East division, <a href="#p228">228–230</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">architectural symbols of division, <a href="#p230">230</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian Logos and Jesus’ world-image, <a href="#p236">236</a>, <a href="#p237">237</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">era, <a href="#p239">239</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Judaism, separation, <a href="#p251">251</a>, <a href="#p316">316</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">early Eastern, <a href="#p251">251</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Eastern State religions, <a href="#p253">253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">monasticism in Arabian, <a href="#p254">254</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian expansion, and inner contradiction, <a href="#p255">255</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">substance controversy and split, <a href="#p255">255–258</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Greek, <a href="#p257">257</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">obligation to other missionarism, <a href="#p259">259</a>, <a href="#p260">260</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">end of Arabian theology, <a href="#p261">261</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">pre-period of Western, <a href="#p277">277</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western Mary-cult and Devil-cult, <a href="#p288">288–292</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western guilt and free-will, sacraments, <a href="#p292">292</a>, <a href="#p293">293</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western contrition, <a href="#p293">293–295</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">elements and effect of Reformation, <a href="#p296">296–300</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">present Russian, <a href="#p495">495</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Manichæism; Monophysites; Nestorianism; Puritanism; Religion; Roman Catholic</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chronology, Arabian spirit, <a href="#p27">27</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural, <a href="#p39">39</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Mexican, <a href="#p44">44</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian eras, <a href="#p239">239</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chrysostom, John, and conflict of estates, <a href="#p353">353</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chthonian cults, <a href="#p283">283</a>, <a href="#p286">286</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chufucianism, fellah character, <a href="#p315">315</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Church, and religion, <a href="#p443">443</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Church and State, Arabian concept, <a href="#p168">168</a>, <a href="#p174">174–178</a>, <a href="#p210">210</a>, <a href="#p242">242</a>, <a href="#p243">243</a>,
+ <a href="#p253">253</a>, <a href="#p315">315</a>, <a href="#p317">317</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Roman law and established church, <a href="#p177">177</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Arabian monasticism, <a href="#p254">254</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">lack of equilibrium, <a href="#p336">336</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Church of England, new transubstantiation controversy, <a href="#p309">309</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cicero, M. Tullius, rise, <a href="#p409">409</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on elections, <a href="#p432">432</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and party, weakling, <a href="#p433">433</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Divus idea, <a href="#p433">433</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and killing of Cæsar, <a href="#p433">433</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and demagogy, <a href="#p458">458</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Trebatius, <a href="#p458">458</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cimabue, Giovanni, as Gothic, <a href="#p291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cineas, on Roman Senate, <a href="#p409">409</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Circus parties, as term, <a href="#p381">381</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Citation, deeper meaning, <a href="#p248">248</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Citizenship, Caracalla’s edict on Roman, <a href="#p68">68</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Roman, and polis, <a href="#p383">383</a>, <a href="#p384">384</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical idea, <a href="#p384">384</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Citizenship, Roman, <a href="#p166">166</a> n., <a href="#p384">384</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">City. <i>See</i> Megalopolitanism; Town</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">City-leagues, Classical, <a href="#p355">355</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">City planning, soulless chessboard form, <a href="#p100">100</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Civil War, American, defeat of aristocracy, <a href="#p356">356</a>, <a href="#p369">369</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and military art, <a href="#p421">421</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as victory of coal-energy, <a href="#p488">488</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Civilization, as term, <a href="#p31">31</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">position of present, <a href="#p37">37</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Mexican Culture, <a href="#p45">45</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">exhaustion and historylessness, <a href="#p48">48–51</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and microcosmic, <a href="#p92">92</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and dictatorship of money, <a href="#p98">98</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as tension, <a href="#p102">102</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rootless forms, world-extension, <a href="#p107">107</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">inner stages, present Western, <a href="#p109">109</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and style, <a href="#p109">109</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">survivals, <a href="#p109">109</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">superficial history, <a href="#p109">109</a>, <a href="#p339">339</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and utilitarian script, <a href="#p152">152</a>, <a href="#p155">155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish, in contact with Gothic, <a href="#p317">317–319</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jews in Western, <a href="#p322">322</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economics under, <a href="#p477">477</a>, <a href="#p484">484</a>, <a href="#p493">493</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">final struggle, money and Cæsarism, <a href="#p506">506</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Cæsarism; Cultures; Fellahism; Megalopolitanism; Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Clary, Désirée, as destiny, <a href="#p329">329</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Classes, and history, <a href="#p96">96</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economic, <a href="#p477">477</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Estates</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Classical Culture, as ahistoric, and script, <a href="#p24">24</a>, <a href="#p27">27</a>, <a href="#p36">36</a>, <a href="#p150">150</a>,
+ <a href="#p152">152</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">similarity of Mexican, <a href="#p43">43</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">end of real history, <a href="#p50">50</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation of Renaissance, <a href="#p58">58</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Greek laws, <a href="#p61">61</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and capital city, <a href="#p95">95</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Civilization cities, <a href="#p101">101</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Civilization and sterility, <a href="#p105">105</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">destruction and survivals of Civilization, <a href="#p109">109</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nations under, polis basis, <a href="#p173">173</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">geographically-limited cults, <a href="#p200">200</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and revelation, <a href="#p244">244</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fate in, <a href="#p267">267</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beast character of deities, <a href="#p276">276</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">obscure religious beginnings, <a href="#p281">281–283</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Orphism, Ascetism, <a href="#p283">283</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">outline of early religion, <a href="#p283">283</a>, <a href="#p284">284</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Greek and Roman cults, <a href="#p284">284</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">later city-religions, <a href="#p285">285</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">personality-concept, <a href="#p293">293</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">second religiousness and Syncretism, <a href="#p312">312</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">agnate family, <a href="#p330">330</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ancient priest-estate, <a href="#p350">350</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">style of nobility, <a href="#p351">351</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">style of priesthood, <a href="#p352">352</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">position of primary estates, <a href="#p353">353</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">significance of colonization, <a href="#p354">354</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">city-leagues, <a href="#p355">355</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">capital and financial organization, <a href="#p372">372</a>, <a href="#p383">383</a>, <a href="#p493">493–496</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and world-power, <a href="#p373">373</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">feudalism and polis, <a href="#p374">374</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">first Tyrannis, <a href="#p375">375</a>, <a href="#p386">386</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dynasty-ideal and oligarchy, <a href="#p380">380</a>, <a href="#p381">381</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i lang="la">carpe diem</i>, <a href="#p383">383</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and war, <a href="#p385">385</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">inter-Tyrannis period, <a href="#p394">394–398</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">second Tyrannis, <a href="#p405">405–408</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period of Cæsarism, evolution, <a href="#p418">418</a>, <a href="#p422">422</a>, <a href="#p423">423</a>, <a href="#p430">430</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">military technique of Civilization, <a href="#p420">420</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">trader-master period, <a href="#p484">484</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money as magnitude, <a href="#p486">486</a>, <a href="#p495">495</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money and land and art value, <a href="#p487">487</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">slaves as money, <a href="#p488">488</a>, <a href="#p496">496</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and technique, <a href="#p501">501</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Cultures; Polis; Pseudomorphosis; Rome</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Claudii, and Roman history, <a href="#p336">336</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">social composition, <a href="#p357">357</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Claudius I, importance, <a href="#p50">50</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Claudius, Appius, and sons of freedmen, <a href="#p166">166</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and peasantry, <a href="#p408">408</a>, <a href="#p410">410</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and consul-list, <a href="#p409">409</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Punic War, <a href="#p410">410</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">reforms and demagogy, <a href="#p458">458</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Clausewitz, Karl von, inversion of phrase, <a href="#p330">330</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as military writer, <a href="#p419">419</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Clearing-house, electrical analogy, <a href="#p490">490</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Clement, Saint, period, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cleomenes I, and helots, <a href="#p396">396</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cleomenes III, fall, <a href="#p65">65</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Sphærus, <a href="#p454">454</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cleomenes, Alexander’s administrator, and speculation, <a href="#p484">484</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-vii">[vii]</span>Cleon, as mass-leader, <a href="#p448">448</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Clergy. <i>See</i> Priesthood</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Climate, and man’s history, <a href="#p39">39</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Clisthenes, and Homer, <a href="#p386">386</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Clock, as Western symbol, <a href="#p300">300</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Clodius. <i>See</i> Claudius</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cluniacs, as rural, <a href="#p92">92</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cluny, and reform, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Coal, and slaves, <a href="#p488">488</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Code, Civil, position, <a href="#p76">76</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Code of Manu, on Sudra, <a href="#p332">332</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Coins, and “Money,” <a href="#p481">481</a> n., <a href="#p483">483</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Classical symbol, <a href="#p486">486</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western attitude, <a href="#p490">490</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Coke, Sir Edward, and Roman law, <a href="#p78">78</a>, <a href="#p365">365</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Collinet, Paul, on Justinian’s Digests, <a href="#p70">70</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Colonate, end, <a href="#p357">357</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Colonization, significance of Classical, <a href="#p354">354</a>, <a href="#p355">355</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural basis, <a href="#p382">382</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Colonna, and Papacy, <a href="#p354">354</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Colonus, vassalage, <a href="#p350">350</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Colosseum, decay, <a href="#p107">107</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Colour, symbolism in Western religion, <a href="#p289">289</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Comitia Centuriata, and money, <a href="#p410">410</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Punic War, <a href="#p410">410</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">supporters, <a href="#p451">451</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Comitia Tributa, and conquest, <a href="#p410">410</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">supporters, <a href="#p451">451</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Commentary on sacred books, authoritative chain, <a href="#p247">247</a>, <a href="#p248">248</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Common law, development, <a href="#p76">76</a>, <a href="#p78">78</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Community. <i>See</i> Consensus</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Comnena, Anna, on crusaders, <a href="#p89">89</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Compass, Chinese invention, <a href="#p501">501</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Compassion, and being, <a href="#p273">273</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and chivalry, <a href="#p273">273</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Comradeship, and race, <a href="#p126">126</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Conception, as sin, <a href="#p272">272</a>. <i>See also</i> Sex</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Condés, feudal force, <a href="#p350">350</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Confession. <i>See</i> Contrition</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Confession of Peter,” <a href="#p220">220</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Confucianism, and “Persian” religion, <a href="#p260">260</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as end of culture, <a href="#p286">286</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Rationalism, <a href="#p306">306</a>, <a href="#p307">307</a>, <a href="#p309">309</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Syncretism, <a href="#p315">315</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and nobility, <a href="#p357">357</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cæsarism, <a href="#p434">434</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Confucius, deification, <a href="#p314">314</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Hwang, <a href="#p388">388</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Congress of Princes, <a href="#p38">38</a>, <a href="#p304">304</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i lang="la">Connubium</i>, cult basis, <a href="#p69">69</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Conrad II, emperor, feudal law, <a href="#p371">371</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Conscription, as phase of Civilization, <a href="#p420">420</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as substitute for war, <a href="#p428">428</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of World War, <a href="#p429">429</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Consensus, as Arabian principle, <a href="#p59">59</a>, <a href="#p73">73</a>, <a href="#p210">210</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian community of elect, <a href="#p242">242</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Arabian monasticism, <a href="#p253">253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">phases of Jewish, <a href="#p315">315–317</a>, <a href="#p320">320</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Constance, Council of, and feudalism, <a href="#p374">374</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Constantine the Great, and Roman law as Christian, <a href="#p69">69</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Byzantium, <a href="#p89">89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and cult and nationality, <a href="#p178">178</a>, <a href="#p230">230</a>, <a href="#p243">243</a>, <a href="#p253">253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as prince and prelate, <a href="#p204">204</a>, <a href="#p258">258</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Nicæa, <a href="#p257">257</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Constantine VII, and Romanos, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Constitutio Antoniana, <a href="#p68">68</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Constitutions, incomplete system of written, <a href="#p361">361</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">written and living, <a href="#p369">369</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">doctrinaire government, <a href="#p413">413–415</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">foresight, <a href="#p415">415</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">status of American, <a href="#p430">430</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character of German (1919), <a href="#p457">457</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Consuls, origin of term, <a href="#p374">374</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beginning, <a href="#p382">382</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Senate, <a href="#p409">409</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as forged ancestors, <a href="#p409">409</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and party, <a href="#p451">451</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Contemplation, cultural basis, <a href="#p242">242</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Contemporaneity, intercultural, <a href="#p39">39–42</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Contending States, period in China, <a href="#p38">38</a>, <a href="#p40">40</a>, <a href="#p339">339</a>, <a href="#p416">416–419</a>,
+ <a href="#p454">454</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Contrition, Western sacrament and Arabian submission, and Grace, <a href="#p240">240–242</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as supreme Western religious concept, <a href="#p293">293</a>, <a href="#p295">295</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and happiness, <a href="#p294">294</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of decline, <a href="#p294">294</a>, <a href="#p298">298</a>, <a href="#p299">299</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as English idea, <a href="#p294">294</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Luther’s faith-concept, <a href="#p298">298</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Conversion, and Arabian cult-nationality, <a href="#p219">219</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Copan, and Mexican Culture, <a href="#p44">44</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Corcyra, massacre, <a href="#p405">405</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cordus, Cremutius, history burnt, <a href="#p434">434</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Corinth, royal succession, <a href="#p380">380</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">destruction, <a href="#p489">489</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Corporation, and Arabian juridical person, <a href="#p174">174</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Corpus Christi, and thanksgiving, <a href="#p293">293</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Corpus Juris, position in Arabian Culture, <a href="#p71">71</a>, <a href="#p74">74</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Western law, <a href="#p76">76–78</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and canon law, <a href="#p77">77</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Corpus Juris Germanici, development, <a href="#p76">76–78</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Corruption, political so-called, <a href="#p458">458</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cortes, beginning, <a href="#p373">373</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cortez, Hernando, force in conquest, <a href="#p44">44</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cos, style of school, <a href="#p345">345</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cosmic, relation of plant and animal to, <a href="#p3">3</a>, <a href="#p4">4</a>, <a href="#p15">15</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beat, feel, <a href="#p4">4</a>, <a href="#p5">5</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">organs, <a href="#p5">5</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">being, <a href="#p7">7</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">crowd and beat, <a href="#p18">18</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and history, <a href="#p23">23</a>, <a href="#p24">24</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in architecture, <a href="#p92">92</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sex, <a href="#p327">327</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">earth and universe, <a href="#p392">392</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Being; Landscape; Microcosm; Plant; Race</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cosmogony, of Genesis, <a href="#p209">209</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cosmopolitanism, and intelligentsia, <a href="#p184">184</a>. <i>See also</i> Megalopolitanism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Costume, as expression-language, <a href="#p134">134</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Councils, spirit of Arabian and Western Christian, <a href="#p59">59</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and pope, <a href="#p374">374</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Country, cosmic, <a href="#p89">89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to town, <a href="#p91">91</a>, <a href="#p94">94</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Gothic, <a href="#p93">93</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">historyless, <a href="#p96">96</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Peasantry</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Courts, Roman, and politics, <a href="#p459">459</a>. <i>See also</i> Jurisprudence; Roman law</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Crassus Dives, M. Licinius, and money, <a href="#p402">402</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-viii">[viii]</span>Triumvirate and Cæsarism, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">politics and finance, <a href="#p458">458</a>, <a href="#p459">459</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and court, <a href="#p459">459</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Credit-system, Western concept, <a href="#p489">489</a>. <i>See also</i> Money</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Crete, Minoan art and Mycenæ, <a href="#p87">87–89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and ethnology, <a href="#p129">129</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Mycenæan beast-deities, <a href="#p276">276</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Criticism, relation to science and history, <a href="#p24">24</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cromwell, Oliver, Puritan manifestation, <a href="#p302">302</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">power, <a href="#p389">389</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dictatorship, <a href="#p390">390</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cross, and Tree of Knowledge, <a href="#p180">180</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Croton, Sybaris, <a href="#p303">303</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">style of school, <a href="#p345">345</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Crowd and mob, cosmic beat, <a href="#p18">18</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cultures, <a href="#p18">18</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ethic, <a href="#p342">342</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fourth estate, <a href="#p358">358</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and leaders, <a href="#p376">376</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise of power, <a href="#p399">399</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Crusades, and Arabian Civilization, <a href="#p43">43</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as rural, <a href="#p97">97</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and nationalism, <a href="#p180">180</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish parallel, <a href="#p198">198</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ctesiphon, school, <a href="#p200">200</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">location, <a href="#p200">200</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cujacius, and Roman law, <a href="#p77">77</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cult, and dogma, cultural attitude, <a href="#p200">200</a>, <a href="#p201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">technique, and myth, <a href="#p268">268</a>, <a href="#p499">499</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Religion</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cultures, as beings, cosmic beat, <a href="#p19">19</a>, <a href="#p35">35</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">historic and ahistoric, <a href="#p24">24</a>, <a href="#p27">27</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as basis of history, <a href="#p26">26</a>, <a href="#p27">27</a>, <a href="#p44">44</a>, <a href="#p46">46–51</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">primitive, character, <a href="#p33">33</a>, <a href="#p34">34</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">mutation, <a href="#p33">33</a>, <a href="#p36">36</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">primitive and pre-Culture, <a href="#p35">35</a>, <a href="#p89">89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">comparative study, <a href="#p36">36–38</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">destined course, <a href="#p37">37</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">future, <a href="#p37">37</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">problems of study, <a href="#p37">37–39</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and landscape study, <a href="#p39">39</a> n., <a href="#p46">46</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dating, <a href="#p39">39</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">contemporary periods, <a href="#p39">39–42</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">inter-Cultures, <a href="#p87">87–89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and “return to nature,” <a href="#p135">135</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and writing, <a href="#p150">150</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation of people, <a href="#p169">169</a>, <a href="#p170">170</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and nations, <a href="#p170">170–173</a>, <a href="#p362">362</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">narrow circle of understanding, <a href="#p280">280</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and religious creativeness, <a href="#p308">308</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">intercultural dissonance, race and time elements, <a href="#p317">317–323</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">passing, <a href="#p435">435</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economic underlay, <a href="#p474">474</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">distinct economic styles, <a href="#p477">477</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money-symbols, <a href="#p486">486</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i>
+ Arabian; Art; Babylonian; Chinese; Civilization; Classical; Economics; Egyptian; Fellahism; History; Indian; Landscape; Language; Mexican; Macrocosm; Morphology; Natural science; Politics; Race; Religion; Russian; Technique; Town; Western</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cumont, Franz, on old Persian religion, <a href="#p207">207</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Customs, purpose, <a href="#p475">475</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cuvier, Baron Georges, theory, <a href="#p31">31</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cynics, Pietism, <a href="#p308">308</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Socrates, <a href="#p309">309</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cyprus, massacre, <a href="#p321">321</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cyrene, massacre, <a href="#p198">198</a> n.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Damascenus, John, as Al Manzor, <a href="#p260">260</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Damascius, as biographer, <a href="#p252">252</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">anchorite, <a href="#p254">254</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Damiani, Petrus, and Mary-cult, <a href="#p288">288</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Danai, as name, <a href="#p161">161</a>, <a href="#p164">164</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Daniel, fictitious, <a href="#p72">72</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dante Alighieri, and Devil-cult, <a href="#p292">292</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and “virtue,” <a href="#p307">307</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Darius the Great, Behistun Inscription, <a href="#p166">166</a>, <a href="#p207">207</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Darwinism, shallowness, <a href="#p31">31</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">palæontological reputation, mutation, <a href="#p32">32</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and race determination, <a href="#p124">124</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and genealogy, <a href="#p180">180</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Death, man and fear, <a href="#p15">15</a>, <a href="#p16">16</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to light, <a href="#p265">265</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as punishment, <a href="#p272">272</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Classical cults, <a href="#p283">283</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">hunger-death and hero-death, <a href="#p471">471</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Decemvirs, code, <a href="#p65">65</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">significance, <a href="#p396">396</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dediticii peregrins, as class, <a href="#p68">68</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dehio, Georg, on houses and architecture, <a href="#p121">121</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Deism, as technic, <a href="#p306">306</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Delbrück, Hans, on ancient armies, <a href="#p40">40</a> n., <a href="#p199">199</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on migrant minority, <a href="#p164">164</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Delos, slave market, <a href="#p489">489</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">temples as banks, <a href="#p493">493</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Demeter cult, Homer’s ignoring, <a href="#p282">282</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Pythagoreans, <a href="#p282">282</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">survival, <a href="#p282">282</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sex, <a href="#p283">283</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">power, <a href="#p290">290</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Demeter-Dionysus-Kore cult, in Rome, <a href="#p386">386</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Democracy (Third Estate), urban, <a href="#p97">97</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to other estates, <a href="#p334">334</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise as contradiction, <a href="#p355">355–358</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Plebs, <a href="#p357">357</a>, <a href="#p408">408–411</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise of Classical, <a href="#p387">387</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical, in inter-Tyrannis period, <a href="#p394">394–398</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise as independent force, <a href="#p398">398</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">negative unity, <a href="#p399">399</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and mob, <a href="#p399">399</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nationalism, and unity, <a href="#p400">400–402</a>, <a href="#p485">485</a>, <a href="#p506">506</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in England, <a href="#p402">402</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">class dictatorship, <a href="#p403">403</a>, <a href="#p404">404</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Parliamentarism, <a href="#p416">416</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period in Arabian Culture, <a href="#p424">424–426</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">decay, <a href="#p433">433</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and party, <a href="#p449">449</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">end, <a href="#p463">463–465</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">social and economic form, <a href="#p478">478</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and machine industry, <a href="#p504">504</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Democritus, atomic theory, <a href="#p58">58</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Depth-experience, Western, “I” as light-centre, <a href="#p8">8</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and nations, <a href="#p179">179</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as prime symbol, <a href="#p288">288</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and gunpowder and printing, <a href="#p460">460</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and technique, <a href="#p501">501–504</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Descartes, René, and doubt, <a href="#p12">12</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Destiny, and cosmic beat, <a href="#p4">4</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and facts, <a href="#p12">12</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">human (cosmic) type, <a href="#p16">16–19</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and natural science, <a href="#p31">31</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in nations, <a href="#p170">170</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">faith, cultural basis of fate, <a href="#p266">266</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sex, <a href="#p327">327</a>, <a href="#p329">329</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nobility as, <a href="#p335">335</a>, <a href="#p336">336</a>, <a href="#p340">340</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">States as, <a href="#p363">363</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in war, <a href="#p429">429</a>, <a href="#p434">434</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Being; Causality; History; Race; Time; Will</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Deutero-Isaiah, Persian influence, <a href="#p208">208</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Devil-cult, development of Western, <a href="#p288">288–291</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Renaissance and, <a href="#p291">291</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and contrition, <a href="#p293">293</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Protestantism, <a href="#p299">299</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Puritanism, <a href="#p302">302</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and machine, <a href="#p502">502</a>, <a href="#p504">504</a> n., <a href="#p505">505</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Witchcraft</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Diadochi, and Arabian Culture, <a href="#p190">190</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">struggle, <a href="#p408">408</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Diakrii, and Tyrannis, <a href="#p386">386</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-ix">[ix]</span>Dictatorship, of class, money and Rationalism 403–405. <i>See also</i> Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Diels, Hermann, on Classical technique, <a href="#p501">501</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dike, age, <a href="#p376">376</a>, <a href="#p378">378</a>, <a href="#p381">381</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dikhans, aristocracy, <a href="#p353">353</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Diocletian, distorted importance, <a href="#p38">38</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and orthodoxy, <a href="#p178">178</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Nicodemia, <a href="#p191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">army, <a href="#p199">199</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">era, <a href="#p139">139</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Church and State, <a href="#p243">243</a>, <a href="#p253">253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Syncretism, <a href="#p252">252</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">feudalism, <a href="#p349">349</a>, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fiscal machinery, <a href="#p371">371</a>, <a href="#p496">496</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and economics, <a href="#p480">480</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Diodorus, on Roman tenements, <a href="#p102">102</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dionysiac cult, Homer’s ignoring, <a href="#p282">282</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">survival, <a href="#p282">282</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">power, <a href="#p290">290</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Tyrannis, <a href="#p386">386</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dionysius I, executions, <a href="#p405">405</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and army, <a href="#p406">406</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and conquered territory, <a href="#p407">407</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">war technique, <a href="#p420">420</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dionysius the Areopagite, fictitious, <a href="#p72">72</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Diplomacy, contrapuntal politics, <a href="#p381">381</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">basis, <a href="#p440">440</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and war, <a href="#p440">440</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Direction, historical, <a href="#p361">361</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Discovery, and Western history-picture, <a href="#p28">28</a>, <a href="#p46">46</a>, <a href="#p501">501</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dispensation, and valuation, <a href="#p267">267</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dispersion, Jewish, as misnomer, <a href="#p210">210</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Disraeli, Benjamin, Jew and Englishman, <a href="#p320">320</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Divorce, English reform, <a href="#p64">64</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">civil and ecclesiastical conflict, <a href="#p365">365</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dodington, George B., on party loyalty, <a href="#p403">403</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dogma, and cult, cultural attitude, <a href="#p200">200–202</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dominicans, as urban, <a href="#p92">92</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Mary-cult, <a href="#p288">288</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Inquisition, <a href="#p291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Donellus, Hugo, and Roman law, <a href="#p77">77</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Doomesday-Book, <a href="#p371">371</a> n., <a href="#p372">372</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dorians, no nation, <a href="#p173">173</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Doric, as cosmic, <a href="#p92">92</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">name and migration, <a href="#p161">161</a>, <a href="#p162">162</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dostoyevski, Feodor M., on Petersburg, <a href="#p193">193</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Russian soul, <a href="#p194">194–196</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Socialism, <a href="#p218">218</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">religion, <a href="#p295">295</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and money, <a href="#p495">495</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dracon, laws, <a href="#p64">64</a>, <a href="#p65">65</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">class law, <a href="#p365">365</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Drama, as urban, <a href="#p93">93</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">origin of Chinese, <a href="#p286">286</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dreams, and cognition, <a href="#p14">14</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Druses, and Trinity, <a href="#p237">237</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dualism, in Arabian Culture, <a href="#p233">233–236</a>, <a href="#p244">244</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and substance controversy, <a href="#p256">256</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Chinese, <a href="#p287">287</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in moral, <a href="#p341">341</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dukas, power, <a href="#p427">427</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dukhobors, as manifestation, <a href="#p278">278</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Duns Scotus, Joannes, will and reason, <a href="#p241">241</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Devil-cult, <a href="#p291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dyarchy, Augustinian, <a href="#p432">432</a>, <a href="#p433">433</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dynamics. <i>See</i> Force; Motion; Technique</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dynastic idea, Western, <a href="#p179">179–183</a>, <a href="#p378">378</a>, <a href="#p381">381</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and overthrow of monarchy, language struggles, <a href="#p183">183</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian, <a href="#p330">330</a> n., <a href="#p378">378</a>, <a href="#p379">379</a>, <a href="#p423">423</a>, <a href="#p424">424</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">basis, <a href="#p336">336</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to priesthood, <a href="#p337">337</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and officialdom, <a href="#p371">371</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">elements, <a href="#p377">377</a>, <a href="#p378">378</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Chinese and Egyptian, <a href="#p379">379</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical, and oligarchy, <a href="#p380">380</a>, <a href="#p381">381</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">union with and against non-estate, <a href="#p386">386</a>, <a href="#p387">387</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">European absolutism, <a href="#p388">388</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">statesmen as leaders, <a href="#p389">389</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Thirty Years’ War, <a href="#p389">389</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Fronde struggles, outcome, <a href="#p390">390</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">republic as anti-dynastic, <a href="#p413">413</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Politics</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Eastern Empire. <i>See</i> Byzantine Empire</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ebionites, origin, <a href="#p220">220</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">disappearance, <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Eckart, Meister, on Mysticism, <a href="#p292">292</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Devil-cult, <a href="#p303">303</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Economics, and writing, <a href="#p152">152</a>, <a href="#p155">155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">classes and political estates, <a href="#p333">333</a>, <a href="#p348">348</a>, <a href="#p477">477</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to politics, power and booty, <a href="#p344">344</a>, <a href="#p345">345</a>, <a href="#p347">347</a>, <a href="#p474">474–476</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and learning, <a href="#p347">347</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and estates, <a href="#p356">356</a>, <a href="#p357">357</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and class-history, <a href="#p367">367</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">material basis of English concept, <a href="#p469">469</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">not self-contained, <a href="#p469">469</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">English premisses of usual concept, <a href="#p469">469</a>, <a href="#p479">479</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">real, as physiognomic, <a href="#p470">470</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and politics as sides of being, <a href="#p470">470</a>, <a href="#p471">471</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“in form” as self-regarding, <a href="#p471">471</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">hunger-death, <a href="#p471">471</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to family, <a href="#p471">471</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">significance of history, form-language, <a href="#p472">472</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">customary ethic, <a href="#p472">472</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and religion, <a href="#p473">473</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">waking-being in, <a href="#p473">473</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">producing and acquisitive, <a href="#p474">474</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">under city life, <a href="#p476">476</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">morphology, <a href="#p476">476–480</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">production, preparation, and distribution, <a href="#p478">478</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">subjects and objects in classes, <a href="#p479">479</a>, <a href="#p493">493</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">no worker-class, <a href="#p479">479</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">spring time of Culture, traffic in “goods,” and “possession,” <a href="#p480">480</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">status of dealer then, <a href="#p481">481</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">early small-scale traffic, <a href="#p481">481</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">town life and trade, “wares” and money measure, <a href="#p481">481–484</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fortune displaces possession, <a href="#p483">483</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as urban, under Civilization, <a href="#p484">484</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Money; Technique; Waking-being</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ecstasy, Arabian, <a href="#p242">242</a>, <a href="#p244">244</a>, <a href="#p245">245</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Eddas, and nature and history, <a href="#p286">286</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Edessa, location, <a href="#p200">200</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and substance controversy, <a href="#p256">256</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Edinburgh, as intellectual centre, <a href="#p305">305</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Education, universal, as instrument of press, <a href="#p462">462</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Egyptian Culture, as historic, <a href="#p28">28</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">problems of study, <a href="#p38">38</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Hyksos Period, <a href="#p38">38</a>, <a href="#p41">41</a>, <a href="#p428">428</a> n., <a href="#p453">453</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">date of beginning, <a href="#p39">39</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">basis of law, <a href="#p67">67</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Minoan art, <a href="#p88">88</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Civilization and depopulation, <a href="#p106">106</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sea-folk, <a href="#p109">109</a>, <a href="#p122">122</a>, <a href="#p164">164</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">alphabetical script, <a href="#p152">152</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nations under, <a href="#p178">178</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beast-deities, <a href="#p276">276</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">religion and way symbol, <a href="#p279">279</a>, <a href="#p281">281</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Re religion as Reformation, <a href="#p296">296</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Syncretism, <a href="#p313">313</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">early nobility, <a href="#p350">350</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and genealogy, <a href="#p351">351</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation of primary estates, <a href="#p353">353</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Pharaoh as Horus, <a href="#p373">373</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">feudalism and interregnum, <a href="#p375">375</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dynastic-idea, <a href="#p379">379</a>, <a href="#p380">380</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Fronde in, <a href="#p386">386</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Middle Kingdom, absolutism, <a href="#p387">387</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-x">[x]</span>period of Cæsarism, <a href="#p427">427</a>, <a href="#p435">435</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money concept, <a href="#p486">486</a>, <a href="#p489">489</a> n., <a href="#p491">491</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">financial organization, <a href="#p495">495</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Cultures</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Elections, as civil war, 415;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">decay, electorate as objects, <a href="#p432">432</a>, <a href="#p456">456</a>, <a href="#p463">463</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as political means, suffrage and technique, <a href="#p447">447</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">size and influence of electorate, <a href="#p455">455</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Democracy</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Electors, rise in Empire, <a href="#p373">373</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Thirty Years’ War, <a href="#p388">388</a>, <a href="#p391">391</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Electricity, clearing-house analogy, <a href="#p490">490</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Elephantine documents, <a href="#p209">209</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Eleusinian mysteries, <a href="#p203">203</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Elkazites, origin, <a href="#p220">220</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">disappearance, <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Elxai, sacred book, <a href="#p220">220</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Empedocles, suicide, <a href="#p283">283</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Emperor-mythology, Chinese, <a href="#p286">286</a>, <a href="#p379">379</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Emperor-worship, and law of creed-communities, <a href="#p68">68</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western and Eastern aspects, <a href="#p203">203</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Syncretism, <a href="#p253">253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Chinese, <a href="#p313">313</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Cicero and, <a href="#p433">433</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Empire, as Germanic idea, <a href="#p181">181</a>. <i>See also</i> Imperialism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Engineer, as master of Western technique, <a href="#p504">504</a>, <a href="#p505">505</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">England, development of law, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p75">75</a>, <a href="#p76">76</a>, <a href="#p78">78</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and dynastic idea, <a href="#p183">183</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Western religious concepts, <a href="#p294">294</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">politics and predestination, <a href="#p304">304</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">property law, <a href="#p371">371</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Normans and finance, <a href="#p372">372</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Magna Charta and control by nobility, rise of Parliament, <a href="#p373">373</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Puritan Revolution, <a href="#p389">389</a>, <a href="#p390">390</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">eighteenth-century class absolutism, <a href="#p392">392–394</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Parliamentarism and democracy, reform, <a href="#p402">402–404</a>, <a href="#p412">412</a>, <a href="#p412">412</a> n., <a href="#p414">414</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">politics, Rationalism and money, <a href="#p403">403</a>, <a href="#p441">441</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and French Revolution, <a href="#p411">411</a>, <a href="#p412">412</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cessation of yeomanry, <a href="#p449">449</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political flair, <a href="#p451">451</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and conception of economics, <a href="#p469">469</a>, <a href="#p479">479</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Enoch, fictitious, <a href="#p72">72</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ephesus, Council of, and Christian split, <a href="#p257">257</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and reform, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ephors, and succession, <a href="#p380">380</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Epic, as rural, <a href="#p93">93</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Russian hero-tales, <a href="#p192">192</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian period, <a href="#p250">250</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Literature</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Epicurus, cult, <a href="#p314">314</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Epimenides, as dogmatist, <a href="#p282">282</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Epistemology. <i>See</i> Knowledge</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Epoch, as term, <a href="#p33">33</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Equality, and party, <a href="#p449">449</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Equities, big-money party, <a href="#p402">402</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">creation, <a href="#p411">411</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">decay, <a href="#p432">432</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and populus, <a href="#p451">451</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Equity, and statute law, <a href="#p363">363</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Eras, as Arabian idea, <a href="#p239">239</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Erckert, Roderich von, on Jewish type, <a href="#p175">175</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Erigena, John Scotus, world-concept, <a href="#p242">242</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Essenes, tendency, <a href="#p211">211</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Estates, beginning, <a href="#p280">280</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as term, <a href="#p329">329</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“in form” and cultural history, <a href="#p330">330–332</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and residue classes, caste, <a href="#p332">332–334</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and occupation classes, <a href="#p333">333</a>, <a href="#p348">348</a>, <a href="#p477">477</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to non-estate, <a href="#p334">334</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and society, <a href="#p343">343</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">build and course of Cultures, <a href="#p347">347</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">primary, and economy and science, <a href="#p347">347</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to peasantry, vassalage, <a href="#p348">348</a>, <a href="#p349">349</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">end of primary, <a href="#p357">357</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">primary and existence of State, <a href="#p362">362</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and laws, <a href="#p364">364</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">contest with State, <a href="#p366">366</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">final effort for rule, <a href="#p385">385</a>, <a href="#p386">386</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and parties, <a href="#p449">449</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Democracy; Nobility; Politics; Priesthood</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ethics, and truth, <a href="#p144">144</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jesus and morals, <a href="#p217">217</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">meaning of religious, <a href="#p271">271</a>, <a href="#p272">272</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">moral defined, negations and being, <a href="#p272">272–274</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character of social, <a href="#p273">273</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">duality of moral, noble and priestly, <a href="#p341">341</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">custom-ethic, crowd, honour, <a href="#p342">342</a>, <a href="#p343">343</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in economic life, <a href="#p348">348</a>, <a href="#p472">472</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dual moral and law, <a href="#p363">363</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Philosophy; Religion; Truth</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Etruscan language, and Roman cults, <a href="#p154">154</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Roman, <a href="#p395">395</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Etruscans, as name, and people, <a href="#p164">164</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">no nation, <a href="#p173">173</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Eubulus of Athens, and finance, <a href="#p372">372</a>, <a href="#p494">494</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Eudaimonia, Rationalism, <a href="#p307">307</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Eugene IV, pope, insurgent faction, <a href="#p381">381</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Euhemerism, <a href="#p306">306</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Evolution. <i>See</i> Darwinism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">E’we language, <a href="#p140">140</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Exchequer, origin of term, <a href="#p372">372</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Exegesis. <i>See</i> Sacred books</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Exekias, vase-painting, <a href="#p135">135</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Exilarch, position, <a href="#p208">208</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Expansion, political aspect of Classical conquests, <a href="#p407">407</a>. <i>See also</i> Imperialism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Experience, egoistic basis, <a href="#p26">26</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Expositio, of German law, <a href="#p76">76</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Expression, defined, <a href="#p133">133</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ezekiel, Persian influence, <a href="#p208">208</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Talmud, <a href="#p208">208</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">revelation, <a href="#p245">245</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ezra, and Talmud, <a href="#p208">208</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Fabii, and Roman history, <a href="#p336">336</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Factions, political, <a href="#p448">448</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Factory-worker, as agent of Western technique, <a href="#p504">504</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Facts, and truths, <a href="#p11">11</a>, <a href="#p12">12</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as starting point of history, <a href="#p47">47</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and politics, <a href="#p368">368</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Faith, defined, and intellect, <a href="#p266">266</a>, <a href="#p269">269</a>, <a href="#p271">271</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and life, <a href="#p271">271</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Luther’s concept and contrition, <a href="#p298">298</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">under Rationalism, <a href="#p308">308</a>, <a href="#p309">309</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Religion; Truth</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Falasha, as Jews, <a href="#p176">176</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as tribe, <a href="#p348">348</a>, <a href="#p479">479</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Family, and State, <a href="#p329">329</a>, <a href="#p336">336</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural basis, <a href="#p330">330</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation of priesthood, <a href="#p337">337</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural styles of nobility, <a href="#p350">350</a>, <a href="#p351">351</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“in form” relation, <a href="#p362">362</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xi">[xi]</span>inward experience, <a href="#p365">365</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and economic side of being, <a href="#p471">471</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Sex</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fan-Sui, character, <a href="#p419">419</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i lang="la">Fas</i>, and <i lang="la">jus</i>, <a href="#p72">72</a>, <a href="#p78">78</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fate, cultural attitude, <a href="#p267">267</a>. <i>See also</i> Destiny; Religion</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Faustian Culture. <i>See</i> Western Culture</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fear, human, relation to invisible, <a href="#p8">8</a>, <a href="#p12">12</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of death, <a href="#p15">15</a>, <a href="#p16">16</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and “thou,” <a href="#p133">133</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and speech, <a href="#p133">133</a>, <a href="#p139">139</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Arabian apocalypse, <a href="#p212">212</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and religion, <a href="#p265">265</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Feeling, and understanding, <a href="#p136">136</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">language and domination of intellect, <a href="#p144">144</a>, <a href="#p145">145</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fehbellin, battle, importance, <a href="#p182">182</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fellahism, as post-Civilization residue, <a href="#p105">105</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as term, <a href="#p169">169</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Arabian nations, <a href="#p178">178</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and pacifism, <a href="#p185">185</a>, <a href="#p186">186</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">religious, <a href="#p314">314</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rigidity, <a href="#p362">362</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ferdinand V of Spain, dynasty-idea, <a href="#p381">381</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Feudalism, cultural contemporaries, <a href="#p39">39</a>, <a href="#p40">40</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian, <a href="#p196">196–199</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Byzantine, <a href="#p199">199</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">vassalage, <a href="#p349">349</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">union of power and booty, fiscal machinery, <a href="#p371">371</a>, <a href="#p372">372</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise, idea, <a href="#p371">371</a>, <a href="#p376">376</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western national stirrings, <a href="#p372">372</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise of control by Western nobility, <a href="#p372">372</a>, <a href="#p374">374</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">world-power idea, Empire-Papacy contest, <a href="#p373">373</a>, <a href="#p374">374</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical, and polis, <a href="#p374">374</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">decay, interregnum, <a href="#p375">375</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economy, <a href="#p477">477</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ficinus, Marcilius, and Devil-cult, <a href="#p291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fictitious authorship, significance in Arabian Culture, <a href="#p72">72</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fifty-year period, cultural rhythm, <a href="#p392">392</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Finance, rise of officialdom, <a href="#p371">371</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">classical attitude, <a href="#p383">383</a>. <i>See also</i> Money</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Finck, F. N., on word and sentence, <a href="#p141">141</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Firm, as Western symbol, <a href="#p490">490</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Flaminius, C., significance, <a href="#p65">65</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">conquest, <a href="#p408">408</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">consul-list, <a href="#p409">409</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and finance, <a href="#p410">410</a>, <a href="#p411">411</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and party, <a href="#p451">451</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Flaminius, T. Quinctius, and political organization, <a href="#p452">452</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Flavius, Cneius, son of freedman, <a href="#p166">166</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Force, alteration in concept, <a href="#p307">307</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western dynamic Rationalism, <a href="#p309">309</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Motion; Technique</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Foreign relations, unilateral law, <a href="#p364">364–366</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in conflict of estates and State, <a href="#p367">367</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">importance of inner authority, <a href="#p369">369</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as field of high politics, <a href="#p440">440</a>, <a href="#p447">447</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">war as primary relation, <a href="#p440">440</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Peace; War</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Form, being “in form,” <a href="#p330">330</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of historical movement, <a href="#p361">361</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">family and State, <a href="#p362">362</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Civilization and loss, Cæsarism, <a href="#p398">398</a>, <a href="#p404">404</a>, <a href="#p406">406</a>, <a href="#p418">418</a>,
+ <a href="#p431">431</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economic “in form,” <a href="#p471">471</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fortune, as displacing possession, <a href="#p483">483</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fourier, François, M. C., and English economics, <a href="#p469">469</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fourth Estate, significance, <a href="#p358">358</a>. <i>See also</i> Crowd</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fox, Charles James, and French Revolution, <a href="#p412">412</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">France, Anatole, on law, <a href="#p64">64</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and moral, <a href="#p272">272</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">France, sterility, <a href="#p106">106</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">national origin, <a href="#p182">182</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">States-General, <a href="#p373">373</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">absolutism and Fronde, <a href="#p388">388</a>, <a href="#p390">390</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">impractical politics, <a href="#p403">403</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">financial and military rule, <a href="#p415">415</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> French Revolution</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Francis of Assisi, and compassion, <a href="#p273">273</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Franciscans, as urban, <a href="#p92">92</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Francke, August H., Pietism, <a href="#p308">308</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Franco-German War, German bankers and French loans, <a href="#p402">402</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Frangipani, and Papacy, <a href="#p354">354</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Frankish dynasty, notion, <a href="#p379">379</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fratres Arvales, end of records, <a href="#p255">255</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rites, <a href="#p314">314</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">formal restoration, <a href="#p433">433</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Frau Holde, and Mary-cult, <a href="#p299">299</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Frederick I Barbarossa, and Henry the Lion, <a href="#p180">180</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Frederick II, emperor, and finance, <a href="#p372">372</a>, <a href="#p489">489</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Frederick the Great of Prussia, and conscription, <a href="#p420">420</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">tact of command, <a href="#p444">444</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economics and politics, <a href="#p475">475</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Frederick William of Brandenburg, as real ruler, <a href="#p389">389</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Frederick William I of Prussia, and army, <a href="#p415">415</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as politician, <a href="#p443">443</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">finance, <a href="#p489">489</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Frederick William III of Prussia, and army, <a href="#p406">406</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Freedom, rise of idea, significance, <a href="#p354">354</a>, <a href="#p356">356</a>, <a href="#p358">358</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as negation, <a href="#p456">456</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and money, <a href="#p481">481</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">French Revolution, and dynastic idea, <a href="#p183">183</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political significance, <a href="#p387">387</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">struggle for internal control, <a href="#p398">398</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">not economic, <a href="#p399">399</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and mob, <a href="#p400">400</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">English ideas and practices, <a href="#p403">403</a>, <a href="#p411">411</a>, <a href="#p412">412</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as unique, <a href="#p411">411</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and set of incidents, <a href="#p411">411</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Frobenius, Leo, on primitive Culture, <a href="#p33">33</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Arabian “cavern,” <a href="#p233">233</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fronde, significance, <a href="#p386">386</a>, <a href="#p404">404</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">European absolutism, <a href="#p388">388</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">principle in Thirty Years’ War, <a href="#p389">389</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">struggle elsewhere, outcome, <a href="#p390">390</a>, <a href="#p404">404</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period in Arabian Culture, <a href="#p423">423</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fugger, city nobility, <a href="#p356">356</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">small-scale traffic, <a href="#p481">481</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Function, Western money concept, <a href="#p486">486</a>, <a href="#p489">489</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Furniture, race in, <a href="#p122">122</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Gaia cult, <a href="#p283">283</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gaius, Institutes, <a href="#p67">67</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Galba, unimportance, <a href="#p50">50</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gallienus, mounted corps, <a href="#p199">199</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">historyless, <a href="#p432">432</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gamaliel, influence, <a href="#p209">209</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gao-dsung, and Nestorians, <a href="#p260">260</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gathas, Gnosis, <a href="#p228">228</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gelnhausen, cathedral art, <a href="#p123">123</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gelon, and Syracuse, <a href="#p382">382</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xii">[xii]</span>Genealogy, and fear, <a href="#p265">265</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">time-mythology, <a href="#p286">286</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Western-principle, <a href="#p350">350</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Chinese ancestry-worship, <a href="#p351">351</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">inherited will, <a href="#p377">377</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and money, <a href="#p449">449</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Dynastic idea</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Genesis, influences, <a href="#p209">209</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Georgia, State religion, <a href="#p253">253</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Germanic law, development, <a href="#p75">75</a>, <a href="#p76">76</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Germany, and Roman law, <a href="#p76">76</a>, <a href="#p77">77</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Western Civilization, <a href="#p109">109</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dynasty and nationalism, <a href="#p181">181–183</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">politics, army, and administration, <a href="#p415">415</a>, <a href="#p444">444</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character of constitution of 1919, <a href="#p457">457</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Holy Roman Empire; Prussia</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gesture, as sign of language, punctuation, <a href="#p134">134</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and words, <a href="#p140">140</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ghassanids, court, poetry, <a href="#p198">198</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ghetto, as Jewish mode, <a href="#p315">315</a>, <a href="#p317">317</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Giotto, as Gothic, <a href="#p291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gnosis, and Chaldean, <a href="#p176">176</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Eastern and Western forms, <a href="#p228">228</a>, <a href="#p229">229</a>, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Godwin, William, and Third Estate, <a href="#p403">403</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, and cosmic beat, <a href="#p5">5</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">historical attunement, <a href="#p30">30</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">form-fulfilment theory, <a href="#p32">32</a>, <a href="#p32">32</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on parts of a Culture, <a href="#p37">37</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on world-literature, <a href="#p108">108</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">form and untruth, <a href="#p137">137</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on German nationalism and poetry, <a href="#p182">182</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on freedom, <a href="#p267">267</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on confession, <a href="#p295">295</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on doer, <a href="#p442">442</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on book-keeping, <a href="#p490">490</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gold reserve and standard, and credit, <a href="#p491">491</a> n. <i>See also</i> Money</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Golden Age, Classical, <a href="#p239">239</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gomdan, stronghold, <a href="#p197">197</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Good, as evaluation, <a href="#p241">241</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Goods, early traffic, <a href="#p480">480</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Goslar, cathedral art, <a href="#p123">123</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gospels, fictitious authorship, <a href="#p72">72</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character, <a href="#p212">212</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">picture, <a href="#p217">217</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Mark, <a href="#p223">223</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">John, <a href="#p226">226</a>, <a href="#p234">234</a>, <a href="#p244">244</a>, <a href="#p245">245</a>, <a href="#p250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">warrantry, <a href="#p248">248</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gothic, as cosmic, <a href="#p92">92</a>, <a href="#p93">93</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cathedral, <a href="#p122">122</a>, <a href="#p123">123</a>, <a href="#p153">153</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Baroque science, <a href="#p270">270</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Renaissance as return, <a href="#p291">291</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and personality, <a href="#p293">293</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Reformation, <a href="#p296">296</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">result on Jews of contact, <a href="#p317">317–319</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and technique, <a href="#p502">502</a>, <a href="#p503">503</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gould, Benjamin A., on American race, <a href="#p119">119</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Government. <i>See</i> Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gracchi, importance, <a href="#p47">47</a>, <a href="#p50">50</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and rural citizens, <a href="#p384">384</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">financing, <a href="#p402">402</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and money, <a href="#p410">410</a>, <a href="#p494">494</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">disorders, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Tribunate, <a href="#p433">433</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and party, <a href="#p451">451</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and political theory, <a href="#p454">454</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and electorate, <a href="#p457">457</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and courts, <a href="#p460">460</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Grace, plurality of idea, <a href="#p59">59</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Arabian doctrine, <a href="#p234">234</a>, <a href="#p241">241</a>, <a href="#p242">242</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western concept, <a href="#p292">292</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Grammar, sentence and word, <a href="#p141">141</a>, <a href="#p145">145</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and syntax, <a href="#p142">142</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">lost origin, <a href="#p146">146</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and vocabularies as basis of linguistic families, <a href="#p147">147</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Indogermanic, <a href="#p148">148</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and writing, <a href="#p149">149</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Granada, as world-city, <a href="#p99">99</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish city, <a href="#p316">316</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gratian, Decretum, <a href="#p77">77</a>, <a href="#p290">290</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Great Protectors, Chinese period, <a href="#p40">40</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Great Wall, contemporary, <a href="#p41">41</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Greek, as language of Christianity, <a href="#p224">224</a>, <a href="#p252">252</a>, <a href="#p256">256</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Roman language, <a href="#p395">395</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Greek fire, purpose, <a href="#p502">502</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Greek Orthodox Church, picture series, <a href="#p116">116</a>. <i>See also</i> Christianity</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Greeks, no nation, <a href="#p173">173</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as adherents of Syncretic cults, <a href="#p176">176</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Christian Church, <a href="#p177">177</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">modern security as Byzantine relic, <a href="#p323">323</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gregory VII, pope, and world-power, <a href="#p373">373</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gregory of Tours, history and Karamzin’s narrative, <a href="#p192">192</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">religiousness, <a href="#p277">277</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Groot, Jan J. M. de, mistake on Chinese religions, <a href="#p286">286</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Grosseteste, Robert, philosophy, <a href="#p8">8</a> n., <a href="#p172">172</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as scientist, <a href="#p300">300</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gudunov {sic}, Boris, period, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Guilds, status, and tribal organization, <a href="#p348">348</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gundisapora, school, <a href="#p200">200</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">location, <a href="#p200">200</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gunpowder, and printing, <a href="#p460">460</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Chinese discovery, <a href="#p501">501</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Greek fire, <a href="#p502">502</a> n.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Habsburgs, and Austrian nation, <a href="#p182">182</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and world-history, <a href="#p336">336</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hadramaut, Axumite kings, <a href="#p197">197</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hadrian, legal edict, <a href="#p66">66</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hague Conference, as prelude of war, <a href="#p430">430</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Halakha, Jewish and Christian, <a href="#p221">221</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hallgerd, as destiny, <a href="#p329">329</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Halo, significance, <a href="#p378">378</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Halyburton, Thomas, on divine-given torments, <a href="#p299">299</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hamdanids, rule, <a href="#p197">197</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hamilcar Barca, Spanish conquest, <a href="#p408">408</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hammurabi, code, <a href="#p75">75</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Han dynasties, <a href="#p41">41</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fall, <a href="#p314">314</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hanifs, Puritanism, <a href="#p304">304</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hannibal, and Hellenism, <a href="#p191">191</a>, <a href="#p422">422</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and border States, <a href="#p408">408</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hansa, small-scale traffic, <a href="#p481">481</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Haoma-drinking, <a href="#p203">203</a>, <a href="#p207">207</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hasidim, sect, <a href="#p255">255</a>, <a href="#p321">321</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hatshepsut, and Egyptian history, <a href="#p434">434</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hauran, feudalism, <a href="#p196">196</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Heaven, Arabian and Western, <a href="#p292">292</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western and Russian, <a href="#p295">295</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hebrew, fate of spoken and written, <a href="#p73">73</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hegel, Georg W. F., and law of nature, <a href="#p78">78</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and numbers, <a href="#p269">269</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hellenes, as name, <a href="#p161">161</a>, <a href="#p173">173</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hellenism, as fellah, <a href="#p185">185</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cannæ and Zama, <a href="#p191">191</a>, <a href="#p422">422</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Paganism and Christianity, <a href="#p203">203</a>, <a href="#p204">204</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">materialism and myth, <a href="#p310">310</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Pseudomorphosis</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xiii">[xiii]</span>Helots, status, <a href="#p322">322</a>, <a href="#p349">349</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">attempt to emancipate, <a href="#p357">357</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Henotheism, Arabian, <a href="#p201">201</a>. <i>See also</i> Religion</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Henry IV, emperor, contemporaries, <a href="#p39">39</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Henry VI, emperor, and world-power, <a href="#p374">374</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Henry VII of England, dynasty-idea, <a href="#p381">381</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hermes Trismegistus, fictitious, <a href="#p72">72</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hermetic Pœmander, <a href="#p213">213</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hermetics, collection as canon, <a href="#p247">247</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hermopolis, cult, <a href="#p279">279</a>, <a href="#p281">281</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hero, and technique, <a href="#p501">501</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Herod, Hellenism, <a href="#p211">211</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Herodotus, on Persians, <a href="#p167">167</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">inaccuracy on Egypt, <a href="#p333">333</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Heroism, and race, <a href="#p339">339</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">hero-death, <a href="#p471">471</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Herrnhut, Pietism, <a href="#p308">308</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hesiod, and Classical religious beginnings, <a href="#p282">282</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hia dynasty, mythology, <a href="#p286">286</a>, <a href="#p379">379</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hiang-Sui, peace league, <a href="#p429">429</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hidalgo, meaning, <a href="#p342">342</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hierocles, breviary, <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hijra, era, <a href="#p239">239</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Himaryites, history, <a href="#p197">197</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish State religion, <a href="#p153">153</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hinayana doctrine, <a href="#p312">312</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hippodamus of Miletus, city-plan, <a href="#p100">100</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">History, and cosmic and microcosmic, <a href="#p23">23</a>, <a href="#p24">24</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">adjustment to horizon, cultural aspect, <a href="#p24">24</a>, <a href="#p25">25</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">subjective basis, <a href="#p26">26</a>, <a href="#p29">29</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural history-pictures, <a href="#p27">27</a>, <a href="#p28">28</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western Culture and infinite, <a href="#p28">28</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">irrational culminative division scheme, <a href="#p28">28</a>, <a href="#p37">37</a>, <a href="#p55">55</a>, <a href="#p190">190</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western Culture and individuality in historical attunement, planes, <a href="#p29">29</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">future uniform physiognomic, <a href="#p30">30</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">enlarged possibilities, restoration and prediction, <a href="#p36">36</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Cultures and significance, <a href="#p44">44</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">true definition and treatment, physiognomic fact, <a href="#p46">46</a>, <a href="#p47">47</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">biological sense of primitive, <a href="#p48">48</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and final objects, <a href="#p48">48</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Cultures and historical man, <a href="#p48">48</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">exhaustion of Civilization and historylessness, <a href="#p48">48–51</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">actualization of the spiritual, <a href="#p49">49</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">intra- and intercultural, <a href="#p55">55</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural plurality, soul and transfer of form, <a href="#p55">55–60</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">importance of negative cultural influences, <a href="#p57">57–59</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural transfer of Christianity as example, <a href="#p59">59</a>, <a href="#p60">60</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Roman Law as example, <a href="#p60">60–83</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">city’s “visage” as, <a href="#p94">94</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and classes, <a href="#p96">96</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Civilization, superficial, <a href="#p109">109</a>, <a href="#p339">339</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and race, <a href="#p116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and writing, <a href="#p150">150</a>, <a href="#p153">153</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to people, <a href="#p165">165</a>, <a href="#p169">169</a>, <a href="#p170">170</a>, <a href="#p181">181</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and nations, <a href="#p171">171</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and faith and science, <a href="#p271">271</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and moral, <a href="#p272">272</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of truths, <a href="#p274">274</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western sense, influence of contrition, <a href="#p294">294</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in intercultural dissonance, <a href="#p319">319</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">sex war, <a href="#p328">328</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cosmic-politic duality, family and State, <a href="#p329">329</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“in form” estates and making, <a href="#p330">330</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural tradition, <a href="#p338">338</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">being-streams as true, <a href="#p339">339</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and State, <a href="#p361">361</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as court, high decision, <a href="#p507">507</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Being; Cultures; Destiny; Landscape; Nature; Politics; Race; Sex; Time</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hogarth, William, art sermons, <a href="#p116">116</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hohenstaufens, results of fall, <a href="#p181">181</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hohenzollerns, and Prussia, <a href="#p182">182</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Holy Roman Empire, significance, <a href="#p181">181</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">electorate, <a href="#p373">373</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">world-power and contest with Papacy, <a href="#p373">373</a>, <a href="#p374">374</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">decay, <a href="#p376">376</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Thirty Years’ War, Wallenstein, <a href="#p388">388–391</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">provincial horizons, <a href="#p392">392</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Holy Synod, <a href="#p278">278</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Homer, urban language, <a href="#p125">125</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">indifference to religion, <a href="#p281">281</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">feudal evidences, <a href="#p374">374</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and talent, <a href="#p486">486</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ho-nan-fu, as royal residence, <a href="#p92">92</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Honour, and class, <a href="#p342">342</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as basic concept of ethics, <a href="#p343">343</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in economic life, <a href="#p472">472</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Horten, Max, on popular Islam, <a href="#p237">237</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Horus-hawk cult, end, <a href="#p279">279</a>, <a href="#p373">373</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hou-li, as religious source, <a href="#p286">286</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">House, Minoan and Mycenæan, <a href="#p88">88</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">farmhouse as symbol, <a href="#p90">90</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">megalopolitan, <a href="#p99">99</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and architecture, <a href="#p120">120</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as expression of race, <a href="#p120">120–122</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as totem, history, <a href="#p121">121</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and ornament, <a href="#p121">121</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and family, <a href="#p329">329</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political and economic expression, <a href="#p471">471</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hsinan-tang, in India, <a href="#p107">107</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hugo de St. Victor, Arabian contemporaries, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Huguccio, pun, <a href="#p77">77</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Humanism, field, <a href="#p291">291</a> n. <i>See also</i> Renaissance</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Humboldt, Wilhelm von, on language, <a href="#p117">117</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and State, <a href="#p366">366</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on politics and literature, <a href="#p439">439</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hume, David, and economic thought, <a href="#p403">403</a>, <a href="#p469">469</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hunac Ceel, rule, <a href="#p45">45</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hunger-death, <a href="#p471">471</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Huns, Chinese repulse and Western attack, <a href="#p41">41</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hus, John, and reform, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Huxley, Thomas H., race classification, <a href="#p125">125</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hwang of Tsi, as protector, <a href="#p388">388</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hwang-ti, rise, <a href="#p38">38</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as title, <a href="#p41">41</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cult, <a href="#p314">314</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economics and politics, <a href="#p475">475</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hybrias the Cretan, and <i lang="la">carpe diem</i>, <a href="#p383">383</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hybris, doctrine, <a href="#p282">282</a>, <a href="#p301">301</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hyksos Period, meaning, <a href="#p38">38</a>, <a href="#p41">41</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">preliminaries, <a href="#p386">386</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cæsarism, <a href="#p427">427</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as term, <a href="#p428">428</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and political theory, <a href="#p453">453</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hypothesis, and usefulness, <a href="#p144">144</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hyrcanus, Hellenism, <a href="#p211">211</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Iamblichus, and Pagan Church, Syncretism, <a href="#p204">204</a>, <a href="#p252">252</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on divine substance, <a href="#p256">256</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and numbers, <a href="#p269">269</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ibas, and substance controversy, <a href="#p256">256</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xiv">[xiv]</span>Ibn Sina, style of canon, <a href="#p346">346</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ibsen, Henrik, and marriage, <a href="#p105">105</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ice Age, man in, <a href="#p33">33</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Iconoclasm. <i>See</i> Images</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ilya Muromyets, hero, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Images, in Pagan churches, <a href="#p204">204</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">basis of worship, <a href="#p256">256</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian and Greek iconoclasm, <a href="#p304">304</a>, <a href="#p425">425</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Monophysites</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Immaculate Conception, as English idea, <a href="#p294">294</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Immortality, cultural basis, <a href="#p59">59</a>. <i>See also</i> Death</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Imperialism, Chinese, <a href="#p38">38</a>, <a href="#p41">41</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Indian, <a href="#p41">41</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">collapse of Roman, <a href="#p42">42</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Calvin-Loyola struggle, <a href="#p299">299</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political aspect of Classical conquests, <a href="#p407">407</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural necessity, <a href="#p422">422</a> n., <a href="#p424">424</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Indian Culture, ahistoric, and script, <a href="#p36">36</a>, <a href="#p150">150</a>, <a href="#p152">152</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">problems of study, <a href="#p38">38</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Imperialism, <a href="#p41">41</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fate in, <a href="#p267">267</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beginning of religion, <a href="#p281">281</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Rationalism, <a href="#p307">307</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">style of priesthood, <a href="#p352">352</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation of primary estates, <a href="#p353">353</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and world-power, <a href="#p373">373</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Buddhism; Cultures</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Indians, and Americans, <a href="#p119">119</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">gesture language, <a href="#p140">140</a> n., <a href="#p147">147</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Indogermanic system, alien words, <a href="#p148">148</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">youth, question of grammar, <a href="#p148">148</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of ahistoric Cultures, <a href="#p150">150</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">basis of coherence, <a href="#p166">166</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Persians, <a href="#p166">166–169</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Western genealogical ideal, <a href="#p181">181</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Industry. <i>See</i> Economics; Technique</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Infinity, in Western Culture, <a href="#p46">46</a>. <i>See also</i> Depth-experience</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Innocent III, pope, and world-power, <a href="#p374">374</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as politician, <a href="#p442">442</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Inquisition, and Devil-cult, <a href="#p291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Inscriptions, as taboo, <a href="#p121">121</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Insula Feliculæ, <a href="#p101">101</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Intelligence, as tension, <a href="#p102">102</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">language as vehicle of dominance, <a href="#p144">144</a>, <a href="#p145">145</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and race-traits, <a href="#p166">166</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">aristocracy, <a href="#p166">166</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and cosmopolitanism, <a href="#p184">184</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jesus and, <a href="#p216">216–218</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Paul’s introduction with Christianity, <a href="#p221">221</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish period, <a href="#p316">316</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and primary estates, <a href="#p356">356</a>, <a href="#p357">357</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cæsarism, <a href="#p433">433</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Causality; Knowledge; Rationalism; Thought; Town; Understanding; Waking-being</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">International law, and Roman <i lang="la">jus gentium</i>, <a href="#p61">61</a>. <i>See also</i> Foreign relations</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Internationalism, as element of Jewry, <a href="#p320">320</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Interregnum, cultural period, significance, <a href="#p375">375</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Interrex, and oligarchy, <a href="#p375">375</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Inventions, Western, <a href="#p501">501</a>. <i>See also</i> Technique</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ionic, as microcosmic, <a href="#p92">92</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ipsus, battle, importance, <a href="#p422">422</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Irak, slave-rebellion, <a href="#p426">426</a>, <a href="#p428">428</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Irenæus, and Western Church, <a href="#p229">229</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and commentary, <a href="#p247">247</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Irnerius, and Roman law, <a href="#p77">77</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Isaac Hassan (ibn Sid), as scientist, <a href="#p316">316</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Isaiah, as Arabian prophet, <a href="#p205">205</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Isidore, biography, <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Isis cult, origin, <a href="#p201">201</a>, <a href="#p310">310</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Islam, as Puritanism, <a href="#p74">74</a>, <a href="#p302">302–304</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and nationality, <a href="#p178">178</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Logos, <a href="#p236">236</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">significance as term, <a href="#p240">240</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">community of elect, <a href="#p243">243</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and substance controversy, <a href="#p256">256</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Monophysites and starting point, <a href="#p258">258</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">missionarism, <a href="#p259">259</a>, <a href="#p304">304</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">earlier Arabian religions and success, <a href="#p260">260</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Arabian manifestation, <a href="#p304">304</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fellahism, <a href="#p315">315</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">basis for endurance, <a href="#p323">323</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political aristocracy of beginning, <a href="#p424">424</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Arabian Culture; Mohammed; Religion; Sufism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Isocrates, and class dictatorship, <a href="#p404">404</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Israelites, tribal association, <a href="#p175">175</a>. <i>See also</i> Jews</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Italy, union as Germanic dynastic creation, <a href="#p181">181</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">city-republic finance, <a href="#p489">489</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ivan III, and Tartars, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ivan IV, the Terrible, period, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">I-Wang, contemporaries, <a href="#p39">39</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and feudalism, <a href="#p349">349</a> n., <a href="#p375">375</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Jabna, Council of, on revelation, <a href="#p245">245</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jackson, Andrew, and party, <a href="#p451">451</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jacopone da Todi, and reform, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jainism, Rationalism, <a href="#p307">307</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">James, Saint, Gospel, <a href="#p223">223</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">James I of England, and marriage-alliance, <a href="#p389">389</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jansenists, Puritan manifestation, <a href="#p302">302</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Japan, cultural status, <a href="#p49">49</a> n., <a href="#p108">108</a>, <a href="#p323">323</a>, <a href="#p421">421</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jason of Pheræ, politics, <a href="#p407">407</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jehuda, Rabbi, period, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jehuda ben Halevi, and science, <a href="#p315">315</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jeremiah, as Arabian prophet, <a href="#p205">205</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jerusalem, relation to Jewry, <a href="#p204">204</a>, <a href="#p208">208</a>, <a href="#p210">210</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jespersen, Otto, on origin of language, <a href="#p138">138</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jesubocht, Corpus, <a href="#p75">75</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jesuits, as urban, <a href="#p92">92</a>. <i>See also</i> Loyola</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jesujabh III, on conversion to Islam, <a href="#p260">260</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jesus, and ceremonial, <a href="#p134">134</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">life and biography, <a href="#p212">212</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and John the Baptist, Mandæanism, <a href="#p214">214</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">connotation of “Nazarene,” <a href="#p214">214</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">self-view as prophet and Messiah, <a href="#p215">215</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">townlessness, <a href="#p215">215</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">before Pilate, faith and fact, <a href="#p216">216</a>, <a href="#p473">473</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">metaphysical world, <a href="#p217">217</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of Resurrection, <a href="#p218">218</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">romances of birth and childhood, <a href="#p224">224</a>, <a href="#p237">237</a>, <a href="#p250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">world-image, and apocalyptic, <a href="#p237">237</a>, <a href="#p239">239</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and submission, <a href="#p240">240</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Christianity; Logos; Substance</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jews, creed basis of law, Talmud, <a href="#p69">69</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">jurisprudence, <a href="#p71">71</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">pre-cultural law, <a href="#p75">75</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">comradeship and race in European, <a href="#p126">126</a>, <a href="#p127">127</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">tribal types, <a href="#p175">175</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ignored phases of religious history, <a href="#p191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">crusade, <a href="#p198">198</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Yahweh cult in Syncretism, <a href="#p201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xv">[xv]</span>Judaism as Arabian prophetic religion, <a href="#p204">204–207</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of exile, apocalypse and Persian influence, <a href="#p207">207</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Judaistic minority, Talmudic development, <a href="#p208">208</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Exilarch majority, <a href="#p208">208</a>, <a href="#p210">210</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">law and the prophets as separate, <a href="#p209">209</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">post-exilic (springtime) increase, spirit, <a href="#p209">209</a>, <a href="#p316">316</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Judea and Jewry, fall of Jerusalem as liberation, <a href="#p209">209–211</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">tendencies, rescue from pseudomorphic Hellenism, <a href="#p210">210</a>, <a href="#p211">211</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">end of apocalypse, <a href="#p211">211</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Judaism and exclusive Messiah Christian sects, disappearance, <a href="#p219">219</a>, <a href="#p220">220</a>, <a href="#p252">252</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Paul and Judaism, <a href="#p221">221</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">era, <a href="#p239">239</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and revelation, <a href="#p245">245</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">separation of Christianity, <a href="#p251">251</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">missionarism, <a href="#p259">259</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Mazdak reformation, end of theology, <a href="#p261">261</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fellah-religion, <a href="#p315">315</a>, <a href="#p323">323</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian-type nationality and ghetto, <a href="#p315">315</a>, <a href="#p317">317</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">intellectual (Baroque) period, in Spain, <a href="#p316">316</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">spiritual character of period, <a href="#p316">316</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Civilization period, results of contact with Gothic, <a href="#p317">317–319</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">race and piety phases of later antagonism, <a href="#p318">318–320</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">landless consensus and Western patriotism, <a href="#p320">320</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fixed alien metaphysic phase, <a href="#p321">321</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Western Civilization, <a href="#p322">322</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">danger of dissolution, <a href="#p323">323</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economic rôle, <a href="#p481">481</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and machine-industry, <a href="#p504">504</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Arabian Culture; Religion</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jezidi, and Trinity, <a href="#p236">236</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Joachim of Floris, world-conception, <a href="#p28">28</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian contemporaries, <a href="#p250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and reform, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Job, Book of, character, <a href="#p208">208</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and will, <a href="#p242">242</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">John Gospel, <a href="#p226">226</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Mani and, <a href="#p227">227</a>, <a href="#p251">251</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dualism, <a href="#p234">234</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on God and the Word, <a href="#p244">244</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as a Koran, <a href="#p245">245</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Old Testament, <a href="#p245">245</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">John the Baptist, Mandæanism, and Jesus, <a href="#p214">214</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">order-community, <a href="#p254">254</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">John Tzimisces, power, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Josephus, on Sadducees, <a href="#p211">211</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Judah, Abraham and betrayal money, <a href="#p237">237</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Judaism. <i>See</i> Jews</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Judge of men, and speech, <a href="#p137">137</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Judith, as Arabian, <a href="#p208">208</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jugurtha, power, <a href="#p428">428</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Julian, edict, <a href="#p66">66</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and cult nation, <a href="#p176">176</a>, <a href="#p204">204</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as prophet, <a href="#p204">204</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Syncretism, <a href="#p253">253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and monasticism, <a href="#p254">254</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jundaisapur, and Gundisapora, <a href="#p200">200</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Junian Latins, <a href="#p68">68</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jupiter Dolichenus cult, <a href="#p201">201</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Juridical person, as Arabian concept, <a href="#p67">67</a>, <a href="#p68">68</a>, <a href="#p174">174</a>, <a href="#p177">177</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jurisprudence, as late science, <a href="#p66">66</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Egyptian and Chinese, <a href="#p67">67</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">future Western, <a href="#p80">80–83</a>, <a href="#p505">505</a>. <i>See also</i> Roman law</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i lang="la">Jus</i>, and <i lang="la">lex</i> in Arabian Culture, <a href="#p71">71</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and <i lang="la">fas</i> in Western Culture, <a href="#p78">78</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i lang="la">Jus gentium</i>, Classical idea, <a href="#p61">61</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as imperial law, <a href="#p66">66</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Justification by faith, and Western Rationalism, <a href="#p309">309</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Justinian, Arabian jurisprudence, <a href="#p70">70</a> n., <a href="#p71">71</a>, <a href="#p74">74</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">army system, <a href="#p199">199</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Digests as interpretation, <a href="#p246">246</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and end of theology, <a href="#p261">261</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Nika Rebellion, <a href="#p381">381</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">conflict with nobility, <a href="#p423">423</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Kabbalah, and secret dogma, <a href="#p247">247</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kalaam, and pneuma, <a href="#p242">242</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kama-sutram, and sport, <a href="#p103">103</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kanauj, as world-city, <a href="#p99">99</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kant, Emmanuel, and numbers, <a href="#p269">269</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">gloom, <a href="#p295">295</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Devil-cult, <a href="#p303">303</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Talmudic intellects, <a href="#p322">322</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on marriage, <a href="#p337">337</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and celibacy of science, <a href="#p346">346</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kara Balgassun, inscription, <a href="#p260">260</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Karæi, as order, <a href="#p255">255</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Puritanism, rise, <a href="#p316">316</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Karamzin, Nikolai M., narrative, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Karlsruhe, plan, <a href="#p100">100</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Karlstadt, as Gothic, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Karna, and civil law, <a href="#p210">210</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Karo, Joseph, metaphysic, <a href="#p321">321</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Karramiyya movement, <a href="#p424">424</a>, <a href="#p425">425</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Karun valley, Mandæanism, <a href="#p214">214</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kassites, as rulers, <a href="#p40">40</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Khazars, conversion to Judaism, <a href="#p259">259</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Khuzistan, Mandæanism, <a href="#p214">214</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ki-Sung, dynasties, <a href="#p379">379</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kierkegaard, Sören, “playing” with religion, <a href="#p137">137</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kinnesrin, school, <a href="#p200">200</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kiur Zan, power, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Knowledge, waking-being and problem of epistemology, <a href="#p14">14</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">technical and theoretical, <a href="#p25">25</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">epistemology and destiny, <a href="#p267">267</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Intelligence</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kobad I, and Mazdak, <a href="#p261">261</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Koran, as term, <a href="#p244">244</a>. <i>See also</i> Islam</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kung-Yang, on Middle Kingdom, <a href="#p373">373</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kwan-tse, and pre-Confucian philosophy, <a href="#p300">300</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kwei-ku-tse, character, <a href="#p419">419</a> n.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Labna, and Mexican Culture, <a href="#p45">45</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Labor. <i>See</i> Economics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Laity, <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> clergy, <a href="#p333">333</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lakayata, system, <a href="#p309">309</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lakhmids, court, poetry, <a href="#p198">198</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lambert, Édouard, on Twelve Tables, <a href="#p65">65</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Land, and Classical money wealth, <a href="#p487">487</a>. <i>See also</i> Peasantry</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Landscape, necessity of study in man’s history, <a href="#p39">39</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Arabian Culture, <a href="#p42">42</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to Culture, <a href="#p46">46</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and transfer of forms, <a href="#p57">57</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and town, <a href="#p90">90</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and race, <a href="#p113">113</a>, <a href="#p119">119</a>, <a href="#p129">129</a>, <a href="#p130">130</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xvi">[xvi]</span>and language, <a href="#p119">119</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and plant changes, <a href="#p130">130</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and religions of Cultures, <a href="#p278">278</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Chinese prime symbol, <a href="#p287">287</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Language, and emancipation of understanding, <a href="#p9">9</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Civilization, <a href="#p108">108</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">defined, development, <a href="#p114">114</a>, <a href="#p115">115</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and race and waking-being, <a href="#p114">114</a>, <a href="#p117">117</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">expression and communication, “I” and “thou,” motive and sign, <a href="#p115">115</a>, <a href="#p133">133</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cult-colouring of prime words, <a href="#p116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and taboo, <a href="#p116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and speaking, dead languages, <a href="#p117">117</a>, <a href="#p125">125</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">independence from landscape, mother-tongue fallacy, <a href="#p119">119</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">essence, wordless, <a href="#p131">131</a>, <a href="#p132">132</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">essential element of relations of microcosm, <a href="#p132">132</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">phases of expression, extensiveness, <a href="#p134">134</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">evolution of communication, <a href="#p134">134</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">speech divorced from speaking, rigid signs as system, <a href="#p134">134</a>, <a href="#p144">144</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“knowing” the language, complexity, <a href="#p135">135</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">set language and understanding, <a href="#p135">135</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">signs and meaning, relation to truth, <a href="#p136">136</a>, <a href="#p137">137</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“playing” with expression, <a href="#p137">137</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">spiritual communion and silence, <a href="#p137">137</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">words, origin, incompleteness, <a href="#p137">137</a>, <a href="#p138">138</a>, <a href="#p142">142</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">vocal and verbal, <a href="#p138">138</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">name and word, <a href="#p138">138–141</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">opposite word-pairs, <a href="#p140">140</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Chinese voice-differentiations, <a href="#p140">140</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">grammar and sentence, relation to word, <a href="#p141">141</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">sentences and race, <a href="#p142">142</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">acquisition of words, <a href="#p142">142</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">verbs and thought-categories, <a href="#p143">143</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">abstract thinking and intellect and life, <a href="#p144">144</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">stages of history, <a href="#p145">145</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">lost formative history, <a href="#p146">146</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as ancient class-secret, <a href="#p146">146</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">tempo of history, effect of writing, <a href="#p147">147</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">grammar and vocabulary, linguistic families as grammatical, <a href="#p147">147</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">alien words, <a href="#p148">148</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as to Aryan, <a href="#p149">149</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">written and colloquial, <a href="#p150">150</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">morphology of Culture-languages, <a href="#p152">152–155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">birth of cultural, popular talk and cult speech, <a href="#p153">153–155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">city script-speech, <a href="#p155">155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and people, <a href="#p161">161</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Persian, <a href="#p166">166</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">mother tongue and dynastic idea, <a href="#p183">183</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and literary history, <a href="#p190">190</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">influence on Christianity, <a href="#p224">224</a>, <a href="#p241">241</a> n., <a href="#p252">252</a>, <a href="#p256">256</a>, <a href="#p258">258</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Arabian religions, <a href="#p252">252</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Literature; Race; Words; Writing</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lao-tse, Taoism, <a href="#p307">307</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Pietism, <a href="#p308">308</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lao-Tzu, and sterility, <a href="#p105">105</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lassalle, Ferdinand, and class dictatorship, <a href="#p404">404</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and English economics, <a href="#p469">469</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Latin, disappearance from legal life, <a href="#p75">75</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Western scholar-languages, <a href="#p155">155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Christianity, <a href="#p241">241</a> n., <a href="#p258">258</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period, <a href="#p395">395</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Latin-America, and Cæsarism, <a href="#p435">435</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Law, property as power, <a href="#p345">345</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">defined, <a href="#p363">363</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as instrument of power, internal and external, <a href="#p365">365–367</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Jurisprudence; Roman law</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">League of Nations, Chinese attempt, <a href="#p38">38</a>, <a href="#p417">417</a>, <a href="#p429">429</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Learning, separation from priesthood, <a href="#p345">345</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">priesthood and cultural form of profane, <a href="#p345">345–347</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and nobility and economics, <a href="#p347">347</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Le Bon, Gustave, study of the crowd, <a href="#p18">18</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lechfeld, battle, <a href="#p259">259</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Leibniz, Baron von, and evolution, <a href="#p31">31</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Leiden, Papyrus, on Hyksos Period, <a href="#p427">427</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lemnos, inscription, <a href="#p122">122</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lenel, Otto, on Roman jurisprudence, <a href="#p67">67</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lenin, Nikolai, as mass-leader, <a href="#p448">448</a> n. <i>See also</i> Bolshevism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Leo III, emperor, legislation, <a href="#p75">75</a>, <a href="#p357">357</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">iconoclasm, <a href="#p304">304</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Leo V, and Theodore of Studion, <a href="#p425">425</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Leonardo da Vinci, and Gothic, <a href="#p291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Leonardo Pisano, on accountancy, <a href="#p489">489</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Leontini, destruction, <a href="#p405">405</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lessing, Gotthold E., and German nationalism, <a href="#p182">182</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Rationalism, <a href="#p305">305</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Letter, as language-picture, <a href="#p134">134</a>. <i>See also</i> Writing</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Levites, as term for priesthood, <a href="#p175">175</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i lang="la">Lex</i>, and <i lang="la">jus</i>, Arabian, <a href="#p71">71</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><cite lang="la">Lex Æbutia</cite>, and present law, <a href="#p62">62</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><cite lang="la">Lex Canuleia</cite>, <a href="#p69">69</a> n., <a href="#p397">397</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lex Hortensia, <a href="#p358">358</a>, <a href="#p396">396</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lex Ogulnia, and Plebs, <a href="#p408">408</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Li-Ki, ritual work, <a href="#p312">312</a> n., <a href="#p315">315</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Li Si, standard script, <a href="#p152">152</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Li-Szu, and Wang-Cheng, <a href="#p41">41</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Li-Wang, problem, <a href="#p38">38</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">flight, <a href="#p376">376</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Libyan problem, <a href="#p162">162</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lidzbarski, Mark, on Jesus as Mandæan, <a href="#p214">214</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lies, and set language, <a href="#p136">136</a>, <a href="#p137">137</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Life. <i>See</i> Being; Death; Sex; Waking-being</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Light. <i>See</i> Sight</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Limes, Great Wall as, <a href="#p41">41</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">List, Friedrich, relation to property, <a href="#p345">345</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and English economics, <a href="#p469">469</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Literature, rural and urban, <a href="#p93">93</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Culture and Civilization, <a href="#p107">107</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">German and nationalism, <a href="#p182">182</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and cosmopolitanism, <a href="#p185">185</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian research, <a href="#p190">190</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and language history, <a href="#p190">190</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">hero-tales, <a href="#p192">192</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian Minne, and epic, <a href="#p198">198</a>, <a href="#p250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Chinese drama, <a href="#p286">286</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Byzantine and Arabian, <a href="#p304">304</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Livy, and polis, <a href="#p383">383</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lo-Yang, as royal residence, <a href="#p92">92</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Locke, John, and Continental Rationalism, <a href="#p308">308</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Logic, and opposites, <a href="#p141">141</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and truth, <a href="#p144">144</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and history, <a href="#p144">144</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Logos, John Gospel, <a href="#p226">226</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Pseudomorphic and Arabian, <a href="#p229">229</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jezidi view, <a href="#p236">236</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian indwelling of spirit, light-sensation, <a href="#p236">236</a>, <a href="#p237">237</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">alteration in concept, <a href="#p307">307</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Trinity</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lombarda code, <a href="#p76">76</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xvii">[xvii]</span>London, as world-city, <a href="#p99">99</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lorraine, as name, <a href="#p161">161</a>, <a href="#p181">181</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Louis XI of France, dynasty-idea, <a href="#p381">381</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Love, and cosmic beat, <a href="#p166">166</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and religion, faith 265, <a href="#p266">266</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and stability, <a href="#p275">275</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural religious, <a href="#p279">279</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and nobility, <a href="#p351">351</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Loyalists, American, <a href="#p412">412</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Loyola, Ignatius, on moral, <a href="#p272">272</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Gothic, <a href="#p296">296</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and world-politics, <a href="#p299">299</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Puritanism, <a href="#p302">302</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lü-pu-Wei, Syncretism, <a href="#p312">312</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lü-Shi Chun-tsiu, <a href="#p312">312</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lucca, Cæsar’s politics, <a href="#p446">446</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Luceres, tribe, <a href="#p351">351</a>, <a href="#p382">382</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lui-Shi, and Wang-Cheng, <a href="#p41">41</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as statesman, <a href="#p418">418</a>, <a href="#p419">419</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">tutor, <a href="#p419">419</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lukka, as name, <a href="#p164">164</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Luschen, Felix von, ethnological research, <a href="#p129">129</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Luther, Martin, as Gothic, <a href="#p296">296</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as urban monk and schoolman, <a href="#p297">297</a>, <a href="#p298">298</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Devil-cult, <a href="#p299">299</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">lack of practicality, <a href="#p299">299</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and science, <a href="#p300">300</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lycurgus, laws, <a href="#p64">64</a>, <a href="#p65">65</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lyell, Sir Charles, theory as English, <a href="#p31">31</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lysander, and army, <a href="#p406">406</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as victor, <a href="#p422">422</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lysias, on speculators, <a href="#p484">484</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Macedonians, as rulers, <a href="#p40">40</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">schools and nationalism, <a href="#p162">162</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Arabian Culture, <a href="#p189">189</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Alexander the Great</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Machiavellism, and factions, <a href="#p448">448</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Machine. <i>See</i> Technique</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Macrocosm, animal’s microcosmic relation, <a href="#p3">3</a>, <a href="#p4">4</a>, <a href="#p15">15</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">man’s self-adjustment, <a href="#p14">14</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Cultures; History; Microcosm; Morphology; Nature; Waking-being</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Madrid, as provincial city, <a href="#p99">99</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mælius, Sp., movement, <a href="#p397">397</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Magi, as term for priesthood, <a href="#p175">175</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Magian Culture. <i>See</i> Arabian Culture</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Magic, technique, <a href="#p268">268</a>, <a href="#p271">271</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Magna Charta, and control by nobility, <a href="#p373">373</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Magnesia, battle, <a href="#p422">422</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Magnitude, Classical money-concept, <a href="#p486">486–489</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mahavira, Rationalism, <a href="#p307">307</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mahayana, doctrine, <a href="#p312">312</a>, <a href="#p313">313</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mahraspand, Mazdaism, <a href="#p251">251</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Maimon, Solomon, and Kant, <a href="#p322">322</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Maimonides, Moses, world, <a href="#p241">241</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">collection of dogmas, <a href="#p315">315</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Spinoza, <a href="#p321">321</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ma’in, Kingdom of, feudalism, <a href="#p196">196</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">geography, <a href="#p196">196</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mamertines, as people, <a href="#p160">160</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Man, lordship of sight, visual thought, <a href="#p7">7–9</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">language and understanding, theoretical thought, <a href="#p9">9</a>, <a href="#p10">10</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and fear of death, <a href="#p15">15</a>, <a href="#p16">16</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">destiny and causality types, <a href="#p16">16–19</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">refutation of Darwinism, <a href="#p32">32</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">two great ages, <a href="#p33">33</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in primitive Culture, <a href="#p33">33</a>, <a href="#p34">34</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of agriculture, <a href="#p89">89</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Animal; Being; Microcosm; Sex; Waking-being</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Management, American development, <a href="#p82">82</a> n. <i>See also</i> Technique</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Manchester School, and Rationalism, <a href="#p403">403</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mandæanism, as redemption-religion, <a href="#p213">213</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">John the Baptist and Jesus, <a href="#p214">214</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">survival, <a href="#p214">214</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">disappearance, <a href="#p252">252</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">order-communities, <a href="#p254">254</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Maniakes, Turk, <a href="#p427">427</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Manichæism, and Chaldean, <a href="#p176">176</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">origins, <a href="#p209">209</a>, <a href="#p251">251</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Logos and Paraclete, <a href="#p227">227</a>, <a href="#p251">251</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">development, <a href="#p251">251</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">missionarism, <a href="#p260">260</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Albegensians, <a href="#p260">260</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mannheim, plan, <a href="#p100">100</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Manufacturer, as economic class, <a href="#p478">478</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Manzikert, battle, <a href="#p427">427</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mar Shimun, prince-patriarch, <a href="#p177">177</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Marcianus, and dynasty, <a href="#p379">379</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Marcion, Bible and Church, <a href="#p225">225–228</a>, <a href="#p245">245</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period, <a href="#p250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and reform, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Marcionites, era, <a href="#p239">239</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Marcus Aurelius, as episode, <a href="#p171">171</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">religiousness, <a href="#p313">313</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and peace, <a href="#p430">430</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Cæsarism and Stoicism, <a href="#p434">434</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Marduk, as deity, <a href="#p206">206</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Marib, Congress of Princes, <a href="#p197">197</a>, <a href="#p304">304</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Marinus, as biographer, <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Marius, C., and money, <a href="#p410">410</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cæsarism, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and party, <a href="#p451">451</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mark Gospel, <a href="#p223">223</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Market, status, <a href="#p91">91</a>, <a href="#p480">480</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Marozia, as destiny, <a href="#p339">339</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Marriage, law, control over it, <a href="#p78">78</a>, <a href="#p365">365</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Civilization type, <a href="#p105">105</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">defined, <a href="#p344">344</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“in form” relation, <a href="#p362">362</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Marx, Karl, and Marxism, and property, <a href="#p344">344</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and party, <a href="#p450">450</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and effective theory, <a href="#p454">454</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">end of influence, <a href="#p454">454</a>, <a href="#p45">45</a> 5;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and English economics, <a href="#p469">469</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and economic classes, <a href="#p478">478</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and value, <a href="#p482">482</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and work, <a href="#p492">492</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Russia, <a href="#p495">495</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on machine-industry as bourgeois, <a href="#p504">504</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Socialism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mary of England, and absolutism, <a href="#p388">388</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mary-cult, Arabian development, <a href="#p224">224</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">victory at Ephesus, <a href="#p257">257</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western development, <a href="#p288">288</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and contrition, <a href="#p293">293</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of Reformation, <a href="#p299">299</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Materialism. <i>See</i> Rationalism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mathematics, and religion, <a href="#p268">268</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Matthew Gospel, Judaic character, <a href="#p220">220</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Maule, Sir William H., and divorce laws, <a href="#p64">64</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Maurists, and orders and schools, <a href="#p346">346</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Maurya and Sunga dynasty, and Imperialism, <a href="#p41">41</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mavali, and revolution, <a href="#p424">424</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xviii">[xviii]</span>Maximilian I, emperor, and law, <a href="#p76">76</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dynasty-idea, <a href="#p380">380</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mayan Culture. <i>See</i> Mexican Culture</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mayapan, and Mexican Culture, <a href="#p45">45</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mazarin, Jules, Cardinal, power, <a href="#p389">389</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Fronde, <a href="#p390">390</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mazdaism, and chivalry, <a href="#p198">198</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">development, <a href="#p251">251</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as State religion, <a href="#p253">253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">missionarism, <a href="#p260">260</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">absorption, <a href="#p260">260</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mazdak, reformation, <a href="#p261">261</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Karramiyya movement, <a href="#p424">424</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mechanics. <i>See</i> Technique</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Medes, as rulers, <a href="#p40">40</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as people, <a href="#p167">167</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mediæval History, as term, <a href="#p28">28</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Medici, city nobility, <a href="#p356">356</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economics and politics, <a href="#p475">475</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">small-scale traffic, <a href="#p481">481</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Medicine, as priesthood, <a href="#p478">478</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Medinet Habet, relief, <a href="#p164">164</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mediterranean region, influence of climatic change, <a href="#p39">39</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Medrashim, style, <a href="#p346">346</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Megalopolitanism, and nomadism, <a href="#p90">90</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and country, <a href="#p94">94</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">development, and provinces, <a href="#p98">98</a>, <a href="#p99">99</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">absolute intellect, <a href="#p99">99</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">city planning, <a href="#p100">100</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">future Western, <a href="#p101">101</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical inner-town, <a href="#p101">101</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">final phase, death, <a href="#p102">102</a>, <a href="#p107">107</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">tension, <a href="#p102">102</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">sport, <a href="#p103">103</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sterility, <a href="#p103">103–105</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and uniform type, <a href="#p108">108</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and language, <a href="#p155">155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and cosmopolitanism, <a href="#p184">184</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">phase in Jewry, <a href="#p317">317</a>, <a href="#p318">318</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Fourth Estate and mob, <a href="#p358">358</a>, <a href="#p399">399</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and public opinion, <a href="#p400">400</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cæsarism, <a href="#p431">431</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and economics, <a href="#p484">484</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Town</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Megasthenes, on Calani, <a href="#p175">175</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mehlis, C., on Libyan problem, <a href="#p162">162</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Melfi, constitutions, <a href="#p372">372</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Memory, and the named, <a href="#p140">140</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Meng Tse, materialism and myth, <a href="#p310">310</a>, <a href="#p312">312</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mercenaries, and Cæsarism, <a href="#p428">428</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Messana, democratic triumph, <a href="#p396">396</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Messiah, as common Arabian idea, <a href="#p206">206</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Mandæanism, <a href="#p214">214</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">attitude of Jesus, <a href="#p215">215</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of Resurrection, <a href="#p218">218</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Metals, primacy, <a href="#p500">500</a>. <i>See also</i> Smith</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Metaphysics. <i>See</i> Philosophy; Religion</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Methodism, Pietism, practicality, <a href="#p308">308</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mewes, Rudolf, on weather and war, <a href="#p392">392</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mexican Culture, development, <a href="#p43">43</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">violent death, <a href="#p43">43</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">reconstruction of history, <a href="#p44">44</a>, <a href="#p45">45</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Civilization and Aztecs, <a href="#p45">45</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">jurisprudence, <a href="#p66">66</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">depopulation, <a href="#p106">106</a>, <a href="#p107">107</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">religious beginnings, <a href="#p288">288</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fellah-religion, <a href="#p315">315</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mexico City. <i>See</i> Tenochtitlan</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Meyer, Edward, on Persian host, <a href="#p40">40</a> n., <a href="#p167">167</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on history, <a href="#p47">47</a>, <a href="#p50">50</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">error on Egyptian nobility, <a href="#p350">350</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">correct Egyptian chronology, <a href="#p427">427</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">mistake on Roman Cæsarism, <a href="#p432">432</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Michael III, emperor, and Bardas, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Michelangelo, and Devil-cult, <a href="#p292">292</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Microcosm, animal as, in macrocosm, <a href="#p3">3–5</a>, <a href="#p15">15</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">sense as organ, <a href="#p6">6</a>, <a href="#p7">7</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">waking-being, <a href="#p7">7</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and cosmic beat, crowd, <a href="#p18">18</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and history and nature, <a href="#p23">23</a>, <a href="#p24">24</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and megalopolitanism, <a href="#p90">90</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">language as essential element, <a href="#p132">132</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sex, <a href="#p327">327</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Western technique, <a href="#p504">504</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Animal; Cosmic; Waking-being</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Middle Kingdom, Chinese, and world-power, <a href="#p373">373</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Middle Kingdom, Egyptian, significance, <a href="#p387">387</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Middleman, as economic class, <a href="#p478">478</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as economic master, <a href="#p483">483</a>, <a href="#p484">484</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as agent of Western technique, <a href="#p504">504</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Economics; Money</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Migrations, and peoples, <a href="#p162">162–165</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">small bands, <a href="#p163">163</a>, <a href="#p167">167</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Miletus, style of school, <a href="#p345">345</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mill, John Stuart, and Pascal, <a href="#p273">273</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Milton, John, and concepts, <a href="#p303">303</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Minæans, tribal association, <a href="#p174">174</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ming-Chu, period, <a href="#p40">40</a>, <a href="#p387">387</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ming-ti, as ruler, <a href="#p41">41</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Minnesänger, Arabian, <a href="#p198">198</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Minoan art, and Mycenæ, <a href="#p87">87–89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Egyptian, <a href="#p88">88</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mir, status, <a href="#p348">348</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mirabeau, Comte de, on law of nations, <a href="#p366">366</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mirandola, Francesco della, and Devil-cult, <a href="#p291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mirian of Georgia, State religion, <a href="#p253">253</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mirza Ali Mohammed, Gnosis, <a href="#p228">228</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mishnah, completion, <a href="#p71">71</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">development, <a href="#p208">208</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as commentary, <a href="#p247">247</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">origin, <a href="#p316">316</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Missionarism, Arabian, <a href="#p259">259</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Islam, <a href="#p304">304</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Pythagorean, <a href="#p307">307</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish, <a href="#p318">318</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mithraism, as military order, <a href="#p198">198</a>, <a href="#p254">254</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Syncretism, <a href="#p201">201</a>, <a href="#p253">253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Essenes, <a href="#p211">211</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">liturgy, <a href="#p213">213</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">provenance, <a href="#p314">314</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mithridates, cultural basis of wars, <a href="#p318">318</a>, <a href="#p321">321</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mitteis, Ludwig, on Constantine’s legislation, <a href="#p70">70</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mob. <i>See</i> Crowd</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Modern History, as term, <a href="#p28">28</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mohammed, predecessors as prophet, <a href="#p204">204</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Paul’s analogy, <a href="#p221">221</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Logos, <a href="#p236">236</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and consensus, <a href="#p243">243</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">revelation, <a href="#p244">244</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Islam</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Moh-ti, and property, <a href="#p344">344</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and military technique, <a href="#p421">421</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and politics, <a href="#p453">453</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mollahs, law-men, <a href="#p71">71</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Moltke, Count Hellmuth von, leadership, <a href="#p444">444</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mommsen, Theodor, false history, <a href="#p50">50</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on political character of Roman Empire, <a href="#p174">174</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">misunderstanding of Cæsarism, <a href="#p432">432</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Varus’ defeat, <a href="#p487">487</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Monarchy. <i>See</i> Dynastic idea; Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xix">[xix]</span>Monasticism (Asceticism), Western rural and urban, <a href="#p91">91</a>, <a href="#p297">297</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Paganism, <a href="#p204">204</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character and development of Arabian, <a href="#p254">254</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Orphic, <a href="#p283">283</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and orgiasm, <a href="#p283">283</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">sage, <a href="#p307">307</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Money, as urban, abstract, <a href="#p97">97</a>, <a href="#p58">58</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and idea of property, <a href="#p357">357</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise as political force, and Rationalism, <a href="#p401">401</a>, <a href="#p402">402</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in English politics, <a href="#p403">403</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and class dictatorship, <a href="#p404">404</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Roman politics, <a href="#p410">410</a>, <a href="#p411">411</a>, <a href="#p457">457–459</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Cæsarism and overthrow, <a href="#p431">431</a>, <a href="#p433">433</a> n., <a href="#p464">464</a>, <a href="#p506">506</a>, <a href="#p507">507</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and genealogy, <a href="#p449">449</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and democracy, <a href="#p456">456</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Western politics, and press, <a href="#p460">460</a>, <a href="#p462">462</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and end of democracy, <a href="#p463">463</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">early status of coin as goods, <a href="#p481">481</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beginning of concept as category, <a href="#p481">481–484</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">value-token and payment-medium, <a href="#p483">483</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">trader as master, <a href="#p483">483</a>, <a href="#p484">484</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as power of Civilization, <a href="#p485">485</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">struggle against, <a href="#p485">485</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and mobility, <a href="#p485">485</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money-mass and value, <a href="#p485">485</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural symbols, <a href="#p486">486</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical magnitude concept, <a href="#p486">486</a>, <a href="#p495">495</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">irrelation with Classical land value, <a href="#p487">487</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical slaves as, <a href="#p488">488</a>, <a href="#p496">496</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western function-concept, book-keeping, <a href="#p489">489</a>, <a href="#p490">490</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western Culture and metallic, <a href="#p490">490</a>, <a href="#p491">491</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and work, quantity and quality, <a href="#p491">491–493</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">capital, cultural basis, <a href="#p493">493</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">financial organization, cultural basis, <a href="#p494">494</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Russian attitude, <a href="#p495">495</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">struggle with technique, <a href="#p505">505</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Socialism, <a href="#p506">506</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Economics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Monophysites, importance, <a href="#p47">47</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">creed basis of law, <a href="#p70">70</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as nation, <a href="#p177">177</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Mary-cult, <a href="#p224">224</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">origin, <a href="#p257">257</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and starting-point of Islam, <a href="#p258">258</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">missionarism, <a href="#p260">260</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and reform, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Monotheism, relation to Arabian Culture, <a href="#p201">201</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Montanist movement, <a href="#p227">227</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Morale. <i>See</i> Ethics; Spirit; Truth</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mormons, as people, <a href="#p160">160</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Morphology, of Culture languages, <a href="#p152">152–155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of peoples, <a href="#p169">169</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of religious history, <a href="#p275">275</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of social history, <a href="#p348">348</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of economic history, <a href="#p470">470</a>, <a href="#p476">476–480</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mortgages, Classical land, <a href="#p487">487</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mortmain, and established church, <a href="#p177">177</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Egypt, <a href="#p375">375</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Moscow, character, <a href="#p194">194</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mosque, and basilica, <a href="#p230">230</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mother tongue, fallacy, <a href="#p120">120</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and dynastic-idea, <a href="#p183">183</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Language</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Motherhood, “versehen,” <a href="#p126">126</a>. <i>See also</i> Demeter; Mary-cult; Sex</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Motion, as problem of thought, <a href="#p14">14–16</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western concept and military art, <a href="#p421">421</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money and mobility, <a href="#p485">485</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Technique</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Motive, and language, <a href="#p133">133</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Müller, Frederick, race classification, <a href="#p125">125</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Mufti,” <a href="#p71">71</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Muktara, as capital, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Multiplication table, dynamics, <a href="#p66">66</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Murtada, philosophy, <a href="#p321">321</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Music, basis of charm, <a href="#p8">8</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in English Parliamentarism, <a href="#p403">403</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Musonius Rufus, and peace, <a href="#p430">430</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mutation theory, and Darwinism, <a href="#p32">32</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cultures, <a href="#p33">33</a>, <a href="#p36">36</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mutawakil, palace, <a href="#p100">100</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mycenæ, and Crete, <a href="#p87">87–89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and beast-formed deities, <a href="#p276">276</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mysteries, Classical, <a href="#p203">203</a>. <i>See also</i> Religion</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mysticism, Sufism, <a href="#p176">176</a>, <a href="#p228">228</a>, <a href="#p242">242</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian period, <a href="#p200">200</a>, <a href="#p250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">John Gospel and Christian, <a href="#p226">226</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">longing of Western, <a href="#p292">292</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Rationalism and Pietism, <a href="#p308">308</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Yesirah, <a href="#p316">316</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fixed Jewish, <a href="#p321">321</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Myth, as theory, and cult, <a href="#p268">268</a>, <a href="#p499">499</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to Greek, <a href="#p284">284</a>, <a href="#p286">286</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">time mythology, <a href="#p286">286</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Western springtime, <a href="#p288">288–290</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">modern ignorance of it, <a href="#p290">290</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Protestantism, <a href="#p299">299</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Naasenes, Book of, <a href="#p213">213</a> n., <a href="#p251">251</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nabu-Nabid, overthrow, <a href="#p207">207</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Naganjuna, Mahayana doctrine, <a href="#p313">313</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nahua, in Mexican Culture, <a href="#p45">45</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Names, and words, <a href="#p138">138–141</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and spiritual change, religion, <a href="#p139">139</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the enigmatic, <a href="#p139">139</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sentence, 141;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and things, <a href="#p148">148</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and people, <a href="#p160">160</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and technique, <a href="#p499">499</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Napoleon I and Napoleonism, and dynastic-idea, <a href="#p181">181</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Désirée Clary, <a href="#p329">329</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">State-machine, formlessness, <a href="#p404">404</a>, <a href="#p405">405</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">army and personal rule, <a href="#p407">407</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and military mobility, <a href="#p421">421</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ruthlessness as victor, <a href="#p422">422</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cæsarism, <a href="#p428">428</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as destiny, <a href="#p439">439</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and tact of command, <a href="#p444">444</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economics and politics, <a href="#p475">475</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Naranjo, and Mexican Culture, <a href="#p44">44</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Narses, expedition, <a href="#p200">200</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nation, as term, <a href="#p170">170</a>, <a href="#p362">362</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">destiny, <a href="#p170">170</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and city-building, <a href="#p171">171</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">separation, <a href="#p171">171</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">representation of minority, <a href="#p172">172</a>, <a href="#p180">180</a>, <a href="#p183">183</a>, <a href="#p184">184</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character of Classical, <a href="#p173">173</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Arabian, <a href="#p174">174–178</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Western, <a href="#p178">178–184</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Chinese and Egyptian, <a href="#p178">178</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">language basis, continued dynastic feeling, <a href="#p183">183</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nobility as representative, <a href="#p184">184</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cosmopolitanism, intelligentsia, and pacifism, <a href="#p184">184</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">peace and fellahism, <a href="#p185">185</a>, <a href="#p186">186</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise of idea, <a href="#p385">385</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Politics; Race</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nationality, Arabian creed basis, <a href="#p69">69</a>, <a href="#p168">168</a>, <a href="#p210">210</a>, <a href="#p253">253</a>, <a href="#p254">254</a>,
+ <a href="#p315">315</a>, <a href="#p317">317</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian cult, and world Christianity, <a href="#p219">219</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Natural science, religious basis, <a href="#p13">13</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">English type of causality, <a href="#p31">31</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">physiognomic, <a href="#p31">31</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">reputation of Darwinism, <a href="#p32">32</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xx">[xx]</span>beginning of Arabian, <a href="#p200">200</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dispensation and law, <a href="#p267">267</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western Culture and practical mechanics, <a href="#p300">300</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">theoretical basis in other Cultures, <a href="#p301">301</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as diabolical, <a href="#p302">302</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish, <a href="#p316">316</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">scientists as priests, <a href="#p478">478</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Art; Nature; Technique</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nature, and cosmic and microcosmic, <a href="#p23">23</a>, <a href="#p24">24</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">adjustment to, cultural development and horizon, <a href="#p25">25</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">technical and theoretical knowledge, <a href="#p25">25</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and peasant, <a href="#p89">89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Rationalism, <a href="#p305">305–308</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Causality; History; Natural science</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nazarene, connotation, <a href="#p214">214</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nebo, as deity, <a href="#p206">206</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nebuchadnezzar, henotheism, prayer, <a href="#p206">206</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nehardea, school, <a href="#p200">200</a>, <a href="#p210">210</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as capital of Exilarch, <a href="#p208">208</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Neo-Brahmanism, <a href="#p315">315</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Neo-Platonists, dualism, <a href="#p234">234</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and revelation, <a href="#p245">245</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period, <a href="#p250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as order, <a href="#p254">254</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Neo-Pythagoreans, community, <a href="#p204">204</a>, <a href="#p254">254</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and revelation, <a href="#p245">245</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nephesh, connotation, <a href="#p234">234</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">soul stones, <a href="#p234">234</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nero, and elections, <a href="#p432">432</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and ideologues, <a href="#p434">434</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nestorianism, creed basis of law, <a href="#p70">70</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as nation, <a href="#p177">177</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Mary-cult, <a href="#p224">224</a>, <a href="#p257">257</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">formative influences, <a href="#p228">228</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">church language, <a href="#p252">252</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">second-century beginnings, <a href="#p252">252</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">missionarism, <a href="#p260">260</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and reform, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">New Testament, Marcion as creator, <a href="#p226">226</a>, <a href="#p227">227</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Marcion and Catholic, <a href="#p228">228</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Bible; Christianity; Gospels</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">New York, as world-city, <a href="#p99">99</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Newspaper. <i>See</i> Press</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ngi-li, as religious source, <a href="#p286">286</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nicæa, Council of, Constantine and, <a href="#p257">257</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">substance controversy, <a href="#p257">257</a>, <a href="#p276">276</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nicephorus, power, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nicholas I, pope, and world-power, <a href="#p373">373</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nicholas of Cusa, as Western, <a href="#p316">316</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nicholas of Oresme, as scientist, <a href="#p301">301</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nicias, treaty, <a href="#p385">385</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nicodemia, as capital, <a href="#p191">191</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nietzsche, Friedrich W., and value of truth, <a href="#p12">12</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and technique, <a href="#p302">302</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on duality of moral, <a href="#p341">341</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nika Rebellion, <a href="#p381">381</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nirvana, rationalistic concept, <a href="#p307">307</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nishapur, and Gundisapora, <a href="#p200">200</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nisibis, Jewish defence, <a href="#p198">198</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">location, <a href="#p200">200</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nobility, primary estate, <a href="#p97">97</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as State, <a href="#p172">172</a>, <a href="#p180">180</a>, <a href="#p183">183</a>, <a href="#p367">367</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beginning as estate, <a href="#p280">280</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to other estates, <a href="#p334">334</a>, <a href="#p335">335</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">symbolic significance, being, destiny, <a href="#p335">335–337</a>, <a href="#p340">340</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and family, <a href="#p336">336</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">big individuals and tradition, <a href="#p338">338</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dependence of politics on, <a href="#p339">339</a>, <a href="#p440">440</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and “training,” <a href="#p340">340</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">moral, <a href="#p341">341</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and idea of property, <a href="#p343">343</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and learning, <a href="#p347">347</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">common cultural land-bound estate, <a href="#p350">350</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural styles, <a href="#p350">350</a>, <a href="#p351">351</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">foci of feelings, <a href="#p351">351</a>, <a href="#p352">352</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">conflict with priesthood, <a href="#p352">352–354</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical, and polis, <a href="#p355">355</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">city movement, effect, new type, <a href="#p355">355–357</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Third Estate, <a href="#p356">356</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">State rule by minority, <a href="#p370">370</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and absolutist State, <a href="#p400">400</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">development of Roman political, <a href="#p409">409–411</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and political Islam, <a href="#p424">424</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and party-form, <a href="#p450">450</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Estates; Feudalism; Oligarchy; Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nomadism, pre-cultural and megalopolitanism, <a href="#p89">89</a>, <a href="#p90">90</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Normans, development of law, <a href="#p75">75</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and finance, concept of money, <a href="#p372">372</a>, <a href="#p489">489</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Northcliffe, Viscount, and demagogy, <a href="#p461">461</a>, <a href="#p463">463</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Novel, as megalopolitan, <a href="#p93">93</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Novels, Justinians, <a href="#p71">71</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Number, and grammar, <a href="#p146">146</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and religion, <a href="#p268">268</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">abstract, and abstract money, <a href="#p481">481</a>, <a href="#p482">482</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and technique, <a href="#p499">499</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Numina, naming, <a href="#p139">139</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Objects and subjects, <a href="#p369">369</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in politics, <a href="#p441">441</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in economics, <a href="#p479">479</a>, <a href="#p493">493</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Occamists, and Copernican system, <a href="#p301">301</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Occupations, status of classes, and primary estates, <a href="#p333">333</a>, <a href="#p348">348</a>. <i>See also</i> Economics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Odoacer, historyless, <a href="#p432">432</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Oetinger, Friedrich C., Pietism, <a href="#p308">308</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Officialdom, common cultural development, <a href="#p350">350</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise of financial, <a href="#p371">371</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical tenure and choice, <a href="#p380">380</a>, <a href="#p383">383</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Oigur realm, Manichæism, <a href="#p260">260</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Old Kingdom, as Gothic, <a href="#p296">296</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money concept, <a href="#p489">489</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Old Testament, and Christian canon, <a href="#p221">221</a>, <a href="#p225">225</a>, <a href="#p226">226</a>, <a href="#p228">228</a>, <a href="#p245">245</a>.
+ <i>See also</i> Bible</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Old Women,” as phrase, <a href="#p329">329</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Oldenbarneveldt, Jan van, power, <a href="#p389">389</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Oldendorp, Johann, and law of nature, <a href="#p78">78</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Oligarchy, early Roman, <a href="#p375">375</a>, <a href="#p382">382</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and polis, <a href="#p380">380–382</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Reformation, <a href="#p386">386</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical democratic contentions, <a href="#p394">394–398</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Nobility</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Olivarez, Count, power, <a href="#p389">389</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Oman, Charles W. C., on Byzantine army system, <a href="#p199">199</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Omar, Puritanism, <a href="#p304">304</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ommaiyads, overthrow, <a href="#p424">424</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Oñate, Conde de, power, <a href="#p389">389</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Onias, and the “Law,” <a href="#p209">209</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Opposites, word pairs and logic, <a href="#p140">140</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Oresme. <i>See</i> Nicholas of Oresme</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Orientation, defined, <a href="#p133">133</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Origen, Scholasticism, <a href="#p229">229</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ornament, as taboo, <a href="#p121">121</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cathedral as, <a href="#p123">123</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xxi">[xxi]</span>and secular buildings, <a href="#p123">123</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as expression-language, <a href="#p134">134</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">script as, <a href="#p151">151</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and number, <a href="#p268">268</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">priesthood as, <a href="#p337">337</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Orphism, and Classical religious beginnings, <a href="#p282">282</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">asceticism, <a href="#p283">283</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and reform, <a href="#p296">296</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Tyrannis, <a href="#p386">386</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Orvieto, frescoes, <a href="#p292">292</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Orsini, and Papacy, <a href="#p354">354</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Orthodoxy, and Arabian State, <a href="#p177">177</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Osrhoene, conversion, <a href="#p177">177</a>, <a href="#p253">253</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ostrogoths, as episode, <a href="#p171">171</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Othman, war with Ali, <a href="#p424">424</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Otto I, and world-power, <a href="#p373">373</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Otto II, and Byzantium, <a href="#p87">87</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Outsiders, dediticii peregrins, <a href="#p68">68</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Oxenstierna, Count Axel, power, <a href="#p389">389</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Pa Period, <a href="#p387">387</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pachomius, and monasticism, <a href="#p254">254</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pacioli, Luca, book-keeping, <a href="#p490">490</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pætus, Thrasea, death, <a href="#p434">434</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Paganism, struggle with Christianity, <a href="#p202">202</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Hellenism; Pseudomorphosis; Syncretic Church</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Paine, Thomas, and Third Estate, <a href="#p403">403</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Painting, modern as dishonest, <a href="#p136">136</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pais, Ettore, on Twelve Tables, <a href="#p65">65</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Palæontology, refutation of Darwinism, <a href="#p32">32</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Palenque, and Mexican Culture, <a href="#p45">45</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Paley, William, and Third Estate, <a href="#p403">403</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Palmyra, inscriptions, <a href="#p206">206</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pan Ku, myth, <a href="#p312">312</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Papacy, pope and councils, <a href="#p59">59</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as English idea, <a href="#p294">294</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">family history, <a href="#p337">337</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and dynamic space, <a href="#p352">352</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">idea and facts, <a href="#p354">354</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">control of Curia, <a href="#p370">370</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">world-power and contest with Empire, <a href="#p373">373</a>, <a href="#p374">374</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">clerical nobility and pope, <a href="#p374">374</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">decay, <a href="#p376">376</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Roman Catholic Church</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Paper, Chinese invention, <a href="#p501">501</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Papias, on Jesus’ teachings, <a href="#p217">217</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Papinian, position as jurist, <a href="#p71">71</a>, <a href="#p73">73</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Papirius Carbo, and Crassius, <a href="#p459">459</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Paraclete, doctrine, <a href="#p227">227</a>. <i>See also</i> Trinity</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Paradosis, in Arabian creeds, <a href="#p228">228</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Paralii, and Tyrannis, <a href="#p386">386</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Paris, as France, <a href="#p95">95</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as world-city, <a href="#p99">99</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Parliamentarism, character, <a href="#p412">412–415</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as transition, <a href="#p415">415</a>, <a href="#p416">416</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as seasonable political means, <a href="#p446">446</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Democracy; England</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Parsees, and ghetto, <a href="#p315">315</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">security, <a href="#p323">323</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Parshva, Puritanism, <a href="#p303">303</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Parthians, and Persians, <a href="#p167">167</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">chivalry, <a href="#p198">198</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">wars as Jewish, <a href="#p198">198</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Party, place in politics, <a href="#p449">449</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">identity with Third Estate, <a href="#p449">449</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nobility and forms, <a href="#p450">450</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">displacement by private politics, machine, <a href="#p452">452</a>, <a href="#p454">454</a>, <a href="#p464">464</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pascal, Blaise, and Mill, <a href="#p273">273</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Devil-cult, <a href="#p303">303</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pataliputra, as world-city, <a href="#p99">99</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">abandoned, <a href="#p107">107</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Patriotism, Western fatherland concept, <a href="#p179">179</a>, <a href="#p183">183</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish attitude, <a href="#p320">320</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Patrol-state, <a href="#p366">366</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Paul, Hermann, on sentence, <a href="#p141">141</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Paul, Saint, position as jurist, <a href="#p71">71</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Christian Church, <a href="#p220">220</a>, <a href="#p221">221</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Mohammed’s analogy, <a href="#p221">221</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">system and westward trend of Christianity, <a href="#p221">221</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Mark Gospel, <a href="#p223">223</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and cults, <a href="#p223">223</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Greek, <a href="#p224">224</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dualism, <a href="#p234">234</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">substance controversy as reversal of work, <a href="#p258">258</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Paulicians, iconoclasm, <a href="#p304">304</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Paullus, L. Æmilius, Pydna, <a href="#p190">190</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pausanias, and helots, <a href="#p357">357</a>, <a href="#p396">396</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pavia, and legal study, <a href="#p76">76</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pe-Ki, as general, <a href="#p417">417</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">overthrow, <a href="#p419">419</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Peace, Chinese League of Nations attempt, <a href="#p38">38</a>, <a href="#p417">417</a>, <a href="#p429">429</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and fellahism, <a href="#p185">185</a>, <a href="#p186">186</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical attitude, <a href="#p385">385</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ruthless, of Cæsarism, <a href="#p422">422</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as unhistorical, 429, <a href="#p434">434</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as submission, <a href="#p434">434</a>, <a href="#p441">441</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Peacock, as Arabian symbol, <a href="#p236">236</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Peasantry, as plant, <a href="#p89">89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">historyless, cosmic, <a href="#p96">96</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and religion, <a href="#p280">280</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to primary estates, vassalage, <a href="#p348">348</a>, <a href="#p349">349</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">reappearance at end of Culture, <a href="#p435">435</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">lack in England and America, <a href="#p449">449</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as economic class, <a href="#p478">478</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Being; Country</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pehlevi, as church-language, <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pelasgi, as name, <a href="#p161">161</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pelham, Sir Henry, money in politics, <a href="#p403">403</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Penestæ, status, <a href="#p332">332</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">People, false idea, <a href="#p113">113</a>, <a href="#p159">159</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as conscious linkage, <a href="#p159">159</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and name, <a href="#p160">160</a>, <a href="#p161">161</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and language, <a href="#p161">161</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and provenance, and migration, <a href="#p162">162–165</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and race, <a href="#p165">165</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as soul unit, and events, <a href="#p165">165</a>, <a href="#p169">169</a>, <a href="#p170">170</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Romans and Russians as example, <a href="#p166">166–169</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">morphology, <a href="#p169">169</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">creation of Western, <a href="#p169">169</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as product of Culture, <a href="#p169">169</a>, <a href="#p170">170</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">characteristics of nations, <a href="#p170">170</a>, <a href="#p171">171</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of West as result of events, <a href="#p181">181</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> nobility, <a href="#p333">333</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise of ideal concept, <a href="#p393">393</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Race</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pergamum, revolt of Aristonicus, <a href="#p454">454</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pericles, age, <a href="#p391">391</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Peripatos, style, <a href="#p345">345</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Persecution, contrast of Classical and Arabian, <a href="#p203">203</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Persephone, cult, <a href="#p283">283</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Perseus, defeat, <a href="#p190">190</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Persians, chronology, <a href="#p27">27</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as rulers, <a href="#p40">40</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">language and people, <a href="#p166">166</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xxii">[xxii]</span>problem of origin of religion, <a href="#p168">168</a>, <a href="#p191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cult and nationality, <a href="#p168">168</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">religion and Jewish, <a href="#p207">207</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and revelation, <a href="#p245">245</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">end of theology, <a href="#p261">261</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian-type nation, ghetto, <a href="#p315">315</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Arabian Culture; Mazdaism; Zarathustra</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Person, Classical notion, <a href="#p60">60</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian concept of incorporeal, <a href="#p67">67</a>, <a href="#p68">68</a>, <a href="#p174">174</a>, <a href="#p177">177</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical concept and Western law, <a href="#p81">81</a>, <a href="#p82">82</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Personality, and contrition, <a href="#p293">293</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical concept, <a href="#p293">293</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Destiny; Will</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Peruvian Culture, destruction, <a href="#p46">46</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Peter, Saint, Gospel, <a href="#p213">213</a> n., <a href="#p223">223</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Paul’s supersession, <a href="#p221">221</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Peter the Great, Petersburg plan, <a href="#p101">101</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Russian pseudomorphosis, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Peter Lombard, and sacraments, <a href="#p292">292</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Petersburg, plan, <a href="#p101">101</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">artificiality, <a href="#p193">193</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Petrie, W. M. Flinders, error on Egyptian chronology, <a href="#p427">427</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Petrus Peregrinus, as scientist, <a href="#p300">300</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and technique, <a href="#p502">502</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Phallic cults, <a href="#p283">283</a>, <a href="#p286">286</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pharaoh, religious position, <a href="#p279">279</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and world-power, <a href="#p373">373</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pharisees, tendency, <a href="#p211">211</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pherecydes, as dogmatist, <a href="#p282">282</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Philip of Macedon, politics, <a href="#p407">407</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Philip II of Spain, and absolutism, <a href="#p388">388</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Philip IV of Spain, and world-power, <a href="#p388">388</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Philippi, battle, and Cæsarism, <a href="#p423">423</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Philistines, migration, <a href="#p164">164</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Philistinism, and Rationalism, <a href="#p307">307</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Philo, and Christianity, <a href="#p229">229</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dualism, <a href="#p234">234</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Philology, Arabian, and research, <a href="#p191">191</a>. <i>See also</i> Language</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Philosophy, Buddhism and Indian, <a href="#p49">49</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western Culture and Classical, <a href="#p57">57</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">systematic, and untruth, <a href="#p137">137</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jesus and metaphysics, <a href="#p216">216</a>, <a href="#p217">217</a>, <a href="#p473">473</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western swing, <a href="#p306">306</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and economics, <a href="#p473">473</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Ethics; Religion</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Phocas, power, <a href="#p427">427</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Phœnicians, economic rôle, <a href="#p481">481</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Physical geography. <i>See</i> Landscape</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Physiognomy, and race, <a href="#p117">117</a>. <i>See also</i> Destiny</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pi-Yung, as symbol, <a href="#p287">287</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Shi-King, <a href="#p352">352</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">change, <a href="#p357">357</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Picture, and expression-language, <a href="#p116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as sign of language, letter, <a href="#p134">134</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Piedras Negras, and Mexican Culture, <a href="#p45">45</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pietism, cultural manifestations, <a href="#p308">308</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pilate, and Jesus, fact and faith, <a href="#p216">216</a>, <a href="#p473">473</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pindar, and being, <a href="#p272">272</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and religion, <a href="#p282">282</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pisistratus, and oligarchy, <a href="#p382">382</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and peasantry, <a href="#p386">386</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Piso, conspiracy, <a href="#p434">434</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pistis-Sophia, <a href="#p213">213</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pitt, William, and French Revolution, <a href="#p412">412</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pittacus, laws, <a href="#p64">64</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Plant, essential character, cosmic, <a href="#p3">3</a>, <a href="#p4">4</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">being, <a href="#p7">7</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and race, <a href="#p115">115</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of transplanting, <a href="#p130">130</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economic life, <a href="#p473">473</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and technique, <a href="#p499">499</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Plantagenets, early, <a href="#p182">182</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Plato, “ideas,” <a href="#p58">58</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and polis, <a href="#p173">173</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and commentary, <a href="#p247">247</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Orphism, <a href="#p282">282</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cult, <a href="#p314">314</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">theory and Syracuse, <a href="#p454">454</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Play, cosmic, and microcosmic sport, <a href="#p103">103</a>. <i>See also</i> Sport</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Plebs, political rise and status, <a href="#p349">349</a>, <a href="#p357">357</a>, <a href="#p408">408</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and political nobility, <a href="#p409">409–411</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and populus, <a href="#p451">451</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pliny, on depopulation, <a href="#p106">106</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Plotinus, Scholasticism, <a href="#p229">229</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ecstasy, <a href="#p242">242</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pneuma, as Arabian principle, <a href="#p57">57</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and law of creed-communities, <a href="#p68">68</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as truth, <a href="#p242">242</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Dualism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Poetry, Arabian Minne, <a href="#p198">198</a>. <i>See also</i> Literature</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Polis, as Classical nation, <a href="#p173">173</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and nobility, oligarchy, <a href="#p355">355</a>, <a href="#p381">381</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">official tenure and choice, <a href="#p380">380</a>, <a href="#p383">383</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">synœcism and aristocracy, <a href="#p381">381</a>, <a href="#p382">382</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i lang="la">civitas</i> and <i lang="la">hostis</i>, <a href="#p384">384</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">normal war, <a href="#p385">385</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Tyrannis and non-estate against estates, <a href="#p386">386</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and democracy, <a href="#p387">387</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">burgher and peasant, <a href="#p396">396</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">destruction as idea, <a href="#p405">405</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and subjugated territory, <a href="#p407">407</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Imperialism, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Classical finance, <a href="#p494">494</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Politics, and race, <a href="#p116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and intercourse by writing, <a href="#p153">153</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and social ethics, <a href="#p273">273</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">English, and predestination, <a href="#p304">304</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">State and family, <a href="#p329">329</a>, <a href="#p336">336</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">estates as term, <a href="#p329">329</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“in form” estates, <a href="#p330">330</a>, <a href="#p331">331</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as war, <a href="#p330">330</a>, <a href="#p366">366</a>, <a href="#p440">440</a>, <a href="#p474">474</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">estates and history of Cultures, <a href="#p331">331</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">estates and residue classes, <a href="#p331">331–334</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Third Estate and non-estate, interrelation, <a href="#p334">334</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nobility and priesthood, symbolic significance, <a href="#p335">335</a>, <a href="#p339">339</a>, <a href="#p340">340</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">great families, basis of dynastic principle, <a href="#p336">336</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">priesthood as opposite, <a href="#p337">337</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">big individuals and tradition, <a href="#p338">338</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as life, dependence on nobility, <a href="#p339">339</a>, <a href="#p440">440</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">moral, <a href="#p341">341</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">custom-ethic and honour, <a href="#p342">342</a>, <a href="#p343">343</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to economics, power and booty, <a href="#p344">344</a>, <a href="#p345">345</a>, <a href="#p474">474–476</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">State and historical stream, <a href="#p361">361</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nations defined, primary estates and State, <a href="#p362">362</a>, <a href="#p366">366</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and care and opposition, war as creator of State, <a href="#p362">362</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">State as inward connection, custom-ethic and law, <a href="#p363">363</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">orders of internal law, <a href="#p363">363</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">power and law, internal and external, <a href="#p363">363–366</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">barrack-state, <a href="#p366">366</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">State control of external position, paramountcy, <a href="#p367">367</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">State and nobility as cognate, <a href="#p367">367</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">alienship of other estates, <a href="#p368">368</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">factual control and truths, <a href="#p368">368</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">importance of leadership, subjects and objects, <a href="#p368">368</a>, <a href="#p369">369</a>, <a href="#p441">441</a>, <a href="#p456">456</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xxiii">[xxiii]</span>estate rule and minority within class, <a href="#p369">369</a>, <a href="#p370">370</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">interregnum between feudalism and State, <a href="#p375">375</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise of State idea, <a href="#p376">376</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">individual ruler, inherited will and dynasty-idea, <a href="#p376">376–378</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical oligarchy, <a href="#p380">380</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise of nation-idea, <a href="#p385">385</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">estates against monarchy and non-estate, <a href="#p385">385–387</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">non-estate as opposite estate, <a href="#p387">387</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Chinese and Egyptian absolutism, <a href="#p387">387</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western Fronde, <a href="#p388">388–391</a>, <a href="#p404">404</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western absolutist period, cabinet-politics, <a href="#p391">391–394</a>, <a href="#p400">400</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical oligarchic-democratic-alternative period, <a href="#p394">394–398</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Civilization, non-estate as independent force, <a href="#p400">400–402</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Rationalism and money as forces, opposition and dependence, <a href="#p400">400–401</a>, <a href="#p455">455</a>, <a href="#p456">456</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Third Estate in England, <a href="#p402">402</a>, <a href="#p403">403</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rational-money, class dictatorship, anti-form, <a href="#p403">403</a>, <a href="#p404">404</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character of Second Tyrannis, <a href="#p405">405–408</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">army as power, <a href="#p406">406</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">polis and conquered territory, <a href="#p407">407</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Roman State of this period, <a href="#p408">408–411</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">doctrinaire Parliamentarism, <a href="#p412">412–415</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">its decay, <a href="#p415">415</a>, <a href="#p416">416</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Fronde period in Arabian Culture, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Third Estate and revolution in Arabian Culture, <a href="#p424">424</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">pre-Civilization relics and future Western, <a href="#p430">430</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">theory and reality, <a href="#p439">439</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">personal, <a href="#p441">441</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">popular talent and leadership, <a href="#p441">441</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">men and measures, <a href="#p441">441</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">conscienceless “doing,” <a href="#p442">442</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">seasonableness, command of means, <a href="#p443">443</a>, <a href="#p446">446</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">exemplariness in doing, <a href="#p443">443</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">tact of command, <a href="#p444">444</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">tradition of command, <a href="#p444">444</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">art of the possible, <a href="#p445">445</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">opportuneness, <a href="#p446">446</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">foreign and domestic, <a href="#p447">447</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">early cultural, factions, <a href="#p448">448</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">urban, and parties, <a href="#p448">448</a>, party and estates, <a href="#p449">449–451</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">displacement of party by private, machine, <a href="#p452">452</a>, <a href="#p454">454</a>, <a href="#p464">464</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">place and influence of theory, <a href="#p453">453–455</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Roman demagogy, elections and courts, <a href="#p457">457–460</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western demagogy, press, <a href="#p460">460–463</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">battle between democracy and Cæsarism, <a href="#p463">463</a>, <a href="#p464">464</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">hero-death, <a href="#p471">471</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and religion, <a href="#p473">473</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and financial credit, <a href="#p491">491</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Cæsarism; Church and State; Dynastic idea; Estates; Feudalism; Foreign relations; History; Polis; Sex</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Polybius, on sterility, <a href="#p104">104</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Flaminius, <a href="#p411">411</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Polycrates, and finance, <a href="#p383">383</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economics and politics, <a href="#p475">475</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pompey the Great, adventurer, <a href="#p19">19</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">principate and monarchy, <a href="#p50">50</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Rome, <a href="#p383">383</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Triumvirate and Cæsarism, <a href="#p413">413</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Lucca, <a href="#p446">446</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">demagogy, <a href="#p458">458</a>, <a href="#p459">459</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pompey, Sextus, and Cæsarism, <a href="#p428">428</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pompon, François, technique, <a href="#p128">128</a> n. {sic}</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Population, megalopolitanism and sterility, <a href="#p103">103–105</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">machine and increase, <a href="#p502">502</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Porcelain, Chinese invention, <a href="#p501">501</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Porphyry, and Greek Church, <a href="#p176">176</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Scholasticism, <a href="#p229">229</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ecstasy, <a href="#p242">242</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">community of elect, <a href="#p243">243</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on divine elements, <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Poitiers, importance of Saracen defeat, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Portraiture, physiognomic studies, <a href="#p126">126</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Portugal, separation from Spain, <a href="#p390">390</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Possession, concept, <a href="#p480">480</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and fortune, <a href="#p483">483</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical land and money, <a href="#p487">487</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Poverty, Western learning and vow, <a href="#p346">346</a>. <i>See also</i> Monasticism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Power and booty, <a href="#p344">344</a>, <a href="#p345">345</a>, <a href="#p347">347</a>, <a href="#p371">371</a>, <a href="#p372">372</a>,
+ <a href="#p474">474</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Prætors, urban, <a href="#p374">374</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beginning, <a href="#p382">382</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Precedent, lack in Roman law, <a href="#p62">62</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Arabian law, <a href="#p72">72</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Predestination, and English politics, <a href="#p304">304</a>. <i>See also</i> Will</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Premonstratensians, as rural, <a href="#p92">92</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Press, and free opinion, <a href="#p405">405</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and spatial infinity, <a href="#p413">413</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as political means, <a href="#p447">447</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">power in Western demagogy, <a href="#p460">460</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and gunpowder and war, <a href="#p460">460</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">expulsion of book by newspaper, <a href="#p461">461</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dictum as public truth, <a href="#p461">461</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">education as instrument of power, <a href="#p462">462</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">syndication, as army, <a href="#p462">462</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">censorship of silence, <a href="#p463">463</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pre-Socratics, asceticism, <a href="#p283">283</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pretinax, edict on untended land, <a href="#p106">106</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Priene, plan, <a href="#p100">100</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Priesthood, primary class, <a href="#p97">97</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beginning as estate, and nobility, <a href="#p280">280</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and time mythology, <a href="#p286">286</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western and contrition-concept, <a href="#p294">294</a>, <a href="#p294">294</a> n., <a href="#p298">298</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to other estates, <a href="#p334">334</a>, <a href="#p335">335</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">symbolic significance, waking-being, causality, <a href="#p335">335–338</a>, <a href="#p340">340</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to family and dynasty, <a href="#p337">337</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as ornament, idea and person, <a href="#p337">337</a>, <a href="#p338">338</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and life, <a href="#p339">339</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as result of shaping, <a href="#p340">340</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and heredity, <a href="#p341">341</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">moral, <a href="#p341">341</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and property, <a href="#p344">344</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and learning, style influence, <a href="#p345">345–347</a>, <a href="#p478">478</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">common cultural estate, <a href="#p350">350</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural styles, <a href="#p352">352</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">conflict with nobility, <a href="#p352">352–354</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">city movement, effect, <a href="#p355">355</a>, <a href="#p356">356</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western law-making, <a href="#p365">365</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical, as city officials, <a href="#p381">381</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Priestley, Joseph, and Third Estate, <a href="#p403">403</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Primitive man, Ice Age, <a href="#p33">33</a>, <a href="#p34">34</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and religion, <a href="#p275">275</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Man; Peasantry</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Principate, in Pseudomorphosis, <a href="#p349">349</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Sulla as heir, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Augustus’ dyarchy as nullity, <a href="#p432">432</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Printing, symbolism, <a href="#p413">413</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Chinese invention, <a href="#p501">501</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Press</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Priscus, Helvidius, death, <a href="#p434">434</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Private law, first systematic, <a href="#p66">66</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western, and Roman law, <a href="#p77">77</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Proclus, on Chaldean oracles, <a href="#p245">245</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Syncretic Father, <a href="#p252">252</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">biography, <a href="#p252">252</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and substance controversy, hymn, <a href="#p257">257</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xxiv">[xxiv]</span>Procopius, on Narses expedition, <a href="#p200">200</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Proculiani, legal school, style, <a href="#p67">67</a>, <a href="#p346">346</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Profane, as concept, <a href="#p345">345</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Proper, and “alien” in sensation, <a href="#p6">6</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Property, Classical concept and Western law, <a href="#p82">82</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">farmhouse as, <a href="#p90">90</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">origin of idea, groundness, <a href="#p343">343</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">power and booty, divergence, <a href="#p344">344</a>, <a href="#p345">345</a>, <a href="#p347">347</a>, <a href="#p371">371</a>, <a href="#p372">372</a>,
+ <a href="#p474">474</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of money, <a href="#p357">357</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">English law, <a href="#p371">371</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Economics; Money; Roman law</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Prophetic religions. <i>See</i> Apocalyptic</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Protestantism. <i>See</i> Puritanism; Reformation</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Provinces, and megalopolitanism, <a href="#p98">98</a>, <a href="#p99">99</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Prudentes, law-men, <a href="#p71">71</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Prussia, as Hohenzollern creation, <a href="#p182">182</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political rise, <a href="#p392">392</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">origin of finance, <a href="#p489">489</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Germany</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Psalms, period, <a href="#p249">249</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Psellus, Michal Constantine, religiousness, <a href="#p313">313</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pseudo-Clementines, romances, <a href="#p237">237</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pseudomorphosis, Justinian, Christianity, and Corpus Juris, <a href="#p74">74</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as historical term, <a href="#p189">189</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Arabian Culture, <a href="#p189">189</a>, <a href="#p190">190</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of Actium, <a href="#p191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Charles Martel and Western avoidance, <a href="#p192">192</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Russia, <a href="#p192">192</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">falsification of Arabian manifestations, <a href="#p200">200</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">aspects of Syncretism, <a href="#p201">201–204</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish rescue from, <a href="#p210">210</a>, <a href="#p211">211</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Catholic Church and Marcionism, <a href="#p227">227</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and substance controversy, <a href="#p256">256–258</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">feudalism, <a href="#p349">349</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economics, <a href="#p480">480</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Religion; Roman law; Syncretic Church</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Psychology, of the crowd, <a href="#p18">18</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural basis, <a href="#p271">271</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ptah of Memphis, and dogma, <a href="#p281">281</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Public opinion, rise, status, <a href="#p400">400</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and press, <a href="#p405">405</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pulcheria, and dynasty, <a href="#p379">379</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pumbeditha, academy, <a href="#p71">71</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Punctuation, as language gesture, <a href="#p134">134</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Punic Wars, economics in, <a href="#p410">410</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">evolution of ruthlessness, <a href="#p422">422</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Purgatory of learning, <a href="#p346">346</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Puritan Revolution, as Fronde, <a href="#p389">389</a>, <a href="#p390">390</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Puritanism, Islam as, <a href="#p302">302–304</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">basis, common cultural manifestation, <a href="#p302">302–305</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and concepts, <a href="#p303">303</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Pythagoreans, <a href="#p303">303</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">predestination and politics, <a href="#p304">304</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Rationalism, <a href="#p305">305</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish, <a href="#p316">316</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Fronde and Tyrannis, <a href="#p386">386</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and English Fronde, <a href="#p389">389</a>, <a href="#p390">390</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pydna, battle, importance, <a href="#p190">190</a>, <a href="#p409">409</a> n., <a href="#p422">422</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pyramids, as cosmic, <a href="#p92">92</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pyrrhonian skepsis, and Socrates, <a href="#p309">309</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pythagoras, fictitious, <a href="#p72">72</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and commentary, <a href="#p247">247</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">biography, <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pythagoreans, mysteries, <a href="#p203">203</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and cult, <a href="#p282">282</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Puritanism, <a href="#p302">302</a>, <a href="#p303">303</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">missionarism, <a href="#p305">305</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">style, <a href="#p345">345</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Sybaris, <a href="#p394">394</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Qaro, Joseph, as expositor, <a href="#p321">321</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Qaraites, Puritanism, rise, <a href="#p255">255</a>, <a href="#p316">316</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Quirinus Pater, god, <a href="#p382">382</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Quirites, origin of name, <a href="#p382">382</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Rabbi, law-man, <a href="#p71">71</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Race, false idea of people, <a href="#p113">113</a>, <a href="#p165">165</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and landscape, no migration, <a href="#p113">113</a>, <a href="#p119">119</a>, <a href="#p129">129</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">defined, <a href="#p113">113</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and development of language, being and waking-being, <a href="#p113">113</a>, <a href="#p114">114</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">sensation, <a href="#p114">114</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in plants, <a href="#p115">115</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and history and politics, <a href="#p116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and totem, <a href="#p116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">not classification but physiognomic fact, <a href="#p117">117</a>, <a href="#p130">130</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">American, <a href="#p119">119</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">house as expression, <a href="#p120">120–122</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">castle as expression, <a href="#p122">122</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">superficial and divergent mechanistic conception, <a href="#p124">124</a>, <a href="#p125">125</a>, <a href="#p129">129</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">hall-marks, inadequacy of skeletonic determination, <a href="#p124">124</a>, <a href="#p128">128–130</a>, <a href="#p175">175</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">chaotic “living” elements in determination, <a href="#p126">126</a>, <a href="#p127">127</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">race-feeling as race-forming, <a href="#p126">126</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">statistics and ancestry, <a href="#p127">127</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">importance of movement-expression, <a href="#p128">128</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">spiritual differences, <a href="#p128">128</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sentences, <a href="#p142">142</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and writing, <a href="#p151">151</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Culture-language, <a href="#p153">153</a>, <a href="#p154">154</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cosmic beat and race hatred, <a href="#p165">165</a>, <a href="#p166">166</a>, <a href="#p318">318</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and intellect, <a href="#p166">166</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">absolutist State as expression, <a href="#p400">400</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Cæsarism and return to power, <a href="#p431">431</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Being; Language; Nation; People; Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Radio, and light, <a href="#p9">9</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as megalopolitan, <a href="#p95">95</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and distance, <a href="#p150">150</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and political tactics, <a href="#p460">460</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rainald van Dassel, policy, <a href="#p376">376</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rameses III, and sea-folks, <a href="#p122">122</a>, <a href="#p164">164</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">historyless, <a href="#p432">432</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ramnes, tribe, <a href="#p351">351</a>, <a href="#p382">382</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ranke, J. Johannes, on skull forms, <a href="#p128">128</a>, <a href="#p129">129</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ranke, Leopold von, on history, <a href="#p46">46</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Raskol movement, <a href="#p278">278</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rationalism, and Puritanism, <a href="#p305">305</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">basis, cultural manifestations, <a href="#p305">305</a>, <a href="#p308">308</a>, <a href="#p309">309</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">sage, <a href="#p307">307</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Mysticism and Pietism, <a href="#p308">308</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dynamic character of Western, <a href="#p309">309</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">mock-religion, <a href="#p310">310</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fading-out, <a href="#p310">310</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise in politics, <a href="#p400">400</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and money, <a href="#p401">401</a>, <a href="#p402">402</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in England, <a href="#p403">403</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and class dictatorship, <a href="#p403">403</a>, <a href="#p404">404</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and constitutions, <a href="#p413">413</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and effective political theory, <a href="#p453">453</a>, <a href="#p454">454</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ravenna, Theoderich’s tomb, <a href="#p89">89</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Re cult, <a href="#p279">279</a>, <a href="#p281">281</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Reformation, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Reading, defined, <a href="#p149">149</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Reason, content, <a href="#p6">6</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and understanding, <a href="#p13">13</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Reflection, and grammar, <a href="#p141">141</a>, <a href="#p143">143</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Reformation, as general cultural movement, <a href="#p295">295–297</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western, as Gothic, <a href="#p296">296</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Renaissance, background, <a href="#p297">297</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">narrow circle of understanding, <a href="#p298">298</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Devil-cult, <a href="#p299">299</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Calvin and world-politics, <a href="#p299">299</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xxv">[xxv]</span>relation to intellectual creation, <a href="#p300">300</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and oligarchy, <a href="#p386">386</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Reger, Max, “playing” with music, <a href="#p137">137</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Reitzenstein, Richard, on Jesus as Mandæan, <a href="#p214">214</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Religion, fear of the invisible, <a href="#p8">8</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as basis of science, <a href="#p13">13</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and causality, <a href="#p14">14</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and theoretical knowledge, <a href="#p25">25</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian consensus, <a href="#p59">59</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian cults and scripts, <a href="#p73">73</a>, <a href="#p150">150</a>, <a href="#p227">227</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">expression-language and communication-language, <a href="#p116">116</a>, <a href="#p134">134</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and language-linkage, <a href="#p116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and knowledge, <a href="#p136">136</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">names and religious thought, <a href="#p139">139</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and rigid language, <a href="#p154">154</a>, <a href="#p155">155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Persian, <a href="#p168">168</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Arabian nationality, <a href="#p168">168</a>, <a href="#p174">174–178</a>, <a href="#p210">210</a>, <a href="#p242">242</a>, <a href="#p243">243</a>,
+ <a href="#p253">253</a>, <a href="#p315">315</a>, <a href="#p317">317</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian, and research, <a href="#p191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">geographical cults of Classical, <a href="#p200">200</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian fourth period, Mysticism and Scholasticism, <a href="#p200">200</a>, <a href="#p250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian henotheism, <a href="#p201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian dogmatic, <a href="#p201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian prophetic, Messianism, <a href="#p204">204–207</a>, <a href="#p209">209</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">awakening of Arabian, <a href="#p208">208</a>, <a href="#p249">249</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">second or apocalyptic period, <a href="#p208">208</a>, <a href="#p212">212</a>, <a href="#p249">249</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as lived metaphysics, <a href="#p217">217</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">distinct Arabian domains, <a href="#p228">228</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian dualism, spirit and soul, <a href="#p233">233–236</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">inward unity of Arabian, <a href="#p235">235</a>, <a href="#p248">248</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian Logos and light-sensation, <a href="#p236">236</a>, <a href="#p237">237</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian time-concept, <a href="#p238">238</a>, <a href="#p249">249</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian submission, Grace, <a href="#p240">240</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian community of the elect, <a href="#p242">242</a>, <a href="#p243">243</a>, <a href="#p253">253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian sacred books and revelation, <a href="#p243">243–246</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">infallible word and interpretation, secret revelation, <a href="#p245">245–247</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">third Arabian period, religions of salvation, grand myths, <a href="#p249">249</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">three directions of Arabian forms, <a href="#p251">251–253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian monasticism, <a href="#p254">254</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian missionarism, <a href="#p259">259</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">end of Arabian inner history, <a href="#p261">261</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and being and waking-being, fear and love, <a href="#p265">265</a>, <a href="#p499">499</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and light, <a href="#p265">265</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">intellect and faith, <a href="#p266">266</a>, <a href="#p269">269–271</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural basis of fate, <a href="#p267">267</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">theory and technique, myth and cult, <a href="#p268">268</a>, <a href="#p271">271</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">God and soul, cultural basis of understanding of numina, <a href="#p270">270</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">faith and life, <a href="#p271">271</a>, <a href="#p443">443</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">works and moral, <a href="#p271">271</a>, <a href="#p272">272</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">moral and negations on being, <a href="#p272">272–274</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and social ethics, <a href="#p273">273</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural basis of truth, <a href="#p274">274</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">morphology of history, <a href="#p275">275</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">primitive organic religiousness, <a href="#p275">275</a>, <a href="#p276">276</a>, <a href="#p278">278</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“pre”-periods of Cultures, <a href="#p276">276–278</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Cultures and landscape, <a href="#p278">278</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beginning in Cultures, <a href="#p279">279</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural character and prime symbols, <a href="#p279">279</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Egyptian, <a href="#p279">279</a>, <a href="#p281">281</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beginning of priesthood estate, <a href="#p280">280</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">peasant, <a href="#p280">280</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">narrow circle of cultural understanding, <a href="#p280">280</a>, <a href="#p282">282</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">obscurity of Classical beginning, <a href="#p281">281–283</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">outline of Classical beginning, <a href="#p283">283</a>, <a href="#p284">284</a>, <a href="#p290">290</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical unity, Greek and Roman cults, <a href="#p284">284</a>, <a href="#p285">285</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">later Classical, <a href="#p285">285</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Chinese beginning, <a href="#p285">285–287</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Chinese tao, <a href="#p287">287</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">newness of Western, depth-experience as symbol, <a href="#p288">288</a>, <a href="#p294">294</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">reformation as general cultural movement, <a href="#p295">295–297</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Western practical mechanics, <a href="#p300">300–302</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Puritanism, <a href="#p302">302–305</a>, <a href="#p316">316</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Rationalism, <a href="#p305">305–308</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Pietism, <a href="#p308">308</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural basis of mechanistic conception, <a href="#p308">308</a>, <a href="#p309">309</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Rationalism and myth fads, <a href="#p310">310</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">second religiousness, <a href="#p310">310–314</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">historyless fellah, <a href="#p314">314</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">phase in anti-Semitism, <a href="#p321">321</a>, <a href="#p322">322</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">phase of Fronde and Tyrannis, <a href="#p386">386</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and church, <a href="#p443">443</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and economics, <a href="#p473">473</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and technique, <a href="#p502">502</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i>
+ Causality; Christianity; Church and State; Death; Jews; Philosophy; Priesthood; Pseudomorphosis;<br>Puritanism; Reformation; Sacred books; Soul; Spirit; Creeds and sects by name</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Renaissance, history-picture, <a href="#p28">28</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to Classical Culture, <a href="#p58">58</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">style as urban, <a href="#p93">93</a>, <a href="#p297">297</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Italian nationalism, <a href="#p182">182</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as Gothic, <a href="#p291">291</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and personality, <a href="#p293">293</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Reformation, <a href="#p297">297</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Republic, Western, as negation, <a href="#p413">413</a>. <i>See also</i> Democracy; Parliamentarism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Resaina, school, <a href="#p200">200</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Resh-Galutha, <a href="#p72">72</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">position, <a href="#p177">177</a>, <a href="#p208">208</a>, <a href="#p210">210</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Resurrection, as Arabian principle, <a href="#p59">59</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect on Christianity, <a href="#p218">218</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Retz, Cardinal de, Fronde, <a href="#p390">390</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Retzius, Anders A., and skull-forms, <a href="#p128">128</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Revelation, Arabian concept, <a href="#p243">243–246</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">secret, <a href="#p246">246</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Revolution, period, <a href="#p387">387</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical occurrence, <a href="#p394">394</a>, <a href="#p405">405</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">French, as unique manifestation, <a href="#p411">411</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Parliamentarism as continuance, <a href="#p415">415</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian period, <a href="#p424">424</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Democracy; Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rhegium, democratic triumph, <a href="#p396">396</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rhodes, Cecil, actuality of leadership, <a href="#p369">369</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">significance, <a href="#p435">435</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money and power, <a href="#p459">459</a>, <a href="#p473">473</a>, <a href="#p475">475</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rhodes, plan, <a href="#p100">100</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">siege, <a href="#p421">421</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rhodesia, oval house, <a href="#p122">122</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Richard I of England, imperial vassal, <a href="#p374">374</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Richelieu, Cardinal de, power, <a href="#p389">389</a>, <a href="#p390">390</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Robert the Devil, and finance, <a href="#p372">372</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Robespierre, Maximilian, adventurer, <a href="#p19">19</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">State-machine, <a href="#p404">404</a>, <a href="#p405">405</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as mass-leader, <a href="#p448">448</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rodbertus, Johann K., and class dictatorship, <a href="#p404">404</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Roe, Sir Thomas, Turkish mission, <a href="#p43">43</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Roger II of Sicily, finance, <a href="#p489">489</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Roman Catholic Church, Classical survivals in popular, <a href="#p110">110</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and style of Western learning, <a href="#p346">346</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">changed basis of politics, <a href="#p451">451</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Christianity; Papacy</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xxvi">[xxvi]</span>Roman law, basis in Classical world, <i lang="la">persona</i> and <i lang="la">res</i>, <a href="#p60">60</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and divine law, <a href="#p60">60</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as product of practical experience, no legal class, <a href="#p61">61</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Greek law, <i lang="la">jus civile</i> and <i lang="la">jus gentium</i>, city law, <a href="#p61">61</a>, <a href="#p62">62</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">lack of precedent, English contrast, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p63">63</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“collection” not “system,” <a href="#p63">63</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">lack of early stratification, <a href="#p64">64</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">codes as party politics, <a href="#p64">64</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i lang="la">jus gentium</i> as imperial, <a href="#p66">66</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Hadrian’s edict and petrification, <a href="#p66">66</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">development of jurisprudence, <a href="#p66">66</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period of maturity, <a href="#p66">66</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">lack of basic ideas, <a href="#p67">67</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">schools, <a href="#p67">67</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">law of bodies, statics, <a href="#p67">67</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Arabian juridical person, <a href="#p67">67</a>, <a href="#p68">68</a>, <a href="#p174">174</a>, <a href="#p177">177</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Arabian creed-communities, emperor-worship, <a href="#p68">68</a>, <a href="#p69">69</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Constantine and orthodox Christian law, <a href="#p69">69</a>, <a href="#p70">70</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">position of Arabian-Latin law, <a href="#p70">70–72</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">divine origin and Arabian written law, precedent and consensus, <a href="#p72">72–74</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">framing and position of Corpus Juris, religious creation, <a href="#p74">74</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">independent development of Western law-history, <a href="#p75">75</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">development of Norman-English law, <a href="#p75">75</a>, <a href="#p76">76</a>, <a href="#p78">78</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Germanic law in Southern Europe, <a href="#p76">76</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Maximilian’s code, <a href="#p76">76</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character in Germany and Spain, <a href="#p76">76</a>, <a href="#p77">77</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Corpus Juris Canonici, <a href="#p77">77</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western conflict of <i lang="la">fas</i> and <i lang="la">jus</i>, <a href="#p78">78</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect on Western culture, book and life, <a href="#p78">78–80</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical bodies and Western functions, <a href="#p80">80–82</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western emancipation as future task, <a href="#p83">83</a>, <a href="#p491">491</a>, <a href="#p505">505</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and established church, <a href="#p177">177</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and family, <a href="#p330">330</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western estates and, <a href="#p365">365</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Romanesque, soul, <a href="#p180">180</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Romanos, power, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Romans, origin of name, <a href="#p382">382</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Romanticism, and world-literature, <a href="#p108">108</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and idea of people, <a href="#p113">113</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and apocalyptic, <a href="#p236">236</a>, <a href="#p237">237</a>, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rome, collapse of empire, <a href="#p42">42</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">historyful and historyless, <a href="#p50">50</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as capital city, <a href="#p95">95</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as provincial city, <a href="#p99">99</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical block-tenements, <a href="#p101">101</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">suburbs of modern city, <a href="#p101">101</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">decay of city, <a href="#p107">107</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">city as Etruscan, <a href="#p164">164</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">people of city, <a href="#p166">166</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political character, <a href="#p173">173</a>, <a href="#p174">174</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">reason for rise, cultural necessity, <a href="#p185">185</a>, <a href="#p422">422</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cults and Greek cults, <a href="#p284">284</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">family history, <a href="#p336">336</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">first settlements and tribes, <a href="#p351">351</a>, <a href="#p382">382</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Plebs as Third Estate, <a href="#p357">357</a>, <a href="#p408">408</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> Carthage, <a href="#p368">368</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">early oligarchy, <a href="#p375">375</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">aristocratic control, attitude toward residue, <a href="#p375">375</a>, <a href="#p382">382</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">empire as polis, <a href="#p383">383</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">polis and citizenship, <a href="#p383">383</a>, <a href="#p384">384</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fifth-century relations, <a href="#p394">394–398</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">status of Tribunate, <a href="#p395">395</a>, <a href="#p415">415</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Senate and Tribunate, opposition as “form,” <a href="#p397">397</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period of military control, <a href="#p407">407</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and border states, <a href="#p407">407</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">control by political nobility, Senate as engine, <a href="#p409">409–411</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money in politics, demagogy, <a href="#p410">410</a>, <a href="#p411">411</a>, <a href="#p457">457–459</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">evolution and completion of Cæsarism, <a href="#p422">422</a>, <a href="#p423">423</a>, <a href="#p430">430</a>, <a href="#p432">432–434</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political factions and parties, <a href="#p450">450</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">courts and politics, <a href="#p459">459</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">finance, <a href="#p487">487</a>, <a href="#p494">494</a>, <a href="#p495">495</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Roosevelt, Theodore, on race suicide, <a href="#p106">106</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rossbach, battle, importance, <a href="#p182">182</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rothschilds, founding of fortune, <a href="#p402">402</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rousseau, Jean Jacques, Rationalism, <a href="#p307">307</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and class dictatorship, <a href="#p404">404</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">end of influence, <a href="#p454">454</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ruach, connotation, <a href="#p234">234</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rubens, Peter Paul, “tigress” expression, <a href="#p128">128</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ruma clan, <a href="#p382">382</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rumina, goddess, <a href="#p382">382</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Russian Culture, pseudomorphosis, and Western Culture, <a href="#p192">192–194</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and towns, <a href="#p194">194</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Dostoyevski and Tolstoi as types, <a href="#p194">194–196</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">position of Bolshevism, <a href="#p195">195</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">regular and secular clergy, <a href="#p254">254</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">pre-cultural religiousness, <a href="#p278">278</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">soul-character, <a href="#p295">295</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">unreal classes, <a href="#p335">335</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">mir, <a href="#p348">348</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and money, <a href="#p495">495</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">present Christianity, <a href="#p495">495</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">culture and machine, <a href="#p504">504</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Russo-Japanese War, and military art, <a href="#p421">421</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Saba, ignored history, <a href="#p190">190</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">feudalism, <a href="#p196">196–198</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">geography, <a href="#p196">196</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">religion, <a href="#p209">209</a>, <a href="#p253">253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">chronology, <a href="#p239">239</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sabazius, cult, <a href="#p201">201</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sabbath, Chaldean and Jewish, <a href="#p207">207</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sabiniani, legal school, style, <a href="#p67">67</a>, <a href="#p346">346</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i lang="de">Sachsenspiegel</i>, <a href="#p64">64</a>, <a href="#p76">76</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sacraments, Pagan, <a href="#p203">203</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western concept, and free will, <a href="#p293">293</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of Reformation, <a href="#p298">298</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Contrition</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sacred books, Arabian nation, revelation, <a href="#p243">243–246</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural attitude, <a href="#p244">244</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">infallibility, interpretation, secret revelation, <a href="#p245">245–247</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">allegorical exegesis, <a href="#p247">247</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">commentary and authoritative chain, <a href="#p249">249</a>, <a href="#p250">250</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Bible</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sadducees, tendency, <a href="#p211">211</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sage, as ideal, <a href="#p307">307</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sahara, extension, <a href="#p39">39</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Saint-Simon, Comte de, and class dictatorship, <a href="#p404">404</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Saint-Simon, Duc de, on nobility and nation, <a href="#p172">172</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on new nobility, <a href="#p357">357</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Salisbury, Marquess of, and family, <a href="#p393">393</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Salman, trial, <a href="#p317">317</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Samarra, plan, <a href="#p100">100</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">area, <a href="#p101">101</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">abandoned, <a href="#p107">107</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Samuel, lord of Al Alblaq, <a href="#p198">198</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">San Gimigniano, fortified towers, <a href="#p355">355</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sankhara, Neo-Brahmanism, <a href="#p315">315</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sapor I, and Mazdaism, <a href="#p251">251</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Saracens, Charles Martel’s victory, <a href="#p192">192</a>. <i>See also</i> Islam</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xxvii">[xxvii]</span>Saragossa, General Privilege, <a href="#p373">373</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sarapion, anchorite, <a href="#p254">254</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sards, as name, <a href="#p164">164</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sargon, contemporaries, <a href="#p39">39</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sassanids, study neglected, <a href="#p38">38</a>, <a href="#p190">190</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">feudalism, <a href="#p196">196–198</a>, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Mazdaic State religion, <a href="#p253">253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nobility and priesthood, <a href="#p353">353</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as model for Byzantine ceremonial, <a href="#p378">378</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Savelli, and Papacy, <a href="#p354">354</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Saviour, as title, <a href="#p219">219</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Savonarola, Girolamo, and Renaissance, <a href="#p291">291</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and reform, urbanism, <a href="#p296">296</a>, <a href="#p297">297</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Saxony, dynastic influence, <a href="#p182">182</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Scævola, Q. Mucius, private-law, <a href="#p66">66</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Scent, man’s relation, <a href="#p7">7</a>, <a href="#p115">115</a>. <i>See also</i> Sense</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Schadow, Johann Gottfried, art, <a href="#p118">118</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Schiele, Friedrich M., on Sadducees and Essenes, <a href="#p211">211</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Schinkel, Hans F., art, <a href="#p118">118</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Scholasticism, Arabian and Pseudomorphic, <a href="#p71">71</a>, <a href="#p200">200</a>, <a href="#p228">228</a>, <a href="#p229">229</a>,
+ <a href="#p250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Rationalism, <a href="#p305">305–308</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">intellectual discipline, <a href="#p463">463</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Schuda, legends, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i lang="de">Schwabenspiegel</i>, <a href="#p76">76</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Science. <i>See</i> Intelligence, Natural science</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Scipio, P. Cornelius (Africanus Major), and border States, <a href="#p408">408</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cato, <a href="#p411">411</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Imperialism, <a href="#p422">422</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and political organization, <a href="#p452">452</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Scipio, P Cornelius (Africanus Minor), murder, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Imperialism, <a href="#p430">430</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and political organization, <a href="#p452">452</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Scots, and divine-given torments, <a href="#p299">299</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Script. <i>See</i> Writing</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sea-folk, and Egypt, <a href="#p107">107</a>, <a href="#p122">122</a>, <a href="#p129">129</a>, <a href="#p164">164</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Second religiousness, in Mexican Culture, <a href="#p45">45</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period and character, <a href="#p310">310</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Syncretism, <a href="#p311">311–313</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">emperor-cult and fixed organizations, <a href="#p314">314</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cæsarism, <a href="#p386">386</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western, <a href="#p455">455</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Seibal, and Mexican Culture, <a href="#p44">44</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Seleucid Empire, as Arabian, <a href="#p190">190</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">era, <a href="#p239">239</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Senate, Roman, and Tribunate, <a href="#p397">397</a>, <a href="#p398">398</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and political nobility, <a href="#p409">409</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Augustus’ dyarchy as nullity, <a href="#p432">432</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and courts, <a href="#p460">460</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economics and politics, <a href="#p475">475</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Senatus Populusque Romanus, as Senate and Tribunate, <a href="#p398">398</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">formal restoration, <a href="#p433">433</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Seneca, L. Annæus, religiousness, <a href="#p313">313</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sensation-content, <a href="#p6">6</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sense, as microcosmic organ, and understanding, <a href="#p5">5</a>, <a href="#p69">69</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">human and animal, <a href="#p114">114</a>, <a href="#p115">115</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and relation of microcosm to macrocosm, <a href="#p499">499</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Sight</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sentence, origin, and word, <a href="#p141">141</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and race, <a href="#p142">142</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">verbs, <a href="#p143">143</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Language</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sentinum, battle, importance, <a href="#p422">422</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sepoy Mutiny, cultural basis, <a href="#p321">321</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Septimus Severus, historyless, <a href="#p432">432</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Serapis-cult, origin, <a href="#p310">310</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sertorius, Quintus, and Cæsarism, <a href="#p428">428</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sesostris I, absolutism, <a href="#p387">387</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sesostris III, absolutism, <a href="#p387">387</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sethe, Kurt, on Egyptian script, <a href="#p108">108</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Seuse, Heinrich, on Mysticism, <a href="#p292">292</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sex, cosmic organ, <a href="#p5">5</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Civilization and sterility, <a href="#p103">103–105</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“versehen,” <a href="#p126">126</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">conception as sin, <a href="#p272">272</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Classical cults, <a href="#p283">283</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">orgiasm and asceticism, <a href="#p283">283</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">elements of duality, war, <a href="#p327">327</a>, <a href="#p328">328</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and “form,” <a href="#p331">331</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and State, <a href="#p362">362</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Being; Family; Monasticism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sforza, Catherine, heroism, <a href="#p328">328</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shak-el-Arab, Mandæanism, <a href="#p214">214</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shamir Juharish, feudalism, <a href="#p196">196</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shan-Kur {sic} Period, <a href="#p416">416</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shang dynasty, mythology, <a href="#p286">286</a>, <a href="#p379">379</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shantung, Manichæans, Nestorians, and Islam, <a href="#p260">260</a>, <a href="#p261">261</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shaping, and training, <a href="#p331">331</a>, <a href="#p340">340</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shaw, George Bernard, on free woman, <a href="#p105">105</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Undershaft as type, <a href="#p475">475</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on money and life, <a href="#p484">484</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sheridan, Richard B. B., and French Revolution, <a href="#p412">412</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shi, as title, <a href="#p41">41</a>, <a href="#p418">418</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shi-hwang-ti, and second religiousness, <a href="#p310">310</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Chinese history, <a href="#p434">434</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shi-King, as religious source, <a href="#p286">286</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">love songs, <a href="#p352">352</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shia, and Chaldean, <a href="#p176">176</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shiites, Logos-idea, <a href="#p236">236</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beginning, <a href="#p424">424</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shirazi, philosophy, <a href="#p321">321</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shneor Zalman ben Baruch. <i>See</i> Salman</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shu-Ching, as religious source, <a href="#p286">286</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shuiski, Vassili, period, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sibylline books, character of Classical, <a href="#p244">244</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sicily, Norman state, <a href="#p372">372</a>, <a href="#p489">489</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">democratic triumph, <a href="#p396">396</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Maniakes, <a href="#p427">427</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Siculi, as name, <a href="#p164">164</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Siena, fortified towers, <a href="#p355">355</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sight, as supreme sense, <a href="#p6">6</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">bodily and mental, <a href="#p7">7</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and waking-being, <a href="#p7">7</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">lordship in man, <a href="#p7">7–9</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">invisible and fear, <a href="#p8">8</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and race, <a href="#p114">114</a>, <a href="#p128">128</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and words, <a href="#p140">140</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and verbs, <a href="#p143">143</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian light-sensation, “cavern” and Logos, <a href="#p233">233</a>, <a href="#p236">236</a>, <a href="#p237">237</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">light and religion, <a href="#p265">265</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Sense</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sign, and language, <a href="#p134">134</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and script, <a href="#p149">149</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Signorelli, Luca, frescoes and the Devil, <a href="#p292">292</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Simplicius, and commentary, <a href="#p247">247</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sinuhet, biography, <a href="#p387">387</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Skeleton, and race, <a href="#p124">124</a>, <a href="#p128">128–130</a>, <a href="#p175">175</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and landscape, <a href="#p130">130</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Skleros, power, <a href="#p427">427</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Skoptsi, as manifestation, <a href="#p278">278</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xxviii">[xxviii]</span>Skull. <i>See</i> Skeleton</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Slavery, Roman freedmen and citizenship, <a href="#p166">166</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical and money, end, <a href="#p349">349</a> n., <a href="#p480">480</a>, <a href="#p488">488</a>, <a href="#p496">496</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Irak rebellion, <a href="#p426">426</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">attitude of Plebs, <a href="#p451">451</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">technique, <a href="#p479">479</a> n., <a href="#p503">503</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western status, <a href="#p488">488</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sleep, as vegetable, <a href="#p7">7</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Smith, Adam, relation to property, <a href="#p345">345</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Hume, <a href="#p403">403</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and economic thought, <a href="#p469">469</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">theory of value, <a href="#p491">491</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Smith, Elliot, ethnological research, <a href="#p129">129</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Smiths, guild and tribe, <a href="#p479">479</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Socialism, money and movement, <a href="#p402">402</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect on Capitalism, <a href="#p454">454</a>, <a href="#p464">464</a> n., <a href="#p506">506</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cæsarism, <a href="#p506">506</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Marx</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Society, origin, <a href="#p343">343</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sociology, Jesus’ indifference, <a href="#p217">217</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Socrates, Rationalism, <a href="#p307">307</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as spiritual heir and ancestry, <a href="#p309">309</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sohm, Rudolf, on German jurisprudence, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sol Invictus, cult, <a href="#p201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Syncretism, <a href="#p253">253</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Solomon, fictitious, <a href="#p72">72</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Psalms, <a href="#p213">213</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Solon, Egyptian influence, <a href="#p62">62</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character of law, <a href="#p63">63–65</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and impiety, <a href="#p282">282</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economics and politics, <a href="#p475">475</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sombart, Werner, on book-keeping, <a href="#p490">490</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sophists, and Socrates, <a href="#p309">309</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Chinese Cæsarism, <a href="#p418">418</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sorel, Albert, and French Revolution, <a href="#p399">399</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Soul, cultural and intercultural forms, <a href="#p56">56</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural significance, <a href="#p59">59</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of town, <a href="#p90">90</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and language, <a href="#p137">137</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and people, <a href="#p165">165</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and spirit in Arabian dualism, indwelling, <a href="#p234">234–236</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western and Russian, <a href="#p295">295</a> n.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See</i> Religion; Spirit; Will</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sound, as sign of language, word, <a href="#p134">134</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Space, extension and waking-being, <a href="#p7">7</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and truths, <a href="#p12">12</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian concept, <a href="#p233">233</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and time and religion, <a href="#p265">265</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Time</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Spain, physical changes, <a href="#p39">39</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Roman law, <a href="#p77">77</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish Culture, <a href="#p316">316</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period of absolutism, <a href="#p388">388</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Fronde conflict, <a href="#p390">390</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">origins of accountancy, <a href="#p489">489</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sparta, helots, <a href="#p332">332</a>, <a href="#p349">349</a>, <a href="#p357">357</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> Athens, <a href="#p368">368</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">royal succession, <a href="#p380">380</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">oligarchic-democratic struggle, <a href="#p396">396</a>, <a href="#p397">397</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Spartacus, and Cæsarism, <a href="#p428">428</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Spartiates, as feudal, <a href="#p375">375</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Speaking, and language, <a href="#p117">117</a>, <a href="#p125">125</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Speculators, as cultural phenomenon, <a href="#p484">484</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Spence, Lewis, on Mexican chronology, <a href="#p44">44</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Spener, Philipp J., Pietism, <a href="#p308">308</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Spenta Mainyu, Persian Holy Spirit, <a href="#p244">244</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sphærus, influence, <a href="#p454">454</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Spinden, Herbert J., researches in Mexican Culture, <a href="#p44">44</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Spinoza, Baruch, Gnosis, <a href="#p228">228</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian metaphysic, <a href="#p241">241</a>, <a href="#p321">321</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on contemplation, <a href="#p242">242</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">expulsion, <a href="#p317">317</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Spirit, Arabian pneuma, <a href="#p57">57</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and soul in Arabian dualism, indwelling, <a href="#p234">234–236</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Body; Religion; Soul; Waking-being</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sport, and Civilization, <a href="#p103">103</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Stanley, Arthur P., on Islam and Christianity, <a href="#p304">304</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">State. <i>See</i> Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">States-General, calling, <a href="#p373">373</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">overthrow, <a href="#p388">388</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Statics, Roman law, <a href="#p67">67</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Steam-engine, effect, <a href="#p502">502</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Stein, Lorenz von, on money, <a href="#p485">485</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Stenography, character, <a href="#p152">152</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sterility, and Civilization, <a href="#p103">103–105</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Stoicism, and jurisprudence, <a href="#p62">62</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Rationalism, <a href="#p307">307</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Pietism, <a href="#p308">308</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and second religiousness, <a href="#p312">312</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">style of school, <a href="#p345">345</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">improvidence, <a href="#p372">372</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cæsarism, ideologues and conspiracy, <a href="#p433">433</a>, <a href="#p434">434</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political influence, <a href="#p454">454</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Streets, cultural attitude, <a href="#p94">94</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Stuarts, and Roman law, <a href="#p365">365</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and dynasty, <a href="#p388">388</a>, <a href="#p389">389</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Studion, monk-state, <a href="#p314">314</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Style, Western, external effects, <a href="#p46">46</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">intercultural, <a href="#p87">87–89</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as urban, <a href="#p92">92</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Civilization, <a href="#p108">108</a>, <a href="#p109">109</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rigid and living, surface mixture, <a href="#p123">123</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">priesthood and, of learning, <a href="#p345">345</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Su-tsin, career, <a href="#p417">417</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character, <a href="#p419">419</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Subjects and objects, <a href="#p369">369</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in politics, <a href="#p441">441</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in economics, <a href="#p479">479</a>, <a href="#p493">493</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Submission, as Arabian concept, <a href="#p240">240</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Substance, Arabian religious concept, <a href="#p244">244</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">controversy and Christian split, <a href="#p255">255–258</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Trinity</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Succession Wars, character, <a href="#p392">392</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sudra, as caste, <a href="#p332">332</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and tribes, <a href="#p348">348</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sufism, and Chaldean, <a href="#p176">176</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Gnosis, <a href="#p228">228</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and contemplation, <a href="#p242">242</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Pietism, <a href="#p308">308</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Jewish Mysticism, <a href="#p321">321</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Islam; Mysticism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sulla, L. Cornelius, and princeps, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and demagogy, <a href="#p458">458</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and courts, <a href="#p460">460</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sultanate, rise over caliphate, <a href="#p425">425</a>, <a href="#p426">426</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sumer, and Arabian Culture, <a href="#p189">189</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sun-tse, on war, <a href="#p417">417</a> n., <a href="#p419">419</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character, <a href="#p419">419</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">anecdote, <a href="#p420">420</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sura, academy, <a href="#p71">71</a>, <a href="#p200">200</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Swedenborg, Emanuel, Pietism, <a href="#p308">308</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Yesirah, <a href="#p316">316</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sybaris, destruction, <a href="#p303">303</a>, <a href="#p394">394</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Symbolism, farmhouse, <a href="#p90">90</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">peacock, <a href="#p236">236</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural religious prime symbols, <a href="#p279">279</a>, <a href="#p287">287</a>, <a href="#p288">288</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">colour, <a href="#p289">289</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">clock, <a href="#p300">300</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Wandering Jew, <a href="#p317">317</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">printing, <a href="#p413">413</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical coin, <a href="#p486">486</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Syncretic Church, and emperor-worship, <a href="#p68">68</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xxix">[xxix]</span>as name, <a href="#p68">68</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cults and “Greeks,” <a href="#p176">176</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian churches in Classical style, <a href="#p201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">reversal, Classical cults as Eastern Church, <a href="#p102">102</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Paganism and Christianity, sacraments and other elements, <a href="#p203">203</a>, <a href="#p204">204</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish rescue, from, <a href="#p210">210</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jesus sects, <a href="#p220">220</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">development, parallelism, <a href="#p252">252</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">State religion, <a href="#p253">253</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">monasticism, <a href="#p254">254</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">westward expansion, <a href="#p255">255</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">missionarism, <a href="#p259">259</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">end of theology, <a href="#p261">261</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Pseudomorphosis; Religion</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Syncretism, in second religiousness, <a href="#p311">311–313</a>. <i>See also</i> preceding title</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Synesius, as Neo-Platonist, <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Synod of a Hundred Chapters, <a href="#p278">278</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Synod of Antichrist, <a href="#p278">278</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Synœcism, Classical, <a href="#p173">173</a>, <a href="#p355">355</a>, <a href="#p381">381</a>, <a href="#p382">382</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Roman, <a href="#p383">383</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Syntax, and grammar, <a href="#p142">142</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period, <a href="#p145">145</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Syracuse, as provincial city, <a href="#p99">99</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as megalopolis, <a href="#p382">382</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">democratic triumph, <a href="#p396">396</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">colonization, <a href="#p405">405</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">class proscriptions, <a href="#p405">405</a>, <a href="#p406">406</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">siege, <a href="#p421">421</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Plato’s theory, <a href="#p454">454</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Syrian Law-book, importance, <a href="#p64">64</a>, <a href="#p70">70</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sze-ma-tsien, on Contending States, <a href="#p417">417</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as compiler, <a href="#p418">418</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">biographies, <a href="#p454">454</a> n.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Taboo, relation to waking-being and language, <a href="#p116">116</a>, <a href="#p154">154</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dependence on totem, <a href="#p117">117</a>, <a href="#p265">265</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in art, <a href="#p118">118</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and cathedral, <a href="#p122">122</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and script, <a href="#p151">151</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">space-fear, <a href="#p265">265</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and technique, <a href="#p268">268</a>, <a href="#p271">271</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">moral, and negations, <a href="#p272">272</a>, <a href="#p342">342</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Totem</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tacitus, Cornelius, on Decemvirs’ code, <a href="#p65">65</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">philosophical confusion, <a href="#p238">238</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and polis, <a href="#p383">383</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Musonius Rufus, <a href="#p430">430</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cæsarism, <a href="#p434">434</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tai-dsung, and Islam, <a href="#p261">261</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Talleyrand-Périgord, Charles de, as politician, <a href="#p446">446</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Talmud, as creed law, <a href="#p69">69</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Chaldean, <a href="#p176">176</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">development, influences, <a href="#p208">208</a>, <a href="#p209">209</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tammany Hall, as type, <a href="#p452">452</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tannaim, class, <a href="#p71">71</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tanvasar, and new Avesta, <a href="#p250">250</a>, <a href="#p251">251</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Taoism, and Pacifism, <a href="#p185">185</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">principle, <a href="#p287">287</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">alteration in concept, <a href="#p307">307</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">expansion, <a href="#p308">308</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Syncretism, <a href="#p312">312</a>, <a href="#p315">315</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Han period, <a href="#p314">314</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and priesthood, <a href="#p352">352</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cæsarism, <a href="#p434">434</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tarquins, fall, <a href="#p65">65</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tarragona, Jewish city, <a href="#p316">316</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tartars, Russian release, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Taxes, purpose, <a href="#p475">475</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tchun-tsin-fan-lu, <a href="#p454">454</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Technique, and truth, <a href="#p144">144</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and theory in religion, <a href="#p268">268</a>, <a href="#p271">271</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Classical city-religions, <a href="#p285">285</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Western science, <a href="#p300">300</a>, <a href="#p302">302</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Rationalism, <a href="#p306">306</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">development of military, <a href="#p420">420–422</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">influence on Western economic thought, <a href="#p469">469</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">machines and Western slavery, <a href="#p488">488</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and plant, <a href="#p499">499</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of animal movement, involuntary, <a href="#p499">499</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">conscious-knowing, <a href="#p499">499</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">tyrannical theory, <a href="#p500">500</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">development out of nature, <a href="#p500">500</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">under Classical Culture, <a href="#p500">500</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western passion, Gothic, <a href="#p501">501</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of steam-engine, <a href="#p502">502</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">religious origin, and Devil, <a href="#p502">502</a>, <a href="#p504">504</a>, <a href="#p504">504</a> n., <a href="#p505">505</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western and infinity, conquest of nature, <a href="#p503">503</a>, <a href="#p504">504</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">machine-industry as master of Western Civilization, <a href="#p504">504</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">its agents, <a href="#p504">504</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">machine-industry as Western bourgeois, <a href="#p504">504</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">other cultures and machine, <a href="#p504">504</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">engineer as priest, <a href="#p505">505</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">struggle with money, <a href="#p505">505</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Telemachus, and dynasty, <a href="#p380">380</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Telescope, Chinese invention, <a href="#p501">501</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tell-el-Amarna letters, <a href="#p166">166</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ten Thousand, as polis, <a href="#p160">160</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tenochtitlan, destruction, <a href="#p44">44</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">founding, character, <a href="#p45">45</a>, <a href="#p99">99</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tension, and beat, <a href="#p4">4</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and waking-being, <a href="#p7">7</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Civilization and intelligence, <a href="#p102">102</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Waking-being</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tertullian, Montanist, <a href="#p227">227</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Western Church, <a href="#p229">229</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">period, <a href="#p250">250</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Teutoburger Wald, Varus’ defeat, <a href="#p48">48</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Teutonic Knights, finance, <a href="#p489">489</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tezcuco, as world-city, <a href="#p99">99</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Thebes, as Egypt, <a href="#p95">95</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as world-city, <a href="#p99">99</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise of dynasty, <a href="#p428">428</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Themis, and Dike, <a href="#p376">376</a>, <a href="#p378">378</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Theocritus, “playing” with expression, <a href="#p137">137</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Theoderich, tomb, <a href="#p89">89</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Theodore of Studion, and Leo V, <a href="#p425">425</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as party leader, <a href="#p449">449</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Theognis, and <i lang="la">carpe diem</i>, <a href="#p383">383</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Theory, development, dominance, <a href="#p10">10</a>, <a href="#p500">500</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and technique in religion, <a href="#p268">268</a>, <a href="#p271">271</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural attitude toward scientific, <a href="#p301">301</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">correctness and technical value, <a href="#p500">500</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Thing, legal Classical notion, <a href="#p60">60</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Third Estate. <i>See</i> Democracy</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Thirty Years’ War, as consequence, <a href="#p181">181</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">political aspect, <a href="#p388">388</a>, <a href="#p391">391</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Wallenstein’s idea and fall, <a href="#p389">389</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Thomas, Saint, Gospel, <a href="#p213">213</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Acts, romances, <a href="#p236">236</a>, <a href="#p251">251</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Thomas Aquinas, philosophy, <a href="#p172">172</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Devil-cult, <a href="#p291">291</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sacraments, <a href="#p293">293</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Thought, defined, development of theoretical, <a href="#p10">10</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and life, facts and truths, <a href="#p11">11–13</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">compulsion, <a href="#p12">12</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">causality-men, place in life, <a href="#p16">16–19</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Waking-being</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xxx">[xxx]</span>Thucydides, ahistoric, <a href="#p24">24</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Thurii, plan, <a href="#p100">100</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tiberius, as historyful, <a href="#p171">171</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">economics and politics, <a href="#p432">432</a>, <a href="#p475">475</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tikal, and Mexican Culture, <a href="#p44">44</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tilly, Count of, and Wallenstein, <a href="#p389">389</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Time, and facts, <a href="#p12">12</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and dynastic-idea, <a href="#p179">179</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian concept, ordained period, <a href="#p238">238–240</a>, <a href="#p249">249</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and space and religion, <a href="#p265">265</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and truth, <a href="#p271">271</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">mythology, <a href="#p286">286</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Being; Destiny; History; Space</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tiresias, and Classical religious beginnings, <a href="#p282">282</a>, <a href="#p350">350</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tities, tribe, <a href="#p351">351</a>, <a href="#p382">382</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tobit, as Arabian, <a href="#p208">208</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Togrulbek, power, <a href="#p427">427</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Toledo, Jewish city, <a href="#p316">316</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Toleration, Classical and Arabian attitude, <a href="#p203">203</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tolstoi, Leo, Western soul, <a href="#p194">194–196</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">conception of Jesus, <a href="#p218">218</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Topinard, Paul, race classification, <a href="#p125">125</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Totem, relation to being and race, <a href="#p116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in art, <a href="#p118">118</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and dwelling-house, <a href="#p121">121</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and castle, <a href="#p122">122</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in language, <a href="#p154">154</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">time-fear and taboo, <a href="#p265">265</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">moral, <a href="#p342">342</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Taboo</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Touch, as primary sense, <a href="#p6">6</a>. <i>See also</i> Sense</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tournament, as manifestation of nobility, <a href="#p352">352</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tours, importance of Saracen defeat, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Town, and Culture, <a href="#p90">90</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">soul, <a href="#p90">90</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to country, <a href="#p91">91</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural type, <a href="#p91">91</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and market, <a href="#p91">91</a>, <a href="#p480">480</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and style, <a href="#p92">92</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“visage” as cultural, <a href="#p93">93</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to landscape, <a href="#p94">94</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">city history as world-history, <a href="#p95">95</a>, <a href="#p96">96</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">domination of capital city, cultural basis, <a href="#p95">95</a>, <a href="#p381">381</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and intellect, <a href="#p96">96</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">great and little, spiritual distinction, <a href="#p97">97</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and monetary idea, and dictatorship, <a href="#p97">97</a>, <a href="#p98">98</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Civilization and overflow, <a href="#p100">100</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and writing, <a href="#p152">152</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">script speech, <a href="#p155">155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and nations, <a href="#p171">171</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Russia and, <a href="#p194">194</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Renaissance-Reformation movement, <a href="#p297">297</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and science, <a href="#p300">300</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Puritanism, <a href="#p302">302</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Rationalism, <a href="#p305">305</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">consciousness and personal freedom, <a href="#p354">354</a>, <a href="#p356">356</a>, <a href="#p358">358</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">burgher estate, <a href="#p355">355</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">movement of primary estates to, <a href="#p355">355</a>, <a href="#p356">356</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and State-idea, <a href="#p377">377</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation of politics and economics, capitalism, <a href="#p476">476</a>, <a href="#p477">477</a>, <a href="#p493">493</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect on trade, <a href="#p481">481</a>, <a href="#p484">484</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Causality; Megalopolitanism; Polis; Politics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Trade, and politics, <a href="#p474">474</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as substitute for war, <a href="#p474">474</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Economics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tradition, place in cultural history, <a href="#p338">338</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">prevision law, <a href="#p363">363</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of political leadership, <a href="#p444">444</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Training, and shaping, <a href="#p331">331</a>, <a href="#p340">340</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Trajan, historyless, <a href="#p432">432</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tramilæ, as name, <a href="#p164">164</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Transubstantiation, new English controversy, <a href="#p309">309</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Trdat of Armenia, State and Church, <a href="#p253">253</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Trebatius Testa, C., and Cicero, <a href="#p458">458</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tree of Knowledge, and cross, <a href="#p180">180</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tribes, Arabian pre-cultural associations, solution, <a href="#p173">173</a>, <a href="#p176">176</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as names for priesthoods, <a href="#p175">175</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">occupational, <a href="#p348">348</a>, <a href="#p479">479</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tribonian, as jurist, <a href="#p73">73</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tribunate, and Plebs, <a href="#p357">357</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">beginning, status, as lawful Tyrannis, <a href="#p394">394–398</a>, <a href="#p433">433</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">consular, <a href="#p397">397</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Senate, survival, <a href="#p397">397</a>, <a href="#p398">398</a>, <a href="#p433">433</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">blind incident, <a href="#p415">415</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Marius as heir, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and party, <a href="#p451">451</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Trinity, and Arabian pneuma, <a href="#p68">68</a>, <a href="#p244">244</a>. <i>See also</i> Logos; Substance</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Triumvirates, and border States, <a href="#p408">408</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Cæsarism, <a href="#p423">423</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">first, <a href="#p454">454</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Troeltsch, Ernst, on Augustine as Classical, <a href="#p241">241</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Trojan War, as beginning of history, <a href="#p27">27</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">feud or crusade, <a href="#p282">282</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Troubadours, Arabian, <a href="#p198">198</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to Renaissance, <a href="#p297">297</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Truth, and facts, <a href="#p11">11</a>, <a href="#p12">12</a>, <a href="#p47">47</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural basis, <a href="#p58">58</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and speech, <a href="#p137">137</a>, <a href="#p144">144</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">abstract and living, <a href="#p147">147</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian pneuma, <a href="#p242">242</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian sacred book, <a href="#p243">243</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">experience, <a href="#p268">268</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and time, <a href="#p271">271</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and current of being, history, <a href="#p274">274</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and politics, <a href="#p368">368</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">influence of press, <a href="#p461">461</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Ethics; Faith</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><cite>Tshou-li</cite>, on officialdom, <a href="#p372">372</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tshun-tsin, period, <a href="#p391">391</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tsi, in period of Contending States, <a href="#p417">417</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tsin, imperialistic State, <a href="#p38">38</a>, <a href="#p41">41</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Taoism, <a href="#p185">185</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Tsu, <a href="#p368">368</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">rise in period of Contending States, <a href="#p416">416–419</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tsu, and Tsin, <a href="#p368">368</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in period of Contending States, <a href="#p417">417</a>, <a href="#p418">418</a>, <a href="#p454">454</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tung Chung-Shu, on Middle Kingdom, <a href="#p373">373</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Turfan manuscripts, <a href="#p213">213</a> n., <a href="#p252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Turgot, Anne R. J., overthrow, <a href="#p411">411</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Turks, and Cæsarism, <a href="#p426">426</a>, <a href="#p427">427</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tursha, as name, <a href="#p164">164</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Twelve Tables, character, <a href="#p63">63</a>, <a href="#p65">65</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">importance, <a href="#p65">65</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">commentary, <a href="#p66">66</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">class law, <a href="#p365">365</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">significance, overthrow, <a href="#p396">396</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tyche, and lot-choice of officials, <a href="#p383">383</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tyrannis, first, preceding oligarchy, <a href="#p375">375</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fall of Tarquinian, <a href="#p382">382</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">significance, <a href="#p386">386</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Tribunate, struggle for lawful, <a href="#p394">394–398</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character of second, <a href="#p405">405–408</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Politics</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Ujjaina, as world-city, <a href="#p99">99</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ulemas, law-men, <a href="#p71">71</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ulpian, as jurist, <a href="#p71">71</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xxxi">[xxxi]</span><cite lang="la">Unam sanctam</cite> bull, <a href="#p376">376</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Understanding, and sensation, <a href="#p6">6</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">language and emancipation, thought, <a href="#p9">9</a>, <a href="#p10">10</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and reason, <a href="#p13">13</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">meaning, <a href="#p133">133</a>, <a href="#p136">136</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as causal, <a href="#p266">266</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and faith, <a href="#p266">266</a>, <a href="#p269">269–271</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">United States. <i>See</i> Americans</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ur, tombs, <a href="#p35">35</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Uxmal, and Mexican Culture, <a href="#p45">45</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as world-city, <a href="#p99">99</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Valentinian III, Law of Citations, <a href="#p73">73</a>, <a href="#p248">248</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Valentinus, period, <a href="#p250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and substance, <a href="#p256">256</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Value, early lack of concept, <a href="#p480">480</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money and value-in-itself, <a href="#p482">482</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">theories as subjective, <a href="#p482">482</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money and standard, <a href="#p485">485</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">irrelation of Classical land and money, <a href="#p487">487</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Classical attitude toward art, <a href="#p487">487</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western concept of work, <a href="#p491">491–493</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Economics</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Varro, M. Terentius, era, <a href="#p239">239</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Varus, P. Quintilius, defeat, site, <a href="#p48">48</a>, <a href="#p487">487</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vasari, Giorgio, and return to nature, <a href="#p291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vase-painting, Exekias, <a href="#p135">135</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vasili Blazheny, style, <a href="#p89">89</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vassalage, rise and significance, <a href="#p349">349</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">change to money basis, <a href="#p357">357</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Feudalism; Slavery</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vegetable. <i>See</i> Plant</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Venice, and money-outlook, <a href="#p97">97</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">small-scale traffic, <a href="#p481">481</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Verbs, place in language development, <a href="#p143">143</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vergennes, Comte de, as end of period, <a href="#p398">398</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Verres, Caius, wealth as object, <a href="#p459">459</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vespasian, war on Judea, <a href="#p210">210</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and ideologues, <a href="#p434">434</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vesta, and economics, <a href="#p472">472</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Village, and town, <a href="#p91">91</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vindex, unimportance, <a href="#p50">50</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Virtue, change in concept, <a href="#p307">307</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vladimir of Kiev, epic cycle, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vohu Mano, as Word of God, <a href="#p244">244</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Voltaire, and Rationalism, <a href="#p305">305</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vries, Hugo de, mutation theory, <a href="#p32">32</a> n.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Waking-being, as microcosmic, and being, <a href="#p7">7</a>, <a href="#p11">11</a>, <a href="#p13">13</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">visual thought, <a href="#p7">7–9</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">language and thought, <a href="#p9">9</a>, <a href="#p10">10</a>, <a href="#p114">114</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">life and thought, facts and truths, <a href="#p11">11–13</a>, <a href="#p16">16</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">adjustment to macrocosm, <a href="#p14">14</a>, <a href="#p24">24</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and causality, <a href="#p14">14</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and problem of motion, death, <a href="#p14">14–16</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and intercultural history, <a href="#p56">56</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and money, <a href="#p98">98</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">upward series of utterances, <a href="#p116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and taboo, <a href="#p117">117</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">willed activity, <a href="#p133">133</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and reflection, <a href="#p141">141</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cultural oppositions, <a href="#p233">233</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and religion, <a href="#p265">265</a>, <a href="#p499">499</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and priesthood, <a href="#p335">335</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and economics, <a href="#p473">473</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sense, <a href="#p499">499</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">ultimate fall, <a href="#p507">507</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Being; Causality; Economics; Intelligence; Language; Microcosm; Religion; Space; Town</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wallenstein, Albrecht von, idea, power and fall, <a href="#p389">389</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wandering Jew, symbolism, <a href="#p317">317</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wang, as title, <a href="#p379">379</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wang-Cheng, rule, <a href="#p41">41</a>, <a href="#p418">418</a>, <a href="#p423">423</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">War, and politics and economics, <a href="#p330">330</a>, <a href="#p366">366</a>, <a href="#p440">440</a>, <a href="#p474">474</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and nobility, <a href="#p351">351</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as great creator, <a href="#p362">362</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as normal Classical condition, <a href="#p385">385</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">character of Baroque, <a href="#p392">392</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Pe-Ki as general, <a href="#p417">417</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Sun-tse as authority, <a href="#p417">417</a> n., <a href="#p419">419</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">change in character under Civilization, <a href="#p419">419–422</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nineteenth-century substitute, <a href="#p428">428</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">expected Western period, <a href="#p429">429</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as cultural necessity, <a href="#p429">429</a>, <a href="#p434">434</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to press, <a href="#p460">460</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and hunger, <a href="#p471">471</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Army; Peace</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wartburg, cathedral art, <a href="#p123">123</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Washington, plan, <a href="#p100">100</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Washington Conference, as prelude of war, <a href="#p430">430</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wealth. <i>See</i> Economics; Money</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wedgwood, Josiah, ware, <a href="#p491">491</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wei-Yang, character, <a href="#p419">419</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Weill, Raymond, on Hyksos, <a href="#p428">428</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Weininger, Otto, Arabian metaphysic, <a href="#p322">322</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Weissenberg, Samuel, on Jewish type, <a href="#p175">175</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wellington, Duke of, rise, <a href="#p406">406</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Welser, city nobility, <a href="#p356">356</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wenceslaus, as emperor, <a href="#p376">376</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wesley, John, practical Pietism, <a href="#p308">308</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Westermann, Diedrich, language investigation, <a href="#p140">140</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Western Culture, as historic, <a href="#p28">28</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and human and universal history, <a href="#p28">28</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">individuality in historical attunement, <a href="#p29">29</a>, <a href="#p30">30</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">future historical achievement, <a href="#p30">30</a>, <a href="#p46">46</a>, <a href="#p47">47</a>, <a href="#p55">55</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">landscape and outside effect, <a href="#p46">46</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">transfer of Christianity to, <a href="#p59">59</a>, <a href="#p235">235</a>, <a href="#p237">237</a>, <a href="#p258">258</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">independent legal development, <a href="#p75">75</a>, <a href="#p76">76</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Roman law in, <a href="#p76">76–78</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of Roman law, <a href="#p78">78–83</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and antique, <a href="#p79">79</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">future jurisprudence, <a href="#p80">80–83</a>, <a href="#p505">505</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">future cities, <a href="#p101">101</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">present stage of Civilization, <a href="#p109">109</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and mother tongue, <a href="#p120">120</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and script, <a href="#p150">150</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and people, <a href="#p169">169</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">nations under, dynastic-idea, <a href="#p179">179–181</a>, <a href="#p378">378</a>, <a href="#p381">381</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">races, nations, and dynasties, <a href="#p181">181–183</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dynastic-idea and overthrow of monarchy, language-idea, <a href="#p183">183</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Charles Martel and avoidance of pseudomorphosis, <a href="#p192">192</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Russia, <a href="#p192">192</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">newness of religion, depth-experience as symbol, <a href="#p288">288</a>, <a href="#p294">294</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Mary-cult and Devil-cult, <a href="#p290">290–294</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">guilt and free-will, sacraments, <a href="#p292">292</a>, <a href="#p293">293</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">contrition, <a href="#p293">293–295</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">personality-concept, <a href="#p293">293</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Calvin-Loyola opposition and world-politics, <a href="#p299">299</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and practical mechanics, <a href="#p300">300</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dynamic character of Rationalism, <a href="#p309">309</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="pindex-xxxii">[xxxii]</span>probable character of second religiousness, <a href="#p311">311</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">religion and style of learning, <a href="#p346">346</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">style of nobility, genealogical principle, <a href="#p350">350</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">style of priesthood, <a href="#p352">352</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation of primary estates, <a href="#p353">353</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">capital city, <a href="#p381">381</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">reading and writing, <a href="#p413">413</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">money as function, <a href="#p489">489–493</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">capital and financial organization, <a href="#p493">493</a>, <a href="#p494">494</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">future, <a href="#p507">507</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Baroque; Cultures; Gothic; Politics; Technique</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Westminster Confession, on Grace, <a href="#p242">242</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Westphalia, Peace of, effect on nobility, <a href="#p391">391</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, Ulrich von, on patriarchal kingdom, <a href="#p380">380</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Will, Arabian attitude, submission, <a href="#p235">235</a>, <a href="#p240">240</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian Grace, <a href="#p241">241</a>, <a href="#p242">242</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Western free-will and sacraments, <a href="#p292">292</a>, <a href="#p293">293</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Russian attitude, <a href="#p295">295</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">William I of England, and property, <a href="#p371">371</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">William of Occam, will and reason, <a href="#p241">241</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wilson, Woodrow, as tool, <a href="#p475">475</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Winchester, Eng., as royal residence, <a href="#p92">92</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Winckler, Hugo, on post-exilic Jews, <a href="#p205">205</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Witchcraft, Western cult, <a href="#p291">291</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">persecution, <a href="#p302">302</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Woman. <i>See</i> Sex</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Words, cult-colouring of prime, <a href="#p116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as language sound, <a href="#p134">134</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as to origin, <a href="#p137">137</a>, <a href="#p138">138</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and names, <a href="#p138">138–141</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and modern gesture, <a href="#p140">140</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and sentence, <a href="#p141">141</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">acquisition, <a href="#p142">142</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">vocabularies and grammar, <a href="#p147">147</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">alien provenance, <a href="#p148">148</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and conscious technique, <a href="#p499">499</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Language</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Work, quantity and quality in Western concept of value, <a href="#p491">491–493</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Works, religious technique and moral, <a href="#p272">272</a>. <i>See also</i> Faith</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">World-city. <i>See</i> Megalopolitanism</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">World War, and passage to Cæsarism, <a href="#p418">418</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect on universal military service, <a href="#p429">429</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and military art, <a href="#p421">421</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Marxism, <a href="#p455">455</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">guilt question, <a href="#p461">461</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Allied press propaganda, <a href="#p462">462</a> n., <a href="#p463">463</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Worms, Diet of, code, <a href="#p76">76</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Writing, cultural relation, <a href="#p36">36</a>, <a href="#p146">146</a>, <a href="#p150">150</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Arabian religions and scripts, <a href="#p73">73</a>, <a href="#p150">150</a>, <a href="#p227">227</a> n.;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Egyptian, <a href="#p108">108</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">grammatical decomposition, <a href="#p145">145</a>, <a href="#p146">146</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">technique of signs and thoughts, <a href="#p146">146</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and linguistic history, <a href="#p147">147</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and “present” training, <a href="#p149">149</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dependence on grammar, <a href="#p149">149</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and reading, <a href="#p149">149</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and extension and duration, <a href="#p150">150</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and historical endowment, <a href="#p150">150</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and colloquial language, <a href="#p150">150</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">relation to race, as taboo, ornament, <a href="#p151">151</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">city and utilitarian, standardization, <a href="#p152">152</a>, <a href="#p155">155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">stenography, <a href="#p152">152</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dependence of world history on, <a href="#p153">153</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Language</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wu, State, annihilation, <a href="#p422">422</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wu-ti, as ruler, <a href="#p41">41</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wullenweber, Jürgen, economics and politics, <a href="#p475">475</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wundt, Wilhelm M., an origin of language, <a href="#p138">138</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wyclif, John, and reform, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Xenophon, and class dictatorship, <a href="#p404">404</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Yahweh cult, <a href="#p201">201</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Yang-Chu, materialism, <a href="#p309">309</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Yellow Turbans, insurrection, <a href="#p314">314</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Yeomanry, lack in England and United States, <a href="#p449">449</a> n. <i>See also</i> Peasantry</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Yesirah, rational Mysticism, <a href="#p316">316</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Yiddish, character, <a href="#p150">150</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Yorck von Wartenburg, Graf, and Napoleon, <a href="#p406">406</a> n.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Zaddikism, <a href="#p322">322</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Zaleucus, laws, <a href="#p64">64</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Zama, battle, and Hellenism, <a href="#p191">191</a>, <a href="#p422">422</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Zarathustra, basis of religious reform, <a href="#p168">168</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Jewish contemporaries, <a href="#p205">205</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> Mazdaism; Zend Avesta</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Zechariah, Persian influence, <a href="#p208">208</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Zend Avesta, commentary, <a href="#p247">247</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">new, Mazdaism, <a href="#p251">251</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Zeno, and property, <a href="#p344">344</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Zimmern, Heinrich, on Jesus as Mandæan, <a href="#p214">214</a> n.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Zionism, character, <a href="#p210">210</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Zoroaster. <i>See</i> Zarathustra</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Zrvanism, rise, <a href="#p256">256</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Zwingli, Ulrich, as Gothic, <a href="#p296">296</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="FOOTNOTES">
+ [FOOTNOTES]
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> In what follows I have drawn upon a metaphysical work that I hope shortly to be able to
+publish.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> For instance, Vol. I, p. 154.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> See Vol. I, p. 54.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> Even scientific astronomy, when applied to everyday work, states the movements of the heavenly
+bodies in terms referred to our perception of them.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> See Vol. I, p. 172.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> A very similar notion of the light-world diffused from the light-centre forms the cardinal point
+of the philosophy of Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln (1175–1273).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> The coming of radio broadcasting has in no way altered, but has rather confirmed, the validity
+of this. The listener either translates his aural impressions into those of the light-world or else
+yields even more readily than usual to the “illusion” here discussed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> The original reads: “<i lang="de">An Stelle des völlig einheitlichen verstehenden Empfindens erscheint oft und öfter
+ein Verstehen der Bedeutung von kaum noch beachteten Sinneseindrücken.</i>”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> Hence we call that which we observe in the faces of men who have not the habit of thought
+“animal”—admiringly or contemptuously as the case may be.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> See Vol. I, p. 126.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> See Vol. I, p. 102.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> Hence Bayle’s profound observation that the understanding is capable only of discovering
+errors.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> See Vol. I, p. 94.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> See Vol. I, pp. 53, et seq.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> Original: “<i lang="de">aus dem Erlebnis.</i>”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 553 (Gibbon, <cite>Decline and Fall</cite>,
+ ch. xliii).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> G. Le Bon’s <cite lang="de">Psychologie des Foules</cite> (which has been translated into English under the title <cite>The
+Crowd</cite>) is the pioneer work on this subject, and though unduly coloured perhaps by the author’s
+personal prepossessions, still retains its interest and value.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> See Vol. I., pp. 139, et seq.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> Meaning here names, dates, numbers—the chronology in the usual extensive sense, and not
+the intensive or deep sense. See Vol. I, pp. 97, 153 (foot-note).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> He affirmed, on the first page of his history (about 400 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>),
+ that before his time nothing of
+significance had happened (οὐ μεγάλα νομίζω γενέσθαι οὔτε κατὰ τοὺς πολέμους οὔτε ἐς τα ἄλλα. Thucydides,
+I, 1.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">[21]</a> Original: “<i lang="de">Alles Bedeutende, nämlich das Einmalige der Geschichte.</i>”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">[22]</a> I suppose the meaning of these words to be that generalization and flair are not really opposed,
+but interdependent.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">[23]</a> Original: <i lang="de">(“So geschieht dies stets ...) im Hinblick auf das</i> im Augenblick geforderte <i lang="de">Bild
+als der beständigen Funktion der Zeit und des Menschen.”</i>—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">[24]</a> Even at the level of the Trojan War the timeless mythological figures of gods and demigods
+are still involved, intimately and in detail, in the human story. See, on the whole question of
+the Greek attitude towards time and history, Vol. I, p. 9 and <i>passim</i>.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">[25]</a> See Chapter VIII below.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">[26]</a> Introduced in Rome in 522 during the Ostrogoth domination, not until Charlemagne’s times
+did it make headway in the Germanic lands. Then, however, its spread was rapid.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">[27]</a> See Vol. I, p. 19.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">[28]</a> On the other hand—and very significantly—the field of the history-picture livingly experienced
+in the consciousness of the sincere Renaissance classicist markedly contracted.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">[29]</a> See Vol. I, p. 16.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">[30]</a> The Emperor Henry VI reigned 1190–7.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">[31]</a> During his Italian sojourn of 1786–8 Goethe made up his mind to resign his political offices
+at Weimar, retaining merely a non-executive seat on the Council and definitely devoting himself to
+art and science. This resolution he carried into effect on his return to Weimar in 1788; <cite>Tasso</cite> finally
+appeared in 1790.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">[32]</a> For the special sense in which the word “Civilization” is used throughout this work see
+Vol. I, p. 31. Briefly, the Civilization is the outcome of the Culture of which it is in one sense the
+final phase, but in another the distinct and unlike sequel.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">[33]</a> Christian Leopold von Buch, 1774–1853; Cuvier, 1769–1832.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">[34]</a> The first proof that the basic forms of plants and animals did not evolve, but were suddenly
+there, was given by H. de Vries in his <cite>Mutation Theory</cite> (1886). In the language of Goethe, we see
+how the “impressed form” [See Vol. I, p. 157.—<i>Tr.</i>] works itself out in the individual samples,
+but not how the die was cut for <em>the whole genus</em>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">[35]</a> With this it becomes unnecessary to postulate vast periods of time for the original states of
+man, and we can regard the interval between the oldest man-type hitherto discovered and the beginning
+of the Egyptian Culture as a span, greater indeed, but certainly not unthinkably greater,
+than the 5,000 years of recognized cultural history.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">[36]</a> It is perhaps not unnecessary to remark that the word “epoch” is used throughout this book
+in its proper sense of “turning point” or “moment of change” and <em>not</em> in the loose sense of “period”
+which it has acquired.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">[37]</a> <cite lang="de">Und Afrika Sprach</cite> (1912); <cite lang="de">Paideuma, Umrisse einer Kultur- und Seelenlehre</cite>
+ (1920). Frobenius
+distinguishes three ages.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">[38]</a>
+ This work appeared before the discovery of the Sumerian (or Pre-Sumerian) tombs of Ur.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">[39]</a> See Vol. I, p. 108.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">[40]</a> Goethe, in his little essay “<cite lang="de">Geistesepochen</cite>,” has characterized the four parts of a Culture—its
+preliminary, early, late, and civilized stages—with such a depth of insight that even to-day there is
+nothing to add. See the tables at the end of Vol. I, which agree with this exactly.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">[41]</a> Another blank is the history of the countryside or landscape (i.e., of the soil, with its plant-mantle
+and its weathering) in which man’s history has been staged for five thousand years. And
+yet man has so painfully wrested himself from the history of the landscape, and withal is so held
+to it still by myriad fibres, that without it life, soul, and thought are inconceivable.</p>
+
+<p>So far as concerns the South-European field, from the end of the Ice Age, a hitherto rank
+luxuriance gradually gave place in the plant-world to poverty. In the course of the successive
+Egyptian, Classical, Arabian, and Western Cultures, a climatic change developed all around the
+Mediterranean, which resulted in the peasant’s being compelled to fight no longer <em>against</em> the plant-world,
+but <em>for</em> it—first against the primeval forest and then against the desert. In Hannibal’s
+time the Sahara lay very far indeed to the south of Carthage, but to-day it already penetrates to
+northern Spain and Italy. Where was it in the days of the pyramid-builders, who depicted sylvan
+and hunting scenes in their reliefs? When the Spaniards expelled the Moriscos, their countryside of
+woods and ploughland, already only artificially maintained, lost its character altogether, and the
+towns became oases in the waste. In the Roman period such a result could not have ensued.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">[42]</a> The new method of comparative morphology affords us a safe test of the datings which have
+been arrived at by other means for the beginnings of past Cultures. The same kind of argument
+which would prevent us, even in the absence of positive information, from dating Goethe’s birth
+more than a century earlier than the “<i lang="de">Urfaust</i>,” or supposing the career of Alexander the Great to
+have been that of an elderly man, enables us to demonstrate, from the individual characteristics of
+their political life and the spirit of their art, thought, and religion, that the Egyptian Culture dawned
+somewhere about 3000 and the Chinese about 1400. The calculations of French investigators and
+more recently of Borchardt (<cite lang="de">Die Annalen und die zeitliche Festlegung des Alten Reiches</cite>, 1919) are as unsound
+intrinsically as those of Chinese historians for the legendary Hsia and Shang dynasties.
+Equally, it is impossible that the Egyptian calendar should have been introduced in 4241 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> As
+in every chronology we have to allow that evolution has been accompanied by radical calendar
+changes, the attempt to fix the exact starting-date <i lang="la">a posteriori</i> is objectless.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">[43]</a> Eduard Meyer (<cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Altertums</cite>, III, 97) estimates the Persians, probably too highly, at
+half a million as against the fifty millions of the Babylonian Empire. The numerical relation between
+the Germanic peoples and legions of the third-century Roman emperors and the Roman population
+as a whole, and that of the Ptolemaic and Roman armies to that of the Egyptian people, was
+of much the same order.</p>
+
+<p>[H. Delbrück, in his well-known <cite lang="de">Gesch. der Kriegskunst</cite> (1908), Vol. I, Part I, chapter i, and elsewhere,
+deals in considerable detail with the strengths of ancient armies.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="label">[44]</a> <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 378. See C. W. C. Oman, <cite>History of the Art of War: Middle Ages</cite>
+ (1898), ch. i; H. Delbrück,
+<cite lang="de">Gesch. der Kriegskunst</cite>, Vol. II, book I, ch. x, and book II.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_45" href="#FNanchor_45" class="label">[45]</a> In the case of Rome, the idea of a fixed frontier against the barbarian emerged soon after the
+defeat of Varus, and the fortifications of the Limes were laid down before the close of the first
+century of our era.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_46" href="#FNanchor_46" class="label">[46]</a> For at that time imperialistic tendencies found expression even in India, in the Maurya and
+Sunga dynasty; these, however, could only be confused and ineffective, Indian nature being what
+it was.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_47" href="#FNanchor_47" class="label">[47]</a> Chapters vii-ix below.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_48" href="#FNanchor_48" class="label">[48]</a> On the history of the Avesta see <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed., articles “Zend-Avesta” and “Zoroaster.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_49" href="#FNanchor_49" class="label">[49]</a> Sir Thomas Roe, 1620. A similar mission went to Turkey on the part of Frederick and the
+Bohemian nobles to ask for assistance and to justify to the Turk their action in deposing the Habsburg
+King. The answer they received was what might be expected of a great imperialist power
+asked to intervene in the affairs of lesser neighbours—namely, material guarantees of the reality
+of the movement it was asked to support and pledges that no settlement would be made without
+its agreement.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_50" href="#FNanchor_50" class="label">[50]</a>
+ Mexico City, or, better, the agglomeration of towns and villages in the valley of Mexico.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_51" href="#FNanchor_51" class="label">[51]</a> According to Prescott, Cortez’s force on landing had thirteen hand firearms and fourteen
+cannon, great and small, altogether. The whole of these were lost in the first defeat at Mexico.
+Later a pure accident gave Cortez the contents of a supply-ship from Europe. In a military sense
+horses contributed to the Spanish victories nearly if not quite as much as firearms, but these, too,
+were in small numbers, sixteen at the outset.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_52" href="#FNanchor_52" class="label">[52]</a> The following attempt is based upon the data of two American works—L. Spence, <cite>The Civilization
+of Ancient Mexico</cite> (Cambridge, 1912); and H. J. Spinden, <cite>Maya Art: Its Subject matter and Historical
+Development</cite> (Cambridge, 1913)—which independently of one another attempt to work
+out the chronology and which reach a certain measure of agreement.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_53" href="#FNanchor_53" class="label">[53]</a> Since the publication of the German original, Spinden’s further researches (<cite>Ancient Civilizations
+of Mexico</cite>) have placed the historical zero date at 613 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> (and the cosmological zero of back-reckoning
+at 3373 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>). This historical zero seems to lie deep in the pre-Cultural period, if later events have
+the dates given in the text. But compare Author’s note on p. 39.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_54" href="#FNanchor_54" class="label">[54]</a> These are the names of near-by villages serving as labels; the true names are lost.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_55" href="#FNanchor_55" class="label">[55]</a> And was there an element of <i lang="la">panem et circenses</i> in the mass-sacrifice of captives? May it be that
+the acceptance of the Spaniard as the expected manifestation of the god Quetzalcoatl (“<i lang="la">redeunt Saturnia
+regna</i>”), and the serious disputations on matters of religion that took place between Montezuma
+and the Christians, were presages of the phase which Spengler calls the “Second Religiousness”
+(see below, <a href="#p310">p. 310</a>) of the Civilization?—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_56" href="#FNanchor_56" class="label">[56]</a> “<cite lang="de">Zur Theorie und Methodik der Geschichte</cite>” (<cite lang="de">Kleine Schriften</cite>,
+ 1910), which is by far the best
+piece of historical philosophy ever written by an opponent of all philosophy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_57" href="#FNanchor_57" class="label">[57]</a> Varus’s disaster in the Teutoburger Wald.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_58" href="#FNanchor_58" class="label">[58]</a> The Japanese belonged formerly to the Chinese Civilization and again belong to a Civilization—the
+Western—to-day. A Japanese Culture in the genuine sense there has never been. Japanese
+Americanism must, therefore, be judged otherwise than as an outgrowth of what never was
+there.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_59" href="#FNanchor_59" class="label">[59]</a> <cite lang="de">Cæsars Monarchie und das Principat des Pompejus</cite> (1918) pp. 501, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_60" href="#FNanchor_60" class="label">[60]</a>
+ I.e., that sensation consists in the absorption of small particles radiated by the object.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_61" href="#FNanchor_61" class="label">[61]</a> See Ch. VIII below.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_62" href="#FNanchor_62" class="label">[62]</a> See R. Hirzel, <cite lang="de">Die Person</cite> (1914), p. 7.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_63" href="#FNanchor_63" class="label">[63]</a> L. Wenger, <cite lang="de">Das Recht der Griechen und Römer</cite>
+ (1914), p. 170; R. v. Mayr, <cite lang="de">Römische Rechtsgeschichte</cite>,
+II, 1, p. 87.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_64" href="#FNanchor_64" class="label">[64]</a> A curious sidelight on this appears in the provisions of the savage law against recalcitrant
+debtors, who (after certain delays and formalities) could be put to death and even hewn in pieces
+by their creditors, or—“sold as slaves beyond the Tiber.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_65" href="#FNanchor_65" class="label">[65]</a> A thirteenth-century collection by Eike von Repgow of German customs and customary
+law (ed. K. G. Homeyer, 1861).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_66" href="#FNanchor_66" class="label">[66]</a> And were judged by a different authority, the peregrin prætor.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_67" href="#FNanchor_67" class="label">[67]</a> The “dependence” of Classical law upon Egyptian is, as it chances, still traceable. Solon
+the wholesale merchant introduced into his Attic legislation provisions concerning debt-slavery,
+contract, work-shyness, and unemployment taken from Egypt. Diodorus, I, 77, 79, 94.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_68" href="#FNanchor_68" class="label">[68]</a> The process is clearly explained in Goudy’s article “Roman Law,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.
+Very roughly, the prætor corresponded to the judge, and the judges to the jury, of modern English
+law, but such a parallel must not be pressed far.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_69" href="#FNanchor_69" class="label">[69]</a> L. Wenger, <cite lang="de">Recht der Griechen und Römer</cite>, pp. 166, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_70" href="#FNanchor_70" class="label">[70]</a> See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed., Vol. XII, p. 502. Fragments of the older collection referred to were found
+in the vicinity.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_71" href="#FNanchor_71" class="label">[71]</a> In English legal theory the judge does not <em>make law</em>
+ by a new decision, but <em>“declares” the law</em>—i.e.,
+makes explicit what has been implicit in the law from the first, though the occasion for its
+manifestation has not hitherto arisen.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_72" href="#FNanchor_72" class="label">[72]</a> See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., Vol XXVI, p. 315.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_73" href="#FNanchor_73" class="label">[73]</a> See Beloch, <cite lang="de">Griechische Geschichte</cite>, I, 1, p. 350.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_74" href="#FNanchor_74" class="label">[74]</a> The background of this is Etruscan law, the primitive form of the Roman. Rome was an
+Etruscan city.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_75" href="#FNanchor_75" class="label">[75]</a> Busolt, <cite lang="de">Griechische Staatskunde</cite>, p. 528.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_76" href="#FNanchor_76" class="label">[76]</a> Compare the famous ironical judgment of Mr. Justice Maule which led to the reform of the
+divorce laws in England (1857): “... It is true that the course which you should legally have
+taken would have cost you many hundreds of pounds, whereas probably you have not as many
+pence. <em>But the Law knows no distinction between rich and poor.</em>”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_77" href="#FNanchor_77" class="label">[77]</a> What is important to us, therefore, in the Law of the Twelve Tables is not the supposed contents
+(of which scarcely an authentic clause survived even in Cicero’s day), but the political act
+of codification itself, the tendency of which corresponded to that of the overthrow of the Tarquinian
+Tyrannis by senatorial Oligarchy—a success which, now endangered, it was sought to stabilize
+for the future. The text which schoolboys learned in detail in Cæsar’s time must have had the
+same destiny as the consular lists of the old time, in which had been interpolated names upon names
+of families whose wealth and influence was of much later origin. In recent years Pais and Lambert
+have disputed the whole story of the Twelve Tables, and so far as concerns the authenticity of the
+reputed text, they may well be right—not so, however, as regards the course of political events in
+the years about 450.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_78" href="#FNanchor_78" class="label">[78]</a> Only half a century separates the traditional dates of these events (509, 451), in spite of the
+wealth of traditional history afterwards attached to the period. The “coup,” in the case of the
+Decemvirs, was the capture by the patricians of a machine set up for the redress of plebeian grievances.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_79" href="#FNanchor_79" class="label">[79]</a> Cf. Ch. IV below.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_80" href="#FNanchor_80" class="label">[80]</a> Sohm, <cite lang="de">Institutionen</cite> (14) p. 101. [This is the edict of “Julian” (Salvius Julianus, urban prætor).
+Romanists are not agreed as to how far, if at all, it included material derived from the decisions
+of the peregrin prætor. See Professor Goudy’s article “Roman Law,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.,
+p. 563.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_81" href="#FNanchor_81" class="label">[81]</a> Lenel, <cite>Das Edictum perpetuum</cite> (1907); L. Wenger, p. 168.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_82" href="#FNanchor_82" class="label">[82]</a> Even the multiplication table of the children assumes the elements of dynamics in counting.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_83" href="#FNanchor_83" class="label">[83]</a> V. Mayr, II, 1, p. 85; Sohm, p. 105.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_84" href="#FNanchor_84" class="label">[84]</a> <cite lang="de">Enzyklopädie der Rechtswissensch.</cite>, I, 357.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_85" href="#FNanchor_85" class="label">[85]</a> Egyptian law of the Hyksos period, and Chinese of the Period of Contending States, in contrast
+to the Classical and the Indian law of the Dharmasutras, must have been built up on basic ideas quite
+other than the idea of the corporeality of persons and things. It would be a grand emancipation from
+the load of Roman “antiquities” if German research were to succeed in establishing these.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_86" href="#FNanchor_86" class="label">[86]</a> Sohm, p. 220.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_87" href="#FNanchor_87" class="label">[87]</a> Acts XV. Herein lies the germ of the idea of a Church law.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_88" href="#FNanchor_88" class="label">[88]</a> For Islam as a “juristic person” see M. Horten, <cite lang="de">Die religiöse Gedankenwelt des Volkes im heutigen
+Islam</cite> (1917), p. xxiv.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_89" href="#FNanchor_89" class="label">[89]</a> See Ch. VII below. We can venture to make the label so positive because the adherents of all
+the Late Classical cults were bound together in devout consensus, just as the primitive Christian
+communities were.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_90" href="#FNanchor_90" class="label">[90]</a> The Persian Church came into the Classical field only in the Classical form of Mithraism,
+which was assimilable in the ensemble of Syncretism.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_91" href="#FNanchor_91" class="label">[91]</a> It is difficult to describe this class in a few words. Roughly, they (and the “Junian Latins,”
+so called, who were excepted with them) represented a stratum of Roman society, largely composed
+of “undesirables,” which was only just not servile. In the older legislation they were necessarily
+lumped with the outer world as peregrins, but when Caracalla made this outer world
+“Roman,” there were obvious reasons against bringing these people into the fold as well. In somewhat
+the same way the word “outsider” is used in colloquial English with the dual meaning of a
+foreigner or non-member, and a socially undesirable person.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_92" href="#FNanchor_92" class="label">[92]</a> In the Twelve Tables <i lang="la">connubium</i> was disallowed even between the patrician and plebian citizens
+of Rome itself. [The hold of the patricians on this privilege, however, was already exceedingly
+precarious, and it vanished a few years later in the <i lang="la">lex Canuleia</i>.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_93" href="#FNanchor_93" class="label">[93]</a> Cf. Ch. VI below.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_94" href="#FNanchor_94" class="label">[94]</a> Lenel, I, 380.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_95" href="#FNanchor_95" class="label">[95]</a> Here, as in every line of the history of the “Pseudomorphosis,” we are reminded of Christ’s
+parable of new wine and old bottles (Matt. ix, 17), an expression not of mere abstract shrewdness,
+as it seems to us now, but of intense living force and even passion. It is only one short verse, not
+obligatory in its context, but leaping out of depths.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_96" href="#FNanchor_96" class="label">[96]</a> As long ago as 1891 Mitteis (<cite lang="de">Reichsrecht und Volksrecht</cite>, p. 13) drew attention to the Oriental
+vein in Constantine’s legislation. Collinet (<cite lang="fr">Études historiques sur le droit de Justinien I</cite>, 1912), chiefly
+on the basis of German researches, throws an immense amount back on Hellenistic law; but how
+much, after all, of this “Hellenistic” was really Greek and not merely written in Greek? The
+results of interpolation-research have proved truly devastating for the “Classical spirit” in Justinian’s
+Digests.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_97" href="#FNanchor_97" class="label">[97]</a> See Ch. VII below.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_98" href="#FNanchor_98" class="label">[98]</a> Coupled with the destruction of all other documents.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_99" href="#FNanchor_99" class="label">[99]</a> Fromer, <cite lang="de">Der Talmud</cite> (1920), p. 190. [The English student will find a fairly full account of
+the main groups of Jewish literature in the article “Hebrew Literature” and cognate articles in
+the <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_100" href="#FNanchor_100" class="label">[100]</a> Mitteis (<cite lang="de">Röm. Privatrecht bis auf die Zeit Dioklezians</cite> (1908), preface) remarks how, “while
+the ancient law-forms were retained, the law itself nevertheless became something quite different.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_101" href="#FNanchor_101" class="label">[101]</a> Head of the exilic Jews under Persian overlordship.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_102" href="#FNanchor_102" class="label">[102]</a> Mayr, IV, pp. 45, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_103" href="#FNanchor_103" class="label">[103]</a> Hence the fictitious names of authors on innumerable books in every Arabian literature—Dionysius
+the Areopagite, Pythagoras, Hermes Trismegistus, Hippocrates, Enoch, Baruch, Daniel,
+Solomon, the Apostle-names attached to the numerous gospels and apocalypses.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_104" href="#FNanchor_104" class="label">[104]</a> For example, Hebrew was supplanted by Aramaic for all ordinary purposes as early as the
+Maccabees—and to such an extent that in the synagogues the Scriptures had to be translated for
+the people—but has held its ground as a religious vehicle, and above all as a script, even to this
+day. (The present use of a <em>spoken</em> Hebrew represents a revival in more recent times, after the wider
+dispersion of the early Middle Ages had broken the connexion with the Aramaic lands.) In the
+Persian field the older Zend survived alongside the newer Pehlevi. In Egypt somewhat similar influences
+were contemporaneously determining the evolution of popular Demotic and official Greek
+into the Coptic language with Greek characters.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_105" href="#FNanchor_105" class="label">[105]</a> M. Horten, <cite lang="de">D. rel. Gedankenwelt d. Volkes im heut. Islam</cite>,
+ p. xvi. Cf. Chapter VII below.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_106" href="#FNanchor_106" class="label">[106]</a> Mayr, IV, 45, et seq. [<cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., Vol. XXIII, p. 570.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_107" href="#FNanchor_107" class="label">[107]</a> 471. See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed., article “Chalcedon, Council of,” and references therein.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_108" href="#FNanchor_108" class="label">[108]</a> Wenger, p. 180.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_109" href="#FNanchor_109" class="label">[109]</a> Krumbacher, <cite lang="de">Byzantinische Literatur-Geschichte</cite>, p. 606.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_110" href="#FNanchor_110" class="label">[110]</a> Sachau, <cite lang="de">Syrische Rechtsbücher</cite>, Vol. III.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_111" href="#FNanchor_111" class="label">[111]</a> Bertholet, <cite lang="de">Kulturgeschichte Israels</cite>, pp. 200, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_112" href="#FNanchor_112" class="label">[112]</a> We get a hint of this in the famous code of Hammurabi, though unfortunately we cannot tell
+in what relation this single work stood, in point of intrinsic importance, to the general level of
+contemporary jurisprudence in the Babylonian world.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_113" href="#FNanchor_113" class="label">[113]</a> See Professor Maitland’s article “English Law” in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed., Vol. IX.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_114" href="#FNanchor_114" class="label">[114]</a> Sohm, <cite>Inst.</cite>, p. 156.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_115" href="#FNanchor_115" class="label">[115]</a> See J. Janssen, <cite>Hist. German People at the End of the Middle Ages</cite>,
+ English translation, Book IV,
+Ch. I-II.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_116" href="#FNanchor_116" class="label">[116]</a> Lend, I, p. 395.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_117" href="#FNanchor_117" class="label">[117]</a> The punning contrast of Lombard <i lang="la">faex</i> (excrement) and Roman <i lang="la">lex</i>
+ is Huguccio’s (1200).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_118" href="#FNanchor_118" class="label">[118]</a> W. Goetz, <cite lang="de">Arch. für Kulturgeschichte</cite>, 10, 28, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_119" href="#FNanchor_119" class="label">[119]</a> See the article “Canon Law” in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_120" href="#FNanchor_120" class="label">[120]</a> See Sohm’s last work, <cite lang="de">Das altkatholische Kirchenrecht und das Dekret Gratians</cite>
+ (1918).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_121" href="#FNanchor_121" class="label">[121]</a> See Ch. VII below.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_122" href="#FNanchor_122" class="label">[122]</a> See Ch. X below.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_123" href="#FNanchor_123" class="label">[123]</a> The permanently valid element in English law is the constant <em>form</em>
+ of an incessant <em>development</em>
+by the courts.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_124" href="#FNanchor_124" class="label">[124]</a> If the higher courts alone are meant, the number is well below fifty for England and Wales.
+Scots law is independent of English and has its own jurisprudence.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_125" href="#FNanchor_125" class="label">[125]</a> <cite>Inst.</cite>, p. 170.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_126" href="#FNanchor_126" class="label">[126]</a> Similar problems are now (1927) arising in connexion with radio broadcasting.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_127" href="#FNanchor_127" class="label">[127]</a> <cite lang="de">Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch</cite>, § 90.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_128" href="#FNanchor_128" class="label">[128]</a> As evidenced in terms of French law like “<i lang="fr">Société anonyme</i>,” “<i lang="fr">raison sociale</i>,”
+ “<i lang="fr">personne juridique</i>.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_129" href="#FNanchor_129" class="label">[129]</a> Note, in this connexion, the remarkable development in modern American industry of a professional
+managerial class, distinct from the capitalist, the technician, and the “worker.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_130" href="#FNanchor_130" class="label">[130]</a> Published 1857. English translation, 1872.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_131" href="#FNanchor_131" class="label">[131]</a> Without Alexander, and even before him, for Alexander neither kindled nor spread that light;
+he did not lead, but followed its path to the East.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_132" href="#FNanchor_132" class="label">[132]</a> See G. Glotz’s recent work <cite lang="fr">La Civilisation égéenne</cite>,
+ 1923 (English translation, 1927).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_133" href="#FNanchor_133" class="label">[133]</a> This is now recognized by art-research; cf. Salis, <cite lang="de">Die Kunst der Griechen</cite>
+ (1919), pp. 3, et seq.;
+H. Th. Bosser, <cite lang="de">Alt-Kreta</cite> (1921), introduction.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_134" href="#FNanchor_134" class="label">[134]</a> D. Fimmen, <cite lang="de">Die kretisch-mykenische Kultur</cite> (1921), p. 210.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_135" href="#FNanchor_135" class="label">[135]</a> Dehio, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. deutsch. Kunst</cite> (1919), pp. 16, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_136" href="#FNanchor_136" class="label">[136]</a> Dieterich, <cite lang="de">Byzant. Charakterköpfe</cite>, pp. 136, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_137" href="#FNanchor_137" class="label">[137]</a> Even admitting within itself the animals of its fields.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_138" href="#FNanchor_138" class="label">[138]</a> Dehio, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. deutschen Kunst</cite> (1919), pp. 13, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_139" href="#FNanchor_139" class="label">[139]</a> Eduard Meyer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Altertums</cite>, I, p. 188.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_140" href="#FNanchor_140" class="label">[140]</a> The English parallel is Winchester.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_141" href="#FNanchor_141" class="label">[141]</a> The phenomenon is perhaps too well known in our days to need exemplification. But it is
+worth while recalling that the usual form of disgrace for a minister or courtier of the seventeenth
+or eighteenth century was to be commanded to “retire to his estates,” and that a student expelled
+from the universities is said to be “rusticated.” Since this volume was written, a remarkable proof
+of the reality of this spiritual indrawing by the Megalopolis has been given by the swift spread of
+radio broadcasting over the West-European and American world. For the country-dweller, radio
+reception means intimate touch with the news, the thought, and the entertainment of the great
+city, and relieves the <em>grievance</em> of “isolation” that the older country-folk would never have felt
+as a grievance at all.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_142" href="#FNanchor_142" class="label">[142]</a> In the case of the Venetians the money-outlook was already potent during the earlier Crusades.
+But the fact that their financial exploitation of the great religious adventure was regarded as scandalous
+indicates sufficiently that the rural world of the West was not yet face to face with the money-idea.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_143" href="#FNanchor_143" class="label">[143]</a> See Ch. XIII below.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_144" href="#FNanchor_144" class="label">[144]</a> Samarra exhibits, like the Imperial Fora of Rome and the ruins of Luxor, truly American
+proportions. The city stretches for 33 km. [20 miles] along the Tigris. The Balkuwara Palace,
+which the Caliph Mutawakil built for one of his sons, forms a square of 1250 m. [say, three-quarters
+of a mile] on each side. One of the giant mosques measures in plan 260 × 180 m. [858 × 594 ft.].
+Schwarz, <cite lang="de">Die Abbasidenresidenz Samarra</cite> (1910); Herzfeld, <cite lang="de">Ausgrabungen von Samarra</cite> (1912). [Pataliputra,
+in the days of Chandragupta and Asoka, measured <i lang="la">intra muros</i> 10 miles × 2 miles (equal to
+Manhattan Island or London along the Thames from Greenwich to Richmond).—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_145" href="#FNanchor_145" class="label">[145]</a> Karlsruhe, with its fan-scheme, and Mannheim, with its rectangles, are earlier than Washington.
+But both are small places. The one is a sort of extension of the prince’s Rococo park and
+centred on his <i lang="fr">point de vue</i>; the other, though its block-numbering, unique in Europe, seems to
+relate it to the American city, was really planned as a self-contained military capital, rectangular
+only within its oval enceinte, whereas the American rectangles are meant to be added to. The layout
+of Petersburg by Peter the Great (which has been adhered to to this day and is still incompletely
+filled in in detail) is a much more forcible example of the arbitrary planning of a megalopolis.
+Though outside the “European” world, it is of it, for it was the visible symbol of Peter’s will to
+force Europe upon Russia. It is contemporary with Mannheim and Karlsruhe (early eighteenth
+century), but its creator conceived of it as a city <em>of the future</em>.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_146" href="#FNanchor_146" class="label">[146]</a> In the case of Canada, not merely great regions, but the <em>whole country</em>
+ has been picketed out in
+equal rectangles for future development.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_147" href="#FNanchor_147" class="label">[147]</a> It has been left to the <em>Western</em> Civilization of present-day Rome to build the garden suburbs
+that the Classical Civilization could have built.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_148" href="#FNanchor_148" class="label">[148]</a> Friedländer, <cite lang="de">Sittengeschichte Roms</cite>, I, p. 5. Compare this with Samarra, which had nothing
+like this population. The “Late Classical city on Arabian soil was un-Classical in this respect
+as in others. The garden suburb of Antioch was renowned throughout the East.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_149" href="#FNanchor_149" class="label">[149]</a> The city which the Egyptian “Julian the Apostate,” Amenophis IV (Akhenaton) built himself
+in Tell-el-Amarna had streets up to 45 m. [149 ft.] wide.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_150" href="#FNanchor_150" class="label">[150]</a> Pöhlmann, <cite lang="de">Aus Altertum und Gegenwart</cite> (1910), pp. 211, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_151" href="#FNanchor_151" class="label">[151]</a> Some years ago a French peasant was brought to notice whose family had occupied its glebe
+since the ninth century.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_152" href="#FNanchor_152" class="label">[152]</a> Shaw, <cite>The Quintessence of Ibsen</cite>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_153" href="#FNanchor_153" class="label">[153]</a> An ancient Hindu materialism.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_154" href="#FNanchor_154" class="label">[154]</a> For what follows see Eduard Meyer, <cite lang="de">Kl. Schriften</cite> (1910), pp. 145, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_155" href="#FNanchor_155" class="label">[155]</a> <cite>Hist. Nat.</cite>, XVIII, 7.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_156" href="#FNanchor_156" class="label">[156]</a>
+ We know of measures to promote increase of population in China in the third century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>,
+precisely the Augustan Age of Chinese evolution. See Rosthorn, <cite lang="de">Das soziale Leben der Chinesen</cite> (1919),
+p. 6.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_157" href="#FNanchor_157" class="label">[157]</a> The <i>amphitheatres</i>
+ of Nîmes and Arles were filled up by mean townlets that used the outer wall
+as their fortifications.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_158" href="#FNanchor_158" class="label">[158]</a> Strabo, Pausanias, Dio Chrysostom, Avienus, etc. See E. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Kl. Schriften</cite>,
+ pp. 164, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_159" href="#FNanchor_159" class="label">[159]</a> The Colosseum of Rome itself in due course fell into this decay and we read in the guide-books
+that “its flora were once famous”—420 wild species lived in its ruins. If this could happen in
+Rome, we need not be surprised at the quick, almost catastrophic, conquest of the Maya cities by
+tropical vegetation.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_160" href="#FNanchor_160" class="label">[160]</a> According to the researches of K. Sethe. Cf. Robert Eisler, <cite lang="de">Die kenitischen Weihinschriften der
+Hyksoszeit</cite>, etc. (1919).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_161" href="#FNanchor_161" class="label">[161]</a> Henceforward, and indeed throughout this work, the word “language” is not to be regarded
+as limited to spoken and written language. As the above definition indicates, it includes all
+modes of intelligible conscious-expression—“affective language” in the widest sense.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_162" href="#FNanchor_162" class="label">[162]</a> Obviously, Totemistic facts, so far as they come under the observation of the waking-consciousness,
+obtain a significance of the Taboo kind also; much in man’s sexual life, for example,
+is performed with a profound sense of fear, because his will-to-understand is baffled by it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_163" href="#FNanchor_163" class="label">[163]</a> W. von Humboldt (<cite lang="de">Über die Verschiedenheit des menschlichen Sprachbaues</cite>)
+ was the first to emphasize
+the fact that a language is not a thing, but an activity. “If we would be quite precise, we
+can certainly say <em>there is no such thing as ‘language,’</em> just as there is no such thing as ‘intellect’; but
+man does speak, and does act intellectually.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_164" href="#FNanchor_164" class="label">[164]</a> Hans Friedrich Schinkel (1781–1841), architect of the Opera House, the Altes Museum, and the
+Königswache of Berlin. Gottfried Schadow (1764–1850), sculptor (statues of Frederick II, Zieten,
+etc.; Quadriga of Brandenburger Tor), a classicist <i lang="fr">malgré lui</i> (not to be confused with two other
+artists of the same name, quasi-contemporaries).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_165" href="#FNanchor_165" class="label">[165]</a> See <a href="#p29">p. 29</a> above.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_166" href="#FNanchor_166" class="label">[166]</a> <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Deutsch. Kunst</cite> (1919), pp. 14, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_167" href="#FNanchor_167" class="label">[167]</a> This practice of inscription survives till deep into the Civilization. Even in 1914 the guns
+of the German Army, true products of the advanced machine-shop though they were, carried a Latin
+threat to the foe. From the magic rune of the blade it is a step to the motto on the shield, and
+then to the motto alone as unity-charm of the regiment or the Order.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_168" href="#FNanchor_168" class="label">[168]</a> W. Altmann, <cite lang="de">Die ital. Rundbauten</cite> (1906).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_169" href="#FNanchor_169" class="label">[169]</a> A striking case in point is the Roman military camp. See Vol. I (English edition), p. 185,
+foot-note.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_170" href="#FNanchor_170" class="label">[170]</a> Bulle, <cite>Orchomenos</cite>, pp. 26, et seq.; Noack, <cite lang="de">Ovalhaus und Palast in Kreta</cite>,
+ pp. 53, et seq. The
+house-plans still traceable in Latin times in the Ægean and Asia Minor may perhaps allow us to
+order our notions of human conditions in the pre-Classical period; but the linguistic remains, never.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_171" href="#FNanchor_171" class="label">[171]</a> <cite>Medieval Rhodesia</cite> (London, 1906).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_172" href="#FNanchor_172" class="label">[172]</a> Cf. Ch. X.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_173" href="#FNanchor_173" class="label">[173]</a> Though magic or prestige may of course be involved in their ornamentation, these are supervening
+and not radical virtues.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_174" href="#FNanchor_174" class="label">[174]</a> In this connexion it ought to be someone’s business to undertake physiognomic studies upon
+the massy, thoroughly peasantish, Roman busts; the portraits of Early Gothic; those of the Renaissance,
+already visibly urban; and, most of all, the polite English portraiture from the late-eighteenth
+century onward. The great galleries of “ancestors” contain an endless wealth of
+material.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_175" href="#FNanchor_175" class="label">[175]</a> The sudden fear of some animal or object seen, believed to result in her child’s bearing the mark
+of it. Cf. Jacob and the speckled cattle (Genesis xxx, 37). The attitude of biologists to this
+question is not negative, but non-committal.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_176" href="#FNanchor_176" class="label">[176]</a> J. Ranke, <cite lang="de">Der Mensch</cite> (1912), II, p. 205.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_177" href="#FNanchor_177" class="label">[177]</a> This suggestive sentence should, of course, be read with its reservation. The cranial evidences
+of Crete are highly illustrative in this connexion; they would not indeed be trusted by a
+modern historian without weighty collateral evidence, but here this evidence exists. Up to the
+latter part of Middle Minoan, the “long” head predominated heavily, not only from the outset,
+but increasingly as the Culture rose, until it included two-thirds of the whole, intermediates forming
+a quarter and “short” heads a mere handful. But from about the time of the catastrophic fall of
+Late Minoan II, the long heads fall to a startlingly low figure, while intermediates account for
+half, and short heads for more than a third. It marks the end of Minoan Civilization and the coming
+of the Achæans. But just as the Minoan skull held its own throughout the Minoan Age, so
+now, after its fall, the short head maintained itself, as stated in the text, through all subsequent
+vicissitudes, from the “Sea-peoples” through Roman, Arab, and Turk, to this day. Thus the Cretan
+landscape has had two skull-types successively; but the change from one to the other occurred in
+connexion with an immense cataclysm, nothing less than the collapse of a Civilization. The
+rough deduction that seems to emerge from this case is that a great Culture holds its skull, no
+doubt in the course of its striving towards ideal physical type of its own (see <a href="#p127">p. 127</a>), but that where
+that major organism does not exist, the skull endures as the land endures and the peasant endures.
+This applies also to the Alpine region, which has received the deposit of migrations, but has never
+been the centre of a high Culture.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_178" href="#FNanchor_178" class="label">[178]</a> Cf. D. Randall-MacIver, <cite>The Etruscans</cite> (1928), Ch. I.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_179" href="#FNanchor_179" class="label">[179]</a> Art is fully developed in the animals. So far as man can get at it by way of analogy, it consists
+for them in rhythmic movement (“dance”) and sound-formation (“song”). But this is by no
+means the limit of artistic impression <em>on</em> the animal itself.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_180" href="#FNanchor_180" class="label">[180]</a> Jesus says to the Seventy whom he is sending out on mission: “And salute no man on the
+way” (Luke x, 4). The ceremonial of greeting on the high-road is so complicated that people in
+a hurry have to omit it. A. Bertholet, <cite lang="de">Kulturgeschichte Israels</cite> (1919), p. 162.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_181" href="#FNanchor_181" class="label">[181]</a> Exekias—represented in the British Museum by his “Achilles and Penthesilea” (<cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+XI ed., article “Ceramics,” Plate I)—stands at the end of Black Figure as the master of the possibilities
+of refinement in it—on the verge of the style-change to Red Figure, yet apart from it. Sebastian
+Bach is his “contemporary.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_182" href="#FNanchor_182" class="label">[182]</a> “All forms, even those that are most felt, contain an element of untruth” (Goethe). In systematic
+philosophy the intent of the thinker coincides neither with the written words nor with
+the understanding of his readers, as it consists in his thinking meanings into words in the course
+of using the words themselves (<i lang="de">da es ein Denken in Wortbedeutungen ist, im Verlauf der Darstellung mit
+sich selbst</i>).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_183" href="#FNanchor_183" class="label">[183]</a>
+ Jespersen deduces language from poesy, dance, and particularly courtship. <cite>Progress in Language</cite>
+(1894), p. 357.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_184" href="#FNanchor_184" class="label">[184]</a> See Vol. I, p. 80.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_185" href="#FNanchor_185" class="label">[185]</a> Sentence-like complexes of sound are known also to the dog. When the Australian dingo
+reverted from domestication to the wild state, he reverted also from the house-dog’s bark to the
+wolf’s howl—a phenomenon that indicates a transition to very much simpler sound-signs, but
+has nothing to do with “words.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_186" href="#FNanchor_186" class="label">[186]</a> The gesture-languages of to-day (Delbrück, <cite lang="de">Grundfragen d. Sprachforsch.</cite>,
+ pp. 49, et seq., with
+reference to the work of Jorio on the gestures of the Neapolitans) without exception presuppose
+word-language and are completely dependent upon its intellectual systematism. Examples: the
+mimicry of the actor, and the language which the American Indians have formed for themselves
+for the purpose of mutually understanding one another in spite of extreme differences and fluidity
+in the verbal languages of the various tribes. Wundt (<cite lang="de">Völkerpsychologie</cite>, I, p. 212) quotes the following
+to show how complicated sentences can be handled in this language: “White soldiers, led by
+an officer of high rank, but little intelligence, took the Mescalero Indians prisoners.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_187" href="#FNanchor_187" class="label">[187]</a> See Vol. I, p. 172.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_188" href="#FNanchor_188" class="label">[188]</a> The case of voice-differentiations of the same word in Chinese is not analogous. It arose only
+out of scholars’ work in the later phases of the Chinese Civilization as understood in this work.
+And it is a mechanical expedient and not a structural character—i.e., it lacks the <em>polarity</em> mentioned
+in the text. Voice-management distinguishes, not “great” from “small,” but “pig” from “God,”
+“bamboo” from “to dwell.” English students will find a clear and understandable account of this
+and other Chinese differential devices in Karlgren’s little book: <cite>Sound and Symbol in Chinese</cite> (English
+translation, 1923).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_189" href="#FNanchor_189" class="label">[189]</a> Possibly connected with this is the <em>emphatic antithesis</em>
+ characterizing many of our proverbs and
+everyday idioms—e.g., “up hill and down dale” (“<i lang="fr">par monts et vaux</i>,” “<i lang="de">bergauf bergab</i>”), meaning
+hardly more than “everywhere.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_190" href="#FNanchor_190" class="label">[190]</a> <cite lang="de">Die Haupttypen des Sprachbaus</cite>, 1910.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_191" href="#FNanchor_191" class="label">[191]</a> See the article “Bantu Languages,” by Sir H. H. Johnston, <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_192" href="#FNanchor_192" class="label">[192]</a> Even calling something “invisible” is a definition of it under the light-aspect.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_193" href="#FNanchor_193" class="label">[193]</a> Only technics are entirely true, for here the words are merely the key to actuality, and the
+sentences are continually modified until they are, not “truth,” but actuality. A hypothesis claims,
+not rightness, but usefulness.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_194" href="#FNanchor_194" class="label">[194]</a> See <a href="#p29">pp. 29</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_195" href="#FNanchor_195" class="label">[195]</a> The English reader may refer to Karlgren’s <cite>Sound and Symbol in Chinese</cite>, already mentioned,
+for details.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_196" href="#FNanchor_196" class="label">[196]</a> See the article “Indo-European Languages,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_197" href="#FNanchor_197" class="label">[197]</a>
+ Translation, it must be remembered, is normally from older into younger linguistic conditions.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_198" href="#FNanchor_198" class="label">[198]</a> See <a href="#p140">p. 140</a> above.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_199" href="#FNanchor_199" class="label">[199]</a> See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., Vol. XVI, p. 251b.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_200" href="#FNanchor_200" class="label">[200]</a> See the articles “Sanskrit” and “Indo-European Languages,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_201" href="#FNanchor_201" class="label">[201]</a> P. Jensen, <cite lang="de">Sitz. Preuss. Akademie</cite> (1919), pp. 367, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_202" href="#FNanchor_202" class="label">[202]</a> L. Hahn, <cite lang="de">Rom und Romanismus im griech-röm. Osten</cite> (1906).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_203" href="#FNanchor_203" class="label">[203]</a> See the article “Book-keeping” in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_204" href="#FNanchor_204" class="label">[204]</a> Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. des Alt.</cite>, I, §§ 455, 465.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_205" href="#FNanchor_205" class="label">[205]</a> See below.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_206" href="#FNanchor_206" class="label">[206]</a> Radio broadcasting does not controvert this. Its characteristic quality is not (as is often
+supposed) dissemination to vast numbers irrespective of physical distance, but a special intimacy
+of address to the listening individual.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_207" href="#FNanchor_207" class="label">[207]</a> See the article “Semitic Language,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_208" href="#FNanchor_208" class="label">[208]</a> Similarly the modern Jews of the Dispersion write Yiddish, which is a modified German,
+in Hebrew characters.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_209" href="#FNanchor_209" class="label">[209]</a> See Lidzbarski, <cite lang="de">Sitz. Berl. Akad.</cite>
+ (1916), p. 1218. There is plentiful material in M. Miese, <cite lang="de">Die
+Gesetze der Schriftgeschichte</cite> (1919).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_210" href="#FNanchor_210" class="label">[210]</a> P. Kretschmer, in Gercke-Norden, <cite lang="de">Einl. i. d. Altertumswissenschaft</cite>, I, p. 551.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_211" href="#FNanchor_211" class="label">[211]</a> See the articles “Romance Languages” and “Latin Language,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_212" href="#FNanchor_212" class="label">[212]</a> Cf. <a href="#p122">p. 122</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_213" href="#FNanchor_213" class="label">[213]</a> For this reason I am one of those who believe that, even quite late, Etruscan still played a very
+important part in the colleges of the Roman priesthood.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_214" href="#FNanchor_214" class="label">[214]</a> Precisely for this reason it has to be recognized that the Homeric poems, which were first
+fixed in the colonization period, can only give us an urban literary language and not the courtly
+conversation-language in which they were originally declaimed.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_215" href="#FNanchor_215" class="label">[215]</a> So much so that the workers of the great cities call themselves <em>the</em>
+ People, thereby excluding
+the bourgeoisie, with which no community feeling conjoins them. The bourgeoisie of 1789 did exactly
+the same.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_216" href="#FNanchor_216" class="label">[216]</a> The dominant nucleus within the Spartan ensemble.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_217" href="#FNanchor_217" class="label">[217]</a> Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Ursprung und Geschichte der Mormonen</cite>
+ (1912), pp. 128, et seq. [An extended summary
+of Mormon history will be found in the article “Mormons,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_218" href="#FNanchor_218" class="label">[218]</a> Ex-mercenaries of Agathocles, tyrant of Syracuse, who seized and settled in Messina. The
+questions arising out of this act precipitated the First Punic War.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_219" href="#FNanchor_219" class="label">[219]</a>
+ A still more celebrated case is the “ambulatory Polis” formed by Xenophon’s Ten Thousand.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_220" href="#FNanchor_220" class="label">[220]</a> And in numerous Classical instances.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_221" href="#FNanchor_221" class="label">[221]</a> See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., Vol. IX, p. 860.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_222" href="#FNanchor_222" class="label">[222]</a> In Macedonia, in the nineteenth century, Serbs, Bulgars, and Greeks all founded schools for
+the anti-Turkish population. If it happens that a village has been taught Serb, even the next generation
+consists of fanatical Serbs. The present strength of the “nations” is thus merely a consequence
+of previous school-policy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_223" href="#FNanchor_223" class="label">[223]</a>
+ For Beloch’s scepticism concerning the reputed Dorian migration see his <cite lang="de">Griechische Geschichte</cite>,
+I, 2, Section VIII. [A brief account of the question, by J. L. Myres, is in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., article
+“Dorians.”—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_224" href="#FNanchor_224" class="label">[224]</a> C. Mehlis, <cite lang="de">Die Berberfrage</cite> (<cite lang="de">Archiv für Anthropologie</cite>
+ 39, pp. 249, et seq.) where relations between
+North German and Mauretanian ceramics, and even resemblances of toponymy (rivers, mountains)
+are dealt with. The old pyramid buildings of West Africa are closely related, on the one hand,
+to the Nordic dolmens (<i lang="de">Hünengräber</i>) of Holstein and, on the other, to the graves of the Old Kingdom
+(some illustrations in L. Frobenius, <cite lang="de">Der kleinafrikanische Grabbau</cite>, 1916).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_225" href="#FNanchor_225" class="label">[225]</a> <cite lang="de">Die Bevölkerung der griechisch-römischen Welt</cite> (1886).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_226" href="#FNanchor_226" class="label">[226]</a> <cite lang="de">Geschichte der Kriegskunst</cite> (from 1900).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_227" href="#FNanchor_227" class="label">[227]</a> Rameses III, who defeated them, portrayed their expedition in the relief of Medinet Habet.
+W. M. Müller, <cite lang="de">Asien und Europa</cite>, p. 366.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_228" href="#FNanchor_228" class="label">[228]</a> Which, therefore, have discovered for themselves the nonsensical designation “aristocracy
+of intellect” (<i lang="de">Geistesadel</i>).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_229" href="#FNanchor_229" class="label">[229]</a> Although—or should we say “thus”?—Rome accorded citizenship to freedmen, who in
+general were of wholly alien blood, and sons of ex-slaves were admitted to the Senate even by Appius
+Claudius the Censor in 310. One of them, Flavius, had already been curule ædile.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_230" href="#FNanchor_230" class="label">[230]</a> See articles “Persia (history: ancient),” “Behistun,” “Cuneiform,” in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.,
+or indeed almost any work upon Babylonian and Persian antiquities.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_231" href="#FNanchor_231" class="label">[231]</a> Sworn by Louis the German and Charles the Bald in both languages. The manuscript of
+the oath, however, is later—say, 950.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_232" href="#FNanchor_232" class="label">[232]</a> “<i lang="de">Die ältesten datierten Zeugnisse der iranischen Sprache</i>” (<cite lang="de">Zeitschr. f. vgl. Sprachf.</cite>
+ 42, p. 26.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_233" href="#FNanchor_233" class="label">[233]</a> See above, <a href="#p145">p. 145</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_234" href="#FNanchor_234" class="label">[234]</a> Ed. Meyer, op. cit., pp. 1, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_235" href="#FNanchor_235" class="label">[235]</a> Compare the absorption of the Norman conquerors into England and the subsequent development
+of an English aristocracy.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_236" href="#FNanchor_236" class="label">[236]</a> For what follows, cf. Ch. VII-IX.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_237" href="#FNanchor_237" class="label">[237]</a> <cite lang="de">Geschichte des Altertums</cite>, I, § 590, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_238" href="#FNanchor_238" class="label">[238]</a> Andreas and Wackernagel, <cite lang="de">Nachrichten der Göttingischen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften</cite>
+ (1911),
+p. 1, et seq. [On the subject generally, see articles by K. Geldner, “Zend-Avesta” and “Zoroaster,”
+and by Ed. Meyer, “Parthia,” in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_239" href="#FNanchor_239" class="label">[239]</a> See, further, below.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_240" href="#FNanchor_240" class="label">[240]</a> Dynasty I.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_241" href="#FNanchor_241" class="label">[241]</a> Albertus Magnus; St. Thomas Aquinas; Grosseteste, and Roger Bacon.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_242" href="#FNanchor_242" class="label">[242]</a> Cf. <a href="#p105">p. 105</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_243" href="#FNanchor_243" class="label">[243]</a> Cf. Ch. X.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_244" href="#FNanchor_244" class="label">[244]</a> See <a href="#p60">p. 60</a> above. The slave did not belong to the nation. On this account the enrolment
+of non-citizens in the army of a city, which on occasions of dire crisis was inevitable, was always
+felt as a profound blow to the national idea.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_245" href="#FNanchor_245" class="label">[245]</a> Even in the Iliad we can perceive the tendency to the nation-feeling in the small, and even
+the smallest, aggregates.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_246" href="#FNanchor_246" class="label">[246]</a> And she had rarely to deal with anything more formidable than a loose partial confederacy.
+Often Etruscan cities were in alliance with Rome against other Etruscan cities.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_247" href="#FNanchor_247" class="label">[247]</a> It is not to be overlooked that both Plato and Aristotle in their political writings were unable
+to conceive of the ideal people otherwise than in the Polis form. But it was equally natural for the
+eighteenth-century thinkers to regard “the Ancients” as nations after the fashion of Shaftesbury
+and Montesquieu—it is <em>we</em> their successors who ought not to have stayed on that note.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_248" href="#FNanchor_248" class="label">[248]</a> Mommsen described the Roman Empire as a “universal Empire founded upon municipal autonomy.”
+And even Alexander’s empire was originally conceived, and to a great extent actually
+organized, in this spirit. See P. Jouguet, <cite lang="fr">L’Impérialisme macédonien</cite> (1926), Ch. IV.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_249" href="#FNanchor_249" class="label">[249]</a> See <a href="#p67">p. 67</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_250" href="#FNanchor_250" class="label">[250]</a> F. N. Finck, <cite lang="de">Die Sprachstämme des Erdkreises</cite> (1915), pp. 29, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_251" href="#FNanchor_251" class="label">[251]</a> About the end of the second century of our era.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_252" href="#FNanchor_252" class="label">[252]</a> See foot-note, <a href="#p197">p. 197</a>, et seq.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_253" href="#FNanchor_253" class="label">[253]</a> A loose group of Edomite tribes which, with Moabites, Amalekites, Ishmaelites, and others,
+thus constituted a fairly uniform Hebrew-speaking population.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_254" href="#FNanchor_254" class="label">[254]</a> See <a href="#p167">p. 167</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_255" href="#FNanchor_255" class="label">[255]</a> Aristotle says that “philosophers are called Calani among the Indians, and Jews among
+the Syrians.” Exactly the same is stated by Megasthenes, the Seleucid ambassador at Pataliputra,
+of Brahmins and Jews.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_256" href="#FNanchor_256" class="label">[256]</a> The district south of Lake Van, of which the capital was Arbela, the old home of the goddess
+Ishtar.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_257" href="#FNanchor_257" class="label">[257]</a> As evidenced by the Falasha, the black Jews of Abyssinia.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_258" href="#FNanchor_258" class="label">[258]</a> <cite lang="de">Arch. f. Anthrop.</cite>, Vol. XIX.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_259" href="#FNanchor_259" class="label">[259]</a> <cite lang="de">Zeitschr. f. Ethnol.</cite> (1919).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_260" href="#FNanchor_260" class="label">[260]</a> <i>Digesta</i>, 50, 15.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_261" href="#FNanchor_261" class="label">[261]</a> Geffcken, <cite lang="de">Der Ausgang des griech.-röm. Heidentum</cite> (1920), p. 57 [English readers may refer to
+the article “Neoplatonism” and shorter articles under the personal names, in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_262" href="#FNanchor_262" class="label">[262]</a> See Vol. I, pp. 63, 71.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_263" href="#FNanchor_263" class="label">[263]</a>
+ Which we translate by “Gentiles,” but which literally means “the nations” or “peoples.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_264" href="#FNanchor_264" class="label">[264]</a> See the article “Nestorians,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_265" href="#FNanchor_265" class="label">[265]</a> See the articles “Jews” (§ 43), “Exilarch,” and “Gaon,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI. ed. In Europe, too,
+far into the Dispersion, there are rabbis recognized by the State as governors of their communities,
+such as the famous Rabbi Löw of Prague (1513–1609).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_266" href="#FNanchor_266" class="label">[266]</a> It may not be at all fanciful to connect the Reception of “Roman” law in Germany and the
+rise of the doctrine of <i lang="la">cujus regio, ejus religio</i> which played so great a part in the religious wars and
+treaties of our sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. At any rate, “practical politics” so-called provides
+an inadequate motive by itself to account for the latter. Considering it in contrast to the
+notion of Mortmain, and having regard to the intensity of religious belief in many of the princes
+who applied it, the idea appears as something much more positive than a mere formula of compromise.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_267" href="#FNanchor_267" class="label">[267]</a> See <a href="#p70">p. 70</a>. The “capitulations” under which until recently Europeans were exempt from
+the jurisdiction of Turkish courts are regarded nowadays as a right enforced by more civilized powers
+to protect their subjects from the laws of a less civilized state, and their abolition is a symbol
+of the rise of the latter to the rank of a civilized power. But originally it was quite the reverse.
+The first “capitulation” was sued for by France in an hour of danger when Turkish aid was essential
+to her. See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., article “Capitulations.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_268" href="#FNanchor_268" class="label">[268]</a> See Vol. I., p. 212.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_269" href="#FNanchor_269" class="label">[269]</a> The author’s meaning may perhaps be precised thus: so much of the old Magian nations as
+was not Arabized became fellah peoples, either outside the Magian sphere (as in Europe and India)
+or within it, under the Turkish (Mongol) domination, but even the old Arab-element itself was
+largely ripe for the change into the fellah condition when the Turks came.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_270" href="#FNanchor_270" class="label">[270]</a> I am convinced that the nations of China which sprang up in members in the middle, Hwang-Ho
+region at the beginning of the Chóu dynasty, as also the regional peoples of the Egyptian Old
+Kingdom (which had each its own capital and its own religion, and as late as Roman times fought
+each other in definitely religious wars), were in their inward form more closely akin to the peoples
+of the West than to those of the Classical and the Arabian worlds. However, research into such
+fields has hitherto been conspicuous by its absence.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_271" href="#FNanchor_271" class="label">[271]</a> That the dynasts themselves have contributed heavily to the catalogue of perjury and bad faith
+only reinforces the argument.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_272" href="#FNanchor_272" class="label">[272]</a> His desertion of the emperor Frederick Barbarossa in the Lombard war, 1176. The details of
+the long struggle between Frederick and Henry will be found in any fairly full history of Europe
+or in the respective articles devoted to them in the <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed. While Frederick stood—and
+with real hopes as well as ideals—for the inclusive Empire, Henry through all his vicissitudes stood
+for Germany’s eastern expansion, the colonization of the Slavonic north-east, and the development
+of the Baltic.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_273" href="#FNanchor_273" class="label">[273]</a> In mediæval hymns the cross is symbolically regarded as a tree bearing Christ as its last and
+grandest fruit; it is identified, indeed, with the Tree of Knowledge. (See Yrjo Hirn, <cite>The Sacred
+Shrine</cite>.)—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_274" href="#FNanchor_274" class="label">[274]</a> And every English schoolboy knows the meaning of the “Early Plantagenets.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_275" href="#FNanchor_275" class="label">[275]</a> Against the Swedes, 1675.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_276" href="#FNanchor_276" class="label">[276]</a> Against the French and their German dependent allies, 1757.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_277" href="#FNanchor_277" class="label">[277]</a> See <a href="#p166">pp. 166</a>, et seq., and <a href="#p174">174</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_278" href="#FNanchor_278" class="label">[278]</a> Less than one per cent of the population.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_279" href="#FNanchor_279" class="label">[279]</a> It is to be noted that the home of the Babylonian Culture, the ancient Sinear, plays no part of
+any importance in the coming events. For the Arabian Culture only the region north of Babylon,
+not that to south, comes into question.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_280" href="#FNanchor_280" class="label">[280]</a>
+ The victory of L. Æmilius Paullus over Perseus, 168 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_281" href="#FNanchor_281" class="label">[281]</a> This has an important bearing also in the histories of the Western literatures. The German
+is written in part in Latin, and English in French.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_282" href="#FNanchor_282" class="label">[282]</a> See Professor Geldner’s article “Zend-Avesta,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_283" href="#FNanchor_283" class="label">[283]</a> See Wollner, <cite lang="de">Untersuchungen über die Volksepik des Grossrussen</cite> (1879). [A convenient edition
+of the Kiev Stories is Mary Gill, <cite lang="fr">Les Légendes slaves</cite> (Paris, 1912).—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_284" href="#FNanchor_284" class="label">[284]</a> The former is dated about 800, the latter about 930.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_285" href="#FNanchor_285" class="label">[285]</a> These two figures—the one an authorized Mayor of the Palace before he was Tsar, the other
+a crude usurper—dominate the period of Russian history called the “Period of Troubles”—i.e.,
+that between the death of Ivan the Terrible in 1584 and the election of Michael Romanov in
+1613.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_286" href="#FNanchor_286" class="label">[286]</a> Covering, before its later extensions, Persia and Iraq to the Euphrates.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_287" href="#FNanchor_287" class="label">[287]</a> The region south of Damascus and east of the Sea of Galilee.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_288" href="#FNanchor_288" class="label">[288]</a> Saba (Sheba) is, roughly, the modern Yemen, though the centre of gravity of the Sabæan
+Kingdom may earlier have been in northern Arabia. See Dr. D. H. Müller’s article “Sabaeans”
+in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_289" href="#FNanchor_289" class="label">[289]</a> Schiele, <cite lang="de">Die Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart</cite>, I, 647.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_290" href="#FNanchor_290" class="label">[290]</a> The “Minæan” and the Sabæan kingdoms were the two outstanding hegemonies of early
+Arabian history. Ma’in, in southern Arabia, should not be confused with the Ma’an which lies
+north-east of the Gulf of Akaba.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_291" href="#FNanchor_291" class="label">[291]</a> Bent, <cite>The Sacred City of the Ethiopians</cite>
+ (London 1893), pp. 134, et seq., deals with the remains
+of Jeha, the inscriptions of which are dated by Glaser between the seventh and fifth centuries before
+Christ. See D. H. Müller, <cite lang="de">Burgen and Schlösser Südarabiens</cite>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_292" href="#FNanchor_292" class="label">[292]</a> Grimme, <cite>Mohammed</cite>, pp. 26, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_293" href="#FNanchor_293" class="label">[293]</a> German Axum Expedition record (1913), Vol. II.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_294" href="#FNanchor_294" class="label">[294]</a> An ancient trade-route from Persia crossed the straits of Ormus and of Bab-el-Mandeb, traversing
+South Arabia and terminating in Abyssinia and the Nile region. It is historically more
+important than the northern route over the Isthmus of Suez.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_295" href="#FNanchor_295" class="label">[295]</a> So little is known as to these events by British (or any other) students that a brief record may
+be useful. The original Himaryites or Homerites, a people of the south-west angle of Arabia, had
+displaced the Sabæans in control of South Arabia in the second century <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> The Himaryite hegemony
+was overthrown by invaders from Axum over the water about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 300, and the Axumite
+rulers were, <i lang="la">inter alia</i>, kings of Hadramaut—hence the mention in the text of the Persian Gulf.
+But a Himaryite opposition continued, and, adopting Judaism as a counter-religion, it succeeded
+for a time in throwing off the Abyssinian rule. Axum, however (aided, as a Christian state, by
+Rome), reasserted her dominion in 525 and held it for fifty years, till an attack of Sassanid Persians
+displaced them again. Thereafter southern Arabia fell into the swaying chaos in which the coming
+of Mohammed found it.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_296" href="#FNanchor_296" class="label">[296]</a> The capital of Saba.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_297" href="#FNanchor_297" class="label">[297]</a> Grimme, p. 43. Illustrations of these immense ruins of Gomdan, ibid., p. 81, and reconstructions
+in the German Axum report.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_298" href="#FNanchor_298" class="label">[298]</a> The country of Ghassan extends east of the Jordan, parallel to and inland of Palestine and Syria,
+approximately from Petra to the middle Euphrates.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_299" href="#FNanchor_299" class="label">[299]</a> The Lakhmids were the ruling dynasty, from the third to the sixth century after Christ, of
+the realm of Hira, which ran in a strip between the Euphrates and the present Nejd coast on the one
+hand and the desert of Arabia on the other.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_300" href="#FNanchor_300" class="label">[300]</a> Brockelmann, <cite lang="de">Geschichte der arabischen Literatur</cite>, p. 34.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_301" href="#FNanchor_301" class="label">[301]</a> The whole structure of Mithraism (so far as we know it) presents strong analogies with that
+of a military order.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_302" href="#FNanchor_302" class="label">[302]</a> As well as it is said 220,000 at Cyrene. At Alexandria, too, there were <i lang="fr">émeutes</i>
+ and counter-<i lang="fr">émeutes</i>.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_303" href="#FNanchor_303" class="label">[303]</a> Roth, <cite lang="de">Sozial- und Kulturgeschichte des Byzantinischen Reiches</cite>, p. 15.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_304" href="#FNanchor_304" class="label">[304]</a> Delbrück, <cite lang="de">Geschichte der Kriegskunst</cite>,
+ II, p. 222. [For British students C. W. C. Oman’s <cite>Art of
+War: Middle Ages</cite> will be more readily available, although Oman treats the subject more as a matter
+of formal military organization than does Delbrück. Neither writer deals with any special features
+of the change as it worked itself out in the East, both being concerned almost entirely with its
+Western aspects and phases. The origin of the late-Byzantine army system, as military historians
+are aware, is an obscure and difficult subject. By what stages, after the decadence of the legion,
+was the “<i lang="de">Landsknecht</i>” army of Justinian reached? Like other elements of middle-East history in
+the epoch of the Arabian Culture, it still awaits the full investigation that the West has already
+had.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_305" href="#FNanchor_305" class="label">[305]</a> <cite lang="de">Gesammelte Schriften</cite>, IV, 532.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_306" href="#FNanchor_306" class="label">[306]</a> <i lang="de">Gefolgstreuen</i> in German. The choice of an equivalent mediæval term in English is difficult,
+since any one that may be selected carries with it certain implications for students of feudal origins.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_307" href="#FNanchor_307" class="label">[307]</a> Domaszewski, <cite lang="de">Die Religion der römischen Heeres</cite>, p. 49.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_308" href="#FNanchor_308" class="label">[308]</a> The typical form, for instance, of the Swiss in their independence-battles, and of Western
+infantry generally in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, during the transition from hand-arm to
+fire-arm warfare.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_309" href="#FNanchor_309" class="label">[309]</a> <i>Buccellarii</i>; see Delbrück, op. cit., II, 354.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_310" href="#FNanchor_310" class="label">[310]</a> Georg von Frundsberg (1473–1528). Short article in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_311" href="#FNanchor_311" class="label">[311]</a> <cite>Gothic War</cite>, IV, 26. [The same holds good for Belisarius’s armies.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_312" href="#FNanchor_312" class="label">[312]</a> Nisibis and Edessa in the up-country between Euphrates and Tigris are represented to-day
+by Nasibin (Nezib) and Urfa respectively; just to the west of them, east of the Euphrates above
+Sura, were the three Jewish academies, in which Talmudic Judaism took shape after the Dispersion.
+Kinnesrin lay just south of Aleppo. Ctesiphon is, of course, the classical city on the Tigris, still
+dominant under the Sassanids, and Resaina lies in the up-country south-west of Nisibis. Gundisapora
+is Gunder-Shapur (Jundaisapur), near the site of the old Elamite capital Susa in Arabistan.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_313" href="#FNanchor_313" class="label">[313]</a> Not “non-existent.” It would be a misconception of the Magian world-feeling to attach
+a Faustian-dynamic meaning to the phrase “true God.” In combating the worship of godlings, the
+reality of godlings and dæmons is presupposed. The Israelite prophets never dreamed of denying
+the Baals, and similarly Isis and Mithras for the Early Christians, Jehovah for the Christian Marcion,
+Jesus for the Manichæans, are devilish, but perfectly real, powers. <em>Disbelieving in them</em> would
+have had no meaning for the Magian soul—what was required was that one should not <em>turn to them</em>.
+To use an expression now long current, it is “Henotheism” and not Monotheism.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_314" href="#FNanchor_314" class="label">[314]</a> Schürer, <cite lang="de">Geschichte des jüdischen Volkes im Zeitalter Jesu Christi</cite>,
+ III, 499; Wendland, <cite lang="de">Die
+hellenistisch-römische Kultur</cite>, p. 192.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_315" href="#FNanchor_315" class="label">[315]</a> Contrast with this the exactly opposite process in Jewry before the Pseudomorphosis had
+begun to affect it,—to wit, the battle against the local “high places” and the concentration of
+sanctity in Jerusalem.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_316" href="#FNanchor_316" class="label">[316]</a> With the result that Syncretism is presented as a mere hotchpotch of every conceivable religion.
+Nothing is further from the truth. The process of taking shape moved first from East to West and
+then from West to East.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_317" href="#FNanchor_317" class="label">[317]</a>
+ The Haoma plant symbolized the Tree of Life (Gaokerena) like the Soma plant of Brahmanism.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_318" href="#FNanchor_318" class="label">[318]</a> Hence the expression “profaning” the mysteries, which meant, not revealing them, but
+bringing them outside their fane.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_319" href="#FNanchor_319" class="label">[319]</a> J. Geffcken, <cite lang="de">Der Ausgang des griechisch-römischen Heidentums</cite>
+ (1920), pp. 197, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_320" href="#FNanchor_320" class="label">[320]</a> Geffcken, op. cit., pp. 131, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_321" href="#FNanchor_321" class="label">[321]</a> Geffcken, op. cit., p. 292, note 149.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_322" href="#FNanchor_322" class="label">[322]</a>
+ “<i lang="la">Res ipsa, quæ nunc religio Christiana nuncupatur, erat apud antiquos nec defecit ab initio generis humani,
+quousque Christus veniret in carnem. Unde vera religio, quæ jam erat coepit appellari Christiana</i>” (<cite lang="la">Retractationes</cite>,
+I, 13).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_323" href="#FNanchor_323" class="label">[323]</a> The name Chaldean signifies, before the Persian epoch, a tribe; later, a religious society.
+See <a href="#p175">p. 175</a> above.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_324" href="#FNanchor_324" class="label">[324]</a> A. Bertholet, <cite lang="de">Kulturgeschichte Israels</cite>
+ (1919), pp. 253, et seq. [Clear and useful English manuals
+are G. Moore, <cite>Literature of the Old Testament</cite>; R. H. Charles, <cite>Between the Old and the New Testaments</cite>.
+See also the article “Hebrew Religion” in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_325" href="#FNanchor_325" class="label">[325]</a> According to Williams Jackson’s <cite>Zoroaster</cite> (1901).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_326" href="#FNanchor_326" class="label">[326]</a> Research has treated the Chaldean, like the Talmudic, as a stepchild. The investigator’s
+whole attention has been concentrated on the religion of the Babylonian Culture, and the Chaldean
+has been regarded as its dying echo. Such a view inevitably excludes any real understanding of it.
+The material is not even separated out, but is dispersed in all the books on Assyrian-Babylonian
+religion. (H. Zimmern, <cite lang="de">Die Keilinschriften und das alte Testament</cite> II; Gunkel, <cite lang="de">Schöpfung and Chaos</cite>;
+M. Jastrow, C. Bezold, etc.) On the other hand the subject is assumed by some (e.g., Bousset,
+<cite lang="de">Hauptprobleme der Gnosis</cite>, 1907) to have been exhausted.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_327" href="#FNanchor_327" class="label">[327]</a> See Vol. I, p. 184.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_328" href="#FNanchor_328" class="label">[328]</a> The fact that Chaldean science was, in comparison with Babylonian empiricism, a new thing
+has been clearly recognized by Bezold (<cite lang="de">Astronomie, Himmelsschau und Astrallehre bei den Babyloniern</cite>,
+1911, pp. 17, et seq.). Its data were taken and developed by different Classical savants according
+to their own way of reasoning—that is, as a matter of applied mathematics, and to the exclusion
+of all feeling for distance.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_329" href="#FNanchor_329" class="label">[329]</a> See Jastrow’s articles “Babylonian and Assyrian Religion” and “Marduk” in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI
+ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_330" href="#FNanchor_330" class="label">[330]</a> J. Hehn, <cite lang="de">Hymnen und Gebete an Marduk</cite> (1905).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_331" href="#FNanchor_331" class="label">[331]</a> For Chaldeans and Persians there was no need to trouble here about proof—they had by their
+God conquered the world. But the Jews had only their literature to cling to, and this accordingly
+turned to theoretical proof in the absence of positive. In the last analysis, this unique national treasure
+owes its origin to the constant need of reacting against self-depreciation. [For example, the
+repeated restatement of the <em>date</em> of the Messiah’s advent in the successive works of the age of the
+prophets.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_332" href="#FNanchor_332" class="label">[332]</a> Glaser, <cite lang="de">Die Abessinier in Arabien und in Afrika</cite>
+ (1895), p. 124. Glaser is convinced that Abyssinian,
+Pehlevi, and Persian cuneiform inscriptions of the highest importance await discovery there.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_333" href="#FNanchor_333" class="label">[333]</a> The inscription and sculptures of Behistun (on an almost inaccessible cliff in the Zagros range
+on the Baghdad-Hamadan road) were reinvestigated by a British Museum expedition in 1904; see
+<cite>The Inscription of Darius the Great at Behistun</cite> (London, 1907). “Thus saith Darius the King. That
+what I have done I have done altogether by the grace of Ahuramazda. Ahuramazda and the other
+gods that be, brought aid to me. For this reason did Ahuramazda and the other gods that be bring
+aid to me because I was not hostile nor a liar nor a wrongdoer, neither I nor my family, but according
+to Rectitude have I ruled” (A. V. Williams Jackson, <cite>Persia Past and Present</cite>).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_334" href="#FNanchor_334" class="label">[334]</a> Isaiah xl-lxvi. For the critical questions arising on Deutero-Isaiah see Dr. T. K. Cheyne’s
+article “Isaiah” in the <cite>Encyclopedia Biblica</cite>, the same scholar’s summary in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., article
+“Isaiah,” or G. Moore’s summary, <cite>Literature of the Old Testament</cite>, Ch. XVI.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_335" href="#FNanchor_335" class="label">[335]</a> This “King of the Banishment” (Exilarch) was long a conspicuous and politically important
+figure in the Persian Empire. He was only removed by Islam.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_336" href="#FNanchor_336" class="label">[336]</a> As Christian and Jewish theology both do—the only difference between these is in their
+respective interpretations of the later development of Israelite literature (recast in Judea as the
+literature of Judaism), the one inflecting it towards Evangelism, the others towards Talmudism.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_337" href="#FNanchor_337" class="label">[337]</a> Later it occurred to some Pharisee mind to Judaize it by interpolating chs. xxxii-xxxvii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_338" href="#FNanchor_338" class="label">[338]</a> See the articles “Tobit,” etc., in <cite>Jewish Encyclopædia</cite>
+ and <cite>Ency. Biblica</cite>.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_339" href="#FNanchor_339" class="label">[339]</a> If the assumption of a Chaldean prophecy corresponding to Isaiah and Zarathustra be correct,
+it is to this young, inwardly cognate, and contemporary astral religion (and not to the Babylonian)
+that Genesis owes its amazingly profound cosmogony, just as it owes to the Persian religion its
+visions of the end of the world.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_340" href="#FNanchor_340" class="label">[340]</a> S. Funk, <cite lang="de">Die Entstehung des Talmuds</cite> (1919), p. 106.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_341" href="#FNanchor_341" class="label">[341]</a> E. Sachau, <cite lang="de">Aramäische Papyros und Ostraka aus Elephantine</cite> (1911).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_342" href="#FNanchor_342" class="label">[342]</a> Josephus, <cite>Antiq.</cite>, 13, 10.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_343" href="#FNanchor_343" class="label">[343]</a> Much as, say, the destruction of the Vatican would be felt by the Catholic Church.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_344" href="#FNanchor_344" class="label">[344]</a> See <a href="#p198">p. 198</a>.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_345" href="#FNanchor_345" class="label">[345]</a> Cf. <a href="#p69">p. 69</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_346" href="#FNanchor_346" class="label">[346]</a> Pyrrho himself had studied under Magian priests. See, for Pyrrhonism, <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.,
+articles “Scepticism,” “Megarian School,” “Pyrrho.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_347" href="#FNanchor_347" class="label">[347]</a> Schiele (<cite lang="de">Die Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart</cite>,
+ III, 812) reverses the two latter names; this,
+however, does not affect the phenomenon in any way.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_348" href="#FNanchor_348" class="label">[348]</a> The Cosmogony and the Law, in the Zoroastrian Scriptures.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_349" href="#FNanchor_349" class="label">[349]</a> Bousset, <cite lang="de">Rel. d. Jud.</cite>, p. 532.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_350" href="#FNanchor_350" class="label">[350]</a> Baruch, Ezra IV (2 Esdras), the original text of John’s Revelation.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_351" href="#FNanchor_351" class="label">[351]</a> For instance, the Book of Naasenes (P. Wendland, <cite lang="de">Hellenistisch-römische Kultur</cite>,
+ pp. 177, et seq.);
+the “Mithras Liturgy” (ed. A. Dieterich); the Hermetic Pœmander (ed. Reitzenstein), the Psalms
+of Solomon, the Gospels of Thomas and Peter, the Pistis-Sophia, etc. [Information as to these will
+be found in the articles “Ophites,” “Mithras,” “Hermes Trismegistus,” “Apocalyptic Literature,”
+“Apocryphal Literature,” “Gnosticism,” in the <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_352" href="#FNanchor_352" class="label">[352]</a> Any more than Dostoyevski’s “<cite>Dream of a Ridiculous Person</cite>” is so.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_353" href="#FNanchor_353" class="label">[353]</a> Our definitive ideas of this early Magian vision-world we owe to the manuscripts of Turfan,
+which have reached Berlin since 1903. It was these which at last freed our knowledge and, above all,
+our criteria from the deformations due to the preponderance of Western-Hellenistic material—a
+preponderance that had been augmented by Egyptian papyrus finds—and radically transformed all
+our existing views. Now at last the pure, almost unknown, East is seen operative in all the apocalypses,
+hymns, liturgies, and books of edification of the Persians, Mandæans, Manichæans, and
+countless other sects; and primitive Christianity for the first time really takes its place in the movement
+to which it owes its spiritual origins (see H. Lüders, <cite lang="de">Sitzungen der Berliner Akademie</cite>, 1914,
+and R. Reitzenstein, <cite lang="de">Das iranische Erlösungsmysterium</cite>, 1921).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_354" href="#FNanchor_354" class="label">[354]</a> Lidzbarski, <cite lang="de">Das Johannesbuch der Mandäer</cite>, Ch. LXVI. Also W. Bousset, <cite lang="de">Hauptprobleme der
+Gnosis</cite> (1907) and Reitzenstein, <cite lang="de">Das Mandäische Buch der Herrn der Grösse</cite> (1919), an apocalypse approximately
+contemporary with the oldest Gospels. On the Messiah texts, the Descent-into-Hell
+texts, and the Songs of the Dead see Lidzbarski, <cite lang="de">Mandäische Liturgien</cite> (1920); also the Book of the
+Dead (especially the second and third books of the left Genza) in Reitzenstein’s <cite lang="de">Das iranische Erlösungsmysterium</cite>
+(especially pp. 43, et seq.). [The Mandæan religion survives to-day in the region
+of the Shatt-el-Arab and the Karun valley or Khuzistan.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_355" href="#FNanchor_355" class="label">[355]</a> See Reitzenstein, pp. 124, et seq., and references there quoted.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_356" href="#FNanchor_356" class="label">[356]</a> In the New Testament, of which the final redaction lies entirely in the sphere of Western-Classical
+thought, the Mandæan religion and the sects belonging thereto are no longer understood,
+and indeed everything Oriental seems to have dropped out. Acts xviii-xix, however, discloses a
+perceptible hostility between the then widespread John-communities and the Primitive Christians
+(see Dibelius, <cite lang="de">Die urchristliche Überlieferung von Johannes dem Täufer</cite>). The Mandæans later rejected
+Christianity as flatly as they had rejected Judaism. Jesus was for them a false Messiah. In their
+Apocalypse of the Lord of Greatness the apparition of Enosh was also announced.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_357" href="#FNanchor_357" class="label">[357]</a> According to Reitzenstein (<cite lang="de">Das Buch von Herrn der Grösse</cite>)
+ Jesus was condemned at Jerusalem as
+a John-disciple. According to Lidzbarski (<cite>Mand. Lit.</cite>, 1920, XVI) and Zimmern (<cite lang="de">Ztschr. d. D. Morg.
+Gesellschaft</cite>, 1920, p. 429), the expression “Jesus the Nazarene” or “Nasorene,” which was later
+by the Christian communities referred to Nazareth (Matthew ii, 23, with a doubtful citation),
+really indicates the membership in a Mandæan Order.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_358" href="#FNanchor_358" class="label">[358]</a> E.g., Mark vi; and then the great change, Mark viii, 27, et seq. There is no religion which
+has given us more honestly the tale of its birth.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_359" href="#FNanchor_359" class="label">[359]</a> Similarly in Mark i, 38, et seq., when he arose in the night and sought a lonely place in order
+to fortify himself by prayer.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_360" href="#FNanchor_360" class="label">[360]</a> The method of the present work is historical. It therefore recognizes the anti-historical as
+well as the historical as <em>a fact</em>. The religious method, on the contrary, necessarily looks upon itself
+as the <em>true</em> and the opposite as <em>false</em>. This difference is quite insuperable.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_361" href="#FNanchor_361" class="label">[361]</a> Hence Mark xiii, taken from an older document, is perhaps the purest example of his usual daily
+discourse. Paul (1 Thess. iv, 15–17) quotes another, which is missing in the Gospels. With these,
+we have the priceless—but, by commentators dominated by the Gospel tone, misunderstood—contributions
+of Papias, who about 100 was still in a position to collect much oral tradition. The
+little that we have of his work suffices amply to show us the apocalyptic character of Jesus’s daily
+discourses. It is Mark xiii and not the Sermon on the Mount that reproduces the real note of them.
+But as <em>his</em> teaching became modified into a teaching <em>of Him</em>, this material likewise was transformed
+and the record of his utterances became the narrative of his manifestation. In this one respect the
+picture given by the Gospels is inevitably false.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_362" href="#FNanchor_362" class="label">[362]</a> Jesus himself was aware of this (Matt. xxiv, 5, 11).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_363" href="#FNanchor_363" class="label">[363]</a> Made more uncertain perhaps by the failure of previous prophecies that had been so confidently
+dated—e.g., Jeremiah xxv, 11; xxiv, 5–6; reinterpreted in Daniel vii, ix; 1 Enoch lxxxiii-xc; and
+again to be reinterpreted in 2 Baruch xxxvi-xl and 4 Ezra x-xii.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_364" href="#FNanchor_364" class="label">[364]</a> The designation “Messiah (Christ)” was old-Jewish, those of “Lord” (κύριος, <i>divus</i>) and
+“Saviour” (σωτήρ, <i>Asklepios</i>) were east-Aramæan in origin. In the course of the pseudomorphosis
+“Christ” became the <em>name</em> of Jesus, and “Saviour” the <em>title</em>; but already “Lord” and “Saviour”
+were titles current in the Hellenistic Emperor-worship; and in this was implicit the whole destiny
+of westward-looking Christianity (compare here Reitzenstein, <cite lang="de">Das iranische Erlösungsmysterium</cite>, p.
+132, note).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_365" href="#FNanchor_365" class="label">[365]</a> Acts xv; Gal. ii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_366" href="#FNanchor_366" class="label">[366]</a> Acts i, 14; cf. Mark vi.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_367" href="#FNanchor_367" class="label">[367]</a> As against Luke, Matthew is the representative of this conception. His is the only Gospel
+in which the word “<i>Ecclesia</i>” is used, and it denotes the true Jews, in contradistinction to the masses
+that refuse to listen to Jesus. This is not the missionary idea, any more than Isaiah was a missionary.
+Community, in this connexion, means an Order within Judaism. The prescriptions of Matt.
+xviii, 15–20 are wholly incompatible with any general dissemination.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_368" href="#FNanchor_368" class="label">[368]</a> It fell apart later into sects, amongst which were the Ebionites and the Elkazites (the latter
+having a strange sacred book, the Elxai; see Bousset, <cite lang="de">Hauptprobleme der Gnosis</cite>, p. 154). [See the articles
+“Ebionites” and “Sabians” in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_369" href="#FNanchor_369" class="label">[369]</a> Such sects were attacked in the Acts of the Apostles and in all Paul’s Epistles, and indeed
+there was hardly a Late Classical or Aramæan religion or philosophy which did not give rise to
+some sort of Jesus-sect. The danger was indeed real of the Passion story becoming, not the nucleus
+of a new religion, but an integrating element of all existing ones.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_370" href="#FNanchor_370" class="label">[370]</a> Of this he was fully aware. Many of his deepest intuitions are unimaginable without Persian
+and Mandæan influences (e.g., Romans vii, 22–24; 1 Corinthians xv, 26; Ephesians v, 6, et seq.,
+with a quotation of Persian origin. See Reitzenstein, <cite lang="de">Das iran. Erlös.-Myst.</cite>, pp. 6, 133, et seq.).
+But this does not prove familiarity with Persian-Mandæan literature. The stories were spread in
+these days as sagas and folk-tales were amongst us. One heard about them in childhood as things
+of daily hearsay, but without being in the least aware of how deeply one was under their spell.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_371" href="#FNanchor_371" class="label">[371]</a> The early missionary effort in the East has scarcely been investigated and is still very difficult
+to establish in detail. Sachau, <cite lang="de">Chronik von Arbela</cite> (1915) and “<cite lang="de">Die Ausbreitung der Christentums in
+Asien</cite>” in <cite lang="de">Abb. Pr. Akad. d. Wiss.</cite> (1919); Harnack, <cite lang="de">Mission und Ausbreitung des Christentums</cite>, II, 117,
+et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_372" href="#FNanchor_372" class="label">[372]</a> The researchers who argue with such over-learnedness about a proto-Mark, Source Q, the
+“Twelve”-source, and so on, overlook the essential novelty of Mark, which is <em>the first “Book” of
+Christendom</em>, plan-uniform and entire. Work of this sort is never the natural product of an evolution,
+but the merit of an individual man, and it marks, here if anywhere, a historical turning-point.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_373" href="#FNanchor_373" class="label">[373]</a> Mark is generally <em>the</em> Gospel; after him the partisan writings (Matthew, Luke) begin; the
+tone of narrative passes into that of legend and ends, beyond the Hebrew and John gospels, in Jesus-romances
+like the gospels of Peter and James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_374" href="#FNanchor_374" class="label">[374]</a> If the word “catholic” be used in its oldest sense (<cite>Ignatius ad Smyrn.</cite>,
+ 8)—namely, to signify
+the <em>sum</em> of the cult-communities, <em>both</em> the Churches were Catholic. In the East the word had no
+meaning. The Nestorian Church was no more a sum than was the Persian: it was a Magian unit.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_375" href="#FNanchor_375" class="label">[375]</a> A brief survey of the Mary doctrine is given in article “Mary,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed. The symbolism
+involved in the details of the story of Mary, as told in writing and in art, is very fully gone
+into in Yrjo Hirn, <cite>The Sacred Shrine</cite>.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_376" href="#FNanchor_376" class="label">[376]</a> Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Ursprung und Anfänge des Christentums</cite> (1921), pp. 77, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_377" href="#FNanchor_377" class="label">[377]</a> <i>C.</i> 85–155. See the recent work of Harnack, <cite lang="de">Marcion: Das Evangelium vom fremden Gott</cite>
+ (1921).
+[Harnack’s article “Marcion” in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., is dated 1910.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_378" href="#FNanchor_378" class="label">[378]</a> Harnack, op. cit., pp. 136, et seq.; N. Bonwetsch, <cite lang="de">Grundr. d. Dogmengesch.</cite> (1919), p. 45, et
+seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_379" href="#FNanchor_379" class="label">[379]</a> This is one of the profoundest ideas in all religious history, and one that must for ever remain
+inaccessible to the pious average man. Marcion’s identification of the “Just” with the Evil enables
+him in this sense to oppose the Law of the Old Testament to the Evangel of the New.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_380" href="#FNanchor_380" class="label">[380]</a> About <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 150. See Harnack, op. cit., pp. 32, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_381" href="#FNanchor_381" class="label">[381]</a> For the notions of Koran and Logos, see below. Again as in the case of Mark, the really
+important question is, not what the material before him was, but how this entirely novel idea
+for such a book, which anticipated and indeed made possible Marcion’s plan for a Christian Bible,
+could arise. The book presupposes a great spiritual movement (in eastern Asia Minor?) that knew
+scarcely anything of Jewish Christianity and was yet remote from the Pauline, westerly thought-world.
+But of the region and type of this movement we know nothing whatever.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_382" href="#FNanchor_382" class="label">[382]</a> Vohu Mano, the Spirit of Truth, in the shape of the Saoshyant.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_383" href="#FNanchor_383" class="label">[383]</a> See the article by Harnack and Conybeare “Manichæism,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_384" href="#FNanchor_384" class="label">[384]</a> Bardesanes, too, and the system of the “Acts of Thomas” are very near to him and to “John.”
+[See the articles “Bardaisan,” “Thomas,” and “Gnosticism,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_385" href="#FNanchor_385" class="label">[385]</a> Harnack, p. 24. The break with the established Church occurred at Rome, in 144.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_386" href="#FNanchor_386" class="label">[386]</a> Harnack, pp. 181, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_387" href="#FNanchor_387" class="label">[387]</a> It had, like each of the other Magian religions, a script of its own, and this script steadily
+came to resemble the Manichæan more and more closely.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_388" href="#FNanchor_388" class="label">[388]</a> Matthew xi, 25, et seq., on which see Eduard Meyer, <cite lang="de">Urspr. u. Anf. d. Christ.</cite>,
+ pp. 286, et seq.;
+here it is the old and Eastern (i.e., the genuine) form of gnosis that is described.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_389" href="#FNanchor_389" class="label">[389]</a> See further, below, <a href="#p321">p. 321</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_390" href="#FNanchor_390" class="label">[390]</a> As a drastic instance, Galatians iv, 24–26.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_391" href="#FNanchor_391" class="label">[391]</a> Loofs, <cite>Nestoriana</cite> (1905), pp. 176, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_392" href="#FNanchor_392" class="label">[392]</a> The best exposition of the mass of thought common to both Churches is Windelband’s <cite lang="de">Geschichte
+der Philosophie</cite> (1900), pp. 177, et seq.; for the dogmatic history of the Christian Church see
+Harnack, <cite lang="de">Dogmengeschichte</cite> (1914), while—unconsciously—Geffcken (<cite lang="de">Der Ausgang des griechisch-römischen
+Heidentums</cite>, 1920) gives the corresponding “dogmatic history of the Pagan Church.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_393" href="#FNanchor_393" class="label">[393]</a> Geffcken, op. cit., p. 69 [article “Neoplatonism” in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i>].</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_394" href="#FNanchor_394" class="label">[394]</a> See the following chapter.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_395" href="#FNanchor_395" class="label">[395]</a> Harnack, <cite lang="de">Dogmengeschichte</cite>, p. 165.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_396" href="#FNanchor_396" class="label">[396]</a> See Vol. I, p. 209.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_397" href="#FNanchor_397" class="label">[397]</a>
+ The expression is Leo Frobenius’s (Paideuma, 1920, p. 91). [See Vol. I, p. 184.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_398" href="#FNanchor_398" class="label">[398]</a> The soul-stones on Jewish, Sabæan, and Islamic tombs are also called <i>nephesh</i>.
+ They are unmistakable
+symbols of the “upward.” With them belong the huge storeyed stelæ of Axum which
+belong to the first to third centuries of our era—i.e., the great period of the early Magian religions.
+The giant stele, long overthrown, is the largest monolith known to art-history, larger than any
+Egyptian obelisk (German Axum Expedition report, Vol. II, pp. 28, et seq.).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_399" href="#FNanchor_399" class="label">[399]</a> On this rests the whole theory and practice of Magian law (see <a href="#p72">p. 72</a> above).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_400" href="#FNanchor_400" class="label">[400]</a> Isaiah xxxii, 15; 4 Ezra xiv, 39; Acts ii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_401" href="#FNanchor_401" class="label">[401]</a> Reitzenstein, <cite lang="de">Das iran. Erlösungsmysterium</cite>, pp. 108, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_402" href="#FNanchor_402" class="label">[402]</a> Bousset, <cite>Kyrios Christos</cite>, p. 142.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_403" href="#FNanchor_403" class="label">[403]</a> Windelband, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Phil.</cite>
+ (1900), pp. 189, et seq.; Windelband-Bonhöffer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. antiken
+Phil.</cite> (1912), pp. 328, et seq.; Geffcken, <cite lang="de">Der Ausgang des griech.-röm. Heidentums</cite> (1920), pp. 51, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_404" href="#FNanchor_404" class="label">[404]</a> Jodl, <cite lang="de">Geschichte der Ethik</cite>, I, p. 58.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_405" href="#FNanchor_405" class="label">[405]</a> M. Horten, <cite lang="de">Die religiöse Gedankenwelt der Volkes im heutigen Islam</cite>
+ (1917), pp. 381, et seq. By the
+Shiites the Logos-idea was transferred to Ali.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_406" href="#FNanchor_406" class="label">[406]</a> Wolff, <cite lang="de">Muhammedanische Eschatologie</cite>, 3, 2, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_407" href="#FNanchor_407" class="label">[407]</a> Mandæan Book of John, Ch. LXXV.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_408" href="#FNanchor_408" class="label">[408]</a> Usener, <cite lang="de">Vortr. u. Aufs.</cite>, p. 217.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_409" href="#FNanchor_409" class="label">[409]</a> The “devil-worshippers” in Armenia; M. Horten in <cite lang="de">Der neue Orient</cite> (March 1918). The name
+arose from the fact that they did not recognize Satan as a being, and accordingly derived the Evil,
+by a very complicated set of ideas, from the Logos itself. Under old Persian influences the Jews
+also busied themselves with the same problem—observe the difference between 2 Samuel xxiv, 1,
+and 1 Chron. xxi, 1.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_410" href="#FNanchor_410" class="label">[410]</a> M. Horten, op. cit., p. xxi. This book is the best introduction to the actually existing popular
+religion of Islam, which deviates considerably from the official doctrines.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_411" href="#FNanchor_411" class="label">[411]</a> Baumstark, <cite lang="de">Die christl. Literaturen des Orients</cite>, I, p. 64.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_412" href="#FNanchor_412" class="label">[412]</a> Cf. <a href="#p205">p. 205</a>. The Babylonian view of the heavens had not definitely distinguished between
+astronomical and atmospheric elements; e.g., the covering of the moon by clouds was regarded as
+a kind of eclipse. For this soothsaying the momentary <em>figure</em> of the heavens served only the same
+purpose as the inspection of the victim’s liver. But the Chaldeans’ intention was to forecast the
+<em>actual</em> course of the stars; here, therefore, astrology presupposed a genuine astronomy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_413" href="#FNanchor_413" class="label">[413]</a> B. Cohn, “<cite lang="de">Die Anfangsepoche der jüd. Kalenders</cite>” (<cite lang="de">Sitz. Pr. Akad.</cite>,
+ 1914). The date of the first
+day of Creation was on this occasion fixed by calculation from a total eclipse of the sun—of course
+with the aid of Chaldean astronomy. [See, in general, the articles “Chronology,” “Calendar,”
+in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_414" href="#FNanchor_414" class="label">[414]</a>
+ The Persian notion of total time is 12,000 years. The Parsees of to-day consider <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1920 as
+the 11,550th.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_415" href="#FNanchor_415" class="label">[415]</a> M. Horten, <cite lang="de">Die religiöse Gedankenwelt des Volkes im heutigen Islam</cite>, p. xxvi.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_416" href="#FNanchor_416" class="label">[416]</a> It shows a great gap in our research that although we possess a whole library of works on
+Classical religion and particularly its gods and cults, we have not one about Classical religiousness
+and its history.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_417" href="#FNanchor_417" class="label">[417]</a> “He is in truth the conclusion and completion of the Christian Classical, its last and greatest
+thinker, its intellectual practitioner and tribune. This is the starting-point from which he must be
+understood. What later ages have made of him is another affair. His own real mind, the synthesizer
+of Classical Culture, ecclesiastical and episcopal authority, and intimate mysticism, could
+not possibly have been handed on by those who, environed by different conditions, have to deal
+with different tasks” (E. Troeltsch, <cite lang="de">Augustin, die christliche Antike und das Mittelalter</cite>, 1915, p. 7).
+His power, like Tertullian’s, rested also on the fact that his writings were not translated into Latin,
+but <em>thought</em> in this language, the <em>sacred</em> language of the Western Church; it was precisely this that
+excluded both from the field of Aramæan thought. Cf. <a href="#p224">p. 224</a> above.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_418" href="#FNanchor_418" class="label">[418]</a> “<i lang="la">Inspiratio bonæ voluntatis</i>” (<cite>De corr. et grat.</cite>,
+ 3). His “good will” and “ill will” are, quite
+dualistically, a pair of opposite substances. For Pelagius, on the contrary, will is an <em>activity</em> without
+moral quality as such; only that which is willed has the <em>property</em> of being good or evil, and the
+Grace of God consists in the “<i lang="la">possibilitas utriusque partis</i>,” the freedom to will this or that. Gregory
+I transmuted Augustinian doctrines into Faustian when he taught that God rejected individuals
+because he foreknew their evil will.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_419" href="#FNanchor_419" class="label">[419]</a> All the elements of the Magian metaphysic are to be found in Spinoza, hard as he tried to
+replace the Arabian-Jewish conceptual world of his Spanish masters (and above all Moses Maimonides)
+by the Western of early Baroque. The individual human mind is for him not an ego, but only
+a mode of the one divine attribute, the “<i lang="la">cogitatio</i>”—which is just the Pneuma. He protests against
+notions like “God’s Will.” His God is <em>pure substance</em> and in lieu of the dynamic causality of the
+Faustian universe he discovers simply the logic of the divine <i lang="la">cogitatio</i>. All this is already in Porphyry,
+in the Talmud, in Islam; and to Faustian thinkers like Leibniz and Goethe it is as alien as
+anything can possibly be. (<cite lang="de">Allgem. Gesch. d. Philos.</cite> in <cite lang="de">Kultur der Gegenwart</cite>, I, v, p. 484, Windelband.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_420" href="#FNanchor_420" class="label">[420]</a> Here, therefore, “good” is an evaluation and not a substance.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_421" href="#FNanchor_421" class="label">[421]</a> The period at which it was written corresponds to our Carolingian. Whether the latter really
+brought forth any poetry of like rank we do not know, but that it may possibly have done so is
+shown by creations like the Voluspa, Muspilli, the Heliand, and the universe conceived by John
+Scotus Erigena.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_422" href="#FNanchor_422" class="label">[422]</a> See, for example, Bertholet, <cite lang="de">Kulturgesch. Israels</cite>, p. 242.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_423" href="#FNanchor_423" class="label">[423]</a> Horten, op. cit., p. xii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_424" href="#FNanchor_424" class="label">[424]</a> See <a href="#p67">p. 67</a> above.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_425" href="#FNanchor_425" class="label">[425]</a> It is almost unnecessary to say that in all religions of the Germanic West the Bible stands in
+a quite other relationship to the faith—namely, in that of a <em>source</em> in the strictly historical sense,
+irrespective of whether it is taken as inspired and immune from textual criticism or not. The relation
+of Chinese thought to the canonical books is similar.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_426" href="#FNanchor_426" class="label">[426]</a> The Holy Spirit, different from Ahuramazda and yet one with him, opposed to the Evil (Angra
+Mainyu).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_427" href="#FNanchor_427" class="label">[427]</a> Identified by Mani with the Johannine Logos. Compare also Yasht 13, 31. Ahuramazda’s
+shining soul is the Word.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_428" href="#FNanchor_428" class="label">[428]</a> <i>Aletheia</i> (Truth) is generally employed in this way in the John Gospel, and <i>drug</i>
+ (= lie) is used
+for Ahriman in Persian cosmology. Ahriman is often shown as though a servant of the <i>drug</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_429" href="#FNanchor_429" class="label">[429]</a> Sura 96; cf. 80, 11 and 85, 21, where in connexion with another vision it is said: “This is
+a noble Koran on a treasured tablet.” The best commentary on all this is Eduard Meyer’s (<cite lang="de">Geschichte
+der Mormonen</cite>, pp. 70, et seq.).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_430" href="#FNanchor_430" class="label">[430]</a> Classical man receives, in states of extreme bodily excitation, the power of unconsciously
+predicting future events. But these visions are completely unliterary. The Classical Sibylline
+books (which have no connexion with the later Christian works bearing that name) are meant to
+be nothing more than a collection of oracles.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_431" href="#FNanchor_431" class="label">[431]</a> See <a href="#p73">p. 73</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_432" href="#FNanchor_432" class="label">[432]</a> IV Ezra xiv; S. Funk, <cite lang="de">Die Entstehung des Talmuds</cite>, p. 17; Hirsch’s commentary on Exodus
+xxi, 2.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_433" href="#FNanchor_433" class="label">[433]</a> Funk, op. cit., p. 86.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_434" href="#FNanchor_434" class="label">[434]</a> For example, Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Urspr. u. Anf. d. Christ.</cite>, p. 95.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_435" href="#FNanchor_435" class="label">[435]</a> In the West, Plato, Aristotle, and above all Pythagoras were regarded as prophets in this
+sense. What could be referred back to them, was valid. For this reason the succession of the heads
+of the schools became more and more important, and often more work was done in establishing—or
+inventing—them than was done upon the history of the doctrine itself.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_436" href="#FNanchor_436" class="label">[436]</a> Fromer, <cite lang="de">Der Talmud</cite>, p. 190.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_437" href="#FNanchor_437" class="label">[437]</a> We to-day confuse <em>authorship</em> and <em>authority</em>.
+ Arabian thought knew not the idea of “intellectual
+property.” Such would have been absurd and sinful, for it is the <em>one</em> divine Pneuma that selects
+the individual as vessel and mouthpiece. Only to that extent is he the “author,” and it does not
+matter even whether he or another actually writes down the material. “The Gospel <em>according to</em>
+Mark” means that Mark <em>vouches for</em> the truth of this evangel.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_438" href="#FNanchor_438" class="label">[438]</a> On the pseudonyma and anonyma of Biblical apocryphal literature the English reader will
+find much of interest in three small books (already referred to) of the “Home University” series:
+Moore, <cite>Literature of the Old Testament</cite>; Charles, <cite>Between the Old and the New Testaments</cite>; and Bacon,
+<cite>The Making of the New Testament</cite>.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_439" href="#FNanchor_439" class="label">[439]</a> See <a href="#p73">p. 73</a>.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_440" href="#FNanchor_440" class="label">[440]</a> Vendidad 19, 1; here it is Zarathustra who is tempted.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_441" href="#FNanchor_441" class="label">[441]</a> M. J. ben Gorion, <cite lang="de">Die Sagen der Juden</cite> (1913).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_442" href="#FNanchor_442" class="label">[442]</a> It is reasonable to suppose that he must through oral tradition have had a very accurate
+knowledge of the fundamental doctrines of the John Gospel. Even Bardesanes (d. 254), and the
+“Acts of St. Thomas” that originated in his circle, are very far removed indeed from Pauline doctrines,
+an alienation that in Mani rose to downright hostility and to the historical Jesus’s being
+described as an evil demon. We obtain here a glimpse into the essence of the almost subterranean
+Christianity of the East, which was ignored by the Greek-writing churches of the Pseudomorphosis
+and for that reason has hitherto escaped the attention of Church history. But Marcion and
+Montanus also came from eastern Asia Minor; here originated the Naasene book, basically Persian,
+but overlaid first with Judaism and then with Christianity; and further east, probably in the
+Matthew monastery of Mosul, Aphrahat wrote, about 340, those strange epistles whose Christianity
+the Western development from Irenæus to Athanasius left wholly unaffected. The history
+of Nestorian Christianity, in fact, was already beginning in the second century.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_443" href="#FNanchor_443" class="label">[443]</a> For the later writings of (for example) Tertullian and Augustine remained wholly without
+effect save in so far as they were translated. In Rome itself even, Greek was the true language of
+the Church.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_444" href="#FNanchor_444" class="label">[444]</a> See <a href="#p177">p. 177</a>.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_445" href="#FNanchor_445" class="label">[445]</a> The Faustian monk represses his evil will, the Magian the evil substance in himself. Only
+the latter is dualistic.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_446" href="#FNanchor_446" class="label">[446]</a> The purity- and food-laws of the Talmud and the Avesta cut far deeper into everyday life
+than, for example, the Benedictine rule.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_447" href="#FNanchor_447" class="label">[447]</a> Asmus, “Damaskios” (<cite>Philos. Bibl.</cite>, 125 (1911)). Christian anchoritism is <em>later</em>
+ than pagan:
+Reitzenstein, “Des Athanasius Werk über das Leben des Antonius” (<cite lang="de">Sitz. Heid. Ak.</cite> (1914), VIII, 12).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_448" href="#FNanchor_448" class="label">[448]</a> Even to the point indicated in Matt. xix, 12, which Origen followed to the letter.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_449" href="#FNanchor_449" class="label">[449]</a> See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed., article “Qaraites.” The outlook of these Protestants so resembled that
+of the Western Protestants that their name was used as a term of contempt for the latter by the Catholics,
+and not greatly resented. It is significant also that this movement in Jewry almost coincided
+in date with the vaster Reformation of Islam.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_450" href="#FNanchor_450" class="label">[450]</a> The followers of Baal Shem above mentioned (<a href="#p228">p. 228</a>) not to be confused with the Hasidim
+or Assideans of the second century.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_451" href="#FNanchor_451" class="label">[451]</a> Wissowa, <cite lang="de">Religion und Kulturs der Römer</cite>, p. 493; Geffcken, pp. 4, 144.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_452" href="#FNanchor_452" class="label">[452]</a> This is the metaphysical basis also of the Christian image-worship, which presently set in
+and of the appearance of wonder-working pictures of Mary and the Saints.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_453" href="#FNanchor_453" class="label">[453]</a> See <a href="#p60">p. 60</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_454" href="#FNanchor_454" class="label">[454]</a> The Nestorians protested against Mary <i>Theotokos</i> (she who bore God), opposing to her the
+concept of Christ the <i>Theophorus</i> (he who carried God in him). The deep difference between an
+image-loving and an image-hating religiousness is here clearly manifested.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_455" href="#FNanchor_455" class="label">[455]</a> Note the “Western” outlook on the substance-questions in the contemporary writings of
+Proclus—his double Zeus, his triad of πατήρ, δύναμις, νοήσις or νοητόν, and so forth (Zeller,
+<cite lang="de">Philosophie der Griechen</cite>, V, pp. 857, et seq.). Proclus’s beautiful “Hymn to Athene” is a veritable
+Ave Maria:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“But when an evil lapse of my being puts me into bondage</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">(And, ah, I know indeed how I am tossed about by many unholy deeds that in my blindness I have done),</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Be thou gracious to me, thou gentle one, thou blessing of mankind,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And let me not lie upon the earth as prey to fearful punishments,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">For I am, and I remain, thy chattel.”</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">(Hymn VII, Eudociæ Aug. rel. A. Ludwich, 1897.)</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_456" href="#FNanchor_456" class="label">[456]</a> See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., article “Apollinaris, the Younger.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_457" href="#FNanchor_457" class="label">[457]</a> And Russia, too, though hitherto Russia has kept it as a buried treasure.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_458" href="#FNanchor_458" class="label">[458]</a> The Christian missionary efforts of the West very generally followed the same method, maintaining
+the local places of prayer, and merely substituting crucifixes or relics for the idols. Gregory
+the Great even sanctioned the sacrifice of animals in Britain.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_459" href="#FNanchor_459" class="label">[459]</a> See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., art. “Khazars.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_460" href="#FNanchor_460" class="label">[460]</a> The Albigensian movement of the twelfth century.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_461" href="#FNanchor_461" class="label">[461]</a> Hermann, <cite lang="de">Chines. Geschichte</cite> (1912), p. 77.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_462" href="#FNanchor_462" class="label">[462]</a> A third, “contemporary,” movement should follow in the Russian world in the first half of
+the coming millennium.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_463" href="#FNanchor_463" class="label">[463]</a> Cf. <a href="#p3">pp. 3</a>, et seq. and foot-note p. 3.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_464" href="#FNanchor_464" class="label">[464]</a> See <a href="#p116">p. 116</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_465" href="#FNanchor_465" class="label">[465]</a> “He who loves God with inmost soul, transforms himself into God” (Bernard of Clairvaux).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_466" href="#FNanchor_466" class="label">[466]</a> For religious <em>thought</em> Destiny is always a causal quantity. Epistemology knows it, therefore,
+only as an indistinct word for causality. Only so long as we <em>do not</em> think upon it do we really
+know it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_467" href="#FNanchor_467" class="label">[467]</a> See <a href="#p25">p. 25</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_468" href="#FNanchor_468" class="label">[468]</a> The distinction between the two is one of <em>inner</em>
+ form. A sacrifice made by Socrates is at bottom
+a prayer; and generally the Classical sacrifice is to be looked upon as a <em>prayer in bodily form</em>.
+The ejaculated prayer of the criminal, on the contrary, is a sacrifice to which fear drives him.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_469" href="#FNanchor_469" class="label">[469]</a> And herein philosophy differs not in the least from soil-sprung folk-belief. Think of Kant’s
+category-table with its 3 × 4 units, of Hegel’s method, of Iamblichus’s triads.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_470" href="#FNanchor_470" class="label">[470]</a> See <a href="#p133">p. 133</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_471" href="#FNanchor_471" class="label">[471]</a> Cf. <a href="#p24">p. 24</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_472" href="#FNanchor_472" class="label">[472]</a> And even so the thought has a different disposition according as it is primitive or cultured;
+Chinese, Indian, Classical, Magian, or Western; and even German, English, or French. In the last
+resort, there are not even two individuals with exactly the same method.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_473" href="#FNanchor_473" class="label">[473]</a> Anatole France’s story <cite lang="fr">Le Jongleur de Notre Dame</cite> is something deeper than a beautiful
+fancy.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_474" href="#FNanchor_474" class="label">[474]</a> See <a href="#p33">p. 33</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_475" href="#FNanchor_475" class="label">[475]</a> Was it that highly civilized Crete, the outpost of Egyptian modes of thought, afforded a
+pattern (see <a href="#p87">p. 87</a>)? But, after all, the numerous local and tribal gods of the primitive Thinite time
+(before 3000), which represented the numina of particular beast-<i>genera</i>, were essentially different
+in meaning. The more powerful the Egyptian deity of this preliminary period is, the more particular
+individual spirits (<i>ka</i>) and individual souls (<i>bai</i>) he possesses, and these hide and lurk in
+the various animals—Bastet in the cat, Sechmet in the lion, Hathor in the cow, Mut in the vulture
+(hence the human-formed <i>ka</i> that figures behind the beast-head in the figures of the gods)—making
+of this earliest world-picture a very abortion of monstrous fear, filling it with powers which
+rage against man even after his death and which only the greatest sacrifices avail to placate. The
+union of the North and the South lands was represented by the common veneration of the Horus-falcon,
+whose first <i>ka</i> resided in the Pharaoh of the time. Cf. Eduard Meyer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Alt.</cite>, I, §§ 182,
+et seq. [See also Moret and Davy: <cite lang="fr">Des clans aux empires</cite> and Moret: <cite lang="fr">Le Nil et la civilisation égyptienne</cite>
+(available in English translations).—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_476" href="#FNanchor_476" class="label">[476]</a> <cite>Eumenides</cite>, 126.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_477" href="#FNanchor_477" class="label">[477]</a> Moreover, in the full maturity of Athens, every little girl of the upper classes was consecrated
+as a bear to this Artemis.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_478" href="#FNanchor_478" class="label">[478]</a> For further information the reader may consult the articles “Demeter,” etc., in the <cite>Ency.
+Brit.</cite>, XI ed.; and, for a suggestive introduction in the fewest possible words, Dr. Jane Harrison’s
+pamphlet, <cite>Myths of Greece and Rome</cite>.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_479" href="#FNanchor_479" class="label">[479]</a> Bernoulli, <cite lang="de">Die Heiligen der Merowinger</cite>
+ (1900)—a good account of this primitive religion.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_480" href="#FNanchor_480" class="label">[480]</a>
+ For an account of Russian sectarian movements see A. P. Stanley, <cite>Hist. of the Eastern Church</cite>;
+for a summary, <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., Vol. XXIII, p. 886.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_481" href="#FNanchor_481" class="label">[481]</a> Kattenbusch, <cite lang="de">Lehrb. d. vgl. Konfessionsk.</cite>,
+ I (1892), pp. 234, et seq.; N. P. Milyukov, <cite lang="de">Skizz. russ.
+Kulturg.</cite> (1901) II, pp. 104, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_482" href="#FNanchor_482" class="label">[482]</a> Borchardt, <cite lang="de">Reheiligtum des Newoserrê</cite>, I (1905). The Pharaoh is no longer an incarnation of
+godhead, and not yet, as the theology of the Middle Kingdom was to make him, the son of Re;
+notwithstanding all earthly greatness, he is small, a servant, as he stands before the god.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_483" href="#FNanchor_483" class="label">[483]</a> Erman, “<cite lang="de">Ein Denkmal memphitsiche Theologie</cite>,” <cite lang="de">Ber. Berl. Ak.</cite>
+ (1911), pp. 916, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_484" href="#FNanchor_484" class="label">[484]</a> Not, of course, to be connected in any profound sense with that which emerged under the name
+in the Magian Culture.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_485" href="#FNanchor_485" class="label">[485]</a> And because they were the gods of the eternal peasant, they outlived the Olympians.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_486" href="#FNanchor_486" class="label">[486]</a> Even though Hesiod is two centuries nearer to the source of his Culture than the German
+mystic is to that of our own. See the article “Boehme,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_487" href="#FNanchor_487" class="label">[487]</a> Insolent prosperity tempting Nemesis.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_488" href="#FNanchor_488" class="label">[488]</a> The work of J. J. Bachofen in this field has recently been assembled in concentrated form under
+the title <cite lang="de">Mythus von Occident und Orient</cite> (1926).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_489" href="#FNanchor_489" class="label">[489]</a> Wissowa, <cite lang="de">Religion und Kultus der Römer</cite>, p. 41. What has been said above (<a href="#p191">p. 191</a>) concerning
+the Talmudic religion applies also to the Etruscan religion by which all Italy—i.e., no less than
+half of the Classical field—was so deeply influenced. It lies outside the province of both the conventional
+“Classical” philologies and in consequence has been practically ignored, as compared
+with the Achæan and Doric religions. In reality (as its tombs, temples, and myths prove), it forms
+with them a single unit of spirit and evolution.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_490" href="#FNanchor_490" class="label">[490]</a> It is immaterial whether or not Dionysus was “borrowed” from Thrace, Apollo from Asia
+Minor, Aphrodite from Phœnicia. It is the fact that out of the thousands of alien motives these
+particular few were chosen and combined in so splendid a unity that implies the fundamental newness
+of the creation—just as does the Mary-cult of the Gothic, although in that case the whole form-material
+was taken over from the East.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_491" href="#FNanchor_491" class="label">[491]</a> As in De Groot’s <cite>Universismus</cite>
+ (1918), where, in fact, the systems of Taoists, Confucians, and
+Buddhists are handled without a qualm as <em>the</em> religions of China. This amounts to the same as
+saying that the Classical religion dates from Caracalla.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_492" href="#FNanchor_492" class="label">[492]</a> Conrady, in Wassiljew, <cite lang="de">Die Erschliessung Chinas</cite>
+ (1909), p. 232; B. Schindler, <cite lang="de">Das Priestertum
+im alten China</cite>, I (1919).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_493" href="#FNanchor_493" class="label">[493]</a> The Shu-Ching or Canon of History is a collection of ancient annals, the Shi-King a canonical
+anthology of rhymed tales made by Confucius.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_494" href="#FNanchor_494" class="label">[494]</a> Conrady, <cite>China</cite>, p. 516.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_495" href="#FNanchor_495" class="label">[495]</a> Of which an outstanding example is the Edda.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_496" href="#FNanchor_496" class="label">[496]</a> See article “Heliand” in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI edit., and works there referred to. A handy edition
+of the text is included in the “Reclam” series.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_497" href="#FNanchor_497" class="label">[497]</a> This idea differs essentially from that of the Egyptian duality of the spiritual <i>ka</i> and the
+soul-bird <i>bai</i>, and still more so from the Magian duality of soul-substances.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_498" href="#FNanchor_498" class="label">[498]</a> O. Franke, <cite lang="de">Studien zur Gesch. des Konfuzianischen Dogmas</cite> (1920), p. 202.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_499" href="#FNanchor_499" class="label">[499]</a> Reference may again be made to Yrjo Hirn, <cite>The Sacred Shrine</cite>.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_500" href="#FNanchor_500" class="label">[500]</a> Consider, for example, the fantastic paintings of Hieronymus Bosch. Breughel’s similar
+humour, too, is unthinkable without the tradition of a rank-and-file of evil creatures.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_501" href="#FNanchor_501" class="label">[501]</a> So also in the Classical, the Homeric figures were for educated people of Hellenistic times
+nothing but literature, representation, artistic motive. Even for Plato’s period they were little
+more than this. But in 1100 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, Demeter and Dionysus were a fearful actuality before which men
+collapsed.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_502" href="#FNanchor_502" class="label">[502]</a> The stern object of Roger Bacon’s science; see <a href="#p502">p. 502</a>, foot-note.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_503" href="#FNanchor_503" class="label">[503]</a> This is the real conclusion that emerges from Burdach’s <cite>Reformation, Renaissance, Humanismus</cite>
+(1918).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_504" href="#FNanchor_504" class="label">[504]</a> In this connexion, it is important to observe that the education-movement of Humanism took
+into its field modern Italian, Hebrew, etc., as well as the Classical knowledge. A Dante professorship
+was founded in Florence in 1373. As for the Classical itself, side by side with all the enthusiasm
+we find a significant note in Boccaccio, who thanks Jesus Christ for a victory over unbelief that has
+delivered up the <em>enemy’s camp</em> to the victor’s enjoyment. Burkhardt, <cite>Renaissance</cite>, Vol. I, p. 262
+(Reclam edition).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_505" href="#FNanchor_505" class="label">[505]</a> Bezold, <cite lang="de">Hist. Zeitschr.</cite>, 45, p. 208.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_506" href="#FNanchor_506" class="label">[506]</a> Italian, “Anna Metterza.” The reference is to the St. Anne of the Louvre and the Royal
+Academy Diploma Gallery, London.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_507" href="#FNanchor_507" class="label">[507]</a> Cf. Vol. I, p. 232.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_508" href="#FNanchor_508" class="label">[508]</a> Fra Angelico and Luca Signorelli.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_509" href="#FNanchor_509" class="label">[509]</a> The sense of such a relativity led to a mathematic (the calculus) which is literally based on
+the ignoring of second- and third-order magnitudes.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_510" href="#FNanchor_510" class="label">[510]</a> See article “Mysticism” in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_511" href="#FNanchor_511" class="label">[511]</a> After its confirmation in 1311, the character of this festival as one of popular joy became still
+more marked by its association with the nascent drama (see <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., articles “Corpus
+Christi,” “Drama”; and Y. Hirn, op. cit., pp. 144–5).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_512" href="#FNanchor_512" class="label">[512]</a> Or even rediscovered it. For Classical man as a spirit-filled body is one amongst many quite
+independent units, while Faustian man is a centre in the universe, which with its soul embraces <em>the
+whole</em>. But personality (individuality) means, not something separate (<i lang="de">einzelnes</i>), but something
+single (<i lang="de">einziges</i>).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_513" href="#FNanchor_513" class="label">[513]</a> Hence it is that this sacrament has conferred a position of such immense power upon the Western
+priest. He receives the personal confession, and speaks personally, in the name of the Infinite,
+the absolution, without which life would be unbearable.</p>
+
+<p>The notion of confession as a <em>duty</em>, which was finally established in 1215, first arose in England,
+whence came also the first confession-books (Penitentials). In England, too, originated, the idea
+of the Immaculate Conception, and even the <em>idea</em> of the Papacy—at a time when Rome itself thought
+of it as a question of power and precedence. It is evidence of the independence of Faustian Christianity
+from Magian that its decisive ideas grew up in those remote parts of its field which lay
+beyond the Frankish Empire.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_514" href="#FNanchor_514" class="label">[514]</a> The immeasurable difference between the Faustian and the Russian souls is disclosed in certain
+word-sounds. The Russian word for heaven is “<i>nyebo</i>,” which contains in its <i>n</i> a negative element.
+Western man looks up, the Russian looks horizontally into the broad plain. The death-impulse,
+too, of the respective souls is distinguishable, in that for the West it is the passion of drive all-ways
+into infinite space, whereas for Russians it is an expressing and expanding of self (<i lang="de">Sichentäussern</i>)
+till “it” in the man becomes identical with the boundless plain itself. It is thus that a Russian
+understands the words “man” and “brother.” He sees even mankind as a plane. The idea of a
+Russian’s being an astronomer! He does not see the stars at all, he sees only the horizon. Instead
+of the vault he sees the down-hang of the heavens—something that somewhere combines with
+the plain to form the horizon. For him the Copernican system, be it never so mathematical, is
+spiritually contemptible.</p>
+
+<p>While our German “<i lang="de">Schicksal</i>” rings like a trumpet call, “<i>Sud’bá</i>” is a genuflection. There is
+no room for the upstanding “I” beneath this almost flat-roofed heaven. That “<i>All are responsible for
+all</i>”—the “it” for the “it” in this boundlessly extended plain—is the metaphysical fundament
+of all Dostoyevski’s creation. That is why Ivan Karamasov must name himself murderer although
+another had done the murder. The criminal is the “unfortunate,” the “wretch”—it is the utter
+negation of Faustian personal responsibility. Russian mysticism has nothing of that upstriving
+inwardness of Gothic, of Rembrandt, of Beethoven, which can swell up to a heaven-storming jubilation—its
+god is not the azure depth up above. Mystical Russian love is love of the plain, the
+love of brothers under equal pressure all along the earth, ever along and along; the love of the
+poor tortured beasts that wander on it, the love of plants—never of birds and clouds and stars.
+The Russian “<i>volya</i>,” our “will,” means principally non-compulsion, freedom not <em>for</em> something
+but <em>from</em> something, and particularly freedom from compulsion to personal doing. Free-will is
+seen as a condition in which no one else can command “it,” and in which, therefore, one may give
+way to one’s own disposition. “<i lang="de">Geist</i>,” “<i lang="fr">esprit</i>,” “spirit,” go thus: ↗; the Russian “<i>duch</i>” goes
+thus: ↳. What sort of a Christianity will come forth one day from this world-feeling?</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_515" href="#FNanchor_515" class="label">[515]</a></p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza" lang="de">
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>“Und wenn die Welt voll Teufel wär’</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent2"><i>Und wollten uns verschlingen</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>So fürchten wir uns nimmermehr</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent2"><i>Es soll uns doch gelingen.”</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_516" href="#FNanchor_516" class="label">[516]</a> And, as the secession of a reformed Church necessarily transforms the parent Church, there
+was a <em>Magian counter-reformation</em> also. In the <cite lang="la">Decretum Gelasii</cite> (<i>c.</i> 500, Rome) even Clement of Alexandria,
+Tertullian, and Lactantius, and in the Synod of Byzantium (543) Origen, were declared
+heretical.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_517" href="#FNanchor_517" class="label">[517]</a> Boehmer, <cite lang="de">Luther im Lichte der neueren Forschung</cite> (1918), pp. 54, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_518" href="#FNanchor_518" class="label">[518]</a> See, for instance, H. T. Buckle, <cite>Hist. Civilization in England</cite>,
+ Vol. III, ch. iv, for the Scottish
+outlook, which at times attributed all this horror, not even to an anti-God, but to God himself.
+“Consider, who is the contriver of these torments. There have been some very exquisite torments
+contrived by the wit of men ... but all these fall as far short of the torments ye are to endure as the
+wisdom of man falls short of that of God.... Infinite wisdom has contrived that evil” (<cite>The Great
+Concern of Salvation</cite>, by T. Halyburton, 1722).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_519" href="#FNanchor_519" class="label">[519]</a> M. Osborn, <cite lang="de">Die Teufelsliteratur des 16. Jahrh.</cite> (1893).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_520" href="#FNanchor_520" class="label">[520]</a> Clocks being an outstanding example. See Vol. I, p. 15, foot-note.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_521" href="#FNanchor_521" class="label">[521]</a> The famous Bishop of Lincoln (1175–1253), scholar and philosopher, scientist and statesman—the
+British Oresme.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_522" href="#FNanchor_522" class="label">[522]</a> A clear summary of Grosseteste’s, Pierre de Maricourt’s, and Roger Bacon’s work and outlook
+will be found in Ch. ix of E. Gilson’s short manual, <cite lang="fr">La Philosophie au Moyen Âge</cite> (Paris, 1925).
+<cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., may also be consulted for Roger Bacon, but the article “Grosseteste” deals almost
+entirely with the bishop’s political and ecclesiastical career.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_523" href="#FNanchor_523" class="label">[523]</a> M. Baumgartner, <cite lang="de">Gesch. der Philos. des Mittelalters</cite>
+ (1915), pp. 425, 571, 620, et seq. [Brief
+account in Ch. xi (3) of Gilson’s manual above cited.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_524" href="#FNanchor_524" class="label">[524]</a> See Ch. XIV below.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_525" href="#FNanchor_525" class="label">[525]</a> Nigantha. See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., article “Jains.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_526" href="#FNanchor_526" class="label">[526]</a> 542. See <a href="#p197">p. 197</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_527" href="#FNanchor_527" class="label">[527]</a> Mahommedanism must be regarded as an eccentric heretical form of Eastern Christianity.
+This in fact was the ancient mode of regarding Mahommet. He was considered, not in the light
+of the founder of a new religion, but rather as one of the chief heresiarchs of the Church. Among
+them he is placed by Dante in the “Inferno.” Dean Stanley, <cite>Eastern Church</cite> (1861), Lecture VIII.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_528" href="#FNanchor_528" class="label">[528]</a> Krumbacher, <cite lang="de">Byzant. Literaturgesch.</cite>, p. 12.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_529" href="#FNanchor_529" class="label">[529]</a> See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., under these names.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_530" href="#FNanchor_530" class="label">[530]</a> Not to say the twentieth.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_531" href="#FNanchor_531" class="label">[531]</a> To which may be added Edinburgh.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_532" href="#FNanchor_532" class="label">[532]</a> πρὸς τὴν πειθὼ τῶν πολλῶν, <cite>Metaphysics</cite> XI, 8, p. 1074 (Bekker) 13.—<i>Tr.</i>
+ {sic—XII, 1074b 1–5}</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_533" href="#FNanchor_533" class="label">[533]</a> Caliphs like Al Maimun (813–33) and the last Ommayads would have entirely approved of
+similar measures in Islam. In those times there was a club in Baghdad in which Christians, Jews,
+Moslems, and Atheists debated, and appeals to the authority of Bible or Koran were “out of order.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_534" href="#FNanchor_534" class="label">[534]</a> Whereas “<i>virtù</i>” in Dante always carries a connotation of vital force, as also does the older
+English use of the word; e.g., in Chaucer’s “of which vertue engendred is the flour,” (<cite>Canterbury
+Tales</cite>, Prol. 4) and in the Bible (Mark v, 30). In Mediæval Latin “<i lang="la">virtutes</i>” is used for miracles.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_535" href="#FNanchor_535" class="label">[535]</a> See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., article “Jains.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_536" href="#FNanchor_536" class="label">[536]</a> E.g., “Given eye and visible object, visual consciousness arises; the conjunction of the three
+is contact; whereby conditioned, arises feeling; whereby conditioned, arises perception....”
+Majjima Nikhaya, I, 111 (quoted by Mrs. Rhys Davids, <cite>Buddhism</cite>).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_537" href="#FNanchor_537" class="label">[537]</a> Gercke-Norden, <cite lang="de">Einleit. in die Altertumswiss.</cite>, II, 210.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_538" href="#FNanchor_538" class="label">[538]</a> Compare the renewed controversy as to Transubstantiation in the English Church, 1926–8,
+in which a bishop actually proposed that physical tests could be applied to the altar-miracle.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_539" href="#FNanchor_539" class="label">[539]</a> Which was ordered no less than four times in the decade 58–49.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_540" href="#FNanchor_540" class="label">[540]</a> Horace’s fine lady, Leuconoë.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_541" href="#FNanchor_541" class="label">[541]</a>
+ It is perhaps possible for us to make some guess already as to these forms, which (it is self-evident)
+must lead back to certain elements of Gothic Christianity. But be this as it may, what is
+quite certain is that they will not be the product of any literary taste for Late-Indian or Late-Chinese
+speculation, but something of the type, for example, of Adventism and suchlike sects.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_542" href="#FNanchor_542" class="label">[542]</a> Arnim, <cite lang="de">Stoic. vet. fragm.</cite>, 537.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_543" href="#FNanchor_543" class="label">[543]</a> See <a href="#p202">p. 202</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_544" href="#FNanchor_544" class="label">[544]</a> The Lü-shi Chun-tsiu of Lü-pu-Wei (d. 237 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>,
+ Chinese Augustan Age) is the first monument
+of this syncretism, of which the final deposit was the ritual work <cite>Li-ki</cite> of the Han period (B.
+Schindler, <cite lang="de">Das Priestertum im alten China</cite>, I, 93).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_545" href="#FNanchor_545" class="label">[545]</a> M. Horten, <cite lang="de">Die religiöse Gedankenwelt des Volkes im heutigen Islam</cite> (1917).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_546" href="#FNanchor_546" class="label">[546]</a> 1018–78; cf. Dieterich, <cite lang="de">Byzant. Charakterköpfe</cite> (1909), p. 63. [Or <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed., article
+“Psellus.”—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_547" href="#FNanchor_547" class="label">[547]</a> It was only in old age and after long and heavy warring that both these Cæsars gave themselves
+up to a mild and weary piety, and both of them held aloof from the more definite religions. From
+the point of view of dogma, Asoka was no Buddhist; what he did was to understand the currents
+and take them under his protection (Hillebrandt, <cite lang="de">Altindien</cite>, p. 143). [Asoka’s life is dealt with in
+several of the works of Rhys Davids; for example, Ch. xv of his <cite>Buddhist India</cite>.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_548" href="#FNanchor_548" class="label">[548]</a> In so far as it is permissible to reckon Mithraism as Classical at all—for it is really a religion
+of the Magian Spring.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_549" href="#FNanchor_549" class="label">[549]</a> De Groot, <cite>Universismus</cite> (1918), p. 134.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_550" href="#FNanchor_550" class="label">[550]</a> <a href="#p169">P. 169</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_551" href="#FNanchor_551" class="label">[551]</a> See the article “Maimonides” in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_552" href="#FNanchor_552" class="label">[552]</a> Fromer, <cite lang="de">Der Talmud</cite>, p. 217. The “red cow” and the ritual of anointing a Jewish king were
+treated in this work with the same seriousness as the most important provisions of private law.
+[See J. and J. Tharaud, <cite lang="fr">Petite Histoire des Juifs</cite>, Ch. I (1927).—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_553" href="#FNanchor_553" class="label">[553]</a> See, for the following paragraphs, the articles “Jews,” “Hebrew Religion,” “Hebrew Literature,”
+“Kabbalah,” “Qaraites,” etc., in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_554" href="#FNanchor_554" class="label">[554]</a> Strunz, <cite lang="de">Gesch. der Naturwiss. im Mittelalter</cite>, p. 89.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_555" href="#FNanchor_555" class="label">[555]</a> Only with Nicolaus Cusanus was this state of things reversed.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_556" href="#FNanchor_556" class="label">[556]</a> <a href="#p174">P. 174</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_557" href="#FNanchor_557" class="label">[557]</a> The reader is recommended to study, in the light of all this, recent literature of the type of
+Hajim Bloch’s <cite>Golem</cite> and the works of the brothers Tharaud.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_558" href="#FNanchor_558" class="label">[558]</a> See <a href="#p259">pp. 259</a>, et seq.; <a href="#p174">174</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_559" href="#FNanchor_559" class="label">[559]</a> <a href="#p127">P. 127</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_560" href="#FNanchor_560" class="label">[560]</a> <a href="#p48">P. 48</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_561" href="#FNanchor_561" class="label">[561]</a> Prague contains a veritable corpus of commentary upon these pages.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_562" href="#FNanchor_562" class="label">[562]</a> <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 132. See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed., Vol. XV, p. 402, and Vol. III, p. 395.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_563" href="#FNanchor_563" class="label">[563]</a> Instances—besides that of Mithradates and the Cyprus massacre (<a href="#p198">p. 198</a>) quoted above—are
+the Sepoy Mutiny in India, the Boxer Rebellion in China, and the Bolshevist fury of Jews,
+Letts, and other alien peoples against Tsarist Russia.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_564" href="#FNanchor_564" class="label">[564]</a> P. Levertoff, <cite lang="de">Die religiöse Denkweise der Chassidim</cite>
+ (1918), pp. 128, et seq.; M. Buber, <cite lang="de">Die Legende
+des Baalschem</cite> (1907). [Brief account in J. and J. Tharaud, <cite lang="fr">Petite histoire des Juifs</cite>, Ch. vii.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_565" href="#FNanchor_565" class="label">[565]</a> Levertoff, op. cit., p. 136.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_566" href="#FNanchor_566" class="label">[566]</a> O. Weininger, <cite lang="de">Taschenbuch</cite> (1919), above all pp. 19, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_567" href="#FNanchor_567" class="label">[567]</a> Their ship-building was in Roman times more Classical than Phœnician, their state was organized
+as a Polis, and their educated people, like Hannibal, were familiar with Greek.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_568" href="#FNanchor_568" class="label">[568]</a> See <a href="#p260">p. 260</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_569" href="#FNanchor_569" class="label">[569]</a> Cf. <a href="#p3">p. 3</a> and foot-note.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_570" href="#FNanchor_570" class="label">[570]</a> And not until women cease to have race enough to have or to want children, not until they
+cease to <em>be</em> history, does it become possible for them to make or to copy the history of men. Conversely,
+it is deeply significant that we are in the habit of calling thinkers, doctrinaires, and humanity-enthusiasts
+of anti-political tendency “old women.” They wish to imitate the other history, the
+history of woman, although they—cannot.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_571" href="#FNanchor_571" class="label">[571]</a> No exact equivalent exists in common English for the German word “<i lang="de">Stand</i>.” “Aristocracy”
+is too narrow, as under most aspects the clergy and under some even the <i lang="fr">Tiers</i> have to be reckoned in.
+“Class” fails because, for logical completeness, it has to be stretched so as to bring in the qualitatively
+unclassed as a distinct category. (A whole social history is contained in the use of these and
+similar words at different periods.) The word “Estate” itself is used nowadays for the “masses”
+(“Fourth Estate” = “Proletariat”), but this very use, by Socialists, is an assertion that the masses,
+as workers, possess a qualitative peculiarity and condition of their own, and the word thus continues
+to connote ideas of differentiation, specific constitution, and oriented outlook. It may, therefore,
+be employed here without fear of misunderstanding or reproach of pedantry.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_572" href="#FNanchor_572" class="label">[572]</a> Cf. <a href="#p120">pp. 120</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_573" href="#FNanchor_573" class="label">[573]</a> Mitteis, <cite lang="de">Reichsrecht und Volksrecht</cite> (1891), p. 63.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_574" href="#FNanchor_574" class="label">[574]</a> Sohm, <cite lang="de">Institutionen</cite> (1911), p. 614. [<cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed., Vol. XXIII, pp. 540–1.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_575" href="#FNanchor_575" class="label">[575]</a> This principle formed the basis of the dynastic-idea of the Arabian world (Ommayads, Comneni,
+Sassanids), which is so hard for us to grasp. When a usurper had seized a throne, he hastened
+to marry one or another of the female members of the blood-community and so prolonged the dynasty;
+of law-made succession rights there was no question, nor under this idea could there be. (See
+also J. Wellhausen, <cite lang="de">Ein Gemeinwesen ohne Obrigkeit</cite> (1900).)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_576" href="#FNanchor_576" class="label">[576]</a> See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., Vol. XXIII, p. 574.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_577" href="#FNanchor_577" class="label">[577]</a> See <a href="#p18">p. 18</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_578" href="#FNanchor_578" class="label">[578]</a> An inversion of Clausewitz’s famous expression that war is a continuation of policy by other
+means. (<cite>On War</cite>, I, i, § 24).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_579" href="#FNanchor_579" class="label">[579]</a> Not excluding art, although we are not <em>conscious</em>
+ of them save through deduction from art-<em>history</em>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_580" href="#FNanchor_580" class="label">[580]</a> Original: “<i lang="de">Sie liegen im gesteigerten Dasein von Einzelnen und Kreisen, eben in dem, was soeben
+‘Dasein in Form’ genannt worden ist, und durch diese Höhe des Geformtseins erst die Kultur repräsentirt.</i>”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_581" href="#FNanchor_581" class="label">[581]</a> So in the German, but see foot-note <a href="#p329">p. 329</a>. “<i lang="de">Stand</i>”
+ would have expressed the sense better.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_582" href="#FNanchor_582" class="label">[582]</a> R. Fick, <cite lang="de">Die soziale Gliederung im nordöstlichen Indien zu Buddhas Zeit</cite>
+ (1897), p. 201; K. Hillebrandt,
+<cite lang="de">Alt-Indien</cite> (1899), p. 82. [Also the article “Brahmanism,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_583" href="#FNanchor_583" class="label">[583]</a> See Vol. I, p. 157.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_584" href="#FNanchor_584" class="label">[584]</a></p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>Got hât driu leben geschaffen</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>Gebûre, ritter, phaffen.</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>[Note the collective <i>ge-</i> attached to the first-named.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_585" href="#FNanchor_585" class="label">[585]</a> The ease with which Bolshevism extinguished the four so-called estates or classes of Petrine
+Russia—nobles, merchants, small townspeople, and peasants—shows that these were mere imitations
+and administrative conveniences, and destitute of all symbolism—for symbolism no power
+on earth can choke. They correspond to the outward differences of rank and possessions that existed
+in the Visigothic and Frankish Kingdoms, and—as glimpses afforded by the earliest parts of the
+Iliad show—in Mycenæan times. It is reserved for the future to develop a true nobility and clergy
+in Russia.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_586" href="#FNanchor_586" class="label">[586]</a> As a treaty of reciprocal possession by the two parties which is made effective by the reciprocal
+use of their sex-properties.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_587" href="#FNanchor_587" class="label">[587]</a> Oldenberg, <cite lang="de">Die Lehre der Upanishaden</cite> (1915), p. 5.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_588" href="#FNanchor_588" class="label">[588]</a> <a href="#p124">P. 124</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_589" href="#FNanchor_589" class="label">[589]</a> “So, then, because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my
+mouth.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_590" href="#FNanchor_590" class="label">[590]</a> <a href="#p4">P. 4</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_591" href="#FNanchor_591" class="label">[591]</a> The case of Egypt is of course similar.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_592" href="#FNanchor_592" class="label">[592]</a> <a href="#p272">Pp. 272</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_593" href="#FNanchor_593" class="label">[593]</a> <cite lang="de">Jenseits von Gut und Böse</cite>, § 260.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_594" href="#FNanchor_594" class="label">[594]</a> In contrast, the Spanish word “<i lang="es">Hidalgo</i>” means “son of somebody.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_595" href="#FNanchor_595" class="label">[595]</a> Conversely, it can successfully be controverted—and often has been so in the Chinese and
+Classical, Indian and Western philosophies—but it does not get abolished.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_596" href="#FNanchor_596" class="label">[596]</a> The possession of movable things (food, equipment, arms) comes later, and is of much lower
+symbolic weight. It occurs widely in the animal world. The bird’s nest, on the contrary, is a
+property of plantlike kind.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_597" href="#FNanchor_597" class="label">[597]</a> Property in this most significant sense—the having grown up with something—refers therefore
+less to the particular person than to the family tree to which he belongs. In every quarrel within
+a peasant or even within a princely family, this is the deep and violent element. The master for the
+time being holds possession only in the name of the family line. Hence, too, the terror of death without
+heirs. <em>Property also is a Time-symbol</em>, and consequently it is closely related to marriage, which is
+a firm plantlike intergrowth and mutual possession of two human beings, so real as to be even
+reflected in an increasing facial similarity.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_598" href="#FNanchor_598" class="label">[598]</a> See <a href="#p248">p. 248</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_599" href="#FNanchor_599" class="label">[599]</a> See these headings in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI. ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_600" href="#FNanchor_600" class="label">[600]</a> After death the teachers of error are excluded from the eternal bliss of the text-book and cast
+into the purgatorial fires of foot-notes, whence, purged by the intercession of the believer, they
+ascend into the paradise of the paragraphs.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_601" href="#FNanchor_601" class="label">[601]</a> Black Jews, who are smiths to a man.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_602" href="#FNanchor_602" class="label">[602]</a> The genuinely primitive Mir, contrary to the assertions of enthusiastic socialists and pan-slavists,
+dates only from after 1600, and has been abolished since 1861. Here the soil is <em>communal</em> soil,
+and the villagers are as far as possible held fast, in order to ensure that the tilling of this soil shall
+cover the demands of taxation.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_603" href="#FNanchor_603" class="label">[603]</a> See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>,
+ XI ed., Vol. XI, pp. 94, 786, or any histories of German literature.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_604" href="#FNanchor_604" class="label">[604]</a> See, further, below.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_605" href="#FNanchor_605" class="label">[605]</a> Brentano, <cite lang="de">Byzant. Volkswirtschaft</cite> (1917), p. 15.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_606" href="#FNanchor_606" class="label">[606]</a> Even I-wang (934–909) was obliged to leave conquered territories to his vassals, who put in
+counts and reeves of their own choice.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_607" href="#FNanchor_607" class="label">[607]</a> See H. Delbrück, <cite lang="de">Gesch. der Kriegskunst</cite>,
+ Vol. II, Book I, Ch. x; or C. W. C. Oman, <cite>Art of War:
+Middle Ages</cite>, Ch. i.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_608" href="#FNanchor_608" class="label">[608]</a> The slave in the Classical sense disappears automatically and completely in these centuries—one
+of the most significant indications that the Classical world-feeling, and with it its economic
+feeling, were extinct.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_609" href="#FNanchor_609" class="label">[609]</a> Thus, later, under Justinian, Belisarius could furnish seven thousand cavalry from his own
+domains for the Gothic War. Very few German princes could have done so much in Charles V’s
+time. [The last of such armies in Western history was the army of the House of Condé in the
+seventeenth century. These centuries of ours “correspond” with the period that set in with Justinian.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_610" href="#FNanchor_610" class="label">[610]</a> Pöhlmann, <cite lang="de">Röm. Kaiserzeit</cite> (Pflugk-Harttungs <cite lang="de">Weltgesch.</cite>,
+ I, pp. 200, et seq.).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_611" href="#FNanchor_611" class="label">[611]</a> See <a href="#p286">p. 286</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_612" href="#FNanchor_612" class="label">[612]</a> In spite of Ed. Meyer (<cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Altertums</cite>, I, § 243).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_613" href="#FNanchor_613" class="label">[613]</a> Our marshal and the Chinese <i>sse-ma</i>, chamberlain and <i>Chen</i>, high steward and <i>ta-tsai</i>,
+ high
+bailiff and <i>nan</i>, earl and <i>peh</i> (the Chinese ranks as in Schindler, <cite lang="de">Das Priestertum im alten China</cite>, p. 61,
+et seq.). Precisely corresponding Egyptian grades in Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. des Altertums</cite>, I, § 222; Byzantine
+in the “<cite lang="la">Notitia Dignitatum</cite>” (derived in part from the Sassanid Court). In the Classical
+city-states certain official titles of ancient origin suggest court functions (Colacretæ, Prytanes,
+Consuls). See further below.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_614" href="#FNanchor_614" class="label">[614]</a> Hardy, <cite lang="de">Indische Religionsgesch.</cite>, p. 260.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_615" href="#FNanchor_615" class="label">[615]</a> M. Granet, <cite lang="de">Coutumes matrimoniales de la Chine antique, T’oung Pao</cite>
+ (1912), pp. 517, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_616" href="#FNanchor_616" class="label">[616]</a> The tournament was an institution in the other, western, half of the Magian world as
+well.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_617" href="#FNanchor_617" class="label">[617]</a> The life of John Chrysostom is an instance.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_618" href="#FNanchor_618" class="label">[618]</a> Another example (beloved of artists) stands to this day in the town of San Gimigniano, which
+is almost nothing but a group of family towers ranging up to 150 ft. in height.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_619" href="#FNanchor_619" class="label">[619]</a> Ambrogio Spinola is a case in point.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_620" href="#FNanchor_620" class="label">[620]</a> The memoirs of the Duc de Saint Simon give a vivid picture of this evolution.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_621" href="#FNanchor_621" class="label">[621]</a> <a href="#p75">P. 75</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_622" href="#FNanchor_622" class="label">[622]</a> Corresponding to our seventeenth century.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_623" href="#FNanchor_623" class="label">[623]</a> K. J. Neumann, <cite lang="de">Die Grundherrschaft der römischen Republik</cite>
+ (1900); Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Kl. Schriften</cite>,
+pp. 351, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_624" href="#FNanchor_624" class="label">[624]</a> A. Rosenberg, <cite lang="de">Studien zur Entstehung der Plebs</cite>,
+ Herm. XLVIII (1913), pp. 359, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_625" href="#FNanchor_625" class="label">[625]</a> <a href="#p102">Pp. 102</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_626" href="#FNanchor_626" class="label">[626]</a> See <a href="#p159">pp. 159</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_627" href="#FNanchor_627" class="label">[627]</a> <a href="#p170">Pp. 170</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_628" href="#FNanchor_628" class="label">[628]</a> See Vol. I, pp. 136, et seq.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_629" href="#FNanchor_629" class="label">[629]</a> Hence such codes throw out the privileges of nobility and clergy and sustain those of money
+and intellect, and display a frank preference for movable as against real property.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_630" href="#FNanchor_630" class="label">[630]</a> <a href="#p75">Pp. 75</a>, et seq. The corresponding attempt of the absolutist Stuarts to introduce Roman Law
+into England was defeated chiefly by the Puritan jurist Coke (d. 1634)—yet another proof that
+the spirit of laws is always a party-spirit.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_631" href="#FNanchor_631" class="label">[631]</a> See <a href="#p65">pp. 65</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_632" href="#FNanchor_632" class="label">[632]</a> Above all in connexion with divorce, in which the civil and the ecclesiastical views <em>both</em>
+ hold
+good, literally side by side.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_633" href="#FNanchor_633" class="label">[633]</a> See <a href="#p330">p. 330</a>.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_634" href="#FNanchor_634" class="label">[634]</a> Thus come about the much satirized forms of the “patrol-” or “barrack-state,” as opponents
+call it with an unintelligent scorn. Similar points of view appear also in Chinese and Greek constitutional
+theories (O. Franke, <cite lang="de">Studien zur Geschichte des konfuzianischen Dogmas</cite> (1920), pp. 211, et
+seq.; Pöhlmann, <cite lang="de">Geschichte der sozialen Frage und der Sozialismus in der antiken Welt</cite> (1912)). On the
+other hand, the political tastes of, for example, Wilhelm von Humboldt, who as a Classicist opposed
+the individual to the State, belong, not to political history at all, but to literature. For what he
+looked at was, not the capacity of the State to thrive in the real State-world around it, but its private
+existence within itself, without regard to the fact that such an ideal could not endure for an
+instant in the face of a neglected outer situation. It is a basic error of the ideologues that, in concentrating
+on the private life and referring to it the whole inner structure of the State, they entirely
+ignore the latter’s position in point of outward power, though this in fact completely conditions its
+freedom for the inward development. The difference between the French and the German Revolutions,
+for example, consists in the fact that the one commanded the external situation and <em>therewith</em>
+the internal also, while the other commanded neither and was foredoomed to farce.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_635" href="#FNanchor_635" class="label">[635]</a> Which is most definitely <em>not</em>
+ identical with economic history in the sense of the materialist
+historian. More of this in the next chapter.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_636" href="#FNanchor_636" class="label">[636]</a> It is to be noted that the author uses the terms “horizontal” and “vertical” here in the reverse
+sense to that in which they commonly figure in present-day <em>political</em> literature, although in
+<em>economic</em> works the usage is the same as that of the text.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_637" href="#FNanchor_637" class="label">[637]</a> Attention is drawn to this phrase, so as to avoid misconceptions as to the meaning of “subject”
+in the sequel.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_638" href="#FNanchor_638" class="label">[638]</a> Compare the position of the aristocratic families of the South in the history of the United
+States up to 1850–60.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_639" href="#FNanchor_639" class="label">[639]</a> For in those centuries the high dignities of the Church were invariably given to the nobility
+of Europe, who put the political qualities of the blood at her service. From this school in turn
+emanated statesmen like Richelieu, Mazarin, and Talleyrand, to name but a few.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_640" href="#FNanchor_640" class="label">[640]</a> See <a href="#p180">p. 180</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_641" href="#FNanchor_641" class="label">[641]</a> I.e., Domesday Book.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_642" href="#FNanchor_642" class="label">[642]</a> See <a href="#p350">p. 350</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_643" href="#FNanchor_643" class="label">[643]</a> Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. a. Altertums</cite>, I, § 244.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_644" href="#FNanchor_644" class="label">[644]</a> Even by Chinese critics. See, however, Schindler, <cite lang="de">Das Priestertum im alten China</cite>,
+ I, pp. 61, et
+seq.; Conrady, <cite>China</cite>, p. 533.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_645" href="#FNanchor_645" class="label">[645]</a> See <a href="#p349">pp. 349</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_646" href="#FNanchor_646" class="label">[646]</a> “<i lang="la">Compotus</i>,” “<i lang="la">contrarotulus</i>” (the counter-roll retained for checking), “<i>quittancia</i>,”
+ “<i lang="la">recordatum</i>.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_647" href="#FNanchor_647" class="label">[647]</a> See <a href="#p279">p. 279</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_648" href="#FNanchor_648" class="label">[648]</a> “For the ruler of the Middle there is no foreign land” (Kung-yang). “The heaven speaks not;
+it causes its thoughts to be promulgated by a man” (Tung Chung-shu). His errors affect the whole
+cosmos and bring about cataclysms in Nature (O. Franke, <cite lang="de">Zur Geschichte des konfuzianischen Dogmas</cite>
+(1920), pp. 212, et seq., 244, et seq.). Such mystic universalism was completely alien to Indian
+and Classical state-notions.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_649" href="#FNanchor_649" class="label">[649]</a> It must not be forgotten that the immense domains of the Church had become hereditary fiefs
+of the bishops and archbishops, who were no more disposed than the lay peers to permit interferences
+on the part of the overlord.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_650" href="#FNanchor_650" class="label">[650]</a> After the overthrow of the Tyrannis, <i>c.</i>
+ 500, the two regents of the Roman patriciate bear the
+title <i lang="la">prætor</i> or <i lang="la">judex</i>. But it seems to me probable that these go back beyond the Tyrannis and even
+the preceding oligarchic period into that of the kingship proper, and that as court-offices they have
+the same origin as our <i lang="de">Herzog</i>, duke (<i>præ-itor</i>); <i lang="de">Heerwart</i>, in Athens polemarch; and <i lang="de">Graf</i>, earl (“<i>Ding-graf</i>,”
+hereditary arbiter, in Athens archon). The name “<i lang="la">consul</i>” (from 366) is philologically
+thoroughly archaic, and therefore implies no new creation, but the renascence of a title (king’s
+adviser?) which oligarchic sentiment had long repudiated.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_651" href="#FNanchor_651" class="label">[651]</a> Beloch, <cite lang="de">Griechische Geschichte</cite>, I, 1, pp. 214, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_652" href="#FNanchor_652" class="label">[652]</a> The Spartiates mustered in the best period of the sixth century some 4000 warriors, out of a
+total population of nearly 300,000, including Periœci and Helots (Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Alt.</cite>, III,
+§ 264). The Roman families must at that time have been of about the same strength relatively to the
+<i lang="la">clientela</i> and the Latins.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_653" href="#FNanchor_653" class="label">[653]</a>
+ Men’s messes. See the article Συσσίτια in Smith’s <cite>Dictionary of Classical Antiquities.</cite>—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_654" href="#FNanchor_654" class="label">[654]</a> Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Geschichte des Alt.</cite>, I, § 264.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_655" href="#FNanchor_655" class="label">[655]</a> Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Alt.</cite>, I, § 267, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_656" href="#FNanchor_656" class="label">[656]</a> See Ehrenberg, <cite lang="de">Die Rechtsidee im frühen Griechentum</cite> (1921), pp. 65, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_657" href="#FNanchor_657" class="label">[657]</a> <a href="#p18">P. 18</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_658" href="#FNanchor_658" class="label">[658]</a> <a href="#p171">Pp. 171</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_659" href="#FNanchor_659" class="label">[659]</a> <a href="#p181">P. 181</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_660" href="#FNanchor_660" class="label">[660]</a> F. Cumont, <cite lang="de">Mysterien des Mithra</cite> (1910), pp. 74, et seq. The Sassanid government, which
+about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 300 changed from the feudal union to the aristocratic State, was in all respects the pattern
+for Byzantium in ceremonial, in the knightly character of its Empire, in administrative management,
+and above all in the type of its Ruler. Cf. also A. Christensen, <cite lang="fr">L’Empire des Sassanides, le peuple, l’état,
+la cour</cite> (Copenhagen, 1907).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_661" href="#FNanchor_661" class="label">[661]</a> Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Kl. Shriften</cite>, p. 146.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_662" href="#FNanchor_662" class="label">[662]</a> See <a href="#p243">p. 243</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_663" href="#FNanchor_663" class="label">[663]</a> Krumbacher, <cite lang="de">Byzant. Literaturgesch.</cite>, p. 918.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_664" href="#FNanchor_664" class="label">[664]</a> A bright light is thrown upon the formation of this picture by the fact that the descendants
+of the repeatedly overthrown dynasties of Hia and Shang reigned in the states of Ki-Sung throughout
+the Chóu period (Schindler, <cite lang="de">Das Priestertum im alten China</cite>, I, p. 30). This shows, firstly, that the
+picture of the Empire was mirrored back on some earlier or even perhaps a contemporary eminence
+of these states; and, secondly and above all, that here too “dynasty” was not what we currently
+mean by the name, but followed some quite different idea of the family. We may compare the
+fiction which made the German King, who was always chosen on Frankish territory and crowned in
+the sepulchral chapel of Charlemagne, into a “Frank,” so that if circumstances had been different,
+there might have evolved the notion of a Frankish dynasty running from Charles to Conradin
+(see Amira, <cite lang="de">German. Recht</cite> in Herm. Paul, <cite lang="de">Grundriss</cite>, III, p. 147, note). From the Confucian age of
+enlightenment this picture became the basis of a State-theory, and later still it was turned to account
+by the Cæsars (p. 313).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_665" href="#FNanchor_665" class="label">[665]</a> O. Franke, <cite lang="de">Studien zur Gesch. d. Konfuz. Dogmas</cite>, pp. 247, 251.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_666" href="#FNanchor_666" class="label">[666]</a> An illuminating example is the “personal union” of the Ki and Tseng states, contested as
+contrary to law (Franke, op. cit., p. 251).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_667" href="#FNanchor_667" class="label">[667]</a> Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Alt.</cite>, I, § 281.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_668" href="#FNanchor_668" class="label">[668]</a> G. Busolt, <cite lang="de">Griech. Staatskunde</cite> (1920), pp. 319, et seq. U. von Wilamowitz (<cite lang="de">Staat und
+Gesellschaft der Griechen</cite>, 1910, p. 53), in disputing the existence of the patriarchal kingdom, misunderstands
+the immense difference between the conditions of the eighth century, indicated in the
+Odyssey, and those of the tenth.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_669" href="#FNanchor_669" class="label">[669]</a> A. Rosenberg, <cite lang="de">Der Staat der alten Italiker</cite>, pp. 75, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_670" href="#FNanchor_670" class="label">[670]</a> Estate or Class was the basis, too, of the two great political associations in Byzantium, which
+are quite wrongly described as “Circus parties.” These Blues and Greens called themselves “Demoi”
+and had their regular leaders. The circus was simply like the Palais Royal of 1789, the scene of
+public manifestations, and behind them were the class-associations of the Senate. When in 520
+Anastasius I gave effect to the Monophysite tendency, the Greens sang orthodox hymns all day there,
+and so forced the Emperor publicly to cry off. The Western counterpart to this is formed by the Parisian
+parties under the “three Henries” (1580), the Guelphs and Ghibellines of Savonarola’s Florence,
+and above all the insurgent faction in Rome under Pope Eugene IV. The suppression of the Nika
+Rebellion by Justinian in 532 was thus also the foundation of State-absolutism <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> the Estates.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_671" href="#FNanchor_671" class="label">[671]</a> This contrast gives rise to a corresponding contrast in idea of colonization. Whereas, e.g.,
+the Prussian sovereigns invited settlers to their <em>land</em> (Salzburg Protestants, French Huguenots),
+Gelon forcibly transferred the populations of whole cities into Syracuse, which thus became the
+first megalopolis of the Classical world (<i>c.</i> 480).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_672" href="#FNanchor_672" class="label">[672]</a> The Greek lecythi found in graves on the Esquiline date form this period.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_673" href="#FNanchor_673" class="label">[673]</a> Wissowa, <cite lang="de">Religion der Römer</cite>, p. 242.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_674" href="#FNanchor_674" class="label">[674]</a> W. Schulze, <cite lang="de">Zur Geschichte lateinischen Eigennamen</cite>,
+ pp. 379, et seq., 580, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_675" href="#FNanchor_675" class="label">[675]</a> See <a href="#p351">p. 351</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_676" href="#FNanchor_676" class="label">[676]</a> This is seen also in the relation of the <i lang="la">Pontifex Maximus</i> to the <i lang="la">Rex Sacrorum</i>—the
+ latter with
+the three great Flamens to the kingship, the Pontifices and the Vestals to the aristocracy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_677" href="#FNanchor_677" class="label">[677]</a> See <a href="#p62">p. 62</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_678" href="#FNanchor_678" class="label">[678]</a> <a href="#p173">P. 173</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_679" href="#FNanchor_679" class="label">[679]</a> This is clearly to be seen from Wilcken, <cite lang="de">Grundzüge der Papyruskunde</cite>
+ (1912), pp. 1, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_680" href="#FNanchor_680" class="label">[680]</a> Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Cæsars Monarchie</cite> (1918), p. 308.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_681" href="#FNanchor_681" class="label">[681]</a> Plutarch and Appian describe the masses of humanity that moved in by all the roads of Italy
+to vote on Tiberius Gracchus’s land-bills. But this in itself shows that nothing of the sort had ever
+happened before; and immediately after his violence upon Octavius, Tiberius Gracchus saw downfall
+staring him in the face because the masses had streamed off home again and were not to be assembled
+a second time. In Cicero’s day a Comitia often consisted only in speeches by a few politicians,
+without participation by others; but never did it occur to a Roman to transfer the place of
+voting to the residence of the individual voter—nor even to the Italians when they were fighting
+for citizenship in 90 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> So strong was the feeling of the Polis.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_682" href="#FNanchor_682" class="label">[682]</a> In the Western dynasty-states the domestic law of each is valid for its <em>territory</em>
+ and applies
+therefore to all persons present therein, irrespective of allegiance. In the city-state, on the contrary,
+the validity of its domestic law for a person arises from that person’s possession of citizenship;
+<i lang="la">civitas</i>, therefore, means infinitely more than present-day nationality, for without it a man was
+without rights at all—as a “person,” non-existent.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_683" href="#FNanchor_683" class="label">[683]</a> See <a href="#p60">p. 60</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_684" href="#FNanchor_684" class="label">[684]</a> Gercke-Norden, <cite lang="de">Einl. i. d. Alt.-Wiss.</cite>, II, p. 202.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_685" href="#FNanchor_685" class="label">[685]</a> Busolt, <cite lang="de">Griech. Geschichte</cite>, II, pp. 346, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_686" href="#FNanchor_686" class="label">[686]</a> Cf. <a href="#p282">pp. 282</a> and 305. Fronde and Tyrannis have as intimate a connexion with Puritanism—the
+same epochal phase, but in the religious instead of the political world—as the Reformation
+with the aristocratic State, and the “Second Religiousness” with Cæsarism.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_687" href="#FNanchor_687" class="label">[687]</a> G. Wissowa, <cite lang="de">Religion der Römer</cite>, pp. 297, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_688" href="#FNanchor_688" class="label">[688]</a> Beloch, <cite lang="de">Griech. Geschichte</cite>, I, 1, p. 354.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_689" href="#FNanchor_689" class="label">[689]</a> Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Alt.</cite>, § 281.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_690" href="#FNanchor_690" class="label">[690]</a> Ibid., §§ 280, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_691" href="#FNanchor_691" class="label">[691]</a> On the means taken to secure the succession, cf. p. 379.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_692" href="#FNanchor_692" class="label">[692]</a> Ed. Meyer, op. cit., § 286.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_693" href="#FNanchor_693" class="label">[693]</a> Ibid., § 283. A. Erman, <cite lang="de">Die Mahnworte eines ägyptischen Propheten</cite> (<cite lang="de">Sitz. Preuss. Akad.</cite>),
+ 1919, pp.
+804, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_694" href="#FNanchor_694" class="label">[694]</a> S. Plath, <cite lang="de">Verfassung und Verwaltung Chinas</cite> (<cite lang="de">Abb. Münch. Ak.</cite>,
+ 1864), p. 97, O. Franke, <cite lang="de">Studien
+z. Gesch. d. Konfuz. Dogmas</cite>, pp. 255, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_695" href="#FNanchor_695" class="label">[695]</a> After armed rebellion.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_696" href="#FNanchor_696" class="label">[696]</a> The fifty-year interval of these critical points, which is seen with special distinctness in the
+clear historical structure of the Baroque, but is recognizable also in the sequence of the three Punic
+Wars, is yet another hint that the Cosmic flowings in the form of human lives upon the surface of a
+minor star are not self-contained and independent, but stand in deep harmony with the unending
+movedness of the universe. In a small but noteworthy book, R. Mewes, <cite lang="de">Die Kriegs- und Geistesperioden
+im Völkerleben unde Verkündigung des nächsten Weltkrieges</cite> (1896), the relation of those war-periods
+with weather-periods, sun-spot cycles, and certain conjunctures of the planets is established, and a
+great war foretold accordingly for the period 1910–20. But these and numerous similar connexions
+that come within the reach of our senses (cf. <a href="#p5">pp. 5</a>, et seq.) veil a secret that we have to respect and
+not to infringe with causal expositions or mystical brain-spectres.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_697" href="#FNanchor_697" class="label">[697]</a> See C. von B(inder)-K(rieglstein), <cite lang="de">Geist und Stoff im Kriege</cite>
+ (1896); F. N. Maude, <cite>War and the
+World’s Life</cite> (1907), and other works by the same author; also, in more summary terms, the articles
+“Army” and “French Revolutionary Wars” by the present translator in <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_698" href="#FNanchor_698" class="label">[698]</a> “Rule, Britannia” is an eighteenth-century product.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_699" href="#FNanchor_699" class="label">[699]</a> For this, and what follows, see my <cite lang="de">Preussentum und Sozialismus</cite>, pp. 31, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_700" href="#FNanchor_700" class="label">[700]</a>
+ Mr. Asquith (Lord Oxford) was the first British Prime Minister to be officially so styled.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_701" href="#FNanchor_701" class="label">[701]</a> “Landed” and “funded” interests (J. Hatschek, <cite lang="de">Engl. Verfassungsgeschichte</cite>, 1913, pp. 589, et
+seq.). Walpole, the organizer of the Whig party after 1714, used to describe himself and Townshend
+as “the Firm;” and this “firm” with various changes of proprietorship governed without limitation
+till 1760.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_702" href="#FNanchor_702" class="label">[702]</a> R. von Pöhlmann, <cite lang="de">Griech. Gesch.</cite> (1914), pp. 223–45.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_703" href="#FNanchor_703" class="label">[703]</a> Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Alt.</cite> V § 809. If Latin became a literary language, only very late—after
+Alexander—the only deduction to be made from the fact is that under the Tarquins Greek and
+Etruscan must have been in general use—which, after all, goes without saying for a city that was
+of a size and position to have relations with Carthage; that waged war in alliance with Cyme and
+made use of the Treasury of Massalia at Delphi; whose standard weights and measures were Dorian;
+whose mode of warfare was Sicilian; and whose walls contained a large foreign colony. Livy
+(IX, 36), following older statements, observes that about 300 the Roman boy was still brought upon
+Etruscan culture, as he was later on Greek. The ancient form “Ulixes” for Odysseus shows that the
+Homeric sagas were not only known, but popularly known here (cf. <a href="#p284">p. 284</a>). The provisions of the
+Twelve Tables (<i>c.</i> 450) agree with the more or less contemporary law of Gortyn in Crete (cf. <a href="#p63">p. 63</a>),
+not merely as to substance, but even stylistically—so exactly that the Roman patricians who drew
+them up must have been entirely at home with juristic Greek.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_704" href="#FNanchor_704" class="label">[704]</a> This measure—a usurpation of the administration by the “nation in arms”—corresponds to
+the setting-up of Consular Tribunes in Rome in the military disturbances of 438.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_705" href="#FNanchor_705" class="label">[705]</a> According to B. Niese. Modern investigators are right in the view that the Decemvirate was
+at first intended to be temporary; but the question is—what were the views of the party that
+backed them concerning the <em>new</em> constitutional order that was to follow. It was on that that a
+crisis had inevitably to come.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_706" href="#FNanchor_706" class="label">[706]</a> A. Wahl, <cite lang="de">Vorgeschichte d. franz. Revolution</cite>,
+ II (1907); this work is the only presentation of the
+subject from the world-historical point of view. All Frenchmen, even the most modern, such as
+Aulard and Sorel, see things from one or another partisan angle. It is materialistic nonsense to talk
+of economic causes for a Revolution like this. Even the peasantry was better off than in most other
+countries, and in any case it was not among them that it began. It was amongst the <em>educated</em> that
+the catastrophe started, the educated of <em>all</em> the classes—in the high nobility and the clergy even
+sooner than in the higher bourgeoisie, because the course of the first assembly of Notables (1787) had
+disclosed the possibility of radically reshaping the form of government according to class-desires.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_707" href="#FNanchor_707" class="label">[707]</a> Even the highly provincial March Revolution of 1848 in Germany was a purely urban matter;
+hence the vanishingly small proportion of the population involved as participants.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_708" href="#FNanchor_708" class="label">[708]</a> Hence also the exclusive bourgeois character of the National Guard in France from 1815 to
+1851, the period between two phases of popular Tyrannis. In the <i lang="fr">coup d’état</i> by which Napoleon III
+seized the throne, Paris was filled with regular troops, and the National Guard was forbidden to
+assemble on pain of death.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_709" href="#FNanchor_709" class="label">[709]</a> <a href="#p97">Pp. 97</a>, and <a href="#p305">305</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_710" href="#FNanchor_710" class="label">[710]</a> See <a href="#p348">pp. 348</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_711" href="#FNanchor_711" class="label">[711]</a> J. Hatschek, <cite lang="de">Engl. Verfassungsgesch.</cite>, p. 588.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_712" href="#FNanchor_712" class="label">[712]</a> On the other side of the Channel, it is well known that the Rothschild fortune was founded
+in a dramatic play upon the varying news from the front in Belgium.</p>
+
+<p>In the second phase of the Franco-German War of 1870–1 the bankers of Frankfurt took up holdings
+in the loans floated by the French Government of National Defence.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_713" href="#FNanchor_713" class="label">[713]</a> But even during the Reign of Terror in the middle of Paris, there flourished the establishment
+of Dr. Belhomme, in which members of the highest aristocracy ate and drank and danced out of all
+danger for so long as they could pay (G. Lenôtre, <cite lang="de">Das revolutionäre Paris</cite>, p. 409).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_714" href="#FNanchor_714" class="label">[714]</a> The great movement which makes use of the catchwords of Marx has not delivered the entrepreneur
+into the power of the worker, but both into that of the Bourse.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_715" href="#FNanchor_715" class="label">[715]</a> Both the old parties possessed clear lines of tradition back to 1680.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_716" href="#FNanchor_716" class="label">[716]</a> The moral and political “Enlightenment” movement was in England also a product of the
+Third Estate (Priestley and Paley, Paine, Godwin), and for that reason was unable to grasp things
+with the fine discrimination of a Shaftesbury.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_717" href="#FNanchor_717" class="label">[717]</a> Pelham, the successor of Walpole, paid to members of the Commons, through his secretary,
+£500 to £800 at the end of each session according to the value of the services rendered by each recipient
+to the Government—i.e., the Whig party. The party agent Dodington described his parliamentary
+activities in these words: “I never attended a debate if I could help it, and I never missed a
+division that I could possibly take part in. I heard many arguments that convinced me, but never
+one that influenced my vote.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_718" href="#FNanchor_718" class="label">[718]</a> Here it was actually the interest of bourgeois and “enlightenment” ideals that the personal
+régime of dictatorship was thought to favour, for the opposition to these ideas lay in the strict
+state-ideal of the Polis, which according to Isocrates was marked with the curse of inability to die.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_719" href="#FNanchor_719" class="label">[719]</a> Diodorus XIV, 7. The drama was repeated in 317, when Agathocles the ex-potter let loose
+his mercenary bands and the mob upon the new upper classes. After the massacre the “people”
+of the “purified city” assembled and conferred the dictature upon the “saviour of true and genuine
+freedom” (Deodorus XIX, 6, et seq.). On the whole movement see Busolt, <cite lang="de">Griech. Staatskunde</cite>, pp.
+396, et seq., and Pöhlmann, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. soz. Frage</cite>, I, pp. 416, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_720" href="#FNanchor_720" class="label">[720]</a> Already that part of the Prussian army which had been in Russia had declared against Napoleon—and
+that, though its general, Yorck, was no liberal, but the old strict type of the Frederician
+officer.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_721" href="#FNanchor_721" class="label">[721]</a> Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Alt.</cite>, IV, §§ 626, 630.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_722" href="#FNanchor_722" class="label">[722]</a> H. Delbrück, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Kriegskunst</cite> (1908), I, p. 142.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_723" href="#FNanchor_723" class="label">[723]</a> Three to six “<i lang="la">tribuni militares consulari protestate</i>”
+ instead of the Consuls. Just at this juncture,
+as the result of the introduction of pay and longer duration of service with the colours, there must
+have come into being a nucleus of true professional soldiers, who would have the election of centurions
+in their own hands and by whom the spirit of the army was determined. It is entirely
+erroneous to speak of a peasant-levy at this stage, quite apart from the fact that the four great city-tribes
+contributed a considerable part of the rank and file and a part, too, whose influence was even
+greater than its numerical strength. Even in the “good old days” picture presented to us by Livy and
+others we can clearly perceive the influence exerted by the standing formations upon the contests of
+parties.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_724" href="#FNanchor_724" class="label">[724]</a> It is perhaps not a mere coincidence that 367 is the year of Dionysius’s death.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_725" href="#FNanchor_725" class="label">[725]</a> According to K. J. Neumann, this goes back to the great Censor.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_726" href="#FNanchor_726" class="label">[726]</a> According to Roman law, the freed slave at once acquired citizenship, with some few limitations.
+As the slave-material came from all over the Mediterranean region and most of all from the
+East, it was a vast rootless mass that collected in the four urban tribes, alien from all the tendencies
+of the old Roman blood; and it quickly destroyed these when, after the Gracchan movement, it had
+succeeded in bringing its weight of numbers to bear with effect.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_727" href="#FNanchor_727" class="label">[727]</a> From the end of the fourth century the nobility developed into a closed circle of families that
+had, or claimed to have, consuls among their ancestors. The more strictly this condition was enforced,
+the more frequent were the falsifications of the old consul-lists in order to “legitimize” rising
+families of strong race and talent. The first (and truly revolutionary) outburst of forgery occurs
+in the epoch of Appius Claudius the Censor, when the curule ædile C. Flavius, the son of a slave,
+put the list in order—that was the time when even royal cognomina were discovered amongst
+plebeian families. The second was in the days of the battle of Pydna (168), when the dominance of
+the nobility began to assume Cæsarian forms (E. Kornemann, <cite lang="de">Der Priesterkodex in der Regia</cite>, 1912, pp.
+56, et seq.). Of the 200 Consulates between 232 and 133, 159 fell to 26 families, and thereafter
+blood-quality being exhausted, but the form as such being all the more studiously preserved in
+consequence—the rise of <i lang="la">novi homines</i> like Cato and Cicero became a rare phenomenon.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_728" href="#FNanchor_728" class="label">[728]</a> Another instance, among many, is its rôle in preparing the German crash of 1918.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_729" href="#FNanchor_729" class="label">[729]</a> And even in France, where the judicial class in the parlements openly scorned the Government,
+and with impunity tore down royal proclamations from the walls and put up their own <i lang="fr">arrêts</i>
+instead (R. Holtzmann, <cite lang="de">Französ. Verfassungsgesch.</cite>, 1910, p. 353); where “orders were given, but
+not obeyed, laws enacted, but not executed” (A. Wahl, <cite lang="de">Vorgesch. d. franz. Revolution</cite>, I, 29 and passim);
+where high finance could overthrow Turgot and anyone else whose reform-schemes disquieted
+it; where the whole educated world, headed by princes and nobles, prelates and generals, was
+Anglomaniac and applauded opposition in any shape or form—even there nothing would have
+happened but for the sudden concurrence of a set of incidents—the fashion which set in amongst
+French officers of aiding the American republicans in their struggle with the English King; the
+diplomatic reverse in Holland (27 Oct. 1787) in the middle of the reforming activity of the Government;
+and the perpetual change of ministers under pressure from irresponsible quarters. In the
+British Empire, the falling-away of the Colonies was the result of attempts of high-Tory circles
+(in collusion with George III, but in reality of course in their own interests) to strengthen the
+Royal power. This party possessed in the Colonies a strong contingent of royalists, notably in the
+South: these elements, fighting on the British side, decided the battle of Camden, and after the
+final victory of the rebels mostly emigrated to Canada, which had remained loyal.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_730" href="#FNanchor_730" class="label">[730]</a> In 1793 there were 306 members of the House of Commons who were elected by 160 persons
+in all. Old Sarum, the constituency of the elder Pitt, consisted of one tenement, returning two members.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_731" href="#FNanchor_731" class="label">[731]</a> Afterwards—from 1832—the English nobility itself, through a series of prudent measures,
+drew the bourgeoisie into <em>co-operation</em> with it, but under its continued guidance and, above all, in the
+framework of tradition, within which consequently the young talent grew up. Democracy thus
+actualized itself here so that the Government remained strictly “in form”—the old aristocratic
+form—while the individual was free to practise politics according to his bent. This transition,
+in a peasantless society dominated by business interests, was the most remarkable achievement of
+inner politics in the nineteenth century.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_732" href="#FNanchor_732" class="label">[732]</a> Early, that is, in the post-revolutionary era here considered.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_733" href="#FNanchor_733" class="label">[733]</a> The reassertion of this tradition after the emergency-army of the Wars of Liberation (1812–15)
+had dispersed into the body of the community is a remarkable story, in which military and political
+standpoints cannot be separated. See Vidal de la Blache, <cite lang="fr">La Régéneration de l’Armée Prusse</cite> (1910),
+Ch. vi.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_734" href="#FNanchor_734" class="label">[734]</a> See <cite lang="de">Preussentum und Sozialismus</cite>, pp. 40, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_735" href="#FNanchor_735" class="label">[735]</a> The genesis of the Roman Tribunate was a blind incident, the happy consequences of which
+no one really foresaw. Western Constitutions, on the contrary, have been thoroughly thought out
+and their effects precisely calculated—whether the calculation proved to be correct or incorrect,
+the care is undeniable.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_736" href="#FNanchor_736" class="label">[736]</a> From the few European works that concern themselves with questions of ancient Chinese
+history, it emerges that Chinese literature contains a very great amount of material bearing on this
+period, which corresponds in innumerable parallels to our own present time. But there is a total
+lack of any political treatment of it that can be taken seriously. References: Hübotter, <cite lang="de">Aus den
+Plänen der Kämpfenden Reiche</cite> (1912); Piton, “The Six Great Chancellors of Tsin,” <cite>China Review</cite>, XIII,
+202, 255, 365, XIV, 3; Ed. Chavannes, <cite lang="fr">Mém. hist. de Se-ma-tsien</cite> (1895 and following); Pfizmair,
+<cite lang="de">Sitz. Wien Akad.</cite>, XLIII (1863) (“Tsin”), XLIV (“Tsu”); A. Tschepe, <cite lang="fr">Histoire du royaume de Ou</cite>
+(1896), and <cite>de Tchou</cite> (1903).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_737" href="#FNanchor_737" class="label">[737]</a> Corresponding more or less to the province of Shen-si.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_738" href="#FNanchor_738" class="label">[738]</a> On the middle Yang-tse-kiang.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_739" href="#FNanchor_739" class="label">[739]</a> Biography 13 of Sze-ma-tsien. So far as the translated evidences allow us to judge, the preparation
+and dispositions of these campaigns, the boldness of the operations by which he drove the enemy
+on to ground where he could beat him, and the novel tactical execution of the separate battles,
+stamp Pe-Ki as one of the greatest military geniuses of all time, a figure worthy indeed of adequate
+treatment by a military expert. It is from this period that we have the authoritative work of
+Sun-tse on War: Giles, <cite>Sun-Tse on the Art of War</cite> (1910). [Or Capt. E. R. Calthrop, <cite>The Book of War—Sun
+and Wu</cite> (1908).—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_740" href="#FNanchor_740" class="label">[740]</a> See <a href="#p312">pp. 312</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_741" href="#FNanchor_741" class="label">[741]</a> Now approximately Shan-tung and Pe-chi-li.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_742" href="#FNanchor_742" class="label">[742]</a> Piton, “Lu-puh-Weih,” <cite>China Rev.</cite> XIII, pp. 365 et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_743" href="#FNanchor_743" class="label">[743]</a> Even if the Chinese authors themselves misunderstood the expression in the same, or anything
+like the same, way as their Western translators, the fact would only prove that the appreciation
+of political problems vanished as rapidly in the Chinese Imperial Age as in fact it did in the
+Roman—because they were no longer personally and livingly experienced. The much-admired
+Sze-ma-tsien is after all a compiler of the same rank as Plutarch (with whom he corresponds in
+date also). The high point of historical comprehension, <em>which presumes an equivalent experience in life</em>,
+must for China have lain in the period of the Contending States, as it lies for us in the nineteenth
+century and after.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_744" href="#FNanchor_744" class="label">[744]</a> Both, like most of the leading statesmen of the time, were pupils of Kwei-ku-tse, whose
+knowledge of men, deep sense of the historically possible, and command of the diplomatic technique
+of the age (the “Art of the vertical and the horizontal”) must have made him one of the most influential
+personalities of the period. Another figure of the same sort of weight after him was the
+thinker and war-theorist above alluded to, Sun-tse, who amongst others was the tutor of the Chancellor
+Lui-Si.</p>
+
+<p>[Sun-Tse’s book of war, as presented in Calthrop’s translation, is comparable to nothing in Western
+military literature short of Clausewitz’s <cite lang="de">Vom Kriege</cite>. Clausewitz was a contemporary and product
+of the Napoleonic epoch, and the glow of Romanticism has not yet passed from him; Sun, on the
+other hand, came “later,” and his atmosphere is the shrewd factual atmosphere of pre-Cæsarism.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_745" href="#FNanchor_745" class="label">[745]</a> A story is told of Sun, that when for a jest (or a demonstration of tactics) opposed forces were
+made up from the court ladies, one of the commanders, the sovereign’s favourite wife, was executed
+by Sun’s command for disobeying an order.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_746" href="#FNanchor_746" class="label">[746]</a> Frederick’s “conscripts” (<i lang="de">Landeskinder</i>)
+ were a long-service element, small in proportion to the
+population, and of serf status. Only the relative poverty of Prussia compelled this much of departure
+from the then normal procedure of recruiting volunteers, to which the Prussian army reverted as soon
+as its treasury could afford to do so. Maurice de Saxe is the one outstanding soldier of the period who
+advocated universal citizen service. But the famous “<i lang="fr">Rêveries</i>” were written (“in thirteen sleepless
+nights”) in 1732, before he had held high command. The military works of Leibniz touch upon the
+subject, but he was a practical man as well as a philosopher, and his detailed proposals are in the spirit
+of the time. On the contrary, the pure philosopher Spinoza definitely advocated universal service.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_747" href="#FNanchor_747" class="label">[747]</a> Large, that is, relatively to the general development of Classical technics in other fields,
+which was of the slightest—not in any way outstanding if judged by, say, Assyrian or Egyptian
+standards.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_748" href="#FNanchor_748" class="label">[748]</a> The book of the Socialist Moh-ti, of this period, treats of universal love of mankind in its
+first part, of fortress artillery in its second—a singular example of contraposition of truths and facts.
+Forke in <cite lang="de">Ostasiat. Ztschr.</cite>, VIII (Hirth number).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_749" href="#FNanchor_749" class="label">[749]</a> A whole literature exists for Napoleon’s “case-shot attack,” which was closely studied in the
+years before 1914 with the definite aim of finding a key to victories that the mechanical developments
+in the defensive rifle had made doubtful.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_750" href="#FNanchor_750" class="label">[750]</a> On the side of the North, more than 1½ million men out of barely 20 million inhabitants.</p>
+
+<p>[The total of men of military age in the North was 4,600,000, of whom 2,780,000 actually enlisted.
+The figure of 1,700,000 is a reduction to a three-year level—i.e., men who served throughout
+the war counting as 1⅓ each and men who served for one year as ⅓ each. The Southern states
+put into the field, on the same three-years’ basis, 900,000 out of 1,065,000 men of military age.
+(Dodge, <cite>Birds Eye View of our Civil War</cite>.)—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_751" href="#FNanchor_751" class="label">[751]</a> To which should be added, though on a small scale, the first serious attempts at submarines,
+machine-guns, and magazine rifles.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_752" href="#FNanchor_752" class="label">[752]</a> Amongst the wholly new problems was that of rapidly restoring railways and bridges; the
+bridge at Chattanooga, for the heaviest military trains, 240 metres long and 30 metres high, was built
+in 4½ days.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_753" href="#FNanchor_753" class="label">[753]</a> Modern Japan belongs to the Western Civilization no less than “modern” Carthage of the
+third century to the Classical.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_754" href="#FNanchor_754" class="label">[754]</a> For the politico-social history of the Arabian World there is the same lack of deep and penetrating
+research as for the Chinese. Only the political evolution of the Western margin up to Diocletian,
+regarded hitherto as within the Classical pale, is an exception.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_755" href="#FNanchor_755" class="label">[755]</a> It was a few thousands only that accompanied the first conquerors and spread themselves from
+Tunis to Turkestan, and these everywhere constituted themselves a self-contained and close Estate
+in the entourage of the new potentates. An “Arabian <i lang="de">Völkerwanderung</i>” is out of the question.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_756" href="#FNanchor_756" class="label">[756]</a> J. Wellhausen, <cite lang="de">Das arabische Reich und sein Sturz</cite> (1902), pp. 309, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_757" href="#FNanchor_757" class="label">[757]</a>
+ Compare the inner divisions of the English Parliamentary army in and after the Civil Wars.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_758" href="#FNanchor_758" class="label">[758]</a> See <a href="#p261">p. 261</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_759" href="#FNanchor_759" class="label">[759]</a> K. Dieterich, <cite lang="de">Byz. Charakterköpfe</cite>,
+ p. 54: “Since thou wilt have an answer from us, receive it
+then! Paul has said some in the Church are ordained by God to be Apostles, some prophets, but he
+said nothing about Emperors—we will not follow though it were an angel that bade us; how much
+less if thou!”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_760" href="#FNanchor_760" class="label">[760]</a> Cf. <a href="#p316">p. 316</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_761" href="#FNanchor_761" class="label">[761]</a> Huart, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Araber</cite> (1914), I, p. 299.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_762" href="#FNanchor_762" class="label">[762]</a> See <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed., art. “Carmathians.”—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_763" href="#FNanchor_763" class="label">[763]</a> Krumbacher, <cite lang="de">Byz. Lit.-Gesch.</cite>, p. 969.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_764" href="#FNanchor_764" class="label">[764]</a> For all this see Krumbacher, op. cit., pp. 969–90; C. Neumann, <cite lang="de">Die Weltstellung des Byz.
+Reiches vor den Kreuzzügen</cite> (1894), pp. 21, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_765" href="#FNanchor_765" class="label">[765]</a> Krumbacher, op. cit., 993.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_766" href="#FNanchor_766" class="label">[766]</a> And perhaps not in Baghdad alone, for the gifted Maniakes, who was hailed by the army in
+Sicily as Emperor and fell in 1043 in his march on Byzantium, must have been a Turk.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_767" href="#FNanchor_767" class="label">[767]</a> 1785–1580. See, for the following, Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Alt.</cite>
+ §§ 298, et seq.; Weill, <cite lang="fr">La Fin du
+moyen empire égyptien</cite> (1918). That Ed. Meyer’s assignment is correct as compared with the 1670 years
+of Petrie has long been proved by the thickness of the strata in which objects have been found and the
+tempo of the style-evolution (Minoan included). Here it is demonstrated afresh by comparison
+with corresponding sections in the other Cultures.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_768" href="#FNanchor_768" class="label">[768]</a> <a href="#p387">P. 387</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_769" href="#FNanchor_769" class="label">[769]</a> Erman, “<cite lang="de">Mahnworte eines ägypt. Propheten</cite>” (<cite lang="de">Sitz. Preuss. Akad.</cite>,
+ 1919, pp. 804, et seq.): “The
+higher officials are displaced, the land robbed of its royalty by a few madmen, and the counsellors
+of the old state pay their court to upstarts; administration has ceased, documents are destroyed,
+all social differences abolished, the courts fallen into the hands of the mob. The noble classes go
+hungry and in rags, their children are battered on the wall, and their mummies torn from the grave.
+Mean fellows become rich and swagger in the palaces on the strength of the herds and ships that they
+have taken from their rightful owners. Former slave-girls become insolent and aliens lord it. Robbery
+and murder rule, cities are laid waste, public buildings burned down. The harvest diminishes,
+no one thinks now of cleanliness, births are few—and oh, that mankind might cease!” Here
+is the very picture of the megalopolitan and Late revolution, as it was enacted in the Hellenistic
+(p. 405) and in 1789 and 1871 in Paris. It is the world-city masses, will-less tools of the ambition
+of leaders who demolish every remnant of order, who desire to see in the outer world the same
+chaos as reigns within their own selves. Whether these cynical and hopeless attempts start from
+alien intruders like the Hyksos or the Turks, or from slaves as in the case of Spartacus and Ali;
+whether the division of property is shouted for as at Syracuse or has a book for banner like Marxism—all
+this is superficial. It is wholly immaterial what slogans scream to the wind while the gates
+and the skulls are being beaten in. Destruction is the true and only impulse, and Cæsarism the only
+issue. The world-city, the land-devouring demon, has set its rootless and futureless men in motion;
+and in destroying they die.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_770" href="#FNanchor_770" class="label">[770]</a> The Papyrus says: the “archer-folk from without”—that is, the barbarian mercenary troops.
+To these the native youth attached itself.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_771" href="#FNanchor_771" class="label">[771]</a> Glance also at the Negro-state in Irak and the “contemporary” attempts of Spartacus, Sertorius,
+and Sextus Pompey, and we get a fair idea of the variety of the possibilities. Weill assumes,
+1785–1765, the collapse of the Kingdom, a usurper (a general); 1765–1675, numerous small potentates,
+in the Delta wholly independent; 1675–1633, struggle for unity, especially the rulers of
+Thebes, with an ever-increasing retinue of dependent rulers, including the Hyksos; 1633, victory
+of the Hyksos and defeat of the Thebans; 1591–1571, final triumph of the Thebans.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_772" href="#FNanchor_772" class="label">[772]</a>
+ As an inspiriting idea it may be retained; translated into actuality it will never be again.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_773" href="#FNanchor_773" class="label">[773]</a> Piton, op. cit., p. 521.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_774" href="#FNanchor_774" class="label">[774]</a> <cite>Hist.</cite>, III, 1.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_775" href="#FNanchor_775" class="label">[775]</a> Including the constitution of the United States of America. Only thus can we account for the
+reverence that the American cherishes for it, even where he clearly sees its insufficiency.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_776" href="#FNanchor_776" class="label">[776]</a>
+ Cæsar recognized this clearly. “<i lang="la">Nihil esse rem publicam, appellationem modo sine corpore ac specie</i>”
+(Suetonius, <cite>Cæsar</cite>, 77).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_777" href="#FNanchor_777" class="label">[777]</a> See <a href="#p48">p. 48</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_778" href="#FNanchor_778" class="label">[778]</a> See <a href="#p48">p. 48</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_779" href="#FNanchor_779" class="label">[779]</a> Cicero, in his <cite lang="la">Pro Sestio</cite>,
+ draws attention to the fact that five people for each tribe attended
+plebiscites, and these really belonged to tribes other than that which they were representing. But
+these five were present only in order to have themselves bought by the possessors of the real power.
+Yet it was hardly fifty years since the Italians had died in masses for this franchise.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_780" href="#FNanchor_780" class="label">[780]</a> And, strangely, Ed. Meyer also, in his masterpiece <cite lang="de">Cæsars Monarchie</cite>,
+ the one work of statesmanlike
+quality yet written about this epoch—and previously in his essay on Augustus (<cite lang="de">Kleine Schriften</cite>,
+pp. 441, et seq.).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_781" href="#FNanchor_781" class="label">[781]</a> <cite lang="la">De Re Publica</cite>, 54 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>,
+ a monograph intended for Pompey.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_782" href="#FNanchor_782" class="label">[782]</a> <a href="#p395">P. 395</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_783" href="#FNanchor_783" class="label">[783]</a> See <a href="#p409">p. 409</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_784" href="#FNanchor_784" class="label">[784]</a> In <cite lang="la">Somnium Scipionis</cite>,
+ VI, 26, he is a god who so rules the State <i lang="la">quam hunc mundum ille princeps
+deus</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_785" href="#FNanchor_785" class="label">[785]</a> It was with every justification that, in the presence of the corpse, Brutus called out the name
+of Cicero, while Antony, on his side, denounced him as the intellectual author of the deed. But
+this “freedom” meant nothing but the oligarchy of a few families, for the masses had long ago
+become tired of their rights. Nor is it in the least surprising that Money was behind Intellect
+in the murder, for the great fortunes of Rome saw in Cæsarism the beginning of the end of their
+power.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_786" href="#FNanchor_786" class="label">[786]</a> Taoism, on the other hand, was supported, as preaching the entire renunciation of politics.
+Said Shakespeare’s Cæsar:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“Let me have men about me that are fat,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Sleek-headed men and such as sleep o’nights.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_787" href="#FNanchor_787" class="label">[787]</a> Tacitus, even, failed to understand. He hated these first Cæsars, because they defended themselves
+by every imaginable means against a stealthy opposition—in <em>his own</em> circles—an opposition
+that from Trajan’s time no longer existed. (Yet a little longer, and the Emperor Marcus Aurelius
+could himself be a Stoic.—<i>Tr.</i>)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_788" href="#FNanchor_788" class="label">[788]</a> <a href="#p329">P. 329</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_789" href="#FNanchor_789" class="label">[789]</a> <a href="#p89">Pp. 89</a> and <a href="#p349">349</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_790" href="#FNanchor_790" class="label">[790]</a> <a href="#p310">P. 310</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_791" href="#FNanchor_791" class="label">[791]</a> “Empires perish, but a good verse stands,” said W. von Humboldt on the field of Waterloo.
+But, all the same, the personality of Napoleon preformed the history of the next century. Good
+verses!—he should have questioned a peasant by the way-side. They “stand”—for literary teaching.
+Plato is eternal—for philologists. But Napoleon inwardly rules <em>us</em>, all of <em>us</em>, our states and
+our armies, our public opinion, the whole of our political outlook, and the more effectually the less
+we are conscious of it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_792" href="#FNanchor_792" class="label">[792]</a> <a href="#p361">P. 361</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_793" href="#FNanchor_793" class="label">[793]</a> <a href="#p116">P. 116</a> and <a href="#p339">339</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_794" href="#FNanchor_794" class="label">[794]</a> <a href="#p363">P. 363</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_795" href="#FNanchor_795" class="label">[795]</a> This is what is expressed in the English proverb: “Men, not measures,” which is the very
+key to the secrets of all political achievement.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_796" href="#FNanchor_796" class="label">[796]</a> <a href="#p18">Pp. 18</a> and <a href="#p364">364</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_797" href="#FNanchor_797" class="label">[797]</a> See <a href="#p341">p. 341</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_798" href="#FNanchor_798" class="label">[798]</a> The same, too, holds good of the Churches, which are different in kind from the Religion—namely,
+elements of the world of facts and, therefore, political and not religious in the type of their
+leadership. It was not the Christian evangel, but the Christian martyr, who conquered the world,
+and that which gave him his strength was not the doctrine, but the example, of the Man on the
+Cross.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_799" href="#FNanchor_799" class="label">[799]</a> It should scarcely need to be emphasized that this is the basic principle, not of an aristocratic
+régime, but of government itself. Cleon, Robespierre, Lenin, every gifted mass-leader, has treated
+his office thus. Anyone who genuinely felt himself as the delegate of the multitude, instead of as the
+regent of such as do not know what they want, would not remain master of his house for one day.
+The only question is whether the great popular leaders apply their powers for their own benefit or for
+that of others; and on that much might be said.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_800" href="#FNanchor_800" class="label">[800]</a> Originally an assembly of nineteen princes and free cities (1529).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_801" href="#FNanchor_801" class="label">[801]</a> See <a href="#p355">pp. 355</a>, <a href="#p398">398</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_802" href="#FNanchor_802" class="label">[802]</a> Hence it is that on the soil of burgher equality the possession of money immediately takes the
+place of genealogical rank.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_803" href="#FNanchor_803" class="label">[803]</a> See <a href="#p354">p. 354</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_804" href="#FNanchor_804" class="label">[804]</a>
+ <a href="#p424">Pp. 424</a>, et seq. Compare also Wellhausen, <cite lang="de">Die relig.-polit. Oppositionsparteien im alten Islam</cite>
+(1901).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_805" href="#FNanchor_805" class="label">[805]</a> It is an important factor in the democracy of England and America that in the first the yeomanry
+had died out and in the second has never existed. The “farmer” is spiritually a suburban and in
+practice carries on his farming as an industry. Instead of villages, there are only fragments of megalopolis.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_806" href="#FNanchor_806" class="label">[806]</a> And wherever, as in Egypt, India, and the West, there exists a <em>political</em>
+ opposition between the
+two primary Estates, there is also a clerical party—the party, so to speak, of the Church as distinct
+from religion and of the priest as distinct from the believer.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_807" href="#FNanchor_807" class="label">[807]</a>
+ And with its content of race-strength it has an excellent chance of successfully doing so.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_808" href="#FNanchor_808" class="label">[808]</a> <a href="#p409">P. 409</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_809" href="#FNanchor_809" class="label">[809]</a> <i>Plebs</i> corresponds to the “Tiers” (burghers and yeomen) of the eighteenth century, <i>populus</i>
+ to
+the megalopolitan masses of the nineteenth. The difference manifested itself in their respective
+attitudes towards the freed slaves, mostly of non-Italian origin. These the Plebs, as an order, sought
+to thrust away into as few tribes as possible, but in the Populus as a party they very soon came to play
+the decisive rôle.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_810" href="#FNanchor_810" class="label">[810]</a> <a href="#p412">P. 412</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_811" href="#FNanchor_811" class="label">[811]</a> Simultaneously, too, the Roman Catholic Church quietly changed the basis of its politics
+from a class to a party, and did so with a strategic sureness that cannot be too much admired. In the
+eighteenth century it had been, as regards the style of its diplomacy, the allocation of its offices
+and the spirit of its higher circles, aristocratic through and through. Think of the type of the abbé,
+and of the prince-prelates who became ministers and ambassadors, like the young Cardinal Rohan.
+Now, in the true liberal fashion, opinions took the place of origins, working-power that of taste, and
+the great weapons of democracy—press, elections, money—were handled with a skill that liberalism
+proper rarely equalled and never surpassed.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_812" href="#FNanchor_812" class="label">[812]</a> For what follows see M. Gelzer, <cite lang="de">Die Nobilität d. röm. Republik</cite>
+ (1912), pp. 43, et seq.; A. Rosenberg,
+<cite lang="de">Untersuchungen zur röm. Centurienverfassung</cite> (1911), pp. 62, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_813" href="#FNanchor_813" class="label">[813]</a> The reputation of Tammany Hall in New York is universal, but the relations approximate to
+this condition in all countries ruled by parties. The American Caucus, which first distributes the
+offices of State amongst its members and then forces their names upon the mass-electorate, was
+introduced into England by Joseph Chamberlain in his “National Liberal Federation,” and in
+Germany its advances have been rapid since 1919.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_814" href="#FNanchor_814" class="label">[814]</a> <a href="#p305">P. 305</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_815" href="#FNanchor_815" class="label">[815]</a> <a href="#p18">P. 18</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_816" href="#FNanchor_816" class="label">[816]</a> For the story of this tragic experiment, see Ed. Meyer, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Alt.</cite>,
+ § 987, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_817" href="#FNanchor_817" class="label">[817]</a> See <a href="#p417">p. 417</a>. The “plans of the Contending States,” the Tchun-tsiu-fan-lu, and the biographies
+of Sze-ma-tsien are full of examples of the pedagogic in interventions of “wisdom” into the province
+of politics.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_818" href="#FNanchor_818" class="label">[818]</a> For this “Sun-state” formed of slaves and day-labourers see Pauly-Wissowa, <cite lang="de">Realencycl.</cite>,
+ 2, 961.
+Similarly, the revolutionary King Cleomenes III of Sparta was likewise under the influence of a Stoic,
+Sphærus. One can understand why “philosophers and rhetors”—i.e., professional politicians,
+fantastics and subverters—were expelled again and again by the Roman Senate.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_819" href="#FNanchor_819" class="label">[819]</a> <a href="#p310">P. 310</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_820" href="#FNanchor_820" class="label">[820]</a> <a href="#p114">P. 114</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_821" href="#FNanchor_821" class="label">[821]</a> The early democracy, which in our case reaches up to Lincoln, Bismarck, and Gladstone, has
+to learn this by <em>experience</em>. The later democracy, in our case mature parliamentarism, starts out from
+it; here truths and facts finally separate out in the form of party ideals and party funds. It is the
+money that gives the real parliamentarian his sense of being freed from the dependence which is
+implicit in the naïve idea that the elector has of his delegate.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_822" href="#FNanchor_822" class="label">[822]</a> <a href="#p452">P. 452</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_823" href="#FNanchor_823" class="label">[823]</a> <a href="#p354">P. 354</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_824" href="#FNanchor_824" class="label">[824]</a> That the mass all the same <em>feels</em> itself as freed is simply another outcome of the profound
+incompatibility between megalopolitan spirit and mature tradition. Its <em>acts</em>, so far from being independent,
+are in inward relation with its subjection to money-rule.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_825" href="#FNanchor_825" class="label">[825]</a> The German Constitution of 1919—standing by virtue of its date on the verge of the <em>decline</em>
+of democracy—most naïvely admits a dictature of the party machines, which have attracted all
+rights into themselves and are seriously responsible to no one. The notorious system of proportional
+election and the Reichslist [see <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, 1922 Supplement, II, 249.—<i>Tr.</i>] secures their self-recruitment.
+In place of the “people’s” rights, which were axiomatic in the Frankfurt Constitution of
+1848, there is now only the right of parties, which, harmless as it sounds, really nurses within itself
+a Cæsarism of the organizations. It must be allowed, however, that in this respect it is the most
+advanced of all the constitutions. Its issue is visible already. A few quite small alterations and it
+confers unrestricted power upon individuals.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_826" href="#FNanchor_826" class="label">[826]</a> And <em>legislation</em>, too, was bound up with an office. Even when, as a formality, acceptance or
+rejection by an assembly was requisite, the law in question could be brought in only by an official;
+for example, a Tribune. The constitutional demands of the masses, therefore (which in any case
+were mostly instigated by the real power-holders), expressed themselves in the issue of the elections
+to office, as the Gracchan period shows.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_827" href="#FNanchor_827" class="label">[827]</a> Even Cæsar, at fifty years of age, was obliged to play this comedy at the Rubicon for his soldiers
+because they were used to it and expected it when anything was asked of them. It corresponds to the
+“chest-tones of deep conviction” of our political assemblies.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_828" href="#FNanchor_828" class="label">[828]</a> But the Cleon type must obviously have existed also in contemporary Sparta, and in Rome at
+the time of the Consular Tribunes.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_829" href="#FNanchor_829" class="label">[829]</a> Gelzer, <cite lang="de">Nobilität</cite>, p. 94; along with Ed. Meyer’s <cite>Cæsar</cite>
+ this book gives the best survey of
+Roman democratic methods.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_830" href="#FNanchor_830" class="label">[830]</a> “<i lang="la">Inaurari</i>,” to which end Cicero recommended his friend Trebatius to Cæsar.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_831" href="#FNanchor_831" class="label">[831]</a> “<i lang="la">Tributim ad prandium vocare</i>,” Cicero, <cite lang="la">Pro Murena</cite>, 72.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_832" href="#FNanchor_832" class="label">[832]</a> For from that time sesterces flowed through his hands by the million. The votive treasures of
+the Gallic temples which he put up for sale in Italy sent down the value of gold with a rush. From
+King Ptolemy he and Pompey extorted 144,000,000 (and Gabinius another 240,000,000) as the price
+of recognition. The Consul Æmilius Paullus (50) was bought for 36,000,000, Curio for 60,000,000.
+We can guess from such figures how enviable was the position of his closer associates. At the triumph
+of 46 every soldier in an army of well over 100,000 men received 24,000 sesterces, officers and other
+leaders much more. Yet at his death the state treasury was still full enough to secure Antony’s
+position.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_833" href="#FNanchor_833" class="label">[833]</a> Gelzer, op. cit., p. 68.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_834" href="#FNanchor_834" class="label">[834]</a> Extortion and corruption were the usual charges. As in those days these things were identical
+with politics, and the judges and plaintiffs had acted precisely in the same way as the defendants, the
+art consisted in using the forms of a well-acted ethical passion to cover a party speech, of which the
+real import was only comprehensible to the initiated. This corresponds entirely with the modern
+parliamentary usage. The “people” would be very much astonished to see party opponents, after
+delivering wild speeches in the chamber (for the reporters) chatting together in the lobbies, or to be
+told how a party passionately champions a proposal after it has made certain by agreement with the
+other side that it will not be passed. In Rome, too, the judgment was not the important thing in
+these “trials”; it was enough if a defendant voluntarily left the city and so retired from the occupancy
+of, or candidature for, office.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_835" href="#FNanchor_835" class="label">[835]</a> See Pöhlmann, <cite lang="de">Griech. Gesch.</cite>
+ (1914), pp. 236, et seq. [Cf. Aristophanes, <cite>Wasps</cite>.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_836" href="#FNanchor_836" class="label">[836]</a> Thus it was possible for Rutilius Rufus to be condemned in the notorious case of 93, because
+as proconsul he had in accordance with his duty proceeded against the extortions of the concessionnaire
+associations.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_837" href="#FNanchor_837" class="label">[837]</a> Radio broadcasting has now emerged to enable the leader to make personal conquests of the
+million, and no one can foretell the changes in political tactic that may ensue therefrom.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_838" href="#FNanchor_838" class="label">[838]</a> The most striking example of this for future generations will be the “War-guilt” question,
+which is the question—<em>who</em> possesses the power, through control of press and cable in all parts of
+the world, to establish in world-opinion that truth which he needs for his political ends and to
+maintain it for so long as he needs it? An altogether different question (which only in Germany is
+confused with the first) is the purely scientific one—to <em>whose</em> interest was it that an event about
+which there was already a whole literature should occur in the summer of 1914 in particular?</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_839" href="#FNanchor_839" class="label">[839]</a> In preparation for the World War the press of whole countries was brought financially under
+the command of London and Paris, and the peoples belonging to them reduced to an unqualified
+intellectual slavery. The more democratic the inner form of a nation is, the more readily and completely
+it succumbs to this danger. This is the style of the twentieth century. To-day a democrat
+of the old school would demand, not freedom for the press, but freedom from the press; but meantime
+the leaders have changed themselves into parvenus who have to secure their position <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i>
+the masses.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_840" href="#FNanchor_840" class="label">[840]</a> The great Burning of the Books in China (<a href="#p433">p. 433</a>) was innocuous by comparison.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_841" href="#FNanchor_841" class="label">[841]</a> <a href="#p434">P. 434</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_842" href="#FNanchor_842" class="label">[842]</a> Herein lies the secret of why all radical (i.e., poor) parties necessarily become the tools of the
+money-powers, the Equites, the Bourse. Theoretically their enemy is capital, but practically they
+attack, not the Bourse, but Tradition on behalf of the Bourse. This is as true of to-day as it was for
+the Gracchan age, and in all countries. Fifty per cent of mass-leaders are procurable by money,
+office, or opportunities to “come in on the ground-floor,” and with them they bring their whole
+party.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_843" href="#FNanchor_843" class="label">[843]</a> <a href="#p415">P. 415</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_844" href="#FNanchor_844" class="label">[844]</a> See <cite lang="de">Preussentum und Sozialismus</cite>, p. 41, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_845" href="#FNanchor_845" class="label">[845]</a> <cite>Political Discourses</cite>, 1752.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_846" href="#FNanchor_846" class="label">[846]</a> The celebrated <cite>Wealth of Nations</cite>, 1776.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_847" href="#FNanchor_847" class="label">[847]</a> It was the opinion of the expert, almost everywhere, that the economic consequences of general
+mobilization would compel the breaking-up of hostilities within a few weeks.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_848" href="#FNanchor_848" class="label">[848]</a> <a href="#p81">P. 81</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_849" href="#FNanchor_849" class="label">[849]</a> <a href="#p1">Pp. 1</a>, et seq., and <a href="#p335">335</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_850" href="#FNanchor_850" class="label">[850]</a> <a href="#p327">P. 327</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_851" href="#FNanchor_851" class="label">[851]</a> <a href="#p95">Pp. 95</a>, <a href="#p120">120</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_852" href="#FNanchor_852" class="label">[852]</a> <a href="#p5">P. 5</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_853" href="#FNanchor_853" class="label">[853]</a> “<i lang="la">Negotium</i>” (by which is meant every form of gainful activity; business is <i lang="la">commercium</i>)
+ “<i lang="la">negat
+otium neque quærit veram quietem quæ est deus</i>,” are the words of the <cite lang="la">Decretum Gratiani</cite> (cf. <a href="#p77">p. 77</a>).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_854" href="#FNanchor_854" class="label">[854]</a> Pilate’s question settles also the relation of economy to science. The religious man will always
+try in vain, catechism in hand, to improve the instincts of his political environment. But it goes
+on its way undisturbed and leaves him to his thoughts. The saint can only choose between adapting
+himself to this environment—and then he becomes a Church politician and conscienceless—and
+fleeing from it into a hermitage or even into the Beyond. But the same happens also—and here
+not without a comic side to it—in the intellectualism of the city. The philosopher who has built
+up an ethical-social system that is replete with virtue and (of course) the only true one, may enlighten
+the economic life as to how it should behave and at what it should aim. It is even the same
+spectacle, whether labelled liberal, anarchistic, or socialistic, or derived from Plato, Proudhon, or
+Marx. Here, too, economy carries on undisturbed and leaves the thinker to choose between withdrawing
+to pour out on paper his lamentations of this world, and entering it as an economic
+politician, in which case he either makes himself ridiculous, or else promptly throws his theory to
+the devil and starts to win himself a leading place.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_855" href="#FNanchor_855" class="label">[855]</a> See <a href="#p3">pp. 1</a>, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_856" href="#FNanchor_856" class="label">[856]</a> See <a href="#p6">p. 6</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_857" href="#FNanchor_857" class="label">[857]</a> Exactly the same is true of wandering bands of hunters and pastorals. But the economic foundation
+of the great Culture is always a mankind that adheres fast to the soil, and nourishes and supports
+the higher economic forms.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_858" href="#FNanchor_858" class="label">[858]</a> See <a href="#p331">p. 331</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_859" href="#FNanchor_859" class="label">[859]</a> Undershaft in Shaw’s <cite>Major Barbara</cite> is a true ruler-figure of this realm.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_860" href="#FNanchor_860" class="label">[860]</a> <a href="#p344">P. 344</a>. As a means for governments it is called finance-economy (financial policy). Here
+the whole nation is the object of a levy of tribute, in the forms of taxes and customs, of which the
+purpose is not to make, so to say, the upkeep of its life more comfortable, but to secure its historical
+position and to enhance its power.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_861" href="#FNanchor_861" class="label">[861]</a> Using the phrase widely, as including, for instance, the rise of workmen, journalists, and men
+of learning to positions of leadership.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_862" href="#FNanchor_862" class="label">[862]</a> <a href="#p331">P. 331</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_863" href="#FNanchor_863" class="label">[863]</a> <a href="#p31">P. 31</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_864" href="#FNanchor_864" class="label">[864]</a> See <a href="#p172">pp. 172</a> and 280.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_865" href="#FNanchor_865" class="label">[865]</a> Including the medical profession, which indeed is indistinguishable in primitive times from
+the priests and magicians.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_866" href="#FNanchor_866" class="label">[866]</a> Herdsmen, fishermen, and hunters included. There is, moreover, a strange and very profound
+relation between peasant and miner, evidenced in ancient sagas and rites. The metals are coaxed
+out of the shaft as the corn out of the earth, and the game out of the thicket. And for the real
+miner even metal is something that <em>lives</em> and grows.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_867" href="#FNanchor_867" class="label">[867]</a> This is true from the earliest sea-voyaging to the Bourse of the world-city, and all traffic,
+whether by river, road, or rail belongs with it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_868" href="#FNanchor_868" class="label">[868]</a> With this belong the machine industry, with its purely Western type of the inventor and engineer,
+and practically, also, a great part of the modern agronomy, as, for instance, in America.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_869" href="#FNanchor_869" class="label">[869]</a> Even to-day the mining and metal industries are felt to be somehow nobler than, for example,
+the chemical and electrical. They possess the most ancient patent of nobility in the technical world,
+and a relic of cult-mystery lies over them.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_870" href="#FNanchor_870" class="label">[870]</a> That is, up to the limit of servage and slavery, although very often—as in the present-day
+East and as in Rome in the case of “vernæ”—slavery itself may be nothing but a form of compulsory-labour
+contract and, apart from that, hardly sensible. The free employee often lives in far
+stricter subjection and enjoys far less respect, and his formal right to “give notice” is in many cases
+practically valueless to him.</p>
+
+<p>[British readers will recall in this connexion the “Chinese slavery” controversy in South Africa
+in 1904, and the questions of indentured labour that come to the surface not infrequently in Australian
+politics. And in an older generation defenders of slavery as practised in the sugar islands of the
+West Indies are still to be found—not to mention the survivors and tradition-bearers of the “Old
+South” in the United States.—<i>Tr.</i>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_871" href="#FNanchor_871" class="label">[871]</a> <a href="#p60">P. 60</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_872" href="#FNanchor_872" class="label">[872]</a> We know this accurately for the Egyptian and the Gothic beginnings, and in general terms for
+the Chinese and the Classical; as for the <em>economic pseudomorphosis</em> of the Arabian (see <a href="#p189">pp. 189</a>, et seq.,
+<a href="#p349">349</a>) it may be summarized, after Hadrian, as a process of disintegration of the highly civilized Classical
+money-economy culminating in the appearance, under Diocletian, of a Springtime barter-economy
+with, in the East, the true Magian element of bargaining visibly superposed.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_873" href="#FNanchor_873" class="label">[873]</a> <a href="#p343">P. 343</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_874" href="#FNanchor_874" class="label">[874]</a> Neither the copper pieces of the Italian Villanova-graves of early Homeric times (Willers,
+<cite lang="de">Gesch. d. röm. Kupferprägung</cite>, p. 18) nor the early Chinese bronze coins in the form of women’s
+drapery (<i>pu</i>), bells, rings, or knives (<i>tsien</i>, Conrady, <i>China</i>, p. 504) are described as money, but quite
+distinctly symbols of goods. And the coins struck by the governments of early Gothic times (in
+imitation of the Classical) as signs of sovereignty figured in economic life only as wares; a piece of
+gold is worth as much as a cow, <em>but not vice versa</em>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_875" href="#FNanchor_875" class="label">[875]</a>
+ Hence it is that so often he is not an outcome of the fixed and self-contained life of the countryside,
+but an alien appearing in it, an alien having neither importance nor antecedents. This is the
+rôle of the Phœnicians in the earliest period of the Classical; of the Romans in the East in Mithradates’s
+time; of the Jews, and with them Byzantines, Persians, and Armenians, in the Gothic West;
+of the Arabs in the Sudan; of the Indians in East Africa; and of the West-Europeans in present-day
+Russia.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_876" href="#FNanchor_876" class="label">[876]</a> And, consequently, on a very small scale. As foreign trade was in those days highly adventurous
+and appealed to the imagination, it was as a rule immensely exaggerated. The “great”
+merchants of Venice and the Hansa about 1300 were hardly the equals of the more distinguished
+craftsmen. The turnover of even the Medici or the Fugger about 1400 was equivalent to that of a
+shop-business in a small town to-day. The largest merchant vessels, in which usually several traders
+held part shares, were much smaller than modern German river-barges, and made only <em>one</em> considerable
+voyage each year. The celebrated wool-export of England, a main element of Hanseatic trade,
+amounted about 1270 to hardly as much as the contents of two modern goods-trains (Sombart, <cite lang="de">Der
+moderne Kapitalismus</cite>, I, pp. 280, et seq.).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_877" href="#FNanchor_877" class="label">[877]</a> <a href="#p91">P. 91</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_878" href="#FNanchor_878" class="label">[878]</a> Cf. Vol. I, Ch. II.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_879" href="#FNanchor_879" class="label">[879]</a> Marks and dollars are no more “money” than metres and grammes are “forces.” <i>Pieces</i> of
+money are real values. It is only our ignorance of Classical physics that has saved us from confusing
+gravitation with a pound-weight—in our mathematics, with its Classical basis, we still
+mix number with magnitude, and our imitation of Classical coinage has brought about the same
+confusion between money and pieces of money.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_880" href="#FNanchor_880" class="label">[880]</a> Conversely, therefore, we can call the metric system (cm., g.) a valuation, and in fact all
+money-measures proceed from the weight theories of physics.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_881" href="#FNanchor_881" class="label">[881]</a> Similarly all value-theories, however objective they are meant to be, are developed—and
+inevitably so—out of a subjective principle. That of Marx, for example, defines value in the way
+that promotes the interest of the manual worker, the effort of the discoverer or the organizer seeming
+to him, therefore, valueless. But it would be wrong to describe this as “erroneous.” All these
+theories are “right” for their supporters and “wrong” for their opponents, and it is not reasons but
+<em>life</em> that settles whether one is a supporter or an opponent.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_882" href="#FNanchor_882" class="label">[882]</a> The Western introduced (on a very modest scale) by the Bank of England from the end of the
+eighteenth century, the Chinese dating from the period of the Contending States.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_883" href="#FNanchor_883" class="label">[883]</a> And is thought of as “amount,” whereas we speak of the “extent” of a property in goods.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_884" href="#FNanchor_884" class="label">[884]</a> Even to the modern pirates of the money-market who intervene amongst the interveners and
+gamble with money as “wares.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_885" href="#FNanchor_885" class="label">[885]</a> Preisigke, <cite lang="de">Girowesen im griechischen Ægypten</cite>
+ (1910). These trading forms of the Ptolemaic period
+were already in vogue, and at the same high level, under the XVIIIth Dynasty.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_886" href="#FNanchor_886" class="label">[886]</a> So also with the bourgeois ideal of freedom. In theory and, therefore, constitutionally, a man
+may be free <em>in principle</em>, but <em>actually</em>, in the economic private-life of the cities, he is made free only
+by money.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_887" href="#FNanchor_887" class="label">[887]</a> The name “bourse” can be applied even in other Cultures, if by that word we mean the
+thought-organ of a developed money-economy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_888" href="#FNanchor_888" class="label">[888]</a> Preface to <cite>Major Barbara</cite> (Constable, London 1909).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_889" href="#FNanchor_889" class="label">[889]</a> <a href="#p343">P. 343</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_890" href="#FNanchor_890" class="label">[890]</a> The “farmer” is the man whose connexion with the piece of land is no longer anything
+more than practical.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_891" href="#FNanchor_891" class="label">[891]</a> The increasing intensity of this thinking appears in the economic picture as a <em>growth of the
+available money-mass</em>, which is abstract and imagined and has nothing to do with the visible supply
+of gold as a ware. The “stiffening” of the money-market, for example, is a purely intellectual process
+played out in the hands of a small handful of men. The increasing energy of money-thinking consequently
+awakens, in every Culture, the feeling that the “value of money is going down”—enormously
+so, for example, in the time between Solon and Alexander—with reference, namely, to the
+unit of calculation. What actually happens is that the mercantile units of value have become artificial
+and no longer comparable with the primary and livingly experiential values of the peasant economy.
+In the end it ceases to matter in what figures the Attic treasure of the Delian League (454) or the sums
+involved in the peace-treaties of 241 and 201, or the booty of Pompey in 64 are reckoned, and whether
+we ourselves shall pass in a few decades from the milliards—still unknown in 1850, but commonplace
+to-day—to the billions. There is no common standard for the value of a talent in 430 and in
+30 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, for gold, like cattle and corn, has continually altered not only its own numeration, but its
+significance within an ever-advancing urban economy. The only steady element is the fact that
+quantity of money—not to be confused with the stock of tokens and the means of payment—is
+an <i>alter ego</i> mirroring thought in money.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_892" href="#FNanchor_892" class="label">[892]</a> Cf. Vol. I, Ch. II.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_893" href="#FNanchor_893" class="label">[893]</a> Friedländer, <cite lang="de">Röm. Sittengesch.</cite>, IV (1921), p. 301.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_894" href="#FNanchor_894" class="label">[894]</a> Sallust, <cite>Catilina</cite>, 35, 3.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_895" href="#FNanchor_895" class="label">[895]</a> <a href="#p458">P. 458</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_896" href="#FNanchor_896" class="label">[896]</a> How difficult it was for Classical man to figure to himself the transformation of a physically
+indefinable asset like land into bodily money is shown by the stone posts (ὅροι) on land in Greece,
+which were meant to <em>represent</em> the mortgages on it, and by the Roman method of sale <i lang="la">per æs et libram</i>,
+in which a clod of earth was handed over for a coin in the presence of witnesses. Consequently, trade
+in goods (properly so called) never existed, nor anything like, for example, a current price for arable
+land. A regular relation between land-value and money-value was as unthinkable to the Classical
+mind as such a relation between artistic value and money-value. Intellectual—i.e., incorporeal—products
+like dramas and frescoes possessed economically no value at all. For the Classical idea of
+law, cf. <a href="#p81">p. 81</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_897" href="#FNanchor_897" class="label">[897]</a> Not very much can have been left of Classical art-treasures even by Augustus’s time. The
+refined Athenians themselves thought far too unhistorically to be moved to spare a chryselephantine
+statue merely because it was the work of Phidias. It is worth remembering that the gold parts of the
+famous Athene-figure of the Parthenon cella were made removable and tested for weight from time
+to time. Economic use of them, therefore, was provided for from the outset.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_898" href="#FNanchor_898" class="label">[898]</a> <cite lang="de">Ges. Schriften</cite>, IV, 200, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_899" href="#FNanchor_899" class="label">[899]</a> P. 600.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_900" href="#FNanchor_900" class="label">[900]</a> The belief that slaves ever constituted, even in Athens or Ægina, as much as a third of the
+population is a complete delusion. On the contrary, the revolutions of the period after 400 presuppose
+an enormous surplus of free paupers.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_901" href="#FNanchor_901" class="label">[901]</a> <a href="#p480">P. 480</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_902" href="#FNanchor_902" class="label">[902]</a> Herein lies the difference between this slavery and the sugar-slavery of our own Baroque. The
+latter represents a threshold phase of our <em>machine industry</em>, an organization of “living” energy, which
+began with man-fuel, but presently passed over to coal-fuel; and slavery came to be considered
+immoral only when coal had established itself. Looked at from this angle, the victory of the North
+in the American Civil War (1865) meant the economic victory of the concentrated energy of coal over
+the simple energy of the muscles.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_903" href="#FNanchor_903" class="label">[903]</a> <a href="#p371">Pp. 371</a>, et seq. The resemblance with the Egyptian administration under the Old Kingdom
+and the Chinese in the earliest Chóu period is unmistakable.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_904" href="#FNanchor_904" class="label">[904]</a> The <i lang="la">clerici</i>
+ of these exchequer offices were the archetype of the modern bank-clerk. Cf. <a href="#p371">p. 371</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_905" href="#FNanchor_905" class="label">[905]</a> Hampe, <cite lang="de">Deutsche Kaisergeschichte</cite>, p. 246. Leonardo Pisano, whose <cite lang="la">Liber Abaci</cite>
+ (1202) was
+authoritative in accountancy till well beyond the Renaissance, and who introduced, besides
+the Arabian system of numerals, negative numbers to indicate debit, was promoted by the great
+Hohenstaufen.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_906" href="#FNanchor_906" class="label">[906]</a> <a href="#p75">P. 75</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_907" href="#FNanchor_907" class="label">[907]</a> Sombart, <cite lang="de">Der moderne Kapitalismus</cite>, II, p. 119.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_908" href="#FNanchor_908" class="label">[908]</a> There is a close relation between our picture of the nature of electricity and the process of the
+“clearing-house,” in which the positive and negative money-positions of several firms (centres of
+tension) are equated amongst themselves by a purely mental act and the true position made presentable
+by a booking. Cf. Vol. I, Ch. XI.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_909" href="#FNanchor_909" class="label">[909]</a> Vol. I, ch. II.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_910" href="#FNanchor_910" class="label">[910]</a> <a href="#p81">P. 81</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_911" href="#FNanchor_911" class="label">[911]</a>
+ In our Culture the credit of a country rests upon its economic capacity and the political organization
+thereof—which imparts to the operations and bookings of finance the character of real
+money-creations—and not on any quantity of gold that may be put into this or that. It is the
+Classicist superstition that raises the gold reserve to the status of an actual measure of credit—actual
+in that the level of credit is thereby made dependent, not upon “will,” but upon “can.” But the
+current coins are <em>wares</em>, which, relatively to national credit, possess a <em>price</em>—the poorer the credit, the
+higher the price of gold—so that thenceforth it can only be upheld against that of <em>other</em> wares. Thus
+gold is measured like other wares against the unit of book-reckoning, and not vice versa as the term
+“gold standard” suggests. It serves also as means of payment in minor transactions, as for that
+matter a postage-stamp does. In old Egypt (whose money-thought is astoundingly like the Western)
+there was nothing resembling the coin even under the New Empire. The written transfer was entirely
+sufficient, and the Classical coins that filtered in from 650 to the founding of Alexandria and the
+Hellenistic régime were usually cut to pieces and reckoned by weight as a ware.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_912" href="#FNanchor_912" class="label">[912]</a> That is why it does not exist for our (present) jurisprudence.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_913" href="#FNanchor_913" class="label">[913]</a> All this equally holds good for the case of “workers” taking over the leadership of the works.
+Either they are incapable of management, and the business collapses, or they are capable of something,
+and then they themselves become inwardly entrepreneurs and think thenceforward only of maintaining
+their power. No theory can eliminate this fact from the world, for so life <em>is</em>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_914" href="#FNanchor_914" class="label">[914]</a> Thus it is only since 1770 that the banks have become centres of an economic power which
+made its first intervention with politics at the Congress of Vienna. Till then the banker had in the
+main concerned himself with bill business. The Chinese, and even the Egyptian, banks had a different
+significance, and the Classical banks, even in the Rome of Cæsar’s day, may best be described as
+cash-tills. They collected the yield of taxes in cash, and lent cash against replacement; thus the
+temples, with their stock of precious metal in the form of votive offerings, became “banks.” The
+temple of Delos, through several centuries, lent at ten per cent.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_915" href="#FNanchor_915" class="label">[915]</a> The idea of the Firm took shape even in Late Gothic times as “<i lang="la">ratio</i>” [hence the modern
+French phrase “<i lang="fr">raison sociale</i>”—<i>Tr.</i>] or “<i lang="la">negotiatio</i>.” It is impossible to render it exactly in a Classical
+language. <i lang="la">Negotium</i> meant for the Romans a concrete process, a “deal” and not a “business.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_916" href="#FNanchor_916" class="label">[916]</a> Pöhlmann, <cite lang="de">griech. Geschichte</cite> (1914), p. 216, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_917" href="#FNanchor_917" class="label">[917]</a> Gercke-Norden, <cite lang="de">Einl. in der Altertumswissensch.</cite>, III, p. 291.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_918" href="#FNanchor_918" class="label">[918]</a> Kromayer, in Hartmann’s <cite lang="de">Röm. Gesch.</cite>, p. 150.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_919" href="#FNanchor_919" class="label">[919]</a> The “Jews” of those times were the Romans (<a href="#p318">p. 318</a>), and the Jews themselves were peasants
+and artizans and small traders (Pârvan, <cite lang="de">Die Nationalität der Kaufleute im röm. Kaiserreiche</cite>, 1909; also Mommsen,
+<cite lang="de">Röm. Gesch.</cite>, V, p. 471); that is, they followed the very callings that in the Gothic period became
+the <em>object</em> of their merchant activity. Present-day “Europe” is in exactly the same position <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i>
+the Russians whose profoundly mystical inner life feels “thinking in money” <em>as a sin</em>. (The Pilgrim in
+Gorki’s <cite>Night-asylum</cite>, and Tolstoi’s thought generally; <a href="#p194">pp. 194</a>, <a href="#p278">278</a>.) Here to-day as in the Syria of
+Jesus’s time we have two economic worlds juxtaposed (<a href="#p192">pp. 192</a>, et seq.): an upper, alien, and civilized
+world intruded from the West (the Bolshevism of the first years, totally Western and un-Russian, is
+the lees of this infiltration), and a townless barter-life that goes on deep below, uncalculating and
+exchanging only for immediate needs. We have to think of the catchwords of the surface as a voice, in
+which the Russian, simple and busied wholly with his soul, hears resignedly the will of God.
+Marxism amongst Russians is based on an inward misunderstanding. They bore with the higher
+economic life of Petrinism, but they neither created it nor recognized it. The Russian does not fight
+Capital, but he does not <em>comprehend</em> it. Anyone who understands Dostoyevski will sense in these
+people a young humanity <em>for which as yet no money exists</em>, but only goods in relation to a life whose
+centre of gravity does <em>not</em> lie on the economical side. The horror of values supervening from nowhere
+which before the war drove many to suicide is a misconstrued literary disguise of the fact that, for a
+townless barter-thinking, money-getting by means of money is an impiety, and (from the view-point
+of the coming Russian religion) a sin. To-day, with the towns of Tsarism in ruin and the mankind
+in them living the village life under the crust (temporarily) of urban-thinking Bolshevism, he has
+freed himself from the Western economy. His apocalyptic hatred—the same that the simple Jew
+of Jesus’s day bore to the Roman—is directed against Petersburg, as a city and the seat of a political
+power of Western stamp, but also as the centre of a thinking in Western money that has poisoned and
+misdirected the whole life. The Russian of the deeps to-day is bringing into being a third kind of
+Christianity, still priestless, and built <em>on the John Gospel</em>—a Christianity that stands much nearer to
+the Magian than to the Faustian and, consequently, rests upon a new symbolism of baptism, and looks
+neither at Rome nor at Wittenberg, but past Byzantium towards Jerusalem, with premonitions of
+coming crusades. This is the <em>only</em> thing that this new Russia really cares about. And it will no doubt
+let itself fall once again under the economy of the West, as the primitive Christian submitted to the
+Romans and the Gothic Christian to the Jews. But inwardly it has no part nor lot therein. (Cf. <a href="#p192">pp.
+192</a>, <a href="#p226">226</a>, <a href="#p278">278</a>, <a href="#p293">293</a>, <a href="#p295">295</a>.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_920" href="#FNanchor_920" class="label">[920]</a> See the article “Diocletian, Edict of,” <cite>Ency. Brit.</cite>, XI ed.—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_921" href="#FNanchor_921" class="label">[921]</a> <a href="#p6">P. 6</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_922" href="#FNanchor_922" class="label">[922]</a> <a href="#p9">Pp. 9</a> et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_923" href="#FNanchor_923" class="label">[923]</a> <a href="#p25">P. 25</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_924" href="#FNanchor_924" class="label">[924]</a> <a href="#p25">P. 25</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_925" href="#FNanchor_925" class="label">[925]</a> <a href="#p268">P. 268</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_926" href="#FNanchor_926" class="label">[926]</a> <a href="#p134">P. 134</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_927" href="#FNanchor_927" class="label">[927]</a> <a href="#p25">Pp. 25</a>, et seq.; 267, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_928" href="#FNanchor_928" class="label">[928]</a> And not vice versa. Cf. <a href="#p268">p. 268</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_929" href="#FNanchor_929" class="label">[929]</a> The “correctness” of physical data (i.e., their applicability never disproved up to date, and
+therefore ranking as an <em>interpretation</em>) is wholly independent of their technical value. An undoubtedly
+wrong, and even self-contradictory, theory may be more valuable for practical purposes than a
+“correct” and profound one, and physical science has long been careful to avoid applying the words
+“right” and “wrong” in the popular sense, and to regard their syntheses as images rather than flat
+formulæ.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_930" href="#FNanchor_930" class="label">[930]</a> What Diels has managed to assemble in his work <cite lang="de">Antike Technik</cite> amounts to a comprehensive
+nullity. If we take away from it what belongs to the older Babylonian Civilization (such as water
+clocks and sun-dials) and to the younger Arabian Springtime (such as chemistry or the wonder-clock
+of Gaza), there is nothing left but devices, such as door-locks of a sort, that it would be an insult to
+attribute to any other Culture.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_931" href="#FNanchor_931" class="label">[931]</a> The Chinese Culture, too, made almost all these European discoveries on its own account—including
+compass, telescope, printing, gunpowder, paper, porcelain—but the Chinese did not
+wrest, but <em>wheedled</em>, things out of Nature. No doubt he felt the advantages of his knowledge and
+turned it to account, but he did not hurl himself upon it to exploit it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_932" href="#FNanchor_932" class="label">[932]</a> <a href="#p301">P. 301</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_933" href="#FNanchor_933" class="label">[933]</a> It is the same spirit that distinguishes the Jewish, Parsee, Armenian, Greek, and Arab ideas of
+business from that of the Western peoples.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_934" href="#FNanchor_934" class="label">[934]</a> <a href="#p301">P. 301</a>. Albertus Magnus lived on in legend as the great magician. Roger Bacon meditated
+upon steam-engines, steamships, and aircraft. (F. Strunz, <cite lang="de">Gesch. d. Naturwiss. im Mittelalter</cite>, 1910,
+p. 88.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_935" href="#FNanchor_935" class="label">[935]</a> <a href="#p268">P. 268</a>. According to Roger Bacon the “third rôle of science,” which is not relative to the
+other sciences, consists in the power that makes it to search the secrets of nature, to discover past
+and future, and to produce so many marvellous results that power is assured to those who possess it....
+The Church should take it into consideration in order to spare Christian blood in the struggle
+with the infidel and above all in preparation for the perils that will menace us in the days of Antichrist
+(E. Gilson, <cite lang="fr">Philosophie au Moyen Âge</cite>, p. 218).—<i>Tr.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_936" href="#FNanchor_936" class="label">[936]</a> <a href="#p288">P. 288</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_937" href="#FNanchor_937" class="label">[937]</a> Greek fire was only to terrify and to ignite, but here the tense force of the gases of explosion
+are converted into energy of motion. Anyone who seriously compares the two does not understand
+the spirit of the Western technique.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_938" href="#FNanchor_938" class="label">[938]</a> Marx is quite right; it is one of the creations (and what is more, the proudest creation) of the
+bourgeoisie. But, spellbound as he is by the ancient-mediæval-modern scheme, he has failed to
+note that it is only the bourgeoisie of this one single Culture that is master of the destiny of the
+Machine. So long as it dominates the earth, every non-European tries and will try to fathom the
+secret of this terrible weapon. Nevertheless, inwardly he abhors it, be he Indian or Japanese, Russian
+or Arab. It is something fundamental in the essence of the Magian soul that leads the Jew, as entrepreneur
+and engineer, to stand aside from the creation proper of machines and devote himself to
+the business side of their production. But so also the Russian looks with fear and hatred at this
+tyranny of wheels, cables, and rails, and if he adapts himself for to-day and to-morrow to the inevitable,
+yet there will come a time when he will <em>blot out the whole thing from his memory and his environment</em>,
+and create about himself a wholly new world, in which nothing of this Devil’s technique
+is left.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_939" href="#FNanchor_939" class="label">[939]</a> Compared with this mighty contest between the two handfuls of steel-hard men of race and of
+immense intellect—which the simple citizen neither observes nor comprehends—the battle of
+mere interests between the employing class and the workers’ Socialism sinks into insignificance
+when regarded from the distant world-historical view-point. The working-class movement is what
+its leaders <em>make</em> of it, and hatred of the owner has long enlisted itself in the service of the bourse.
+Practical communism with its “class-war”—to-day a long obsolete and adulterated phrase—is
+nothing but the trusty henchman of big Capital, which knows perfectly well how to make use of it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_940" href="#FNanchor_940" class="label">[940]</a> In this sense the interest-politics of the workers’ movements also belong to it, in that their
+object is not to overcome the money-values, but to possess them.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_941" href="#FNanchor_941" class="label">[941]</a> <a href="#p345">P. 345</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="transnote">
+<h2>Transcriber’s notes</h2>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Apparent typographical errors in English were silently corrected, while
+non-English text is almost always rendered as printed, with occasional
+corrections (especially in citations) when further inquiry was made.
+The index contained dozens of incorrectly spelled or variant proper
+nouns; where this was noticed, the index spelling was made consistent with
+the main text. The index entry was not moved even if the new spelling
+would require it.</li>
+
+<li>Any “{sic}” in this text is the transcriber’s.</li>
+
+<li>Most italic text is marked up with emphasis, language or citation tags in HTML, to
+aid accessibility.</li>
+
+<li>Redundant part-title pages for chapters have been removed. This accounts for
+three-page gaps in page numbering (including associated blank pages) in the formats that
+display page numbers.</li>
+
+<li>Chapter XI lacks a section numbered IX. This error was not corrected in
+later reprints (e.g. Knopf 1965). Chapter IV does not have an explicit
+section I.</li>
+</ul>
+
+</div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78914 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+[Project Gutenberg](https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook [#78914](https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78914)