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+
+ <body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78957 ***</div>
+
+
+<div class='tnotes covernote'>
+
+<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
+
+<p class='c000'>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter ph1'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div>IN THE AMERICAN JUNGLE</div>
+ <div class='c002'>[1925–1936]</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='c003 figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/i_frontispiece.jpg' alt='A black and white photographic portrait of a middle-aged man with a prominent mustache, thinning hair, and a thoughtful expression, looking slightly downward.' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p>© <i>Sheldon Dick</i></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='titlepage'>
+
+<div>
+ <h1 class='c004'>In the<br> American Jungle<br> &#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [1925–1936]</h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div><span class='xlarge'>WALDO FRANK</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><i>Photographic Decorations by William H. Field</i></div>
+ <div class='c002'>FARRAR <i>&#38;</i> RINEHART, <i>Incorporated</i></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>NEW YORK · TORONTO</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='c003 figcenter id002'>
+<img src='images/i_copyright.jpg' alt='A vintage, stylized oval emblem resembling a leaf or fruit, featuring the bold capital letters &#39;F&#39; and &#39;R&#39; on either side of a central vertical stem.' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><span class='small'>COPYRIGHT, 1937, BY WALDO FRANK</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>BY J. J. LITTLE AND IVES COMPANY, NEW YORK</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>ALL RIGHTS RESERVED</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div><i>to my friend Adolph S. Oko</i></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>FOREWORD</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>For the general idea and design of this book, I am indebted
+to my friend, Harold Clurman, the director of the Group
+Theater. During several years, he urged me to publish a collection
+of my papers similar to “<span class='fss'>SALVOS</span>” which united certain of
+my short critical writings from 1915 to 1924. I was always
+too busy—and the notion of a miscellany does not appeal to
+me. At last, at his request, I handed him from my files what
+I could find of my articles and papers published in the past
+twelve years. I was amazed to find how much it was. Several
+months later, he returned to me a selection, reduced by two
+thirds. He pointed out that what he had put in order was not
+a miscellany but <i>a book</i> with a beginning, a middle and a
+conclusion: a book even with a “plot”!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The materials that compose this “collective portrait” of
+an era which spans the Boom, the Depression, and (perhaps)
+the beginning, in Spain, of the new World War that may
+end the world we have all lived in, appeared originally in
+the following periodicals (of New York, unless otherwise
+noted):</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><cite>The Adelphi</cite> (London), <cite>The Dial</cite>, <cite>Europe</cite> (Paris), <cite>Harper’s</cite>,
+<cite>The Menorah Journal</cite>, <cite><span lang="es">La Nación</span></cite> (Buenos Aires), <cite>The
+New Masses</cite>, <cite>The New Republic</cite>, <cite>The New Yorker</cite>, <cite>Occidente</cite>
+(Rome), <cite><span lang="es">El Repertorio Americano</span></cite> (San José, Costa
+Rica), <cite>Scribner’s</cite>, <cite>Soviet Russia Today</cite>, <cite><span lang="es">Sur</span></cite> (Buenos Aires),
+<cite>Virginia Quarterly Review</cite>, <cite>The Guardian</cite> (Philadelphia).</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span>Many other magazines reprinted or translated some of this
+material, but since I have no full list of these I have not
+named them.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>W. F.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>New York, December, 1936</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_ix'>ix</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS</h2>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009' colspan='3'><i>Foreword</i></td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_vii'>vii</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c012' colspan='4'>ONE: BOOM YEAR SKETCHES</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>1.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>I DISCOVER THE NEW WORLD</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_3'>3</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>2.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>A SAVAGE ISLE</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_16'>16</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>3.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>A MOB AND A MACHINE</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_21'>21</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>4.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>MURDER AS BAD ART</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_25'>25</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>5.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>THE BATTLE OF A CENTURY AND A HALF</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_29'>29</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>6.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>ENNOBLING OUR CRIMINALS</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_35'>35</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>7.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>READING THE SPORTS</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_38'>38</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>8.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>THE NEW CONQUISTADORES</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_41'>41</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>9.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>TWO FACES</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_45'>45</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>10.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>THE DRUG ON THE MARKET</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_48'>48</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c012' colspan='4'>TWO: PORTRAITS</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>I.</td>
+ <td class='c013' colspan='3'><i>MEN</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>1.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>RANDOLPH BOURNE</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_59'>59</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>2.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>CHARLES CHAPLIN</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_61'>61</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>3.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>D. H. LAWRENCE</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_74'>74</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_x'>x</span>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>4.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>HERBERT CROLY</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_75'>75</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>5.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>SIGMUND FREUD</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_82'>82</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>6.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>SHERWOOD ANDERSON</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_93'>93</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>7.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>HART CRANE</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_96'>96</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>II.</td>
+ <td class='c013' colspan='3'><i>AMERICAN TRAITS</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>1.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>IN DEFENSE OF OUR VULGARITY</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_109'>109</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>2.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>THE MOVIES AND THE MASSES</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_112'>112</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>3.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>THE COMEDY OF COMMERCE</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_116'>116</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>4.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>JAZZ AND FOLK ART</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_119'>119</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>5.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>STRAIGHT STREETS</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_123'>123</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>III.</td>
+ <td class='c013' colspan='3'><i>IDEAS</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>1.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>SERIOUSNESS AND DADA</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_128'>128</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>2.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>MR. MENCKEN, KING OF THE PHILISTINES</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_135'>135</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>3.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>PSEUDO LITERATURE</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_139'>139</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>4.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>“UTILITARIAN ART”</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_142'>142</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>5.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>ART IN OUR JUNGLE</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_146'>146</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>6.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>THE ARTIST IN OUR JUNGLE</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_149'>149</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>7.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>THE MACHINE AND METAPHYSICS</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_153'>153</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c012' colspan='4'>THREE: BOOKS</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>1.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>POE AT LAST</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_161'>161</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>2.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>FRANCE AND THOREAU</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_165'>165</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>3.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>FAIRY TALES FOR THE OLD</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_168'>168</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_xi'>xi</span>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>4.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>DUSK AND DAWN</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_172'>172</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>5.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>ELEGY FOR ANARCHISM</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_177'>177</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>6.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>THE BOOK OF LEO STEIN</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_183'>183</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>7.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>REFLECTIONS ON SPENGLER</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_188'>188</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>8.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>THE MODERN DISTEMPER</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_201'>201</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>9.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>THE “UNIVERSE” OF T. S. ELIOT</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_220'>220</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c012' colspan='4'>FOUR: SOME PRACTICAL CONCLUSIONS FOR THE SURVIVAL OF MAN</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>1.</td>
+ <td class='c014' colspan='2'>SOLIDARITY IS NOT ENOUGH</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_231'>231</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>2.</td>
+ <td class='c014' colspan='2'>WITH MARX, SPINOZA&#160;...</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_240'>240</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>3.</td>
+ <td class='c014' colspan='2'>FROM MANY MESSAGES TO MANY PEOPLES:</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>I.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>WAR IS WITH US NOW</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_254'>254</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>II.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>TO THE STUDENTS OF CUBA</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_256'>256</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>III.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>THE TOUCHSTONE</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_260'>260</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>IV.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>TO ROMAIN ROLLAND ON HIS SEVENTIETH BIRTHDAY</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_262'>262</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>V.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>TO THE PREMIER OF FRANCE</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_265'>265</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>VI.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>VALUES OF THE REVOLUTIONARY WRITER</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_269'>269</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>VII.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>THE WRITER’S PART IN SOCIAL REVOLUTION</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_279'>279</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>4.</td>
+ <td class='c014' colspan='2'>TERRE HAUTE HOTEL</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_287'>287</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014' colspan='3'>INDEX</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_295'>295</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_xii'>xii</span>“... <i>in a dying world, creation is revolution</i>.”</div>
+ <div class='line in24'>“Our America,” 1919</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c016'>“<i>The American jungle is rich in denatured elements
+of a transplanted world: it consists largely
+in those deposits, cultural, political, economic,
+which justify our calling ‘the new world’ the
+Grave of Europe.</i>”</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r c017'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“The Re-Discovery of America,” 1929</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_xiii'>xiii</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>ONE: BOOM YEAR SKETCHES</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>
+ <h3 class='c018'>1. I DISCOVER THE NEW WORLD</h3>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>a.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>The most important room at home was the library. Our
+house was the usual four-story brownstone segment in the
+unbroken wall of an upper West Side block. There were
+plenty of windows. Those to the north looked out upon the
+street where grocery wagons rattled by day and by night the
+gas lamps dimly slumbered. Those to the south gave a broad
+view of another wall of houses which at dark became fantastic
+with lighted windows holding many secrets and black
+silhouettes mysteriously alive behind drawn blinds. And beyond
+the houses was the glow of the great city. The library
+had but a single window; it was too little for so large and
+low a room. Even by day the library was dark and, since
+the window opened on a strip of yard choked by an ugly
+ailanthus, I never looked through that window. When I was
+in this room New York did not come in; New York stayed
+distant and silent. The real world became this world of
+books; and almost all the books had come from Europe.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Among the pictures on the walls were those of two
+Americans: Washington and Lincoln. But they had little to
+do with the America outside the window. They spoke to me
+less eloquently than the novelists and poets of England, than
+the thinkers of Germany, than the Athenians and Romans all
+living on the shelves. This library in my father’s house in the
+city of New York was a sanctuary of Europe. It glowed with
+a secluded quiet and with a life of its own. And here my
+childhood lived with an intensity and depth of feeling that
+not school, not the streets could give me.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>My father nearly every year went to Europe. We would
+go down to the ship often, on the eve of his sailing, board
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>the great vessel, and dine with the captain in his cabin. I was
+in Europe then: everything, from the food we ate to the
+words we heard, was strange to America. Father sailed away,
+and mother bundled us children into a train. We got at last
+into a shimmer of meadows and of young green trees. But
+even in the mountains Europe was not far distant. Letters
+would presently arrive with foreign stamps. They were long
+letters: page upon page of personal description in which my
+father narrated his adventures in Hamburg, in London, in
+Paris. His trips were short—business trips. When he came
+back he brought Europe still more vividly along; in the air
+of his clothes, in the scent of his label-plastered luggage. And
+then mother was always there: and that made more of
+Europe. Mother was an artist. She sang every day. Beethoven,
+Wagner, Brahms, Schubert, Schumann, Wolf—these were the
+voices that came with us even to the mountains.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>My room in the city home was on the top floor. I was
+the youngest, a tragic fate since it meant my going earliest
+to bed. It was not easy, this clambering up from the lighted
+drawing room filled with the cheer of guests, through the
+shadowed house. But the fourth floor was mine, and already
+I was a confirmed breaker of laws. I knew that my father
+would presently sit down at the organ or the piano to accompany
+my mother. I would then take a blanket from my bed,
+wrap myself snugly, and seat myself on the stair. My mother’s
+singing came clearly through the house. School was a dim
+fable beside the reality of those songs; even the strong words
+on the library shelves were weak by contrast. That lovely,
+breathing voice with its perfect modulation and its subtle
+colors brought the lands across the sea miraculously near as
+I sat in guilt—and in ecstasy—upon the stair.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So when I went to Europe (several times before I was
+old enough for college) I found lands familiar to the library
+of my father and to my mother’s music: familiar also through
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>the American poets, Longfellow, Lowell, Holmes. Cooper’s
+redskins and sea rovers were more remote to me than the
+cockneys of Dickens, the Parisians of Balzac. As to Poe,
+whose wistful little house my father showed me in a Fordham
+waste of goats and cans, his land seemed a wraithlike world
+in no way kin to the rectangular New York that was, for
+me, most of America.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course, this European “nature” of my boyhood was
+wholly and merely conscious surface. My hours of school,
+my mates of the street, the values and activities of parent
+and relative, under all, the food I ate and the air I breathed—flesh
+of my flesh, bone of my bone—were American. But
+these depths were voiceless, and I did not know them. Even
+the family traditions: the adventures of my father’s father in
+New York during the Civil War, the tales of my mother’s
+mother about the Yankee army that burned her Alabama
+home and stole her heirlooms, and about her running the
+blockade in a tiny rowboat in Mobile bay (with mother a
+child in arms and the constant fear that if she cried the
+Yankee ships would find them) failed somehow to come as
+close as the great tales I read in Homer or in Tolstoi: tales
+of Europe. America was in me, of course; but too close for
+my roving mind to know it.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>b.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>In my fifteenth year I had a great adventure. I picked up
+a history of American literature which spoke, coldly and
+slightingly enough, of an unknown poet, of whose curious
+style there was appended an example called “O Pioneers!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I procured a green-bound volume, “Leaves of Grass”; it
+had a title page in archaic type and the portrait of an ancient
+bearded sage, all grey, who signed himself Walt Whitman.
+I read, studied, annotated, as I might have done with the
+Bible if I had been reared religiously. Whitman stirred deep
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>voices in my soul; he inspired me. I believe in those early
+days I understood him well enough. But one so obvious fact
+escaped me, since I was not ready for it: the fact that this
+man was an American, that his experience was related to my
+own and that this was why I loved him! I thought he was as
+remote—and holy—as a Hebrew prophet!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>That spring there was the annual oratory contest at the
+high school. The usual bright lads rose before an auditorium
+of a thousand people and bespoke “The Spirit of ’76,” “The
+Blessings of Democracy,” and so forth. And then a strange
+thing happened. A short, black-haired boy stood upon the
+rostrum and for half an hour harangued the audience about
+the merits of an unknown, dead poet called Walt Whitman.
+He must have been eloquent as well as amusing, for the
+judges gave him the gold medal for his effort. But the whole
+affair remained somehow outside his experience as an American.
+These teachers who had rewarded him for praising
+Whitman kept on quoting Longfellow. Whitman’s value
+seemed well symbolized by the useless medal of gold which
+the boy’s mother put away and which he never saw again.
+Whitman was an outsider, a myth—almost an outcast.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But Europe came ever closer. I was done with school and
+too young for college. So I was sent abroad. I discovered
+myself at sixteen, at seventeen, to be of an age which on the
+Continent was deemed the age of a man! I consorted with
+students from every land of Europe: Russians, Spaniards,
+Serbians, Jews from Egypt, burly football players from Great
+Britain. They were not “pretty” fellows. They knew life—women—books.
+We sat about at night, drinking our tea with
+rum; and the air was less thick with tobacco smoke than with
+the thunder of exciting talk. Revolution, art, morality, death:
+all the old dwellers of the books which I had met in my
+father’s library took on flesh, grew warm, grew urgent. And
+here at last, so many miles from his Manhattan, Whitman
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>became alive; Poe found recognition. “America?” said my
+European friends. “It is the place that gave us Poe and
+Whitman.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I had engaged my room at Harvard. But I wanted to go
+to Heidelberg, I wanted, like my friends, to make the rounds
+of the great universities of Germany, England, Paris. I wanted
+to persevere in this world of midnight tea and rum with its
+dizzy flights into art and metaphysics. Europe beckoned me
+on, like a dark, mellow woman in whom the Mother eternally
+old and the Lover wondrously young were merged. And my
+father would not have stood against my will. He was an imperious,
+passionate man, whose prime passion was respect for
+the personality of others. A tyrant in matters of deportment,
+he hated all interference in adventures of the spirit. He had
+watched me, perhaps amused, perhaps with a hidden pang,
+go about at the age of twelve with my undigested load of
+Ibsen and Zola and Tolstoi. He had observed me, bored with
+school, become a truant, frequent the vaudeville shows or
+barricade myself from furious teachers in the office of our
+high school paper. Now, when the formal letters came from
+Heidelberg, telling the young American that he knew enough
+to be admitted, my father would not have said no, whatever
+his conviction. But my older brother was less philosophical.
+He came to Europe; and in a hotel room high above the Seine
+we had what for me was a decisive battle.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You are not going to Heidelberg,” said my brother.
+“You are going to be an American, by gum! And what’s
+more, you are not going to Harvard. You’re queer enough
+as it is. You’re going to be not only an American, but as
+<i>human</i> an American as I can make you. I’m going to send
+you to a place that will smooth out your angles and your
+crotchets. Yale for you.”... And to Yale I went.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I suppose I had been ill-prepared for the “dear old
+Campus.” My classmates were engrossed in football, not in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>ideas; in Greek-letter fraternities, not in secret revolutionary
+orders. They got drunk on beer and sang sentimental songs,
+whereas my friends in Europe had sipped their liquor soberly
+for the most part, and got drunk on Nietzsche. Good, groping,
+earnest fellows, my chums at Yale seemed children to
+me. I went through college a rather cantankerous rebel. To
+amuse myself I wrote dramatic criticism for a local paper,
+losing no occasion to bewray America’s woeful “lack of culture”;
+I played Bach; I wrote a book on the Literature of
+Modern France; and always my eyes continued to turn east,
+across the Atlantic Ocean.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Active journalism in New York was a leap from a nursery
+to a sort of jungle. The academic cloisters had struck me as
+anemic imitations of the full-blooded youthfulness which I
+had seen in Europe. I liked sport well enough; but was there
+not as well an athleticism in literature and in philosophy?
+Now came New York once again: a New York of murders,
+robberies, politics, and visiting celebrities who spent the interviewer’s
+hour telling him pleasant things about America
+which were not so.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This New York seemed wholly body. While the slums
+reeked with poverty and vice, while the high spirit of youth
+was trampled out by the thresh of mechanical progress, the
+City seemed aware only of problems of traffic, of taxation,
+of money. A vast town, New York; but since it was concerned
+only with the mechanics of sheer physical growth, it
+struck me as a baby—a sort of Brobdingnagian baby. If a man
+proposed municipal ownership of public utilities, or cheap
+gas, he was treated like a monster. If a woman was suspected
+of infidelity, it seemed right to drag her to a divorce court;
+and the important thing—the only important thing—seemed
+to be to ascertain the fact; the deep hidden significances of
+her character, of her unhappiness, of the subtle treatment of
+her husband—all these elements of truth were ignored. I could
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>not accept this gross, this infantile America, which was all the
+America I knew. Being a child myself, I made the same old
+gross mistake: I imagined that my Paradise existed “over
+there,” across the sea. I packed a bag at last and went to
+live in Paris.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>c.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>When I arrived it was nightfall. I left my bags at a hotel
+and wandered up the Boul’ Mich’—the gaudy thoroughfare of
+the Latin Quarter. I saw no face that I knew in the thronged
+terraces of the cafés which made two fertile banks from the
+Gardens of the Luxembourg down to the Seine. But I felt
+happy and I felt at home. I began to write. I found myself
+in a world where writing—the sheer creative act—was considered
+a sacrament and a service: not because of what it
+brought, not for what it did—for itself. It was in the air—this
+rhythm of creation. Life was looked on as a lovely, mysterious
+adventure, and its true priests were they who sang of it,
+who pictured it, who revealed its beauty. I made friends.
+Here, among these swarms of enthusiasts who spent their
+days arguing about a picture or a poet, I found men after
+my own heart. And I found a woman, a true daughter of
+this world who took me in and made me part of it. And then,
+after a brief year, just as I was beginning truly to be at home,
+I packed my bags and I went back to New York!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What had happened? I was having a good time and a
+successful one. Living was cheap there. It was extremely easy
+for a journalist like myself to send articles and stories to the
+United States, convert the few dollars into many francs, and
+live like a young lord in this perpetual holiday town where
+poverty was no disgrace, where there was as much honor in
+contributing to certain magazines as in being elected to the
+Senate! Did not wealthy ladies of Paris find the same thrill
+in climbing five musty flights of stairs to the garret of an obscure
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>American author that our own ladies found in dining
+with celebrities from Paris? Was there indeed not a whole
+world here fashioned for the artist and ruled by his desire?
+Paris itself, vast and modern, had the leisurely freedom of an
+aristocratic village. Here was a huge city in which there were
+happy people, in which there were trees and gardens, in
+which there was room for all moods, all liberties—even for
+a bit of license.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I had more than I had ever had, and yet I gave it up quite
+simply because I did not want it, and I could not stand it. In
+several of the cafés of Paris there gathered artists from
+America. Many of them had not been home in years; most
+of them came from small places in the interior and had had
+no contact with Europe until they had come over. They
+spoke seldom of our country. But when they did, they
+sneered, they jeered, they swore they were done with the
+barbaric land that had given them birth. I could not argue
+with them; so much of what they said was simply fact. Yet
+it was in the company of these Americans that I began to
+feel most sharply my need of coming back. If what they said
+was true, all the more urgent was the return of men like
+themselves who claimed to be conveyers of the truth, creators
+of beauty—men who could endow America with what
+they accused America of lacking.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But I went little with these expatriates. My knowledge
+of the language, my love and, bit by bit, my work gained me
+an entrance into the true world of France, which before the
+War was the home of so much of Europe. I was happy here,
+but I was not <i>needed</i>. I was being nourished by what other
+men, through centuries and ages, had created. I was a parasite.
+At least, so it seemed to me. I do not believe that I
+thought further in those youthful days. Certainly, I thought
+scarcely at all of what I was going to find when I returned.
+I knew simply that I was going home. I left the best friends
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>that I had ever had, the most congenial home, I left my love
+(she never understood). I took a boat. I rented a room in
+Washington Place. I stared at the dirty wall—and wondered
+what madness had driven me. No matter. I was where I
+belonged!</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>d.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>The year was 1913 and I was twenty-three. I was alone
+and miserable as I had never been. In Paris they had not
+understood why I had left them. But in America no one even
+knew that I was here. I had outgrown my old friends. I was
+done with newspapers. Everything that a young man most
+needs—companionship, ideas, love—was beyond the ocean.
+Here? I lay on my iron cot and stared at the blank walls; I
+heard the elevated trains pound past and the arrogant motors
+shuffle and the crowds press, press in their weary quest for
+money—in their vast indifference to all which made <i>my</i>
+world. I was unable to eat, unable to sleep—unable to work.
+At times, in my weakness, I thought of what I had left behind
+in Paris. But always I knew that I was not going back—never
+going back until I had proven to my friends abroad,
+both the Europeans and the Americans, that I was right in
+leaving.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In 1914 America was not what the young artist or writer
+found ten years later. There were no magazines hospitable to
+virgin efforts, there were no Little Theatres, no liberal weeklies.
+The land seemed a hostile waste, consumed by the fires
+of possession. Whatever “literature and art” there was had
+to be imported from Europe in order to find a market.
+But did not this fact prove that such as I were needed? The
+very fact that life was hard here, that life did not seem to
+want me, that America was quite resigned to letting me
+starve—did not this prove that I was <i>needed</i>, and that I had
+come home?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>So I set to work upon the pleasant task of making myself
+wanted in a world that seemed to be getting along extremely
+well without me. I soon learned that it was getting on so
+well, chiefly on the surface. I had a vision then, in those dark
+days, which gave me light and strength, and which has never
+left me.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I saw our land as a fumbling giant child, idealistically
+hungry as was no other land in all the West, but helpless to
+express its hunger. Our forefathers had come here brimful of
+religious energy: Puritans from England, Catholics from
+Spain, Jews from Germany and Russia. And here were material
+things that must be done: a continent to clear, bridges
+to build, a nation to house. Our fathers had learned to perform
+these substantial chores; they had performed them so
+miraculously well because of the spiritual force which drove
+them. But now that they longed to express their deeper
+dreams, their subtler ideals, they did not know how. So that,
+for want of better, they poured all their poetry and most of
+their religion into the business at hand: made it express their
+idealism which they could not express otherwise at all!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We spent so much time making money because the poets
+had not yet come to teach us to make better things. We were
+so proud of our machines because the builders of more significant
+beauty had not yet come among us. We were such
+busybodies about the personal habits of our neighbors—keeping
+them from an innocent drink or even from a cigarette—because
+the teacher had not yet appeared to show us better
+ways of ennobling our souls. And finally, we marched about
+in white sheets, passed restrictive laws against immigration,
+grew intolerant of the chaos of creeds and races in our midst,
+because we were not yet strong enough, mature enough, to
+conceive of a unity of inclusion rather than of exclusion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now I was ready to see America. I had intellectually or
+in the flesh been “round the world.” I had known personally
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>the men of modern Europe, studied the masters of ancient
+Greece, Israel, and India. I discovered America last—which
+was the right way to discover it, since America is to be the
+last word, the summing up of all the yesterdays which have
+poured their blood upon the American shores.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I went west. Under the noisy, dirty, braggart mood of
+Chicago I felt a childlike spirit—I found childlike men. I
+found a fertile and sweet world pushing up in this town
+which Sandburg called the Hog-butcher of the world—pushing
+up under the coal and the grime like springtime grass
+beneath the muck of winter.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I helped to edit a country paper in the heart of Kansas.
+I spoke to the farmers, wrote for them, lived with them. And
+though I had done the same thing with the intellectuals of
+Paris, I found here a warmth of response which I had not
+found abroad. Here in this crude corngrower hungering to
+“git America and his dream together,” and in his overworked
+wife scheming to give her girls the “culture” she had never
+had, was a seed of the spirit which needed only nurture and
+the sun to flower. And I had talks in the kitchens of solitary
+farms that moved me in a way mysteriously deep and gave
+me strength.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I lived with coal miners. I found them hungry for light,
+possessed of an infallible instinct for the tragic beauty of the
+world. They, too, were spiritual seed long underground and
+ready to push up. And when a fellow who had mined since
+he was twelve and who had never seen his dad by light of day
+piloted me through a leaky shaft with a care that was loving
+and paternal, I realized what I had won by giving up salutes
+of another sort in Paris.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I went south—to the country which my mother had left
+as a baby. I spent months in lodgings in that slumberous aristocrat
+of cities, Richmond. Here, too, were esthetes, weavers
+of silly images of distant Paradise. I did not see them. I saw
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>a people, stricken still under the curse of a past and under the
+load of an intricate present: a people hungering for light, for
+expression—a people hungering and, hence, a people growing.
+I came to know the Negroes in the cypress swamps of Alabama
+and Mississippi. I lived with them, I spoke to them in
+their churches and their schools. In these dark breasts was a
+flame. I realized the wondrous wealth of spirit and of dream
+which America possesses in her Negroes.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And I saw the Indians of the Southwest pueblos. In their
+classic ceremonial dances, in their deeply unselfish religion of
+nature, in the dignity and restraint of their lives and culture,
+I recognized an American past—and an American example.
+Here was a spiritual splendor which America had created.
+Like all our past it was waning. Would we create it anew in
+our own culture?</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>e.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>Finally, after the War, I went again to Europe. I had
+begun to put my vision of America into books. Many intellectuals
+had sneered. A large group of them had even come
+together under the leadership of one of the Americans who
+spend their time in Paris and had published a fat book to
+prove that America was hopeless, an altogether unlivable
+place. Much of the response which my books had won had
+come, not from the intellectuals, but from those very byways
+of our country—the farms of the West, the cities of the
+North, the fields of the South—where I had wandered and
+where I had been nourished. And some of the response had
+come from Europe. My books had been translated. And now
+that I was again in Paris the writers of that great city called
+me to them and told me with warm hospitality that this new
+America of which I wrote was what <i>they</i> needed. For, they
+said, the spiritual power of Europe was declining. Europe’s
+noon was past. Europe, which had created and nurtured us,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>now needed nurture! If America was indeed to be a land to
+distil new spiritual values out of our modern chaos it would
+be the savior of the Old World!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Some of the writers of France and England had been here,
+and were pessimistic. “Do not believe him,” they said. “He
+and his sort are only importations from Europe—they represent
+a transplanted dream of the Old World. They cannot
+thrive in America. They will be crushed out. Their light is
+a twilight, not a dawn. The future of America is steel, more
+steel; is gold, more gold; is the triumph of a sordid, ignorant
+Herd. There is no hope.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But at these men I smiled. They had seen what I saw as
+a boy: they had been repelled by the crude, the ignorant
+surface....</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A few days before I left for home I was sitting in a library
+infinitely richer than the one in my father’s house. It was the
+library of the master, Anatole France. There he sat in his red
+skullcap by the open fire. About him in manuscript, in illuminated
+volume, in precious bibelot, ranged wide treasures of
+European culture, and in him lived the essence of that culture—the
+exquisite distillation of the thought of a hundred
+ages.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Make no mistake,” he smiled at me, “Europe is a tale
+that has been told. Our long twilight is before us. But I believe
+in your American dream. And I will tell you why. It
+is not because of your books. It is because of the pictures
+I have seen, in common magazines, of your girls and your
+women. You have said a great deal about Puritanism, about
+materialism in America. Those glorious girls belie all that.
+How could an ugly world produce such women? How could
+such women produce an ugly world?”...</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1925</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>
+ <h3 class='c018'>2. A SAVAGE ISLE</h3>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>a.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>I’ve been away from home for almost a year. In France,
+in Germany, in Lithuania and Poland, in Egypt and Palestine
+and Tunis, I’ve talked with eager men about my own fabulous
+country. Everywhere people knew about America. They
+told me all about it. I learned a lot.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I’m a peaceful fellow, not given to argument. And I’m
+impressionable, delighted to agree with what is told me. This
+I find particularly easy when what I hear is pleasant; when
+I am taken, for instance, in my capacity of American, for a
+citizen of Eldorado or of Ophir. So gradually, as the months
+of my absence grew, I found myself accepting what I heard,
+in Europe, Africa and Asia, about my native land.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>By the time I took ship from Boulogne, this—more or less—is
+the portrait of America which the industrialist of Essen,
+the rabbi of Posen, the Vilna medical professor, the Tunisian
+judge, the merchant of Damascus, the Parisian dentist, the
+nationalist of Egypt, had impressed upon me:</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>America&#160;... meaning above all New York&#160;... is the
+most modern, the most civilized, the most genteel, the most
+efficient, the most expeditious, the most comfortable spot on
+earth. In America, there are no low or humble classes. In
+America, everywhere, the families dwell on the twentieth
+floors of palaces equipped with electric ice and radiant heat;
+and when they descend to the street it is to roll away in private
+autos. In America, everybody has a hand in the state;
+everybody has a heart for public welfare; everybody reads;
+everybody considers everybody’s rights to peace and comfort.
+In America, the rich lavish their money upon scientific progress
+for its own sake; and of course, in America, everyone is
+rich.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>... In America, the women are beautiful, free and pure.
+They are comrades to men. The American man is as pure as
+his mother. Vice is not tolerated, drink is unknown.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>... It is true that this American folk is overconcerned
+with material well-being. But at least it has uplifted material
+well-being to the rank of an art. The American people have
+perhaps too great a care for money. But, at least, they spend
+it with splendor, and get for what they spend their heart’s
+desire. For here are gleaming cities, marvelously fed with sun
+and air; here are farmlands ribboned with smooth roads and
+labored by miraculous machines.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>... In America, to sum up, are men and women elegant,
+cheerful, leisured, powerful, serene. The rest of the backward
+world is jealous of America, of course. The world, in places,
+quite sincerely thinks that there are spiritual values which
+shining America may have missed. But America is the apogee
+of material refinement. Beside American towns, Paris must
+seem an unkempt village, Warsaw a dumpheap....</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>b.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>Finally my boat put into the great American harbor. I
+came up on deck, my eyes shiningly ready to enjoy the
+America of the talkers of Europe, Africa and Asia.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I saw no scintillant city rising like an army of arrows
+toward the Sun, its father. What I saw was a conglomerate
+of buildings, formless with haphazard shapes, a phalanx of
+skyscrapers as formidable from the distance as an old comb
+lacking half its teeth. A sprawling and grimy town above
+the noble Hudson. And the famous buildings, if they were
+at all the symbol of power, made me think of a baby giant,
+in weak control of his muscles, who had heaped this tilting
+mess of blocks upon the floor of his playroom.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The river-front streets had a brash rottenness that hurt,
+after the mellow rottenness of Fez. The houses were cheap
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>and dirty. They revealed no imagination: a dull obsession
+seemed the architect of these innumerable banks of brick. A
+folk had dumped these houses where they stood, with its
+mind elsewhere or totally absent, with its heart cold or altogether
+lacking. As the taxi shunted me along, going slower
+than a rickshaw in Pekin (a taxi dirtier than any in Madrid,
+and driven by a man who needed but a soiled burnoose and
+a turban to brother him with the sword-eater in the Tangier
+Sacco), I thought of the improvised squalor in certain modern
+sections of Egyptian towns and of the far sweeter and swifter
+rhythm of the Saharan camel. And as the traffic crawled under
+the marshaling terror of the cop, I remembered the ease and
+speed with which one flies through the intricate network of
+Paris. Fifth Avenue has a splendor; Park Avenue (when at
+last I reached it) flaunted the elegance of a Brobdingnagian
+refrigerator, electrically cooled. But I’d gone through an hour
+of back yard and alley to get there....</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I went uptown. I discovered empty lots throughout the
+heart of the city, and unpaved stretches of street where my
+car bumped precisely as I had been bumped on the winter-logged
+roads of Poland. Indeed, more and more, this iridescent
+city of men’s dreams—in its disorder, in its dirt, in its noise, in
+its lack of form and style—brought to my mind the towns I
+had seen in Eastern Europe: towns where for ten unceasing
+years armies, rebellions, insurrections, pogroms, have spewed
+their havoc.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I dismounted at last from my taxi, and began to look into
+the faces of this most pampered, ultracivilized and genteel
+people. Since they are having a good time, enjoying the “top
+of the world,” why are they so gloomy about it? Since they
+are at ease in their Zion of physical comfort, why are they so
+uncomfortable, so nervous, so harassed? Since they have been
+polished off by all the polishing machines of the Modernist
+Machine Age, why do their brutal faces make me quake? I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>am no dauntless Galahad. But I have roamed the water front
+of Antwerp, searched the night kasbah of Algiers, tramped
+the lightless wastes of London’s Wapping, tempted the traps
+of Cádiz and of Jaffa. I have never seen faces more sullen,
+more dehumanized, than these of New Yorkers. I forgot all
+about my conversations with the informed gentlemen of
+Europe, Africa and Asia. I recalled certain statistics and knew
+that I was in a town where thieving is a soft profession and
+where holdups and assassinations hugely outnumber the totals
+in populous European countries.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Also, I was forced to remember that alcohol intoxicates.
+In my first ten hours I saw more drunkenness in my native
+village than I had observed in as many months in Spain.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>c.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>At last I was safely in bed in a room the price of which
+for the night was a little over the cost of a week’s rental of
+a furnished farm in France. There came to my blasted ears,
+beneath the zephyrous purr of a million motors emitting carbon
+gas and of a thousand radios drenching the air with the
+still more noxious fumes of ballyhoo, fragments of flattering
+talks about my native land in Paris, Berlin, Warsaw, Jerusalem
+and Cairo.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Comfort”&#160;... I heard: “speed&#160;... efficiency”&#160;...
+“mechanical perfection”&#160;... “civilization too easy, too
+happy, too refined.”... On the fields of France they had
+once builded great Gothic myths; and Egypt has her Sphinx;
+and Palestine wove the legends of Jehovah. Now, the sons
+of these mythmakers croon fables of an America where
+houses sing with gladness, and men move noiselessly and
+swift from pleasure to pleasure.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Please do not mistake me. I have no grouch; I am not
+pessimistic. I live in the land of my birth through choice; I
+deem myself fortunate in being a New Yorker. But the notion
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>that our country is at an apex of perfection is the most inept
+falsehood. We are barbarians in a savage jungle, we are at
+the sultriest beginning.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>That, precisely, is the fun of living here. Everything,
+however primitive and basic, still must be accomplished: the
+present generation of Americans are more profoundly pioneers
+than Daniel Boone, more original adventurers than
+Columbus. The myth consists of supposing that we are, to
+date, more than a lot of babies rising from the womb of
+Europe.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course, the European and African and Asiatic supporters
+of this myth have been helped by ourselves. They
+have got their “information” and their “facts” from the
+News. That modern Wonder, compact of cable, print, radio,
+and motion picture—has it not “linked the whole world close
+together,” making each man know all about his brothers?
+And could I expect the American myth to fail to carry in
+Morocco, when it succeeds right here?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Grab your paper and plunge into the subway. The steel
+corridors have an infernal beauty and the subway stinks. The
+noise deafens you and you are jammed for forty minutes
+between strap-hanging troglodytes all reading the same paper.
+That paper shrieks an incessant alternation of Lust and Death,
+fulfilling the portrait of a savage jungle. No matter. On the
+editorial page you will be sweetly informed that your land
+is the Pinnacle of Progress, your town the culmination of
+man’s seeking ages. And you, too, will be convinced of the
+American—the modern—myth.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id003'>
+<img src='images/i_021fp.jpg' alt='A massive, crowded baseball stadium grandstand from the early-to-mid 20th century, filled with spectators wearing hats.' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p>© <i>Acme</i></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>d.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>I know a way out, if you want one. Let the conduits of
+“information” and “news” be placed in the hands of philosophers
+and men of science. For instance, give the dailies to the
+metaphysicians; the weeklies to the psychologists, the radio
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>and movies to experts in social science. And let it be stipulated
+that no edition and no story be released, until the <i>entire
+Board agree upon the truth</i>. This would at once diminish the
+output of press, radio and cinema to precisely what that output
+was in the year 1200 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, and thereby enhance our accurate
+knowledge of the world—and of America—to what that
+knowledge was in those more illumined days.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1928</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>3. A MOB AND A MACHINE</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>I went up to the opening ball game at the Polo Grounds.
+A number of thousands of others went along with me. I suppose
+it may safely be surmised that all of us were there to
+have a good time. However varied our definitions of what a
+good time is, all of us, at least, must have had the idea that
+a good time was to be had at a ball game.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What happened to us, up there, strikes me as pathetic. I
+am not referring to the particular brand of ball played that
+afternoon by the Giants or the Braves. It was typical baseball,
+more or less: and it was the typical scene.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Here was the great stadium filled with the black human
+mass. The field is enormous; the stands must be huge to compass
+the field. The majority of us were pretty remote from
+the inner diamond where most of the game takes place. On
+the periphery of it all were we—we, the great human throng—spread
+parabola-wise around the field. And in one corner of
+that field was the tight, shut diamond: and was the machine
+of players going through its motions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It would be hard to exaggerate the abyss that separates a
+ball game at the Polo Grounds from the vast crowds that
+watch it. We all know the picture of the hungry lad peering
+at the man in Childs who flips the wheat cakes on the grid
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>inside the window. It seems to me that that boy is less remote
+from his cakes than we were from our ball game.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Just think of those titanic stands of steel. If they are not
+wholly filled, their emptiness makes a menacing unlit presence
+all about, chilling the spectacle of the game. And if they
+are packed, they form a human mob so great it is unwieldy.
+No normal ball game can stir it more than ten seconds out of
+every hour.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We and the teams, moreover, had so little in common!
+Good baseball, such as is habitually played by the Major
+Leagues, is a smooth-running, impersonal affair. As little is
+left to the discretion of the players on the field as it is possible
+to leave them. They are tools, or rather parts of a mechanism
+run by a “mastermind” who sits on the bench. Batsman and
+fielder mechanically carry out motions whose plan and purpose
+are established for them. Even in the ultimate personal
+element that remains—the hitting of the ball, the fielding of
+the ball—the good player is a specialist, a coldly trained performer
+whose ways are very far removed from the ways of
+the urban, sedentary throng. The beauty of baseball, indeed,
+is precisely in its mechanical perfection. It is related to the
+beauty of a machine, rather than of art.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Far, far away is the crowd. It is not close in any sense, as
+is the theatre crowd, for instance, close to the actors on the
+stage. A theatre is a shut, packed unity: crowd and performers
+are physically knit. And what the physical proximity of
+audience and stage does not effect, the emotions expressed on
+the stage supply. Humor, pathos, passion, dancing, music—these
+are all symbols enacted by the players and immediately
+current in the life of every man and woman watching. But
+the ball game is a machine: by and large, it remains as separate
+from the mob as might a brilliantly intricate dynamo set out
+upon the field.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Sitting there, that day, I understood why Babe Ruth—ignoble,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>fat fellow that he is—deserves his vogue. I understood
+that a man like the Babe is indeed greater than the National
+Game. It is such as he who enable the wistful mob to have
+some sort of contact with the game. For baseball is only
+clockwork; but the Babe is a boy—moody, clever, human.
+He “gets across.” One crowd sees the game: another crowd
+follows it on the scoreboard of Times Square; America reads
+of it in Kalamazoo and Junktown. All, with a difference only
+of degree, are separate from this highly organized, privately
+owned, secretly controlled affair of baseball.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Here comes a player, with whom the crowd can identify
+itself. Babe Ruth catapulting the pill into the grandstand is a
+symbol. There have been subtler batsmen, but all of them,
+Lajoie, Wagner, Sisler, Cobb, aimed for the base hit which
+stays <i>inside</i> the field. The Babe’s home run is an effort on the
+part of the machine to <i>connect</i> with the crowd. When the
+ball reaches the bleachers, contact is established. The game
+and the watchers of the game for that instant have the ball
+in common. Babe Ruth is the demagogue of baseball.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Not only is Babe Ruth greater than the game: such little
+episodes as the periodic scandals, so deplored by moral managers
+and punctilious pressmen, are little less than godsends.
+If they did not crop up from time to time, Judge Landis
+would do well to invent them. They, too, introduce into the
+machinery of baseball certain negotiable passions: public responses
+to bribery, temptation, nobility and vice, come to
+reinforce the old worn response of partisanship—a response
+difficult to sustain when players are swapped from town to
+town like cattle. Anything that makes us feel—even if what
+we feel is only anger—helps the game.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What a hungry, wistful crowd we are, seated in our
+ascetic seats! The game itself rarely holds us. Most of us,
+where we are placed, cannot spot a ball from a strike, until
+we see it posted. We cannot tell Bancroft from Marriott at
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>the bat, without looking up the number and consulting our
+score card. And save for a few tense moments, the game is
+as static down there as a dead motor on a winter morning.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>No wonder we are driven to help ourselves to entertainment!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We call every player by his first name. That helps. It
+makes him less remote, away down there.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We shout advice to him. Praise. Vituperation. We josh
+him, we cuss him out. That helps. It makes us, in some wise,
+participants, after all, in our great National Sport.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When a ball comes our way, we make the most of it.
+We shout at a long fly, even if it is caught. We pray for a
+home run in our particular direction.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But even when the game runs on, smooth and cold and
+remote, we can make use of it. It permits us to act like children—or
+like madmen. That helps, by golly! Where else can
+we scream ourselves hoarse—about nothing? Where else can
+we make all the strange, uncivilized noises of which the
+human throat is capable? We hoot, shout, boo, scream,
+whistle. We get excited—without consequences. We get profane,
+abusive, grandiose—without danger of having to pay.
+Downtown, excitement about much is bad business. Here,
+corybantic ecstasy about nothing is good form. To hell with
+the ball game, after all. We can enact lyrical dramas of rage,
+disgust, beatitude—flinging our jewels of gesture to the empty
+air, even if the game be a machine and a sell.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And after an hour and a half of this, we can pack ourselves
+like grains of sand into a stifled elevated train, and read
+in the headlines of the paper we have just bought what a
+significant national event we have just witnessed....</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is quite true that the old-fashioned humble game was
+better sport. The bleachers hugged the field. The players were
+visible: we could see the sweat on them and the look in their
+eyes. They made more errors, but even in that were they not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>closer to us? Well, like everything else in our America, the
+Game’s got bigger—and that means better. Even sport had to
+be specialized. It used to be an enjoyable means of moving
+our own bodies. Not any more. Now there’s a machine that
+does the moving, while our forty thousand bodies sit packed
+and rancid in the grandstands. You gotta expect to pay for
+the privilege of belonging to the most progressive country
+on earth.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1925</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>4. MURDER AS BAD ART</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>Nearly every day you see the statistics in the papers.
+“Half as many homicides in Erie in an hour, as in England
+in an era.” “As many assassinations in St. Louis in a second,
+as in Yucatán in a year.” “More murders in Manhattan in a
+month, than in Schleswig-Holstein in a century.” From which
+it is to be inferred that private slaughter is an American
+activity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When, moreover, you observe the high consideration
+accorded to our slayers—a consideration expressed in most
+cases by letting them alone (and this, in a democracy where
+such a privilege is almost unheard of!) or—in the few authenticated
+instances of capture—by hero worship and adulation,
+it becomes further clear that we regard the murderer somewhat
+as Spaniards the matador, as Frenchmen the poet, as
+Germans the philosopher, as Jews the prophet.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Murder is an American expression, a folk art. It contains
+some virtue so close to our desire that we have protected it
+jealously from the class distinctions which begin to encroach
+on our once so purely democratic life. The American murderer
+can win a front page, be he millionaire or beggar. The
+same sob sisters will write him up—gilded clubman or lowly
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>loafer. There is no hierarchy here but Merit; no limit to glory
+save the intensest competition. Murder, in short, is an American
+art. My quarrel with it is that it is bad art; and that
+America’s growing devotion to it threatens our cultural
+progress.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Consider, first, the psychology of murder. Murder is
+above all a solution. We take an elementary case. <i>A</i> hates <i>B</i>—hates
+the sight and presence of <i>B</i>. So <i>A</i> kills <i>B</i>. <i>A</i> no longer
+sees what he hates to see. <i>He has succeeded</i>: he has found a
+solution. This is the instinctive murder. We will complicate
+it with a higher impulse. <i>A</i> wants <i>B</i>‘s purse. <i>B</i>, alive, would
+prefer not to give his purse to <i>A</i>. So <i>A</i> shoots <i>B</i> or slits <i>B</i>’s
+throat. <i>B</i> no longer objects to giving <i>A</i> his purse. <i>A</i>, once
+again, has succeeded. He has found a solution. This is the
+emotional murder—what the Europeans know as the <i>crime
+passionnel</i>: since the commercial desire, the will to earn, is
+the dominant American emotion. We go still higher in the
+category. <i>A</i> wants <i>B</i>’s girl, or <i>B</i>’s social status as Beer Baron.
+<i>B</i>, active and alive, is too handsome and too clever. <i>A</i> spoils
+<i>B</i>’s beauty by bashing in his face, and overcomes <i>B</i>’s intellectual
+superiority by bashing out his brains. <i>A</i>, now unimpeded,
+wins Girl and Fortune. He has succeeded again:
+found a solution again. This is the intellectual murder: since
+Shakespeare and Milton severally tell us that love of woman
+and love of fame are the last infirmities of the noble mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Having thus placed murder under the Microscope provided
+by a scientific age, we have detected in it a constant
+germ: what might be called the <i>success bacillus</i>—the will to
+a quick solution. Now it must be understood why murder is
+so advanced and wide a practice in the United States. We
+are believers in success: we are clamorers for a solution: we
+are no brookers of delay. Take our three hypothetic situations
+between <i>A</i> and <i>B</i>; and consider how in a less successful
+milieu than our own they might be blunderingly met. A
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>French <i>A</i> hates a French <i>B</i>: he grins and bears it—or he fights,
+perhaps vainly, to overcome his hatred—or he avoids <i>B</i>—or
+possibly he comes close to his foe and, by studying him well,
+strains to turn hate to love. These are arduous endeavors, for
+which there is no <i>guarantee</i> of success. None of them <i>gets
+results</i>, like arsenic or a bullet.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A London <i>A</i> covets the purse of a London <i>B</i>. Unless he
+is as atypical as genius, <i>A</i> will not dream of murder. He will
+pick <i>B</i>’s pocket, or gamble with him, or slip by stealth into
+his room at night—or even do without! Again, it is clear that
+success is less assured. The solution is in doubt: the result is
+far below 100 per cent certain.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And now, finally, <i>A</i> belonging to any of the effete societies
+of Europe has a rival in <i>B</i> for a girl and for social fortune.
+He will probably try to get at the girl (an uncertain method
+where a moment’s success “carries no insurance”) or he may
+try to outstrip <i>B</i> by study and application. The processes are
+long, difficult, full of hazard. The American way of assassination
+is sure-fire.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But the American method gets so quickly and nakedly at
+the result, by destroying what stands in the way: <i>which is
+Life itself</i>. And not alone the life of <i>B</i>: what <i>A</i> avoids—trial,
+struggle, doubt—is just that content of experience which enriches
+living and is the stuff of art. The American system is
+very competent, and very sterile. It is related neither to life
+nor to art: but rather to the machine.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us consider our other American arts. We shall then
+see at once how general is this love of a <i>quick</i> solution; and
+how systematically we eliminate from life those elements
+which might hinder a solution. Quite recently we were mad
+over the Crossword Puzzle. The puzzle was soluble: it made
+success easy: and it contained nothing—neither sense nor content—except
+the incentive toward success. Even if one did
+happen to fail, despite the aid of dictionaries and of neighbors,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>in finding the “3-letter word meaning the adult of kitten,”
+next morning’s paper put an end to the agony. Similarly,
+there is the Movie and the Popular Story. They must contain
+a mechanism leading in simple and directest terms to Success
+and a solution. They must dispense with any forms of “life”
+that might impede solution. We can see now how harmoniously
+murder fits in with the other common ways of American
+Law and Order.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So much for our recognizable arts. If we tum to our
+public life—to our “serious” side—we encounter the same
+habit. We have social problems: and we solve them. Folks
+get drunk on alcohol? Easy: abolish alcohol. Roundhead foreigners
+cluttered up our landscape? Easy: abolish immigration.
+Dour dramas corrupted Sweet Sixteen? Easy: censor the
+drama. Crazy communists upset bedtime story mood of bourgeois
+gentlemen? Easy: jail ’em and let the Supreme Court
+of the United States outlaw their nonsense. These are all
+problems they still have in blundering, backward Europe. By
+gosh, we’ve solved them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And we’re constructive, too: not merely defensive. Having
+money means having a good time. We’ve learned that.
+So we are abolishing every value, and throwing in contempt
+each occupation, which does not aim at money: either in the
+earning of it or in the display of it, once it has been earned.
+And finally, success is success. Having discovered this, there
+is nothing left but to murder all moods and impulses which
+would deny this crucial American proposition.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You have the idea. We jolt off more folk in New Jersey
+in a week than they do in France in a generation, because
+murder is so consonant with the American Idea. Of course,
+murder’s the low form of our art: a folk art. (We have our
+pickpockets, too.) But you can’t get away from it. The murderer
+is a go-getter. The murderer has a problem, and he
+solves it. The murderer sees what he wants, and he takes it.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>The murderer believes in quick action: he is a maker of success:
+he is a man with results. (“Success” magazines and
+popular platform artists please copy.)</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And all this makes for bad art because—as Goethe put it—“art
+is long.” The short cut gets you “there.” But what if
+the “short cut” cuts out life itself? You’ve had nothing on
+the way. And when you are once “there,” what can you do
+but start again—on another short cut—for the next place? This
+is the joker in our competence. We do away with the means:
+and behold! The Means are everything and the End is nothing.
+It’s like the modern Sunday afternoon. We used to go
+nowhere in particular, on foot: and see the country. Now we
+motor a hundred miles to X. And X is nothing. And we’ve
+gone so fast, and swallowed so much carbon monoxide gas,
+that the way was nothing either. So we speed on to Y and
+to Z, ad infinitum, ad nauseam.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To solve the problems of life is very simple. All you need
+do is to eliminate—to murder—life. That gets rid of the problems:
+and that explains 99/100 of what men call civilization.
+For life is all Problem, and the brave dwelling therein: and
+the solution is death. A good life is the art of avoiding quick
+solutions. And murder—this so popular American practice,
+this so simple mechanical means toward a solution—is a good
+symbol of the bad art of America.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1925</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>5. THE BATTLE OF A CENTURY AND A HALF</h3>
+
+<p class='c021'><span class='c022'>PHILADELPHIA (JULY 4, 1776-SEPT. 23, 1926)</span></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The rain was the hero of the evening. The gentle falling
+rain. It appeared second on the scene, pattering down so modestly
+just after Tunney had climbed up, and preceding the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>Champion Dempsey. It was not greeted quite so cordially by
+the crowd as were Gene and Jack. But ere long it made itself
+felt. At the end, it held undisputed sway.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The rain was the hero of that memorable hour in which
+the Mauler of Manassa lost his crown to the Sweet Marine—for
+a variety of reasons. To begin with, everybody saw the
+rain; and don’t you dream for an instant that every one of
+those good 130,000 American patriots who had come so far—at
+such expense and trouble—just to celebrate their country’s
+Sesquicentennial birthday, <i>saw</i> the Fight. Did the seats lack
+visibility? Not a bit of it. A marvel of architectural finesse is
+the great stadium. But even Mr. Rickard could not stretch the
+structure of men’s sight nor mold to a more plastic shape the
+sort of scrap he had staged. The seeing was carefully graded,
+as everything should be in an orderly Republic.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For $27.50 (up) you <i>saw</i> the Fight, and the stripe on
+Jack’s trunks; you saw the exquisite process whereby Dempsey
+was softened, slowed, mauled, unshaped by the obdurate
+indifference of Tunney. The sum of $16.50 gave you two
+men—one square head and one oblong—manifestly clad in
+purple and blue trunks; face and condition a blank, but
+bodies spinning visibly enough, and hopping and hugging
+and lunging, boring and jabbing in a ten-round dance. Fairly
+balanced, they were, under the heavy crown of the loudspeakers.
+No one went down, no one went through the ropes.
+Tunney was steadfast and Dempsey was wild. So $16.50 got
+a mere guess at the decision of the Fight you had come so
+laboriously to behold. At $10.00, what you saw was a couple
+of bright bugs with swift antennae, making love or something
+in true insect fashion—and getting nowhere, so that you
+could notice. And at $3.30, you beheld, all about a far flame,
+a spot, a sky of moveless, pivotless heads, a sky rolling with
+human thunder. And that was worth the money.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But when the rain came, the gentle falling rain, it played
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>no favorites. It did not pour buckets on Mayor Walker’s
+crown, and drip a mere drop on Paddy. And how the rain
+was needed! Don’t you believe it put a damper on that mob.
+Individual men and women may have been disgruntled—although
+they didn’t show it. But the crowd itself, and the
+spirit of the show, <i>called for</i> the rain.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the mists which tided to the crowd from the high shell
+walls, see a symbol of tedium, and you’ve got the idea. A
+solid, stolid thing was the mob, massing from the ringside.
+When the lights that stared from brackets all around went
+out, the crowd seemed dead. Myriad heads rose from the
+flanks of the thing like carven facets—like knobs—like artificed
+protuberances on a woody substance. You felt that a plane,
+if it were big enough, could run over the vast surface, and
+smooth it, and smooth off the heads. You felt there’d be a lot
+of sawdust, and that’s all. You were unjust, however. For
+when the lights screamed back, shedding their green-blue ice
+on the hot crowd, you saw that each of these myriad individual
+knobs had a face: mostly a man’s, perhaps a woman’s,
+face. The expression was dull, not too lifelike; and almost
+never varied. But if you doubted the monumental genius of
+the painter of all those phizes, you couldn’t help admiring the
+assiduity for going to such trouble.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Then the Fight, to make the stadium come alive. Shouts,
+cheers, murmurs, ran at first through the inert thing: trickled,
+jabbed at it, harried—and failed to fuse it together. Many
+sparks and no flame. The spirit of the evening was not a
+spirit of fire. Sogginess, wetness—spirit of the rain was what
+Philadelphia summoned from its weary streets to meet the
+wearied visitors from afar. And that’s why, when the rain did
+fall, it was right. You can’t blame Mr. Rickard. How could
+he know? How could he know, for instance, that this stadium,
+unlike other circuses, sprawls too horizontal from the
+ring, is too fluid in its forms to be galvanized into a furious
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>hard passion? A fight scene should be more vertical, more
+funnel-shaped. Then your scrappers have a chance, with their
+lean frail arms, to weave a spell to pull the human lump
+together—fire it, make it the mad, single-howling creature
+which loomed above Dempsey and Firpo in New York....
+And how could Mr. Rickard foresee that his two prize babies,
+this time, would keep their feet so well?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If the prize fight is to outlive its present mastodonic bulk,
+and not—like other dinosauri—collapse from sheer flatulent
+vastness, the pugs’ arms will have to grow stronger so that
+there is more flooring, or their legs will have to grow feebler,
+so that there is more flopping. In a huge stadium, you can see
+a man go down flat—and that is always worth a week’s salary
+and ten hours’ sweating in trains. But boxing, boring, sparring,
+dancing, spinning—but a bloody nose and Jack’s shut
+eye—what’n’ell do such fine points get you, when you cannot
+<i>see</i> them? The fat ball park developed the fat Babe Ruth.
+Slugging makes contact with the huge modern mob, where
+all the place-hitting of Nap Lajoie would be lost. The fisticuff
+equivalent of a fast-bounding ball in the bleachers is a
+couple of giants tumbling each other, as in the Dempsey-Firpo
+fracas. There was none of that in Philadelphia.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The crowds were childish about it; and you cannot blame
+them. They wanted action: thudding, sudden action. Without
+it, they were bored. How far they had come! what hours
+they had voyaged, leaving wife and children! what hours’
+hard earnings expended! what sweat exuded! what shoe
+leather worn away, in order to be in Philly! Was it to see two
+boxers, bobbing in a white-roped ring? Once they were there,
+they couldn’t wait to get home. A knockout in round
+one would have delighted them. Immediate action—what the
+French in another context call <i><span lang="fr">la jouissance immédiate</span></i>—that
+was the infantile temper of the crowd. They howled down
+the announcer, when he wasted time on adjectives. They
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>were nonpartisan. They were for Tunney when his blow
+landed; they were for Jack when the thud of <i>his</i> glove came
+over the acred heads. They were for anybody who’d bring
+it all crashing to a decisive thrill. Poor public! Hadn’t they
+paid two million dollars for <i>something</i>? I suppose that is why
+Mr. Rickard, whose influence with the weather is well
+known, brought down the rain.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Which leads me to our Showman. The show was, of
+course, the packed stadium. Or, if you prefer, the show was
+the show itself. The Fight was the pretext for bringing the
+show together. To this end, Jack and Gene fought for championship.
+To this end, one hundred and fifty years ago, our
+fathers fought for independence. So that Philadelphia might
+have her celebration and dawdle through it meagerly for
+many months on such nurture as the Pageant of Freedom
+(loss $700,000)—and recoup it all in the sudden financial
+glory of a scrap fight, which a hundred-odd thousand paid
+for, and which the radio stay-at-homes alone followed clearly.
+But if the Show was the show itself—who saw it?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Not the newspapermen, not the frontiersmen in the wide,
+cheapest spaces. All of them erroneously had their eyes on
+the ringside. The chief appreciator of this thing of beauty
+was the chief creator of it: Mr. Tex Rickard himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>From 8:00 to 9:30 <span class='fss'>P.M.</span> I followed this enraptured artist
+as he moved from entrance to entrance of his golden dump.
+I was happy to catch the esthetic gleam in his eye, and to
+hear him murmur:</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Gee! Only look at ’em all! See that silver blimp tipping
+the stadium askew as if we were on a boat in a storm. See
+that Penn State Building yonder, like a city in the air. See
+the heavens rolling, rumbling near. All so fluid, all so fairy-like—above
+the solid substances of my crowd! One hundred
+thirty thousand&#160;... solid&#160;... solid&#160;... <i>paid for</i>! By
+Michael Angelo,” cried our leading modeler of mobs, “it’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>worth earning half a million dollars to make a thing as beautiful
+as this.”...</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And so, to make that beauty perfect, he summoned down
+the rain. It worked on the crowd like water on a thirsty
+plant. It eased them—brought them together. It gave them
+something more immediate and urgent than that distant dance
+in the ring. Water, drooling from one bosom to another,
+joined them. The little raindrop, bounding from head to
+head, made brothers as it bounded. We knew that our forefathers,
+fighting for freedom, had fought to make a Nation,
+after all.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Men and women removed their hats and swathed their
+heads in handkerchiefs that gleamed in the gloom like turbans.
+The stadium turned Oriental; the fight fans became
+worshipers at some rite. Now, the remoteness of the bout
+was good—since a rite before an altar should be occult. Now,
+the cavortings and borings of two men on a light-blazed box
+seemed fitting. And it was well that a little man in an incongruous
+dinner coat should make noiseless speech under a
+diadem of arcs and amplifiers; and that his voice should loom,
+by some sudden miracle, into each shadow of the conchshaped
+pile. And, finally, it was right that at the very end,
+at least a hundred thousand of the worshipers (who had,
+they thought, come to <i>see</i> a fight) should stand quiet until
+the Metal Voice belched forth the news to them of <i>who had
+won</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Slowly, sweetly they plashed away through the mud and
+the motors, toward their distant homes. Through the waterlogged
+rhetoric of a National Fair which needed a prize
+fight to put it on the map. And the heavens wept gently.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But when we reached the Penn Station at Broad Street,
+all my hopes for mankind were reborn. With a greater drive
+than Dempsey’s, with more stamina than Tunney’s, silent
+mobs of men stormed with drenched bodies through the gates—to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>the New York trains. And then I knew that my brothers,
+after all, were capable of enthusiastic action when some high
+purpose urged them.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1926</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>6. ENNOBLING OUR CRIMINALS</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>So it has come to this. They’re advertising for the crook
+and the yegg. The first practical sign of the uplift was in the
+modest little placards which blossomed out some time ago
+in the “L” stations: they reminded prospective robbers of
+ticket offices that, <i>if they were caught</i>, they’d get from six
+to seven years. The suggestion, of course, was: not to be
+caught, and doubtless some few courageous men were thereby
+inspired to do better work. But now there are to be flamboyant
+posters—every bit as good as the old ones which urged
+us to Buy Liberty Bonds, to Save Sugar, to Save the World
+from the Kaiser.... These new works of democratic art
+speak out to all whom they concern: “You <span class='fss'>CAN’T</span> win. Ships
+Don’t Sail Beyond the Arm of the Law.” Or, “You <span class='fss'>CAN’T</span>
+win. You Have to Get All the Breaks. One Little Slip Means
+Sing Sing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is fair to assume that these exhortations are not addressed
+to the little girl who works all day in a milliner’s shop; nor
+even to the plumber riding home from his pipes. There must
+be a criminal class, large and plebeian enough to use the
+streetcars, to whom these advertisements are devoted and
+whom they are aimed to improve. This is highly significant
+as perhaps the final proof that we are a democracy. I feel,
+however, that much good material is neglected by not putting
+the posters also in the taxis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>At last the criminal class is to be exalted. Today, of course,
+it is small pumpkins to hold up a bank clerk or sandbag an
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>aged millionaire as he saunters from his club. Mediocre men—men
+of conservative instincts and cool passions—have degraded
+the ranks of crime. All this is now to be changed.
+The crook is to be challenged! The yegg is to be dared!
+“<span class='sc'>You can’t win</span>” shout the ads. This will, of course, discourage
+the weak members. It will fire and inspire the strong
+ones. It will weed out the cautious crooks. It will raise the
+moral and spiritual standard of the whole fraternity of pillagers,
+marauders, brigands, thugs and pirates who grace our
+peaceful land, and serve to circulate moneys and emotions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Dick Turpin, Robin Hood, the great corsairs, had no
+encouragement like this. They worked against a spirit of
+states and peoples which in every way encouraged “virtue.”
+When one thinks of the drawbacks of those days one wonders
+that picaroons, spielers and strong-arm men survived at all!
+It merely goes to show the indestructibility of genius. Men
+were discouraged from peculation by thoughts of God, and
+by the subtle suggestion of the priests that it was <i>harder</i> to
+go straight! Moses had thundered: “Thou shalt not”—with
+the assumption that, of course, <i>thou couldst</i>. Jesus of Nazareth
+went even further. He made it clear that it was almost
+impossible to be good. For ages, the aristocracies and the
+churches kept up their propaganda, discouraging crime on
+the ground that crime was easy, forgivable and mean.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We have changed all that. “You can’t win my swag!”
+challenges the banker, knowing well that this is the very
+tune to inspire the daring crook against him. Indeed, the best
+of this new scene of our Democratic Drama is the altruism
+of the leaders.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>They have suffered, after all, very little from holdups.
+Crime has been endemic, but sporadic. The land buccaneering
+art needed uplift and stimulation. It needed the standards and
+the token of popular support which advertising—that university
+of democracy—alone would give it. Enough vivid
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>posters encouraging superior youth to bust safes or board
+bullion-carrying motors—through the method of challenge
+and of a call to adventure, and we can look forward to the
+day when all banks will be broken, all rich ladies stripped of
+their jewels, and all motors in the hands of thieves, save, of
+course, those taxis which are already run by licensed yeggmen.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Our ruling class disproves the cynicism of the materialist
+philosopher. Are they not now inspiring a criminal class,
+with educational posters, to despoil them?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But perhaps there’s a way out of this dilemma, after all.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Everyone knows that about fifty years ago our pioneers
+and pork-barrel experts instituted the campaign which has
+resulted in the present flood, throughout the land, of novelists
+and poets. Advertising methods in those days were more intimate,
+because the science had not been standardized. Yet
+the process was essentially the same as that now begun for
+the benefit of our criminal classes. Instead of shouting in
+posters, it was whispered about: “Write Poetry—and
+Starve.” “Creators—You Can’t Win. The Possessive Arm of
+the Law Will Get You, Even in Paris.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The result, of course, was Greenwich Village, and our ten
+thousand Little Theatres. In the bright lexicon of youth,
+there’s no word of challenge like <span class='fss'>CAN’T</span>. But the crowning
+stroke of this maneuver for supplying our land with a
+sufficiency of poets, was the system of awards and prizes
+which has since sprung up.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The creators, of course, were first <i>challenged</i> into existence
+by the possessors. Then, those who were wise enough
+to make their imagination and their art work <i>for</i> the possessors,
+were paid sumptuously in coin.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Similarly, bank robbers and holdup men must first be inspired
+to know the dignity of their calling. These posters
+will help to draw the right class of energetic youth. All that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>remains, then, will be to announce positive rewards for those
+criminals who make good.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1925</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>7. READING THE SPORTS</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>Oh, how glad I am that spring is coming and that baseball’s
+here! For once again, I can get something from the
+papers. I am what America would unanimously call a highbrow.
+Put me down as that, since the Majority Rules. It is
+because I am a highbrow, spending my days and nights in
+philosophic contemplation, that I rely on the sports in our
+dailies. During these last months, life has been bitterly empty.
+At its best, pro football is a vague business, and tennis is the
+sort of game you must see in order to believe. I have suffered
+frightfully for lack of news. But now I am myself again.
+The sun shines promisingly in my window. Mayor Walker
+has thrown out the first ball and at last I can spend my
+pennies evening after evening, for Baseball Finals: certain at
+last of having <i>news</i> to read.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is, if you insist on explanations, because I am a highbrow
+spending my days and nights in philosophic contemplation
+that I require the sports. You don’t see? Well: let’s examine
+the matter like two highbrows together.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I prop my morning paper carefully (so as not to spill it)
+against the water tumbler, with its edge held down by the
+plate which holds my grapefruit. Right column spread:
+Briand and the League of Nations. Do I read it? No. Why
+do I not read it? Because I am not concerned in International
+Affairs? Wrong again. It is because I am concerned
+in International Affairs, and know something <i>about</i> International
+Affairs, and know a good deal about papers—that I skip
+this column. For I am aware, whatever the true crux of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>crisis, that I’ll not find it printed. Vague conjectures, superficial
+facts, details, a perfect avoidance of everything causal—of
+all that <i>counts</i> in this particular matter—this is what my
+faithful paper spreads before me, on International Affairs.
+Next door, an article about the Police and Bootlegging and
+the Crime Wave in our city. I am exceeding interested in
+all crime news, and in the liquor market. That is why I skip
+the column. If I desire to be sure what really happened, I
+must wait till I can drop in on the boys who know one thing
+and who write another.... Left column: the big story
+about Congress. It also fails to qualify. Nothing but the hot
+air is in the print. The real plots, plans, motives, are as far
+from this open page as are the committee rooms and dining
+rooms of Washington from the visitors’ gallery at the Capitol.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I turn the page. I fare no better. Discovery of ruins in
+Yucatán, Egypt, the Gobi Desert. I know the “desk” has
+sedulously deformed the trickle of “quick” news which the
+telegraph has shot across the sea.... Divorce? I’ll get none
+of the violet rays of subtle human truth in this odious, scarlet,
+lyingly “whole” report. Taxi smashup? Perhaps the
+names at least are right (though even they may be misspelled,
+unless they’re famous). Music? I happen to know too much
+about music to marvel convincedly at Marion Talley’s voice.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Ah, but here is the book page! I may glance at the ads.
+They tell me at least, with a modicum of truth, that Mr.
+Mencken’s new novel is out; and that the Hexameter Epic
+to which Mr. Broun has devoted so many years of silence
+is to be published in the fall. But will these lengthy and
+pontifical disquisitions about the current output give me
+either <i>facts</i> or credible <i>opinion</i>? Alas! I fear not. There is
+more honesty and candor here than in the sections devoted to
+politics and crime. But not more competence. Real information
+about books and art requires an informer with background
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>and perspective, and fairly permanent esthetic standards.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And I crave facts! I’m a highbrow: I want to <i>know</i> at least
+of <span class='fss'>SOMETHING</span> that’s happened in the world, since yesterday.
+So I turn to the sports page.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I am told that Babe Ruth fanned three times, and I believe
+it! I am told that Vance pitched as good a game as that
+famous one of Walter Johnson’s, five years ago in Detroit.
+I’ll stake my dollars, it’s true! Here is the statement that the
+Giants blew in the seventh and the Pirates hammered five
+earned runs. I know it! I know the runs were earned!
+(What a relief it is, to know anything at all in our chaotic
+world—when even the atom has crumbled!)</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I am pretty certain that these boys in the Majors are really
+Major Leaguers, and deserve to be there, by the best of baseball
+standards. I believe these baseball critics. I am willing
+to accept, without the tedium of a personal inquiry, that the
+fellows who are playing in Paterson or Oshkosh are not as
+good as their brothers in Big Time. But I am quite as sure
+that the real Major Leaguers in politics, law, business, literature,
+education, are usually ignored by the papers; whereas
+every morning there’s a new crop of tenth-rate Minors in
+the five-column spreads.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>McGraw would stand for no Mayor Hylan in his line-up.
+It wouldn’t pay <i>him</i>, as it paid Tammany. No sentimental
+blurb can hide the fact if Ruth has batted .170 for a week.
+No lack of a blurb can blur the fielding and batting splendor
+of George Sisler. There’s plenty of stuff about the past, that
+we believe in; plenty of hopes for the future. But today—what
+can we believe today? In the sports I get rare satisfaction,
+for I can say: “It’s in the papers, and I do believe it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You’ve got to have <i>some</i> certainties at breakfast. You’ve
+got to have <i>some</i> English written in a style living, appropriate,
+honest. There’s plenty of fiction: forty pages, daily, in our
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>average-sized journals. Forty pages of cake. That’s all very
+well. But, being a plain highbrow, I need a little of the bread
+of fact. Thank the Lord for baseball.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1926</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>8. THE NEW CONQUISTADORES</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>So I went to Florida for a rest....</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course, I left all my money there in real estate ventures,
+and had to return by boat. This is a cheaper way than Pullman,
+and I soothed my pride by arguing that it would round
+out my experience. In Miami, Sarasota, St. Augustine and
+Jacksonville, I had encountered nothing but millionaires.
+There must be a nether side, an “other half of the world,”
+even in Florida. More modest revelers in sunshine surely must
+go south by winter and doubtless I would find these coming
+north by boat.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I was mistaken. The steamer was crowded. Every cabin
+and berth were occupied by men and women who, according
+to admissions obliquely and nonchalantly let fall in talk, were
+larded with money. Everyone had tried to get a <i>de luxe</i>
+stateroom, alas! and had failed. Everyone, moreover, was
+traveling by boat because of a tender love of the sea. There
+was not much wind; but a good portion of our company
+were sick. Nor do I recall any gazing at the ocean, save on
+one or two instances when porpoises were sighted. Perhaps
+there was more sea to the voyage than the pampered landowners
+had bargained for. It is true that from beginning
+to end the boat was utterly surrounded.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And besides, there was too much of an intellectual, cultural,
+public-spirited nature to discuss on board for any
+childish pleasure in salt water. These were men and women
+on a holiday. Yet, everybody knows that the athletic mind
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>finds rest, not in lazing, but in a simple change of the topic
+of cerebration. These men and women had gone South
+ostensibly in quest of sunshine, alligators, golf and bathing.
+Their alert minds had soon discovered that Florida today was
+the very apex of American progress, the cynosure of all
+live American eyes, the ideal of every purse possessed of the
+creative impulse to increase and multiply. What more inevitable
+than that, returning to their estates in Kalamazoo,
+Newark and the Bronx, they should discuss and discuss?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We were foregathered in the smoking room.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They are sure doing wonders down there in Florida.”
+A heavy Elk spoke with gleaming eyes. His chest was deep
+and so was his voice. It was strange how two-dimensional
+those eyes seemed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As the four others of us round the table nodded and
+sipped our near beer and chewed at our cigars, I became
+aware of a strange presence overhead. The smoking room
+was fitted out after the fashion of an old English inn. In the
+ceiling were open rafters clouded in smoke. And here, straight
+above us, through the darkling mist, I saw another group of
+men gathered like us about an oaken table.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>At first, I thought that there must be a mirror in the
+beams, catching our group through the haze; for these men
+above were placed like us. But as my vision cleared I saw that
+they were different, after all. They were clad in steel coats
+of mail; swords swanked angularly at their sides; they wore
+flaring boots; armored gauntlets were drawn off, and freed
+the harsh-haired fists of conquistadores clasping silver goblets
+filled with ruby wine.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>My neighbor answered—a weasel fellow, all grey, whose
+nose seemed in a perpetual tremor of scenting and searching:</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, Jacksonville’s population alone has doubled in ten
+years!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>—<i>Tell the Padre that we have made another hundred
+converts</i>, came from the smoke-veiled rafters.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They got 268 manufacturing plants that can turn out
+$50,000,000 worth of goods a year.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>—<i>Our first stone building at San Agustin is a school for
+the Indians.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You know that filling-in of marsh water front at Sarasota
+cost the Ringling Brothers about $10,000. They sold it at
+$13,500 the acre.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>—<i>The new Cathedral was built by Christian natives. We
+have sent the deed of the property as a gift to the University
+of Salamanca.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Miami has a transient population of 90,000. That’s what
+pays&#160;... the transients.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And over my head the echo:—<i>We are being urged to
+marry with the Indian if need be, and to settle. Are these men
+not the hidalgos of a great land? Has not Don Francisco
+called them brothers of the Spaniard?</i></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Fifteen thousand hotels in Florida.” The Elk eyes
+glowed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>—<i>A Mission in the Everglades at last!</i> was the refrain.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The whole thing is stupendous,” came the shrill voice
+from the grey man at my side. “It’s the greatest land rush
+in the history of the U. S. A.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Which means, in the history of the world,” said a surgeon
+who operated in lots on the side. He was a man burly and
+sinuous. There was in him something of the otter and a good
+deal of the boar. “Why, compared to this, the great movements
+of history—the gold rush into California, the dash to
+the Klondike, the opening of the Middle West and the Northwest
+with Harriman and Hill, were puny.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was an eloquent as well as learnèd speaker. And as
+each glorious instance rolled from his soft mouth, there came
+an echo mysteriously transformed by the smoky rafters....</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>—<i>Movements of history&#160;... passage of the children of
+Israel across the Red Sea&#160;... the quest of the Holy Grail&#160;...
+Crusades&#160;... Columbus.</i>...</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But it ain’t business only!” I protested.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You bet not,” said the Elk. “‘Come to Florida and see
+the nation at play.’” He quoted the great line without hesitation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I saw our nation at play. Motoring&#160;... movies&#160;... lot
+jugglings&#160;... motoring&#160;... walnut chocolate fudge sundaes
+and bad booze&#160;... motoring&#160;... boosting, boasting&#160;...
+motoring....</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Overhead clinked silver goblets. The conquistadores were
+humming a “malagueña.” From the mist about them came a
+glow as of mellow vineyards yielding sunny wines, and of
+women dancing. Below, hard lips told of sport.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Said our Elk: “I dropped in on the Yankees at St. Petersburg.
+Those boys clear a fortune even out of training.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The tale of sport from overhead was different. Honor and
+love were counters; the players risked life and joyously won
+death.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Not alone a nation at play,” exclaimed the surgeon.
+“Florida is a frontier with all the culture of the capitals. Here
+is a whole state being opened up, with the best accommodations!
+For modern improvements, New York’s got nothing
+on it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And they ain’t forgot religion,” added the grey man
+with the tremulous nose. “They just put up a church in De
+Land, cost $300,000. You bet I bought all the lots I could in
+a town like that. Where they spend money on a church,
+they’re going to stick. A swell church means business.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>—<i>Our Mission was builded by volunteers from the old
+Settlements elsewhere. They were not paid, of course; but
+we had to shoot many infidel natives who did not understand
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>why we wanted to build so fair a church in a land that was
+not ours. Yes, many were killed and some were tortured.
+There is no room for infidels. We let the gold go home for
+the greater glory of our Gracious Queen.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well,” cried I, emptying my mug of legal beer,
+“Florida is certainly a hum-dinging first-class show of American
+progress.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It’s enough to make you proud,” said the Elk.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“—and rich,” smiled the sly surgeon.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, in Jacksonville every guy in town’s got to wear
+a big button—and if he don’t, you just bet he gets into
+trouble. It’s yellow and on it is printed in red [those are old
+Spain’s colors, you know]: <span class='sc'>We are believers in Jacksonville.</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>—<i>We are believers in God</i>, came clearly from the rafters.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1925</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>9. TWO FACES</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>In the literary office of a certain magazine there is a vast
+table piled with books. “Mostly junk,” the editor will explain.
+My hand feathers the outskirts and picks a volume with title:
+“Calvin Coolidge. His First Biography.” I am not permitted
+to speak of it here. Nor shall I linger wistfully over the so
+symbolic circumstance that a book about a living President
+should be a thing void of ideas, vile in composition, rancid,
+and false in spirit. Within its covers, I found the portraits of
+two faces: one of the President and one of the President’s
+mother. Thereby hangs my tale.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She was beautiful. She looks out at you in a black dress of
+satin, sterncuffed in white, high-collared, with a cameo at
+the throat. The hands lie demure in the lap. The hair is
+drawn tight and sideways to the ears. She looks out at you,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>not so much from the frontispiece of a book as from New
+England.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She is impressive. The sharp small chin is firm. The mouth
+is pursed, its prim lips faintly flexed into a downward frown.
+The nose is straight. It has delicacy; its nostrils seem to quiver
+not from emotion, but from restraint of emotion. Under the
+plastered hair is a forehead high and ample: a square forehead
+which is the feminine form of the stern unsubtlety of pioneers.
+It holds a mind serene through exclusions, correct through
+lack of doubts. The eyebrows are straight as a whiplash.
+Above them the flesh puckers like a girl’s, ere the forehead’s
+rigor claims it. But the eyes are deep-set as in some dark
+seclusion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>They glower. Their gaze is reproof. And their sight is
+a shadow. Pain lurks in them, muted and proud, and constant.
+There speaks a virtue assumed, a mastery willed: almost a
+habitude of judgment. The eyes dominate all. Under the
+girlish brows with their faint fleshliness, above the exquisite
+nose, within the contour both fragile and brittle which the
+folded hands whitely enhance, these eyes are paramount.
+Tenderness turns hard; frailty assigns itself master; weakness
+wills itself mighty. The result is a transformation. This face,
+so gracious in its elements, gives for its final word inhospitality
+and shutness. The result, in more personal terms, is
+Calvin Coolidge.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>His face is the response to his mother’s. She was the obscure
+farmer’s wife in the Connecticut River Valley. There,
+as with countless other women, her loveliness had its begrudging
+bloom. Winters long as a siege, summers of swift
+fever, the inclement lordship of Puritan ideals, made her
+astringent. Weather attuned to will hardened this flesh and
+drew the spirit down to the sure rigor of material affairs.
+Virtue became a saying of Nay and an economic cunning.
+Poetry took property for symbol. And so at last, on a certain
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>Fourth of July, this daughter of New England gave birth to
+Calvin Coolidge. Not she alone. A whole decadent Puritan
+tradition gave birth to him; fathered his spirit; molded his
+memorable face.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The little man waxed great. And as he grew, his face became
+the caricature of his mother’s fairness. It is a caricature
+horrible in its significance, superb in its logic.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Chin, mouth, nose, brow, eyes of Calvin Coolidge are
+children of the splendors strangled in his mother. Her face
+already is this twilight, is a recession of splendors. Her features
+speak but greyly an ancestral greatness. Moral power,
+will, devotion, chastity, singleness of vision, bore this woman.
+But the essence of their means to life made the mind intense
+to the exclusion of content; made the beauty neurotic; made
+the virtue shut. Made, inevitably, their own culminant death
+whose Person now presides the American lands.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The chin of Calvin Coolidge has grown pointed, out of all
+proportion: it is a shallow, contentless thrusting. The lips
+have almost disappeared. The mouth is a crease of shrewd,
+complacent purpose. The fold of resolution beneath his
+mother’s nose becomes a dugout of meanness. The nose itself
+is bulbous, perhaps with too much half-baked nutriment: it
+is a proboscis of forwardness unchallenged along the path
+which the canny eyes select from all the paths of the world.
+The forehead is blown into a windy conch, unruffled and
+unfilled save with the echoes of dead covenants. It crowns
+the face like a seashell; and the face itself becomes, beneath
+it, a pucker of soft parts like some naked creature peering
+forth for food. The head, indeed, is the Rhetoric of absence.
+The face is the expression of an immaculate instinct for sure
+and mean details.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/i_048fp.jpg' alt='An aerial, black and white photograph showing thousands of vintage automobiles parked in tight, orderly rows across a massive outdoor lot.' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p>© <i>Fairchild Aerial Surveys</i></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Again, as with his mother, the man’s eyes give the key.
+They have lost the tragedy of hers. They have flattened,
+hardened, and come out to the surface. They do not, from
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>a secret depth, glower upon a hostile world: but have pressed,
+with a twist and a leer, to Victory. They twinkle. They have
+the lasciviousness of cold possession. They are the logical eyes
+of the battener on nullities: the eyes of the democratic
+politician.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So, as Calvin Coolidge, professional legislator, might declare:
+The Nays have it. Here is a face at last, ultimate and
+stripped to the model of a will like a machine. A face where
+no dream lingers beyond the dreams approved by a smug
+world: a face which no thought troubles that has no answer
+in the current coinage: a face that knows not passion, unless
+it be charted and chartered in the Statutes. The mother’s
+frown is gone with the conflict it expressed. Here, in lieu,
+is a smirk. All the realms of spiritual risk which her men,
+good pioneers, to such good purpose barred, have here stayed
+out, indeed. A race’s turning of its ideal power into the body
+of Success becomes this face and body, stripped to cunning,
+instinct with the spirit of acquisition. The symbol becomes a
+man; the man becomes a symbol. He crawls up the greased
+ladder of public honors. He becomes a leader and an idol,
+in whom the mob can worship its own meanness....</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1926</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>10. THE DRUG ON THE MARKET</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>It is prevalent and poisonous. And the land is proud of
+it. Its manufacture is a huge industry; its sale is a popular
+art. Billions of dollars are spent in making it: millions more
+go to the appurtenances of its use: and billions are paid in
+wages to men and women who devote their lives, openly, to
+its production, distribution, upkeep. The states all license it,
+turning a tithe of the wealth spent for it by our people to
+their own coffers. Great magazines and newspapers grow
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>fatter with its advertisements. Some papers, indeed, are entirely
+given to its commercial and esthetic aspects. And no
+publication, however ethical in editing its columns, however
+adverse to such drugs as coffee or tobacco, refuses to display
+its blandishments for money.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All America lives under its influence, and does not suspect
+that it is enslaved by a drug. “Shows” are planned yearly in
+great towns to propagate its sales and sing its praises. Special
+sections of the dailies detail its progress. Schools teach the
+beginner how to enjoy it. And everywhere ordinances and
+officials tune the whole life of the land to the needs and
+habits of those who use it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It comes in varieties of kind which display distinct differences
+in expenditure of money. And these gradations have
+a truly hierarchic value. In a democracy where castes are
+vague, where money-power has few manifest badges of dress
+or standard of living; where, indeed, millionaire and clerk go
+to the same movie, read the same books, travel the same roads,
+and where intellectual distinctions must be very carefully
+concealed, the conspicuous uses of this drug have become a
+standard of social status. The lowest classes aspire, first of
+all, to earn the means of <i>visibly</i> possessing it. When they have
+risen so far, they may be said to have a foot on the first rung
+of the Ladder of Success. Thence, they are urged, instructed,
+exhorted, by advertisement, editorial, numberless methods of
+herd pressure, to progress upward. It is neither uncommon nor
+unworthy to mortgage a farm or keep it bare of such luxuries
+as furniture and books, in order to purchase a more showy
+form of the drug: one whose effects are swifter and whose
+price is higher.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Like all drugs, this one has estimable virtues. Its effect is
+great on the motility of man, when used in moderation. It
+is a synthetic product. It is not found in a state of nature,
+but must be concocted; although, of course, from natural
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>ingredients both mineral and vegetable. I do not know how
+man first came to put it together. Probably his love of new
+combinations led him. I doubt whether the incentive to increase
+our mobility on earth was there at the beginning. (The
+thing, by the way, was invented in Europe; and in Europe,
+largely still, it is controlled within the limits of good use.)
+But America soon transformed it from a delicate ornament
+to the mastering instrument it is today. It increases man’s
+power to move things, and to move himself. It increases his
+power to see things. It opens up to him stretches of the world
+he might elsewise never reach: communities of action and
+intercourse with other men whom he might elsewise not
+come near enough to work with.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This virtue of the drug is a positive contribution. It makes
+it not unworthy to be placed in man’s esteem beside other
+concoctions long known and loved. Alcoholic drinks, for
+instance, with their heat-making, cheer-making, fat-making,
+nerve-relaxing power: tobacco, which is a subtle sedative to
+mind and stimulant to nerve: coffee and tea which cheat
+fatigue: opium, morphine, cocaine, ether, by means of which
+men and women are helped across the crises of the body
+without the drain of too great suffering.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The drug’s most typical and most desired effect is the
+sense of <i>self-motion</i>. The user feels that he is “on the go.”
+The faith that he is covering ground or getting somewhere
+(although that “somewhere” be of no intrinsic value) is, of
+course, the type of morbid rationalization common to all
+addicts of all poisons. The sensation of flight is the main
+matter. The drug is a means of physical escape. It becomes
+a symbol of psychological escape.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, “progress” is an American superstition whose chief
+feature is movement. To progress, you’ve got to move on:
+you’ve got to be perpetually passing from what <i>is</i> to what
+will never, never be—since as soon as <i>that</i> is, it also must be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>passed. This superstitious tic is potently flattered by the
+effects of our drug. From being a means of motion and escape,
+it has grown into a symbol of progress. It began by cajoling
+our nerves. It ends by cajoling our ideals.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course, this subtle transition from use to abuse is
+generic of all vices. Far too soon, the ill annuls the good
+which tempted us into the path leading to addiction. But
+with older narcotics, men have had time to learn the dangers
+hidden in delight. They have elaborated mental and moral
+mechanisms to protect them. It is deemed a “social vice” in
+Europe to drink too much liquor. Men almost everywhere
+have become “afraid” to employ opiates without the doctor’s
+sanction. Sometimes this instinct of defense hardens into law.
+America, for instance, as befits a timid land, was armored by
+Constitutional Amendment against the ravages of a mug of
+beer, against the blight of a little glass of wine. (This may
+not be known to the reader, who can verify it by consulting
+any lawyer.) The instinct of self-protection is naturally
+strong in the small and the weak. This makes it all the more
+amazing that America has developed no defense, and no
+awareness of the need of defense, against the holocaustic uses
+of this drug on our market.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The reason is, that we have not yet had it long enough.
+The lapse from use to abuse has been too subtle and too
+short. And the reason is, also, that there has been confusion
+between the sensory effects of the drug and what Americans
+consider their ideals. The notion, for instance, of bare movement
+as value—is this, indeed, a human value or is it the
+delusion of a drug fiend? or the idea of utilitarian progress
+whereby all present life is successively sacrificed to a never-reached
+tomorrow? or the standard of measuring worth
+which makes man neglect himself and give his love only to
+the accumulation of dead external objects? It might well be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>argued that such “values” as these are the results of a drug
+habit, rather than the spiritual traits of a Great Republic.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The key to the popular appeal of this narcotic is, then,
+an induced sense of flight—idealized into the delusion of
+“progress.” The addict becomes nervous and restless. He
+hungers to “progress” with his drug to help him move; and
+also he aims to heighten the outward splendor of the drug
+itself, so that the world may judge his “progress” in the
+world by it. Battening on change, he dares not stop. He
+must go on moving. And since even motion can become a
+constant almost as steady as rest, he must be forever changing
+his pace of motion. His life must be accented motion—ever
+irregularly accented. And change, from being a means,
+becomes an end.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now follow other results. Swift movement, increasing
+the extension of our sight, enfeebles the intensity and quality
+of what we see. With the delusion of seeing more, we
+see less: with the delusion of unfolding more miles of the
+world, the span of living shrinks. The drug is foe to meditation,
+to solitude, to careful and loving observance. It frees
+the addict from resorting to himself in the crises of dullness:
+he need not explore the devious trails of his soul, when so
+many, wider, asphalted roads are beyond him. But meditation
+and leisurely observance are the traits whereby life becomes
+real.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In lieu of them, we have the bare experience of passing.
+Moments are not dwelt in; they are overcome. The “present”
+of life, no longer a treasure to be mined, is a barrier to
+be vaulted. But moments and places are real to us only in so
+far as we put ourselves <i>within</i> them. Now with this drug
+the converse happens: we take ourselves <i>away</i> from moments
+and from places. Moments and places grow void. Life becomes
+a succession of zeros.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Within each soul there is a kindred process. The drug
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>is a substitute for thought and for emotion. So hallucinatory
+is its sensuous effect of “progress” that the addict literally
+<i>moves out</i> of his troubles. Are troubles not matter for thinking
+and for feeling? And do not thought and feeling require
+some rest—or at least some constant, unconscious motion—in
+order to be enjoyed? This drug of ours, spelling flight, flight
+from the hour and the place upon us, brings flight as well
+from the problems of life that fill the place and the hour....
+Remains only motion&#160;... only the emotion of motion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The drug’s use is a short cut: and nothing is more dangerous
+and sterile. A short cut through time, through place,
+through life—leads to death! Life is swift, and the value of
+life is the value of every moment. A machine, an act, a drug
+which makes us leap this moment is murderous. Alas! here,
+too, there has been confusion between the effects of a narcotic
+and what we consider our ideals. For we are proud of the
+short cuts with which we clutter and sterilize our world.
+Newspapers, telephones, radios, are imperious short cuts, demanding
+that we devote an ever-increased portion of our days
+to details and surfaces of men and matters we might well
+ignore. The use of this drug eliminates the ground between
+the “beginning” and the “end.” But both “beginning” and
+“end” of anything are abstractions, darkness, death. The
+<i>between</i> is life. So the use of the drug lessens life.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It has another, curious effect upon the user: a subtle
+one, hard to grasp—but not without importance. It lifts the
+user from the embrace of living things, setting him, half
+insulate, in a machine. To walk the earth, to sail the sea,
+to ride a horse or plod behind one in a buggy—to drink the
+heady brews of grain or vine—these are all ways of touching
+life. But to box oneself into a thing of iron, and race through
+the verdurous world as fast as ever one may, is to get almost
+out of life, even without the common aid of accidents. It is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>to exile oneself from the sensuous growing earth which is our
+ultimate food.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, to move is to overcome resistance. And to overcome
+resistance <i>too well</i> is to avoid life’s loveliness which
+dawns on men only when they are forced to pause. The
+perfect, unconscious mechanism of an animal knows neither
+thought nor beauty. The child begins to think and to enjoy,
+only when life stops him. This drug of ours induces a child’s
+heaven—or an animal’s. It makes things too easy: seeing the
+world, seeing folks, seeing your girl, too easy. And man can
+stand the adversity which bores him, far better than a lubricated
+ease. To see an endless series of places is to value none
+of them. To see too many folks is to see too little of oneself.
+For the value of things lies, in great extent, in the amount
+of ourselves we must put forth to get them. Take love-making,
+for example. Resistance and time are so necessary for its
+right consummation that even the brutes know it. Make the
+tryst between the boy and the girl too facile and too swift—eliminate
+the hazards of invading little brothers in family
+drawing rooms—and the couple will very soon prefer the delights
+of a hard-won brown bottle to the delights of each
+other.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So the vicious circle rounds. And the drug whose use was
+to bring increased power and joy turns its addict impotent
+and sad. This specific concoction has done much to make of
+us a gloomy people. Or, perhaps, it was the other way. Being
+a lugubrious lot, we have fallen victims to a drug which turns
+us even worse: making us roll along on lines of motion far
+less fancifully pleasant than the devious ones induced by
+alcohol.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Unfortunately the drug’s ill results have not yet made
+us sick of it. We are merely demanding more of the same.
+Swifter mobility to kill time and trouble; more elaborate
+and expensive emptinesses to fill empty holidays. In the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>American town, the effect is sadly visible. The streets are
+cluttered with the wheeled instruments in which the drug is
+used. And the air is fouled with its miasmic fumes. And the
+poor folk who took to it in order to be free, in order to
+know flight from trouble, find themselves grooved into traffic
+lines, manacled by traffic laws, crawling like slaves under the
+haughty signals of the cop.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Verily, the hour calls for some great solver of problems
+to save the nation. I think at once of Mr. Henry Ford. He
+has been so successful in solving our transportation problems.
+He has earned so much wealth in that beneficent task. And
+he has shown himself so eager to go on serving his people—if
+possible, in bigger, better ways! Has he no scheme for
+curbing the evil uses of this Thing which causes our noble
+countrymen to roll along the landside in a complacent stupor?</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1927</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <h2 class='c005'>TWO: PORTRAITS</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div>I. MEN</div>
+ <div class='c002'>II. AMERICAN TRAITS</div>
+ <div class='c002'>III. IDEAS</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>
+ <h3 class='c023'><i>I. MEN</i></h3>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>1. RANDOLPH BOURNE</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>A girl friend of his mother snatched him away from the
+wise arms, to hug and coddle him; let him slip and dropped
+him from the balcony where they were standing. This is
+the origin of the sad mutilations with which Randolph
+Bourne went through life. The tale has the true depth of a
+legend. The affection of a young woman, clumsy with unskilled
+love; the desire to share, to help, perhaps—and as
+aftermath, the lifetime of agony and visible disgrace. This is
+the sort of irony that Randolph relished, and bore with him
+through the world. Beholding him, one felt that his deformity
+somehow was not the profane traditional one: it was
+rather the stigmata of some miscarried loveliness.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was very deformed. Not alone was he dwarfed and
+hunchbacked: his face was twisted, he had a tortured ear,
+his color was sallow and his breathing was audible and hard.
+He walked in a cape that hid him. He took a chair for the
+first time in your presence, let fall the black shroud about
+him, and revealed a form so mangled that you despaired ever
+to find sufficient ease for the sort of conversation his immediately
+brilliant mind demanded.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But the magic of Randolph Bourne was not separate from
+his poor body, and at once you knew this. This is why, in
+writing of his splendid spirit, it is meet to dwell upon his
+misery. Within half an hour, your discomfort was gone—so
+miraculously gone that your mind was prone to look about
+for it. But whenever, in the future, awareness did return of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>the grotesque shape in which this spirit was imprisoned and
+was doomed to walk, it was intellectual altogether: the mind
+needed to stir the senses with the thought of it, while the
+senses moved in full ease within his presence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was Randolph’s eyes and hands that brought about the
+wonder. The hands were exquisite, gentle, quiet. They seemed
+made for such clear profundities as the playing of Bach:
+they bespoke his style—the caress of his ruthless understanding.
+And they flowered from his body with the inevitable
+irony of all his being. The eyes were penetrant, studious.
+There was a reticence in them, after the adventure, not before
+it. You knew from them that Randolph Bourne was wise,
+and that he had withdrawn some subtle spirit of himself
+forever from gross contacts: that he had learned to see and
+to experience without the ill-focused turmoil of too close
+contacts. So surely consonant were his hands and eyes with
+what he said, that the body became a sort of Christian <i>Lest
+Ye Forget</i>—a sign to thrust you back into the humiliating
+coil of life, from the high freedom of his discourse.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All of him had this counterpoint. His spirituality was
+shrewd; his warmth was ironical and measured; his gaiety
+was leashed; above all, his direct caustic wit was barbed with
+a general indulgence. The body had forced on him this
+complex economy of emotion. And there ensued from it a
+splendor of free energy for every challenge of liberty, for
+every accolade of the creative life. This little man, indeed,
+so celled in a crushed body that even breath was hard, became
+a rounded athlete of the spirit, as none, perhaps, of us
+who have survived him. The loss of Randolph Bourne is a
+shadow that lengthens....</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1925</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>
+ <h4 class='c024'>2. CHARLES CHAPLIN</h4>
+</div>
+
+<h5 class='c019'>a.</h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>Chaplin’s eyes are a blue so darkly shadowed that they
+are almost purple. They are sad eyes; from them pity and
+bitterness look out upon the world. They are veiled: while
+the man moves forward with irresistible charm, his eyes hold
+back in a solitude fiercely forbidding. No one who sees the
+eyes of Chaplin can feel like laughing. They are the one
+part of the man which does not show in his pictures.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For fifteen years these eyes have looked out on Hollywood.
+Much nonsense has been written about this suburb
+of Los Angeles, which is itself a suburb of the country.
+America reviles it as an indecent stranger somehow lodged in
+its midst, or romanticizes it into a scene from the “Arabian
+Nights.” But, of course, Hollywood is no worse a place
+than any provincial city of our land; nor better. Hollywood’s
+producers are typical money men; its directors are typical
+professional men; its actresses and actors are typical girls and
+boys. Its army of mechanics, craftsmen, engineers, are the
+usual American sort: grime them up a bit, lower their wages,
+and they would fit in to your town garage. Hollywood’s
+swarm of aspirants buzzing about the lots are typical floating
+seed of the American jungle: the wastrel seed that finds no
+soil to root in, whether it rots near home or blows away.
+Only in one respect is Hollywood unusual: its girls are really
+as fair as all girls would like to be.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Hollywood is the perfect mirror of banal American success.
+Ordinary souls dream extraordinary dreams—in the way
+of ordinary souls. And in Hollywood the dreams come true.
+Here is uncounted money, here is glamour, here is the exact
+mechanical production of that ideal to which success means
+a show. And Chaplin, with those frightening eyes of his,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>which almost no one ever sees, looks out upon this world,
+his home since he was twenty-four. There is another world
+which he looks in upon: the grey, grinding London of his
+childhood. He loves the London slums; for these slums were
+his and they are in his heart. But on his mother’s side the
+blood of Chaplin is half gypsy. Through her, whom he
+brought from England to live near him on the Coast, yet
+another world lives in him: a world of meadows and irresponsible
+laughter.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the city of success he carries with him the taste of the
+London slums. But even there he was not at home: even for
+that sad past which formed his body and his mind he has a
+grim, ironical refusal—since there, too, the gypsy in him
+was a stranger.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This counterpoint of sympathy and denial is our first
+clew to the man. The drawing room of his house is packed
+with bibelots, pictures, bric-a-brac, sent him by the admiring
+splendor of the world. Here are tributes from Chinese mandarins
+and from the royalty of Europe. And here, too, on
+the wall, hang a few colored lithographs of Whitechapel and
+Wapping. Chaplin loves to take these from the wall. They
+depict streets that are like some cold inferno, in which the
+people stir slowly like souls stripped of all save the capacity to
+suffer. Watch his eyes as he looks at this picture of his childhood
+world. They are at once too soft and too hard. The
+emotions of understanding and of refusal are separate in
+them. In this room I once sat with Chaplin while the Comte
+de Chasseloup exhibited to us what are perhaps the most
+terrible photographs in the world: close-ups in progressive
+detail of tortures and executions which he had collected in
+China. We looked on the deliberate process of men being
+carved alive—as a butcher quarters a calf. We saw faces black
+with the horror of their pain, and then white with the relief
+of death. And in Chaplin there was the same counterpoint of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>feeling. His eyes took in the tremendous pity of these portrayals
+of man’s way with man. Suddenly his eyes hardened;
+he jumped up, and his mouth was cruel. “There’s humanity
+for you! By God, they deserve it. Give it to them! That’s
+man. Cut ’em up. Torture ’em! The bastards!”... The pity
+he had felt was intolerable to him. He summoned hardness
+to wipe it out: to save himself from this danger of being
+overwhelmed. Chaplin does not wish to give himself to any
+emotion, to any situation, to any life. Life draws him too
+terribly for that. Whatever he feels must immediately arouse
+its opposite; so that Chaplin may remain untouched—immaculate
+and impervious in himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With this same reserve he moves through Hollywood.
+He is no recluse. His secret apartness is far subtler than that.
+He frequents the Coconut Grove at the Ambassador, where
+the slightly decayed youth of the Coast ferments in dance.
+He sits for hours in the smoke of his friend Henry Bergman’s
+restaurant on the crowded boulevard. He goes to
+parties—to those of his friend Marion Davies at her Beach
+House, to those of William Randolph Hearst at his ranch.
+And wherever he goes he is the life of the crowd. He acts,
+he mimics, he plays, he insists on amusing and on being seen.
+But always there is the same immediate wavering away from
+the life about him and from the effect he produces. He does
+not give himself nor does he really take. Above all, he does
+not aggressively refuse any advance or emotion. He is noncommittal.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Intactness</i>—this is the principle that best explains the balance
+of opposites in feeling, conduct, thought, which he sets
+up. He is like an atom that must journey alone through the
+world. The atom moves an intricate course, swerving here and
+there, myriadly attracted, myriadly repelled, seeming to give,
+seeming to respond—always remaining free and alone. A
+direct refusal of the world about him would mean a definite
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>relation with it. This is not Chaplin’s game. If the world
+draws him, he responds—passive. His course has been swerved,
+but he is uncommitted. He resolves every force with its opposite.
+Emotionally this means that he frustrates in himself
+every impulse of utter giving or of utter taking. He remains
+unpossessed and ultimately unpossessing. But this deep frustration
+is the key to his profound success. Do not pity him
+for it. He is no pitiable creature.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With sure instinct Chaplin has guided his personal life
+through channels where he would be always alone. He loves
+the world he lives in, and despises it. He does not want to
+change it: no man is farther from the fervor of the prophet,
+and yet few men have done so much to show it up as ridiculous
+and worthless. He does not want another world. He
+uses this one, just as it is, in order to ensure his aloneness.
+But, were he really alone, he would meet in the silence of
+himself some acceptance which would prove his unity with
+the world. So he courts the world, and dwells in it, in order
+to frustrate such a possible self-encounter.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was a time when Chaplin seemed to me a kind of
+fallen angel: an angel cursed by God with all human feelings
+and with the inability to fulfill them: cursed with the gift of
+evoking laughter and love and with no power to take laughter
+and love to himself. But this was a sentimental error. The
+inordinate tenderness of the man, his gentility and grace, are
+checked by his native rejection of the self-bestowal to which
+such qualities must lead. Hardness and ruthless egoism are as
+primal in him as the generous emotions. He refuses to be lost
+in any synthesis of love. He must remain the atom of himself.
+And in his perfect poise <i>between</i> the forces of the world—the
+poise of opposites—this is what he remains. And this is
+what he wants.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What he wants, Chaplin has infinite resources for getting.
+The shrewd technique of his art is but a phase of the same
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>art in his life. This is the man who, when he was first
+approached with an invitation to enter pictures—untried and
+unknown—jacked up the initial offer of seventy-five dollars
+a week to twelve times that figure. “I saw they were anxious,”
+he explained to me. “When I said to them, ‘I think I’ll study
+philosophy; I don’t care for acting,’ I saw them go white.
+That’s how I knew what I was worth.” And this is the man
+who, three years later, when Mary Pickford, Fairbanks,
+Griffith, Hart and himself were in danger of being shamefully
+exploited by the business end of the game, gathered
+them all together into “United Artists” and preserved a fair
+portion of the treasure to the men and women who were
+doing the work. Chaplin is endowed with consummate
+powers for connecting with the world. “I’d make a great
+banker,” he once told me. He is intelligent, so intelligent
+that he intuitively grasps the abstruse currents of modern
+thought, esthetic, political, even philosophic. He is sensitive,
+so exquisitely that the gamut of human joy and pain plays
+endless responses within him. And he is passionate and earthy,
+a lover of good food and of women and of racy words. All
+these gifts naturally conspire to make him one with the world.
+Yet there is in him this dominant need to be one only with
+himself, to submit to no marriage, to let himself be lost in
+no union, to which his mind and sense impel him. What, in
+this diathesis, can he do? He can keep on moving. He can
+make his life a constant journey through the inconstancy of
+impressions which, if he dwelt with them, would bind him.
+He can make of his life an <i>escape</i>.</p>
+
+<h5 class='c019'>b.</h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>The life, then, of this first master of the motion picture,
+is motion. His art is the treasured essence of his life. The
+theme of the Chaplin picture is Chaplin himself, in relation
+(opposition) to the world. He journeys through it, immeasurably
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>roused, solicited, moved—yet aloof, yet intactly alone.
+The form of the Chaplin film is his own body, set off by the
+world: his body made into a mask behind which the man,
+all intact, goes slyly and painfully on his impervious journey.
+And the plot of the Chaplin film is merely some sequence of
+episodes in this constant opposition of himself journeying
+through life and never fused within it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course, it is not as easy as it sounds. Precisely because
+his work is the incarnation of his life mood, of his life journey,
+its birth is a delicate issue. In the beginning there is the
+atomic Chaplin, cast in some role that will motivate his passage
+through the required number of reels. But that passage—as
+pawnbroker’s assistant, circus fool, convict pilgrim, fireman,
+seeker of gold, tramp, janitor, country bumpkin, etc.—that
+passage must be blocked out with events. Each foot of
+the film is an event, an encounter between Chaplin and the
+world. Since the art is to be the essence of his life, it, too,
+like his life, must be completely <i>fleshed</i>; and must breathe!
+From each encounter, either with another person or with
+some inanimate object like a brickbat, there must rise visible
+and palpable the personality of the entire journey. So each
+event of the film must be a work of art in itself. And there
+must be sequence, breathing, flowing, mounting. Each event
+must rise into the next until the mass of events becomes a
+plastic music where each episode is a note. The whole tale is
+a motion of events to represent the journey of the man—his
+escape, intact, through the myriad mass of life.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The mood of the tale, being intimately Chaplin’s own, is
+carried within him. What he must wait for is the precise
+scale of episodes that will form the mood. Even when the
+events have come to him (the particular stunts of the film),
+they must be weighed and measured. Where do they fit in?
+Do they fit in at all?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This period of gestation is painful and long. Chaplin lies
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>abed an entire morning. He broods, measuring the tentative
+“body” of his tale by the inner sense of what he wants.
+This sense is infallible, but it is inarticulate save as the completed
+picture will be its articulation. Chaplin does not know,
+he has no words for saying, the exact timbre and gamut of
+physical actions that will express this particular body of his
+life journey. The picture will be his knowing.... Meantime,
+several miles away, his studio awaits him. It is a charming
+lot, several acres in size. Here lives Kono, the remarkable
+Japanese factotum who manages Chaplin’s personal journey
+through life, who serves as a kind of intelligent oil against
+the inevitable frictions of the inevitable encounters with
+stranger and friend. Here wait his general staff: Alf Reeves
+(who has been with him since music-hall days), Harry
+Crocker, Carl Robinson, Henry Bergman, Henry Clive,
+Roland Totheroh—possibly the director Harry d’Arrast, who
+once worked with him in Crocker’s present place and who
+remains his chum. All these men are distinguishably sweet,
+sensitized, intelligent, aloof in the crass Hollywood world.
+(That world is full of workers who carry on after they have
+left him, bearing the stamp he gave them—Menjou is a celebrated
+instance.)</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The staff all feel the tension of their chief. The strain,
+indeed, is so great that there are men in the “industry” who
+could not stand it. At last, possibly around noon, Chaplin
+arrives. The instant has come when he is ready. He has
+dropped into his clothes, stepped into the limousine which
+waits all morning at the door, with the engine throbbing. He
+is hatless, tieless, and his vest is open. But the clothes are the
+most dapper product of the London tailor. He wears them,
+at work, like a gypsy. Even in this detail there is the meeting
+of the Chaplin opposites. Gypsy and exquisitely groomed
+young gentleman delete each other: leaving, as ever, merely
+Chaplin.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>He joins his crowd in the little bungalow on the lot,
+where lunch is served and where he has his dressing rooms.
+Tentative moments of the film are brought up, altered, discarded,
+readjusted. Chaplin paces, his face hard, his mouth
+half open, his eyes far off in himself. Infinitesimal details are
+studied, rehearsed, discussed; gags, postures, meanings, properties,
+business. Walking up and down, the little man holds in
+his head the film’s inexorable rhythm, the inner logic of its
+growth. As the ideas fly back and forth, in words and mimicry,
+Chaplin brings them to the measure in himself: rejects
+or accepts.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There may be months of this. Nothing seems to be going.
+The corps of workers champ and chafe. Chaplin moves with
+his preoccupation through his habitual life: parties, dinners,
+wanderings about town, swift flights with friends, long hours
+alone. At last certain scenes, having withstood the critical
+pause, seem certain. Carpenters and plasterers get busy. Sets
+rise on the lot. Chaplin wanders about among the hammers,
+alone or with his group: judging, silent, suddenly exasperated,
+lost in a new angle of vision—giving sharp orders that destroy
+the work of weeks. A shot that cost a long journey to location
+(and $50,000) will be ruthlessly scrapped. Later a scene
+will be repeated a literal hundred times; and, if the fifty-ninth
+time was right, each detail of it will be so clear in
+Chaplin’s eye that he will reproduce it for the camera. Finally,
+a thousand feet of photography will be collapsed into a yard
+so pregnant with the essence of the event that it will move,
+intact like the man himself, through all the world.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This perfect consciousness of Chaplin as craftsman would,
+of course, be less conspicuous in any other place. (In Paris,
+for instance, where men work with words and with pigment
+as Chaplin does with human masses, his métier is understood
+as merely the highest form of a common practice.)
+But Hollywood is a usual American town—not a capital of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>artists. And the studios of Hollywood confine their precision
+and consciousness to problems of mechanics and finance.
+They are monuments of esthetic vagueness, intellectual
+nullity, artistic hit-or-miss. The usual story, to begin with, is
+an externalized contraption put together by the combined
+shrewdness of half a dozen wholesalers parading as writers,
+scenarists, directors and producers. The actors have no accurate
+technique. The directors have no conscious control. In
+such a combination the chance artist is helpless and lost.
+When a scene is “pretty good,” it is shot. And the result is
+the kind of flat approximation that feeds the dreams of the
+millions. But by the time Chaplin gets ready to rehearse a
+scene its precise place in the architectonic of his tale has been
+measured, even as the theme itself has been measured in his
+life. And as he rehearses, he knows what happens. I mean
+that he knows the interplay of muscle, mass, space, and their
+focal value as the camera lens will catch it. He is no expert
+in photography. In his especial choreography he is supreme.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All organic life has a commanding, individual rhythm: the
+beat of a heart, the slant of a mind, the indecipherable stir
+of cells must go with that rhythm. Such an organic rhythm
+besets the consciousness of Chaplin, incarnating his subjective
+mood into a story. At the beginning, he knows the rhythm
+only. He has to grope for the episodes to flesh it. But when
+he finds his episodes he knows what he wants. And at the
+moment of shooting a scene he knows how to recall what he
+wants. And he can do this because, from the twist of a leg to
+the flicker of an eye, he knows how everything is done.</p>
+
+<h5 class='c019'>c.</h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>All this, however, has not explained what it is that Chaplin
+is doing. His work may be the incarnation of his personal
+escape from those trammels of life to which his sensitivity
+and capacity for love expose him; his way of escape may
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>be shrewd with all the shrewdness of his cockney-gypsy
+genius; and the esthetic expression of that journey of his soul
+may be done with consummate craft. Yet the inward value
+of the entire adventure is not yet clear.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We can best approach the significance of Chaplin’s art
+by considering another constant presence (besides himself)
+in his meditations on the story, in his conferences with
+Crocker and d’Arrast, in his rehearsals, in his final prunings,
+acceptances and rejections. That other presence he always
+alludes to by a simple name. He calls it “they.” “They” is
+the public. “They” collaborates unceasingly with Chaplin.
+“They” has the final veto over even Chaplin himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course, a similar “they” seems to preside over all the
+lots of filmland. But in the usual studio there are a number
+of men pawing over the platitudes of the human race in the
+deliberate effort to concoct from them a pattern which the
+public will pay for. Chaplin, too, is a child of the theatre.
+And there is no theatre without a “box” in front. But in the
+studio of Chaplin there is, most really of all, a man of the
+people—a cockney, a gypsy, a music-hall fellow—who looks
+into the eyes of the world as into a mirror, in order to see
+<i>himself</i> more objectively and sharply. So it is that, coming
+to Chaplin’s public, we return to the man. By means of this
+reflection we can see at last, in clarity, how he manages his
+escape and what it is which, behind the mask of “funny-legs,”
+goes its immortal journey into the heart of the world.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Chaplin looks upon the world of today. He sees failure:
+poverty, agony, disease, chaos, fear, pitiful passion, pitiful
+love. He sees success: deceit, garishness, tinsel, boast, disillusion.
+He sees his own past in London—his mother in the drab
+uniform of the poorhouse. He sees his own victorious present.
+He sees and feels too much. He is afraid of being lost in
+this world. There is a kernel of him that is neither this success
+nor this failure: a core in the man that can dance its own life
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>if only it may remain alone. That is why he must escape;
+why he must look on all the invading world as an enemy and
+must hate it. Chaplin is a hard and princely fellow: his brow
+is strong, and his jaw and his mouth. But the modeling about
+his temples is girlishly tender, and the deepest spirit in his
+eyes is a retreating terror. He is afraid for that core in him
+of grace and loveliness and youthful dance. To protect it, he
+will fight—he will employ all his skill, all his hardness.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now consider Chaplin’s public, which is the modern
+world. In each breast live grace and loveliness and wistful
+dream. But in the common man that personal treasure of each
+heart cannot remain intact. Family, business, law and war
+invade it. All civilization becomes a foe, trampling on this
+secret heart, dispersing its dream, bruising and breaking its
+love.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Chaplin, who has striven to keep it whole for himself, has
+made his fight for the world. Here, in his films, the grace and
+beauty of the human “atom” are visible once more. Behind
+the mask of Chaplin—behind the swinging cane, the ambling,
+painful feet, the tight drawn coat, the cocky derby hat—marches
+the common loveliness of man—marches and journeys
+as it must through a hated modern world—dissociate
+from social forms, shabby, despised, pitiful, poor; yet
+miraculously intact and miraculously triumphant.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Rousseau, I suppose, perfected this tragicomedy of the
+modern world, with its dualistic conflict between beauty and
+civilization, between love and man’s habitual life. Marvelously
+gifted, he gave to the world its rationale for the impulse to
+creep back into a mythic childhood, to worship the self at the
+expense of the towering forms about it. As Mr. Lardner
+might say: “Jean Jacques started something.” Charles Chaplin
+has finished it. (Even the cut of his comic coat recalls the
+romantic century—the age of Alfred de Musset.) The cult of
+loveliness at war with the sobrieties of life could beget no
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>greater art than this journey of Chaplin carrying beauty untouched
+through an atmosphere of heavy institutions, of brickbats
+and policemen. French intellectual, London clerk, Chinese
+coolie, Mexican peon, Park Avenue child, in the common
+distress of their submission to a world too full of money
+to leave room for singing and for dancing, can gaze together
+at this secret triumph which Chaplin has enacted for them.
+His song explodes their oppressive world. His primitive refusal
+to “grow up” in the “respectable way” becomes the
+modern spirit of revolution.<a id='r1'></a><a href='#f1' class='c025'><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
+
+<h5 class='c019'>d.</h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>In the old days Charles Chaplin worked not less meticulously,
+but a good deal faster. His theme has always been the
+exact transcription of the mood of his life. But when his life
+was simpler, the bridge to his work was more immediate. It
+was easier for the man to remain impervious, intact, virginally
+himself. The instinctive operation of his will had found no invasion
+too bruising or too tiring for him to repel. But he has
+had to pay the toll of his way; and that toll has grown great.
+It is hard to sustain one’s solitude when one is so full of
+eagerness as Chaplin; and when, precisely because the world
+loved his aloneness, the world has done everything to destroy
+it. His recent struggles, not so much against the clamor of the
+public as against his own human need for that peace and love
+which can be gained only by some union with another, have
+made him conscious of himself. Consciousness and weariness
+have stood between him and his journey—slowing him and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>slowing his work, which is the expression of that journey. His
+hair has turned grey, and his beautiful face is lined.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The Circus” marks the crisis. The terrible year<a id='r2'></a><a href='#f2' class='c025'><sup>[2]</sup></a> that
+separated its first-made scenes from the last brought a new
+somberness into his art. The picture on which he is at work
+at present is the most meditative, the most complex, the darkest
+story he has ever imagined. A progress like that which
+distinguishes the end of “Don Quixote” from its rollicking
+outset is manifest in his work. Chaplin is still alone; still intact.
+But the fight he has had to wage in order to remain so
+has worn him. It is the natural destiny of so passionate a man
+to lose himself. Thus far Chaplin has refused this death. It
+would mean, indeed, the death of his old gay art. It might
+mean the birth of a new tragic artist.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Meantime the circumstances of his career in Hollywood
+have conspired to perfect his solitude. Here was an artist
+whose theme was an essential motion: the pantomimic medium
+of the motion picture was there to express him. But
+now the motion-picture industry of Hollywood decides to
+talk. Chaplin, whose excellence made him solitary enough,
+finds himself almost literally alone.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A little more entirely than he may have dreamed, he is
+having his way. He is alone in his great house, alone with his
+few friends, who love him but who cannot really reach him.
+He is alone among his professional comrades, who, unlike
+him, have abandoned the silent picture. Chaplin has reached
+a goal. A goal is an end. An end can be also a beginning.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1929.</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>
+ <h4 class='c024'>3. D. H. LAWRENCE</h4>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c020'>Lawrence lived his entire life in a transition. Hence his
+painful and irascible temper: hence also his illuminations, exquisite
+and unbearable as direct contact with a nerve.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>One world he had left: the world of plural “facts.” He
+was no dupe of the parade of detailed separatenesses that
+clutter mortal eye. He knew that this world of things, this
+matter-of-fact and practical world of commonplace, was
+false; for he had left it for a truer. But that other world he
+never quite attained: the world of unity and wholeness,
+whereof all things are momentary foci. He was close enough
+to this world to be pulling away from the other: but he was
+not of it sufficiently to accept the world of “things” in the
+transfigured sense that makes things real. He was close enough
+to the true to win from it vision and power to illumine the
+“things” he fought; close enough to create a vision of them as
+an artist. Yet he was not of the true world of organic oneness
+so deeply as to incorporate himself within it and thereby to
+be at peace with the many.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was always striving to organize himself in wholeness:
+and always failing, and always furious and exacerbated by
+his failures. These failures are his life, and are his books. The
+characters of his stories are never wholly persons in the sense
+of either world: the passion of the writer of his books is never
+wholly either illumination of his characters as organic bodies
+or life within the characters themselves.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Lawrence was exiled from the moderate pace of things that
+enact their part in the Whole unconsciously. This blessed
+naturalization he had left forever. He could never share the
+peace of the clod which knows not its share in the Life it
+enacts. Nor could he accept the clod, from within the realm
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>of the conscious Life itself. The ecstasy of knowing himself
+part of the Whole was never quite natural for him; he never
+assimilated it into the processes of living. To possess that
+ecstasy, he had to deny the lineaments of life: he had to seek
+extraordinary moments. The true ecstasy of knowing the
+many common things of the world as the common features of
+life’s oneness was never his.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was imprisoned in transition. And he frantically
+strove to incorporate himself entirely in the world of truth
+by lopping off his attachments to the separatistic world that
+dragged him. Thus his denial of “mind,” of tenderness and
+pity, of the feminine as contradistinguished from the female.
+These were qualities that seemed to hold him back near the
+world of “many-ness” which he hated as false. He was neither
+strong enough nor clear enough to know that it was his failure
+to fuse these qualities into wholeness, rather than the
+intrinsic qualities themselves, that thwarted him and kept him
+divided.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1930</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>4. HERBERT CROLY</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>Most men are set and long past growing before they are
+forty. This is true of the conspicuous and successful, no less
+than of the common. They have contrived, from their first
+impacts with the world, some attitude, trick or gesture; it
+works; they stick to it until they are repetitive as machines.
+Herbert Croly was a growing man until he was stricken; and
+the rate of his growth kept on accelerating with the years.
+This rare capacity, which toward the end transfigured him,
+was his true genius.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If we analyze the nature of his growth, we come close to
+the man, and understand what made him so sound and beautiful
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>a being. And the first trait upon which we come is his
+humility. Herbert Croly was authentically humble. Not
+humble with the inverted pride of a Franciscan or of a character
+of Dostoevski’s—because of raging lusts intolerable to
+himself which he had to flay into their opposite lest they drive
+him mad. Herbert Croly’s humility came from a true sense of
+himself in the world—a sense of true proportion. In the years
+when I knew him, at least, he never seemed to be looking
+upon himself alone: always, he felt and saw and thought himself
+within a texture that was the world. From this proportion
+came sobriety and humility; and from this organic contact
+with life’s sources, a springlike energy that kept him growing.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was nothing, I suppose, superficially brilliant or arresting
+about him. He was in cool fact what Whitman romantically
+sang: a “divine average.” By which I mean that he
+was a man whose pre-eminence came from the purification
+and exaltation of those traits that made him most like others.
+With the shining talents of the market place he was not
+lavishly gifted. The talent he had is rare in any mart: the
+passion for growth, the moral, intellectual powers needed for
+growth, and a courage in devotion to the life of growth that
+served him in his long fight as sudden illumination serves the
+romantic hero.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>How differently shrewd he was from the shrewd men
+with whom he deliberately consorted, and whom he ruthlessly
+noted while, for the most part, they took scant note of him.
+This world of atomic egos, bursting with pride and will, and
+disappearing into the darkness of the mass, after their brief
+explosion. And Herbert Croly, beginning in the mass, groping
+his obscure way through a sense of brotherhood and life, into
+true personality, into wisdom. His first impulse was to accept.
+And this alone marked him off from his intellectual generation,
+and made his discoveries far more potential. He had a
+sympathy for the commonplace. His humility, deriving from
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>his sense of proportion, made him instinctively, even intellectually,
+share. Here, his “averageness” ceased. For what he
+accepted and shared he weighed with the same quiet ruthlessness
+that he brought to bear upon himself. That is why, at
+the end, he had won a deeper vision of his world than had
+any of his fellows. He had begun by letting himself be part
+of it, refusing nothing. From within, he had scrutinized, purified—inexorably
+judged.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Yet, if in this spirit, temper, method, he was different
+from the New York in which he worked, it was because he
+carried on so purely an American tradition. It is true, of
+course, that he did not come of old American stock, both his
+parents having been born in Europe. But it is also true that in
+the making of Americans lineage is the least factor. The immigrant
+is potentially American: that is why he came: he is
+brother in spirit, if not in blood, of Roger Williams or of
+Franklin. Moreover, the land itself stamps the child more
+deeply than do his fathers. Thus, despite the European background
+of Herbert Croly, there was much of the Puritan
+about him, a great deal of the pioneer. He trekked our continent
+of the modern spirit “on foot,” slowly and laboriously
+blazing his way through the American chaos. He understood
+creatively and creatively served it, because he had given himself
+to it; and this he had done because—like Emerson, like
+Whitman, like Thoreau, like all its deepest critics—he had
+faith in it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These homespun traits, almost exactly transposed from the
+plane of the American forefathers, reveal the nature of his
+ideological growth. The man who, twenty years ago, wrote
+“The Promise of American Life” had been essentially one
+who accepted the intellectual pattern of the hour. Herbert
+Croly was thinking in terms, then, of government commissions
+with ideals of knight-errantry, of moral agencies somehow
+working out through legislative bodies. His way of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>facing the problem of the good life at that beginning would
+have been familiar enough to Gladstone or to Burke. But,
+having accepted the pattern, he applied to it a sincerity of
+penetration rare in any hour. His book, instead of following,
+became the test—and the destroyer—of its own pattern. He
+was feeling his way; and all of his career may similarly be
+termed a feeling of his way.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This trait gives the quality of his style; it lacked charm and
+ease because it was a process rather than a conclusion. It never
+flowered; it burrowed and made roots: whatever energy it
+evolved from its growth turned downward into deeper roots
+instead of blooming upward. From the standpoint of English,
+this is a grave defect. A written style should be a fruit, not an
+embryology for some future fruitage. But from the standpoint
+of the promise of American life, the style, like the man himself,
+was the very substance. His words portrayed the passage
+of the author slowly, circuitously through the jungle
+of half-decayed surmise which is the heritage of our generation.
+The ultimate light of what he wrote was the consequence
+of that passage. His words might be said to have ended with
+light, in contrast to most modern words which begin with
+glitter and end in darkness.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This book of 1910 began with a certain premise: America
+has the political technique and the human equipment to fulfill
+itself. The book studies the equipment—institutional, personal—turns
+back on its premise, and rejects it. The book does not
+conclude; it institutes. While the author writes, he grows:
+instead of ending, he changes. At the finale, he is free of the
+pattern of his hour, truly free since he has first accepted it
+and lived it through.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>More than once, he espoused causes that seemed contradictory
+to the essence of the man as I later came to know him.
+Thus his acceptance of the War, his sponsorship of the Progressivism
+of Roosevelt, his apparent dedication to the Pragmatism
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>of John Dewey. But to condemn him for this was to
+misjudge him by standards that did not apply. Herbert Croly
+was not a prophet; he was an experimental and emergent force
+within the body politic—the force that energizes prophecy and
+must precede it: he personified the gradual principle of detachment
+within the process of his time. He was not espousing
+these causes that were, indeed, denials of his essence, so much
+as living through them, and as growing through them. By his
+acceptance of the War, of the noisy and supine Progressivism
+of Theodore Roosevelt, of the spiritually prostrate Pragmatism
+of John Dewey, he was—in his own way—getting beyond
+them. And his humble method is, to me, the only possible
+promise of our nation, which, too, having accepted these
+false positions, with a self-knowledge and a humility like
+Herbert Croly’s may also get beyond them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>His ultimate refusal was significant because he had lived
+through what he rejected. Herbert Croly went through a
+gamut of faiths in political reform; that is why his final doubts
+about the political method and his convictions on psychological
+and religious re-education were important. He was
+well versed in the instrumentalisms and technological credos
+of his day; that is why his recognition of the nuclear spiritual
+force within the person and beyond the reaches of pragmatic
+methods was important. He knew the principles and methodologies
+of modern engineering; that is why his transposition
+and application of them to the problem of the person were
+important, and why his ultimate religious interest—emergent
+from a practical participation in the affairs of our day—was
+so convincing and potential.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These later phases of his growth were clear only to those
+who personally knew him. He spoke of two books that he
+was going to write: a sequel to “The Promise of American
+Life” and an intimate record of his own evolution. I do not
+know if any part of these works was ever set down. But I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>feel that the quality of the man and the form of his spirit
+were best revealed to his friends. At night, within the shadows
+of his bookshelves, a release came to Herbert Croly. He
+was morbidly sensitive. He spoke so low that when one ate
+with him in a restaurant it was difficult to hear what he said.
+Yet to have raised his voice in a public place, one felt, would
+have been an outrage to the nature of this man who was,
+without doubt, the deepest publicist of his generation. In his
+own occult way, Herbert Croly had embraced the world. A
+kind of dogged heroism through the years had driven him to
+accept the crass contacts of politics and journalism. For that
+was the method of his philosophy: his knowing was action.
+But now, in the stillness of his room, his knowing became
+words. What he said had a luminous strength, like wine kept
+long. For these were words aged in the cellar of himself. The
+exquisite perceptions had grown strong in secret. His eyes
+glowed, at such times, with his words. He was relaxed. A
+flame burned from the hard wood of his reticence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Like an old wine, this strength of Herbert Croly’s was
+not aggressive. It did not come to you; you had to find the
+means of taking it. He had none of the prophet’s and mystic’s
+need of self-assertion or of liberation from the trammels of
+his time. His method was always the same humble one: to
+work in the substances of the day, to live his day, and slowly
+to go on emerging without separation from the day’s humble
+matters.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Some men synthesize the actuality of their time. Such a
+one was Theodore Roosevelt, once Croly’s friend. Another
+kind, more rare and more precious, synthesize not the day’s
+actuality, but its promise. Such was Herbert Croly. But even
+within this group, he was unique. These men are likely to be
+at odds with their hour, and quite aloof. Their method of
+revelation is often the prophetic attitude which refuses all
+participation with the actuality which they transcend. But
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>Herbert Croly synthesized American promise by his acceptance
+of the American fact. He did not intuit his promise, he
+distilled it from the facts themselves. He was very far from
+the conventional prophet or mystic. His exquisite nerves
+grappled with the iron and blood of the twentieth century.
+What could come of this embrace of an almost feminine spirit
+with a body in which plunged a billion horsepower? The
+spirit of the man remained undriven, clear; it became the
+record of a slow revelation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If we translate his career into terms of our national destiny,
+how does it read? America runs the gamut of political
+credos. America sets up its external technologies and worships
+in them its own infantile power. America swears by the machine,
+and patterns from it arts and folkways. Under high-sounding
+slogans of pragmatism and instrumentalism, America
+submits to the hour—to all the miseries and tyrannies of a
+caste clad in the immediacy of the hour. But America will,
+from its experience, return unto itself; learn that there is no
+substitute for the strength and value that reside secretly in
+man, and that there is no conduit to mastery of the world
+other than mastery of self. America will again hear the voices
+of the fathers who came to create a dwelling place, not for
+gilded slaves of the machine, but for man—a world made new,
+not by mechanical proliferation, but by the growth of the
+spirit of man and woman.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Such was the progress of Herbert Croly, who moved
+through the American jungle to find himself, and in himself
+projected what must be the destiny of his country, if that
+destiny be salvation. The promise of American life has had
+no truer form than this life.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1930</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>
+ <h4 class='c019'>5. SIGMUND FREUD</h4>
+</div>
+
+<h5 class='c019'>a.</h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>The nineteenth century in Northern Europe was a time
+of Titans struggling to create worlds of their own. The medieval
+Catholic world had crumbled: simple or timid souls
+still lived in it, but for several hundred years the strongest
+spirits had been engaged in tearing it to pieces. This destruction
+was, of course, creative; was, indeed, largely the cultural
+work of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in astronomy,
+geography, physics, economics, mysticism and esthetics. But
+it was work of pioneering or analysis, rather than of synthesis.
+And it bequeathed to the eighteenth century, not a new world
+for the whole man to live in, but a miscellany of abstract,
+mutually discordant principles with which to begin to build
+it. These principles were known as laws: there were the laws
+of mathematics, of mechanics, of biology, of the natural and
+the economic man. They were all based upon the law of
+reason, and this was religiously believed in. The destructive
+centuries had not invented the faith in reason; that faith was
+a legacy of the Catholic world which reason, by shifting its
+premise, undermined. Reason, to be hypostasized, requires an
+unchallenged premise; in Catholic theology this premise was
+the revelation of the Bible; now it was to be the revelation of
+the human senses or of the original rightness and divinity of
+man. With such instruments, abstract and confused, the forerunners
+of the nineteenth century (Kant, Rousseau, Blake,
+etc.) strove to create a cosmos of their own to replace the
+glorious fertile world of St. Francis, Aquinas, Dante.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The period of great romantic art was ushered in; and it
+had many forms. In philosophy, there were Schopenhauer,
+Hegel, Spencer, Comte; in the novel, there were Balzac and
+Dostoevski; in music, there were Beethoven, Moussorgsky,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>Wagner; in painting, there were Delacroix, Ingres, Cézanne;
+in the sciences, there were Marx and Darwin. All these men,
+despite immense distinctions, were of one family. They were
+in touch with objective reality, masters of inquiry, often discoverers
+in the fields from which they mined their materials.
+But their constructions, unlike the worlds of the great Catholic
+creators right down to Bach, Descartes, Racine, were the
+embodiments of the personal will of their creators. There is,
+here, no contradiction; nor were these nineteenth-century
+worlds less “real,” because personal, or of less social use. Man
+is not an isolated atom. The genius who erects a world in the
+image of himself—if his self-search be deep and his self-mastery
+strong—will produce a work of universal nature. The
+more profound the subjective impulse, the more complete the
+command over objective nature in order to fulfill it. That is
+why the scientific realism of a Cézanne qualitatively equals
+that of a Darwin; why a poet like Wagner portrays the reality
+of Middle Europe; why an economist like Marx may write as
+emotionally as Isaiah; and why we find in the solipsistic verse
+of a Rimbaud prophecies, which science has fulfilled, of the
+nature and behavior of the atom.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I have needed to speak of these nineteenth-century Titans,
+because Sigmund Freud, whose work dates from the 1890’s,
+is the last of their line. To understand him, we must know his
+family. It was a family of men moved to replace, by their
+own work, the broken synthesis of Catholic Europe. They
+were all absolutists, seeking in some genetic principle of unitary
+vision the pattern that God supplied in the old order. The
+law may have been progress and reason or (as in Dostoevski
+and Rimbaud) their denial; may have been will or (as in
+Schopenhauer) its overcoming; it may have been some genetic
+rule like the survival of the fittest, sexual selection, Aryan-Lutheran
+supremacy, class struggle, etc. Always there was
+implicit in the texture of these men’s constructions an absolute
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>rationalism, or the nullification of reason; a faith in the
+sufficiency of the senses as a report of truth, or total rejection.
+These worlds, risen from an abstract and absolute law, were
+built of materials preponderantly personal—more idiosyncratic,
+indeed (although the work were a book on economics),
+than the love lyric of any medieval poet who accepted
+his immersion in a common cosmic pattern.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The twentieth century will be different: its creative work
+will be to reconcile and integrate apparently contradictory
+laws by the aid of supersensory dimensions. It will be the
+relativistic age, in which the discoveries of the absolutists of
+the nineteenth century—Nietzsche and Marx, Dostoevski and
+Darwin, Rimbaud and Spencer—will be worked together for
+the making not of worlds, but of <i>the world</i>, and not less personal
+because socially pragmatic. To this new era, barely
+ushered in by men like Bergson, Whitehead, S. Alexander,
+André Gide, Franz Kafka, etc., Freud does not belong. But
+in the perspective of cultural history, he will be seen as a contemporary
+of Darwin, Schopenhauer, Dostoevski, Marx; and
+he may be known, by the fecundity of his work, as their
+equal.</p>
+
+<h5 class='c019'>b.</h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>Freud began as a physician; as one seeking to heal human
+ills. But he found, in the dark places of the human heart, a
+world as personal, tragic and universal as the world of Dostoevski.
+The psychological system of Freud is, first of all, a
+great human drama. Here, in the arcana of the soul, are complex
+organisms: the superego, dwelling place of the fathers—conscience
+and tradition; the id, hinterland of the immense
+accumulations of instinct, habit, appetite; and between them
+the ego, where lives the individual will. These organisms are
+interacting units, from whose clash rise devious characters
+with strange names: cathex, complex, sex-urge, death-urge,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>neurosis, fixation or repression or sublimation of libido. They
+are all filled with the life of action; they make lyric and epic
+conquests of the objective world; they also interlock in secret
+combat or in more terrible alliance, giving forth the gamut
+of emotions from horror to ecstasy, and producing the many
+mansions of human deed from pastoral beginnings when the
+infant offers its prized excrement as a gift to its mother, to
+heights where men make philosophies and religions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This world of Freud has complex unity. Among the welter
+of symptom, dream, and cultural act move the “heroes”: the
+radical urge for life (sex and self-preservation) and the masochist-sadist
+hunger, born of life, for the return to death. And
+like all the esthetic constructions of the nineteenth-century
+Titans, this world has a personal savor. “The Interpretation
+of Dreams,” Freud’s pivotal work, in its revelation of a passionate
+individual nature may be compared with the “Confessions”
+of Rousseau (the father of the century), with Dostoevski’s
+“Notes from Underground,” with Volume I of
+“Capital,” with Schopenhauer’s “The World as Will and
+Idea,” and with “Thus Spake Zarathustra.” A man is speaking.
+He is building a system from his discoveries and observations
+by the use of a legitimate instrument of science. But first and
+last, <i>a man</i> is revealing himself. And only less intensely is this
+true of all Freud’s books. Whether he writes of the genetic
+sources of Da Vinci’s art (in “Leonardo da Vinci”) or of a
+savage totem (in “Totem and Taboo”) or of a slip of the
+tongue (in “Psychopathology of Everyday Life”), he brings
+himself to the construction. While with healing hand he
+touches the lesions of a soul, he is really carrying to these
+dark places a flame from his own Promethean nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Most men solve their inner conflicts by forgetting about
+them (with the magic of ready-made solutions or of drugs,
+sexual, mechanical, alcoholic, patriotic); some men need to
+create a world of their own to solve them. Marx, suffering
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>within himself the lesion of social injustice, created a world
+that mankind will use as a rationale of cure for its social diseases.
+The humbly religious Darwin, agonized by an age of
+“Enlightenment” that had dissevered him from God only to
+marry him with chaos, forecast a biological order where the
+human species could begin again to find the peace of integration
+between its lowest and its highest parts. Freud also makes
+answer to a personal conflict.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He is a man who accepts the dogma of nineteenth-century
+science. “There is no other source of knowledge,” he says,
+“but the intellectual manipulation of carefully verified observations,
+in fact, what is called research&#160;... and no knowledge
+can be obtained from revelation, intuition or inspiration.”
+This is pure eighteenth-century rationalism. Thus armed, he
+goes down into the irrational depths of the soul, a chaos to
+be conquered. His highway is the dream; and the Freudian
+technique of dream interpretation by word and thought associations
+and by the use of symbols is one of the mightiest acts
+of the imagination. The domain where the dream has led him,
+which he calls the id, is a jungle of the lusts of human organs
+aprowl like wild beasts among the tropical trees and swamps
+of primeval habit. But Freud will not surrender to this phantasmagoric
+and miasmic world; he will draw forth from its
+flux, by means of reason, energy for the three-dimensional
+world of reasonable practice, and this limited world he will
+insist to be the one reality. It is a struggle between uneven
+forces, and the consequence is a psychological design (called
+“real”) that is drenched with the passionate and heroic will
+of its author.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is illuminating to compare this Freudian world with the
+world of Dostoevski. The novelist explores the same Amazonian
+jungles of the unconscious, made manifest in their
+most morbid extremes. He, too, has gone down, through the
+need of an integrating principle that shall transfigure this chaos
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>into truth. His method is the precise opposite of Freud’s.
+Dostoevski follows the unconscious impulse of men to its
+irrational source, and he accepts this source as the sole reality,
+finding in it his God and his values. He rejects as unreal the
+contradictory world of reason and all the social-moral constructs
+of reason. This rejected “conscious” world is dream for
+Dostoevski; the nineteenth-century culture built from it in
+Europe is false for him; and in the obscurantist ecstasy of what
+Freud calls the “lowest levels of the id,” the Russian finds
+his salvation of “waking.” Freud moves toward the irrational
+source only to reject of it what reason cannot bind; and only
+such energies of the unconscious as reason can draw back into
+a world of social conformity will he call “real.” The materials
+of Dostoevski’s art, made plastic in the great organisms of his
+novels, are identical with the materials of Freud’s world made
+into the looser esthetic form of a psychological system.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Dostoevski does not succeed in his absolutist attempt to
+deny reality to all experience of reason: if the irrational ecstasy
+is man’s sole waking, there is much sleep in his books,
+and hence their substance. The same holds with Freud. He
+would be the first to disclaim victory in his attempt to naturalize
+all the energy of the id within the domain of reason.
+There is much “sleep” and much darkness in his system: hence
+its livingness.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Time and again, Freud is led to limits where he is face
+to face with Dostoevski’s “real”—the mystic and the occult.
+“It can easily be imagined,” he says, “that certain practices of
+the mystics may succeed in upsetting the normal relations
+between the different regions of the mind, so that, for example,
+the perceptual system becomes able to grasp relations
+in the deeper layers of the ego and in the id which would
+otherwise be inaccessible to it. Whether such a procedure can
+put one in possession of ultimate truths [there speaks the absolutist
+devotee of reason] may be safely doubted. All the same,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>we must admit that the therapeutic efforts of psychoanalysis
+have chosen much the same method of approach. For their
+object is to strengthen the ego, to make it more independent
+of the superego,&#160;... to take over new portions of the id.
+Where id was, there ego shall be.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Freud does not admit the premise of the mystic method,
+which is, of course, that the cosmic lives within the individual
+unconscious (the id) so that the following of percepts to
+their source rounds man’s circle to God. But Dostoevski,
+typical mystic in revolt against the world of reason, would not
+see the implication in Freud’s rationalist method: if the findings
+of reason are universal, reason must be cosmic. This
+rationalist premise is also mystic, and also irrationally rounds
+the circle between man and God. Freud, like all the nineteenth-century
+rationalists, is an unconscious follower of the
+older, ethical Kant. Dostoevski was a conscious, and hence a
+more reasonable, mystic. But both groups of absolutists, in
+their attempt to exclude a part of man’s equipment for
+finding truth—the one group reason, the other group organic
+intuition—are doomed to failure. And in Freud, no less than
+in Dostoevski, this awareness of limitations gives the poignant
+note of the Titans who are helpless to create a world against
+the indefeasible God who is the Whole. In all the great nineteenth-century
+creations, there is this discord between the
+will and the work. It gives to the pages of Freud a personal
+vibration that is not the least of their value.</p>
+
+<h5 class='c019'>c.</h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>What of the scientific values of Freud’s work? Psychoanalysis
+is, first of all, a therapy in the treatment of nervous
+and psychic disorders. Thousands of physicians, for the most
+part in the Central European and Anglo-Saxon countries,
+practice it, and seemingly with success. But therapy is the
+least important aspect of Freud’s work. Most of the ills of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>personal maladjustment which the Freudian analysis may cure
+are symptoms of the disorder, economic, social, cultural, of
+the contemporary world. The right way to overcome them
+is to attack the disease, not its individual symbols. In this task,
+the light thrown by Freud on the human psyche is of great
+importance; the actual relief given to a few persons is immaterial.
+The time required by an analysis, and the expense, make
+the method (under our present system) available chiefly to
+the type of idle woman and parasitic man who are not worth
+saving at the price of the lengthy effort which the analyst
+must devote to readjusting them into a morbid world. It
+would really be better for the whole leisured class, who have
+supported so many analysts in luxury, to be converted en
+masse to the Catholic Church. They could all go to Lourdes,
+whose record of cures is vastly more varied. There is this
+difference, however. When a patient finds relief at a Catholic
+shrine, no one is the wiser: the cure has been worked in an
+invulnerable darkness. But when even the most useless society
+woman is analyzed by a Freudian, although she may not be
+cured, the analyst and science know something more about
+the human soul. Psychoanalysis as a therapy is justified, in
+so far as the physician is more important than the patient.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Freud, therefore, is within the tradition of his Jewish
+fathers, to whom Wisdom was never (as it was with the
+Hindus) an end to be independently attained, but the common
+fruit of the tree of humane living. Freud, the physician, is
+moved to heal the suffering of his fellows; and from this
+humble, socially immaterial ministration has issued a deep
+knowledge.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I am not qualified to judge the precise final values, as objective
+science, of the Freudian system. But, of course, objective
+science has no final values. Despite its assumption of definitive
+laws, the light of generations makes of the science of any
+epoch a mere trend or method toward knowledge. That
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>scientific work whose path is followed farther, is good work;
+and here is its ultimate value. Thus the mathematical science
+of a Pascal or a Leibnitz is good; and in this sense, it is
+already clear that the Freudian technology is good. His dicta
+on any specific problem, such as the origin of neurosis or the
+setup of the psyche, may be amended. Indeed, Freud has himself
+refuted several of his early propositions. For instance, he
+used to hold that in the anxiety neurosis, the repression caused
+the anxiety, and his analytic experience has now taught him,
+as indicated in “A New Series of Introductory Lectures to
+Psycho-Analysis,” that the anxiety comes first, and that its
+source is a (disguised) actual trauma. In the technique of
+analysis, this reversal is important. But it reveals at what
+deeper level than any fact or system lies the scientific value
+of Freud’s work. Freud’s vision of the soul as an organism in
+dynamic integration with the physical body, with the social
+body, and with the historic body of mankind, has given us a
+<i>method</i>. And by this method we have come more close than
+we had come before to the sources of behavior, to an anatomy
+of ideas and emotions. Already, the uses of the method have
+proliferated widely. It has shed light on the social origins of
+man, anthropological and cultural; and on the problems of
+character formation without which there can be no science
+of education and no science of ethics. By its fecundity, the
+method of Freud’s psychology will perhaps prove to be as
+good science as the method of Darwin’s biology or of the
+Marxian historical critique.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I have said that the least value of Freud’s work is its therapy;
+I may amend this by saying that in therapy lie its greatest
+evils. Persons who go to psychoanalysis to be cured of
+neurosis or of a functional maladjustment, inevitably look for
+guiding values which anciently were given by religion. They
+seek <i>a way of life</i>; and the analyst is placed in the position of
+spiritual leader. This is not Freud’s claim. He scouts all Weltanschauung
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>beyond the scientific acceptance and ordering of
+the report of the senses. These rationalists are all naïve in
+their failure to recognize the limiting dogmatism of their
+creed. A measuring rod that negates what lies beyond its
+scope is the sternest of dogmatists. The man who disclaims
+any individual norm of values, and yet deals with the subtlest
+problems of human adjustment, implicitly accepts the values
+that are current and actively rejects what lies outside his
+measure. The patient is sick because he does not fit into the
+world as he finds it; the analyst who cures him helps him into
+this world, which means that he has set up, as the desired
+norm, the values of the world. If the analyst is not aware of
+this, his acceptance is merely the more blind and his work
+upon the soul of the patient the more irresponsible. This is a
+serious criticism to be made against psychoanalysis from the
+viewpoint of a world sorely in need of revolution in the
+domain of values. And it may well be that the maladjusted
+neurotic of today is closer to the norm of healthy social transformation
+than the neurotic whom Freudian analysis has
+made “fit and content” within a society of false individualism
+and cultural decay.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A more serious, because more philosophical, indictment is
+that the Freudian system (not the method) makes of mental
+life a region without polarity with either cosmos or individual
+person. The explorer Knud Rasmussen once asked an Eskimo,
+who lived within the ice of the Arctic Circle and whose food
+was the raw flesh of caribou, “What do you understand by
+the soul?” And Ikinilik, the savage, answered: “It is something
+beyond understanding, that makes me a human being.”
+Freud, the man, would probably agree; Freud, the nineteenth
+century rationalist, cannot admit of this “something beyond
+understanding.” He must draw his charts of human behavior,
+his maps of the mind, without allowance for this “x.” But
+what if the “x” is needed to produce, from Freud’s hypothetic
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>id and ego, the human being? What if all Freud’s analytic
+counters, lacking this “x,” do not add up into the synthesis—the
+actual person? “The id,” says Freud, “is the whole personality
+and the ego is within it.” But Freud’s id is a chaos
+of instinct and desire, timeless and spaceless, from which by
+definition all cosmic connection is excised. How does it
+manage, out of its anarchic tidings, to throw up the ego and
+the superego with their cultural cosmic sublimations? Where
+is the forming factor? Dostoevski, who finds God at the
+irrational and subnormal source, has a more logical explanation.
+Jung, the Swiss psychologist, although he lacks Freud’s
+intellectual genius and although his work is not, like Freud’s,
+a great esthetic body, is more logical, calling the id the
+“collective unconscious” and finding there the cosmic seed
+that can explain the human fruit. You can insert no new element,
+says Whitehead, in an evolving organism. It must be
+there at the beginning. Freud, in his rationalist refusal to allow
+within the id, at least hypothetically, the mystic “x” which
+can alone explain the flowering from the muck of the intellectual
+and esthetic capacities of man, meets the tragic fate of
+all rationalists whose ultimate syllogism proves the irrationality
+of the rationalist dogma.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But whatever the reader judges to be the validity of the
+Freudian system or the virtues of his own use of his method,
+he must know, as he reads the books of Sigmund Freud, that
+he stands within the presence of true human greatness.
+Freud, indeed, is one of the supreme intellectual heroes of
+our time: one of those men who make life more livable for
+us all through the fact of their existence. In his writings, we
+sense the heroism of his effort, armed alone by faith in reason,
+to conquer cosmic continents. We think of the first Spaniards,
+exploring with the blunderbuss and a Cross, yet giving the
+Americas to man. Freud, also, with a faith and weapons
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>equally foredoomed, has discovered a new world which, by
+outliving him, will make him immortal.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1934</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>6. SHERWOOD ANDERSON</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>One must approach the stories of this storyteller in the
+spirit of reverence, in the spirit of mystery—as one approaches
+the child. Let the critical come after. If one begins by analyzing
+Sherwood Anderson, one will not receive him; and all
+one’s analysis will go for naught. Let him lodge in us ungrudgingly;
+not till then let our intellectual questionings have
+play.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For his tales are a testimony; and they testify to the still
+infantile revelation of Our America. What would have happened
+in Europe, if the naïve confessionals of convert Gaul
+and Frank and Goth had been analyzed before they were
+accepted? Anderson’s books are a relation of the search for
+fresh religious values; a groping toward an Apocalypse in our
+own inchoate terms. Woe to us if we do not nurture this act
+in the childlike simplicity of the man who gives it!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We shall create a Scripture in our land. And of the stuff
+of Scripture are the glowing songs of “Winesburg, Ohio,” “A
+Story Teller’s Story,” the subsequent volumes. Scripture they
+are not. They are not hard, clear, strong enough for that.
+They are to our new Scripture that shall be, possibly, as were
+the lost Songs of Miriam to the subsequent Books of Moses;
+as the pre-Vedic psalms to the Rig-Veda; as the stammering
+testimonies before St. Isidore of Christians from the Rhine
+to the Guadalquivir, to that medieval Scripture of Abélard,
+Anselm, Aquinas. They are source, a living inchoate source.
+We must let them speak in us and for us, in order to grow
+beyond them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>If we fail to accept them, America will turn against them.
+There are already signs of this revulsion—weakness turned into
+bravado—in the shrill gestures of young-old men like Ernest
+Hemingway. We shall have to spew out this false maturity;
+we shall have to go back and <i>live through</i> Anderson in order
+to grow beyond our childhood.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>From the molder heap of nineteenth-century America rise
+flames of longing and dance a moment in the air. Then they
+fall back into the smoke, lost, fetidly lost. There is still too
+much damp muck for the divine bonfire which America shall
+be. We cannot yet burn. We can get ready to burn.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Such is the burden of Sherwood Anderson’s books; they
+are a playing of wistful flames over the muck heap. There
+have been other flames, hardier, greater. Either they came before
+our modern muck heap, or they played on its edge. The
+flames of Thoreau, Melville, Poe, the fire of Whitman, stood
+clear enough away to cast light to Europe. Anderson’s flame
+is more modest. But it is at the heart, not at the edge of the
+molder. It does not light Paris and London; it helps warm <i>us</i>.
+It helps prepare the muck heap for the great bonfire. Its value
+lies in its inwardness, in its humble staying.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All the tales of this storyteller are little inward-creeping
+tongues of fire. Anderson himself is a fragment flame flickering
+through America’s chaos: licking, curling, dancing, smoking,
+fainting. He is not organic, he has no body and no eyes.
+He ignites nothing. He warms, he lessens the dank, he cleanses
+the stench of the muck heap. After, the bonfire.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When we have accepted him, we can place him; and by
+this means place America. Looking upon this man’s nature,
+listening to his words, above all to the dull beat of his feet, we
+realize what a task this is: to make America into a holy land.
+Elijah and Amos wrestling with their idolaters, the Judges and
+Prophets swearing to force their pack of stubborn shepherds
+into the Word of God, had a task no harder than ours who
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>would make America into a luminous land. If you have doubts,
+here are books to strengthen despair; if you hesitate in your
+need to transcend despair, here are books to hearten you by
+their songs of man’s mysterious emergence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Whence came Sherwood Anderson? and what had he?
+If this be not God in his blundering step, in his blinded eye,
+then God is not immanent on earth. Not intelligence, not
+shrewdness, not cultural purpose, moved this man. To the
+end he will be deaf, dumb, blind. The Midwest lives in his
+stories but not in his knowledge of himself. He comes to
+New York, a man past forty years. Can you say that he saw
+even one skyscraper, even one person? High men, low men,
+bitter men and sweet, dance in equal delirium before him. He
+goes to Europe, a pilgrimage through the detritus of his own
+youthful readings about Europe. So he has gone through
+life: so, in a true esthetic form of faint emergence out of
+chaos, he has created his tales. Creeping flames searching in
+muck and drench for the dry brand, striving so wistfully hard
+to catch on, to ignite!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I spoke with a sharp critic from England about “A Story
+Teller’s Story.” He disposed of it with ease: it lacked form,
+it lacked clarity of image and thought, it gave nothing of
+Ohio, nothing of New York; it was vague in picturing the
+associates of childhood, the transition years; it had no incisive
+word on the artists encountered in the East. The European
+mind could not touch the flavor of this revelation. What it
+saw as muddle is search; what it saw as evasion is honest
+effort.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Sherwood Anderson used to sing of the gods, the new-old
+gods coming out of the corn into the streets of Chicago.
+Primitive gods they were, almost phallic. Mere trunks of
+power, moving; mere conveyancers of life greyly luminous
+into the builded blackness of our cities. Sherwood Anderson
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>is such a god, himself. There must be many, ere the new
+Elohim grow into the new Jehovah.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1926</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>7. HART CRANE</h4>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c026'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>I dwell in Possibility</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>A fairer house than Prose,</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>More numerous of windows</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Superior of doors.</i></div>
+ <div class='line in18'><span class='sc'>Emily Dickinson</span></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h5 class='c019'>a.</h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>Agrarian America had a common culture, which was both
+the fruit and the carrier of what I have called elsewhere “the
+great tradition.”<a id='r3'></a><a href='#f3' class='c025'><sup>[3]</sup></a> This tradition rose in the Mediterranean
+world with the will of Egypt, Israel and Greece, to re-create
+the individual and the group in the image of values called
+divine. The same will established Catholic Europe, and when
+it failed (producing nonetheless what came to be the national
+European cultures), the great tradition survived. It survived
+in the Europe of Renaissance, Reformation, Revolution. With
+the Puritans, it was formally transplanted to the North American
+seaboard. Roger Williams, Thomas Hooker, Jonathan
+Edwards; later, Jefferson, Madison, Adams, carried on the
+great tradition with the same tools, on the same intellectual
+and economic terms, that had been brought from Europe and
+that had failed in Europe. It was transplanted, it was not
+transfigured. But before the final defeat of the Puritan avatar—a
+defeat ensured by the disappearance of our agrarian economy—the
+great tradition had borne fruit in two general forms.
+The first was the ideological art of what Lewis Mumford calls
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>the Golden Day: a prophetic art of poets so diverse as Emerson,
+Thoreau, Poe, whose vision was one of Possibility and
+whose doom, since its premise was a disappearing world, was
+to remain suspended in the thin air of aspiration. The second
+was within the lives of the common people. Acceptance of
+the great tradition had its effect upon their character; and
+this humbler achievement is recorded, perhaps finally, in the
+poems of Robert Frost.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Frost’s record (“North of Boston,” 1914; “Mountain Interval,”
+1916) was already made when the United States
+entered the War; and the War brought final ruin to the
+American culture of “free” individuals living for the most
+part on farms, whose beauty Frost recorded. The tradition
+which had tempered the persons in Frost’s poems had already,
+before the Civil War, sung its last high word in the old terms
+that were valid from Plato to Fichte. And this, too, was fitting,
+for the Civil War prepared the doom, which the World
+War completed, of the agrarian class culture. But the great
+tradition, unbroken from Hermes Trismegistus and Moses,
+does not die. In a society transfigured by new scientific and
+economic forces, it must be transfigured. The literature and
+philosophy of the past hundred years reveal many efforts at
+this transfiguration: in this common purpose, Nietzsche and
+Marx are brothers. The poetry of Whitman was still founded
+on the substances of the old order. The poetry of Hart Crane
+is a deliberate continuance of the great tradition in terms of
+our industrialized world.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If we bear in mind this purpose of Crane’s work, we shall
+be better prepared to understand his methods, his content,
+his obscurity. We shall, of course, not seek the clear forms
+of a poet of Probability, like Frost. But we shall also not too
+widely trust Crane’s kinship with the poets of the Emersonian
+era, whose tradition he immediately continues. They were
+all, like Crane, bards of possibility rather than scribes of realization.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>Yet they relied upon inherited forms—forms emotional,
+ethical, social, intellectual and religious, transplanted from
+Europe and not too deliquescent for their uses. Whitman’s
+apocalypse rested on the politics of Jefferson and on the economics
+of the physiocrats of France. Emerson was content
+with the ideology of Plato and Buddha, his own world not
+too radically differing from theirs. Even Emily Dickinson
+based her explosive doubts upon the permanent premise of a
+sheltered private garden, to which such as she could always
+meditatively retire. These traditional assumptions gave to the
+poets of the Golden Day an accessible, communicable form;
+for we, too, have been nurtured on the words of that old
+order. But in Crane, none of the ideal landmarks, none of
+the formal securities, survive; therefore his language problem—the
+poet’s need to find words at once to create and to communicate
+his vision—is acute. Crane, who began to write while
+Frost was perfecting his record, lived, instinctively at first,
+then with poignant awareness, in a world whose inherited outlines
+of person, class, creed, value—still clear, however weak,
+in Emerson’s Boston, Whitman’s New York, Poe’s Richmond—had
+dissolved. His vision was the timeless One of all the
+seers, and it binds him to the great tradition; but because of
+the time that fleshed him and that he needed to substance his
+vision, he could not employ conventional concretions. In his
+lack of valid terms to express his relationship with life, Crane
+was a true culture-child; more completely than either Dickinson
+or Blake, he was a child of modern man.</p>
+
+<h5 class='c019'>b.</h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>Harold Hart Crane was born in Garrettsville, Ohio, July
+21, 1899. His parents, Clarence Arthur Crane and Grace Hart,
+were of the pioneer stock that trekked in covered wagons
+from New England to the Western Reserve. But his grandparents,
+on both sides, had already shifted from the farm to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>small-town business, and Clarence Crane, who had inherited
+his father’s general store in Garrettsville, became a wealthy
+candy manufacturer in Cleveland. Here the poet, an only
+child, lived from his tenth year. At thirteen, he was composing
+verse; at sixteen, in the words of Gorham Munson, “he
+was writing on a level that Amy Lowell never rose from.”
+In the winter of 1916, he went with his mother, who was
+separated from her husband, to the Isle of Pines, south of
+Cuba, where his grandfather Hart had a fruit ranch; and this
+journey, which gave him his first experience of the sea, was
+cardinal in his growth. The following year, he was in New
+York, in contact with Margaret Anderson and Jane Heap,
+editors of “The Little Review”; tutoring for college; writing;
+already passionately and rather wildly living.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>At this time, two almost mutually exclusive tendencies
+divided the American literary scene. One was centered in Ezra
+Pound, Alfred Kreymborg, the imagists, Harriet Monroe’s
+“Poetry” and “The Little Review”: the other was grouped
+about “The Seven Arts.” Young Crane was in vital touch with
+both. He was reading Marlowe, Donne, Laforgue, Rimbaud;
+but he was also finding inspiration in Whitman, Sherwood
+Anderson and Melville. His action, when the United States
+lurched into the war, reveals the complexity of his interests.
+He decided not to go to college and by his own choice returned
+to Cleveland, to work as a common laborer in a munition
+plant and a shipyard on the lake. He loved machines, the
+earth tang of the workers. He was no poet in an ivory tower.
+But also he loved music; he wanted time to write, to meditate,
+to read. The conflict of desires led him, perhaps, to accept
+what seemed a comfortable compromise: a job in the candy
+business of his father.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The elder Crane seems to have been a man of turbulent
+and twisted power, wholly loyal to the gods of Commerce.
+He was sincerely outraged by the jest of fortune which had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>given him a poet for a son. Doubtless, he was bitter at his one
+child’s siding with the mother in the family conflict. But
+under all, there was a secret emotional bond between the two,
+making for the ricochet of antagonism and attraction that
+lasted between them until the father’s death, a year before
+the son’s. The candy magnate set laboriously to work to
+drive the “poetry nonsense” out of his boy. Hart became a
+candy salesman behind a counter, a soda-jerker, a shipping
+clerk. He received a minimum wage. Trusted employees were
+detailed to spy on him, lest he read “poetry books” during
+work hours. Hart Crane escaped several times from the paternal
+yoke, usually to advertising jobs near home or in New
+York. And at last, in 1920, he decided to break with both
+Cleveland and his father.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>His exquisite balance of nerves was already permanently
+impaired. The youthful poet, who had left a comfortable
+household to live with machines and rough men, who had
+shouldered “the curse of sundered parentage,” who had tasted
+the strong drink of literature and war, carried within him a
+burden intricate and heavy—a burden hard to hold in equilibrium.
+Doubtless the chaos of his personal life led him to
+rationalize the accessible tangent ease from the strain of balance
+which excess use of alcohol invited. Yet there was a
+deeper cause for the disequilibrium which, when Crane was
+thirty-two, was finally to break him from his love of life and
+to destroy him. Hart Crane was a mystic. The mystic is a
+man who <i>knows</i>, by immediate experience, the organic continuity
+of his self with the cosmos. This experience, which is
+the natural fruit of sensitivity, becomes intense in one whose
+native energy is great; and lest it turn into an overwhelming,
+shattering burden, it must be disciplined and ordered. A stable
+nucleus within the self must be achieved, to bear and finally
+transfigure the world’s impinging chaos. Personally, Crane did
+not win this synthesis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>But the poet was clearer and shrewder than the man. His
+mind sought a poetic principle to integrate the exuberant
+flood of his impressions. The early poems, collected in “White
+Buildings” (1926), reveal the quest, not the finding. Allen
+Tate, in his Introduction to this volume, writes: “The poems&#160;...
+are facets of a single vision; they refer to a central imagination,
+a single evaluating power, which is at once the motive
+of the poetry and the form of its realization.” But the central
+imagination, wanting a unitary principle, wavers and breaks;
+turns back upon itself instead of mastering the envisaged substance
+of the poem. That is why, often, a fragmentary part of
+a poem is greater than the whole: and why it is, at times, impossible
+to transpose the series of images into the sense-and-thought
+sequence that originally moved the poet, and that
+must be perceived in order to move the reader. The mediate
+principle, coterminous with the image logic of the poem and
+the feeling logic of the poet, is imperfect. The first lines of
+the volume:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c026'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>As silent as a mirror is believed</div>
+ <div class='line'>Realities plunge in silence by....</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>are a superb expression of chaos and of the poet’s need to
+integrate this chaos in the active mirror of self. Page after
+page, “realities plunge by,” only ephemerally framed in a
+mirroring mood which alas! melts, itself, into the turbulent
+procession. Objective reality exists in these poems only as an
+oblique moving-inward to the poet’s mood. But the mood is
+never, as in imagist or romantic verse, given for and as itself.
+It is given only as an organic moving-outward toward the
+objective world. Each lyric is a diapason between two integers
+of a continuous whole. But the integers (subjective and objective)
+are almost never clear. This makes of the poem an
+abstract, wavering, esthetic body. There is not yet, as in the
+later work, a conscious substantiated theme or principle of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>vision to stratify the interacting parts of the poems into an
+immobile whole.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But in the final six lyrics of this volume (“Voyages”)
+there is the beginning of a synthesis. Its symbolic theme is
+the Sea. The turbulent experience of Crane’s childhood and
+youth is fused in a litany to the Sea.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c026'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>... Sleep, death, desire,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Close round one instant in one floating flower.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The sea, first source of life, first Mother, is death to man.
+To woo it is to return to death’s simple singleness. This solution
+from the burden of chaos is like the erotic mysticism of
+D. H. Lawrence. Immersion—hence loss—of the burdened
+mystic self in perfect sexual union is a romantic myth, old
+as the myth of the Sea. It satisfied Lawrence. But Crane was
+intellectually too strong, and too robust an artist, to abide it.
+“White Buildings” closes on the unitary theme of surrender.
+But the poet is ready to begin his quest again.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In 1924, the poems of “White Buildings” written but not
+yet published, Crane was living in Brooklyn, in range of the
+harbor, the Bridge, the sea-sounds....</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c026'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Gongs in white surplices, beshrouded wails,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Far strum of fog horns....</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>And now, the integrating theme came to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c006'>The will of Crane in “The Bridge” is deliberately mythmaking.
+But this will, as we have seen, is born of a desperate,
+personal need: the mystic <i>must</i> create order from the chaos
+with which his associative genius overwhelms him. The poem
+retains this personal origin. The revelation of “The Bridge,”
+as principle and myth, comes to an individual in the course
+of his day’s journey; and that individual is the poet. In this
+sense. “The Bridge” is allied to the “Commedia” of Dante,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>who also, in response to desperate need, takes a journey in
+the course of which his need finds consummation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Lest the analogy be misleading, I immediately amend it.
+Dante’s cosmos, imaged in an age of cultural maturity, when
+the life of man was coterminous with his vision, contains time
+and persons: only in the ecstatic last scenes of the “Paradiso”
+are they momently merged and lost. Therefore, the line of
+Dante’s poem is clear, being forth and back in time: and the
+focus of the action is cogent, being the person of the Poet
+with whom the reader can readily graph points of reference.
+Crane’s cosmos has no time and his person-sense is vacillant
+and evanescent. Crane’s journey is that of an individual unsure
+of his own form and lost to time. This difference at once
+clarifies the disadvantageous esthetic of “The Bridge” as compared
+with that of broadly analogous poems of spiritual
+search, like the “Commedia” or “Don Quixote.” It exemplifies
+the role played by the cultural epoch in the creation of
+even the most personal work of genius.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In “Proem,” the poet exhorts the object of his choice—the
+Bridge. It shall synthesize the world of chaos. It joined city,
+river and sea; man made it with his new hand, the machine.
+Parabola-wise, it shall now vault the continent, and, transmuted,
+reach that inward heaven which is the fulfillment of
+man’s need of order. Part One, “Ave Maria,” is the vision of
+Columbus, mystic navigator who mapped his voyage in Isaiah,
+seeking to weld the world’s riven halves into one. But this
+Columbus is scarcely a person; he is suffused in his history
+and his ocean; his will is more substantial than his eye. Nor
+does he live in time. Part Two, “Powhatan’s Daughter” (the
+Indian princess is the flesh of America, the American earth,
+and Mother of our dream), begins the recital of the poet’s
+journey which traces in extension (as Columbus gives in
+essence) the myth’s trajectory. The poet awakes in his room
+above the harbor, beside his lover. Risen (taking the harbor
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>and the sea-sounds with him), he walks through the lowly
+Brooklyn streets: but walks with his cultural past: Pizarro,
+Cortés, Priscilla, and now Rip Van Winkle whose eyes, fresh
+from sleep, will abide the poet’s as they approach the transfigured
+world of today. The poet descends the subway that
+tunnels the East River (the Bridge is above); and now the
+subway is a river “leaping” from Far Rockaway to Golden
+Gate. A river of steel rails at first, bearing westward America’s
+urban, civilization (“Stick your patent name on a signboard”)
+and waking as it runs the burdened trudge of pioneers and
+all their worlds of factory and song. The patterning march
+of the American settlers traces the body, gradually, of Pocahontas;
+the flow of continent and man becomes the Great
+River; the huge travail of continental life, after the white man
+and before him, is borne southward, “meeting the Gulf.”
+Powhatan’s daughter, America’s flesh, dances and the flesh
+becomes spirit. Dances the poet’s boyhood memories of star
+and lake, of “sleek boat nibbling margin grass”; dances at last
+into the life of an Indiana mother, home from a frustrate trek
+to California for gold, who is bidding her son farewell; he is
+going east again to follow the sea. (“Write me from Rio.”)</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There are no achieved persons in the universe, barely
+emergent from chaos, of Hart Crane; and this first crystallization—the
+prairie mother—is the first weak block in the poem’s
+structure. Now, with Part Three, “Cutty Sark,” the physical
+course of the poet (the subway ride has exploded into the
+cosmic implication of the River) returns to view, but blurred.
+The poet is in South Street, Manhattan, near midnight: he
+is carousing with a sailor who brings him in snatches of song
+Leviathan, Plato, Stamboul—and a dim harbinger of Atlantis.
+“I started walking home across the Bridge”: there, in the hallucinatory
+parade of clippers that once winked round the
+Horn “bright skysails ticketing the Line,” the poet is out
+again, now seaward.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>Part Four, “Cape Hatteras,” is the turning point of the
+poem. Thus far, we have seen the individual forms of the
+poet’s crowded day melt into widening, deepening cycles of
+association. Columbus into the destiny and will of the Atlantic:
+two lovers into the harbor, the harbor into the sea: subway
+into a transcontinental railroad, into a continent, into a
+River; the River into the Gulf; the Indian princess into the
+Earth Mother, and her dance into the tumult and traffic of
+the nation; ribald South Street into a vision—while the Bridge
+brings the clippers that bring China—of Atlantis. Now, the
+movement turns back toward crystallization. “Cape Hatteras”
+at first invokes the geologic age that lifted the Appalachians
+above the sea; the cosmic struggle sharpens into the birth of
+the airplane—industrial America; the “red, eternal flesh of
+Pocahontas” gives us, finally, Walt Whitman. “Years of the
+Modern! Propulsions toward what capes?” The Saunterer on
+the Open Road takes the hand of the poet. Parts Five and Six
+are interludes. Part Seven, “The Tunnel,” carries the poem
+to its climax. The poet, in mid-air and at midnight, leaves the
+Bridge; he “comes down to earth” and returns home as he
+had left, by subway. This unreal collapse of bridge into subway
+has meaning. The subway is the tunnel. The tunnel is
+America, and is a kind of hell. But it has dynamic direction.
+In this plunging subway darkness, appears Poe:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c026'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>And why do I often meet your visage here,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Your eyes like agate lanterns...?</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>If the reader understand Poe, he will understand the apparition.
+Of all the classic poets of the great tradition in America,
+Poe—perhaps the least an artist—was the most advanced, the
+most prophetic, as thinker. All, as we have noted, were content
+more or less with the merely transplanted terms of an
+agrarian culture. Only Poe guessed the transfiguring effect of
+the Machine upon the forms of human life, upon the very
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>concept of the person. The Tunnel gives us man in his industrial
+hell which the machine—his hand and heart—has made;
+now let the machine be his godlike hand to raise him! The
+plunging subway shall merge with the vaulting bridge. Whitman
+gives the vision, Poe—however vaguely—the method.
+The final part, “Atlantis,” is a transposed return to the beginning.
+The Bridge, in time, has linked Atlantis with Cathay.
+Now it becomes an absolute experience. Like any human
+event, <i>fully known</i>, it links man instantaneously, “beyond
+time,” with the Truth.</p>
+
+<p class='c006'>The principle that Crane sought, to make him master of
+his sense of immediate continuity with a world overwhelmingly
+chaotic, gave him “The Bridge”; but in actual life it did
+not sustain him. The later poems, despite their technical perfection
+(and with the exception of “The Broken Tower”),
+mark a retreat to the mood of the last pages of “White Buildings.”
+The Sea, symbol of the return to a unity of personal
+abolition, had ebbed while the poet stood upon his mythic
+bridge; now again it was rising. The periodicity of his excesses
+grew swifter; the lucid intervening times when he could write
+were crowded out. Crane went to Mexico, where individual
+extinction has for a thousand years inspired a cult and a culture.
+On his return to New York, heart of the chaos in his
+life, there was the Sea; and he could not resist it. As his boat
+was bearing him from the warm waters which fifteen years
+before had given him a symbol, he took off his coat, quietly,
+and joined the Sea forever.</p>
+
+<h5 class='c019'>c.</h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>The beauty of most of Crane’s lyrics, and of many passages
+of “The Bridge,” seems to me to be inviolable. If I analyze
+this conviction, I am brought first to the poetic texture.
+Its traditional base is complex. Here is a music plainly related
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>to the Elizabethan poets. And here, also, is a sturdy lilt like
+the march of those equal children of the Elizabethans—the
+pioneers. Although Crane describes a modern cabaret&#160;...</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c026'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Brazen hypnotics glitter here;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Glee shifts from foot to foot&#160;...</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>always, there is the homely metronomic, linking him to his
+fathers. Hence the organic soundness of his verse. Its <i>livingness</i>
+it owes to the dimension of variant emergence from the
+traditional music, like the emergence of our industrial world
+from the base of old America. The entire intellectual and
+spiritual content of Crane’s verse could be derived from a
+study of his typical texture. And this is earnest of its importance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The structural pattern of “The Bridge” is superb: a man
+moves of a morning from Brooklyn to Manhattan, returns at
+midnight, each stage of his course adumbrating by the mystic
+law of continuity into American figures with cosmic overtones,
+and all caught up in a mythic Bridge whose functional
+span is a parabola, and an immediate act, of vision. The
+poem’s flaw lies in the weakness of the personal crystallization
+upon which the vision rests, as the Bridge is spanned
+upon its piers. This flaw gets into the idiom and texture.
+Sometimes the image blurs, the sequence breaks, the plethora
+of words is blinding. There is even, in the development of
+certain figures, a tendency toward inflation which one is
+tempted to connect with the febrile, false ebullience of the
+American epoch (1924–1929) in which the poem was written.
+Yet the concept is sound; the poet’s genius has on the whole
+equaled his ambition. Even the failings in execution help to
+express the epoch, for it is in the understanding and creating
+of <i>persons</i> that our rapidly collectivizing age is weakest.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Crane’s myth must, of course, not be confused with the
+myth as we find it in Homer or the Bible or the Nibelungen.
+The Bridge is not a particularized being to be popularly sung;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>it is a conceptual symbol to be <i>used</i>. And the fact that this
+symbol begins as a man-constructed thing is of the essence
+of its truth for our instrumental age. From a machine-made
+entity, the poem makes the Bridge into a machine. But it has
+beauty. This means that through the men who builded it, the
+life of America has flowed into it—the life of our past <i>and
+our future</i>. A cosmic content has given beauty to the Bridge,
+and must give it a poetic function. From being a machine of
+matter, it becomes an instrument of spirit. <i>The Bridge is
+matter made into human action.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We may confidently say that this message of “The
+Bridge” will be more comprehensible in the future (not in
+the immediate future), when the functionally limited materialism
+of our collectivist era has, through success, grown inadequate
+to the deepened needs of a mankind released from
+economic insecurity and prepared, by leisure, for regeneration.
+For even as necessity, today and tomorrow, drives most
+men to think collectively in order that they may survive;
+necessity, day after tomorrow, will drive men to think personally
+(poetically, cosmically) in order that their survival
+may have meaning. When the collectivist era has done its
+work—the abolition of economic classes and of animal want—men
+will turn, as only the privileged of the past could ever
+turn, toward the discovery of Man. But when that time
+comes, the message of “The Bridge” will be taken for
+granted; it will be too obvious, even as today it is too obscure,
+for general interest. The revelation, in Crane’s poems, however,
+of a man who through the immediate conduit of his
+senses realized the organic unity between his self, the objective
+world and the cosmos, will be accepted as a great human
+value. And the poems whose very texture reveals and sings
+this man will be remembered.<a id='r4'></a><a href='#f4' class='c025'><sup>[4]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1933</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>
+ <h3 class='c023'><i>II. AMERICAN TRAITS</i></h3>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>1. IN DEFENSE OF OUR VULGARITY</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>If refinement implies spiritual values, vulgarity might
+be called their <i>aggressive</i> absence. The values need not be
+individually acquired. They may be traditional, unconscious.
+They are not necessarily linked to personal traits like morality
+and learning. The Negro peasant in the Alabama black belt
+is illiterate and often drunk. But in his native state, he draws
+from the soil and sky in whose cycles he is seasoned, a grace
+which is refinement even if it be unconscious like the grace
+of a flower. Perhaps he is transplanted to some crude mining
+suburb of Birmingham. Probably, then, he loses his refinement.
+But if the loss remain passive, if it be not aggressive,
+he is not yet vulgar. Give him now a shrewd head by means
+of which he pushes north and lands in Harlem. Teach him
+that he is a free-born, American citizen on whom it is incumbent
+to amuse himself in metropolitan fashion. Hand him a
+little money and a good dose of our contemporary eighteenth-century
+notion of Equality. Now, his absence of refinement
+will grow aggressive. He will be vulgar.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We all came from Europe with a modicum of refinement.
+And the collateral descendants of our forebears have it still
+in the mines and farms of Britain, in the towns of Germany
+and Italy, in the ghettos of Galicia. No natural peasant of
+Europe is quite without it. For this refinement is almost as
+widespread as vegetation—as perishable, as passive.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Transplanted, we lost this leguminous bloom. But we
+were not vulgar until we had grown conscious of being
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>great. American vulgarity is the sum of our spiritual loss and
+of our assertive energy. Were we less lordly, our lack of
+spiritual values would not make us vulgar. And were we
+spiritually full, our assertiveness might prove a virtue. Vulgar
+people exist everywhere. We are perhaps the only nationally
+vulgar people. And therein dwells not alone our predicament,
+but our hope.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Surely, this vulgarity is clear in all our words and acts,
+from Maine to Texas! In my optimism, I would have it no
+less than universal. I would not be cheated of finding it,
+wherever America and Americanism wave. Politicians of
+other lands may be merely corrupt or dull: ours are vulgar.
+There is naught vulgar about the servant of a European lord.
+But there is naught more vulgar than an American lackey
+at post before the barracks of Park Avenue—save the barracks
+themselves, and the millionaires they house. Our newspapers
+are vulgar. But so are many of our churches. Witness their
+aggressiveness, their display of results, their want of the sanctity
+of silence. Our evangelists are vulgar, being void of vision
+and full of advertising. But the Menckenites who rail against
+them are no less vulgar—for the identical reason. Chicago is
+doubtless vulgar: but so is Ben Hecht who hates Chicago.
+And the whole land has turned the motorcar into vulgarity’s
+badge: since it has become an instrument of display, a means
+of elocuting at so many miles per hour the owner’s social
+status up and down the country.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, if you analyze this universal vulgarity of ours, you
+will discover in it a constant element of <i>misplaced effort</i>. The
+European servant may be quite as spiritually void as ours;
+but he is less vulgar because he is less striving: what he lacks
+is precisely the unfounded aspiration which makes our lackey
+vulgar. Our advertisements are vulgar because they strive so
+commonly to be something beyond the nature of advertisements—sermons
+or homilies, editorials or art. Our newspapers
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>are vulgar because they presume to be arbiters of taste and
+morals; and our churches are vulgar because they labor for
+results of the spirit with methods of factory and salesroom.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Run down the list, and it will bear me out. This vulgarity
+of ours means no intrinsic lack of spiritual will and energy;
+it means the failure of that good will and energy. We dwell
+in a confusion of impulses and forms. The spirit is exiled from
+the deed. The deed hungers vainly for justification by the
+spirit. That is why we are aggressive. And the spirit lacks
+body. That is why we are wistful, credulous, neurotic. High
+energy we have—energy of the kind known as religious. It
+vaporizes for lack of a container; or it is misapplied in the
+pushing of old creeds no longer fit to house it. Emptiness
+grows emphatic because it strives to be full.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, all this is the due consequence of our past. For
+more than three centuries, old forms of thought and life—for
+the most part hostile to each other—were dumped upon
+our soil. Not until about 1860 had they all rotted enough
+to begin to come together; rotted enough for the first tender
+shoot of a true America to rise from the fecundity of decay.
+In our outward life, we are still committed to forms of living
+which our nascent spirit has rejected. We lug around the
+archaic body of theological pioneers; and by means of it we
+attempt to stammer out the rounded New World vision of a
+Whitman. The result, of course, is a botch. The result, also,
+is a promise. This madness of ours, finding symbols in motors,
+dramas in football games, art in advertisements, morality in
+statutes, and sermons in tabloid papers, lacks only a working
+method to become supremely sane. Deflect this misplaced
+will to unity into some channel that will hold it; and we shall
+see how the energy which mothers American vulgarity and
+American folly can father greatness.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Nor must we forget that all these forms of life in which
+today we express vulgarity, because they are not proper conduits
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>for the clamorous spirit with which we endeavor to
+infuse them, are not American at all—are European. We may
+produce 90 per cent of the motors of the world; we may
+measure our progress by our physical power: but the machine
+and the gold-and-iron standard of value are fundamentally
+and historically of Europe. Our contribution has been not in
+the form, but in the spirit which <i>deforms</i> it. We have not
+made the machine: we have made of the machine the carrier
+of a Dream. Mr. Henry Ford may be more vulgar than
+M. Citroën of Paris, because he is a tuppenny prophet: but
+it is the prophet in him, not the mechanic, which is of our
+land.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The world wistfully senses this. Europe reads the book
+of Henry Ford and studies the vulgarest of American expressions
+through a deep instinct and a mastering hunger. It seeks
+new spiritual gold. It knows—although it may not analyze the
+knowledge—that our vulgarity is an ore which holds it.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1926</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>2. THE MOVIES AND THE MASSES</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>The American motion picture is a truly popular art. It
+has more than one audience, of course: Broadway patronizes
+it, and Europe, and Africa and Asia. But whereas it could get
+along without these more decorative plaudits, it depends
+vitally on the American masses. A film that will please only
+the capitals and languish in the locals, means little to Hollywood’s
+master minds. It is the people who count: the workers.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is, hence, fair to say that the sentiments, attitudes and
+dreams of the American masses will find, if not flattery and
+full reflection, at least some harmonious note on the American
+screen. The makers of our movies are, of course, high middle
+class, with all the ideals and prejudices of wealth. You may
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>accuse them of “putting across” their standards in their work.
+But you give them a heroism which they lack, if you suggest
+that they would go to the length of imbuing their wares with
+unpopular ideas, just because they believed them. Much as
+they love success and armies, the makers of the movies would
+refrain, no doubt, from confessing their weakness in public,
+if such confession weakened their incomes. After all, these
+men have made money because they have pleased the public.
+They will keep their money only so long as they hold off
+from antagonizing their public. If you find in our motion pictures
+a set of standards, a gamut of values, not only bourgeois,
+but actually oligarchic, military, antiproletarian, the reason
+must be, not alone that these suit the bourgeois fashioner of
+the films, but as well that they do not too radically displease
+the proletarian patrons.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What the tastes and standards in the movies are, is plain
+enough. Films devoted to the depiction of labor or rural life
+are extremely rare. High life is the average film life. Or life
+in the rising provincial class which begins with a Ford and
+attains a Packard. Alternate with this is the romantic cowboy
+world of the West. But such tales are no more proletarian
+than those of Wall Street. Here also is a realm of the picaresque,
+sentimental, admittedly mythic, and aspiring to the one
+True Value: the money and position of the middle class.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Run over in your mind the movies you have seen in a
+year. How many dealt honestly with the life of a farmer, of
+a carpenter, of a factory hand? If the hero began as a mechanic,
+was he not an automobile manufacturer at the end?
+If he was a stableboy at the outset, did he not own the stable
+or marry the girl who owned it, at the fade-out? If Reel One
+found him a country bumpkin, was he not a magnate ere you
+left the theatre?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Our movie world, like any theatre of its audience, is a
+confessional of the masses. And what it seems to mirror very
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>plainly, indeed, is that the achievement of bourgeois status is
+the heart’s desire of the average toiling man and woman in
+our country.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is nothing new. But the obvious conclusion, that this
+is what the masses really and positively value, is the conclusion
+we do not wish to make. Worship of big guns, military,
+financial, social, on which the American movie thrives, is indeed
+the tonal will of the moviemakers. This is what really
+moves the businessmen and women who distribute, produce,
+direct, compose and act our movies. But the true reason why
+the masses—above all, the plastic sons and daughters of the
+masses—accept such values is that they have not received a
+set of values of another kind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The people must love, must worship, something. What
+school and church provide them, as substance for their dreaming,
+has gone so dim that it disappears in the brash glamour of
+our jungle. The movie gives an idealization of the powers
+and hungers of daily American life. Empty the people go
+from church and schoolroom. But the press agent of the silver
+screen needs only to give a twist to the actual presences of
+the busy street in order to make the shopgirl a lady and the
+laborer a millionaire.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The corruptly glamorous values of an exploiting class are
+absorbed by the people, not because the people are corrupt,
+but because they lack values and glamour of their own.
+They have no ethos, they have no myth, they have no simplest
+story in which the elements of the laboring life take on
+essential and intrinsic worth. Lincoln, let it not be overlooked,
+became a corporation lawyer—like any movie hero.
+And Whitman has not yet been translated into American
+speech. But when a poet does arise, inspired to sing, as Burns
+did for his people, the values and virtues of laboring men as
+men, rather than as aspirants to wealth, the masses will follow
+him—even in the movies.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>It is significant that no one has yet given the movie audience
+a set of values other than the prevailing. Has anyone
+tried? We suspect that such a poet would not languish in the
+anterooms of all the movie magnates.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And one reason for our confidence is the unique case of
+Charlie Chaplin. The average moviegoer does not love Chaplin
+more than he does Doug Fairbanks or Harold Lloyd or
+Lon Chaney because he thinks that Chaplin is a greater artist.
+The average movie fan believes that the high art of the screen
+is in such stars as Swanson or the Gishes. He is likely to be
+a bit ashamed of his love for Charlie. There are a dozen more
+“admired” actors. But the average American loves Chaplin
+most tenderly because Chaplin on the screen is so often a
+poor cuss of the people who remains one: and who “puts it
+over,” not by becoming a millionaire, but by remaining a
+human being. Charlie as waiter, bricklayer, fireman, bank
+sweeper, pawnbroker’s assistant, convict, is not at the tale’s
+end and in accordance with film formula, the owner of the
+restaurant, the contractor, the fire commissioner, the banker,
+the police lieutenant. He remains, fragilely, wholly, triumphantly,
+of the people. (“The Gold Rush,” in which Charlie
+strikes gold, is an exception.) He is the frail and unutterably
+sweet beginning of a movie mythos in which the common
+man may absorb poetic values not by changing his class, but
+<i>by becoming himself</i>. And this is the true reason why the
+common man adores him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Here is a first step in our American labor and farmer
+movement which remains to be taken. It consists in the creating
+of living values within the life of laborer and farmer.
+Only so will the extrinsic values of “getting ahead” and of
+“getting into another class” be displaced. When such living
+values exist, the radical movements organized to put labor
+into power will have something to work with.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1927</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>
+ <h4 class='c024'>3. THE COMEDY OF COMMERCE</h4>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c020'>Industrialism’s mood is tragic. In the early years, men’s
+wonder gave to it the glamour of romance. Something of the
+delicious terror memorialized in “The Castle of Otranto”
+went to men’s consideration of these new giants fleshed of
+iron and belching steam. But the monsters’ bite was too hard;
+too dolorous was the displacement which they brought to
+good men’s lives. These were no proper prodigies like the
+“Gothic,” avenging merely wrongs and rescuing the noble.
+So the romantic mood grew swiftly dark. With the early
+socialists and anarchists, it took on the Doom note of prophecy.
+Zola made it tragic. In the muckraking days of our
+magazines, the tales of factory and mill were grey and ominous.
+They were, indeed, replicas of the infernos of our
+industrial towns. Laughter, like the hero-workman’s little girl,
+languished and died in those swart caves whose breath was a
+blast and whose light was a sear of fire.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id003'>
+<img src='images/i_116fp.jpg' alt='A busy, historical black and white photograph of a stock exchange trading floor, with men in suits reading papers amidst scattered ticker tape on the ground.' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>But as industrialism became more the usual circumstance,
+we began to react against it. And our reaction, having as its
+aim recovery, was comedic. That particular response to the
+grim industrial glower, which is the Comedy of Commerce,
+has found perfection in America. In England, the monsters’
+bite has been too cruel. There are no spirits left, there is no
+energy, for the recovering laugh. In the Latin countries, the
+monsters’ sway is not bitter enough as yet to have provoked
+a systematic answer. (There are signs of it in France.) In
+Germany, as soon as industrialism flourished, the Teuton
+genius turned not to a balance of frolic or of smiles, but to
+an ideal compensation. The machine was drafted by neo-Hegelian
+argument into the soldierly service of Kultur. In
+America, we had no such metaphysical bent. The best we
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>could do with our industrial tragedy was to cover it up with
+a surface, coruscating and comedic.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The symbol of this new comedy is the electric light on
+Broadway. It is, of course, commercial and of industrial antecedents.
+It is bright, dazzlingly. It displays power and wealth,
+yet it does not reveal. Instead it covers, with its hard cold
+beams, the rather shoddy buildings. It distracts the eye from
+the beholding of sources. It is a light that blinds. Any artist
+will assure you that the electric light is <i>false</i>—in the sense that
+it deforms.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But thanks to such enterprise, it will soon be inexact to
+speak of our “industrial cities.” Industry must continue, of
+course, to have its home. But industry will not continue to
+control the tone and nature of our dwellings. It will be disguised
+or hidden. It will become as the kitchen or the plumbing
+system of our social house, as the bowels of our social
+body. And we will be outwardly bedecked and bedizened
+in an obtrusive laughter the ingredients of which, indeed, will
+be the results of industry, and the purpose of which will be
+to deny its parent.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Already, not alone New York among our splendid cities
+has cloaked this tragic source of its greatness in the comedy
+of commerce. Forget the blare of the Broadway lights, and
+think of the shop windows. How gaily drugstores, hardware
+stores, delicatessens, shine with their myriad cavorting forms
+and colors. Think of the newspapers whose columns of dour
+news are plentifully (and profitably) balanced with the comedic
+patter of the advertisements. In our popular magazines,
+the reaction is complete. The mill town is disappearing from
+them; the honest workman’s daughter languishes less in print.
+It is the doughty salesman, the go-getter of commerce, with
+his steed a motor and his muse a flapper, who commands the
+pages not already commandeered by “National Advertisers.”
+Our more sophisticated books reveal the same aversion. Our
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>“first-line” critics must, above all, be comic—if not clowns.
+They must provide the sedative of laughter. And the books
+they tout do likewise. Tragedy is <i>nefas</i>. The tragic stuff
+about us has cowed our spirit from the enterprise of making
+it a means for that joyous confrontation of truth which is
+tragedy. We glance off into comedy—if not farce. And the
+cleverism, the anecdote, the epigram, the swift cartoon—so
+close to the heart of the salesman—clutter as well the minds
+of our intellectual classes.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is so with the theatre. In such a typical success as “The
+Show-Off” (called our best comedy by many of the reviewers)
+a minor role fell to Industry. Not the boy mechanic who
+actually <i>invents</i> is the hero; but the salesman, the show-off,
+the man who by empty bluff and in utter ignorance of the
+product he is pushing, <i>puts over</i> the invention. The industrial
+source of wealth remains wistfully indulged and sedulously
+hidden beneath the noisy comedy of commerce.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/i_119fp.jpg' alt='A moody, low-light black and white photograph of a couple dancing closely, captured with a slight motion blur.' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p>© <i>Ernst W. von Seckendorff</i></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>The comedy of commerce is a comedy of display. It is a
+denial of the industrial gloom by a boast of brightness. And
+yet its materials and its very rhythms are conditioned tragically
+by the tragic world it aims to deny. It is only a disguise;
+often frenetic, often wistful, never more than momently
+successful. Nowhere is this more plain than in the music of
+the comedy of commerce—Jazz. I do not desire to discuss the
+music roots of jazz: whether they lead you back to the Barbary
+Coast of San Francisco or to the Argentine or to the
+Congo. The product we have naturalized is the song of our
+reaction from the dull throb of the machine. Jazz syncopates
+the lathe-lunge, jazz shatters the piston-thrust, jazz shreds the
+hum of wheels, jazz is the spark and sudden lilt centrifugal to
+their incessant pulse. Jazz is a moment’s gaiety, after which
+the spirit droops, cheated and unnurtured. This song is not
+an escape from the Machine to limpid depths of the soul. It
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>is the Machine itself! It is the music of a revolt that fails. Its
+voice is the mimicry of our industrial havoc.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You will find this irony in all corners of our successful
+world. Industry is the source of our power and of our sorrow.
+We are ashamed of its ugliness, hurt by its cruelties. We
+will employ the power it gives us to escape the sorrow. We
+seem so adept! We have ten thousand gay contrivances, all
+born of industry, to hide it. But all of them are like that
+paragon, the motor. Its chief purpose, of course, is to carry
+us away from factory smoke: ourselves figuratively, and the
+laborers whose Fords stand parked outside the mill, literally,
+when the day’s work is done. But alas! the machine that carries
+us away from industrialism carries its spirit along. The
+clever story in the <cite>Satevepost</cite>, the bungalow, the radio, the
+song and dance—all the little acts of the comedy of commerce—hold
+the bitter taste, essentialize the spirit and the
+forms of the industrial discomfort they are supposed to combat.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Comedy of Commerce is a failure. It is an antidote
+brewed of the poison it would save from. We must go deeper
+for a healing laughter. Laughter that heals must come from
+health, not from the disease. It must spring from the whole
+vision and whole experience of life, not from a mere shrewd
+juggling and twisting of any of life’s products.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1925</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>4. JAZZ AND FOLK ART</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>In “The Comedy of Commerce,” I referred to jazz, not in
+uncomplimentary terms, but critically as an instance of the
+art of a commerce- and industry-ridden people. Many readers
+gave protest. So far as I could see, the chief point against me
+was that I had dared be critical of a folk art. Jazz, went their
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>sentimental plaint, was the expression of a people. (I had not
+denied it.) Hence, hands off! Hence, down on worshipful
+knees!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There has, indeed, been abroad for a full century the
+curious notion that folk art—as once the king—can do no
+wrong: that folk art is necessarily good art: that the critic
+who dares to question folk art commits the unpardonable sin.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is a point I would examine briefly, forgetting jazz
+as the mere pretext for it. The notion, to begin with, seems
+to be quite modern. Before Rousseau, folk art was known,
+of course; was appreciated; was, indeed, taken for granted.
+It was neither idealized nor despised. It was the art of the
+folk: the elite regarded it with the same relative eye with
+which they looked upon the people. The people was the mass,
+the soil, the loam, whence they had sprung; the body, if you
+will, for the aristocratic spirit. It was indispensable and it was
+causally, if not finally, good. No tyrant could think otherwise,
+without deleting the very substance of his power.
+Molière, in the first act of “Le Misanthrope,” expressed the
+common philosophic attitude toward folk art. To excoriate
+the precious nonsense of Oronte, Alceste quotes a popular
+Parisian ditty, and declares it vastly better than the sophisticate’s
+sonnet. He shatters the courtier with a point which
+today would be altogether lost. For he is uttering a paradox.
+Here, in our language, is the gist of his attack: “This popular
+Parisian song—you know its class—may not be much; but it <i>is</i>
+sincere, sweet, lovely. And your sonnet, M. Oronte, which
+should of course be an improvement on such primitive traits,
+shows but their total loss.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The crowning of folk art is a corollary from Rousseau
+who preached a “return to Nature”—as if civilized man were
+somehow miraculously out of nature; and “a return to infancy”—as
+if his own doctrines had not been the dream of a
+weary adult. If you accept the Rousseauistic premise, the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>modern notion follows about art. The best art, then, will be
+the least cultured, the most primitive, the most childlike. And
+poor man, addicted hopelessly to beauty, had best pursue
+his weakness in the art of folk who, thinking least, are least
+attainted. If, however, you reject the creed of Rousseau—which
+does not mean that you deny his value and his genius;
+if it seems clear to you that civilized man belongs as much to
+nature as a tree does, and that man’s need to live well, to
+know true, to aim high, is as healthy and as natural a function
+as the tree’s to grow good roots and blossom, then this indiscriminate
+adoring of folk art, merely because it <i>is</i> folk art,
+is nonsense.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Dante was once ten years old. He was a remarkable child.
+He babbled sonnets and rondeaux which revealed his nature.
+Do you put the prattlings he produced at ten before the
+“Divina Commedia” he composed at fifty? If you are the
+usual folk-art worshiper, why not? Were those lyric works
+of Dante’s youth not the pure Dante? the untrammeled sign
+and substance of his soul? Were they not Dante’s folk art?
+And the “Divina Commedia”! what alien and sophisticate and
+unoriginal matters dulled the raptures of his early years to
+this! Aristotle, Aquinas, Virgil, the apocalypses of Jerusalem,
+the pseudo epigraphia of Alexandria—the whole theology and
+logic of the school-men had to “debauch” the pure Dante, ere
+he was ready to write his intricate, conscious poem. If you
+are a real lover of art, surely you will turn with mild disgust
+from the “Commedia” to his childhood singing.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I do not think this caricature of the folk art fad is too
+unjust to sharpen a just point. It is literally true that if greatness
+be ever in a man or a race, it must potentially have been
+there at the outset. Therefore the beginning expressions of
+that man or race will hold the germ of their significance.
+Most men, moreover, fail (perhaps most races also) to fulfill
+their spiritual promise. The promise universally exists. No
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>child, no child-race is without it. Only the mature achievement
+is rare. And so it follows that the search for spiritual
+values among children will be, by and large, more fruitful
+than among men and women. But to say that the art expression
+of all children gives more than the art expression of all
+adults, because children all have the germ and adults seldom
+the flower—only this bad logic can lead us to conclude that
+child art and folk art are best, or even always good. Folk art
+is the seed of great art: seeds are more numerous than flowers.
+To cultivate the seed at the expense of the flower is a
+defeatism and a folly we are not quite cured of.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But folk art is not naïve in its elements, any more than
+are the babblings of the “purest” child. It is, more often, the
+naïve mirroring and mimicry of ideas caught from above.
+The emotions of folk art are childish. Yet they are the result
+of unconsciously inherited ideas, imposed by ruling classes.
+Take, for instance, the folk arts of medieval Christian Europe,
+the spirituals of the American Negro slave. Did the folk invent
+the intricate theology and philosophy on which they
+rested? Rather, they vulgarized the product of intellectual
+minorities—Prophets, Plato, Plotinus and the Patrists: made it
+a pabulum, at last, which later intellectuals could re-employ
+for the creating of more cultivated art. Another example:
+Russian folk music reveals traces of liturgical and synagogical
+music. Now, a new group of cultivated artists—Rimsky,
+Stravinsky, Ornstein—reforms this popularized pabulum of
+older minorities into a fresh intellectualized music.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id003'>
+<img src='images/i_123fp.jpg' alt='A high-angle, black and white aerial photograph showing a dense, rigid grid of urban city blocks and buildings with long afternoon shadows.' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p>© <i>Fairchild Aerial Surveys</i></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Or consider our jazz. Jazz is not so much a folk music—like
+the Negro spirituals—as a folk accent in music. It expresses
+well a mass response to our world of piston rods, cylinders and
+mechanized laws. The response is of the folk and is passive.
+The nature of our world itself is due to the work and temperament
+of minorities alien to the jazzmakers. Jazz expresses
+a personal maladjustment to this world, righted by sheer and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>shrewd compliance. And this, doubtless, is why the races at
+once most flexible and most maladjusted—the Negro and the
+Jew—give the best jazz masters. Since the rhythm of our age
+is not transfigured in jazz, as in truly creative art, but is assimilated,
+the elements of the age itself which we may disapprove
+will appear also in jazz. In other words, a folk art—being so
+largely an art of reaction and of assimilation—will contain the
+faults of the adult minorities that rule the folk, as well as the
+pristine virtues of the people.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And we have other folk arts. “The Rosary”—jazzless,
+European saccharine—is as truly a folk art as any of the
+Berlin or Gershwin ditties. Harold Bell Wright’s books—messes
+of Victorian notions in decay—are also an American
+folk art. The New York “Daily News” is the daily art of a
+folk numbering several millions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The adorers of folk art in its own divine right need but
+observe what they adore. That will be enough to cure them.
+Nor should they forget that in all culturally early epochs,
+dissatisfaction with folk art is one of the incentives for the
+production of great art.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1926</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>5. STRAIGHT STREETS</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>What is the meaning of our cities of rectangular streets?
+What is their effect on our souls? It is plain that Nature likes
+curves. You may find rough angles in rocky mountain wastes,
+or in the sort of creature that a microscope makes vaguely
+visible. But the Nature of man and near to man is a sinuous,
+rounded being. Think of our bodies and of the bodies of animals—not
+a Euclidean angle in the lot. Think of the shapes of
+flowers, plants, trees; of the configuration of the hills and
+fields; of the sweep of waters; of the globe. Now think of our
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>interior worlds. Our physical dynamo has not a straight line
+in it. And our mental digestion is tortuous as our intestines.
+Logic may proceed theoretically like a plummet; but there’s
+nothing natural in such logic. Draconian justice might
+be called rectilinear, but it, too, does not exist in Nature.
+Uprightness when it is not tempered by the curves of mercy
+is repellent. Man’s mind moves in curves. His thoughts arch,
+vault, melt into reverie. Dream and sense swerve into each
+other. His heart, too, is full of arcuations. And the heart’s desires
+are parabolas. There is naught angular within us. Nor
+above us. Space, we have learned from Riemann, has a crimp
+and a curve. The “straight gravitational line” of Newton
+proves to be the “Einstein shift.” From the detour of solar
+systems back upon themselves within a spheroid Space, to the
+devexities of dream, man has a universe full of everything but
+angles. And yet, the American urbanite has elected to spend
+his days in a gridiron.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The towns of the Old World were and still are curved
+creatures. From Iceland to the Cape of Good Hope you will
+not find an ancient city that does not gyre like a heart or
+twist like the intestines. Indeed, the European links angles
+with humanity only in his thought of death. Christ was killed
+on a cross. St. Laurentius was roasted on a grid. When the
+fanatical Felipe of Spain built a monastery to express his contempt
+for life and his withdrawal to the grave, he patterned
+it after a gridiron.<a id='r5'></a><a href='#f5' class='c025'><sup>[5]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Curves rest: angles tire. How often the American abroad
+lets his eye float down the gentle swerve of a street and is
+soothed sensuously, and is moved as by a freshet of pleasant
+impulse. It is the curve! The jolliest street in Manhattan—the
+one that is most human, most laughing, most restful—is Broadway,
+which has a curve or two; and even at its straightest runs
+diagonally to the ruthless grid, thus giving the delusion of a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>flex. No wonder it has become the avenue of shows, the road
+for informal saunterings clear up to Harlem. No wonder the
+automobile, our pathetic symbol of escape, has made Broadway
+its home.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If straight bobbed hair delights, the reason is that it sets
+off the curves of our girl’s face. Her straight dress has value
+in so far as it reveals the rondures of her body. American
+civilization has revolutionized the shape of cities. It may yet
+appreciably alter the shape of man.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For we seem to be angularized in almost everything else.
+Not alone our streets are straight and stiff. Our houses are
+as rigid as if they were made of the building blocks of
+Brobdingnagian babes. Where else is there a spectacle like the
+recently grown splendor of Park Avenue—that parade of
+pompous tombs, shutting in wealth and shutting out the sun?
+Is it possible that the disfavor of Riverside Drive as a residence
+street among our leaders is due to the swinging rise and
+fall of that untypical parkway? Our laws, like our houses,
+become more rectangular and upright. Our morals are strait
+like the gates of Ellis Island. Even our faces.... If there be
+in all the world a human countenance made of angles instead
+of the immemorial curves, it must be that of Calvin Coolidge.
+So perhaps biology will give way after all to the rectangular
+will of our American world. Perhaps the flapper of tomorrow
+will have pyramidal breasts....</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is a reason for all this, and a good one. If you care
+to go to the heart of the matter you entrain by the Santa Fé
+and alight in some New Mexican pueblo.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Indian’s culture is prophetic of what our culture must
+be. His nature is a guide to the understanding and achievement
+of our own. This does not mean that we are going to
+give up motors, and dress in paint and feathers, nor that the
+skyscraper will dwindle to the wigwam, nor even that our
+women at some distant date will be swinging their papooses
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>across their shoulders. But it does mean that there is something
+deeper than these discrepancies between the Indian and
+ourselves. Something deeper, which we share.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Amerind was profoundly, beautifully adjusted to the
+land. If you study him in his demeanor, his dance, his music,
+his pyramiding pueblos or his simple tepees, in his flinted
+arrows, in his decorations, you will find that the general symbol
+of his expression is a curve so sharp and so severe that
+it barely escapes being an angle. The curve is the way of
+acceptance: the angle is the way of resistance. America is a
+feverish world. Its geological tempo is not like that of Europe.
+It is far more terribly intense. I am certain that when the
+ancestors of the Indian crossed to America from Mongolia
+(or Atlantis) they resisted this atmospheric fury, as have we,
+with an angular restraint. That reaction was not a culture,
+any more than our present reactions from Europe or from
+mechanical civilization constitute a culture. The Indian culture
+began when his innate spiritual and intellectual values
+formed a solution with the world about him: his culture was
+achieved when the responses between his soul and the world
+had rounded into a unified <i>life</i> which expressed both fully.
+After many ages, the Indian’s first reactive restraint toned
+down, and became the subtle and fertile curve of the Indian
+music, the symbolic gesture of his dance, the exquisite reticence
+of his demeanor.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Recently Dr. Jung of Zurich was in this country and
+made a visit to the pueblos in which he had been rightly
+advised that he would find archetypical remains of classic
+Indian culture. Dr. Jung had psychoanalyzed many Americans,
+and found in them all (whether their ancestry was
+Nordic, Latin or Semitic) a unique alliance of <i>wildness and
+restraint</i> which did not exist in the European nature. Dr.
+Jung’s intuition told him that he would find this combination,
+so hidden in our souls, culturally expressed in the Indian
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>pueblo. He was right. Despite the ponderous luggage with
+which we came from Europe and which so differs from what
+the Indian brought along, we must inevitably go the Indian’s
+way in the spirit, since we have come his way in the flesh.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When Babbitt tells us that American towns are laid out
+“regular” because it “pays,” he does not know how deeply
+he is right. Regularity and angularity pay, indeed, because
+such is the beginning of our self-assertion against a cosmic
+factor. In our straight streets, in our jazz, in our dress, in our
+morals, in our lantern-jaw Puritans, in our raillike girls, we
+manifest the first stage of resistance to the furious fire which
+is the nature of our world. The rigid angles will smooth out,
+will take on the curves of life—will become the forms of our
+American culture.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1925</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>
+ <h3 class='c023'><i>III. IDEAS</i></h3>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>1. SERIOUSNESS AND DADA</h4>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div>(<i>An Exchange with Malcolm Cowley</i>)</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h5 class='c019'>a.</h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>It is possible in small space to touch but briefly, and upon
+one of its phases, the complex and defunct Dada movement.
+Its immediate progenitors were the Italian heirs of Athens
+and of Rome—they called themselves futurists: a restless Jew
+whose ancestors had settled in Rumania brought it to Paris.
+It had behind it, therefore, the ripe Mediterranean littorals
+and the full growth of Europe. It was a salutary burst of
+laughter in a world that felt itself too old. Europe was crystallized
+and desired a solvent. It creaked in stratified forms
+and laws and notions, and it yearned to explode.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The War was a violent but unsatisfactory excursion of a
+similar sort. The ponderous machinations of diplomacy had
+prepared this laughter of young millions rushing to a bright
+shambles from the straitened gloom of ordered cities and inherited
+farms. But the war was too superficial. Jaded Europe
+learned the inconsequent effect of such inebriety as death and
+murder. The deep spirit of the land was unmoved by columns
+of men miles long and by guns that raked cities. It was
+the esthetes of France—the solemn romanticists, the shrill
+Parnassians, the symbolists, the votaries of Bergson, it was the
+pragmatists of Germany and the rhetoricians of Italy, who
+invited the release of Dada by their formulations, hedgings-in
+and dogmas. There is no doubt that the face of Europe
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>yearned for the smashing of a few cathedrals. But also
+the heart of Europe hungered after the battering of a few
+spiritual laws.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Dada was an emanation of this will of a too sober, too
+mature, too sanctified rationalist church. Scampering in disarray
+against metrics and the still more cloying bondages of
+“freedom,” imping against the roll of such millstones as
+Truth, as Unity, as Beauty, Dada was as logical as the most
+Freudian hallucination. It was an eruption, a breakup, a
+shower: it was a jag and a reversion. And having cooled the
+face of the old land and made Europe forget her uncomfortable
+age, it disappeared.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Good jokers, the Dadaists were: wistful creators, against
+sour sense, of sweet absurdity. But they did nothing more
+ridiculous than the installation of the Dada mood in American
+letters. Europe called for Dada by antithesis: America for
+analogous reasons calls for the antithesis of Dada. For America
+<i>is</i> Dada. The richest mess of these bean-spillers of Italy, Germany
+and France is a flat accord beside the American chaos.
+Dada spans Brooklyn Bridge; it spins round Columbus Circle;
+it struts with the Ku-Klux Klan; it mixes with all brands of
+bootleg whisky; it prances in our shows; it preaches in our
+churches; it tremolos at our political conventions. Dada is in
+the typical Western university that spends $50,000 on cows
+and $200 on books. It is in the esthetics of Mr. Bryan, whose
+favorite work of art is any old Madonna. It is in the commercial
+comedy of our advertisements. (<span class='sc'>Do Your Duty:
+Chew Mixlets Gum. Be an American: Throw Your Rubbish
+Here.</span>) It is in the counterpoint of callow Hollywood
+and the immemorial desiccation of the California desert. It is
+in the medley of strutting chimneys and bowed heads, of
+strutting precepts and low deeds that make America. We are
+a hodgepodge, a boil. We are a maze of infernos and nirvanas.
+Our brew of Nigger-strut, of wailing Jew, of cantankerous
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>Celt, of nostalgic Anglo-Saxon, is a brew of Dada. No wonder
+they imported our essential chaos to lighten the regularities
+of France! But we are young, and what we need is a bit
+of mature action. We are fantastic ourselves, and what we
+need is integrating thought. We are the most fecund joke on
+earth—for the overserious others. What we need, by way of
+rounding our lives into livableness, is a bit of seriousness for
+ourselves.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Our complexities provoke strange paradox in our deeds.
+Ourselves a spontaneous combustion of contrariety and antithesis,
+there grew up in us a fear and a shame of the spontaneous.
+(This is, of course, a trait of adolescence.) In order
+to become unspontaneous, we turned to Europe. Our attention
+was caught by a lot of youths of age on a “bust” of
+spontaneous laughter. In all solemnity, we artificed their
+spontaneity, crowning thereby the best of the Dada jokes.
+But we did not create Dada art. Dada art arose from the
+traditional maturity of Europe. The intellectual stuff and
+stamina, in our own case, were lacking: and what we got
+were weakling strains of the European pose muddled with
+American incompetence and lost against the background of
+American bewilderment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A healthy reaction to our world must, of course, be the
+contrary of Dada: it must be ordered and serious and thorough.
+Dada worked well in overmature Europe. We, by analogue,
+must be fundamental, formal. That, indeed, is the
+proper mood of youth. The young cutup in the literature of
+our land is the bromide. We need him doubtless, but humbly
+in the rank and file. To be coruscant, smart and swift in the
+American language is to be platitudinous and banal. Therefore
+it is that the literature which poses as most advanced in
+the United States is for the most part quite the contrary—is
+as undifferentiate, indeed, from the common wallow, as the
+Mecca Mosque on Fifty-fourth Street, as the Hearst headlines,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>or as were the jokes of Josh Billings. Our cosmopolites
+who think that they are emulating Aragon and Cocteau and
+Firbank, our local realists and shockers who think they are
+reforming us, are all in reality but sweepings of the immense
+centrifugal action of the American world. Our surface twists
+and scintillates and shrieks. They are caught in it, they are
+slavish functions of the American mass which they profess to
+lead. They are the reflections of a world that is Dada and
+that is in danger of becoming narcissistic: of growing infatuated
+with its own twitching image.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The first step in the absorption and control of our Dada
+Jungle is the achievement of a serious, of a literally religious
+temper. The academies are turned away from America: their
+earnestness is frivolous. The neoclassicists are turned away
+from America: their nostalgia is anemic and their grace is
+shallow. The realists are submerged by America. The pragmatists
+are bluffed by America. The clever and decorative boys
+who clutter our “serious” magazines are reflecting not even
+America’s surface, but Europe’s thirsty reflection of our surface.
+None of this is serious, although doubtless all of this
+has its place in the chemistry of ferment....</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If we can produce a handful of serious creators—men
+unafraid of unpopular words like philosophy, profundity,
+saintliness, devotion—and if we can keep them alive and at
+work a score of years, perhaps there’ll be a start toward integration:
+and after several hundred years, we may be mature
+enough to inspire a Dada of our own.</p>
+
+<h5 class='c019'>b.</h5>
+
+<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Dear Mr. Frank</i>:</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>The progress of literature (and here progress does not
+imply a betterment) is largely a series of reactions, a passage
+from one extreme to the other: romanticism succeeding
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>classicism, realism against romance, estheticism against naturalism
+and Dada against the esthetes. But given the fact that
+every national literature starts from a different point and
+follows a different course, their reactions of a given moment
+can hardly be the same. For American writers to revolt from
+the tradition of Remy de Gourmont or Mallarmé is empty
+imitation, a gesture with no more significance than could be
+given to a French protest against anticigarette laws in the
+state of Kansas.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To this measure your attack, in the last issue of 1924,
+against a hypothetical group of American Dadas was completely
+justified. It would have been more valuable, however,
+less obviously biased, had you gone on to consider that the
+progress of literature is also a discovery of new principles,
+involving a rejection or reaffirmation of the old; and that such
+principles are international.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To call Dada “a ‘bust’ of spontaneous laughter” was
+absurd. You were on safer ground when you spoke of it as
+a reaction against European writers whom you listed as “the
+solemn romanticists, the shrill Parnassians, the symbolists, the
+votaries of Bergson&#160;... the pragmatists of Germany and
+the rhetoricians of Italy”; or when you added that since few
+of these schools were represented in America, a similar
+American reaction would be stupid.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But Dada was also a discovery: that nonsense may be the
+strongest form of ridicule; that writing is often worst when
+it is most profound, saintly or devoted and best when it is
+approached in a spirit of play; that associational processes of
+thought often have more force than the logical; that defiance
+carried to the extremes of bravado is more to be admired
+than a passive mysticism.<a id='r6'></a><a href='#f6' class='c025'><sup>[6]</sup></a> Dada was the sense of exhilaration
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>which was born when our old shackles were tested and found
+to be rusted away.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was nothing geographical in these discoveries. But
+you prefer to play geographer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You have been to Paris and carry back the gossip of
+Monsieur X the poet and Monsieur Y the novelist. Other
+American writers (I was one) have been to Paris. Some met
+Paul Fort and wrote polyphonic prose in his manner, some
+met Paul Valéry and became classicists, some met Soupault
+or Tzara and wrote a Yankee Dada, some met Jules Romains
+and his little group, studied his treatises, adopted his more
+solemn faults with some of his virtues and are proud to be
+called the Unanimists of America. There were a few Americans
+who met many writers of many schools, took the best
+of each and retained enough personal force to write about
+their own surroundings in their own manner, but you, Mr.
+Frank, are not generally included in their number.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Neither am I. One tries to keep free of the ten schools
+and two academies, but in this day of slogans we must all be
+ticketed, must possess a little slip of red, white or yellow
+cardboard printed with a name. I was in doubt which name
+to choose, but your article decides me. Let me therefore be
+considered as your butt: the clever but not coruscant, smart
+or swift young man who clutters our more serious magazines,
+the American Dada.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Malcolm Cowley</span></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-l'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Dear Mr. Cowley</i>:</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was good of you to send me a copy of what you consider
+your answer to my article “Seriousness and Dada,” with
+the invitation that I—as you phrase it—“continue the debate.”
+I have read carefully what you say; and I am forced to conclude
+that if there is to be a debate upon the principles suggested
+in my little essay, it has yet to begin. Until it does,
+I rest.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>Many questions of fact rather than of theory are brought
+up, it is true, by your letter: but they are irrelevant to the
+issue. I might point out that your definition of the progress
+of letters is a good juvenile one, defining nothing. I might
+suggest, after your linking of the term “mysticism” with the
+adjective “passive” that you study a mystic, taking your
+choice from Hosea, Plato, Paul, Plotinus, Gabirol, Abélard,
+Aquinas, Bernard, Roger Bacon, Dante, Spinoza, Pascal,
+Teresa, Calvin, Blake, Dostoevski, Whitman, or any other
+who may appeal to you, and explain to us why and how this
+mysticism is passive. Finally, I might refer to your allusion
+to myself as having “been in Paris and returned with the gossip
+of M. X. and M. Y.” or to your veiled reference to my
+American “unanimism,” as convicting you of an impertinence
+which in turn is the result of an ignorance so essential as to
+disqualify you in your present temper from true intelligent
+discussion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>However, all of this is aside the point of my paper which
+sought by no means to destroy American Dada, but merely
+to put it snugly in its little place. The one statement in your
+letter which has the force of relevance is that in which you
+volunteer to be considered an American Dada. Of course,
+one must accept you so, since you insist upon it. I admit,
+however, that I for one could accept you in this guise with
+less regret had not my acquaintance with your poetry convinced
+me that you will be fit for better things when you
+achieve the moral courage to confront the reality of our
+world, and the spiritual energy to take issue with it; instead
+of permitting yourself to be flung off by its centrifugal
+action, in the fond belief that because you fly off to Nothing
+in a graceful pirouette and with a foreign oath upon your
+lips you are being any the less booted and beshat by the very
+elements of life which you profess to despise.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>W. F.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span><i>This exchange appeared in the December issue of 1924, a little
+magazine edited and published by Edwin Seaver.... Of course,
+out of Dada have come the surréalistes; and the best of their leaders
+(Tristan Tzara, Louis Aragon, André Breton, etc.) combine
+their romantic creed with communism. Malcolm Cowley has
+moved in a similar direction. At least one of the important writers
+associated with Dada, Pierre Drieu La Rochelle, has moved into
+fascism, like Marinetti and other earlier Italian futurists.</i></p>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>2. MR. MENCKEN, KING OF THE PHILISTINES</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>America, which protects its deer and partridges, still has
+perpetual open season for philosophy hunting. Dr. Durant
+turned “The Story of Philosophy” into a best seller by the
+shrewd device of leaving philosophy out and putting in its
+place anecdotal stories, whole chapters on nonmetaphysical
+authors, and his own not too subtly diffused contempt for
+the entire silly business of “ultimate problems.” John Dewey,
+the most characteristic American mind of his generation, has
+always been an antiphilosopher at heart (with unconscious
+vestiges of the poor side of Hegel). And here is Mr. Mencken,
+tripping upon the autumnal scene, all decked out in leather
+jerkin, hunting cap, cartridge belt, and his usual supply of
+automatic popguns.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“If you want to find out,” says Mr. Mencken, “how a
+philosopher feels when he is engaged in the practice of his
+profession, go to the nearest zoo and watch a chimpanzee at
+the wearying and hopeless job of chasing fleas. Both suffer
+damnably and neither can win.” The “fleas” in this case, you
+realize, are truth, the absolute, any ultimate concept of the
+real world, any distinction at all between reality and appearance.
+Elsewhere, in the same lofty Menckenian column, the
+same matter is called “bunk.” “For the absolute, of course,”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>he absolutely assures us, “is a mere banshee. No such thing
+exists. Philosophy in the narrow technical sense”—read, in
+the sense of the whole silly lineage from Pythagoras to
+Whitehead—“is largely moonshine and wind music.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>At last I know, from Mr. Mencken’s rigorous definitions,
+what is his secret desire: the unsated hunger which all his
+literary work has struggled to fulfill. Since, to his mind,
+philosophy is bunk and wind and moonshine, is it not clear
+that Mr. Mencken looks upon himself as a writer of philosophy?
+And if he strives to sharpshoot all the other philosophical
+fellows off the field, who can blame him, since he
+knows that his own particular brand of brass fanfare is
+the best for us?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us therefore take him as a philosopher: take him seriously,
+I mean, of course. And consider the matter of this
+“bunk” of metaphysics. A moment’s inquiry should make
+clear that if the philosophical “woolgathering” of man is
+to be judged merely by practical results—by results in the
+way man has lived; in contrast with the metaphysicians, the
+builders of temples were builders in sand, the makers of
+empires were but furious blowers of bubbles.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course, the findings of metaphysics—the logic of reality,
+and of epistemology—the logic of knowledge, are disputed,
+disputable, relative, impermanent. What is not? Even the
+term “eternal” is a pitiful, anthropomorphic thing, having
+no life and no sense save in the mouth of the evanescent
+creature who knows himself for mortal. If you will have
+nothing less than the eternal, what will you do with language,
+music, economics? what with religions, empires, arts? Do
+these outlast philosophy? On the contrary, they rest and
+have ever rested upon it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Take the age of the Upanishads, nearly thirty centuries
+behind us. Do we speak the language of that day? We speak
+its philosophical thought. Do we live by its arts, its customs,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>its gods, its laws? Yet its metaphysics is a cogent factor in
+modern psychology, in modern letters. The era of the Upanishads
+is living for us, solely through its professional philosophers—those
+“idle” <i>sitters-about</i> who spent their days spinning
+webs about Absolute and Will—webs so marvelously
+strong that they have outlasted cities and cultures.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What exists now of the Greece and Magna Græcia of
+the sixth century before Christ? Chiefly Pythagoras: and
+through him a good deal of history, ancient and modern, of
+science, ancient and modern, of mathematics, of physics, of
+religious doctrine. From his philosophy of number came the
+science of numbers: came Euclid: came the whole forever
+adumbrating realm of physics and mechanics, the modern
+mathematics of analysis, the modern critical realism (via
+other philosophers, of course, like Descartes and Leibnitz)
+which in men like Mach, Einstein, Russell, Whitehead, is
+once again transfiguring the world. From the abstractions of
+these technical philosophers of preclassic Greece came Plato
+(even as Aeschylus and Tragedy came from the Eleusinians):
+came Aristotle, came Plotinus: came at last such fairly practicable
+structures as the whole civilization of Christian
+Europe. From the moonshine of such men as Pythagoras,
+Protagoras, Plato, Heraclitus, Democritus and Zeno, tough-minded
+men managed to build states, churches, sciences,
+atomic theories, machines. Similarly, the prophets of Israel,
+the wise men of India and North Africa—questers of that
+Absolute which, in their ignorance they called God or Atman,
+whereas Mr. Mencken in his more modern language calls it
+bunk or fleas—gave to man a concept so very real that
+he has dwelt in it, builded from it his art, his ethics and his
+state, for many thousand years.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Mencken probably forgets that Bacon’s preparation
+for modern science was possible to him only because he
+rested wholly on a metaphysical faith: the assumption of an
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>absolute Order without which, as Hume points out, there
+could be no science, because there could be no deduction
+from particular to general, from appearance to Law, from
+passing effect to eternal Cause. So Newton, also, rose from
+an intricate, profound, world-satisfying structure of metaphysical
+faith which a whole lineage of “professional flea-chasers”
+from Plato to Aquinas had molded at last into the
+Christian Cosmos.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Perhaps Mr. Mencken does not know that Dante, Cervantes,
+Shakespeare, Goethe, had their metaphysics—had,
+above all, their masters, technical and abstruse, in metaphysics.
+Has not his careful study of the philosophical classics, which
+he assures us he “rereads every year when the weather is
+too hot for serious mental work,” revealed to him that his
+favorites, Conrad and Nietzsche, are romantic versions of
+Schopenhauer who, in turn, rests upon Kant and the philosophers
+of India? If he has no use for Kant, his disgust with
+the post-Kantian idealists (Hegel, for instance) is utterly
+beneath words. Yet, from these sources come psychoanalysis,
+Marxism, the Nietzschean anti-Marxism: come the non-Euclidean
+and <i>n</i>-dimensional geometers (Gauss, Riemann,
+Lobachevski, Minkowski), who in their turn nourished
+Lorentz, Einstein, the critical realists—makers of the modern
+world. And straight from Hegel is derived the impressionistic
+style in criticism which Mr. Mencken so adorns—since
+it is, indeed, his own.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is one of the burdens of philosophy that lesser men turn
+its noble doubts into dogmatic denials: chip from its high
+structure of critique little stones to fling against it. In all
+ages, heedless people accept what the great past bequeaths
+them, live by it, and betray it. The man who is most proud
+of his Buick is most contemptuous of the thinker whose intricate
+thought made his car possible. The man most at ease
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>in his Zion sneers most at the makers of the concepts which
+built his state and his morals.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1926</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>3. PSEUDO LITERATURE</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>The term, I believe, is Schopenhauer’s. He declared that
+there are two streams of writing, for the most part indistinguishably
+merged save for a very few. One of these, the
+effect of creative thought and of creative vision, he called
+literature; and all the rest, however pleasant and respectable,
+he outlawed. To go back to any flourishing epoch is to be
+convinced that Schopenhauer was right and that our present
+status is not essentially unique. The modish ladies of Weimar
+forsook Goethe for the “more modern” Kotzebue. Pradon and
+Quinault outbid Racine for favor. Alexandria, Rome, Athens,
+Jerusalem, had swarms of writers who were so close to the
+contemporary clamor that they have died with it into as whole
+a silence. The printing press and the mock crowning of
+demos have merely aggravated an immemorial condition.
+Where only a minority could read, only a minority could
+be idle readers. Now that everyone is forced to read, the
+flood of words without creative source is stintless, and there
+are organized for it great armies of “distributing agents,” of
+which an unconsciously servile group call themselves reviewers—even
+critics! The swollen plethora of pseudo literature
+has perhaps lowered the visibility of the real through
+its sheer mass. But if this be argued an increased deterrent
+to the life and health of literature it is more than overcome
+by the increasing of the potential public for what is good.
+The more persons who can read at all, the more may read
+what is authentic.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is then no good ground for the friend and writer
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>of literature to complain. He has traditionally addressed
+a minority in a minority; and it exists for him today. The
+new presence of hawkers and bawlers purveying printed
+goods to the mob has not altered his position any more than
+has the deformation of the democratic doctrine into the
+myth that everybody is as good as everybody else. If the
+writer hungers after enormous sales, he is the victim of confusion:
+unconsciously, he desires to leave his true domain. If
+he feels that he is entitled to the royalties of a Michael
+Arlen or to the popularity of a Fannie Hurst, the urgence
+of his vision must be very weak. For it is the glorious compensation
+of the wooers of beauty and of truth that all other
+of life’s guerdons are by contrast dull. To have heard clear,
+even once, the word of God is to hear it forever in all the
+calls of life.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>More serious and more concerning is another phase of
+this mutual attraction between the real with its rigorous solitude
+and the false with its populous cordialities. The purveyors
+of pseudo literature are so many that they fall into
+classes. They have their snobs, too, their social climbers. And
+there is among their readers an ample group sufficiently
+emerged from the rest to desire “culture” even at the cost
+of thrills. These persons are aware of the term “literature”
+and want their share in it. Their conception, of course, is
+derived from shallow study of the past. Incapable of recognizing
+the essence of an art, they dwell on its external traits
+and manners. And the contemporary writers who most flatter
+them are the emulators of these imitable parts. Such authors
+are competent in style, they are elegant, they reproduce in
+terms of up-to-dateness the forms and virtues of previous
+pioneers. Most of them will be novelists, dramatists, even
+poets. But they must have their critics. And to them falls
+the dangerous task of establishing a rationale for their kind;
+an aggressive apologia for all their sterile wares.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>The creative, the heroic, the religious spirit of true literature
+is by such critics utterly ignored; and by repeated omission
+comes to be regarded as nonexistent. The novel which
+flows well, the tale which is pleasing, the construction which
+reflects current thought or current passion is hailed as <i>good</i>,
+and the more reflective, hence passive, it is, the higher is rated
+its importance. Unconsciously, it is assumed that literature
+has no independent body: that its real substance is the public
+taste. From this fallacy it follows that criticism becomes a
+solemn discussion of secondary traits—timeliness, grace and
+color. The primary creative stuff of literature without which
+these secondary qualities can have no true existence is forgotten.
+The terms of what is genuine are borrowed for what
+is false. And the confusion grows.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What hungry common reader could dream, from contemporary
+criticisms of Mr. Hergesheimer, of Mr. Cabell, of
+Miss Cather—supply your own names from the current columns—that
+these are makers of books with an essential lack:
+a lack as crucial as that which parts organic death from life?
+The books of such novelists are competent in so far as they
+are elegant reflections of styles in form and thought and language.
+As contributions to the creative life of the mind and
+of the spirit, they are inept. Their source is neither a luminous
+vision nor an authentic knowledge; but rather the shrewd
+perusal of past masters and present moods. Neither their purpose
+nor their substance adds one iota to the experience of
+man. To call them literature is to degrade the name.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And it is precisely urgent that the name “literature” be
+not degraded. For there is much in a name: much directing
+of intelligence, much shaping of powers. And we possess
+an age in which intelligence is not small, but confused, in
+which powers are lavish, but debauched. A critic of our day
+as aware as were Abélard and Anselm, would be as concerned
+as they were with the pragmatic virtues of the Name. He
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>would know, as they did, that a confusion in words is the
+symbol of confusion in continents and souls. Much of the
+dangerous condition of our time springs from the fact that
+in the readjustment of social and spiritual forms, names have
+become the prostituted playthings of any fool or knave who
+wishes to mouth them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Thus, the gigantic reaches of pseudo literature from the
+Hearst papers to Harold Bell Wright, being allotted their
+proper place, do no great harm. They touch only the senses
+they appeal to; they convince only minds incapable of conviction;
+there is no formidable claque to name them other
+than they are. Far more pernicious is the snob class of pseudo
+literature; for it sails under false colors and of late it proceeds
+almost unchallenged.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The challenge of other days was a competent tradition.
+Pseudo literature has always thrived on pretension. But an
+audience to whom the classics, holy or profane, were valid
+had an incessant standard to protect it. If a French academician
+extolled Quinault, there was Euripides to answer.
+If an Alexandrian put out a bad pseudepigraphia of Ezra, the
+Chronicles could face him. Our situation is more arduous. In
+the general liquidation of old forms, the esthetic tradition has
+dissolved. We must build up a new critical standard not only
+within, but from the current chaos.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1925</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>4. “UTILITARIAN ART”</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>It is revealing that the notion of “art for art’s sake,” of
+art sprung from itself and for itself, arose with the utilitarianism
+of the nineteenth century. If you will read the conversations
+of Goethe, the prefaces of Racine, the notebooks of
+Leonardo, the prose works of Dante, and finally trace back
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>to Aristotle and to Plato, you may marvel (if you are a
+“modern”) at the ethical bias in all our classic art. Not alone
+Milton believed that he was writing “to justify the ways of
+God to men.” It is safe to say that if a respectable goldsmith
+of the Renaissance had been cornered for a “reason” for his
+work, he would have professed some moral or some religious
+purpose not too remote from that which moved the Alexandrians
+and the prophets. While theology was hale, esthetics
+was its handmaid. Later, art went into the service of the God
+of Reason; and later still, took on the harness of metaphysics
+when that logic had assumed the imperatives of revealed
+religion. Only when modern man has debauched the ideal of
+spiritual progress—old as the Hindus and the Hebrews—to a
+bare functional or mechanistic pattern do we come upon art so
+divinely considered that it may have no “purpose.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The reason for this is not far to seek. While man’s fate
+was still linked with gods or with godlike values, the arts could
+honorably serve. When that fate was mechanized into some
+economic or utilitarian or biological “design,” art rebelled
+and set up a church of its own. The dogma of “pure poetry”
+and of “art for art’s sake” is a reaction from the dogma of
+vulgar materialism and of “man for his belly’s sake.” Being
+a reaction, it partakes of the nature of the source whence,
+however obscurely, it has risen.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The doctrine of utilitarianism had two esthetic offspring.
+One is obvious: it is the art which in devious ways aims
+to “get results” in actual life. The debased condition of such
+art is coming to be suspected even by the bourgeoisie.
+The other offspring is the art of the Ivory Tower—the art
+of “esthetics”—the art of “purposelessness” and of aloofness.
+And I wish to make clear that these two are radically one.
+However they may differ in the intelligence that makes them,
+they are both utilitarian: they are both debased from art’s
+full function.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>The philosophy of utilitarian materialism defined life in
+terms of the pursuit of specific material values. (I speak of it in
+the past, for it still lingers only in the minds of tyros.) It
+committed the fallacy of taking some “end” or process <i>within</i>
+life—economic or sexual, personal or biological—and setting it
+up as the Cause. Like all geneticisms, it was illogical and was,
+indeed, refuted in the texts of the very philosophers whose
+shallow disciples had invented it. Now, the same point may,
+of course, be raised against the nugatory notion of “utilitarian
+art.” Whereas art in its full sense is an organic event of life,
+sensorily formed, autonomous and yet contingent, like any
+individual, on its living context, utilitarian art disavows this
+individual organism of art, and aims to reduce art’s essence to
+some specific effect within the world of men.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Examples of this class of instrumental or utilitarian art
+are everywhere about us. Such is the “art” of advertisement,
+of exhortation: such is the play “with a thesis,” the fiction of
+reformers like Upton Sinclair or H. G. Wells. Such, too,
+are the industrial “arts” whose purpose is to turn out <i>salable</i>
+machines, rather than <i>livable</i> ones, as was the purpose of the
+ancient craftsmen who worked for an intimate, spiritually
+harmonious client. The arts of the popular magazines are no
+less utilitarian. A story which strives simply to amuse is kin
+to the story which endeavors to reform. The novel that
+“cleaned up” the Chicago Packingtown may have been more
+laudable, it was not more utilitarian than the tale that aims
+merely at killing a few hours’ boredom. In both instances,
+you have that organic life process called art narrowed and
+debased to meet some specific sensory demand. Whether the
+demand be for clean meat or a vicarious amour, esthetically
+your books are of one class.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And as “utilitarian art” must be grouped—and condemned
+also—the current works of the esthetes. Mr. Cabell’s fancies
+may be more refined than Mr. Sinclair’s: they are as remote
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>from the whole province of art which can “help” in life by
+no less fact than that it <i>is</i> life. Mr. Cabell, engineering an
+escape from life, is not in the lineage of the masters: he is an
+epigone of the materialists who lowered the whole life process
+into a “struggle” for comfort or for survival. I see no essential
+esthetic difference between the schools of Mr. Cabell and
+Mr. Aldous Huxley, and that of Pollyanna. In the latter case,
+you get sugar instead of a whole experience of life; in the
+former, you get some acrid opiate. If this is in any way the
+revelation of a superior taste, then the jaded adult who adores
+rotted cheese is superior in taste to the child who calls for
+candy.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The organism of art is, of course, constructed of physical
+materials with sensory and ideological associations, even as
+is the individual life made up of physical substances. In life,
+these materials—chemical, mineral, vegetable—are mysteriously
+organized into the unitary, indivisible <i>living organism</i>.
+And in true art, the same holds. The sensory appeals—to eye,
+ear, appetite, memory, emotion—are the materials which the
+artist has composed into the organic whole called art: which
+differs from its elements, even as life from its ingredients. A
+utilitarian philosophy of life might be called one in which
+some group of these materials in life is made more causative
+than the whole. A utilitarian art, by analogue, is one in which
+the main matter (instead of the means) is some appeal to the
+senses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Purposely, my definition lumps with the commercial, the
+pornographic, the dully sensational artists, a whole school of
+haughty favorites: for instance, Virginia Woolf. Analyze
+“Jacob’s Room,” and what do you discover? A sensitive
+woman (the authoress) with deft hands picks to pieces the
+banal story of an English boy. Upon her nerves, its fragments
+register sensations. She is not, like James Joyce or D.
+H. Lawrence, composing these sensations into organic life.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span><i>They</i> are her end and she is using them for a personal sensory
+delectation which her reader may share. She is not creating
+at all: she is transposing.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You may apply, for yourself, the same criterion to our
+music or our painting. Is the composer building the sensory
+ingredients of his music into an organic life which transcends
+bare sense, as life transcends inorganic matter? or is he <i>using</i>
+his theme—transposing it perhaps from a well-known tonal
+to a striking dissonance—in order to get a sensory appeal?
+If this is his end, even though his name be thrice Russian,
+he is as completely a utilitarian artist as the man who writes
+a Buick advertisement.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1927</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>5. ART IN OUR JUNGLE</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>When you have done with the latest work on relativity
+or the theory of quanta, and the once so solid universe has
+melted into a mere congeries of spaceless, timeless, substanceless
+vibrations, go to some modern art gallery and bask in
+the certainties of our painters. For the best of these are men
+who hold to a reality or are resolved to re-establish it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>From Picasso to Weber, from Marin to Orozco, it is
+amazing how harmonious most of these painters and sculptors
+are, in their formal purpose, even in their formal use of color.
+They are builders of <i>structure</i>. Not of architectures or machines:
+not even, for the most part, of such designs as the
+fugue or the canon. The structure which they seek to produce
+is the answer to the chaos which they find about them. It is
+as if they were plunging through a liquidated world; and as
+they fall they build—in order to cease falling.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The best of them are workers in a crisis. Confusion of
+fundamentals is our atmosphere. Emergency in danger is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>their temper. Their response to the carpers who expect them
+to be pretty and pleasant is: “We need ground to stand on!”
+Would you criticize the manners of the man who rescued
+you at sea? or judge by metropolitan standard the costume
+of the fireman who led you from a blazing building? If not—and
+only then—are you in the proper mood to appreciate the
+contemporary artist.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us hope that the modern gallery director has interspersed
+a number of pretty or “academic” paintings among
+the works of the creators and of the seekers of form. They
+establish a curious dissonance. Who shall quarrel with dainty
+ladies flimsily attired and dancing to a rose? or with excellent
+gentlemen silk-hatted and promenading with a spaniel? But
+what if you find them at their peaceful antics on the walls
+of an embattled city? In some such way are men like Charles
+W. Hawthorne, Childe Hassam, Henri Martin, most of the
+British, out of place in a serious exhibition.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The capacity of any generation for misunderstanding its
+art is not mysterious: it is equal to, for it is the same thing
+as, each man’s capacity for ignoring the essence of his soul.
+How long is it, since you last heard the usual Wise Word
+about the whole esthetic movement since Cézanne? “Oh, ho—a
+Saturnalia of decay! These wistful little artists, so out of
+touch with the great world; reflecting their defeat, their
+impotence, their despair. These inadequate anarchists glorifying
+their own chaos! How lucky it is that we have Solid
+Science!” Well, your too-solid scientific world has melted.
+Gone is the atom, gone is ether, gone is the whole Mechanism
+in which, from Aristotle to Newton, man dwelt irrelevant
+and complacent. The conclusions of our physicists hurl us
+back, through three thousand years of certainties, to the
+“vagary” of the Upanishad: our universe is but the Breath
+of Brahma.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Relation, Vibration, entity of Movement, conformity of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>impalpable motions into a dream called substance—these are
+the lean relics of our centuries of science. And these are
+the precise materials with which the contemporary artist
+is creating truth and beauty!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The age which produces Picasso, Maillol, Brancusi, Derain,
+Braque, Marin, Juan Gris, Rivera, Orozco, is not alone an
+age of art: it is an age of classical and of religious creation.
+Only the labelmakers, the “wordmen” are lacking, in order
+that we may know it. These artists are, if anything, too
+somberly intent upon their basic purpose. Were the saints
+more pure to their ideal? Man Ray extracts the essential
+line of jazz, and has no time for dancing. Picasso establishes
+the formal counterpoint in a woman’s body, and has no eye
+for the woman. Brancusi’s Bird is the bird at its height: a sort
+of hero-bird which neither mates, sleeps nor builds its nest—a
+bird, a bird which soars, which is sheer soaring. One and all,
+these men make a demand on nature as heroic as their own
+temper of salvation. One and all, they seem to say: “You,
+bird; you, woman; you, farm; you, landscape—you are
+doomed: all of our glamorous dream of earth, sky, men is
+doomed. Unless you are transfigured—unless you will permit
+that our spirit of the god burn you pure of your phenomenal
+dross—of your associations of sentiment, of hierarchy—unless
+you go to your allotted place as parts of an essential Whole,
+you are doomed. For we assure you, O bodies and sights of
+nature—you do not exist save in that Whole. The old men
+who sought to build up their Whole, by adding you together
+one by one, as you appeared to yourselves, were wrong.
+You’ve crumbled and disappeared. The very atoms of your
+bodies—the very words of your consciousness, have vanished.
+All that remains is God. If we can reinterpret our tragic
+memory of you—O bodies and colors of existence—in terms
+of God, perhaps we can bring you back to life.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course, I am saying this in words: the painters are
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>creating this in paint. Spaniards, Frenchmen, Rumanians,
+Americans, Orientals, all are tending toward a single declaration.
+And it would be a shallow error to believe that this
+symphonic kinship is due simply to the influence of the schools
+or of certain men in Paris. Paris for fifty years has been the
+focus of so much modern art, because men from all the
+world <i>were looking in one direction</i>. Paris is not an influence,
+it is a confluence. The reason why Cézanne rediscovered El
+Greco, and why French Colonials brought African sculpture
+to their metropolis, is aside my point. The significant is that
+the arabesque or body-language of Picasso, the plastic lyres
+of Maillol and Brancusi, the mosaics of Braque and of Marin,
+the rituals of O’Keeffe, the revelations of Julia Codesido and
+Sonia Brown, the mass equations of Derain and Walt Kuhn,
+and the instinct rhapsodies of Walkowitz and Epstein, are
+so many personalized departures from a common experience
+and toward a common purpose.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The common experience is that the old static formulas
+and bodies wherein Western civilization dwelt are gone; that
+only relations and the movements of relations are real and
+are immortal. The common purpose is, to produce from these
+immediate experiences of relation new bodies (unities) and
+new forms (faiths and ideas) wherein mankind may dwell
+and thrive again. And the achievement is already of sufficient
+stature to presage a modern classic art.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1926</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>6. THE ARTIST IN OUR JUNGLE</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>Gilbert Seldes has revived what might be called the classic
+debate of American culture: Should an American artist stay
+at home? Mr. Seldes holds that the artist is at home wherever
+he chooses to settle. And he cites instances in favor of his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>contention. He is indirectly seconding Edmund Wilson who
+reproached Van Wyck Brooks for writing an admirable book
+about Henry James without more than a word about the
+novelist. Mr. Brooks, of course, was writing about Henry
+James the exile; and employed him as a symbol in his own
+thesis which is contrary to that of Mr. Seldes. It seems to me
+that the considerations and examples presented by both sides
+have suffered, because they were neither specific nor general
+enough. Perhaps the exiles of Joyce, Stravinsky, Picasso, were
+successful; perhaps the pilgrimage of Henry James meant
+failure. If a law or a rule is to be sketched from these instances,
+the elements that enter into them should be essentially understood.
+One might study the basic idiom of the arabesque which
+Picasso brought with him from Málaga, or the basic folk
+voice with which Stravinsky came away from Russia; and plot
+the intellectual transfiguration of these primary materials by
+the schools of Paris. Or one might attempt to correlate the
+chaste designs which Henry James desired to produce, and the
+American chaos from which he escaped in order to produce
+them. One might at the end decide that James was a shrewd
+tactician, saving his art by retreat; or that Picasso was a
+brilliant culturist, enhancing his art by transplantation. Yet
+the general and haunting problem of the artist in America,
+which unconsciously inspires all these arguments, would be as
+untouched as ever.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This problem of the artist is, after all, not unrelated to
+the question of his materials. In some manner, the successful
+creator organizes a fusion between what we call his will,
+his vision or his experience, on the one hand, and what we
+call life, on the other. Both the creative will and the workable
+objective material must exist, else there will be no art. Now
+with this simple idea to illumine us, let us venture into the
+specific dilemma of the American artist and the American
+world.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>The first thought to occur is that this material of ours
+is still inchoate; it has not been digested by the conceptual
+activity of previous generations of American artists and thinkers;
+and in this it is abysmally apart from the native material
+of the European. The arabesque, for instance, has been an
+essential form in Andalusian life for so many ages that Picasso
+must have absorbed it as instinctively as he did his language.
+Ages of cultural selection have simplified the expressional
+background of European peoples; these simplifications beget
+traits and provide tools for the European artist which he can
+take with him: moreover, the relation between these concepts
+in different European countries is so close that deeply a European
+artist remains at home, wherever he is, in Europe.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A concept is an essence; and it can be transported. Or,
+to shift the figure, if one belongs to a world which has
+culturally refined its gold, one can leave that world yet take
+the gold along. But if one has had the fortune—good or ill—to
+be born upon the scarce-scratched surface of an unmined
+treasure, and if one indeed wants that treasure for his own—then,
+it is necessary to get down and dig.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This, it seems to me, is the very human crux of our classic
+problem: Should an American artist stay at home? The answer
+may be left to him. He will seek the material fitted for his
+creative will. To the peculiar will of Henry James, of Whistler,
+of Ezra Pound, it seems clear that the right material was
+best available abroad. The point of vision of these artists was
+static; they required a fixed focus wherefrom to trace in
+leisured sureness the Apollonian intricacies of their designs.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The creator who yearns to weave ever more intricate
+glosses upon a given fundamental statement of life is fortunate
+if he is born across the water. France, for instance,
+will provide him with a completely conceptualized experience
+which he can build on and variate forever. And if such
+a man is born in America and yet feels drawn to the, after all,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>not too-distant cultures of Europe, it is idle to begrudge his
+departure.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But there is another kind of artist: he who rejects the
+fixed limits of any established cultural status, and whose will
+it is to forge the parabolas of chaos into unitary form. This
+creator might broadly be termed the religious artist, in so
+far as his purpose is to bind together what appears confusion,
+and to make whole what strikes the sense as multiform and
+diverse.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If an artist of this kind is born in America, he is fortunate
+indeed. For he inherits a world particularly apt for his purpose.
+The <i>life</i> of America is a stupendous symbol of the
+human chaos which such an artist beholds in all life ere the
+transfiguring magic of his unitary vision has been worked
+upon it. And yet the implicit <i>idea</i> of America is symbolic of
+just such a unitary will. America, in other words, is a multiverse
+craving to become One; it both challenges and invites
+the purpose of the religious artist.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This American will to be One is manifest in every noble
+chapter of our history. More encouraging still, it is the very
+theme of our follies, the essence of our most ignoble social
+acts. It is the ideology shallowly applied, of our bar on
+immigration. It is the unconscious factor in our sumptuary
+laws, in our pathetic efforts to legislate uniformity of morals.
+We are not One; and we desire to be One. The whole American
+scene is, hence, a symbol on a human plane of the sort
+of activity which takes place in the mind of the religious
+artist. It provides him with the challenging material; it energizes
+him toward creation.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/i_153fp.jpg' alt='A black and white historical photograph of a machinist wearing glasses and overalls, carefully operating a large industrial lathe or turret machinery.' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p>© <i>Robert Dudley Smith, R. I. Nesmith Associates</i></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Middle Ages in central Western Europe established
+a similar apt symbol for the religious artist. Europe was a
+turbulent chaos in material and fact. Yet it possessed in the
+ideal Body of the Catholic Church a unitary will. It was this
+marvelous conjunction of material and will in the objective
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>world, with material experience and will within the artist,
+that made possible the success of Dante, of Aquinas, of the
+Gothic architects, of the polyphonists—a success not equaled
+in the modern European epochs, whose art has been for the
+most a wistful echo or a frustrate fragmentation of that last
+great Synthesis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The American artist whose will is to join in the tristful
+litany over the dissolving body of European culture does well,
+like T. S. Eliot, to live abroad. The American artist who
+feels within himself the power to add to the intricate glosses
+of that culture does well, like Ezra Pound or Henry James,
+to live abroad. But the artist who is tempted to the task of
+forging new organic life from chaos may bless his stars if
+America is his home. For in all the world there is no symbol
+of this chaos so potent and so pregnant as our American
+jungle.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Moreover, the failure of artists of this high aim heretofore
+in our land need dishearten no one. It is true that the
+athletic will of Poe was not supported by a consonant strength
+of nerves. It is true that Melville broke down. It is true
+perhaps that Whitman sounded little more than a summons.
+But failures of a kind so heroic—and all within a century—will,
+we may be sure, discourage only those whose intimate
+desire it is, for their own comfort’s sake, to be discouraged.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1925</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c024'>7. THE MACHINE AND METAPHYSICS</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>At first thought there seems an insoluble difference between
+the machine and the tool. The tool is passive in the
+hand of the workman, and by that fact comes to express his
+will both intimately and directly. The tool is, indeed, an
+extension of the hand. The crude laborer has a crude tool
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>and does crude work. The subtle craftsman becomes an
+artisan, an artist: the tool holds close to his nature and works
+his will in ways so immediate that the instinctive love attaching
+limb to mind goes over, consciously, into the brush, the
+knife, the hammer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With the machine, this alchemy inspiriting a thing of
+wood or stone is gone. The machine is set in motion and
+achieves therewith a somewhat autonomous life. Moreover,
+the nature of this life does not depend upon the man who
+works it. Its qualities and its powers are fashioned for it
+and are inevitably determined, at a source to which the machinist
+has no access. An inventor, abstracted from his products,
+designs their future acts. The machines go forth. And
+the mechanic by a series of rote behavior sets them going,
+runs them, stops them without for an instant coming into
+creative contact with the thing by which he lives. A crude
+man may work at a delicate machine: a blind or illiterate man
+may print a book: a man with no sense of texture or design
+may run a machine which manufactures lace or turns out
+decorations. And conversely, the delicate man—the creative
+man—can find no immediate channel for his will in running
+a machine. Whatever creativeness or delicacy it possesses has
+been ordained for it and is aloof. He cannot swerve it from
+its stubborn independence. All he can do is care for it. Attendant,
+doctor, nurse—however you look at it, he is the
+slave of a creation which in its act and its idea remains beyond
+him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now all this is clear enough and from it philosophers deduce
+our woes, rightly—and wrongly our despair. If this
+state of things were final, we might forsee man’s downgoing
+in sterile servitude to a too-exterior, too-permanent grandeur.
+For, indeed, much of our common misery has sprung from
+man’s loss of tools which were his own and through which in
+myriad ways he did express himself. With the tool came
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>beauty, because it was a subtly extended and yet obedient
+hand bringing between subject and object that harmony
+which is beauty’s norm. With the tool came contentment,
+because by means of it the humblest worker put his seal on
+his craft; and came pride and those births of pride—morality
+and value—since the work of the tool was the man himself,
+and so must be good, and so must be regarded. Finally, with
+the tool came fullness: for that man alone is unified and
+full who has spent himself in self-expressive labor. And by
+contrast, the man is empty and disrupted who has been spent
+in labor which excludes his deep co-operation. Thus far the
+pessimists of the machine are right. But here their rightness
+ends. Could they look back upon what must have been the
+experience of man ere he mastered the tool, they might more
+sanguinely look forward.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The primitive man, wielding an artifact, paddling a dugout
+or making an instrument of a horse, had to undergo a
+profound psychological revolution ere this element in his
+hands, stone or wood or flesh, could become an extension of
+his personal will. He had to grow. How far he had to grow
+you can see symbolized for yourself by comparing your
+own hand with the paw of a dog. The step was inscrutably
+vast: so vast that once man made it, he dared not look back,
+and soon he forgot—and still he fights to forget. Who shall
+say what tragic ages went to the transition? to what insanities
+and despairs men plunged with the strange tool in their
+bewildered hands, with a wild horse beneath them? Surely,
+those unmastered weapons must have committed follies; must
+have broken the measure of men’s life; must have inspired the
+wiseacres of that day to gloomy forecasts. We do not know
+the names of the Rousseaus of these desperate generations in
+which man’s brain had not yet instinctively grasped the tool.
+But nothing is more certain than that they existed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, with the machine, we are once more primitive. The
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>tool is ours: we have tamed it and made it part of our dominion
+by a step in consciousness. Before the machine, we are still
+barbarian or savage even like early man before a horse or a
+stone. Through a failure to make a certain further step in
+consciousness, before the machine we are still external.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course, there are differences. And it is precisely they
+which point to a new departure in man’s life. If the machine
+were merely a more complex tool, there would not be this
+new element to our exciting day. The machine is a new part
+of nature: one which did not, like the stone or the horse,
+exist before. There is in the machine a marriage of what we
+call the old elements and what we call the human. The domestic
+animal, in this sense, was a tool: its elements were
+outside of human nature. In dominating it, as with any other
+tool, we mastered a part of external nature. And this was
+comparatively simple, since in our use of the tool we did not
+come in conflict with any human will. But if we dominate
+the machine—make it part of ourselves—we shall have won
+control over a realm of nature which includes mankind;
+for man’s will, other men’s wills, are constant and determining
+factors of the machine. We shall have won a victory of
+consciousness not merely over the nature of the external
+world—but over our own nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The problem was one of consciousness in the days of the
+stone artifact; and it is again of consciousness today. It is
+a problem profound as human destiny, inscrutably complex.
+Yet I think the heart of it can be thus simply stated. The
+animal, so far as we can see, is incapable of the idea of any
+part of nature becoming part of itself. Man, with the tool,
+achieved this: fused unto himself the animal and the stone.
+Call the process what you may, this attitude of his toward
+portions of the physical world was metaphysical. And no
+savage could paddle a canoe without this metaphysical inheritance,
+made instinct.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>We flounder before the machine, we are features more
+or less groveling of its external life, because we lack an
+instinctive metaphysical consciousness to make us master and
+absorb it—to fuse the machine with all its elements of will
+and act into our own expression. Such consciousness, of
+course, must be evolved vastly beyond the childish metaphysics
+beneath the use of a tool. In the machine are adumbrated
+the will of the inventor, the will of the owner, the
+will of many workers, the will, indeed, of an age and of a
+world. Only when the individual worker experiences that
+these wills are not alien to him; that these elements of life
+contained in the machine fuse, in a higher synthesis, together
+with his own, into a unitary act—only then will his spirit
+in participation be able to go out through the machine, so
+that it and the whole mechanized world may once again, in
+his joy, in his beauty, in his human pride, express him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But such a mechanic would possess the consciousness of
+a Spinoza? No less! No less is needed, in order that the human
+world may not go down before this new Nature—the free-spawning
+mechanical invention. The modern machine converges
+with the wisdom of the ages to force man ahead. From
+India, from Judea, from Greece, from Germany, has come the
+single canon: that life is unitary, that experience is One, and
+that the human consciousness in one form or another must
+know and be this One. The machine will compel us, at this
+human crisis, to experience what heretofore merely great
+men have known. The machine again makes metaphysics
+man’s most practical engagement.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1925</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <h2 class='c005'>THREE: BOOKS</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>
+ <h3 class='c018'>I. POE AT LAST</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c020'>Perhaps the classic figures of American literature should be
+regarded chiefly as actors in the epos of the American birth.
+With one or two exceptions, they did not produce great
+books. Yet all of them were heroes; were characters who in
+their defeats as in their victories fleshed and fixed features
+of our nascent world. Their lives—like the careers of the
+patriarchs of Genesis—may prove more current in our future
+mind than any of their works.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This certainly will be the case with Poe. Despite his influence
+abroad, despite the range of his activity, he wrote
+neither verse nor prose intrinsically great. His significance is
+not to be extracted from his situation. And the construction
+of the creative Poe—the <i>true</i> Poe—has lagged, precisely because
+this situation was misunderstood. Poe paid bitterly for
+his youthful Byronism. From his neighbors and the Bostonians,
+it shrouded him in sentimental horror; from us, it has
+quarantined the man in an equally blinding sentimental glamour.
+His first biographer, Griswold, was incompetent. And
+Professor Woodberry inherited this incompetence for all his
+scholarly good will since crucial features of Poe’s life were
+hidden and since without them Poe’s work, unlike organic
+great art, lacked an entire dimension.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There has now been published a sheaf of letters<a id='r7'></a><a href='#f7' class='c025'><sup>[7]</sup></a> which
+will mark the true birth of Poe as an authentic, working
+figure in our cultural world. For the most part, they are
+notes written by Poe to his foster father, with brief notations
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>or replies by Mr. Allan. They give us at last the young
+Poe, the crucial Poe, and the world which he went forth to
+live in and to conquer. The first of them dates from the
+University of Virginia which the poet entered at seventeen;
+the last reveals him, seven years later, abandoned for the final
+time by Mr. Allan who has remarried and is soon to die.
+The years—from seventeen to twenty-four—are the years of
+Poe’s confrontation with America. Prior to them, he was a
+child—what manner of child, nurtured and spoiled in the
+Richmond mansion of the Allans, his words reveal. And after
+them, there come the open pages of his books, of his trafficking
+with editors, of his relations with Mrs. Clemm and with
+his wife, Virginia. These letters form the link that makes the
+whole. Their appearance is a major event in American letters.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The career of Poe becomes a scene in a symbolic drama.
+He is creative will, nakedly let loose upon the American
+world. Who shall say America did not summon him? He
+rises like an impulse from this land which cannot act him
+out. Between America and Poe, as between Poe and his
+foster father, are the chains of a need unrecognized. Without
+his adopted son whom he bred to hyperesthesia and left to
+starve, whom he set high and then cast down, John Allan
+would be a clod. And without John Allan, Poe would have
+been altogether disembodied. In the tortuous recriminations
+of these letters, there is the plea for love as well as bread.
+Transpose the family quarrel into general terms, and you
+have the full years of Poe: Poe, the most highly potential
+intellect of a land whose hour of realization had not struck.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In this failure there is no object lesson, no call for a
+morality. It is too inevitable and too right. It is true that,
+with the intellectual range of a Goethe, Poe gave forth but
+a few shriveled and glittering pages. And yet, in his hour and
+for his hour, he gave the ultimate, since he gave a Symbol.
+An imagined Poe, petted to old age in the rich library of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>an adoring foster father, would have been less—far less—than
+the frail, fierce, frustrate Poe we have.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Unarmed, unguided, he went forth to create in the American
+desert. His masterful will found no immediate object
+upon which to work. He had absorbed haphazard the philosophers,
+the metaphysical poets, the occultists and seers of
+the Kabala, the chroniclers of exotic journeys. But he did not
+stay in <i>their</i> world. His constant effort was to refocus and
+apply this chaos of ideas to some absolute experience of life.
+Witness his treatment of the values of poetry and music: his
+making metaphysics out of the relation of facts or out of
+the forecast of facts: his use of the machine, or airships, of
+mesmerism, of physiology and mechanical contrivance, to
+express the widening consciousness of the human soul. Even
+the wanderings of Arthur Gordon Pym end in a revelation.
+Of course, Poe failed. Grub Street in Baltimore and New
+York—this remained the stage for his apocalypse. And the
+hazard crumbs from the intellectual banquets of Asia and of
+Europe were but manna, in no wise transfiguring the Wilderness
+which for forty years he wandered.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Yet the lofty impulse of his work is lodged, forever. Poe’s
+theory of pure poetry holds the intuition of a great esthetic.
+His “Eureka” gives the glimpse of a vision deep as that which
+is imagined in the Kalpa and the Brahma of the Hindus. A
+half dozen of his tales, “Eleonora,” “Ligeia,” “Morella,” “The
+Fall of the House of Usher,” etc., are variants of a single theme
+which envisions the mystery of the Person as close as any
+prophecy of Blake. Hard, shut, shrunken work it is: and yet
+it holds a vaster sense of life than do the amplitudes of Whitman
+or of Emerson. Holds it, however, as a seed the tree.
+In Whitman and Melville there is life’s blossoming. Poe belongs
+less with the creators of art than with its prophets.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>His creative impulse, first to last, was metaphysical and
+religious. Behind these horrid trips to Ulalume and Usher,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>these dogmatic repetitions of telltale hearts and reincarnate
+lovers, is the man’s will for a world timeless and absolute.
+That his materials were the shoddy “seconds” of the romantic
+Gothic, we may leave to the pedants to assure us. Poe’s
+impulse was no more romantic than was Goethe’s. He had a
+flair for the Real: he lacked the power to establish this reality
+from the world about him. Hence his defeated flights to
+other realms. But in his Poetics and in “Eureka,” it stands
+proved that the glancings-off which constitute his “works”
+were but his trial flights: that Poe was resolved to found his
+revelation within the visible, audible, beating world. Unlike
+the Bostonians, Poe was no transcendentalist by choice or
+reason. The confrontation of experience and then the act of
+alchemy upon it, by virtue of his vision, was beyond his
+powers. And was beyond him not, as seemed manifest, because
+of his harried and brief life: was beyond him symbolically,
+inevitably, since it was beyond the America of which he was
+so high, so near, so unachieved an impulse.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us make <i>this</i> Poe ours. Let us not twang semi-sentimental
+plaints about his failures. Let us not fool ourselves
+as to his triumphs. Let us not blame the symbolical Mr. Allan
+for acting so well his ungrateful role in a Scene so vastly
+without his canny ken. Let us, above all, not split Poe—as
+is the fashion of the day—into pseudo-scientific fragments of
+psychologic and sociologic terms. Let us take him whole—the
+man and his work: Poe the embodied impulse of an
+Organism which holds not only him, but us; Poe the impulse
+of America to transfigure the worlds within it into a world
+more real. And let us proceed to the Adventure.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1925</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>
+ <h3 class='c018'>2. FRANCE AND THOREAU</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c020'>Since Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, French literature has come
+variously to America for materials and forms wherewith to
+re-create itself. The greatest instance is still perhaps that of
+Chateaubriand whose impossible Indians may outlast the too-possible
+Frenchmen of Flaubert. The sustenance which Stendhal
+won from contemplation of our scene for the esthetic
+of his novel of the modern will is less widely recognized. We
+are aware, however, of how the symbolists transfigured Poe;
+and more recently of the enthusiastic creation by the Dadaists
+of a romantic America of cowboys, skyscrapers and jazz.
+Romantic movements in classicist France are ever forages for
+nurture rather than voyages of discovery. Like Greece,
+France is omnivorous and egocentric. In every period of
+influences her writers are like a family consuming beefsteak.
+That beefsteak will become, let us say, part of a lanky father,
+a fat mother, a bad pagan boy, and a noble Christian sister.
+At this moment, we may behold America turn into Louis
+Aragon, Valéry Larbaud, and Bazalgette....</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Bazalgette’s translation and biography of Whitman had a
+dynamic share in the slow stirring of French letters, away
+from the Narcissus mood which led to the masterworks of
+Claudel, Valéry, Proust, toward a new gesture of spiritual
+excursion whence a good range of fresh romantic stuffs will
+accrue for the young classicists to work on. His Whitman
+was a biography that held fairly close to the narrative form,
+save that a lyrism illumined it and made it speak with emphasis
+and fervor to the imagination of the French. In “Henry
+Thoreau,” however, Bazalgette stands revealed more clearly:
+a poet himself, and a prophet, he employs a certain spiritual
+experience made manifest in America because less assimilated
+here than the experience of Rousseau and of Tolstoi in their
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>lands; and he makes of it his own spiritual Word for France.
+This technical analogy between Bazalgette in sophisticated
+Paris writing of Thoreau, and Chateaubriand in rationalist
+Paris dreaming of our virgin forests must not be strained too
+far. Bazalgette is less a poet than Napoleon’s noble hater,
+but he is more historian and critic. His book has the lilt and
+passage and effect of a packed personal paean; and yet it is
+perhaps the best of all pictures of our great New England.
+There is no phenomenal relation between Chateaubriand’s
+America—or that of the Dadaists—and ourselves. Their work
+is, therefore, not negotiable beyond their immediate needs.
+But clad in the fine English of Van Wyck Brooks, Bazalgette’s
+“Thoreau” responds to our experience. It becomes an
+American classic as surely as it is a French one.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The method is not narrative: it is a composite of allusiveness,
+colloquy, lyrical projection and dramatic scening. A hard
+method to follow unflagging through three hundred pages;
+and at first the frail figure of Thoreau seems insufficient for
+it. The author has sustained his tone with ruthless logic that
+at times may pall. One would occasionally welcome passages
+in a more direct, conventional prose. But the consequence of
+the author’s lack of mercy is an esthetic form the more remarkable
+when one considers the, after all, comparative slightness
+of Thoreau’s stuff and the frustrate colors of his milieu.
+At the end, one realizes that this unsparing method was the
+inevitable right one for the subject. Thoreau’s greatness did
+not loom like Whitman’s. It was the consequence of impacts
+on a small living nucleus, of the organic yet reactive growth
+of that nucleus within an inchoate social envelope. When
+he created his Whitman, Bazalgette had but to follow Whitman.
+Hence his use of narrative was correct. Even the Civil
+War fell into place as a sort of objective scene for the hero’s
+progress. Creating Thoreau, Bazalgette creates primarily the
+New England town, and the woods and the rivers and the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>birds, creates the astringent air of Emerson and Alcott, creates
+Mr. Greeley and his <cite>Tribune</cite>, John Brown and his raiders,
+lyceum audiences and village ne’er-do-wells. A superb massivity
+of America bounding Thoreau gives him his dimensions
+by indirection and by the dynamism of the man’s responses.
+It was a subtle task, and Bazalgette has done it. It required
+a complete mastery of the American scene; and the extent
+to which this Frenchman who has never visited our land
+knows it—its past, its present, <i>and</i> its future—is uncanny.
+Where did he learn what a New England village feels like,
+what winter is in a Canadian wood? How did he catch
+this scent of the Emersonian family, this shuttling rhythm of
+Broadway, this dark deluvial stain in the Judge’s house in
+Staten Island? No mere thorough scholarship can explain it.
+Chateaubriand’s Indians, Baudelaire’s Poe, are alien and exotic.
+Bazalgette possesses a true intuition of America. Strange as it
+may seem, he loves us—loves our promise, our struggle to
+evolve it. But his love is clairvoyant: his mind has stratified his
+vision of us with analytic understanding. He knows the heartbreaking
+husk of social and psychic life in which our promise
+stifles. Bazalgette is a Roussinean romanticist in that he chooses
+to bring to Paris our Thoreau as a reality <i>for it</i>, from the
+New England town. But he is no romanticizer of the town.
+Nor of Thoreau who emerges from the book as a true hero
+almost by a process of survival. Thoreau is a hero of his age,
+we gather, because his age was otherwise unheroic.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The book is a new type of novel, if you please, rather
+than biography in the strict French sense. There is a new
+novel form—the Proustian—in which the hero is literally “I.”
+An example of it in our language is Sherwood Anderson’s
+“Story Teller’s Story.” Here is another kind of novel—a sort
+of Crocean history—in which a real personage is drawn ruthlessly
+as regards the facts and yet with Dionysian freedom in
+spiritual emphasis and in esthetic.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>A work like this dares to contain anything: and there
+is to be found here a bit of literary criticism so original in
+form that it must be mentioned. Thoreau and Whitman meet.
+Their talk is a failure. Walt is distrustful of this highbrow
+Yankee who has so consciously turned away from Harvard.
+Bazalgette records the futile dialogue and adds to it, by way
+of antistrophe, an imagined dialogue consisting of responses
+gleaned from the two men’s work. The effect is powerful
+and convincing: a contrapuntal fugue that does more to prove
+the nuclear energy of the American mind and its unity, in
+variety, of direction, than a score of essays.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Brooks’s translation has a tendency toward “toning
+down.” The original title, as an instance, reads “Henry
+Thoreau, Sauvage.” This might be faithfully Englished as
+Henry Thoreau, the Untamed. Mr. Brooks has preferred to
+substitute Emerson’s “bachelor of Nature.” Perhaps he shares
+somewhat Emerson’s Apollonian attitude toward this nature-drunk,
+nature-sweet, neoprimitive neighbor. But the translation
+is very far, indeed, from a betrayal. It is the process
+whereby Bazalgette’s book becomes indigenous and takes
+its place in our American literature between the old and the
+new. Thoreau stands with Whitman and with Melville for
+the creative transitional gesture between that new America,
+inheritor of Old World forms, and our old America, creator
+of a new world. Of this hazardous long birth-hour in whose
+travail we persist, there is no lovelier expression than the
+prose of Van Wyck Brooks.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1927</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>3. FAIRY TALES FOR THE OLD</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>Our country was not young from the beginning. It had
+to achieve youth. From the Old World came old shoots: the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>transplantation as often as not aggravated their antiquity.
+Ere we could be young, our elements had to rot and to be
+remingled. This took time. And it may broadly be said that
+only with the opening of the West and the demise, in civil
+war, of our old sectional cultures, did America become at last
+a single sprawling infant.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Even then, the sectional elderships persisted. They took
+many forms. None more pleasant than the glowing second
+childhood of New England which stands expressed in the
+stories of Sarah Orne Jewett. These are tales mostly of
+Maine in the later decades of the nineteenth century. And
+rightly enough the best of them are about old women. The
+occasional story of a child is sicklied over with an aged cast:
+for instance, Sylvia of “A White Heron” is an old woman’s
+child, and lives with an old woman. And when there is a
+wooing in “The Country of the Pointed Firs” the maid has
+grown grey in service of her mother; the man—son of the
+almost centenarian Mrs. Blackett—is a simpleton past fifty.
+But whether the scene be the Poor Farm or a spruce island
+home or the tiny palace of Queen Victoria’s Twin, there is
+ever a single glamorous illusion making the substance and life
+of these sweet tales. And it is the manner of illusion that
+dwells in the hearts of folks who have grown sweetly childish,
+rather than sour, in their senility.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is not necessary to insist that the farms painted by
+Miss Jewett are about as “realistic” as the England of “Alice
+in Wonderland” or of Tennyson’s “Idylls.” Yet these uniformly
+charming people, so pure of thought, so innocuous
+in action, so redolent of lavender and lace, are true, although
+the theatre of their verity is the poetic fancy of Miss Jewett.
+We may all snatch from our coming decrepit days the nodding
+wish to turn from the rot of our world into a sweet-scented
+realm of senile wishes, in order to enjoy Miss Jewett.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Maine of a mature mind, contemporary with these
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>stories, must have revealed men and women more like the
+persons of Robert Frost, more like those one feels, rather
+by reaction than by direct creation, in the works of Thoreau,
+Hawthorne, Margaret Fuller, Melville. And yet these kind
+and well-groomed vagaries of Miss Jewett’s are no less a
+result of the crass facts—no less respectable. The spirit of
+them is a sort of iridescent mist rising from the shut pools
+of that life.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course, stories with substance so wistful and so misty
+cannot rank high as art: and we must not permit the present
+mood of American reminiscence to which are due so many
+biographies, so many re-editions, so many reconstructions, to
+blind us to their frail value. The fairy tales of youth have
+greater destiny, because they have harder substance. The
+child transcends his world: his ebullient vaulting energy despises
+a mere unmastered round of fact and with parabolic
+power brings Mystery to earth. But with second childhood,
+reality is too much and is avoided by a sharp reduction.
+Energy, exhausted, draws back in catatonic gesture; re-creates
+smallnesses to dwell in as a comfortable offset to the no longer
+challengeable world.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Willa Cather, a feeble daughter of Miss Jewett, has had
+the fondness to compare her tales with “Huckleberry Finn”
+(a fairy tale of youth) and “The Scarlet Letter”—one of
+the maturest dreams of American romance. But these perfumed
+pictures of the land of pointed firs are a gross reduction
+of the truth. All the primary lines, colors, forms, are
+missing. Indeed, all life-welling passion, all organic substance,
+have been mulcted out by the desire for Peace: and what remains
+is a predigested brew of natural descriptions and carefully
+balanced converse—a true diet, indeed, for old and
+toothless gums.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Yet, although their stuff be small, these tales have loveliness.
+And one rereads them, after all these years, marveling
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>at the grace with which their frailties have aged. The scenes
+of nature are good lyrics. Although Miss Jewett’s sea has
+become strangely gentle, like a parlor pet, it is still living:
+it is captured somewhat as life is captured in certain two-dimensional
+prints from old Japan. The dialect has the mark
+of absolute perfection; and yet is musically mannered so that
+none of the conscious stress on veracity is there to irk one.
+But above all—those women, those adorable, impossible old
+ladies, brewing tea, gossiping, sewing! They are there, not like
+our grandmothers, but like our childish vision of them—like
+what our grandmothers would have liked to be, to our rapt
+young love. Even this sentimental splendor is reduced to a
+kind of loophole glimpse. And yet the lens is never blurred
+and the effect has all the negotiability of art.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was a strength in old New England which passed
+maturity without losing all its power. There are wild flowers
+still in these rock-bound fields that go to seed hardily: they do
+not scatter or fall with the first turning away of the summer
+sun; but wraithlike they stand aloft upon their stems and
+let the autumn air run through them. Something of this
+prowess is in Miss Jewett’s stories. For all their simplification,
+for all their romantic refusal of the true stuff of tragedy—finally,
+hence, for all their subtle denigration of New England
+which deserves greater and more athletic art, these tales bear
+well. They may be tales of senescence—of a soul’s twilight:
+but this is a soul not impotent even in decay.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Most of them appeared in magazines well over forty years
+ago. As one measures them with what has followed, one is
+dismayed. For hidden in their glamour is a sinister seed. True
+enough are tales which spring from a felt illusion. But it is
+only the lie which has brought forth progeny. The hallucination
+of Miss Jewett, making her see such paragons of peace
+and sweetness in the New England farms, causing her in all
+solemnity to compare the “Bowdoin reunion” with “a company
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>of Greeks going to celebrate a victory, or to worship
+the god of harvest”—this peculiar magic of old age could not
+be copied and has not been transmitted. Only the trick of
+reduction, only the simplification, only the falsehood. And
+the consequence, patented and standard, swarms within our
+fiction magazines and in our novels.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The fairy tale turned formula—the fairy tale without the
+motive of youth or of old age—becomes the harsh, cold,
+mechanical, nugatory art which makes up most of our current
+“competence” in fiction. It marks the extension into
+literature of the processes of mass production which belong
+to an industrial age. It is responsible for the factories and
+sweatshops whence reading matter is turned out for the
+million. How it came to be born you can trace in the soft,
+warm, gradually shallowing and self-repeating art of Sarah
+Orne Jewett.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1925</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>4. DUSK AND DAWN</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>The basis for any criticism of a book by Lewis Mumford
+must be respect for the author and thankfulness that he is at
+work in our country. Rare, indeed, are American critics
+who, like him, venture into the realm of general ideas; and
+rarer are the men who, with his good will, possess his rounded
+equipment. For Mr. Mumford tries to be no specialist save
+in the task of seeing and interpreting life whole. No less
+than all the works of men shall be his laboratory; no less
+than the search of values for “the good life” his aim. He
+can write of archaic Utopias and future city plannings, of
+modern books and ancient pictures and medieval guilds;
+he is at home in all subjects since he has gained awareness
+that all of them are one.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>Mr. Mumford’s “The Golden Day” sustains this sense of
+him. It is in many ways a beautiful book. It flows easy,
+brilliant, poetical, from the store of its maker. It has style, it
+has form. There is no reason to doubt that it will take its
+place in the sparse critical literature of our uncertain era.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Mumford has written an essay in interpretation of
+the American past. With this purpose, he has utilized an
+analysis of our customs, of our ideals, principally through
+the medium of our writers. But the standpoint of his study
+is the present. He has not written history; he has established,
+as his focus, not alone our day, but as well our need. His
+retrospect receives its dynamic rhythm, one might almost
+say its <i>life</i>, from the author’s mastering interest in “What
+next?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The general theme, viewed as a series of facts, is plain
+enough and has been proposed in similar terms, before. Europe’s
+state since the Middle Ages is regarded as a disintegration.
+Of this profound breakup America is a conspicuous
+symptom and expression. America was colonized by forces
+of Europe’s decomposition; and America itself, determining
+such states of mind as pioneering, hastened the deliquescence
+of that spiritual world which man raised up in Europe and
+whose tearing down had no deeper symbol than the emigrations.
+Howsoever, before the final breakup of Europe in the American
+West, new shoots of the transplanted European
+culture rose on our Eastern seaboard. In the Golden Day of
+Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman, they reached a splendor fresh
+and unparalleled in the contemporary hour of a Europe less
+swiftly, but as essentially decadent. Thereafter, the American
+West, in which the disintegrated force of the Old World and
+the barbarizing condition of the New came to a climax, gradually
+prevailed. Already, with Hawthorne, Melville, Poe, the
+Golden Day was waning: the good elements of old Europe
+were rotted by unconscious “new” American factors. The
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>“pragmatic acquiescence” marks America’s rationalized slump
+into the barbaric mood of the industrial pioneer. William
+James, John Dewey, are good men ennobling the sterile cause.
+The descent, now, is swift. The muckrakers are social critics
+themselves submerged in the muck, failing of any principle to
+catapult them free. Novelists socially and spiritually submerged
+are Mark Twain, Jack London, Theodore Dreiser—scavengers
+whose true function is to pick to pieces what still
+remains of a once noble structure. And not deeply otherwise
+are the wistful “pillagers of the past” of whom the finest are
+Henry James and George Santayana; their retreat into Europe
+or to “philosophy” is motived by as forceless an acceptance
+of the barbaric day as the rationalization of the pragmatists.
+Finally, Mr. Mumford brings us to ourselves. After this ebb,
+we are sunk so low that naught could remain but a new
+rising. Mr. Mumford is hopeful, one feels, for sheerly tidal
+reasons.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course, to state in a paragraph what the author himself
+has athletically stripped to but three hundred pages is to leave
+out much and to denature more. This book, it seems to me,
+is chiefly a personal essay—a confession by a significant man.
+You will find, here, excellent pages on the “romanticism” of
+the pioneer, on the genius of Emerson, on the limitations of
+Dewey and Santayana. You will find other pages less adequate:
+as the discussions of Whitman, Melville, Poe and
+Dreiser. What interests me most in “The Golden Day” is not
+its assemblage of interpretations, but its focus.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This focus is external. Mr. Mumford is outside his own
+book. He depicts superbly the Platonic, pagan and mystical
+glories which in America’s Golden Day were called Emerson,
+Thoreau, Whitman. But they are experientially remote
+from Mr. Mumford: as remote as Dante and Aquinas. Ideally,
+of course, we share all greatness and find its recognition in
+our souls. Yet those medieval worlds were not actually ours:
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>their source, their form and their behavior differ. Mr. Mumford
+depicts, also, and with no less eloquence, the horrors of
+the American scene: the barbaric frontier, the Protestant decadence,
+the tyranny of the machine and of the job, the
+fallacies of materialism, utilitarianism, experimentalism, pragmatism.
+But he is outside the experience of these also. When
+he praises the age of Emerson, there is an aloofness of elegy.
+When he exhorts the young men, his contemporaries: “Allons.
+The road is before us!” there is an aloofness of rhetoric. What
+is the matter with Mr. Mumford?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The matter is that he has considered us, rather than experienced
+us. He has gone deep to behold our past greatness,
+our present miseries; but not deep enough to establish the
+vital connection between them, and between them and himself.
+America is an organic subject. Mr. Mumford, for all his
+studies in causation, treats as a series of isolate manifestations,
+“good” or “bad,” “tasteful” or “disgusting,” what are really
+acts of a single spiritual Organism, yet immature, yet basally
+“in the making.” The Golden Day whereof the author so
+wistfully sings was not a day at all: it was not even a dawn:
+it was, if you insist on solar terms, <i>a</i> dusk of Europe. But only
+in its ideologies and cultural forms! More accurately, it was
+a moment in the American childhood when the spirit spoke
+lyrically, before the whelming demands of body—of nutrition
+and of growth—plunged America more fully into chaos. The
+fact that this age was not a Day is plain in its shimmering,
+surface passage over the American mind: and in the sequence
+when America transformed the idealism of its transcendentalists
+and poets into immediate adolescent matters of expansion
+and of self-indulgence. Mr. Mumford makes Emerson the
+hero of this “day.” Yet if ever a man was a congeries of lovely
+echoes, of wistful longings, of fleeting and unfleshed intuitions,
+Emerson was he! His intimations of immortality were
+almost literally those which the great Wordsworth beheld
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>on the visage of a babe! Emerson <i>was</i> such an intimation on
+America’s huge child face. He was our first, unfleshed, undifferentiate
+glimpse of manhood—of a manhood still very
+far ahead.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In Whitman this intimation is no longer the tremorous
+glimpse so well symbolized in Emerson’s frail and evanescent
+prose. It is a roar of adolescence: a true hunger call: no
+more. Now, note Mr. Mumford’s basic misunderstanding of
+Poe and Melville. These men were the first to try to <i>flesh</i>
+what we might style the Emersonian intuition in American
+life. Mr. Mumford calls them figures of the twilight. And
+yet, from the standpoint of a study of the American Organism,
+they are more advanced than such more successful artists
+as Whitman and Thoreau. Poe’s mystical attitude toward the
+mechanism and applied science, his marvelous attempt to add
+a dimensional sense to the inherited experience of life; and
+Melville’s tragic effort to wed God and whaling—these are
+the first organic <i>acts</i> after the childhood intimations of the
+men whom Mr. Mumford esteems as makers of our Noon.<a id='r8'></a><a href='#f8' class='c025'><sup>[8]</sup></a>
+And the author fails to recognize them, because he has no
+organic experience in America to guide him. He is in love
+with the gesture, the dream, the childhood faëry of our past:
+yet he rejects the <i>body</i>—our present interim of the Machine
+and of the romanticisms of the Machine—whereby alone this
+promise from our past may be organized into a living future.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Therefore, finally, his book brings the flavor of a plaint:
+his envoi is wistful and vague, his call to future action has
+no ring. For American future spiritual action must rise organically
+from the facts of our hideous present, since these
+facts are an insuperable sequence from our past ideals. Mr.
+Mumford, in this book, is a man sincerely, prophetically in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>love with the sweet spirit of childhood; yet turning from
+the physical, often bestial process whereby alone the child
+can grow in order to express that spirit. When the child
+America lisps purities half understood, Mr. Mumford blesses.
+But when the child America gulps food, wallows in mud,
+slugs and robs comrades, adventures, bullies, cheats—Mr.
+Mumford merely scolds.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1926</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>5. ELEGY FOR ANARCHISM</h3>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>a.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>I hoped to glean from the autobiography of Emma Goldman
+four experiences, each of them worth while: the intimate
+life story of a remarkable woman, the history of her ideals
+and thoughts as an anarchist, a portrait of toiling America
+during the past four decades, and an account of the years
+of military communism in the U.S.S.R. I got what I wanted,
+although in each case the net gain in light is different from
+what I had supposed it would be—different, I feel certain,
+from what Emma Goldman herself believes her book has
+given.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The most enlightening point, for me, in the first volume
+where the author describes her girlhood, her marriage, her
+entrance into the anarchist ranks after the Chicago executions,
+her love affairs, her friendships with Johann Most and Alexander
+Berkman, is that her narrative is almost bare of experience
+and ideas. The pages fly with gusto, Emma Goldman
+holds back nothing. But she has, rather amazingly, almost
+nothing inward to give! Intimately, for all her good will,
+she appears to remember little of her own sensations; and
+if there was a period of doubt and inquiry before she accepted
+Kropotkin and Bakunin, she takes her own thoughts for
+granted, giving us the bare conclusion. I had a sense of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>Emma Goldman writing these pages of her youth; but it was
+a sense of the mature woman the author, not of the young
+woman the subject. And this very fact: that Emma Goldman
+describing her loves, her factories and sweatshops, her cities,
+her encounters with magnates and policemen, gives no direct
+experience of her feelings and thoughts, helps to reveal the
+nature of the woman. One must make one’s own deductions,
+as one might if one were actually speaking with the author.
+For Emma Goldman is a presence in her book—a deep, hearty
+presence. She is never the analyst or integrator of her story.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Her chief traits are goodness and energy. There is something
+abstract in her élan vital, since she is unaware of causes.
+The Freudians would doubtless call her career a flight from
+a cruel father (who became symbolized as authority and the
+state). More obviously, her life was a simple escape from
+the intolerable pain of inhibitions (personal and social) and a
+blind rush toward that freedom which the word “anarchism”
+convincingly evoked. In a life so purely dynamic, there is no
+pause for thought, hence her book’s total lack of ideology;
+there is no room for emotional contemplation, hence its author’s
+want of vivid memory. Emma Goldman cannot be said
+to remember her girlhood, and its record, pictorial or sensory,
+is absent from her pages. Which is to say, that her first thirty
+or forty years were lived not on an intellectual, not even on
+an emotional, plane; but were instinctive. Instinctive action
+(if I may use this obsolete term) is automatic, and leaves no
+memory.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But Miss Goldman’s instinctivism must not be confused
+with that of others. It is paradoxical, being extremely good
+and brave. Most women who live on this level are self-indulgent,
+cowardly, shallow. Miss Goldman, although she
+seems never to have thought, has a nature both good and
+profound. At any moment of her youth, it is clear that she
+was ready to give herself to her Cause. Even her sex life, one
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>feels, was the response of a motherly heart rather than of a
+lusting body. And if she followed the dictates of her body,
+the wonder is that even selfish impulse moved her to constant
+sacrifice and the acceptance of suffering.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This paradox convinces me that there are really persons
+in the world like the “free souls” on whose actual existence
+Rousseau, Proudhon and the other romantic anarchists based
+their theories. No wonder Emma Goldman was an anarchist—and
+without having to think about it. Her innocent nature
+predicates and incarnates the anarchist creed. Even in her
+appetites, she is a woman instinctively good and pure: a
+woman whose blithe spirit only the alien contacts of official
+law could poison.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The pages are, of course, full of references to anarchist
+comrades. Directly, she analyzes them no more than herself;
+but her own vitality imbues with life her portraits of men
+like Berkman, Reitman, Brady and Most. Like the author,
+these figures belong to the romantic movement. They are an
+issue of the same social forces which gave the Atalas, Renés,
+Adolphes and Werthers. The key to these characters is a
+deliberate return to “self”—a return which is a reaction from
+a system, social and intellectual, that was losing its vitality:
+so that the romantic return to “self” was literally the escape
+of “life” from the old Western order. In the profounder
+romantics (Rousseau, Blake, Beethoven, Stendhal, Balzac,
+Whitman, Nietzsche, etc.), this return to “self” was sufficiently
+thorough to reveal the self’s cosmic implications and
+therewith the nucleus of a whole new social fabric. Intellectually
+weaker romantics did not go so far. They discovered
+their own yearning ego, and loved it, and regarded the
+world as a mere bar to its divine trajectory. Their ideas of
+social justice were rationalizations of their lyric need of
+freedom. They were the anarchists. They knew nothing of
+the objective world, save that it got in their way. They knew
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>nothing even of each other, since in the last analysis they
+knew nothing of themselves. They were “pure being,” and
+since “pure being” is a rationalized fantasy, their own lives
+have an abstract air, a lack of body and of reason.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This <i>unreality</i> of the anarchists is perfectly revealed by
+Emma Goldman. It is epitomized in the <i>attentat</i> on Frick by
+her lifelong comrade Berkman. Young Berkman (a very different
+man from the mature Berkman of later years) is as good
+as his girl friend. He <i>knows</i> nothing, either: not how to make
+a bomb, not how to speak English, not the crucial differences
+between an American magnate and the lords of Tsarist Russia;
+not (at the end) how to aim a pistol. His act is a “pure act”
+in a cruel, complex world that has thrown him off, so that he
+wills to destroy it. The anarchist is a tangential force from the
+social center, but in his naïve egoism he conceives himself as
+the center. Thus, by immediate logic, the legalized social
+world becomes the centrifugal tangent—and he erects a philosophy
+or builds a bomb, to wipe it out.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Volume One of Emma Goldman’s story might, then, be
+called the premise of anarchism: there are really born in the
+world persons instinctively good, whom the complex tissue of
+laws tortures and maims. Volume Two is the conclusion of
+anarchism: the fate of such persons in the real world that persists.
+In her record of the past ten or fifteen years, the author
+is closer to the subject. We no longer have a woman of sixty
+trying to re-create a girl. We know what the young Miss
+Goldman was, by what she failed to record: we have the contemporary
+in a more positive record. For this other woman has
+been forced, by her frustrations, from the instinctive rush of
+her élan vital to the emotional plane. The natural mother
+blindly fighting for her children becomes the contemplative
+mother who can no longer wield arms, who can only suffer.
+The bud of the young woman’s goodness blooms into a dark
+flower of pain. Now Emma Goldman has memory. Her last
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>pages, in which she gives us a War America and a Russia of
+her own, are suffused with tragic light.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>b.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>I do not wish to appear to minimize the intellectual contribution
+of the great anarchist writers. They established a theory
+of the state which Marx accepted. Indeed, the bitter war
+between anarchism and communism is one of methods toward
+a common goal—the classless and stateless society. As anarchism
+evolved, however, it became an unrealistic fixation on
+the end, whereas the Marxists assumed the task of establishing
+the ideological and technical means that might bring the end
+into existence. The anarchists (in the contemporary jargon)
+became a dissociation from the context of life: they represented
+that extreme of social suffering which touches madness
+in so far as madness is a dislocation from the whole. And
+against them, Marx brought his organic rationale to the cause
+of revolution. He counteracted the instinctive anarchist flight
+from an unjust world by making reasonable the relation between
+the rebellious impulse and the capitalist system, and by
+integrating social revolution as an organic (dialectic) issue
+of our social order. In this effort, it is natural that all the leading
+Marxists—Engels, Plekhanov, Lenin, etc.—should have
+made conscious war against the anarchists. But it is a beautiful
+stroke of fortune which led a leading anarchist, like Emma
+Goldman, into articulate contact with the first Marxist nation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Her bitter rejection of bolshevism is well known. She went
+to Russia in 1920, ready to defend and to collaborate. A year
+and a half later, she and Berkman left, heartbroken by what
+she names the betrayal of the Cause for which she has given
+her life. Her record is full, and is—for reasons unknown to
+herself—the most significant part of her book. It is the final
+revelation of the utter unreality of her own kind of revolution.
+Emma Goldman found in Russia a ruthless state employing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>repression of all kinds—censorship, imprisonment, execution—in
+the effort to survive both the inherited chaos of the
+Tsarist regime and the seventeen White armies that were attacking
+it. This was enough for Miss Goldman: the old hated
+state at its old methods. She had never stopped, in her assaults
+on bourgeois society, to understand it; why, now, should she
+stop to understand the real problems of the proletarian dictatorship
+in Russia? Contexts are beyond Emma Goldman,
+whether they be White or Red. The whole activity of relations
+is beyond her.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Her book, in its finality, becomes the tragedy of good will
+and a good heart unguided by a sense of the Whole. The
+impulse that had made her a rebel was generous; her methods
+of rebellion were brave and pure. But rebellion became the
+automatic habit of her life; her one positive response to the
+objective world of men and of values. If she had <i>understood</i>
+the evils of bourgeois society, she would have understood the
+inevitability of their survival in the transition period which
+she witnessed in Russia. Her descriptions of what she saw
+are factual enough: Emma Goldman is incapable of deliberate
+falsehood. But she is also incapable of truth, which is the placing
+of facts in their vital context.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Her failure to understand Russia is the anarchist failure
+to understand and hence to work upon the world. Her story
+of a great anarchist (there is something about this woman
+that is great) becomes the most eloquent defense of communism.
+If the revolutionary impulse can go so far astray
+through blind emotion, become so hysterical, so impotent, so
+unjust, and finally so destructive, the Marxian method is
+imperative.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But if the lesson of this book went no further, it would
+scarcely deserve the space that I have given it. Anarchism as
+a system and method of revolution is dead: communism has
+killed it. What remains in the revolutionary world is the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>menace of a fixation, different but as deadly as that which in
+a hundred years turned the fertile beginnings of Godwin and
+Proudhon into so pitiful an end. Anarchism has died of intellectual
+dry rot induced by its eccentric emotionalism. There
+are signs that orthodox communism is threatened by a dogmatic
+rationalistic creed (by no means discoverable in Marx)
+whose inadequate depth and breadth would ultimately exclude
+the creative energies of mankind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The intelligent communist will not gloat over the tragic
+story of Emma Goldman. He will bear in mind that a revolutionary
+cause must be constantly Creative, and that to this
+end it must be vigilant against mental or emotional habits
+that exclude the right of fresh discoveries. To bring a new
+mankind into the world is a long act of birth menaced at
+every instant by the nearness of death.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1931</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>6. THE BOOK OF LEO STEIN</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>The man whose conversations about art have gone into
+the nurture of most of the important artists of our day in
+Paris has written a book. For one who knows the author, it
+will be hard to dissociate these printed pages from the voice
+of the man who wrote them. To have had acquaintance with
+this tireless seeker, watched the beautiful curves of his mind
+moving for hours of uninterrupted discourse upon a mental
+action, and to have relished his piquant admixture of spiritual
+humbleness, intellectual passion and ascetic distrust of all passions,
+is not the sort of experience to be overlooked, just because
+one of the best talkers of our day has turned to writing.
+Mr. Stein’s work is, moreover, in the best sense, conversation.
+From beginning to end, his curt and quiet tone is a manner of
+speaking. The color of the man stands in his most abstracted
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>thought. He has written a volume in which all thinking and
+all topics are so securely focused to a personal rhythm, that—whatever
+else—his essay is a work of art.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Stein has a poor opinion of philosophy, and of what
+esthetics, at its hand, has suffered. Mr. Stein, moreover, has
+loved art. He has, in consequence, attempted what might be
+called a “rescue.” The sentimental mists of philosophic
+thought must be cut away from his beloved; the basis of the
+esthetic act must be presented in simple, matter-of-fact, assumptionless
+terms. This is the program. Actually, what Mr.
+Stein has achieved is a statement as subjective as Amiel’s journal:
+a self-portrayal which is both beautiful and significant,
+since its hero is so archetypical of his time.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With the purely technical part of his examination of
+esthetics, there can be no quarrel. It is superb. Mr. Stein has
+studied the <i>picture</i> with a combined sensitivity and intelligence
+of which I, at least, can name no even approximate
+equal. To read his discussion of focus, interval, the physiology
+and analogies of rhythm, distortion, tension, composition, is
+to be aware of mastery and to know what sentimental perfume
+most literary art appreciation—from Goethe to Elie
+Faure—consists of. Mr. Stein’s technique for the practical taste
+of art seems to me to be perfect. His chapter, for example, on
+“Pictorial Seeing,” in which he makes clear how the eyes can
+turn a dish into a picture, how this ideal act is the basis of
+esthetics and must inevitably determine the distorting, flattening
+and focalizing, is a masterpiece; and the man who understands
+it is ready to see pictures. Moreover, the book is
+filled with apophthegmatic observations on life, the ego,
+civilization (which, to Mr. Stein, is yet far from dawning),
+that should make his volume precious to all lovers of delicious
+talk. Indeed, the work is so complete in its foreground—the
+physiology of the esthetic object—that its utter lack of background—the
+matrix, causality and dynamics of art—becomes
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>the clearer. Mr. Stein makes plain how in a picture it is upon
+the depth dimension that esthetic success hinges: how, indeed,
+much European art has failed because of the failure to throw
+the focus organically back and to make alive the planes which
+support and enact the forward action. And in this criticism
+he has given the measure of himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If, having so amply learned from Leo Stein how to transform
+the dish before our eyes into a picture, one were to ask
+him: (a) why one should do this; (b) why anyone has ever
+done this; (c) why and how this act is universally linked with
+the entire history of man’s spirit; (d) why feeling and value
+accrue from this act, and (e) what is the nature of this process
+whereby the self is enhanced, one would receive no answer.
+As I have said, Mr. Stein is “against” all philosophy and metaphysics.
+He takes furious pride in telling us that he has never
+been able to understand the writers on these subjects: and he
+makes clear that, if you think you have understood them, you
+are suffering from a delusion. “Philosophy,” he tells us, “is
+a pseudo-knowledge which attempts to add a dimension to
+human capacity.” “Mysticism,” he adds, “is sentimentality
+taken seriously.” The entire effort to establish truth from
+facts, or the real from our complex of thought and sense and
+act, being “philosophical” or “mystic,” is inadequate and acrimoniously
+barred from his discussion of esthetics. “Esthetics
+gives us fact, not truth,” he tells us. The work of art is a
+cognitive object, an object by means of which men may know
+but which they must “stay outside of.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Stein sticks about as heroically to his backgroundless
+thesis as he could, without becoming inarticulate altogether.
+What value exists in that rhythmic synthesis of ingredients
+intercepted by self, and called art, unless the unity achieved
+conveys an experience beyond the matters abstracted? Why
+should we care to know a Cezanne landscape, if this especial
+focusing of hills and houses is a mere unification of themselves?
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>Mr. Stein, in refusing to ask such questions or to place
+his facts in a context that inherently transcends them, dislocates
+every fact, every question he discusses; as assuredly
+as he would dislocate a dish (in a picture) if he essayed to
+represent its planes without the planes that intersect them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To render art intelligible by isolating it from those causes
+and associations which invade the philosophic realm is just
+about as wise as it would be to employ a language after
+abstracting the meaning of the words. (This, by the way, is
+not far from the method of Mr. Stein’s illustrious and ridiculous
+sister, Gertrude.) In his fear of unproved assumptions,
+Leo Stein has made a two-dimensional picture of esthetics.
+For the expert, his study of the traits of art in analytical
+cross section is instructive. But for the reader who is really
+seeking an alphabet of esthetics, the result is arid.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Leo Stein represents, in his attitude, the philosophical defeatism
+of our day. Because so many little boys have burned
+their fingers, he will eschew fire and live cold. There is something
+positively heroic in this spectacle of a man aborting the
+creative process of his mind, because so many births in the past
+(as he sees it) have been abortions. Even worse, Leo Stein,
+having no sympathy with the birth pangs of the world, decides
+there shall be no more birth at all. To this end, the work
+of art is reduced to a mere rationally cognitive object, with
+self as a static co-ordinate of the cognition; and that entire
+process of dynamic osmosis between self and not-self, <i>which
+is the history of culture</i>, is put away as sentimental nonsense.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>His subject has its revenge upon him. You cannot trace
+more than a diagram of the means of esthetics, unless you
+know that the configuration of facts in any work of art establishes
+for both artist and observer an experienced entity called
+truth, which as radically differs from these facts as water does
+from H<sub>2</sub> and O, or as a human body differs from the sum of
+inorganic chemicals within it. And—unfortunately for Mr.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>Stein—you cannot talk about anything with perseverance,
+without having to choose between a philosophy of your own
+(which is at least alive and yours) and a philosophy that is unconscious
+and not yours and uncontrolled.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is the fate of the antiphilosophic Leo Stein. He
+says, for instance: “Some believe there are quite a lot of emotions.
+Some believe there are only three. I doubt very much
+that there is more than one, which is just emotion.” This
+sounds like a brave refusal to “assume.” It is really an assumption
+based on an atomistic philosophy whose tenet was that
+you must split up psychic states just as physicists split up
+matter into atoms. I might respond that there are no emotions—only
+organic contexts from which the mind may abstract
+analytic elements which partake solely of the mind process and
+which it has called emotions. I don’t say my organic philosophy
+would be truer. The point is that Mr. Stein, in disagreeing
+with me, is as philosophical as I am.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Throughout his book, such unconscious philosophical assumptions
+are present: and they are inadmissible because <i>he</i>
+does not admit them. He says, for instance:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class='c007'>Esthetics gives us fact, not truth. But fact to be interesting
+to adults in the long run must be true. Only science and practice
+can judge validity beyond the mere aspect. The world as it is
+scientifically known is not a whole world, but the nature of that
+world is such that it can find in science a partial reflection that is
+true enough to work. Our esthetic perception of the world must
+not contradict this knowledge.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class='c007'>If this is not philosophy—philosophy of a very classic mold—then
+Aristotle was a landscape painter.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I have here no space to isolate the assumptions which
+color the esthetic of Leo Stein; nor to work out the inadequacy
+of his definition of art as a cognitive object. The task
+would be the more difficult, in that he forbears from the
+method of statement of his first principles—a method which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>makes it so easy to attack the systematic thinkers. I detect, under
+Mr. Stein’s abnegation of first principles about the “real”
+and the “true” and the “good,” the cowardice of our epoch.
+Every man who lives should know that his <i>life</i> is an assumed,
+rationally unproved first principle. The real and the true are
+categories of our existence and enter as functions into all our
+acts. Our sole choice is between a creative and a passive attitude
+toward the first principles thus <i>given</i>. So far as I know,
+the one honest, if vain, effort to reject first principles is suicide.
+Much of the brilliant intellectual activity of our day is a
+comfortable surrogate for self-destruction.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1927</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>7. REFLECTIONS ON SPENGLER</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>Oswald Spengler’s “The Decline of the West,” from
+1918 to 1926, sold in Germany almost a hundred thousand
+copies. It would be inspiriting to believe that a profound
+historical and philosophical work could have so large a sale
+in any modern land. But the originality of Spengler does not
+reside in his erudition; it is poetic. The book’s metaphysics is
+eclectic rather than sound; its historical research is vast rather
+than uniformly deep. “Der Untergang des Abendlandes” is
+an epos, a myth. So, if Germany has not bought a hundred
+thousand copies of a great philosophic work, it has at least
+welcomed a personal mythos of deep interest: one whose
+elements are philosophy, history, esthetics: one whose comprehension
+requires of the reader a great familiarity with
+comparative history and comparative religion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I think at once of “The Outline of History” of H. G.
+Wells, which had an analogous popular appeal in America and
+England. Wells, like Spengler, under the guise of writing history,
+offered a thesis and a myth. Here the analogy stops. The
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>story in Wells is a vulgar, obvious narrative of “events”: his
+thesis is the most illiterate notion of “human progress” and his
+myth is a mere flatulent, optimistic dream. Spengler’s work is
+formally beautiful. He builds, not by storytelling, but by the
+presentation and analysis of analogies. And he concludes on
+a note as darkly glamorous as it is pessimistic. The Winter is
+upon us, he declares in doom words that are closer to the note
+of the prophets than he would care to admit. Our salvation
+is to perform, nobly and perfectly, the work of Winter: to
+understand ourselves, to set down as the Seal of our glorious
+dying life a ruthless scrutiny of what we were.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I shall criticize Spengler harshly enough. Let it be, however,
+always clear that Spengler has written a work of heroic
+poetic power. The land that dared to welcome such a volume
+still possesses culture.</p>
+
+<p class='c006'>The book’s main thesis seems to be disguised in the title.
+“The Decline of the West”—is it not a misnomer? Has not
+Spengler really written a history and a morphology of Cultures?
+But no. Though the title may mislead—may, indeed,
+have misled its author and its readers, it is a true self-confession
+of the poet’s veritable purpose. Spengler has composed
+this erudite, overpoweringly brilliant thesis on the anatomy
+and physiology of cultures, in order to prove that <i>his</i> Culture
+(the Culture of the West) is dying. This is where his heart
+lies. He has written a swan song. And since he is a citizen of
+the world whose most valid mythic material is no longer the
+personal legend, the hero, the war, the romance; is, on the
+other hand, metaphysics, history, epistemology and science,
+Spengler has employed these elements to make his tragic tale.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And the value of the book lies not in its thesis and its
+proof. This decline of the West is obvious enough. Spengler
+shares his conviction of it with a great measure of good Europeans.
+For several generations the disaster has been in the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>air. The Great War was but an episode. Rousseau had some
+ideas on the subject. No sooner had the Germans after Kant
+invented the notions of Culture, Progress, Spirit, than the
+critics rose to prove that their culture was moribund and
+their spirit sleeping. Since Schopenhauer and Nietzsche, Europe’s
+religious decline has been taken for granted. Tolstoi
+and Nordau from contrary directions met in calling modern
+art the herald of the fall. Rimbaud, Blake, Dostoevski, Whitman,
+were the sort of prophets who declared the death of
+Western Europe, although it was to predict a new spiritual
+rise. Long past its zenith is the myth that the “modern age”
+is a height rather than a decline from the medieval. The
+notion that the Middle Ages were “Dark Ages” is relegated
+to Chautauqua.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Spengler’s value (and it is very real) lies in his attitude
+toward this decline of the West and in the method whereby
+he establishes it. His attitude is poetic. He despises the Superman
+construction whereby Nietzsche cheated his despair of
+tomorrow: he is closer to the marvelous poet Rimbaud who
+accepted the complete negation of all values, without hope of
+heavens or nirvanas, and who, yet, made of his acceptance
+a last song. Spengler is in love with winter. So bitter-passionate
+is his embrace of the death he feels in his own soul that he
+has written a vast book to prove the inevitability of his love.
+The romantic “proves” the perfection of his lady by showing
+how the birds and the trees and the winds sing her praises.
+Thus has Spengler bent the art and mathematics of the
+Greeks, the religion of the Jews and Arabs, the cultures of
+Egypt, India and China to his one loved purpose: he has made
+them over into ineluctable signs of the winter upon Europe.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Before such thorough passion one must be respectful. This
+is a song—a death song the Prussian is singing. The work of
+art is a matter of focus. Here a man with the whole world’s
+learning in his hand has <i>focused</i> it to make refrain for a great
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>downgoing. He has seen mankind whole, in order to make
+that whole the accomplice of his own particular end. He has
+warped history, maimed philosophy, chain-ganged science,
+perverted art. But he is an artist himself. He has written a
+book which is poor history, worse anthropology, perhaps. So
+was Dante’s “Divina Commedia.”</p>
+
+<p class='c006'>Spengler, I have said, is a poet, his metaphysics eclectic
+rather than sound, his historical research vast rather than uniformly
+deep. Spengler’s masters, as regards the material with
+which he works out his conception, are almost legion, nor has
+he always done them justice. The notion of a culture-organism,
+independent, impenetrable, yet somehow mirroring the
+universe within its autonomous self, and moved only by God
+in the mysterious shape of Destiny, is very close to Leibnitz
+with his Monads. Spengler, indeed, is an instance, with Whitehead
+and Bertrand Russell, of the revival of Leibnitz, whose
+realistic, pluralistic universe was for a time submerged under
+the idealistic waves of Kant and Hegel. To this Leibnitzian
+base, Spengler adds a good measure of Hegel. His treatment
+of mathematics, science, history, all the attributes of culture
+from geometry to esthetics, as expressions of Spirit and as subjective,
+is Hegelian or Kantian idealism. On the other hand,
+his radical differentiation of mathematical time (which is reversible)
+from the irreversible Time which he calls Destiny
+brings to mind Bergson who opposed creative Time, the signature
+of Life, to the false, spatial, materialistic time which he
+condemns as a constructed figment of the intellect. Spengler’s
+anti-intellectualism, whereas it is as logical as Hegel, springs
+from Bergson, as does, likewise, his hostility to the geneticisms
+of Darwin and of Marx. His treatment, however, of the art-phenomena
+of any age as physiognomic traits of its people is a
+brilliant evolution of what Taine and Renan themselves derived
+from Hegel.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>Spengler avows Goethe as his master. He is forever quoting
+Goethe, appealing to him as the scientific and philosophic
+source of his conception. And he is right, in so far as both
+these men are poets. Spengler is very far from the ideas of
+Goethe; but in his use of ideas toward an absolute, mythmaking
+end, he is allied to the creator of Faust.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Goethe’s philosophic master was Spinoza. This manifest
+fact would be inadmissible to Spengler who regards Goethe
+as the last master of the Faustian soul and Spinoza as an
+anomalous survival, out of time and out of place, from the
+alien Magian or Arabian culture. Spengler’s thesis of intact,
+autonomous culture-organisms does not allow that a master
+from one culture can do more than impede the evolution of
+another. Spinoza, he declares, shows his strangeness from
+Western (Faustian) Culture in that he lacks the <i>force-element</i>
+which is that culture’s primary trait. Faust denotes force
+tending toward the infinite. But why cannot the same be said
+of the personal nature of any of the Hebrew prophets or of
+Prometheus? In Spinoza, it is true that this trait of personal
+force is assimilated—or, rather, it is equated—in that balance
+of individual wills whose sum is God. The point is that whereas
+Goethe as artist depicted personal force in Faust, he transcended
+it as a philosopher precisely in his acceptance of the
+Spinozistic synthesis of forces. Goethe, maturing as a thinker,
+transcended the concept of personal will as ultimate. Spengler
+has taken Goethe’s esthetic creation of the individual, <i>willing</i>
+Faust, and made of it a philosophic symbol for an entire
+culture.</p>
+
+<p class='c006'>Let us take Spengler for a while, as he demands to be
+taken, critically. My notes of specific disagreements with the
+Spenglerian presentation of facts and of conclusions would
+cover many pages. This is no place to print them. Yet I cannot
+avoid some minimum of analytical discussion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>The major thesis is the critical issue. Spengler considers
+the culture as an organism. He discerns in history a number
+of such cultures. He examines the Chinese, the Egyptian, the
+Indian (Hindu), the Classical (Greek and Roman), the
+Magian (Jewish-Persian—early Christian-Arab), and the
+Western or Faustian (roughly Western Europe since 900
+<span class='fss'>C.E.</span>). He discovers in each of these cultures a regular life
+span of four seasons: spring, summer, autumn, winter. They
+sum to about one thousand years. The form and length of
+this course never varies. Each culture has a <i>soul</i>: this it expresses
+through a chief spiritual attitude, through an individual
+vision of life and through a specific symbol. The mathematics,
+science, art, religion, political, financial and economic
+forms of every culture express its soul, its vision—are symbols
+of its attitude toward life. These expressions go, with the culture
+itself, through the seasons to decrepitude from youth.
+Each epoch in any culture is strictly homogeneous with the
+“contemporary” epoch of any other culture. In the spring,
+that is, of Classical culture, you will find manifestations in
+every activity of man which are analogous to those of the
+spring of Western or of Chinese culture. Each culture lives
+out its own destiny, dies its own death. No other culture can
+do more than impede it, even as one tree may impede another’s
+sunlight. There is no interpenetration. There is no
+mutual understanding. It is an illusion on the part of the Western
+soul to believe it understands the Chinese, the Arabian,
+the Greek. The inherent growth of each culture is a matter
+not of geneticisms and material evolutions, but of Destiny.
+There is no cause and effect; there are monadlike cultural
+units, mapped through irreversible Time from birth to death.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, the trouble with these organisms is that they are
+placed <i>in vacuo</i>. They are described as evolving their destiny
+sheerly out of themselves, without relational struggle, drama,
+reaction, interference. And yet they are also described as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>having the nature of biologic organisms: i. e., they have youth,
+maturity, old age; they have a specific lifespan. But no organisms
+known to man exist in this utter isolation. One and all,
+they arise from other organisms like them, they live in a continuum
+of interaction with other organisms like them, they
+give birth before death or in death to other organisms like
+them. The culture-organisms of Spengler do not seem to be
+really alive: they are mere synthetic constructions of the
+author. In order to prove them alive, Spengler has been forced
+to a progressive and virtuosic deforming of the facts.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When I say that the Spenglerian culture-organism, absolute,
+monadlike, impenetrable, does not exist, I do not mean
+that there is no valid view of cultures as organic within their
+rise and fall. Before I can come to this, I must examine in at
+least one detail the Spenglerian proof.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Each culture, Spengler undertakes to show, has a soul
+unique and radically different from that of any other culture.
+(If this is so, why is there such strict analogy in the
+forms, seasons and lifespan of all cultures?) This soul’s Weltanschauung
+is its own. And its prime symbol is its idea of
+space or of extension. From this symbol each culture-soul constructs
+its mathematics, its sciences, its religion, its architecture,
+etc. They are all expressions of the prime symbol. Therefore
+every mathematics, science system, religion, etc., differs
+radically from every other. Moreover, there is no one mathematics,
+no one system of physics, etc. There are as many as
+there are cultures. Each is true, and true uniquely for <i>its</i>
+culture.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To prove his thesis of the individual prime symbol of
+each culture, Spengler bravely ventures to establish that
+Greek “number” and “space” and “mathematics” differ radically
+from the Western. The Classical prime symbol is the
+finite unit, the entity, the <i>here and now</i>. It denies infinitude,
+past, future. It considers space as the mere emptiness between
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>objects. Therefore it looks on number (Pythagoras) as the
+essence of all things: and by all things it means literally things
+perceptible to the senses. From this prime symbol has come the
+Classical esthetic unit—the human body: the Greek tragedy
+of episode and exterior fate: the political unit, a small city
+(polis): the coin, etc. But the Western (Faustian) soul has
+infinity as its prime symbol. Space for it is infinite and comes
+prior to the objects which have their being <i>within</i> it. Western
+mathematics is, therefore, one of function, analysis, relation.
+Its geometry is non-Euclidean. Its State is a cosmic empire.
+Its money is credit, not the coin. Its signal art is not sculpture
+but atmospheric painting and contrapuntal music. Its architecture
+is not the interiorless Greek temple, but the infinitely
+soaring Gothic church.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To make his thesis absolute instead of merely suggestive,
+Spengler is forced to explain away the Dionysian (anti-Apollonian)
+element in Greek culture and the Renaissance in
+Western Europe: to ignore the mystical in Pythagoras and
+Plato, together with the Aristotelian elements of medieval
+thought and modern science. The idea of the infinite and of
+aspiration toward it existed, indeed, in Greece. It came over,
+organically, from Egypt. Classic Greece did not lose it, but
+formed it, rather; and transformed it. Moreover, the modern
+mathematics is different from the classic and the Newtonian
+only in so far as it is a growth. Infinity was a problem evaded
+by the classical geometers: admitted as insoluble by the Cartesians:
+and <i>eliminated as solved</i> by the non-Euclidean mathematicians
+of the nineteenth century. The Classical attitude
+toward ultimate problems was a status of childhood. It
+admitted only the object and the material. So it evolved
+materialistic systems like those of Thales, Democritus, Heraclitus;
+or turned the abstractions of ideas into quasi materials
+called essences, as in Plato. The Faustian attitude was one of
+adolescence. It stressed the unsolved and aspirational: the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>concept of infinite space, the autonomy of the personal will.
+Faust is a growth from Œdipus; even as the Cathedral is a
+growth from the Temple. To differentiate the prime symbols
+of cultures which so obviously were interpenetrated, not
+alone one by the other, but each by still other cultures (such
+as the Egyptian and the Hebrew), is to do them violence. It
+is an unnecessary abstraction. Why Spengler wanted to make
+this abstraction we shall see in the sequel.</p>
+
+<p class='c006'>Here is a book packed with intricate allusions. To criticize
+it in detail would take almost page for page. I must confine
+myself to one more example. One of the cultures discussed by
+Spengler is the Arabian—the culture of the Magian soul. Its
+prime space-symbol is the <i>world-cave</i>. It lacks the force element
+of the Faustian, and the unit-object notion of the Greek.
+The individual, here, is a mere passive emanation within God,
+as within an aloof yet immanent and defining Cave. The
+Arab arch, the mosque-dome, the mosaic painting, are alike
+expressions of this symbol. As are also algebra (the arithmetic
+of indefinite number), the arguments of Talmudry, the fatalism
+of the Moslem. The Magian culture-soul was born about
+the first year of our era. Precultural to it was the whole pre-Christian
+history of Judea, Persia, Arabia. Now, as “springtime
+scriptures,” come the Gospels, come the philosophies of
+Origen, Philo, Plotinus, Iamblichus, Mani. With Augustine
+and the Nestorians we are at the summer. Mohammed marks
+the decline into the autumnal dryness whose strawlike flowers
+are the Arab and Judaic thinkers of Babylon and Spain.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Perhaps this amazing violence done to such various spirits
+as ancient Hebrew prophet, Berber mystic, Alexandrian
+pseudepigraphist, Arab Moslem and Granadan Moor, in the
+attempt to enclose them all within one organic cultural conception,
+born at the birth of Christ, reaching summer about
+400, drooping in 800 and dead with the <i>rigor mortis</i> of “civilization”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>at the year 1,000, will most briefly prove the dangers
+of the Spenglerian method.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course, there are analogies between St. Augustine and
+Ibn Gabirol. Are there, then, none between Faust and Job?
+between the writers of the Upanishads and Whitman? between
+the sculptors of Egypt and the painters of Spain? If
+Maimonides is a “Magian Winter man,” why is Aquinas a
+“Faustian Spring man”? If kinship of “prime symbol” bring
+Philo, Plotinus, Mohammed, Rabbi Akiba and Jehuda Halevi
+together as seasonal expressions of a single culture, why not
+prove for the entire world one spiritual Body, one organic
+culture—with its systoles and diastoles, of course, its tides, its
+shifts, and yet as well with its deep unity of purpose, its continuity
+of form and of method of creation?</p>
+
+<p class='c006'>Death is a breaking up; a lapse from unity into multiplicity.
+When a human being dies, only his unity is gone.
+Disease means <i>dis-wholeness</i>. Spengler breaks up the world
+into these absolute cultures which are really fragments, because
+there is the tendency toward death—toward disunity—in
+his own high Prussian soul. <i>He</i> is breaking and so
+is his particular portion of the world. Let him, therefore,
+make conscription of all the wisdom of his world to prove
+that his experience is the Law.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Nowhere is the man’s will to see crooked plainer than in
+his virtual ignoring of the Jews. The whole Scriptural era
+before the Gospels is set aside as “inorganic”—not cultural at
+all. Now, Spengler’s thesis is that the pure mystical religious
+ethos is the trait of the birth of a culture. Legalism, materialism,
+socialism, communism, the various systems of utilitarianism,
+mark that culture’s end and herald the “state of suspended
+death” which he calls civilization and which, with all its
+wintry signs, he declares now to be upon the European and
+American worlds. But if, hypothetically, he had deigned to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>consider the Hebrews and Jews as a culture, what would he
+have found? Mosaism (read: materialism, legalism, utilitarianism)
+came first! “Civilization” or death came before culture
+or birth. And from this winter a gradual unfolding toward
+the spring of the prophets. He would have found matter even
+more disquieting than that. For this “organism” of the Jews
+is hopelessly irregular: its seasons and states recur and are
+intermingled. Nor does Spengler’s millennial limit for the
+entire story tell one-half of its creative tale. He would have
+found, moreover, that this hypothetic culture interpenetrated
+with others: revived and created others, was revived by others.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And, looking from the Jews back to his Greeks and Faustians,
+he would have found a similar intricate story. He would
+have found, in other words, hope in lieu of his dear despair.
+Wherefore he looked elsewhere, reasoned otherwise.</p>
+
+<p class='c006'>The culture-organism is a notion abstracted from human
+life. It <i>is</i> an abstraction. And abstractions are needed for intellectual
+work. They are right when they are fruitful. To
+regard the life of Greece as a strict cultural whole is wrong:
+yet pragmatically it may be correct to do so, since it enables
+us to get the results which observation in isolated status alone
+brings. The danger rises when we forget that abstractions are
+of use qua abstractions. Take them for real and they turn
+monsters.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Indeed, the idea of the periodic rise and fall of man is
+probably a similar abstraction. Yet it is justified so long as we
+employ it either to criticize the past or to envisage a greater
+future. Both of these acts require the analytic method: and
+analysis <i>is</i> abstraction. And now we are at the root of what
+ails Spengler. His “cultures” are counters of the analyst. And
+these he has turned into a poet’s bodies. This is why his book,
+although its impulse is poetic, cannot rank as great poetic art.
+He tells us a good deal about the cultures which have filled
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>the world. And much of what he says is true and is profound.
+Nowhere, for instance, have I encountered better comment
+on German music, on the deep significances of Classic and
+Gothic architecture. Yet the cultures themselves, whereof he
+speaks as breathing entities, do not become plastically real. We
+learn much in detail about their traits. <i>They</i> neither breathe
+for us nor move. They cannot. For they are not persons of a
+drama: they are tools of an argument.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Human spirit takes forms, of course, and all forms die. But
+the <i>constant</i> is the human spirit. And it is poor philosophy to
+take its forms as really abstracted from each other. Even the
+painter of a group of persons must relate them, one and all,
+upon his canvas if he aims to achieve esthetic truth.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Among the forms of human spirit are the arts which rise
+and fall; are social entities like state and city, which are
+builded and broken. But the Spenglerian assumption that the
+human spirit has no other life than in the splendor of great
+buildings, great realms, great arts, is a profanation. To prove
+that the abstraction called Rome was “decadent” in the year
+400 is not to prove that Man, then, was less great than in the
+days when Caesar strutted. It may require a peculiar conjunction
+of poetic genius and social readiness to produce a Vergil.
+But there are other ways to the light. And some of them are
+always open.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Spengler feels death in his own soul. Wherefore he marshals
+a whole retrospect of life to funeral him in true Prussian
+glory. But human history is subtler. Man is a variable
+constant. He can achieve greatness with the ruins of a world
+as his sole instruments, as well as with the aid of outward
+fortune. Here, too, the evidence of the Jew might have saved
+Spengler—from the writing of his book! Variant circumstance
+has infinitely varied the expressions of this people.
+They have been warlike and humble; unphilosophical and,
+later, abstruse beyond the Greeks and Hindus. They have had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>no drama and flooded the stage: no worldly arts at all, and
+later supplied such arts for all the world. They have been
+pastoral, and adverse from the soil. They have been creators,
+politically, of Greek polis, of Oriental empires, and of invisible,
+Platonic Zions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Only in so far as Man remained alive among the Jews was
+Jewish culture a constant. And this is true of any culture.
+The undying kernel is humanity: this is the locus of organic
+growth and of organic permanence which Spengler should
+have studied. For cultures are never isolate. Cut them off from
+their immersion in other cultures—in Life, they will die uprooted.
+They move upon and within each other: they fall to
+rise, fade to be transfigured.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Above all, the human spirit, in any cultural body, is capable
+of <i>unprecedented transformation</i>, provided an unprecedented
+new element of life comes fertilely upon it. This is the
+destiny of evolution. And evolution is true, however discarded
+the mechanistic form of it may be which Darwin
+degraded from Lamarck. <i>And this crucial fact—that the culture,
+if to be regarded as an organism at all, must be taken as
+a transforming organism; an organism related to the genus,
+not to the individual, to the possibly infinite genus, not to the
+sharply delimited and mortal person—is entirely ignored by
+Spengler.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Look on cultures, not as biologic bodies with their youth
+and age, but as indefinite series like those in mathematics, and
+you have a fertile abstraction in lieu of a dead one. These
+series have, each, their inner laws, perhaps, but they are intertwined
+and any figure belonging in one place to one series
+may differently occupy other series. Paul, then, who in the
+Spenglerian sense was a “winter man” for the Jews, could be
+a “spring man” for Western Europe. And Jesus, his strict
+contemporary in time and race, could have in him all seasons.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Or take America. Spengler would rightly say that America
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>was born of the dying of European culture. So he condemns
+us to the <i>rigor mortis</i> of civilization; to a noisier
+Egyptian fellahdom. But what of the new mythmakers, the
+springtime men, those creatures of pure ethos—Whitman,
+Lincoln, Melville, Thoreau? In an organic body, shut by
+Destiny, they have no place, and Spengler doubtless would
+deny them. In a life series, self-contained yet indefinitely
+progressing, they are in place. For with such a series each
+integer is at once the conclusion of what came before and
+the outset of an infinity beyond....</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1926</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>8. THE MODERN DISTEMPER</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>(<i>A diagnosis through Joseph Wood Krutch and
+Bertrand Russell</i>)</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>a.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>In the days when all men of a nation shared a view of life—worshiping
+Jehovah and obeying Torah, dwelling within
+the cosmos of the Catholic Church, accepting the divine right
+of their king or of their reason—it was possible for the author
+and critic to make his individual contribution without explicitly
+stating the philosophic ground on which he rested.
+The base of his point of view was common, and was commonly
+understood. The personal variation was what mattered.
+This, of course, is the contrary of our modern state. It is
+precisely the foundations of human vision—hence of human
+thought and of language—that have shifted. In place of essential
+harmony in the premises of intellectual action, there is
+chaos. But the American writer, despite this obvious fact,
+seldom honors his public with a clear-cut statement of what
+his philosophy and his religion are. He may even go so far as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>to deny that he possesses any, and make of his lack a virtue.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Yet, however negative and confused, each human being
+must possess an attitude toward life. Every thought is a judgment,
+every act is a judgment, the interpretation of every
+word is a judgment: and judgment implies a standard. If that
+standard is not stated, it may function contrary to the conscious
+will of its possessor. But it functions nevertheless. Current
+literary work is for the most part the expression of a
+philosophy and a religion that are not stated at all. The essential
+implications never come to light. The student could, of
+course, go to the complete works of each writer and discover
+the traits of his <i>Weltanschauung</i>; but most readers possess
+neither time nor power for such research. They are therefore
+constantly taking in, under cover of a stream of articles,
+biographies, poems, novels, plays, an attitude toward life of
+which they never become aware. And this hidden attitude
+works in them; shapes and nourishes, or corrupts them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Joseph Wood Krutch is a well-known American critic.
+He is neither more able, nor less so, than a dozen others who
+write in our liberal magazines. But he has done what all of
+his fellows should have realized the need of doing; and what
+most of them have shamefully neglected to do. He has written
+a book, entitled “The Modern Temper,” in which, with
+all the clarity and honesty at his command, he has set forth
+the philosophy behind his judgments—the <i>measure</i> of life that
+determines his specific critical responses. How far he is justified
+in calling his mood <i>the</i> modern temper, we shall see.
+Certainly, his is <i>a</i> modern temper, widespread and hence significant.
+His book therefore offers an occasion, exceptionally
+concise, to study the philosophy and spirit of some of the
+men who write our books and who review them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In order to take fair advantage of this occasion, I must
+begin by setting forth in some detail what Mr. Krutch has
+said. In my summary I shall, without criticism, follow the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>line of the book in its exact progression, using wherever possible
+the words of the author.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class='c007'><i>Chapter 1.</i> (a) Freud says that the unborn babe is the happiest
+of creatures; into his consciousness has entered no conflict,
+nor is there any limitation upon his desires, (b) As the babe
+grows up and experience and knowledge make life miserable, he
+invents myths of all sorts to recapture or protect his infant bliss.
+The realm of poetry, mythology, religion, represents the world
+as a man would like to have it, while science represents the world
+as it is. (c) Connections between parts of life, explanations of life,
+reasons for life—relations between the parts—are supplied by the
+imagination. Which means, they are illusions, (d) Only man has
+rationality; the universe is not rational, (e) Therefore man is an
+alien in the universe. His rationality, being “unnatural,” is hence
+an illusion, (f) Our morality and emotional lives are adjusted to
+a world which no longer exists—because it has been destroyed by
+reason (science being the reasoning from facts).</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Chapter 2.</i> (a) The social virtues of the humanists—serving
+one’s children and posterity, living for society, etc.—are really
+animal traits, (b) Don Juan is the real type of human, (c) An
+individualism that is antagonistic to and destructive of the social
+virtues is the highest human value, (d) Human individualism, the
+real human value, is perfect separatism of each soul, (e) Nature
+reveals no ends only means for its own self-perpetuation, (f)
+Man in civilization strives for ends, and turns means (sex,
+thought, etc.) into ends. Therefore man is unnatural, (g) Apotheosis
+of the ant, as the ideal of nature; since the ant has no individualistic
+ends, living entirely for the anthill, (h) The antithesis
+between natural means and human ends is irreconcilable, for
+when man makes his own thought or sensation or life an end, he
+neglects the procreation of the species, (i) Therefore, all cultures
+no sooner ripen than they rot. (j) The alternatives for man
+are an antlike stable group, or recurrent death at the top. (k)
+Humanism is riddled with mutually destructive contradictions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Chapter 3.</i> (a) The generation of Huxley, Tennyson, etc.,
+was sure that science was going to disclose a world in which man
+is perfectly and regally at home, (b) But science has revealed
+only a vast emptiness, in which, lost like Milton’s Satan, we wing
+our way. (c) Scientific mastery of the inner life, the soul, leads
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>likewise to no real mastery of it, but only to more confusion. (d)
+There is no ethics or morals. Anthropology and psychology
+reveal merely a variety of ethics and morals. (e) Yet man persists
+in being an ethical, moral creature. (f) There is no royal
+reason. (g) The reason in which Aristotle, Shakespeare, Spinoza,
+believed is revealed by science to be mere rationalization. (h)
+Science itself is doubtful. 2,000 years of epistemology have made
+it dubious if man can know any reality outside himself. (i) Science
+gives us one table—consisting of nothing but electrons. Our
+senses give us another table. The former we know as truth; but
+the second only can be of use to us in our experience. (j) Science
+gives us the real universe. (k) Huxley, etc., were deluded, thinking
+we could make this universe ours. (l) There is no relation
+between the outer world of science and the inner world of man’s
+needs and emotions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Chapter 4.</i> (a) Love is defined as the sexuality of the individual
+separate ego. It is a discontinuous, physical phenomenon
+with no implications in reality beyond its naked self. (b) Since
+science and modern freedom have freed love of the old taboos
+and of the religious and poetic myths, love, as more than naked
+sexuality, turns out to be illusion. (c) Sex is a mere physical need,
+and hence has no values whatsoever. Man is simply cursed with
+this need and must make his peace with it, as he can. (d) We
+shall have to get used to a loveless as well as to a godless world.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Chapter 5.</i> (a) Tragedy is based on noble action, and noble
+action is based on the belief (as Sophocles and Shakespeare had
+it) in the dignity of man’s soul. (b) This dignity is an illusion;
+for it derives from the notion that man is the center of the universe,
+or at least that he belongs to the universe, and that his
+deeds have some universal import. (c) With the going of this
+illusion has gone man’s dignity, his possibility of noble action—and
+Tragedy. (d) The art of the present can only distrust its
+own thoughts, despise its own passions, realize man’s impotent
+unimportance in the universe, and tell no story except such as
+makes it more acutely aware of its trivial miseries. (e) Yet with
+the passing of Tragedy, our need of Tragedy (i.e., of dignity,
+noble actions, etc.) has not passed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Chapter 6.</i> (a) To medievalism, life was an exact science. The
+laws, rules, etc., of that science have broken. (b) Life regarded
+as a science is now and forevermore intellectually indefensible.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>(c) The modern mind, realizing that there is no Peace unless
+each life is made into some self-sufficient pattern or order or
+whole of its own, strives to achieve this. Strives, that is, to make
+life an art. (d) For in science, there is only one Truth; but in
+art, there may be many truths. Many men have striven to make
+their lives an art: e.g., Cellini, St. Francis, the heroes of Henry
+James’s novels, Anatole France. (e) In art, there is no standard
+except the artistic perfection of the individual work, according to
+its own rules. As an artistic creation, Othello is no better than
+Iago. (f) In art, there is no ethics. (g) To conceive of life as a
+group of works of art means, therefore, anarchy. (h) No society
+can five by such a scheme. Life lived as an art is pragmatically
+impossible, from the standpoint of mankind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Chapter 7.</i> (a) What progress did philosophy or religion ever
+make? None. It was only when the thinker discovered how small
+are the things he can do, that he did anything at all: only when
+he renounced looking for the key to heaven, that he was able to
+keep chimneys from smoking. (b) The world grows more comfortable,
+as man ceases to strive for anything beyond comfort.
+(c) But now, despite this progress, behold metaphysics is reborn!
+(d) It is typified by the neo-Catholicism of France, and the
+neo-Anglicanism of England. (e) Its essence is expressed by T. E.
+Hulme, who wrote: “One of the main achievements of the nineteenth
+century was&#160;... the principle of <i>continuity</i>. The destruction
+of this conception is, on the contrary, an urgent necessity
+of the present.” The premise of the new metaphysicians is
+therefore <i>dualism</i>, or discontinuity. It says: “There are two
+worlds: one, the empty spaces of materialism and science, and
+two, the world of man—spirit, faith, ethic, value, emotion, God.
+And there is discontinuity between them.” (f) But there is nothing
+of which we are so sure as of the <i>continuity</i> taught by science.
+To earlier, naïve men, the important thing about <i>living
+matter</i> was that it <i>lived</i>: but science can only be sure that it is
+<i>matter</i>. (g) We believe in matter, accepting <i>its</i> continuity, wiping
+out the merely hypothetic world of spirit, value, etc.—the
+world of the modern metaphysicians. (h) Metaphysics is but
+another petty effort to make life an art: it is a confession of its
+own despair and failure.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Chapter 8.</i> (a) It is not by thought that men live. The less
+they think, the better they live. The more they think, the more
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>willing they are to die. (b) The very need of thought proves
+that man’s vitality is ebbing. An animal, a barbarian, has no such
+need. (c) Civilizations, constructed on thought, reach death; then
+the naïve barbarians rush in, the man begins anew. (d) The fresh
+hordes of barbarians destined to renew us are perhaps the Russians.
+(e) Communism, despite its sophisticated phraseology, is a
+new barbarism. In communism the individual does not count,
+only the anthill counts. No religious speculation is allowed. Life
+is perpetuated, unquestioningly, for its own blind sake. (f) But
+the inevitable despair of the modern man who, having learned to
+think, has learned the hopeless abyss between himself and nature,
+is not so bad after all: since he has physical comfort. Philosophical
+pessimism is not so hard to bear as cold or hunger. Ours
+is a lost cause, but we should rather die (in comfort) as men, than
+live as animals.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>b.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>Our next step is to examine the various elements of Mr.
+Krutch’s philosophy of life: to test their quality, their typicality,
+and to compare them; to measure their cogency as the
+cause of such desperate conclusions. The references are to the
+divisions of his argument, as catalogued, omitting repetitions
+and minor points.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Chapter 1.</i> (a) states with apparent sympathy that a prenatal,
+vegetable life, bereft of struggle or aspiration, is a possible
+desideratum. (b) asserts that there is a dualistic conflict
+between art, which is an illusory world, and science, which is
+the real world. Here is the author’s doctrine: the relation between
+the unborn babe and the womb in which it lives is real;
+but the relation between the born man and the world in which
+he lives is illusion. Therefore, since life in any individual consists
+of the relation between it and its environment, and since
+no man could live an instant without some relation with the
+air and the world, what Mr. Krutch is really saying is: the
+life of the unborn babe is real; the life of the born man is an
+illusion. (c) implies that relations and connections between
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>man and the universe, such as imagination supplies, are necessary
+for his welfare. But they are illusory, since the imagination
+is delusion. Yet Mr. Krutch has not even attempted to
+prove that imagination is delusion. This is his premise, so that,
+of course, this must be his conclusion. (d) and (e) invalidate
+man’s reason, since the universe has no reason. Yet the author
+employs his reason to prove his alienness in the universe.
+Virtually, he says: “My reason is invalid, since the universe
+is not rational. Yet my reason is, miraculously, valid enough
+to <i>prove</i> that no relation between me and the universe exists.”
+What he should have said, logically, from the premises, is
+this: “I declare my reason to be exclusively mine. Therefore
+it is not a cogent measure to determine any relation outside
+myself. To discover if I belong in the universe, I must employ
+some measure common to both me and it: some measure
+that I can move from myself to the universe.” Of course, if
+he had relied on some such measure—a measure of mass, for
+instance, or of causation—he would have found <i>continuity</i>
+between man and the universe. Conclusion: the chapter assumes
+that continuity between man and the universe is desirable,
+but that absolute discontinuity exists. The assumptions
+are sustained by means of indefensible logic.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Chapter 2.</i> (a) states that since man’s social virtues are
+found also in animals, they cannot be human. This is tantamount
+to asserting absolute discontinuity between animal and
+man. Darwin, evolution, modern biology, are therefore
+flouted. The author unconsciously assumes an attitude more
+close to the early ascetic Christian and neo-Platonic concept
+of an abyss between man and brute. (b) and (c) lift up an
+old Spanish myth as the real human type. Don Juan was a
+“man” who could make love to countless women without ever
+becoming tired, without ever becoming attached, without
+ever changing, without ever feeling. Psychologists class him
+as the archetype of “fixated adolescent” and agree that he
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>never existed, outside the realms of pathology. This insulate
+human “atom,” the “perfect individualist,” with no social relations
+or connections, this abstract fiction of infantile will, is
+the human ideal of our author. (e) and (f) carry on the
+thesis of discontinuity. Nature has no ends and is not moral:
+man has ends and is persistently a moral creature. The traits of
+nature are determined by studying the ant, etc.: they are by
+no means to be determined by studying man. For the ant, by
+some inscrutable right, belongs to nature, whereas man does
+not. This is really the premise of the argument: Mr. Krutch
+makes it the conclusion. His syllogism in its pure form is this:
+“Man is not part of nature: man has certain traits: hence
+these traits are not part of nature. Therefore man, possessing
+these (unnatural) traits, is not part of nature.” However, let
+us grant the premises that the ant is in nature, man is not.
+The conclusion must be that man is different from the ant.
+From this, our author is inspired to conclude that man, to
+<i>succeed as man</i>, must behave like an ant! Man, to succeed
+like a man, must build anthills and—nothing else. Conclusion:
+the chapter declares, in the face of anthropology, biology,
+sociology, psychology, that man is utterly apart from nature
+and from animals, and that (even as the old ascetics and transcendentalists
+insisted) he is a separate creation. Here is the
+syllogism, transposed for clarity: “A tree is made of wood.
+Apples are not wood. Therefore, apples cannot belong on
+trees.” But despite the organic difference between man and
+“natural creatures,” he must behave—if he would succeed—just
+like the creatures whom he in no way resembles! (Here,
+the ascetics were more logical. Having posited man as different
+from the brute, they mapped out for him a totally
+separate course.) Assuming the organic difference, our author
+insists that the two relationless entities must go the same way.
+He builds up the definitions of his humanism upon illogical
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>contradictions; and then dismisses “humanism” as full of the
+contradictions of his own bad thinking.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Chapter 3.</i> (a) and (b) are repetitions. (c) looks for science
+to “master” the soul—and looks in vain. Pure science
+attempts merely to measure, from the outside. For instance,
+it weighs the sun and names its elements. It has no mastery
+of the sun, in the sense of controlling the sun. To a slight
+degree, science has similarly tried to “measure” the soul: i.e.,
+to analyze its components. Pure science has never attempted
+more, leaving the application of its discoveries to education
+and religion. The modern effort in these fields is unknown
+to our author. (d) comes down to this: science has found
+that <i>noses</i> are not alike, in any two parts of the world. Negro,
+Eskimo, Malay, Nordic, have decidedly different noses. Ergo,
+science has discovered that <i>noses do not exist</i>!... To prove
+that morals and ethics do not exist, it would be necessary to
+prove that the sense of right does not exist or is at least very
+rare. But anthropology shows that this sense is universal. Its
+diversity of ethical and moral forms, of course, is due to the
+fact that morals are a product of the interplay between men
+and their environment. To say that morals vary is simply to
+say that men vary. To say that morals do not exist, because
+they do not agree, is to say that men do not exist because
+men do not agree. Chapter 1 revealed the genesis of the
+author’s mood as the result of an exorbitant faith in reason.
+Now (f) and (g) call reason a bad name, and dismiss it.
+Chapter 1 illogically employed human reason to establish the
+preponderance of an external, irrational universe over man.
+Now the evidence of the mind is declared to be poor: the
+universe itself may be but the projection of that poor human’s
+reason which (in another part) has no existence within the
+universe. Mr. Krutch has said: the table of science is real.
+The table of his senses, like the neo-Platonist dwelling in
+Tyre or Batanaea in the year 300, he rejects as unreal. But
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>the old Tyrian was logical. He lived where his faith was: he
+utterly declined to follow his senses. This is too athletic for
+our modern. With one breath, he gives credence to the table
+of electrons; with the next, he confesses that the false table
+is the only one he ever hopes to live with! But the lack here
+is greater than merely one of logic. Mr. Krutch has the most
+childish notion of what science <i>means</i>, when it states that the
+table is a congeries of electrons.... The language of science
+is mathematics; and mathematics is a logic of <i>forms</i>.
+Everything that cannot be expressed in symbols of mass and
+motion is nonexistent within the realm of mathematics. Now,
+pictured in so far as it exists within the domain of science,
+i.e., in so far as it is a congeries of mass in motion, a table,
+of course, can be nothing but a congeries of mass in motion:
+a chart of electrons. In the precise same way a living
+body, pictured in terms of anatomy, can be nothing but an
+anatomical structure. But there are other domains; for instance,
+human behavior, which has qualities that the language
+of mathematics does not cover. In this domain, the description
+of the chair as a group of electrons will not work: but
+the notion of the child who has never heard of electrons, but
+who wants to sit down in the chair, works very well, indeed.
+To say that science is the <i>whole</i> truth, because it prophesies
+an event like an eclipse, is just as reasonable as to say that
+the ideas of the child are the <i>whole</i> truth, because the child
+prophesies that it is going to sit in that chair, and straightway
+does so. The eclipse takes place in a realm where human
+quality is largely extracted: so we are right to deal with
+eclipses in the logic of science. But man’s experience of
+beauty, for instance, before that eclipse is largely in the realm
+of human value. Here, the language of poetry is more adequate
+than that of mathematics. To deny one of these measures
+in absolute favor of the other is as reasonable as it would
+be to say that the architect’s blueprint is more real than the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>house. Mathematicians of high order, of course, are aware of
+the limitations of their language and therefore of the realm
+which their language expresses. It is only the weakling, desperately
+in need of an absolute Word, who speaks like Mr.
+Krutch, of the “certitudes of science.” Not Poincaré, not
+Einstein. Not the typical Eddington who says: “There is a
+constant unknowable in science.... Scientific laws are
+merely truistic measurements of a single physical condition....
+So long as the electron is not reacting with the rest of
+the universe, we cannot be aware of it.... A particle may
+have position or it may have velocity, but it cannot in any
+exact sense have both. An association of exact position with
+exact momentum can never be discovered by us, because
+there is no such thing in nature.”... All of which is tantamount
+to saying, that the mathematical electron is an abstraction,
+that it is a mere plausible symbol; and that certitude can
+never exist in a field which is built up on the assumption of
+discrete, separate parts; since these parts do not exist—cannot
+exist in a continuum; and could not be observed by man, even
+if they existed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Chapter 4.</i> A display of the same dualism and an assumption
+of the same discontinuity between the various functions
+of man, and between man and his world. The author’s attitude
+toward sex is worthy of the hermit in the Egyptian
+desert. Sex, as an energy expressing the whole man and
+woman, linking them in a full human relation, mobilizing
+their creative as well as their possessive nature, is unreal for
+the author. But unlike the antique gymnosophist whose rejection
+of sex he shares (while ignoring his science of self-control
+and despising his God), Mr. Krutch has not the courage
+or the will to carry out his own convictions. He considers
+himself superior to his sex; but he is quite willing to capitulate
+before it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span><i>Chapter 5.</i> The finest writing of the book is here. Mr.
+Krutch discourses on Tragedy “as it once was” with discernment
+and fervor. It is plain that he is attached to Tragedy,
+“dead child of fallacy and illusion”; he can write with loving
+observation about the body of a “fraud.” (a) and (b) assume
+discontinuity, once more. (c) and (d) misread the modern
+status of literary art. Human dignity still exists, noble action
+and noble lives still persevere. The disappearance of the
+anthropocentric cosmos and of the personal heaven have
+enhanced man’s sense of dignity within himself. He is responsible
+now, not as the child of a mythic Father, but as the
+father of himself. Yet more is needed than dignity and noble
+action for the production of Tragedy. Tragedy is a social
+form. It must enact man’s dignity in communicable, common
+terms. These terms are wanting. The modern conscience of
+the world has not yet bridged from private into public symbols.
+There is nothing discouraging in this. There were
+ages of social preparation, also, before Sophocles and before
+Shakespeare: ages in which individual men had dignity, in
+which men lived nobly, and yet in which no great Tragedy
+was written.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Chapter 6.</i> (a) begins with a dubious statement. The
+medieval science of life was inexact; it was, indeed, founded
+upon self-contradictory laws, and the dualism of these laws,
+which were supposed to conform to life but did not, eventually
+disrupted medieval science. In “The Re-Discovery of
+America,” I have gone into this question at some length.
+Here it is not centrally cogent, so we let it pass. (d) and (e)
+again imply discontinuity and discreteness not alone between
+man and the universe, but between man and man. Men, says
+the author, have so little relation among themselves that (f)
+if each man lived his truth according to his essence, these
+multiple truths would sum to anarchy! If men are essentially
+related, if the reality or truth of each is a focus of the interplay
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>of the whole (as philosophy, psychology and social sciences
+agree), then their living by the light of their individual
+reality and truth would bring them into active relation with
+one another, and would result in harmony. These premises
+are denied by Mr. Krutch. The rest of the chapter is less
+essential. It is interesting to note, however, that it implies the
+impossibility of man’s ever achieving any inner principle of
+order or control, whereby he might integrate his life within
+the vicissitudes of the world. The chapter is the final admission
+of man’s impotence. The artist is the creator of a kind
+of order. Man can be an artist, says the author, when he deals
+with words or pigment or marble. When he deals with life,
+man can be only an amoeba.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>c.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>But the reader has had enough of this dissection of a
+dreary argument. Let him give one final backward glance to
+Chapter 7, and I shall insist no more. There he will discover
+that Mr. Krutch, after desperately building upon the premise
+of <i>discontinuity</i> (of absolute separation between man and
+nature, between man and man, between certain traits in man
+and certain others), refutes the “new metaphysicians” on the
+ground that <i>they are the discontinuists</i>; while he falls back
+on the continuity of science! The reader will agree that Mr.
+Krutch has now sufficiently revealed himself as a befuddled
+man. If he were a thorough pessimist like Schopenhauer or
+Gautama, if he were a thorough transcendentalist like St. Paul,
+if he were a thorough materialist like Haeckel, if he were a
+thorough individualist like Rousseau, we could disagree with
+him and yet respect him. But he is thoroughly nothing, except
+confused. His thinking quavers between contradictory extremes
+of which he is not even aware; his values are a crazy-quilt
+of fragments pieced together from the worn creeds
+of Manichaeism, Puritanism, Rousseauism, Nietzscheanism,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>Haeckelian monism, etc., etc. His emotions are infantile. His
+spirit is an aggressive fear that would deny to others the
+dignity it lacks. He has nonetheless been worth our scrutiny.
+For his argument contains most of the clichés and most of the
+implications of our current “culture.” It shows the distemper
+of the modern mind, unable to bear the chaos of three centuries
+of ideological destruction, and unschooled to reform that
+chaos. If the average pundit in “The Nation,” “The New
+Republic,” “Harper’s,” “The Atlantic Monthly,” “The Dial,”
+were to put down, with a like candor, his philosophy of life, it
+would turn out a no less pitiful confusion. If our current literary
+arts were analyzed, they, too, would reveal a message as
+ill-founded. Behind the stubborn bewilderment of Theodore
+Dreiser, behind the lyric bewilderment of Sherwood Anderson,
+behind the bravado of Hemingway, behind the dandified
+despairs of Cabell and the earlier T. S. Eliot, behind the
+dainty froth of Thornton Wilder and of Carl Van Vechten—behind
+the materialism, the cynicism, the indifferentism, the
+impertinence, the impotence of most of our popular writing<a id='r9'></a><a href='#f9' class='c025'><sup>[9]</sup></a>—exists
+a failure to think straight from the facts, and to
+feel straight, not identical with the failure of Mr. Krutch,
+but essentially related.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The key to the situation—perhaps the basic cause of the
+“modern temper”—is suggested in Chapter 7 of Mr. Krutch’s
+book. What the author calls the “new metaphysic” is merely
+the old transcendentalism. These men whom he attacks—neo-Catholics,
+sentimental mysticalists, spiritualists, deniers of
+the “flesh” in one way or another—answer the “certitudes
+of science” by declaring that there is <i>another world</i>—their
+world of value, spirit and religion. Here, you have transcendentalism
+defined. And Mr. Krutch rejects it on the
+proper ground of discontinuity. But he does not see that his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>own argument—the separateness of parts and traits of man
+from other parts, and of man from men, and of men from
+nature—is discontinuity no less. And he does not see that he
+has blinded himself to the discontinuity of his own thought
+by the naïve method of calling <i>his favorite part of reality
+the Whole</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Like the two ladies in Kipling’s jingle, transcendentalist
+and materialist are “sisters under the skin.” The transcendentalist
+(Platonist, Christian, Christian Scientist, etc.) starts by
+dividing the world into (1) spirit-value-quality-soul and into
+(2) matter-body-evil. Having begun this dualistically, he cannot
+go on. Unknown to himself, <i>he must reduce this duality
+into a whole</i>. This he does by denying the part he does not
+like—by denying matter. (He may be subtle about it, like the
+followers of Henri Massis, or crude, like the disciples of Mrs.
+Eddy.) Now, he has his Whole, which is all life, all good—which
+is All. But this All will not bear the buffets of the
+world: for it is really a fragment. And the transcendentalist
+begins his endless labor of corrupting reality, in order to
+make it fit his figment.... The materialist starts likewise.
+He, too, divides the world into (1) measurable matter and
+(2) the unmeasurable qualities of certain kinds of matter—good,
+value, love, spirit, color, poetry, dream, etc., etc. He,
+too, cannot abide this dualism, and must somehow manage
+to resolve it into a One. He simply rejects what the transcendentalist
+exalts, and takes what the other refuses. He sacrifices
+everything that is not measurable matter. Whatever cannot
+be measured, he says, does not exist. But the part of the
+Whole which he has legislated into nullity still “functions”
+in him. He wears himself out, denying the domains of emotion
+and thought which his petty “whole” has no room for.
+He becomes the tired cynic, like Mr. Krutch; or the arrogant
+pseudo-scientific clown, like Dr. Watson.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(Of these two sisters, it must be avowed that the transcendentalist
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>is less foolish. Both find “living matter.” The one
+rejects matter and retains the abstract living: the other accepts
+matter and denies life. But it is plain that we are more sure of
+the undifferentiate quality of <i>living</i> than we are of matter.
+Living without form does not exist, of course: living-matter
+cannot be divided. But there is a difference of degree in the
+folly of the camps.)</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Between dogmatic transcendentalist and dogmatic materialist—each
+hoisting his “part” into a Whole—stands the agnostic,
+of whom Bertrand Russell is an illustrious instance. Mr.
+Russell understands the limitations of the language of mathematics,
+and how they must limit the scientific universe which
+mathematics symbolizes. He says that there are two general
+logics: the logic of quantity and the logic of quality or feeling.
+He says that both are right.<a id='r10'></a><a href='#f10' class='c025'><sup>[10]</sup></a> But since the logic of quantity
+(measurement and science) is within the mind of the
+observer who personally must follow the logic of feeling,
+Mr. Russell concludes that there is no way of measuring the
+<i>measure</i> value. So he decides that it is all no use: man can
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>never know anything since in order to do so he would have
+to “get out of himself.” And of this agnosticism he makes
+a dogmatic virtue.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The agnostic is not so different, after all, from the other
+two. He also has begun wrong: he has arbitrarily divided the
+world into two parts, of which one theoretically is “the
+truth,” and its expression into two languages or logics. Having
+made this dualism, he also irresistibly is driven to seek
+his Whole: and this he does, not by the sacrifice of one part
+<i>to</i> the other, but—since he cannot separate them—by the sacrifice
+of both! For the Zero of the agnostic is a kind of
+Whole: nescience is an assumed omniscience. The man who
+<i>knows</i> that we cannot know is dogmatic also. Again, in this
+agnosticism,<a id='r11'></a><a href='#f11' class='c025'><sup>[11]</sup></a> there is the same false premise: the dividing of
+reality into two parts. Wherever this is done, there must
+ineluctably follow confusion and falsehood, agnosticism or
+despair....</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>d.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>The voices of confusion, agnosticism, despair, are the
+popular voices of today. The average American reader of
+the so-called educated classes has been brought up on literature
+and science that were crassly dualistic. He probably left
+a dualistic church when he was young. He has fallen at once
+into the camp of Rousseau (the individual as a separate, perfect
+atom), or into the camp of dogmatic science (only measurable
+matter exists), or into some allied camp like that of
+vulgar collectivism (society is real, but its individual integers
+are not). These statements, of course, are caricatures: that is
+why they express the distorting effect of modern doctrine on
+the average mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The consequence has been that the common reader of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>books (the kind that calls himself an intellectual) is helplessly
+lost and helplessly confused. For his doctrine and the world
+will not go together. “Feeling” draws him imperiously one
+way; “knowing” another. He is miserable. And misery loves
+company. The literary art which makes that misery respectable
+by “proof” that there is no other course, and by decking
+out impotence in gracious gestures, becomes the popular
+art. Books have engendered the modern distemper. The least
+they can do, now, is to justify it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The curative, recreative task is very hard. It is the work of
+the ages before us. And those of us who choose it for our
+own will have to labor in the cold of an unfrequented dawn.
+Yet, although it is the task of generations—of armies of artists,
+of corps of truly scientific thinkers—the essence of it can be
+stated very simply.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We have seen how even the dualist and discontinuist is
+irresistibly drawn to believe in a Whole, and to create a
+Whole (out of his favorite fragment). The concept of wholeness,
+the experience of wholeness, the living of wholeness are
+the unavoidable aspiration of human life.<a id='r12'></a><a href='#f12' class='c025'><sup>[12]</sup></a> This is so inevitable
+that even the intellectual denier of wholeness in the effort of
+his thought and deed belies his rejection. The right beginning,
+therefore, of our task must be to conceive a Whole <i>that
+will be the Whole</i>. Let us passionately refuse all dualism, all
+denials, at the outset. If science is so foolish as to say: “There
+is no color in the colored thing,” let us challenge that science.
+If religion is so foolish as to say: “Man’s soul is separate from
+his body,” let us challenge that religion. If mathematics is so
+foolish as to say: “<i>x</i> and <i>y</i>, although they are in the universe,
+are not joined, but are discrete and separate,” let us challenge
+that mathematics. Let us say:</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“There is one and only one irrefutable truth: <i>the universe
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>exists</i>. Men differ about what it is, men differ about where
+it is. Some say it is all ‘matter,’ and outside; some say it is all
+‘thought,’ and within. All must agree that it <i>is</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“There is, to this one truth, one corollary that is irrefutable
+also: <i>the universe, for each of us, is focused from the
+self</i>. Self—whatever it is—looks out, or looks in, on the universe.
+Men differ about that. Yet must agree that self <i>is</i> that
+focus of the universe which knows the universe exists. Self,
+therefore, is <i>of</i> the universe (it may be the whole of it, of
+course) which self asserts.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“All my words, all my thought, all my action, shall be
+determined by this single common truth—this single common
+premise of existence. My words will be such that when they
+point to a ‘thing’ or a ‘state’ (as all words do) they will imply
+the tentative existence of the thing or state, within the certain
+Whole. For the thing is vague and fleeting: only the universe
+is certain.... My thought will be such, that when it represents
+a ‘thing’ or a ‘state’ or an ‘action,’ as all thought must,
+it will imply its tentative existence within the certain Whole;
+and its valuation of the ‘thing’ or the ‘state’ will be the relating
+of it with the universe which alone is certain.... And
+my action will be such, that it expresses this relationship of
+self and of all things involved, within the Whole that is the
+premise of all thought and all behavior.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If these few words, necessarily insufficient, suggest the
+revolutionary task that challenges human life—the re-creating
+of language, of society and of man in the image of the Whole
+which is God—they will have served their purpose. But the
+task is not impossible. The ant is born with the capacity to
+fulfill his function. Savage man was born with the capacity
+to fulfill his. Why should historic man alone, of all creatures
+in the world, be born without the capacity to realize himself?
+All history attests that man’s nature is a striving toward the
+divine achievement: the focusing of the Whole in his thought,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>the enacting of the Whole (this is called holiness) in his deed.
+But whereas all art, all science, all religion, are the striving
+toward this consummation, they have always been too weak:
+so they have broken. Dualism, with its rejections, its denials,
+its corruptions, is the symbol of this breakdown. Dualism,
+in its twin forms of transcendentalism and materialism, has
+always brought a temporary death to man’s immortal effort.
+History is a short tale. It has been just long enough to tell
+us what, as men, we have to do.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But let us Americans not delude ourselves. Only the Remnant
+lives. And this is so, because the way of death is easier
+than life. Mr. Krutch has stated well the inevitable end to
+which the dualist—whether he calls himself materialist or
+transcendentalist or agnostic—is ineluctably brought. “Ours is
+a lost cause,” he closes, “and there is no place for us in the
+natural universe.” So he elects to die. This is the death, indeed,
+of the race of men who look upon themselves as alien
+from the remotest star, and who put their loyalty in life upon
+one jot less than the Whole which is God. Let them die....
+And for the race, still at its dawn, let Spinoza speak:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class='c007'><i>A free man thinks of nothing less than of death, and his
+wisdom is not a meditation upon death, but upon life.</i></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1929</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>9. THE “UNIVERSE” OF T. S. ELIOT</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>The collected essays of Mr. Eliot provide a portrait of
+a mind that for the past twelve years has prominently played
+on the American literary scene. The volume contains theoretical
+chapters from “The Sacred Wood,” eleven papers on
+the Elizabethan dramatists, the entire brochure on Dante,
+essays on the Metaphysical Poets and on Dryden, Blake,
+Baudelaire, Swinburne. It represents Mr. Eliot’s social and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>theological position in the studies of Lancelot Andrewes, in
+“Thoughts after Lambeth,” and in the two essays on Babbitt
+et al., which did so much more to discomfit the new humanists
+than the lunges of their foes. And finally, it reveals the
+more casual man—delightfully—on topics like poetry in drama,
+Wilkie Collins, Dickens and Marie Lloyd. The book portrays
+a sensitive, finely endowed person. Itself an accumulation of
+comments on many matters, it suggests a review of like
+nature: one is tempted to pass from page to page detailing,
+comparing, dissenting. But the place of Mr. Eliot as a literary
+influence in our time, and the cultural crisis of our time, make
+this method inadvisable. It is important to employ the book
+as a means for seeing the man whole; and, having done so, to
+deduce a measure of his values as a leader and thereby a
+measure of the time which took him as a leader.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The first revelation is of a man with an exquisite, almost
+infallible, taste for the stuffs of literary art. Whether he
+touches a line of Dante or of Swinburne, a melodrama
+of Cyril Tourneur or of Wilkie Collins, the prosody of
+Baudelaire or of Blake, Mr. Eliot evinces an esthetic delight
+which implies true contact with his subject. This first trait
+is particularly distinguished in an age in which the field of
+literary discussion has been almost monopolized by writers
+who may know something of baseball or economics but who
+ignore the nature of literary art. The second trait of Mr.
+Eliot, not less pervasive but more subtly entextured in his
+book, is his moral sense; and this, coupled with his first, is
+even more rare. We have had plenty of moralists—More,
+Mencken, Lewisohn, are examples—writing on literature and
+totally insensitive to literary esthetics; we have had a few
+“estheticians” disclaiming the moral sense (as if esthetic form
+were some kind of insubstantial absolute and not an organic
+configuration of ordinary human experience and motive), and
+therefore writing with even worse futility on books. When
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>Mr. Eliot compares lines in Massinger and Shakespeare, contrasts
+tropes in Dryden and Milton, draws a prosodic sequence
+from Donne to Shelley, he reveals, in his taste and judgment,
+the moral integer: he knows the <i>human nature</i> of esthetics.
+This moral sense is organic in the man; it is no mere acceptance
+of rules, it is not moralistic. Being the permeation, within
+his specific literary experience, of his general view of life, the
+moral quality in Mr. Eliot is religious. Everywhere, although
+he may be discussing merely a choice of verbs in Middleton,
+he reveals a general and definite attitude toward existence
+taken as a whole: and this attitude, when logically formed,
+becomes religion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>T. S. Eliot, then, is portrayed by this book as a man with
+a sense of the whole, with a conviction of his place in the
+whole, as a man engaged in an activity (literature) for which
+he is fitted and to which he gives his entire equipment. Such
+a crystallization comes close to what Nietzsche meant by a
+cultural act; and in an epoch whose literary critics have been
+insensitive and incompetent men, it makes Mr. Eliot an exceedingly
+welcome figure. If, however, we turn from those
+contemporaries in contrast with whose nullity he looms, and
+measure him rather by his own subjects and by the literary
+exigencies of our epoch, Mr. Eliot dwindles. No single major
+essay in this book, for instance, can be said to be organic
+either as a presentation of its subject or as a literary essay.
+Consider the “Dante” in whose study he is at his best: every
+observation is exact, many a phrase stands forth a luminous
+gem; but the observations merely mount arithmetically into
+so many pages of running comment. Dante and his work are
+never objectified, never dimensionally re-created either in the
+world of Dante or in the world of T. S. Eliot. Or consider
+the justly admired pages on the Elizabethans: they contain
+glimpses both precise and profound into the art of the theatre,
+into the poets and their world. But none of the plays, none
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>of the dramatists, is made to stand whole, either in the epoch,
+in the drama, or in some total conception of the critic.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If, then, as I have stated, there is wholeness in Mr. Eliot,
+we are led to question what kind of wholeness it must be
+that can focus so superbly on details in a dozen poets and
+a dozen epochs, and yet fail to envelop any one of them.
+It is true that this failure is not always complete. In the
+“Baudelaire,” for instance, or the “Swinburne,” we obtain a
+kind of two-dimensional cross section, built from the prosodic
+study, which we can place for ourselves in the organic milieu
+of the nineteenth century. But in the essays on the more
+cosmic men there are no dimensions beyond mere points
+of light. And in the studies of dynamic but little-discussed
+figures, the failure is disastrous. The pages on Bradley, for
+example, proceed without the faintest evocation of the two
+ideological worlds—Hegelianism and English individualism—which
+Bradley sought to synthesize. The chapter on Lancelot
+Andrewes is a mere ringing of personal responses to the old
+priest’s music, which become sentimental and pretentious,
+since there is no effort to place this music in the symphony
+of Roman Catholic, Jewish and Arabic exegesis, from which
+it was never truly independent.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>T. S. Eliot, it becomes plain, is a man of integrity in the
+real sense of the word; but his vision is such that it can never
+hold more than details; and his energy is too weak to give
+organic form either to his subjects or to his essays. Unlike
+most of his fellows, who suffer in a chaos, he lives in a “universe.”
+But this “universe” of Mr. Eliot’s is evidently small
+and minor. It is achieved by huge and deliberate exclusions.
+It scarcely contacts with the modern world—the world whose
+radical transformations in physics, psychology and economics
+have dissolved all the old formal values. Nor does it really
+embrace the past worlds with which Mr. Eliot is so sympathetic:
+Dantean Europe or Jacobean England. This failure
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>of mastery even on Mr. Eliot’s chosen ground is revealing.
+No one can understand a living past who is not actively
+engaged in the living present. For any past age is an integer
+in the creating of today, and only by conscious sharing of
+this creation can the past, as part of it, be understood. Fundamentally,
+Mr. Eliot’s subjective love of the Anglo-Catholic
+tradition leaves him as remote from what England really was
+as his distaste for modern problems leaves him remote from
+us—and for the same reason.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>That reason brings us to the heart of our portrait. Any
+living world, whether it be Seneca’s or Shakespeare’s or our
+own, in so far as it lives, is dynamic; and Mr. Eliot’s world
+is static. Wherefore, in confrontation with a chaos of dynamic
+forces like our modern era, a chaos which our dynamic will
+must meet, grapple with, and mold, Mr. Eliot can only ignore;
+and in confrontation with dynamic worlds of the past, he can
+only rather sentimentally adore. His own static vision picks
+out details, reflects them and variates them into a kind of
+series, like the stills of a cinema, whose total effect may be
+sensitive and delightful, but cannot be organic.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This same static quality explains Mr. Eliot’s loyalty to a
+class and a class creed. A static universe does not evolve, cannot
+believe in evolving. It does, however, accumulate, and
+its “additions” make a quantitative change—the one kind of
+change and of cultural contribution which Mr. Eliot admits
+(see his essays on “Tradition,” “Individual Talent” and “The
+Function of Criticism”). In a static universe, transfiguration
+and revelation, and the capacity for these, are all stratified in
+the past. And this is another way of saying that Mr. Eliot’s
+spiritual experiences, from which issue his moral and esthetic
+taste, although they are real, have the form not of life, but of
+an inherited convention. Thus Mr. Eliot, with a religious
+sense, conceives of no religion except the orthodox Christian;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>with a tragic sense, conceives of man’s struggle exclusively in
+the cant meanings of Original Sin; with a sense of the spirit’s
+need of discipline and order—both in society and in the person—dreams
+of no method but that of a moneyed class ruling
+through church and state.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Are such views valid, in the sense of having a relationship
+with reality? Is there a position from which the universe is
+static; in which transfiguration and revelation are past; in
+which Good, Evil, and the given political and economic forms
+are absolute? The answer is Yes, in the sense that death, being
+real, is valid. The living world of the mind is as dynamic as
+the material world (they are one); there, too, the individual
+life must partake of the dynamism of the whole, and when
+it is severed from that dynamism we call it dead. The only
+difference is, that in the world of the mind we do not commonly
+employ the term “death”; we prefer to say conventional,
+dogmatic, static. Mr. Eliot’s position is that of a man
+who has withdrawn from growth—in our meaning, withdrawn
+from life. <i>He</i> is static, his soul’s transfiguration is past,
+whatever progress he conceives must be a mere consolidation
+of himself into forms already uttered. His intellectual, spiritual
+and poetic “life” is a rationalization of this death deep
+within him.</p>
+
+<p class='c006'>We hold now, I believe, the key to T. S. Eliot. He is a
+man who has abdicated; but since he has been deeply sensitized
+to life, the articulation of his experience remains an
+exquisite, lingering echo. Such abdicated men have always
+existed, and have never been vital: even in periods of cultural
+stability (like that of Dante, for example), the cultural whole
+had constantly to be re-created by dynamic men. But in our
+age, where stability has foundered into chaos, and where the
+need for spiritual growth has become absolutely identified
+with the bare struggle for survival, the discrepancy between
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>a man like Mr. Eliot and adequate leadership becomes
+enormous.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What we have really defined in our portrait of T. S. Eliot
+is a type of minor poet. He is in the tradition, neither of our
+major poets—Poe, Whitman, Melville—nor of the great Victorians.
+He is close to a cultivated and popular figure like
+Thomas Gray; and his “Waste Land” is a poem as good, and
+of the same nature, as the “Elegy.” Gray also was a technical
+innovator with an immense appeal because he foreshadowed,
+unconsciously, what was to become the dominant appetite of
+Europe: closeness to nature. From the energy of this appetite,
+Titans were to evolve the method for absorbing and controlling
+nature. But in Gray, the motion took a reactionary
+form: a sentimental harking back to the values of Puritanism
+(and to the language of Milton). The analogy with “The
+Waste Land” is complete. Here, too, is technical innovation
+together with a vague foreshadowing of what is <i>now</i> the
+dominant need of the world: the need of an organic, a livable
+Whole in which all men and all man may function. This foreshadowed
+need gives to the poem its pathos, its unity and its
+importance. But, as in Gray, it is negatively stated by an
+evocation of a sentimental memory and by the use of old
+materials—in Mr. Eliot’s case, more diffused and catholic,
+since no strong Milton stands immediately behind him.</p>
+
+<p class='c006'>The questions remain: why has Mr. Eliot been a leader
+and what does his leadership reveal about our literary generation?
+The questions are swiftly answered. Even in an age
+of confused standards, there is recognition of literary merit.
+Mr. Eliot’s clarity, it is true, is achieved not by integrating
+the chaos that has bewildered us, but by withdrawal. Yet to
+the men whom the cultural dissolution has frightened and
+weakened (the majority of men), these limitations make him
+only more acceptable. A long time ago, I wrote of what I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>called “the comfort of the limit,” and explained its appeal to
+many types of mind lost in our modern chaos. Only athletic
+souls can face a world that has become, perhaps more than
+any other era, an overwhelmingly open and darkened future.
+The temptation to limit this world, either by rationalistically
+charting its future (a disguised reactionism) or by merely
+advocating its reform in an image of the past, is great and
+manifold.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All the dogmatisms of our day are really such “limits”—such
+simplifications of the real. There is the dogmatism of
+science (the comfort of limiting reality and its mastery to
+problems of mechanics and addition); there is the dogmatism
+of cynical despair (the comfort of giving up hope and therefore
+struggle); there is the dogmatism of a pseudo-Marxian
+dialectic (the comfort of explaining the human tragedy in
+terms solely of a simple, solvable class struggle). And, for the
+weakly poetic, there is the haven of an elegiac past, like Mr.
+Eliot’s, in which great poets still sing and sure priests thunder.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The one way of life that has no limit and affords no comfort
+is the way ahead—into the bitter and dark and bloody
+dawn of a new world, wherein mankind shall integrate without
+loss the stormy elements that make the chaos of our day,
+and its promise.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1932</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <h2 class='c005'>FOUR: SOME PRACTICAL CONCLUSIONS FOR THE SURVIVAL OF MAN</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='c003 figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/i_231fp.jpg' alt='A historical black and white photograph of a labor strike, showing men in suits and fedoras walking along a city street wearing sandwich-board signs that read &#39;STRIKE&#39;.' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p>© <i>F. Allan Morgan, A.R.P.S.</i></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>
+ <h3 class='c018'>1. SOLIDARITY IS NOT ENOUGH</h3>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div>(<i>Notes written in the Great Textile Strike of 1934</i>)</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>a.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>At dawn, they are all outside the mills: men, girls, mothers
+with children. The huge structure, submerged in mist,
+leaps suddenly with lights; the gates swing open; nobody
+goes in. The men talk in lively groups, the mothers smile,
+the girls have put on their glad rags and there is song in
+their throats. At the doors stand a few guards, glumly. In
+half an hour, they swing the gates shut and the lights snap
+out. The crowd of strikers, sure of its strength, strolls up the
+long flank of the mill, stretches in the morning sun; idles
+down to the next mill where stands another crowd before
+shut doors.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The strike has begun gaily. Men and women have joy of
+themselves in their common purpose, like a young animal discovering
+the health of its body.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Over on the North Side, before the open gates of a mill
+stands the crowd of strikers. Half a dozen girls pass forward,
+their heads low, their shoulders hunched. They are going to
+work. As the guards let them in, women call after them:
+“Ain’t you ashamed!”; men mutter angry and then ugly
+words. The thousand strikers understand the six disloyal
+girls; a sharp doubt stirs in them all, particularly the women.
+“We need the money too&#160;... maybe they’re right. Maybe
+we’ll lose and only the girls will win.... Rent&#160;... milk&#160;...
+coal&#160;... winter coats for the children.” The strikers
+are murmuring against their own fears&#160;... the faithful presence
+of poverty and cold&#160;... which they see personified in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>the six girls. The girls are at work now. The mill has become
+the form of their betrayal, and of the fear of the strikers.
+Already the holiday mood is gone.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>b.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>Fall River molders in the ruins of an industrial era. Small
+mills, built like castles with Colonial windows and with ivy
+on the brick, have been abandoned to the sweatshop rats.
+And the wood houses of the workers have died into festering
+shanties, the streets rank as rotten teeth. A man climbs the
+outside stair of one of these dead houses and enters a room
+at dawn. A mother stands at the stove; three men bend over
+a mimeograph machine in the far corner; and from two cots
+four children eagerly look up at the comrade.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He takes a leaflet, reads it, and nods. “Here’s another we
+need at once.” The children hear the words: “... the independent
+unions&#160;... because they hate the U.T.W. they
+won’t come out. We got to show ’em that they must come
+out. We got to make ’em see, even if the A.F.L. did doublecross
+’em, we must stick together....”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The men huddle again over the mimeograph machine.
+One of them is Portuguese, the first shaft of sun lights his
+fine hard mouth; another is a French Canadian, lumberly,
+musical, a Northern spruce walking the world. The man who
+has come in with the text of the new leaflet is a Yankee with
+the lantern jaw and gangling limbs of his Puritan forefathers.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Here, you drink coffee first,” sings the mother.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“No time——”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You drink coffee first,” she insists.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>c.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>Back in the South Side of New Bedford, five thousand
+strikers gather round the bandstand in a park to hear their
+leaders. Near by the harbor waters dance in the morning sun,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>dance up to the silent shadow of the mills. But a little along
+there is a line of mills athrob with labor: the great tire-fabric
+plants called the Fisk and the Devon, which recognize no
+union and worked clear through the six months’ strike of
+1928.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>William Batty, chairman of the strike committee of the
+U.T.W., gets to his feet. He is a burly fellow with a sharp
+nose and piercing eyes in his red face. He praises the strikers,
+he praises the President, he hurls his contempt and hate at
+the “Reds who are trying to make trouble.” One gets the
+impression, as he talks, that the strike belongs to him and to
+the other leaders: the workers are accessories and servants.
+“Leave it all to us,” is the burden of his message. “Washington”—sacrosanct
+word; “Strike headquarters in the Carpenters
+Building”—a Temple which only U.T.W. leaders are
+good enough to enter. The man has power, and has shrewdness.
+No doubt of that. Look at the heavy shoulders, the
+thin-lipped mouth. But where does he belong? He is standing
+on the bandstand a bit above the workers, he is talking a good
+deal down to them: one hears, in the rumble of his hatred for
+communists and shop committees, the echo of other voices,
+more shrewd, more potent: voices of politics and Money.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>After Batty comes Ferdinand Sylvia, U.T.W. organizer
+and local favorite, who is running for State Representative
+on the Democratic ticket. A little, passionate Portuguese he
+is, and clever; the hard black eyes are nobody’s fool. How
+he praises the workers! “I’m proud of you. You’re making
+history today. We got a great friend in the White House
+who will help us against the bosses.... All you got to do is
+stick together. We’ll go back to Washington and do the rest.”
+There is no personal enthusiasm in the crowd for these leaders.
+But there is devotion to the cause which these men lead;
+and above all, there is the will, tense and a little wistful, to
+believe that they are truly leaders.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>Sylvia speaks of the tire-fabric mills that are still working
+and holding New Bedford from a 100 per cent tie-up. “Go
+down and picket,” he cries. “Get ’em all out!” The mass, five
+thousand strong, moves quiet down the harbor.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>d.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>A youth with the high forehead of a poet, the Socialist
+Minister Glen Trimble, starts the picket line before the Fisk
+and Devon plants. Batty waves the crowd on the opposite
+side of the street to join; a couple of hundred men, women,
+girls, are soon patrolling. They are having a good time. They
+sing “Who’s Afraid of the Big, Bad Wolf” and, in lesser
+number, the old I.W.W. “Solidarity” song. Down from the
+windows peer the workers who refuse to strike. In the eyes
+of some is a defensive disdain: “If I can despise the strikers.
+I’ll not feel the need to join them.” Others are torn in conflict.
+Some of the boys and girls look down in veritable terror:
+not terror at the pickets, but at something in themselves
+that holds them back&#160;... that makes them fear to join their
+sisters and their brothers. <i>Fear of their own fear</i>—the beginning
+of wisdom.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I slip into the office and ask for the manager. He says
+he’ll talk to me, provided I do not disclose his name for publication
+(I do not blame him). The same stale line about his
+“happy family of workers,” and the conscientious refusal to
+let “outside and alien organizers interfere in our affairs.” “We
+figure,” he says, “we can run our plant best with our own
+men. We give better minimum wages than NRA has asked
+for.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But,” I ask, “aside from the issue of wages, don’t you
+recognize a democratic, an American, a human issue? Labor
+is struggling to organize, like the bosses and business. Aren’t
+you working against the American spirit by discouraging
+your men from getting together? You admit conditions are
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>bad in other mills. Why don’t you encourage these workers
+to help their brothers by joining the same union?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The managerial eye grows cold and blank; the hands
+twitch. Then, obliquely: “I don’t get you. What good would
+it do if these men struck with the others? If one is starving,
+is it better that two starve?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I realize the hopelessness of making a class-bound man
+hear the theme of loyalty and dignity in another class—in
+the class which he must exploit and degrade in order to survive.
+I expected no better. But as I return to the town center
+(while the pickets march) for a bite to eat, I find that the
+waitress is on the side of the strikers; the barkeep across from
+the best hotel, mixing me an excellent Tom Collins, says:
+“Sure, the tire-fabric mills should strike!” and the garage
+mechanic who fills my tank is warmly and openly with the
+strikers. This was not the case four years ago at the last great
+strike. Even a cop on the corner confidentially leans to me
+and says: “I guess the boys’ve got it!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Up in the Labor Temple sits a little Scot, Abraham Binns,
+and runs the works. Dispatches pickets to hesitant outlying
+mills; phones Washington, puffs his pipe, and wonders, if
+Federal Relief backs down, where the funds will come from
+to feed the strikers. A sincere old-timer, he is, with a good
+eye for the detail of the battle and no vaguest notion of what,
+<i>really</i>, the battle is about. A thirty-hour week, a minimum
+wage? Sure! But that a world is breaking and has to be replaced
+by another lest the heart of mankind perish?...</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I ask him about the National Textile Workers Union.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They’re communists,” he burrs, as if to say: “They’ve
+got the smallpox.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The workers think they can force the bosses to abolish
+the stretch-out. Binns sees that, and he’ll fight for it, too. But
+he does not guess that what the workers really want is to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>live, and <i>that they must create a new world to live in</i>. What
+chance has such a leader against Capital, the shrewdly conscious
+foe that knows, indeed, it is fighting <i>to live</i> and for its
+world to live in?</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>e.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>Yonder in Hazelwood Park, a young woman is talking:
+she knows what Binns and Batty have never dreamed of.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is dusk of the first day. Seventeen thousand of the
+twenty thousand textile workers of New Bedford have come
+out; the exceptions being the tire-fabric mills. The talker is
+Ann Burlak, organizer of the N.T.W., herself a weaver and
+the child of Ukrainian workers of Northern Pennsylvania.
+The Boston and local papers have put the spotlight on Ann.
+She is the “red flame”; she is reputed to be “in hiding in the
+tenements of the South Side,” and the police announce they
+will run her in “on the slightest provocation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Ann is a tall blond girl in her early twenties. Her body
+bespeaks tenderness and grace; you feel that, were it not for
+a stronger love, she’d spend a lot of her time dancing. The
+firm jaw, the clear eye, the intelligent brow, make you understand
+why there’s so little time for dancing. On the bandstand,
+all around her, is a bunch of kids. They frolic about,
+none too silent, in the way of children; and I wonder how she
+manages to keep her mind, and her hearers’ minds, on her subject.
+The local N.T.W. organizer, Walter Burke, has the
+same concern; and he tries to shoo away the kids. But he is
+far too gentle about it; the kids refuse to go; and when Burke
+observes that they are not troubling Ann he gives up. Then
+it comes to me, that far from disturbing this reputed “fireeater,”
+the gathered children give Ann Burlak the appropriate
+setting. Truly, she is speaking for them; of the gay young
+world they can inherit, if their parent-workers know what
+they want, and fight for it, and know how to fight.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>How different her tone from the U.T.W. leaders who
+harangued their crowd from the same stand! Ann Burlak appears
+to have faith in the workers and to be pleading with
+them to take hold of their own battle. She has to go easy. If
+she tells them straight what their leaders are up to, dickering
+with politicians and capitalists, they will scare. If she tells
+them straight what her motherly heart is full of: that the
+bosses cannot lose under capitalism, that the workers under
+capitalism cannot win, they will turn pale, and glance about
+them and cease to listen. It is a subtle task, this leading of the
+ignorant American workers to the realization of their own
+needs, of their own powers, of their own nature. And Ann
+Burlak does it well. Gradually, unobtrusively, she draws her
+hearers to the facts about “arbitration,” to the shortcomings
+of the U.T.W., to the single devotedness of the slandered
+“Reds.” The men and women listen. They have come, many
+of them, to have a look at the “red flame”; a good show for
+nothing. “They say she’s hot stuff,” explain the boys in the
+bench before me. Curiosity and frivolity fade, as the tall
+young woman gives her sensible heart and her motherly mind
+to her hearers. Mothers find themselves face to face with the
+truth: the bare cupboards of their homes, the bare bodies,
+the bare futures, of their children. Men see with their eyes
+what for long their hearts, despite the palaver of journal and
+politics, have known: that they, the workers, live in an enemy
+country! Latin, Slav or Yankee, they live in a land possessed
+and ruled by foes who are sworn to exploit and to degrade
+them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>At the close of her pleading to the workers to know themselves,
+to respect themselves, to be themselves, Ann Burlak
+tries to lead them in song. The men and women pitifully
+follow. And I am minded of the singing at a camp meeting
+which I recently attended. How the words rang for Christ’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>second coming! Surely, had Christ been in his heaven, he must
+have answered these splendid ringing voices. And the thought
+came: When the workers of America learn to sing the coming
+of their world on earth as their fathers, the Christians,
+sang for their world in heaven, the Revolution will not tarry.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>f.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>It is midnight, after the first day. Around the Fisk and
+Devon mills, gravid with lights and labor, stand battalions of
+police: the comparatively kindly town constables with clubs
+and the sinister khaki-clad motor-cops with guns in their
+holsters and tear gas in reserve. On the park side are massed
+the strikers, a good ten thousand. Glen Trimble harangues
+them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They won’t let us picket? We’ll see about that. All of
+you here at the crack of dawn. And when the workers file
+in to work, we’ll have a picket line for them to pass through.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A Negro in the crowd, in a quiet penetrant voice, says:
+“Why wait till tomorrow? Why not picket now?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The crowd turns toward the mill; Trimble accepts the
+challenge. The police clubs stop them. The picket line halts,
+wavers, turns. And its repressed energy gathers in hands behind.
+Stones fly from the park side, and smash the mill
+windows. The police press forward.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Seven hours later, huge shut vans roll up to the red buildings
+and disgorge officers. Far off, beyond an empty lot, fully
+a fifth of a mile from the mills, stands the crowd and boos as
+the tire-fabric workers pass through to their jobs. Near the
+gates, they form hesitant knots. A man stays behind, while
+his wife enters. A girl looks up at a bevy of her sisters beckoning
+from a top mill window, grasps her bag and joins them.
+The police, guns swinging, slide across the empty lot, and
+the workers fade in the grey background of the harbor.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“There’ll be no picket line,” shouts the police chief at
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>Batty and Sylvia. “We had enough last night. Look at them
+windows. Just you let your men come up, and we’ll take care
+of ’em.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But while the clubs and the guns mass at the Devon side
+of the huge block, and the crowds die before them, another
+corps of workers comes to birth on the farther slope of the
+mills; a line forms&#160;... marches.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The sun rises, the mill throbs. The clusters of hesitant
+workers have vanished, either inside to the machines or away.
+Suddenly, a gate swings open. The crowd rises in voice:
+“THEY’RE COMING OUT”: and forward, four abreast,
+march the Fisk workers to join their brothers and sisters.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Sylvia crows like a cock. “I’m proud of you!” And to
+Mary Vorse and me: “Tell ’em in Washington and New
+York, New Bedford has the world’s best workers.” Even the
+cops smile. The walk-out is 100 per cent. Now what?...</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I think of the heroic tiny groups of revolutionary organizers
+throughout the nation: individuals, isolated, threatened,
+resourceless save for their own luminous spirit. Pleading with
+the workers, against the workers, to know themselves, to be
+themselves, to fight the good fight; while the official leaders
+and the pack of papers and the towns and the churches vomit
+their fear of the new world in the form of insults and lies.
+Workers, like everyone else, get the leaders they deserve.
+The workers are pitifully ignorant. Ignorance is the mother
+of misleaders.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I think of the great show of strength that the Textile
+Strike—like San Francisco yesterday—has summoned. And,
+while Ignorance is in the saddle, of the inevitable betrayal!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When the American workers <i>know</i> what they are, there’ll
+be a different story.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>That is the task of all young men and women: let thousands,
+each in his own way, go among the people, and humbly,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>quietly explain the cause of Life, which is the cause of
+Revolution.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Solidarity is not enough.<a id='r13'></a><a href='#f13' class='c025'><sup>[13]</sup></a></p>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>2. WITH MARX, SPINOZA....</h3>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>a.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>This essay would not have been written at this hour had
+it not been for the dark hour of the German Jews. But their
+catastrophe is the deepening, within the crisis of the world,
+of a threat that for two centuries has gathered against Jewry.
+Judaism has never solved the challenge of the modern world;
+and this challenge is now a crisis—one of those historic crises
+from which Jewry must be reborn, if at all, through the
+threshold of death.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I do not stop to swell the lamentations that the fate of
+half a million highly cultured Jews has aroused in all sane
+people. My object is more stern. It is to analyze the response
+of the Jews in the United States to Hitler: to expose and
+study from the response certain traits of modern Jewry.
+There has been, in all the tears and rage, one constant refrain.
+“Why are we persecuted?” cry the leaders. “We are not
+different from you Gentiles—not in any point of thought,
+conduct or allegiance, that <i>counts</i>. In Germany, we are good
+Germans; in America, we are good Americans. There is no
+reason for this persecution.” Now, Jews have often suffered
+persecution; although I suspect never by such ruthlessly
+efficient methods as the German. But Jews have always
+known why they were maltreated. It was because they were
+different; in thought, in conduct, in allegiance, in all that
+counted, a peculiar people. It was because they were Jews.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>This might cause great sacrifice. But since Jewishness was the
+treasure of their lives, source of their beauty and joy, they
+deemed even the price of persecution not too great to pay
+for being Jewish. They took the persecution for granted,
+meeting it as shrewdly as they could. The stress of their
+energy and will was focused, not on avoiding or denying
+reasons for persecution, but on being Jews. Here, then, is an
+enormous difference. For the first time in a history of three
+thousand years, the leaders of Jewry do not know why they
+are persecuted: for the first time they disclaim any reason
+for persecution.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This sheds new light on the German Jewish disaster. Are
+these half million victims to be considered undifferentially as
+suffering human beings? Then they deserve no more pity and
+help—no more and, of course, no less—than the millions of
+other sufferers of our dark age: than the Negroes of our
+South, for instance; than the countless families broken by
+unemployment; than the communists whom Hitler and the
+Balkan sadists are torturing and maiming. But such pooled
+pity does not satisfy the Jewish leaders. In their appeals and
+reports they are careful to separate their cause from others.
+They imply that German Jewry calls for more than its quantitative
+share of the concern of a world riven with anguish;
+they assume, indeed, that a great people, whose value to mankind
+is high, is being menaced. Now this claim, on the evidence
+of the past, can be denied by no intelligent man. The
+Jews have through the centuries made contributions to the
+Western world that are inestimable, and organic. But are not
+the contemporary leaders confused in time? Should the Jews
+be saved today for what they were in the past? Such a plea
+runs counter to all natural law. What is there <i>alive</i> in contemporary
+Jewry to distinguish it from any other quantitative
+group of human beings?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The answer, alas! is, there is nothing. There are still, it is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>true, traditional Jewish communes in Eastern Europe and
+North Africa. But we do not hear from them; they provide
+no Jewish leaders. Indeed, the modern world no longer gives
+them nurture or function, and they are doomed by their own
+archaic form. The Jewry that protests against Hitlerism and
+is menaced by it the world over, and that assumes its past
+worth as argument for its present survival, is a “progressive”
+Jewry, freed from that past. It is the Jewry that cries: Why
+are we persecuted? Let us examine it, then, for Jewishness—and
+in its most prosperous member, the Jews of the United
+States.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>First, I must define the Jew; and this, fortunately, can be
+done without raising the old problems of race and nation.
+To be a Jew has always meant <i>to live a certain way of life</i>:
+a way which, evolving with the ages and with the cultural-economic
+conditions of the lands, was yet an organic growth
+from a single tradition. This tradition was one; and the Jewish
+groups made it organic with their lives. Other nations
+had prophets, the Jews enacted theirs. Other nations had arts,
+the Jews lived theirs. Other peoples had high standards for
+personal, communal and cosmic relations: the Jews, by the
+minutiae of their 613 commandments, made flesh and bone
+of their vision of the divine and the eternal. The defining
+Jewish trait is <i>unification</i> of values, personal and communal,
+into an organic body of behavior. The defining Jewish term
+is <i>action</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Jewish principle—unity of value and deed, harmony
+of person and group—has always had a dual form. That the
+values of the person shall be fulfilled in the community, there
+must be <i>social justice</i>. And that within the cosmos there shall
+be preserved and furthered the values of men and of Man,
+there must be <i>God</i>. Social justice, of course, was an aspiration
+limited by the economy of the particular land and era—limited,
+that is, by <i>possibility</i>. What did God mean to the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>Jew? At first by miracle and confusedly, then rationally,
+God meant the dynamic immanence, in the world of matter
+and of man, of what the person most deeply recognized as
+his own truth and worth. God meant the principle of order,
+the will to unity, in an otherwise chaotic multiverse. God
+meant <i>value in Being</i>. The Jews, as a people, were the first
+to understand that this Value-in-Being could not be abstract,
+not diffuse, not impersonal, although it transcended individuals;
+but was myriadly focused and fleshed in human lives.
+This means that for the Jew every man and woman holds a
+purposive and creative place in life’s dynamic process.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, bearing this definition in mind, where—outside the
+vanishing Old World ghettoes of our East Side—are the
+Jews? Where in New York, in Cincinnati, in Chicago, in San
+Francisco? The American Jew is as divided in his ideals and
+his behavior as any Gentile. His amusements and his arts, his
+family life and his business methods, his loyalties to class, state
+and God, are the same tissue of contradictions. Like any Gentile,
+he scrambles for the dollar, lives for his belly, shares in
+the stampede for cheap delights. As businessman, he also
+exploits his brother; as citizen, he votes for the same liars,
+crude or gilded. He shouts the same chauvinistic phrases and
+is ready, with the rest, in time of war, to rush with the courage
+of Gadarene swine to his destruction. He enjoys (and
+writes) the same inane novels, movies. In a society whose
+crucial trait is the abyss between ideal and deed, he—the Jew—is
+indistinguishable from his neighbor. Is the “Jewishness”
+of these modern Jews a dynamic pattern of action? or is it
+a mere moldering heap of sentiment, vanity and habit?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I am speaking of the prosperous American Jew; not yet
+of the rank and file, the humble clerks and clothing workers,
+artisans and mechanics. These, as Jews, are passive. And in
+so far as they have Jewish leaders to make them act (as contradistinguished
+from labor leaders, for example), they choose
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>the very type who have grown great by shrewd collaboration
+with a world that is the antithesis, in every value, to what is
+Jewish. This is a cardinal point in the lethal condition of
+American Jewry. Its leaders and spokesmen, in their loyalty
+to the exploiting class, have dangerously identified the Jew
+with a bourgeoisie that is degenerate and doomed. In the
+Middle Ages, the Jew was allied functionally with the rising
+burgher class whose destiny it was to break the feudal system.
+This alliance was one reason for the Jew’s survival. But
+burgherdom, in medieval Europe, played a different moral
+part from the grande bourgeoisie of today. In the realm of
+practicable action, the burgherdom stood for social justice and
+intellectual freedom, as against the exploiting landowning
+gentry and the landowning church. Technically, the profit
+system always meant exploitation of labor. But socially, this
+early bourgeois exploitation was in the direction of justice,
+since it was a departure from slavery and spread the margin
+of leisure whereby man’s culture could alone advance. Until
+the invention of the machine, some exploitation of men was
+needed in order that a privileged portion of mankind could
+think—and at last, by perfecting the machine, and spreading
+possible leisure to all humanity, abolish the need of human
+exploitation altogether. The alliance of medieval Jewry with
+burgherdom was therefore within the rhythm of advancing
+social justice, and hence harmonious with Jewishness. But
+today, the dominant bourgeoisie is the power of stratified
+social injustice: it is the power of war, of spiritual death and
+intellectual ruin.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The intensity of American Jewish allegiance to the exploiting
+class can be measured by the lives of the prominent
+Jewish leaders.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Almost without exception they are lawyers, judges,
+merchants, bankers, proprietors of newspapers and other vast
+affairs; men who have grown great in the American game of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>grab, men indistinguishable in spirit, mind and action from
+thousands of other divided men who (with like shamelessness)
+call themselves Christian. In a few instances, they are
+writers and rabbis—apologists, rank or subtle, of the exploiting
+classes.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Since their deeds are contradictions of their ideals, are
+such leaders Jews? Is a folk that such men lead, a Jewish
+folk? From the Jewish premise that value and vision must
+become action, a trait of Jewry has ever been to create true
+Jewish leaders.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But it may be said, there are other Jews, greater than
+these: not necessarily American, yet the real leaders of Jewry.
+There are Albert Einstein, Sigmund Freud, Alfred Stieglitz,
+Henri Bergson, Leon Trotsky&#160;... others. These men are
+great, and are leaders, and are Jews. But they are not leaders
+of Jews. They are leaders of scientists, philosophers, artists,
+revolutionists. They and other great Jewish men of our
+times are products of Jewish life; but modern Jewry cannot
+claim them. They are the offspring of the old communal
+Jewry which still existed in their formative years. And the
+fact that they have been forced to function quite outside
+modern Jewry is another proof of its present dissolution. The
+Jewish world no longer holds its men of genius; the highest
+products of its spirit, of its intellectual discipline and of
+its sense of life, leave the parent body. And the world of
+Jews, in deadly division from the Jewish spirit, chooses
+leaders who hasten its death.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Consider now the pitiful, the ironical condition of the
+Jew. To suffer for a cause that our soul loves is bearable:
+is, indeed—since we must suffer—man’s most enviable destiny.
+But to suffer for nothing! To be hated and ruined as a
+Jew, when one’s life is not Jewish! The Jews of Germany,
+taken as a whole, exist <i>inertially</i> because their past way was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>Jewish and because it takes more than a generation to destroy
+a way of life so strong and so vital. If two hundred years
+ago, they had ceased living as Jews, Hitler and the Nazis, who
+are ignorant men, would probably not have heard of them.
+Hitler persecutes them now because in a confused way he
+has inherited what was a real reason, then, for a German
+in revolt against Western civilization to dislike real Jews who
+had so much to do with its creating.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But that is only half the picture. The Jews are allied
+with an agonizing and desperate middle class. When that class
+flourished, the Jews, functioning in it, were tolerated by it.
+Now that it droops and its spoils dwindle, it turns—like a
+man in a panic—against its weaker neighbor. It is the principle
+of “every man for himself”—the basic law of bourgeois life.
+Oh, the ironical confusion in the fate of the modern Jew!
+He is persecuted by barbarous and desperate men because of
+ideals that he no longer lives: and he is persecuted by a class
+to which, in the main, he is loyal, because he is a rival of its
+barbarous way of life—a way that contradicts his own ideals!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is Germany today: who doubts that with variations
+it may be America tomorrow? that it may be any capitalistic
+country where the Jew, <i>in his present</i>, is a minority factor
+in a desperate middle class and <i>in his past</i> a reminder of the
+liberal culture of the Western world, against which that
+desperate class is in revolt?</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'>b.</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>Now for the final questions: How can the Jew survive
+in the modern world, <i>and why should he survive</i>? To answer
+clearly, I must first state some of the reasons why he survived
+in the past. And since the kaleidoscope of Jewish generations
+is so great, I take the latest period of undisputed Jewish health:
+the Middle Ages (which lasted for the Jews until the eighteenth
+century), when the Jews lived, harmonious and whole,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>within a Europe of violent divisions, and often savagely
+hostile.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class='c007'>1. Jewry’s strict unity of ideal and conduct made the community,
+although small and surrounded, an efficient body. All its
+energy was conserved for itself and applied functionally for survival;
+whereas in a greater community where value and deed are
+divided, there is conflict, loss of energy, disease.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>2. In Judaism, both ideally and actively, there was no separation
+between man and group. Although infiltrations from Alexandrian
+and Platonized Egypt corrupted the ancient Hebrew
+knowledge that there is no personal immortality, this superstition
+of a surviving individual soul (the deepest cause of the failure of
+European cultures) was never strong against the healthy Jewish
+unification of individual and commune. Therefore, medieval
+Jewry had no destructive egoism—no “great men”—to mislead it
+for discordant personal ends. (The egoistic leader battens on the
+accumulated egoisms of his rabble.) In Jewry, the leaders were
+as organic to the commune as an eye or a brain to the body.
+Moreover, these leaders were not soldiers, not megalomaniacs of
+fame and money: they were the seers and the thinkers. Here,
+then, was a social body whose eyes and brain literally led it—in
+contrast to our modern world in which the eye and the brain
+often appear to be discards or decorations.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>3. Jewry had, despite theological and cultural differences, a
+deep community of values with Christian cultural leaders. These
+recognized the worth of the Jewish ethic; the beauty of the Jews’
+concept of Godhead as immanent in human action. The best in
+Christian Europe at all times respected, and often learned from,
+the “hated” Jews. And during the ages when the church was
+strong, it had enough influence to defend the Jews against
+extremities of persecution.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>4. Through these times, <i>Jewry had an economic function</i>. Its
+activities in international commerce, banking, exchange, and in the
+practical sciences of communication and of navigation, did a
+necessary work in feudal Europe. And this allied Jewry with the
+struggling middle class—the burghers who were to inherit and
+transform feudal Europe. Without this function and the alliance
+with a rising economic class, Jewry’s inner harmony of action
+could not have saved it. For there would have been lacking a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>harmony of function within the larger body of the Gentile
+world.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class='c007'>To return, now, to our time; the Jew obviously can survive,
+if the immutable essence of the Jewish social organism
+can somehow be transformed to function in the modern
+world. And obviously, the Jew should survive, if this essential
+Jewish nature still has a part to play before mankind.
+These questions are the subject for a book—which I shall
+write, if I live long enough. Here, I can but sketch my answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Jewish principle of value-in-Being, of God and social
+justice, of the <i>enactment</i> of value by individual and group,
+did not exist <i>in vacuo</i>. It existed within a matrix. And this
+matrix was the agrarian economic-cultural world—a world
+so basally static that the eighteenth-century Galician Jew
+shared it, fundamentally unchanged, with Amos and Isaiah.
+So long as the matrix held, the Jew could follow the commandments
+of his prophets <i>as interpreted by twenty centuries
+of fathers</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We may now see why the Jewish organism broke in the
+impact with the modern world. Modern industrialism destroyed
+the simple, paternalistic economy under which the
+Jewish commune <i>approximated</i> social justice. And modern
+thought and science corroded the theologic-ethic form under
+which the Jew knew God. To survive, the Jewish principle
+must be transfigured into modern terms. Judaism must embrace
+an again workable program approximating social justice:
+and that means the unequivocal destruction of the unjust
+anarchy called industrial capitalism. And Judaism must redefine
+what it has always meant—or meant to mean—by God.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, let the reader answer: Is the principle of social
+justice needed today? And that <i>Man</i> may live, must there be,
+not an anthill system, but a living social form that nurtures
+the inward need of every human being to create and to share
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>his inward vision and value? If your answer is Yes, then
+there is need in the world of what has been, for nearly thirty
+hundred years, the Jewish principle. And as if history urged
+that this cardinal dual need of the world may yet be the
+peculiar business of the Jewish people (there have always
+been, in all nations, saintly and isolated men who lived and
+died for it, as greatly as any Jew), the need stands most
+forcibly answered in the work of two Jews—Jews of a “new
+remnant,” Marx and Spinoza.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I place Marx first, because in the perspective of function
+he comes first—although Spinoza lived two centuries before
+him and profoundly influenced his thinking. Marx, from the
+Jewish premise of history as an organism evolving toward
+“good,” has given to the industrial world a realistic logic
+and a technique of social justice. Time, of course, has amended
+or refuted many details of his plan; yet it is nonetheless
+categorical that every man who wants to <i>enact</i> social justice
+in the modern world must be a Marxist in spirit although
+he may reject certain Marxist dogmas. The modern Jew,
+if he is to exist, must interpret Marx as a prophet as surely
+as his forebears interpreted Moses and Isaiah. Marx (despite
+chronology) comes before Spinoza, because the social discord
+is a disease immediately threatening the survival of civilized
+mankind; and because collective consciousness comes before
+mature self-consciousness. Marx without Spinoza is an imperative,
+immediate, primitive first step in action. Spinoza,
+without Marx, remains an abstract philosophy, removed from
+possible action.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But as Marx is the man who most surely projected the
+prophetic aspiration of social justice into a workable modern
+program, Spinoza is the prophet who has completed the purifying
+of the knowledge of God into the God of inwardness,
+of substance and of action. If Marx carries on Moses and
+Ezra, Spinoza carries on Isaiah and Jesus. It is he who has
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>best established the organic being of God <i>in</i> matter and in
+human thought; who has made rational the ancient mystic
+intuition that the cosmic dwells within the man in so far
+as the man grows self-conscious. By giving value to matter
+in a form acceptable to the age of science, Spinoza will crown
+the work of Marx, who gives reality to a program of social
+justice in the age of machines.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, it may be that Spinoza and Marx are the swan song
+of Jewry: the final message of a great people before its
+ultimate death. It may be that the work of unifying and
+enacting their contributions shall fall to other peoples. There
+is a Soviet Union in the world, and China, and the two
+Americas; from such virgin soil may come the fulfillment of
+the prophets. I do not know. But I do know that, if the
+Jew is to survive as an organic group, he must enact his
+modern prophets as his fathers (after rejecting them, also)
+enacted the prophets of Scripture. And I conclude by broadly
+sketching what the modern Jewish way of living must be.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To begin with (for, I repeat—in the field of action, Marx
+comes before Spinoza), the Jew must renounce loyalty to
+the exploiting class. Without that, all his “service” is a “vain
+oblation.” Today, as twenty-six centuries ago, the word of the
+prophet is true:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c026'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Bring no more vain oblations;</div>
+ <div class='line'>It is an offering of abomination unto Me;</div>
+ <div class='line'>New moon and sabbath, the holding of convocations—</div>
+ <div class='line'>I cannot endure iniquity along with solemn assembly....</div>
+ <div class='line'>Cease to do evil;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Learn to do well;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Seek justice....</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>“<i>Learn</i> to do well!” In our industrial world, this means
+active allegiance to the class whose historic function it is
+to abolish economic exploitation—the base of social injustice
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>and of war—by doing away with economic classes altogether.
+This new allegiance will not be easy; since the Jews for
+centuries have been forced to earn their bread within the
+middle class, it will have the value, by itself, of a religious
+conversion. But this new loyalty as a group does not mean
+that the Jew will be submerged in the working class or in
+any proletarian body like the communists. He must fight for
+the workers (and the farmer and the intellectual, too, are
+workers), help them with his brain and body; but he may be
+detached from them, at least at present, because of his particular
+stewardship of values—“the realm of God,” in each
+man, with which the harried and hungry worker has not had
+time to grow familiar.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The revolutionary proletariat cannot trouble about God.
+There are good functional reasons for the atheism of most
+Marxists. The word “God” has been monopolized so long
+by the apologists of the class of exploitation: theologians,
+philosophers, poets! To detach (as Spinoza did) the reality
+in God from all the accumulated lies is a problem that calls
+for subtlety beyond the present anguished state of the masses;
+for energy that the masses and their immediate leaders <i>cannot
+spare</i> from the day’s struggle. It is unhistorical to expect the
+active revolutionist of our time to do more than reject the
+false “God” of the churches and the synagogues. Yet the
+true experience of God must not die even in the heat of
+revolutionary battle. The first Marxist ends cannot be won
+and man be raised from animal penury and fear into the human
+stage of security and leisure unless the individual finds life
+good: and this can be only through the Spinozistic sense of
+God. The experience of the divine in mortal life must be
+preserved. Wherefore, there is need today of a people, scattered
+through the nations, that know and nurture the experience
+of God. By the tradition of ages, by their ancient
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>prophets and their modern thinkers, the Jews have inherited
+the challenge and the <i>right</i> to be such a people.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This Jewish “remnant”—and only the remnant, through
+the ages, has preserved the Jew—will be loyal to the class
+of social revolution; but through its consciousness of God it
+will be still separate, and must remain so. It will understand
+the functional “atheism” of many simple-minded revolutionists,
+and not demand that it be understood in return. The God
+in man will be the still secret treasure it must lovingly preserve
+against the day when men, free of fear and hunger,
+learn to look within themselves where God is. Thus, the
+Jews will still be a peculiar people. And they will be subject
+to the dislike and distrust of the zealot for whom the word
+“God” is anathema; although it was in the name of God that
+his values of social justice and individual dignity were preserved
+and prepared, through the barbaric ages.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, a majority cannot rise to so high a challenge of
+rebirth. Bankers, merchants, lawyers, professional men and
+politicians, even artisans and mechanics among the Jews, will
+not yield their old allegiance to the middle class, although
+that class turns (as it is turning!) against them. And these
+will disappear in the general human welter, as Jews have disappeared
+in Assyria, Babylon, Alexandria and Rome. But
+what a magnificent remnant there may be! The teacher, the
+doctor, the engineer, the clear-eyed man of commerce who
+knows and hates the rottenness of capitalist commerce, the
+Jewish worker and the student—above all, the Jewish student!
+Already, these are on the side of the productive class that
+alone holds the energy to remake the world. Already, they
+accept Marx. Let them fulfill this knowledge with devotion
+to the inward value—the God whom Spinoza has explored in
+man and in matter—and there will be again, in the world, a
+Jewish remnant!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>Persecution? It is already here, even in America; and as
+the capitalistic era shrinks, darkens and despairs, it will grow
+worse. The lesson of Hitler, in offering the Jew as the traditional
+scapegoat for the accumulated rage of a bewildered
+people, is bound to be learned; already we have our little
+Hitlers, profiteers of suffering stupidity and blindness. The
+Jewish people are going to suffer. And for those who are
+individually and innocently hurt, and who know not why,
+there can be no soothing words. Before their anguish, we
+can only bow our heads, humbly, as they enact the world-old
+mystery of pain. But at least, for the conscious Jew, the
+real Jew, there will again be reason for Jewishness, reason to
+bear his persecution; and comrades to help him bear it. And
+if individual Jews die, their death will be in the cause of
+humane life; no man can ask a higher guerdon. And the
+history of the Jews will hearten them with knowledge, that
+when a people is ready to be persecuted and to die for a good
+cause, the cause lives—and the people.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-l c017'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Postscript</i>:</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c028'>This article, which appeared in “The New Republic” in 1933 and was
+reprinted in many journals, is itself an abbreviated form of an essay published
+in French by “Europe,” of Paris, and in Spanish by “Sur,” of Buenos
+Aires. I have used it here, rather than the longer version, because both are
+a project or programmatic abstract of the essay I must someday write, in
+which all the terms of my argument will be more fully and fundamentally
+defined. Recent attacks on socialism and communism by prominent Jews—rich
+men, shallow, slavish, scared, of the kind I have described, or by truckling
+labor leaders, make the writing of this essay an imperative duty.</p>
+
+<p class='c028'>I trust it is clear in my conclusion about the possible leadership of a
+Jewish “remnant” in our recreative task, that I have not mentioned the like
+necessary role of a Christian “remnant,” only because this paper deals
+specifically with the Jews. That the prophetic-revolutionary strain is not
+dead in the American Protestant churches is proved by the labors of such
+men as Reinhold Niebuhr—one of the truly creative minds of America.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>
+ <h3 class='c018'>3. FROM MANY MESSAGES TO MANY PEOPLE</h3>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c019'><i>i. War Is with Us Now<br> To the First United States Congress Against War, Held in New York, 1933</i></h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>Two thousand delegates from every part of the country,
+and of every shade of progressive opinion, are meeting in
+New York in a Congress Against War. A most laudable
+enterprise; and a most needed. For war threatens the world;
+and with war, civilization, still staggering from the blows
+of the last conflict, may definitely founder. The crisis is
+immediate and tragic. But no congress of good men can avert
+it. All that this congress can do is to bring men’s consciousness
+to focus upon the present danger; and to raise men’s consciousness
+to the pitch of intensity where it becomes action.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Before everything else, we must become aware that <i>war
+is already here</i>! The political and economic setup of the
+modern nations IS war. Battles on land and sea, millions of
+lives destroyed, cities and fields laid waste, are but a concentrated
+form of the jungle anarchy that is called “government”
+in the metropolis, that is called “diplomacy” in the
+embassies, that is called “business” in factories, mills, mines
+and markets.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So long as we have nations playing the lone game of power
+and aggression, or banding together like packs of wolves in
+“alliance” against other nations, we have war—<i>war in peace</i>.
+And all the congresses of the world will not prevail against
+the inevitable, periodic outbreak of this constant war into
+pitched battles.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So long as we have a social system within each nation
+that divides the citizens into classes whose economic basis is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>exploiter and exploited; a social system in which success
+means power gained at the expense of others and enjoyed
+to the exclusion of others, we have war—<i>civil war</i> in peace,
+within each nation. The small ruling class is brutalized by its
+success in enslaving others; the large classes are brutalized by
+their slavery—brutalized the more if they are not conscious
+of enslavement. In such a social system (and all the “planned
+economics” of capitalism can only make it more dangerous
+by disguising it), it is inevitable that the state and the nation
+will reflect, on a large scale, the jungle spirit of individual
+men. It is inevitable that the jungle greed of such a state
+and nation will come into conflict with the greed of other
+nations where the same system prevails. It is inevitable that
+this <i>normal</i> state of conflict shall break out, from time to time,
+in formal warfare.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But our present condition of war is even deeper! So long
+as war prevails in the internal economic structure of each
+nation, it will prevail as well in the internal psychic structure
+of the men and women who constitute the nation. A society
+that is a rationalized jungle of greed and violence, encourages
+the lust for individual power in all men and women and
+atrophies the social instinct in all men and women. The
+members of such a society war upon each other in their
+individual lives: and each individual soul is itself the seat of
+warfare. Of course, such divided men band together in gangs,
+classes, nations, to make war upon other gangs, classes,
+nations.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>War has been the constant condition of what we call
+civilization. War between individuals, war between classes,
+war between peoples—each seeking profit and power at the
+expense of others. But there is a new factor in the situation
+of today.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Modern science has made war deadlier than it has ever
+been: so that war now threatens—not only persons and individual
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>nations, but all mankind. And this new factor of
+science, by its potentiality of large-scale production and co-operation,
+has also made the old systems of exploitation and
+rivalry no longer needed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is the crucial state of the world—its mortal danger
+and its hope. War, as never before, is a menace to human
+survival. And war (military, economic, social war) has been
+made unnecessary, as never before, by our modern mastery
+of means of production, distribution, communication,
+whereby it is feasible today <i>for all men</i> to live in plenty
+and with leisure, without enslaving or exploiting others.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The United States Congress Against War represents a
+good impulse. But men’s protest against war is not a new event
+in the so-called Christian world. It has been futile, throughout
+the ages, <i>because war was organic in men’s way of living</i>.
+Similarly, this congress will not pass the limits of “good intentions”
+unless it writes down formally in its record that
+the abolition of war means revolution. Fundamental revolution.
+Revolution in the social structure of the nations, and
+revolution in the souls of men and women.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'><i>ii. To the Students of Cuba</i><br> (<i>April, 1931</i>)</h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>I am following with deep emotion your struggle to renovate—indeed
+to re-create—the life of Cuba. I am poignantly
+aware of the terrible dilemma that confronts you. Your
+government is the slave of irresponsible financial interests of
+the United States, and of the State Department at Washington
+which with cynical hypocrisy is launched on a deliberate
+campaign to imperialize the entire Caribbean. If your prostitute
+government remains in office, Cuba will continue to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>be a “factory” for American investments, a “factory” protected
+by no laws such as limit exploitation on American
+soil; since you Cubans are not citizens of the United States
+and your political “independence” more and more is coming
+to mean the privilege of our exploiters to work in your
+country with a ruthless irresponsibility which they would not
+dare to display in their own. Yet, if you overthrow this
+government, it may mean the landing of American marines
+in Havana and the swift setting up of a new rule which will
+be the replica of Machado’s—the other horn of the dilemma!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What can you do? What can a citizen of the United
+States urge you to do? In a way I am ashamed to speak to
+you, ashamed to mention my own sorrow and my shame,
+as a native of the oppressor country, who is helpless to help
+you. Men like myself in the United States are powerless.
+There is no enlightened public opinion here with any <i>punch</i>
+to it. Most of our good will is Platonic, in the bad sense
+of the word. And who, here, is interested in a <i>students’</i>
+revolutionary movement? Our intellectuals, as a body, have
+lost contact with the spiritual, the <i>human</i> source of art; our
+student groups are too pampered and too infantile to get
+excited over anything but football.<a id='r14'></a><a href='#f14' class='c025'><sup>[14]</sup></a> You are alone in your
+fight, alone with the student bodies and the workers of other
+Hispano-American countries who, for the most part, are as
+dispossessed as you. You are alone with the truth!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Yet I can say to you: Go on! If for no other reason,
+<i>go on because only then will you be happy</i>. Do not let
+so-called practical affairs and worldly wisdom compromise
+your ideal. Look at the men who have made these “necessary
+compromises”: the successful men, the rulers of the world.
+See what ugly, misshapen, miserable men they are. Look well
+at the “practical” men, and do not go the hideous way which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>they have gone, and of which the ignoble shambles of the
+modern world is the result. Even if you are imprisoned, even
+if you are shot down (as some of you have been), you must
+have the satisfaction of knowing that you are living the sole
+way that makes life tolerable. The enemies who have sold
+themselves for dollars are not happy; the indifferent ones, in
+Cuba, in the United States, who follow opportunism—for
+success, for pleasure, for power—are not happy. They must
+drug themselves with ever more success, more pleasure, more
+power, lest they awake to the intolerableness of their way of
+living. And that is why they hate you: because you are the
+constant revealers to themselves of their own nullity. They
+must deny their nullity; and by a common psychologic
+mechanism they do so by denying <i>you</i> who make them cognizant
+of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I cannot promise you success in your present endeavor
+to free Cuba and to bring Cuba to real independence. It would
+be false to promise it. <i>You</i> may not succeed in actually overthrowing
+the hideous anarchy of which men like Machado
+are mere minor servants. So to do requires more than your
+good will; it requires method, technique and long hard work.
+But this triumphant method can come only from such will
+as yours. Before you achieve it, perhaps you individually will
+be crushed, since the ordered anarchy and greed of the
+modern world <i>has</i> method. But even if this is so—this worst
+which must be bravely envisaged, it makes no difference in
+what you must do, not merely from a sense of duty, but in
+order to be happy! You must go on struggling to free and to
+reorganize your country; knowing that that labor is its own
+reward; that the man who gives his life for freedom, by that
+fact is alive and is free.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You know that your problem as Cubans struggling for
+independence is not apart from that of most of the other
+nations of America Hispana. Yet you are divided from your
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>allies, not alone by mountains and deserts and seas, but by
+proud persistent nationalisms, by differences of race and culture—the
+differences of Indian, Negro, mestizo, criollo. You
+are all rich in plunder, and the imperialist power feeds on
+it the better by exciting the disunities between you. But you
+are profoundly gifted peoples; your resources of the spirit
+are as great as the resources of your lands—greater, surely,
+than the difficulties inherited from your historic pasts. You
+will help yourselves and one another, synchronously, by
+deeper self-understanding. For brothers who fulfill themselves
+achieve thereby not homogeneity, but harmony. Without
+harmony, both your lands and your cultures would be taken
+from you. But you are already far on the way to achieving
+this organic unity among you, in cultural terms and in terms
+of political aspiration.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The imperialist power exploits you and incites you to
+fratricidal war, because it has allies within your borders:
+your own capitalists and their servants, the politicians. If you
+effectively fight the domestic enemy, the foreign enemy will
+at last be helpless against you, even as he was helpless against
+revolutionary Russia. I know that your task is more complex
+than was Russia’s, because you are not politically united.
+But, essentially, it is one problem.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And it is our problem, too. We in the United States fight
+the same foe as you. This, when we attain a conscious intelligentsia
+and a conscious working class, will serve to unite
+us.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Only from the platform of War Against Capitalism can
+you effectively meet your national problem. For your foe is
+only superficially an alien government; more deeply it is the
+capitalist power with its twin heads: the Machados at home,
+the armed Dollar abroad. Most deeply, it is the ignorance
+of all the people—in Cuba, in America Hispana, in the United
+States.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>Students of Cuba, you have come out into the clear air
+of action; you have created leaders for yourselves, and a
+program. You are blessed in this. I find myself almost envying
+you, rather than pitying you despite your anguish and your
+struggles. My heart and my mind are with you. If I could
+feel that my word warmed you in the slightest degree,
+heartened your perseverance, it would be for me an inexpressible
+joy, who am alone here in this great country—alone,
+and unable to act for and with men like you who stand for
+everything I cherish.</p>
+
+<p class='c028'><span class='sc'>Note</span>: <i>This is one of many messages by the author clandestinely introduced,
+printed in pamphlet form, and distributed, in Latin-American countries
+under brutal dictatorships. It has been re-Englished from the Spanish
+text.</i></p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'><i>iii. The Touchstone</i><br> <i>on the anniversary of the October Revolution, 1935</i></h4>
+
+<p class='c020'>More than ever, in this day of spiritual and social confusion,
+the attitude of men toward Soviet Russia is a touchstone
+of the quality of their good will. By this criterion three
+large groups stand forth.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There are, first, the enemies of the Soviet Union: and
+these are the souls whose true love, despite all their fine
+words of God and Man and Freedom, is for their pocket-books.
+Their real nature is manifest in their leaders, archetypes
+of human ugliness and degeneration—the Hearsts, the Hitlers,
+the Hoovers. A second group consists of the “liberals,” the
+“socialists,” the idealistic “revolutionaries” who are so busy
+deploring the mistakes and injustices committed in the Soviet
+Union that they have no time to understand or to defend it.
+These are men (when they are sincere) so infatuated with
+their own private notion of what truth and justice should look
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>like that the spectacle of a great nation, heroically serving
+truth and justice with the humble tools of humble human
+nature, leaves them cold. Essentially, these are men devoted
+to their own egos: men whose professional love for mankind
+masks a childish and shallow and ill-tempered self-adoration.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The third group consists of those who know that in the
+Soviet Union a people is dedicated to the task for which
+in all ages the inspired few—the prophets and the poets—have
+given their lives: the task of founding upon earth,
+at last, a culture not of slaves but of men, a society of
+universal justice, in which human truths shall be sought and
+expressed by the common and communal life of all men and
+women. They know that this people consists not of gods,
+but of humans. They know that this people must meet and
+overcome, in their great undertaking, the obstacles of a
+hostile world and, no less, the obstacles of their own enslaved
+past and of their faulty natures as human beings. They
+know that the labor of the Soviet Union is the more precious
+because it is the work of humble men and women, subject to
+trial and error; and that those who reject this labor because of
+its failures and imperfections are at heart cowards. They know
+that if the dark years, in which we have lived since the Great
+War, shall appear in the perspective of history as the time
+of a great Dawning, the reason is the light that has come
+since 1917 from Russia.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These sincere men and women, today more than ever,
+while the clouds of aggressive ignorance and ill will gather
+upon the world, must declare their devotion to the Cause of
+the Soviet Union.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>
+ <h4 class='c019'><i>iv. To Romain Rolland on His Seventieth Birthday</i></h4>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c020'>Your seventieth birthday comes at a time when France
+holds in her hands the immediate destiny of the Western
+world. The result of the struggle for power in France between
+the elements of reaction typified by the Croix de Feu, which
+are the forces of death, and the elements of re-creation
+typified by the Front Uni, which are the forces of life, may
+well determine the result, at least as it affects those still living,
+of the same struggle throughout the Occident. If France fails,
+Great Britain fails; the sinister forces in the United States,
+emboldened by a century of capitalist anarchy, may sweep
+America into the same disaster. If France fails, Western man
+may fail: a period of overwhelming darkness may intervene
+for us all, before that future time when our progeny once
+again takes up the Torch, held aloft meanwhile—who knows
+for how long?—by the Soviet Union and perhaps by certain
+parts of China, India, America Hispana that prove inaccessible
+to fascist armies.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In this crucial scene of mankind, as so often in the past,
+France plays a leading role. And we, who celebrate your
+seventieth birthday, Romain Rolland, perforce look upon
+you as the symbol of our hope in your great country. You
+are a great man, a great <i>person</i>, Romain Rolland, because you
+are a symbol; because a world spirit speaks <i>through</i> you. At
+this hour of crisis and of celebration, for many in my country,
+you incarnate the genius which for eight centuries has sustained
+French culture.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This genius is a kind of “common sense,” rare alas!—both
+individually and collectively rare. It is “common” only as
+essence, as the universal, is common. It is compounded of a
+ruthless clarity in meeting the Real and in relating its parts
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>together; of an invincible courage in following whither the
+Real leads at whatever sacrifice of individual peace and comfort;
+and of a creative vision in so mastering the facts that
+they may ever more closely conform with man’s intuition
+of his dignity and destiny.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As I look about me at the world in which I have now lived
+for over forty years, meeting men of all qualities of mind and
+temperament and talent, I am appalled at the rarity of this
+“common sense”; and I am no longer amazed at the cruel and
+dolorous pass to which the world has come. Men of genius in
+the usual sense of the word are not rare; nor men of physical
+courage, nor men of imagination. But terribly rare is the
+man who, capable of knowing the truth, continues to serve the
+truth beyond the point at which such service begins to make
+him suffer; terribly rare is the man of imagination who, finding
+that he can sell his gifts at high price unto the prostitutes
+and exploiters who rule the world, elects still to give his gifts
+into the hands of his humble brothers; terribly rare is the
+man who, possessing courage, does not get drunk with it and
+lose his control of reality, finding it easier to move armies or
+mobs than to master his own ego.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Men of this rare “common sense” will, perhaps, someday
+be more common; this, then, will be a different world. But
+until that time of maturity arrives, these men are historic.
+You are one of them, Romain Rolland. In you, there is no
+break between conviction and action; between recognition
+of the truth and every word and deed within your power
+to fulfill it; between the responsibility you feel for your
+dignity as an heir of Man and the responsibility you feel for
+your dignity as a servant of men. Ten years ago, I called
+you a <i>whole man</i>, Romain Rolland. I cannot improve this
+term, today. The whole man is he who possesses this common
+sense I speak of.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>I pray that France may duly celebrate the seventieth
+birthday of her great son and heir to those intellectual and
+ethical qualities which have made France great. If she does
+so, it will have to be by her actions. France knows where the
+truth lies: will she have the common sense to serve it? She
+knows that truth lies first of all in fearless realization of the
+collective economic freedom which can alone make <i>true</i>
+those principles of <i>Egalité</i>, <i>Fraternité</i>, <i>Liberté</i>, which now for
+a hundred years she has flaunted on all her public buildings.
+To this end, the people of France must grimly sever from
+their loyalty to <i>La Patrie</i> those greeds and inertias and self-indulgences
+of class which are the germs of fascism and of
+death. The hour has come when France must accomplish the
+promise of her great tradition to herself and to the world.
+She must mature into realization. It will hurt, it will be heroic.
+But if France fails now, she goes down; she commits that
+suicide of the spirit which ever precedes decomposition of
+the body.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Great nations mirror their powers and their vision in the
+lives of their great men. Let France, today, look to herself
+by looking to you, Romain Rolland. Let her study the clear
+progress of your thought from the humanitarian idealism of
+your bourgeois youth, through the trial of war which schooled
+you to find the truth in <i>facts</i>, and to the strong revolutionary
+realism which is your deed, today. What France sees, in studying
+you, let her understand to be the symbol of her own
+ineluctable course, if she would continue to be France.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>... This prayer to France, this challenge to France, this
+confidence in France, is my way, Romain Rolland, of celebrating
+your seventieth birthday.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>January, 1936</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c028'><span class='sc'>Note</span>: <i>This letter, before publication, was read at the great mass meeting
+held in the Paris Trocadéro, on Romain Rolland’s birthday.</i></p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>
+ <h4 class='c019'><i>v. To the Premier of France</i></h4>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c020'>Dear Léon Blum: I presume to address you in this personal
+form because you are more than the head of a French government,
+you are more than leader of the People’s Front of the
+French nation: historic circumstance has made you arbiter
+of the present destiny of Europe, perhaps of us all. To fulfill
+your role, only a true man can suffice. And it is to the man
+that I am speaking.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All the world knows just what is happening in Spain. The
+Spanish people last February by a great majority chose a
+government of their own—somewhat similar to the one you
+are now leading. Having created a government of their
+own, they proceeded by means moderate and legal to create
+a Spain of their own. And as their program began to take
+effect, the enemies of the people of Spain, they who hate
+the people because they exploit them and because their
+privilege depends on the continued degradation of the people,
+took arms against the nation. Alone, these reactionaries would
+have failed, for they had almost a whole nation against them.
+Even with the trained mercenaries of the army, with the
+resources of vested property and vested superstition, they
+would have failed. But there were allies at hand—groups of the
+same kind, some in power and in possession of their respective
+countries, dealers in falsehood and blood, manipulators of
+ignorance and confusion. With the military and economic
+aid of these enemies of the Spanish people, and of their own
+peoples, Spain is being invaded, Spain’s democracy is being
+crushed, the world is being forced to stand by day after day
+while the machines manned by mercenaries and by the lusters
+after power destroy the naked body of a nation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Léon Blum, this is no civil war of Spain; this is the conquest
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>of the Spanish people by an armed international class
+to whom the destruction of life in the defense of property
+is an everyday routine. This class knows no frontiers. Its
+henchmen, called Hitler, Mussolini, Franco, the Tories of
+Great Britain and America, may mouth national slogans, but
+they are of one brotherhood, they adore one Baal and one
+Mammon. Was the conquest of Ethiopia a civil war? Plenty of
+African troops fought with Mussolini against the Negus who
+to them was a local exploiter less desirable perhaps than the
+Italian. But who fights against the loyalists in Spain? A military
+caste traditionally removed from sympathy with the
+people, a clerical caste trained to submission to the powers
+that be, all the dupes and victims of these castes—in other
+words, the forces, whether in Spain, in Italy, in France or in
+Britain, who are the sworn enemies of you, your party and
+your allies.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is not a civil war in Spain; this is the civil war of
+Europe. This is a war of attempted conquest, Léon Blum,
+waged by all the elements you have devoted your life to
+combat against all the values you hold dear. It is your war,
+Léon Blum; it is our war.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The fascists of Italy and Germany know this. They know
+that the fascists of Spain are fighting <i>their</i> battle of conquest.
+Therefore they are giving aid to their own kind. And the reactionaries
+of Japan, the United States, of every nation where
+money or privilege is in power, by the force of credits and
+propaganda are helping the men of their own stamp in Spain
+in order that their machines may prevail against a defense
+of mere human flesh and blood.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This, Léon Blum, is the war in which you have declared
+that France must remain neutral.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In all Europe there are three governments that can claim
+with validity to represent the interests of the entire people.
+They are Spain, which is fighting for life; your government,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>and the Soviet Union. The U.S.S.R., far removed from the
+immediate scene of battle and menaced by the two most
+aggressive militarist states of the world, Germany and Japan,
+cannot act alone; cannot act at all without regard to the
+decision of its sole ally, the French Republic. If the Soviet
+Union made legal its overwhelming sympathy for the Spanish
+nation as against your neutrality pact, you, Léon Blum, would
+fall; the People’s Front of France would fall; there would be
+chaos in France to match Spain’s, and perhaps a similar
+fascist uprising.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What does this mean, Léon Blum? It means that yours
+is the decision. In all Europe, France alone can act; France
+by the unified nature of its government and by the immediate
+threat to it both east and south, must act.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The world knows where your heart lies in this struggle.
+We know that if you could purchase victory for Spain with
+your life, you would gladly give your life. We know that
+what holds you back is the refusal of the British government
+to join you, is the criminal leadership of English Labor, is—in
+a word—your fear of war waged against the lives of your
+people by the united fascists. Yes, that is the superiority of
+the fascists over men and women of the democracies. The
+fascists, despising life, readily risk it; despising the lives of
+others, readily mislead and destroy them; whereas at the Left
+are they who hesitate because they think, because they feel,
+because they are more wholly human.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But, Léon Blum, it is a true saying: He who hesitates
+is lost. There is another old saying: He who loses his life
+shall find it. The words originally had a supernatural meaning.
+We can give to them a modern, psychological, rational form.
+We can say: “He who through fear of losing what he values
+dares not run risks is sure to lose what he values.” You fear
+war if you aid the Spanish people; you fear to alienate Britain;
+you fear to provoke the enemy who are giving aid to their
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>factions by every means in their power. And your fear is
+helping the enemy; your fear is making more hopeless the
+cause of the people not only in Spain but in Germany and
+Italy, who need encouragement to rise against their executioners.
+Your fear is making more assured the position of the
+fascists when at last, made mad by their successes, they choose
+to unleash their war against you. Your fear—if need be—to
+risk war now is making war inevitable; and meantime your
+hesitancy and caution are throwing to the fascists the first
+battles.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Léon Blum, we who in everything human know ourselves
+superior to the fascists must equal them in daring and
+in resolution. Otherwise, our hatred of war and love of humanity
+will defeat us and deliver the world to the war makers.
+There are times when the best strategy is to get one’s eye
+on the goal and to move toward it. This is the strategy of the
+fascists, and it has been victorious in Ethiopia, on the Rhine
+and elsewhere. It is a strategy not every nation is able to
+pursue. Britain is too divided to pursue it. France has the
+power, the perspective, the government—and the incentive!—to
+pursue it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Already the aid of the fascists to their kind in Spain, while
+France rigidly and solitarily remains neutral, is demoralizing
+the masses of all countries. They say to themselves, in England,
+in France, in Brazil, in the United States: “The fascists
+help their gangs; we leave our people to be massacred and
+their cities to be bombed.” The masses do not understand that
+the U.S.S.R. must act with France, must uphold <i>your</i> hand,
+Léon Blum. None of us understands what holds you back.
+Your “neutrality” is breaking the heart and spirit of the peoples,
+everywhere, who soon or late must fight <i>your</i> battle.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If I have presumed to address this letter to you, Léon
+Blum, it is because I know that my anguish is that of millions
+before the tragedy of Spain; and that my expectation of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>your leadership is that of millions everywhere—not excluding
+those in Italy and Germany—who cannot act alone, but who
+are waiting to follow.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We implore you: Recognize the facts in Spain. Recognize
+that <i>there is no neutrality</i> in this irrepressible conflict
+between the two possible futures of mankind—the way forward
+to human dignity, the way backward to slavery. Open
+the frontiers of France for aid to the legitimate government
+of Spain before it is too late! Help them with food, guns,
+planes, credit, and above all with the moral force that will be
+theirs when they know that the French are their comrades.
+If you do this, at once, you will be doing merely what one
+legitimate government should do for another; you will be
+doing merely what the fascists, the world over, are doing for
+their conspirators in Spain.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If you do less than this, Léon Blum, you are betraying
+what your country represents, what your People’s Front gave
+you the mandate to perform. You will be betraying mankind.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>October, 1936</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<h4 class='c019'><i>vi. Values of the Revolutionary Writer</i></h4>
+
+<p class='c029'>(<i>This address was read at the first session of the American Writers
+Congress held in New York in April, 1935.</i>)</p>
+
+<h5 class='c030'>1. <i>Definitions</i></h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>The world stands at the crossways. It goes forward into
+the socialist order, or human culture, not as we know it but
+as we aspire to create it, will perish. I do not say the way
+forward is certain. The life of man is at issue; and with man
+the alternatives are present, at all times, of life or of death.
+They are present now. But this is certain. To agonize within
+the present system, to refuse to get clear by the social revolution
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>of the working classes, means the plunge of Western
+man into a darkness to which his productive and his intellectual
+forces, if they continue uncontrolled, must doom him:
+a darkness from which even the intimations of light that have
+made our present, will have vanished. This makes clear that
+the cause of the socialist society is not, finally, a political-economic
+problem: it is a cultural problem: it is <i>the</i> human
+problem.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I propose to show the specific value, in this crisis, of the
+literary work of art—not as a chorus of revolutionary politics,
+not as an echo to action: but as <i>an autonomous kind of action</i>.
+I propose to show that above all in America today, owing to
+our peculiar cultural conditions, the revolutionary writer must
+not be a “fellow traveler”: that his art must be co-ordinate
+with, not subordinate to, the political-economic aspects of
+the re-creation of mankind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This requires some definition of history and of literary
+art (for we are engaged in making history). Fortunately, I
+may point to the historic sense of mankind, implicit in Marx,
+as of a body which, like all organic life, evolves by reason of
+inward assimilations of an objective world from which it
+wins sustenance and on which it reacts—all according to a
+pattern which is the nature of the organism: a pattern which
+in man is capable of great variations chiefly through the
+process of what, vaguely, we call consciousness.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The part of consciousness, or if you prefer, of <i>experience</i>,
+in historic evolution is important for us because it leads
+straight to the social function of art. The work of art is a
+means (among other things) for extending, deepening, our
+experience of relationship with life as this organic whole.
+The feeling of intimate kinship with any part of the objective
+world is what we mean by beauty. As this relationship expands
+to an inclusive social form, it is what we mean by culture.
+The basic social function of art is <i>so to condition men that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>they will, as a social body, be the medium for the actions of
+growth and change required by their needs</i>. These social
+actions, to be healthy, must be performed within the true
+experience of <i>the whole of life involved</i>—and the conveying,
+the naturalizing, of this experience is the especial function of
+art.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I will make this plain. Suppose a man needs to hammer
+nails for his new house. He must hit the nails square on the
+head. But in order to do this, the man must be in good
+general condition. If his eyes are poor, if his brain is dizzy,
+all his technical skill of wrist-action won’t save him from
+hammering nails badly. No man, it is obvious, is in shape
+for even an act so simple as hitting a nail on the head unless
+his body and mind are a fit <i>medium</i> for the job. No society of
+men or class of men is in shape for any needed action, save
+in so far as it has been conditioned to become the <i>effective
+medium</i> for that action.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In simple societies, the prime conditioning arts are lyrical:
+they are music, the song, the dance. By means of the experience
+absorbed and sustained through them, the folk becomes
+the effective medium for the kind of action its emotional
+and economic needs, and the needs of its rulers, call for. In
+our world where a chaos of forces is breaking down the
+life of man before our eyes, the chief conditioning art—although
+all arts have their place—must be one to synthesize
+our complex pasts and present, and to direct them. This is
+the art of words, by which man captures the worlds and
+selves that have borne him, and renders them alive with his
+own vision.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We know now, roughly, the kind of social action to demand
+of our literary art. It is in general to condition men
+for the multitude of direct actions of which their life consists:
+it is, with us, the crucial task of conditioning our readers—who
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>we hope will be the workers, the farmers, and their allies, to
+become the effective medium of revolution.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This subtle process of <i>conditioning</i> is not to be confused
+with the work of direct <i>preparation</i> for daily struggle: work
+which falls primarily to the teachers, the theorists, the organizers
+of party and of union, who are largely conditioned
+by the accumulated work of writers. And it must be clear
+that this work of conditioning the social body, however
+invisible it seems, is the direct action of the writers. Words,
+of course, are also instruments for “preparation”: reportage,
+pamphlets, slogans, manifestoes (this paper is a kind of manifesto),
+have their legitimate uses in political work. But only
+in so far as the need of the revolutionary <i>medium</i> is understood;
+and as the main function of literary art, <i>which is to
+create this medium</i>, prevails. The writer who forgets this, in
+order to bend his art to some seemingly more immediate task,
+weakens the organic health and progress of mankind by betraying
+his integral part in it. And in a world full of hunger,
+of hideous injustice, of threatening war, only a clarity rare,
+hard and heroic, will hold the literary artist to his own often
+thankless, often obscured, yet fundamental, action.</p>
+
+<h5 class='c030'>2. <i>The American Writer Under Capitalism</i></h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>I apply at once these definitions to the special problems of
+the American revolutionary writer. To this end, we must
+first glance at the general state of readers and writers in our
+country.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We have never lacked literary talents. But the economic
+soil in which they rooted was washed away ere the roots
+could hold. We have had great writers. They have been influential
+abroad, where an organic cultural life possessing
+what we still lack—memory and consciousness—could employ
+them. Here, a Poe, a Whitman, a Thoreau, a Melville, could
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>win only sentimental disciples because the discontinuity of
+ethnic and industrial conditions made their message obsolete
+more quickly than a generation could mature to hear them.
+We Americans are weak—infinitely weaker than the peasants
+of China, America Hispana, or old Russia—in that intuitive
+connection with soil and self and human past, which makes
+of a folk an effective medium for creative action. In this, our
+common state of cultural malnutrition, the need of sound
+literary art cries aloud. But our writers have been attainted
+by the disease they must help to cure. A sense of impotence,
+derived from their unconnectedness with the vital classes of
+the American world, has delivered them up to a succession
+of European fads and dogmas; and their reflections of foreign
+literary styles, like the shallow glints of a kaleidoscope, have
+added up to nothing. When they have turned to our world,
+our writers have been unable to resist the overpowering
+pulls of the capitalist system. They have been entertainers,
+purveyors of candy and cocktails. When at the end
+of the War, they began to rebel in numbers, their revolt
+was hollow: an exhibitionistic beating of drums or a snarl and
+a sneer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now the deepest cause of their subjection as writers, and
+of their impotence, is the hidden ideology of the American
+system, which—liberal and conservative alike—most of our
+writers have absorbed. <i>And this is painfully to the point</i>,
+because—whether they know it or not—the same ideology prevails
+among our revolutionary writers. Far too many of us
+have taken over the philosophy of the American capitalist
+culture that we are sworn to overthrow.</p>
+
+<h5 class='c030'>3. <i>The American Revolutionary Writer</i></h5>
+
+<p class='c020'>This American ideology, which has ruled from the beginning—from
+the time of those prophets of bourgeois business:
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>Benjamin Franklin and Alexander Hamilton, the true
+masters of our way of life—is a shallow, static rationalism
+derived from the thinnest, not the deepest, eighteenth-century
+minds of France and Britain: an empirical rationalism based
+on fact-worship, on a fetishism (both unscientific and unpoetic)
+of the finished cut-and-dried report of the five senses,
+which is not remotely related to the organic rationalism
+explicit in Spinoza and implicit in the historical dialectic of
+Marx. Had this vulgar rationalism ruled in seventeenth-century
+England and France, there would be no modern science.
+It is, since it ignores the organic and evolving nature of man,
+by definition the foe of all creative work: the foe, therefore,
+however hidden, of art and revolution.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Briefly, I will disclose symptoms and attitudes in our revolutionary
+writers, which reveal (although the writers know it
+not) this sterile philosophy....</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(1) Disbelief in the autonomy of the writer’s art; in its
+integral place <i>as art</i> in the organic growth of man and specifically
+in the revolutionary movement. This self-distrust makes
+the writer capitulate <i>as artist</i>: leads him to take orders, <i>as
+artist</i>, from political leaders—much to the dismay of the more
+intelligent of said political leaders. It moves the American
+writer to misapply in his art borrowed foreign definitions of
+values which have cogence in their place and time of origin;
+but are meaningless here. This is a carry-over of the faddism
+of middle-class American writing.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(2) From the same inorganic view of life and hence of
+art, comes the servile or passive concept of revolutionary
+literature as primarily “informational,” “reflective,” “propaganda.”
+This is, of course, borrowed from the mid-Victorian,
+middle-class idea of utilitarian or moralistic art. There is no
+reason why good literature should not be of high documentary
+importance, and have a strong political appeal. Indeed, in a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>dynamic age like ours, a profound literary art, insofar as it
+must reveal the deepest evolving forces of man at the time,
+must be “propaganda” for these forces and for the goal of
+these forces. But this kind of propaganda derives from the
+work’s effectiveness as literary art and is dependent on it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(3) What murders the effectiveness of so much of our
+revolutionary writing? The clue is the word “murder.” We
+all know that murder is a conspicuous American trait: there
+are more murders, we are told, in the United States in a day
+than in some European countries in a month. Now murder
+is a sort of short cut: it is an oversimplified solution of a
+problem—say, a nagging wife or husband—by simply getting
+rid of them. It eliminates the <i>life</i> of which the problem is a
+factor. What murder is to the art of life, this dead philosophy
+is to knowledge; and translated into literary terms it becomes
+“oversimplification.” Call it, if you prefer, a kind of misplaced
+or <i>forced</i> direct action. Here are some of its results:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class='c007'>(a) Novels, aiming to reveal the revolutionary portent
+and substance of our world, which are stuffed with stereotypes&#160;...
+or imitate the spiced journalese of newspaper reports
+of surface events&#160;... or echo the bravado (hiding
+weakness) of the Hemingway-Dashiell Hammett school&#160;...
+or borrow the drab pedestrian effects of Victorian realism—as
+if these were adequate to convey the body—tragic, farcical,
+explosive, corybantic, tender, deep as hell and high as heaven,
+of American life!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(b) Proletarian tales and poems which portray the workers
+as half-dead people devoid of the imagination, soaring
+wills and laughter, which are the springs of creation—and of
+revolution.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(c) Laborious essays in criticism and literary history in
+which the organic bodies of the works of poets and prosemen
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>are mangled and flattened to become mere wallpapering for
+the structure of a political argument.<a id='r15'></a><a href='#f15' class='c025'><sup>[15]</sup></a></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class='c007'>(4) In these refusals, often by men of genuine literary
+gift, to recognize the material for a deep revolutionary art,
+lies the one ideological taint. Its final evil is to turn Marxism
+itself into a dogmatically, mechanically <i>shut</i> philosophy. And
+the effect of this, were it to prevail on our eager, unschooled
+and sensitive youth (workers as well as writers), would be to
+repel them: indeed, to drive many of them (and not the
+worst because the worst bewildered) to seek a home in
+reactionary schools of thought which do lip service to old
+forms of man’s organic intuitions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If the youth of America are drawn by the decayed loyalties
+of nationalism and church into the ranks of fascism, it
+will be <i>in part</i> because our revolutionary writers have been
+thwarted, by this dead rationalism implicit in the dying capitalist
+culture, from making clear that life today—in the depths
+that call for sacrifice, loyalty and love—is on the side of
+revolution.</p>
+
+<p class='c006'>The American revolutionary writer&#160;... to act his part,
+which is to create the cultural medium for revolution&#160;...
+must see life whole. He will have a political creed; if he is
+a generous man, it will be hard for him to forgo some share
+of the daily political-industrial struggle. But his political
+orientation must be within, must arise from, his orientation
+to life as an artist. Any course of action, any creed, lives
+within the dynamic substance of life itself: <i>and this substance,
+in all its attributes, is the business of the artist</i>. Therefore
+it is proper to state that the artist’s vision of life IS the
+material of his art.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>There is much confusion among us as to “material” and
+“subject.” The subject of a book is a mere label or container;
+it may mislead or be empty. Our revolutionary poet or proseman,
+by his loyalty to the working class (whether born in it
+or not) and by his natural selection of strong, expressive
+subjects, will write more and more of the struggles of farmer
+and worker. But if his vision be sound, it will make—<i>whatever
+his subject</i>—the material for revolutionary art. The term “proletarian”
+applied to art should refer to the key and vision
+in which the work is conceived, rather than to subject. It
+should be a qualitative, not a quantitative, term. A story of
+middle-class or intellectual life, or even of mythological figures,
+if it is alight with revolutionary vision, is more effective
+proletarian art—and more effective art for proletarians—than
+a shelf full of dull novels about stereotyped workers.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I wish to characterize two of our specific problems.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We writers have two highways for reaching mastery of
+our material. We must go into life&#160;... in persons and in self.
+These two ways are really one; and the writer must follow
+them together, else he will make headway in neither. If we
+look upon persons or classes, save with the eye of self-knowledge,
+we will not see them; and if we look inward upon self,
+save with an eye disciplined by objective understanding, we
+will see only the mists of egoism which are the tree self’s
+denial. Even more complex is this double way we must take,
+and never cease from taking. If we look upon persons of one
+class we will not know them unless we see the class opposing.
+If we look upon the present of any scene, we will not know it
+unless we see within it the past&#160;... and its dynamic direction:
+its future. <i>This is the dialectic of the artist.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Because classes are in mortal conflict, <i>and because we have
+taken sides</i>, does not mean they have nothing in common: it
+means they have life in common. The class struggle, for us,
+is a focus of light, a modern form, by which timeless ingredients
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>of human nature common to every person are revealed.
+It is not a substitute for understanding, but a kind of <i>spectrum</i>
+wherein hunger, passion, love, pity, envy, worship, dream,
+fear, despair and ecstasy receive a dynamic modern order.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The other branch of our simultaneous highway is the self.
+Self is the integer of value and of social action, the norm and
+form of life as man may know it. The revolutionary writer
+must understand the <i>person</i>, or his portraits of social struggle
+will be flat and ephemeral as the poster on a billboard. As
+early as Shakespeare, Cervantes and Racine, the artists were
+creating the image of the “lonely Soul,” the “atomic will”—an
+image which served to make the <i>medium</i> in which the
+Protestant-bourgeois, individualist economy could flourish.
+We must have poets to sing the image of the new and truer
+person: the person who knows his integration with group
+and cosmos; the person through whom the Whole speaks.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Only by bringing home the timeless human values in the
+class struggle to every member of the exploited classes and
+to the sensitive of all classes (for under capitalism all decent
+men and women are oppressed) can the writer stimulate the
+will to revolutionary action. Only by deepening his comprehension
+of cultural historic forms, such as religion, in
+which, however faultily and impurely, man’s profoundest
+intuitions of his organic nature were embodied, can the writer
+touch the <i>spirit</i> of the American worker and farmer and
+middle class, to release their spirit from obsolete forms into
+new creative channels. And only thus can we save them from
+the decayed devotions which are the treacherous bait of the
+fascists.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Thus, for the American revolutionary writer to give less
+than the whole picture is poor philosophy, poor art—and poor
+strategy.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We are aware there is war; we have declared this war to
+be ours; and we know that in war strategy is important. But
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>this is a war whose battleground is the world—the world of
+extension and, no less, the world of inward depth. In this
+battle are countless separate struggles. Many, engaged on their
+particular fronts, are forced by the crisis of their position to
+ignore its relativity in the whole; or to misprize and forget
+values which do not appear to apply to their one urgent need.
+Therefore we writers must know the breadth and depth of
+the whole struggle: know its background and its foreground:
+know its ultimate values within its immediate aims: in order
+that, by the common experience of our work, the balance
+and unity be kept; that in the fever of struggle no human
+heritage of truth and freedom languish; and that the great
+war for Man move, without error or blindness, to its issue.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><i>Our</i> special work is the universal. In our field there can
+be no strategy but the whole truth.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If a writer doubts this, I doubt he is an artist.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If we believe that communism is the organic next step of
+the world to be released by freeing the world’s forces of
+health, we must believe in the art revealing man’s depths
+which bear this destiny. We will embody in our work the
+substance of life: the blood, the bone, the eye, the conscious
+embrace of necessity whose child is freedom—knowing that
+in so far as we create this truth, we are moving, and moving
+those who hear us, toward the Revolution.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c019'><i>vii. The Writer’s Part in Social Revolution</i></h4>
+
+<p class='c029'>(<i>An address to the International Congress of Writers for the Defence
+of Culture, held at Paris, June 21–25, 1935.</i>)</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We are all here, not as Frenchmen, Germans, Americans,
+but as men of letters who conceive their art as an articulation
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>of the human spirit. Each of us bespeaks his class and his
+country only in so far as he voices deeply his self, and thereby
+voices mankind. This is the irreducible character of the artist.
+Whether he knows it or not (and in our day, most do not
+know it, whence the fragmentary and corrupted nature of
+their works and of themselves as men), the artist is one who
+acts on the premise that the universal lives in the particular;
+that cosmos lives in the person. This is the meaning of the
+mysterious words “beauty” and “truth” applied to art. As
+we share the universal in a particular form—a painting of a
+tree, a story of a beggar—we call it the experience of beauty.
+We feel the unity between self and some other object, a
+unity which (far from destroying) heightens and <i>makes true</i>
+the particularity of both the self and the object. And whether
+we know it or not, we value this experience of truth and
+beauty; we love it as somehow good. This is another irreducible
+trait, beneath our differences, of us all. The conflicts
+of our actual existence may so weary and confuse us that
+we believe we long for death; may fill us with distrust and
+despair: it is love of life, none the less because wounded and
+twisted, that writes the darkest of our pages. In so far as a
+man seeks beauty, he knows that life <i>is</i> value; for the recognition
+of beauty is nothing but the joyous acceptance of our
+part and our participation in the body of living.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In periods of normal cultural rhythm, when the social
+body moves moderately well in all its organs, this act of
+conscious participation in life as a whole, the essential act of
+the artist, can remain implicit in the quiet body of his story
+or song or picture. Such times see no Congress of Writers
+such as this one. But today the forms and modes of human
+existence, unevenly evolved, have broken the equilibrium
+which is life itself. Today, the active and aggressive faith in
+life, the revelation of its intricate harmony, which is the sole
+science of the artist, is so at variance with the actual world
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>that we feel the need of a direct action, transcending the
+solid, quiet, slow certainty of art, to reinforce our love and
+our vision in the experience of the people.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All this may seem to you irrelevant esthetics. But you
+must pardon me, for the application I wish to draw from it
+(my brief message to this Congress) is relevant.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The revolutionary hour in which we live is but the
+present phase of the process, centuries old and destined to
+outlast almost the memory of economic conflict, whereby
+man (not a privileged, exploiting class, but man as a whole)
+will emerge into a conscious culture; even as the child at a
+certain physiologic stage must become adult or go down into
+degeneration. The key of the present phase of the long
+process is economic; therefore the importance of the class
+struggle and the imperative of entering it on the side of the
+workers. But the process itself, now as ever, is organic. By
+which I mean that <i>the whole of man</i>, heart and mind, subtlest
+sense and deepest intuition, as well as belly and loin, must
+partake of it—or it miscarries.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The orthodox revolutionary creeds, which are the technique
+of the transition of this crucial hour, do not comprehend
+the whole man. They stress, rightly, the aspects of
+mass social-economic action. They slight other parts of man:
+the intuitive, the intimate, the personal which leads to the
+cosmic—phases which are the concern of the creative writer.
+But since the process of man’s growth must at all times be
+complete, these phases too must enter the revolutionary movement.
+Since they lag, blame not the political leaders but the
+writers. Since in consequence even the immediate economic
+aspect of the whole process lags, and threatens to miscarry,
+again blame (at least in part) the writers.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Excluding the hordes of parasites and peddlers who dare
+call themselves “writers” only in a world where illiteracy
+thinks it can “read,” we might divide our writers into two
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>groups. The first stress the sensuous, the personal; strive perhaps
+after the mystic; ignore utterly the masses of men, and
+that vast region of each man’s life involved in economic
+forces. The other group, often recruited or converted from
+the first, in the enthusiasm perhaps of their discovery of the
+social-economic factor limit themselves to it or at least permit
+their awareness of the intimate, infinite dimensions of human
+life to become dulled. Their work, like the first group’s, is
+inorganic. And what is worse, the great Cause—man’s rebirth—to
+which they are devoted continues, because of them, deprived
+of elements needed to make it whole and to make
+it live.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course, the values of the creative writer, as I have
+named them, are of the very stuff of the Revolution which,
+indeed, is the expression in terms of urgent human need of
+just these values. At the heart of socialism and communism,
+bequeathed to it direct by romantics like Rousseau who saved
+it from the contradictory theological impedimenta of the
+church, lies a view of men and of man which the degenerate
+humanisms of the eighteenth century and the sectarian Protestant
+creeds had abandoned. It is the view of human history
+as one organic body, growing by tragic effort toward consciousness
+and justice; it is the view of the individual (in so
+far as he is <i>real</i>) as an integer of this body, so that the health
+of the whole and the health of every part are one; it is the
+view that universal meaning is inherent in material behavior,
+and therefore, that society becomes by its actions the immanent
+presence of timeless value. This view, which I call the
+<i>organic</i> view, is implicit in every major artist, however dissident
+may be his intellectual convictions. It runs with infallible
+continuity from the Egyptian sculptors and the Hebrew
+prophets through the patrists, through the builders of the
+Gothic, through the great sixteenth- and seventeenth-century
+founders of modern science, through the systems of Spinoza
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>and Hegel—ineluctably leading to the historical-prophetic
+vision of Karl Marx.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But in the eighteenth century there had grown strong a
+countercurrent in the thought of Europe. So successful was
+the conquest of facts about material bodies, the capture of
+their movements in the laws of mechanics, that certain men,
+hungry like all men for simplifications, cut down the organic
+humanisms of Erasmus and Rabelais, the organic rationalisms
+of Spinoza and Newton, to a dogmatic empiricism
+of the five senses. Theirs was a “universe” containing everything
+that moved by mechanical law—everything, that is, except
+life. And the victories of applied science were so great
+that these shallow empiricists swelled in prestige; while the
+organic view grew enfeebled, being confined to artists with
+no “scientific” magic to win them credence, to mystics overburdened
+with theologies that contradicted their intuitions,
+and to simple men and simple women with no intellectual
+weapons.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The nineteenth century, of course, brought giants who, in
+philosophy, literature and the sciences, revived the organic
+view. In Marx, who belongs to his century’s great tradition,
+the organic view of man is fundamental, and is complete as in
+perhaps no other modern thinker except Spinoza and Goethe.
+But this shallow empiricism was in the air. Marx, overanxious
+to attack theological creeds and theological metaphysics, at
+times fell into the use of easy terms borrowed from the vulgar
+materialists whom he despised as much as he hated the idealists
+against whom he aimed them. There are contradictions in
+Marx—great prophet, great historical philosopher, great economist,
+but too harried a man to be a complete logician. Often
+on the same page with an unsurpassed word about man’s
+primal unity, in thought and deed, with the dynamic principle
+of all life, one will find uncritical outcroppings of sensationalism,
+phrases from the eighteenth-century materialists
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>whom he rejected, implicit denials of the validity and primacy
+of man’s intuitive organic sense—all of which betray the premise
+of the Marxist dialectic. These flaws in his work have
+been stressed as virtues in our Western world by sterile
+men to whom a dogmatic reduction of life to the report of
+the five senses offers comfort; and it has been a blight upon
+our revolutionary growth.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I have no time, nor need, to expatiate upon the symptoms
+of this blight. The course of socialism in nineteenth- and
+twentieth-century Germany, France, England, America, is
+full of them. Witness the degradation, one might almost say
+the disappearance, of the <i>true person</i> from revolutionary
+letters as the individual is shrunk from an organic integer of
+cosmos to a mere quantitative factor of the collective mass,
+possessing no inwardness—in consequence of which the
+human mass likewise becomes denatured. Witness the simplification
+of the human being to a passive product of environment—a
+fallacy which any man who has ever planted a carrot
+seed next to a pea in a garden knows enough to laugh at. And
+the failure, in judging the course, both hideous and heroic,
+of contemporary events, to allow, in some adequate modern
+term, for what our fathers fancifully called the demonic and
+the angelic aspects of human nature. Witness the degradation
+of literature from being an integral part of life’s creative
+process to a mere reflection of events falsely conceived as
+“objective” or to a mere instrument for some surface action.
+Witness, in such poor thought as this, the decay of logic and
+the decay of metaphysics. Witness, above all, the dangerous
+failure to distinguish between the true essence of religion—its
+creative role in human culture—its major role, indeed, in
+the genesis of socialism, and religion’s outworn theological
+and class superstructures.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All such systems indicate the contempt for human life and
+destiny which comes when man is cut off from his primitive
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>participation in the cosmos without finding a conscious synthesis
+(the task of the writers!) to replace it: all, regnant in
+the vulgar revolutionary thought of Western Europe and
+America, strike at the very heart of revolutionary meaning.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In agricultural lands, such as Russia, China, great sections
+of America Hispana, the folk have not lost that immediate
+integration with life, through soil and self, which is the
+organic sense in its first phase. The revolutionary doctrines
+of the West, even with their present limitations, tend to free
+these peoples from the imposed dualism of their priestcraft,
+to discipline them for technical advance against the cloudy
+helplessness in which their misery has mired them, and to
+release their instinctive monism so that it should flow with
+ease into the organic view and form of a communist order.
+This procedure is particularly plain in the Soviet Union
+where, despite an orthodox terminology which frequently
+sounds mechanistic or traditionally dogmatic, the true foundations
+of organic Marxism are understood and are being passionately
+enacted by the people.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In our industrialized countries, the case is different. Science,
+prostituted and misapplied, has for a hundred years
+plowed down the primitive monistic intuitions of the masses:
+the same vulgar empiricism which attaints our literature flouts
+its obscene excesses in every penny paper, every school, every
+church. The stress on the “environmental,” the “behavioristic,”
+the “economic” man, the failure to appeal, in revolutionary
+terms, to <i>the whole man</i>, stimulates the mechanolatry
+to which we are already enslaved; dims further our enfeebled
+sense of wholeness from which alone fertility and power
+issue; and threatens our whole birth-period with disaster.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I do not deny the economic-political causes of fascism.
+But only psychological and cultural factors in all the people
+can explain its spread. Among these factors, pre-eminently
+in Germany, was the failure of both great revolutionary
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>parties to lead forward into fresh forms of loyalty and action
+those primordial intuitive energies of man which, balked of
+their future, flow back into the rotted channels of church,
+state, race, devotion to a Fuehrer mouthing decayed loyalties—there,
+of course, to be exploited by the sinister high priests
+of Money.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I do not mean that the revolutionary cause in its present
+form fails to enlist the heroic loyalties of numbers of men and
+women. The concentration camps of Hitler give the lie to
+such a statement, as does every industrial struggle of the world
+from the Saar to California, where you will find them: the
+young crusaders for Man, the geniuses of social vision, clear-eyed,
+quiet of soul. These are the gifted vanguard who, of
+their own lyric health, absorb and express what is deeply
+organic in the revolutionary movement. But the world cause
+cannot rely exclusively on heroes or on the natural poets of
+action. Its Word must be such as to fire also the more cautious,
+the more conservatively rooted. And the more subjectively
+sensitive must also be entrained, those hosts of men and
+women (teachers, poets, mothers, subtle and humble craftsmen)
+whose religious and esthetic instincts are balked by the
+antireligious and antiesthetic conventions of most Marxists.
+For each youth who is driven into the fascist ranks because he
+finds it easy to adore his own petty ego magnified in a Fuehrer
+or a Duce, there are a score of men and women too decent
+and intelligent to be tempted by these obscene gestures, who
+yet remain unmoved while the world cries for them, because
+the appeal of Revolution <i>seems</i> to deny those very depths of
+man, secret and mysterious, whence the creative will and
+energy must issue.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The New World of which the old world is in travail is
+like an embryon. Until it be whole, it cannot be born. What
+intimate <i>knowing</i> moves the embryon, long after its organs
+and muscles are complete? This knowing of completeness is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>the final phase of completion. When it is there, and not before,
+the being issues forth; a new life breathes.... I sometimes
+feel that all the organs, the limbs, the brain and nervous system,
+of the New World exist. They are the laws of science,
+the methods of production and communication, the treasures
+of literature, art, religious wisdom; and, embodying these, the
+mass of workers possessed of the will and the power, together
+with their indispensable leaders, drawn from all classes, the
+intellectuals, the teachers, and technicians. Why, in this hour
+of travail, when death threatens the generations of man, does
+not the new life issue? The final integrality is lacking&#160;...
+the final completeness which is organic consciousness, the
+<i>knowing</i> harmony of all the parts, making them move to life,
+making them breathe together. This, within the ready social
+body, is the function of the writer.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>4. TERRE HAUTE HOTEL</h3>
+
+<p class='c020'>Outside the nine cells<a id='r16'></a><a href='#f16' class='c025'><sup>[16]</sup></a> of our ward runs a corridor which
+is left open part of the day, and through its barred windows
+I can see the country. Right under my eye is the mellow
+muddy river that Theodore Dreiser’s brother sang, long ago.
+On the banks of the Wabash I see a huge pile of discarded
+cars, rust-rotted fragments of machines, shanties paintless and
+broken-roofed, the homes of human discards among the industrial
+refuse. This view outside the jail makes me feel at
+home in the jail. The bars shut me into, rather than out of, a
+familiar world.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The men in the ward enhance my feeling of having come
+more close to the America that put me here. There are details,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>of course, inanimate or crawling, to which I am not used; but
+like the iron-barred windows, the grated doors, these separating
+elements are superficial; they do not avail against the
+growing knowledge that to be in this jail, among these men,
+and with the police and the chamber of commerce outside, is
+to be at the heart of a common experience and (given the
+society we live in) to be in the right place.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The men of our ward have set up a “kangaroo court” to
+deal with their day-by-day needs, problems primarily of supplementing
+the vile, scant prison food, of bringing in tobacco,
+of keeping the ward comparatively clean. The chief
+of the court is a big fellow whom I’ll call Jack, a natural
+leader. Jack’s boyhood was rooted in the shanties along the
+banks of the Wabash; joy for him, from the earliest days,
+meant escape from everything familiar—and the best means
+to it, whisky. Jack found a good job in a local gymnasium.
+One night of payday, he left a bootleg dive and was attacked
+by a gang who knew that he had dollars in his pocket. There
+was a fight; a policeman butted in, and a chance blow of
+Jack’s great fist sent him to the pavement, fracturing his
+skull. The cop died, and when Jack got out of jail, the police
+hounded him and no more jobs were open. Jack had to eat, he
+had to drink, he had to have a girl; so he became a bootlegger.
+From then on, he has spent half his time in jail. When he’s
+out, he falls inevitably back into the one way he can think of
+to make a living: a way of disorder, of course.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But here in jail (where he has more essential freedom than
+outside), Jack is an orderly man. His cell is clean, his clothes,
+his toilet articles, his library of magazines, are arranged in
+shipshape fashion. With a Flit can, he holds the bugs in
+abeyance. And with his authority as chief of the kangaroo
+court, he keeps order in the ward, teaching the newcomers
+and the vags who are let in for the night their duties and their
+places. Jack is a great reader, and if what he reads is trash,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>the reason is that trash is all he knows—a point in common
+with the vigilantes. He is the kind of taciturn man who, when
+he talks, talks well. I note, in his description of his friendship
+with the little children of his brother, the tenderness that is
+in him, the kind of tenderness that I have often felt in preadolescent
+boys for very little children. Utterly wanting in
+Jack is a critical sense of the society he lives in, is a concept
+for understanding and bettering his place. Mentally, spiritually,
+he is a child, because he has been stopped from growing;
+but in his fixedness of immaturity certain virtues of the
+boy remain untarnished. I observe this, when he comes into
+my cell, of his own accord, and shows me the trick of driving
+the bedbugs to cover. And I shall not forget his bringing out
+to me, as a spread for my bread, his jar of peach preserve, a
+homemade gift from his mother; and his sensitive lie, when he
+feels my hesitation (I know already what good food means
+in jail): “Go ahead, eat all you want—I don’t eat that stuff
+much.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Jack’s right-hand man is Pop, who supervises the ward’s
+housework, cooking, cleaning, laundry; an old man of sixty
+doing time for perjury. Pop’s grey face has a beauty difficult
+to decipher, until one catches its two main elements: a childlike,
+animal gaiety impervious to experience and an old man’s
+pain, the two transfused into a mask, sly, ironic, covering
+them both. Pop also is a child; he’d play treacherous tricks on
+you if he chose; that is clear. But it is also clear that if you
+touch his emotions decently, he may not choose. He’s a child
+brought up among hostile and undiscerning masters. He does
+not question their authority, nor does he conform. He escapes
+by remaining in the limbo of his boyhood, a psychological
+place beyond good and evil but saturated with feeling and
+humor.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Tony is the kind of chap who affects white buck shoes,
+and even in stir tries to keep them polished if not clean. He
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>wears a saffron necktie and his blond hair is pushed up from
+his vague blue eyes in a pompadour. Tony is being held for
+manslaughter—killing a truckman while driving his car in a
+state of intoxication. He used to be an iron molder; but molding
+jobs have run thin in the mills since the production of
+capital machines has dwindled; and bad times have reduced
+him to the status of a common laborer. He likes the boys in
+jail; he’s having a good time doing nothing.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In this, he is like the farm boy from the Kentucky border—Willie—who
+denies the grand larceny charge that has put
+him here, but visibly enjoys his moratorium from cribbing
+corn and milking. Willie, with brand-new blue overalls,
+curled-up amber hair, baby blue eyes, could take the part of
+the farmer’s son in the melodrama, the youth smelling of
+clover who comes to the big city to reclaim his girl lured by
+the wicked traveling salesman. Willie is handsome, nonchalant,
+illiterate, with many a childish virtue. Back on the farm
+he has a wife and two kids. He is glad to be free of them for
+a while, and time for him does not go beyond the vague
+measure of a season.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When night falls, the lock on the door frequently grinds
+and the homeless men are turned in for a night’s lodging. Not
+to dull my story (which has a point, if you’ll be patient), I’ll
+describe but two of these night-guests. One is an old man,
+dweller in the filthiest shanties of the Wabash, an aged human
+body clad in squalor. Sam has been south, picking cotton, and
+he tells us it doesn’t pay. That’s why he’s back home. He
+hails the tin dish of malodorous slop called supper with delight;
+although he has no teeth, the pork chop gets gnawed
+to the bone.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Beside Sam is a riveter, a young South Indianan who has
+helped build bridges from Bayonne to St. Louis. He’s broke,
+but he expects a job tomorrow. Meantime, he shows us where
+a molten rivet missed his pail and caught him in the belly;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>his clothes ablaze, he jumped to the elevator, dropped to a
+tank of water and then spent three months in a hospital bed.
+But he’s all right now: to prove it he takes hold of a steel
+butt on the ceiling with the forward half of his fingers and
+chins himself six times. Old Sam jumps up, and chins himself
+twice, giggling with pride. Sam’s body is still gamy and
+beneath his dirty unshaved beard is the bland face of a boy, a
+face essentially sweet....</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Do not judge that I am sentimentalizing this common,
+typical group of failures. There are, of course, vicious men in
+jails, just as there are vicious men out of jail. They are the
+exception in both categories, and I’m sure I do not know in
+which one will find relatively more. Perhaps the vicious
+among convicts are as rare as the Mellons, Rockefellers, duPonts,
+among businessmen; as the Hearsts among journalists;
+as the Hitlers and Huey Longs and Coughlins among politicians.
+Every broad social group has certain basic traits; in
+the criminal group not viciousness is such a trait, but <i>childishness</i>.
+Without a doubt, the percentage of rotten men among
+criminals is so small it is no wonder that every single man in
+my ward of the jail happens to be a decent person.</p>
+
+<p class='c006'>That they were all childish was not accidental. It may
+help to explain why I liked these men. I have always felt at
+ease among children. And perhaps this means that I am something
+of a child myself. And this draws me closer to the point
+of my story.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Two inmates of our ward, mugged and fingerprinted like
+the rest of us, I have not yet named. They are the communist
+organizers, Andrew Remes and Charles Stadtfelt. Stadtfelt is
+a young man with a playboy’s smile and a body pitifully
+invaded by tuberculosis. So slight is Stadtfelt’s resistance that
+every hour or so he must dive into his lousy bunk, under
+mine, for a rest. When he emerges, there is a cigarette in his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>mouth, a laugh in his eyes and a jest on his tongue. Stadtfelt’s
+way of curing his consumption is to forget it, and devote his
+life to bringing on the Revolution. There is no feverish strain
+in his good humor; it comes from a harmony of the whole
+man which tubercular bacilli have not yet broken. The second
+communist, Remes, is studious and unsmiling. Brought in
+later than I, the first thing he does is to ask me for an explanation
+of why the Soviet Union does not officially help the
+Spaniards. Back and forth in the corridor we walked, while
+he put his questions. But the sobriety of Comrade Remes is
+not objectionable to the camaraderie of the others. His intellectual
+preoccupations trouble them no more than his
+working out the crossword puzzles in the old papers (while
+they hunt tales of daring gunmen and passionate lovers).
+Instinctively, they are aware that Remes looks at the bosses
+with eyes parallel to theirs.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These bosses are the symbolic “fathers” who keep the boys
+behind bars. They have tools. Lowest are the turnkeys, for
+the most part men brutalized by long practice of mechanical
+repression without understanding; men dehumanized to the
+bare repressive function. A little less low are the police, dull
+incarnations of conformity to the rules the criminals break;
+professional opponents, players of the same game as the lawless
+but on the other side of the line and held in contempt by
+the crooks, who instinctively sense that to obey the rules
+of our society means less fantasy, less generosity, less feeling,
+than to break them. The true fathers are rarely seen by their
+unfortunate children: they are the respectable citizens, the
+taxpayers, the makers of the rules, the builders of the courts
+and jails, the dealers of prison terms. Implicitly, men like
+Jack, Pop, old Sam and Tony regard them as children regard
+grownups.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These pillars of society are less childlike than the jailbirds.
+But they are not the mature men fathers should be. If they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>were mature (and the crooks instinctively know this), there
+would be less filth in jail, there would be no need of jail at
+all, there would be less misery, corruption, injustice, in the
+chaotic outer world which the jail’s false order impotently
+strives to correct. The lawbreakers are children; the sustainers
+of the legalized anarchy called the capitalist system are
+neither children nor grown men. Call them men in a transition
+between infancy and adulthood: that will explain their
+natural selection for eminence by a society that is itself an
+epoch of transition. Capitalism is a transition age between the
+naïve childhood of the race and that mastering maturity in
+which alone the dreams, values, inventions of childhood, transfigured,
+may flower.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This explains why the “children” are in jail; why the
+men who have not grown up build the jail and place the “children”
+in it: it explains also why the communists, who are
+creating a form for maturity, are in jail with the “children.”
+The two communists in our ward (not to mention the leading
+communist in a ward belowstairs) legitimately stand for a
+will, a discipline, a method, whereby men may outgrow the
+irrational chaos of capitalism, may mature to a society for
+both grown men and children. By this truth, symbolically, the
+communists belong in jail. For the values which they strive,
+through changing the laws, to bring to normal life are kin to
+the values which the criminals, by breaking the laws, impotently
+struggle to retain. The mature man rounds the cycle,
+giving organic form to the lyric impulses of childhood—the
+need for joy, for play, for freedom, which man outgrows at
+his peril.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But this natural conjunction of child and mature man in a
+jail, as against the halfmen who put them in jail, may be still
+further broadened. After we had been released, Chief of Police
+Yates came up to us. Yates is a jaunty young man, smooth
+and hard-eyed, half a machine, a type too common in this
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>world, without whom fascism could not function. He is
+simply the shallow young man, wanting to get along in a
+hurry, who sells out to the forces in immediate power—the
+owners of the Machine; and who wants for his reward, not so
+much a fat pay envelope as freedom to give play to his desires,
+less destroyed than repressed into sadism by the dull business
+world of which he also is a victim.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Yates saunters up to us, and tells us with pride of the
+congratulatory cable he has received from Berlin. Capitalist
+society has already driven back into infantilism the weakest
+members of the working class; and you will find some of
+them in jail. Fascism is a method for finishing the process!
+Fascism would <i>infantilize</i> all the workers; not in order to put
+them into jail if they are good boys, but to put them into a
+brown, black or silver shirt, and stick a slogan in their mouths
+and call them the fatherland’s army. Fascism is the program
+for the forced regimented infantilization of the people; implicit
+or explicit, it must be the program of all rulers under
+capitalism, since these rulers, by the nature of their transitional
+order, are themselves caught in a transition before maturity,
+are not men enough to lead men or to work with men, and
+are compelled, before the threatening maturity of the masses,
+to drive them all—through force, falsehood, ill nurture—down
+to a morbid, regressive, infantile level.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Either down to infantilism or forward to the revolutionary
+beginning of a human order in which normal men may normally
+mature: that was the choice, palpable as human bodies,
+within our ward’s barred windows. In the Terre Haute jail
+I had our world with me: the atavistic, careless and abnormal;
+the future, striving to be; the dolorous, dangerous present. I
+felt at home there....</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>1936</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>INDEX</h2>
+</div>
+
+<ul class='index c003'>
+ <li class='c031'>Abélard, Peter, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Absolutists, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Adams, John, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Aeschylus, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Agnosticism, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Agrarian class culture, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Akiba, Rabbi, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Alcott, Louisa May, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Alexander, S., <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Alice in Wonderland,” Lewis Carroll, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Allan, John, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Anarchism, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Anarchists, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Anderson, Margaret, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Anderson, Sherwood, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>–96, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Andrewes, Lancelot, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Aquinas, St. Thomas, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Aragon, Louis, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Aristotle, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Arlen, Michael, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Arrast, Harry d’, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Art, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>folk, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></li>
+ <li>modern, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a></li>
+ <li>organism, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
+ <li>utilitarian, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Artists, American, abroad, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a> <i>et seq.</i>
+ <ul>
+ <li>religious, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Atlantic Monthly, The,” <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Atlantis,” Hart Crane, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Attitude toward life, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Augustine, St., <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Automobile, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Ave Maria,” Hart Crane, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Bach, Johann, Sebastian, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Bacon, Roger, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Bakunin, Mikhail, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Balzac, Honoré de, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Bancroft (ballplayer), <a href='#Page_23'>23</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Baseball, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Batty, William, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Baudelaire, Charles, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Baudelaire,” T. S. Eliot, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Bazalgette, Léon, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Beethoven, Ludwig van, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Bergman, Henry, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Bergson, Henri, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Berkman, Alexander, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Bernard, St., <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Billings, Josh, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Binns, Abraham, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Blake, William, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Blum, Léon, appeal to, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>–269</li>
+ <li class='c031'>Bourne, Randolph, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Bradley, George G., <a href='#Page_223'>223</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Brady, Edward, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Brancusi, Constantin, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Braque, Georges, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Breton, André, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Bridge, The,” Hart Crane, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Broken Tower, The,” Hart Crane, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Brooks, Van Wyck, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Broun, Heywood, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Browder, Earl, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Brown, John, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Brown, Sonia, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Bryan, William Jennings, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Buddha, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Burke, Edmund, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Burke, Walter, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Burlak, Ann, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Burns, Robert, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Cabell, James Branch, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Calverton, V. F., <a href='#Page_276'>276</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Calvin, John, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Calvin Coolidge. His First Biography,” <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Cape Hatteras,” Hart Crane, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Capital,” Karl Marx, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Castle of Otranto, The,” Hugh Walpole, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Cather, Willa, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Cellini, Benvenuto, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Cervantes, Miguel de, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Cézanne, Paul, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Chaney, Lon, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Chaplin, Charles, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>–73, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>“Circus, The,” <a href='#Page_73'>73</a></li>
+ <li>clothes, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+ <li>“Gold Rush, The,” <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
+ <li>mementos, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></li>
+ <li>reserve, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></li>
+ <li>studio, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+ <li>working habits, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Chasseloup, Comte de, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Chateaubriand, François René, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Christians, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Christian Scientists, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Citroën, M., <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Civil War, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Claudel, Paul, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Clemm, Mrs., <a href='#Page_162'>162</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Clive, Henry, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Cobb, Ty, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Cocteau, Jean, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Codesido, Julia, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Collected Poems of Hart Crane, The,” <a href='#Page_108'>108</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Collins, Wilkie, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Communism, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Comte, Auguste, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Confessions of Rousseau,” <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Congress Against War, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>–256</li>
+ <li class='c031'>Conrad, Joseph, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Coolidge, Calvin, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Coolidge, Mrs. (mother of Calvin), <a href='#Page_45'>45</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Cooper, James Fenimore, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Country of the Pointed Firs, The,” Sara Orne Jewett, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Cowley, Malcolm, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>letter to Waldo Frank, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Crane, Clarence Arthur, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Crane, Hart, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>–108
+ <ul>
+ <li>ancestry, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
+ <li>birth, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
+ <li>death, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
+ <li>employed in candy business, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li>literary associations, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li>mystic, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a></li>
+ <li>purpose of work, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Crime, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a> <i>et seq.</i>
+ <ul>
+ <li>(<i>see also</i> Murder)</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Critics, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Crocker, Harry, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Croly, Herbert, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Crossword puzzle, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Cuban independence, message to Cuban students, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>–260</li>
+ <li class='c031'>Cultures, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Cutty Sark,” Hart Crane, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Dada movement, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>in America, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li>in Europe, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'><i>Daily News</i>, New York, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Dante, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Dante,” T. S. Eliot, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Darwin, Charles Robert, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Davies, Marion, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Decline of the West, The,” Oswald Spengler, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>–201</li>
+ <li class='c031'>Delacroix, Ferdinand V. Eugène, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Democritus, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Dempsey, Jack, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>(<i>see also</i> Prize fighting)</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Derain, André, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Descartes, René, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Dewey, John, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Dewey’s Suppressed Psychology,” Scudder Klyce, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Dial, The” (magazine), <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Dickens, Charles, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Dickinson, Emily, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Divina Commedia,” Dante, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Donne, John, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Don Quixote,” Cervantes, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Dostoevski, Feodor M., <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Dreiser, Theodore, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Dryden, John, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Durant, Will, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Eddington, Sir Arthur, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Eddy, Mary Baker, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Edgar Allan Poe Letters Till Now Unpublished,” <a href='#Page_161'>161</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Edwards, Jonathan, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Einstein, Albert, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Elegy,” Thomas Gray, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Eleonora,” Edgar Allan Poe, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Eleusinians, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>El Greco, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Eliot, T. S., <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>–227
+ <ul>
+ <li>leadership, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></li>
+ <li>lives in static world, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li>traits, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Emerson, Ralph Waldo, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Engels, Friedrich, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Epstein, Jacob, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Erasmus, Desiderius, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Esthetics, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Ethiopia, conquest of, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Euclid, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Eureka,” Edgar Allan Poe, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Euripides, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Europe” (magazine), <a href='#Page_253'>253</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Fairbanks, Douglas, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Fairy tales, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Fall of the House of Usher, The,” Edgar Allan Poe, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Fascism, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Fascists, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Faure, Elie, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Felipe of Spain, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Fichte, Johann Gottlieb, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Firbank, Arthur, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Firpo, Luis, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Flaubert, Gustave, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Florida, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Folk art (<i>see</i> Art)</li>
+ <li class='c031'>Ford, Henry, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Fort, Paul, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>France, Anatole, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Francis, St., <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Franco, General, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Franklin, Benjamin, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Freud, Sigmund, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>–93, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>began as physician, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
+ <li>dream interpretation, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
+ <li>family, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a></li>
+ <li>follower of Kant, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
+ <li>scientific value of work, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Freudian system, indictment of, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Frick, Henry Clay, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Frost, Robert, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Fuller, Margaret, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Function of Criticism, The,” T. S. Eliot, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Gabirol, Ibn, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Gauss, Karl Friedrich, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Gide, André, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Gish, Dorothy, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Gish, Lillian, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Gladstone, William E., <a href='#Page_78'>78</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Godwin, William, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Golden Day, The,” Lewis Mumford, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Goldman, Emma, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>–183
+ <ul>
+ <li>rejects bolshevism, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li>traits, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Gourmont, Remy de, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Gray, Thomas, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Great Tradition, The,” Granville Hicks, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Greeley, Horace, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Griffith, David Mark, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Gris, Juan, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Griswold, Rufus W., <a href='#Page_161'>161</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Haeckel, Ernst Heinrich, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Halevi, Jehuda, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hamilton, Alexander, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hammett, Dashiell, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Harper’s,” <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hart, Grace, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hart, William, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hassam, Childe, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hawthorne, Charles W., <a href='#Page_147'>147</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hawthorne, Nathaniel, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Heap, Jane, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hearst, William Randolph, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hecht, Ben, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hemingway, Ernest, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Henry Thoreau, Bachelor of Nature,” Bazalgette, trans. by Van Wyck Brooks, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Heraclitus, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hergesheimer, Joseph, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hennes Trismegistus, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hicks, Granville, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hitler, Adolf, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hollywood, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Holmes, Oliver Wendell, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Homer, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hooker, Thomas, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hosea, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Huckleberry Finn,” Mark Twain, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hulme, T. E., <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hume, David, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hurst, Fannie, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Huxley, Aldous, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hylan, Mayor, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Iamblichus, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Ibsen, Henrik, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Idylls,” Tennyson, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Ikinilik, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Indian, American, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Individual Talent,” T. S. Eliot, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Industrialism, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Ingres, Jean Auguste Dominique, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Interpretation of Dreams, The,” Sigmund Freud, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>“Jacob’s Room,” Virginia Woolf, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>James, Henry, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>James, William, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Jazz, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Jefferson, Thomas, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Jewett, Sara Orne, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Jewry, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>–253
+ <ul>
+ <li>American, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a></li>
+ <li>defined, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a></li>
+ <li>economic function in Middle Ages, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a></li>
+ <li>German, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a></li>
+ <li>leaders, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a></li>
+ <li>persecution, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a></li>
+ <li>and social justice, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Johnson, Walter, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Joyce, James, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Jung, Carl, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Kafka, Franz, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Kant, Immanuel, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Klyce, Scudder, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Kotzebue, August von, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Kreymborg, Alfred, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Kropotkin, Peter Alexeivitch, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Krutch, Joseph Wood, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>–220</li>
+ <li class='c031'>Kuhn, Walt, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Laforgue, Jules, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Lajoie, Napoleon, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Lamarck, Jean de, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Landis, Kenesaw M., <a href='#Page_23'>23</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Larbaud, Valéry, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Lardner, Ring, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Laurentius, St., <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Lawrence, D. H., <a href='#Page_74'>74</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Leaves of Grass,” Walt Whitman, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Leibnitz, Gottfried Wilhelm, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Lenin, Nikolai, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Leonardo da Vinci,” Sigmund Freud, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Lewisohn, Ludwig, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Liberation of American Literature, The,” V. F. Calverton, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Ligeia,” Edgar Allan Poe, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Lincoln, Abraham, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Literature, pseudo, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>progress of, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Little Review, The” (magazine), <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Lloyd, Harold, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Lloyd, Marie, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Lobachevski, Nikolai, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>London, Jack, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Lorentz, Hendrik, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Lowell, Amy, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Lowell, James Russell, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Mach, Ernst, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Machado, Gerardo, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Machine, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Madison, James, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Maillol, Aristide, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Maimonides, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Mallarmé, Stéphane, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Mani, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Marin, John, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Marinetti, Filippo Tommaso, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Marlowe, Christopher, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Marriott (ballplayer), <a href='#Page_23'>23</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Martin, Henri, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Marx, Karl, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Massis, Henri, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Materialism, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Melville, Herman, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Mencken, H. L., <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>–139, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Menjou, Adolphe, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Metaphysics, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Milton, John, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Minkowski, Hermann, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Misanthrope, Le,” Molière, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Modern Temper, The,” Joseph Wood Krutch, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a> <i>et seq.</i>
+ <ul>
+ <li>analysis, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li>summary, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>–206</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Mohammed, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Molière, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Mom, Arturo, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Monroe, Harriet, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Morella,” Edgar Allan Poe, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Moses, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Most, Johann, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Motion pictures, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Mountain Interval,” Robert Frost, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Moussorgsky, Modest P., <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Mumford, Lewis, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>–177</li>
+ <li class='c031'>Munson, Gorham, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Murder, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Musset, Alfred de, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Mussolini, Benito, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>“Nation, The” (magazine), <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>National Textile Workers Union, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Nazis, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Negroes, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Neurosis (<i>see</i> Psychoanalysis)</li>
+ <li class='c031'>“New Republic, The” (magazine), <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“New Series of Introductory Lectures, A,” Sigmund Freud, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Newspapers, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Newton, Sir Isaac, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Niebuhr, Reinhold, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Nietzsche, Friederich Wilhelm, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“1924” (magazine), <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Nordau, Max, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“North of Boston,” Robert Frost, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Notes from Underground,” Feodor M. Dostoevski, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>O’Keeffe, Georgia, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“O Pioneers,” Walt Whitman, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Origen, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Ornstein, Leo, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Orozco, José Clemente, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Our America,” <a href='#Page_176'>176</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Outline of History,” H. G. Wells, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Pageant of Freedom (Philadelphia), <a href='#Page_33'>33</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Paradiso,” Dante, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Pascal, Blaise, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Paul, St., <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Philo, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Philosophy, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Picasso, Pablo, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Pickford, Mary, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Plato, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Platonist, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Plekhanov, George V., <a href='#Page_181'>181</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Plotinus, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Poe, Edgar Allan, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>–164, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Poe, Virginia, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Poetry” (magazine), <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Poincaré, Raymond, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Polo Grounds, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Pound, Ezra, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Powhatan’s Daughter,” Hart Crane, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Pradon, Nicolas, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Prize fighting, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a> <i>et seq.</i>
+ <ul>
+ <li>Dempsey-Firpo fight, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
+ <li>Dempsey-Tunney fight, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Proem,” Hart Crane, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Promise of American Life, The,” Herbert Croly, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Protagoras, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Proudhon, Pierre Joseph, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Proust, Joseph Louis, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Psychoanalysis, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Psychopathology of Everyday Life,” Sigmund Freud, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Pythagoras, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Quinault, Philippe, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Rabelais, François, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Racine, Jean, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Rasmussen, Knud, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Ray, Man, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Reeves, Alf, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Re-discovery of America, The,” Waldo Frank, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <i>notes on</i> 96, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Refinement, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Reitman, Ben, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Remes, Andrew, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Renan, Joseph Ernest, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Reviewers, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Rickard, Tex, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Riemann, Georg, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Rimbaud, Jean Arthur, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Rimsky-Korsakov, Nikolai, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Rivera, Diego, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Robinson, Carl, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Rochelle, Pierre Drieu La, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Rolland, Romain, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>–264</li>
+ <li class='c031'>Romains, Jules, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Roosevelt, Theodore, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Rosary, The” (song), <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Russell, Bertrand, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Ruth, Babe, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>“Sacred Wood, The,” T. S. Eliot, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Saint-Pierre, Bernardin de, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Sandburg, Carl, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Santayana, George, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Scarlet Letter, The,” Nathaniel</li>
+ <li class='c031'>Hawthorne, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Schopenhauer, Arthur, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Seaver, Edwin, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Seldes, Gilbert, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Seven Arts, The” (magazine), <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Shakespeare, William, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Show-Off, The” (play), <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Sinclair, Upton, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Sins of Science,” Scudder Klyce, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Sisler, George, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Sophocles, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Soupault, Philippe, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Soviet Russia, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Spain, war in, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Spencer, Herbert, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Spengler, Oswald, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>–201
+ <ul>
+ <li>ignores Jews, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+ <li>masters, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a></li>
+ <li>theory of cultures, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a></li>
+ <li>value, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Spinoza, Baruch, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Stadtfelt, Charles, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Stanard, Mary Newton, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Stein, Gertrude, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Stein, Leo, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>–188
+ <ul>
+ <li>literary style, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Stendhal, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Stieglitz, Alfred, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Story of Philosophy,” Will Durant, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Story Teller’s Story, A,” Sherwood Anderson, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Strachey, John, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Stravinsky, Igor, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Streets, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Sur” (magazine), <a href='#Page_253'>253</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Surréalistes, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Swanson, Gloria, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Swinburne, Algernon Charles, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Swinburne,” T. S. Eliot, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Sylvia, Ferdinand, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Taine, Hippolyte Adolphe, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Talley, Marion, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Tate, Allen, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Tennyson, Alfred Lord, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Teresa, St., <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Terre Haute jail, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–294</li>
+ <li class='c031'>Textile strike, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>–240</li>
+ <li class='c031'>Thales, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Therapy, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Thoreau, Henry David, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Thoughts after Lambeth,” T. S. Eliot, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Thus Spake Zarathustra,” Nietzsche, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Tolstoi, Count Leo Nikolaievitch, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Tool, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Totem and Taboo,” Sigmund Freud, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Totheroh, Roland, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Tradition,” T. S. Eliot, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Transcendentalism, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Trimble, Glen, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Trotsky, Leon, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Tunnel, The,” Hart Crane, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Tunney, Gene, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Twain, Mark, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Tzara, Tristan, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>United Artists, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Universe,” Scudder Klyce, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Valéry, Paul, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Vance, Arthur C., <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Van Vechten, Carl, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Vinci, Leonardo da, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Virgil, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Vorse, Mary Heaton, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Voyages,” Hart Crane, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Vulgarity, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Wagner, John Henry (“Honus”), <a href='#Page_23'>23</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Wagner, Richard, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Walker, Mayor, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Walkowitz, Abram, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>War, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a> <i>et seq.</i>
+ <ul>
+ <li>World, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></li>
+ <li>(<i>see also</i> Congress Against War)</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Waste Land, The,” T. S. Eliot, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Weber, Max, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Wells, H. G., <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Whistler, James Abbott McNeill, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“White Buildings,” Hart Crane, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Whitehead, Alfred N., <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“White Heron, A,” Sara Orne Jewett, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Whitman, Walt, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Wilder, Thornton, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Williams, Roger, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Wilson, Edmund, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“Winesburg, Ohio,” Sherwood Anderson, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Woodberry, George E., <a href='#Page_161'>161</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Woolf, Virginia, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Wordsworth, William, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>“World as Will and Idea, The,” Schopenhauer, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Wright, Harold Bell, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Writers, American revolutionary, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a> <i>et seq.</i>
+ <ul>
+ <li>American, under capitalism, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li>part in Social Revolution, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li>revolutionary, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>–272</li>
+ <li>two groups, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c031'>Writers’ Congress, American, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Writers, International Congress of, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Yates, chief of police, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class='c003'>Zeno, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
+ <li class='c031'>Zola, Emile, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c002'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div><span class='xlarge'><i>by Waldo Frank</i></span></div>
+ <div class='c003'>STORY</div>
+ <div class='c002'>THE UNWELCOME MAN (1917)</div>
+ <div>THE DARK MOTHER (1920)</div>
+ <div>RAHAB (1922)</div>
+ <div>CITY BLOCK (1922)</div>
+ <div>HOLIDAY (1923)</div>
+ <div>CHALK FACE (1924)</div>
+ <div>THE DEATH AND BIRTH OF DAVID MARKAND (1934)</div>
+ <div class='c003'>HISTORY</div>
+ <div class='c002'>OUR AMERICA (1919)</div>
+ <div>VIRGIN SPAIN (1926)</div>
+ <div>THE RE-DISCOVERY OF AMERICA (1929)</div>
+ <div>AMERICA HISPANA (1931)</div>
+ <div class='c003'>CRITICISM</div>
+ <div class='c002'>THE ART OF THE VIEUX COLOMBIER (1918)</div>
+ <div class='c002'>SALVOS (1924)</div>
+ <div class='c002'><span lang="es">PRIMER MENSAJE À LA AMÉRICA HISPANA (1930)</span></div>
+ <div>(<i>published only in Spanish—Madrid and Buenos Aires</i>)</div>
+ <div class='c002'>DAWN IN RUSSIA (1932)</div>
+ <div class='c002'>IN THE AMERICAN JUNGLE (1937)</div>
+ <div class='c003'>THEATRE</div>
+ <div class='c002'>NEW YEAR’S EVE (1930)</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c032'>
+<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. Arturo Mom, the Argentinian writer, tells us that Lenin once said:
+“Chaplin is the only man in the world I want to meet.” It is a story readily
+believed. Chaplin’s art expresses the germinal seed of the revolt—tender and
+ruthless, romantic and realistic—which Lenin’s technique attempted to fulfill.
+Chaplin and Lenin—they are probably the two most potential spirits of our
+age. Bring them together—pure individualist and pure collectivist—into a
+single force, and you have a vision of tomorrow.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. The year of his trouble with his second wife, the truth about which
+has not been told.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. See “The Re-discovery of America,” 1928.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. This is a short version of the Introduction to “The Collected Poems
+of Hart Crane.”</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. El Escorial.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. Bertrand Russell says, “Traditional mysticism has been contemplative,
+convinced of the unreality of time, and essentially a lazy man’s philosophy.”
+It has always seemed to me that the mysticism of Mr. Frank’s novels
+was of this traditional type.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. “Edgar Allan Poe Letters Till Now Unpublished,” in the Valentine
+Museum at Richmond, Virginia; with introductory essay and commentary
+by Mary Newton Stanard.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. I feel moved to recall that in “Our America,” a work with a kindred
+theme published in 1919, Poe receives even unfairer treatment than that
+accorded him by Mr. Mumford; and Melville is utterly ignored.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. The reader of “The Re-Discovery of America” will know that I find
+important exceptions to this general statement.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. We have in America a logician who, obscurely and unaided, is working
+out the fundamental problem of the dualistic languages of modern culture,
+and who is relating them into a logic of the Whole. His name is
+Scudder Klyce and he resides in Winchester, Massachusetts. He has published
+three books: “Universe,” “Sins of Science,” “Dewey’s Suppressed
+Psychology.” In the first (which I have not yet read), he attempts to
+establish continuity, or the Whole, in purely empirical terms and to construct
+a logic to express it. In the second, he exposes (often brilliantly and
+at times wildly) the contradictory dualisms in modern thought. The third
+volume, as invaluable as it is unwieldy, reveals the failure of John Dewey
+to carry his own “infinite pluralism” to its logical conclusion: an explicit
+philosophy of the Whole.... So it goes in our America. Just as one is
+getting ready to despair of the current tendencies, along comes a man like
+Klyce who is doing work as essential and great as any I know in the contemporary
+world. I was not aware of Klyce when I wrote “The Re-Discovery
+of America.” That is my excuse for not mentioning his contribution
+and its organic part in what I call the Great American Tradition.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>P.S. Since the writing of this note, Scudder Klyce has died. The first
+work to acknowledge the greatness of his contribution has yet to be
+published. But it will come!</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. Not to be confused, of course, with the athletic <i>skepticism</i> that is the
+servant of positive knowledge.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. The reader will find a development of this idea in “The Re-Discovery
+of America.”</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. A short time after this article was written and published, the five
+hundred thousand textile strikers were sold out by their “leaders” in
+Washington.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r14'>14</a>. Since this was written, a strong revolutionary students’ movement has
+sprung up in the United States.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r15'>15</a>. I have read only three volumes of Marxist literary criticism in the
+English language: “The Liberation of American Literature,” by V. F.
+Calverton; “The Great Tradition,” by Granville Hicks; and a short book
+by John Strachey. All three are of this category.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r16'>16</a>. The author accompanied Earl Browder, communist candidate for
+President of the United States, on a tour of Midwest industrial cities as a
+newspaper correspondent and was jailed with him in Terre Haute.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c002'>
+</div>
+<div class='tnotes x-ebookmaker'>
+
+<div class='chapter ph2'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+ <ul class='ul_1 c003'>
+ <li>Fixed typos; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+
+ </li>
+ <li>Renumbered footnotes and moved them all to the end of the final chapter.
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78957 ***</div>
+</body>
+<!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57i (with regex) on 2026-06-05 04:49:21 GMT -->
+</html>
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