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ESSAY VIII Nominalist and Realist
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In countless upward-striving waves
The moon-drawn tide-wave strives;
In thousand far-transplanted grafts
The parent fruit survives;
So, in the new-born millions,
The perfect Adam lives.
Not less are summer-mornings dear
To every child they wake,
And each with novel life his sphere
Fills for his proper sake.
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I cannot often enough say, that a man is
only a relative and representative nature.
Each is a hint of the truth, but far enough
from being that truth, which yet he quite
newly and inevitably suggests to us. If I
seek it in him, I shall not find it. Could
any man conduct into me the pure stream of
that which he pretends to be! Long afterwards,
I find that quality elsewhere which he promised
me. The genius of the Platonists, is intoxicating
to the student, yet how few particulars of
it can I detach from all their books. The
man momentarily stands for the thought, but
will not bear examination; and a society
of men will cursorily represent well enough
a certain quality and culture, for example,
chivalry or beauty of manners, but separate
them, and there is no gentleman and no lady
in the group. The least hint sets us on the
pursuit of a character, which no man realizes.
We have such exorbitant eyes, that on seeing
the smallest arc, we complete the curve,
and when the curtain is lifted from the diagram
which it seemed to veil, we are vexed to
find that no more was drawn, than just that
fragment of an arc which we first beheld.
We are greatly too liberal in our construction
of each other's faculty and promise. Exactly
what the parties have already done, they
shall do again; but that which we inferred
from their nature and inception, they will
not do. That is in nature, but not in them.
That happens in the world, which we often
witness in a public debate. Each of the speakers
expresses himself imperfectly: no one of
them hears much that another says, such is
the preoccupation of mind of each; and the
audience, who have only to hear and not to
speak, judge very wisely and superiorly how
wrongheaded and unskilful is each of the
debaters to his own affair. Great men or
men of great gifts you shall easily find,
but symmetrical men never.
When I meet a pure intellectual force, or
a generosity of affection, I believe, here
then is man; and am presently mortified by
the discovery, that this individual is no
more available to his own or to the general
ends, than his companions; because the power
which drew my respect, is not supported by
the total symphony of his talents. All persons
exist to society by some shining trait of
beauty or utility, which they have. We borrow
the proportions of the man from that one
fine feature, and finish the portrait symmetrically;
which is false; for the rest of his body
is small or deformed. I observe a person
who makes a good public appearance, and conclude
thence the perfection of his private character,
on which this is based; but he has no private
character. He is a graceful cloak or lay-figure
for holidays. All our poets, heroes, and
saints, fail utterly in some one or in many
parts to satisfy our idea, fail to draw our
spontaneous interest, and so leave us without
any hope of realization but in our own future.
Our exaggeration of all fine characters arises
from the fact, that we identify each in turn
with the soul. But there are no such men
as we fable; no Jesus, nor Pericles, nor
Caesar, nor Angelo, nor Washington, such
as we have made. We consecrate a great deal
of nonsense, because it was allowed by great
men. There is none without his foible. I
verily believe if an angel should come to
chaunt the chorus of the moral law, he would
eat too much gingerbread, or take liberties
with private letters, or do some precious
atrocity. It is bad enough, that our geniuses
cannot do anything useful, but it is worse
that no man is fit for society, who has fine
traits. He is admired at a distance, but
he cannot come near without appearing a cripple.
The men of fine parts protect themselves
by solitude, or by courtesy, or by satire,
or by an acid worldly manner, each concealing,
as he best can, his incapacity for useful
association, but they want either love or
self-reliance.
Our native love of reality joins with this
experience to teach us a little reserve,
and to dissuade a too sudden surrender to
the brilliant qualities of persons. Young
people admire talents or particular excellences;
as we grow older, we value total powers and
effects, as, the impression, the quality,
the spirit of men and things. The genius
is all. The man, -- it is his system: we
do not try a solitary word or act, but his
habit. The acts which you praise, I praise
not, since they are departures from his faith,
and are mere compliances. The magnetism which
arranges tribes and races in one polarity,
is alone to be respected; the men are steel-filings.
Yet we unjustly select a particle, and say,
`O steel-filing number one! what heart-drawings
I feel to thee! what prodigious virtues are
these of thine! how constitutional to thee,
and incommunicable.' Whilst we speak, the
loadstone is withdrawn; down falls our filing
in a heap with the rest, and we continue
our mummery to the wretched shaving. Let
us go for universals; for the magnetism,
not for the needles. Human life and its persons
are poor empirical pretensions. A personal
influence is an ignis fatuus. If they say,
it is great, it is great; if they say, it
is small, it is small; you see it, and you
see it not, by turns; it borrows all its
size from the momentary estimation of the
speakers: the Will-of-the-wisp vanishes,
if you go too near, vanishes if you go too
far, and only blazes at one angle. Who can
tell if Washington be a great man, or no?
Who can tell if Franklin be? Yes, or any
but the twelve, or six, or three great gods
of fame? And they, too, loom and fade before
the eternal.
We are amphibious creatures, weaponed for
two elements, having two sets of faculties,
the particular and the catholic. We adjust
our instrument for general observation, and
sweep the heavens as easily as we pick out
a single figure in the terrestrial landscape.
We are practically skilful in detecting elements,
for which we have no place in our theory,
and no name. Thus we are very sensible of
an atmospheric influence in men and in bodies
of men, not accounted for in an arithmetical
addition of all their measurable properties.
There is a genius of a nation, which is not
to be found in the numerical citizens, but
which characterizes the society. England,
strong, punctual, practical, well-spoken
England, I should not find, if I should go
to the island to seek it. In the parliament,
in the playhouse, at dinner-tables, I might
see a great number of rich, ignorant, book-read,
conventional, proud men, -- many old women,
-- and not anywhere the Englishman who made
the good speeches, combined the accurate
engines, and did the bold and nervous deeds.
It is even worse in America, where, from
the intellectual quickness of the race, the
genius of the country is more splendid in
its promise, and more slight in its performance.
Webster cannot do the work of Webster. We
conceive distinctly enough the French, the
Spanish, the German genius, and it is not
the less real, that perhaps we should not
meet in either of those nations, a single
individual who corresponded with the type.
We infer the spirit of the nation in great
measure from the language, which is a sort
of monument, to which each forcible individual
in a course of many hundred years has contributed
a stone. And, universally, a good example
of this social force, is the veracity of
language, which cannot be debauched. In any
controversy concerning morals, an appeal
may be made with safety to the sentiments,
which the language of the people expresses.
Proverbs, words, and grammar inflections
convey the public sense with more purity
and precision, than the wisest individual.
In the famous dispute with the Nominalists,
the Realists had a good deal of reason. General
ideas are essences. They are our gods: they
round and ennoble the most partial and sordid
way of living. Our proclivity to details
cannot quite degrade our life, and divest
it of poetry. The day-laborer is reckoned
as standing at the foot of the social scale,
yet he is saturated with the laws of the
world. His measures are the hours; morning
and night, solstice and equinox, geometry,
astronomy, and all the lovely accidents of
nature play through his mind. Money, which
represents the prose of life, and which is
hardly spoken of in parlors without an apology,
is, in its effects and laws, as beautiful
as roses. Property keeps the accounts of
the world, and is always moral. The property
will be found where the labor, the wisdom,
and the virtue have been in nations, in classes,
and (the whole life-time considered, with
the compensations) in the individual also.
How wise the world appears, when the laws
and usages of nations are largely detailed,
and the completeness of the municipal system
is considered! Nothing is left out. If you
go into the markets, and the custom-houses,
the insurers' and notaries' offices, the
offices of sealers of weights and measures,
of inspection of provisions, -- it will appear
as if one man had made it all. Wherever you
go, a wit like your own has been before you,
and has realized its thought. The Eleusinian
mysteries, the Egyptian architecture, the
Indian astronomy, the Greek sculpture, show
that there always were seeing and knowing
men in the planet. The world is full of masonic
ties, of guilds, of secret and public legions
of honor; that of scholars, for example;
and that of gentlemen fraternizing with the
upper class of every country and every culture.
I am very much struck in literature by the
appearance, that one person wrote all the
books; as if the editor of a journal planted
his body of reporters in different parts
of the field of action, and relieved some
by others from time to time; but there is
such equality and identity both of judgment
and point of view in the narrative, that
it is plainly the work of one all-seeing,
all-hearing gentleman. I looked into Pope's
Odyssey yesterday: it is as correct and elegant
after our canon of today, as if it were newly
written. The modernness of all good books
seems to give me an existence as wide as
man. What is well done, I feel as if I did;
what is ill-done, I reck not of. Shakspeare's
passages of passion (for example, in Lear
and Hamlet) are in the very dialect of the
present year. I am faithful again to the
whole over the members in my use of books.
I find the most pleasure in reading a book
in a manner least flattering to the author.
I read Proclus, and sometimes Plato, as I
might read a dictionary, for a mechanical
help to the fancy and the imagination. I
read for the lustres, as if one should use
a fine picture in a chromatic experiment,
for its rich colors. 'Tis not Proclus, but
a piece of nature and fate that I explore.
It is a greater joy to see the author's author,
than himself. A higher pleasure of the same
kind I found lately at a concert, where I
went to hear Handel's Messiah. As the master
overpowered the littleness and incapableness
of the performers, and made them conductors
of his electricity, so it was easy to observe
what efforts nature was making through so
many hoarse, wooden, and imperfect persons,
to produce beautiful voices, fluid and soul-guided
men and women. The genius of nature was paramount
at the oratorio.
This preference of the genius to the parts
is the secret of that deification of art,
which is found in all superior minds. Art,
in the artist, is proportion, or, a habitual
respect to the whole by an eye loving beauty
in details. And the wonder and charm of it
is the sanity in insanity which it denotes.
Proportion is almost impossible to human
beings. There is no one who does not exaggerate.
In conversation, men are encumbered with
personality, and talk too much. In modern
sculpture, picture, and poetry, the beauty
is miscellaneous; the artist works here and
there, and at all points, adding and adding,
instead of unfolding the unit of his thought.
Beautiful details we must have, or no artist:
but they must be means and never other. The
eye must not lose sight for a moment of the
purpose. Lively boys write to their ear and
eye, and the cool reader finds nothing but
sweet jingles in it. When they grow older,
they respect the argument.
We obey the same intellectual integrity,
when we study in exceptions the law of the
world. Anomalous facts, as the never quite
obsolete rumors of magic and demonology,
and the new allegations of phrenologists
and neurologists, are of ideal use. They
are good indications. Homoeopathy is insignificant
as an art of healing, but of great value
as criticism on the hygeia or medical practice
of the time. So with Mesmerism, Swedenborgism,
Fourierism, and the Millennial Church; they
are poor pretensions enough, but good criticism
on the science, philosophy, and preaching
of the day. For these abnormal insights of
the adepts, ought to be normal, and things
of course.
All things show us, that on every side we
are very near to the best. It seems not worth
while to execute with too much pains some
one intellectual, or aesthetical, or civil
feat, when presently the dream will scatter,
and we shall burst into universal power.
The reason of idleness and of crime is the
deferring of our hopes. Whilst we are waiting,
we beguile the time with jokes, with sleep,
with eating, and with crimes.
Thus we settle it in our cool libraries,
that all the agents with which we deal are
subalterns, which we can well afford to let
pass, and life will be simpler when we live
at the centre, and flout the surfaces. I
wish to speak with all respect of persons,
but sometimes I must pinch myself to keep
awake, and preserve the due decorum. They
melt so fast into each other, that they are
like grass and trees, and it needs an effort
to treat them as individuals. Though the
uninspired man certainly finds persons a
conveniency in household matters, the divine
man does not respect them: he sees them as
a rack of clouds, or a fleet of ripples which
the wind drives over the surface of the water.
But this is flat rebellion. Nature will not
be Buddhist: she resents generalizing, and
insults the philosopher in every moment with
a million of fresh particulars. It is all
idle talking: as much as a man is a whole,
so is he also a part; and it were partial
not to see it. What you say in your pompous
distribution only distributes you into your
class and section. You have not got rid of
parts by denying them, but are the more partial.
You are one thing, but nature is one thing
and the other thing, in the same moment.
She will not remain orbed in a thought, but
rushes into persons; and when each person,
inflamed to a fury of personality, would
conquer all things to his poor crotchet,
she raises up against him another person,
and by many persons incarnates again a sort
of whole. She will have all. Nick Bottom
cannot play all the parts, work it how he
may: there will be somebody else, and the
world will be round. Everything must have
its flower or effort at the beautiful, coarser
or finer according to its stuff. They relieve
and recommend each other, and the sanity
of society is a balance of a thousand insanities.
She punishes abstractionists, and will only
forgive an induction which is rare and casual.
We like to come to a height of land and see
the landscape, just as we value a general
remark in conversation. But it is not the
intention of nature that we should live by
general views. We fetch fire and water, run
about all day among the shops and markets,
and get our clothes and shoes made and mended,
and are the victims of these details, and
once in a fortnight we arrive perhaps at
a rational moment.
If we were not thus infatuated, if we saw
the real from hour to hour, we should not
be here to write and to read, but should
have been burned or frozen long ago. She
would never get anything done, if she suffered
admirable Crichtons, and universal geniuses.
She loves better a wheelwright who dreams
all night of wheels, and a groom who is part
of his horse: for she is full of work, and
these are her hands. As the frugal farmer
takes care that his cattle shall eat down
the rowan, and swine shall eat the waste
of his house, and poultry shall pick the
crumbs, so our economical mother despatches
a new genius and habit of mind into every
district and condition of existence, plants
an eye wherever a new ray of light can fall,
and gathering up into some man every property
in the universe, establishes thousandfold
occult mutual attractions among her offspring,
that all this wash and waste of power may
be imparted and exchanged.
Great dangers undoubtedly accrue from this
incarnation and distribution of the godhead,
and hence nature has her maligners, as if
she were Circe; and Alphonso of Castille
fancied he could have given useful advice.
But she does not go unprovided; she has hellebore
at the bottom of the cup. Solitude would
ripen a plentiful crop of despots. The recluse
thinks of men as having his manner, or as
not having his manner; and as having degrees
of it, more and less. But when he comes into
a public assembly, he sees that men have
very different manners from his own, and
in their way admirable. In his childhood
and youth, he has had many checks and censures,
and thinks modestly enough of his own endowment.
When afterwards he comes to unfold it in
propitious circumstance, it seems the only
talent: he is delighted with his success,
and accounts himself already the fellow of
the great. But he goes into a mob, into a
banking-house, into a mechanic's shop, into
a mill, into a laboratory, into a ship, into
a camp, and in each new place he is no better
than an idiot: other talents take place,
and rule the hour. The rotation which whirls
every leaf and pebble to the meridian, reaches
to every gift of man, and we all take turns
at the top.
For nature, who abhors mannerism, has set
her heart on breaking up all styles and tricks,
and it is so much easier to do what one has
done before, than to do a new thing, that
there is a perpetual tendency to a set mode.
In every conversation, even the highest,
there is a certain trick, which may be soon
learned by an acute person, and then that
particular style continued indefinitely.
Each man, too, is a tyrant in tendency, because
he would impose his idea on others; and their
trick is their natural defence. Jesus would
absorb the race; but Tom Paine or the coarsest
blasphemer helps humanity by resisting this
exuberance of power. Hence the immense benefit
of party in politics, as it reveals faults
of character in a chief, which the intellectual
force of the persons, with ordinary opportunity,
and not hurled into aphelion by hatred, could
not have seen. Since we are all so stupid,
what benefit that there should be two stupidities!
It is like that brute advantage so essential
to astronomy, of having the diameter of the
earth's orbit for a base of its triangles.
Democracy is morose, and runs to anarchy,
but in the state, and in the schools, it
is indispensable to resist the consolidation
of all men into a few men. If John was perfect,
why are you and I alive?
As long as any man exists, there is some
need of him; let him fight for his own. A
new poet has appeared; a new character approached
us; why should we refuse to eat bread, until
we have found his regiment and section in
our old army-files? Why not a new man? Here
is a new enterprise of Brook Farm, of Skeneateles,
of Northampton: why so impatient to baptise
them Essenes, or Port-Royalists, or Shakers,
or by any known and effete name? Let it be
a new way of living. Why have only two or
three ways of life, and not thousands? Every
man is wanted, and no man is wanted much.
We came this time for condiments, not for
corn. We want the great genius only for joy;
for one star more in our constellation, for
one tree more in our grove. But he thinks
we wish to belong to him, as he wishes to
occupy us. He greatly mistakes us. I think
I have done well, if I have acquired a new
word from a good author; and my business
with him is to find my own, though it were
only to melt him down into an epithet or
an image for daily use.
"Into paint will I grind thee, my bride!"
To embroil the confusion, and make it impossible
to arrive at any general statement, when
we have insisted on the imperfection of individuals,
our affections and our experience urge that
every individual is entitled to honor, and
a very generous treatment is sure to be repaid.
A recluse sees only two or three persons,
and allows them all their room; they spread
themselves at large. The man of state looks
at many, and compares the few habitually
with others, and these look less.
Yet are they not entitled to this generosity
of reception? and is not munificence the
means of insight? For though gamesters say,
that the cards beat all the players, though
they were never so skilful, yet in the contest
we are now considering, the players are also
the game, and share the power of the cards.
If you criticise a fine genius, the odds
are that you are out of your reckoning, and,
instead of the poet, are censuring your own
caricature of him. For there is somewhat
spheral and infinite in every man, especially
in every genius, which, if you can come very
near him, sports with all your limitations.
For, rightly, every man is a channel through
which heaven floweth, and, whilst I fancied
I was criticising him, I was censuring or
rather terminating my own soul. After taxing
Goethe as a courtier, artificial, unbelieving,
worldly, -- I took up this book of Helena,
and found him an Indian of the wilderness,
a piece of pure nature like an apple or an
oak, large as morning or night, and virtuous
as a briar-rose.
But care is taken that the whole tune shall
be played. If we were not kept among surfaces,
every thing would be large and universal:
now the excluded attributes burst in on us
with the more brightness, that they have
been excluded. "Your turn now, my turn
next," is the rule of the game. The
universality being hindered in its primary
form, comes in the secondary form of all
sides: the points come in succession to the
meridian, and by the speed of rotation, a
new whole is formed. Nature keeps herself
whole, and her representation complete in
the experience of each mind. She suffers
no seat to be vacant in her college. It is
the secret of the world that all things subsist,
and do not die, but only retire a little
from sight, and afterwards return again.
Whatever does not concern us, is concealed
from us.
As soon as a person is no longer related
to our present well-being, he is concealed,
or dies, as we say. Really, all things and
persons are related to us, but according
to our nature, they act on us not at once,
but in succession, and we are made aware
of their presence one at a time. All persons,
all things which we have known, are here
present, and many more than we see; the world
is full. As the ancient said, the world is
a plenum or solid; and if we saw all things
that really surround us, we should be imprisoned
and unable to move. For, though nothing is
impassable to the soul, but all things are
pervious to it, and like highways, yet this
is only whilst the soul does not see them.
As soon as the soul sees any object, it stops
before that object. Therefore, the divine
Providence, which keeps the universe open
in every direction to the soul, conceals
all the furniture and all the persons that
do not concern a particular soul, from the
senses of that individual. Through solidest
eternal things, the man finds his road, as
if they did not subsist, and does not once
suspect their being. As soon as he needs
a new object, suddenly he beholds it, and
no longer attempts to pass through it, but
takes another way. When he has exhausted
for the time the nourishment to be drawn
from any one person or thing, that object
is withdrawn from his observation, and though
still in his immediate neighborhood, he does
not suspect its presence.
Nothing is dead: men feign themselves dead,
and endure mock funerals and mournful obituaries,
and there they stand looking out of the window,
sound and well, in some new and strange disguise.
Jesus is not dead: he is very well alive:
nor John, nor Paul, nor Mahomet, nor Aristotle;
at times we believe we have seen them all,
and could easily tell the names under which
they go.
If we cannot make voluntary and conscious
steps in the admirable science of universals,
let us see the parts wisely, and infer the
genius of nature from the best particulars
with a becoming charity. What is best in
each kind is an index of what should be the
average of that thing. Love shows me the
opulence of nature, by disclosing to me in
my friend a hidden wealth, and I infer an
equal depth of good in every other direction.
It is commonly said by farmers, that a good
pear or apple costs no more time or pains
to rear, than a poor one; so I would have
no work of art, no speech, or action, or
thought, or friend, but the best.
The end and the means, the gamester and the
game, -- life is made up of the intermixture
and reaction of these two amicable powers,
whose marriage appears beforehand monstrous,
as each denies and tends to abolish the other.
We must reconcile the contradictions as we
can, but their discord and their concord
introduce wild absurdities into our thinking
and speech. No sentence will hold the whole
truth, and the only way in which we can be
just, is by giving ourselves the lie; Speech
is better than silence; silence is better
than speech; -- All things are in contact;
every atom has a sphere of repulsion; --
Things are, and are not, at the same time;
-- and the like.
All the universe over, there is but one thing,
this old Two-Face, creator-creature, mind-matter,
right-wrong, of which any proposition may
be affirmed or denied. Very fitly, therefore,
I assert, that every man is a partialist,
that nature secures him as an instrument
by self-conceit, preventing the tendencies
to religion and science; and now further
assert, that, each man's genius being nearly
and affectionately explored, he is justified
in his individuality, as his nature is found
to be immense; and now I add, that every
man is a universalist also, and, as our earth,
whilst it spins on its own axis, spins all
the time around the sun through the celestial
spaces, so the least of its rational children,
the most dedicated to his private affair,
works out, though as it were under a disguise,
the universal problem. We fancy men are individuals;
so are pumpkins; but every pumpkin in the
field, goes through every point of pumpkin
history. The rabid democrat, as soon as he
is senator and rich man, has ripened beyond
possibility of sincere radicalism, and unless
he can resist the sun, he must be conservative
the remainder of his days. Lord Eldon said
in his old age, "that, if he were to
begin life again, he would be damned but
he would begin as agitator."
We hide this universality, if we can, but
it appears at all points. We are as ungrateful
as children. There is nothing we cherish
and strive to draw to us, but in some hour
we turn and rend it. We keep a running fire
of sarcasm at ignorance and the life of the
senses; then goes by, perchance, a fair girl,
a piece of life, gay and happy, and making
the commonest offices beautiful, by the energy
and heart with which she does them, and seeing
this, we admire and love her and them, and
say, "Lo! a genuine creature of the
fair earth, not dissipated, or too early
ripened by books, philosophy, religion, society,
or care!" insinuating a treachery and
contempt for all we had so long loved and
wrought in ourselves and others.
If we could have any security against moods!
If the profoundest prophet could be holden
to his words, and the hearer who is ready
to sell all and join the crusade, could have
any certificate that tomorrow his prophet
shall not unsay his testimony! But the Truth
sits veiled there on the Bench, and never
interposes an adamantine syllable; and the
most sincere and revolutionary doctrine,
put as if the ark of God were carried forward
some furlongs, and planted there for the
succor of the world, shall in a few weeks
be coldly set aside by the same speaker,
as morbid; "I thought I was right, but
I was not," -- and the same immeasurable
credulity demanded for new audacities. If
we were not of all opinions! if we did not
in any moment shift the platform on which
we stand, and look and speak from another!
if there could be any regulation, any `one-hour-rule,'
that a man should never leave his point of
view, without sound of trumpet. I am always
insincere, as always knowing there are other
moods.
How sincere and confidential we can be, saying
all that lies in the mind, and yet go away
feeling that all is yet unsaid, from the
incapacity of the parties to know each other,
although they use the same words! My companion
assumes to know my mood and habit of thought,
and we go on from explanation to explanation,
until all is said which words can, and we
leave matters just as they were at first,
because of that vicious assumption. Is it
that every man believes every other to be
an incurable partialist, and himself an universalist?
I talked yesterday with a pair of philosophers:
I endeavored to show my good men that I love
everything by turns, and nothing long; that
I loved the centre, but doated on the superficies;
that I loved man, if men seemed to me mice
and rats; that I revered saints, but woke
up glad that the old pagan world stood its
ground, and died hard; that I was glad of
men of every gift and nobility, but would
not live in their arms. Could they but once
understand, that I loved to know that they
existed, and heartily wished them Godspeed,
yet, out of my poverty of life and thought,
had no word or welcome for them when they
came to see me, and could well consent to
their living in Oregon, for any claim I felt
on them, it would be a great satisfaction.
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