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To Dr. Faustus in his study Mephistopheles told the history of the
Creation, saying:
The
endless praises of the choirs of angels had begun to grow wearisome;
for, after all, did he not deserve their praise? Had he not given
them endless joy? Would it not be more amusing to obtain undeserved
praise, to be worshipped by beings whom he tortured? He smiled inwardly,
and resolved that the great drama should be performed.
For
countless ages the hot nebula whirled aimlessly through space. At
length it began to take shape, the central mass threw off planets,
the planets cooled, boiling seas and burning mountains heaved and
tossed, from black masses of cloud hot sheets of rain deluged the
barely solid crust. And now the first germ of life grew in the depths
of the ocean, and developed rapidly in the fructifying warmth into
vast forest trees, huge ferns springing from the damp mould, sea
monsters breeding, fighting, devouring, and passing away. And from
the monsters, as the play unfolded itself, Man was born, with the
power of thought, the knowledge of good and evil, and the cruel
thirst for worship.
And
Man saw that all is passing in this mad, monstrous world, that all
is struggling to snatch, at any cost, a few brief moments of life
before Deaths inexorable decree. And Man said: There
is a hidden purpose, could we but fathom it, and the purpose is
good; for we must reverence something, and in the visible world
there is nothing worthy of reverence. And Man stood aside
from the struggle, resolving that God intended harmony to come out
of chaos by human efforts. And when he followed the instincts which
God had transmitted to him from his ancestry of beasts of prey,
he called it Sin, and asked God to forgive him.
But
he doubted whether he could be justly forgiven, until he invented
a Divine Plan by which Gods wrath was to have been appeased.
And seeing the present was bad, he made it yet worse, that thereby
the future might be better. And he gave God thanks for the strength
that enabled him to forgo even the joys that were possible. And
God smiled; and when he saw that Man had become perfect in renunciation
and worship, he sent another sun through the sky, which crashed
into Mans sun; and all returned again to nebula.
Yes, he murmured, it was a good play; I will have it
performed again.
Such, in outline, but even more purposeless, more void of meaning
is the world which Science presents for our belief. Amid such a
world, if anywhere, our ideals henceforward must find a home. That
Man is the product of causes which had no prevision of the end they
were achieving; that his origin, his growth, his hopes and fears,
his loves and his beliefs, are but the outcome of accidental collocations
of atoms; that no fire, no heroism, no intensity of thought and
feeling, can preserve an individual life beyond the grave; that
all the labours of the ages, all the devotion, all the inspiration,
all the noonday brightness of human genius, are destined to extinction
in the vast death of the solar system, and that the whole temple
of Mans achievement must inevitably be buried beneath the
debris of a universe in ruinsall these things, if not quite
beyond dispute, are yet so nearly certain, that no philosophy which
rejects them can hope to stand. Only within the scaffolding of these
truths, only on the firm foundation of unyielding despair, can the
souls habitation henceforth be safely built.
How,
in such an alien and inhuman world, can so powerless a creature
as Man preserve his aspirations untarnished? A strange mystery it
is that Nature, omnipotent but blind, in the revolutions of her
secular hurryings through the abysses of space, has brought forth
at last a child, subject still to her power, but gifted with sight,
with knowledge of good and evil, with the capacity of judging all
the works of his unthinking Mother. In spite of Death, the mark
and seal of the parental control, Man is yet free, during his brief
years, to examine, to criticize, to know, and in imagination to
create. To him alone, in the world with which he is acquainted,
this freedom belongs; and in this lays his superiority to the resistless
forces that control his outward life.
The
savage, like ourselves, feels the oppression of his impotence before
the powers of Nature; but having in himself nothing that he respects
more than Power, he is willing to prostrate himself before his gods,
without inquiring whether they are worthy of his worship. Pathetic
and very terrible is the long history of cruelty and torture, of
degradation and human sacrifice endured in the hope of placating
the jealous gods: surely, the trembling believer thinks, when what
is most precious has been freely given, their lust for blood must
be appeased, and more will not be required. The religion of Molochas
such creeds may be generically calledis in essence the cringing
submission of the slave, who dare not, even in his heart, allow
the thought that his master deserves no adulation. Since the independence
of ideals is not yet acknowledged, Power may be freely worshipped,
and receive an unlimited respect, despite its wanton infliction
of pain.
But
gradually, as morality grows bolder, the claim of the ideal world
begins to be felt; and worship, if it is not to cease, must be given
to gods of another kind than those created by the savage. Some,
though they feel the demands of the ideal, will still consciously
reject them, still urging that naked Power is worthy of worship.
Such is the attitude inculcated in Gods answer to Job out
of the whirlwind: the divine power and knowledge are paraded, but
of the divine goodness, there is no hint. Such also is the attitude
of those who, in our own day, base their morality upon the struggle
for survival, maintaining that the survivors are necessarily the
fittest. But others, not content with an answer so repugnant to
the moral sense, will adopt the position which we have become accustomed
to regard as specially religious, maintaining that, in some hidden
manner, the world of fact is really harmonious with the world of
ideals.Thus,
Man creates God, all-powerful and all-good, the mystic unity of
what is and what should be.
But
the world of fact, after all, is not good; and, in submitting our
judgment to it, there is an element of slavishness from which our
thoughts must be purged. For in all things it is well to exalt the
dignity of Man, by freeing him as far as possible from the tyranny
of non-human Power. When we have realized that Power is largely
bad, that man, with his knowledge of good and evil, is but a helpless
atom in a world which has no such knowledge, the choice is again
presented to us: Shall we worship Force, or shall we worship Goodness?
Shall our God exist and be evil, or shall he be recognized as the
creation of our own conscience?
The
answer to this question is very momentous, and affects profoundly
our whole morality. The worship of Force, to which Carlyle and Nietzsche
and the creed of Militarism have accustomed us, is the result of
failure to maintain our own ideals against a hostile universe: it
is itself a prostrate submission to evil, a sacrifice of our best
to Moloch. If strength indeed is to be respected, let us respect
rather the strength of those who refuse that false recognition
of facts which fails to recognize that facts are often bad.
Let us admit that, in the world we know, there are many things that
would be better otherwise, and that the ideals to which we do and
must adhere are not realized in the realm of matter. Let us preserve
our respect for truth, for beauty, for the ideal of perfection which
life does not permit us to attain, though none of these things meet
with the approval of the unconscious universe. If Power is bad,
as it seems to be, let us reject it from our hearts. In this lies
Mans true freedom: in determination to worship only the God
created by our own love of the good, to respect only the heaven
which inspires the insight of our best moments.
In action, in desire, we must submit perpetually to the tyranny
of outside forces; but in thought, in aspiration, we are free, free
from our fellowmen, free from the petty planet on which our bodies
impotently crawl, free even, while we live, from the tyranny of
death. Let us learn, then, that energy of faith that enables us
to live constantly in the vision of the good; and let us descend
in action, into the world of fact, with that vision always before
us.
When first the opposition of fact and ideal grows fully visible,
a spirit of fiery revolt, of fierce hatred of the gods, seems necessary
to the assertion of freedom. To defy with Promethean constancy a
hostile universe, to keep its evil always in view, always actively
hated, to refuse no pain that the malice of Power can invent, appears
to be the duty of all who will not bow before the inevitable.
But indignation is still a bondage, for it compels our thoughts
to be occupied with an evil world; and in the fierceness of desire
from which rebellion springs there is a kind of self-assertion which
it is necessary for the wise to overcome. Indignation is a submission
of our thoughts, but not of our desires; the Stoic freedom in which
wisdom consists is found in the submission of our desires, but not
of our thoughts. From the submission of our desires springs the
virtue of resignation; from the freedom of our thoughts springs
the whole world of art and philosophy, and the vision of beauty
by which, at last, we half reconquer the reluctant world. But the
vision of beauty is possible only to unfettered contemplation, to
thoughts not weighted by the load of eager wishes; and thus Freedom
comes only to those who no longer ask of life that it shall yield
them any of those personal goods that are subject to the mutations
of Time.
Although
the necessity of renunciation is evidence of the existence of evil,
yet Christianity, in preaching it, has shown a wisdom exceeding
that of the Promethean philosophy of rebellion. It must be admitted
that, of the things we desire, some, though they prove impossible,
are yet real goods; others, however, as ardently longed for, do
not form part of a fully purified ideal. The belief that what must
be renounced is bad, though sometimes false, is far less often false
than untamed passion supposes; and the creed of religion, by providing
a reason for proving that it is never false, has been the means
of purifying our hopes by the discovery of many austere truths.
But there is in resignation a further good element: even real goods,
when they are unattainable, ought not to be fretfully desired. To
every man comes, sooner or later, the great renunciation.
For
the young, there is nothing unattainable; a good thing desired with
the whole force of a passionate will, and yet impossible, is to
them not credible. Yet, by death, by illness, by poverty, or by
the voice of duty, we must learn, each one of us, that the world
was not made for us, and that, however beautiful may be the things
we crave, Fate may nevertheless forbid them. It is the part of courage,
when misfortune comes, to bear without repining the ruin of our
hopes, to turn away our thoughts from vain regrets. This degree
of submission to Power is not only just and right: it is the very
gate of wisdom.
But
passive renunciation is not the whole of wisdom; for not by renunciation
alone can we build a temple for the worship of our own ideals. Haunting
foreshadowings of the temple appear in the realm of imagination,
in music, in architecture, in the untroubled kingdom of reason,
and in the golden sunset magic of lyrics, where beauty shines and
glows, remote from the touch of sorrow, remote from the fear of
change, remote from the failures and disenchantments of the world
of fact. In the contemplation of these things the vision of heaven
will shape itself in our hearts, giving at once a touchstone to
judge the world about us, and an inspiration by which to fashion
to our needs whatever is not incapable of serving as a stone in
the sacred temple.
Except
for those rare spirits that are born without sin, there is a cavern
of darkness to be traversed before that temple can be entered. The
gate of the cavern is despair, and its floor is paved with the gravestones
of abandoned hopes. There Self must die; there the eagerness, the
greed of untamed desire must be slain, for only so can the soul
be freed from the empire of Fate. But out of the cavern the Gate
of Renunciation leads again to the daylight of wisdom, by whose
radiance a new insight, a new joy, a new tenderness, shine forth
to gladden the pilgrims heart.
When,
without the bitterness of impotent rebellion, we have learnt both
to resign ourselves to the outward rule of Fate and to recognize
that the non-human world is unworthy of our worship, it becomes
possible at last so to transform and refashion the unconscious universe,
so to transmute it in the crucible of the imagination, that a new
image of shining gold replaces the old idol of clay. In all the
multiform facts of the worldin the visual shapes of trees
and mountains and clouds, in the events of the life of man, even
in the very omnipotence of Deaththe insight of creative idealism
can find the reflection of a beauty which its own thoughts first
made. In this way mind asserts its subtle mastery over the thoughtless
forces of Nature. The more evil the material with which it deals,
the more thwarting to untrained desire, the greater is its achievement
in inducing the reluctant rock to yield up its hidden treasures,
the prouder its victory in compelling the opposing forces to swell
the pageant of its triumph.
Of all the arts, Tragedy is the proudest, the most triumphant; for
it builds its shining citadel in the very center of the enemys
country, on the very summit of his highest mountain; from its impregnable
watchtowers, his camps and arsenals, his columns and forts, are
all revealed; within its walls the free life continues, while the
legions of Death and Pain and Despair, and all the servile captains
of tyrant Fate, afford the burghers of that dauntless city new spectacles
of beauty. Happy those sacred ramparts, thrice happy the dwellers
on that all-seeing eminence. Honour to those brave warriors who,
through countless ages of warfare, have preserved for us the priceless
heritage of liberty, and have kept undefiled by sacrilegious invaders
the home of the unsubdued.
But
the beauty of Tragedy does but make visible a quality which, in
more or less obvious shapes, is present always and everywhere in
life. In the spectacle of Death, in the endurance of intolerable
pain, and in the irrevocableness of a vanished past, there is a
sacredness, an overpowering awe, a feeling of the vastness, the
depth, the inexhaustible mystery of existence, in which, as by some
strange marriage of pain, the sufferer is bound to the world by
bonds of sorrow. In these moments of insight, we lose all eagerness
of temporary desire, all struggling and striving for petty ends,
all care for the little trivial things that, to a superficial view,
make up the common life of day by day; we see, surrounding the narrow
raft illumined by the flickering light of human comradeship, the
dark ocean on whose rolling waves we toss for a brief hour; from
the great night without, a chill blast breaks in upon our refuge;
all the loneliness of humanity amid hostile forces is concentrated
upon the individual soul, which must struggle alone, with what of
courage it can command, against the whole weight of a universe that
cares nothing for its hopes and fears.
Victory,
in this struggle with the powers of darkness, is the true baptism
into the glorious company of heroes, the true initiation into the
overmastering beauty of human existence. From that awful encounter
of the soul with the outer world, renunciation, wisdom, and charity
are born; and with their birth a new life begins. To take into the
inmost shrine of the soul the irresistible forces whose puppets
we seem to beDeath and change, the irrevocableness of the
past, and the powerlessness of man before the blind hurry of the
universe from vanity to vanityto feel these things and know
them is to conquer them.
This
is the reason why the Past has such magical power. The beauty of
its motionless and silent pictures is like the enchanted purity
of late autumn, when the leaves, though one breath would make them
fall, still glow against the sky in golden glory. The Past does
not change or strive; like Duncan, after lifes fitful fever
it sleeps well; what was eager and grasping, what was petty and
transitory, has faded away, the things that were beautiful and eternal
shine out of it like stars in the night. Its beauty, to a soul not
worthy of it, is unendurable; but to a soul which has conquered
Fate it is the key of religion.
The
life of Man, viewed outwardly, is but a small thing in comparison
with the forces of Nature. The slave is doomed to worship Time and
Fate and Death, because they are greater than anything he finds
in himself, and because all his thoughts are of things which they
devour. But, great as they are, to think of them greatly, to feel
their passionless splendour, is greater still. And such thought
makes us free men; we no longer bow before the inevitable in Oriental
subjection, but we absorb it, and make it a part of ourselves. To
abandon the struggle for private happiness, to expel all eagerness
of temporary desire, to burn with passion for eternal thingsthis
is emancipation, and this is the free mans worship. And this
liberation is effected by a contemplation of Fate; for Fate itself
is subdued by the mind which leaves nothing to be purged by the
purifying fire of Time.
United
with his fellowmen by the strongest of all ties, the tie of a common
doom, the free man finds that a new vision is with him always, shedding
over every daily task the light of love. The life of Man is a long
march through the night, surrounded by invisible foes, tortured
by weariness and pain, towards a goal that few can hope to reach,
and where none may tarry long. One by one, as they march, our comrades
vanish from our sight, seized by the silent orders of omnipotent
Death.
Very
brief is the time in which we can help them, in which their happiness
or misery is decided. Be it ours to shed sunshine on their path,
to lighten their sorrows by the balm of sympathy, to give them the
pure joy of a never-tiring affection, to strengthen failing courage,
to instill faith in hours of despair. Let us not weigh in grudging
scales their merits and demerits, but let us think only of their
needof the sorrows, the difficulties perhaps the blindnesses,
that make the misery of their lives; let us remember that they are
fellow-sufferers in the same darkness, actors in the same tragedy
with ourselves. And so, when their day is over, when their good
and their evil have become eternal by the immortality of the past,
be it ours to feel that, where they suffered, where they failed,
no deed of ours was the cause; but wherever a spark of the divine
fire kindled in their hearts, we were ready with encouragement,
with sympathy, with brave words in which high courage glowed.
Brief
and powerless is Mans life; on him and all his race the slow,
sure doom falls pitiless and dark. Blind to good and evil, reckless
of destruction, omnipotent matter rolls on its relentless way; for
Man, condemned today to lose his dearest, tomorrow himself to pass
through the gate of darkness, it remains only to cherish, ere yet
the blow falls, the lofty thoughts that ennoble his little day;
disdaining the coward terrors of the slave of Fate, to worship at
the shrine that his own hands have built; undismayed by the empire
of chance, to preserve a mind free from the wanton tyranny that
rules his outward life; proudly defiant of the irresistible forces
that tolerate, for a moment, his knowledge and his condemnation,
to sustain alone, a weary but unyielding Atlas, the world that his
own ideals have fashioned despite the trampling march of unconscious
Power.
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