Cibrarp of ID he 'theological ^eminar^ PRINCETON • NEW JERSEY »vyy //a sss Vxv* PRESENTED BY Rudolf A. Clemen PR 400*1 . L_33)2, Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2019 with funding from Princeton Theological Seminary Library https://archive.org/details/danceoflife00elli_1 THE DANCE OF LIFE THE DANCE OF L HAVELOCK ELLIS AUTHOR OF “IMPRESSIONS AND COMMENTS,” “ AFFIRMATIONS1’ “ESSAYS IN WAR-TIME,” ETC. BOSTON AND NEW YORK HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY GTfje |3r e&s Cnmfcritsc COPYRIGHT, 1923, BY HAVELOCK ELLIS ALL RIGHTS RESERVED SECOND IMPRESSION, JUNE, I923 THIRD IMPRESSION, AUGUST, I923 FOURTH IMPRESSION, SEPTEMBER, I923 FIFTH IMPRESSION, OCTOBER, 1923 SIXTH IMPRESSION, NOVEMBER, I923 SEVENTH IMPRESSION, DECEMBER, 1923 EIGHTH IMPRESSION, FEBRUARY, I924 NINTH IMPRESSION, JULY, 1924 TENTH IMPRESSION, SEPTEMBER, I924 ELEVENTH IMPRESSION, OCTOBER, I924 TWELFTH IMPRESSION, DECEMBER, I924 THIRTEENTH IMPRESSION, DECEMBER, I924 FOURTEENTH IMPRESSION, APRIL, I925 tEfje ^tbersstlic |3teg£( CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS PRINTED IN THE U.S.A. PREFACE This book was planned many years ago. As to the idea running through it, I cannot say when that arose. My feeling is, it was born with me. On reflection, in¬ deed, it seems possible the seeds fell imperceptibly in youth — from F. A. Lange, maybe, and other sources — to germinate unseen in a congenial soil. However that may be, the idea underlies much that I have writ¬ ten. Even the present book began to be written, and to be published in a preliminary form, more than fifteen years ago. Perhaps I may be allowed to seek consola¬ tion for my slowness, however vainly, in the saying of Rodin that “slowness is beauty,” and certainly it is the slowest dances that have been to me most beauti¬ ful to see, while, in the dance of life, the achievement of a civilisation in beauty seems to be inversely to the rapidity of its pace. Moreover, the book remains incomplete, not merely in the sense that I would desire still to be changing and adding to each chapter, but even incomplete by the ab¬ sence of many chapters for which I had gathered mate¬ rial, and twenty years ago should have been surprised to find missing. For there are many arts, not among those we conventionally call “fine,” which seem to me fundamental for living. But now I put forth the book vi PREFACE as it stands, deliberately, without remorse, well content so to do. Once that would not have been possible. A book must be completed as it had been originally planned, finished, rounded, polished. As a man grows older his ideals change. Thoroughness is often an admirable ideal. But it is an ideal to be adopted with discrimina¬ tion, having due reference to the nature of the work in hand. An artist, it seems to me now, has not always to finish his work in every detail ; by not doing so he may succeed in making the spectator his co-worker, and put into his hands the tool to carry on the work which, as it lies before him, beneath its veil of yet partly unworked material, still stretches into infinity. Where there is most labour there is not always most life, and by doing less, provided only he has known how to do well, the artist may achieve more. He will not, I hope, achieve complete consistency. In fact a part of the method of such a book as this, written over a long period of years, is to reveal a con¬ tinual slight inconsistency. That is not an evil, but rather the avoidance of an evil. We cannot remain con¬ sistent with the world save by growing inconsistent with our own past selves. The man who consistently — as he fondly supposes ‘ ‘ logically ’ ’ — clings to an un¬ changing opinion is suspended from a hook which has ceased to exist. “ I thought it was she, and she thought it was me, and when we come near it were n’t neither one of us” — that metaphysical statement holds, with PREFACE •t VII a touch of exaggeration, a truth we must always bear in mind concerning the relation of subject and object. They can neither of them possess consistency; they have both changed before they come up with one an¬ other. Not that such inconsistency is a random flux or a shallow opportunism. We change, and the world changes, in accordance with the underlying organisa¬ tion, and inconsistency, so conditioned by truth to the whole, becomes the higher consistency of life. I am therefore able to recognise and accept the fact that, again and again in this book, I have come up against what, superficially regarded, seemed to be the same fact, and each time have brought back a slightly differ¬ ent report, for it had changed and I had changed. The world is various, of infinite iridescent aspect, and until I attain to a correspondingly infinite variety of state¬ ment I remain far from anything that could in any sense be described as “truth.” We only see a great opal that never looks the same this time as when we looked last time. “He never painted to-day quite the same as he had painted yesterday,” £lie Faure says of Renoir, and it seems to me natural and right that it should have been so. I have never seen the same world twice. That, indeed, is but to repeat the Heraclitean saying — an imperfect saying, for it is only the half of the larger, more modern synthesis I have already quoted — that no man bathes twice in the same stream. Yet — and this opposing fact is fully as signifi¬ cant — we really have to accept a continuous stream PREFACE viil as constituted in our minds ; it flows in the same direc¬ tion ; it coheres in what is more or less the same shape. Much the same may be said of the ever-changing bather whom the stream receives. So that, after all, there is not only variety, but also unity. The diversity of the Many is balanced by the stability of the One. That is why life must always be a dance, for that is what a dance is: perpetual slightly varied movements which are yet always held true to the shape of the whole. We verge on philosophy. The whole of this book is on the threshold of philosophy. I hasten to add that it remains there. No dogmas are here set forth to claim any general validity. Not that even the technical phi¬ losopher always cares to make that claim. Mr. F. H. Bradley, one of the most influential of modern English philosophers, who wrote at the outset of his career, “On all questions, if you push me far enough, at pres¬ ent I end in doubts and perplexities,” still says, forty years later, that if asked to define his principles rigidly, “ I become puzzled.” For even a cheese-mite, one imag¬ ines, could only with difficulty attain an adequate metaphysical conception of a cheese, and how much more difficult the task is for Man, whose everyday in¬ telligence seems to move on a plane so much like that of a cheese-mite and yet has so vastly more complex a web of phenomena to synthetise. It is clear how hesitant and tentative must be the attitude of one who, having found his life-work else- PREFACE lx where than in the field of technical philosoph}^ may in¬ cidentally feel the need, even if only playfully, to spec¬ ulate concerning his function and place in the universe. Such speculation is merely the instinctive impulse of the ordinary person to seek the wider implications bound up with his own little activities. It is philosophy only in the simple sense in which the Greeks understood philosophy, merely a philosophy of life, of one’s own life, in the wide world. The technical philosopher does something quite different when he passes over the threshold and shuts himself up in his study — “Veux-tu decouvrir le monde, Ferme tes yeux, Rosemonde” — and emerges with great tomes that are hard to buy, hard to read, and, let us be sure, hard to write. But of Socra¬ tes, as of the English philosopher Falstaff, we are not told that he wrote anything. So that if it may seem to some that this book reveals the expansive influence of that great classico-mathe- matical Renaissance in which it is our high privilege to live, and that they find here “relativity” applied to life, I am not so sure. It sometimes seems to me that, in the first place, we, the common herd, mould the great movements of our age, and only in the second place do they mould us. I think it was so even in the great earlier classico-mathematical Renaissance. We associate it with Descartes. But Descartes could have effected nothing if an innumerable crowd in many fields had not created the atmosphere by which he was en- X PREFACE abled to breathe the breath of life. We may here profit* ably bear in mind all that Spengler has shown concern¬ ing the unity of spirit underlying the most diverse ele¬ ments in an age’s productivity. Roger Bacon had in him the genius to create such a Renaissance three cen¬ turies earlier; there was no atmosphere for him to live in and he was stifled. But Malherbe, who worshipped Number and Measure as devoutly as Descartes, was bom half a century before him. That silent, colossal, ferocious Norman — vividly brought before us by Tallement des R6aux, to whom, rather than to Saint- Simon, we owe the real picture of seventeenth-century France — was possessed by the genius of destruction, for he had the natural instinct of the Viking, and he swept all the lovely Romantic spirit of old France so completely away that it has scarcely ever revived since until the days of Verlaine. But he had the Norman classico-mathematical architectonic spirit — he might have said, like Descartes, as truly as it ever can be said in literature, Omnia apud me mathematica fiunt — and he introduced into the world a new rule of Order. Given a Malherbe, a Descartes could hardly fail to follow, a French Academy must come into existence almost at the same time as the “Discours de la M6- thode,” and Le Notre must already be drawing the geo¬ metrical designs of the gardens of Versailles. Descartes, it should be remembered, could not have worked with¬ out support; he was a man of timid and yielding char¬ acter, though he had once been a soldier, not of the PREFACE xl heroic temper of Roger Bacon. If Descartes could have been put back into Roger Bacon’s place, he would have thought many of Bacon’s thoughts. But we should never have known it. He nervously burnt one of his works when he heard of Galileo’s condemnation, and it was fortunate that the Church was slow to recognise how terrible a Bolshevist had entered the spiritual world with this man, and never realised that his books must be placed on the Index until he was already dead. So it is to-day. We, too, witness a classico-mathemat- ical Renaissance. It is bringing us a new vision of the universe, but also a new vision of human life. That is why it is necessary to insist upon life as a dance. This is not a mere metaphor. The dance is the rule of num¬ ber and of rhythm and of measure and of order, of the controlling influence of form, of the subordination of the parts to the whole. That is what a dance is. And these same properties also make up the classic spirit, not only in life, but, still more clearly and definitely, in the universe itself. We are strictly correct when we re¬ gard not only life but the universe as a dance. For the universe is made up of a certain number of elements, less than a hundred, and the “periodic law’’ of these elements is metrical. They are ranged, that is to say, not haphazard, not in groups, but by number, and those of like quality appear at fixed and regular inter¬ vals. Thus our world is, even fundamentally, a dance, a single metrical stanza in a poem which will be for ever PREFACE «• Xll hidden from us, except in so far as the philosophers, who are to-day even here applying the methods of mathematics, may believe that they have imparted to it the character of objective knowledge. I call this movement of to-day, as that of the seven¬ teenth century, classico-mathematical. And I regard the dance (without prejudice to a distinction made later in this volume) as essentially its symbol. This is not to belittle the Romantic elements of the world, which are equally of its essence. But the vast exuber¬ ant energies and immeasurable possibilities of the first day may perhaps be best estimated when we have reached their final outcome on the sixth day of crea¬ tion. However that may be, the analogy of the two his¬ torical periods in question remains, and I believe that we may consider it holds good to the extent that the strictly mathematical elements of the later period are not the earliest to appear, but that we are in the pres¬ ence of a process that has been in subtle movement in many fields for half a century. If it is significant that Descartes appeared a few years after Malherbe, it is equally significant that Einstein was immediately pre¬ ceded by the Russian ballet. We gaze in admiration at the artist who sits at the organ, but we have been blowing the bellows; and the great performer's music would have been inaudible had it not been for us. This is the spirit in which I have written. We are all engaged — not merely one or two prominent per* PREFACE xiii sons here and there — in creating the spiritual world. I have never written but with the thought that the reader, even though he may not know it, is already on my side. Only so could I write with that sincerity and simplicity without which it would not seem to me worth while to write at all. That may be seen in the saying which I set on the forefront of my earliest book, “ The New Spirit ” : he who carries farthest his most in¬ timate feelings is simply the first in file of a great num¬ ber of other men, and one becomes typical by being to the utmost degree one’s self. That saying I chose with much deliberation and complete conviction because it went to the root of my book. On the surface it obvi¬ ously referred to the great figures I was there concerned with, representing what I regarded — by no means in the poor sense of mere modernity — as the New Spirit in life. They had all gone to the depths of their own souls and thence brought to the surface and expressed audaciously or beautifully, pungently or poignantly — intimate impulses and emotions which, shocking as they may have seemed at the time, are now seen to be those of an innumerable company of their fellow men and women. But it was also a book of personal affirma¬ tions. Beneath the obvious meaning of that motto on the title-page lay the more private meaning that I was myself setting forth secret impulses which might some day be found to express the emotions also of others. In the thirty-five years that have since passed, the saying has often recurred to my mind, and if I have sought in xiv PREFACE vain to make it mine I find no adeauate justification for the work of my life. And now, as I said at the outset, I am even prepared to think that that is the function of all books that are real books. There are other classes of so-called books: there is the class of history books and the class of foren¬ sic books, that is to say, the books of facts and the books of argument. No one would wish to belittle either kind. But when we think of a book proper, in the sense that a Bible means a book, we mean more than this. We mean, that is to say, a revelation of something that had remained latent, unconscious, per¬ haps even more or less intentionally repressed, within the writer’s own soul, which is, ultimately, the soul of mankind. These books are apt to repel; nothing, in¬ deed, is so likely to shock us at first as the manifest rev¬ elation of ourselves. Therefore, such books may have to knock again and again at the closed door of our hearts. “Who is there?” we carelessly cry, and we cannot open the door; we bid the importunate stranger, whatever he may be, to go away; until, as in the apo¬ logue of the Persian mystic, at last we seem to hear the voice outside saying: “It is thyself.” H. E. CONTENTS I. Introduction i II. The Art of Dancing 36 III. The Art of Thinking 68 IV. The Art of Writing 141 V. The Art of Religion 191 VI. The Art of Morals 244 VII. Conclusion 285 Index 359 I THE DANCE OF LIFE • • CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION I It has always been difficult for Man to realise that his life is all an art. It has been more difficult to conceive it so than to act it so. For that is always how he has more or less acted it. At the beginning, indeed, the primitive philosopher whose business it was to account for the origin of things usually came to the conclusion that the whole universe was a work of art, created b}r some Supreme Artist, in the way of artists, out of ma¬ terial that was practically nothing, even out of his own excretions, a method which, as children sometimes in¬ stinctively feel, is a kind of creative art. The most familiar to us of these primitive philosophical state¬ ments — and really a statement that is as typical as any — is that of the Hebrews in the first chapter of their Book of Genesis. We read there how the whole cosmos was fashioned out of nothing, in a measurable period of time by the art of one Jehovah, who pro¬ ceeded methodically by first forming it in the rough, and gradually working in the details, the finest and most delicate last, just as a sculptor might fashion a 2 THE DANCE OF LIFE statue. We may find many statements of the like kind even as far away as the Pacific.1 And — also even at the same distance — the artist and the craftsman, who resembled the divine creator of the world by making the most beautiful and useful things for Mankind, himself also partook of the same divine nature. Thus, in Samoa, as also in Tonga, the carpenter, who built canoes, occupied a high and almost sacred position, ap¬ proaching that of the priest. Even among ourselves, with our Roman traditions, the name Pontiff, or Bridge- Builder, remains that of an imposing and hieratic per¬ sonage. But that is only the primitive view of the world. When Man developed, when he became more scientific and more moralistic, however much his practice re¬ mained essentially that of the artist, his conception be¬ came much less so. He was learning to discover the mystery of measurement; he was approaching the be¬ ginnings of geometry and mathematics; he was at the same time becoming warlike. So he saw things in straight lines, more rigidly; he formulated laws and commandments. It was, Einstein assures us, the right way. But it was, at all events in the first place, most unfavourable to the view of life as an art. It remains so even to-day. Yet there are always some who, deliberately or by instinct, have perceived the immense significance in 1 See, for instance, Turner’s Samoa, chap. I. Usually, however, in the Pacific, creation was accomplished, in a more genuinely evolutionary manner, by a long series of progressive generations. INTRODUCTION 3 lite of the conception of art. That is especially so as re¬ gards the finest thinkers of the two countries which, so far as we may divine, — however difficult it may here be to speak positively and by demonstration, — have had the finest civilisations, China and Greece. The wisest and most recognisably greatest practical phi¬ losophers of both these lands have believed that the whole of life, even government, is an art of definitely like kind with the other arts, such as that of music or the dance. We may, for instance, recall to memory one of the most typical of Greeks. Of Protagoras, calum¬ niated by Plato, — though, it is interesting to observe that Plato's own transcendental doctrine of Ideas has been regarded as an effort to escape from the solvent influence of Protagoras’ logic, — it is possible for the modern historian of philosophy to say that “the great¬ ness of this man can scarcely be measured." It was with measurement that his most famous saying was concerned: “Man is the measure of all things, of those which exist and of those which have no existence." It was by his insistence on Man as the active creator of life and knowledge, the artist of the world, moulding it to his own measure, that Protagoras is interesting to us to-day. He recognised that there are no absolute criteria by which to judge actions. He was the father of relativism and of phenomenalism, probably the ini¬ tiator of the modern doctrine that the definitions of geometry are only approximately true abstractions from empirical experiences. We need not, and prof> 4 THE DANCE OF LIFE ably should not, suppose that in undermining dogma¬ tism he was setting up an individual subjectivism. It was the function of Man in the world, rather than of the individual, that he had in mind when he enunci¬ ated his great principle, and it was with the reduction of human activity and conduct to art that he was mainly concerned. His projects for the art of living be¬ gan with speech, and he was a pioneer in the arts of language, the initiator of modern grammar. He wrote treatises on many special arts, as well as the general treatise “On the Art” among the pseudo-Hippocratic writings, — if we may with Gomperz attribute it to him, — which embodies the spirit of modern positive science. 1 Hippias, the philosopher of Elis, a contemporary of Protagoras, and like him commonly classed among the “Sophists,” cultivated the largest ideal of life as an art which embraced all arts, common to all mankind as a fellowship of brothers, and at one with natural law which transcends the convention of human laws. Plato made fun of him, and that was not hard to do, for a philosopher who conceived the art of living as so large could not possibly at every point adequately play at it. But at this distance it is his ideal that mainly concerns us, and he really was highly accomplished, even a pioneer, in many of the multifarious activities he undertook. Pie was a remarkable mathematician; he was an astronomer and geometer; he was a copious 1 Gomperz, Greek Thinkers , voL I, book in, chap. Vi. INTRODUCTION 5 poet in the most diverse modes, and, moreover, wrote on phonetics, rhythm, music, and mnemonics; he dis¬ cussed the theories of sculpture and painting; he was both mythologist and ethnologist, as well as a student of chronology; he had mastered many of the artis¬ tic crafts. On one occasion, it is said, he appeared at the Olympic gathering in garments which, from the sandals on his feet to the girdle round his waist and the rings on his fingers, had been made by his own hands. Such a being of kaleidoscopic versatility, Gomperz re¬ marks, we call contemptuously a Jack-of-all-trades. We believe in subordinating a man to his work. But other ages have judged differently. The fellow citizens of Hippias thought him worthy to be their ambassador to the Peloponnesus. In another age of immense human activity, the Renaissance, the vast-ranging energies of Leo Alberti were honoured, and in yet a later like age, Diderot — Pantophile as Voltaire called him — displayed a like fiery energy of wide-ranging interests, although it was no longer possible to attain the same level of wide-ranging accomplishment. Of course the work of Hippias was of unequal value, but some of it was of firm quality and he shrank from no labour. He seems to have possessed a gracious modesty, quite unlike the conceited pomposity Plato was pleased to attribute to him. He attached more importance than was common among the Greeks to devotion to truth, and he was cosmopolitan in spirit. He was famous for his distinc¬ tion between Convention and Nature, and Plato put 6 THE DANCE OF LIFE into his mouth the words: 44 All of you who are here present I reckon to be kinsmen and friends and fel¬ low citizens, and by nature, not by law; for by nature like is akin to like, whereas law is the tyrant of man¬ kind, and often compels us to do many things that are against nature/’ Hippias was in the line of those whose supreme ideal is totality of existence. Ulysses, as Benn remarks, was in Greek myth the representative of the ideal, and its supreme representative in real life has in modern times been Goethe.1 n But, in actual fact, is life essentially an art? Let us look at the matter more closely, and see what life is like, as people have lived it. This is the more necessary to do since, to-day at all events, there are simple- minded people — well-meaning honest people whom we should not ignore — who pooh-pooh such an idea. They point to the eccentric individuals in our Western civilisation who make a little idol they call “ Art,” and fall down and worship it, sing incomprehensible chants in its honour, and spend most of their time in pouring 1 I have here mainly followed Gomperz ( Greek Thinkers , vol. i, pp. 430- 34); there is not now, however, much controversy over the position of Hippias, which there is now, indeed, rather a tendency to exaggerate, considering how small is the basis of knowledge we possess. Thus Dupreel (La Legende Socratique , p. 432), regarding him as the most misunderstood of the great Sophists, declares that Hippias is “the thinker who con¬ ceived the universality of science, just as Prodicus caught glimpses of the synthesis of the social sciences. Hippias is the philosopher of science, the Great Logician, just as Prodicus is the Great Moralist.” He compares him to Pico della Mirandola as a Humanist and to Leibnitz in power of wide synthesis. INTRODUCTION 7 contempt on the people who refuse to recognise that this worship of “Art” is the one thing needed for what they may or may not call the “ moral uplift ” of the age they live in. We must avoid the error of the good simple-minded folk in whose eyes these “Arty” people loom so large. They are not large, they are merely the morbid symptoms of a social disease; they are the fantastic reaction of a society which as a whole has ceased to move along the true course of any real and living art. For that has nothing to do with the ec¬ centricities of a small religious sect worshipping in a Little Bethel ; it is the large movement of the common life of a community, indeed simply the outward and visible form of that life. Thus the whole conception of art has been so nar¬ rowed and so debased among us that, on the one hand, the use of the word in its large and natural sense seems either unintelligible or eccentric, while, on the other hand, even if accepted, it still remains so unfamiliar that its immense significance for our whole vision of life in the world is scarcely at first seen. This is not altogether due to our natural obtusity, or to the absence of a due elimination of subnormal stocks among us, however much we may be pleased to attrib¬ ute to that dysgenic factor. It seems largely inevitable. That is to say that, so far as we in our modern civilisa¬ tion are concerned, it is the outcome of the social process of two thousand years, the result of the break¬ up of the classic tradition of thought into various parts 8 THE DANCE OF LIFE which under post-classic influences have been pursued separately.1 Religion or the desire for the salvation of our souls, “Art” or the desire for beautification, Science or the search for the reasons of things — these conations of the mind, which are really three aspects of the same profound impulse, have been allowed to furrow each its own narrow separate channel, in alienation from the others, and so they have all been impeded in their greater function of fertilising life. It is interesting to observe, I may note in passing, how totally new an aspect a phenomenon may take on when transformed from some other channel into that of art. We may take, for instance, that remarkable phenomenon called Napoleon, as impressive an in¬ dividualistic manifestation as we could well find in human history during recent centuries, and consider two contemporary, almost simultaneous, estimates of it. A distinguished English writer, Mr. H. G. Wells, in a notable and even famous book, his “Outline of History,” sets down a judgment of Napoleon through¬ out a whole chapter. Now Mr. Wells moves in the ethico-religious channel. He wakes up every morning, it is said, with a rule for the guidance of life ; some of his 1 Strictly speaking, in the technical sense of that much-abused word, this is “decadence.” (I refer to the sense in which I defined “decadence ” many years ago in Affirmations , pp. 175-87.) So that while the minor arts have sometimes been classic and sometimes decadent, the major art of living during the last two thousand years, although one can think of great men who have maintained the larger classic ideal, has mainly been decadent. INTRODUCTION 9 critics say that it is every morning a new rule, and others that the rule is neither ethical nor religious; but we are here concerned only with the channel and not with the direction of the stream. In the “Outline” Mr. Wells pronounces his ethico-religious anathema of Napoleon, “this dark little archaic personage, hard, compact, capable, unscrupulous, imitative, and neatly vulgar.” The “archaic” — the old-fashioned, out¬ worn — element attributed to Napoleon, is accentu¬ ated again later, for Mr. Wells has an extremely low opinion (hardly justifiable, one may remark in passing) of primitive man. Napoleon was “a reminder of ancient evils, a thing like the bacterium of some pestilence”; “the figure he makes in history is one of almost incredible self-conceit, of vanity, greed, and cunning, of callous contempt and disregard of all who trusted him.” There is no figure, Mr. Wells asserts, so completely antithetical to the figure of Jesus of Nazareth. He was “a scoundrel, bright and complete.” There is no occasion to question this condemnation when we place ourselves in the channel along which Mr. Wells moves; it is probably inevitable; we may even accept it heartily. Yet, however right along that line, that is not the only line in which we may move. Moreover — and this is the point which concerns us — it is possible to enter a sphere in which no such merely negative, condemnatory, and dissatisfying a conclusion need be reached. For obviously it is dissatisfying. It is IO THE DANCE OF LIFE not finally acceptable that so supreme a protagonist of humanity, acclaimed by millions, of whom many gladly died for him, and still occupying so large and glorious a place in the human imagination, should be dismissed in the end as merely an unmitigated scoun¬ drel. For so to condemn him is to condemn Man who made him what he was. He must have answered some lyric cry in the human heart. That other sphere in which Napoleon wears a different aspect is the sphere of art in the larger and fundamental sense. Elie Faure, a French critic, an excellent historian of art in the ordinary sense, is able also to grasp art in the larger sense because he is not only a man of letters but of science, a man with medical training and experience, who has lived in the open world, not, as the critic of literature and art so often appears to be, a man living in a damp cellar. Just after Wells issued his “Out- line,” Elie Faure, who probably knew nothing about it since he reads no English, published a book on Napo¬ leon which some may consider the most remarkable book on that subject they have ever come across. For to Faure Napoleon is a great lyric artist. It is hard not to believe that Faure had Wells’s chapter on Napoleon open before him, he speaks so much to the point. He entitled the first chapter of his “Napol6on” “Jesus and He,” and at once pierces to what Wells, too, had perceived to be the core of the matter in hand: “From the point of view of morality he is not to be defended and is even incomprehensible INTRODUCTION ii In fact be violates law, he kills, he sows vengeance and death. But also he dictates law, he tracks and crushes crime, he establishes order everywhere. He is an assassin. He is also a judge. In the ranks he would deserve the rope. At the summit he is pure, distribut¬ ing recompense and punishment with a firm hand. He is a monster with two faces, like all of us perhaps, in any case like God, for those who have praised Napo¬ leon and those who have blamed him have alike not understood that the Devil is the other face of God.” From the moral point of view, Faure says (just as Wells had said), Napoleon is Antichrist. But from this standpoint of art, all grows clear. He is a poet of action, as Jesus was, and like him he stands apart. These two, and these two alone among the world’s supremely great men of whom we have any definite knowledge, “acted out their dream instead of dream¬ ing their action.” It is possible that Napoleon himself was able to estimate the moral value of that acted dream. As he once stood before the grave of Rousseau, he observed: “ It would have been better for the repose of France if that man and I had never existed.” Yet we cannot be sure. “ Is not repose the death of the world?” asks Faure. “Had not Rousseau and Napo¬ leon precisely the mission of troubling that repose? In another of the profound and almost impersonal sayings that sometimes fell from his lips, Napoleon ob¬ served with a still deeper intuition of his own function in the world: “ I love power. But it is as an artist that 12 THE DANCE OF LIFE I love it. I love it as a musician loves his violin, to draw out of it sounds and chords and harmonies. 1 love it as an artist.” As an artist! These words were the inspiration of this finely illuminating study of Napoleon, which, while free from all desire to defend or admire, yet seems to explain Napoleon, in the larger sense to justify his right to a place in the human story, *0 imparting a final satisfaction which Wells, we ^eel, could he have escaped from the bonds of the narrow conception of life that bound him, had in him the spirit and the intelligence also to bestow upon us. But it is time to turn from this aside. It is always possible to dispute about individuals, even when so happy an illustration chances to come before us. We are not here concerned with exceptional persons, but with the interpretation of general and normal human civilisations. Ill I take, almost at random, the example of a primitive people. There are many others that would do as well or better. But this happens to come to hand, and it has the advantage not only of being a primitive people, but one living on an island, so possessing until lately its own little-impaired indigenous culture, as far as possible remote in space from our own ; the record also has been made, as carefully and as impartially as one can well expect, by a missionary’s wife who speaks from INTRODUCTION n a knowledge covering over twenty years.1 It is almost needless to add that she is as little concerned with any theory of the art of life as the people she is describing. The Loyalty Islands lie to the east of New Cale¬ donia, and have belonged to France for more than half a century. They are thus situated in much the same latitude as Egypt is in the Northern hemisphere, but with a climate tempered by the ocean. It is with the Island of Lifu that we are mainly concerned. There are no streams or mountains in this island, though a ridge of high rocks with large and beautiful caves con¬ tains stalactites and stalagmites and deep pools of fresh water; these pools, before the coming of the Christians, were the abode of the spirits of the de¬ parted, and therefore greatly reverenced. A dying man would say to his friends: “ I will meet you all again in the caves where the stalactites are.” The Loyalty Islanders, who are of average European stature, are a handsome race, except for their thick lips and dilated nostrils, which, however, are much less pronounced than among African negroes. They have soft large brown eyes, wavy black hair, white teeth, and rich brown skin of varying depth. Each tribe has its own well-defined territory and its own chief. Al- 1 Emma Hadfield, Among the Natives of the Loyalty Group. 1920. It would no doubt have been more satisfactory to select a people like the Fijians rather than the Lifuans, for they represented a more robust and accomplished form of a rather similar culture, but their culture has re¬ ceded into the past, — and the same may be said of the Marquesans of whom Melville left, in Typee , a famous and delightful picture which other records confirm, — while that of the Lifuans is still recent. H THE DANCE OF LIFE though possessing high moral qualities, they are a laughter-loving people, and neither their climate nor their mode of life demands prolonged hard labour, but they can work as well as the average Briton, if need be, for several consecutive days, and, when the need is over, lounge or ramble, sleep or talk. The basis of their culture — and that is doubtless the significant fact for us — is artistic. Every one learned music, dancing, and song. Therefore it is natural for them to regard rhythm and grace in all the actions of life, and almost a matter of instinct to cultivate beauty in all social relationships. Men and boys spent much time in tattooing and polishing their brown skins, in dyeing and dressing their long wavy hair (golden locks, as much admired as they always have been in Europe, being obtained by the use of lime), and in anointing their bodies. These occupations were, of course, con¬ fined to the men, for man is naturally the ornamental sex and woman the useful sex. The women gave no attention to their hair, except to keep it short. It was the men also who used oils and perfumes, not the women, who, however, wore bracelets above the elbow and beautiful long strings of jade beads. No clothing is worn until the age of twenty-five or thirty, and then all dress alike, except that chiefs fasten the girdle dif¬ ferently and wear more elaborate ornaments. These people have sweet and musical voices and they culti¬ vate them. They are good at learning languages and they are great orators. The Lifuan language is soft and INTRODUCTION liquid, one word running into another pleasantly to the ear, and it is so expressive that one may sometimes understand the meaning by the sound. In one of these islands, Uvea, so great is the eloquence of the people that they employ oratory to catch fish, whom indeed they regard in their legends as half human, and it is believed that a shoal of fish, when thus politely plied with compliments from a canoe, will eventually, and quite spontaneously, beach themselves spellbound. For a primitive people the art of life is necessarily of large part concerned with eating. It is recognised that no one can go hungry when his neighbour has food, so no one was called upon to make any great demonstra¬ tion of gratitude on receiving a gift. Help rendered to another was help to one’s self, if it contributed to the common weal, and what I do for you to-day you will do for me to-morrow. There was implicit trust, and goods were left about without fear of theft, which was rare and punishable by death. It was not theft, however, if, when the owner was looking, one took an article one wanted. To tell a lie, also, with intent to deceive, was a serious offence, though to tell a lie when one was afraid to speak the truth was excusable. The Lifuans are fond of food, but much etiquette is practised in eating. The food must be conveyed to the mouth gracefully, daintily, leisurely. Every one helped him¬ self to the food immediately in front of him, without hurry, without reaching out for dainty morsels (which were often offered to women), for every one looked l6 THE DANCE OF LIFE after his neighbour, and every one naturally felt that he was his brother’s keeper. So it was usual to invite passers-by cordially to share in the repast. “ In the matter of food and eating,” Mrs. Hadfield adds, “they might put many of our countrymen to shame.” Not only must one never eat quickly, or notice dainties that are not near one, but it would be indelicate to eat in the presence of people who are not themselves eat¬ ing. One must always share, however small one’s por¬ tion, and one must do so pleasantly; one must accept also what is offered, but slowly, reluctantly; having accepted it, you may, if you like, openly pass it on to some one else. In old days the Lifuans were, occasion¬ ally, cannibals, not, it would seem, either from neces¬ sity or any ritual reason, but because, like some peoples elsewhere, they liked it, having, indeed, at times, a kind of craving for animal food. If a man had twenty or thirty wives and a large family, it would be quite correct if, now and then, he cooked one of his own chil¬ dren, although presumably he might prefer that some one else’s child was chosen. The child would be cooked whole, wrapped in banana or coconut leaves. The social inconveniences of this practice have now been recognised. But they still feel the utmost respect and reverence for the dead and fail to find anything offen¬ sive or repulsive in a corpse. “Why should there be, seeing it was once our food?” Nor have they any fear of death. To vermin they seem to have little objec¬ tion, but otherwise they have a strong love of cleanli- INTRODUCTION 17 ness. The idea of using manure in agricultural opera¬ tions seems to them disgusting, and they never do use it. “The sea was the public playground.” Mothers take their little ones for sea-baths long before they can walk, and small children learn to swim as they learn to walk, without teaching. With their reverence for death is associated a reverence for old age. “Old age is a term of respect, and every one is pleased to be taken for older than he is since old age is honoured.” Still, regard for others was general — not confined to the aged. In the church nowadays the lepers are seated on a separate bench, and when the bench is occupied by a leper healthy women will sometimes insist on sitting with him; they could not bear to see the old man sitting alone as though he had no friends. There was much demonstration on meeting friends after absence. A Lifuan always said “Olea” (“Thank you”) for any good news, though not affecting him personally, as though it were a gift, for he was glad to be able to rejoice with another. Being divided into small tribes, each with its own autocratic chief, war was sometimes inevitable. It was attended by much etiquette, which was always strictly observed. The Lifuans were not acquainted with the civilised custom of making rules for warfare and breaking them when war actually broke out. Several days’ notice must be given before hostilities were commenced. Women and children, in contrast to the practice of civilised warfare, were never molested. As soon as half a dozen fighters THE DANCE OF LIFE i3 were put out of action on one side, the chief of that side would give the command to cease fighting and the war was over. An indemnity was then paid by the conquerors to the vanquished, and not, as among civilised peoples, by the vanquished to the conquerors. It was felt to be the conquered rather than the con¬ queror who needed consolation, and it also seemed desirable to show that no feeling of animosity was left behind. This was not only a delicate mark of consider¬ ation to the vanquished, but also very good policy, as, by neglecting it, some Europeans may have had cause to learn. This whole Lifuan art of living has, however, been undermined by the arrival of Christianity with its usual accompaniments. The Lifuans are substitut¬ ing European vices for their own virtues. Their sim¬ plicity and confidence are passing away, though, even yet, Mrs. Hadfield says, they are conspicuous for their honesty, truthfulness, good-humour, kindness, and po¬ liteness, remaining a manly and intelligent people. IV The Lifuans furnish an illustration which seems de¬ cisive. But they are savages, and on that account their example may be invalidated. It is well to take another illustration from a people whose high and long-con¬ tinued civilisation is now undisputed.' The civilisation of China is ancient: that has long been a familiar fact. But for more than a thousand years it was merely a legend to Western Europeans: INTRODUCTION 19 none had ever reached China, or, if they had, they had never returned to tell the tale; there were too many fierce and jealous barbarians between the East and the West. It was not until the end of the thirteenth cen¬ tury, in the pages of Marco Polo, the Venetian Co¬ lumbus of the East, — for it was an Italian who dis¬ covered the Old World as well as the New, — that China at last took definite shape alike as a concrete fact and a marvellous dream. Later, Italian and Portuguese travellers described it, and it is interesting to note what they had to say. Thus Perera in the six¬ teenth century, in a narrative which ^Willes translated for Hakluyt’s “ Voyages,” presents a detailed picture of Chinese life with an admiration all the more im¬ pressive since we cannot help feeling how alien that civilisation was to the Catholic traveller and how many troubles he had himself to encounter. He is astonished, not only by the splendour of the lives of the Chinese on the material side, alike in large things and in small, but by their fine manners in all the ordi¬ nary course of life, the courtesy in which they seemed to him to exceed all other nations, and in the fair deal¬ ing which far surpassed that of all other Gentiles and Moors, while in the exercise of justice he found them superior even to many Christians, for they do justice to unknown strangers, which in Christendom is rare; moreover, there were hospitals in every city and no beggars were ever to be seen. It was a vision of splen¬ dour and delicacy and humanity, which he might have 20 THE DANCE OF LIFE seen, here and there, in the courts of princes in Europe, but nowhere in the West on so vast a scale as in China. The picture which Marco Polo, the first European to reach China (at all events in what we may call modern times), presented in the thirteenth century was yet more impressive, and that need not surprise us, for when he saw China it was still in its great Augustan age of the Sung Dynasty. He represents the city of Hang-Chau as the most beautiful and sumptuous in the world, and we must remember that he himself belonged to Venice, soon to be known as the most beautiful and sumptuous city of Europe, and had acquired no small knowledge of the world. As he describes its life, so exquisite and refined in its civilisa¬ tion, so humane, so peaceful, so joyous, so well ordered, so happily shared by the whole population, we realise that here had been reached the highest point of urban civilisation to which Man has ever attained. Marco Polo can think of no word to apply to it — and that again and again — but Paradise. The China of to-day seems less strange and aston¬ ishing to the Westerner. It may even seem akin to him — partly through its decline, partly through his own progress in civilisation — by virtue of its direct and practical character. That is the conclusion of a sensitive and thoughtful traveller in India and Japan and China, G. Lowes Dickinson. He is impressed by the friendliness, the profound humanity, the gaiety, of the Chinese, by the unequalled self-respect, in- INTRODUCTION 21 I * dependence, and courtesy of the common people. “The fundamental attitude of the Chinese towards life is, and has always been, that of the most modern West, nearer to us now than to our mediaeval an¬ cestors, infinitely nearer to us than India.”1 So far it may seem scarcely as artists that these travellers regard the Chinese. They insist on their cheerful, practical, social, good-mannered, tolerant, peaceable, humane way of regarding life, on the re¬ markably educable spirit in which they are willing, and easily able, to change even ancient and deep-rooted habits when it seems convenient and beneficial to do so; they are willing to take the world lightly, and seem devoid of those obstinate conservative instincts by which we are guided in Europe. The “Resident in Peking” says they are the least romantic of peoples. He says it with a nuance of dispraise, but Lowes Dick¬ inson says precisely the same thing about Chinese poetry, and with no such nuance: “ It is of all poetry I know the most human and the least symbolic or ro¬ mantic. It contemplates life just as it presents itself, without any veil of ideas, any rhetoric or sentiment; it simply clears away the obstruction which habit has 1 G. Lowes Dickinson, An Essay on the Civilisations of India , China, and Japan (1914), p. 47. No doubt there are shades to be added to this picture. They may be found in a book, published two years earlier, China as it Really Is, by “a Resident in Peking ” who claims to have been born in China. Chinese culture has receded, in part swamped by over-popula¬ tion, and concerning a land where to-day, it has lately been said, “ magni¬ ficence, crudity, delicacy, fetidity, and fragrance are blended,” it is easy for Westerners to show violent difference of opinion. 22 THE DANCE OF LIFE built up between us and the beauty of things and leaves that, showing in its own nature. ” Every one who has learnt to enjoy Chinese poetry will appreciate the delicate precision of this comment. The quality of their poetry seems to fall into line with the simple, direct, childlike quality which all observers note in the Chinese themselves. The unsympathetic “Resident in Peking” describes the well-known etiquette of politeness in China: “A Chinaman will inquire of what noble country you are. You return the question, and he will say his lowly province is so-and-so. He will invite you to do him the honour of directing your jewelled feet to his degraded house. You reply that you, a discredited worm, will crawl into his magnificent palace.” Life becomes all play. Ceremony — the Chinese are unequalled for ceremony, and a Govern¬ ment Department, the Board of Rites and Ceremonies, exists to administer it — is nothing but more or less crystallised play. Not only is ceremony here “almost an instinct,” but, it has been said, “A Chinese thinks in theatrical terms.” We are coming near to the sphere of art. The quality of play in the Chinese character and Chinese civilisation has impressed alike them who have seen China from afar and by actual contact. It used to be said that the Chinese had invented gunpowder long before Europeans and done nothing with it but make hreworks. That seemed to the whole Western world a terrible blindness to the valuable uses of gunpowder, INTRODUCTION *3 and it is only of late years that a European com¬ mentator has ventured to remark that “the proper use of gunpowder is obviously to make fireworks, which may be very beautiful things, not to kill men.” Cer¬ tainly the Chinese, at all events, appreciate to the full this proper use of gunpowder. “One of the most obvious characteristics of the Chinese is their love of fireworks,” we are told. The gravest people and the most intellectual occupy themselves with fireworks, and if the works of Bergson, in which pyro technical allusions are so frequent, are ever translated into Chinese, one can well believe that China will produce enthusiastic Bergsonians. All toys are popular; every¬ body, it is said, buys toys of one sort or another: paper windmills, rattles, Chinese lanterns, and of course kites, which have an almost sacred significance. They delight, also, in more complicated games of skill, in¬ cluding an elaborate form of chess, far more difficult than ours.1 It is unnecessary to add that to philoso¬ phy, a higher and more refined form of play, the Chinese are peculiarly addicted, and philosophic discussion is naturally woven in with an “art of exquisite enjoy¬ ment” — carried probably to greater perfection than anywhere else in the world. Bertrand Russell, who makes this remark, in the suggestive comments on his 1 See, for instance, the chapter on games in Professor E. H. Parker’s China: Past and Present. Reference may be made to the same author’s important and impartial larger work, China: Its History , with a dis¬ criminating chapter on Chinese personal characteristics. Perhaps, ths most penetrating study of Chinese psychology is, however, Arthur H. Smith's Chinese Characteristics. THE DANCE OF LIFE 24 own visit to China, observes how this simple, child-* like, yet profound attitude towards life results in a liberation of the impulses to play and enjoyment which “makes Chinese life unbelievably restful and delightful after the solemn cruelties of the West.” We are reminded of Gourmont’s remark that “pleas¬ ure is a human creation, a delicate art, to which, as for music or painting, only a few are apt.” The social polity which brings together the people who thus view life is at once singular and appropriate. I well remember how in youth a new volume of the Sacred Books of the East Series, a part of the Con- fucian Li-ki, came into my hands and how delighted 1 was to learn that in China life was regulated by music and ceremony. That was the beginning of an interest in China that has not ceased to grow, though now, when it has become a sort of fashion to exalt the spiritual qualities of the Chinese above those of other peoples, one may well feel disinclined to admit any interest in China. But the conception itself, since it seems to have had its beginning at least a thousand years before Christ, may properly be considered inde¬ pendently of our Western fashions. It is Propriety — the whole ceremony of life — in which all harmonious intercourse subsists; it is “the channel by which we apprehend the ways of Heaven,” in no supernatural sense, for it is on the earth and not in the skies that the Confucian Heaven lies concealed. But if human feel¬ ings, the instincts — for in this matter the ancient INTRODUCTION 23 Chinese were at one with our modern psychologists, — are the field that has to be cultivated, and it is cere¬ mony that ploughs it, and the seeds of right action that are to be planted on it, and discipline that is to weed it, and love that is to gather in the fruits, it is in music, and the joy and peace that accompany music, that it all ends. Indeed, it is also in music that it all begins. For the sphere in which ceremonies act is Man’s external life; his internal life is the sphere of music. It is music that moulds the manners and cus¬ toms that are comprised under ceremony, for Con¬ fucius held that there can be music without sound where “ virtue is deep and silent ” ; and we are reminded of the “Crescendo of Silences” on the Chinese pa¬ vilion in Villiers de F Isle Adam’s story, “Le Secret de l’ancienne Musique.” It is music that regulates the heart and mind and with that development brings joy, and joy brings repose. And so “Man became Heaven.” “Let ceremonies and music have their course until the earth is filled with them!” It is sometimes said that among Chinese moralists and philosophers Lao-tze, the deepest of them alb alone stands aside from the chorus in praise of music and ceremony. When once Confucius came to consult Lao-tze concerning the rules of propriety, and rever¬ ence for the teaching of the sages of antiquity, we are told, Lao-tze replied: “The men of whom you speak, sir, have, if you please, together with their bones, mouldered.” Confucius went away, puzzled if not dis* 26 THE DANCE OF LIFE satisfied. He was willing to work not only from within outwards, but from without inwards, because he al¬ lowed so large a place for social solidity, for tradition¬ alism, for paternalism, though he recognised that ceremony is subordinate in the scheme of life, as colour is in a painting, the picture being the real thing. Lao- tze was an individualist and a mystic. He was little concerned with moralities in the ordinary sense. He recognised no action but from within outwards. But though Confucius could scarcely have altogether grasped his conception, he was quite able to grasp that of Confucius, and his indifference to tradition, to rule and propriety was simply an insistence on essential reality, on “music.” “Ceremonies,” he said, “are the outward expression of inward feeling.” He was no more opposed to the fundamental Chinese conception than George Fox was opposed to Christianity in refus¬ ing to observe the mere forms 2nd ceremonies of the Church. A sound Confucianism is the outward mani¬ festation of Taoism (as Lao-tze himself taught it), just as a sound socialism is the outward manifestation of a genuine individualism. It has been well said that Chinese socialistic solidarity rests on an individualistic basis, it is not a bureaucratic State socialism ; it works from within outward. (One of the first European visitors to China remarked that there a street was like a home.) This is well shown by so great and typical a Chinese philosopher as Meh-ti,1 who lived shortly 1 His ideas have been studied by Madame Alexandra David, Le lasophe Meh-U et I’IdSe de SoUdariU . London, 1907. INTRODUCTION r? after Confucius, in the fifth century b.c. He taught universal love, with universal equality, and for him to love meant to act. He admitted an element of self- interest as a motive for such an attitude. He desired to universalise mutual self-help. Following Confucius, but yet several centuries before Jesus, he declared that a man should love his neighbour, his fellow man, as himself. “When he sees his fellow hungry, he feeds him; when he sees him cold, he clothes him; ill, he nurses him; dead, he buries him.” This, he said, was by no means opposed to filial piety; for if one cares for the parents of others, they in turn will care for his. But, it was brought against him, the power of egoism? The Master agreed. Yet, he said, Man accepts more difficult things. He can renounce joy, life itself, for even absurd and ridiculous ends. A single generation, he added, such is the power of imitation, might suffice to change a people’s customs. But Meh-ti remained placid. He remarked that the great ones of the earth were against human solidarity and equality; he left it at that. He took no refuge in mysticism. Practical social action was the sole end he had in view, and we have to remember that his ideals are largely embodied in Chinese institutions.1 We may understand now how it is that in China, and in China alone among the great surviving civilisa¬ tions, we find that art animates the whole of life, even its morality. “This universal presence of art,” remarks 1 Eugene Simon, La CiU Chimnst, 28 THE DANCE OF LIFE an acute yet discriminating observer, Emile Hovelaque, whom I have already quoted,1 “manifested in the smallest utensil, the humblest stalls, the notices on the shops, the handwriting, the rhythm of movement, always regular and measured, as though to the tune of unheard music, announces a civilisation which is com¬ plete in itself, elaborated in the smallest detail, pene¬ trated by one spirit, which no interruption ever breaks, a harmony which becomes at length a hallucinatory and overwhelming obsession.” Or, as another writer has summed up the Chinese attitude: “For them the art of life is one, as this world and the other are one. Their aim is to make the Kingdom of Heaven here and now.” It is obvious that a natural temperament in which the art-impulse is so all-embracing, and the aesthetic sensibility so acute, might well have been of a perilous instability. We could scarcely have been surprised if, like that surpassing episode in Egyptian history of which Akhenaten was the leader and Tell-el-Amarna the tomb, it had only endured for a moment. Yet Chinese civilisation, which has throughout shown the dominating power of this sensitive temperament, has lasted longer than any other. The reason is that the very excesses of their temperament forced the Chinese to fortify themselves against its perils. The Great Wall, built more than two thousand years ago, and still to-day almost the most impressive work of man on 1 E. Hovelaque, La Chine (Paris, 1920), p. 47. INTRODUCTION 29 the earth, is typical of this attitude of the Chinese. They have exercised a stupendous energy in fortifying themselves against the natural enemies of their own temperament. When one looks at it from this point of view, it is easy to see that, alike in its large outlines and its small details, Chinese life is always the art of balancing an aesthetic temperament and guarding against its excesses. We see this in the whole of the ancient and still prevailing system of Confucian morality with its insistence on formal ceremony, even when, departing from the thought of its most influential founder, — for ceremonialism in China would have existed even if Confucius had not lived, — it tended to become merely an external formalism. We see it in the massive solidarity of Chinese life, the systematic social organisation by which individual responsibility, even though leaving individuality itself intact, is merged in the responsibility of the family and the still larger group. We see it in the whole drift of Chinese philos¬ ophy, which is throughout sedative and contemplative. We see it in the element of stoicism on the one hand and cruelty on the other which in so genuinely good- natured a people would otherwise seem puzzling. The Chinese love of flowers and gardens and landscape scenery is in the same direction, and indeed one may say much the same of Chinese painting and Chinese poetry.1 That is why it is only to-day that we in the 1 This point has not escaped the more acute students of Chinese civilisation. Thus Dr. John Steele, in his edition of the I-Li, remark* 3© THE DANCE OF LIFE West have reached the point of nervous susceptibility which enables us in some degree to comprehend the aesthetic supremacy which the Chinese reached more than a thousand years ago. Thus, during its extremely long history — for the other great civilisations with which it was once con¬ temporary have passed away or been disintegrated and transformed — Chinese civilisation has borne witness to the great fact that all human life is art. It may be because they have realised this so thoroughly that the Chinese have been able to preserve their civilisation so long, through all the violent shocks to which it has been subjected. There can be no doubt, however, that, during the greater part of the last thousand years, there has been, however slow and gradual, a decline in the vitality of Chinese civilisation, largely due, it may well be, to the crushing pressure of an excessive popula¬ tion. For, however remarkable the admiration which China arouses even to-day, its finest flowering periods in the special arts lie far in the past, while in the art of living itself the Chinese have long grown languid. The different reports of ancient and modern travellers that “ceremonial was far from being a series of observances, empty and unprofitable, such as it degenerated into in later time. It was meant to inculcate that habit of sell-control and ordered action which was the ex¬ pression of a mind fully instructed in the inner meaning of things, and sensitive to every impression.” Still more clearly, Reginald Farrer wrote, in On the Eaves of the World , that “the philosophic calm that the Chinese deliberately cultivate is their necessary armour to protect the excessive susceptibility to emotion. The Chinese would be for ever the victims of their nerves had they not for four thousand years pursued reason and self-control with self-protective enthusiasm.” INTRODUCTION t 31 regarding one definite social manifestation, the preva¬ lence of beggary, cannot fail to tell us something re¬ garding the significant form of their social life. Modern travellers complain of the plague constituted by the prevalence of beggars in China; they are even a fixed and permanent institution on a trades-union basis. But in the sixteenth century Galeotto Perera noticed with surprise in China the absence of beggars, aa Marco Polo had before him, and Friar Gaspar de Cruz remarked that the Chinese so abhorred idleness that they gave no alms to the poor and mocked at the Portuguese for doing so: “Why give alms to a knave? Let him go and earn it.” Their own priests, he adds, they sometimes whipped as being knaves. (It should be noted at the same time that it was considered rea¬ sonable only to give half the day to work, the other half to joy and recreation.) But they built great asylums for the helpless poor, and found employment for blind women, gorgeously dressed and painted with ceruse and vermilion, as prostitutes, who were more esteemed in early China than they have been since. That is 3 curious instance of the unflinching practicality still shown by the Chinese in endless ways. The undoubted lassitude in the later phases of this long-lived Chinese culture has led to features in the art of life, such as beggary and dirt among the poor, not manifested in the younger offshoot of Chinese and Korean culture in J apan, though it is only fair to point out that impartial English observers, like Parker, consider this prevalence THE DANCE OF LIFE 32 of vermin and dirt as simply due to the prevalence of poverty, and not greater than we find among the poor in England and elsewhere in the West. Marco Polo speaks of three hundred public baths in one city alone in his time. We note also that in the more specialised arts the transcendence of China belongs to the past, and even sometimes a remote past. It is so in the art of philosophy, and the arts of poetry and painting. It is so also in the art of pottery, in which Chinese su¬ premacy over the rest of the world has been longest recognised — has not the word ‘‘china” for centuries been our name for the finest pottery? — and is most beyond measure. Our knowledge of the pottery of various cultures excels that of any other human prod¬ ucts because of all it is the most perdurable. We can better estimate their relative aesthetic worth now than in the days when a general reverence for Greek anti¬ quity led to a popular belief in the beauty of Greek pottery, though scarcely a single type of its many forms can fairly be so considered or even be compared to the products of the Minoan predecessors of Greek culture, however interesting they may still remain for us as the awkward and inappropriate foundation for exquisite little pictures. The greatest age of this uni¬ versal human art was in China and was over many centuries ago. But with what devotion, with what absolute concentration of the spirit, the Chinese potters of the great period struggled with the problem of art is finely illustrated by the well-known story INTRODUCTION 33 which an old Chinese historian tells of the sacrifice of the divine T’ung, the spirit who protects potters. It happened that a complicated problem had baffled the potters. T’ung laid down his life to serve them and to achieve the solution of the problem. He plunged into the fire and the bowl came out perfect. “The vessel’s perfect glaze is the god’s fat and blood; the body material is the god’s body of flesh; the blue of the decoration, with the brilliant lustre of gems, is the essence of the god’s pure spirit.” That story embodies the Chinese symbol of the art of living, just as we embody our symbol of that art in the Crucifixion of Jesus, The form is diverse; the essence is the same, V It will be seen that when we analyse the experiences of life and look at it simply, in the old-fashioned way, liberated from the artificial complexities of a tempo¬ rary and now, it may be, departing civilisation, what we find is easy to sum up. We find, that is to say, that Man has forced himself to move along this line, and that line, and the other line. But it is the same water of life that runs in all these channels. Until we have ascended to a height where this is clear, to see all our little dogmatisms will but lead us astray. We may illuminatingly change the analogy and turn to the field of chemistry. All these various elements of life are but, as it were, allotropic forms of the same element. The most fundamental among these forms is 34 THE DANCE OF LIFE that of art, for life in all its forms, even morality in the narrowest sense, is, as Duprat has argued, a matter of technique, and technique at once brings us to the elements of art. If we would understand what we are dealing with, we may, therefore, best study these forms under that of art. There is, however, a deeper chemical analogy than this to be seen. It may well be, indeed, that it is more than an analogy. In chemistry we are dealing, not merely with the elements of life, but with the elements of the world, even of what we call our universe. It is not unreasonable to think that the same law holds good for both. We see that the forms of life may all be found, and then better understood, in one form. Some day, perhaps, we shall also see that that fact is only a corollary of the larger fact — or, if any one prefers so to regard it, the smaller fact — that the chemical elements of our world can be regarded as all only transmutations of one element. From of old, men instinctively divined that this might be so, though they were merely concerned to change the elements into gold, the element which they most highly valued. In our own times this transmutation is beginning to become, on a minute scale, a demonstrable fact, though it would seem easier to transmute elements into lead than into gold. Matter, we are thus coming to see, may not be a confused variety of separate sub¬ stances, but simply a different quantitative arrange¬ ment of a single fundamental stuff, which might pas- INTRODUCTION 35 sibly be identical with hydrogen or some other already known element. Similarly we may now believe that the men of old who thought that all human life was made of one stuff were not altogether wrong, and we may, with greater assurance than they were able to claim, analyse the modes of human action into differ¬ ent quantitative or other arrangements of which the most fundamental may well be identical with art. This may perhaps become clearer if we consider more in detail one of the separate arts, selecting the most widely symbolic of all, the art that is most clearly made of the stuff of life, and so able to translate most truly and clearly into beautiful form the various modalities of life. CHAPTER II THE ART OF DANCING I Dancing and building are the two primary and essen¬ tial arts. The art of dancing stands at the source of all the arts that express themselves first in the human person. The art of building, or architecture, is the beginning of all the arts that lie outside the person; and in the end they unite. Music, acting, poetry pro¬ ceed in the one mighty stream; sculpture, painting, all the arts of design, in the other. There is no primary art outside these two arts, for their origin is far earlier than man himself; and dancing came first.1 That is one reason why dancing, however it may at times be scorned by passing fashions, has a profound and eternal attraction even for those one might sup¬ pose farthest from its influence. The joyous beat of the feet of children, the cosmic play of philosophers* thoughts rise and fall according to the same laws of rhythm. If we are indifferent to the art of dancing, we have failed to understand, not merely the supreme manifestation of physical life, but also the supreme symbol of spiritual life. 1 It is even possible that, in earlier than human times, dancing and architecture may have been the result of the same impulse. The nest of birds is the chief early form of building, and Edmund Selous has sug¬ gested (. Zoologist , December, 1901) that the nest may first have arisen aa an accidental result of the ecstatic sexual dance of birds. THE ART OF DANCING 11 The significance of dancing, in the wide sense, thus lies in the fact that it is simply an intimate concrete appeal of a general rhythm, that general rhythm which marks, not life only, but the universe, if one may still be allowed so to name the sum of the cosmic influ¬ ences that reach us. We need not, indeed, go so far as the planets or the stars and outline their ethereal dances. We have but to stand on the seashore and watch the waves that beat at our feet, to observe that at nearly regular intervals this seemingly monotonous rhythm is accentuated for several beats, so that the waves are really dancing the measure of a tune. It need surprise us not at all that rhythm, ever tending to be moulded into a tune, should mark all the physical and spiritual manifestations of life. Dancing is the primitive expression alike of religion and of love — of religion from the earliest human times we know of and of love from a period long anterior to the coming of man. The art of dancing, moreover, is intimately entwined with all human tradition of war, of labour, of pleasure, of education, while some of the wisest phi¬ losophers and the most ancient civilisations have re¬ garded the dance as the pattern in accordance with which the moral life of men must be woven. To realise, therefore, what dancing means for mankind — the poignancy and the many-sidedness of its appeal — we must survey the whole sweep of human life, both at its highest and at its deepest moments. 3® THE DANCE OF LIFE n “ Wiiat do you dance? ” When a man belonging to one branch of the great Bantu division of mankind met a member of another, said Livingstone, that was the question he asked. What a man danced, that was his tribe, his social customs, his religion ; for, as an anthro¬ pologist has put it, “a savage does not preach his religion, he dances it.” There are peoples in the world who have no secular dances, only religious dances; and some investigators believe with Gerland that every dance was of religious origin. That view may seem too extreme, even if we admit that some even of our modern dances, like the waltz, may have been originally religious. Even still (as Skene has shown among the Arabs and Swahili of Africa) so various are dances and their functions among some peoples that they cover the larger part of life. Yet we have to remember that for primitive man there is no such thing as religion apart from life, for religion covers everything. Dancing is a magical oper¬ ation for the attainment of real and important ends of every kind. It was clearly of immense benefit to the individual and to society, by imparting strength and adding organised harmony. It seemed reason¬ able to suppose that it attained other beneficial ends, that were incalculable, for calling down blessings or warding off misfortunes. We may conclude, with Wundt, that the dance was, in the beginning, th« THE ART OF DANCING 39 expression of the whole man, for the whole man was religious.1 Thus, among primitive peoples, religion being so large a part of life, the dance inevitably becomes of supreme religious importance. To dance was at once both to worship and to pray. Just as we still find in aur Prayer Books that there are divine services for all the great fundamental acts of life, • — for birth, for mar¬ riage, for death, • — as well as for the cosmic procession of the world as marked by ecclesiastical festivals, and for the great catastrophes of nature, such as droughts, so also it has ever been among primitive peoples. For all the solemn occasions of life, for bridals and for funerals, for .seed-time and for harvest, for war and for peace, for all these things there were fitting dances. To-day we find religious people who in church pray for rain or for the restoration of their friends to health. Their forefathers also desired these things, but, instead of praying for them, they danced for them the fitting dance which tradition had handed down, and which the chief or the medicine-man solemnly conducted. The gods themselves danced, as the stars dance in the sky — so at least the Mexicans, and we may be sure many other peoples, have held ; and to dance is there- 1 “Not the epic song, but the dance,” Wundt says (Vdlker psy¬ chologic, 3d ed. 1911, Bd. 1, Teil 1, p. 277), “accompanied by a monotonous and often meaningless song, constitutes everywhere the most primitive, and, in spite of that primitiveness, the most highly developed art. Whether as a ritual dance, or as a pure emotional expression of the joy in rhythmic bodily movement, it. rules the life of primitive men to &uclt a degree that ail other forms of art are subordinate to it.” THE DANCE OF LIFE 40 fore to imitate the gods, to work with them, perhaps to persuade them to work in the direction of our own desires. “Work for us!” is the song-refrain, expressed or implied, of every religious dance. In the worship of solar deities in various countries, it was customary to dance round the altar, as the stars dance round the sun. Even in Europe the popular belief that the sun dances on Easter Sunday has perhaps scarcely yet died out. To dance is to take part in the cosmic control of the world. Every sacred Dionysian dance is an imita¬ tion of the divine dance. All religions, and not merely those of primitive character, have been at the outset, and sometimes throughout, in some measure saltatory. That was recognised even in the ancient world by acute ob¬ servers, like Lucian, who remarks in his essay on danc¬ ing that “you cannot find a single ancient mystery in which there is no dancing; in fact most people say of the devotees of the Mysteries that ‘they dance them out.'” This is so all over the world. It is not more pronounced in early Christianity, and among the ancient Hebrews who danced before the ark, than among the Australian aborigines whose great cor- roborees. are religious dances conducted by the medi¬ cine-men with their sacred staves in their hands. Ev¬ ery American Indian tribe seems to have had its own religious dances, varied and elaborate, often with a richness of meaning which the patient study of modern investigators has but slowly revealed. The Shamans THE ART OF DANCING 41 in the remote steppes of Northern Siberia have their ecstatic religious dances, and in modern Europe the Turkish dervishes — perhaps of related stock — still dance in their cloisters similar ecstatic dances, com¬ bined with song and prayer, as a regular part of devo¬ tional service. These religious dances, it may be observed, are sometimes ecstatic, sometimes pantomimic. It is natural that this should be so. By each road it is possible to penetrate towards the divine mystery of the world. The auto-intoxication of rapturous move¬ ment brings the devotees, for a while at least, into that self-forgetful union with the not-self which the mystic ever seeks. The ecstatic Hindu dance in honour of the pre-Aryan hill god, afterwards Siva, became in time a great symbol, “the clearest image of the activity of God,” it has been called, “which any art or religion can boast of.” 1 Pantomimic dances, on the other hand, with their effort to heighten natural expression and to imitate natural process, bring the dancers into the divine sphere of creation and enable them to assist vicariously in the energy of the gods. The dance thus becomes the presentation of a divine drama, the vital reenactment of a sacred history, in which the wor¬ shipper is enabled to play a real part.2 In this way ritual arises. 1 See an interesting essay in The Dance of Siva: Fourteen Indian Essays, by Ananda Coomaraswamy. New York, 1918. * This view was clearly put forward, long ago, by W. W. Newell at the International Congress of Anthropology at Chicago in 1893. It has be¬ come almost a commonplace since. 42 THE DANCE OF LIFE It is in this sphere — highly primitive as it is — of pantomimic dancing crystallised in ritual, rather than in the sphere of ecstatic dancing, that we may to-day in civilisation witness the survivals of the dance in religion. The divine services of the American Indian, said Lewis Morgan, took the form of “set dances, each with its own name, songs, steps, and costume.” At this point the early Christian, worshipping the Divine Body, was able to join in spiritual communion with the ancient Egyptian or the later Japanese 1 or the modern American Indian. They are all alike privileged to enter, each in his own way, a sacred mystery, and to participate in the sacrifice of a heavenly Mass. What by some is considered to be the earliest known Christian ritual — the “Hymn of Jesus” assigned to the second century — is nothing but a sacred dance. Eusebius in the third century stated that Philo’s de¬ scription of the worship of the Therapeuts agreed at all points with Christian custom, and that meant the prominence of dancing, to which indeed Eusebius often refers in connection with Christian worship. It has been supposed by some that the Christian Church was originally a theatre, the choir being the raised stage, even the word “choir,” it is argued, meaning an en¬ closed space for dancing. It is certain that at the 1 See a charming paper by Marcella Azra Hincks, "The Art of Dancing in Japan,” Fortnightly Review , July, 1906. Pantomimic dancing, which has played a highly important part in Japan, was introduced into re¬ ligion from China, it is said, in the earliest time, and was not adapted to secular purposes until the sixteenth century. THE ART OF DANCING 43 Eucharist the faithful gesticulated with their hands, danced with their feet, flung their bodies about. Chrysostom, who referred to this behaviour round the Holy Table at Antioch, only objected to drunken excesses in connection with it; the custom itself he evidently regarded as traditional and right. While the central function of Christian worship is a sacred drama, a divine pantomime, the associations of Christianity and dancing are by no means confined to the ritual of the Mass and its later more attenuated transformations. The very idea of dancing had a sa¬ cred and mystic meaning to the early Christians, who had meditated profoundly on the text, “We have piped unto you and ye have not danced.” Origen prayed that above all things there may be made operative in us the mystery “of the stars dancing in Heaven for the salvation of the Universe.” So that the monks of the Cistercian Order, who in a later age worked for the world more especially by praying for it (“orare est la- borare”), were engaged in the same task on earth as the stars in Heaven ; dancing and praying are the same thing. St. Basil, who was so enamoured of natural things, described the angels dancing in Heaven, and later the author of the “Dieta Salutis” (said to have been St. Bonaventura), which is supposed to have in¬ fluenced Dante in assigning so large a place to dancing in the “ Paradiso,” described dancing as the occupation of the inmates of Heaven, and Christ as the leader of the dance. Even in more modern times an ancient 44 THE DANCE OF LIFE Cornish carol sang of the life of Jesus as a dance, and represented him as declaring that he died in order that man “may come unto the general dance.” 1 This attitude could not fail to be reflected in prac¬ tice. Genuine dancing, not merely formalised and un¬ recognisable dancing, such as the traditionalised Mass, must have been frequently introduced into Christian worship in early times. Until a few centuries ago it re¬ mained not uncommon, and it even still persists in re¬ mote corners of the Christian world. In English cathe¬ drals dancing went on until the fourteenth century. At Paris, Limoges, and elsewhere in France, the priests danced in the choir at Easter up to the seventeenth century, in Roussillon up to the eighteenth century. Roussillon is a Catalan province with Spanish tradi¬ tions, and it is in Spain, where dancing is a deeper and more passionate impulse than elsewhere in Europe, that religious dancing took firmest root and flourished longest. In the cathedrals of Seville, Toledo, Valencia, and Jeres there was formerly dancing, though it now only survives at a few special festivals in the first.2 At Alaro in Mallorca, also at the present day, a dancing 1 I owe some of these facts to an interesting article by G. R. Mead, “The Sacred Dance of Jesus,” The Quest , October, 1910. 2 The dance of the Seises in Seville Cathedral is evidently of great antiquity, though it was so much a matter of course that we do not hear of it until 1690, when the Archbishop of the day, in opposition to the Chapter, wished to suppress it. A decree of the King was finally obtained permitting it, provided it was performed only by men, so that evidently, before that date, girls as well as boys took part in it. Rev. John Morris, “Dancing in Churches,” The Month , December, 1892; also a valuable article on the Seises by J. B. Trend, in Music and Letters , January, 1921. THE ART OF DANCING 45 company called Els Cosiers, on the festival of St. Roch, the patron saint of the place, dance in the church in fanciful costumes with tambourines, up to the steps of the high altar, immediately after Mass, and then dance out of the church. In another part of the Christian world, in the Abyssinian Church — an offshoot of the Eastern Church — dancing is also said still to form part of the worship. Dancing, we may see throughout the world, has been so essential, so fundamental, a part of all vital and un¬ degenerate religion, that, whenever a new religion ap¬ pears, a religion of the spirit and not merely an anaemic religion of the intellect, we should still have to ask of it the question of the Bantu: “What do you dance? ” III Dancing is not only intimately associated with reli¬ gion, it has an equally intimate association with love. Here, indeed, the relationship is even more primitive, for it is far older than man. Dancing, said Lucian, is as old as love. Among insects and among birds it may be said that dancing is often an essential part of love. In courtship the male dances, sometimes in rivalry with other males, in order to charm the female; then, after a short or long interval, the female is aroused to share his ardour and join in the dance; the final climax of the dance is the union of the lovers. Among the mammals most nearly related to man, indeed, dancing is but little developed: their energies are more variously diffused, THE DANCE OF LIFE 46 though a close observer of the apes, Dr. Louis Robin* son, has pointed out that the “spasmodic jerking of the chimpanzee’s feeble legs,” pounding the partition of his cage, is the crude motion out of which “the heav¬ enly alchemy of evolution has created the divine movements of Pavlova”; but it must be remembered that the anthropoid apes are offshoots only from the stock that produced Man, his cousins and not his an¬ cestors. It is the more primitive love-dance of insects and birds that seems to reappear among human sav¬ ages in various parts of the world, notably in Africa, and in a conventionalised and symbolised form it is still danced in civilisation to-day. Indeed, it is in this aspect that dancing has so often aroused reprobation, from the days of early Christianity until the present, among those for whom the dance has merely been, in the words of a seventeenth-century writer, a series of “immodest and dissolute movements by which the cupidity of the flesh is aroused.” But in nature and among primitive peoples it has its value precisely on this account. It is a process of court¬ ship and, even more than that, it is a novitiate for love, and a novitiate which was found to be an admirable training for love. Among some peoples, indeed, as the Omahas, the same word meant both to dance and to love. By his beauty, his energy, his skill, the male must win the female, so impressing the image of him¬ self on her imagination that finally her desire is aroused to overcome her reticence. That is the task of the mule THE ART OF DANCING throughout nature, and in innumerable species besides Man it has been found that the school in which the task may best be learnt is the dancing-school. Those who have not the skill and the strength to learn are left behind, and, as they are probably the least capable members of the race, it may be in this way that a kind of sexual selection has been embodied in unconscious eugenics, and aided the higher development of the race. The moths and the butterflies, the African ostrich and the Sumatran argus pheasant, with their fellows in¬ numerable, have been the precursors of man in the strenuous school of erotic dancing, fitting themselves for selection by the females of their choice as the most splendid progenitors of the future race.1 From this point of view, it is clear, the dance per¬ formed a double function. On the one hand, the tend¬ ency to dance, arising under the obscure stress of this impulse, brought out the best possibilities the individ¬ ual held the promise of; on the other hand, at the mo¬ ment of courtship, the display of the activities thus ac¬ quired developed on the sensory side all the latent pos¬ sibilities of beauty which at last became conscious in man. That this came about we cannot easily escape concluding. How it came about, how it happens that some of the least intelligent of creatures thus developed a beauty and a grace that are enchanting even to our - See, for references, Havelock Ellis, Studies in the Psychology of Sex , vol. hi; Analysis of the Sexual Impulse , pp. 29, etc.; and Wester marck. History of Human Marriage , vol. 1, chap, xm, p. 470. 48 THE DANCE OF LIFE human eyes, is a miracle, even if not affected by the mystery of sex, which we cannot yet comprehend. When we survey the human world, the erotic dance of the animal world is seen not to have lost, but rather to have gained, influence. It is no longer the males alone who are thus competing for the love of the fe¬ males. It comes about by a modification in the earlier method of selection that often not only the men dance for the women, but the women for the men, each striv¬ ing in a storm of rivalry to arouse and attract the de¬ sire of the other. In innumerable parts of the world the season of love is a time which the nubile of each sex devote to dancing in each other’s presence, sometimes one sex, sometimes the other, sometimes both, in the frantic effort to display all the force and energy, the skill and endurance, the beauty and grace, which at this moment are yearning within them to be poured into the stream of the race’s life. From this point of view we may better understand the immense ardour with which every part of the won¬ derful human body has been brought into the play of the dance. The men and women of races spread all over the world have shown a marvellous skill and pa¬ tience in imparting rhythm and measure to the most unlikely, the most rebellious regions of the body, all wrought by desire into potent and dazzling images. To the vigorous races of Northern Europe in their cold damp climate, dancing comes naturally to be dancing of the legs, so naturally that the English poet, as a mat- THE ART OF DANCING 49 fcer of course, assumes that the dance of Salome was a ‘‘twinkling of the feet.” 1 But on the opposite side of the world, in Japan and notably in java and Madagas¬ car, dancing may be exclusively dancing of the arms and hands, in some of the South Sea Islands of the hands and fingers alone. Dancing may even be carried on in the seated posture, as occurs at Fiji in a dance connected with the preparation of the sacred drink, ava. In some districts of Southern Tunisia dancing, again, is dancing of the hair, and all night long, till they perhaps fall exhausted, the marriageable girls will move their heads to the rhythm of a song, maintaining their hair in perpetual balance and sway. Elsewhere, no¬ tably in Africa, but also sometimes in Polynesia, as well as in the dances that had established themselves in an¬ cient Rome, dancing is dancing of the body, with vi¬ bratory or rotatory movements of breasts or flanks. The complete dance along these lines is, however, that in which the play of all the chief muscle-groups of the body is harmoniously interwoven. When both sexes take part in such an exercise, developed into an ideal¬ ised yet passionate pantomime of love, we have the complete erotic dance. In the beautiful ancient civili¬ sation of the Pacific, it is probable that this ideal was 1 At an earlier period, however, the dance of Salome was understood much more freely and often more accurately. As Enlart has pointed out, on a capital in the twelfth-century cloister of Moissac, Salome holds a kind of castanets in her raised hands as she dances; on one of the western portals of Rouen Cathedral, at the beginning of the sixteenth century, she is dancing on her hands; v/hile at Hemelverdeghem she is really executing the morisco, the “danse du ventre." 50 t THE DANCE OF LIFE sometimes reached, and at Tahiti, in 1772, an old voy¬ ager crudely and summarily described the native dance as “an endless variety of posturings and wagglings of the body, hands, feet, eyes, lips, and tongue, in which they keep splendid time to the measured’ In Spain the dance of this kind has sometimes attained its noblest and most harmoniously beautiful expression. From the narratives of travellers, it would appear that it was especially in the eighteenth century that among all classes in Spain dancing of this kind was popular. The Church tacitly encouraged it, an Aragonese Canon told Baretti in 1770, in spite of its occasional indecorum, as a useful safety-valve for the emotions. It was not less seductive to the foreign spectator than to the people themselves. The grave traveller Peyron, towards the end of the century, growing eloquent over the languor¬ ous and flexible movements of the dance, the bewitch¬ ing attitude, the voluptuous curves of the arms, declares that, when one sees a beautiful Spanish woman dance, one is inclined to fling all philosophy to the winds. And even that highly respectable Anglican clergyman, the Reverend Joseph Townsend, was constrained to state that he could “almost persuade myself” that if the fandango were suddenly played in church the gravest worshippers would start up to join in that “lascivious pantomime.” There we have the rock against which the primitive dance of sexual selection suffers ship¬ wreck as civilisation advances. And that prejudice of civilisation becomes so ingrained that it is brought to THE ART OF DANCING 5* bear even on the primitive dance. The pygmies of Af¬ rica are described by Sir H. H. Johnston as a very dec¬ orous and highly moral people, but their dances, he adds, are not so. Yet these dances, though to the eyes of Johnston, blinded by European civilisation, “grossly indecent,” he honestly, and inconsistently, adds, are “danced reverently.” IV From the vital function of dancing in love, and its sa¬ cred function in religion, to dancing as an art, a pro¬ fession, an amusement, may seem, at the first glance, a sudden leap. In reality the transition is gradual, and it began to be made at a very early period in diverse parts of the globe. All the matters that enter into courtship tend to fall under the sway of art; their aes¬ thetic pleasure is a secondary reflection of their pri¬ mary vital joy. Dancing could not fail to be first in manifesting this tendency. But even religious danc¬ ing swiftly exhibited the same transformation ; dancing, like priesthood, became a profession, and dancers, like priests, formed a caste. This, for instance, took place in old Hawaii. The hula dance was a religious dance; it required a special education and an arduous train¬ ing; moreover, it involved the observance of important taboos and the exercise of sacred rites; by the very fact of its high specialisation it came to be carried out by paid performers, a professional caste. In India, again, the Devadasis, or sacred dancing girls, are at once both THE DANCE OF LIFE 52 religious and professional dancers. They are married to gods, they are taught dancing by the Brahmins, they figure in religious ceremonies, and their dances repre¬ sent the life of the god they are married to as well as the emotions of love they experience for him. Yet, at the same time, they also give professional performances in the houses of rich private persons who pay for them. It thus comes about that to the foreigner the Devada- sis scarcely seem very unlike the Ramedjenis, the danc¬ ers of the street, who are of very different origin, and mimic in their performances the play of merely human passions. The Portuguese conquerors of India called both kinds of dancers indiscriminately Balheideras (or dancers) which we have corrupted in Bayaderes.1 In our modern world professional dancing as an art has become altogether divorced from religion, and even, in any biological sense, from love; it is scarcely even possible, so far as Western civilisation is con¬ cerned, to trace back the tradition to either source. If we survey the development of dancing as an art in Em rope, it seems to me that we have to recognise two streams of tradition which have sometimes merged, but yet remain in their ideals and their tendencies es¬ sentially distinct. I would call these traditions the Classical, which is much the more ancient and funda¬ mental, and may be said to be of Egyptian origin, and 1 For an excellent account of dancing in India, now being degraded by modern civilisation, see Otto Rothfeld, Women 0/ India, chap. vil( “The Dancing Girl,” 1922. THE ART OF DANCING 53 the Romantic, which is of Italian origin, chiefly known to us as the ballet. The first is, in its pure form, solo dancing — though it may be danced in couples and many together — and is based on the rhythmic beauty and expressiveness of the simple human personality when its energy is concentrated in measured yet pas¬ sionate movement. The second is concerted dancing, mimetic and picturesque, wherein the individual is sub¬ ordinated to the wider and variegated rhythm of the group. It may be easy to devise another classification, but this is simple and instructive enough for our pur¬ pose. There can scarcely be a doubt that Egypt has been for many thousands of years, as indeed it still remains, a great dancing centre, the most influential dancing- school the world has ever seen, radiating its influence to south and east and north. We may perhaps even agree with the historian of the dance who terms it “the mother-country of all civilised dancing.” We are not entirely dependent on the ancient wall-pictures of Egypt for our knowledge of Egyptian skill in the art. Sacred mysteries, it is known, were danced in the temples, and queens and princesses took part in the orchestras that accompanied them. It is significant that the musical instruments still peculiarly associated with the dance were originated or developed in Egypt ; the guitar is an Egyptian instrument and its name was a hieroglyph already used when the Pyramids were being built; the cymbal, the tambourine, triangles, THE DANCE OF LIFE 54 castanets, in one form or another, were all familiar to the ancient Egyptians, and with the Egyptian art of dancing they must have spread all round the shores of the Mediterranean, the great focus of our civilisation, at a very early date.1 Even beyond the Mediterra¬ nean, at Cadiz, dancing that was essentially Egyptian in character was established, and Cadiz became the dancing-school of Spain. The Nile and Cadiz were thus the two great centres of ancient dancing, and Mar¬ tial mentions them both together, for each supplied its dancers to Rome. This dancing, alike whether Egyptian or Gaditanian, was the expression of the individual dancer’s body and art; the garments played but a small part in it, they were frequently trans¬ parent, and sometimes discarded altogether. It was, and it remains, simple, personal, passionate dancing, classic, therefore, in the same sense as, on the side of literature, the poetry of Catullus is classic. 2 1 I may hazard the suggestion that the gypsies may possibly have acquired their rather unaccountable name of Egyptians, not so much because they had passed through Egypt, the reason which is generally suggested, — for they must have passed through many countries, — but because of their proficiency in dances of the recognised Egyptian type. 2 It is interesting to observe that Egypt still retains, almost unchanged through fifty centuries, its traditions, technique, and skill in dancing, while, as in ancient Egyptian dancing, the garment forms an almost or quite negligible element in the art. Loret remarks that a charming Egyptian dancer of the Eighteenth Dynasty, whose picture in her trans¬ parent gauze he reproduces, is an exact portrait of a charming Almeh of to-day whom he has seen dancing in Thebes with the same figure, the same dressing of the hair, the same jewels. I hear from a physician, a gynaecologist now practising in Egypt, that a dancing-girl can lie on her back, and with a full glass of water standing on one side of her abdomen THE ART OF DANCING 55 Ancient Greek dancing was essentially classic danc¬ ing, as here understood. On the Greek vases, as re¬ produced in Emmanuel’s attractive book on Greek dancing and elsewhere, we find the same play of the arms, the same sideward turn, the same extreme back¬ ward extension of the body, which had long before been represented in Egyptian monuments. Many supposedly modern movements in dancing were cer¬ tainly already common both to Egyptian and Greek dancing, as well as the clapping of hands to keep time which is still an accompaniment of Spanish dancing. It seems clear, however, that, on this general classic and Mediterranean basis, Greek dancing had a de¬ velopment so refined and so special — though in technical elaboration of steps, it seems likely, inferior to modern dancing — that it exercised no influence outside Greece. Dancing became, indeed, the most characteristic and the most generally cultivated of Greek arts. Pindar, in a splendid Oxyrhynchine frag¬ ment, described Hellas, in what seemed to him su¬ preme praise, as “the land of lovely dancing,” and Athenaeus pointed out that he calls Apollo the Dancer. It may well be that the Greek drama arose out of dance and song, and that the dance throughout was an essential and plastic element in it. Even if we reject and an empty glass on the other, can by the contraction of the muscles on the side supporting the full glass, project the water from it, so as to fill the empty glass. This, of course, is not strictly dancing, but it is part of the technique which underlies classic dancing and it witnesses to the thoroughness with which the technical side of Egyptian dancing is still cultivated. THE DANCE OF LIFE k6 the statement of Aristotle that tragedy arose out of the Dionysian dithyramb, the alternative suppositions (such as Ridgeway’s theory of dancing round the tombs of the dead) equally involve the same elements. It has often been pointed out that poetry in Greece demanded a practical knowledge of all that could be included under “dancing.” Aeschylus is said to have developed the technique of dancing and Sophocles danced in his own dramas. In these developments, no doubt, Greek dancing tended to overpass the fundamental limits of classic dancing and foreshadowed the ballet.1 The real germ of the ballet, however, is to be found in Rome, where the pantomime with its concerted and picturesque method of expressive action was devel¬ oped, and Italy is the home of Romantic dancing. The same impulse which produced the pantomime pro¬ duced, more than a thousand years later in the same Italian region, the modem ballet. In both cases, one is inclined to think, we may trace the influence of the same Etruscan and Tuscan race which so long has had its seat there, a race with a genius for expressive, dra¬ matic, picturesque art. We see it on the walls of Etrus¬ can tombs and again in pictures of Botticelli and his fellow Tuscans. The modern ballet, it is generally be¬ lieved, had its origin in the spectacular pageants at 1 “We must learn to regard the form of the Greek drama as a dance form,” says G. Warre Cornish in an interesting article on “Greek Drama and the Dance” ( Fortnightly Review , February, 1913), “a musical symphonic dance-vision, through which the history of Greece and tins soul of man are portrayed.” j THE ART OF DANCING 57 the marriage of Galeazzo Visconti, Duke of Milan, in 1489. The fashion for such performances spread to the other Italian courts, including Florence, and Catherine de’ Medici, when she became Queen of France, brought the Italian ballet to Paris. Here it speedily became fashionable. Kings and queens were its admirers and even took part in it; great statesmen were its patrons. Before long, and especially in the great age of Louis XIV, it became an established institution, still an ad¬ junct of opera but with a vital life and growth of its own, maintained by distinguished musicians, artists, and dancers. Romantic dancing, to a much greater ex¬ tent than what I have called Classic dancing, which de¬ pends so largely on simple personal qualities, tends to be vitalised by transplantation and the absorption of new influences, provided that the essential basis of technique and tradition is preserved in the new devel¬ opment. Lulli in the seventeenth century brought women into the ballet ; Camargo discarded the compli¬ cated costumes and shortened the skirt, so rendering possible not only her own lively and vigorous method, but all the freedom and airy grace of later dancing. It was Noverre who by his ideas worked out at Stuttgart, and soon brought to Paris by Gaetan Vestris, made the ballet a new and complete art form; this Swiss-French genius not only elaborated plot revealed by gesture and dance alone, but, just as another and greater Swiss- French genius about the same time brought sentiment and emotion into the novel, he brought it into the bal- 58 THE DANCE OF LIFE let. In the French ballet of the eighteenth century a very high degree of perfection seems thus to have been reached, while in Italy, where the ballet had originated, it decayed, and Milan, which had been its source, be¬ came the nursery of a tradition of devitalised tech¬ nique carried to the finest point of delicate perfection. The influence of the French school was maintained as a living force into the nineteenth century, — when it was renovated afresh by the new spirit of the age and Taglioni became the most ethereal embodiment of the spirit of the Romantic movement in a form that was genuinely classic, — overspreading the world by the genius of a few individual dancers. When they had gone, the ballet slowly and steadily declined. As it de¬ clined as an art, so also it declined in credit and in pop¬ ularity; it became scarcely respectable even to admire dancing. Thirty or forty years ago, those of us who still appreciated dancing as an art — and how few they were! — had to seek for it painfully and sometimes in strange surroundings. A recent historian of dancing, in a book published so lately as 1906, declared that “the ballet is now a thing of the past, and, with the modern change of ideas, a thing that is never likely to be resus¬ citated.’ * That historian never mentioned Russian ballet, yet his book was scarcely published before the Russian ballet arrived to scatter ridicule over his rash prophecy by raising the ballet to a pitch of perfection it can rarely have surpassed, as an expressive, emotional; even passionate form of living art. THE ART OF DANCING 50 The Russian ballet was an offshoot from the French ballet and illustrates once more the vivifying effect of transplantation on the art of Romantic dancing. The Empress Anna introduced it in 1735 and appointed a French ballet-master and a Neapolitan composer to carry it on; it reached a high degree of technical per¬ fection during the following hundred years, on the traditional lines, and the principal dancers were all im¬ ported from Italy. It was not until recent years that this firm discipline and these ancient traditions were vitalised into an art form of exquisite and vivid beauty by the influence of the soil in which they had slowly taken root. This contact, when at last it was effected, mainly by the genius of Fokine and the enterprise of Diaghilev, involved a kind of revolution, for its out¬ come, while genuine ballet, has yet all the effect of de¬ licious novelty. The tradition by itself was in Russia an exotic without real life, and had nothing to give to the world; on the other hand, a Russian ballet apart from that tradition, if we can conceive such a thing, would have been formless, extravagant, bizarre, not subdued to any fine aesthetic ends. What we see here, in the Russian ballet as we know it to-day, is a splendid and arduous technical tradition, brought at last — by the combined skill of designers, composers, and dancers — into real fusion with an environment from which during more than a century it had been held apart; Russian genius for music, Russian feeling for rhythm, Russian skill in the use of bright colour, 50 THE DANCE OF LIFE and, not least, the Russian orgiastic temperament, the Russian spirit of tender poetic melancholy, and the general Slav passion for folk-dancing, shown in other branches of the race also, Polish, Bohemian, Bulgarian, and Servian. At almost the same time what I have termed Classic dancing was independently revived in America by Isadora Duncan , bringing back what seemed to be the free naturalism of the Greek dance, and Ruth St. Denis, seeking to discover and revitalise the secrets of the old Indian and Egyptian traditions. Whenever now we find any restored art of theatrical dancing, as in the Swedish ballet, it has been inspired more or less, by an eclectic blending of these two revived forms, the Romantic from Russia, the Classic from America. The result has been that our age sees one of the most splen¬ did movements in the whole history of the ballet, V Dancing as an art, we may be sure, cannot die out, but will always be undergoing a rebirth. Not merely as an art, but also as a social custom, it perpetually emerges afresh from the soul of the people. Less than a century ago the polka thus arose, extemporised by the Bohe¬ mian servant girl Anna Slezakova out of her own head for the joy of her own heart, and only rendered a per¬ manent form, apt for world-wide popularity, by the acci¬ dent that it was observed and noted down by an artist. Dancing has for ever been in existence as a spontaneous custom, a social discipline. Thus it is, finally, that THE ART OF DANCING 61 dancing meets us, not only as love, as religion, as art, but also as morals. All human work, under natural conditions, is a kind of dance. In a large and learned book, supported by an immense amount of evidence, Karl Bucher has argued that work differs from the dance, not in kind, but only in degree, since they are both essentially rhythmic. There is a good reason why work should be rhythmic, for all great combined efforts, the efforts by which alone great constructions such as those of megalithic days could be carried out, must be harmonised. It has even been argued that this necessity is the source of human speech, and we have the so-called Yo-heave-ho theory of languages. In the memory of those who have ever lived on a sailing ship — that loveliest of human creations now disappearing from the world — there will always linger the echo of the chanties which sailors sang as they hoisted the topsail yard or wound the capstan or worked the pumps. That is the type of primitive combined work, and it is indeed difficult to see how such work can be effectively accomplished without such a device for regulating the rhythmic energy of the muscles. The dance rhythm of work has thus acted socialisingly in a parallel line with the dance rhythms of the arts, and indeed in part as their in- spirer. The Greeks, it has been too fancifully sug¬ gested, by insight or by intuition understood this when they fabled that Orpheus, whom they regarded as the earliest poet, was specially concerned with moving 62 THE DANCE OF LIFE stones and trees. Bucher has pointed out that even poetic metre may be conceived as arising out of work; metre is the rhythmic stamping of feet, as in the tech¬ nique of verse it is still metaphorically called; iambics and trochees, spondees and anapaests and dactyls, may still be heard among blacksmiths smiting the anvil or navvies wielding their hammers in the streets. In so far as they arose out of work, music and singing and dancing are naturally a single art. A poet must al¬ ways write to a tune, said Swinburne. Herein the ancient ballad of Europe is a significant type. It is, as the name indicates, a dance as much as a song, per¬ formed by a singer who sang the story and a chorus who danced and shouted the apparently meaningless refrain ; it is absolutely the chanty of the sailors and is equally apt for the purposes of concerted work.1 Yet our most complicated musical forms are evolved from similar dances. The symphony is but a development of a dance suite, in the first place folk-dances, such as Bach and Handel composed. Indeed a dance still lingers always at the heart of music and even the heart of the composer. Mozart, who was himself an accom¬ plished dancer, used often to say, so his wife stated, that it was dancing, not music, that he really cared for. Wagner believed that Beethoven’s Seventh 1 it should perhaps be remarked that in recent times it has been denied that the old ballads were built up on dance songs. Miss Pound, for in¬ stance, in a book on the subject, argues that they were of aristocratic and not communal origin, which may well be, though the absence of the dance element does not seem to follow. THE ART OF DANCING 63 Symphony — to some of us the most fascinating of them and the most purely musical — was an apotheosis of the dance, and, even if that belief throws no light on the intention of Beethoven, it is at least a revelation of Wagner's own feeling for the dance. It is, however, the dance itself, apart from the work and apart from the other arts, which, in the opinion of many to-day, has had a decisive influence in socialis¬ ing, that is to say in moralising, the human species. Work showed the necessity of harmonious rhythmic cooperation, but the dance developed that rhythmic cooperation and imparted a beneficent impetus to all human activities. It was Grosse, in his “ Beginnings of Art,” who first clearly set forth the high social signifi¬ cance of the dance in the creation of human civilisation. The participants in a dance, as all observers of savages have noted, exhibit a wonderful unison; they are, as it were, fused into a single being stirred by a single im¬ pulse. Social unification is thus accomplished. Apart from war, this is the chief factor making for social solidarity in primitive life; it was indeed the best training for war. It has been a twofold influence; on the one hand, it aided unity of action and method in evolution : on the other, it had the invaluable function — for man is naturally a timid animal — of impart¬ ing courage; the universal drum, as Louis Robinson remarks, has been an immense influence in human af¬ fairs. Even among the Romans, with their highly de¬ veloped military system, dancing and war were de- THE DANCE OF LIFE 64 finitely allied ; the Salii constituted a college of sacred military dancers; the dancing season was March, the war-god’s month and the beginning of the war season, and all through that month there were dances in triple measure before the temples and round the altars, with songs so ancient that not even the priests could understand them. We may trace a similar influence of dancing in all the cooperative arts of life. All our most advanced civilisation, Grosse insisted, is based on dancing. It is the dance that socialised man. Thus, in the large sense, dancing has possessed pecul¬ iar value as a method of national education. As civi¬ lisation grew self-conscious, this was realised. “One may judge of a king,” according to ancient Chinese maxim, “by the state of dancing during his reign.” So also among the Greeks; it has been said that danc¬ ing and music lay at the foundation of the whole political and military as well as religious organisation of the Dorian states. In the narrow sense, in individual education, the great importance of dancing came to be realised, even at an early stage of human development, and still more in the ancient civilisations. “A good education,” Plato declared in the “Laws,” the final work of hm old age, “consists in knowing how to sing and dance well.” And in our own day one of the keenest and most enlightened of educationists has lamented the decay of dancing; the revival of dancing, Stanley Hall declares, is imperatively needed to give poise to the THE ART OF DANCING 65 nerves, schooling to the emotions, strength to the will, and to harmonise the feelings and the intellect with the body which supports them. It can scarcely be said that these functions of danc¬ ing are yet generally realised and embodied afresh in education. For, if it is true that dancing engendered morality, it is also true that in the end, by the irony of fate, morality, grown insolent, sought to crush its own parent, and for a time succeeded only too well. Four centuries ago dancing was attacked by that spirit, in England called Puritanism, which was then spread over the greater part of Europe, just as active in Bohemia as in England, and which has, indeed, been described as a general onset of developing Urbanism against the old Ruralism. It made no distinction be¬ tween good and bad, nor paused to consider what would come when dancing went. So it was that, as Remy de Gourmont remarks, the drinking-shop con¬ quered the dance, and alcohol replaced the violin. But when we look at the function of dancing in life from a higher and wider standpoint, this episode in its history ceases to occupy so large a place. The con¬ quest over dancing has never proved in the end a mat¬ ter for rejoicing, even to morality, while an art which has been so intimately mixed with all the finest and deepest springs of life has always asserted itself afresh. For dancing is the loftiest, the most moving, the most beautiful of the arts, because it is no mere translation or abstraction from life; it is life itself. It is the onl> 66 THE DANCE OF LIFE art, as Rahel Varnhagen said, of which we ourselves* are the stuff. Even if we are not ourselves dancers, but merely the spectators of the dance, we are still — • according to that Lippsian doctrine of Einftihlung or “empathy” by Groos termed “the play of inner imitation” — which here, at all events, we may accept as true — feeling ourselves in the dancer who is manh festing and expressing the latent impulses of our own being. It thus comes about that, beyond its manifold practical significance, dancing has always been felt to possess also a symbolic significance. Marcus Aurelius was accustomed to regard the art of life as like the dancer’s art, though that Imperial Stoic could not re¬ sist adding that in some respects it was more like the wrestler’s art. “ I doubt not yet to make a figure in the great Dance of Life that shall amuse the spectators in the sky,” said, long after, Blake, in the same strenuous spirit. In our own time, Nietzsche, from first to last, showed himself possessed by the conception of the art of life as a dance, in which the dancer achieves the rhythmic freedom and harmony of his soul beneath the shadow of a hundred Damoclean swords. He said the same thing of his style, for to him the style and the man were one: “My style,” he wrote to his intimate friend Rohde, “is a dance.” “Every day I count wasted,” he said again, “in which there has been no dancing.” The dance lies at the beginning of art, and we find it also at the end. The first creators of civi- THE ART OF DANCING 67 lisation were making the dance, and the philosopher of a later age, hovering over the dark abyss of insanity, with bleeding feet and muscles strained to the breaking point, still seems to himself to be weaving the maze of the dance. CHAPTER III THE ART OF THINKING I Herbert Spencer pointed out, in his early essay on “The Genesis of Science,” that science arose out of art, and that even yet the distinction is “purely con¬ ventional,” for “it is impossible to say when art ends and science begins.” Spencer was here using “art” in the fundamental sense according to which all practice is of the nature of art. Yet it is of interest to find a thinker now commonly regarded as so prosaic assert¬ ing a view which to most prosaic people seems fanciful. To the ordinary solid man, to any would-be apostle of common sense, science — and by “science” he usually means applied science — seems the exact opposite of the vagaries and virtuosities that the hard-headed homme moyen sensuel is accustomed to look upon as “art.” Yet the distinction is modern. In classic times there was no such distinction. The “ sciences ” — reason¬ ably, as we may now see, and not fancifully as was afterwards supposed — were “the arts of the mind.” In the Middle Ages the same liberal studies — gram¬ mar, logic, geometry, music, and the rest — could be spoken of either as “sciences” or as “arts,” and for Roger Bacon, who in the thirteenth century was so THE ART OF THINKING 69 genuine a man of science, every branch of study or learning was a “scientia.” I am inclined to think that it was the Mathematical Renaissance of the seven¬ teenth century which introduced the undue emphasis on the distinction between “science” and “art.” “All the sciences are so bound together,” wrote Descartes, the banner-bearer of that Renaissance, in his “Regies pour la Direction de l’Esprit,” “that it is much easier to learn them all at once than to learn one alone by detaching it from the others.” He added that we could not say the same of the arts. Yet we might perhaps say of arts and sciences that we can only under¬ stand them all together, and we may certainly say, as Descartes proceeded to say of the sciences alone, that they all emanate from the same focus, however di¬ versely coloured by the media they pass through or the objects they encounter. At that moment, however, it was no doubt practically useful, however theoreti¬ cally unsound, to overemphasise the distinction be¬ tween “science,” with its new instrumental precision, and “art.”1 At the same time the tradition of the old usage was not completely put aside, and a Master of “Arts” remained a master of such sciences as the directors of education succeeded in recognising until the middle of the nineteenth century. By that time 1 It would not appear that the pioneers of the Mathematical Renais¬ sance of the twentieth century are inclined to imitate Descartes in this matter. Einstein would certainly not, and many apostles of physical science to-day (see, e.g., Professor Sinithells, From a Modern University: Some Aims and Aspirations of Science ) insist on the aesthetic, imagina¬ tive, and other “art” qualities of science. THE DANCE OF LIFE 70 the development of the sciences, and especially of the physical sciences, as “the discovery of truth,” led to a renewed emphasis on them which resulted in the practical restriction of the term “art” to what are ordinarily called the fine arts. More formally, science became the study of what were supposed to be de¬ monstrable and systematically classifiable truths re¬ garding the facts of the world; art was separated off as the play of human impulses in making things. Sir Sidney Colvin, in the “Encyclopaedia Britannica,” after discussing the matter (which Mill had already discussed at length in his “Logic” and decided that the difference is that Science is in the Indicative Mood and Art in the Imperative Mood), concluded that science is “ordered knowledge of natural phenomena and of the relations between them,” or that “Science consists in knowing, Art consists in doing.” Men of science, like Sir E. Ray Lankester, accepted this con¬ clusion. That was as far as it was possible to go in the nineteenth century. But the years pass, and the progress of science itself, especially the sciences of the mind, has upset this dis¬ tinction. The analysis of “knowing” showed that it was not such a merely passive and receptive method of recognising “truth” as scientists had innocently sup¬ posed. This is probably admitted now by the Realists among philosophers as well as by the Idealists. Dr. Charles Singer, perhaps our most learned historian of science, now defines science, no longer as a body of THE ART OF THINKING 7i organized knowledge, but as “the process which makes knowledge/’ as “knowledge in the making”; that is to say, “the growing edge between the unknown and the known.” 1 As soon as we thus regard it, as a mak¬ ing process, it becomes one with art. Even physical science is perpetually laying aside the “facts” which it thought it knew, and learning to replace them by other “facts” which it comes to know as more satis¬ factory in presenting an intelligible view of the world. The analysis of “knowing” shows that this is not only a legitimate but an inevitable process. Such a process is active and creative. It clearly partakes at least as much of the nature of “doing” as of “knowing.” It involves qualities which on another plane, sometimes indeed on the same plane, are essentially those involved in doing. The craftsman who moulds conceptions with his mind cannot be put in a fundamentally different class from the craftsman who moulds conceptions with his hand, any more than the poet can be put in a totally different class from the painter. It is no longer possible to deny that science is of the nature of art. 1 C. Singer. “What is Science?” British Medical Journal , 25th June, 1921. Singer refuses the name of “science” in the strict sense to fields of completely organised knowledge which have ceased growing, like human anatomy (though, of course, the anatomist still remains a man of science by working outwards into adjoining related fields), preferring to term any such field of completed knowledge a discipline. This seems convenient and I should like to regard it as sound. It is not, however, compatible with the old doctrine of Mill and Colvin and Ray Lankester, for it ex¬ cludes from the field of science exactly what they regarded as most typically science, and some one might possibly ask whether in other departments, like Hellenic sculpture or Sung pottery, & completed art ceases to be art. 72 THE DANCE OF LIFE So it is that in the fundamental sense, and even, it will have to be added, in a sense that comprehends the ex¬ travagancies of wild variations from the norm, we have to recognise that the true man of science is an artist. Like the lunatic, the lover, the poet (as a great physi¬ cian, Sir William Osier, has said), the student is “of imagination all compact.” It was by his “wonderful imagination,” it has been well pointed out, that New¬ ton was constantly discovering new tracks and new processes in the region of the unknown. The extraor¬ dinary various life-work of Helmholtz, who initiated the valuation of beauty on a physiological basis, scientifically precise as it was, had, as Einstein has remarked, anaesthetic colouring. “There is no such thing as an unimaginative scientific man,” a distin¬ guished professor of mechanics and mathematics de¬ clared some years ago, and if we are careful to re¬ member that not every man who believes that his life is devoted to science is really a “scientific man,” that statement is literally true.1 It is not only true of the scientific man in the special sense ; it is also true of the philosopher. In every philosopher’s work, a phil¬ osophic writer has remarked, “the construction of a complete system of conceptions is not carried out simply in the interests of knowledge. Its underlying 1 It has often been pointed out that the imaginative application of science — artistic ideas like that of the steam locomotive, the flying- jnachine heavier than air, the telegraph, the telephone, and many others — were even at the moment of their being achieved, elaborately shown to be “impossible” by men who had been too hastily hoisted up to posi¬ tions of “scientific” eminence. THE ART OF THINKING 73 motive is aesthetic. It is the work of a creative art¬ ist/* 1 The intellectual lives of a Plato or a Dante, Professor Graham Wallas from a different standpoint has remarked, “were largely guided and sustained by their delight in the sheer beauty of the rhythmic re¬ lation between law and instance, species and indi¬ vidual, or cause and effect.”1 , That remark, with its reference to the laws and rhythm in the universe, calls to mind the great initi¬ ator, so far as our knowledge extends back, of scien¬ tific research in our European world. Pythagoras is a dim figure, and there is no need here to insist unduly on his significance. But there is not the slightest doubt about the nature of that significance in its bearing on the point before us. Dim and legendary as he now appears to us, Pythagoras was no doubt a real person, born in the sixth century before Christ, at Samos, and by his association with that great shipping centre doubtless enabled to voyage afar and glean the wisdom of the ancient world. In antiquity he was regarded, Cicero remarks, as the inventor of philosophy, and still to-day he is estimated to be one of the most original figures, not only of Greece, but the world. Pie is a figure full of interest from many points of view, 1 J. B. Baillie, Studies hn Human Nature (1921), p, 221. This point has become familiar ever since F. A. Lange published his almost epoch¬ marking work. The History of Materialism , which has made so deep an impress on many modern thinkers from Nietzsche to Vaihinger; it is in¬ deed a book which can never be forgotten (1 speak from experience) hf any one who read it in youth. * G. Wailas, The Great Society , p. 107. 74 THE DANCE OF LIFE however veiled in mist, but he only concerns us here because he represents the beginning of what we call “ science” — that is to say, measurable knowledge at its growing point-— and because he definitely represents it as arising out of what we all conventionally recognise as “art,1" and as, indeed, associated with the spirit of art, even its most fantastic forms, all the way. Pytha¬ goras was a passionate lover of music, and it was thus that he came to make the enormously fruitful dis¬ covery that pitch of sound depends upon the length of the vibrating chord. Therein it became clear that law and spatial quantity ruled even in fields which had seemed most independent of quantitative order. The beginning of the great science of mechanics was firmly set up. The discovery was no accident. Even his rather hostile contemporary Heraclitus said of Pytha¬ goras that he had “practised research and inquiry be¬ yond all other men.” He was certainly a brilliant mathematician ; he was, also, not only an astronomer, but the first, so far as we know, to recognise that the earth is a sphere, — so setting up the ladder which was to reach at last to the Copemican conception, — while his followers took the further step of affirming that the earth was not the centre of our cosmic system, but concentrically related. So that Pythagoras may not only be called the Father of Philosophy, but, with better right the Father of Science in the modern ex¬ act sense. Yet he remained fundamentally an artist even in the conventional sense. His free play of irn- THE ART OF THINKING 75 agination and emotion, his delight in the ravishing charm of beauty and of harmony, however it may sometimes have led him astray, — and introduced the reverence for Number which so long entwined fancy too closely with science, — yet, as Gomperz puts it, gave soaring wings to the power of his severe reason.1 One other great dim figure of early European an¬ tiquity shares with Pythagoras the philosophic domi¬ nance over our world, and that is the Platonic Socrates, or, as we might perhaps say, the Socratic Plato. And here, too, we are in the presence of a philosopher, if not a scientist, who was a supreme artist. Here again, also, we encounter a legendary figure concealing a more or less real human person. But there is a difference. While all are agreed that, in Pythagoras we have a great and brilliant figure dimly seen, there are many who consider that in Socrates we have a small and dim figure grown great and brilliant in the Platonic medium through which alone he has been really influential in our world, for without Plato the name of Socrates would have scarcely been mentioned. The problem of the Pythagorean legend may be said to be settled. But the problem of the Socratic legend is still under discussion. We cannot, moreover, quite put it aside as merely of academic interest, for its solution, if ever reached, would touch that great vital problem of art 1 Gomperz, Greek Thinkers , voL I, chap, m, where will be kruad . Attractive account of Pythagoras' career and poisitiosa. 76 THE DANCE OF LIFE in the actual world with which we are here throughout concerned. If one examines any large standard history of Greece, like Grote’s to mention one of the oldest and best, one is fairly sure to find a long chapter on the life of Socrates. Such a chapter is inserted, without apology, "without explanation, without compunction, as a matter course, in a so-called “history,” and nearly every one, even to-day, still seems to take it as a matter of course. Few seem to possess the critical and analytical mind necessary for the examination of the documents on which the “history” rests. If they approached this chapter in a questioning spirit, they might perhaps discover that it was not until about half a century after the time of the real Socrates that any “historical” evidence for the existence of our legendary Socrates begins to appear.1 Few people seem to realise that even of Plato himself we know nothing certain that 1 Always, it may perhaps be noted in passing, it seems to have been difficult for the sober and solemn Northerner, especially of England, to enter into the Greek spirit, all the more since that spirit was only the spirit of a sprinkling of people amid a hostile mass about as unlike any¬ thing we conventionally call “Greek” as could well be imagined, so that, as £lie Faure, the historian of art, has lately remarked, Greek art is a biological “monstrosity.” (Yet, I would ask, might we not say the same of France or of England?) That is why it is usually so irritating to read books written about the Greeks by barbarians; they slur over or ignore what they do not like and, one suspects, they instinctively misinterpret what they think they do like. Better even the most imperfect knowledge of a few original texts, better even only a few days on the Acropolis, than the second-hand opinions of other people. And if we must have a book about the Greeks, there is always Athenaeus, much nearer to them in time and in spirit, with all his gossip, than any Northern barbarian, and an everlasting delight. THE ART OF THINKING 77 could not be held in a single sentence. The “biogra¬ phies” of Plato began to be written four hundred year?? after his death. It should be easy to estimate their value. There are three elements — one of them immeasur¬ ably more important than the other two — of which the composite portrait of our modern Socrates is made up: Xenophon, Plato, the dramatists. To the con¬ tribution furnished by the first, not much weight is usually attached. Yet it should really have been regarded as extremely illuminating. It suggests that the subject of “Socrates” was a sort of school exercise, useful practice in rhetoric or in dialectics. The very fact that Xenophon’s Socrates was so remi¬ niscent of his creator ought to have been instruc¬ tive.1 It has, however, taken scholars some time to recognise this, and Karl Joel, who spent fifteen of the 1 Along another line it should have been clear that the dialogues of the philosophers were drama and not history. It would appear (Croiset, Litterature Grecque, vol. hi, pp. 448 et seq.) that with Epicharmus of Cos, who was settled in Megara at the beginning of the fifth century, phil¬ osophic comedy flourished brilliantly at Syracuse, and indeed fragment's of his formal philosophic dialogue survive. Thus it is suggested that Athenian comedy and sophistic prose dialogues may be regarded as tw* branches drawn from the ancient prototype of such Syracusan comedy, itself ultimately derived from Ionian philosophy. It is worth noting, I might add, that when we first hear of the Platonic dialogues they were being grouped in trilogies and tetralogies like the Greek dramas; that indicates, at all events, what their earliest editors thought about them. If is also interesting to note that the writer of, at the present moment, the latest handbook to Plato, Professor A. E. Taylor {Plato, 1922, pp. 32- 33), regards the “Socrates” of Plato as no historical figure, not even a mask of Plato himself, but simply “the hero of the Platonic drama,” which we have to approach in much the same way as the work of “a great dramatist or novelist.” 78 THE DANCE OF LIFE best years of his life over the Xenophontic Socrates, to discover that the figure was just as much a fiction as the Platonic Socrates, has lately confessed that he thinks those years rather wasted. It might have been clear earlier that what Plato had done was really just the same thing so far as method was concerned, though a totally different thing in result because done by the most richly endowed of poet-philosophers, the. most consummate of artists. For that is probably how we ought to regard Plato, and not, like some, as merely a great mystiffcator. It is true that Plato was the master of irony, and that “ irony,” in its fundamental mean¬ ing, is, as Gomperz points out, “ pleasure in mystify¬ ing.” But while Plato's irony possesses a significance which we must always keep before us, it is yet only one of the elements of his vast and versatile mind. It is to the third of these sources that some modem investigators are now inclined to attach primary signi¬ ficance. It was on the stage — in the branch of drama that kept more closely in touch with life than that which had fallen into the hands of the prose dialecti¬ cians and rhetoricians — that we seem to find the shadow of the real Socrates. But he was not the Socra¬ tes of the dramatic dialogues of Plato or even of Xeno¬ phon; he was a minor Sophist, an inferior Diogenes, yet a remarkable figure, arresting and disturbing, whose idiosyncrasies were quite perceptible to the crowd. It was an original figure, hardly the embodiment of a turning-point in philosophy, but fruitful of great possi- THE ART OF THINKING 79 bilities, so that we could hardly be surprised if the mas¬ ter of philosophic drama took it over from real life and the stage for his own purposes. To make clear to myself the possible way — I am far from asserting it was the actual way — in which our legendary Socrates arose, I sometimes think of Chid- ley. Chidley was an Australian Sophist and Cynic, in the good sense of both these words, and without doubt, it seems to me, the most original and remarkable figure that has ever appeared in Australia, of which, however, he was not a native, though he spent nearly his whole life there. He was always poor, and like most philoso¬ phers he was born with a morbid nervous disposition, though he acquired a fine and robust frame. He was liable not only to the shock of outward circumstances but of inward impulses; these he had in the past often succumbed to, and only slowly and painfully gained the complete mastery over as he gained possession of his own philosophy. For all his falls, which he felt acutely, as Augustine and Bunyan as well as Rousseau felt such lapses., there was in him a real nobility, an even ascetic firmness and purity of character. I never met him, but I knew him more intimately, perhaps, than those who came in contact with him. For many years I was in touch with him, and his last letter was written shortly before his death; he always felt I ought to be persuaded of the truth he had to reveal and never quite understood my sympathetic attitude of scepti¬ cism. He had devoured all the philosophic literature So THE DANCE OF LIFE he could lay hold of, but his philosophy — in the Greek sense, as a way of life, and not in our modern sense as a system of notions — was his own: a new vision of Na¬ ture’s simplicity and wholeness, only new because it had struck on a new sensibility and sometimes in ex¬ cessive and fantastic ways, but he held his faith with unbending devotion, and never ceased to believe that' all would accept the vision when once they beheld it. So he went about the streets in Sydney, clad (as a con¬ cession to public feeling) in bathing drawers, finding anywhere he could the Stoa which might serve for him, to argue and discuss, among all who were willing, with eager faith, keen mind, and pungent speech. A few were won, but most were disturbed and shocked. The police persistently harassed him; they felt bound to in¬ terfere with what seemed such an outrage on the prim decency of the streets; and as he quietly persisted in following his own course, and it was hard to bring any serious charge against him, they called in the aid of the doctors, and henceforth he was in and out of the asy¬ lum instead of the prison. No one need be blamed; it was nobody’s fault; if a man transgresses the ordinary respectable notions of decency, he must be a criminal, and if he is not a criminal, he must be a lunatic; the social organisation takes no account of philosophers ; the philosophic Hipparchia and her husband must not nowadays consummate their marriage in public, and our modern philosophers meekly agree that philosophy is to have nothing to do with a life. Every one in the THE ART OF THINKING 81 case seems to have behaved with due conventional propriety, just as every one behaved around the death* bed of Tolstoy’s Ivan Hitch. It was Chidley’s death¬ bed they were preparing, and he knew itr but he un¬ flinchingly grasped the cup they held out to him and drank it to the dregs. He felt he could do no other. There was no fabled hemlock in it, but it was just as deadly as though it had been accompanied by all the dramatic symbolisation of a formal condemnation to death, such as had really been recorded (Plato well knew) in old Athenian annals. There was no Plato in Sydney. But if there had been, it is hard to conceive any figure more fit for the ends of his transforming art. Through that inspiring medium the plebeian Sophist and Cynic, while yet retaining something of the asper¬ ity of his original shape, would have taken on a new glory, his bizarreries would have been spiritualised and his morbidities become the signs of mystic possession, his fate would have appeared as consecrated in form as it genuinely was in substance, he would have been the mouthpiece, not only of the truths he really uttered, but of a divine eloquence on the verge of which he had in real life only trembled, and, like Socrates in the hands of Plato, he would have passed, as all the finest philosophy passes at last, into music.1 So in the end Chidley would have entered modem history, just as 1 He had often been bidden in dreams to make music, said the Platonic Socrates in Plnado , and he had imagined that that was meant to en¬ courage him in the pursuit of philosophy, “ whid is the noblest and best os music.” 8 2 THE DANCE OF LIFE Socrates entered ancient history, the Saint and Martyr of Philosophy.1 If it should so be that, as we learn to see him truly, the figure of the real Socrates must diminish in magni¬ tude, then — and that is the point which concerns us here — the glory of the artist who made him what he has become for us is immensely enhanced. No longer the merely apt and brilliant disciple of a great master, he becomes himself master and lord, the radiant cre¬ ator of the chief figure in European philosophy, the most marvellous artist the world has ever known. So that when we look back at the spiritual history of Europe, it may become possible to say that its two supreme figures, the Martyr of Philosophy and the Martyr of Religion, were both — however real the two human persons out of which they were formed — • the work of man’s imagination. For there, on the one hand, we see the most accomplished of European thinkers, and on the other a little band of barbarians, awkwardly using just the same Greek language, work¬ ing with an unconscious skill which even transcends all that conscious skill could have achieved, yet both bear¬ ing immortal witness to the truth that the human soul only lives truly in art and can only be ruled through art. So it is that in art lies the solution of the conflicts 1 In discussing Socrates I have made some use of Professor Dupreel’a remarkable book, La Legends Socratique (1922). Dupreel himself, with a little touch of irony, recommends a careful perusal of the beautiful and monumental works erected by Zeller and Grote and Gomperz to the honour of Socrates. THE ART OF THINKING ®3 of philosophy. There we see Realism, or the discovery of things, one with Idealism, or the creation of things. Art is the embodied harmony of their conflict. That could not be more exquisitely symbolised than by these two supreme figures in the spiritual life of Europe, the Platonic Socrates and the Gospel Jesus, both alike presented to us, it is so significant to ob¬ serve, as masters of irony. There has never again been so great an artist in philosophy, so supreme a dramatist, as Plato. But in later times philosophers themselves have often been willing to admit that even if they were not, like Plato, dramatists, there was poetry and art in their vocation. “One does not see why the sense for Philosophy should be more generally diffused than that for poetry,” remarked Schellin-g, evidently regarding them as on the same plane. F. A. Lange followed with his memorable “History of Materialism,” in which the conception of philosophy as a poetic art was clearly set forth. “ Philosophy is pure art,” says in our own days a distinguished thinker who is in especially close touch with the religious philosophy of the East. “The thinker works with laws -of thought and scientific facts in just the same sense as the musical composer with tones. He must find accords, he must think out se¬ quences, he must set the part in a necessary relation to the whole. But for that he needs art.” 1 Bergson regards 1 Count Hermann Keyserling, Philosophic als Kunst (1920), p. 2. He associates this with the need for a philosophy to possess a subjective 84 THE DANCE OF LIFE philosophy as an art, and Croce, the more than rival of Bergson in popular esteem, and with interesting points of contact with the French philosopher, though his standpoint is so different, has repeatedly pointed out — as regards Nietzsche, for instance, and even as regards a philosopher to whom he is so closely related as Hegel — that we may read philosophy for its poetic rather than its historic truth. Croce’s position in this matter is not, indeed, easy to state quite simply. He includes aesthetics in philosophy, but he would not regard philosophy as an art. For him art is the first and lowest stratum in the mind, not in rank, but in order, and on it the other strata are laid and combine with it. Or, as he elsewhere says, “ art is the root of our whole theoretic life. Without root there can be neither flower nor fruit.” 1 But for Croce art is not itself flower or fruit. The “ Concept” and other abstrac¬ tions have to be brought in before Croce is satisfied that he has attained reality. It may, perhaps, indeed, be permitted, even to an admirer of the skill with which Croce spreads out such wide expanses of thought, to suggest that, in spite of his anxiety to keep close to the concrete, he is not therein always successful, and that he tends to move in verbal circles, as may perhaps hap¬ pen to a philosopher who would reduce the philosophy personal character, without which it can have no value, indeed no con¬ tent at all. : Croce, Problem i d ’ Estctica, p. 15. I have to admit, for myself, that, while admiring the calm breadth of Croce’s wide outlook, it is sometimes my misfortune, in spite of myself, when I go to his works, to play the vfc&rt of a Balaam & rcbours. I go forth to bless: and, somehow, I cutsr THE ART OF THINKING 85 of art to the philosophy of language. But, however that may be, it is a noteworthy fact that the close relationship of art and philosophy is admitted by the two most conspicuous philosophers of to-day, raised to popular eminence in spite of themselves, the Philoso¬ pher of Other-worldliness and the Philosopher of This-worldliness. If we turn to England, we find that, in an age and a land wherein it was not so easy to make the assertion as it has now more generally become, Sir Leslie Stephen, in harmony, whether or not he knew it, with F. A. Lange, wrote to Lord Morley (as he later be¬ came) in the last century: “ I think that a philosophy is really made more of poetry than of logic; and the real value of both poetry and philosophy is not the pretended reasoning, but the exposition in one form or other of a certain view of life.” It is, we see, just what they have all been saying, and if it is true of men of science and philosophers, who are the typical represen¬ tatives of human thinking, it is even true of every man on earth who thinks, ever since the day when conscious thinking began. The world is an unrelated mass of impressions, as it first strikes our infant senses, failing at random on the sensory mechanism, and all appear¬ ing as it were on the same plane. For an infant the moon is no farther away than his mother’s breast, even though he possesses an inherited mental apparatus fitted to coordinate and distinguish the two. It is only when we begin to think, that we can arrange these THE DANCE OF LIFE SC unrelated impressions into intelligible groups, and thinking is thus of the nature of art.1 All such art, moreover, may yet be said to be an invention of fictions. That great and fundamental truth, which underlies so much modern philosophy, has been expounded in the clearest and most detailed manner by Hans Vaihinger in his “Philosophic des Als Ob.” n Hans Vaihinger is still little known in England;2 and that is the more remarkable as he has always been strongly attached to English thought, of which his famous book reveals an intimate knowledge. In early life he had mixed much with English people, for whom he has a deep regard, and learnt to revere, not only Darwin, but Hume and J. S. Mill, who exerted a 1 James Hinton, a pioneer in so many fields, clearly saw that thinking is really an art fifty years ago. “Thinking is no mere mechanical proc¬ ess,” he wrote ( Chapters on the Art of Thinking , pp. 43 et seq.), “it is a great Art, the chief of all the Arts. . . . Those only can be called thinkers who have a native gift, a special endowment for the work, and have been trained, besides, by assiduous culture. And though we continually as¬ sume that every one is capable of thinking, do we not all feel that there is somehow a fallacy in this assumption? Do we not feel that what people set up as their ‘reasons’ for disbelieving or believing are often nothing of the sort?. . . The Art faculty is Imagination, the power of seeing the unseen, the power also of putting ourselves out of the centre, of reducing ourselves to our true proportions, of truly using our own impressions. And is not this in reality the chief element in the work of the thinker?. . . Science is poetry.” * So far, indeed, as I am aware, I was responsible for the first English account of his work (outside philosophical journals); it appeared in the London Nation and Athcneeum a few years ago, and is partly embodied in the present chapter. THE ART OF THINKING 87 decisive influence on his own philosophic development. At the beginning of his career he projected a history of English philosophy, but interest in that subject was then so small in Germany that he had regretfully to abandon his scheme, and was drawn instead, through no active effort on his part, to make the study of Kant the by-product of his own more distinctive work, yet it was a fitting study, for in Kant he saw the germs of the doctrine of the “as if,” that is to say, the practical significance of fiction in human life, though that is not the idea traditionally associated with Kant, who, indeed, was not himself clear about it, while his insight was further darkened by his reactionary tendencies; yet Vaihinger found that it really played a large part in Kant’s work and might even be regarded as his special and personal way of regarding things; he was not so much a metaphysician, Vaihinger remarks, as a % metaphorician. Yet even in his Kantian studies the English influence was felt, for Vaihinger’s work has here been to take up the Neo-Kantism of F. A. Lange and to develop it in an empirical and positivistic direction. There was evidently something in Vaihinger’s spirit that allied him to the English spirit. We may see that in his portrait; it is not the face of the philosophic dreamer, the scholarly man of the study, but the eager, forceful head of the practical man of action, the daring adventurer, the man who seems made to struggle with the concrete things of the world, the kind oi man, that S3 THE DANCE OF LIFE is to say, whom we consider peculiarly English. That, indeed, is the kind of man he would have been ; that is the kind of life, a social life full of activity and of sport, that he desired to lead. But it was impossible. An extreme and lifelong short-sightedness proved a handi¬ cap of which he has never ceased to be conscious. So it came about that his practical energy was, as it were, sublimated into a philosophy which yet retained the same forceful dynamic quality. For the rest, his origin, training, and vocation seem all to have been sufficiently German. He came, like many other eminent men, out of a Swabian parsonage, and was himself intended for theology, only branching off into philosophy after his university career was well advanced. At the age of sixteen he was deeply influ¬ enced, as so many others have been, by Herder’s “ Ideen zur Geschichte der Menschheit ” ; that not only harmonised with his own tendency at the time towards a mixed theism and pantheism, but it first planted within him the conception of evolution in human his¬ tory, proceeding from an animal origin, which became a fundamental element of his mental constitution.. When a year later he came across Darwin’s doctrines he felt that he knew them beforehand. These influ¬ ences were balanced by that of Plato, through whose “ Ideas” he caught his first glimpse of an “As-If world.” A little later the strenuous training of one of his teachers in the logical analysis of Latin syntax, especially in the use of the conjunctions, furnished the TIIE ART OF THINKING 89 source from which subsequently he drew that now well-known phrase. It was in these years that he reached the view, which he has since definitely ad¬ vocated, that philosophy should not be made a sepa¬ rate study, but should become a natural part and cor¬ ollary of every study, since philosophy cannot be fruitfully regarded as a discipline by itself. Without psychology, especially, he finds that philosophy is merely “ a methodic abstraction. ” A weighty influence of these days was constituted by the poems and essays of Schiller, a Swabian like himself, and, indeed, asso¬ ciated with the history of his own family. Schiller was not only an inspiring influence, but it was in Schiller’s saying, “ Error alone is life, and knowledge is death,” that he found (however unjustifiably) the first expression of his own “ fictionalism,” while Schiller’s doctrine of the play impulse as the basis of artistic creation and enjoyment seemed the prophecy of his own later doctrine, for in play he saw later the “as if” as the kernel of aesthetic practice and contem¬ plation. At the age of eighteen Vaihinger proceeded to the Swabian University of Tubingen and here was free to let his wide-ranging, eager mind follow its own im¬ pulses. He revealed a taste for the natural sciences and with this the old Greek nature philosophers, especially Anaximander, for the sake of their anticipations of modern evolutionary doctrines. Aristotle also occu¬ pied him, later Spinoza, and, above all, Kant, though 90 THE DANCE OF LIFE it was chiefly the metaphysical antinomies and the practical reason which fascinated him. As ever, it was what made for practice that seemed mostly to concern him. Schelling, Hegel, and Schleiermacher, the official German idealists, said nothing to him. He turned from them to Schopenhauer, and thence he drew the pessimisms, the irrationalism, and the voluntarism which became permanent features of his system of thought. The irrationalism, as he himself points out, was completely opposed to all early influences on him, but it lay in his own personal circumstances. The con¬ trast between his temperamental impulse to energetic practical action in every direction, and the reserve, passivity, and isolation which myopia enforced, seemed to him absolutely irrational and sharpened his vision for all the irrationality of existence. So that a philoso¬ phy which, like Schopenhauer’s, truthfully recognised and allowed for the irrational element in existence came like a revelation. As to Vaihinger’s pessimism, that, as we might expect, is hardly of what would be generally considered a pessimistic character. It is merely a recognition of the fact that most people are over-sanguine and thereby come to grief, whereas a little touch of pessimism would have preserved them from much misery. Long before the Great War, Vaihinger felt that many Germans were over-sanguine regarding the military power of their Empire, and of Germany’s place in the world, and that such optimism might easily conduce to war and disaster. In 1911 he THE ART OF THINKING even planned to publish anonymously in Switzerland a pamphlet entitled “ Finis Germanise,” with the motto “Quos Deus vult perdere, prius dementat,” and was only prevented by a sudden development of the eye- trouble. Vaihinger points out that an unjustified optimism had for a long time past led in the politics of Germany — and also, he might have said, of the countries later opposed to her — to lack of foresight, over-haste, and arrogance ; he might have added that a very slight touch of pessimism would also have enabled these countries, on both sides, to discover the not very remote truth that even the victors in such a contest would suffer scarcely less than the conquered. In early life Vaihinger had playfully defined Man as a “species of ape afflicted by megalomania” ; he admits that, whatever truth lies behind the definition, the state¬ ment is somewhat exaggerated. Yet it is certainly strange to observe, one may comment, how many people seem to feel vain of their own ungratified optimism when the place where optimism most flour¬ ishes is the lunatic asylum. They never seem to pause to reflect on the goal that lies ahead of them, though there must be few who on looking back cannot perceive what terrible accidents they might have foreseen and avoided by the aid of a little pessimism. When the gods, to ruin a man, first make him mad, they do it, almost invariably, by making him an optimist. One might hazard the assertion that the chief philosophic distinction between classic antiquity and modem THE DANCE OF LIFE 92 civilisation is the prevalence in the latter of a facile optimism; and the fact that of all ancient writers the most popular in modern times has been the com¬ placently optimistic (or really hedonistic) Horace is hardly due to his technical virtuosity. He who would walk sanely amid the opposing perils in the path of life always needs a little optimism; he also needs a little pessimism. Reference has been made to Vaihinger’s devouring appetite for knowledge. This, indeed, was extraordi¬ nary, and of almost universal range. There seem to have been few fields with which he failed to come in touch, either through books or by personal intercourse with experts. He found his way into all the natural sciences, he was drawn to Greek archaeology and Ger¬ man philosophy; he began the study of Sanscrit with Roth. Then, realising that he had completely neg¬ lected mathematics, he devoted himself with ardour to analytic geometry and infinitesimals, a study which later he found philosophically fruitful. Finally, in 1874, he may be said to have rounded the circle of his self-development by reading the just published en¬ larged and much improved edition of F. A. Lange’s “History of Materialism. ” Here he realised the pres¬ ence of a spirit of the noblest order, equipped with the widest culture and the finest lucidity of vision, the keenest religious radicalism combined with large- hearted tolerance and lofty moral equilibrium, all manifested in a completed master- work. Moreover, THE ART OF THINKING 93 the standpoint of F. A. Lange was precisely that which Vaihinger had been independently struggling towards, for it brought into view that doctrine of the place of fiction in life which he had already seen ahead. It is not surprising that he should generously and enthusiastically acclaim Lange as master and leader, though his subsequent work is his own, and has carried ideas of which Lange held only the seeds to new and fruitful development.1 It was in 1876-77 that Vaihinger wrote his book, a marvellous achievement for so youthful a thinker, for he was then only about twenty-five years of age. A final revision it never underwent, and there remain various peculiarities about the form into which it is cast. The serious failure in eyesight seems to have been the main reason for delaying the publication of a work which the author felt to be too revolutionary to put forth in an imperfect form. He preferred to leave it for posthumous publication. But the world was not standing still, and during the next thirty years many things happened. Vaihinger found the new sect of Pragmatists coming into fashion with ideas resembling his own, though in a cruder shape, which seemed to render philosophy the “ mere- trix theologorum.” Many distinguished thinkers were working towards an attitude more or less like his own, 1 I have based this sketch on an attractive and illuminating account of his own development written by Professor Vaihinger for Dr. Raymund Schmidt’s highly valuable series, Die Deutsche Philosophic der Gegcn- wart in Seibsldarsteliungcn (1921), vol. li. 94 THE DANCE OF LIFE especially Nietzsche, whom (like many others even to-day) he had long regarded with prejudice and avoided, but now discovered to be “a great liberator” with congenial veins of thought. Vaihinger realised that his conception was being independently put for¬ ward from various sides, often in forms that to him seemed imperfect or vicious. It was no longer ad¬ visable to hold back his book. In 1911, therefore, “Die Philosophic des Als Ob” appeared. The problem which Vaihinger set out to solve was this: How comes it about that with consciously false ideas we yet reach conclusions that are in harmony with Nature and appeal to us as Truth? That we do so is obvious, especially in the “exact” branches of science. In mathematics it is notorious that we start from absurdities to reach a realm of law, and our whole conception of the nature of the world is based on a foundation wThich we believe to have no existence. For even the most sober scientific investigator in science, the most thoroughgoing Positivist, cannot dispense with fiction; he must at least make use of categories, and they are already fictions, analogical fictions, or labels, which give us the same pleasure as children receive when they are told the “name” of a thing. Fiction is, indeed, an indispensable supplement to logic, or even a part of it ; whether we are working inductively or deductively, both ways hang closely together with fiction ; and axioms, though they seek to be primary verities, are more akin to fiction. If we had THE ART OF THINKING 95 realised the nature of axioms, the doctrine of Einstein, which sweeps away axioms so familiar to us that they seem obvious truths, and substitutes others which «$eem absurd because they are unfamiliar, might not have been so bewildering. Physics, especially mathematical physics, Vaihinger explains in detail, has been based, and fruitfully based, on fictions. The infinite, infinitely little or infinitely great, while helpful in lightening our mental opera¬ tions, is a fiction. The Greeks disliked and avoided it, and “the gradual formation of this conception is one of the most charming and instructive themes in the history of science/’ indeed, one of the most noteworthy spectacles in the history of the human spirit; we see the working of a logical impulse first feeling in the dark, gradually constructing ideas fitted to yield precious service, yet full of hopeless contradictions, without any relation to the real world. That absolute space is a fiction, Vaihinger points out, is no new idea. Hobbes had declared it was only a phantasma; Leibnitz, who agreed, added that it was merely “ the idolum of a few modem Englishmen,” and called time, extension, and movement “ choses ideates .” Berkeley, in attacking the defective conceptions of the mathematicians, failed to see that it was by means of, and not in spite of, these logically defective conceptions that they attained logi¬ cally valuable results. All the marks of fiction were set up on the mathematician’s pure space; it was impossi¬ ble and unthinkable; yet it proved useful and fruitful. 96 THE DANCE OF LIFE The tautological fiction of “ Force ” — an empty reduplication of the fact of a succession of relation¬ ships — is one that we constantly fall back on with immense satisfaction and with the feeling of having achieved something; it has been a highly convenient fiction which has aided representation and experience. It is one of the most famous, and also, it must be added, one of the most fatal of fantasies. For when we talk of, for instance, a “life-force ” and its elan , or whatever other dainty term we like to apply to it, we are not only summarily mingling together many separate phenom¬ ena, but we are running the risk that our conception may be taken for something that really exists. There is always temptation, when two processes tend to follow each other, to call the property of the first to be followed by the other its “force/' and to measure that force by the magnitude of the result. In reality we only have succession and coexistence, and the “ force ” is something that we imagine. We must not, therefore, treat our imagination with contempt as was formerly the fashion, but rather the reverse. The two great periods of English Philosophy, Vaihinger remarks, ended with Ockham and with Hume, who each took up, in effect., the fictional point of view, but both too much on the merely negative side, without realising the positive and constructive value of fictions. English law has above all realised it, even, he adds, to the point of absurdity. Nothing is so precious as fiction, provided only one chooses the right THE ART OF THINKING 97 fiction. “Matter” is such a fiction. There are still people who speak with lofty contempt of “Material¬ ism”; they mean well, but they are unhappy in their terms of abuse. When Berkeley demonstrated the impossibility of “matter,” he thought he could afford to throw away the conception as useless. He was quite wrong; it is logically contradictory ideas that are the most valuable. Matter is a fiction, just as the funda¬ mental ideas with which the sciences generally operate are mostly fictions, and the scientific materialisation of the world has proved a necessary and useful fiction, only harmful when we regard it as hypothesis and therefore possibly true. The representative world is a system of fictions. It is a symbol by the help of which we orient ourselves. The business of science is to make the symbol ever more adequate, but it remains a symbol, a means of action, for action is the last end of thinking. The “atom,” to which matter is ultimately reduced, is regarded by Vaihinger as equally a fiction, though it was at first viewed as an hypothesis, and it may be added that since he wrote it seems to have returned to the stage of hypothesis.1 But when with Boscovich the “atom” was regarded as simply the bearer of energy, it became “literally a hypostatised nothing.” We have 1 “Most workers on the problem of atomic constitution/’ remarks Sir Ernest Rutherford ( Nature , 5th August, 1922), “take as a working hypothesis that the atoms of matter are purely electrical structures, and that ultimately it is hoped to explain all the properties of atoms as a result of certain combinations of the two fundamental units of positiv® and negative electricity, the proton and electron.” 98 THE DANCE OF LIFE to realise at the same time that every “thing” is a “summatory fiction,” for to say, as is often said, that a “thing” has properties and yet has a real existence apart from its properties is obviously only a convenient manner of speech, a “verbal fiction.” The “force of attraction,” as Newton himself pointed out, belongs to the same class of summatory fictions. Vaihinger is throughout careful to distinguish fiction alike from hypothesis and dogma. He regards the distinction as, methodologically, highly important, though not always easy to make. The “dogma” is put forward as an absolute and unquestionable truth; the “hypothesis” is a possible or probable truth, such as Darwin’s doctrine of descent; the “fiction” is impos¬ sible, but it enables us to reach what for us is relatively truth, and, above all, while hypothesis simply con¬ tributes to knowledge, fiction thus used becomes a guide to practical action and indispensable to what we feel to be progress. Thus the mighty and civilising structure of Roman law was built up by the aid of what the Romans themselves recognised as fictions, while in the different and more flexible system of Eng¬ lish laws a constant inspiration to action has been furnished by the supposed privileges gained by Magna Carta, though we now recognise them as fictitious. Many of our ideas tend to go through the three stages of Dogma, Hypothesis, and Fiction, sometimes in that order and sometimes in the reverse order. Hypothesis especially presents a state of labile stability which is THE ART OF THINKING 99 unpleasant to the mind, so it tends to become either dogma or fiction. The ideas of Christianity, beginning as dogmas, have passed through all three stages in the minds of thinkers during recent centuries: the myths of Plato, beginning as fiction, not only passed through the three stages, but then passed back again, being now again regarded as fiction. The scientifically valuable fiction is a child of modern times, but we have already emerged from the period when the use of fiction was confined to the exact sciences. Thus we find fiction fruitfully flourishing in the biological and social sciences and even in the highest spheres of human spiritual activity. The Linnaean and similar classificatory systems are fictions, even though put forward as hypotheses, having their value simply as pictures, as forms of representation, but leading to contradictions and liable to be replaced by other systems which present more helpful pictures. There are still people who disdain Adam Smith’s “economic man,” as though proceeding from a purely selfish view of life, although Buckle, forestalling Vaihinger, long ago explained that Smith was deliberately making use of a “valid artifice,” separating facts that he knew to be in nature inseparable — he based his moral theory on a totally different kind of man — because so he could reach results approximately true to the observed phenomena. Bentham also adopted a fiction for his own system, though believing it to be an hypothesis, and Mill criticised it as being “geometrical”; the IOO THE DANCE OF LIFE criticism is correct, comments Vaihinger, but the method was not thereby invalidated, for in compli¬ cated fields no other method can be fruitfully used. The same law holds when we approach our highest and most sacred conceptions. It was recognised by enlightened philosophers and theologians before Vai¬ hinger that the difference between body and soul is not different from that between matter and force, — a pro¬ visional and useful distinction, — that light and dark¬ ness, life and death, are abstractions, necessary, indeed, but in their application to reality always to be used with precaution. On the threshold of the moral world we meet the idea of Freedom, “one of the weightiest conceptions man has ever formed,” once a dogma, in course of time an hypothesis, now in the eyes of many a fiction; yet we cannot do without it, even although we may be firmly convinced that our acts are deter¬ mined by laws that cannot be broken. Many other great conceptions have tended to follow the same course. God, the Soul, Immortality, the Moral World- Order. The critical hearers understand what is meant when these great words are used, and if the uncritical misunderstand, that, adds Vaihinger, may sometimes be also useful. For these things are Ideals, and all Ideals are, logically speaking, fictions. As Science leads to the Imaginary, so Life leads to the Impossible; without them we cannot reach the heights we are born to scale. “Taken literally, however, our most valuable conceptions are worthless/’ THE ART OF THINKING ioi When we review the vast field which Vaihinger sum¬ marises, we find that thinking and existing must ever be on two different planes. The attempt of Hegel and his followers to transform subjective processes into objective world-processes, Vaihinger maintains, will not work out. The Thing-in-Itself, the Absolute, re¬ mains a fiction, though the ultimate and most neces¬ sary fiction, for without it representation would be unintelligible. We can only regard reality as a Hera- clitean flux of happening — though Vaihinger fails to point out that this “ reality” also can only be an image or symbol — and our thinking would itself be fluid if it were not that by fiction we obtain imaginary standpoints and boundaries by which to gain control of the flow of reality. It is the special art and object of thinking to attain existence by quite other methods than that of existence itself. But the wish by so doing to understand the world is both unrealisable and fool¬ ish, for we are only trying to comprehend our own fictions. We can never solve the so-called world- riddle because what seem riddles to us are merely the contradictions we have ourselves created. Yet, though the way of thinking cannot be the way of being, since they stand on such different foundations, thinking always has a kind of parallelism with being, and though we make our reckoning with a reality that we falsify, yet the practical result tends to come out right. Just because thinking is different from reality, its forms must also be different in order to correspond 102 THE DANCE OF LIFE with reality. Our conceptions, our conventional signs, have a furtive function to perform; thinking in its lower grades is comparable to paper money, and in its higher forms it is a kind of poetry. Imagination is thus a constitutive part of all think¬ ing. We may make distinctions between practical scientific thinking and disinterested aesthetic thinking. Yet all thinking is finally a comparison. Scientific fictions are parallel with aesthetic fictions. The poet is the type of all thinkers: there is no sharp boundary between the region of poetry and the region of science. Both alike are not ends in themselves, but means to higher ends. Vaihinger’s doctrine of the “as if” is not immune from criticism on more than one side, and it is fairly ob¬ vious that, however sound the general principle, par¬ ticular “hctions” may alter their status, and have even done so since the book was written. Moreover, the doctrine is not always quite congruous with itself. Nor can it be said that Vaihinger ever really answered the question with which he set out. In philosophy, how¬ ever, it is not the attainment of the goal that matters, it is the things that are met with by the way. And Vai¬ hinger’s philosophy is not only of interest because it presents so clearly and vigorously a prevailing tend¬ ency in modern thought. Rightly understood, it sup¬ plies a fortifying influence to those who may have seen their cherished spiritual edifice, whatever it may be, fall around them and are tempted to a mood of disillu- THE ART OF THINKING 103 sionment. We make our own world; when we have made it awry, we can remake it, approximately truer, though it cannot be absolutely true, to the facts. It will never be finally made; we are always stretching forth to larger and better fictions which answer more truly to our growing knowledge and experience. Even when we walk, it is only by a series of regulated errors, Vaihinger well points out, a perpetual succession of falls to one side and the other side. Our whole progress through life is of the same nature ; all thinking is a regu¬ lated error. For we cannot, as Vaihinger insists, choose our errors at random or in accordance with what hap¬ pens to please us; such fictions are only too likely to turn into deadening dogmas: the old vis dormitiva is the type of them, mere husks that are of no vital use and help us not at all. There are good fictions and bad fic¬ tions just as there are good poets and bad poets. It is in the choice and regulation of our errors, in our readiness to accept ever-closer approximations to the unattain¬ able reality, that we think rightly and live rightly. We triumph in so far as we succeed in that regulation. 11 A lost battle,” Foch, quoting De Maistre, lays down in his “ Principes de Guerre,” “is a battle one thinks one has lost ” ; the battle is won by the fiction that it is won. It is so also in the battle of life, in the whole art of living. Freud regards dreaming as fiction that helps us to sleep ; thinking we may regard as fiction that helps us to live. Man lives by imagination. 104 THE DANCE OF LIFE in Yet what we consider our highest activities arise out of what we are accustomed to regard as the lowest. That is, indeed, merely a necessary result of evolution; bipeds like ourselves spring out of many-limbed crea¬ tures whom we should now regard as little better than vermin, and the adult human creature whose eyes, as he sometimes imagines, are fixed on the stars, was a few years earlier merely a small animal crawling on all fours. The impulse of the philosopher, of the man of science, of any ordinary person who sometimes thinks about seemingly abstract or disinterested questions — * we must include the whole range of the play of thought in response to the stimulus of curiosity — may seem at the first glance to be a quite secondary and remote prod¬ uct of the great primary instincts. Yet it is not diffi¬ cult to bring this secondary impulse into direct relation with the fundamental primary instincts, even, and per¬ haps indeed chiefly, with the instinct of sex. On the mental side — which is not, of course, its fundamental side — the sexual instinct is mainly, perhaps solely, a reaction to the stimulus of curiosity. Beneath that mental surface the really active force is a physiologi¬ cally based instinct urgent towards action, but the boy or girl who first becomes conscious of the mental stim¬ ulus is unaware of the instinct it springs from, and may even disregard as unimportant its specific physiological manifestations. The child is only conscious of new THE ART OF THINKING 105 curiosities, and these it persistently seeks to satisfy at any available or likely source of information, aided by the strenuous efforts of its own restlessly active imagi¬ nation. It is in exactly the same position as the meta¬ physician, or the biologist, or any thinker who is faced by complex and yet unsolved problems. And the child is at first baffled by just the same kind of obstacles, due, not like those of the thinker, to the silence of re¬ calcitrant Nature, but to the silence of parents and teachers, or to their deliberate efforts to lead him astray. Where do babies come from? That is perhaps for many children the earliest scientific problem that is in this way rendered so difficult of solution. No satisfy- r ing solution comes from the sources of information to which the child is wont to appeal. He is left to such slight imperfect observations as he can himself make; on such clues his searching intellect works and with the aid of imagination weaves a theory, more or less remote from the truth, which may possibly explain the phe¬ nomena. It is a genuine scientific process — the play of intellect and imagination around a few fragments of observed fact — and it is undoubtedly a valuable dis¬ cipline for the childish mind, though if it is too pro¬ longed it may impede or distort natural development, and if the resulting theory is radically false it may lead, as the theories of scientific adults sometimes lead, if not speedily corrected, to various unfortunate results. A little later, when he has ceased to be a child and io6 THE DANCE OF LIFE puberty is approaching, another question is apt to arise in the boy’s mind: What is a woman like? There is also, less often and more carefully concealed, the cor¬ responding curiosity in the girl’s mind. Earlier this question had seemed of no interest; it had never even occurred to ask it ; there was little realisation — some¬ times none at all — of any sexual difference. Now it sometimes becomes a question of singular urgency, in the solution of which it is necessary for the boy to con¬ centrate all the scientific apparatus at his command. For there may be no ways of solving it directly, least of all for a well-behaved, self-respecting boy or a shy, modest girl. The youthful intellect is thus held in full tension, and its developing energy directed into all sorts of new channels in order to form an imaginative picture of the unknown reality, fascinating because in¬ completely known. All the chief recognised mental processes of dogma, hypothesis, and fiction, developed in the history of the race, are to this end instinctively created afresh in the youthful individual mind, end¬ lessly formed and re-formed and tested in order to fill in the picture. The young investigator becomes a dili¬ gent student of literature and laboriously examines the relevant passages he finds in the Bible or other ancient primitive naked books. He examines statues and pic¬ tures. Perhaps he finds some old elementary manual of anatomy, but here the long list of structures with Latin names proves far more baffling than helpful to the youthful investigator who can in no possible way THE ART OF THINKING 107 fit them all into the smooth surface shown by the stat¬ ues. Yet the creative and critical habit of thought, the scientific mind generated by this search, is destined to be of immense value, and long outlives the time when the eagerly sought triangular spot, having fulfilled its intellectual function, has become a familiar region, viewed with indifference, or at most a homely tender¬ ness. That was but a brief and passing episode, however permanently beneficial its results might prove. With the achievement of puberty, with the coming of adoles¬ cence, a larger and higher passion fills the youth’s soul. He forgets the woman’s body, his idealism seems to raise him above the physical: it is the woman’s person¬ ality — most likely some particular woman’s personal¬ ity — that he desires to know and to grasp. A twofold development tends to take place at this age — in those youths, that is to say, who possess the latent attitude for psychic development — and that in two diverse directions, both equally away from definite physical desire, which at this age is sometimes, though not always, at its least prominent place in conscious¬ ness. On the one hand there is an attraction for an idealised person — perhaps a rather remote person, for such most easily lend themselves to idealisation — of the opposite (or occasionally the same) sex, it may sometimes for a time even be the heroine of a novel. Such an ideal attraction acts as an imaginative and emotional ferment. The imagination is stimulated to io8 THE DANCE OF LIFE construct for the first time, from such material as it has come across, or can derive from within, the coherent picture of a desirable person. The emotions are trained and disciplined to play around the figure thus con¬ structed with a new impersonal and unselfish, even self- sacrificing, devotion. But this process is not enough to use up all the energies of the developing mind, and the less so as such impulses are unlikely by their very na¬ ture to receive any considerable degree of gratification, for they are of a nature to which no adequate response is possible. Thus it happens in adolescence that this new stream of psychic energy, emotional and intellectual, generated from within, concurrently with its primary personal function of moulding the object of love, streams over into another larger and more impersonal channel. It is, indeed, lifted on to a higher plane and transformed, to exercise a fresh function by initiating new objects of ideal desire. The radiant images of religion and of art as well as of science — however true it may be that they have also other adjuvant sources — thus begin to emerge from the depths beneath consciousness. They tend to absorb and to embody the new energy, while its primary personal object may sink into the background, or at this age even fail to be conscious at all. This process — the process in which all abstract thinking is born as well as all artistic creation — must to some slight extent take place in every person whose mental activity is not entirely confined to the immedi- THE ART OF THINKING 109 ate objects of sense. But in persons of more complex psychic organisation it is a process of fundamental im¬ portance. In those of the highest complex organisation, indeed, it becomes what we term genius. In the most magnificent achievements of poetry and philosophy, of art and of science, it is no longer forbidden to see the ultimate root in this adolescent development. To some a glimpse of this great truth has from time to time appeared. Ferrero, who occupied himself with psychology before attaining eminence as a brilliant historian, suggested thirty years ago that the art im¬ pulse and its allied manifestations are transformed sex¬ ual instinct; the sexual impulse is “the raw material, so to speak, from which art springs”; he connected that transformation with a less development of the sexual emotions in women ; but that was much too hasty an as¬ sumption, for apart from the fact that such transforma¬ tion could never be complete, and probably less so in women than in men, we have also to consider the nature of the two organisms through which the transformed emotions would operate, probably unlike in the sexes, for the work done by two machines obviously does not depend entirely upon feeding them with the same amount of fuel, but also on the construction of the two engines. Mobius, a brilliant and original, if not erratic, German psychologist, who was also concerned with the question of difference in the amount of sexual energy, regarded the art impulse as a kind of sexual secondary character. That is to say, no doubt, — if we develop no THE DANCE OF LIFE the suggestion, — that just as the external features oJ the male and his external activities, in the ascending zoological series, have been developed out of the im¬ pulse of repressed organic sexual desire striving to man¬ ifest itself ever more urgently in the struggle to over¬ come the coyness of the female, so on the psychic side there has been a parallel impulse, if of later develop¬ ment, to carry on the same task in forms of art which have afterwards acquired an independent activity and a yet further growth dissociated from this primary bio¬ logical function. We think of the natural ornaments which adorn male animals from far down in the scale even up to man, of the additions made thereto by tat¬ tooing and decoration and garments and jewels, of the parades and dances and songs and musical serenades found among lower animals as well as Man, together with the love-lyrics of savages, furnishing the begin¬ nings of the most exquisite arts of civilisation. It is to be noted, however, that these suggestions in¬ troduce an assumption of male superiority, or male in¬ feriority — according to our scheme of values — which unnecessarily prejudices and confuses the issue. W7e have to consider the question of the origin of art apart from any supposed predominance of its manifestations in one sex or the other. In my own conception — put forward a quarter of a century ago — of what I called auto-erotic activities, it was on such a basis that I sought to place it, since I regarded those auto-erotic phenomena as arising from the impeded spontaneous THE ART OF THINKING in sexual energy of the organism and extending from sim¬ ple physical processes to the highest psychic manifesta¬ tions; “it is impossible to say what finest elements in art, in morals, in civilisation generally, may not really be rooted in an auto-erotic impulse,” though I was care¬ ful to add that the transmutation of sexual energy into other forms of force must not be regarded as itself com¬ pletely accounting for all the finest human aptitudes of sympathy and art and religion.1 It is along this path, it may perhaps be claimed, — as dimly glimpsed by Nietzsche, Hinton, and other earlier thinkers, — that the main explanation of the dynamic process by which the arts, in the widest sense, have come into being, is now chiefly being explored. One thinks of Freud and especially of Dr. Otto Rank, perhaps the most brilliant and clairvoyant of the younger investigators who still stand by the master’s side. In 1905 Rank wrote a little essay on the artist3 in which this mechanism is set forth and the artist placed, in what the psycho-analytic author considers his due place, between the ordinary dreamer at one end and the neurotic subject at the other, the lower forms of art, such as myth-making, standing near to dreams, and the higher forms, such as the drama, philosophy, and the founding of religions, near to psycho-neurosis, but all possessing a sublimated life-force which has its root in some modification of sexual energy. 1 Havelock Ellis, Studies in the Psychology of Sex, vol. 1. * Otto Rank, Der Kiinstler : Ansdtze zu einer Sexual Psychologic. 112 THE DANCE OF LIFE It may often seem that, in these attempts to explain the artist, the man of science is passed over or left in the background, and that is true. But art and science, as we now know, have the same roots. The supreme men of science are recognisably artists, and the earliest forms of art, which are very early indeed, — Sir Ar¬ thur Evans has suggested that men may have drawn before they talked, — were doubtless associated with magic, which was primitive man’s science, or, at all events, his nearest approximation to science. The connection of the scientific instinct with the sexual instinct is not, indeed, a merely recent insight. Many years ago it was clearly stated by a famous Dutch author. “Nature, who must act wisely at the risk of annihilation,’’ wrote Multatuli at the conclusion of his short story, “The Adventures of Little Walter,” “has herein acted wisely by turning all her powers in one direction. Moralists and psychologists have long since recognised, without inquiring into the causes, that curiosity is one of the main elements of love. Yet they were only thinking of sexual love, and by raising the two related termini in corresponding wise on to a higher plane I believe that the noble thirst for knowl¬ edge springs from the same soil in which noble love grows. To press through, to reveal, to possess, to di¬ rect, and to ennoble, that is the task and the longing, alike of the lover and the natural discoverer. So that every Ross or Franklin is a Werther of the Pole, and whoever is in love is a Mungo Park of the spirit.” THE ART OF THINKING 113 IV As soon as we begin to think about the world around us in what we vainly call a disinterested way — for disin¬ terest is, as Leibnitz said, a chimera, and there remains a superior interest — we become youths and lovers and artists, and there is at the same time a significant strain of sexual imagery in our thought.1 Among our¬ selves this is not always clear; we have been dulled by the routine of civilisation and the artificial formalities of what is called education. It is clear in the mytho- poeic creation of comparative primitive thought, but in civilisation it is in the work of men of genius — poets, philosophers, painters, and, as we have to recognise, men of science — that this trait is most conspicuously manifested. To realise this it is sufficient to contem¬ plate the personality and activity of one of the earliest great modern men of science, of Leonardo da Vinci. Until recent times it would have seemed rather strange so to describe Leonardo da Vinci. He still seemed, as he was in his own time, primarily a painter, an artist in the conventionally narrow sense, and as such one of the greatest, fit to paint, as Browning put it, one of the four walls of the New Jerusalem. Yet even his contem¬ poraries who so acclaimed him were a little worried about Leonardo in this capacity. He accomplished so 1 The sexual strain in the symbolism of language is touched on in my Studies in the Psychology of Sex, vol. v, and similar traits in primitive legends have been emphasised — many would say over-emphasised — - by Freud and Jung. ii4 THE DANCE OF LIFE little, he worked so slowly, he left so much unfinished, he seemed to them so volatile and unstable. He was an enigma to which they never secured the key. They failed to see, though it is clearly to be read even in his face, that no man ever possessed a more piercing con¬ centration of vision, a more fixed power of attention, a more unshakable force of will. All that Leonardo achieved in painting and in sculpture and in architec¬ ture, however novel or grandiose, was, as Solmi, the highly competent Vincian scholar has remarked, merely a concession to his age, in reality a violence done to his own nature, and from youth to old age he had directed his whole strength to one end : the knowledge and the mastery of Nature. In our own time, a sensitive, alert, widely informed critic of art, Bernhard Berenson, set¬ ting out with the conventional veneration for Leonardo as a painter, slowly, as the years went by and his judg¬ ment grew more mature, adopted a more critical at¬ titude, bringing down his achievements in art to moderate dimensions, yet without taking any interest in Leonardo as a stupendous artist in science. We may well understand that vein of contempt for the crowd, even as it almost seems the hatred for human society, the spirit of Timon, which runs across Leonardo’s writings, blended, no doubt inevitably blended, with his vein of human sweetness. This stem devotee of knowledge declared, like the author of “The Imitation of Christ,” that “Love conquers all things.” There is here no discrepancy. The man who poured a contemp- THE ART OF THINKING 115 tuous flood of irony and denunciation over the most sacred social institutions and their most respectable representatives was the same man — the Gospels tell us — who brooded with the wings of a maternal tender¬ ness over the pathos of human things. When, indeed, our imagination plays with the idea of a future Overman, it is Leonardo who comes be¬ fore us as his forerunner. Vasari, who had never seen Leonardo, but has written so admirable an account of him, can only describe him as “supernatural” and “divine.” In more recent times Nietzsche remarked of Leonardo that “there is something super- European and silent in him, the characteristic of one who has seen too wide a circle of things good and evil.” There Nietzsche touches, even though vaguely, more nearly than Vasari could, the distinguishing mark of this end¬ lessly baffling and enchanting figure. Every man of genius sees the world at a different angle from his fel¬ lows, and there is his tragedy. But it is usually a meas¬ urable angle. We cannot measure the angle at which Leonardo stands; he strikes athwart the line of our conventional human thought in ways that are some¬ times a revelation and sometimes an impenetrable mystery. We are reminded of the saying of Heraclitus: “Men hold some things wrong and some right; God holds all things fair.” The dispute as to whether he was above all an artist or a man of science is a foolish and even unmeaning dispute. In the vast orbit in which Leonardo moved the distinction had little or no ex- n6 THE DANCE OF LIFE istence. That was inexplicable to his contemporaries whose opinions Vasari echoes. They could not under¬ stand that he was not of the crowd of makers of pretty things who filled the workshops of Florence. They saw a man of beautiful aspect and fine proportions, with a long curled beard and wearing a rose-coloured tunic, and they called him a craftsman, an artist, and thought him rather fantastic. But the medium in which this artist worked was Nature, the medium in which the scientist works; every problem in painting was to Leonardo a problem in science, every problem in physics he approached in the spirit of the artist. "Human ingenuity,” he said, “can never devise any¬ thing more simple and more beautiful, or more to the purpose, than Nature does.” For him, as later for Spinoza, reality and perfection were the same thing. Both aspects of life he treats as part of his task — the extension of the field of human knowledge, the inten¬ sion of the power of human skill ; for art, or, as he called it, practice, without science, he said, is a boat without a rudder. Certainly he occupied himself much with painting, the common medium of self-expression in his day, though he produced so few pictures; he even wrote a treatise on painting; he possessed, indeed, a wider perception of its possibilities than any artist who ever lived. “Here is the creator of modern landscape ! ” exclaimed Corot before Leonardo’s pictures, and a re¬ markable description he has left of the precise effects of colour and light produced when a woman in white THE ART OF THINKING 117 stands on green grass in bright sunshine shows that Leonardo clearly apprehended the plein-airiste' s prob¬ lem. Doubtless it will prove possible to show that he foresaw still later methods. He rejected these methods because it seemed to him that the artist could work- most freely by moving midway between light and darkness, and, indeed, he, first of painters, succeeded in combining them — just as he said also that Pleasure and Pain should be imaged as twins since they are ever together, yet back to back because ever contrary — and devised the method of chiaroscuro , by which light reveals the richness of shade and shade heightens the brightness of light. No invention could be more characteristic of this man whose grasp of the world ever involved the union of opposites, and the opposites both apprehended more intensely than falls to the lot of other men. Yet it is noteworthy that Leonardo constantly speaks of the artist’s function as searching into and imi¬ tating Nature, a view which the orthodox artist an¬ athematises. But Leonardo was not the orthodox art¬ ist, not even, perhaps, as he is traditionally regarded, one of the world’s supreme painters. For one may sympathise with Mr. Berenson’s engaging attempt — unconvincing as it has seemed — to 4 ‘expose” Leo¬ nardo. The drawings Mr. Berenson, like every one else, admires whole-heartedly, but, save for the unfinished “Adoration,” which he regards as a summit of art, he finds the paintings mostly meaningless and repellent. Ii8 THE DANCE OF LIFE He cannot rank Leonardo as an artist higher than Botticelli, and concludes that he was not so much a great painter as a great inventor in painting. With that conclusion it is possible that Leonardo himself would have agreed. Painting was to him, he said, a subtle invention whereby philosophical speculation can be applied to all the qualities of forms. He seemed to himself to be, here and always, a man standing at the mouth of the gloomy cavern of Nature with arched back, one hand resting on his knee and the other shad¬ ing his eyes, as he peers intently into the darkness, possessed by fear and desire, fear of the threatening gloom of that cavern, desire to discover what miracle it might hold. We are far here from the traditional attitude of the painter; we are nearer to the attitude of that great seeker into the mysteries of Nature, one of the very few born of women to whom we can ever even passingly compare Leonardo, who felt in old age that he had only been a child gathering shells and pebbles on the shore of the great ocean of truth. It is almost as plausible to regard Leonardo as pri¬ marily an engineer as primarily a painter. He offered his services as a military engineer and architect to the Duke of Milan and set forth at length his manifold claims which include, one may note, the ability to construct what we should now, without hesitation, describe as “tanks/’ At a later period he actually was appointed architect and engineer-general to Caesar Borgia, and in this capacity was engaged on a variety THE ART OF THINKING 1x9 of works. He has, indeed, been described as the founder of professional engineering. He was the seer of coming steam engines and of steam navigation and transportation. He was, again, the inventor of innu¬ merable varieties of ballistic machines and ordnance, of steam guns and breech-loading arms with screw breech-lock. His science always tended to become ap¬ plied science. Experience shows the road to practice, he said, science is the guide to art. Thus he saw every problem in the world as in the wide sense a problem in engineering. All nature was a dynamic process of forces beautifully effecting work, and it is this as it were distinctive vision of the world as a whole which seems to give Leonardo that marvellous flair for de¬ tecting vital mechanism in every field. It is impossible even to indicate summarily the vast extent of the re¬ gion in which he was creating a new world, from the statement, which he set down in large letters, “The sun does not move,” the earth being, he said, a star, “much like the moon,” down to such ingenious original devices as the construction of a diving-bell, a swim¬ ming-belt, and a parachute of adequate dimensions, while, as is now well known, Leonardo not only medi¬ tated with concentrated attention on the problem of flight, but realised scientifically the difficulties to be encountered, and made ingenious attempts to over¬ come them in the designing of flying-machines. It is enough — following expert scientific guidance — to enumerate a few points : he studied botany in the bio- 120 THE DANCE OF LIFE logical spirit; he was a founder of geology, discovering the significance of fossils and realising the importance of river erosion; by his studies in the theories of mechanics and their utilization in peace and war he made himself the prototype of the modern man of science. He was in turn biologist in every field of vital mechanism, and the inaugurator before Vesalius (who, however, knew nothing of his predecessor’s work) of the minute study of anatomy by direct in¬ vestigation (after he had found that Galen could not be relied on) and post-mortem dissections; he nearly anticipated Harvey’s conception of the circulation of the blood by studying the nature of the heart as a pump. He was hydraulician, hydrographer, geome¬ trician, algebraist, mechanician, optician.1 These are but a few of the fields in which Leonardo’s marvellous insight into the nature of the forces that make the world and his divining art of the methods of employ¬ ing them to human use have of late years been re¬ vealed. For centuries they were concealed in note¬ books scattered through Europe and with difficulty decipherable. Yet they are not embodied in vague utterances or casual intuitions, but display a laborious concentration on the precise details of the difficulties to be overcome; nor was patient industry in him, as often happens, the substitute for natural facility, for 1 Einstein, in conversation with Moszkowski, expressed doubt as to the reality of Leonardo’s previsions of modern science. But it scarcely appeared that he had investigated the matter, while the definite testi¬ mony of the experts in many fields who have done so cannot be put aside. THE ART OF THINKING 121 he was a person of marvellous natural facility, and, like such persons, most eloquent and persuasive in speech. At the same time his more general and reflec¬ tive conclusions are expressed in a style combining the maximum of clarity with the maximum of con¬ cision, — far, indeed, removed from the characteristic florid redundancy of Italian prose, — which makes Leonardo, in addition to all else, a supreme master of language.1 Yet the man to whom we must credit these vast intellectual achievements was no abstracted philoso¬ pher shut up in a laboratory. He was, even to look upon, one of the most attractive and vivid figures that ever walked the earth. As has sometimes happened with divine and mysterious persons, he was the natural child of his mother, Caterina, of whom we are only told that she was “of good blood,” belonging to Vinci like Ser Piero the father, and that a few years after Leo¬ nardo’s birth she became the reputable wife of a citi¬ zen of his native town. Ser Piero da Vinci was a notary, of a race of notaries, but the busiest notary in Florence and evidently a man of robust vigour; he married four times and his youngest child was fifty years the junior of Leonardo. We hear of the extraordinary physical 1 For the Italian reader of Leonardo the fat little volume of Frammenti , edited by Dr. Solmi and published by Barbera, is a precious and inex¬ haustible pocket companion. For the English reader Mr. MacCurdy's larger but much less extensive volume of extracts from the Note-Books , ©r the still further abridged Thoughts , must suffice. Herbert Horne's annotated version of Vasari’s Life is excellent for Leonardo’s personality and career. I2Z THE DANCE OF LIFE strength of Leonardo himself, of his grace and charm, of his accomplishments in youth, especially in singing and playing on the flute, though he had but an ele¬ mentary school education. Except for what he learnt in the workshop of the many-sided but then still youthful Verrocchio, he was his own schoolmaster, and was thus enabled to attain that absolute emancipa¬ tion from authority and tradition which made him indifferent even to the Greeks, to whom he was most akin. He was left-handed ; his peculiar method of writ¬ ing long raised the suspicion that it was deliberately adopted for concealment, but it is to-day recognised as simply the ordinary mirror-writing of a left-handed child without training. This was not the only anomaly in Leonardo’s strange nature. We now know that he was repeatedly charged as a youth on suspicion of homosexual offences; the result remains obscure, but there is some reason to think he knew the inside of a prison. Throughout life he loved to surround himself with beautiful youths, though no tradition of license or vice clings to his name. The precise nature of his sexual temperament remains obscure. It mocks us, but haunts us from out of his most famous pictures. There is, for instance, the “John the Baptist” of the Louvre, which we may dismiss with the distinguished art critic of to-day as an impudent blasphemy or brood over long, without being clearly able to determine into what obscure region of the Freudian Unconscious Leonardo had here adventured. Freud himself hits THE ART OF THINKING 123 devoted one of his most fascinating essays to a psycho¬ analytic interpretation of Leonardo’s enigmatic per¬ sonality. He admits it is a speculation; we may take it or leave it. But Freud has rightly apprehended that in Leonardo sexual passion was largely sublimated into intellectual passion, in accordance with his own saying, “ Nothing can be loved or hated unless first we have knowledge of it,” or, as he elsewhere said, “True and great love springs out of great knowledge, and where you know little you can love but little or not at all.” So it was that Leonardo became a master of life. Vasari could report of him — almost in the words it was reported of another supreme but widely different figure, the Jesuit saint, Francis Xavier — that “with the splendour of his most beautiful coun¬ tenance he made serene every broken spirit.” To possess by self-mastery the sources of love and hate is to transcend good and evil and so to possess the Over¬ man’s power of binding up the hearts that are broken by good and evil. Every person of genius is in some degree at once man, woman, and child. Leonardo was all three in the extreme degree and yet without any apparent con¬ flict. The infantile strain is unquestioned, and, apart from the problem of his sexual temperament, Leonardo was a child even in his extraordinary delight in devis¬ ing fantastic toys and contriving disconcerting tricks. His more than feminine tenderness is equally clear, alike in his pictures and in his life. Isabella d? Este, in 124 THE DANCE OF LIFE asking him to paint the boy Jesus in the Temple, justly referred to “the gentleness and sweetness which mark your art." His tenderness was* shown not only towards human beings, but to all living things, animals and even plants, and it would appear that he was a vegetarian. Yet at the same time he was emphatically masculine, altogether free from weakness or softness. He delighted in ugliness as well as in beauty; he liked visiting the hospitals to study the sick in his thirst for knowledge; he pondered over battles and fighting; he showed no compunction in planning devilish engines of military destruction. His mind was of a definitely realistic and positive cast; though there seems no field of thought he failed to enter, he never touched metaphysics, and though his worship of Nature has the emotional tone of religion, even of ecstasy, he was clearly disdainful of the established religions, and per¬ petually shocked “the timid friends of God.” By pre¬ cept and by practice he proclaimed the lofty solitude of the individual soul, and he felt only contempt for the herd. We see how this temper became impressed on his face in his own drawing of himself in old age, with that intent and ruthless gaze wrapped in intellectual contemplation of the outspread world. Leonardo comes before us, indeed, in the end, as a figure for awe rather than for love. Yet, as the noblest type of the Overman we faintly try to conceive, Leo¬ nardo is the foe, not of man, but of the enemies of man. The great secrets that with clear vision his stern grip THE ART OF THINKING 125 tore from Nature, the new instruments of power that his energy wrought, they were all for the use and delight of mankind. So Leonardo is the everlasting embodi¬ ment of that brooding human spirit whose task never dies. Still to-day it stands at the mouth of the gloomy cavern of Nature, even of Human Nature, with bent back and shaded eyes, seeking intently to penetrate the gloom beyond, with the fear of that threatening darkness, with the desire of what redeeming miracle it yet perchance may hold. V That Leonardo da Vinci was not only supremely great in science, but the incarnation of the spirit of science, the artist and lover of Nature, is a fact it is well to bear in mind. Many mistakes would be avoided if it were more clearly present to consciousness. We should no longer find the artists in design absurdly chafing under what they considered the bondage of the artists in thought. It would no longer be possible, as it was some years ago, and may be still, for a narrow-minded pedagogue like Brunetiere, however useful in his own field, 10 be greeted as a prophet when he fatuously proclaimed what he termed “the bankruptcy of sci¬ ence.” Unfortunately so many of the people who masquerade under the name of “men of science” have no sort of title to that name. They may be doing good and honest work by accumulating in little cells the facts which others, more truly inspired by the spirit of sci- 126 THE DANCE OF LIFE ence, may one day work on ; they may be doing more or less necessary work by the application to practical life of the discoveries which genuine men of science have made. But they themselves have just as much, and no more, claim to use the name of ‘‘science” as the men who make the pots and dishes piled up in a crockery shop have to use the name of “art.” 1 They have not yet even learnt that “science” is not the ac¬ cumulation of knowledge in the sense of piling up iso¬ lated facts, but the active organisation of knowledge, the application to the world of the cutting edge of a marvellously delicate instrument, and that this task is impossible without the widest range of vision and the most restless fertility of imagination. Of such more genuine men of science — to name one whom by virtue of several common interests I was sometimes privileged to come near — was Francis Galton. He was not a professional man of science; he was even willing that his love of science should be ac¬ counted simply a hobby. From the standpoint of the ordinary professional scientific man he was probably an amateur. He was not even, as some have been, a learned amateur. I doubt whether he had really mastered the literature of any subject, though I do not doubt that that mattered little. When he heard of 1 Morley Roberts, who might be regarded as a pupil in the school of Leonardo and trained like him in the field of art, has in various places of his suggestive book, Warfare in the Human Body, sprinkled irony over the examples he has come across of ignorant specialists claiming to be men of “science.” THE ART OF THINKING 127 some famous worker in a field he was exploring, he would look up that man’s work; so it was with Weis- mann in the field of heredity. And, as I would note with a smile in reading his letters, Galton was not able to spell Weismann’s name correctly.1 His attitude in science might be said to be pioneering much like that of the pioneers of museums in the later seventeenth and earlier eighteenth centuries, men like Tradescant and Ashmole and Evelyn and Sloane : an insatiable cu¬ riosity in things that were only: just beginning, or had not yet begun, to arouse curiosity. So it was that when I made some personal experiments with the Mexican cactus, mescal (Anhalonium Lewinii) , to explore its vision-producing qualities, then quite unknown in England, Galton was eagerly interested and wanted to experiment on himself, though ultimately dissuaded on account of his advanced age. But, on this basis, Galton’s curiosity was not the mere inquisitiveness of the child, it was coordinated with an almost uniquely organised brain as keen as it was well-balanced. So that on the one hand his curiosity was transformed into methods that were endlessly ingenious and in¬ ventive, and on the other it was guided and held in check by inflexible caution and good sense. And he knew how to preserve that exquisite balance without 1 Needless to say, I do not mention this to belittle Galton. A careful attention to words, which in its extreme form becomes pedantry, is by no means necessarily associated with a careful attention to things. Until recent times English writers, even the greatest, were always negligent in spelling; it would be foolish to suppose they were therefore negligent in thinking. 128 THE DANCE OF LIFE any solemnity or tension or self-assertion, but play¬ fully and graciously, with the most unfailing modesty. It was this rare combination of qualities — one may see it all in his “Inquiries into Human Faculty” — which made him the very type of the man of genius, operating, not by profession or by deliberate training, but by natural function, throwing light on the dark places of the world and creating science in out-of-the- way fields of human experience which before had been left to caprice or not even perceived at all. Through¬ out he was an artist and if, as is reported, he spent the last year of his life chiefly in writing a novel, that was of a piece with the whole of his marvellous activity; he had never been doing anything else. Only his romances were real. Galton’s yet more famous cousin, Charles Darwin, presents in equal purity the lover and the artist in the sphere of Nature and Science. No doubt there were once many obtuse persons to whom these names seemed scarcely to fit when applied to Darwin. There have been people to whom Darwin scarcely seemed a man of genius, merely a dry laborious pedestrian student of facts. He himself even — as many people find it difficult to forget — once lamented his indiffer¬ ence to poetry and art. But Darwin was one of those elect persons in whose subconscious, if not in their conscious, nature is implanted the realisation that “science is poetry,” and in a field altogether remote the poetry and art of convention he was alike THE ART OF THINKING 129 poet and artist. Only a man so endowed could from a suggestion received on reading Mai thus have con¬ ceived of natural selection as a chief moulding creative force of an infinite succession of living forms; so also of his fantastic theory of pangenesis. Even in trifling mat¬ ters of experiment, such as setting a musician to play the bassoon in his greenhouse, to ascertain whether music affected plants, he had all the inventive imagina¬ tion of poet or of artist. He was poet and artist — though I doubt if this has been pointed out — in his whole attitude towards Nature. He worked hard, but to him work was a kind of play, and it may well be that with his fragile health he could not have carried on his work if it had not been play. Again and again in his “Life and Letters” we find the description of his observations or experiments introduced by some such phrase as: “I was infinitely amused.” And he re¬ marks of a biological problem that it was like a game of chess. I doubt, indeed, whether any great man of science was more of an artist than Darwin, more con¬ sciously aware that he was playing with the world, more deliciously thrilled by the fun of life. That man may well have found “poetry and art” dull who himself had created the theory of sexual selection which made the whole becoming of life art and the .secret of it poetry.1' 1 Darwin even overestimated the aesthetic element in his theory of sexual selection, and (I have had occasion elsewhere to point out) un¬ necessarily prejudiced that theory by sometimes unwarily assuming a conscious .esthetic element. 130 THE DANCE OF LIFE It is not alone among biologists, from whose stand¬ point it may be judged easier to reach, since they are concerned with living Nature, that we find the attitude of the lover and the artist. We find it just as well marked when the man of genius plays in what some might think the arid field of the physicist. Faraday worked in a laboratory, a simple one, indeed, but the kind of place which might be supposed fatal to the true spirit of science, and without his researches in magnetic electricity we might have missed, with or without a pang, those most practical machines of our modern life, the dynamo and the telephone. Yet Fara¬ day had no practical ends in view; it has been possible to say of him that he investigated Nature as a poet investigates the emotions. That would not have suf¬ ficed to make him the supreme man of science he was. His biographer, Dr. Bence Jones, who knew him well, concludes that Faraday’s first great characteristic was his trust in facts, and his second his imagination. There we are brought to the roots of his nature. Only, it is important to remember, these two characteristics were not separate and distinct. In themselves they may be opposing traits; it was because in Faraday they were held together in vital tension that he be¬ came so potent an instrument of research into Nature’s secrets. Tyndall, who was his friend and fellow worker, seems to have perceived this. 4 ‘The force of his imag¬ ination,” wrote Tyndall, “ was enormous,” — he“rose from the smallest beginnings to the greatest ends.” THE ART OF THINKING 13* from “bubbles of oxygen and nitrogen to the atmos^ pheric envelope of the earth itself,” — but “he bridled it like a mighty rider.” Faraday himself said to the same effect: “Let the imagination go, guarding it by judgment and principles, but holding it in and direct¬ ing it by experiment.” Elsewhere he has remarked that in youth he was, and he might have added that he still remained, “a very lively imaginative person and could believe in the ‘Arabian Nights’ as easily as in the ‘Encyclopaedia ‘ ” But he soon acquired almost an instinct for testing facts by experiment, for dis¬ trusting such alleged facts as he had not so tested, and for accepting all the conclusions that he had thus reached with a complete indifference to commonly accepted beliefs. (It is true he was a faithful and de¬ vout elder in the Sandemanian Church, and that is not the least fascinating trait in this fascinating man.) Tyndall has insisted on both of these aspects of Fara¬ day’s mental activity. He had “wonderful vivacity,” he was “a man of excitable and fiery nature,” and “underneath his sweetness was the heat of a volcano.” He himself believed that there was a Celtic strain in his heredity; there was a tradition that the family came from Ireland; I cannot find that there are any Fara¬ days, or people of any name resembling Faraday, now in Ireland, but Tyndall, being himself an Irishman, liked to believe that the tradition was sound. It would only account for the emotionally vivacious side of this nature. There was also the other side, on w hich Tyn- THE DANCE OF LIFE *32 dall also insists: the love of order, the extreme tenacity, the high self-discipline able to convert the fire within into a clear concentrated glow. In the fusion of these two qualities “he was a prophet,” says Tyndall, “and often wrought by an inspiration to be understood by sympathy alone.” His expansive emotional imagina¬ tion became the servant of truth, and sprang into life at its touch. In carrying out physical experiments he , would experience a childlike joy and his eyes sparkled. “Even to his latest days he would almost dance for joy at being shown a new experiment.” Silvanus Thompson, in his book on Faraday, insists (as Tyndall had) on the association with this childlike joy in im¬ aginative extravagance of the perpetual impulse to test and to prove, “yet never hesitating to push to their logical conclusions the ideas suggested by experiment, however widely they might seem to lead from the accepted modes of thought.” His method was the method of the “Arabian Nights,” transferred to the region of facts. Faraday was not a mathematician. But if we turn to Kepler, who moved in the sphere of abstract calcula- J0-' tion, we find precisely the same combination of charac¬ teristics. It was to Kepler, rather than to Copernicus, that we owe the establishment of the heliocentric the¬ ory of our universe, and Kepler, more than any man, was the precursor of Newton. It has been said that if Kepler had never lived it is difficult to conceive who could have taken his place and achieved his special THE ART OF THINKING 133 part in the scientific creation of our universe. For that pioneering part was required a singular blend of seem¬ ingly opposed qualities. Only a wildly daring, original, and adventurous spirit could break away from the age¬ long traditions and rigid preconceptions which had ruled astronomy for thousands of years. Only an end¬ lessly patient, careful, laborious, precise investigator could set up the new revolutionary conceptions needed to replace these traditions and preconceptions. Kepler supplied this rare combination of faculties. He pos¬ sessed the most absurdly extravagant imagination ; he developed a greater regard for accuracy in calcula¬ tion than the world had ever known. He was willing to believe that the earth was a kind of animal, and would not have been surprised to find that it possessed lungs or gills. At the same time so set was he on securing the precise truth, so patiently laborious, that some of his most elaborate calculations were repeated, and without the help of logarithms, even seventy times. The two essential qualities that make the supreme artist in sci¬ ence have never been so clearly made manifest as in Kepler. Kepler may well bring us to Einstein, the greatest pioneer in the comprehension of the universe since his day, and, indeed, one who is more than a pioneer, since he already seems to have won a place beside Newton. It is a significant fact that Einstein, though he pos¬ sesses an extremely cautious, critical mind, and is re¬ garded as conspicuous for his common sense, has a *34 THE DANCE OF LIFE profound admiration for Kepler, whom he frequently quotes. For Einstein also is an imaginative artist.1 Einstein is obviously an artist, even in appearance, as has often been noted by those who have met him; “he looks far more the musician than the man of sci¬ ence, “ one writes, while those who know him well say that he is “essentially as much an artist as a discov¬ erer. M As a matter of fact he is an artist in one of the most commonly recognised arts, being an accomplished musician, a good violinist, it is said, while improvisa¬ tion on the piano, he himself says, is “a necessity of his life.” His face, we are told, is illumined when he listens to music; he loves Bach and Haydn and Mozart, Beethoven and Wagner much less, while to Chopin, Schumann, and the so-called romantics in music, as we might anticipate, he is indifferent. His love of music is inborn; it developed when, as a child, he would think out little songs “in praise of God,” and sing them by himself; music, Nature, and God began, even 1 It is probable that the reason why it is often difficult to trace the imaginative artist in great men of supposedly abstract science is the paucity of intimate information about them. Even their scientific friends have rarely had the patience, or even perhaps the intelligence, to observe them reverently and to record their observations. We know almost nothing that is intimately personal about Newton. As regards Einstein, we are fortunate in possessing the book of Moszkowski, Ein¬ stein (translated into English under the title of Einstein the Searcher ), which contains many instructive conversations and observations by a highly intelligent and appreciative admirer, who has set them down in a Bosweilian spirit that faintly recalls Eckermann’s book on Goethe (which, indeed, Moszkowski had in mind), though falling far short of that supreme achievement. The statements in the text are mainly gleaned from Moszkowski. THE ART OF THINKING 135 at that early age, to become a kind of unity to him. “Music,” said Leibnitz, “is the pleasure the human soul experiences from counting without being aware that it is counting.” It is the most abstract, the most nearly mathematical of the arts — we may recall how music and mathematics had their scientific origin to¬ gether in the discovery of Py thagoras — and it is not surprising that it should be Einstein’s favorite art.1 It is even more natural that, next to music, he should be attracted to architecture — the art which Goethe called “frozen music” — for here we are actually plunged into mechanics, here statics and dynamics are transformed into visible beauty. To painting he is indifferent, but he is drawn to literature, although no great reader. In literature, indeed, it would seem that it is not so much art that he seeks as emotion ; in this field it is no longer the austerely architectonic that draws him; thus he is not attracted to Ibsen; he is greatly attracted to Cervantes as well as Keller and Strindberg; he has a profound admiration for Shake¬ speare, but is cooler towards Goethe, while it would seem that there is no writer to whom he is more fer¬ vently attached than the most highly emotional, the most profoundly disintegrated in nervous organisation of all great writers, Dostoievsky, especially his master¬ piece, “The Brothers Karamazov.” “Dostoievsky 1 Spengler holds ( Der Untergang des Abendlandes , vol. x, p. 329) that the development of music throughout its various stages in our European culture really has been closely related with the stages ol the development ol mathematics. 136 THE DANCE OF LIFE gives me more than any scientist, more than Gauss." All literary analysis or aesthetic subtlety, it seems to Einstein, fails to penetrate to the heart of a work like “The Karamazovs,” it can only be grasped by the feelings. His face lights up when he speaks of it and he can find no word but “ethical satisfaction.” For ethics in the ordinary sense, as a system, means little to Einstein; he would not even include it in the sciences; it is the ethical joy embodied in art which satisfies him. Moreover, it is said, the keynote of Einstein’s emo¬ tional existence is the cry of Sophocles’ Antigone: “I am not here to hate with you, but to love with you.” The best that life has to offer, he feels, is a face glowing with happiness. He is an advanced democrat and paci¬ fist rather than (as is sometimes supposed) a socialist; he believes in the internationality of all intellectual work and sees no reason why this should destroy na¬ tional characteristics. Einstein is not — and this is the essential point to make clear — merely an artist in his moments of leis¬ ure and play, as a great statesman may play golf or a great soldier grow orchids. He retains the same atti¬ tude in the whole of his work. He traces science to its roots in emotion, which is exactly where art also is rooted. Of Max Planck, the physicist, for whom he has great admiration, Einstein has said: “The emotional condition which fits him for his task is akin to that of a devotee or a lover.” We may say the same, it would seem* of Einstein himself. He is not even to be in- THE ART OF THINKING 137 eluded, as some might have supposed, in that rigid sect which asserts that all real science is precise measure¬ ment ; he recognises that the biological sciences must be largely independent of mathematics. If mathematics were the only path of science, he once remarked, Na¬ ture would have been illegible for Goethe, who had a non-mathematical, even anti-mathematical, mind, and yet possessed a power of intuition greater than that of many an exact investigator.1 All great achievements in science, he holds, start from intuition. This he con¬ stantly repeats, although he adds that the intuition must not stand alone, for invention also is required. He is disposed to regard many scientific discoveries commonly regarded the work of pure thought as really works of art. He would have this view embodied in all education, making education a free and living process, with no drilling of the memory and no examinations, mainly a process of appeal to the senses in order to draw out delicate reactions. With his end, and even for the sake of acquiring ethical personality, he would have every child learn a handicraft, joinery, bookbind- ing, or other, and, like Elie Faure,2 he has great faith in 1 I would here refer to a searching investigation, “Goethe und die mathematische Fhysik: Eine Erkenntnistheoretische Studie,” in Ernst Cassirer’s Idee und Gestalt (1921). It is here shown that in some respects Goethe pointed the way along which mathematical physics, by following its own paths, has since travelled, and that even when most non-mathe¬ matical Goethe’s scientific attitude was justifiable. 2 See the remarkable essay, “De la Cineplastique,” in filie Faure’s L'Arbre d’lLden (1922). It is, however, a future and regenerated cinema for which Elie Faure looks, “to become the art of the crowd, the powerful centre of communion in which new symphonic forms will be born in the tumult of passions and utilized for fine and elevating aesthetic ends." 138 THE DANCE OF LIFE the educational value of the cinema. We see that be¬ hind all Einstein’s activity lies the conception that the physicist’s work is to attain a picture, “a world- picture,” as he calls it. “ I agree with Schopenhauer,” Einstein said at a celebration in honour of Planck in 1918, “that one of the most powerful motives that at¬ tract people to science and art is the longing to escape from everyday life with its painful coarseness and des¬ olating bareness, and to break the fetters of their own ever-changing desires. It impels those of keener sensi¬ bility out of their personal existences into the world of objective perception and understanding. It is a motive force of like kind to that which drives the dweller in noisy confused cities to restful Alpine heights whence he seems to have an outlook on eternity. Associated with this negative motive is the positive motive which impels men to seek a simplified synoptic view of the world conformable to their own nature, overcoming the world by replacing it with this picture. The painter, the poet, the philosopher, the scientist, all do this, each in his own way.” Spengler has elaborately argued that there is a perfect identity of physics, mathematics, re¬ ligion, and great art.1 We might fairly be allowed to point to Einstein as a lofty embodiment of that iden¬ tity. Here, where we reach the sphere of mathematics, we are among processes which seem to some the most inhuman of all human activities and the most remote * O. Spengler, Der Untergang dcs Abcndlandes, vol. 1, p. 576. THE ART OF THINKING 139 from poetry. Yet it is here that the artist has the full¬ est scope for his imagination. “Mathematics,” says Bertrand Russell in his “Mysticism and Logic,” “may be defined as the subject in which we never know what we are talking about, nor whether what we are saying is true.” We are in the imaginative sphere of art, and the mathematician is engaged in a work of creation which resembles music in its orderliness, and is yet re¬ producing on another plane the order of the universe, and so becoming as it were a music of the spheres. It is not surprising that the greatest mathematicians have again and again appealed to the arts in order to find some analogy to their own work. They have indeed found it in the most various arts, in poetry, in painting, in sculpture, although it would certainly seem that it is in music, the most abstract of the arts, the art of num¬ ber and of time, that we find the closest analogy. “The mathematician’s best work is art,” said Mittag-Lefler, “a high and perfect art, as daring as the most secret dreams of imagination, clear and limpid. Mathemati¬ cal genius and artistic genius touch each other.” And Sylvester wrote in his “Theory of Reciprocants” : “Does it not seem as if Algebra had attained to the dignity of a fine art, in which the workman has a free hand to develop his conceptions, as in a musical theme or a subject for painting? It has reached a point in which every properly developed algebraical composi¬ tion, like a skilful landscape, is expected to suggest the notion of an infinite distance lying beyond the limits THE DANCE OF LIFE 140 of the canvas.” “ Mathematics, rightly viewed,” says Bertrand Russell again, ‘‘possesses not only truth, but supreme beauty — a beauty cold and austere, like that of sculpture. . . . The true spirit of delight, the exalta¬ tion, the sense of being more than man, which is the touchstone of the highest excellence, is to be found in mathematics as surely as in poetry.” The mathematician has reached the highest rung on the ladder of human thought. But it is the same lad¬ der which we have all of us been always ascending, alike from the infancy of the individual and the infancy of the race. MolRre’s Jourdainhad been speaking prose for more than forty years without knowing it. Man¬ kind has been thinking poetry throughout its long career and remained equally ignorant* CHAPTER IV THE ART OF WRITING I From time to time we are solemnly warned that in the hands of modern writers language has fallen into a morbid state. It has become degenerate, if not, indeed, the victim of “senile ataxy” or “general paralysis.” Certainly it is well that our monitors should seek to arouse in us the wholesome spirit of self-criticism. Whether we write ill or well, we can never be too seri¬ ously concerned with what it is that we are attempting to do. We may always be grateful to those who stimu¬ late us to a more wakeful activity in pursuing a task which can never be carried to perfection. Yet these monitors seldom fail at the same time to arouse a deep revolt in our minds. We are not only impressed by the critic’s own inability to write any better than those he criticises. We are moved to ques¬ tion the validity of nearly all the rules he lays down for our guidance. We are inclined to dispute altogether the soundness of the premises from which he starts. Of these three terms of our revolt, covering compre¬ hensively the whole ground, the first may be put aside — since the ancient retort is always ineffective and it helps the patient not at all to bid the physician heal himself — and we may take the last first. 142 THE DANCE OF LIFE Men are always apt to bow down before the superior might of their ancestors. It has been so always and everywhere. Even the author of the once well-known book of Genesis believed that “there were giants in the earth in those days,” the mighty men which were of old, the men of renown, and still to-day among our¬ selves no plaint is more common than that concerning the physical degeneracy of modern men as compared with our ancestors of a few centuries ago. Now and then, indeed, there comes along a man of science, like Professor Parsons, who has measured the bones from the remains of the ancestors we still see piled up in the crypt at Hythe, and finds that — however fine the occasional exceptions — the average height of those men and women was decidedly less than that of their present-day descendants. Fortunately for the vitality of tradition, we cherish a wholesome distrust of science. And so it is with our average literary stature. The academic critic regards himself as the special deposi¬ tory of the accepted tradition, and far be it from him to condescend to any mere scientific inquiry into the actual facts. He half awakens from slumber to mur¬ mur the expected denunciation of his own time, and therewith returns to slumber. He usually seems un¬ aware that even three centuries ago, in the finest period of English prose, Swift, certainly himself a supreme master, was already lamenting “the corruption of our style.” If it is asserted that the average writer of to-day has THE ART OF WRITING 143 not equalled the supreme writer of some earlier age, — • there are but one or two in any age, — we can only ejaculate: Strange if he had! Yet that is all that the academic critic usually seems to mean. If he would take the trouble to compare the average prose writer of to-day with the average writer of even so great an age as the Elizabethan, he might easily convince him¬ self that the former, whatever his imperfections, need not fear the comparison. Whether or not Progress in general may be described as 4 ‘the exchange of one nuisance for another nuisance,” it is certainly so with the progress of style, and the imperfections of our average everyday writing are balanced by the quite other imperfections of our forefathers’ writing. What, for instance, need we envy in the literary methods of that great and miscellaneous band of writers whom Hakluyt brought together in those admirable volumes which are truly great and really fascinating only for reasons that have nothing to do with style? Raleigh himself here shows no distinction in his narrative of that discreditable episode, — as he clearly and rightly felt it to be, — the loss of the Revenge by the wilful Grenville. Most of them are bald, savourless, monot¬ onous, stating the obvious facts in the obvious way, but hopelessly failing to make clear, when rarely they attempt it, anything that is not obvious. They have none of the little unconscious tricks of manner which worry the critic to-day. But their whole manner is one commonplace trick from which they never escape. 144 THE DANCE OF LIFE They are only relieved by its simplicity and by the novelty which comes through age. We have to re¬ member that all mediocrity is impersonal and that when we encourage its manifestations on printed pages we merely make mediocrity more conspicuous. Nor can that be remedied by teaching the mediocre to cultivate tricks of fashion or of vanity. There is more personality in Claude Bernard's ^Legons de Physi¬ ologic Exp6rimen tales,” a great critic of life and letters has pointed out, Remy de Gourmont, than in Musset’s “ Confession d’un Enfant du Si£cle.” For personality is not something that can be sought; it is a radiance that is diffused spontaneously. It may even be most manifest when most avoided, and no writer — the remark has doubtless often been made before — can be more personal than Flaubert who had made almost a gospel of Impersonality. But the absence of re¬ search for personality, however meritorious, will not suffice to bring personality out of mediocrity. Moreover, the obvious fact seems often to be over¬ looked by the critic that a vastly larger proportion of the population now write, and see their writing printed. We live in what we call a democratic age in which all are compulsorily taught how to make pothooks and hangers on paper. So that every nincompoop — in the attenuated sense of the term — as soon as he puts a pen in ink feels that he has become, like M. Jourdain, a writer of prose. That feeling is justified only in 2 very limited sense, and if we wish to compare the condi- THE ART OF WRITING T45 tion of things to-day with that in an age when people wrote at the bidding of some urgent stimulus from without or from within, we have at the outset to delete certainly over ninety-five per cent of our modern so-called writers before we institute any comparison. The writers thus struck out, it may be added, cannot fail to include many persons of much note in the world. There are all sorts of people to-day who write from all sorts of motives other than a genuine aptitude for writing. To suppose that there can be any com¬ parison at this point of the present with the past and to dodder over the decay of our language would seem a senile proceeding if we do not happen to know that it occurs in all ages, and that, even at the time when our prose speech was as near to perfection as it is ever likely to be, its critics were bemoaning its corruption, lamenting, for instance, the indolent new practice of increasing sibilation by changing “arriveth” into “arrives” and pronouncing “walked” as “walkd,” sometimes in their criticisms showing no more knowl¬ edge of the history and methods of growth of English than our academic critics show to-day. For we know what to-day they tell us; it is not hard to know, their exhortations, though few, are repeated in so psittaceous a manner. One thinks, for instance, of that solemn warning against the enormity of the split infinitive which has done so much to aggravate the Pharisaism of the bad writers who scrupulously avoid it. This superstition seems to have had its 146 THE DANCE OF LIFE origin in a false analogy with Latin in which the infinitive is never split for the good reason that it is impossible to split. In the greater freedom of English it is possible and has been done for at least the last five hundred years by the greatest masters of English; only the good writer never uses this form helplessly and involuntarily, but with a definite object; and that is the only rule to observe. An absolute prohibition in this matter is the mark of those who are too igno¬ rant, or else too unintelligent, to recognise a usage which is of the essence of English speech.1 One may perhaps refer, again, to those who lay down that every sentence must end on a significant word, never on a preposition, and who reprobate what has been technically termed the post-habited prefix. They are the same worthy and would-be old- fashioned people who think that a piece of music must always end monotonously on a banging chord. Only here they have not, any more than in music, even the virtue — if such it be — of old fashion, for the final so- called preposition is in the genius of the English lan¬ guage and associated with the Scandinavian — in the wider ancient sense Danish — strain of English, one of the finest strains it owns, imparting much of the plastic force which renders it flexible, the element which helped to save it from the straitlaced tendency 1 It may be as well to point that it is the amateur literary grammarian and not the expert who is at fault in these matters. The attitude of tin expert (as in C. T. Onions, Advanced English Syntax) is entirely reason* able. THE ART OF WRITING 147 of Anglo-Saxon and the awkward formality of Latin and French influence. The foolish prejudice we are here concerned with seems to date from a period when the example of French, in which the final preposition is impossible, happened to be dominant. Its use in English is associated with the informal grace and simplicity, the variety of tender cadence, which our tongue admits. In such matters as the ‘‘split infinitive ” and the “post-habited preposition/’ there should never have been any doubt as to the complete validity and author¬ ity of the questioned usages. But there are other points at which some even good critics may be tempted to accept the condemnation of the literary grammari¬ ans. It is sufficient to mention one : the nominative use of the pronoun “me.” Yet, surely, any one who con¬ siders social practice as well as psychological necessity should not fail to see that we must recognise a double use of “me” in English. The French, who in such matters seem to have possessed a finer social and psychological tact, have realised that je cannot be the sole nominative of the first person and have supple¬ mented it by moi (mi from mihi). The Frenchman, when asked who is there, does not reply “Je!” But the would-be English purist is supposed to be reduced to replying “ I ! ” Royal Cleopatra asks the Messenger: “ Is she as tall as me?” The would-be purist no doubt transmutes this as he reads into: “ Is she as tall as I?” We need not envy him. THE DANCE OF LIFE Such an example indicates how independent th€ free and wholesome life of language is of grammatical rules. This is not to diminish the importance of the grammarian’s task, but simply to define it, as the formulator, and not the lawgiver, of usage. His rules are useful, not merely in order to know how best to keep them, but in order to know how best to break them. Without them freedom might become licence. Yet even licence, we have to recognise, is the necessary oflscouring of speech in its supreme manifestations of vitality and force. English speech was never more syntactically licentious than in the sixteenth century, but it was never more alive, never more fitly the mate¬ rial for a great artist to mould. So it is that in the six¬ teenth century we find Shakespeare. In post-Dryden days (though Dryden was an excellent writer and engaged on an admirable task) a supreme artist in English speech became impossible, and if a Shake¬ speare had appeared all his strength would have been wasted in a vain struggle with the grammarians. French speech has run a similar and almost synchron¬ ous course with English. There was a magnificently natural force and wealth in sixteenth-century French: in Rabelais it had been even extravagantly exuberant ; in Montaigne it is still flexible and various — ondoyant et divers — and still full of natural delight and freedom. But after Malherbe and his fellows French speech acquired orderliness, precision, and formality; they were excellent qualities, no doubt, but had to be paid THE ART OF WRITING J49 for by some degree of thinness and primness, even some stiffening of the joints. Rousseau came and poured fresh blood from Switzerland into the language and a new ineffable grace that was all his own ; so that if we now hesitate to say, with Landor, that he excels all the moderns for harmony, it is only because they have learnt what he taught; and the later Romantics, under the banner of Hugo, imparted colour and brilliance. Yet all the great artists who have wrestled with French speech for a century have never been able to restore the scent and the savour and the substance which Villon and Montaigne without visible effort could once find within its borders. In this as in other matters what we call Progress means the discovery of new desirable qualities, and therewith the loss of other qualities that were at least equally desirable. Then there is yet another warning which, especially in recent times, is issued at frequent intervals, and that is against the use of verbal counters, of worn or even worn-out phrases, of what we commonly fall back on modern French to call cliches. We mean thereby the use of old stereotyped phrases — Goethe called them “stamped” or gestempelt — to save the trouble of making a new living phrase to suit our meaning. The word cliche is thus typographic, though, it so happens, it is derived from an old French word of phonetic meaning, cliqueter or cliqucr (related to the German klatschen ), which we already have in English as to “click” or to “clack,” in a sense which well supple- 1 150 THE DANCE OF LIFE ments its more modern technical sense for this literary end. Yet the warning against cliches is vain. The good writer, by the very fact that he is alive and craves speech that is vivid, as cliches never are, instinctively avoids their excessive use, while the nervous and bad writer, in his tremulous anxiety to avoid these tabooed cliches , falls into the most deplorable habits, like the late Mr. Robert Ross, who at one time was so anxious to avoid cliches that he acquired the habit of using them in an inverted form and wrote a prose that made one feel like walking on sharp flints; for, though a macadamized road may not be so good to walk in as a flowered meadow, it is better than a macadamized road with each stone turned upside down and the sharp edge uppermost. As a matter of fact it is impossible to avoid the use of cliches and counters in speech, and if it were possible the results would be in the highest degree tedious and painful. The word “ cliche ” itself, we have seen, is a cliche , a worn counter of a word, with its original meaning all effaced, and even its secondary meaning now only just visible. That, if those folk who condemn cliches only had the intelligence to perceive it, is a significant fact. You cannot avoid using cliches , not even in the very act of condemning them. They include, if we only look keenly enough, nearly the whole of language, almost every separate word. If one could avoid them one would be unintelligible. Even those common phrases which it is peculiarly meet to call counters are not to be absolutely condemned. THE ART OF WRITING They have become so common to use because so fit to use, as Baudelaire understood when he spoke of “the immense depth of thought in vulgar locutions/’ 1 There is only one rule to follow here, — and it is simply the rule in every part of art, — to know what one is doing, not to go sheeplike with the flock, ignorantly, unthinkingly, heedlessly, but to mould speech to expression the most truly one knows how. If, indeed, we are seeking clarity and the precise expression of thought, there is nothing we may not do if only we know how to do it — but that “if” might well be in capitals. One who has spent the best part of his life in trying to write things that had not been written before, and that were very difficult to write, may perhaps be allowed to confess the hardness of this task. To write is thus an arduous intellectual task, a process which calls for the highest tension of the muscles in the escalade of a heaven which the strong¬ est and bravest and alertest can never hope to take by violence. He has to be true, — whether it is in the external world he is working or in his own internal world, — and as truth can only be seen through his own temperament, he is engaged in moulding the 1 It is interesting to note that another aristocratic master of speech had also made just the same observation. Landor puts into the mouth of Horne Tooke the words: “No expression can become a vulgarism which has not a broad foundation. The language of the vulgar hath its source in physics: in known, comprehended, and operative things.” At the same time Landor was as stern a judge as Baudelaire of the random use of cliches . 152 THE DANCE OF LIFE expression of a combination which has never been seen in the world before. It is sometimes said that the great writer seldom quotes, and that in the main is true, for he finds it difficult to mix an alien music of thought and speech with his own. Montaigne, it is also said, is an excep¬ tion, but that is scarcely true. What Montaigne quoted he often translated and so moulded to the pattern of his own mind. The same may be said of Robert Burton. If it had not been so these writers (almost certainly Burton) could scarcely have attained to the rank of great authors. The significant fact to note, however, is not that the great writer rarely quotes, but that he knows how to quote. Schopenhauer was here a master. He possessed a marvellous flair for fine sayings in remote books, and these he would now and again let fall like jewels on his page, with so happy a skill that they seem to be created for the spot on which they fell. It is the little writer rather than the great writer who seems never to quote, and the reason is that he is really never doing anything else.1 1 Speaking as a writer who has been much quoted, — it ought to be a satisfaction, but I have had my doubts, — I may say that I have ob served that those who quote belong mostly to two classes, one consist¬ ing of good, or at all events indifferent, writers, and the other of bad writers. Those of the first class quote with fair precision and due ac¬ knowledgement, those of the second with no precision, and only the vaguest intimation, or none at all, that they are quoting. This would seem to indicate that the good writer is more honest than the bad writer, but that conclusion may be unjust to the bad writer. The fact is that, having little thought or knowledge of his own, he is not fully conscious of what he is doing. He is like a greedy child who, seeing food in front ol him, snatches it at random, without being able to recognise whether or THE ART OF WRITING 153 It is not in writing only, in all art, in all science, the task before each is that defined by Bacon : man added to Nature . It is so also in painting, as a great artist of modern time, Cezanne, recognised even in those same words: “He who wishes to make art,” he once said to Vollard, “must follow Bacon, who defined the artist as 4 Homo additus Naturae.’ ” So it is that the artist, if he has succeeded in being true to his function, is neces¬ sarily one who makes all things new.1 That remarkable artist who wrote the Book of the Revelation has ex¬ pressed this in his allegorical, perhaps unconscious, Oriental way, for he represents the artist as hearing the divine spirit from the throne within him utter¬ ing the command: 44 Behold, I make all things new. Write!” The command is similar whatever the art may be, though it is here the privilege of the writer to find his own art set forth as the inspired ensample of all art. Thus it is that to write is a strenuous intellectual task not to be achieved without the exercise of the best not it is his own. There is, however, a third class of those who cannot re¬ sist the temptation of deliberately putting forth the painfully achieved thought or knowledge of others as their own, sometimes, perhaps, seek¬ ing to gloss over the lapse with: “As every one knows — ” 1 Croce, who is no doubt the most instructive literary critic of our time, has, in his own way, insisted on this essential fact. As he would put it, there are no objective standards of judgment; we cannot ap¬ proach a work of art with our laws and categories. We have to com¬ prehend the artist’s own values, and only then are we fit to pronounce any judgment on his work. The task of the literary critic is thus im¬ mensely more difficult than it is vulgarly supposed to be. The same holds good, I would add, of criticism in the fields of art, not excluding the art of love and the arts of living in general. THE DANCE OF LIFE 154 trained and most deliberate rational faculties. That is the outcome of the whole argument up to this point. There is so much bad writing in the world because writing has been dominated by ignorance and habit and prudery, and not least by the academic teachers and critics who have known nothing of what they daim to teach and were often themselves singular examples of how not to write. There has, on the other hand, been a little good writing here and there in the world, through the ages, because a few possessed not only courage and passion and patience, but knowledge and the concentrated intellectual attention, and the resolution to seek truth, and the conviction that, as they imagined, the genius they sought consisted in taking pains. Yet, if that were all, many people would become great writers who, as we well know, will never become writers; if that were all, writing could scarcely even be regarded as an art. For art, or one side of it, transcends conscious knowledge; a poet, as Landor remarked, “is not aware of all that he knows, and seems at last to know as little about it as a silkworm knows about the fineness of her thread.” Yet the same great writer has also said of good poetry, and with equal truth, that “the ignorant and inexpert lose half its pleasures.” We always move on two feet, as filie Faure remarks in his “L’Arbre d’Eden,” the two poles of knowledge and of desire, the one a matter of deliberate acquirement and the other of profound instinct, and all our move- THE ART OF WRITING 155 merits are a perpetual leap from one to the other, seek¬ ing a centre of gravity we never attain.1 So the achieve¬ ment of style in writing, as in all human intercourse, is something more than an infinite capacity for taking pains. It is also defined — and, sometimes I think, supremely well defined — as “grace seasoned with salt.” Beyond all that can be achieved by knowledge and effort, there must be the spontaneous grace that springs up like a fountain from the depth of a beauti¬ fully harmonious nature, and there must be also the quality which the Spaniards call “sal,” and so rightly admire in the speech of the women of the people of their own land, the salt quality which gives savour and point and antiseptic virtue.2 The best literary prose speech is simply the idealisa¬ tion in the heaven of art of the finest common speech of earth, simply, yet never reached for more than a moment in a nation’s long history. In Greece it was immortally and radiantly achieved by Plato; in Eng¬ land it was attained for a few years during the last years of the seventeenth and the first years of the 1 “This search is the art of all great thinkers, of all great artists, indeed of all those who, even without attaining expression, desire to live deeply. If the dance brings us so near to God, it is, I believe, because it symbol¬ izes for us the movement of this gesture.” (£lie Faure, L’Arbre d'lldent P- 3i8.) 2 This is that “divine malice” which Nietzsche, in Ecce Homo, speak¬ ing of Heine (“ one day Heine and I will be regarded as by far the great¬ est artists of the German language,” he says rather egotistically, but per¬ haps truly) considered essential to perfection. “I estimate the value of men and of races,” he added, “by their need to identify their God with a satyr,” a hard saying, no doubt, to the modern man, but it has its mean- THE DANCE OF LIFE 156 eighteenth centuries, lingering on, indeed, here and there to the end of that century until crushed between the pedantry of Johnson and the poetic licence of the Romantics. But for the rest only the most happily endowed genius can even attain for a rare moment the perfection of the Pauline ideal of “grace seasoned with salt.” It is fortunate, no doubt, that an age of machinery is well content with machine-made writing. It would be in bad taste — too physiological, too sentimental, altogether too antiquated — to refer to the symbolical significance of the highly relevant fact that the heart, while undoubtedly a machine, is at the same time a sen¬ sitively pulsating organ with fleshy strings stretched from ventricle to valves, a harp on which the great artist may play until our hearts also throb in unison. Yet there are some to whom it still seems that, beyond mechanical skill, the cadences of the artist's speech are the cadences of his heart, and the footfalls of his rhythm the footfalls of his spirit, in a great adventure across the universe. n Thus we do not always realise that learning to write is partly a matter of individual instinct. This is so even of that writing which, as children, we learnt in copy¬ books with engraved maxims at the head of the page. There are some, indeed, probably the majority, who quickly achieve the ability to present a passable iroita- THE ART OF WRITING 157 don of the irreproachable model presented to them There are some who cannot. I speak as one who knows, for I recall how my first schoolmaster, a sarcastic little Frenchman, irritated by my unchastenable hand, would sometimes demand if I wrote with the kitchen poker, or again assert that I kept a tame spider to run over the page, while a later teacher, who was an individualist and more tolerant, yet sometimes felt called upon to murmur, in a tone of dubious optimism: “ You will have a hand of your own, my boy.” It is not lack of docility that is in question, but an imperative demand of the nervous system which the efforts of the will may indeed bend but cannot crush. Yet the writers who cheerfully lay down the laws of style seldom realise this complexity and mystery en¬ wrapping even so simple a matter as handwriting. No one can say how much atavistic recurrence from remote ancestors, how much family nervous habit, how much wayward yet deep-rooted personal idiosyn¬ crasy deflect the child’s patient efforts to imitate the copperplate model which is set before him. The son often writes like the father, even though he may seldom or never see his father’s handwriting; brothers may write singularly alike, though taught by different teachers and even in different continents. It has been noted of the ancient and distinguished family of the Tyrrells that their handwriting in the parish books of Stowmarket remained the same throughout many generations. I have noticed, in a relation of my own, THE DANCE OF LIFE 158 peculiarities of handwriting identical with those of an ancestor two centuries ago whose writing he certainly never saw. The resemblance is often not that of exact formation, but of general air or underlying structure.1 One is tempted to think that often, in this as in other matters, the possibilities are limited, and that when the child is formed in his mother’s womb Nature cast the same old dice and the same old com¬ binations inevitably tend to recur. But that notion scarcely fits all the facts, and our growing knowledge of the infinite subtlety of heredity, of its presence even in the most seemingly elusive psychic characters, indicates that the dice may be loaded and fall in accord with harmonies we fail to perceive. The development of Mendelian analysis may in time help us to under¬ stand them. The part in style which belongs to atavism, to heredity, to unconscious instinct, is probably very large. It eludes us to an even greater extent than the corresponding part in handwriting because the man of letters may have none among his ancestors who sought expression in style, so that only one Milton speaks for a mute inglorious family, and how far he speaks truly remains a matter of doubt. We only divine the truth when we know the character and deeds of the family. There could be no more instructive revelation of 1 Since this was written I have found that Laycock, whose subtle ob¬ servation pioneered so many later ideas, long ago noted (“Some Organic Laws of Memory,” Journal of Mental Science , July, 1875) reversion to ancestral modes of handwriting. THE ART OF WRITING 159 family history in style than is furnished by Carlyle. There had never been any writer in the Carlyle family, and if there had, Carlyle at the time when his manner of writing was formed, would scarcely have sought to imitate them. Yet we could not conceive this stem, laborious, plebeian family of Lowland Scots — with its remote Teutonic affinities, its coarseness, its nar¬ rowness, its assertive inarticulative force — in any more fitting verbal translation than was given it by this its last son, the pathetic little figure with the face of a lost child, who wrote in a padded room and turned the rough muscular and reproductive activity of his fathers into more than half a century of eloquent chatter concerning Work and Silence, so writing his name in letters of gold on the dome of the British Museum.1 1 This was written fifteen years ago, and as Carlyle has of late been unduly depreciated I would add that, while strictly to the present point, it is not put forward as an estimate of Carlyle’s genius. That I seem to have attempted twenty-five years earlier in a private letter (to my friend the late Reverend Angus Mackay) I may here perhaps be allowed to quote. It was in 1883, soon after the publication of Carlyle’s Reminis¬ cences: “This is not Carlylese, but it is finer. The popular judgment is hopelessly wrong. We can never understand Carlyle till we get rid of the ‘great prophet’ notion. Carlyle is not (as we were once taught) a ‘great moral teacher,’ but, in the high sense, a great comedian. His books are wonderful comedies. He is the Scotch Aristophanes, as Rabelais is the French and Heine the German Aristophanes — of course, with the in¬ tense northern imagination, more clumsy, more imperfect, more pro¬ found than the Greek. But, at a long distance, there is a close resem¬ blance to Aristophanes with the same mixture of audacity in method and conservatism in spirit. Cariyle’s account of Lamb seems in the true sense Aristophanic. His humour is, too, as broad as he dares (some curious resemblances there, too). In his lyrical outbursts, again, he. follows Aristophanes, and again at a distance. Of course he cannot be x6o THE DANCE OF LIFE When we consider the characteristics* not of the family, but of the race, it is easier to find examples of the force of ancestry, even remote ancestry, overcom¬ ing environment and dominating style. Shakespeare and Bacon were both Elizabethans who both lived from youth upwards in London, and even moved to some extent almost in the same circles. Yet all the influences of tradition and environment, which some¬ times seem to us so strong, scarcely sufficed to spread even the faintest veneer of similarity over their style, and we could seldom mistake a sentence of one for a sentence of the other. We always know that Shake¬ speare — with his gay extravagance and redundancy, his essential idealism — came of a people that had been changed in character from the surrounding stock by a Celtic infolding of the receding British to Wales.1 We never fail to realise that Bacon — with his in¬ stinctive gravity and temperance, the suppressed ardour of his aspiring intellectual passion, his tempera¬ mental naturalism — was rooted deep in that East Anglian soil which he had never so much as visited. In Shakespeare’s veins there dances the blood of the men who made the “ Mabinogion” ; we recognise Bacon as a man of the same countryside which pro- compared as an artist. He has not, like Rabelais, created a world to play with, but, like Aristophanes generally, he sports with the things that are.” That youthful estimate was alien to popular opinion then be¬ cause Carlyle was idolised; it is now, no doubt, equally alien for an oppo¬ site reason. It is only on extremes that the indolent popular mind can rest. 1 J. Beddoe, The Races of Britain , p. 254. THE ART OF WRITING t6i duced the forefathers of Emerson. Or we may consider the mingled Breton and Gascon ancestry of Renan, in whose brain, in the very contour and melody of his style, the ancient bards of Brittany have joined hands with the tribe of Montaigne and Bran tome and the rest. Or, to take one more example, we can scarcely fail to recognise in the style of Sir Thomas Browne — as later, may be, in that of Hawthorne — the glamour of which the latent aptitude had been handed on by ancestors who dwelt on the borders of Wales. In these examples hereditary influence can be clearly distinguished from merely external and traditional influences. Not that we need imply a disparagement of tradition: it is the foundation of civilised progress. Speech itself is a tradition, a naturally developed con¬ vention, and in that indeed it has its universal ap¬ plicability and use. It is the crude amorphous material of art, of music and poetry. But on its formal side, whatever its supreme significance as the instrument and medium of expression, speech is a natural conven¬ tion, an accumulated tradition. Even tradition, however, is often simply the cor¬ poreal embodiment, as it were, of heredity. Behind many a great writer’s personality there stands tradi¬ tion, and behind tradition the race. That is well illustrated in the style of Addison. This style — with a resilient fibre underneath its delicacy and yet a certain freedom as of conversational familiarity — has as its most easily marked structural signature a tend- 162 THE DANCE OF LIFE ency to a usage it has already been necessary to men¬ tion : the tendency to allow the preposition to lag to the end of the sentence rather than to come tautly before the pronoun with which in Latin it is combined. In a century in which the Latin-French elements of English were to become developed, as in Gibbon and Johnson, to the utmost, the totally different physiognomy of Addison’s prose remained conspicuous, — though really far from novel, — and to the sciolists of a bygone age it seemed marked by carelessness, if not licence, at the best by personal idiosyncrasy. Yet, as a matter of fact, we know it was nothing of the kind. Addison, as his name indicates, was of the stock of the Scandina¬ vian English, and the Cumberland district he belonged to is largely Scandinavian; the adjoining peninsula of Furness, which swarms with similar patronymics, is indeed one of the most purely Scandinavian spots in England. Now in the Scandinavian languages, as we know, and in the English dialects based upon them, the preposition comes usually at the end of the sen¬ tence, and Scandinavian structural elements form an integral part of English, even more than Latin French, for it has been the part of the latter rather to enrich the vocabulary than to mould the structure of our tongue. So that, instead of introducing a personal idiosyncrasy or perpetrating a questionable licence, Addison was continuing his own ancestral traditions and at the same time asserting an organic prerogative of English speech. It may be added that Addison THE ART OF WRITING 163 reveals his Scandinavian affinities not merely in the material structure, but in the spiritual quality, of his work. This delicate sympathetic observation, the vein of gentle melancholy, the quiet restrained humour, meet us again in modern Norwegian authors like Jonas Lie. When we put aside these ancestral and traditional influences, there is still much in the writer’s art which, even if personal, we can only term instinctive. This may be said of that music which at their finest mo¬ ments belongs to all the great writers of prose. Every writer has his own music, though there are few in whom it becomes audible save at rare and precious intervals. The prose of the writer who can deliberately make his own personal cadences monotonously audible all the time grows wearisome ; it affects us as a tedious mannerism. This is a kind of machine-made prose which indeed it requires a clever artisan to produce; but, as Landor said, “he must be a bad writer to whom there are no inequalities.” The great writers, though they are always themselves, attain the perfect music of their style under the stress of a stimulus adequate to arouse it. Their music is the audible translation of emotion, and only arises when the waves of emotion are stirred. It is not properly speaking a voluntary effect. We can but say that the winds of the spirit are breathed upon the surface of style, and they lift it into rhythmic movement. And for each writer these waves have their own special rate of vibration, their peculiar shape and interval. The rich deep slow tones of Bacon 564 THE DANCE OF LIFE have nothing in common with the haunting, long- drawn melody, faint and tremulous, of Newman; the high metallic falsetto ring of De Quincey’s rhetoric is far away from the pensive low-toned music of Pater. Imitation, as psychologists have taught us to realise, is a part of instinct. When we begin to learn to write, it rarely happens that we are not imitators, and, for the most part, unconsciously. The verse of every young poet, however original he may afterwards grow, usually has plainly written across it the rhythmic signature of some great master whose work chances to be abroad in the world ; once it was usually Tennyson, then Swinburne, now various later poets; the same thing happens with prose, but the rhythm of the signature is less easy to hear. As a writer slowly finds his own centre of gravity, the influence of the rhythm of other writers ceases to be perceptible except in so far as it coincides with his own natural movement and tempo. That is a familiar fact. We less easily realise, perhaps, that not only the tunes but the notes that they are formed of are, in every great writer, his own. In other words, he creates even his vocabulary. That is so not only in the more obvious sense that out of the mass of words that make up a language every writer uses only a limited number and even among these has his words of predilection.1 It is 1 I once studied, as an example, colour-words in various writers, find¬ ing that every poet has his own colour formula. Variations in length oi sentence and peculiarities of usage in metre have often been studied. Reference is made to some of these studies by A. Niceforo, “Metodo Statistics e Document} Liu era ri,” Revista d'ltalia , August, 1917. THE ART OF WRITING 165 in the meanings he gives to words, to names, that a writer creates his vocabulary. All language, we know, is imagery and metaphor; even the simplest names of the elementary things are metaphors based on re¬ semblances that suggested themselves to the primitive men who made language. It is not otherwise with the aboriginal man of genius who uses language to express his new vision of the world. He sees things charged with energy, or brilliant with colour, or breathing out perfume, that the writers who came before him had overlooked, and to designate these things he must use names which convey the qualities he lias perceived. Guided by his own new personal sensations and per¬ ceptions, he creates his metaphorical vocabulary. If we examine the style of Montaigne, so fresh and personal and inventive, we see that its originality lies largely in its vocabulary, which is not, like that of Rabelais, manufactured afresh, but has its novelty in its metaphorical values, such new values being tried and tempered at every step, to the measure of the highly individual person behind them, who thereby exerts his creative force. In later days Huysmans, who indeed saw the world at a more eccentric angle than Montaigne, yet with unflinching veracity and absolute devotion, set himself to the task of creating his own vocabulary, and at first the unfamiliarity of its beauty estranges us. To think of Huysmans is to be led towards an aspect of style not to be passed over. To say that the artist THE DANCE OF LIFE 1 66 in words is expressing a new vision of the world and seeking the designations for things as he sees them, is a large part of the truth, and, I would say, perhaps the most important part of it. For most of us, I suppose (as I know it has been for me), our vision of Nature has been largely, though by no means entirely, constituted by pictures we have seen, by poems we have read, that left an abiding memory. That is to say that Nature comes to us through an atmosphere which is the emanation of supreme artists who once thrilled us. But we are here concerned with the process of the artist’s work and not with his aesthetic influence. The artist finds that words have a rich content of their own, they are alive and they flourish or decay. They send out connecting threads in every direction, they throb with meaning that ever changes and reverber¬ ates afar. The writer is not always, or often, merely preparing a catalogue raisonne of things, he is an artibt and his pigments are words. Often he merely takes his suggestions from the things of the world and makes his own pictures without any real resemblance to the scene it is supposed to depict. Dujardin tells us that he once took Huysmans to a Wagner concert; he scarcely listened to the music, but he was fascinated by the programme the attendant handed to him; he went home to write a brilliant page on “Tannhauser.” Mallarm6, on the other hand, was soaked in music; to him music was the voice of the world, and it was the aim of poetry to express the world by itself becoming THE ART OF WRITING 167 music; he stood on a height like a pioneer and looked towards the Promised Land, trying to catch intima¬ tions of a new sensibility and a future art, but a great master of language, like Huysmans, he never was. Huysmans has written superb pages about Gustave Moreau and Felicien Rops, thinking, no doubt, that he was revealing supreme artists (though we need not follow too closely the fashion of depreciating either of those artists), but he was really only attracted to their programmes and therein experiencing a stimulus that chanced to be peculiarly fitted for drawing out his own special art. Baudelaire would have written less gorgeously, but he would have produced a more final critical estimate. Yet even the greatest writers are affected by the intoxication of mere words in the artistry of language. Shakespeare is, constantly, and, not content with * ‘ making the green one red,” he must needs at the same time “the multitudinous seas incarnadine.” It is con¬ spicuous in Keats (as Leigh Hunt, perhaps his first sensitively acute critic, clearly explained), and often, as in “The Eve of St. Agnes,” where he seemed to be concerned with beautiful things, he was really con¬ cerned with beautiful words. In that way he is some¬ times rather misleading for the too youthful reader; “porphyry” seemed to me a marvellous substance when as a boy of twelve I read of it in Keats, and I imagine that Keats himself would have been surprised, had he lived long enough to walk to St. Thomas’s 168 THE DANCE OF LIFE Hospital over the new London Bridge, when told that he was treading a granite that was porphyritic. I recall how Verlaine would sometimes repeat in varying tones some rather unfamiliar word, rolling it round and round in his mouth, sucking it like a sweetmeat, licking the sound into the shape that pleased him; some people may perhaps have found a little bizarre the single words (“Green,” for example) which he some¬ times made the title of a song, but if they adopt the preliminary Verlainian process they may understand how he had fitted such words to music and meaning. The most obviously beautiful things in the world of Nature are birds and flowers and the stones we call precious. But the attitude of the poet in the presence of Nature is precisely that of Huysmans in the presence of art : it is the programme that interests him. Of birds the knowledge of poets generally is of the most gener¬ alised and elementary kind; they are the laughing¬ stock of the ornithologist; they are only a stage re¬ moved from the standpoint of the painter who was introducing a tree into his landscape and when asked what tree, replied, “Oh, just the ordinary tree.” Even Goethe mistook the finches by the roadside for larks. The poet, one may be sure, even to-day seldom carries in his pocket the little “Fiihrer durch unsere Vogel- welt” of Bernhard Hoffmann, and has probably never so much as heard of it. Of flowers his knowledge seems to be limited by the quality of the flower’s name. I have long cherished an exquisite and quite common THE ART OF WRITING i6g English wild-flower, but have never come across a poem about it, for its unattractive name is the stitch- wort, and it is only lately that even in prose it has met (from Mr. Salt) writh due appreciation. As regards precious stones the same may be said, and in the galleries of the Geological Museum it has hardly seemed to me that, among the few visitors, there were poets (unless I chanced to bring one myself) to brood over all that beauty. It is the word and its inner reverberation with which the poet is really concerned, even sometimes perhaps deliberately. When Milton misused the wx>rd “eglantine” one realises the uncon¬ scious appeal to him of the name and one cannot feel quite sure that it wras altogether unconscious. Cole¬ ridge has been solemnly reproved for speaking of the “loud ” bassoon. But it was to the timbre of the word, not of the instrument, that Coleridge was responding, and had he been informed that the bassoon is not loud, I doubt not he would have replied: “Well, if it is not loud it ought to be.” On the plane on which Coleridge moved “the loud bassoon” wras absolutely right. We see that the artist in speech moves among words rather than among things. Originally, it is true, wwds arc closely related to things, but in their far reverberation they have become enriched by many associations, saturated with many colours; they have acquired a life of their own, moving on another plane than that of things, and it is on that plane that the artist in words is, as an artist, concerned with them. 170 THE DANCE OF LIFE It thus comes about that the artist in words, like the artist in pigments, is perpetually passing between two planes — the plane of new vision and the plane of new creation. He is sometimes remoulding the external world and sometimes the internal world ; sometimes, by predilection, lingering more on one plane than on the rther plane. The artist in words is not irresistibly drawn to the exact study of things or moved by the strong love of Nature. The poets who describe Nature most minutely and most faithfully are not usually the great poets. That is intelligible because the poet — even the poet in the wide sense who also uses prose — is primarily the instrument of human emotion and not of scientific observation. Yet that poet possesses im¬ mense resources of strength who in early life has stored within him the minute knowledge of some field of the actual external world.1 One may doubt, indeed, whether there has been any supreme poet, from Homer on, who has not had this inner reservoir of sensitive impressions to draw from. The youthful Shakespeare who wrote the poems, with their minute descriptions, was not a great poet, as the youthful Marlowe was, but he was storing up the material which, when he had 1 “The Muses are the daughters of Memory,” Paul Morand tells ua that Proust would say; “there is no art without recollection,” and cer¬ tainly it is supremely true of Proust’s art. It is that element of art which imparts at once both atmosphere and poignant intimacy, external far¬ ness with internal nearness. The lyrics of Thomas Hardy owe their intimacy of appeal to the dominance in them of recollection (in Late Lyrics and Earlier one might say it is never absent), and that is why they can scarcely be fully appreciated save by those who are no longej very young. THE ART OF WRITING 171 developed into a great poet, he could draw on at need with a careless and assured hand. Without such reser¬ voirs, the novelists also would never attain to that touch of the poet which, beyond their story-telling power, can stir our hearts. “A la Recherche du Temps Perdu” is the name of a great modern book, but every novelist during part of his time has been a Ulysses on a perilous voyage of adventure for that far home. One thinks of George Eliot and her early intimacy with the life of country people, of Hardy who had acquired so acute a sensitivity to the sounds of Nature, of Conrad who had caught the flashes of penetrating vision which came to the sailor on deck ; and in so far as they move away into scenes where they cannot draw from those ancient reservoirs, the adventures of these artists, however brilliant they may become, lose their power of intimate appeal. The most extravagant example of this to-day is the Spanish novelist Blasco Ibanez, who wrote of the Valencian huerta that had saturated his youth in novels that were penetrating and poignant, and then turned to writing for the cosmopolitan crowd novels about anything, that were completely negligible. We grow familiar in time with the style of the great writers, and when we read them we translate them easily and unconsciously, as we translate a foreign language we are familiar with; we understand the vocabulary because we have learnt to know the special seal of the creative person who moulded the vocabu¬ lary. But at the outset the great writer may be almost THE DANCE OF LIFE 172 as unintelligible to us as though he were writing in a language we had never learnt. In the now remote days when “Leaves of Grass” was a new book in the world, few who looked into it for the first time, how¬ ever honestly, but were repelled and perhaps even violently repelled, and it is hard to realise now that once those who fell on Swinburne’s “Poems and Ballads” saw at first only picturesque hieroglyphics to which they had no key. But even to-day how many there are who find Proust unreadable and Joyce un¬ intelligible. Until we find the door and the clue the new writer remains obscure. Therein lies the truth of Landor’s saying that the poet must himself create the beings who are to enjoy his Paradise. For most of those who deliberately seek to learn to write, words seem generally to be felt as of less impor¬ tance than the art of arranging them. It is thus that the learner in writing tends to become the devoted stu¬ dent of grammar and syntax whom we came across at the outset. That is indeed a tendency which always increases. Civilisation develops with a conscious ad^ hesion to formal order, and the writer — writing by fashion or by ambition and not by divine right of creative instinct — follows the course of civilisation. It is an unfortunate tendency, for those whom it af¬ fects conquer by their number. As we know, writing that is real is not learnt that way. Just as the solar system was not made in accordance with the astrono¬ mer’s laws, so writing is not made by the laws of gram- THE ART OF WRITING 173 mar. Astronomer and grammarian alike can only come in at the end, to give a generalised description of what usually happens in the respective fields it pleases them to explore. When a new comet, cosmic or literary, enters their sky, it is their descriptions which have to be readjusted, and not the comet. There seems to be no more pronounced mark of the decadence of a people and its literature than a servile and rigid subserviency to rule. It can only make for ossification, for anchy¬ losis, for petrification, all the milestones on the road of death. In every age of democratic plebeianism, where each man thinks he is as good a writer as the others, and takes his laws from the others, having no laws of his own nature, it is down this steep path that men, in a flock, inevitably run. We may find an illustration of the plebeian anchy¬ losis of advancing civilisation in the minor matter of spelling. We cannot, it is true, overlook the fact that writing is read and that its appearance cannot be quite disregarded. Yet, ultimately, it appeals to the ear, and spelling can have little to do with style. The laws of spelling, properly speaking, are few or none, and in the great ages men have understood this and boldly acted accordingly. They exercised a fine personal dis¬ cretion in the matter and permitted without ques¬ tion a wide range of variation. Shakespeare, as we know, even spelt his own name in several different ways, all equally correct. When that great old Eliza¬ bethan mariner, Sir Martin Frobisher, entered on one THE DANCE OF LIFE 174 of his rare and hazardous adventures with the pen, he created spelling absolutely afresh, in the spirit of simple heroism with which he was always ready to sail out into strange seas. His epistolary adventures are, certainly, more interesting than admirable, but we have no reason to suppose that the distinguished persons to whom these letters were addressed viewed them with any disdain. More anaemic ages cannot endure creative vitality even in spelling, and so it comes about that in periods when everything beautiful and handmade gives place to manufactured articles made wholesale, uniform, and cheap, the same prin¬ ciples are applied to words, and spelling becomes a mechanic trade. We must have our spelling uniform, even if uniformly bad.1 Just as the man who, having out of sheer ignorance eaten the wrrong end of his asparagus, was thenceforth compelled to declare that he preferred that end, so it is with our race in the mat¬ ter of spelling; our ancestors, by chance or by igno- 1 The Oxford University Press publishes a little volume of Rules for Compositors and Readers in which this uniform is set forth. It is a useful and interesting manual, but one wonders how many unnecessary and even undesirable usages — including that morbid desire to cling to the ize termination (charming as an eccentricity but hideous as a rule) when ise would suffice — are hereby fostered. Even when we leave out of con¬ sideration the great historical tradition of variety in this matter, it is doubtful, when we consider them comprehensively, whether the advan¬ tages of encouraging every one to spell like his fellows overbalances the advantages of encouraging every one to spell unlike his fellows. When 1 was a teacher in the Australian bush I derived far less enjoyment from the more or less '‘correctly’’ spelt exercises of my pupils than from the occasional notes I received from their parents who, never having been taught to spell, were able to spell in the grand manner. We are wilfully throwing away an endless source of delight. THE ART OF WRITING *75 ranee, tended to adopt certain forms of spelling and we, their children, are forced to declare that we prefer those forms. Thus we have not only lost all individual¬ ity in spelling, but we pride ourselves on our loss and magnify our anchylosis. In England it has be¬ come almost impossible to flex our stiffened mental joints sufficiently to press out a single letter, in America it is almost impossible to extend them enough to admit that letter. It is convenient, we say, to be rigid and formal in these things, and therewith we are content; it matters little to us that we have thereby killed the life of our words and only gained the con- veniency of death. It would be likewise convenient, no doubt, if men and women could be turned into rigid geometrical diagrams, — as indeed our legislators sometimes seem to think that they already are, — but we should pay by yielding up all the infinite variations, the beautiful sinuosities, that had once made up life. There can be no doubt that in the much greater matter of style we have paid heavily for the attainment of our slavish adherence to mechanical rules, however convenient, however inevitable. The beautiful incor¬ rection, as we are now compelled to regard it, that so often marked the great and even the small writers of the seventeenth century, has been lost, for all can now write what any find it easy to read, what none have any consuming desire to read. Rut when Sir Thomas Browne wrote his “Religio Medici” it was with an art made up of obedience to personal law and abandon- THE DANCE OF LIFE 176 ment to free inspiration which still ravishes us. It is extraordinary how far indifference or incorrection of style may be carried and yet remain completely ad¬ equate even to complex and subtle ends. Pepys wrote his “ Diary,” at the outset of a life full of strenuous work and not a little pleasure, with a rare devotion in¬ deed, but with a concision and carelessness, a single eye on the fact itself, and an extraordinary absence of self-consciousness which rob it of all claim to possess what we conventionally term style. Yet in this vehicle he has perfectly conveyed not merely the most vividly realised and delightfully detailed picture of a past age ever achieved in any language, but he has, moreover, painted a psychological portrait of himself which for its serenely impartial justice, its subtle gradations, its bold juxtapositions of colours, has all the qualities of the finest Velasquez. There is no style here, we say, merely the diarist, writing with careless poignant vitality for his own eye, and yet no style that we could conceive would be better fitted, or so well fitted, for the miracle that has here been effected. The personal freedom of Browne led up to splendour, and that of Pepys to clarity. But while splendour is not the whole of writing, neither, although one returns to it again and again, is clarity. Here we come from another side on to a point we had already reached. Bergson, in reply to the question: “Comment doi- vent 6crire les Philosophes?” lets fall some observa¬ tions, which, as he himself remarks, concern other THE ART OF WRITING *77 writers beside philosophers. A technical word, he re¬ marks, even a word invented for the occasion or used in a special sense, is always in its place provided the instructed reader — though the difficulty, as he fails to point out, is to be sure of possessing this instructed reader — accepts it so easily as not even to notice it, and he proceeds to say that in philosophic prose, and in all prose, and indeed in all the arts, “the perfect ex¬ pression is that which has come so naturally, or rather so necessarily, by virtue of so imperious a predestina¬ tion, that we do not pause before it, but go straight on to what it seeks to express, as though it were blended with the idea; it became invisible by force of being transparent.”1 That is well said. Bergson also is on the side of clarity. Yet I do not feel that that is all there is to say. Style is not a sheet of glass in which the only thing that matters is the absence of flaws. Berg¬ son’s own style is not so diaphanous that one never pauses to admire its quality, nor, as a hostile critic (Edouard Dujardin) has shown, is it always so clear as to be transparent. The dancer in prose as well as in verse — philosopher or whatever he may be — must reveal all his limbs through the garment he wears; yet the garment must have its own proper beauty, and there is a failure of art, a failure of revelation, if it pos¬ sesses no beauty. Style indeed is not really a mere invisible transparent medium, it is not really a gar¬ ment, but, as Gourmont said, the very thought itself. 1 Ls Monde Nouveau, 15th December, 19 2X. 178 THE DANCE OF LIFE It is the miraculous transubstantiation of a spiritual body, given to us in the only form in which we may receive and absorb that body, and unless its clarity is balanced by its beauty it is not adequate to sustain that most high function. No doubt, if we lean on one side more than the other, it is clarity rather than beauty which we should choose, for on the other side we may have, indeed, a Sir Thomas Browne, and there we are conscious not so much of a transubstantiation as of a garment, with thick embroidery, indeed, and glisten¬ ing jewels, but we are not always sure that much is hidden beneath. A step further and we reach D’An¬ nunzio, a splendid mask with nothing beneath, just as in the streets of Rome one may sometimes meet a Franciscan friar with a head superb as a Roman Emperor’s and yet, one divines, it means nothing. The Italian writer, it is significant to note, chose so ostentatiously magnificent a name as Gabriele D’An¬ nunzio to conceal a real name which was nothing. The great angels of annunciation create the beauty of their own real names. Who now finds Shakespeare ridiculous? And how lovely a name is Keats! As a part of the harmony of art, which is necessarily made out of conflict, we have to view that perpetual seeming alternation between the two planes — the plane of vision and the plane of creation, the form within and the garment that clothes it — which may some¬ times distract the artist himself. The prophet Jeremiah once said (and modem prophets have doubtless had THE ART OF WRITING 179 occasion to recognise the truth of his remark) that he seemed to the people round him only as “one that hath a pleasant voice and can play well on an instrument.” But he failed to understand that it was only through this quality of voice and instrument that his lamenta¬ tions had any vital force or even any being, and that if the poem goes the message goes. Indeed, that is true of all his fellow prophets of the Old Testament and the New who have fascinated mankind with the sound of those harps that they had once hung by the waters of Babylon. The whole Bible, we may be very sure, would have long ago been forgotten by all but a few intelligent archaeologists, if men had not heard in it, again and again and again, “one that hath a pleasant voice and can play well on an instrument.” Socrates said that philosophy was simply music. But the same might be said of religion. The divine dance of satyrs and nymphs to the sound of pipes — it is the symbol of life which in one form or another has floated before human eyes from the days of the sculp¬ tors of Greek bas-reliefs to the men of our own day who catch the glimpse of new harmonies in the pages of “L’Esprit Nouveau.” We cannot but follow the piper that knows how to play, even to our own de¬ struction. There may be much that is objectionable about Man. But he has that engaging trait. And the world will end when he has lost it. One asks one’s self how it was that the old way of writing, as a personal art, gave place to the new way of THE DANCE OF LIFE I So writing, as a mere impersonal pseudo-scicnce, rigidly bound by formal and artificial rules. The answer, no doubt, is to be found in the existence of a great new current of thought which began mightily to stir in men’s minds towards the end of the seventeenth century. It will be remembered that it was at that time, both in England and France, that the new de¬ vitalised, though more flexible, prose appeared, with its precision and accuracy, its conscious orderliness, its deliberate method. But only a few years before, over France and England alike, a great intellectual wave had swept, imparting to the mathematical and geo¬ metrical sciences, to astronomy, physics, and allied studies, an impetus that they had never received be¬ fore on so great a scale. Descartes in France and New¬ ton in England stand out as the typical representatives of the movement. If that movement had to exert any influence on language — and we know how sensitively language reacts to thought — it could have been mani¬ fested in no other way than by the change which actu¬ ally took place. And there was every opportunity for that influence to be exerted.1 This sudden expansion of the mathematical and geometrical sciences was so great and novel that interest in it was not confined to 1 Ferris Creenslet (in his study of Joseph Glanvill, p. 183), referring to the Cartesian influence on English prose style, quotes from Sprat’s History of the Royal Society that the Society “exacted from its members a close, naked, natural way of speaking, positive expressions, a native easiness, bringing ail things as near the mathematic plainness as they can.” The Society passed a resolution to reject “all amplifications, di¬ gressions, and swellings of style.” THE ART OF WRITING 181 a small band of men of science: it excited the man in the street, the woman in the drawing-room; it was in¬ deed a woman, a bright and gay woman of the world, who translated Newton’s profound book into French. Thus it was that the new qualities of style were in¬ vented, not merely to express new qualities of thought, but because new scientific ideals were moving within vhe minds of men. A similar reaction of thought on language took place at the beginning of the nine¬ teenth century, when an attempt was made to vitalise language once more, and to break the rigid and formal moulds the previous century had constructed. The attempt was immediately preceded by the awakening of a new group of sciences, but this time the sciences of life, the biological studies associated with Cuvier and Lamarck, with John Hunter and Erasmus Darwin. With the twentieth century we see the temporary exhaustion of the biological spirit with its historical form in science and its romantic form in art, and we have a neo-classic spirit which has involved a renais¬ sance of the mathematical sciences and, even before that, was beginning to affect speech. To admire the old writers, because for them writing was an art to be exercised freely and not a vain attempt to follow after the ideals of the abstract sciences, thus by no means implies a contempt for that decorum and orderliness without which all written speech must be ineffective and obscure. The great writers in the great ages, standing above classicism and above romanti- 1 82 THE DANCE OF LIFE ' 7 cism, have always observed this decorum and orderli¬ ness. In their hands such observance was not a servile and rigid adherence to external rules, but a beautiful convention, an instinctive fine breeding, such as is naturally observed in human intercourse when it is not broken down by intimacy or by any great crisis of life or of death. The freedom of art by no means involves the easiness of art. It may rather, indeed, be said the difficulty in¬ creases with freedom, for to make things in accordance with patterns is ever the easiest task. The problem is equally arduous for those who, so far as their craft is conscious, seek an impersonal and for those who seek a personal ideal of style. Flaubert sought — in vain, it is true — to be the most objective of artists and to mould speech with heroic energy in shapes of abstract per¬ fection. Nietzsche, one of the most personal artists in style, sought likewise, in his own words, to work at a page of prose as a sculptor works at a statue. Though the result is not perhaps fundamentally different, whichever ideal it is that, consciously or instinctively, is followed, the personal road of style is doubtless theo¬ retically — though not necessarily in practice — the sounder, usually also that which moves most of us more profoundly. The great prose writers of the Second Empire in France made an unparalleled effort to carve or paint impersonal prose, but its final beauty and ef¬ fectiveness seem scarcely equal to the splendid energy it embodies. Jules de Goncourt, his brother thought, THE ART OF WRITING 183 literally died from the mental exhaustion of his un¬ ceasing struggle to attain an objective style adequate to express the subtle texture of the world as he saw it. But, while the Goncourts are great figures in literary history, they have pioneered no new road, nor are they of the writers whom men continuously love to read; for it is as a document that the “Journal” remains of enduring value. Yet the great writers of any school bear witness, each in his own way, that, deeper than these conven¬ tions and decorums of style, there is a law which no writer can escape from, a law which must needs be learnt, but can never be taught. That is the law of the logic of thought. All the conventional rules of the construction of speech may be put aside if a writer is thereby enabled to follow more closely and lucidly the form and process of his thought. It is the law of that logic that he must for ever follow and in attaining it alone find rest. He may say of it as devoutly as Dante : “In la sua voluntade £ nostra pace.” All progress in literary style lies in the heroic resolve to cast aside accretions and exuberances, all the conventions of a past age that were once beautiful because alive and are now false because dead. The simple and naked beauty of Swift’s style, sometimes so keen and poignant, rests absolutely on this truth to the logic of his thought. The twin qualities of flexibility and intimacy are of the essence of all progress in the art of language, and in their progressive achievement lies the attainment of 1 84 THE DANCE OF LIFE great literature. If we compare Shakespeare with his predecessors and contemporaries, we can scarcely say that in imaginative force he is vastly superior to Mar¬ lowe, or in intellectual grip to Jonson, but he im¬ measurably surpasses them in flexibility and in in¬ timacy. He was able with an incomparable art to weave a garment of speech so flexible in its strength, so intimate in its transparence, that it lent itself to every shade of emotion and the quickest turns of thought. When we compare the heavy and formal letters of Bacon, even to his closest friends, with the ‘‘Familiar Letters" of the vivacious Welshman Howell, we can scarcely believe the two men were contemporaries, so incomparably more expressive, so flexible and so intimate, is the style of Howell. All the writers who influence those who come after them have done so by the same method. They have thrown aside the awkward and outworn garments of speech, they have woven a simpler and more familiar speech, able to express subtleties or audacities that before seemed inexpressible. That was once done in English verse by Cowper and Wordsworth, in English prose by Addison and Lamb. That has been done in French to-day by Proust and in English by Joyce. When a great writer, like Carlyle or Browning, creates a speech of his own which is too clumsy to be flexible and too heavy to be intimate, he may arouse the ad¬ miration of his fellows, but he leaves no traces on the speech of the men who come after him. It is not easy THE ART OF WRITING 185 to believe that such will be Joyce’s fate. His “ Ulysses” • — carrying to a much further point qualities that be¬ gan to appear in his earlier work — has been hailed as epoch-making in English literature, though a dis¬ tinguished critic holds that it is this rather by closing than by opening an epoch. It would still be preparing a new road, and as thus operative we may accept it without necessarily judging it to be at the same time a master-work, provided we understand what it is that has been here attempted. This huge Odyssey is an ordinary day’s history in the ordinary life of one ordinary man and the persons of his immediate envi¬ ronment. It is here sought to reproduce as Art the whole of the man’s physical and psychic activity dur¬ ing that period, omitting nothing, not even the actions which the most naturalistic of novelists had hitherto thought too trivial or too indelicate to mention. Not only the thoughts and impulses that result in action, but also the thoughts and emotions that drift aimlessly across the field of his consciousness, are here; and, in the presentation of this combined inner and outer life, Joyce has sometimes placed both on the same plane, achieving a new simplicity of style, though we may at first sometimes find it hard to divine what is outer and what inner. Moreover, he never hesitates, when he pleases, to change the tone of his style and even to adopt without notice, in a deliberately ironical and chameleon-like fashion, the manner of other writers. In these ways Joyce has here achieved that new THE DANCE OF LIFE 1 86 intimacy of vision, that new flexibility of expression, which are of the essence of all great literature at its vitally moving point of advance. He has succeeded in realising and making manifest in art what others had passed over or failed to see. If in that difficult and dangerous task he has failed, as some of us may believe, to reach either complete clarity or complete beauty, fee has at all events made it possible for those who come after to reach a new height which, without the help of the road he had constructed, they might have missed, or even failed to conceive, and that is enough for any writer’s fame. When we turn to Proust we are in the presence of a writer about whom, no doubt, there is no violent dis¬ pute. There may be much about his work that is disturbing to many, but he was not concerned, like Joyce, to affront so many prejudices, and in France it is not even necessary, for the road has already been prepared by heroic pioneers of old during a thousand years. But the writer who brings a new revelation is not necessarily called upon to invite the execration of the herd. That is a risk he must be called upon to face, it is not an inevitable fate. When the mob yell: “Crucify him! Crucify him!” the artist, in whatever medium, hears a voice from Heaven: “This is my be¬ loved son.” Yet it is conceivable that the more per¬ fectly a new revelation is achieved the less antagonism it arouses. Proust has undoubtedly been the master of a new intimacy of vision, a new flexibility of ex- THE ART OF WRITING 187 pression. even though the style through which the revelation has been made, perhaps necessarily on account of the complexity involved, has remained a little difficult and also, it must be said, a little negli¬ gent. But it has achieved a considerable degree of clarity and a high degree of beauty. So there is less difficulty in recognising a great masterpiece in “A la Recherche du Temps Perdu” than if it were more con¬ spicuously the work of a daring pioneer. It is seen as the revelation of a new aesthetic sensibility embodied in a new and fitting style. Marcel Proust has ex¬ perienced clearly what others have felt dimly or not at all. The significance of his work is thus altogether apart from the power of its dramatic incidents or its qualities as a novel. To the critic of defective intelli¬ gence, craving for scenes of sensation, it has sometimes seemed that “A l’Ombre des Jeunes Filles en Fleur” is the least important section of Proust’s work. Yet it is on that quiet and uneventful tract of his narrative that Proust has most surely set the stamp of his gen¬ ius, a genius, I should like to add, which is peculiarly congenial to the English mind because it was in the English tradition, rather than in the French tradition, that Proust was moving.1 1 If it is asked why I take examples of a quality in art that is univer¬ sal from literary personalities that to many are questionable, even mor¬ bid or perverse, rather than from some more normal and unquestioned figure, Thomas Hardy, lor example, I would reply that I have always re¬ garded it as more helpful and instructive to take examples that are still questionable rather than to fall back on the unquestionable that all will accept tamely without thought. Forty years ago, when Hardy's genius i88 THE DANCE OF LIFE No doubt it is possible for a writer to go far by the exercise of a finely attentive docility. By a dutiful study of what other people have said, by a refined cleverness in catching their tricks, and avoiding their subtleties, their profundities, their audacities, by, in short, a patient perseverance in writing out copper¬ plate maxims in elegant copybooks, he can become at last, like Stevenson, the idol of the crowd. But the great writer can only learn out of himself. He learns to write as a child learns to walk. For the laws of the logic of thought are not other than those of physical movement. There is stumbling, awkwardness, hesita¬ tion, experiment — before at last the learner attains the perfect command of that divine rhythm and peril¬ ous poise in which he asserts his supreme human privi¬ lege. But the process of his learning rests ultimately on his own structure and function and not on others’ example. li Style must be founded upon models”; it is the rule set up by the pedant who knows nothing of what style means. For the style that is founded on a model is the negation of style. The ardour and heroism of great achievement in style never grow less as the ages pass, but rather tend to grow more. That is so, not merely because the hardest tasks are left for the last, but because of the ever increasing impediments placed in the path of was scarcely at all recognised, it seemed worth while to me to set forth the quality of his genius. To-day, when that quality is unquestioned, and Hardy receives general love and reverence, it would seem idle and unprofitable to do so. THE ART OF WRITING i8q style by the piling up of mechanical rules and rigid conventions. It is doubtful whether on the whole the forces of life really gain on the surrounding inertia o i death. The greatest writers must spend the blood and sweat of their souls, amid the execration and disdain of their contemporaries, in breaking the old moulds of style and pouring their fresh life into new moulds. From Dante to Carducci, from Rabelais to Proust, from Chaucer to Whitman, the giants of letters have been engaged in this life-giving task, and behind them the forces of death swiftly gather again. Here there is always room for the hero. No man, indeed, can write anything that matters who is not a hero at heart, even though to the people who pass him in the street or know him in the house he may seem as gentle as any dove. If all progress lies in an ever greater flexibility and intimacy of speech, a finer adaptation to the heights and depths of the mobile human soul, the task can never be finally completed. Every writer is called afresh to reveal new strata of life. By digging in his own soul he becomes the discoverer of the soul of his family, of his nation, of the race, of the heart of human¬ ity. For the great writer finds style as the mystic find& God, in his own soul. It is the final utterance of a sigh, which none could utter before him, and which all can who follow. In the end, it will be seen we return at last to the point from which we start. We have completed the cycle of an art’s evolution, — and it might, indeed, be THE DANCE OF LIFE any other art as much as writing, — reaching in the final sweep of ever wider flights the fact from which we started, but seeing it anew, with a fresh universal significance. Writing is an arduous spiritual and in¬ tellectual task, only to be achieved by patient and de¬ liberate labour and much daring. Yet therewith we are only at the beginning. Writing is also the expres¬ sion of individual personality, which springs up spon¬ taneously, or is slowly drawn up from within, out of a well of inner emotions which none may command. But even with these two opposite factors we have not attained the complete synthesis. For style in the full sense is more than the deliberate and designed creation, more even than the unconscious and involuntary crea¬ tion, of the individual man who therein expresses him¬ self. The self that he thus expresses is a bundle of in¬ herited tendencies that came the man himself can never entirely know whence. It is by the instinctive stress of a highly sensitive, or slightly abnormal con¬ stitution, that he is impelled to instil these tendencies into the alien magic of words. The stylum wherewith he strives to write himself on the yet blank pages of the world may have the obstinate vigour of the metal rod or the wild and quavering waywardness of an in¬ sect’s wing, but behind it lie forces that extend into infinity. It moves us because it is itself moved by pulses which in varying measure we also have in¬ herited, and because its primary source is in the heart of a cosmos from which we ourselves spring. CHAPTER V THE ART OF RELIGION I Religion is a large word, of good import and of evil import, and with the general discussion of religion we are not in this place concerned. Its quintessential core — which is the art of finding our emotional re¬ lationship to the world conceived as a whole — is all that here matters, and it is best termed “Mysticism.” No doubt it needs some courage to use that word. It is the common label of abuse applied to every pseudo¬ spiritual thing that is held up for contempt. Yet it would be foolish to allow ourselves to be deflected from the right use of a word by the accident of its abuse. “Mysticism,” however often misused, will here be used, because it is the correct term for the relationship of the Self to the Not-Self, of the individual to a Whole, when, going beyond his own personal ends, he dis¬ covers his adjustment to larger ends, in harmony or devotion or love. It has become a commonplace among the unthink ing, or those who think badly, to assume an oppose tion of hostility between mysticism and science.1 If 1 It is scarcely necessary to remark that if we choose to give to “ mysticism” a definition incompatible with “science,” the opposition cannot be removed. This is, for example, done by Croce, who yet recog¬ nises as highly important a process of “conversion” which is nothing else but mysticism as here understood. (See, e.g., Piccoli, Benedetto Croce , p. 184.) Only he has left himself no name to applv to it. 192 THE DANCE OF LIFE “science” is, as we have some reason to believe, an art, if “mysticism” also is an art, the opposition can scarcely be radical since they must both spring from the same root in natural human activity. II If, indeed, by “science” we mean the organisation of an intellectual relationship to the world we live in ad¬ equate to give us some degree of power over that world, and if by “mysticism” we mean the joyful organisation of an emotional relationship to the world conceived as a whole,1 the opposition which we usually assume to exist between them is of comparatively modern origin. Among savage peoples such an opposition can scarcely be said to have any existence. The very fact that science, in the strict sense, seems often to begin with the stars might itself have suggested that the basis of science is mystical contemplation. Not only is there usually no opposition between the “scientific” and the “mystical” attitude among peoples we may fairly call primitive, but the two attitudes may be combined in the same person. The “medicine-man ” is not more an embryonic man of science than he is an embryonic mystic; he is both equally. He cultivates not only 1 “The endeavour of the human mind to enjoy the blessedness of actual communion with the highest," which is Pringle Pattison’s widely accepted definition of mysticism, 1 prefer not to use because it is ambig¬ uous. The “endeavour,” while it indicates that we are concerned with an art, also suggests its strained pathological forms, while “actual com¬ munion" lends itself to ontological interpretations. THE ART OF RELIGION 193 magic but holiness, he achieves the conquest of his own soul, he enters into harmony with the universe; and in doing this, and partly, indeed, through doing this, his knowledge is increased, his sensations and power of observation are rendered acute, and he is enabled so to gain organised knowledge of natural processes that he can to some extent foresee or even control those processes. He is the ancestor alike of the hermit fol¬ lowing after sanctity and of the inventor crystallising discoveries into profitable patents. Such is the medi¬ cine-man wherever we may find him in his typical shape — which he cannot always adequately achieve — all over the world, around Torres Straits just as much as around Behring’s Straits. Yet we have failed to grasp the significance of this fact. It is the business of the Shaman , as on the mystical side we may conveniently term the medicine-man, to place himself under the conditions — and even in primitive life those conditions are varied and subtle — which bring his will into harmony with the essence of the world, so that he grows one with that essence, that its will becomes his will, and, reversely, that, in a sense, his will becomes its. Herewith, in this unity with the spirit of the world, the possibility of magic and the power to control the operation of Nature are introduced into human thought, with its core of reality and its endless trail of absurdity, persisting even into advanced civilisation. But this harmony with the essence of the universes THE DANCE OF LIFE 194 this control of Nature through oneness with Nature, is not only at the heart of religion ; it is also at the heart of science. It is only by the possession of an acquired or inborn temperament attuned to the temperament of Nature that a Faraday or an Edison, that any scien¬ tific discoverer or inventor, can achieve his results. And the primitive medicine-man, who on the religious side has attained harmony of the self with the Not- Self, and by obeying learnt to command, cannot fail on the scientific side also, under the special conditions of his isolated life, to acquire an insight into natural methods, a practical power over human activities and over the treatment of disease, such as on the imagina¬ tive and emotional side he already possesses. If we are able to see this essential and double attitude of the Shaman — medicine-man — if we are able to elimi¬ nate all the extraneous absurdities and the extrava¬ gancies which conceal the real nature of his function in the primitive world, the problem of science and mysticism, and their relationship to each other, ceases to have difficulties for us. It is as well to point out, before passing on, that the Investigators of primitive thought are not altogether in agreement with one another on this question of the relation of science to magic, and have complicated the question by drawing a distinction between magic (understood as man’s claim to control Nature) and re¬ ligion (understood as man’s submission to Nature). The difficulties seem due to an attempt to introduce THE ART OF RELIGION 195 dear-cut definitions at a stage of thought where none such existed. That medicine-men and priests culti¬ vated science, while wrapping it up in occult and magical forms, seems indicated by the earliest histori¬ cal traditions of the Near East. Herbert Spencer long ago brought together much of the evidence on this point. McDougall to-day in his “Social Psychology” (Chapter XIII) accepts magic as the origin of science, and Frazer in the early edition of his “Golden Bough” regarded magic as “the savage equivalent of our natural science.” Marett1 “profoundly doubts” this, and declares that if we can use the word “science” at all in such a context, magic is occult science and the very antithesis of natural science. While all that Marett states is admirably true on the basis of his own definitions, he scarcely seems to realise the virtue of the word “equivalent,” while at the same time, it may be, his definition of magic is too narrow. Silberer, from the psycho-analytic standpoint, accepting the development of exact science from one branch of magic, points out that science is, on the one hand, the rec¬ ognition of concealed natural laws and, on the other, the dynamisation of psychic power,2 and thus falls into two great classes, according as its operation is external or internal. This seems a true and subtle dis¬ tinction which Marett has overlooked. In the latest % edition of his work,3 Frazer has not insisted on the 1 The Threshold of Religion (1914), p. 48. * Zentralblatt fur Psychoanalyse (1911), p. 272. ® Golden Bough , “Balder the Beautiful,” vol. 11, pp. 304-03. 196 THE DANCE OF LIFE relation or analogy of science to magic, but has been content to point out that Man has passed through the three stages of magic, religion, and science. “ In magic Man depends on his own strength to meet the diffi¬ culties and dangers that beset him on every side. He believes in a certain established order of Nature on which he can surely count, and which he can manipu¬ late for his own ends.” Then he finds he has over¬ estimated his own powers and he humbly takes the road of religion, leaving the universe to the more or less capricious will of a higher power. But he finds this view inadequate and he proceeds to revert in a meas¬ ure to the older standpoint of magic by postulating explicitly what in magic had only been implicitly as¬ sumed, “to wit, an inflexible regularity in the order of natural events which, if carefully observed, enables us to foresee their course with certainty, and to act ac¬ cordingly.” So that science, in Frazer’s view, is not so much directly derived from magic as itself in its original shape one with magic, and Man has pro¬ ceeded, not in a straight line, but in a spiral. The profound significance of this early personage is, however, surely clear. If science and mysticism are alike based on fundamental natural instincts, appear¬ ing spontaneously all over the world; if, moreover, they naturally tend to be embodied in the same indi¬ vidual, in such a way that each impulse would seem to be dependent on the other for its full development; then there can be no ground for accepting any dis- THE ART OF RELIGION 197 harmony between them. The course of human evolu¬ tion involves a division of labour, a specialisation of science and of mysticism along special lines and in separate individuals.1 But a fundamental antagonism of the two, it becomes evident, is not to be thought of ; it is unthinkable, even absurd. If at some period in the course of civilisation we seriously find that our science and our religion are antagonistic, then there must be something wrong either with our science or with our religion. Perhaps not seldom there may be something wrong with both. For if the natural im¬ pulses which normally work best together are separated and specialised in different persons, we may expect to find a concomitant state of atrophy and hypertrophy, both alike morbid. The scientific person will become atrophied on the mystical side, the mystical person will become atrophied on the scientific side. Each will be¬ come morbidly hypertrophied on his own side. But the assumption that, because there is a lack of harmony between opposing pathological states, there must also be a similar lack of harmony in the normal state, is un¬ reasonable. We must severely put out of count alike the hypertrophied scientific people with atrophied religious instincts, and the hypertrophied religious 1 Farnell even asserts (In his Greek Hero Cults) that “it is impossible to quote a single example of any one of the higher world-religions work¬ ing in harmony with the development of physical science.” He finds a “special and unique” exception in the cult of Asclepios at Cos and Epidauros and Pergamon, where, after the fourth century B.c., were physicians, practising a rational medical science, who were also official priests of the Asclepios temples. THE DANCE OF LIFE people with atrophied scientific instincts. Neither group can help us here; they only introduce confusion. We have to examine the matter critically, to go back to the beginning, to take so wide a survey of the phe¬ nomena that their seemingly conflicting elements fall into harmony. The fact, in the first place, that the person with an overdeveloped religious sense combined with an under* developed scientific sense necessarily conflicts with a person in whom the reverse state of affairs exists, can¬ not be doubted, nor is the reason of it obscure. It is difficult to conceive a Darwin and a St. Theresa enter¬ ing with full and genuine sympathy into each other’s point of view. And that is so by no means because the two attitudes, stripped of all but their essentials, are irreconcilable. If we strip St. Theresa of her atrophied pseudo-science, which in her case was mostly theo¬ logical “science,” there was nothing in her attitude which would not have seemed to harmonise and to exalt that absolute adoration and service to natural truth which inspired Darwin. If we strip Darwin of that atrophied sense of poetry and the arts which he deplored, and that anaemic secular conception of the universe as a whole which he seems to have accepted without deploring, there was nothing in his attitude which would not have served to fertilise and enrich the spiritual exaltation of Theresa and even to have removed far from her that temptation to acedia or slothfulness which all the mystics who are mystics THE ART OF RELIGION 199 only have recognised as their besetting sin, minimised as it was, in Theresa, by her practical activities. Y et, being as they were persons of supreme genius de¬ veloped on opposite sides of their common human nature, an impassable gulf lies between them. It lies equally between much more ordinary people who yet show the same common character of being undergrown on one side, overgrown on the other. This difficulty is not diminished when the person who is thus hypertrophied on one side and atrophied on the other suddenly wakes up to his one-sided state and hastily attempts to remedy it. The very fact that such a one-sided development has come about in¬ dicates that there has probably been a congenital basis for it, an innate disharmony which must require infinite patience and special personal experience to overcome. But the heroic and ostentatious manner in which these ill-balanced people hastily attempt the athletic feat of restoring their spiritual balance has frequently aroused the interest, and too often the amusement, of the spectator. Sir Isaac Newton, one of the most quintessentially scientific persons the world has seen, a searcher who made the most stupend¬ ous effort to picture the universe intelligently on its purely intelligible side, seems to have realised in old age, when he was, indeed, approaching senility, that the vast hypertrophy of his faculties on that side had not been compensated by any development on the religious side. He forthwith set himself to the inter- 200 THE DANCE OF LIFE pretation of the Book of Daniel and puzzled over the prophecies of the Book of Revelation, with the same scientifically serious air as though he were analysing the spectrum. In reality he had not reached the sphere of religion at all ; he had merely exchanged good science for bad science. Such senile efforts to pene¬ trate, ere yet life is quite over, the mystery of religion recall, and, indeed, have a real analogy to, that final effort of the emotionally starved to grasp at love which has been called “old maid’s insanity”; and just as in this aberration the woman who has all her life put love into the subconscious background of her mind is over¬ come by an eruption of the suppressed emotions and driven to create baseless legends of which she is her¬ self the heroine, so the scientific man who has put re¬ ligion into the subconscious and scarcely known that there is such a thing may become in the end the victim of an imaginary religion. In our own time we may have witnessed attempts of the scientific mind to become religious, which, without amounting to mental aber¬ ration, are yet highly instructive. It would be a double- edged compliment, in this connection, to compare Sir Oliver Lodge to Sir Isaac Newton. But after devoting himself for many years to purely physical research, Lodge also, as he has confessed, found that he had overlooked the religious side of life, and therefore set himself with characteristic energy to the task — the stages of which are described in a long series of books - — of developing this atrophied side of his nature. THE ART OF RELIGION 201 Unlike Newton, who was worried about the future, Lodge became worried about the past. Just as Newton found what he was contented to regard as religious peace in speculating on the meaning of the Books of Daniel and Revelation, so Lodge found a similar satis¬ faction in speculations concerning the origin of the soul and in hunting out tags from the poets to support his speculations. So fascinating was this occupation that it seemed to him to constitute a great “ message’ * to the world. ‘‘My message is that there is some great truth in the idea of preexistence, not an obvious truth, nor one easy to formulate — a truth difficult to ex¬ press — not to be identified with the guesses of rein¬ carnation and transmigration, which may be fanciful. We may not have been individuals before, but we are chips or fragments of a great mass of mind, of spirit, and of life — drops, as it were, taken out of a germinal reservoir of life, and incubated until incarnate in a material body.” 1 The genuine mystic would smile if asked to accept as a divine message these phraseologi¬ cal gropings in the darkness, with their culmination in the gospel of ‘‘incubated drops.” They certainly rep¬ resent an attempt to get at a real fact. But the mystic is not troubled by speculations about the origin of the individual, or theories of preexistence, fantastic myths which belong to the earlier Plato's stage of thought. It is abundantly evident that when the hypertrophied man of science seeks to cultivate his atrophied religious 1 Sir Oliver Lodge, Reason and Belief , p. 19. 202 THE DANCE OF LIFE instincts it is with the utmost difficulty that he es¬ capes from science. His conversion to religion merely means, for the most part, that he has exchanged sound science for pseudo-science. Similarly, when the man with hypertrophied reli¬ gious instincts seeks to cultivate his atrophied scienti¬ fic instincts, the results are scarcely satisfactory. Here, indeed, we are concerned with a phenomenon that is rarer than the reverse process. The reason may not be far to seek. The instinct of religion develops earlier in the history of a race than the instinct of science. The man who has found the massive satisfaction of his religious cravings is seldom at any stage conscious of scientific cravings; he is apt to feel that he already pos¬ sesses the supreme knowledge. The religious doubters who vaguely feel that their faith is at variance with science are merely the creatures of creeds, the product of Churches; they are not the genuine mystics. The genuine mystics who have exercised their scientific instincts have generally found scope for such exercise within an enlarged theological scheme which they re¬ garded as part of their religion. So it was that St. Au¬ gustine found scope for his full and vivid, if capricious, intellectual impulses; so also Aquinas, in whom there was doubtless less of the mystic and more of the scien¬ tist, found scope for the rational and orderly develop¬ ment of a keen intelligence which has made him an au¬ thority and even a pioneer for many who are absolutely indifferent to his theology. THE ART OF RELIGION 203 Again we see that to understand the real relations of science and mysticism, we must return to ages when, on neither side, had any accumulated mass of dead traditions effected an artificial divorce between two great natural instincts. It has already been pointed out that if we go outside civilisation the divorce is not found; the savage mystic is also the savage man of science, the priest and the doctor are one.1 It is so also for the most part in barbarism, among the ancient He¬ brews for instance, and not only among their priests, but even among their prophets. It appears that the most usual Hebrew word for what we term the “ pro¬ phet” signified “one who bursts forth,” presumably into the utterance of spiritual verities, and the less us¬ ual words signify “seer.” That is to say, the prophet was primarily a man of religion, secondarily a man of science. And that predictive element in the prophet’s function, which to persons lacking in religious instinct seems the whole of his function, has no relationship at all to religion; it is a function of science. It is an in¬ sight into cause and effect, a conception of sequences based on extended observation and enabling the 1 It is scarcely necessary to point out that a differentiation of function has to be made sooner or later, and sometimes it is made soon. This wa3 so among the Todas of India. “Certain Todas,” says Dr. Rivers {The Todas, 1906, p. 249), “ have the power of divination, others are sorcerers, and others again have the power of curing diseases by means of spells and rites, while all three functions are quite separate from those of the priest or sharman. The Todas have advanced some way towards civilisation of function in this respect, and have as separate members of the community their prophets, their magicians, and their medicine-men in addition to their priests." 204 THE DANCE OF LIFE “ prophet ” to assert that certain lines of action will probably lead to the degeneration of a stock, or to the decay of a nation. It is a sort of applied history. “ Prophecy ” has no more to do with religion than have the forecasts of the Meteorological Bureau, which also are a kind of applied science in earlier stages associated with religion. If, keeping within the sphere of civilisation, we go back as far as we can, the conclusion we reach is not greatly different. The earliest of the great mystics in historical times is Lao-tze. He lived six hundred years earlier than Jesus, a hundred years earlier than Sakya- Muni, and he was more quintessentially a mystic than either. He was, moreover, incomparably nearer than either to the point of view of science. Even his occupa¬ tion in life was, in relation to his age and land, of a scientific character; he was, if we may trust uncertain tradition, keeper of the archives. In the substance of his work this harmony of religion and science is throughout traceable, the very word “Tao,” which to Lao-tze is the symbol of all that to which religion may mystically unite us, is susceptible of being translated “Reason,” although that word remains inadequate to its full meaning. There are no theological or metaphys¬ ical speculations here concerning God (the very word only occurs once and may be a later interpolation), the soul, or immortality. The delicate and profound art of Lao-tze largely lies in the skill with which he expresses spiritual verities in the form of natural truths. His THE ART OF RELIGION 205 affirmations not only go to the core of religion, but they express the essential methods of science. This man has the mystic’s heart, but he has also the physicist’s touch and the biologist’s eye. He moves in a sphere in which religion and science are one. If we pass to more modern times and the little Euro¬ pean corner of the world, around the Mediterranean shores, which is the cradle of our latter-day civilisation, again and again we find traces of this fundamental unity of mysticism and science. It may well be that we never again find it in quite so pure a form as in Lao-tze, quite so free from all admixture alike of bad re¬ ligion and bad science. The exuberant unbalanced ac¬ tivity of our race, the restless acquisitiveness — already manifested in the sphere of ideas and traditions before it led to the production of millionaires — soon became an ever-growing impediment to such unity of spiritual impulses. Among the supple and yet ferocious Greeks, indeed, versatility and recklessness seem at a first glance always to have stood in the way of approach to the essential terms of this problem. It was only when the Greeks began to absorb Oriental influences, we are inclined to say, that they became genuine mystics, and as they approached mysticism they left science behind. Yet there was a vein of mysticism in the Greeks from the first, not alone due to seeds from the East flung to germinate fruitfully in Greek soil, though perhaps to that Ionian element of the Near East which was an es¬ sential part of the Greek spirit. All that Karl Joel of 206 THE DANCE OF LIFE Basel has sought to work out concerning the evolution of the Greek philosophic spirit has a bearing on this point. We are wrong, he believes, to look on the early Greek philosophers of Nature as mainly physicists, treating the religious and poetic mystic elements in them as mere archaisms, concessions, or contradic¬ tions. Hellas needed, and possessed, an early Romantic spirit, if we understand the Romantic spirit, not merely through its reactionary offshoots, but as a deep mystico-lyrical expression; it was comparable in early Greece to the Romantic spirit of the great creative men of the early Renaissance or the early nineteenth century, and the Apollinian classic spirit was devel¬ oped out of an ordered discipline and formulation of the Dionysian spirit more mystically near to Nature.1 If we bear this in mind we are helped to understand much in the religious life of Greece which seems not to harmonise with what we conventionally call “classic.” In the dim figure of Pythagoras we perhaps see not only a great leader of physical science, but also a great initiator in spiritual mystery. It is, at any rate, fairly clear that he established religious brotherhoods of care¬ fully selected candidates, women as well as men being eligible, and living on so lofty and aristocratic a level that the populace of Magna Grecia, who could not understand them, decided out of resentment to burn 1 Joel, Ur sprung der Natur philo sophie aus dem Geiste der Romantik (1903); Nietzsche und die Romantik (1905). But I am here quoting from Professor Joel’s account of his own philosophical development in Du DexUsciie Philosophic der Gegenwart, vol. 1 (1921). THE ART OF RELIGION 207 them alive, and the whole order was annihilated about B.c. 500. But exactly how far these early Pythago¬ reans, whose community has been compared to the me^ diaeval orders of chivalry, were mystics, we may imagine as we list, in the light of the Pythagorean echoes we find here and there in Plato. On the whole we scarcely go to the Greeks for a clear exposition of what we now term “ mysticism.” We see more of it in Lucretius than we can divine in his master Epicurus. And we see it still more clearly in the Stoics. We can, indeed, no¬ where find a more pure and concise statement than in Marcus Aurelius of the mystical core of religion as the union in love and harmony and devotion of the self with the Not-Self. If Lucretius may be accounted the first of moderns in the identification of mysticism and science, he has been followed by many, even though, one sometimes thinks, with an ever-increasing difficulty, a drooping of the wings of mystical aspiration, a limping of the feet of scientific progress. Leonardo and Giordano Bruno and Spinoza and Goethe, each with a little imperfec¬ tion on one side or the other, if not on both sides, have moved in a sphere in which the impulses of religion are felt to spring from the same centre as the impulses of science. Einstein, whose attitude in many ways is so in¬ teresting, closely associates the longing for pure knowl¬ edge with religious feeling, and he has remarked that “in every true searcher of Nature there is a kind of re¬ ligious reverence.” He is inclined to attach significance 208 THE DANCE OF LIFE to the fact that so many great men of science — New¬ ton, Descartes, Gauss, Helmholtz — have been in one way or another religious. If we cannot altogether in¬ clude such men as Swedenborg and Faraday in the same group, it is because we cannot feel that in them the two impulses, however highly developed, really spring from the same centre or really make a true har¬ mony. We suspect that these men and their like kept their mysticism in a science-proof compartment of their minds, and their science in a mysticism-proof compart¬ ment; we tremble for the explosive result, should the wall of partition ever be broken down. The difficulty, we see again, has been that, on each hand, there has been a growth of non-essential tradi¬ tions around the pure and vital impulse, and the obvi¬ ous disharmony of these two sets of accretions conceals the underlying harmony of the impulses themselves. The possibility of reaching the natural harmony is thus not necessarily by virtue of any rare degree of intellec¬ tual attainment, nor by any rare gift of inborn spiritual temperament, — though either of these may in some cases be operative, — but rather by the happy chance that the burden of tradition on each side has fallen and that the mystical impulse is free to play without a dead metaphysical theology, the scientific impulse without a dead metaphysical formalism. It is a happy chance that may befall the simple more easily than the wise and learnedL THE ART OF RELIGION 209 in The foregoing considerations have perhaps cleared the way to a realisation that when we look broadly at the matter, when we clear away all the accumulated super¬ stitions, the unreasoned prepossessions, on either side, and so reach firm ground, not only is there no opposi¬ tion between science and mysticism, but in their es¬ sence, and at the outset, they are closely related. The seeming divorce between them is due to a false and un¬ balanced development on either side, if not on both sides. Yet all such considerations cannot suffice to make present to us this unity of apparent opposites. There is, indeed, it has often seemed to me, a certain futility in all discussion of the relative claims of science and religion. This is a matter which, in the last resort, lies beyond the sphere of argument. It depends not only on a man’s entire psychic equipment, brought with him at birth and never to be fundamentally changed, but it is the outcome of his own intimate experience during life. It cannot be profitably discussed because it is ex¬ periential. It seems to me, therefore, that, having gone so far, and stated what I consider to be the relations of mysti¬ cism and science as revealed in human history, I am bound to go further and to state my personal grounds for believing that the harmonious satisfaction alike of the religious impulse and the scientific impulse may be 210 THE DANCE OF LIFE attained to-day by an ordinarily balanced person in whom both impulses crave for satisfaction. There is, indeed, a serious difficulty. To set forth a personal re¬ ligious experience for the first time requires consider¬ able resolution, and not least to one who is inclined to suspect that the experiences usually so set forth can be of no profound or significant nature; that if the under¬ lying motives of a man’s life can be brought to the sur¬ face and put into words their vital motive power is gone. Even the fact that more than forty years have passed since the experience took place scarcely suffices to make the confession of it easy. But I recall to mind that the first original book I ever planned (and in fact began to write) was a book, impersonal though sug¬ gested by personal experience, on the foundations of re¬ ligion.1 I put it aside, saying to myself I would com¬ plete it in old age, because it seemed to me that the problem of religion will always be fresh, while there were other problems more pressingly in need of speedy investigation. Now, it may be, I begin to feel the time has come to carry that early project a stage further. Like many of the generation to which I belonged, f was brought up far from the Sunday-school atmosphere of conventional religiosity. I received little religious instruction outside the home, but there I was made to feel, from my earliest years, that religion is a very vital 1 In connection with this scheme, it may be interesting to note, I pre¬ pared, in 1879, a questionnaire on “conversion,” on the lines of the inves¬ tigations which some years later began to be so fruitfully carried out by the psychologists of religion in America. THE ART OF RELIGION 211 and personal matter with which the world and the fash¬ ion of it had nothing to do. To that teaching, while still scarcely more than a child, I responded in a whole¬ hearted way. Necessarily the exercise of this early im¬ pulse followed the paths prescribed for it by my en¬ vironment. I accepted the creed set before me ; I pri¬ vately studied the New Testament for my own satisfac¬ tion; I honestly endeavoured, strictly in private, to mould my actions and impulses on what seemed to be Christian lines. There was no obtrusive outward evi¬ dence of this; outside the home, moreover, I moved in a world which might be indifferent but was not actively hostile to my inner aspirations, and, if the need for any external affirmation had become inevitable, I should, I am certain, have invoked other than religious grounds for my protest. Religion, as I instinctively felt then and as I consciously believe now, is a private matter, as love is. This was my mental state at the age of twelve. Then came the period of emotional and intellectual expansion, when the scientific and critical instincts be¬ gan to germinate. These were completely spontaneous and not stimulated by any influences of the environ¬ ment. To inquire, to question, to investigate the qual¬ ities of the things around us and to search out their causes, is as native an impulse as the religious impulse would be found to be if only we would refrain from ex¬ citing it artificially. In the first place, this scientific impulse was not greatly concerned with the traditional body of beliefs which were then inextricably entwined 212 THE DANCE OF LIFE in my mind with the exercise of the religious instinct. In so far, indeed, as it touched them it took up their de¬ fence. Thus I read Renan’s “Life of Jesus,” and the facile sentiment of this book, the attitude of artistic re¬ construction, aroused a criticism which led me to over¬ look any underlying sounder qualities. Yet all the time the inquiring and critical impulse was a slowly permeat¬ ing and invading influence, and its application to religion was from time to time stimulated by books, although such application was in no slightest degree favoured by the social environment. When, too, at the age of fifteen, I came to read Swinburne’s “Songs be¬ fore Sunrise,” — although the book made no very per¬ sonal appeal to me, — I realised that it was possible to present in an attractively modern emotional light reli¬ gious beliefs which were incompatible with Christian¬ ity, and even actively hostile to its creed. The process of disintegration took place in slow stages that were not perceived until the process was complete. Then at last I realised that I no longer possessed any religious faith. All the Christian dogmas I had been brought up to ac¬ cept unquestioned had slipped away, and they had dragged with them what I had experienced of religion, for I could not then so far analyse all that is roughly lumped together as “religion” as to disentangle the essential from the accidental. Such analysis, to be effectively convincing, demanded personal experiences I was not possessed of. I was now seventeen years of age. The loss of reli- THE ART OF RELIGION 213 gious faith had produced no change in conduct, save that religious observances, which had never been os¬ tentatiously performed, were dropped, so far as they might be without hurting the feelings of others. The revolution was so gradual and so natural that even in¬ wardly the shock was not great, while various activities, the growth of mental aptitudes, sufficiently served to occupy the mind. It was only during periods of depres¬ sion that the absence of faith as a satisfaction of the re¬ ligious impulse became at all acutely felt. Possibly it might have been felt less acutely if I could have real¬ ised that there was even a real benefit in the cutting down and clearing away of traditional and non-vital beliefs. Not only was it a wholesome and strenuous ef¬ fort to obey at all costs the call of what was felt as “truth/’ and therefore having in it a spirit of religion even though directed against religion, but it was evi¬ dently favourable to the training of intelligence. The man who has never wrestled with his early faith, the faith that he was brought up with and that yet is not truly his own, — for no faith is our own that we have not arduously won, — has missed not only a moral but an intellectual discipline. The absence of that disci¬ pline may mark a man for life and render all his work in the world ineffective. He has missed a training in criti¬ cism, in analysis, in open-mindedness, in the resolutely impersonal treatment of personal problems, which no other training can compensate. He is, for the most part, condemned to live in a mental jungle where his 214 THE DANCE OF LIFE arm will soon be too feeble to clear away the growths that enclose him and his eyes too weak to find the light. While, however, I had adopted, without knowing it, the best course to steel the power of thinking and to render possible a patient, humble, self-forgetful atti¬ tude towards Nature, there were times when I became painfully, almost despairingly, conscious of the unsat¬ isfied cravings of the religious impulse. These moods were emphasised even by the books I read which ar¬ gued that religion, in the only sense in which I under¬ stood religion, was unnecessary, and that science, whether or not formulated into a creed, furnished all that we need to ask in this direction. I well remember the painful feelings with which I read at this time D. F. Strauss’s “The Old Faith and the New.” It is a scien¬ tific creed set down in old age, with much comfortable complacency, by a man who found considerable satis¬ faction in the evening of life in the enjoyment of Haydn’s quartets and Munich brown beer. They are both excellent things, as I am now willing to grant, but they are a sorry source of inspiration when one is seven¬ teen and consumed by a thirst for impossibly remote ideals. Moreover, the philosophic horizon of this man was as limited and as prosaic as the aesthetic atmos¬ phere in which he lived. I had to acknowledge to my¬ self that the scientific principles of the universe as Strauss laid them down presented, so far as I knew, the utmost scope in which the human spirit could move. THE ART OF RELIGION 215 But what a poor scope ! I knew nothing of the way that Nietzsche, about that time, had demolished Strauss. But I had the feeling that the universe was represented as a sort of factory filled by an inextricable web of wheels and looms and flying shuttles, in a deafening din. That, it seemed, was the world as the most com¬ petent scientific authorities declared it to be made. It was a world I was prepared to accept, and yet a world in which, I felt, I could only wander restlessly, an igno¬ rant and homeless child. Sometimes, no doubt, there were other visions of the universe a little less disheart¬ ening, such as that presented by Herbert Spencer’s u First Principles.” But the dominant feeling always was that while the scientific outlook, by which I mainly meant the outlook of Darwin and Huxley, commended itself to me as presenting a sound view of the world, on the emotional side I was a stranger to that world, if, indeed, I would not, with Omar, “shatter it to bits.” At the same time, it must be noted, there was no fault to find with the general trend of my life and activ¬ ities. I was fully occupied, with daily duties as well as with the actively interested contemplation of an ever- enlarging intellectual horizon. This was very notably the case at the age of nineteen, three years after all vestiges of religious faith had disappeared from the psychic surface. I was still interested in religious and philosophic questions, and it so chanced that at this time I read the “Life in Nature” of James Hinton, who had al- 216 THE DANCE OF LIFE ready attracted my attention as a genuine man of sci¬ ence with yet an original and personal grasp of religion. I had read the book six months before and it had not greatly impressed me. Now, I no longer know why, I read it again, and the effect was very different. Evi¬ dently by this time my mind had reached a stage of saturated solution which needed but the shock of the right contact to recrystallise in forms that were a reve¬ lation to me. Here evidently the right contact was ap¬ plied. Hinton in this book showed himself a scientific biologist who carried the mechanistic explanation of life even further than was then usual.1 But he was a man of highly passionate type of intellect, and what might otherwise be formal and abstract was for him soaked in emotion. Thus, while he saw the world as an orderly mechanism, he was not content, like Strauss, to stop there and see in it nothing else. As he viewed it, the mechanism was not the mechanism of a factory, it was vital, with all the glow and warmth and beauty of life; it was, therefore, something which not only the in¬ tellect might accept, but the heart might cling to. The 1 It must be remembered that for science the mechanistic assumption always remains; it is, as Vaihinger would say, a necessary fiction. To abandon it is to abandon science. Driesch, the most prominent vitalist of our time, has realised this, and in his account of his own mental devel¬ opment (Die Deutsche Philosophie der Gegenwart, vol. I, 1921) he shows how, beginning as a pupil of Haeckel and working at zoology for many years, after adopting the theory of vitalism he abandoned all zoological work and became a professor of philosophy. When the religious spec¬ tator, or the aesthetic spectator (as is well illustrated in the French re¬ view L' Esprit Nouveau), sees the “machinery” as something else than machinery he is legitimately going outside the sphere of science, but he is not thereby destroying the basic assumption of science. THE ART OF RELIGION 217 bearing of this conception on my state of mind is obvi¬ ous. It acted with the swiftness of an electric contact; the dull aching tension was removed ; the two opposing psychic tendencies were fused in delicious harmony, and my whole attitude towards the universe was changed. It was no longer an attitude of hostility and dread, but of confidence and love. My self was one with the Not-Self, my will one with the universal will. I seemed to walk in light; my feet scarcely touched the ground; I had entered a new world. The effect of that swift revolution was permanent. At first there was a moment or two of wavering, and then the primary exaltation subsided into an attitude of calm serenity towards all those questions that had once seemed so torturing. In regard to all these mat¬ ters I had become permanently satisfied and at rest, yet absolutely unfettered and free. I was not troubled about the origin of the “soul” or about its destiny; I was entirely prepared to accept any analysis of the “soul” which might commend itself as reasonable. Neither was I troubled about the existence of any su¬ perior being or beings, and I was ready to see that all the words and forms by which men try to picture spir¬ itual realities are mere metaphors and images of an inward experience. There was not a single clause in my religious creed because I held no creed. I had found that dogmas were — not, as I had once imagined, true, not, as I had afterwards supposed, false, — but the mere empty shadows of intimate personal experience. I had 218 THE DANCE OF LIFE become indifferent to shadows, for I held the substance. I had sacrificed what I held dearest at the call of what seemed to be Truth, and now I was repaid a thousand¬ fold. Henceforth I could face life with confidence and joy, for my heart was at one with the world and what¬ ever might prove to be in harmony with the world could not be out of harmony with me.1 Thus, it might seem to many, nothing whatever had happened; I had not gained one single definite belief that could be expressed in a scientific formula or hard¬ ened into a religious creed. That, indeed, is the essence of such a process. A “conversion ” is not, as is often as¬ sumed, a turning towards a belief. More strictly, it is a turning round, a revolution; it has no primary refer¬ ence to any external object. As the greater mystics have often understood, “the Kingdom of Heaven is within.” To put the matter a little more precisely, the change is fundamentally a readjustment of psychic ele¬ ments to each other, enabling the whole machine to work harmoniously. There is no necessary introduc¬ tion of new ideas; there is much more likely to be a casting out of dead ideas which have clogged the vital process. The psychic organism — which in conven- 1 Long ago Edith Simcox (in a passage of her Natural Law which chanced to strike my attention very soon after the episode above nar¬ rated) well described “conversion” as a “spiritual revolution,” not based on any single rational consideration, but due to the “cumulative evidence of cognate impressions” resulting, at a particular moment, not in a change of belief, but in a total rearrangement and recolouring of beliefs and impressions, with the supreme result that the order of the universe is apprehended no longer as hostile, but as friendly. This is the fundamental fact of “conversion,” which is the gate of mysticism. THE ART OF RELIGION 2ig tional religion is called the “sour” — had not been in harmony with itself; now it is revolving truly on its own axis, and in doing so it simultaneously finds its true orbit in the cosmic system. In becoming one with itself, it becomes one with the universe.1 The process, it will be seen, is thus really rather an¬ alogous to that which on the physical plane takes place in a person whose jaw or arm is dislocated, whether by some inordinate effort or some sudden shock with the external world. The miserable man with a dislocated jaw is out of harmony with himself and with the uni¬ verse. All his efforts cannot reduce the dislocation, nor can his friends help him; he may even come to think there is no cure. But a surgeon comes along, and with a 1 How we are to analyse the conception of “universe” — apart from its personal emotional tone, which is what mainly concerns us — is, of course, a matter that must be left altogether open and free. Sir James Frazer at the end of his Golden Bough (“Balder the Beautiful,” vol. n, p. 306) finds that the “universe” is an “ever-shifting phantasmagoria of thought,” or, he adds, suddenly shifting to a less idealistic and more realistic standpoint, “shadows on the screen.” That is a literary artist’s metaphysical way of describing the matter and could not occur to any one who was not familiar with the magic lantern which has now devel¬ oped into the cinema, beloved of philosophers for its symbolic signifi¬ cance. Mr. Bertrand Russell, a more abstract artist, who would reject any such “imaginative admixture” as he would find in Frazer’s view, once severely refused to recognise any such thing as a “universe,” but has since less austerely admitted that there is, after all, a “set of appear¬ ances,” which may fairly be labelled “reality,” so long as we do not assume “a mysterious Thing-in-Itself behind the appearances.” ( Na¬ tion , 6th January, 1923.) But there are always some people who think that an “appearance” must be an appearance of Something, and that when a “shadow” is cast on the screen of our sensory apparatus it must be cast by Something. So every one defines the “universe” in his own way, and no two people — not even the same person long — can define it in the same way. We have to recognise that even the humblest of ua is entitled to his own “universe.” 220 THE DANCE OF LIFE slight pressure of his two thumbs, applied at the right spot, downwards and backwards, the jaw springs into place, the man is restored to harmony — and the uni¬ verse is transformed. If he is ignorant enough, he will be ready to fall on his knees before his deliverer as a di¬ vine being. We are concerned with what is called a “spiritual” process, — for it is an accepted and neces¬ sary convention to distinguish between the “spiritual” and the “physical,” — but this crude and imperfect analogy may help some minds to understand what is meant. Thus may be explained what may seem to some the curious fact that I never for a moment thought of accepting as a gospel the book which had brought me a stimulus of such inestimable value. The person in whom “conversion” takes place is too often told that the process is connected in some magical manner with a supernatural influence of some kind, a book, a creed, a church, or what not. I had read this book before and it had left me unmoved ; I knew that the book was merely the surgeon’s touch, that the change had its source in me and not in the book. I never looked into the book again ; I cannot tell where or how my copy of it disap¬ peared; for all that I know, having accomplished its mission, it was drawn up again to Heaven in a sheet. As regards James Hinton, I was interested in him be¬ fore the date of the episode here narrated ; I am inter¬ ested in him still.1 1 The simple and essential outlines of “conversion” have been ob« THE ART OF RELIGION 221 It may further be noted that this process of “ con¬ version ” cannot be regarded as the outcome of despair or as a protective regression towards childhood. The unfortunate individual, we sometimes imagine, who is bereft of religious faith sinks deeper and deeper into despondency, until finally he unconsciously seeks the relief of his woes by plunging into an abyss of emo¬ tions, thereby committing intellectual suicide. On the contrary, the period in which this event occurred was not a period of dejection either mental or physical. I was fully occupied ; I lived a healthy, open-air life, in a fine climate, amid beautiful scenery; I was revelling scured because chiefly studied in the Churches among people whose pre¬ possessions and superstitions have rendered it a highly complex process, and mixed up with questions of right and wrong living which, important as they are, properly form no part of religion. The man who wraits to lead a decent life until he has “saved his soul” is not likely to possess a soul that is worth saving. How much ignorance prevails in regard to “con¬ version,” even among the leaders of religious opinion, and what violent contrasts of opinion — in which sometimes both the opposing parties are mistaken — was well illustrated by a discussion on the subject at the Church Congress at Sheffield in 1922. A distinguished Churchman well defined “conversion” as a unification of character, involving the whole man, — will, intellect, and emotion, — by which a “new self” was achieved; but he also thought that this great revolutionary process con¬ sisted usually in giving up some “definite bad habit,” very much doubted whether sudden conversion was a normal phenomenon at all, and made no attempt to distinguish between that kind of “conversion” which is merely the'result of suggestion and auto-suggestion, after a kind of hys¬ terical attack produced by feverish emotional appeals, and that which is spontaneous and of lifelong effect. Another speaker went to the op¬ posite extreme by asserting that “conversion ” is an absolutely necessary process, and an Archbishop finally swept away “conversion” altogether by declaring that the whole of the religious life (and the whole of the irreligious life?) is a process of conversion. (The Times, 12th October, 1922.) It may be a satisfaction to some to realise that, this is a matter on which it is vain to go to the Churches for light. 222 THE DANCE OF LIFE in new studies and the growing consciousness of new powers. Instead of being the ultimate stage in a proc¬ ess of descent, or a return to childhood, such psychic revolution may much more fittingly be regarded as the climax of an ascensional movement. It is the final casting off of childish things, the initiation into com¬ plete manhood. There is nothing ascetic in such a process. One is sometimes tempted to think that to approve mysti¬ cism is to preach asceticism. Certainly many mystics have been ascetic. But that has been the accident of their philosophy, and not the essence of their religion. Asceticism has, indeed, nothing to do with normal religion. It is, at the best, the outcome of a set of philosophical dogmas concerning the relationship of the body to the soul and the existence of a transcen¬ dental spiritual world. That is philosophy, of a sort, not religion. Plotinus, who has been so immensely influ¬ ential in our Western world because he was the main channel by which Greek spiritual tendencies reached us, to become later embodied in Christianity, is usually regarded as a typical mystic, though he was primarily a philosopher, and he was inclined to be ascetic. Therein we may not consider him typically Greek, but the early philosophical doctrine of Plato concern¬ ing the transcendental world of ‘‘Ideas" easily lent itself to developments favourable to an ascetic life. Plotinus, indeed, was not disposed to any extreme ascetic position. The purification of the soul meant THE ART OF RELIGION 223 for him “to detach it from the body, and to elevate it to a spiritual world.” But he would not have sym¬ pathised with the harsh dualism of flesh and spirit which often flourished among Christian ascetics. He lived celibate, but he was willing to regard sex desire as beautiful, though a delusion.1 When we put aside the philosophic doctrines with which it may be associated, it is seen that asceticism is merely an adjuvant dis¬ cipline to what we must regard as pathological forms of mysticism. People who come in contact with the phenomenon of “conversion” are obsessed by the notion that it must have something to do with morality. They seem to fancy that it is something that happens to a person leading a bad life whereby he suddenly leads a good life. That is a delusion. Whatever virtue morality may possess, it is outside the mystic’s sphere. No doubt a person who has been initiated into this mys¬ tery is likely to be moral because he is henceforth in harmony with himself, and such a man is usually, by a natural impulse, in harmony also with others. Like Leonardo, who through the glow of his adoration oi Nature was as truly a mystic as St. Francis, even by contact with him “every broken heart is made serene.” But a religious man is not necessarily a moral man. That is to say that we must by no means expect to And that the religious man, even when he is in harmony 1 Dean Inge {Philosophy of Plotinus, vol. 11, p. 165) has some remarks 00 Plotinus in relation to asceticism. THE DANCE OF LIFE 224 with his fellows, is necessarily in harmony with the moral laws of his age. We fall into sad confusion if we take for granted that a mystic is what we conven¬ tionally term a “ moral” man. Jesus, as we know, was almost as immoral from the standpoint of the society in which he moved as he would be in our society. That, no doubt, is an extreme example, yet the same holds good, in a minor degree, of many other mystics, even in very recent times. The satyrs and the fauns were minor divinities in antiquity, and in later times we have been apt to misunderstand their holy functions and abuse their sacred names. Not only is there no necessary moral change in such a process, still less is there any necessary intellectual change. Religion need not involve intellectual suicide. On the intellectual side there may be no obvious change whatever. No new creed or dogma had been adopted.1 It might rather be said that, on the con¬ trary, some prepossessions, hitherto unconscious, had been realised and cast out. The operations of reason, so far from being fettered, can be effected with greater freedom and on a larger scale. Under favourable conditions the religious process, indeed, throughout directly contributes to strengthen the scientific atti- 1 Jules de Gaultier (La Philosophic officielle et la Philosophic , p. 150) refers to those Buddhist monks the symbol of whose faith was contained in one syllable: Om. But those monks, he adds, belonged to “the only philosophic race that ever existed” and by the aid of their pure faith, placed on a foundation which no argumentation can upset, all the re¬ ligious philosophies of the Judeo-Iielleno-Christian tradition are but as fairy-tales told to children. THE ART OF RELIGION 225 tude. The mere fact that one has been impelled by the sincerity of one’s religious faith to question, to analyse, and finally to destroy one’s religious creed, is itself an incomparable training for the intelligence. In this task reason is submitted to the hardest tests; it has every temptation to allow itself to be lulled into sleepy repose or cajoled into specious reconciliations. If it is true to itself here it is steeled for every other task in the world, for no other task can ever demand so com¬ plete a self-sacrifice at the call of Truth. Indeed, the final restoration of the religious impulse on a higher plane may itself be said to reenforce the scientific im¬ pulse, for it removes that sense of psychic disharmony which is a subconscious fetter on the rational activity. The new inward harmony, proceeding from a psychic centre that is at one alike with itself and with the Not-Self, imparts confidence to every operation of the intellect. All the metaphysical images of faith in the unseen — too familiar in the mystical experiences of men of all religions to need specification — are now on the side of science. For he who is thus held in his path can pursue that path with serenity and trust, however daring its course may sometimes seem. It appears to me, therefore, on the basis of personal experience, that the process thus outlined is a natural process. The harmony of the religious impulse and of the scientific impulse is not merely a conclusion to be deduced from the history of the past. It is a living fact to-day. However obscured it may sometimes be, 226 THE DANCE OF LIFE the process lies in human nature and is still open to all to experience. IV If the development of the religious instinct and the development of the scientific instinct are alike natural, and if the possibility of the harmony of the two in¬ stincts is a verifiable fact of experience, how is it, one may ask, that there has ever been any dispute on the matter? Why has not this natural experience been the experience of all? Various considerations may help to make clear to us how it has happened that a process which might reasonably be supposed to be intimate and sacred should have become so obscured and so deformed that it has been fiercely bandied about by opposing factions. At the outset, as we have seen, among com¬ paratively primitive peoples, it really is a simple and natural process carried out harmoniously with no sense of conflict. A man, it would seem, was not then overburdened by the still unwritten traditions of the race. He was comparatively free to exercise his own impulses unfettered by the chains forged out of the dead impulses of those who had gone before him. It is the same still among uncultivated persons of our own race in civilisation. I well remember how once, during a long ride through the Australian bush with a settler, a quiet, uncommunicative man with whom I THE ART OF RELIGION 227 had long been acquainted, he suddenly told me how at times he would ascend to the top of a hill and become lost to himself and to everything as he stood in con¬ templation of the scene around him. Those moments of ecstasy, of self-forgetful union with the divine beauty of Nature, were entirely compatible with the rational outlook of a simple, hard-working man who never went to church, for there was no church of any kind to go to, but at such moments had in his own humble way, like Moses, met God in a mountain. There can be no doubt that such an experience is not uncommon among simple folk unencumbered by tradi¬ tion, even when of civilised race. The burden of traditions, of conventions, of castes has too often proved fatal alike to the manifestation of the religious impulse and the scientific impulse. It is unnecessary to point out how easily this happens in the case of the religious impulse. It is only too familiar a fact how, when the impulse of religion first germi¬ nates in the young soul, the ghouls of the Churches rush out of their caverns, seize on the unhappy victim of the divine effluence and proceed to assure him that his rapture is, not a natural manifestation, as free as the sunlight and as gracious as the unfolding of a rose, but the manifest sign that he has been branded by a super¬ natural force and fettered for ever to a dead theological creed. Too often he is thus caught by the bait of his own rapture; the hook is firmly fixed in his jaw and he is drawn whither his blind guides will; his wings droop 228 THE DANCE OF LIFE and fall away; so far as the finer issues of life are con¬ cerned, he is done for and damned.1 But the process is not so very different on the sci¬ entific side, though here it is more subtly concealed. The youth in whom the natural impulse of science arises is sternly told that the spontaneous movement of his intelligence towards Nature and truth is noth¬ ing, for the one thing needful is that he shall be put to discipline, and trained in the scientific traditions of the ages. The desirability of such training for the effective questioning of Nature is so clear that both teacher and pupil are apt to overlook the fact that it involves much that is not science at all: all sorts of dead traditions, unrealised fragments of ancient metaphysical systems, prepossessions and limitations, conscious or unconscious, the obedience to arbitrary authorities. It is never made clear to him that science also is an art. So that the actual outcome may be that the finally accomplished man of science has as little of the scientific impulse as the fully fledged religious man need have of the religious impulse; he becomes the victim of another kind of ecclesiastical sectarianism. There is one special piece of ancient metaphysics which until recently scientific and religious sects have 1 We must always remember that “Church'* and “religion/* though often confused, are far from being interchangeable terms. “ Religion” is a natural impulse, “Church ” is a social institution. The confusion is un¬ fortunate. Thus Freud ( Group Psychology , p. 51) speaks of the proba¬ bility of religion disappearing and Socialism taking its place. He means not “religion,” but a “Church.” We cannot speak of a natural impulse disappearing, an institution easily may. THE ART OF RELIGION 229 alike combined to support: the fiction of “ matter,’’ which we passingly came upon when considering the art of thinking. It is a fiction that has much to answer for in distorting the scientific spirit and in creating an artificial opposition between science and religion. All sorts of antique metaphysical peculiarities, inherited from the decadence of Greek philosophy, were attrib¬ uted to “matter” and they were mostly of a bad char¬ acter; all the good qualities were attributed to “spirit” ; “matter” played the Devil's part to this more divine “spirit.” Thus it was that “materialistic” came to be a term signifying all that is most heavy, opaque, de¬ pressing, soul-destroying, and diabolical in the uni¬ verse. The party of traditionalised religion fostered this fiction and the party of traditionalised science frequently adopted it, cheerily proposing to find infi¬ nite potentialities in this despised metaphysical sub¬ stance. So that “matter” which was on one side trodden underfoot was on the other side brandished overhead as a glorious banner. Yet “matter,” as psychologically minded philoso¬ phers at last began to point out, is merely a substance we have ourselves invented to account for our sensa¬ tions. We see, we touch, we hear, we smell, and by a brilliant synthetic effort of imagination we put to¬ gether all those sensations and picture to ourselves “matter” as being the source of them. Science itself is now purging “matter” of its complicated meta¬ physical properties. That “matter,” the nature of 230 THE DANCE OF LIFE which Dr. Johnson, as Boswell tells us, thought he had settled by “ striking his foot with mighty force against a large stone,” is coming to be regarded as merely an electrical emanation. We now accept even that trans¬ mutation of the elements of which the alchemists dreamed. It is true that we still think of “matter” as having weight. But so cautious a physicist as Sir Joseph Thomson long ago pointed out that weight is only an “apparently” invariable property of matter. So that “matter” becomes almost as “ethereal” as “spirit,” and, indeed, scarcely distinguishable from “spirit.” The spontaneous affirmation of the mystic that he lives in the spiritual world here and now will then be, in other words, merely the same affirmation which the man of science has more laboriously reached. The man, therefore, who is terrified by “materialism” has reached the final outpost of absurdity. He is a simple-minded person who places his own hand before his eyes and cries out in horror: The Universe has disappeared ! We have not only to realise how our own preposses¬ sions and the metaphysical figments of our own crea¬ tion have obscured the simple realities of religion and science alike ; we have also to see that our timid dread lest religion should kill our science, or science kill our religion, is equally fatal here. He who would gain his life must be willing to lose it, and it is by being honest to one’s self and to the facts by applying courageously the measuring rod of Truth, that in the end salvation THE ART OF RELIGION 231 is found. Here, it is true, there are those who smilingly assure us that by adopting such a method we shall merely put ourselves in the wrong and endure much unnecessary suffering. There is no such thing as “Truth,” they declare, regarded as an objective im¬ personal reality ; we do not “discover” truth, we invent it. Therefore your business is to invent a truth which shall harmoniously satisfy the needs of your nature and aid your efficiency in practical life. That we are justified in being dishonest towards truth has even been argued from the doctrine of relativity by some who failed to realise that that doctrine is here hardly relative. Certainly the philosophers of recent times, from Nietzsche to Croce, have loved to analyse the idea of “truth” and to show that it by no means signi¬ fies what we used to suppose it signified. But to show that truth is fluid, or even the creation of the individual mind, is by no means to show that we can at will play fast and loose with it to suit our own momentary con¬ venience. If we do we merely find ourselves, at the end, in a pool where we must tramp round and round in intellectual slush out of which there is no issue. One may well doubt whether any Pragmatist has ever really invented his truth that way. Practically, just as the best result is attained by the man who acts as though free-will were a reality and who exerts it, so in this matter, also, practically, in the end the best result is attained by assuming that truth is an objective real¬ ity which we must patiently seek, and in accordance THE DANCE OF LIFE 232 with which we must discipline our own wayward im¬ pulses. There is no transcendent objective truth, each one of us is an artist creating his own truth from the phenomena presented to him, but if in that creation he allows any alien emotional or practical considerations to influence him he is a bad artist and his work is wrought for destruction. From the pragmatic point of view, it may thus be said that if the use of the measur¬ ing-rod of truth as an objective standard produces the best practical results, that use is pragmatically justi¬ fied. But if so, we are exactly in the same position as we were before the pragmatist arrived ; we can get on as well without him, if not better, for we run the risk that he may confuse the issues for us. It is really on the theoretic rather than the practical side that he is helpful. It is not only the Pragmatist whose well-meant efforts to find an easy reconciliation of belief and practice, and indirectly the concord of religion and science, come to grief because he has not realised that the walls of the spiritual world can only be scaled with much expenditure of treasure, not without blood and sweat, that we cannot glide luxuriously to Heaven in his motor-car. We are also met by the old-fashioned Intuitionist.1 It is no accident that the Intuitionist so 1 It must be remembered that “intuition” is a word with all sorts of philosophical meanings, in addition to its psychological meanings (which were studied some years ago by Dearborn in the Psychological Review). For the ancient philosophic writers, from the Neo-Platonists cm, it was usually a sort of special organ for coming in contact with THE ART OF RELIGION 233 often walks hand in hand with the Pragmatist; they are engaged in the same tasks. There is, we have seen, the impulse of science which must work through in¬ telligence; there is, also, the impulse of religion in the satisfaction of which intelligence can only take a very humble place at the antechamber of the sanctuary. To admit, therefore, that reason cannot extend into the religious sphere is absolutely sound so long as we realise that reason has a coordinate right to lay down the rules in its own sphere of intelligence. But in men of a certain mental type the two tendencies are alike so deeply implanted that they cannot escape them: they are not only impelled to go beyond intelligence, but they are also impelled to carry intelligence with them outside its sphere. The sphere of intelligence is limited, they say, and rightly; the soul has other impulses besides that of intelligence and life needs more than knowledge for its complete satisfaction. But in the hands of these people the faculty of “intuition,” which is to supplant that of intelligence, itself results in a product which by them is called “knowledge,” and so spuriously bears the hall-mark which belongs to the product of intelligence. But the result is disastrous. Not only is an illegiti¬ mate confusion introduced, but, by attributing to the supernatural realities; for Bergson it is at once a method superior to the intellect for obtaining knowledge and a method of aesthetic contempla¬ tion; for Croce it is solely aesthetic, and art is at once “intuition” and “expression” (by which he means the formation of internal imagee). For Croce, when the mind “intuits” by “expressing,” the result ia art. There is no “religion” for Croce except philosophy. 234 THE DANCE OF LIFE impulse of religion a character which it is neither en¬ titled to nor in need of, we merely discredit it in the eyes of intelligence. The philosopher of intuition, even in denying intelligence, is apt to remain so predomi¬ nantly intelligent that, even in entering what is for him the sphere of religion, he still moves in an atmosphere of rarefied intelligence. He is farther from the King¬ dom of Heaven than the simple man who is quite incapable of understanding the philosopher’s theory, but yet may be able to follow his own religious im¬ pulse without foisting into it an intellectual content. For even the simple man may be one with the great mystics who all declare that the unspeakable quality they have acquired, as Eckhart puts it, “hath no image.” It is not in the sphere of intellection, it brings no knowledge; it is the outcome of the natural instinct of the individual soul. No doubt there really are people in whom the in¬ stincts of religion and of science alike are developed in so rudimentary a degree, if developed at all, that they never become conscious. The religious instinct is not an essential instinct. Even the instinct of sex, which is much more fundamental than either of these, is not absolutely essential. A very little bundle of instincts and impulses is indispensable to a man on his way down the path of life to a peaceful and humble grave. A man’s equipment of tendencies, on the lowest plane, needs to be more complex and diverse than an oyster’s, yet not so very much more. The equipment of the THE ART OF RELIGION 235 higher animals, moreover, is needed less for the good of the individual than for the good of the race. We cannot, therefore, be surprised if the persons in whom the superfluous instincts are rudimentary fail to under¬ stand them, confusing them and overlaying them with each other and with much that is outside both. The wonder would be if it were otherwise. When all deduction has been made of the mental and emotional confusions which have obscured men’s vision, we cannot fail to conclude, it seems to me, that Science and Mysticism are nearer to each other than some would have us believe. At the beginning of human cultures, far from being opposed, they may even be said to be identical. From time to time, in later ages, brilliant examples have appeared of men who have possessed both instincts in a high degree and have even fused the two together, while among the humble in spirit and the lowly in intellect it is probable that in all ages innumerable men have by instinct harmonised their religion with their intelligence. But as the accumulated experiences of civilisation have been preserved and handed on from generation to generation, this free and vital play of the instincts has been largely paralysed. On each side fossilised tradi¬ tions have accumulated so thickly, the garments of dead metaphysics have been wrapped so closely around every manifestation alike of the religious instinct and the scientific instinct — for even what we call “com¬ mon sense" is really a hardened mass of dead meta- THE DANCE OF LIFE 236 physics — that not many persons can succeed in re¬ vealing one of these instincts in its naked beauty, and very few can succeed in so revealing both instincts. Hence a perpetual antagonism. It may be, however, we are beginning to realise that there are no meta¬ physical formulas to suit all men, but that every man must be the artist of his own philosophy. As we realise that, it becomes easier than it was before to liberate ourselves from a dead metaphysics, and so to give free play alike to the religious instinct and the scientific instinct. A man must not swallow more beliefs than he can digest; no man can absorb all the traditions of the past; what he fills himself with will only be a poison to work to his own auto-intoxication. Along all these lines we see more clearly than before the real harmony between Mysticism and Science. We see, also, that all arguments are meaningless until we gain personal experience. One must win one’s own place in the spiritual world painfully and alone. There is no other way of salvation. The Promised Land al¬ ways lies on the other side of a wilderness. V It may seem that we have been harping overmuch on a single string of what is really a very rich instrument, when the whole exalted art of religion is brought down to the argument of its relationship to science. The core of religion is mysticism, it is admitted. And yet where are all the great mystics? Why nothing of the THE ART OF RELIGION 237 Neo-Platonists in whom the whole movement of mod¬ ern mysticism began, of their glorious pupils in the Moslem world, of Ramon Lull and Francis of Assisi and Francois Xavier and John of the Cross and George Fox and the “De Imitatione Christi” and “ Towards Democracy”? There is no end to that list of glorious names, and they are all passed by. To write of the mystics, whether Pagan or Christian or Islamic, is a most delightful task. It has been done, and often very well done. The mystics are not only themselves an incarnation of beauty, but they reflect beauty on all who with understanding approach them. Moreover, in the phenomena of religious mysticism we have a key — if we only knew it — to many of the most precious human things which on the surface may seem to have nothing in them of religion. For this is an art which instinctively reveals to us the secrets of other arts. It presents to us in the most naked and essential way the inward experience which has inspired men to find modes of expression which are transmuta¬ tions of the art of religion and yet have on the surface nothing to indicate that this is so. It has often been seen in poetry and in music and in painting. One might say that it is scarcely possible to understand completely the poetry of Shelley or the music of C6sar Franck or the pictures of Van Gogh unless there is somewhere within an intimation of the secret of mysticism. This is go not because of any imperfection in the achieved work of such men in poetry and in 238 ' THE DANCE OF LIFE music and in painting, — for work that fails to contain its own justification is always bad work, — but be¬ cause we shall not be in possession of the clue to explain the existence of that work. We may even go beyond the sphere of the recognised arts altogether, and say that the whole love of Nature and landscape, which in modern times has been so greatly developed, largely through Rousseau, the chief creator of our modern spiritual world, is not intelligible if we are altogether ignorant of what religion means. But we are not so much concerned here with the rich and variegated garments the impulse of religion puts on, or with its possible transmutations, as with the simple and naked shape of those impulses when bared of all garments. It was peculiarly important to present the impulse of mysticism naked because, of all the fundamental human impulses, that is the one most often so richly wrapped round with gorgeous and fantastic garments that, alike to the eye of the ordinary man and the acute philosopher, there has seemed to be no living thing inside at all. It was necessary to strip off all these garments, to appeal to simple personal direct experience for the actual core of fact, and to show that that core, so far from being soluble by analysis into what science counts as nothing, is itself, like every other natural organic function, a fact of science. It is enough here, where we are concerned only with the primary stuff of art, the bare simple technique of THE ART OF RELIGION 239 the human dance, to have brought into as clear a light as may be the altogether natural mechanism which lies behind all the most magnificent fantasies of the mystic impulse, and would still subsist and operate even though they were all cast into the flames. That is why it has seemed necessary to dwell all the time on the deep-lying harmony of the mystic’s attitude with the scientific man’s attitude. It is a harmony which rests on the faith that they are eternally separate, however close, however intimately cooperative. When the mystic professes that, as such, he has knowledge of the same order as the man of science, or when the scientist claims that, as such, he has emotion which is like that of the man of religion, each of them deceives himself. He has introduced a confusion where no con¬ fusion need be; perhaps, indeed, he has even com¬ mitted that sin against the Holy Ghost of his own spiritual integrity for which there is no forgiveness. The function of intellectual thought — which is that of the art of science — may, certainly, be invaluable for religion ; it makes possible the purgation of all that pseudo-science, all that philosophy, good or bad, which has poisoned and encrusted the simple spontane¬ ous impulse of mysticism in the open air of Nature and in the face of the sun. The man of science may be a mystic, but cannot be a true mystic unless he is so relentless a man of science that he can tolerate no alien science in his mysticism. The mystic may be a man of science, but he will not be a good man of THE DANCE OF LIFE 240 science unless he understands that science must be kept for ever bright and pure from all admixture of mystical emotion; the fountain of his emotion must never rust the keenness of his analytic scalpel. It is useless to pretend that any such rustiness can ever con¬ cert the scalpel into a mystical implement, though it can be an admirable aid in cutting towards the mys¬ tical core of things, and perhaps if there were more relentless scientific men there would be more men of pure mystic vision. Science by itself, good or bad, can never be religion, any more than religion by itself can ever be science, or even philosophy. It is by looking back into the past that we see the facts in an essential simplicity less easy to reach in more sophisticated ages. We need not again go so far back as the medicine-men of Africa and Siberia. Mysticism in pagan antiquity, however less intimate to us and less seductive than that of later times, is perhaps better fitted to reveal to us its true nature. The Greeks believed in the spiritual value of “ conver¬ sion” as devoutly as our Christian sects and they went beyond most such sects in their elaborately systematic methods for obtaining it, no doubt for the most part as superficially as has been common among Christians. It is supposed that almost the whole popu¬ lation of Athens must have experienced the Eleusinian initiation. These methods, as we know, were embodied in the Mysteries associated with Dionysus and Deme¬ ter and Orpheus and the rest, the most famous and THE ART OF RELIGION 241 typical being those of Attic Eleusis.1 We too often see those ancient Greek Mysteries through a concealing mist, partly because it was rightly felt that matters of spiritual experience were not things to talk about, so that precise information is lacking, partly because the early Christians, having their own very similar Mys¬ teries to uphold, were careful to speak evil of Pagan Mysteries, and partly because the Pagan Mysteries no doubt really tended to degenerate with the general decay of classic culture. But in their large simple essential outlines they seem to be fairly clear. For just as there was nothing “orgiastic” in our sense in the Greek “orgies,” which were simply ritual acts, so there was nothing, in our sense, “mysterious” in the Mysteries. We are not to suppose, as is sometimes supposed, that their essence was a secret doctrine, or even that the exhibition of a secret rite was the sole object, although it came in as part of the method. A mystery meant a spiritual process of initiation, which was, indeed, necessarily a secret to those who had not yet experienced it, but had nothing in itself “mysteri¬ ous” beyond what inheres to-day to the process in any Christian “revival,” which is the nearest analogue to 1 The modern literature of the Mysteries, especially of Eleusis, is very extensive and elaborate in many languages. I will only mention here a small and not very recent book, Cheetham’s Hulsean Lectures on Ths Mysteries Pagan and Christian (1897) as for ordinary readers sufficiently indicating the general significance of the Mysteries. There is, yet briefer, a more modern discussion of the matter in the Chapter on “Re¬ ligion” by Dr. W. R. Inge in R. W. Livingstone’s useful collection oi essays, The legacy of Greece (1921). THE DANCE OF LIFE 242 the Greek Mystery. It is only “mysterious” in the sense that it cannot be expressed, any more than the sexual embrace can be expressed, in words, but can only be known by experience. A preliminary process of purification, the influence of suggestion, a certain religious faith, a solemn and dramatic ritual carried out under the most impressive circumstances, having a real analogy to the Catholic’s Mass, which also is a function, at once dramatic and sacred, which cul¬ minates in a spiritual communion with the Divine — all this may contribute to the end which was, as it always must be in religion, simply a change of inner attitude, a sudden exalting realisation of a new rela¬ tionship to eternal things. The philosophers under¬ stood this; Aristotle was careful to point out, in an extant fragment, that what was gained in the Myster¬ ies was not instruction but impressions and emotions, and Plato had not hesitated to regard the illumination which came to the initiate in philosophy as of the nature of that acquired in the Mysteries. So it was natural that when Christianity took the place of Paganism the same process went on with only a change in external circumstances. Baptism in the early Church — before it sank to the mere magical sort of rite it later became — was of the nature of initiation into a Mystery, preceded by careful preparation, and the baptised initiate was sometimes crowned with a garland as the initiated were at Eleusis. When we go out of Athens along the beautiful road THE ART OF RELIGION 243 that leads to the wretched village of Eleusis and linger among the vast and complicated ruins of the chief shrine of mysticism in our Western world, rich in asso¬ ciations that seem to stretch back to the Neolithic Age and suggest a time when the mystery of the blossoming of the soul was one with the mystery of the upspringing of the corn, it may be that our thoughts by no un¬ natural transition pass from the myth of Demeter and Kore to the remembrance of what we may have heard or know of the manifestations of the spirit among barbarian northerners of other faiths or of no faith in far Britain and America and even of their meetings of so-called “revival.” For it is always the same thing that Man is doing, however various and fantastic the disguises he adopts. And sometimes the revelation of the new life, springing up from within, comes amid the crowd in the feverish atmosphere of artificial shrines, maybe soon to shrivel up, and sometimes the blossom¬ ing forth takes place, perhaps more favourably, in the open air and under the light of the sun and amid the flowers, as it were to a happy faun among the hills. But when all disguises have been stripped away, it is always and everywhere the same simple process, a spiritual function which is almost a physiological func¬ tion, an art which Nature makes. That is alL CHAPTER VI THE ART OF MORALS I No man has ever counted the books that have been written about morals. No subject seems so fascinating to the human mind. It may well be, indeed, that nothing imports us so much as to know how to live. Yet it can scarcely be that on any subject are the books that have been written more unprofitable, one might even say unnecessary. For when we look at the matter objectively it is, after all, fairly simple. If we turn our attention to any collective community, at any time and place, in its moral aspect, we may regard it as an army on the march along a road of life more or less encompassed by danger. That, indeed, is scarcely a metaphor; that is what life, viewed in its moral aspect, may really be considered. When thus considered, we see that it cofi* sists of an extremely small advance guard in front, formed of persons with a limited freedom of moral action and able to act as patrols in various directions, of a larger body in the rear, in ancient military lan¬ guage called the blackguard and not without its uses, and in the main of a great compact majority with which we must always be chiefly concerned since they really are the army; they are the community. What THE ART OF MORALS 245 we call “morals” is simply blind obedience to words of command — whether or not issued by leaders the army believes it has itself chosen — of which the sig¬ nificance is hidden, and beyond this the duty of keep¬ ing in step with the others, or of trying to keep in step, or of pretending to do so.1 It is an automatic, almost unconscious process and only becomes acutely con¬ scious when the individual is hopelessly out of step; then he may be relegated to the rear blackguard. But that happens seldom. So there is little need to be con¬ cerned about it. Even if it happened very often, noth¬ ing overwhelming would have taken place; it would merely be that what we called the blackguard had now become the main army, though with a different dis¬ cipline. We are, indeed, simply concerned with a dis¬ cipline or routine which in this field is properly de¬ scribed as custom , and the word morals essentially means custom . That is what morals must always be for the mass, and, indeed, to some extent for all, a discipline, and, as we have already seen, a discipline cannot properly be regarded as a science or an artc The innumerable books on morals, since they have usually confused and befogged this simple and central 1 What we call crime is, at the beginning, usually an effort to get. or to pretend to get, into step, but, being a violent or miscalculated effort, it is liable to fail, and the criminal falls to the rear of the social army. “I believe that most murders are really committed by Mrs. Grundy,” a woman writes to me, and, with the due qualification, the saying is worthy of meditation. That is wrhy justice is impotent to prevent or even to punish murder, for Mrs. Grundy is within all of us, being a part of the social discipline, and cannot be hanged. 246 THE DANCE OF LIFE fact, cannot fail to be rather unprofitable. That, it would seem, is what the writers thought — at all events about those the others had written — or else they would not have considered it necessary for them¬ selves to add to the number. It was not only an un¬ profitable task, it was also — except in so far as an objectively scientific attitude has been assumed — aimless. For, although the morals of a community at one time and place is never the same as that of an¬ other or even the same community at another time and place, it is a complex web of conditions that pro¬ duces the difference, and it must have been evident that to attempt to affect it was idle.1 There is no occa¬ sion for any one who is told that he has written a “ moral” book to be unduly elated, or when he is told that his book is “ immoral” to be unduly cast down. The significance of these adjectives is strictly limited. Neither the one book nor the other can have more than the faintest effect on the march of the great compact majority of the social army. Yet, while all this is so, there is still some interest in the question of morals. For, after all, there is the small body of individuals ahead, alertly eager to find the road, with a sensitive flair for ail the possibilities the future may hold. When the compact majority, blind 1 Herbert Spencer, writing to a correspondent, once well expressed the harmlessness — if we choose so to regard it — of moral teaching: “After nearly two thousand years’ preaching of the religion of amity, the religion of enmity remains predominant, and Europe is peopled b> two hundred million pagans, masquerading as Christians, who revile those who wish them to act on the principles they profess." THE ART OF MORALS 247 and automatic and unconscious, follows after, to tramp along the road these pioneers have discovered, it may seem but a dull road. But before they reached it that road was interesting, even passionately interest¬ ing. The reason is that, for those who, in any age, are thus situated, life is not merely a discipline. It is, or it may become, really an art. IT That living is or may be an art, and the moralist the critic of that art, is a very ancient belief. It was especially widespread among the Greeks. To the Greeks, indeed, this belief was so ingrained and in¬ stinctive that it became an implicitly assumed attitude rather than a definitely expressed faith. It was natural to them to speak of a virtuous person as we should speak of a beautiful person. The 4 ‘good” was the “beautiful”; the sphere of ethics for the Greeks was not distinguished from the sphere of aesthetics. In Sophocles, above all poets, we gather the idea of a natural agreement between duty and inclination which is at once both beauty and moral order. But it is the beautiful that seems to be most fundamental in to tcaXov, which was the noble, the honourable, but fundamentally the beautiful. “Beauty is the first of all things,” said Isocrates, the famous orator; “nothing that is devoid of beauty is prized. . . . The admiration for virtue comes to this, that of all manifestation of 24.8 THE DANCE OF LIFE life, virtue is the most beautiful.” The supremely beautiful was, for the finer sort of Greeks, instinctively if not always consciously, the supremely divine, and the Argive Hera, it has been said, ‘‘has more divinity in her countenance than any Madonna of them all.” That is how it came to pass that we have no word in our speech to apply to the Greek conception ; aesthetics for us is apart from all the serious business of life, and the attempt to introduce it there seems merely comic. But the Greeks spoke of life itself as a craft or a fine art. Protagoras, who appears to-day as a pioneer of modern science, was yet mainly concerned to regard living as an art, or as the sum of many crafts, and the Platonic Socrates, his opponent, still always assumed that the moralist’s position is that of a critic of a craft. So influential a moralist as Aristotle remarks in a matter-of-fact way, in his “ Poetics,” that if we wish to ascertain whether an act is, or is not, morally right we must consider not merely the intrinsic quality of the act, but the person who does it, the person to whom it is done, the time, the means, the motive. Such an atti¬ tude towards life puts out of court any appeal to rigid moral laws; it meant that an act must befit its particu¬ lar relationships at a particular moment, and that its moral value could, therefore, only be judged by the standard of the spectator’s instinctive feeling for pro¬ portion and harmony. That is the attitude we adopt towards a work of art. It may well appear strange to those who cherish the THE ART OF MORALS 249 modern idea of “aestheticism” that the most complete statement of the Greek attitude has come down to us in the writings of a philosopher, an Alexandrian Greek who lived and taught in Rome in the third century of our Christian Era, when the Greek world had van¬ ished, a religious mystic, moreover, whose life and teaching were penetrated by an austere ascetic severity which some would count mediaeval rather than Greek. 1 It is in Plotinus, a thinker whose inspiring influence still lives to-day, that we probably find the Greek atti¬ tude, in its loftiest aspect, best mirrored, and it was probably through channels that came from Plotinus — though their source was usually unrecognised - — that the Greek moral spirit has chiefly reached modern times. Many great thinkers and moralists of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, it has been claimed, were ultimately indebted to Plotinus, who represented the only genuinely creative effort of the Greek spirit in the third century.2 1 But later asceticism was strictly the outcome of a Greek tendency, to be traced in Plato, developed through Antisthenes, through Zeno, through Epictetus, who all desired to liberate the soul from the bonds o! matter. The Neo-Platonists carried this tendency further, for in their time the prevailing anarchy and confusion rendered the world and society less than ever a fitting haven for the soul. It was not Christian¬ ity that made the world ascetic (and there were elements of hedonism in the teaching of Jesus), but the world that made Christianity ascetic, and it was easy for a Christian to become a Neo-Platonist, for they were both being moulded by the same forces. 2 Maurice Croiset devotes a few luminous critical pages to Plotinus in the Croisets’ Histoire de la Litterature Grecque, vol. v, pp. 820-31. As an extended account of Plotinus, from a more enthusiastically sympa¬ thetic standpoint, there are Dr. Inge's well-known Gifford Lectures, The Philosophy of Plotinus (1918); I may also mention a careful scholastic 250 THE DANCE OF LIFE Plotinus seems to have had little interest in art, as commonly understood, and he was an impatient, rapid, and disorderly writer, not even troubling to spell cor¬ rectly. All his art was in the spiritual sphere. It is impossible to separate aesthetics, as he understood it, from ethics and religion. In the beautiful discourse on Beauty, which forms one of the chapters of his first “ Ennead,” it is mainly with spiritual beauty that he is concerned. But he insists that it is beauty, beauty of the same quality as that of the physical world, which inheres in goodness, “nor may those tell of the splen¬ dour of Virtue who have never known the face of Justice and of Wisdom beautiful beyond the beauty of Evening and of Dawn.’' It is a beauty, he further states, — though here he seems to be passing out of the purely aesthetic sphere, — that arouses emotions of love. “This is the spirit that Beauty must ever induce, wonderment and a delicious trouble, longing and love, and a trembling that is also delight. For the unseen all this may be felt as for the seen, and this souls feel for it, every soul in some degree, but those the more deeply who are the more truly apt to this higher love — just as all take delight in the beauty of the body, but ail are not strung as sharply, and those only that feel the keener wound are known as Lovers.” Goodness and Truth were on the same plane for Plotinus as Beauty. It may even be said that Beauty was the most funda- study, L' KslhJ’liqtu de Ploiin (1913), by Cochez, of Louvain, who re¬ gards Plotinus as the climax of the objective aesthetics of antiquity and the beginning of the road to modern subjective aesthetics. THE ART OF MORALS 251 mental of all, to be identified ultimately as the Ab¬ solute, as Reality itself. So it was natural that in the sphere of morals he should speak indifferently either of “ extirpating evil and implanting goodness” or of “introducing order and beauty to replace goodness” — in either case “we talk of real things.” “Virtue is a natural concordance among the phenomena of the soul, vice a discord.” But Plotinus definitely rejects the notion that beauty is only symmetry, and so he avoids the narrow conception of some more modern aesthetic moralists, notably Hutcheson. How, then, he asks, could the sun be beautiful, or gold, or light, or night, or the stars? “Beauty is something more than symmetry, and symmetry owes its beauty to a remoter principle” — its affinity, in the opinion of Plotinus, with the “Ideal Form,” immediately recognised and confirmed by the soul. It may seem to some that Plotinus reduces to ab¬ surdity the conception of morality as aesthetics, and it may well be that the Greeks of the great period were wiser when they left the nature of morals less explicit. Yet Plotinus had in him the root of the matter. He had risen to the conception that the moral life of the soul is a dance ; “ Consider the performers in a choral dance : they sing together, though each one has his own partic¬ ular part, and sometimes one voice is heard while the others are silent; and each brings to the chorus some¬ thing of his own; it is not enough that all lift their voices together; each must sing, choicely, his own part THE DANCE OF LIFE 252 in the music set for him. So it is with the Soul/’1 The Hellenic extension of the aesthetic emotion, as Benn pointed out, involved no weakening of the moral fibre. That is so, we see, and even emphatically so, when it becomes definitely explicit as in Plotinus, and revolu- tionarily hostile to all those ideals of the moral life which most people have been accustomed to consider modern. As usually among the Greeks, it is only implicitly, also, that we detect this attitude among the Romans, the pupils of the Greeks. For the most part, the Romans, whose impulses of art were very limited, whose practical mind craved precision and definition, proved rebellious to the idea that living is an art ; yet it may well be that they still retained that idea at the core of their morality. It is interesting to note that St. Augustine, who stood on the threshold between the old Roman and new Christian worlds was able to write: “The art of living well and rightly is the defini¬ tion that the ancients give of ‘virtue.’” For the Latins believed that ars was derived from the Greek word for virtue, aper^2 Yet there really remained a difference between the Greek and the Roman views of morals. The Greek view, it is universally admitted, was aesthetic, in the most definite sense; the Roman was not, and when Cicero wishes to translate a Greek reference to a “beautiful” action it becomes an 1 Ennead, bk. in, chap. VI. I have mostly followed the translation of Stephen McKenna. * St. Augustine, De Civitate Dei , bk. iv, chap. xxz. THE ART OF MORALS 253 “honourable” action. The Greek was concerned with what he himself felt about his actions; the Roman was concerned with what they would look like to other people, and the credit, or discredit, that would be re¬ flected back on himself. The Hebrews never even dreamed of such an art. Their attitude is sufficiently embodied in the story of Moses and that visit to Sinai which resulted in the production of the table of Ten Commandments which we may still see inscribed in old churches. For even our modern feeling about morals is largely Jewish, in some measure Roman, and scarcely Greek at all. We still accept, in theory at all events, the Mosaic concep¬ tion of morality as a code of rigid and inflexible rules, arbitrarily ordained, and to be blindly obeyed. The conception of morality as an art, which Chris¬ tendom once disdained, seems now again to be finding favour in men’s eyes. The path has been made smooth for it by great thinkers of various complexion, who, differing in many fundamental points, all alike assert the relativity of truth and the inaptitude of rigid maxims to serve as guiding forces in life. They also assert, for a large part, implicitly or explicitly, the authority of art. The nineteenth century was usually inspired by the maxims of Kant, and lifted its hat reverently when it heard Kant declaiming his famous sayings concerning the supremacy of an inflexible moral law. Kant had, indeed, felt the stream of influence which flowed from THE DANCE OF LIFE 254 Shaftesbury, and he sought to mix up aesthetics with his system. But he had nothing of the genuine artist’s spirit. The art of morals was to him a set of maxims, cold, rigid, precise. A sympathetic biographer has said of him that the maxims were the man. They are some¬ times fine maxims. But as guides, as motives to practical action in the world? The maxims of the valetudinarian professor at Konigsberg scarcely seem that to us to-day. Still less can we harmonise maxims with art. Nor do we any longer suppose that we are impertinent in referring to the philosopher’s person¬ ality. In the investigation of the solar spectrum per¬ sonality may count for little; in the investigation of moral laws it counts for much. For personality is the very stuff of morals. The moral maxims of an elderly professor in a provincial university town have their interest. But so have those of a Casanova. And the moral maxims of a Goethe may possibly have more interest than either. There is the rigid categorical imperative of Kant; and there is also that other dictum, less rigid but more reminiscent of Greece, which some well-inspired person has put into the mouth of Walt Whitman: ‘‘Whatever tastes sweet to the most perfect person, that is finally right.” ill Fundamentally considered, there are two roads by which we may travel towards the moral ends of life: the road of Tradition, which is ultimately that of THE ART OF MORALS 255 Instinct, pursued by the many, and the road of what seems to be Reason — sought out by the few. And in the end these two roads are but the same road, for reason also is an instinct. It is true that the ingenuity of analytic investigators like Henry Sidgwick has suc¬ ceeded in enumerating various “methods of ethics.” But, roughly speaking, there can only be these two main roads of life, and only one has proved supremely important. It has been by following the path of tra¬ dition moulded by instinct that man reached the threshold of civilisation : whatever may have been the benefits he derived from the guidance of reason he never consciously allowed reason to control his moral life. Tables of commandments have ever been “given by God”; they represented, that is to say, obscure impulses of the organism striving to respond to practi¬ cal needs. No one dreamed of commending them by declaring that they were reasonable. It is clear how Instinct and Tradition, thus working together, act vitally and beneficently in moulding the moral life of primitive peoples. The “divine com¬ mand” was always a command conditioned by the special circumstance under which the tribe lived. That is so even when the moral law is to our civilised eyes “unnatural.” The infanticide of Polynesian islanders, where the means of subsistence and the possibilities of expansion were limited, was obviously a necessary measure, beneficent and humane in its effects. The killing of the aged among the migrant Eskimos was THE DANCE OF LIFE 256 equally a necessary and kindly measure, recognised as such by the victims themselves, when it was essential that every member of the community should be able to help himself. Primitive rules of moral action, greatly as they differ among themselves, are all more or less advantageous and helpful on the road of primitive life. It is true that they allow very little, if any, scope for divergent individual moral action, but that, too, was advantageous. But that, also, is the rock on which an instinctive traditional morality must strike as civilisation is ap¬ proached. The tribe has no longer the same unity. Social differentiation has tended to make the family a unit, and psychic differentiation to make even the separate individuals units. The community of interests of the whole tribe has been broken up, and therewith traditional morality has lost alike its value and its power. The development of abstract intelligence, which coincides with civilisation, works in the same direction. Reason is, indeed, on one side an integrating force, for it shows that the assumption of traditional morality — • the identity of the individual’s interests with the interests of the community — is soundly based. But it is also a disintegrating force. For if it reveals a general unity in the ends of living, it devises infinitely various and perplexingly distracting excuses for living. Before the active invasion of reason living had been an art, or at all events a discipline, highly conventional- THE ART OF MORALS 257 ised and even ritualistic, but the motive forces of liv¬ ing lay in life itself and had all the binding sanction of instincts; the penalty of every failure in living, it was felt, would be swiftly and automatically expe¬ rienced. To apply reason here was to introduce a powerful solvent into morals. Objectively it made morality clearer but subjectively it destroyed the exist¬ ing motives for morality; it deprived man, to use the fashionable phraseology of the present day, of a vital illusion. Thus we have morality in the fundamental sense, the actual practices of the main army of the population, while in front a variegated procession of prancing philosophers gaily flaunt their moral theories before the world. Kant, whose personal moral problems were concerned with eating sweetmeats,1 and other philosophers of varyingly inferior calibre, were re¬ garded as the lawgivers of morality, though they car¬ ried little enough weight with the world at large. 1 Kant was habitually cold and calm. But he was very fond of dried fruits and used to have them specially imported for him by his friend Motherby. “At one time he was eagerly expecting a vessel with French fruits which he had ordered, and he had already invited some friends to a dinner at which they were to be served. The vessel was, hou’ever, de¬ layed a number of days by a storm. When it arrived, Kant was in¬ formed that the provisions had become short on account of the delay, and that the crew had eaten his fruit. Kant was so angry that he de¬ clared they ought rather to have starved than to have touched it. Sur¬ prised at this irritation, Motherby said, ‘Professor, you cannot be in earnest.’ Kant answered, ‘I am really in earnest,’ and went away. Afterwards he was sorry.” (Quoted by Stuckenberg, The Life, of Kant , p. 138.) But still it was quite in accordance with Kantian morality that the sailors should have starved. THE DANCE OF LIFE 258 Thus it comes about that abstract moral specula¬ tions, culminating in rigid maxims, are necessarily sterile and vain. They move in the sphere of reason, and that is the sphere of comprehension, but not of vital action. In this way there arises a moral dualism in civilised man. Objectively he has become like the gods and able to distinguish the ends of life; he has eaten of the fruit of the tree and has knowledge of good and evil. Subjectively he is still not far removed from the savage, oftenest stirred to action by a confused web of emotional motives, among which the inter¬ woven strands of civilised reason are as likely to pro¬ duce discord or paralysis as to furnish efficient guides, a state of mind first, and perhaps best, set forth in its extreme form by Shakespeare in Hamlet. On the one hand he cannot return to the primitive state in which all the motives for living flowed harmoniously in the same channel ; he cannot divest himself of his illuminat¬ ing reason ; he cannot recede from his hardly acquired personal individuality. On the other hand he can never expect, he can never even reasonably hope, that reason will ever hold in leash the emotions. It is clear that along neither path separately can the civilised man pursue his way in harmonious balance with him¬ self. We begin to realise that what we need is not a code of beautifully cut-and-dried maxims — whether emanating from sacred mountains or from philoso¬ phers' studies — but a happy combination of two differ¬ ent ways of living. We need, that is, a traditional THE ART OF MORALS 259 and instinctive way of living, based on real motor in¬ stincts, which will blend with reason and the manifold needs of personality, instead of being destroyed by their solvent actions, as rigid rules inevitably are. Our only valid rule is a creative impulse that is one with the illuminative power of intelligence. IV At the beginning of the eighteenth century, the seed¬ time of our modern ideas, as it has so often seemed to be, the English people, having in art at length brought their language to a fine degree of clarity and precision, and having just passed through a highly stimulating period of dominant Puritanism in life, became much interested in philosophy, psychology, and ethics. Their interest was, indeed, often superficial and amateurish, though they were soon to produce some of the most notable figures in the whole history of thought. The third Earl of Shaftesbury, one of the earliest of the group, himself illustrated this unsys¬ tematic method of thinking. He was an amateur, an aristocratic amateur, careless of consistency, and not by any means concerned to erect a philosophic system. Not that he was a worse thinker on that account. The world’s greatest thinkers have often been ama¬ teurs; for high thinking is the outcome of fine and independent living, and for that a professorial chair offers no special opportunities. Shaftesbury was, moreover, a man of fragile physical constitution, as 26o THE DANCE OF LIFE Kant was; but, unlike Kant, he was not a childish hypochondriac in seclusion, but a man in the world, heroically seeking to live a complete and harmonious life. By temperament he was a Stoic, and he wrote a characteristic book of “ Exercises/' as he proposed to call what his modern editor calls the “Philosophical Regimen,” in which he consciously seeks to discipline himself in fine thinking and right living, plainly acknowledging that he is the disciple of Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. But Shaftesbury was also a man of genius, and as such it was his good fortune to throw afresh into the stream of thought a fruitful conception, in part absorbed, indeed, from Greece, and long im¬ plicit in men’s minds, but never before made clearly recognisable as a moral theory and an ethical temper, susceptible of being labelled by the philosophic histo¬ rian, as it since has been under the name, passable no doubt as any other, of “^Esthetic Intuitionism.” Greek morality, it has been well said, is not a con¬ flict of light and darkness, of good and evil, the clear choice between the broad road that leads to destruc¬ tion and the narrow path of salvation: it is “an artistic balance of light and shade.” Gizycki, remarking that Shaftesbury has more affinity to the Greeks than per¬ haps any other modern moralist, says that “ the key lay not only in his head, but in his heart, for like can only be recognised by like.” 1 We have to remember at the same time that Shaftesbury was really something of a * Georg von Gizycki, Die Ethik David Hume’s, p. xi« THE ART OF MORALS 261 classical scholar, even from childhood. Bom in 1671, the grandson of the foremost English statesman of his time, the first Earl, Anthony Cooper, he had the ad¬ vantage of the wise oversight of his grandfather, who placed with him as a companion in childhood a lady who knew both Greek and Latin so well that she could converse fluently in both languages. So it was that by the age of eleven he was familiar with the two classic tongues and literatures. That doubtless was also a key to his intimate feeling for the classic spirit, though it would not have sufficed without a native affinity. He became the pupil of Locke, and at fifteen he went to Italy, to spend a considerable time there. He knew France also, and the French tongue, so well that he was often taken for a native. He lived for some time in Holland, and there formed a friendship with Bayle, which began before the latter was aware of his friend’s rank and lasted till Bayle’s death. In Holland he may have been slightly influenced by Grotius.1 Shaftesbury was not of robust constitution ; he suffered from asth¬ ma, and his health was further affected by his zeal in public affairs as well as his enthusiasm in study, for his morality was not that of a recluse, but of a man who played an active part in life, not only in social benevo¬ lence, like his descendant the enlightened philanthropic Earl of the nineteenth century, but in the establish¬ ment of civil freedom and toleration. Locke wrote of his pupil (who was not, however, in agreement with hia 1 F. C. Sharp, Mind (1912), p. 38$, 262 THE DANCE OF LIFE tutor's philosophic standpoint,1 though he always treated him with consideration) that “the sword was too sharp for the scabbard." “He seems," wrote of Shaftesbury his unfriendly contemporary Mandeville, “to require and expect goodness in his species as we do a sweet taste in grapes and China oranges, of which, if any of them are sour, we boldly pronounce that they are not come to that perfection their nature is capable of." In a certain sense this was correct. Shaftesbury, it has been said, was the father of that new ethics which recognises that Nature is not a mere impulse of self-preservation, as Hobbes thought, but also a racial impulse, having regard to others; there are social inclinations in the individual, he realised, that go beyond individual ends. (Referring to the famous dictum of Hobbes, Homo homini lupus , he observes: “To say in disparagement of Man ‘that he is to Man a wolf' appears somewhat absurd when one considers that wolves are to wolves very kind and loving creatures.") Therewith “good¬ ness" was seen, virtually for the first time in the modern period, to be as “natural" as the sweetness of ripe fruit. There was another reason, a fundamental physi¬ ological and psychological reason, why “goodness" of actions and the “sweetness" of fruits are equally 1 Shaftesbury held that Locke swept away too much and failed ta allow for inborn instincts (or “senses,” as he sometimes called them*) developing naturally. We now see that he was right. THE ART OF MORALS 263 natural, a reason that would, no doubt, have been found strange both by Mandeville and Shaftesbury. Morality, Shaftesbury describes as “the taste of beauty and the relish of what is decent,” and the “sense of beauty” is ultimately the same as the “moral sense.” “My first endeavour,” wrote Shaftes¬ bury, “must be to distinguish the true taste of fruits, refine my palate, and establish a just relish in the kind.” He thought, evidently, that he was merely using a metaphor. But he was speaking essentially in the direct, straightforward way of natural and primi¬ tive Man. At the foundation, “sweetness” and “good¬ ness” are the same thing. That can still be detected in the very structure of language, not only of primitive languages, but those of the most civilised peoples. That morality is, in the strict sense, a matter of taste, of aesthetics, of what the Greeks called ala6^