 |
"But souls that of his own good life
partake,
He loves as his own self; dear as his eye
They are to Him: He'll never them forsake:
When they shall die, then God himself shall die:
They live, they live in blest eternity."
Henry More
Space is ample, east and west,
But two cannot go abreast,
Cannot travel in it two:
Yonder masterful cuckoo
Crowds every egg out of the nest,
Quick or dead, except its own;
A spell is laid on sod and stone,
Night and Day 've been tampered with,
Every quality and pith
Surcharged and sultry with a power
That works its will on age and hour.
ESSAY IX The Over-Soul
There is a difference between one and
another hour of life, in their authority and subsequent effect.
Our faith comes in moments; our vice is habitual. Yet there
is a depth in those brief moments which constrains us to ascribe
more reality to them than to all other experiences. For this
reason, the argument which is always forthcoming to silence
those who conceive extraordinary hopes of man, namely, the
appeal to experience, is for ever invalid and vain. We give
up the past to the objector, and yet we hope. He must explain
this hope. We grant that human life is mean; but how did we
find out that it was mean? What is the ground of this uneasiness
of ours; of this old discontent? What is the universal sense
of want and ignorance, but the fine inuendo by which the soul
makes its enormous claim? Why do men feel that the natural
history of man has never been written, but he is always leaving
behind what you have said of him, and it becomes old, and
books of metaphysics worthless? The philosophy of six thousand
years has not searched the chambers and magazines of the soul.
In its experiments there has always remained, in the last
analysis, a residuum it could not resolve. Man is a stream
whose source is hidden. Our being is descending into us from
we know not whence. The most exact calculator has no prescience
that somewhat incalculable may not balk the very next moment.
I am constrained every moment to acknowledge a higher origin
for events than the will I call mine.
As with events, so is it with thoughts.
When I watch that flowing river, which, out of regions I see
not, pours for a season its streams into me, I see that I
am a pensioner; not a cause, but a surprised spectator of
this ethereal water; that I desire and look up, and put myself
in the attitude of reception, but from some alien energy the
visions come.
The Supreme Critic on the errors of
the past and the present, and the only prophet of that which
must be, is that great nature in which we rest, as the earth
lies in the soft arms of the atmosphere; that Unity, that
Over-soul, within which every man's particular being is contained
and made one with all other; that common heart, of which all
sincere conversation is the worship, to which all right action
is submission; that overpowering reality which confutes our
tricks and talents, and constrains every one to pass for what
he is, and to speak from his character, and not from his tongue,
and which evermore tends to pass into our thought and hand,
and become wisdom, and virtue, and power, and beauty. We live
in succession, in division, in parts, in particles. Meantime
within man is the soul of the whole; the wise silence; the
universal beauty, to which every part and particle is equally
related; the eternal ONE. And this deep power in which we
exist, and whose beatitude is all accessible to us, is not
only self-sufficing and perfect in every hour, but the act
of seeing and the thing seen, the seer and the spectacle,
the subject and the object, are one. We see the world piece
by piece, as the sun, the moon, the animal, the tree; but
the whole, of which these are the shining parts, is the soul.
Only by the vision of that Wisdom can the horoscope of the
ages be read, and by falling back on our better thoughts,
by yielding to the spirit of prophecy which is innate in every
man, we can know what it saith. Every man's words, who speaks
from that life, must sound vain to those who do not dwell
in the same thought on their own part. I dare not speak for
it. My words do not carry its august sense; they fall short
and cold. Only itself can inspire whom it will, and behold!
their speech shall be lyrical, and sweet, and universal as
the rising of the wind. Yet I desire, even by profane words,
if I may not use sacred, to indicate the heaven of this deity,
and to report what hints I have collected of the transcendent
simplicity and energy of the Highest Law.
If we consider what happens in conversation,
in reveries, in remorse, in times of passion, in surprises,
in the instructions of dreams, wherein often we see ourselves
in masquerade, — the droll disguises only magnifying and enhancing
a real element, and forcing it on our distinct notice, — we
shall catch many hints that will broaden and lighten into
knowledge of the secret of nature. All goes to show that the
soul in man is not an organ, but animates and exercises all
the organs; is not a function, like the power of memory, of
calculation, of comparison, but uses these as hands and feet;
is not a faculty, but a light; is not the intellect or the
will, but the master of the intellect and the will; is the
background of our being, in which they lie, — an immensity
not possessed and that cannot be possessed. From within or
from behind, a light shines through us upon things, and makes
us aware that we are nothing, but the light is all. A man
is the fasade of a temple wherein all wisdom and all good
abide. What we commonly call man, the eating, drinking, planting,
counting man, does not, as we know him, represent himself,
but misrepresents himself. Him we do not respect, but the
soul, whose organ he is, would he let it appear through his
action, would make our knees bend. When it breathes through
his intellect, it is genius; when it breathes through his
will, it is virtue; when it flows through his affection, it
is love. And the blindness of the intellect begins, when it
would be something of itself. The weakness of the will begins,
when the individual would be something of himself. All reform
aims, in some one particular, to let the soul have its way
through us; in other words, to engage us to obey.
Of this pure nature every man is at
some time sensible. Language cannot paint it with his colors.
It is too subtile. It is undefinable, unmeasurable, but we
know that it pervades and contains us. We know that all spiritual
being is in man. A wise old proverb says, "God comes to see
us without bell"; that is, as there is no screen or ceiling
between our heads and the infinite heavens, so is there no
bar or wall in the soul where man, the effect, ceases, and
God, the cause, begins. The walls are taken away. We lie open
on one side to the deeps of spiritual nature, to the attributes
of God. Justice we see and know, Love, Freedom, Power. These
natures no man ever got above, but they tower over us, and
most in the moment when our interests tempt us to wound them.
The sovereignty of this nature whereof
we speak is made known by its independency of those limitations
which circumscribe us on every hand. The soul circumscribes
all things. As I have said, it contradicts all experience.
In like manner it abolishes time and space. The influence
of the senses has, in most men, overpowered the mind to that
degree, that the walls of time and space have come to look
real and insurmountable; and to speak with levity of these
limits is, in the world, the sign of insanity. Yet time and
space are but inverse measures of the force of the soul. The
spirit sports with time, —
"Can crowd eternity into an hour,
Or stretch an hour to eternity."
We are often made to feel that there
is another youth and age than that which is measured from
the year of our natural birth. Some thoughts always find us
young, and keep us so. Such a thought is the love of the universal
and eternal beauty. Every man parts from that contemplation
with the feeling that it rather belongs to ages than to mortal
life. The least activity of the intellectual powers redeems
us in a degree from the conditions of time. In sickness, in
languor, give us a strain of poetry, or a profound sentence,
and we are refreshed; or produce a volume of Plato, or Shakspeare,
or remind us of their names, and instantly we come into a
feeling of longevity. See how the deep, divine thought reduces
centuries, and millenniums, and makes itself present through
all ages. Is the teaching of Christ less effective now than
it was when first his mouth was opened? The emphasis of facts
and persons in my thought has nothing to do with time. And
so, always, the soul's scale is one; the scale of the senses
and the understanding is another. Before the revelations of
the soul, Time, Space, and Nature shrink away. In common speech,
we refer all things to time, as we habitually refer the immensely
sundered stars to one concave sphere. And so we say that the
Judgment is distant or near, that the Millennium approaches,
that a day of certain political, moral, social reforms is
at hand, and the like, when we mean, that, in the nature of
things, one of the facts we contemplate is external and fugitive,
and the other is permanent and connate with the soul. The
things we now esteem fixed shall, one by one, detach themselves,
like ripe fruit, from our experience, and fall. The wind shall
blow them none knows whither. The landscape, the figures,
Boston, London, are facts as fugitive as any institution past,
or any whiff of mist or smoke, and so is society, and so is
the world. The soul looketh steadily forwards, creating a
world before her, leaving worlds behind her. She has no dates,
nor rites, nor persons, nor specialties, nor men. The soul
knows only the soul; the web of events is the flowing robe
in which she is clothed.
After its own law and not by arithmetic
is the rate of its progress to be computed. The soul's advances
are not made by gradation, such as can be represented by motion
in a straight line; but rather by ascension of state, such
as can be represented by metamorphosis, — from the egg to
the worm, from the worm to the fly. The growths of genius
are of a certain total character, that does not advance
the elect individual first over John, then Adam, then Richard,
and give to each the pain of discovered inferiority, but by
every throe of growth the man expands there where he works,
passing, at each pulsation, classes, populations, of men.
With each divine impulse the mind rends the thin rinds of
the visible and finite, and comes out into eternity, and inspires
and expires its air. It converses with truths that have always
been spoken in the world, and becomes conscious of a closer
sympathy with Zeno and Arrian, than with persons in the house.
This is the law of moral and of mental
gain. The simple rise as by specific levity, not into a particular
virtue, but into the region of all the virtues. They are in
the spirit which contains them all. The soul requires purity,
but purity is not it; requires justice, but justice is not
that; requires beneficence, but is somewhat better; so that
there is a kind of descent and accommodation felt when we
leave speaking of moral nature, to urge a virtue which it
enjoins. To the well-born child, all the virtues are natural,
and not painfully acquired. Speak to his heart, and the man
becomes suddenly virtuous.
Within the same sentiment is the germ
of intellectual growth, which obeys the same law. Those who
are capable of humility, of justice, of love, of aspiration,
stand already on a platform that commands the sciences and
arts, speech and poetry, action and grace. For whoso dwells
in this moral beatitude already anticipates those special
powers which men prize so highly. The lover has no talent,
no skill, which passes for quite nothing with his enamoured
maiden, however little she may possess of related faculty;
and the heart which abandons itself to the Supreme Mind finds
itself related to all its works, and will travel a royal road
to particular knowledges and powers. In ascending to this
primary and aboriginal sentiment, we have come from our remote
station on the circumference instantaneously to the centre
of the world, where, as in the closet of God, we see causes,
and anticipate the universe, which is but a slow effect.
One mode of the divine teaching is the
incarnation of the spirit in a form, — in forms, like my own.
I live in society; with persons who answer to thoughts in
my own mind, or express a certain obedience to the great instincts
to which I live. I see its presence to them. I am certified
of a common nature; and these other souls, these separated
selves, draw me as nothing else can. They stir in me the new
emotions we call passion; of love, hatred, fear, admiration,
pity; thence comes conversation, competition, persuasion,
cities, and war. Persons are supplementary to the primary
teaching of the soul. In youth we are mad for persons. Childhood
and youth see all the world in them. But the larger experience
of man discovers the identical nature appearing through them
all. Persons themselves acquaint us with the impersonal. In
all conversation between two persons, tacit reference is made,
as to a third party, to a common nature. That third party
or common nature is not social; it is impersonal; is God.
And so in groups where debate is earnest, and especially on
high questions, the company become aware that the thought
rises to an equal level in all bosoms, that all have a spiritual
property in what was said, as well as the sayer. They all
become wiser than they were. It arches over them like a temple,
this unity of thought, in which every heart beats with nobler
sense of power and duty, and thinks and acts with unusual
solemnity. All are conscious of attaining to a higher self-possession.
It shines for all. There is a certain wisdom of humanity which
is common to the greatest men with the lowest, and which our
ordinary education often labors to silence and obstruct. The
mind is one, and the best minds, who love truth for its own
sake, think much less of property in truth. They accept it
thankfully everywhere, and do not label or stamp it with any
man's name, for it is theirs long beforehand, and from eternity.
The learned and the studious of thought have no monopoly of
wisdom. Their violence of direction in some degree disqualifies
them to think truly. We owe many valuable observations to
people who are not very acute or profound, and who say the
thing without effort, which we want and have long been hunting
in vain. The action of the soul is oftener in that which is
felt and left unsaid, than in that which is said in any conversation.
It broods over every society, and they unconsciously seek
for it in each other. We know better than we do. We do not
yet possess ourselves, and we know at the same time that we
are much more. I feel the same truth how often in my trivial
conversation with my neighbours, that somewhat higher in each
of us overlooks this by-play, and Jove nods to Jove from behind
each of us.
Men descend to meet. In their habitual
and mean service to the world, for which they forsake their
native nobleness, they resemble those Arabian sheiks, who
dwell in mean houses, and affect an external poverty, to escape
the rapacity of the Pacha, and reserve all their display of
wealth for their interior and guarded retirements.
As it is present in all persons, so
it is in every period of life. It is adult already in the
infant man. In my dealing with my child, my Latin and Greek,
my accomplishments and my money stead me nothing; but as much
soul as I have avails. If I am wilful, he sets his will against
mine, one for one, and leaves me, if I please, the degradation
of beating him by my superiority of strength. But if I renounce
my will, and act for the soul, setting that up as umpire between
us two, out of his young eyes looks the same soul; he reveres
and loves with me.
The soul is the perceiver and revealer
of truth. We know truth when we see it, let skeptic and scoffer
say what they choose. Foolish people ask you, when you have
spoken what they do not wish to hear, 'How do you know it
is truth, and not an error of your own?' We know truth when
we see it, from opinion, as we know when we are awake that
we are awake. It was a grand sentence of Emanuel Swedenborg,
which would alone indicate the greatness of that man's perception,
— "It is no proof of a man's understanding to be able to confirm
whatever he pleases; but to be able to discern that what is
true is true, and that what is false is false, this is the
mark and character of intelligence." In the book I read, the
good thought returns to me, as every truth will, the image
of the whole soul. To the bad thought which I find in it,
the same soul becomes a discerning, separating sword, and
lops it away. We are wiser than we know. If we will not interfere
with our thought, but will act entirely, or see how the thing
stands in God, we know the particular thing, and every thing,
and every man. For the Maker of all things and all persons
stands behind us, and casts his dread omniscience through
us over things.
But beyond this recognition of its own
in particular passages of the individual's experience, it
also reveals truth. And here we should seek to reinforce ourselves
by its very presence, and to speak with a worthier, loftier
strain of that advent. For the soul's communication of truth
is the highest event in nature, since it then does not give
somewhat from itself, but it gives itself, or passes into
and becomes that man whom it enlightens; or, in proportion
to that truth he receives, it takes him to itself.
We distinguish the announcements of
the soul, its manifestations of its own nature, by the term
Revelation. These are always attended by the emotion
of the sublime. For this communication is an influx of the
Divine mind into our mind. It is an ebb of the individual
rivulet before the flowing surges of the sea of life. Every
distinct apprehension of this central commandment agitates
men with awe and delight. A thrill passes through all men
at the reception of new truth, or at the performance of a
great action, which comes out of the heart of nature. In these
communications, the power to see is not separated from the
will to do, but the insight proceeds from obedience, and the
obedience proceeds from a joyful perception. Every moment
when the individual feels himself invaded by it is memorable.
By the necessity of our constitution, a certain enthusiasm
attends the individual's consciousness of that divine presence.
The character and duration of this enthusiasm varies with
the state of the individual, from an ecstasy and trance and
prophetic inspiration, — which is its rarer appearance, —
to the faintest glow of virtuous emotion, in which form it
warms, like our household fires, all the families and associations
of men, and makes society possible. A certain tendency to
insanity has always attended the opening of the religious
sense in men, as if they had been "blasted with excess of
light." The trances of Socrates, the "union" of Plotinus,
the vision of Porphyry, the conversion of Paul, the aurora
of Behmen, the convulsions of George Fox and his Quakers,
the illumination of Swedenborg, are of this kind. What was
in the case of these remarkable persons a ravishment has,
in innumerable instances in common life, been exhibited in
less striking manner. Everywhere the history of religion betrays
a tendency to enthusiasm. The rapture of the Moravian and
Quietist; the opening of the internal sense of the Word, in
the language of the New Jerusalem Church; the revival
of the Calvinistic churches; the experiences of the
Methodists, are varying forms of that shudder of awe and delight
with which the individual soul always mingles with the universal
soul.
The nature of these revelations is the
same; they are perceptions of the absolute law. They are solutions
of the soul's own questions. They do not answer the questions
which the understanding asks. The soul answers never by words,
but by the thing itself that is inquired after.
Revelation is the disclosure of the
soul. The popular notion of a revelation is, that it is a
telling of fortunes. In past oracles of the soul, the understanding
seeks to find answers to sensual questions, and undertakes
to tell from God how long men shall exist, what their hands
shall do, and who shall be their company, adding names, and
dates, and places. But we must pick no locks. We must check
this low curiosity. An answer in words is delusive; it is
really no answer to the questions you ask. Do not require
a description of the countries towards which you sail. The
description does not describe them to you, and to-morrow you
arrive there, and know them by inhabiting them. Men ask concerning
the immortality of the soul, the employments of heaven, the
state of the sinner, and so forth. They even dream that Jesus
has left replies to precisely these interrogatories. Never
a moment did that sublime spirit speak in their patois.
To truth, justice, love, the attributes of the soul, the idea
of immutableness is essentially associated. Jesus, living
in these moral sentiments, heedless of sensual fortunes, heeding
only the manifestations of these, never made the separation
of the idea of duration from the essence of these attributes,
nor uttered a syllable concerning the duration of the soul.
It was left to his disciples to sever duration from the moral
elements, and to teach the immortality of the soul as a doctrine,
and maintain it by evidences. The moment the doctrine of the
immortality is separately taught, man is already fallen. In
the flowing of love, in the adoration of humility, there is
no question of continuance. No inspired man ever asks this
question, or condescends to these evidences. For the soul
is true to itself, and the man in whom it is shed abroad cannot
wander from the present, which is infinite, to a future which
would be finite.
These questions which we lust to ask
about the future are a confession of sin. God has no answer
for them. No answer in words can reply to a question of things.
It is not in an arbitrary "decree of God," but in the nature
of man, that a veil shuts down on the facts of to-morrow;
for the soul will not have us read any other cipher than that
of cause and effect. By this veil, which curtains events,
it instructs the children of men to live in to-day. The only
mode of obtaining an answer to these questions of the senses
is to forego all low curiosity, and, accepting the tide of
being which floats us into the secret of nature, work and
live, work and live, and all unawares the advancing soul has
built and forged for itself a new condition, and the question
and the answer are one.
By the same fire, vital, consecrating,
celestial, which burns until it shall dissolve all things
into the waves and surges of an ocean of light, we see and
know each other, and what spirit each is of. Who can tell
the grounds of his knowledge of the character of the several
individuals in his circle of friends? No man. Yet their acts
and words do not disappoint him. In that man, though he knew
no ill of him, he put no trust. In that other, though they
had seldom met, authentic signs had yet passed, to signify
that he might be trusted as one who had an interest in his
own character. We know each other very well, — which of us
has been just to himself, and whether that which we teach
or behold is only an aspiration, or is our honest effort also.
We are all discerners of spirits. That
diagnosis lies aloft in our life or unconscious power. The
intercourse of society, — its trade, its religion, its friendships,
its quarrels,— is one wide, judicial investigation of character.
In full court, or in small committee, or confronted face to
face, accuser and accused, men offer themselves to be judged.
Against their will they exhibit those decisive trifles by
which character is read. But who judges? and what? Not our
understanding. We do not read them by learning or craft. No;
the wisdom of the wise man consists herein, that he does not
judge them; he lets them judge themselves, and merely reads
and records their own verdict.
By virtue of this inevitable nature,
private will is overpowered, and, maugre our efforts or our
imperfections, your genius will speak from you, and mine from
me. That which we are, we shall teach, not voluntarily, but
involuntarily. Thoughts come into our minds by avenues which
we never left open, and thoughts go out of our minds through
avenues which we never voluntarily opened. Character teaches
over our head. The infallible index of true progress is found
in the tone the man takes. Neither his age, nor his breeding,
nor company, nor books, nor actions, nor talents, nor all
together, can hinder him from being deferential to a higher
spirit than his own. If he have not found his home in God,
his manners, his forms of speech, the turn of his sentences,
the build, shall I say, of all his opinions, will involuntarily
confess it, let him brave it out how he will. If he have found
his centre, the Deity will shine through him, through all
the disguises of ignorance, of ungenial temperament, of unfavorable
circumstance. The tone of seeking is one, and the tone of
having is another.
The great distinction between teachers
sacred or literary, — between poets like Herbert, and poets
like Pope, — between philosophers like Spinoza, Kant, and
Coleridge, and philosophers like Locke, Paley, Mackintosh,
and Stewart, — between men of the world, who are reckoned
accomplished talkers, and here and there a fervent mystic,
prophesying, half insane under the infinitude of his thought,
— is, that one class speak from within, or from experience,
as parties and possessors of the fact; and the other class,
from without, as spectators merely, or perhaps as acquainted
with the fact on the evidence of third persons. It is of no
use to preach to me from without. I can do that too easily
myself. Jesus speaks always from within, and in a degree that
transcends all others. In that is the miracle. I believe beforehand
that it ought so to be. All men stand continually in the expectation
of the appearance of such a teacher. But if a man do not speak
from within the veil, where the word is one with that it tells
of, let him lowly confess it.
The same Omniscience flows into the
intellect, and makes what we call genius. Much of the wisdom
of the world is not wisdom, and the most illuminated class
of men are no doubt superior to literary fame, and are not
writers. Among the multitude of scholars and authors, we feel
no hallowing presence; we are sensible of a knack and skill
rather than of inspiration; they have a light, and know not
whence it comes, and call it their own; their talent is some
exaggerated faculty, some overgrown member, so that their
strength is a disease. In these instances the intellectual
gifts do not make the impression of virtue, but almost of
vice; and we feel that a man's talents stand in the way of
his advancement in truth. But genius is religious. It is a
larger imbibing of the common heart. It is not anomalous,
but more like, and not less like other men. There is, in all
great poets, a wisdom of humanity which is superior to any
talents they exercise. The author, the wit, the partisan,
the fine gentleman, does not take place of the man. Humanity
shines in Homer, in Chaucer, in Spenser, in Shakspeare, in
Milton. They are content with truth. They use the positive
degree. They seem frigid and phlegmatic to those who have
been spiced with the frantic passion and violent coloring
of inferior, but popular writers. For they are poets by the
free course which they allow to the informing soul, which
through their eyes beholds again, and blesses the things which
it hath made. The soul is superior to its knowledge; wiser
than any of its works. The great poet makes us feel our own
wealth, and then we think less of his compositions. His best
communication to our mind is to teach us to despise all he
has done. Shakspeare carries us to such a lofty strain of
intelligent activity, as to suggest a wealth which beggars
his own; and we then feel that the splendid works which he
has created, and which in other hours we extol as a sort of
self-existent poetry, take no stronger hold of real nature
than the shadow of a passing traveller on the rock. The inspiration
which uttered itself in Hamlet and Lear could utter things
as good from day to day, for ever. Why, then, should I make
account of Hamlet and Lear, as if we had not the soul from
which they fell as syllables from the tongue?
This energy does not descend into individual
life on any other condition than entire possession. It comes
to the lowly and simple; it comes to whomsoever will put off
what is foreign and proud; it comes as insight; it comes as
serenity and grandeur. When we see those whom it inhabits,
we are apprized of new degrees of greatness. From that inspiration
the man comes back with a changed tone. He does not talk with
men with an eye to their opinion. He tries them. It requires
of us to be plain and true. The vain traveller attempts to
embellish his life by quoting my lord, and the prince, and
the countess, who thus said or did to him. The ambitious
vulgar show you their spoons, and brooches, and rings, and
preserve their cards and compliments. The more cultivated,
in their account of their own experience, cull out the pleasing,
poetic circumstance, — the visit to Rome, the man of genius
they saw, the brilliant friend they know; still further on,
perhaps, the gorgeous landscape, the mountain lights, the
mountain thoughts, they enjoyed yesterday, — and so seek to
throw a romantic color over their life. But the soul that
ascends to worship the great God is plain and true; has no
rose-color, no fine friends, no chivalry, no adventures; does
not want admiration; dwells in the hour that now is, in the
earnest experience of the common day, — by reason of the present
moment and the mere trifle having become porous to thought,
and bibulous of the sea of light.
Converse with a mind that is grandly
simple, and literature looks like word-catching. The simplest
utterances are worthiest to be written, yet are they so cheap,
and so things of course, that, in the infinite riches of the
soul, it is like gathering a few pebbles off the ground, or
bottling a little air in a phial, when the whole earth and
the whole atmosphere are ours. Nothing can pass there, or
make you one of the circle, but the casting aside your trappings,
and dealing man to man in naked truth, plain confession, and
omniscient affirmation.
Souls such as these treat you as gods
would; walk as gods in the earth, accepting without any admiration
your wit, your bounty, your virtue even, — say rather your
act of duty, for your virtue they own as their proper blood,
royal as themselves, and over-royal, and the father of the
gods. But what rebuke their plain fraternal bearing casts
on the mutual flattery with which authors solace each other
and wound themselves! These flatter not. I do not wonder that
these men go to see Cromwell, and Christina, and Charles the
Second, and James the First, and the Grand Turk. For they
are, in their own elevation, the fellows of kings, and must
feel the servile tone of conversation in the world. They must
always be a godsend to princes, for they confront them, a
king to a king, without ducking or concession, and give a
high nature the refreshment and satisfaction of resistance,
of plain humanity, of even companionship, and of new ideas.
They leave them wiser and superior men. Souls like these make
us feel that sincerity is more excellent than flattery. Deal
so plainly with man and woman, as to constrain the utmost
sincerity, and destroy all hope of trifling with you. It is
the highest compliment you can pay. Their "highest praising,"
said Milton, "is not flattery, and their plainest advice is
a kind of praising."
Ineffable is the union of man and God
in every act of the soul. The simplest person, who in his
integrity worships God, becomes God; yet for ever and ever
the influx of this better and universal self is new and unsearchable.
It inspires awe and astonishment. How dear, how soothing to
man, arises the idea of God, peopling the lonely place, effacing
the scars of our mistakes and disappointments! When we have
broken our god of tradition, and ceased from our god of rhetoric,
then may God fire the heart with his presence. It is the doubling
of the heart itself, nay, the infinite enlargement of the
heart with a power of growth to a new infinity on every side.
It inspires in man an infallible trust. He has not the conviction,
but the sight, that the best is the true, and may in that
thought easily dismiss all particular uncertainties and fears,
and adjourn to the sure revelation of time, the solution of
his private riddles. He is sure that his welfare is dear to
the heart of being. In the presence of law to his mind, he
is overflowed with a reliance so universal, that it sweeps
away all cherished hopes and the most stable projects of mortal
condition in its flood. He believes that he cannot escape
from his good. The things that are really for thee gravitate
to thee. You are running to seek your friend. Let your feet
run, but your mind need not. If you do not find him, will
you not acquiesce that it is best you should not find him?
for there is a power, which, as it is in you, is in him also,
and could therefore very well bring you together, if it were
for the best. You are preparing with eagerness to go and render
a service to which your talent and your taste invite you,
the love of men and the hope of fame. Has it not occurred
to you, that you have no right to go, unless you are equally
willing to be prevented from going? O, believe, as thou livest,
that every sound that is spoken over the round world, which
thou oughtest to hear, will vibrate on thine ear! Every proverb,
every book, every byword that belongs to thee for aid or comfort,
shall surely come home through open or winding passages. Every
friend whom not thy fantastic will, but the great and tender
heart in thee craveth, shall lock thee in his embrace. And
this, because the heart in thee is the heart of all; not a
valve, not a wall, not an intersection is there anywhere in
nature, but one blood rolls uninterruptedly an endless circulation
through all men, as the water of the globe is all one sea,
and, truly seen, its tide is one.
Let man, then, learn the revelation
of all nature and all thought to his heart; this, namely;
that the Highest dwells with him; that the sources of nature
are in his own mind, if the sentiment of duty is there. But
if he would know what the great God speaketh, he must 'go
into his closet and shut the door,' as Jesus said. God will
not make himself manifest to cowards. He must greatly listen
to himself, withdrawing himself from all the accents of other
men's devotion. Even their prayers are hurtful to him, until
he have made his own. Our religion vulgarly stands on numbers
of believers. Whenever the appeal is made — no matter how
indirectly — to numbers, proclamation is then and there made,
that religion is not. He that finds God a sweet, enveloping
thought to him never counts his company. When I sit in that
presence, who shall dare to come in? When I rest in perfect
humility, when I burn with pure love, what can Calvin or Swedenborg
say?
It makes no difference whether the appeal
is to numbers or to one. The faith that stands on authority
is not faith. The reliance on authority measures the decline
of religion, the withdrawal of the soul. The position men
have given to Jesus, now for many centuries of history, is
a position of authority. It characterizes themselves. It cannot
alter the eternal facts. Great is the soul, and plain. It
is no flatterer, it is no follower; it never appeals from
itself. It believes in itself. Before the immense possibilities
of man, all mere experience, all past biography, however spotless
and sainted, shrinks away. Before that heaven which our presentiments
foreshow us, we cannot easily praise any form of life we have
seen or read of. We not only affirm that we have few great
men, but, absolutely speaking, that we have none; that we
have no history, no record of any character or mode of living,
that entirely contents us. The saints and demigods whom history
worships we are constrained to accept with a grain of allowance.
Though in our lonely hours we draw a new strength out of their
memory, yet, pressed on our attention, as they are by the
thoughtless and customary, they fatigue and invade. The soul
gives itself, alone, original, and pure, to the Lonely, Original,
and Pure, who, on that condition, gladly inhabits, leads,
and speaks through it. Then is it glad, young, and nimble.
It is not wise, but it sees through all things. It is not
called religious, but it is innocent. It calls the light its
own, and feels that the grass grows and the stone falls by
a law inferior to, and dependent on, its nature. Behold, it
saith, I am born into the great, the universal mind. I, the
imperfect, adore my own Perfect. I am somehow receptive of
the great soul, and thereby I do overlook the sun and the
stars, and feel them to be the fair accidents and effects
which change and pass. More and more the surges of everlasting
nature enter into me, and I become public and human in my
regards and actions. So come I to live in thoughts, and act
with energies, which are immortal. Thus revering the soul,
and learning, as the ancient said, that "its beauty is immense,"
man will come to see that the world is the perennial miracle
which the soul worketh, and be less astonished at particular
wonders; he will learn that there is no profane history; that
all history is sacred; that the universe is represented in
an atom, in a moment of time. He will weave no longer a spotted
life of shreds and patches, but he will live with a divine
unity. He will cease from what is base and frivolous in his
life, and be content with all places and with any service
he can render. He will calmly front the morrow in the negligency
of that trust which carries God with it, and so hath already
the whole future in the bottom of the heart.
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