Writers may be classified as meteors,
planets and fixed stars. A meteor makes a striking
effect for a moment. You look up and cry There!
and it is gone for ever. Planets and wandering
stars last a much longer time. They often outshine
the fixed stars and are confounded with them by the
inexperienced; but this only because they are near.
It is not long before they must yield their place;
nay, the light they give is reflected only, and the
sphere of their influence is confined to their own
orbit their contemporaries. Their path
is one of change and movement, and with the circuit
of a few years their tale is told. Fixed stars
are the only ones that are constant; their position
in the firmament is secure; they shine with a light
of their own; their effect to-day is the same as it
was yesterday, because, having no parallax, their
appearance does not alter with a difference in our
standpoint. They belong not to one system,
one nation only, but to the universe.
And just because they are so very far away, it is
usually many years before their light is visible to
the inhabitants of this earth.
We have seen in the previous chapter
that where a man’s merits are of a high order,
it is difficult for him to win reputation, because
the public is uncritical and lacks discernment.
But another and no less serious hindrance to fame
comes from the envy it has to encounter. For
even in the lowest kinds of work, envy balks even the
beginnings of a reputation, and never ceases to cleave
to it up to the last. How great a part is played
by envy in the wicked ways of the world! Ariosto
is right in saying that the dark side of our mortal
life predominates, so full it is of this evil:
questa assai piú oscura
che serena
Vita mortal, tutta d’invidia piena.
For envy is the moving spirit of that
secret and informal, though flourishing, alliance
everywhere made by mediocrity against individual eminence,
no matter of what kind. In his own sphere of work
no one will allow another to be distinguished:
he is an intruder who cannot be tolerated. Si quelq’un
excelle parmi nous, qu’il aille exceller ailleurs!
this is the universal password of the second-rate.
In addition, then, to the rarity of true merit and
the difficulty it has in being understood and recognized,
there is the envy of thousands to be reckoned with,
all of them bent on suppressing, nay, on smothering
it altogether. No one is taken for what he is,
but for what others make of him; and this is the handle
used by mediocrity to keep down distinction, by not
letting it come up as long as that can possibly be
prevented.
There are two ways of behaving in
regard to merit: either to have some of one’s
own, or to refuse any to others. The latter method
is more convenient, and so it is generally adopted.
As envy is a mere sign of deficiency, so to envy merit
argues the lack of it. My excellent Balthazar
Gracian has given a very fine account of this relation
between envy and merit in a lengthy fable, which may
be found in his Discreto under the heading
Hombre de ostentación. He describes all
the birds as meeting together and conspiring against
the peacock, because of his magnificent feathers.
If, said the magpie, we could only manage
to put a stop to the cursed parading of his tail, there
would soon be an end of his beauty; for what is not
seen is as good as what does not exist.
This explains how modesty came to
be a virtue. It was invented only as a protection
against envy. That there have always been rascals
to urge this virtue, and to rejoice heartily over
the bashfulness of a man of merit, has been shown
at length in my chief work. In Lichtenberg’s
Miscellaneous Writings I find this sentence
quoted: Modesty should be the virtue of those
who possess no other. Goethe has a well-known
saying, which offends many people: It is only
knaves who are modest! Nur die Lumpen
sind bescheiden! but it has its prototype in Cervantes,
who includes in his Journey up Parnassus certain
rules of conduct for poets, and amongst them the following:
Everyone whose verse shows him to be a poet should
have a high opinion of himself, relying on the proverb
that he is a knave who thinks himself one.
And Shakespeare, in many of his Sonnets, which gave
him the only opportunity he had of speaking of himself,
declares, with a confidence equal to his ingenuousness,
that what he writes is immortal.
A method of underrating good work
often used by envy in reality, however,
only the obverse side of it consists in
the dishonorable and unscrupulous laudation of the
bad; for no sooner does bad work gain currency than
it draws attention from the good. But however
effective this method may be for a while, especially
if it is applied on a large scale, the day of reckoning
comes at last, and the fleeting credit given to bad
work is paid off by the lasting discredit which overtakes
those who abjectly praised it. Hence these critics
prefer to remain anonymous.
A like fate threatens, though more
remotely, those who depreciate and censure good work;
and consequently many are too prudent to attempt it.
But there is another way; and when a man of eminent
merit appears, the first effect he produces is often
only to pique all his rivals, just as the peacock’s
tail offended the birds. This reduces them to
a deep silence; and their silence is so unanimous that
it savors of preconcertion. Their tongues are
all paralyzed. It is the silentium livoris
described by Seneca. This malicious silence, which
is technically known as ignoring, may for a
long time interfere with the growth of reputation;
if, as happens in the higher walks of learning, where
a man’s immediate audience is wholly composed
of rival workers and professed students, who then
form the channel of his fame, the greater public is
obliged to use its suffrage without being able to
examine the matter for itself. And if, in the
end, that malicious silence is broken in upon by the
voice of praise, it will be but seldom that this happens
entirely apart from some ulterior aim, pursued by
those who thus manipulate justice. For, as Goethe
says in the West-oestlicher Divan, a man can
get no recognition, either from many persons or from
only one, unless it is to publish abroad the critic’s
own discernment:
Denn es ist kein Anerkenen, Weder
Vieler, noch des Einen, Wenn es nicht am Tage foerdert,
Wo man selbst was moechte scheinen.
The credit you allow to another man
engaged in work similar to your own or akin to it,
must at bottom be withdrawn from yourself; and you
can praise him only at the expense of your own claims.
Accordingly, mankind is in itself
not at all inclined to award praise and reputation;
it is more disposed to blame and find fault, whereby
it indirectly praises itself. If, notwithstanding
this, praise is won from mankind, some extraneous
motive must prevail. I am not here referring
to the disgraceful way in which mutual friends will
puff one another into a reputation; outside of that,
an effectual motive is supplied by the feeling that
next to the merit of doing something oneself, comes
that of correctly appreciating and recognizing what
others have done. This accords with the threefold
division of heads drawn up by Hesiod and afterwards
by Machiavelli There are, says the latter,
in the capacities of mankind, three varieties:
one man will understand a thing by himself; another
so far as it is explained to him; a third, neither
of himself nor when it is put clearly before him.
He, then, who abandons hope of making good his claims
to the first class, will be glad to seize the opportunity
of taking a place in the second. It is almost
wholly owing to this state of things that merit may
always rest assured of ultimately meeting with recognition.
To this also is due the fact that
when the value of a work has once been recognized
and may no longer be concealed or denied, all men vie
in praising and honoring it; simply because they are
conscious of thereby doing themselves an honor.
They act in the spirit of Xenophon’s remark:
he must be a wise man who knows what is wise.
So when they see that the prize of original merit is
for ever out of their reach, they hasten to possess
themselves of that which comes second best the
correct appreciation of it. Here it happens as
with an army which has been forced to yield; when,
just as previously every man wanted to be foremost
in the fight, so now every man tries to be foremost
in running away. They all hurry forward to offer
their applause to one who is now recognized to be
worthy of praise, in virtue of a recognition, as a
rule unconscious, of that law of homogeneity which
I mentioned in the last chapter; so that it may seem
as though their way of thinking and looking at things
were homogeneous with that of the celebrated man,
and that they may at least save the honor of their
literary taste, since nothing else is left them.
From this it is plain that, whereas
it is very difficult to win fame, it is not hard to
keep it when once attained; and also that a reputation
which comes quickly does not last very long; for here
too, quod cito fit, cito perit. It is obvious
that if the ordinary average man can easily recognize,
and the rival workers willingly acknowledge, the value
of any performance, it will not stand very much above
the capacity of either of them to achieve it for themselves.
Tantum quisque laudat, quantum se posse sperat imitari a
man will praise a thing only so far as he hopes to
be able to imitate it himself. Further, it is
a suspicious sign if a reputation comes quickly; for
an application of the laws of homogeneity will show
that such a reputation is nothing but the direct applause
of the multitude. What this means may be seen
by a remark once made by Phocion, when he was interrupted
in a speech by the loud cheers of the mob. Turning
to his friends who were standing close by, he asked:
Have I made a mistake and said something stupid?
Contrarily, a reputation that is to
last a long time must be slow in maturing, and the
centuries of its duration have generally to be bought
at the cost of contemporary praise. For that which
is to keep its position so long, must be of a perfection
difficult to attain; and even to recognize this perfection
requires men who are not always to be found, and never
in numbers sufficiently great to make themselves heard;
whereas envy is always on the watch and doing its best
to smother their voice. But with moderate talent,
which soon meets with recognition, there is the danger
that those who possess it will outlive both it and
themselves; so that a youth of fame may be followed
by an old age of obscurity. In the case of great
merit, on the other hand, a man may remain unknown
for many years, but make up for it later on by attaining
a brilliant reputation. And if it should be that
this comes only after he is no more, well! he is to
be reckoned amongst those of whom Jean Paul says that
extreme unction is their baptism. He may console
himself by thinking of the Saints, who also are canonized
only after they are dead.
Thus what Mahlmann has said so
well in Herodes holds good; in this world truly
great work never pleases at once, and the god set up
by the multitude keeps his place on the altar but a
short time:
Ich denke, das wahre Grosse in der
Welt Ist immer nur Das was nicht gleich gefaellt
Und wen der Poebel zum Gotte weiht, Der steht
auf dem Altar nur kurze Zeit.
It is worth mention that this rule
is most directly confirmed in the case of pictures,
where, as connoisseurs well know, the greatest masterpieces
are not the first to attract attention. If they
make a deep impression, it is not after one, but only
after repeated, inspection; but then they excite more
and more admiration every time they are seen.
Moreover, the chances that any given
work will be quickly and rightly appreciated, depend
upon two conditions: firstly, the character of
the work, whether high or low, in other words, easy
or difficult to understand; and, secondly, the kind
of public it attracts, whether large or small.
This latter condition is, no doubt, in most instances
a, corollary of the former; but it also partly depends
upon whether the work in question admits, like books
and musical compositions, of being produced in great
numbers. By the compound action of these two
conditions, achievements which serve no materially
useful end and these alone are under consideration
here will vary in regard to the chances
they have of meeting with timely recognition and due
appreciation; and the order of precedence, beginning
with those who have the greatest chance, will be somewhat
as follows: acrobats, circus riders, ballet-dancers,
jugglers, actors, singers, musicians, composers, poets
(both the last on account of the multiplication of
their works), architects, painters, sculptors, philosophers.
The last place of all is unquestionably
taken by philosophers because their works are meant
not for entertainment, but for instruction, and because
they presume some knowledge on the part of the reader,
and require him to make an effort of his own to understand
them. This makes their public extremely small,
and causes their fame to be more remarkable for its
length than for its breadth. And, in general,
it may be said that the possibility of a man’s
fame lasting a long time, stands in almost inverse
ratio with the chance that it will be early in making
its appearance; so that, as regards length of fame,
the above order of precedence may be reversed.
But, then, the poet and the composer will come in
the end to stand on the same level as the philosopher;
since, when once a work is committed to writing, it
is possible to preserve it to all time. However,
the first place still belongs by right to the philosopher,
because of the much greater scarcity of good work
in this sphere, and the high importance of it; and
also because of the possibility it offers of an almost
perfect translation into any language. Sometimes,
indeed, it happens that a philosopher’s fame
outlives even his works themselves; as has happened
with Thales, Empedocles, Heraclitus, Democritus, Parmenides,
Epicurus and many others.
My remarks are, as I have said, confined
to achievements that are not of any material use.
Work that serves some practical end, or ministers
directly to some pleasure of the senses, will never
have any difficulty in being duly appreciated.
No first-rate pastry-cook could long remain obscure
in any town, to say nothing of having to appeal to
posterity.
Under fame of rapid growth is also
to be reckoned fame of a false and artificial kind;
where, for instance, a book is worked into a reputation
by means of unjust praise, the help of friends, corrupt
criticism, prompting from above and collusion from
below. All this tells upon the multitude, which
is rightly presumed to have no power of judging for
itself. This sort of fame is like a swimming bladder,
by its aid a heavy body may keep afloat. It bears
up for a certain time, long or short according as
the bladder is well sewed up and blown; but still
the air comes out gradually, and the body sinks.
This is the inevitable fate of all works which are
famous by reason of something outside of themselves.
False praise dies away; collusion comes to an end;
critics declare the reputation ungrounded; it vanishes,
and is replaced by so much the greater contempt.
Contrarily, a genuine work, which, having the source
of its fame in itself, can kindle admiration afresh
in every age, resembles a body of low specific gravity,
which always keeps up of its own accord, and so goes
floating down the stream of time.
Men of great genius, whether their
work be in poetry, philosophy or art, stand in all
ages like isolated heroes, keeping up single-handed
a desperate struggling against the onslaught of an
army of opponents. Is not this characteristic of
the miserable nature of mankind? The dullness,
grossness, perversity, silliness and brutality of
by far the greater part of the race, are always an
obstacle to the efforts of the genius, whatever be
the method of his art; they so form that hostile army
to which at last he has to succumb. Let the isolated
champion achieve what he may: it is slow to be
acknowledged; it is late in being appreciated, and
then only on the score of authority; it may easily
fall into neglect again, at any rate for a while.
Ever afresh it finds itself opposed by false, shallow,
and insipid ideas, which are better suited to that
large majority, that so generally hold the field.
Though the critic may step forth and say, like Hamlet
when he held up the two portraits to his wretched
mother, Have you eyes? Have you eyes?
alas! they have none. When I watch the behavior
of a crowd of people in the presence of some great
master’s work, and mark the manner of their
applause, they often remind me of trained monkeys
in a show. The monkey’s gestures are, no
doubt, much like those of men; but now and again they
betray that the real inward spirit of these gestures
is not in them. Their irrational nature peeps
out.
It is often said of a man that he
is in advance of his age; and it follows from
the above remarks that this must be taken to mean that
he is in advance of humanity in general. Just
because of this fact, a genius makes no direct appeal
except to those who are too rare to allow of their
ever forming a numerous body at any one period.
If he is in this respect not particularly favored
by fortune, he will be misunderstood by his own
age; in other words, he will remain unaccepted
until time gradually brings together the voices of
those few persons who are capable of judging a work
of such high character. Then posterity will say:
This man was in advance of his age, instead
of in advance of humanity; because humanity
will be glad to lay the burden of its own faults upon
a single epoch.
Hence, if a man has been superior
to his own age, he would also have been superior to
any other; provided that, in that age, by some rare
and happy chance, a few just men, capable of judging
in the sphere of his achievements, had been born at
the same time with him; just as when, according to
a beautiful Indian myth, Vischnu becomes incarnate
as a hero, so, too, Brahma at the same time appears
as the singer of his deeds; and hence Valmiki, Vyasa
and Kalidasa are incarnations of Brahma.
In this sense, then, it may be said
that every immortal work puts its age to the proof,
whether or no it will be able to recognize the merit
of it. As a rule, the men of any age stand such
a test no better than the neighbors of Philemon and
Baucis, who expelled the deities they failed to recognize.
Accordingly, the right standard for judging the intellectual
worth of any generation is supplied, not by the great
minds that make their appearance in it for
their capacities are the work of Nature, and the possibility
of cultivating them a matter of chance circumstance but
by the way in which contemporaries receive their works;
whether, I mean, they give their applause soon and
with a will, or late and in niggardly fashion, or
leave it to be bestowed altogether by posterity.
This last fate will be especially
reserved for works of a high character. For the
happy chance mentioned above will be all the more
certain not to come, in proportion as there are few
to appreciate the kind of work done by great minds.
Herein lies the immeasurable advantage possessed by
poets in respect of reputation; because their work
is accessible to almost everyone. If it had been
possible for Sir Walter Scott to be read and criticised
by only some hundred persons, perhaps in his life-time
any common scribbler would have been preferred to
him; and afterwards, when he had taken his proper place,
it would also have been said in his honor that he was
in advance of his age. But if envy, dishonesty
and the pursuit of personal aims are added to the
incapacity of those hundred persons who, in the name
of their generation, are called upon to pass judgment
on a work, then indeed it meets with the same sad
fate as attends a suitor who pleads before a tribunal
of judges one and all corrupt.
In corroboration of this, we find
that the history of literature generally shows all
those who made knowledge and insight their goal to
have remained unrecognized and neglected, whilst those
who paraded with the vain show of it received the
admiration of their contemporaries, together with
the emoluments.
The effectiveness of an author turns
chiefly upon his getting the reputation that he should
be read. But by practicing various arts, by the
operation of chance, and by certain natural affinities,
this reputation is quickly won by a hundred worthless
people: while a worthy writer may come by it
very slowly and tardily. The former possess friends
to help them; for the rabble is always a numerous body
which holds well together. The latter has nothing
but enemies; because intellectual superiority is everywhere
and under all circumstances the most hateful thing
in the world, and especially to bunglers in the same
line of work, who want to pass for something themselves.
This being so, it is a prime condition
for doing any great work any work which
is to outlive its own age, that a man pay no heed to
his contemporaries, their views and opinions, and
the praise or blame which they bestow. This condition
is, however, fulfilled of itself when a man really
does anything great, and it is fortunate that it is
so. For if, in producing such a work, he were
to look to the general opinion or the judgment of
his colleagues, they would lead him astray at every
step. Hence, if a man wants to go down to posterity,
he must withdraw from the influence of his own age.
This will, of course, generally mean that he must
also renounce any influence upon it, and be ready
to buy centuries of fame by foregoing the applause
of his contemporaries.
For when any new and wide-reaching
truth comes into the world and if it is
new, it must be paradoxical an obstinate
stand will be made against it as long as possible;
nay, people will continue to deny it even after they
slacken their opposition and are almost convinced of
its truth. Meanwhile it goes on quietly working
its way, and, like an acid, undermining everything
around it. From time to time a crash is heard;
the old error comes tottering to the ground, and suddenly
the new fabric of thought stands revealed, as though
it were a monument just uncovered. Everyone recognizes
and admires it. To be sure, this all comes to
pass for the most part very slowly. As a rule,
people discover a man to be worth listening to only
after he is gone; their hear, hear, resounds
when the orator has left the platform.
Works of the ordinary type meet with
a better fate. Arising as they do in the course
of, and in connection with, the general advance in
contemporary culture, they are in close alliance with
the spirit of their age in other words,
just those opinions which happen to be prevalent at
the time. They aim at suiting the needs of the
moment. If they have any merit, it is soon recognized;
and they gain currency as books which reflect the
latest ideas. Justice, nay, more than justice,
is done to them. They afford little scope for
envy; since, as was said above, a man will praise
a thing only so far as he hopes to be able to imitate
it himself.
But those rare works which are destined
to become the property of all mankind and to live
for centuries, are, at their origin, too far in advance
of the point at which culture happens to stand, and
on that very account foreign to it and the spirit
of their own time. They neither belong to it
nor are they in any connection with it, and hence
they excite no interest in those who are dominated
by it. They belong to another, a higher stage
of culture, and a time that is still far off.
Their course is related to that of ordinary works as
the orbit of Uranus to the orbit of Mercury.
For the moment they get no justice done to them.
People are at a loss how to treat them; so they leave
them alone, and go their own snail’s pace for
themselves. Does the worm see the eagle as it
soars aloft?
Of the number of books written in
any language about one in 100,000 forms a part of
its real and permanent literature. What a fate
this one book has to endure before it outstrips those
100,000 and gains its due place of honor! Such
a book is the work of an extraordinary and eminent
mind, and therefore it is specifically different from
the others; a fact which sooner or later becomes manifest.
Let no one fancy that things will
ever improve in this respect. No! the miserable
constitution of humanity never changes, though it may,
to be sure, take somewhat varying forms with every
generation. A distinguished mind seldom has its
full effect in the life-time of its possessor; because,
at bottom, it is completely and properly understood
only by minds already akin to it.
As it is a rare thing for even one
man out of many millions to tread the path that leads
to immortality, he must of necessity be very lonely.
The journey to posterity lies through a horribly dreary
region, like the Lybian desert, of which, as is well
known, no one has any idea who has not seen it for
himself. Meanwhile let me before all things recommend
the traveler to take light baggage with him; otherwise
he will have to throw away too much on the road.
Let him never forget the words of Balthazar Gracian:
lo bueno si breve, dos vezes bueno good
work is doubly good if it is short. This advice
is specially applicable to my own countrymen.
Compared with the short span of time
they live, men of great intellect are like huge buildings,
standing on a small plot of ground. The size
of the building cannot be seen by anyone, just in front
of it; nor, for an analogous reason, can the greatness
of a genius be estimated while he lives. But
when a century has passed, the world recognizes it
and wishes him back again.
If the perishable son of time has
produced an imperishable work, how short his own life
seems compared with that of his child! He is like
Semela or Maia a mortal mother who gave
birth to an immortal son; or, contrarily, he is like
Achilles in regard to Thetis. What a contrast
there is between what is fleeting and what is permanent!
The short span of a man’s life, his necessitous,
afflicted, unstable existence, will seldom allow of
his seeing even the beginning of his immortal child’s
brilliant career; nor will the father himself be taken
for that which he really is. It may be said,
indeed, that a man whose fame comes after him is the
reverse of a nobleman, who is preceded by it.
However, the only difference that
it ultimately makes to a man to receive his fame at
the hands of contemporaries rather than from posterity
is that, in the former case, his admirers are separated
from him by space, and in the latter by time.
For even in the case of contemporary fame, a man does
not, as a rule, see his admirers actually before him.
Reverence cannot endure close proximity; it almost
always dwells at some distance from its object; and
in the presence of the person revered it melts like
butter in the sun. Accordingly, if a man is celebrated
with his contemporaries, nine-tenths of those amongst
whom he lives will let their esteem be guided by his
rank and fortune; and the remaining tenth may perhaps
have a dull consciousness of his high qualities, because
they have heard about him from remote quarters.
There is a fine Latin letter of Petrarch’s on
this incompatibility between reverence and the presence
of the person, and between fame and life. It comes
second in his Epistolae familiares? and
it is addressed to Thomas Messanensis. He there
observes, amongst other things, that the learned men
of his age all made it a rule to think little of a
man’s writings if they had even once seen him.
Since distance, then, is essential
if a famous man is to be recognized and revered, it
does not matter whether it is distance of space or
of time. It is true that he may sometimes hear
of his fame in the one case, but never in the other;
but still, genuine and great merit may make up for
this by confidently anticipating its posthumous fame.
Nay, he who produces some really great thought is conscious
of his connection with coming generations at the very
moment he conceives it; so that he feels the extension
of his existence through centuries and thus lives
with posterity as well as for it.
And when, after enjoying a great man’s work,
we are seized with admiration for him, and wish him
back, so that we might see and speak with him, and
have him in our possession, this desire of ours is
not unrequited; for he, too, has had his longing for
that posterity which will grant the recognition, honor,
gratitude and love denied by envious contemporaries.
If intellectual works of the highest
order are not allowed their due until they come before
the tribunal of posterity, a contrary fate is prepared
for certain brilliant errors which proceed from men
of talent, and appear with an air of being well grounded.
These errors are defended with so much acumen and
learning that they actually become famous with their
own age, and maintain their position at least during
their author’s lifetime. Of this sort are
many false theories and wrong criticisms; also poems
and works of art, which exhibit some false taste or
mannerism favored by contemporary prejudice. They
gain reputation and currency simply because no one
is yet forthcoming who knows how to refute them or
otherwise prove their falsity; and when he appears,
as he usually does, in the next generation, the glory
of these works is brought to an end. Posthumous
judges, be their decision favorable to the appellant
or not, form the proper court for quashing the verdict
of contemporaries. That is why it is so difficult
and so rare to be victorious alike in both tribunals.
The unfailing tendency of time to
correct knowledge and judgment should always be kept
in view as a means of allaying anxiety, whenever any
grievous error appears, whether in art, or science,
or practical life, and gains ground; or when some
false and thoroughly perverse policy of movement is
undertaken and receives applause at the hands of men.
No one should be angry, or, still less, despondent;
but simply imagine that the world has already abandoned
the error in question, and now only requires time
and experience to recognize of its own accord that
which a clear vision detected at the first glance.
When the facts themselves are eloquent
of a truth, there is no need to rush to its aid with
words: for time will give it a thousand tongues.
How long it may be before they speak, will of course
depend upon the difficulty of the subject and the
plausibility of the error; but come they will, and
often it would be of no avail to try to anticipate
them. In the worst cases it will happen with theories
as it happens with affairs in practical life; where
sham and deception, emboldened by success, advance
to greater and greater lengths, until discovery is
made almost inevitable. It is just so with theories;
through the blind confidence of the blockheads who
broach them, their absurdity reaches such a pitch
that at last it is obvious even to the dullest eye.
We may thus say to such people: the wilder
your statements, the better.
There is also some comfort to be found
in reflecting upon all the whims and crotchets which
had their day and have now utterly vanished.
In style, in grammar, in spelling, there are false
notions of this sort which last only three or four
years. But when the errors are on a large scale,
while we lament the brevity of human life, we shall
in any case, do well to lag behind our own age when
we see it on a downward path. For there are two
ways of not keeping on a level with the times.
A man may be below it; or he may be above it.