And I know not if, save in this, such gift be allowed
to man,
That out of three sounds he frame,
not a fourth sound, but a star.
Consider it well: each tone of our scale in itself
is naught:
It is everywhere in the world
loud, soft, and all is said:
Give it to me to use! I mix it with two in my
thought:
And there! Ye have heard and
seen: consider and bow the head!
Browning.
The Panama-Pacific International Exposition
is best seen in its fourth-dimensional aspect when
approached through the Gateway of Memory. This
is what one might expect, for that entrance alone has
the requisite geometrical structure. You will
recall having heard, I am sure, how in the fourth
dimension a person may go in and out of a locked room
at his pleasure with bolts and bars untouched.
Broad and open as is this Gate of Memory, when you
pass its portals the wall closes behind you; there
is no visible opening to mark the spot of your entry.
A feeling of detachment comes over you. This
is augmented by the burst of light and color that
flashes across the field of your vision, and for the
first time you understand the purport of those ’banners
yellow, glorious, golden’ which ‘do float
and flow.’ They seem to bear you on breezes
of their own creating to the freedom of outer spaces.
What you had taken for the flauntings of festivity
are become the heralds of hyperspace.
As you wend your way down the Avenue
of Time you feel an inexpressive lightness, a sensation
of being lifted out of yourself. The moment seems
unique. Things are unrelated. There is no
concern of proportion. The place is one of immediacy.
You wander from the ephemeral to the ephemeral.
‘Time is,’ you say, in childish glee.
And you hasten to assemble images as many and as disparate
as possible, believing that you are drinking life
at its fountain head. The outer world presents
itself to your consciousness in the form of facts
in juxtaposition. You read guide-books and rejoice
in the acquisition of knowledge. Gradually through
the perception of the same phantasmagoria comes an
at-oneness with your fellows. You are caught
up in the swirl of a larger self.
Soon you weary of the heterogeneous.
The Zone of Consciousness stands revealed in all its
grotesqueness. ‘Time is,’ you cry,
but to give thought its impulse, and you hasten on
if perchance you may discover the direction of the
life-principle. What you had taken for reality
is but its cross-section so does this empirical
realm stand to the higher world of your spirit, even
as a plane to a solid.
Now you turn your attention from things
to relations in the hope of getting at truth in the
large. A passage in Plato comes vividly to your
mind. ’For a man must have intelligence
of universals, and be able to proceed from the many
particulars of sense to one conception of reason;
- this is the recollection of those things which our
soul once saw while following God, when, regardless
of that which we now call being, she raised her head
up towards the true being.’
Henceforth the multiplicity that you
seek is one of organization and has nothing to do
with number. ‘Time was,’ you proclaim,
that consciousness might sift out the irrelevant.
As you pass from collection to collection individual
fact becomes prolonged into general law and science
dominates the field of thought. A thousand years
are as a day when subsumed by its laws. You look
at the objects of man’s creating with new eyes.
The displays are no longer contests of laborious industry
but of vision, and faith. You see that truth
has made itself manifest through the long repetition
of the same fundamental theme. That which is unique
and personal you are surprised to find of less value
than the habit perfected by patient practice.
The routine and monotony of daily toil become glorified
in the light that now falls athwart your vision.
You learn to substitute for your personal feeling
the common impersonal element felt by the many.
Your concern is not as formerly to recollect, but
to symbolize. To this end you study frieze and
statuary and frequent lectures. Your sense of
social solidarity grows through mutual comprehension
of the same truths.
And again that ’vexing, forward
reaching sense of some more noble permanence’
urges you on. ‘Time was;’ you joyously
affirm for man to come to the knowledge of an eternal
self. But that, your tradition and education
have led you to believe, is still yonder, worlds away.
And you image the soul in its quest passing from life
to life as you are now passing from building to building,
from hall to hall. But glad the thought
there will be courts wherein you may perhaps glimpse
the plan of the whole and so gather strength and purpose
for another housing. All at once you know that
death has no fear for you and you feel toward your
present life as you do toward these Palaces of the
Mundane the sooner compassed the better.
You pass from court to edifice and
from edifice to court, marveling at the symmetry of
plan and structure. Unity, balance, and harmony
become manifest as spatial properties you
had been taught to regard them as principles of art.
You wonder if art itself may not be merely a matter
of right placing the adjustment of a thing
to its environment. You are certain that this
is so as each coign and niche offers you its particular
insight. Strange vagaries float through your mind
one’s duty to the inanimate things of
one’s possession; the house too large for the
personality of the owner; the right setting for certain
idiosyncrasies; character building as a constructive
process; the ideal as the limit of an infinite series
each pointing the way, as you think, to a
different vista of human outlook. What then your
glad surprise to find these converging toward one
ideal synthesis. In anticipation of the splendor
you hasten on till earth shall have attained to heaven.
There it stands ‘a structure brave,’
the Palace of Art, the Temple of the Soul
and you know you were made to be perfect too.
Now that you apprehend the plan of
the whole, symmetry takes on a vital significance
for your thought. You try to recall what you learned
of it in geometry. There was a folding over,
you remember, and a fitting together ‘congruence’
you believe it was called. But that could have
no meaning for solids. Stop! a folding over?
Why, that implies another dimension! The two
halves of a leaf can be brought together only as one
or the other is lifted out of the plane of the leaf
into a third dimension. So to bring two buildings
into superposition when they are alike except for
a reverse order of parts, would necessitate a fourth
dimension and a turning inside out. Quick as the
thought, the court you are in is that a building
inside out!
Ah! you know now wherefor that wonderful
uplifting sensation that comes whenever you enter
one of these beautiful inclosures. You have passed
into the fourth dimension of spatial realization.
‘Time is past,’ you shout aloud, and laugh
to find yourself on the inside of externality.
Cubism in architecture! Futurism, in very truth!
You visit again the galleries of the
New Art, not to scoff, but in earnest desire for enlightenment
as to this thing which is so near to consciousness
and yet so far. You find yourself exclaiming:
’Ah, there is something here
Unfathomed by the cynic’s sneer!’
As you gaze at the portrayal so strangely
weird in form and color you ask yourself where have
I felt that, seen this, before? Immediately you
are transported in memory to the midst of a crowded
street. In the mad bustle and noise you are conscious
only of mechanical power; of speed always
of speed. Your voice far away ‘The
child, oh, the child!’ A swooning sensation.
Men’s faces as triangles and horses with countless
legs. The chaos of primal forces about youthen
darkness.
As the past fuses with the present
you awaken to a larger privilege of life than man
now knows. You feel yourself encompassed by truth,
vital and strong. This art, erstwhile so baffling,
stands revealed as the struggle of a superhuman entity
for self-expression. The tendency toward God
has to begin anew with each round of the life-spiral
that eternal circle which life pursues.
Now you find yourself in the Court
of the Universe. Bands of many-colored light,
the white radiance of eternity, stream athwart the
sky. The illumination is of the wonder that now
is. How marvelously strange the sight of the
world-consciousness passing over into a higher thought-form!
Each individual element suffering reversal to take
its proper place in the new world-order! You
see positive becoming negative, negative becoming
positive, and Evolution giving place to Involution
a process as yet uncomprehended by our narrow
thought. And the secret of the world-struggle
across the sea you know; men passing their nature’s
bound; new hopes and loyalties supplanting old ties
and joys; the established creeds of right and wrong
as they vanish in this immeasurable thirst for an
unknown good. All these things you know to be
the travail of the world as it gives birth to some
higher entity than individual man.
‘Time is past,’ and as
you speak a dove settles to rest upon a pediment.
Therewith you are carried away in the spirit to a great
and high mountain and you behold a new heaven and
a new earth; for the first heaven and the first earth
are passed away. You see the holy city coming
down out of heaven her light is like unto a
stone most precious, as it were a jasper stone, clear
as crystal, and the walls thereof are adorned with
all manner of precious stones and they brought
the glory and the honor of the nations into it.