None of us yet know, for none of us
have yet been taught in early youth, what fairy palaces
we may build of beautiful thought proof
against all adversity; bright fancies, satisfied
memories, noble histories, faithful sayings, treasure-houses
of precious and restful thoughts; which care cannot
disturb, nor pain make gloomy, nor poverty take away
from us houses built without hands for our
souls to live in. Ruskin.
Stirred up with high hopes of living
to be brave men and worthy patriots, dear to God and
famous to all ages. Milton.
A great man’s house is filled
chiefly with menials and creatures of ceremony; and
great libraries contain, for the most part, books as
dry and lifeless as the dust that gathers on them:
but from amidst these dead leaves an immortal mind
here and there looks forth with light and love.
From the point of view of the bank
president, Emerson tells us, books are merely so much
rubbish. But in his eyes the flowers also, the
flowing water, the fresh air, the floating clouds,
children’s voices, the thrill of love, the fancy’s
play, the mountains, and the stars are worthless.
Not one in a hundred who buy Shakspere,
or Milton, or a work of any other great mind, feels
a genuine longing to get at the secret of its power
and truth; but to those alone who feel this longing
is the secret revealed. We must love the man
of genius, if we would have him speak to us.
We learn to know ourselves, not by studying the behavior
of matter, but through experience of life and intimate
acquaintance with literature. Our spiritual
as well as our physical being springs from that of
our ancestors. Freedom, however, gives the soul
the power not only to develop what it inherits, but
to grow into conscious communion with the thought
and love, the hope and faith of the noble dead, and,
in thus enlarging itself, to become the inspiration
and source of richer and wider life for those who
follow. As parents are consoled by the thought
of surviving in their descendants, great minds are
upheld and strengthened in their ceaseless labors
by the hope of entering as an added impulse to better
things, from generation to generation, into the lives
of thousands. The greatest misfortune which can
befall genius is to be sold to the advocacy of what
is not truth and love and goodness and beauty.
The proper translation of timeo hominem unius
libri is not, “I fear a man of one book,”
but “I dread a man of one book:”
for he is sure to be narrow, one-sided, and unreasonable.
The right phrase enters at once into our spiritual
world, and its power becomes as real as that of material
objects. The truth to which it gives body is
borne in upon us as a star or a mountain is borne in
upon us. Kings and rich men live in history
when genius happens to throw the light of abiding
worlds upon their ephemeral estate. Carthage
is the typical city of merchants and traders.
Why is it remembered? Because Hannibal was a
warrior and Virgil a poet.
The strong man is he who knows how
and is able to become and be himself; the magnanimous
man is he who, being strong, knows how and is able
to issue forth from himself, as from a fortress, to
guide, protect, encourage, and save others.
Life’s current flows pure and unimpeded within
him, and on its wave his thought and love are borne
to bless his fellowmen. If he who gives a cup
of water in the right spirit does God’s work,
so does he who sows or reaps, or builds or sweeps,
or utters helpful truth or plays with children or cheers
the lonely, or does any other fair or useful thing.
Take not seriously one who treats with derision men
or books that have been deemed worthy of attention
by the best minds. He is false or foolish.
As we cherish a human being for the courage and love
he inspires, so books are dear to us for the noble
thoughts and generous moods they call into being.
To drink the spirit of a great author is worth more
than a knowledge of his teaching.
He who desires to grow wise should
bring his reason to bear habitually upon what he sees
and hears not less than upon what he reads; for thus
he soon comes to understand that whatever he thinks
or feels, says or does, whatever happens within the
sphere of his conscious life, may be made the means
of self-improvement. “He is not born for
glory,” says Vauvenargues, “who knows
not the worth of time.” The educational
value of books lies in their power to set the intellectual
atmosphere in vibration, thereby rousing the mind
to self-activity; and those which have not this power
lack vitality.
If in a whole volume we find one passage
in which truth is expressed in a noble and striking
manner, we have not read in vain. To read with
profit, we should read as a serious student reads,
with the mind all alive and held to the subject; for
reading is thinking, and it is valuable in proportion
to the stimulus it gives to the exercise of faculty.
The conversation of high and ingenuous minds is doubtless
as instructive as it is delightful, but it is seldom
in our power to call around us those with whom we
should wish to hold discourse; and hence we go back
to the emancipated spirits, who having transcended
the bounds of time and space, are wherever they are
desired and are always ready to entertain whoever
seeks their company. Genius neither can nor
will discover its secret. Why his thought has
such a mould and such a tinge he no more knows than
why the flowers have such a tint and such a perfume;
and if he knew he would not care to tell. Nothing
is wholly manifest. In the most trivial object,
as in the simplest word, there lies a world of meaning
which does not reveal itself to a passing glance.
If therefore thou wouldst come to right understanding,
consider all things with an awakened and interested
curiosity.
When the mind at last finds itself
rightly at home in its world, it is as delighted as
children making escape from restraining walls, as full
of spirit as colts newly turned upon the greensward.
In the realm of truth each one is
king, and what he knows is as much his own as though
he were its first discoverer. However firmly
thou holdest to thy opinions, if truth appears on
the opposite side, throw down thy arms at once.
A book has the power almost of a human being to inspire
admiration or disgust, love or hatred. To be
useful is a noble thing, to be necessary is not desirable.
The youth has not enough ambition unless he has too
much. It is difficult to give lessons in the
art of pleasing without teaching that of lying.
The discouraged are already vanquished. In
judging the deed let not the character of the doer
influence thy opinion, for good is good, evil evil,
by whomsoever done. When the author is rightly
inspired his words need not interpretation.
They are as natural and as beautiful as the faces
of children or as new-blown flowers, and their meaning
is plain. The spirit and love of dogmatism is
characteristic of the imperfectly educated.
As there is a communion of saints, there is a communion
of noble minds, living and dead. To speak of
love which is not felt, of piety which is not a living
sentiment within us, is to weaken both in ourselves
and in those who hear us the power of faith and affection.
The best that has been known and experienced by minds
and hearts lies asleep in books, ready to awaken for
whoever holds the magician’s wand. Books
which at their first appearance create a breeze of
excitement, are forgotten when the wind falls.
A human soul rightly uttering itself,
in whatever age or country, ceases to belong to any
age or country, and becomes part of the universal
life of man. A sprightly wit may serve only to
lead us astray, and to enmesh us more hopelessly in
error. Deeper knowledge is the remedy for the
foolishness of sciolism: like cures like.
In the books in which men worth knowing have put
some of the vital quality which makes them worth knowing,
there is perennial inspiration. They are the
form and substance of an immortal spirit which, in
creating them, became itself. “I have
not made my book,” says Montaigne, “more
than my book has made me.”
Were one to ask an acquaintance who
knows men to point out the individuals whom he should
make his friends, his request would probably receive
an unsatisfactory reply: for how, except by trial,
is it possible to say who will suit whom? Those
whose friendship would be valuable might, for whatever
cause, be disagreeable to him, as the greatest and
noblest may be unpleasant companions. Many a
one whom we admire as he stands forth in history,
whose words and deeds thrill and uplift us, we should
detest had we known him in life; and others to whom
we might have been drawn would have cared nothing for
us. Between men and books there is doubtless
a wide difference, though a good book contains the
best of the life of some true man. But when we
are asked to point out the books one should learn
to love, we are confronted with much the same difficulty
as had we been asked to name the persons whom he should
make his friends. A book can have worth for us
only when we have learned to love it; and since a
real book, like a real man, has its proper character,
it is not easy to determine whom it will please or
displease. Once it has taken a safe place in
literature, it will, of course, be praised by everybody;
but this, like the praise of men, is often meaningless.
All who read know something about the great books,
but their knowledge, unless it leads them to intimate
acquaintance with some one or several of these books,
has little worth. Books are, indeed, a world
which each one must discover for himself. Another
may tell us about them, but the truth and beauty there
is in them for each one, each one must find.
The value of a book, like that of a man, lies not
in its freedom from fault, but in its qualities, in
the good it contains. Words which inspire the
love of spiritual beauty and noble action cannot be
false: the consent of the wise places them in
the canon. The imperishable goods are truth,
freedom, love, and beauty. Valuable alone is
that which enriches and ennobles life. There
are natures for whom the lack of knowledge is as painful
as the lack of food. They are ahungered and
athirst for it, and their suffering impels them to
ceaseless meditation and study, as the only means
of relief.
The self-educator’s first and
simplest aim should be to learn to know and do well
whatever he knows and does; and to this end let him
often observe and consider how rare are they who know
anything thoroughly or do well any of the hundred
things which are part of daily life: who talk
well, or write well, or behave well. Herbert
Spencer affirms that it is better to learn the meanings
of things than the meanings of words; but he loses
sight of the fact that the meanings of things become
plain only when things are clothed in words, which,
in truth, are things, being nothing else than the
very form and body of nature as it reveals itself
within the mind of man. The world is chiefly
a mental fact. From mind it receives the forms
of time and space, the principle of causality, color,
warmth, and beauty. Were there no mind, there
would be no world. The end of man is the pursuit
of perfection, through communion with God, his fellows,
and nature, by means of knowledge and conduct, of
faith, hope, admiration, and love. It is easy
to praise work overmuch. Like money, it is a
means, not an end, and it is good or evil as it is
made to help or harm the worker, for man is an end,
not a means. The work which millions are still
forced to do is a curse, the trail of the
serpent is over it all, and no people has the right
to call itself civilized, while work which dehumanizes
is not merely permitted, but encouraged.
Let us not teach the young to believe
they are born into a world of delights and pleasures,
but let us strive to enable them to realize that,
upon this earth, only the wise and good and strong
can make themselves really at home; that for the wicked
and the weak its very delights and pleasures turn
to sorrow and suffering. We pity the hard-driven
beast of burden. How then is it possible to look
with complacency on a world in which multitudes of
human beings are condemned to the work of the ox and
the ass? For the healthy man, wealth and happiness
would seem to be identical, if his desires are confined
to the things of which money is the equivalent.
But this is a delusion, for the plenary possession
of these things has never satisfied a human being.
Man needs virtue, knowledge, love, and to take the
obvious view, he needs the power to enjoy the things
money buys; and of this money deprives him.
When we consider the many unworthy
means men take to gain wealth and office, we are forced
to believe that to reach their ends they are ready
to profess to hold opinions and beliefs about which
they care nothing or which they really do not accept
at all. By this following of time-servers and
place-hunters every noble cause is weakened and the
purest faith is corrupted.
To labor for those we love, to sit
in the hours of rest, with wife and children about
us, smiling in the blaze of the fire we have lighted,
sheltered by the roof we have built, secure in the
sense of protection our presence inspires, is to feel
that life is good. But is it not a higher thing
to turn away, in disrespect of all this peace and comfort,
and to strive alone, by thought and deed, to find the
way which leads to God and to be a pioneer therein
for those who wander helpless and astray? The
more we dwell with truth and love, the more conscious
we become that they are the best, and are everlasting;
and thus our immortality is revealed to us.
Visibly we float on the boundless stream and disappear;
but inasmuch as we are truth-loving and love-cherishing,
we dwell in an abiding city, and may behold our bodies
carried forth by the flood, as a man sees his house
swept away, while he himself remains. Our thoughtlessness
and indifference, our indolence and frivolousness,
blind us to the infinite worth and significance of
life; and they who call themselves religious often
take it as lightly as worldlings and unbelievers.
In the Universe there is nothing which
exists separate and apart from other things.
The satellites hold to the planets, the planets to
the suns, the suns to one another, all in obedience
to the same laws which bind the body to earth, and
cause the water to flow and the vapor to rise.
For the senses there is separateness, but for the
mind there is union and unity. Communion is
the law of souls as of bodies. Both are immersed
in a boundless world, from which if they could be drawn
forth they would cease to be. The principle
of this infinite harmony is love, is God.
The right human bond is that which
unites soul with soul; and only they are truly akin
who consciously live in the same world, who think,
believe, and love alike, who hope for the same things,
aspire to the same ends.
Our mental view never reaches the
ultimate nature of being, and hence our knowledge,
whether of material or of spiritual things, is incomplete.
Faith is the effort to supply the defect which inheres
in all our knowing. Knowledge springs from faith,
faith from knowledge, as rivers from clouds, clouds
from rivers. The more we know, the more we believe;
and our growing consciousness does not make us content
to rest in a mechanical view of nature, but it brings
home to us with increasing power the awfulness of
the infinite mystery, which we more and more clearly
perceive to be a spiritual rather than a material
fact. If at present there is a certain failure
of will and consequent discouragement in the pursuit
of moral and intellectual perfection, this is a result
of our passing bewilderment in the presence of the
revelations of science and of the mighty forces it
places in the hands of man, and not of any new knowledge
which tends to inspire misgivings concerning the being
of God and our kinship with Him: –
From nature up to law, from law to love:
This is the ascendant path in which we
move,
Impelled by God in ways that lighten still,
Till all things meet in one eternal thrill.
As the Universe revealed by the Copernican
astronomy and the other natural sciences is infinitely
more sublime and marvellous than such a world as the
Israelites, the Greeks, or the Romans imagined, so
they who see rightly in the luminous ether of modern
intelligence understand better than the ancients that
human life is not an ephemeral and superficial, but
an immortal and central power, enrooted in God, and
drawing its substance and sustenance from Him.
The appeal to shame is a poor argument.
The fact that men of great intellectual power and
learning have held an opinion to be true does not
make it so. New knowledge may have shown it to
be false, or the general advance of the race may have
changed the point of view. The presumption of
the larger wisdom of the Ancients we cannot accept:
for we, not they, are the true ancients. The
purest and the holiest prayer men speak is this:
“Thy will be done.” They who utter
it from the inmost soul, find peace, even as a fretful
child sinks to rest upon the mother’s bosom.
In learning to love the will of God they come at last
not merely to believe, but to feel that His will guides
the Universe, and that all will be well. When
an utterance comes forth from the depths of our spiritual
being, men cannot but hearken. It is as though
we should bring to exiles tidings of a long-lost home
and country.
To what a weight he stoops who addresses
himself with fixed resolve to the life of thought!
The burden indeed is heavy, but the pathway lies
through pleasant fields where great souls move to and
fro in freedom and at peace. And as he grows
accustomed to his labor, the world widens, the heavens
break open, the dead live again, and with them he
rises into the high regions where the petty cares and
passions of mortals do not reach.
He who would educate himself must
make use of his own powers. He must observe,
think, examine, read, argue, ponder; he must learn
when to hold judgment in suspense, and when to give
the wings of the soul free sweep through the high
and serene realms of truth and beauty. The farther
we dwell from the crowd, with its current opinion,
the better and truer shall we and our thoughts become.
They who write for multitudinous readers rise with
difficulty above the dignity of mountebanks.
There is a radical defect in the character
of whoever works in the spirit of a trifler, however
blameless his conduct. The power to inspire
faith in the seriousness and goodness of life is a
sufficient test of the worth of a scheme of education.
No one should fill an office which
he is unable to hold without hindrance to the play
of mind and heart that makes him a man. The
dignities we possess at the cost of knowledge and virtue
are like jewels for the sake of which one goes hungry
and naked; mere glittering baubles for which we barter
the soul’s prosperity.
Experience is personal, and it is
largely incommunicable; but genius and
in this lies its power and charm renders
it communicable. What the poet or the painter
has felt and seen, he makes all men feel and see.
The difference between man and man, between the child
and the youth, the youth and the adult, is chiefly
a difference in feeling, in the manner in which they
are impressed; and it is our nature to be drawn in
admiration or reverence to those who by their words
or deeds give us deeper impressions of the worth of
life, and thus open for us new sources of feeling.
Fair thoughts rise in the heart and
mind of genius, like the fragrant breath which the
dewy flowers exhale in the face of the rising sun,
and they utter themselves as simply as matin
songs warbled by sweet-throated birds.
Faith in the infinite nature and worth
of truth, goodness, and love, is the dawn which shall
merge into the fulness of day, when, in other worlds,
God looks upon the soul, reborn from out this seemingness.
Our position, our reputation, our
wealth, our comforts, are but a vesture like the body
itself. They shall fall away, and we shall remain
with God. There is no liberty but obedience to
the impulse of the higher nature which urges us to
think nobly, to act rightly, and to love constantly.
The dominion of appetite is slavery; the dominion
of reason and conscience is freedom.
Renan somewhere says he could wish
for nothing better than that a little volume of selections
from his writings might commend itself to young women,
whose fair faces should bend over it, and find there
a reflection of their own pure souls. But where
there is no God, the soul is not mirrored, and we
never really love an author who weakens faith and
hope.
With whatever success we advance towards
the wide and serene life of the pure reason, let us
still cling to faith, hope, and love, the primal powers
which keep watch at our birth, and which bend over
our cradles, and which alone lift us into the world
of enduring peace and hold us within the sheltering
arms of God. In the enlightened mind, faith
is a higher virtue than it can be for the ignorant,
and to sustain it there is need of a nobler life.
He whom neither learning nor power
nor wealth can corrupt must have virtue; for learning
breeds conceit, and power begets pride, and wealth
debases both the mind and heart.
The intellect does not recognize that
conscience may forbid its exercise, since knowledge
cannot be evil. If earth were a hell and life
a curse and the Universe but a cinder, it would still
be good to know the fact. The saddest truth
is better than the merriest lie.
To know a thing is to be conscious
of its relation to the mind. We know it, not
in itself, but in and through this relation.
Our knowledge of God, who is the absolute, is not
absolute knowledge, but a knowledge of Him in so far
as He is related to the mind of man. Since,
however, mind is reason and not unreason, there is
harmony between it and things, between it and God;
and hence to be conscious of its relation to God and
the universe is to be conscious of a real relation,
in which both the thinker and his thought are in truth
what they seem to be. The ultimate reality is
inferred, not directly perceived. It reveals
itself to the purest faith and love, and may be hidden
from one who knows all the sciences.
As man’s relations to his fellows
make him a social and political being, so his relations
to the unseen power behind and within the visible
world, of whose presence he is always, however dimly,
conscious, and to whom he refers whatever touches the
senses, as well as the principle of life itself, make
him a religious being.
In identifying what seem to be our
particular interests with the interests of all, we
make escape from narrowness and isolation into the
general life of humanity; and when we come to understand
that not only mankind but all nature is a Unity in
the Consciousness of the Infinite and Eternal, bound
together by thought and love, we enter into the glorious
liberty of the Sons of God, and feel that nor height
nor depth nor things past nor things to come shall
separate us from the divine charity. We are
akin to all that may become part of our life; and
whatever we know or love or admire is spiritualized
and made human. To understand the things of
the spirit we must have spiritual experience.
The intuitions of time and space, as well as the principle
of causality, are given in the constitution of the
mind. So is the idea of being, of perfection,
of beauty, of eternity, of infinity, of duty.
To think implies being, to perceive things as existing
in time and space implies consciousness of eternity
and infinity. To know the imperfect is possible
only in the light of the perfect. Subject is
itself object, the first known and best understood,
and the laws of mind are laws of being. If the
constitution of mind makes the revelation of the material
world possible only under the forms of time and space,
intelligible only as sequence of cause and effect,
the reason is to be found in the nature of things.
If the constitution of mind postulates one who knows
and shapes, in a world in which whatever is, is intelligible,
in which there is order, proportion, and purpose,
it is because such an One is given in the nature of
things, and He is God. However living our faith,
it is faith and not knowledge; and should it become
knowledge, it would cease to be faith.
There are three kinds of authors, those
who impart knowledge, those who give delight, and
those who strengthen and inspire.
A noble thought rightly expressed
sweeps the higher nerve centres as the touch of a
perfect performer the strings of an instrument; but
if the instrument is poor and irresponsive, the appeal
is made in vain. Life has the power to propagate
itself, and if the words thou utterest are living,
they will strike root somewhere and bud and blossom
and bear fruit; but if there is no life in them, be
content to have them fall and lie amid the dust of
the dead. God and the universe are what they
are, and the best even genius can do is to throw over
them a revealing light. He who feels that he
is always in the presence of God will strive as religiously
to think only what is true as he will strive to do
only what is right. A phrase which leaps forth
aglow with life from the heart and brain of genius,
not only lives forever, but retains forever the power
to awaken, when brought into contact with a brain and
heart, the thrill with which it first came into being.
Only a few know and love the poet,
but they are young and fair, and the music of high
thoughts and pure love is rhythmic with the current
of their blood; and if among them there be found some
who are old, they are choice spirits who have risen
from out the lapses of time into regions where what
is true and beautiful is so forever. This little
band of chosen ones accompanies him adown the centuries,
and listens to the melody which wells in his heart
and breaks into songs that shall give delight as long
as the air of spring is pleasant and the flowers fragrant
and the carollings of birds delightful; and while the
poet strolls on the outskirts of time, thus loved
and thus attended, the stormy and glittering favorites
of the crowd drop from sight and are forgotten, or
remembered but as the echo of a name.
A line from Homer, which sounds like
a response from our own heart, is clothed with the
mystery of diviner power, because it makes us feel
that we were alive thousands of years ago amid the
Grecian isles, thus revealing to us the unreality
of time and space, and the everlasting nature of truth
and beauty.
As it is right to admire and love
whatever is good wherever it is found, it needs must
be the part of wisdom to seek to know and appreciate
all that is true and high in the works of genius, though
there, like precious stones and metals in the mine,
it be mingled with baser matter. It is but narrowness
or intellectual pharisaism to turn from a great author
because in his life and works there may be things
of which we cannot approve. Shall we abandon
God because His world is full of evil, or Christ because
there is corruption in the church? St. Paul
appeals to pagan literature, St. Augustine is the disciple
of Plato, St. Thomas Aquinas of Aristotle, and the
culture and civilization of Christendom are largely
due to influences which are not Christian. Whatever
is good is from God. There is no surer mark of
the lack of culture than the use of ill-natured and
abusive epithets. To feel the need of injurious
words to express one’s opinion, merely shows
that one is angry, and anger is vulgar.
Whatever is inspired by vanity is
in bad taste. This is why a showy style is a
false style, why fine writing is poor writing.
The author yields to the spirit of vainglory, whereas
he should be wholly bent upon uttering his thought
as he knows it. It is as though he should call
our attention to a costly garb when what we want to
see is a man.
As a plain face is better than a mask,
though fine, so one’s own style, though inferior,
is better than any which is borrowed.
True books survive without help or
let of critics, by virtue of their vital quality,
which attracts kindred spirits with irresistible power.
When their worth becomes known, the
critics set up a howl of praise, and many buy; but
only a few make them their serious study, and learn
to know and love them. Truth is the mind’s
food; and, like that of the body, it is nourishment
only when it has been digested and assimilated.
It is, after all, but a little while since man began
to think. As yet he is learning the alphabet.
Take heart then, and apply thy mind. As we
grow older the years seem to run to months, the months
to weeks, the weeks to days, the days to hours, the
hours to moments, until time, like an exhalation,
appears to dissolve in the inane, and become the nothing
it was and is and will be for eternity.
If thought were given us, like house
and clothing, merely for our personal comfort, wisdom
would lead us to think with and like all the world.
They who are eager for the good opinion of others
seem to have but weak faith in their own worth.
The art of pleasing would better deserve
our study were there more who are worth pleasing,
or were it less difficult to please without loss of
sincerity and without stooping to the service of vulgar
interests. Not how much or how many things thou
knowest is of import. An industrious reader,
of retentive memory, will easily know more things than
a great philosopher compared with whom he is but a
child.
Know thyself was the sum of what Socrates
taught, and each of the seven wise men rested his
fame upon an apothegm. To expect the multitude
to appreciate the best in life or literature, is to
expect them to be what they have never been and will
probably never be. Would you have an ox admire
the sunrise or the pearly dew, when all he feels the
need of is grass? Appeal to the many if you
will, but if your appeal is for the highest, only
the few will hearken.
Consider not what great men or books
are worth in themselves, but what they are worth to
thee; for thou art able to judge of their value only
in so far as thou understandest and lovest them.
If thou canst not bear trouble, sorrow,
and disappointment without loss of composure, thou
art poorly equipped for life’s struggle.
If thou mayst not lead the life thou wouldst wish,
thou canst at least make the life thou leadest the
means to improve thyself. If we were so constituted
that thought, feeling, and imagination might have free
and healthful play in ever-during darkness and isolation,
life would still be good. Could I live surrounded
by those I love, I should feel less keenly the discontent
which the consciousness of my higher needs creates;
and besides, it is not easy to rest in the comforts
and luxuries which make and keep us inferior, except
in the company of those we love. If our ordinary
power of sight were as great as that we gain with
the help of the microscope, the world would become
for us a place of horrors; and if we could clearly
see ourselves as we are, life would be less endurable.
God blurs our vision as a mother hides from her child
its wound.
Pleasures which quickly end in revulsion
of feeling are but momentary escapes from pain; and
they alone are fortunate who are able to persevere
in pursuits which give them pure delight. “All
good,” says Kant, “which is not based
on the highest moral principle is but empty appearance
and splendid misery.”
Sensations of color, taste, sound,
smell, touch, heat and cold, perceptions of magnitude,
and temporal and spatial relations, is the sum of
what we know; and yet we are conscious that reason
means infinitely more than this, that its proper object
is the eternal world of truth, goodness, and beauty.
Think for thyself with a single view to truth; for
so only will thy thought be of worth and service to
others. We feel ourselves only in action, and
hence the need of doing lest we lose ourselves and
be swallowed in nothingness. And for the old
and feeble even worry, I suppose, is a comfort, for
it helps to keep this self-consciousness alive.
It is impossible to say whence a thought comes, and
it is often difficult to determine the occasion by
which it has been suggested.
Fortunate are the children all of
whose knowledge comes from man and nature in their
purity, whose memory holds no words which are not the
symbols of what they themselves have seen and felt,
in whose minds no will-o’-the-wisp from chimera
worlds flits to and fro. It is only by keeping
men in ignorance and vice that it is possible to keep
them from the contagion of great thoughts. They
who have little are thought to have no right to anything.
Thus the plagiarized sayings of Napoleon and other
nurslings of fame pass for their own; who their real
authors were, seeming to be a matter of indifference.
If I am not pleased with myself, but
should wish to be other than I am, why should I think
highly of the influences which have made me what I
am? Should I publish what I believe to be true
and well expressed, and competent judges should declare
it to be worthless in form and substance, the verdict
would be interesting to me, and I should set to work
to discover why and how I had so far failed in discernment.
“A thoroughly cultivated man,” says Fontenelle,
“is informed by all the thinkers of the past,
as though he had lived and continued to grow in knowledge
during all the centuries.” The author is
rewarded when his readers are made better.
The most persuasive of men are the
praisers of patent medicines. Their eloquence
is more richly rewarded than that of all the orators,
who also are paid, for the most part, in inverse ratio
to the amount of truth they utter. Fame, as
fame, is the merest vanity. No wise man wishes
to be talked and written about, living or dead, to
be a theme chiefly for fools.
Literature is writing in which genuine
thought and feeling are rightly expressed. They
who content themselves with what others have uttered,
learn nothing. The blind need a guide, but they
who are able to see should look for themselves.
There is, indeed, in the words of genius a glow which
never dies; but it only dazzles and misleads, if it
fails to stimulate and strengthen our own powers of
vision. True speech is not idle; it is utterance
of life, the mate of action, and the begetter of noble
deeds. Strive for knowledge and strength, but
do not appear to have them.
“A book,” says La Bruyere,
“which exalts the mind and inspires high and
manly thoughts, is good, and the work of a master.”
A phrase suffices to tell the man is ignorant or
the book worthless. As the body is nourished
by dead things, vegetable and animal, so the mind feeds
on the thoughts of those who have ceased to live,
which, it would seem, are never rightly understood
until the thinkers have passed away.
To be unwilling to be proved wrong
is to fail in love of truth; to resent an objection
is to lack culture. One may believe what cannot
be demonstrated, but to grow angry because there is
no proof is absurd.
To do deeds and to utter thoughts
which long after we have departed shall remain to
cheer, to illumine, to strengthen and console, is to
be like God; and the desire of noble minds is not
of praise, but of abiding power for good.
He who is certain of himself needs
not the good opinion of men, not of those even who
are competent to judge. Only the vain and foolish
or the designing and dishonest will wish to receive
credit for more ability and virtue than they have.
An exaggerated reputation may nourish conceit or
win favor; but the wise and the good put away conceit,
and desire not favors which are granted from mistaken
notions.
“I hate false words,”
says Landor, “and seek with care, difficulty,
and moroseness those that fit the thing.”
Dwell not with complacency upon aught
thou hast or hast achieved, but address thyself each
day, like a simple-hearted child, to the task God
sets thee; and remember when the last hour comes thou
canst carry nothing to Him but faith in His mercy
and goodness.