It was on a day of rare beauty that
I went out into the fields to try and gather these
few thoughts. So golden and sweetly hot it was,
that they came lazily, and with a flight no more coherent
or responsible than the swoop of the very swallows;
and, as in a play or poem, the result is conditioned
by the conceiving mood, so I knew would be the nature
of my diving, dipping, pale-throated, fork-tailed
words. But, after all I thought,
sitting there I need not take my critical
pronouncements seriously. I have not the firm
soul of the critic. It is not my profession
to know ’things for certain, and to make others
feel that certainty. On the contrary, I am often
wrong a luxury no critic can afford.
And so, invading as I was the realm of others, I advanced
with a light pen, feeling that none, and least of
all myself, need expect me to be right.
What then I thought is
Art? For I perceived that to think about it I
must first define it; and I almost stopped thinking
at all before the fearsome nature of that task.
Then slowly in my mind gathered this group of words:
Art is that imaginative expression
of human energy, which, through technical concretion
of feeling and perception, tends to reconcile the
individual with the universal, by exciting in him impersonal
emotion. And the greatest Art is that which excites
the greatest impersonal emotion in an hypothecated
perfect human being.
Impersonal emotion! And what I
thought do I mean by that? Surely I mean:
That is not Art, which, while I, am contemplating it,
inspires me with any active or directive impulse;
that is Art, when, for however brief a moment, it
replaces within me interest in myself by interest in
itself. For, let me suppose myself in the presence
of a carved marble bath. If my thoughts be “What
could I buy that for?” Impulse of acquisition;
or: “From what quarry did it come?”
Impulse of inquiry; or: “Which would be
the right end for my head?” Mixed impulse of
inquiry and acquisition I am at that moment
insensible to it as a work of Art. But, if I
stand before it vibrating at sight of its colour and
forms, if ever so little and for ever so short a time,
unhaunted by any definite practical thought or impulse to
that extent and for that moment it has stolen me away
out of myself and put itself there instead; has linked
me to the universal by making me forget the individual
in me. And for that moment, and only while that
moment lasts, it is to me a work of Art. The
word “impersonal,” then, is but used in
this my definition to signify momentary forgetfulness
of one’s own personality and its active wants.
So Art I thought is
that which, heard, read, or looked on, while producing
no directive impulse, warms one with unconscious vibration.
Nor can I imagine any means of defining what is the
greatest Art, without hypothecating a perfect human
being. But since we shall never see, or know
if we do see, that desirable creature dogmatism
is banished, “Academy” is dead to the
discussion, deader than even Tolstoy left it after
his famous treatise “What is Art?” For,
having destroyed all the old Judges and Academies,
Tolstoy, by saying that the greatest Art was that
which appealed to the greatest number of living human
beings, raised up the masses of mankind to be a definite
new Judge or Academy, as tyrannical and narrow as
ever were those whom he had destroyed.
This, at all events I thought
is as far as I dare go in defining what Art is.
But let me try to make plain to myself what is the
essential quality that gives to Art the power of exciting
this unconscious vibration, this impersonal emotion.
It has been called Beauty! An awkward word a
perpetual begging of the question; too current in use,
too ambiguous altogether; now too narrow, now too wide a
word, in fact, too glib to know at all what it means.
And how dangerous a word often misleading
us into slabbing with extraneous floridities what would
otherwise, on its own plane, be Art! To be decorative
where decoration is not suitable, to be lyrical where
lyricism is out of place, is assuredly to spoil Art,
not to achieve it. But this essential quality
of Art has also, and more happily, been called Rhythm.
And, what is Rhythm if not that mysterious harmony
between part and part, and part and whole, which gives
what is called life; that exact proportion, the mystery
of which is best grasped in observing how life leaves
an animate creature when the essential relation of
part to whole has been sufficiently disturbed.
And I agree that this rhythmic relation of part to
part, and part to whole in short, vitality is
the one quality inseparable from a work of Art.
For nothing which does not seem to a man possessed
of this rhythmic vitality, can ever steal him out
of himself.
And having got thus far in my thoughts,
I paused, watching the swallows; for they seemed to
me the symbol, in their swift, sure curvetting, all
daring and balance and surprise, of the delicate poise
and motion of Art, that visits no two men alike, in
a world where no two things of all the things there
be, are quite the same.
Yes I thought and
this Art is the one form of human energy in the whole
world, which really works for union, and destroys the
barriers between man and man. It is the continual,
unconscious replacement, however fleeting, of oneself
by another; the real cement of human life; the everlasting
refreshment and renewal. For, what is grievous,
dompting, grim, about our lives is that we are shut
up within ourselves, with an itch to get outside ourselves.
And to be stolen away from ourselves by Art is a
momentary relaxation from that itching, a minute’s
profound, and as it were secret, enfranchisement.
The active amusements and relaxations of life can
only rest certain of our faculties, by indulging others;
the whole self is never rested save through that unconsciousness
of self, which comes through rapt contemplation of
Nature or of Art.
And suddenly I remembered that some
believe that Art does not produce unconsciousness
of self, but rather very vivid self-realisation.
Ah! but I though that
is not the first and instant effect of Art; the new
impetus is the after effect of that momentary replacement
of oneself by the self of the work before us; it is
surely the result of that brief span of enlargement,
enfranchisement, and rest.
Yes, Art is the great and universal
refreshment. For Art is never dogmatic; holds
no brief for itself you may take it or you may leave
it. It does not force itself rudely where it
is not wanted. It is reverent to all tempers,
to all points of view. But it is wilful the
very wind in the comings and goings of its influence,
an uncapturable fugitive, visiting our hearts at vagrant,
sweet moments; since we often stand even before the
greatest works of Art without being able quite to lose
ourselves! That restful oblivion comes, we never
quite know when and it is gone! But
when it comes, it is a spirit hovering with cool wings,
blessing us from least to greatest, according to our
powers; a spirit deathless and varied as human life
itself.
And in what sort of age I
thought are artists living now? Are
conditions favourable? Life is very multiple;
full of “movements,” “facts,”
and “news”; with the limelight terribly
turned on and all this is adverse to the
artist. Yet, leisure is abundant; the facilities
for study great; Liberty is respected more
or less. But, there is one great reason why,
in this age of ours, Art, it seems, must flourish.
For, just as cross-breeding in Nature if
it be not too violent often gives an extra
vitality to the offspring, so does cross-breeding of
philosophies make for vitality in Art. I cannot
help thinking that historians, looking back from the
far future, will record this age as the Third Renaissance.
We who are lost in it, working or looking on, can
neither tell what we are doing, nor where standing;
but we cannot help observing, that, just as in the
Greek Renaissance, worn-out Pagan orthodoxy was penetrated
by new philosophy; just as in the Italian Renaissance,
Pagan philosophy, reasserting itself, fertilised again
an already too inbred Christian creed; so now Orthodoxy
fertilised by Science is producing a fresh and fuller
conception of life a, love of Perfection,
not for hope of reward, not for fear of punishment,
but for Perfection’s sake. Slowly, under
our feet, beneath our consciousness, is forming that
new philosophy, and it is in times of new philosophies
that Art, itself in essence always a discovery, must
flourish. Those whose sacred suns and moons
are ever in the past, tell us that our Art is going
to the dogs; and it is, indeed, true that we are in
confusion! The waters are broken, and every
nerve and sinew of the artist is strained to discover
his own safety. It is an age of stir and change,
a season of new wine and old bottles. Yet, assuredly,
in spite of breakages and waste, a wine worth the
drinking is all the time being made.
I ceased again to think, for the sun
had dipped low, and the midges were biting me; and
the sounds of evening had begun, those innumerable
far-travelling sounds of man and bird and beast so
clear and intimate of remote countrysides
at sunset. And for long I listened, too vague
to move my pen.
New philosophy a vigorous
Art! Are there not all the signs of it?
In music, sculpture, painting; in fiction and
drama; in dancing; in criticism itself, if criticism
be an Art. Yes, we are reaching out to a new
faith not yet crystallised, to a new Art not yet perfected;
the forms still to find-the flowers still to fashion!
And how has it come, this slowly growing
faith in Perfection for Perfection’s sake?
Surely like this: The Western world awoke one
day to find that it no longer believed corporately
and for certain in future life for the individual
consciousness. It began to feel: I cannot
say more than that there may be Death may
be the end of man, or Death may be nothing.
And it began to ask itself in this uncertainty:
Do I then desire to go on living? Now, since
it found that it desired to go on living at least
as earnestly as ever it did before, it began to inquire
why. And slowly it perceived that there was,
inborn within it, a passionate instinct of which it
had hardly till then been conscious a sacred
instinct to perfect itself, now, as well as in a possible
hereafter; to perfect itself because Perfection was
desirable, a vision to be adored, and striven for;
a dream motive fastened within the Universe; the very
essential Cause of everything. And it began to
see that this Perfection, cosmically, was nothing
but perfect Equanimity and Harmony; and in human relations,
nothing but perfect Love and Justice. And Perfection
began to glow before the eyes of the Western world
like a new star, whose light touched with glamour
all things as they came forth from Mystery, till to
Mystery they were ready to return.
This I thought is surely
what the Western world has dimly been rediscovering.
There has crept into our minds once more the feeling
that the Universe is all of a piece, Equipoise supreme;
and all things equally wonderful, and mysterious,
and valuable. We have begun, in fact, to have
a glimmering of the artist’s creed, that nothing
may we despise or neglect that everything
is worth the doing well, the making fair that
our God, Perfection, is implicit everywhere, and the
revelation of Him the business of our Art.
And as I jotted down these words I
noticed that some real stars had crept up into the
sky, so gradually darkening above the pollard lime-trees;
cuckoos, who had been calling on the thorn-trees all
the afternoon, were silent; the swallows no longer
flirted past, but a bat was already in career over
the holly hedge; and round me the buttercups were closing.
The whole form and feeling of the world had changed,
so that I seemed to have before me a new picture hanging.
Ah! I thought Art must indeed
be priest of this new faith in Perfection, whose motto
is: “Harmony, Proportion, Balance.”
For by Art alone can true harmony in human affairs
be fostered, true Proportion revealed, and true Equipoise
preserved. Is not the training of an artist a
training in the due relation of one thing with another,
and in the faculty of expressing that relation clearly;
and, even more, a training in the faculty of disengaging
from self the very essence of self and passing
that essence into other selves by so delicate means
that none shall see how it is done, yet be insensibly
unified? Is not the artist, of all men, foe
and nullifier of partisanship and parochialism, of
distortions and extravagance, the discoverer of that
jack-o’-lantern Truth; for, if Truth
be not Spiritual Proportion I know not what it is.
Truth it seems to me is no absolute thing,
but always relative, the essential symmetry in the
varying relationships of life; and the most perfect
truth is but the concrete expression of the most penetrating
vision. Life seen throughout as a countless
show of the finest works of Art; Life shaped, and
purged of the irrelevant, the gross, and the extravagant;
Life, as it were, spiritually selected that
is Truth; a thing as multiple, and changing, as subtle,
and strange, as Life itself, and as little to be bound
by dogma. Truth admits but the one rule:
No deficiency, and no excess! Disobedient to
that rule nothing attains full vitality.
And secretly fettered by that rule is Art, whose
business is the creation of vital things.
That aesthete, to be sure, was right,
when he said: “It is Style that makes one
believe in a thing; nothing but Style.”
For, what is Style in its true and broadest sense
save fidelity to idea and mood, and perfect balance
in the clothing of them? And I thought:
Can one believe in the decadence of Art in an age
which, however unconsciously as yet, is beginning
to worship that which Art worships Perfection-Style?
The faults of our Arts to-day are
the faults of zeal and of adventure, the faults and
crudities of pioneers, the errors and mishaps of the
explorer. They must pass through many fevers,
and many times lose their way; but at all events they
shall not go dying in their beds, and be buried at
Kensal Green. And, here and there, amid the disasters
and wreckage of their voyages of discovery, they will
find something new, some fresh way of embellishing
life, or of revealing the heart of things. That
characteristic of to-day’s Art the
striving of each branch of Art to burst its own boundaries which
to many spells destruction, is surely of happy omen.
The novel straining to become the play, the play the
novel, both trying to paint; music striving to become
story; poetry gasping to be music; painting panting
to be philosophy; forms, canons, rules, all melting
in the pot; stagnation broken up! In all this
havoc there is much to shock and jar even the most
eager and adventurous. We cannot stand these
new-fangled fellows! They have no form!
They rush in where angels fear to tread. They
have lost all the good of the old, and given us nothing
in its place! And yet only out of
stir and change is born new salvation. To deny
that is to deny belief in man, to turn our backs on
courage! It is well, indeed, that some should
live in closed studies with the paintings and the
books of yesterday such devoted students
serve Art in their own way. But the fresh-air
world will ever want new forms. We shall not
get them without faith enough to risk the old!
The good will live, the bad will die; and tomorrow
only can tell us which is which!
Yes I thought we
naturally take a too impatient view of the Art of our
own time, since we can neither see the ends toward
which it is almost blindly groping, nor the few perfected
creations that will be left standing amidst the rubble
of abortive effort. An age must always decry
itself and extol its forbears. The unwritten
history of every Art will show us that. Consider
the novel that most recent form of Art!
Did not the age which followed Fielding lament the
treachery of authors to the Picaresque tradition,
complaining that they were not as Fielding and Smollett
were? Be sure they did. Very slowly and
in spite of opposition did the novel attain in this
country the fulness of that biographical form achieved
under Thackeray. Very slowly, and in face of
condemnation, it has been losing that form in favour
of a greater vividness which places before the reader’s
brain, not historical statements, as it were, of motives
and of facts, but word-paintings of things and persons,
so chosen and arranged that the reader may see, as
if at first hand, the spirit of Life at work before
him. The new novel has as many bemoaners as
the old novel had when it was new. It is no question
of better or worse, but of differing forms of
change dictated by gradual suitability to the changing
conditions of our social life, and to the ever fresh
discoveries of craftsmen, in the intoxication of which,
old and equally worthy craftsmanship is by
the way too often for the moment mislaid.
The vested interests of life favour the line of least
resistance disliking and revolting against
disturbance; but one must always remember that a spurious
glamour is inclined to gather around what is new.
And, because of these two deflecting factors, those
who break through old forms must well expect to be
dead before the new forms they have unconsciously
created have found their true level, high or low, in
the world of Art. When a thing is new how shall
it be judged? In the fluster of meeting novelty,
we have even seen coherence attempting to bind together
two personalities so fundamentally opposed as those
of Ibsen and Bernard Shaw dramatists with hardly a
quality in common; no identity of tradition, or belief;
not the faintest resemblance in methods of construction
or technique. Yet contemporary; estimate talks
of them often in the same breath. They are new!
It is enough. And others, as utterly unlike
them both. They too are new. They have
as yet no label of their own then put on some one
else’s!
And so I thought it must
always be; for Time is essential to the proper placing
and estimate of all Art. And is it not this feeling,
that contemporary judgments are apt to turn out a
little ludicrous, which has converted much criticism
of late from judgment pronounced into impression recorded recreative
statement a kind, in fact, of expression
of the critic’s self, elicited through contemplation
of a book, a play, a symphony, a picture? For
this kind of criticism there has even recently been
claimed an actual identity with creation. Esthetic
judgment and creative power identical! That
is a hard saying. For, however sympathetic one
may feel toward this new criticism, however one may
recognise that the recording of impression has a wider,
more elastic, and more lasting value than the delivery
of arbitrary judgment based on rigid laws of taste;
however one may admit that it approaches the creative
gift in so far as it demands the qualities of receptivity
and reproduction is there not still lacking
to this “new” critic something of that
thirsting spirit of discovery, which precedes the
creation hitherto so-called of
anything? Criticism, taste, aesthetic judgment,
by the very nature of their task, wait till life has
been focussed by the artists before they attempt to
reproduce the image which that imprisoned fragment
of life makes on the mirror of their minds.
But a thing created springs from a germ unconsciously
implanted by the direct impact of unfettered life on
the whole range, of the creator’s temperament;
and round the germ thus engendered, the creative artist ever
penetrating, discovering, selecting goes
on building cell on cell, gathered from a million little
fresh impacts and visions. And to say that this
is also exactly what the recreative critic does, is
to say that the interpretative musician is creator
in the same sense as is the composer of the music that
he interprets. If, indeed, these processes be
the same in kind, they are in degree so far apart
that one would think the word creative unfortunately
used of both....
But this speculation I
thought is going beyond the bounds of vagueness.
Let there be some thread of coherence in your thoughts,
as there is in the progress of this evening, fast
fading into night. Return to the consideration
of the nature and purposes of Art! And recognize
that much of what you have thought will seem on the
face of it heresy to the school whose doctrine was
incarnated by Oscar Wilde in that admirable apotheosis
of half-truths: “The Decay of the Art of
Lying.” For therein he said: “No
great artist ever sees things as they really are.”
Yet, that half-truth might also be put thus:
The seeing of things as they really are the
seeing of a proportion veiled from other eyes (together
with the power of expression), is what makes a man
an artist. What makes him a great artist is
a high fervour of spirit, which produces a superlative,
instead of a comparative, clarity of vision.
Close to my house there is a group
of pines with gnarled red limbs flanked by beech-trees.
And there is often a very deep blue sky behind.
Generally, that is all I see. But, once in a
way, in those trees against that sky I seem to see
all the passionate life and glow that Titian painted
into his pagan pictures. I have a vision of mysterious
meaning, of a mysterious relation between that sky
and those trees with their gnarled red limbs and Life
as I know it. And when I have had that vision
I always feel, this is reality, and all those other
times, when I have no such vision, simple unreality.
If I were a painter, it is for such fervent vision
I should wait, before moving brush: This, so intimate,
inner vision of reality, indeed, seems in duller moments
well-nigh grotesque; and hence that other glib half-truth:
“Art is greater than Life itself.”
Art is, indeed, greater than Life in the sense that
the power of Art is the disengagement from Life of
its real spirit and significance. But in any
other sense, to say that Art is greater than Life
from which it emerges, and into which it must remerge,
can but suspend the artist over Life, with his feet
in the air and his head in the clouds Prig
masquerading as Demi-god. “Nature is no
great Mother who has borne us. She is our creation.
It is in our brain that she quickens to life.”
Such is the highest hyperbole of the aesthetic creed.
But what is creative instinct, if not an incessant
living sympathy with Nature, a constant craving like
that of Nature’s own, to fashion something new
out of all that comes within the grasp of those faculties
with which Nature has endowed us? The qualities
of vision, of fancy, and of imaginative power, are
no more divorced from Nature, than are the qualities
of common-sense and courage. They are rarer,
that is all. But in truth, no one holds such
views. Not even those who utter them. They
are the rhetoric, the over-statement of half-truths,
by such as wish to condemn what they call “Realism,”
without being temperamentally capable of understanding
what “Realism” really is.
And what I thought is
Realism? What is the meaning of that word so
wildly used? Is it descriptive of technique,
or descriptive of the spirit of the artist; or both,
or neither? Was Turgenev a realist? No
greater poet ever wrote in prose, nor any one who more
closely brought the actual shapes of men and things
before us. No more fervent idealists than Ibsen
and Tolstoy ever lived; and none more careful to make
their people real. Were they realists?
No more deeply fantastic writer can I conceive than
Dostoievsky, nor any who has described actual situations
more vividly. Was he a realist? The late
Stephen Crane was called a realist. Than whom
no more impressionistic writer ever painted with words.
What then is the heart of this term still often used
as an expression almost of abuse? To me, at
all events I thought the words
realism, realistic, have no longer reference to technique,
for which the words naturalism, naturalistic, serve
far better. Nor have they to do with the question
of imaginative power as much demanded by
realism as by romanticism. For me, a realist
is by no means tied to naturalistic technique he
may be poetic, idealistic, fantastic, impressionistic,
anything but romantic; that, in so far as
he is a realist, he cannot be. The word, in fact,
characterises that artist whose temperamental preoccupation
is with revelation of the actual inter-relating spirit
of life, character, and thought, with a view to enlighten
himself and others; as distinguished from that artist
whom I call romantic whose tempera mental
purpose is invention of tale or design with a view
to delight himself and others. It is a question
of temperamental antecedent motive in the artist,
and nothing more.
Realist Romanticist!
Enlightenment Delight! That is the
true apposition. To make a revelation to
tell a fairy-tale! And either of these artists
may use what form he likes naturalistic,
fantastic, poetic, impressionistic. For it is
not by the form, but by the purpose and mood of his
art that he shall be known, as one or as the other.
Realists indeed including the half of Shakespeare
that was realist not being primarily concerned to
amuse their audience, are still comparatively unpopular
in a world made up for the greater part of men of
action, who instinctively reject all art that does
not distract them without causing them to think.
For thought makes demands on an energy already in
full use; thought causes introspection; and introspection
causes discomfort, and disturbs the grooves of action.
To say that the object of the realist is to enlighten
rather than to delight, is not to say that in his
art the realist is not amusing himself as much as ever
is the teller of a fairy-tale, though he does not
deliberately start out to do so; he is amusing, too,
a large part of mankind. For, admitted that
the abject, and the test of Art, is always the awakening
of vibration, of impersonal emotion, it is still usually
forgotten that men fall, roughly speaking, into two
flocks: Those whose intelligence is uninquiring
in the face of Art, and does not demand to be appeased
before their emotions can be stirred; and those who,
having a speculative bent of mind, must first be satisfied
by an enlightening quality in a work of Art, before
that work of Art can awaken in them feeling.
The audience of the realist is drawn from this latter
type of man; the much larger audience of the romantic
artist from the former; together with, in both cases,
those fastidious few for whom all Art is style and
only style, and who welcome either kind, so long as
it is good enough.
To me, then I thought this
division into Realism and Romance, so understood,
is the main cleavage in all the Arts; but it is hard
to find pure examples of either kind. For even
the most determined realist has more than a streak
in him of the romanticist, and the most resolute romanticist
finds it impossible at times to be quite unreal.
Guido Reni, Watteau, Leighton were they not perhaps
somewhat pure romanticists; Rembrandt, Hogarth, Manet
mainly realists; Botticelli, Titian, Raphael, a blend.
Dumas pere, and Scott, surely romantic; Flaubert and
Tolstoy as surely realists; Dickens and Cervantes,
blended. Keats and Swinburne romantic; Browning
and Whitman realistic; Shakespeare and Goethe,
both. The Greek dramatists realists.
The Arabian Nights and Malory romantic. The
Iliad, the Odyssey, and the Old Testament, both realism
and romance. And if in the vagueness of my thoughts
I were to seek for illustration less general and vague
to show the essence of this temperamental cleavage
in all Art, I would take the two novelists Turgenev
and Stevenson. For Turgenev expressed himself
in stories that must be called romances, and Stevenson
employed almost always a naturalistic technique.
Yet no one would ever call Turgenev a romanticist,
or Stevenson a realist. The spirit of the first
brooded over life, found in it a perpetual voyage of
spiritual adventure, was set on discovering and making
clear to himself and all, the varying traits and emotions
of human character the varying moods of
Nature; and though he couched all this discovery in
caskets of engaging story, it was always clear as
day what mood it was that drove him to dip pen in
ink. The spirit of the second, I think, almost
dreaded to discover; he felt life, I believe, too
keenly to want to probe into it; he spun his gossamer
to lure himself and all away from life. That was
his driving mood; but the craftsman in him, longing
to be clear and poignant, made him more natural, more
actual than most realists.
So, how thin often is the hedge!
And how poor a business the partisan abuse of either
kind of art in a world where each sort of mind has
full right to its own due expression, and grumbling
lawful only when due expression is not attained.
One may not care for a Rembrandt portrait of a plain
old woman; a graceful Watteau decoration may leave
another cold but foolish will he be who denies that
both are faithful to their conceiving moods, and so
proportioned part to part, and part to whole, as to
have, each in its own way, that inherent rhythm or
vitality which is the hall-mark of Art. He is
but a poor philosopher who holds a view so narrow
as to exclude forms not to his personal taste.
No realist can love romantic Art so much as he loves
his own, but when that Art fulfils the laws of its
peculiar being, if he would be no blind partisan, he
must admit it. The romanticist will never be
amused by realism, but let him not for that reason
be so parochial as to think that realism, when it
achieves vitality, is not Art. For what is Art
but the perfected expression of self in contact with
the world; and whether that self be of enlightening,
or of fairy-telling temperament, is of no moment whatsoever.
The tossing of abuse from realist to romanticist and
back is but the sword-play of two one-eyed men with
their blind side turned toward each other. Shall
not each attempt be judged on its own merits?
If found not shoddy, faked, or forced, but true to
itself, true to its conceiving mood, and fair-proportioned
part to whole; so that it lives then, realistic
or romantic, in the name of Fairness let it pass!
Of all kinds of human energy, Art is surely the most
free, the least parochial; and demands of us an essential
tolerance of all its forms. Shall we waste breath
and ink in condemnation of artists, because their
temperaments are not our own?
But the shapes and colours of the
day were now all blurred; every tree and stone entangled
in the dusk. How different the world seemed from
that in which I had first sat down, with the swallows
flirting past. And my mood was different; for
each of those worlds had brought to my heart its proper
feeling painted on my eyes the just picture.
And Night, that was coming, would bring me yet another
mood that would frame itself with consciousness at
its own fair moment, and hang before me. A quiet
owl stole by in the geld below, and vanished into
the heart of a tree. And suddenly above the
moor-line I saw the large moon rising. Cinnamon-coloured,
it made all things swim, made me uncertain of my thoughts,
vague with mazy feeling. Shapes seemed but drifts
of moon-dust, and true reality nothing save a sort
of still listening to the wind. And for long
I sat, just watching the moon creep up, and hearing
the thin, dry rustle of the leaves along the holly
hedge. And there came to me this thought:
What is this Universe that never had beginning
and will never have an end but a myriad
striving to perfect pictures never the same, so blending
and fading one into another, that all form one great
perfected picture? And what are we ripples
on the tides of a birthless, deathless, equipoised
Creative-Purpose but little works of Art?
Trying to record that thought, I noticed
that my note-book was damp with dew. The cattle
were lying down. It was too dark to se