Our age is retrospective.
It builds the sepulchres of the fathers. It writes
biographies, histories, and criticism. The foregoing
generations beheld God and nature face to face; we,
through their eyes. Why should not we also enjoy
an original relation to the universe? Why should
not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight and
not of tradition, and a religion by revelation to us,
and not the history of theirs? Embosomed for
a season in nature, whose floods of life stream around
and through us, and invite us by the powers they supply,
to action proportioned to nature, why should we grope
among the dry bones of the past, or put the living
generation into masquerade out of its faded wardrobe?
The sun shines to-day also. There is more wool
and flax in the fields. There are new lands,
new men, new thoughts. Let us demand our own works
and laws and worship.
Undoubtedly we have no questions to
ask which are unanswerable. We must trust the
perfection of the creation so far, as to believe that
whatever curiosity the order of things has awakened
in our minds, the order of things can satisfy.
Every man’s condition is a solution in hieroglyphic
to those inquiries he would put. He acts it as
life, before he apprehends it as truth. In like
manner, nature is already, in its forms and tendencies,
describing its own design. Let us interrogate
the great apparition, that shines so peacefully around
us. Let us inquire, to what end is nature?
All science has one aim, namely, to
find a theory of nature. We have theories of
races and of functions, but scarcely yet a remote
approach to an idea of creation. We are now so
far from the road to truth, that religious teachers
dispute and hate each other, and speculative men are
esteemed unsound and frivolous. But to a sound
judgment, the most abstract truth is the most practical.
Whenever a true theory appears, it will be its own
evidence. Its test is, that it will explain all
phenomena. Now many are thought not only unexplained
but inexplicable; as language, sleep, madness, dreams,
beasts, sex.
Philosophically considered, the universe
is composed of Nature and the Soul. Strictly
speaking, therefore, all that is separate from us,
all which Philosophy distinguishes as the not
me, that is, both nature and art, all other men
and my own body, must be ranked under this name, nature.
In enumerating the values of nature and casting up
their sum, I shall use the word in both senses; in
its common and in its philosophical import. In
inquiries so general as our present one, the inaccuracy
is not material; no confusion of thought will occur.
Nature, in the common sense, refers to essences
unchanged by man; space, the air, the river, the leaf.
Art is applied to the mixture of his will with
the same things, as in a house, a canal, a statue,
a picture. But his operations taken together are
so insignificant, a little chipping, baking, patching,
and washing, that in an impression so grand as that
of the world on the human mind, they do not vary the
result.