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6. Quotation and Originality
WHOEVER looks at the insect world, at flies, aphides,
gnats, and innumerable parasites, and even at the infant mammals, must
have remarked the extreme content they take in suction, which
constitutes the main business of their life. If we go into a library or
news-room, we see the same function on a higher plane, performed with
like ardor, with equal impatience of interruption, indicating the
sweetness of the act. In the highest civilization the book is still the
highest delight. He who has once known its satisfactions is provided
with a resource against calamity. Like Plato’s disciple who has
perceived a truth, "he is preserved from harm until another period." In
every man’s memory, with the hours when life culminated are usually
associated certain books which met his views. Of a large and powerful
class we might ask with confidence, What is the event they most desire?
what gift? What but the book that shall come, which they have sought
through all libraries, through all languages, that shall be to their
mature eyes what many a tinsel-covered toy pamphlet was to their
childhood, and shall speak to the imagination? Our high respect for a
well-read man is praise enough of literature. If we encountered a man of
rare intellect, we should ask him what books he read. We expect a great
man to be a good reader; or in proportion to the spontaneous power
should be the assimilating power. And though such are a more difficult
and exacting class, they are not less eager. "He that borrows the aid
of an equal understanding," said Burke, " doubles his own; he that uses
that of a superior elevates his own to the stature of that he
contemplates."
We prize books, and they prize them
most who are themselves wise. Our debt to tradition through reading and
conversation is so massive, our protest or private addition so rare and
insignificant, -- and this commonly on the ground of other reading or
hearing, -- that, in a large sense, one would say there is no pure
originality. All minds quote. Old and new make the warp and woof of
every moment. There is no thread that is not a twist of these two
strands. By necessity, by proclivity, and by delight, we all quote. We
quote not only books and proverbs, but arts, sciences, religion,
customs, and laws; nay, we quote temples and houses, tables and chairs
by imitation. The Patent-Office Commissioner knows that all machines in
use have been invented and re-invented over and over; that the mariner’s
compass, the boat, the pendulum, glass, movable types, the kaleidoscope,
the railway, the power-loom, etc., have been many times found and lost,
from Egypt, China, and Pompeii down; and if we have arts which Rome
wanted, so also Rome had arts which we have lost; that the invention of
yesterday of making wood indestructible by means of vapor of coal-oil or paraffine was suggested by the Egyptian method which has preserved its
mummy-cases four thousand years.
The highest statement of new
philosophy complacently caps itself with some prophetic maxim from the
oldest learning. There is something mortifying in this perpetual circle.
This extreme economy argues a very small capital of invention. The
stream of affection flows broad and strong; the practical activity is a
river of supply; but the dearth of design accuses the penury of
intellect. How few thoughts! In a hundred years, millions of men, and
not a hundred lines of poetry, not a theory of philosophy that offers a
solution of the great problems, not an art of education that fulfils the
conditions. In this delay and vacancy of thought we must make the best
amends we can by seeking the wisdom of others to fill the time.
If we confine ourselves to literature,
'tis easy to see that the debt is immense to past thought. None escapes
it. The originals are not original. There is imitation, model, and
suggestion, to the very archangels, if we knew their history. The first
book tyrannizes over the second. Read Tasso, and you think of Virgil;
read Virgil, and you think of Homer; and Milton forces you to reflect
how narrow are the limits of human. invention. The "Paradise Lost" had
never existed but for these precursors; and if we find in India or
Arabia a book out of our horizon of thought and tradition, we are soon
taught by new researches in its native country to discover its
foregoers, and its latent, but real connection with our own Bibles.
Read in Plato, and you shall find
Christian dogmas, and not only so, but stumble on our evangelical
phrases. Hegel pre-exists in Proclus, and, long before, in Heraclitus
and Parmenides. Whoso knows Plutarch, Lucian, Rabelais, Montaigne, and
Bayle will have a key to many supposed originalities. Rabelais is the
source of many a proverb, story, and jest, derived from him into all
modern languages; and if we knew Rabelais’s reading, we should see the
rill of the Rabelais river. Swedenborg, Behmen, Spinoza, will appear
original to uninstructed and to thoughtless persons: their originality
will disappear to such as are either well-read or thoughtful; for
scholars will recognize their dogmas as reappearing in men of a similar
intellectual elevation throughout history. Albert, the "wonderful
doctor," St. Buonaventura, the "seraphic doctor," Thomas Aquinas, the
"angelic doctor" of the thirteenth century, whose books made the
sufficient culture of these ages, Dante absorbed and he survives for us.
"Renard the Fox," a German poem of the thirteenth century, was long
supposed to be the original work, until Grimm found fragments of another
original a century older. M. Le Grand showed that in the old Fabliaux
were the originals of the tales of Molière, La Fontaine, Boccaccio, and
of Voltaire.
Mythology is no man’s work; but, what
we daily observe in regard to the bon-mots that circulate in society,
--
that every talker helps a story in repeating it, until, at last, from
the slenderest filament of fact a good fable is constructed, -- the same
growth befalls mythology: the legend is tossed from believer to poet,
from poet to believer, everybody adding a grace or dropping a fault or
rounding the form, until it gets an ideal truth.
Religious literature, the psalms and
liturgies of churches, are of course of this slow growth, -- a fagot of
selections gathered through ages, leaving the worse, and saving the
better, until it is at last the work of the whole communion of
worshippers. The Bible itself is like an old Cremona; it has been played
upon by the devotion of thousands of years, until every word and
particle is public and tunable. And whatever undue reverence may have
been claimed for it by the prestige of philonic inspiration, the
stronger tendency we are describing is likely to undo. What divines had
assumed as the distinctive revelations of Christianity, theologic
criticism has matched by exact parallelisms from the Stoics and poets of
Greece and Rome. Later, when Confucius and the Indian scriptures were
made known, no claim to monopoly of ethical wisdom could be thought of;
and the surprising results of the new researches into the history of
Egypt have opened to us the deep debt of the churches of Rome and
England to the Egyptian hierology.
The borrowing is often honest enough,
and comes of magnanimity and stoutness. A great man quotes bravely and
will not draw on his invention when his memory serves him with a word as
good. What he quotes, he fills with his own voice and humor, and the
whole cyclopædia of his table-talk is presently believed to be his own.
Thirty years ago, when Mr. Webster at the bar or in the Senate filled
the eyes and minds of young men, you might often hear cited as Mr.
Webster’s three rules: first, never to do to-day what he could defer
till to-morrow; secondly, never to do himself what he could make another
do for him; and, thirdly, never to pay any debt to-day. Well, they are
none the worse for being already told, in the last generation, of
Sheridan; and we find in Grimm’s Mémoires that Sheridan got them from
the witty D'Argenson; who, no doubt, if we could consult him, could tell
of whom he first heard them told. In our own college days we remember
hearing other pieces of Mr. Webster's advice to students, -- among
others this: that when he opened a new book, he turned to the table of
contents, took a pen, and sketched a sheet of matters and topics, --
what he knew and what he thought, -- before he read the book. But
we find in Southey's "Commonplace Book" this said of the Earl of
Strafford: "I learned one rule of him," says Sir G. Radcliffe, "which I
think worthy to be remembered. When he met with a well-penned
oration or tract upon any subject, he framed a speech upon the same
argument, inventing and disposing what seemed fit to be said upon that
subject, before he read hte book; then, reading, compared his own with
the author's, and noted his own defects and the author's art and fulness;
whereby he drew all that ran in the author more strictly, and might
better judge of his own wants to supply them." I remember to have
heard Mr. Samuel Rogers, in London, relate, among other anecdotes of the
Duke of Wellington, that a lady having expressed in his presence a
passionate wish to witness a great victory, he replied: "Madam, there is
nothing so dreadful as a great victory, -- excepting a great defeat."
But this speech is also D'Argenson's, and is reported by Grimm. So
the sarcasm attributed to Baron Alderson upon Brougham, "What a
wonderful versatile mind has Brougham! he knows politics, Greek,
history, science; if he only knew a little of law, he would know a
little of everything." You may find the original of this gibe in Grimm,
who says that Louis XVI., going out of chapel after hearing a sermon
from the Abbe Maury, said, "Si l'Abbé nous avait parlé un peu de
religion, il nous aurait parlé de tout." A pleasantry which ran through
all the newspapers a few years since, taxing the eccentricities of a
gifted family connection in New England, was only a theft of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu’s
mot of a hundred years ago, that " the world was made
up of men and women and Herveys."
Many of the historical proverbs have a
doubtful paternity. Columbus’s egg is claimed for Brunelleschi.
Rabelais’s dying words, "I am going to see the great Perhaps " (le grand Peut-être), only repeats the "IF" inscribed on the portal of the temple
at Delphi. Goethe’s favorite phrase, " the open secret," translates
Aristotle’s answer to Alexander, " These books are published and not
published." Madame de Staël’s "Architecture is frozen music" is
borrowed from Goethe’s "dumb music," which is Vitruvius’s rule, that
"the architect must not only understand drawing, but music."
Wordsworth’s hero acting "on the plan which pleased his childish
thought," is Schiller’s "Tell him to reverence the dreams of his
youth," and earlier, Bacon’s "Consilia juventutis plus divinilatis
habent."
In romantic literature examples of this vamping abound. The fine verse
in the old Scotch ballad of "The Drowned Lovers,"
"Thou art roaring ower loud, Clyde
water,
Thy streams are ower strang; Make me thy wrack when I come back, But spare me when I gang,"
is a translation of Martial’s epigram
on Hero and Leander, where the prayer of Leander is the same: --
"Parcite dum propero, mergite dum
redeo."
Hafiz furnished Burns with the song of
"John Barleycorn," and furnished Moore with the original of the piece,
"When in death I shall calm recline, Oh, bear my heart to my mistress dear," etc.
There are many fables which, as they
are found in every language, and betray no sign of being borrowed, are
said to be agreeable to the human mind. Such are "The Seven Sleepers," "Gyges’s
Ring," "The Travelling Cloak," "The Wandering Jew," "The Pied Piper,"
"Jack and his Beanstalk," the "Lady Diving in the Lake and Rising in the
Cave," -- whose omnipresence only indicates how easily a good story
crosses all frontiers. The popular incident of Baron Munchausen, who
hung his bugle up by the kitchen fire, and the frozen tune thawed out,
is found in Greece in Plato’s time. Antiphanes, one of Plato’s friends,
laughingly compared his writings to a city where the words froze in the
air as soon as they were pronounced, and the next summer, when they were
warmed and melted by the sun, the people heard what had been spoken in
the winter. It is only within this century that England and America
discovered that their nursery-tales were old German and Scandinavian
stories; and now it appears that they came from India, and are the
property of all the nations descended from the Aryan race, and have been
warbled and babbled between nurses and children for unknown thousands of
years.
If we observe the tenacity with which
nations cling to their first types of costume, of architecture, of tools
and methods in tillage, and of decoration, -- if we learn how old are the
patterns of our shawls, the capitals of our columns, the fret, the
beads, and other ornaments on our walls, the alternate lotus-bud and
leaf-stem of our iron fences, -- we shall think very well of the first
men, or ill of the latest.
Now shall we say that only the first
men were well alive, and the existing generation is invalided and
degenerate? Is all literature eavesdropping, and all art Chinese
imitation? our life a custom, and our body borrowed, like a beggar’s
dinner, from a hundred charities? A more subtle and severe criticism
might suggest that some dislocation has befallen the race; that men are
off their centre; that multitudes of men do not live with Nature, but
behold it as exiles. People go out to look at sunrises and sunsets who
do not recognize their own quietly and happily, but know that it is
foreign to them. As they do by books, so they quote the sunset and the
star, and do not make them theirs. Worse yet, they live as foreigners in
the world of truth, and quote thoughts, and thus disown them. Quotation
confesses inferiority. In opening a new book we often discover, from the
unguarded devotion with which the writer gives his motto or text, all we
have to expect from him. If Lord Bacon appears already in the preface, I
go and read the "Instauration" instead of the new book.
The mischief is quickly punished in
general and in particular. Admirable mimics have nothing of their own.
In every kind of parasite, when Nature has finished an aphis, a teredo,
or a vampire bat, -- an excellent sucking-pipe to tap another animal, or
a mistletoe or dodder among plants, -- the self-supplying organs wither
and dwindle, as being superfluous. In common prudence there is art early
limit to this leaning on an original. In literature quotation is good
only when the writer whom I follow goes my way, and, being better
mounted than I, gives me a cast, as we say; but if I like the gay
equipage so well as to go out of my road, I had better have gone afoot.
But it is necessary to remember there
are certain considerations which go far to qualify a reproach too grave.
This vast mental indebtedness has every variety that pecuniary debt has,
-- every variety of merit. The capitalist of either kind is as hungry to
lend as the consumer to borrow; and the transaction no more indicates
intellectual turpitude in the borrower than the simple fact of debt
involves bankruptcy. On the contrary, in far the greater number of cases
the transaction is honor-able to both. Can we not help ourselves as
discreetly by the force of two in literature? Certainly it only needs
two well placed and well tempered for co-operation, to get somewhat far
transcending any private enterprise! Shall we converse as spies? Our
very abstaining to repeat and credit the fine remark of our friend is
thievish. Each man of thought is surrounded by wiser men than he, if
they cannot write as well. Cannot he and they combine? Cannot they sink
their jealousies in God’s love, and call their poem Beaumont and
Fletcher, or the Theban Phalanx's? The city will for nine days or nine
years make differences and sinister comparisons: there is a new and more
excellent public that will bless the friends. Nay, it is an inevitable
fruit of our social nature. The child quotes his father, and the man
quotes his friend. Each man is a hero and an oracle to some-body, and to
that person whatever he says has an enhanced value. Whatever we think
and say is wonderfully better for our spirits and trust in an-other
mouth. There is none so eminent and wise but he knows minds whose
opinion confirms or qualifies his own: and men of extraordinary genius
acquire an almost absolute ascendant over their nearest companions. The
Comte de Crillon said one day to M. d'Allonville, with French vivacity,
"If the universe and I professed one opinion, and M. Necker expressed a
contrary one, I should be at once convinced that the universe and I were
mistaken."
Original power is usually accompanied
with assimilating power, and we value in Coleridge his excellent
knowledge and quotations perhaps as much, possibly more, than his
original suggestions. If an author give us just distinctions, inspiring
lessons, or imaginative poetry, it is not so important to us whose they
are. If we are fired and guided by these, we know him as a benefactor,
and shall return to him as long as he serves us so well. We may like
well to know what is Plato’s and what is Montesquieu’s or Goethe’s part,
and what thought was always dear to the writer himself; but the worth of
the sentences consists in their radiancy and equal aptitude to all
intelligence. They fit all our facts like a charm. We respect ourselves
the more that we know them.
Next to the originator of a good
sentence is the first quoter of it. Many will read the book before one
thinks of quoting a passage. As soon as Ile has done this, that line
will be quoted east and west. Then there are great ways of borrowing.
Genius borrows nobly. When Shakespeare is charged with debts to his
authors, Landor replies: " Yet he was more original than his originals.
He breathed upon dead bodies and brought them into life." And we must
thank Karl Ottfried Muller for the just remark, " Poesy, drawing within
its circle all that is glorious and inspiring, gave itself but little
concern as to where its flowers originally grew." So Voltaire usually
imitated, but with such superiority that Dubuc said: "He is like the
false Amphitryon; although the stranger, it is always he who has the air
of being master of the house." Wordsworth, as soon as he heard a good
thing, caught it up, meditated upon it, and very soon re-produced it in
his conversation and writing. If De Quincey said, " That is what I told
you," he replied, "No: that is mine, -- mine, and not yours." On the
whole, we like the valor of it. 'Tis on Marmontel’s principle, "I
pounce on what is mine, wherever I find it"; and on Bacon’s broader
rule, "I take all knowledge to be my province." It betrays the
consciousness that truth is the property of no individual, but is the
treasure of all men. And inasmuch as any writer has ascended to a just
view of man’s condition, he has adopted this tone. In so far as the
receiver’s aim is on life, and not on literature, will be his
indifference to the source. The nobler the truth or sentiment, the less
imports the question of authorship. It never troubles the simple seeker
from whom he derived such or such a sentiment. Whoever expresses to us a
just thought makes ridiculous the pains of the critic who should tell
him where such a word had been said before. "It is no more according to
Plato than according to me." Truth is always present: it only needs to
lift the iron lids of the mind’s eye to read its oracles. But the moment
there is the purpose of display, the fraud is exposed. In fact, it is as
difficult to appropriate the thoughts of others, as it is to invent.
Always some steep transition, some sudden alteration of temperature, of
point or of view, betrays the foreign interpolation.
There is, besides, a new charm in such
intellectual works as, passing through long time, have had a multitude
of authors and improvers. We admire that poetry which no man wrote, -- no
poet less than the genius of humanity itself, -- which is to be read in a
mythology, in the effect of a fixed or national style of pictures, of
sculptures, or drama, or cities, or sciences, on us. Such a poem also is
language. Every word in. the language has once been used happily. The
ear, caught by that felicity, retains it, and it is used again and
again, as if the charm belonged to the word, and not to the life of
thought which so enforced it. These profane uses, of course, kill it,
and it is avoided. But a quick wit can at any time reinforce it, and it
comes into vogue again. Then people quote so differently: one finding
only what is gaudy and popular; another, the heart of the author, the
report of his select and happiest hour: and the reader some-times giving
more to the citation than he owes to it. Most of the classical citations
you shall hear or read in the current journals or speeches were not
drawn from the originals, but from previous quotations in English books;
and you can easily pronounce, from the use and relevancy of the
sentence, whether it had not done duty many times before, -- whether your
jewel was got from the mine or front an auctioneer. We are as much
informed of a writer’s genius by what he selects as by what he
originates. We read the quotation with his eyes, and find a new and
fervent sense; as a passage from one of the poets, well recited, borrows
new interest from the rendering. As the journals say, "the italics are
ours." The profit of books is according to the sensibility of the
reader. The profoundest thought or passion sleeps as in a mine, until an
equal mind and heart finds and publishes it. The passages of Shakespeare
that we most prize were never quoted until within this century; and
Milton’s prose, and Burke, even, have their best fame within it. Every
one, too, remembers his friends by their favorite poetry or other
reading.
Observe, also, that a writer appears to more ad-vantage in the pages of
another book than in his own. In his own, he waits as a candidate for
your approbation; in another's, he is a lawgiver.
Then another’s thoughts have a certain
advantage with us simply because they are another's. There is an
illusion in a new phrase. A man hears a fine sentence out of Swedenborg,
and wonders at the wisdom, and is very merry at heart that he has now
got so fine a thing. Translate it out of the new words into his own
usual phrase, and he will wonder again at his own simplicity, such
tricks do fine words play with us.
'Tis curious what new interest an old
author acquires by official canonization in Tiraboschi, or Dr. Johnson,
or Von Hammer-Purgstall, or Hallam, or other historian of literature.
Their registration of his book, or citation of a passage, carries the
sentimental value of a college diploma. Hallam, though never profound,
is a fair mind, able to appreciate poetry, unless it becomes deep, being
always blind and deaf to imaginative and analogy-loving souls, like the
Platonists, like Giordano Bruno, like Donne, Herbert, Crashaw, and
Vaughan; and Hallam cites a sentence from Bacon or Sidney, and
distinguishes a lyric of Edwards or Vaux, and straightway it commends
itself to us as if it had received the Isthmian crown.
It is a familiar expedient of
brilliant writers, and not less of witty talkers, the device of
ascribing their own sentence to an imaginary person, in order to give it
weight, -- as Cicero, Cowley, Swift, Landor, and Carlyle have done. And
Cardinal de Retz, at a critical moment in the Parliament of Paris,
described himself in an extemporary Latin sentence, which he pretended
to quote from a classic author, and which told admirably well. It is a
curious reflex effect of this enhancement of our thought by citing it
from another, that many men can write better under a mask than for
themselves, -- as Chatterton in archaic ballad, Le Sage in Spanish
costume, Macpherson as " Ossian," -- and, I doubt not, many a young
barrister in chambers in London, who forges good thunder for the
"Times," but never works as well under his own name. This is a sort of
dramatizing talent; as it is not rare to find great powers of
recitation, without the least original eloquence, -- or people who copy
drawings with admirable skill, but are incapable of any design.
In hours of high mental activity we
sometimes do the book too much honor, reading out of it bet-ter things
than the author wrote, -- reading, as we say, between the lines. You have
had the like experience in conversation: the wit was in what you heard,
not in what the speakers said. Our best thought came from others. We
heard in their words a deeper sense than the speakers put into them, and
could express ourselves in other people’s phrases to finer purpose than
they knew. In Moore’s Diary, Mr. Hallam is reported as mentioning at
dinner one of his friends who had said, "I don't know how it is, a thing
that falls flat from me seems quite an excellent joke when given at
second-hand by Sheridan. I never like my own bon-mots until he adopts
them." Dumont was exalted by being used by Mirabeau, by Bentham, and by
Sir Philip Francis, who, again, was less than his own "Junius"; and
James Hogg (except in his poems "Kilmeny" and "The Witch of Fife") is
but a third-rate author, owing his fame to his effigy colossalized
through the lens of John Wilson, - who, again, writes better under the
domino of "Christopher North" than in his proper clothes. The bold
theory of Delia Bacon, that Shakespeare’s plays were written by a
society of wits, -- by Sir Walter Raleigh, Lord Bacon, and others around
the Earl of Southampton, -- had plainly for her the charm of the superior
meaning they would acquire when read under this light; this idea of the
authorship controlling our appreciation of the works themselves. We once
knew a man overjoyed at the notice of his pamphlet in a leading
newspaper. What range he gave his imagination! Who could have written
it? Was it not Colonel Carbine, or Senator Tonitrus, or, at the least,
Professor Maximilian? Yes, he could detect in the style that fine Roman
hand. How it seemed the very voice of the refined and discerning public,
inviting merit at last to consent to fame, and come up and take place in
the reserved and authentic chairs! He carried the journal with haste to
the sympathizing Cousin Matilda, who is so proud of all we do. But what
dismay, when the good Matilda, pleased with his pleasure, confessed she
had written the criticism, and carried it with her own hands to the
post-office! "Mr. Wordsworth," said Charles Lamb, "allow me to introduce
to you my only admirer."
Swedenborg threw a formidable theory
into the world, that every soul existed in a society of souls, from
which all its thoughts passed into it, as the blood of the mother
circulates in her unborn child; and he noticed that, when in his bed, --
alternately sleeping and waking, -- sleeping, he was surrounded by
persons disputing and offering opinions on the one side and on the other
side of a proposition; waking, the like suggestions occurred for and
against the proposition as his own thoughts; sleeping again, he saw and
heard the speakers as before: and this as often as he slept or waked.
And if we expand the image, does it not look as if we men were thinking
and talking out of an enormous antiquity, as if we stood, not in a
coterie of prompters that filled a sitting-room, but in a circle of
intelligences that reached through all thinkers, poets, inventors, and
wits, men and women, English, German, Celt, Aryan, Ninevite, Copt, --
back to the
first geometer, bard, mason, carpenter, planter, shepherd, - back to the
first negro, who, with more health or better perception, gave a shriller
sound or name for the thing he saw and dealt with? Our benefactors are
as many as the children who in-vented speech, word by word. Language is
a city, to the building of which every human being brought a stone; yet
he is no more to be credited with the grand result than the acaleph
which adds a cell to the coral reef which is the basis of the continent.
: all things are in flux. It
is inevitable that you are indebted to the past. You are fed and formed
by it. The old forest is decomposed for the composition of the new
forest. The old animals have given their bodies to the earth to furnish
through chemistry the forming race, and every individual is only a
momentary fixation of what was yesterday another's, is to-day his, and
will belong to a third to-morrow. So it is in thought. Our knowledge
is the amassed thought and experience of innumerable minds: our
language, our science, our religion, our opinions, our fancies we
inherited. Our country, customs, laws, our ambitions, and our notions of
fit and fair, -- all these we never made; we found them ready-made; we
but quote them. Goethe frankly said, "What would remain to me if this
art of appropriation were derogatory to genius? Every one of my writings
has been furnished to me by a thousand different persons, a thousand
things: wise and foolish have brought me, without suspecting it, the
offering of their thoughts, faculties, and experience. My work is an
aggregation of beings taken from the whole of nature; it bears the name
of Goethe."
But there remains the indefeasible
persistency of the individual to be himself. One leaf, one blade of
grass, one meridian, does not resemble another. Every mind is different;
and the more it is unfolded, the more pronounced is that difference. He
must draw the elements into him for food, and, if they be granite and
silex, will prefer them cooked by sun and rain, by time and art, to his
hand. But, however received, these elements pass into the sub-stance of
his constitution, will be assimilated, and tend always to form, not a
partisan, but a possessor of truth. To all that can be said of the
preponderance of the Past, the single word Genius is a sufficient reply.
The divine resides in the new. The divine never quotes, but is, and
creates. The profound apprehension of the Present is Genius, which makes
the Past forgotten. Genius believes its faintest presentiment against
the testimony of all history; for it knows that facts are not ultimates,
but that a state of mind is the ancestor of everything. And what is
Originality? It is being, being one’s self, and reporting accurately
what we see and are. Genius is, in the first instance, sensibility, the
capacity of receiving just impressions from the external world, and the
power of coordinating these after the laws of thought. It implies Will,
or original force, for their right distribution and expression. If to
this the sentiment of piety be added, if the thinker feels that the
thought most strictly his own is not his own, and recognizes the
perpetual suggestion of the Supreme Intellect, the oldest thoughts
become new and fertile whilst he speaks them.
Originals never lose their value.
There is always in them a style and weight of speech, which the
immanence of the oracle bestowed, and which cannot be counterfeited.
Hence the permanence of the high poets. Plato, Cicero, and Plutarch cite
the poets in the manner in which Scripture is quoted in our churches. A
phrase or a single word is adduced, with honoring emphasis, from Pindar,
Hesiod, or Euripedes, as precluding all argument, because thus had they
said: importing that the bard spoke not his own, but the words of some
god. True poets have always ascended to this lofty platform, and met
this expectation. Shakespeare, Milton, Wordsworth, were very conscious of
their responsibilities. When a man thinks happily, he finds no
foot-track in the field he traverses. All spontaneous thought is
irrespective of all else. Pindar uses this haughty defiance, as if it
were impossible to find his sources: " There are many swift darts within
my quiver, which have a voice for those with understanding; but to the
crowd they need interpreters. He is gifted with genius who knoweth much
by natural talent."
Our pleasure in seeing each mind take
the subject to which it has a proper right is seen in mere fitness in
time. He that comes second must needs quote him that comes first. The
earliest describers of savage life, as Captain Cook’s account of the
Society Islands, or Alexander Henry’s travels among our Indian tribes,
have a charm of truth and just point of view. Landsmen and sailors
freshly come from the most civilized countries, and with no false
expectation, no sentimentality yet about wild life, healthily receive
and report what they saw, -- seeing what they must, and using no choice;
and no man suspects the superior merit of the description, until
Chateaubriand, or Moore, or Campbell, or Byron, or the artists arrive,
and mix so much art with their picture that the incomparable advantage
of the first narrative appears. For the same reason we dislike that the
poet should choose an antique or far-fetched subject for his muse, as if
he avowed want of insight. The great deal always with the nearest. Only
as braveries of too prodigal power can we pardon it, when the life of
genius is so redundant that out of petulance it flings its fire into
some old mummy, and, lo! it walks and blushes again here. in the street.
We cannot overstate our debt to the
Past, but the moment has the supreme claim. The Past is for us; but the
sole terms on which it can be-come ours are its subordination to the
Present. Only an inventor knows how to borrow, and every man is or
should be an inventor. We must not tamper with the organic motion of the
soul. 'Tis certain that thought has its own proper motion, and the
hints which flash from it, the words overheard at unawares by the free
mind, are trustworthy and fertile, when obeyed, and not perverted to low
and selfish account. This vast memory is only raw material. The divine
gift is ever the instant life, which receives and uses and creates, and
can well bury the old in the omnipotency with which Nature decomposes
all her harvest for recomposition.
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