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THE AMERICAN SCHOLAK
^^
iJelivered hy^
RALPH
WALDO EMERSON 'Se/oir» {he ^BK SOCIETY
^ ^
AT CA2VIBRIDGE
(,
LAURENTLVN PRESS ri
and Gen-
R President
tlemen
I
:
greet you on
recommencement of our literary year. Our an-
the
niversary
is
one of hope,
and, perhaps, not enough of labor.
do not meet skill,
tragedies,
Greeks
;
games of strength or
for
the
for
recitation
and odes, for
We
like
of
histories,
the
ancient
parliaments of love and
poesy, like the
Troubadours
;
nor for
the advancement of science, like our
contemporaries in the British and Eu-
ropean
capitals.
Thus
far,
our holiday
has been simply a friendly sign of the survival of the love of letters
amongst
a people too busy to give to letters any
more.
As
such,
it
is
precious as the
sign of an indestructible instinct.
haps the time
is
already
ought to be, and
vv^ill
Per-
come when be,
it
something
else
when
;
this continent will
iron lids and tation
intellect
of
look from under
its
the sluggard
fill
the postponed expec-
of the world with something
better than the exertions of mechanical
Our day of dependence, our
skill.
long apprenticeship to the learning of other
lands,
draws to
a
close.
The
millions that around us are rushing into life
cannot always be fed on the sere
remains of foreign actions, arise that
harvests.
Events,
must be sung, that
will sing themselves.
Who
can doubt
and lead in a
that poetry will revive
new
age, as the star in the constella-
tion
Harp, which
now
flames in our
zenith, astronomers announce, shall one
day be the years
pole-star
for
a
thousand
?
In the light of this hope I accept the topic which
not only usage
but
the nature of our association seem to prescribe to this day,
Scholar.
Year by year
hither to read one
biography. lights,
new
thrown on
—the American
we come up
more chapter of
his
Let us inquire what new events and
more days have
his character, his duties
and
his hopes. It is
of an
one of those
unknown
fables
which out
antiquity convey an
unlooked-for wisdom, that the gods, in the beginning, divided
Man
into
men,
he might be more helpful to himself; just as the hand was divided
that
into fingers, the
better
to
answer
its
end.
The old fable covers a doctrine ever new and sublime; that there is One Man, present to all particular men
—
only partially, or through one faculty;
and that you must take the whole so-
ciety to find the
not
a
Man
whole man.
or a professor, or
farmer,
engineer, but he
is all.
Man
is
is
an
priest,
and scholar, and statesman, and proIn the divided or ducer, and soldier. social state these functions ar#-parceled
out to individuals, each of
do
to
each
his stint
whom
aims
of the joint work, whilst
other performs his.
Tlfe fable
implies that the individual, to possess
must sometimes return from own labor to embrace all the other
himself, his
laborers.
But, unfortunately, this orig-
inal unit, this
fountain of power, has
been so distributed to multitudes, has been so minutely subdivided and peddled out, that
it is
spilled into drops,
not be gathered. is
state
of society
one in which the members have
strut
about so
suf-
from the trunk, and many walking monsters,
fered amputation
4
The
and can-
—
a gdlld finger, a neck, a stomach, an
elbow, but never a man.
Man
thus metamorphosed into a
is
thing, into
who
is
many
Man
gather food,
The
things.
planter,
sent out into the field to
seldom cheered by any
is
idea of the true dignity of his minis-
He
try.
sees his bushel
and
his cart,
and nothing beyond, and sinks into the farmer, instead of
Man
on the farm.
The
tradesman scarcely ever gives an
ideal
worth to
his
work, but
by the routine of his is
craft,
subject to dollars.
is
ridden
and the soul
The
priest
be-
comes a form the attorney a statutebook the mechanic a machine the ;
;
;
sailor a
rope of the ship.
In this distribution of functions the scholar
is
the delegated intellect.
In
Man
In
the right state he
the degenerate
is
state,
Thinking.
when
the victim 5
of society, he tends to become a mere thinker, or, still worse, the parrot of other men's thinking.
In this view of him, as
Man Think-
whole theory of his office is Him Nature solicits with contained.
ing, the
all
her placid,
Him
all
her monitory pictures.
Him
the future
not indeed every
man a stu-
the past instructs. Is
invites.
dent, and do not student's
all
things exist for the
behoof? And,
finally, is
true scholar the only true master as
the old oracle said,
two handles: one." errs
In
life,
?
But
" All things have
Beware of the wrong too often, the scholar
with mankind and
ilege.
not the
forfeits his priv-
Let us see him in his school,
and consider him in reference to the
main influences he
receives.
HE
first
in
first
time and the
in
importance of the
influences
upon the mind
that of Nature.
is
day, the sun
and her
sunset, night
winds
blow^
Every day, ing,
must
What
is
Ever the
stars.
the
and
beholding
admiring
and, after
grows.
grass
men and women,
scholar must
He
ever
;
;
Every
convers-
The
beholden.
needs stand wistful and
before
settle its
Nature
great
this
value in his mind.
him
to
a beginning, there
spectacle.
is
?
There
is
never
never an end, to
the inexplicable continuity of this web of
God, but always ing into his
own
itself.
spirit,
circular
power return-
Therein
resembles
whose beginning, whose
ending, he never can find, boundless.
it
—
so entire, so
Far, too, as her splendors
shine, system
on system shooting
like 7
upward, downward, without cen-
rays, tre,
without
circumference,
—
in
the
mass and in the particle. Nature hastens to render account of herself to the mind.
To
begins.
Classification
the young
mind every thing is individual, stands by itself. By and by it finds how to join two things and see in them one nature
sand
own
;
;
then three, then three thou-
and
so,
tyrannized over by
unifying instinct,
it
its
goes on tying
things together, diminishing anomalies,
discovering roots running under ground whereby contrary and remote things cohere, and flower out from one stem. It
presently learns that since the
there has been a constant
of history
accumulation and classifying of
But what
dawn
is
classification
facts.
but the per-
ceiving that these objects are not chaotic,
and are not foreign, but have a
;
law which
mind
is
The
?
also a
law of the human
astronomer discovers that
geometry, a pure abstraction of the hu-
man mind, is the measure of planetary The chemist finds propormotion. tions
and
intelligible
out matter
;
method through-
and science
is
nothing but
the finding of analogy, identity, in the
most soul fact
remote sits
down
one
;
The
parts.
ambitious
before each refractory
after
reduces
another,
strange constitutions,
all
new
all
powers,
to their class and their law, and goes
on forever
to animate the
organization, the
by
last fibre
of
of nature,
outskirts
insight.
Thus
to
him, to
der the bending
;
one
relation,
is
school-boy un-
dome of
gested that he and
Root
this
it
day,
sug-
proceed from one
leaf and one
sympathy,
is
stirring
is
flower
in
every 9
And what
vein.
is
Root
that
that the soul of his soul
too
bold,
when
—
this spiritual light shall
—when
have
re-
earthly natures,
and to see that the natural phil-
gropings of
look
now its
forward
knowledge
only the
gigantic hand, he
an
to
to a
as
is
is,
becoming
shall see that nature
part.
One
beauty
mind.
Its
is
is
seal
the
first
shall
ever-expanding
is
of the soul, answering to
Its
Yet
?
he has learned to worship the
osophy that
He
more
not
thought
dream too wild
a
vealed the law of
soul,
—A
?
Is
?
the opposite it
and one
beauty
creator.
part for print.
is
of his
laws are the laws
own
of his
own mind. Nature then becomes to him the measure of his attainments. So much of nature as he is ignorant of, so much of his own mind does he not yet possess.
And,
in fine, the ancient
precept, "
Know thyself,"
and the mod" Study nature," become at ern precept, last
one maxim.
HE
next great influence the
into
spirit
of
mind of the
scholar
is
the
Past,
in
whatever form,
—
whether of
literature,
of institutions, that mind
art,
Books are the
scribed.
the
of in-
is
best type
of
the influence of the past, and perhaps
we
shall
get at the truth,
amount of veniently,
this
—by
influence
—
learn the
more con-
considering their value
alone.
The
theory of books
scholar of the
the world around
on
gave
his
it
the
The
;
brooded there-
new arrangement of
own mind, and
came
noble.
age received into
first
him ;
is
uttered
it
again.
It
went out from him, truth. It came to himj shortlived actions; it went out from him, immortal thoughts. It came to him. into him, life
;
it
went from him, poetry. was dead fact now, it is quick
business It
;
it
;
thought. It
now
can stand, and
It
endures,
it
now
flies, it
now
in-
Precisely in proportion to the
spires.
depth of mind from which
high does
so
can go.
it
it
it
issued,
long does
soar, so
it
sing.
Or,
I
might
far the process
ing
life
depends on
say, it
how
had gone, of transmut-
into truth.
In proportion to
the completeness of the
distillation, so
will the purity and imperishableness of
But none
the product be.
is
quite per-
fect.
As no air-pump can by any means
make
a perfect
any
artist entirely
tional, the
his
vacuum,
exclude the conven-
local, the
book, or
a
perishable
write a book
thought, that shall be respects, to
so neither can
remote
from
of pure
as efficient, in all
posterity, as to 13
contemporaries, or rather to the second
Each
age. its
age,
own books
tion
for
found, must write
it is
or rather, each genera-
;
The
next succeeding.
the
books of an older period will not
fit
this.
Yet hence
The
arises
sacredness
grave mischief.
a
which attaches
to the act
of creation, the act of thought,
is
poet chanting was
man
to be a divine
felt
henceforth the chant
;
The
also.
is
divine
writer was a just and wise
spirit
;
henceforward
book
is
perfect
;
it
as love
is
settled the
of the hero cor-
rupts into worship of his statue. stantly the
guide
and
is
book becomes noxious
a tyrant.
lo, a
in-
The
stantly transferred to the record.
In;
the
We sought a brother,
governor.
The
sluggish and
mind of the multitude, always slow to open to the incursions of Reaperverted
14
;
son, having once
once received
this
on
w^ritten
it
having
book, stands upon
and makes an outcry Colleges are
opened,
so
it,
if it is disparaged.
on
Books are by thinkers, not by Man built
it.
Thinking; by men of talent, that is, who start wrong, who set out from accepted dogmas, not from their own
Meek young men
sight of principles.
grow up
in libraries, believing
it
their
duty to accept the views which Cicero,
which Locke, which Bacon, have given forgetful that Cicero, Locke, and Bacon were only young men in libraries when they wrote these books.
Hence, instead of have the bookworm. learned
class,
who
Man Thinking, we Hence
the book-
value books, as such
not as related to nature and the constitution, but as
making
;
human
a sort of
Third Estate with the world and the IS
Hence the
soul.
restorers
of readings,
the emendators, the bibliomaniacs of all
This
degrees.
than
it
is
among
the right use
which
is
all
?
the worst.
What
means go
is
to effect
own
orbit,
its
book than
attraction clean out of
my
and made
a satellite instead
The one
world, of value,
is
thing in the
the active soul,
soul, free, sovereign, active.
man
is
entitled to
men The
all
born. truth
;
and
this action 16
—
the
This ev-
this every
;
contains within him,
most
had
I
be
of a system.
ery
They
.?
to
never see a
warped by
What
the one end
are for nothing but to inspire. better
worse
of things, well
are the best
abused,
;
this
;
seems.
Books used
bad
is
man
although in
al-
obstructed, and as yet unsoul
active
sees
absolute
utters truth, or creates. it is
genius
;
In
not the privi-
—
lege of here and there a favorite, but
the sound estate of every man. essence
it is
college, the school
In
The book,
progressive.
of
its
the
the institu-
art,
tion of any kind, stop with
some
utterance of genius.
good, say
they,
me
—
let us
hold by
is
They
this.
not forward.
But genius always looks
The
eyes of
man
are set in
his forehead, not in his hindhead.
Genius
hopes.
to create,
man
is
To
Man
create,
the proof of a divine prestalents
may
be, if the
create not, the pure efflux of the
Deity there
—
creates.
Whatever
ence.
pin
They look backward and
dow^n.
forward.
This
past
is
not his
may
;
—
cinders and
be, but not yet flame.
smoke There
are creative manners, there are creative actions,
and creative words
actions, words, that
is,
;
manners,
indicative of
no
custom or authority, but springing spon17
own
taneous from the mind's
good and
On its
fair.
the other part, instead of being
own
another
seer, let it receive
mind
its
solitude,
is
inquest,
always from
though
truth,
in torrents of light,
and
sense of
it
were
without periods of
and
a fatal disservice
self-recovery
done.
is
enemy of ge-
always sufficiently the
The
nius by over-influence.
of every nation bear
;
Genius
me
literature
witness.
The
English dramatic poets have Shakespear-
now
two hundred years. Undoubtedly there is a right way of
ized
for
reading, so
it
be sternly subordinated.
Man
Thinking must not be subdued by his instruments. Books are for the scholar's idle times. When he can read
God
directly, the
hour
is
too precious
to be wasted in other men's transcripts
of their readings. i8
But when the inter-
vals
come they seeth not, when
of darkness come,
—when the the sun hid and —we must,
soul
is
their shining,
the
as
stars
repair to
which were kindled by
withdraw the lamps
their
ray, to
guide our steps to the East again, where the
dawn
We
is.
hear, that
speak.
The
fig-tree,
looking on a
Arabian proverb fig-tree,
we may says,
"A
becometh
fruitful." It is
remarkable, the character of the
pleasure
They
we
derive
from the
best books.
impress us ever with the convic-
tion that one nature wrote and the
We
reads.
read the verses
same of one of
the great English poets, of Chaucer, of Marvell, of Dry den, with the most ern joy, is
—with
a pleasure,!
in great part caused
modmean, which
by the abstraction
from their verses. There is some awe mixed with the joy of our of
all
time
19
surprise,
some
when
this poet,
who
lived in
two or three hundred that which lies close to that which I also had
past world,
years ago, says
my own
soul,
well-nigh thought and
said.
But for
the evidence thence afforded to the philosophical doctrine of the identity of all
we
should suppose some pre-
established
harmony, some foresight of
minds,
souls that
were
to be,
and some prepa-
ration of stores for^their
future wants,
like the fact observed in insects,
lay
up food before death
grub they
for the
who
young
shall never see.
would not be hurried by any love of system, by any exaggeration of instincts, to underrate the Book. We all know that as the human body can be nourished on any food, though it were boiled grass and the broth of shoes, so I
the
human mind
can be fed by any
knowledge. have existed
And great and heroic men who had almost no other
information than by the printed page. I
only would say that
head to bear that
needs a strong
it
One must be
diet.
As the prov-
an inventor to read well. erb says, "
He
that
would bring home
the wealth of the Indies must carry out
There
the wealth of the Indies."
then creative reading writing.
When
the
as
is
well as creative
mind
braced by
is
labor and invention, the page of what-
book we read becomes luminous
ever
with manifold is
doubly
significant,
our author
We as
see,
and the sense of
broad
as
what
is
as
among heavy
its
the world.
always true, that
the seer's hour of vision
rare is
then
is
Every sentence
allusion.
is
short and
days and months, so
record, perchance, the least part
of his volume.
The
discerning will
read, in his Plato or Shakespeare, only
that least part,
—only
terances of the oracle rejects,
were
it
the authentic ut;
—
the rest he
all
many
never so
times
Plato's and Shakespeare's.
Of course
there
a portion
is
of read-
ing quite indispensable to a wise man.
History and exact science he must learn
by laborious reading.
Colleges, in like
manner, have their indispensable
—
to
teach elements.
But
office,
they
can
when they aim create when th«y
only highly serve us not to
drill,
but to
;
gather from far every ray of various genius to their hospitable halls, and by the concentrated their
fires set
youth on flame.
the hearts of
Thought and in which ap-
knowledge are natures paratus and pretension avail nothing. Gowns and pecuniary foundations, though of towns of gold, can never
countervail the least sentence or syllable of wit.
Korget
this,
and our Amer-
ican colleges will recede in their public
importance, whilst every year.
they
grow
richer
—
HERE
goes in the world
a notion that the scholar
should be a recluse, a valetudinarian,
—
as unfit for
any handiwork or public
The
labor as a penknife for an axe. so-called
" practical
speculative ulate or
see,
have heard are
always,
other
class,
men,
as
men "
if,
sneer
at
because they spec-
they could do nothing. it
said that the clergy
more
I
—who
universally than any
the scholars of their day
are addressed as
women
that the rough,
;
spontaneous conversation of
men
they
do not hear, but only a mincing and diluted speech. ally disfranchised
They ;
are often virtu-
and, indeed, there are
As
advocates for their celibacy. this
is
true of the studious classes,
not just and wise.
Action
scholar subordinate, but 24
far as
it
is is
it is
with the essential.
Without out
it
truth.
it
he
is
With-
not yet man.
thought can never ripen into Whilst the world hangs before
the eye as a cloud of beauty,
even see
its
beauty.
ardice, but
there
we
Inaction
cannot
is
cow-
be no scholar
can
without the heroic mind.
The pream-
ble of thought, the transition through
which
from the unconscious to the conscious, is action. Only so much do I know, as I have lived. Instantly we know whose words are loaded with life, and whose not. The world this shadow of the soul, Its ator other me, lies wide around. it
passes
—
tractions are the keys
thoughts and myself.
I
which unlock
make me
acquainted with
launch eagerly 'into
sounding tumult.
my
I grasp
those next me, and take
this re-
the hands of
my
place in
the ring to suffer and to work, taught 25
by an
abyss be vocal with speech. its
order
of
it
ing
I dissipate its fear
;
within the circuit of
So
life.
much
dumb
shall the
so
instinct that
I
pierce
I dispose
;
my
only of
expandlife
as
I
know by experience, so much of the wilderness have I vanquished and planted,
or so far have I extended
dominion.
I
do not see
my being, my how
any
man
can afford, for the sake of his nerves
and his nap, to spare any action in which he can partake. It is pearls and rubies Drudgery, calamity,
to his discourse.
exasperation, want, are instructors in elo-
The
quence and wisdom. grudges
every
true scholar
opportunity
of action
passed by, as a loss of power. It
is
the raw material out of
which
the intellect moulds her splendid products.
which 26
A
strange process too, this by
experience
is
converted into
thought, as
a
verted
satin.
into
goes forward
The
mulberry-leaf
The
con-
is
manufacture
at all hours.
actions and events of our child-
hood and youth
are now^
They lie like Not so with
calmest observation. pictures in the
recent actions,
we now
air.
—with
matters
fair
our
the business which
On
have in hand.
quite unable to speculate. tions as yet circulate
of
this
we are
Our
affec-
through
know
it.
we
We
no more
feel or
the
or the hand, or the brain of
feet,
our body.
than
it
The new deed
—remains
is
feel
yet a part
immersed in our unconscious life. In some contemplative hour it detaches itself from of
the
life,
life like
for a time
a ripe fruit, to
thought of the mind. raised, transfigured
;
put on incorruption.
become
Instantly
it
a is
the corruptible has
Henceforth
it is
27
;
an object of beauty, however base origin and neighborhood.
its
Observe, too,
the impossibility of antedating this act. its
grub
shine,
it is
In
state it
cannot
fly, it
cannot
But suddenly,
a dull grub.
w^ithout observation, the selfsame thing unfurls beautiful w^ings, and gel of
wisdom.
So
is
an an-
there no fact, no
event, in our private history, not, sooner or
is
later, lose
which shall
its
adhesive,
inert form, and astonish us
by soaring from our body into the empyrean. Cradle and infancy, school and playground, the fear of boys, and dogs, and ferules, the love
of
little
maids and ber-
and many another fact that once filled the whole sky, are gone already ries,
friend and relative, profession
and party,
town and country, nation and world, must
also soar
and
sing.
Of course, he who 38
has put forth his
total
strength
in
richest return of
fit
actions
wisdom.
has the
I will
not
shut myself out of this globe of action,
and transplant an oak into a flower-pot, there to hunger and pine
nor trust
;
the revenue of some single faculty, and
exhaust one vein of thought, those
Savoyards,
who,
much
getting
like
their
livelihood by carving shepherds, shepherdesses, all
and smoking Dutchmen, for
Europe, went out one day to the
mountain to find stock, and discovered that they had whittled up the last of Authors we have, their pine-trees. in numbers, who have written out and who, moved by a commendable prudence, sail for Greece or
their vein,
Palestine, follow the trapper prairie, or
into the
ramble round Algiers, to re-
plenish their merchantable stock. If
it
were only
for a vocabulary, the 29
;
scholar
Life
is
would be covetous of our dictionary.
spent in country labors
the tures
insight ;
into
in
;
trades
;
town
in science
one end of mastering in
facts a
language by which to
in art
;
all
their
illustrate
and embody our perceptions.
much he
in
with many
to the
immediately
;
and manufac-
in frank intercourse
men and women
action.
Years are well
I
learn
from any speaker
how
has already lived, through the
poverty or the splendor of his speech. Life
lies
behind us
whence we
get
tiles
as the
quarry from
and copestones for
the
masonry of to-day.
way
to learn
This
is
the
grammar. Colleges and books only copy the language which the field and the work-yard made. But the final value of action, like that of books, and better than is
30
that
it
is
a resource.
books,
That great
— ;
principle of Undulation in nature, that
shows
itself in
the inspiring and expir-
ing of the breath tiety
in the ebb
;
in day
and night
;
in
desire
and
and flow of the ;
sa-
sea
in heat and cold
more deeply ingrained
and, as yet
every atom and every
fluid, is
in
known
under the name of Polarity, these " fits of easy transmission and re-
to us
flection," as
Newton
called them, are
the law of nature because they are the
law of spirit.
The mind now thinks now acts and ;
;
each the
fit
reproduces the other.
artist
when
When
has exhausted his materials,
the fancy no longer paints,
when
no longer apprehended and books are a weariness, he has always the resource to live. Character is Thinking is the higher than intellect.
thoughts
function.
are
Living
—
is
the
functionary. 31
The
stream retreats to
source.
its
A
great soul will be strong to live, as well
Does he lack
as strong to think.
or-
gan or medium to impart his truths ? He can still fall back on this elemental force of living them.
Thinking
act.
is
a
This partial
is
Let
act.
of justice shine
the grandeur
a total
in
his
Let the beauty of affection cheer his lowly roof. Those " far from affairs.
fame,"
who
dwell and act with him,
will feel the force of his
constitution
in the doings
and passages of the day
better than
can be measured by any
public
it
and designed
shall teach
him
display.
Time
that the scholar loses
no hour which the man lives. Herein he unfolds the sacred germ of his instinct, is
lost in seemliness is
Not 32
screened from influence.
out of those on
What
gained in strength.
whom
systems of
education have exhausted their culture
comes the helpful giant to destroy the old or to build the new, but out of unhandselled savage nature
out of terri-
;
come
ble Druids and Berserkers
Alfred and Shakspeare. fore with joy whatever
hear there-
I is
at last
beginning to
be said of the dignity and necessity of labor to every citizen.
There
is
virtue
yet in the hoe and the spade, for learned as
And
well as for unlearned hands.
labor
we
is
everywhere welcome
are invited to
limitation
always
work; only be
observed, that
not for the sake of wider fice
;
a
man
this shall
activity sacri-
any opinion to the popular judg-
ments and modes of action.
HAVE now spoken of the education of the scholar
by nature, by books, and by action.
It
remains to
somewhat of his duties. They are such as become Man They may all be comThinking. say
prised in
scholar
self-trust.
cheer, to
to
is
The
of the
office raise,
and to
men by showing them
guide
amidst appearances.
He plies
facts
the slow,
unhonored, and unpaid task of observation.
their
Flamsteed and Herschel,
glazed
logue the
observatories,
stars
may
in
cata-
with the praise of
all
men, and, the results being splendid and useful, honor is sure. But he, in his private observatory, cataloguing ob-
human man has
scure and nebulous stars of the
mind, which thought 34
of
as
as
yet
such,
no
—watching
days
and months sometimes correcting
still
for a
few
his old records,
facts;
—must
relinquish display and immediate fame.
In the long period of his preparation
he must betray often an ignorance and shiftlessness in
popular
arts,
the disdain of the able
him
;
the dead.
—how
For the
who
shoulder
Long he must stammer
aside.
his speech
incurring
in
often forego the living for
Worse
often ease
!
yet,
he must accept
—poverty
and
solitude.
and pleasure of treading
the old road, accepting the fashions, the education, the religion of society,
he takes the cross of making his own, and, of course, the self-accusation, the faint
and
heart, loss
the frequent
uncertainty
of time, which are the
nettles
and tangling vines in the way of the and the self-relying and self-directed state of virtual hostility in which he ;
35
seems
cially to loss
stand
to
to
society,
For
educated society.
and scorn, what
and espe-
offset
?
all this
He
is
to
find consolation in exercising the highest
one
functions of
human
nature.
He
is
who raises himself from private con-
siderations,
and breathes and
lives
on
He is He is the world's heart.
public and illustrious thoughts.
the world's eye.
He
is
to resist the vulgar prosperity that
retrogrades ever to barbarism, by preserving and
communicating heroic sen-
timents, noble verse,
biographies, melodious
and the conclusions of history.
Whatsoever oracles the human heart, in all emergencies, in all
has uttered as
world of
its
actions,
ceive and impart.
solemn hours,
commentary on the
—
these he shall
And
whatsoever
re-
new
Reason from her inviolable seat pronounces on the passing men and verdict
36
events
of to-day,
—
this
he
shall
hear
and promulgate.
These being
him
his functions,
it
to feel all confidence in
becomes himself,
and to defer never to the popular cry. He, and he only, knows the world.
The world merest
of
any
appearance.
moment is Some great
the de-
corum, some fetich of a government, some ephemeral trade, or war, or man,
up by half mankind and cried down by the other half, as if all depended on this particular up or down. The odds are that the whole question is not worth the poorest thought which the scholar has lost in listening is
cried
to the controversy. his belief that a
Let him not quit
popgun
is
a
popgun,
though the ancient and honorable of the earth affirm
doom.
it
to be the crack of
In silence, in steadiness, in
se37
;
vere abstraction, self;
add
let
him hold by himobservation,
observation to
patient of neglect, patient of reproach
and bide his if
he can
this
own
time,
—happy enough
himself
satisfy
alone
that
day he has seen something truly.
on
Success
treads
For the
instinct
is
every
right
sure that prompts
him
to tell his brother
He
then learns that in going
into the
what he
thinks.
down
own mind he
of his
secrets
step.
has descended into the secrets of
minds.
mastered thoughts all
He
learns
any is
that
law
in
he his
all
has
private
master to that extent of
men whose
language he speaks, and
of all into whose language his
be translated.
who
The
own
poet in utter
can soli-
remembering his spontaneous thoughts and recording them, is found tude
to have recorded 38
that
which men
in
crowded
The
cities find true for
orator distrusts at
first
them
also.
the fitness
of his frank confessions, his want of
knowledge of the persons he addresses, until he finds that he is the complement of his
hearers
;
—
words because he
own
nature
that they drink his
fulfils
for
them
their
the deeper he dives into
;
his privatest, secretest presentiment, to
wonder he
his
this is the
finds
most
acceptable, most public, and universally
The
true.
people delight in
better part of every
my
music
In
;
this
is
self-trust all
prehended.
—
man
feels.
it
;
the
This
is
myself.
the virtues are
com-
Free should the scholar be,
and brave. Free even to the definition of freedom, " without any hinfree
drance that does not constitution."
which
arise
out of his
Brave for fear
a scholar
;
by
is
own
a thing
his very function 39
puts behind him.
from ignorance.
Fear always springs
shame
It is a
if his tranquillity,
him
to
amid dangerous times,
from the presumption that like children and women his is a protected arise
class
or if
;
he seek a temporary peace
by the diversion of politics or
his thoughts
from
vexed questions, hiding his
head like an ostrich in the flowering bushes, peeping into microscopes, and as a boy whistles to keep his courage up. So is the danger a danger still so is the fear worse. Manlike let him turn and face it. Let
turning rhymes,
;
him look nature,
into
its
inspect
whelping of
its
eye and search origin,
this lion,
way back
—
—
see
^which
lies
its
the
no
he will then find in himself a perfect comprehension of its nature and extent he will have made great
;
;
his 40
hands meet on the other
side,
and
;
can henceforth
through
and pass on
it,
The world
superior. see
defy
who can pretension. What
its
his
is
what stone-blind custom, what overgrown error you behold, is there only by sufferance, by your deafness,
—
See
sufferance.
to
it
you have already dealt
be a
we
are
trustless.
It
we
are
that
is
the a
cowed,
and
mortal
its
it
blow. Yes,
lie,
—
^we
the
mischievous notion
come
late
into
nature
that the world was finished a long time
As the world was
ago.
fluid in the
much
to so to
it.
They may ;
To
hands of God, so of his attributes
-in
proportion
it is
we
as
ignorance and sin
adapt themselves to
but
plastic
ever
bring
it is flint.
it
as a
and
as
man
they has
him divine, the firmament before him and takes his signet
anything in flows
41
and form.
Not he
is
alter matter,
but he
who
of the world
who
art,
all
who
can
alter
my
can
the kings
are
give the
thought to
present
their
and
They
of mind.
state
great
color of
all
nature
and persuade men, by the
cheerful serenity of their carrying the matter, that this thing is
which they do
the apple which the ages have depluck,
sired to
now
at
last ripe,
The
inviting nations to the harvest.
great
man makes
the
great
Wherever Macdonald
sits,
head
Linnseus
there
and
thing. is
the
makes botany the most alluring of studies, and wins it from the farmer and the herbwoman Davy, chemistry and Cuvier, of the
table.
;
;
fossils.
The
works in
it
day
is
always his
with serenity and
who great
The unstable estimates of men crowd to him whose mind is filled aims.
42
with a truth,
as
the heaped waves of
the Atlantic follow the moon.
For
this
the
self-trust,
reason
deeper than can be fathomed,
than can be enlightened. carry with
me
I
my own
—darker
might not
the feeling of
ence in stating
is
my
audi-
But
belief.
have already shown the ground of
I
my
hope, in adverting to the doctrine that
man
is
one.
wronged
He
;
believe
I
he
has
man
wronged
has been himself.
has almost lost the light that can
lead
him back
Men
are
to
his
prerogatives.
become of no account.
in history,
men
in the
Men
world of to-day,
spawn, and are called " the mass " and " the herd." In a are
bugs,
are
century, in a millennium, one or two
men
;
that
is
proximations every man.
to
say,
to
the
one or two apright
state
of
All the rest behold in the 43
hero or the poet their
own
crude
;
being,
content to be
—ripened less,
What
stature.
its full
of grandeur,
so that
yes,
and are
may
attain to
a testimony, full
of pity,
full
the demands of his
green and
own
is
borne to
nature, by the
who
poor clansman, the poor partisan, in
rejoices
The
the
and
poor
of his
glory
chief!
low find some immense moral capacthe
amends
to their
ity, for
their acquiescence in a politi-
and
cal
social
inferiority.
content to be brushed like
They flies
are
from
the path of a great person, so that justice shall
mon sire
be done by him to that com-
nature
of
all
which
is
it
the dearest de-
to see enlarged
and
glorified.
They
sun themselves in the great man's
light,
and
ment.
from 44
feel it to
They their
be their
own
cast the dignity
downtrod
selves
of
ele-
man
uDon the
shoulders of a hero, and will perish to
add one drop of blood great
heart beat, those
Men cause
it
is
or as
power good
est,
sinews
lives for us,
and power beas money, the
;
—
" spoils," so called, " of
why
that
such as they are, very naturally
money
seek
giant
He
combat and conquer. and we live in him.
make
to
not
their
sleep-walking,
highest.
Wake them
in
this,
they dream
and they
And
for they aspire to the high-
?
and
office."
is
shall quit the false
good, and
leap to the true, and leave governments to clerks is
to
and desks.
be wrought by the gradual do-
mestication
The main
of the
man.
idea
of Culture.
enterprise of the world for
splendor, for extent,
of a
This revolution
Here
is
the upbuilding
are
strewn along the ground.
the materials
The
private 45
life
of one
man
shall
be a more
illustri-
more formidable
ous monarchy,
to
its
enemy, more sweet and serene in its influence to its friend, than any king-
dom
For a man, rightly viewed, comprehendeth the particular Each philosopher, natures of all men. each bard, each actor, has only done for I
history.
in
me,
as
by a delegate, what one day
can do for myself.
once
we
valued
more than the apple
we
have quite exhausted.
of the eye,
What
is
The books which
that but saying that
we
have
come up with
the point of view which
the universal
mind took through the
eyes of one scribe
;
we
have been that
man, and have passed on. then another,
we
drain
waxing greater by
we
crave a better and
food. 46
all
The man
First one,
all cisterns,
and
these supplies,
more abundant
has never lived
that
can feed us ever.
The human mind who
cannot be enshrined in a person shall set a barrier
on any one
side to
unbounded, unboundable empire. is one central fire, which, flaming
this It
now
out of the
lips
of Etna, lightens
the capes of Sicily, and throat
of
Vesuvius,
now
out of the
illuminates
towers and vineyards of Naples.
the It
is
one light which beams out of a thousand
mates
stars. all
It
men.
is
one soul which ani-
UT
have dwelt perhaps
I
tediously
upon
ab-
this
straction of the Scholar. I
ought not to delay longer
what
to add
I
have to say
of nearer reference to the time and to this country. is
thought to be
a difference in the ideas
which predom-
Historically, there
inate over successive epochs, are data for Classic,
marking the genius of the
of the Romantic, and
the Reflective
With
and there
the views
now
Philosophical
or I
of
age.
have intimated of
the oneness or the identity of the
mind
through
much
all
dwell on I believe all
three.
individuals, I
these
48
differences.
In
fact,
each individual passes through
The boy
youth, romantic; I
do not
is
a
Greek; the
the adult, reflective.
deny not, however, that a revolution
—
in the
leading idea
enough
traced.
Our age
is
bewailed
Must
Introversion. evil
We,
?
it
may be as
the age of
needs
that
seems, are
distinctly
be
We
critical.
are embarrassed w^ith second thoughts.
We
cannot enjoy anything for hanker-
ing to
know whereof the
sists.
We
are
lined
see with our feet.
pleasure con-
with
We
eyes.
The time
is
infected
with Hamlet's unhappiness, Sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought.
Is
it
so
bad then
thing to be pitied.
Do we
fear lest
we
?
Sight
is
the
Would we be
last
blind
?
should outsee nature
and God, and drink truth dry
?
I
look
upon the discontent of the literary as a mere announcement of the
class
that they find themselves not in
the
state
fact
of mind of their fathers, and re49
gret the
coming
state as untried;
as a
boy dreads the water before he has If there is learned that he can swim. any period one would desire to be born in,
it
is
when by
new
the old and the
side
when
not the age of Revolution; stand side
and admit of being compared; the
men are and by hope when
energies
searched by fear
of
all
;
the historic glories of the old can be
compensated by the rich the
new era ?
possibilities
This time, like
all
of
times,
good one, if we but know what to do with it. I read with joy some of the auspicious signs of the coming days, as they glimmer already through poetry and
is
a very
art,
through
philosophy and
through church and
One 50
state.
of these signs
the same
science,
is
the fact that
movement which
effected the
;
elevation of class in
what was
called the lowest
the state assumed in literature a
very marked and as benign an aspect. Instead of the sublime and beautiful,
the near, the low, the
common, was
ex-
That which had been negligently trodden under foot by those who were harnessing and provisplored and poetized.
ioning themselves for long journeys into far countries, is
richer than
all
suddenly found to be
foreign parts.
The
lit-
erature of the poor, the feelings of the child, the philosophy of the street, the
meaning of household ics
of the time.
It is a sign
when when
—
is
It it
life,
a great stride.
is
not
—of new vigor
?
the extremities are currents of
the hands and the
are the top-
made
warm
life
feet.
I
the great, the remote, the
what
is
active,
run into
ask not for
romantic
doing in Italy or Arabia
;
what 51
;;
is
I
Greek art, or Proven9al minstrelsy; embrace the common, I explore and
sit at
the feet of the familiar, the low.
Give
me
insight into to-day, and
you
may have the antique and future w^orlds. What w^ould we really know the meaning of? The meal in th'e firkin; the milk street
in ;
the pan; the
ballad
the news of the boat
;
in
the
the glance
of the eye; the form and the gait of the body;
—show me the
son of these matters
;
ultimate rea-
show me the sub-
lime presence of the highest spiritual cause lurking, as always
it
does lurk, in
these suburbs and extremities of nature let
me
see every trifle bristling
polarity that ranges eternal
it
with the
instantly
on an
law; and the shop, the plow,
and the ledger referred to the like cause by which light undulates and poets sing
—and 52
the world
lies
no longer a dull
miscellany and lumber-room, but has
form and order there is no trifle there is no puzzle but one design unites and ;
;
;
animates the farthest pinnacle and the lowest trench.
This idea has inspired the genius of Goldsmith, Burns, Cowper, and, in a
newer time, of Goethe, Wordsworth, and Carlyle. This idea they have differently followed and with various success.
In contrast with their writing,
the style of Pope, of Johnson, of Gib-
bon, looks writing
cold
and pedantic.
Man
blood-warm.
is
This is
sur-
prised to find that things near are not less beautiful
remote.
The
drop
and wondrous than things
The is
near explains
is
This perception
of the worth of the vulgar discoveries.
far.
A man
a small ocean.
related to all nature.
the
Goethe, in
is
fruitful in
this very thing 53
the most
shown
modern of the moderns, has
us, as
none ever
did, the genius
of the ancients.
There is one man of genius who has done much for this philosophy of life, whose literary value has never yet been rightly estimated; I mean Emanuel
—
Swedenborg.
The most
imaginative
of men, yet writing with the precision of a mathematician, he endeavored to engraft a purely philosophical
Ethics
on the popular Christianity of his time. Such an attempt, of course, must have difficulty which no genius could surmount. But he saw and showed the connection between nature and the affections of the soul.
emblematic or
He
pierced the
spiritual character
visible, audible, tangible
world.
cially did his shade-loving
of the Espe-
muse hover
over and interpret the lower parts of 54
he showed the mysterious bond that allies moral evil to the foul mate-
nature
rial
;
forms, and has given in epical para-
bles a theory of insanity, of beasts, of
unclean and fearful things.
Another sign of our times, also marked by an analogous political movement, the
the
is
single
new importance
person.
tends to insulate the individual
round him with
given to
Everything
—
that
to sur-
barriers of natural re-
man shall feel the and man shall treat with
spect, so that each
world
man
as a
—
state
his,
is
sovereign state with a sovereign
tends to true union as well as
greatness.
"
I
learned," said the mel-
ancholy Pestalozzi, " that no
man
in
God's wide earth is either willing or Help able to help any other man."
must come from the bosom alone. The scholar is that man who must take up SS
;
into himself all the ability of the time,
the contributions of the past,
all
He
hopes of the future.
the
all
must be an If there be
university of knowledges.
one lesson more than another which should pierce his ear, is
is
man
nothing, the
the law of
not yet
how
all
it is
:
The world
is all
;
in yourself
nature, and
a globule of sap ascends
in yourself slumbers the
son
;
it is
for
you know
you
to
whole of Rea-
know all
;
for
it is
you to dare all. Mr. President and Gentlemen, this confidence in the unsearched might of motives, by
all
aration, to the
man
belongs,
prophecy, by
by
all
prep-
all
American Scholar.
We
have listened too long to the courtly
muses of Europe.
American freeman to be timid,
The is
spirit
already suspected
imitative, tame.
and private avarice make the S6
of the Public air
we
breathe thick and
The
fat.
scholar
decent, indolent, complaisant.
ready
the
See
al-
The
consequence.
tragic
is
mind of this country, taught to aim at low objects, eats upon itself. There is no work for any one but the decorous
Young men of who begin life upon
and the complaisant. the
fairest
promise,
our shores, inflated by the mountain winds, shined upon by
God,
all
the stars of
below not in unison with these, but are hindered from action by the disgust which the principles on find the earth
which
business
is
managed
inspire,
and
turn drudges, or die of disgust, some of
them suicides. What is the remedy ? They did not yet see, and thousands of young men as hopeful now crowding to the barriers for the career do not yet see, that if
self
the single
man
indomitably on his
plant
instincts,
himand 57
there abide, the huge world will
round
him.
to
Patience, all
the good and
company; and
for solace, the
with the shades of great for
own
perspective of your
and
for
—
come
patience;
infinite
life;
work, the study and the com-
munication of principles, the making those instincts prevalent, the conversion
of the world.
not the chief dis-
Is it
grace in the world, not to be an unit;
not to be reckoned one character; not
which each
to yield that peculiar fruit
man was
created
reckoned in the
to
but to
bear,
gross, in the
be
hundred,
or the thousand, of the party, the section,
to
opinion the
which we belong; predicted
north,
geographically,
brothers and friends, shall not
own 58
feet;
be
so.
we
south?
the
or
—
We
will
and
Not
our as so,
God, ours walk on our
please
will
work with our own
we
hands;
Then
will speak, our
shall
man be no
for pity, for doubt,
and
own
minds.
longer a
name
for sensual
in-
The dread of man and the man shall be a wall of defense
dulgence. love of
and
wreath of joy around
a
nation of exist,
men
will
for
the
all.
first
A time
because each believes himself in-
spired by the inspires
all
Divine Soul which
men.
also
BOOK WAS DESIGNED ARRANGED AND PRINTED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF ARTHUR H HAHLO AND GEORGE S HELLMAN AT THE LAURENTIAN PRESS 353 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK IN THE YEAR NINETEEN HUNDRED AND ONE THIS