But that
portion of it which we each know as self, is it not like to a
drop of rain seen in its falling through the air? Indistinguishable
the
particle was in the cloud
whence it came; indistinguishable it
will become again in the ocean w
hither it is bound. Its personality
is but its passing phase from a vast
impersonal on the one hand to
an
equally vast
impersonal on the other. Thus seers preached in the
past; so modem science is hinting to-day. With us the idea seems the
bitter fruit of material
philosophy; by them it was looked upon as
the fairest flower of their faith. What is dreaded now as the
impious
suggestion of the godless four thousand years ago was
reverenced as a
sacred tenet of religion.
Shorter even than his short
threescore years and ten is that soul's
life of which man is directly cognizant. Bounded by two
seemingly
impersonal states is the personal
consciousness of which he is made
aware: the one the infantile
existence that precedes his boyish
discovery, the other the gloom that grows with years,--two
twilights
that
fringe the two borders of his day. But with the Far Oriental,
life is all
twilight. For in Japan and China both states are found
together. There, side by side with the present un
consciousness of
the babe exists the
belief in a coming un
consciousness for the man.
So inseparably blended are the two that the known truth of the one
seems, for that very bond, to carry with it the credentials of the
other. Can it be that the personal,
progressive West is wrong, and
the
impersonal, impassive East right? Surely not. Is the other side
of the world in advance of us in mind-development, even as it
precedes us in the time of day; or just as our noon is its night,
may it not be far in our rear? Is not its
seemingwisdom rather the
precociousness of what is destined never to go far?
Brought suddenly upon such a
civilization, after the blankness of a
long ocean
voyage, one is reminded
instinctively of the feelings of
that bewildered individual who, after a dinner at which he had
eventually ceased to be himself, was by way of pleasantry left out
overnight in a graveyard, on their way home, by his humorously
inclined companions; and who, on awaking alone, in a still dubious
condition, looked around him in surprise, rubbed his eyes two or
three times to no purpose, and finally muttered in a tone of
awe-struck
conviction, "Well, either I'm the first to rise, or I'm a
long way behind time!"
Whether their
failure to follow the natural course of evolution
results in bringing them in at the death just the same or not, these
people are now, at any rate,
stationary not very far from the point
at which we all set out. They are still in that
childish state of
development before self-
consciousness has spoiled the sweet
simplicity of nature. An
impersonal race seems never to have fully
grown up.
Partly for its own sake,
partly for ours, this most distinctive
feature of the Far East, its marked
impersonality, is well
worthyparticular attention; for while it collaterally suggests pregnant
thoughts about ourselves, it directly underlies the deeper oddities
of a
civilization which is the modern eighth wonder of the world.
We shall see this as we look at what these people are, at what they
were, and at what they hope to become; not historically, but
psychologically, as one might
perceive, were he but wise enough, in
an acorn, besides the nut itself, two oaks, that one from which it
fell, and that other which from it will rise. These three states,
which we may call its
potential past, present, and future, may be
observed and
studied in three special outgrowths of a race's
character: in its language, in its every-day thoughts, and in its
religion. For in the language of a people we find embalmed the
spirit of its past; in its every-day thoughts, be they of arts or
sciences, is wrapped up its present life; in its religion lie
enfolded its dreamings of a future. From out each of these three
subjects in the Far East
impersonality stares us in the face.
Upon this quality as a
foundation rests the Far Oriental
character.
It is
individually rather than nationally that I propose to scan it
now. It is the action of a
particle in the wave of world-development
I would watch, rather than the propagation of the wave itself.
Inferences about the
movement of the whole will follow of themselves
a knowledge of the
motion of its parts.
But before we attack the subject esoterically, let us look a moment
at the man as he appears in his relation to the
community. Such a
glance will suggest the
peculiaratmosphere of
impersonality that
pervades the people.
However
lacking in cleverness, in merit, or in
imagination a man may
be, there are in our Western world, if his
existence there be so
much as noticed at all, three occasions on which he appears in print.
His birth, his marriage, and his death are all duly chronicled in
type, perhaps as
sufficientlytypical of the general unimportance of
his life. Mention of one's birth, it is true, is an aristocratic
privilege, confined to the world of English society. In democratic
America, no doubt because all men there are
supposed to be born free
and equal, we
ignore the first event, and mention only the last two
episodes, about which our national astuteness asserts no such
effacing equality.
Accepting our newspaper record as a fair enough
summary of the
biography of an average man, let us look at these three momentous
occasions in the
career of a Far Oriental.
Chapter 2. Family.
In the first place, then, the poor little Japanese baby is ushered
into this world in a sadly
impersonal manner, for he is not even
accorded the
distinction of a birthday. He is permitted instead
only the much less special honor of a birth-year. Not that he
begins his separate
existenceotherwise than is the custom of
mortals generally, at a
definiteinstant of time, but that very
little
subsequent notice is ever taken of the fact. On the contrary,
from the moment he makes his appearance he is
spoken of as a year
old, and this same age he continues to be considered in most simple
ease of
calculation, till the
beginning of the next
calendar year.
When that epoch of general
rejoicing arrives, he is credited with
another year himself. So is everybody else. New Year's day is a
common birthday for the
community, a sort of
impersonalanniversaryfor his whole world. A like
reckoning is followed in China and
Korea. Upon the disadvantages of being considered from one's birth
up at least one year and possibly two older than one really is,
it lies beyond our present purpose to expatiate. It is quite evident
that woman has had no voice in the framing of such a chronology.
One would hardly imagine that man had either, so astronomic is the
system. A communistic age is however but an unavoidable detail of
the general
scheme whose most
suggestive feature consists in the
subordination of the
actual birthday of the individual to the
fictitious birthday of the
community. For it is not so much the
want of commemoration shown the subject as the
character of the
commemoration which is
significant. Some slight notice is indeed
paid to birthdays during early
childhood, but even then their
observance is quite
secondary in importance to that of the great
impersonal anniversaries of the third day of the third moon and the
fifth day of the fifth moon. These two occasions
celebrated the
coming of
humanity into the world with an
impersonality
worthy of
the French
revolutionarycalendar. The first of them is called the
festival of girls, and commemorates the birth of girls generally,
the
advent of the
universalfeminine, as one may say. The second is
a
correspondinganniversary for boys. Owing to its sex, the latter
is the greater event of the two, and in
consequence of its most
conspicuous feature is styled the
festival of fishes. The fishes
are hollow paper images of the "tai" from four to six feet in length,
tied to the top of a long pole planted in the ground and tipped with
a gilded ball. Holes in the paper at the mouth and the tail enable
the wind to
inflate the body so that it floats about horizontally,
swaying
hither and t
hither, and tugging at the line after the manner
of a living thing. The fish are emblems of good luck, and are set
up in the
courtyard of every house where a son has been born during
the year. On this auspicious day Tokio is suddenly transformed into
eighty square miles of aquarium.
For any more personal purpose New Year's day eclipses all particular
anniversaries. Then everybody congratulates everybody else upon
everything in general, and
incidentally upon being alive. Such
substitution of an
abstract for a
concrete birthday, although
exceedingly
convenient for others, must at least conduce to
self-forgetfulness on the part of its proper possessor, and tend
inevitably to merge the
identity of the individual in that of the