of ours; nor do I think you would care to hear much about it. The talk on
that subject is too often of the most
extravagant, confused sort. Yet I
may say, the fact itself seems certain enough; nay we can trace out the
inevitable necessity of it in the nature of things. Every man, as I have
stated somewhere, is not only a learner but a doer: he learns with the
mind given him what has been; but with the same mind he discovers farther,
he invents and devises somewhat of his own. Absolutely without originality
there is no man. No man
whatever believes, or can believe, exactly what
his
grandfather believed: he enlarges somewhat, by fresh discovery, his
view of the Universe, and
consequently his Theorem of the Universe,--which
is an _infinite_ Universe, and can never be embraced
wholly or finally by
any view or Theorem, in any
conceivable enlargement: he enlarges somewhat,
I say; finds somewhat that was credible to his
grandfatherincredible to
him, false to him,
inconsistent with some new thing he has discovered or
observed. It is the history of every man; and in the history of Mankind we
see it summed up into great
historical amounts,--revolutions, new epochs.
Dante's Mountain of Purgatory does _not_ stand "in the ocean of the other
Hemisphere," when Columbus has once sailed thither! Men find no such thing
extant in the other Hemisphere. It is not there. It must cease to be
believed to be there. So with all
beliefs
whatsoever in this world,--all
Systems of Belief, and Systems of Practice that spring from these.
If we add now the
melancholy fact, that when Belief waxes uncertain,
Practice too becomes unsound, and errors, injustices and miseries
everywhere more and more
prevail, we shall see material enough for
revolution. At all turns, a man who will _do_
faithfully, needs to believe
firmly. If he have to ask at every turn the world's
suffrage; if he cannot
dispense with the world's
suffrage, and make his own
suffrage serve, he is
a poor eye-servant; the work committed to him will be _mis_done. Every
such man is a daily
contributor to the
inevitabledownfall. Whatsoever
work he does, dis
honestly, with an eye to the
outward look of it, is a new
offence, parent of new
misery to somebody or other. Offences accumulate
till they become insupportable; and are then
violently" target="_blank" title="ad.强暴地;猛烈地">
violently burst through,
cleared off as by
explosion. Dante's
sublime Catholicism,
incredible now
in theory, and defaced still worse by
faithless, doubting and dishonest
practice, has to be torn
asunder by a Luther, Shakspeare's noble Feudalism,
as beautiful as it once looked and was, has to end in a French Revolution.
The accumulation of offences is, as we say, too
literally _exploded_,
blasted
asunder volcanically; and there are long troublous periods, before
matters come to a settlement again.
Surely it were
mournful enough to look only at this face of the matter, and
find in all human opinions and arrangements merely the fact that they were
uncertain,
temporary, subject to the law of death! At bottom, it is not
so: all death, here too we find, is but of the body, not of the
essence or
soul; all
destruction, by
violent revolution or howsoever it be, is but new
creation on a wider scale. Odinism was _Valor_; Christianism was
_Humility_, a nobler kind of Valor. No thought that ever dwelt
honestly as
true in the heart of man but _was_ an honest
insight into God's truth on
man's part, and _has_ an
essential truth in it which endures through all
changes, an
lasting" target="_blank" title="a.永久的,无尽的">
everlasting possession for us all. And, on the other hand,
what a
melancholy notion is that, which has to represent all men, in all
countries and times except our own, as having spent their life in blind
condemnable error, mere lost Pagans, Scandinavians, Mahometans, only that
we might have the true
ultimate knowledge! All
generations of men were
lost and wrong, only that this present little section of a
generation might
be saved and right. They all marched forward there, all
generations since
the
beginning of the world, like the Russian soldiers into the ditch of
Schweidnitz Fort, only to fill up the ditch with their dead bodies, that we
might march over and take the place! It is an
incredible hypothesis.
Such
incredible hypothesis we have seen maintained with
fierce emphasis;
and this or the other poor individual man, with his sect of individual men,
marching as over the dead bodies of all men, towards sure
victory but when
he too, with his hypothesis and
ultimateinfallible credo, sank into the
ditch, and became a dead body, what was to be said?--Withal, it is an
important fact in the nature of man, that he tends to
reckon his own
insight as final, and goes upon it as such. He will always do it, I
suppose, in one or the other way; but it must be in some wider, wiser way
than this. Are not all true men that live, or that ever lived, soldiers of
the same army, enlisted, under Heaven's captaincy, to do battle against the
same enemy, the empire of Darkness and Wrong? Why should we misknow one
another, fight not against the enemy but against ourselves, from mere
difference of uniform? All uniforms shall be good, so they hold in them
true
valiant men. All fashions of arms, the Arab
turban and swift
scimetar, Thor's strong
hammer smiting down _Jotuns_, shall be welcome.
Luther's battle-voice, Dante's march-melody, all
genuine things are with
us, not against us. We are all under one Captain. soldiers of the same
host.--Let us now look a little at this Luther's fighting; what kind of
battle it was, and how he comported himself in it. Luther too was of our
spiritual Heroes; a Prophet to his country and time.
As introductory to the whole, a remark about Idolatry will perhaps be in
place here. One of Mahomet's characteristics, which indeed belongs to all
Prophets, is
unlimited implacable zeal against Idolatry. It is the grand
theme of Prophets: Idolatry, the
worshipping of dead Idols as the
Divinity, is a thing they cannot away with, but have to denounce
continually, and brand with inexpiable reprobation; it is the chief of all
the sins they see done under the sun. This is worth noting. We will not
enter here into the
theological question about Idolatry. Idol is
_Eidolon_, a thing seen, a
symbol. It is not God, but a Symbol of God; and
perhaps one may question whether any the most benighted
mortal ever took it
for more than a Symbol. I fancy, he did not think that the poor image his
own hands had made _was_ God; but that God was emblemed by it, that God was
in it some way or other. And now in this sense, one may ask, Is not all
worshipwhatsoever a
worship by Symbols, by _eidola_, or things seen?
Whether _seen_, rendered
visible as an image or picture to the
bodily eye;
or
visible only to the
inward eye, to the
imagination, to the intellect:
this makes a
superficial, but no
substantial difference. It is still a
Thing Seen,
significant of Godhead; an Idol. The most rigorous Puritan has
his Confession of Faith, and
intellectual Representation of Divine things,
and
worships
thereby;
thereby is
worship first made possible for him. All
creeds, liturgies, religious forms, conceptions that fitly
invest religious
feelings, are in this sense _eidola_, things seen. All
worshipwhatsoevermust proceed by Symbols, by Idols:--we may say, all Idolatry is
comparative, and the worst Idolatry is only _more_ idolatrous.
Where, then, lies the evil of it? Some fatal evil must lie in it, or
earnestprophetic men would not on all hands so reprobate it. Why is
Idolatry so
hateful to Prophets? It seems to me as if, in the
worship of
those poor
woodensymbols, the thing that had
chiefly provoked the Prophet,
and filled his inmost soul with
indignation and aversion, was not exactly
what suggested itself to his own thought, and came out of him in words to
others, as the thing. The rudest
heathen that
worshipped Canopus, or the
Caabah Black-Stone, he, as we saw, was superior to the horse that
worshipped nothing at all! Nay there was a kind of
lasting merit in that
poor act of his; analogous to what is still meritorious in Poets:
recognition of a certain endless _
divine_ beauty and
significance in stars
and all natural objects
whatsoever. Why should the Prophet so mercilessly
condemn him? The poorest
mortalworshipping his Fetish, while his heart is
full of it, may be an object of pity, of
contempt and avoidance, if you
will; but cannot surely be an object of
hatred. Let his heart _be_
honestly full of it, the whole space of his dark narrow mind illuminated
thereby; in one word, let him entirely _believe_ in his Fetish,--it will
then be, I should say, if not well with him, yet as well as it can readily
be made to be, and you will leave him alone, unmolested there.
But here enters the fatal circumstance of Idolatry, that, in the era of the
Prophets, no man's mind _is_ any longer
honestly filled with his Idol or
Symbol. Before the Prophet can arise who,
seeing through it, knows it to
be mere wood, many men must have begun dimly to doubt that it was little
more. Condemnable Idolatry is _insincere_ Idolatry. Doubt has eaten out
the heart of it: a human soul is seen clinging spasmodically to an Ark of
the Covenant, which it half feels now to have become a Phantasm. This is
one of the balefulest sights. Souls are no longer filled with their
Fetish; but only
pretend to be filled, and would fain make themselves feel
that they are filled. "You do not believe," said Coleridge; "you only
believe that you believe." It is the final scene in all kinds of Worship
and Symbolism; the sure
symptom that death is now nigh. It is equivalent
to what we call Formulism, and Worship of Formulas, in these days of ours.
No more immoral act can be done by a human creature; for it is the
beginning of all im
morality, or rather it is the
impossibilityhenceforthof any
moralitywhatsoever: the innermost moral soul is paralyzed
thereby,
cast into fatal
magnetic sleep! Men are no longer _sincere_ men. I do not
wonder that the
earnest man denounces this, brands it, prosecutes it with
inextinguishable aversion. He and it, all good and it, are at death-feud.
Blamable Idolatry is _Cant_, and even what one may call Sincere-Cant.
Sincere-Cant: that is worth thinking of! Every sort of Worship ends with