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<h1> DIANA OF THE CROSSWAYS </h1>
<h2> By George Meredith </h2>
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<h2> CHAPTER I. OF DIARIES AND DIARISTS TOUCHING THE HEROINE </h2>
<p>Among the Diaries beginning with the second quarter of our century, there
is frequent mention of a lady then becoming famous for her beauty and her
wit: 'an unusual combination,' in the deliberate syllables of one of the
writers, who is, however, not disposed to personal irony when speaking of
her. It is otherwise in his case and a general fling at the sex we may
deem pardonable, for doing as little harm to womankind as the stone of an
urchin cast upon the bosom of mother Earth; though men must look some day
to have it returned to them, which is a certainty; and indeed full surely
will our idle-handed youngster too, in his riper season; be heard
complaining of a strange assault of wanton missiles, coming on him he
knows not whence; for we are all of us distinctly marked to get back what
we give, even from the thing named inanimate nature.</p>
<p>The 'LEAVES FROM THE DIARY OF HENRY WILMERS' are studded with examples of
the dinner-table wit of the time, not always worth quotation twice; for
smart remarks have their measured distances, many requiring to be a brule
pourpoint, or within throw of the pistol, to make it hit; in other words,
the majority of them are addressed directly to our muscular system, and
they have no effect when we stand beyond the range. On the contrary, they
reflect sombrely on the springs of hilarity in the generation preceding
us; with due reserve of credit, of course, to an animal vivaciousness that
seems to have wanted so small an incitement. Our old yeomanry farmers—returning
to their beds over ferny commons under bright moonlight from a neighbour's
harvest-home, eased their bubbling breasts with a ready roar not unakin to
it. Still the promptness to laugh is an excellent progenitorial foundation
for the wit to come in a people; and undoubtedly the diarial record of an
imputed piece of wit is witness to the spouting of laughter. This should
comfort us while we skim the sparkling passages of the 'Leaves.' When a
nation has acknowledged that it is as yet but in the fisticuff stage of
the art of condensing our purest sense to golden sentences, a readier
appreciation will be extended to the gift: which is to strike not the
dazzled eyes, the unanticipating nose, the ribs, the sides, and stun us,
twirl us, hoodwink, mystify, tickle and twitch, by dexterities of lingual
sparring and shuffling, but to strike roots in the mind, the Hesperides of
good things. We shall then set a price on the 'unusual combination.' A
witty woman is a treasure; a witty Beauty is a power. Has she actual
beauty, actual wit?—not simply a tidal material beauty that passes
current any pretty flippancy or staggering pretentiousness? Grant the
combination, she will appear a veritable queen of her period, fit for
homage; at least meriting a disposition to believe the best of her, in the
teeth of foul rumour; because the well of true wit is truth itself, the
gathering of the precious drops of right reason, wisdom's lightning; and
no soul possessing and dispensing it can justly be a target for the world,
however well armed the world confronting her. Our temporary world, that
Old Credulity and stone-hurling urchin in one, supposes it possible for a
woman to be mentally active up to the point of spiritual clarity and also
fleshly vile; a guide to life and a biter at the fruits of death; both
open mind and hypocrite. It has not yet been taught to appreciate a
quality certifying to sound citizenship as authoritatively as acres of
land in fee simple, or coffers of bonds, shares and stocks, and a more
imperishable guarantee. The multitudes of evil reports which it takes for
proof, are marshalled against her without question of the nature of the
victim, her temptress beauty being a sufficiently presumptive delinquent.
It does not pretend to know the whole, or naked body of the facts; it
knows enough for its furry dubiousness; and excepting the sentimental of
men, a rocket-headed horde, ever at the heels of fair faces for ignition,
and up starring away at a hint of tearfulness; excepting further by chance
a solid champion man, or some generous woman capable of faith in the
pelted solitary of her sex, our temporary world blows direct East on her
shivering person. The scandal is warrant for that; the circumstances of
the scandal emphasize the warrant. And how clever she is! Cleverness is an
attribute of the selecter missionary lieutenants of Satan. We pray to be
defended from her cleverness: she flashes bits of speech that catch men in
their unguarded corner. The wary stuff their ears, the stolid bid her best
sayings rebound on her reputation. Nevertheless the world, as Christian,
remembers its professions, and a portion of it joins the burly in morals
by extending to her a rough old charitable mercifulness; better than
sentimental ointment, but the heaviest blow she has to bear, to a
character swimming for life.</p>
<p>That the lady in question was much quoted, the Diaries and Memoirs
testify. Hearsay as well as hearing was at work to produce the abundance;
and it was a novelty in England, where (in company) the men are the
pointed talkers, and the women conversationally fair Circassians. They
are, or they know that they should be; it comes to the same. Happily our
civilization has not prescribed the veil to them. The mutes have here and
there a sketch or label attached to their names: they are 'strikingly
handsome'; they are 'very good-looking'; occasionally they are noted as
'extremely entertaining': in what manner, is inquired by a curious
posterity, that in so many matters is left unendingly to jump the empty
and gaping figure of interrogation over its own full stop. Great ladies
must they be, at the web of politics, for us to hear them cited
discoursing. Henry Wilmers is not content to quote the beautiful Mrs.
Warwick, he attempts a portrait. Mrs. Warwick is 'quite Grecian.' She
might 'pose for a statue.' He presents her in carpenter's lines, with a
dab of school-box colours, effective to those whom the Keepsake fashion
can stir. She has a straight nose, red lips, raven hair, black eyes, rich
complexion, a remarkably fine bust, and she walks well, and has an
agreeable voice; likewise 'delicate extremities.' The writer was created
for popularity, had he chosen to bring his art into our literary market.</p>
<p>Perry Wilkinson is not so elaborate: he describes her in his
'Recollections' as a splendid brune, eclipsing all the blondes coming near
her: and 'what is more, the beautiful creature can talk.' He wondered, for
she was young, new to society. Subsequently he is rather ashamed of his
wonderment, and accounts for it by 'not having known she was Irish.' She
'turns out to be Dan Merion's daughter.'</p>
<p>We may assume that he would have heard if she had any whiff of a brogue.
Her sounding of the letter R a trifle scrupulously is noticed by Lady
Pennon: 'And last, not least, the lovely Mrs. Warwick, twenty minutes
behind the dinner-hour, and r-r-really fearing she was late.'</p>
<p>After alluding to the soft influence of her beauty and ingenuousness on
the vexed hostess, the kindly old marchioness adds, that it was no wonder
she was late, 'for just before starting from home she had broken loose
from her husband for good, and she entered the room absolutely houseless!'
She was not the less 'astonishingly brilliant.' Her observations were
often 'so unexpectedly droll I laughed till I cried.' Lady Pennon became
in consequence one of the stanch supporters of Mrs. Warwick.</p>
<p>Others were not so easily won. Perry Wilkinson holds a balance when it
goes beyond a question of her wit and beauty. Henry Wilmers puts the case
aside, and takes her as he finds her. His cousin, the clever and cynical
Dorset Wilmers, whose method of conveying his opinions without stating
them was famous, repeats on two occasions when her name appears in his
pages, 'handsome, lively, witty'; and the stressed repetition of
calculated brevity while a fiery scandal was abroad concerning the lady,
implies weighty substance—the reservation of a constable's
truncheon, that could legally have knocked her character down to the
pavement. We have not to ask what he judged. But Dorset Wilmers was a
political opponent of the eminent Peer who yields the second name to the
scandal, and politics in his day flushed the conceptions of men. His short
references to 'that Warwick-Dannisburgh affair' are not verbally
malicious. He gets wind of the terms of Lord Dannisburgh's will and
testament, noting them without comment. The oddness of the instrument in
one respect may have served his turn; we have no grounds for thinking him
malignant. The death of his enemy closes his allusions to Mrs. Warwick. He
was growing ancient, and gout narrowed the circle he whirled in. Had he
known this 'handsome, lively, witty' apparition as a woman having
political and social views of her own, he would not, one fancies, have
been so stingless. Our England exposes a sorry figure in his
Reminiscences. He struck heavily, round and about him, wherever he moved;
he had by nature a tarnishing eye that cast discolouration. His unadorned
harsh substantive statements, excluding the adjectives, give his Memoirs
the appearance of a body of facts, attractive to the historic Muse, which
has learnt to esteem those brawny sturdy giants marching club on shoulder,
independent of henchman, in preference to your panoplied knights with
their puffy squires, once her favourites, and wind-filling to her columns,
ultimately found indigestible.</p>
<p>His exhibition of his enemy Lord Dannisburgh, is of the class of noble
portraits we see swinging over inn-portals, grossly unlike in likeness.
The possibility of the man's doing or saying this and that adumbrates the
improbability: he had something of the character capable of it, too much
good sense for the performance. We would think so, and still the shadow is
round our thoughts. Lord Dannisburgh was a man of ministerial tact,
official ability, Pagan morality; an excellent general manager, if no
genius in statecraft. But he was careless of social opinion, unbuttoned,
and a laugher. We know that he could be chivalrous toward women,
notwithstanding the perplexities he brought on them, and this the
Dorset-Diary does not show.</p>
<p>His chronicle is less mischievous as regards Mrs. Warwick than the
paragraphs of Perry Wilkinson, a gossip presenting an image of perpetual
chatter, like the waxen-faced street advertizements of light and easy
dentistry. He has no belief, no disbelief; names the pro-party and the
con; recites the case, and discreetly, over-discreetly; and pictures the
trial, tells the list of witnesses, records the verdict: so the case went,
and some thought one thing, some another thing: only it is reported for
positive that a miniature of the incriminated lady was cleverly smuggled
over to the jury, and juries sitting upon these eases, ever since their
bedazzlement by Phryne, as you know.... And then he relates an anecdote of
the husband, said to have been not a bad fellow before he married his
Diana; and the naming of the Goddess reminds him that the second person in
the indictment is now everywhere called 'The elderly shepherd';—but
immediately after the bridal bells this husband became sour and
insupportable, and either she had the trick of putting him publicly in the
wrong, or he lost all shame in playing the churlish domestic tyrant. The
instances are incredible of a gentleman. Perry Wilkinson gives us two or
three; one on the authority of a personal friend who witnessed the scene;
at the Warwick whist-table, where the fair Diana would let loose her
silvery laugh in the intervals. She was hardly out of her teens, and
should have been dancing instead of fastened to a table. A difference of
fifteen years in the ages of the wedded pair accounts poorly for the
husband's conduct, however solemn a business the game of whist. We read
that he burst out at last, with bitter mimicry, 'yang—yang—yang!'
and killed the bright laugh, shot it dead. She had outraged the decorum of
the square-table only while the cards were making. Perhaps her too-dead
ensuing silence, as of one striving to bring back the throbs to a slain
bird in her bosom, allowed the gap between the wedded pair to be visible,
for it was dated back to prophecy as soon as the trumpet proclaimed it.</p>
<p>But a multiplication of similar instances, which can serve no other
purpose than that of an apology, is a miserable vindication of innocence.
The more we have of them the darker the inference. In delicate situations
the chatterer is noxious. Mrs. Warwick had numerous apologists. Those
trusting to her perfect rectitude were rarer. The liberty she allowed
herself in speech and action must have been trying to her defenders in a
land like ours; for here, and able to throw its shadow on our giddy
upper-circle, the rigour of the game of life, relaxed though it may
sometimes appear, would satisfy the staidest whist-player. She did not
wish it the reverse, even when claiming a space for laughter: 'the breath
of her soul,' as she called it, and as it may be felt in the early youth
of a lively nature. She, especially, with her multitude of quick
perceptions and imaginative avenues, her rapid summaries, her sense of the
comic, demanded this aerial freedom.</p>
<p>We have it from Perry Wilkinson that the union of the divergent couple was
likened to another union always in a Court of Law. There was a
distinction; most analogies will furnish one; and here we see England and
Ireland changeing their parts, until later, after the breach, when the
Englishman and Irishwoman resumed a certain resemblance to the yoked
Islands.</p>
<p>Henry Wilmers, I have said, deals exclusively with the wit and charm of
the woman. He treats the scandal as we might do in like manner if her
story had not to be told. But these are not reporting columns; very little
of it shall trouble them. The position is faced, and that is all. The
position is one of the battles incident to women, their hardest. It asks
for more than justice from men, for generosity, our civilization not being
yet of the purest. That cry of hounds at her disrobing by Law is
instinctive. She runs, and they give tongue; she is a creature of the
chase. Let her escape unmangled, it will pass in the record that she did
once publicly run, and some old dogs will persist in thinking her
cunninger than the virtuous, which never put themselves in such positions,
but ply the distaff at home. Never should reputation of woman trail a
scent! How true! and true also that the women of waxwork never do; and
that the women of happy marriages do not; nor the women of holy nunneries;
nor the women lucky in their arts. It is a test of the civilized to see
and hear, and add no yapping to the spectacle.</p>
<p>Thousands have reflected on a Diarist's power to cancel our Burial
Service. Not alone the cleric's good work is upset by him; but the
sexton's as well. He howks the grave, and transforms the quiet worms, busy
on a single poor peaceable body, into winged serpents that disorder sky
and earth with a deadly flight of zig-zags, like military rockets, among
the living. And if these are given to cry too much, to have their tender
sentiments considered, it cannot be said that History requires the flaying
of them. A gouty Diarist, a sheer gossip Diarist, may thus, in the bequest
of a trail of reminiscences, explode our temples (for our very temples
have powder in store), our treasuries, our homesteads, alive with
dynamitic stuff; nay, disconcert our inherited veneration, dislocate the
intimate connexion between the tugged flaxen forelock and a title.</p>
<p>No similar blame is incurred by Henry Wilmers. No blame whatever, one
would say, if he had been less, copious, or not so subservient, in
recording the lady's utterances; for though the wit of a woman may be
terse, quite spontaneous, as this lady's assuredly was here and there, she
is apt to spin it out of a museful mind, at her toilette, or by the lonely
fire, and sometimes it is imitative; admirers should beware of holding it
up to the withering glare of print: she herself, quoting an obscure
maximmonger, says of these lapidary sentences, that they have merely 'the
value of chalk-eggs, which lure the thinker to sit,' and tempt the vacuous
to strain for the like, one might add; besides flattering the world to
imagine itself richer than it is in eggs that are golden. Henry Wilmers
notes a multitude of them. 'The talk fell upon our being creatures of
habit, and how far it was good: She said:—It is there that we see
ourselves crutched between love grown old and indifference ageing to
love.' Critic ears not present at the conversation catch an echo of maxims
and aphorisms overchannel, notwithstanding a feminine thrill in the irony
of 'ageing to love.' The quotation ranks rather among the testimonies to
her charm.</p>
<p>She is fresher when speaking of the war of the sexes. For one sentence out
of many, though we find it to be but the clever literary clothing of a
common accusation: 'Men may have rounded Seraglio Point: they have not yet
doubled Cape Turk.'</p>
<p>It is war, and on the male side, Ottoman war: her experience reduced her
to think so positively. Her main personal experience was in the social
class which is primitively venatorial still, canine under its polish.</p>
<p>She held a brief for her beloved Ireland. She closes a discussion upon
Irish agitation by saying rather neatly: 'You have taught them it is
English as well as common human nature to feel an interest in the dog that
has bitten you.'</p>
<p>The dog periodically puts on madness to win attention; we gather then that
England, in an angry tremour, tries him with water-gruel to prove him
sane.</p>
<p>Of the Irish priest (and she was not of his retinue), when he was deemed a
revolutionary, Henry Wilmers notes her saying: 'Be in tune with him; he is
in the key-note for harmony. He is shepherd, doctor, nurse, comforter,
anecdotist and fun-maker to his poor flock; and you wonder they see the
burning gateway of their heaven in him? Conciliate the priest.'</p>
<p>It has been partly done, done late, when the poor flock have found their
doctoring and shepherding at other hands: their 'bulb-food and fiddle,'
that she petitioned for, to keep them from a complete shaving off their
patch of bog and scrub soil, without any perception of the tremulous
transatlantic magnification of the fiddle, and the splitting discord of
its latest inspiriting jig.</p>
<p>And she will not have the consequences of the 'weariful old Irish duel
between Honour and Hunger judged by bread and butter juries.'</p>
<p>She had need to be beautiful to be tolerable in days when Englishmen stood
more openly for the strong arm to maintain the Union. Her troop of enemies
was of her summoning.</p>
<p>Ordinarily her topics were of wider range, and those of a woman who mixed
hearing with reading, and observation with her musings. She has no doleful
ejaculatory notes, of the kind peculiar to women at war, containing
one-third of speculative substance to two of sentimental—a feminine
plea for comprehension and a squire; and it was probably the reason (as
there is no reason to suppose an emotional cause) why she exercised her
evident sway over the mind of so plain and straightforward an Englishman
as Henry Wilmers. She told him that she read rapidly, 'a great deal at one
gulp,' and thought in flashes—a way with the makers of phrases. She
wrote, she confessed, laboriously. The desire to prune, compress,
overcharge, was a torment to the nervous woman writing under a sharp
necessity for payment. Her songs were shot off on the impulsion; prose was
the heavy task. 'To be pointedly rational,' she said, 'is a greater
difficulty for me than a fine delirium.' She did not talk as if it would
have been so, he remarks. One is not astonished at her appearing an
'actress' to the flat-minded. But the basis of her woman's nature was
pointed flame: In the fulness of her history we perceive nothing
histrionic. Capricious or enthusiastic in her youth, she never trifled
with feeling; and if she did so with some showy phrases and occasionally
proffered commonplaces in gilt, as she was much excited to do, her moods
of reflection were direct, always large and honest, universal as well as
feminine.</p>
<p>Her saying that 'A woman in the pillory restores the original bark of
brotherhood to mankind,' is no more than a cry of personal anguish. She
has golden apples in her apron. She says of life: 'When I fail to cherish
it in every fibre the fires within are waning,' and that drives like rain
to the roots. She says of the world, generously, if with tapering idea:
'From the point of vision of the angels, this ugly monster, only half out
of slime, must appear our one constant hero.' It can be read maliciously,
but abstain.</p>
<p>She says of Romance: 'The young who avoid that region escape the title of
Fool at the cost of a celestial crown.' Of Poetry: 'Those that have souls
meet their fellows there.'</p>
<p>But she would have us away with sentimentalism. Sentimental people, in her
phrase, 'fiddle harmonics on the strings of sensualism,' to the delight of
a world gaping for marvels of musical execution rather than for music. For
our world is all but a sensational world at present, in maternal travail
of a soberer, a braver, a brighter-eyed. Her reflections are thus to be
interpreted, it seems to me. She says, 'The vices of the world's nobler
half in this day are feminine.' We have to guard against 'half-conceptions
of wisdom, hysterical goodness, an impatient charity'—against the
elementary state of the altruistic virtues, distinguishable as the
sickness and writhings of our egoism to cast its first slough. Idea is
there. The funny part of it is our finding it in books of fiction composed
for payment. Manifestly this lady did not 'chameleon' her pen from the
colour of her audience: she was not of the uniformed rank and file
marching to drum and fife as gallant interpreters of popular appetite, and
going or gone to soundlessness and the icy shades.</p>
<p>Touches inward are not absent: 'To have the sense of the eternal in life
is a short flight for the soul. To have had it, is the soul's vitality.'
And also: 'Palliation of a sin is the hunted creature's refuge and final
temptation. Our battle is ever between spirit and flesh. Spirit must brand
the flesh, that it may live.'</p>
<p>You are entreated to repress alarm. She was by preference light-handed;
and her saying of oratory, that 'It is always the more impressive for the
spice of temper which renders it untrustworthy,' is light enough. On
Politics she is rhetorical and swings: she wrote to spur a junior
politician: 'It is the first business of men, the school to mediocrity, to
the covetously ambitious a sty, to the dullard his amphitheatre, arms of
Titans to the desperately enterprising, Olympus to the genius.' What a
woman thinks of women, is the test of her nature. She saw their existing
posture clearly, yet believed, as men disincline to do, that they grow.
She says, that 'In their judgements upon women men are females, voices of
the present (sexual) dilemma.' They desire to have 'a still woman; who can
make a constant society of her pins and needles.' They create by stoppage
a volcano, and are amazed at its eruptiveness. 'We live alone, and do not
much feel it till we are visited.' Love is presumably the visitor. Of the
greater loneliness of women, she says: 'It is due to the prescribed
circumscription of their minds, of which they become aware in agitation.
Were the walls about them beaten down, they would understand that
solitariness is a common human fate and the one chance of growth, like
space for timber.' As to the sensations of women after the beating down of
the walls, she owns that the multitude of the timorous would yearn in
shivering affright for the old prison-nest, according to the sage
prognostic of men; but the flying of a valiant few would form a vanguard.
And we are informed that the beginning of a motive life with women must be
in the head, equally with men (by no means a truism when she wrote). Also
that 'men do not so much fear to lose the hearts of thoughtful women as
their strict attention to their graces.' The present market is what men
are for preserving: an observation of still reverberating force. Generally
in her character of the feminine combatant there is a turn of phrase, like
a dimple near the lips showing her knowledge that she was uttering but a
tart measure of the truth. She had always too much lambent humour to be
the dupe of the passion wherewith, as she says, 'we lash ourselves into
the persuasive speech distinguishing us from the animals.'</p>
<p>The instances of her drollery are rather hinted by the Diarists for the
benefit of those who had met her and could inhale the atmosphere at a
word. Drolleries, humours, reputed witticisms, are like odours of roast
meats, past with the picking of the joint. Idea is the only vital breath.
They have it rarely, or it eludes the chronicler. To say of the great
erratic and forsaken Lady A****, after she had accepted the consolations
of Bacchus, that her name was properly signified in asterisks 'as she was
now nightly an Ariadne in heaven through her God,' sounds to us a
roundabout, with wit somewhere and fun nowhere. Sitting at the roast we
might have thought differently. Perry Wilkinson is not happier in citing
her reply to his compliment on the reviewers' unanimous eulogy of her
humour and pathos:—the 'merry clown and poor pantaloon demanded of
us in every work of fiction,' she says, lamenting the writer's compulsion
to go on producing them for applause until it is extremest age that knocks
their knees. We are informed by Lady Pennon of 'the most amusing
description of the first impressions of a pretty English simpleton in
Paris'; and here is an opportunity for ludicrous contrast of the French
and English styles of pushing flatteries—'piping to the charmed
animal,' as Mrs. Warwick terms it in another place: but Lady Pennon was
acquainted with the silly woman of the piece, and found her amusement in
the 'wonderful truth' of that representation.</p>
<p>Diarists of amusing passages are under an obligation to paint us a
realistic revival of the time, or we miss the relish. The odour of the
roast, and more, a slice of it is required, unless the humorous thing be
preternaturally spirited to walk the earth as one immortal among a number
less numerous than the mythic Gods. 'He gives good dinners,' a candid old
critic said, when asked how it was that he could praise a certain poet. In
an island of chills and fogs, coelum crebris imbribus ac nebulis foedum,
the comic and other perceptions are dependent on the stirring of the
gastric juices. And such a revival by any of us would be impolitic, were
it a possible attempt, before our systems shall have been fortified by
philosophy. Then may it be allowed to the Diarist simply to relate, and we
can copy from him.</p>
<p>Then, ah! then, moreover, will the novelist's Art, now neither blushless
infant nor executive man, have attained its majority. We can then be
veraciously historical, honestly transcriptive. Rose-pink and dirty drab
will alike have passed away. Philosophy is the foe of both, and their
silly cancelling contest, perpetually renewed in a shuffle of extremes, as
it always is where a phantasm falseness reigns, will no longer baffle the
contemplation of natural flesh, smother no longer the soul issuing out of
our incessant strife. Philosophy bids us to see that we are not so pretty
as rose-pink, not so repulsive as dirty drab; and that instead of
everlastingly shifting those barren aspects, the sight of ourselves is
wholesome, bearable, fructifying, finally a delight. Do but perceive that
we are coming to philosophy, the stride toward it will be a giant's—a
century a day. And imagine the celestial refreshment of having a pure
decency in the place of sham; real flesh; a soul born active, wind-beaten,
but ascending. Honourable will fiction then appear; honourable, a fount of
life, an aid to life, quick with our blood. Why, when you behold it you
love it—and you will not encourage it?—or only when presented
by dead hands? Worse than that alternative dirty drab, your recurring
rose-pink is rebuked by hideous revelations of the filthy foul; for nature
will force her way, and if you try to stifle her by drowning, she comes
up, not the fairest part of her uppermost! Peruse your Realists—really
your castigators for not having yet embraced Philosophy. As she grows in
the flesh when discreetly tended, nature is unimpeachable, flower-eke, yet
not too decoratively a flower; you must have her with the stem, the
thorns, the roots, and the fat bedding of roses. In this fashion she grew,
says historical fiction; thus does she flourish now, would say the modern
transcript, reading the inner as well as exhibiting the outer.</p>
<p>And how may you know that you have reached to Philosophy? You touch her
skirts when you share her hatred of the sham decent, her derision of
sentimentalism. You are one with her when—but I would not have you a
thousand years older! Get to her, if in no other way, by the sentimental
route:—that very winding path, which again and again brings you
round to the point of original impetus, where you have to be unwound for
another whirl; your point of original impetus being the grossly material,
not at all the spiritual. It is most true that sentimentalism springs from
the former, merely and badly aping the latter,—fine flower, or
pinnacle flame-spire, of sensualism that it is, could it do other? and
accompanying the former it traverses tracts of desert here and there
couching in a garden, catching with one hand at fruits, with another at
colours; imagining a secret ahead, and goaded by an appetite, sustained by
sheer gratifications. Fiddle in harmonics as it may, it will have these
gratifications at all costs. Should none be discoverable, at once you are
at the Cave of Despair, beneath the funereal orb of Glaucoma, in the thick
midst of poniarded, slit-throat, rope-dependant figures, placarded across
the bosom Disillusioned, Infidel, Agnostic, Miserrimus. That is the
sentimental route to advancement. Spirituality does not light it;
evanescent dreams: are its oil-lamps, often with wick askant in the
socket.</p>
<p>A thousand years! You may count full many a thousand by this route before
you are one with divine Philosophy. Whereas a single flight of brains will
reach and embrace her; give you the savour of Truth, the right use of the
senses, Reality's infinite sweetness; for these things are in philosophy;
and the fiction which is the summary of actual Life, the within and
without of us, is, prose or verse, plodding or soaring, philosophy's elect
handmaiden. To such an end let us bend our aim to work, knowing that every
form of labour, even this flimsiest, as you esteem it, should minister to
growth. If in any branch of us we fail in growth, there is, you are aware,
an unfailing aboriginal democratic old monster that waits to pull us down;
certainly the branch, possibly the tree; and for the welfare of Life we
fall. You are acutely conscious of yonder old monster when he is mouthing
at you in politics. Be wary of him in the heart; especially be wary of the
disrelish of brainstuff. You must feed on something. Matter that is not
nourishing to brains can help to constitute nothing but the bodies which
are pitched on rubbish heaps. Brainstuff is not lean stuff;—the
brainstuff of fiction is internal history, and to suppose it dull is the
profoundest of errors; how deep, you will understand when I tell you that
it is the very football of the holiday-afternoon imps below. They kick it
for pastime; they are intelligences perverted. The comic of it, the
adventurous, the tragic, they make devilish, to kindle their Ogygian
hilarity. But—sharply comic, adventurous, instructively tragic, it
is in the interwinding with human affairs, to give a flavour of the modern
day reviving that of our Poet, between whom and us yawn Time's most hollow
jaws. Surely we owe a little to Time, to cheer his progress; a little to
posterity, and to our country. Dozens of writers will be in at yonder
yawning breach, if only perusers will rally to the philosophic standard.
They are sick of the woodeny puppetry they dispense, as on a race-course
to the roaring frivolous. Well, if not dozens, half-dozens; gallant pens
are alive; one can speak of them in the plural. I venture to say that they
would be satisfied with a dozen for audience, for a commencement. They
would perish of inanition, unfed, unapplauded, amenable to the laws
perchance for an assault on their last remaining pair of ears or heels, to
hold them fast. But the example is the thing; sacrifices must be expected.
The example might, one hopes, create a taste. A great modern writer, of
clearest eye and head, now departed, capable in activity of presenting
thoughtful women, thinking men, groaned over his puppetry, that he dared
not animate them, flesh though they were, with the fires of positive
brainstuff. He could have done it, and he is of the departed! Had he
dared, he would (for he was Titan enough) have raised the Art in dignity
on a level with History; to an interest surpassing the narrative of public
deeds as vividly as man's heart and brain in their union excel his plain
lines of action to eruption. The everlasting pantomime, suggested by Mrs.
Warwick in her exclamation to Perry Wilkinson, is derided, not
unrighteously, by our graver seniors. They name this Art the pasture of
idiots, a method for idiotizing the entire population which has taken to
reading; and which soon discovers that it can write likewise, that sort of
stuff at least. The forecast may be hazarded, that if we do not speedily
embrace Philosophy in fiction, the Art is doomed to extinction, under the
shining multitude of its professors. They are fast capping the candle.
Instead, therefore, of objurgating the timid intrusions of Philosophy,
invoke her presence, I pray you. History without her is the skeleton map
of events: Fiction a picture of figures modelled on no skeleton-anatomy.
But each, with Philosophy in aid, blooms, and is humanly shapely. To
demand of us truth to nature, excluding Philosophy, is really to bid a
pumpkin caper. As much as legs are wanted for the dance, Philosophy is
required to make our human nature credible and acceptable. Fiction
implores you to heave a bigger breast and take her in with this heavenly
preservative helpmate, her inspiration and her essence. You have to teach
your imagination of the feminine image you have set up to bend your
civilized knees to, that it must temper its fastidiousness, shun the
grossness of the over-dainty. Or, to speak in the philosophic tongue, you
must turn on yourself, resolutely track and seize that burrower, and scrub
and cleanse him; by which process, during the course of it, you will
arrive at the conception of the right heroical woman for you to worship:
and if you prove to be of some spiritual stature, you may reach to an
ideal of the heroical feminine type for the worship of mankind, an image
as yet in poetic outline only, on our upper skies.</p>
<p>'So well do we know ourselves, that we one and all determine to know a
purer,' says the heroine of my columns. Philosophy in fiction tells, among
various other matters, of the perils of this intimate acquaintance with a
flattering familiar in the 'purer'—a person who more than ceases to
be of else to us after his ideal shall have led up men from their flint
and arrowhead caverns to intercommunicative daylight. For when the
fictitious creature has performed that service of helping to civilize the
world, it becomes the most dangerous of delusions, causing first the
individual to despise the mass, and then to join the mass in crushing the
individual. Wherewith let us to our story, the froth being out of the
bottle.</p>
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