<h2>THE ILLUSION OF HISTORIC TIME</h2>
<p>He who has survived his childhood intelligently must become conscious
of something more than a change in his sense of the present and in his
apprehension of the future. He must be aware of no less a thing
than the destruction of the past. Its events and empires stand
where they did, and the mere relation of time is as it was. But
that which has fallen together, has fallen in, has fallen close, and
lies in a little heap, is the past itself—time—the fact
of antiquity.</p>
<p>He has grown into a smaller world as he has grown older. There
are no more extremities. Recorded time has no more terrors.
The unit of measure which he holds in his hand has become in his eyes
a thing of paltry length. The discovery draws in the annals of
mankind. He had thought them to be wide.</p>
<p>For a man has nothing whereby to order and place the floods, the
states, the conquests, and the temples of the past, except only the
measure which he holds. Call that measure a space of ten years.
His first ten years had given him the illusion of a most august scale
and measure. It was then that he conceived Antiquity. But
now! Is it to a decade of ten such little years as these now in
his hand—ten of his mature years—that men give the dignity
of a century? They call it an age; but what if life shows now
so small that the word age has lost its gravity?</p>
<p>In fact, when a child begins to know that there is a past, he has
a most noble rod to measure it by—he has his own ten years.
He attributes an overwhelming majesty to all recorded time. He
confers distance. He, and he alone, bestows mystery. Remoteness
is his. He creates more than mortal centuries. He sends
armies fighting into the extremities of the past. He assigns the
Parthenon to a hill of ages, and the temples of Upper Egypt to sidereal
time.</p>
<p>If there were no child, there would be nothing old. He, having
conceived old time, communicates a remembrance at least of the mystery
to the mind of the man. The man perceives at last all the illusion,
but he cannot forget what was his conviction when he was a child.
He had once a persuasion of Antiquity. And this is not for nothing.
The enormous undeception that comes upon him still leaves spaces in
his mind.</p>
<p>But the undeception is rude work. The man receives successive
shocks. It is as though one strained level eyes towards the horizon,
and then were bidden to shorten his sight and to close his search within
a poor half acre before his face. Now, it is that he suddenly
perceives the hitherto remote, remote youth of his own parents to have
been something familiarly near, so measured by his new standard; again,
it is the coming of Attila that is displaced. Those ten last years
of his have corrected the world. There needs no other rod than
that ten years’ rod to chastise all the imaginations of the spirit
of man. It makes history skip.</p>
<p>To have lived through any appreciable part of any century is to hold
thenceforth a mere century cheap enough. But, it may be said,
the mystery of change remains. Nay, it does not. Change
that trudges through our own world—our contemporary world—is
not very mysterious. We perceive its pace; it is a jog-trot.
Even so, we now consider, jolted the changes of the past, with the same
hurry.</p>
<p>The man, therefore, who has intelligently ceased to be a child scans
through a shortened avenue the reaches of the past. He marvels
that he was so deceived. For it was a very deception. If
the Argonauts, for instance, had been children, it would have been well
enough for the child to measure their remoteness and their acts with
his own magnificent measure. But they were only men and demi-gods.
Thus they belong to him as he is now—a man; and not to him as
he was once—a child. It was quite wrong to lay the child’s
enormous ten years’ rule along the path from our time to theirs;
that path must be skipped by the nimble yard in the man’s present
possession. Decidedly the Argonauts are no subject for the boy.</p>
<p>What, then? Is the record of the race nothing but a bundle
of such little times? Nay, it seems that childhood, which created
the illusion of ages, does actually prove it true. Childhood is
itself Antiquity—to every man his only Antiquity. The recollection
of childhood cannot make Abraham old again in the mind of a man of thirty-five;
but the beginning of every life is older than Abraham. <i>There</i>
is the abyss of time. Let a man turn to his own childhood—no
further—if he would renew his sense of remoteness, and of the
mystery of change.</p>
<p>For in childhood change does not go at that mere hasty amble; it
rushes; but it has enormous space for its flight. The child has
an apprehension not only of things far off, but of things far apart;
an illusive apprehension when he is learning “ancient” history—a
real apprehension when he is conning his own immeasurable infancy.
If there is no historical Antiquity worth speaking of, this is the renewed
and unnumbered Antiquity for all mankind.</p>
<p>And it is of this—merely of this—that “ancient”
history seems to partake. Rome was founded when we began Roman
history, and that is why it seems long ago. Suppose the man of
thirty-five heard, at that present age, for the first time of Romulus.
Why, Romulus would be nowhere. But he built his wall, as a matter
of fact, when every one was seven years old. It is by good fortune
that “ancient” history is taught in the only ancient days.
So, for a time, the world is magical.</p>
<p>Modern history does well enough for learning later. But by
learning something of antiquity in the first ten years, the child enlarges
the sense of time for all mankind. For even after the great illusion
is over and history is re-measured, and all fancy and flight caught
back and chastised, the enlarged sense remains enlarged. The man
remains capable of great spaces of time. He will not find them
in Egypt, it is true, but he finds them within, he contains them, he
is aware of them. History has fallen together, but childhood surrounds
and encompasses history, stretches beyond and passes on the road to
eternity.</p>
<p>He has not passed in vain through the long ten years, the ten years
that are the treasury of preceptions—the first. The great
disillusion shall never shorten those years, nor set nearer together
the days that made them. “Far apart,” I have said,
and that “far apart” is wonderful. The past of childhood
is not single, is not motionless, nor fixed in one point; it has summits
a world away one from the other. Year from year differs as the
antiquity of Mexico from the antiquity of Chaldea. And the man
of thirty-five knows for ever afterwards what is flight, even though
he finds no great historic distances to prove his wings by.</p>
<p>There is a long and mysterious moment in long and mysterious childhood,
which is the extremest distance known to any human fancy. Many
other moments, many other hours, are long in the first ten years.
Hours of weariness are long—not with a mysterious length, but
with a mere length of protraction, so that the things called minutes
and half-hours by the elderly may be something else to their apparent
contemporaries, the children. The ancient moment is not merely
one of these—it is a space not of long, but of immeasurable, time.
It is the moment of going to sleep. The man knows that borderland,
and has a contempt for it: he has long ceased to find antiquity there.
It has become a common enough margin of dreams to him; and he does not
attend to its phantasies. He knows that he has a frolic spirit
in his head which has its way at those hours, but he is not interested
in it. It is the inexperienced child who passes with simplicity
through the marginal country; and the thing he meets there is principally
the yet further conception of illimitable time.</p>
<p>His nurse’s lullaby is translated into the mysteries of time.
She sings absolutely immemorial words. It matters little what
they may mean to waking ears; to the ears of a child going to sleep
they tell of the beginning of the world. He has fallen asleep
to the sound of them all his life; and “all his life” means
more than older speech can well express.</p>
<p>Ancient custom is formed in a single spacious year. A child
is beset with long traditions. And his infancy is so old, so old,
that the mere adding of years in the life to follow will not seem to
throw it further back—it is already so far. That is, it
looks as remote to the memory of a man of thirty as to that of a man
of seventy. What are a mere forty years of added later life in
the contemplation of such a distance? Pshaw!</p>
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