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Essays, Second Series
IX. NEW ENGLAND REFORMERS
Ralph Waldo Emerson
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       _ NEW ENGLAND REFORMERS.
       In the suburb, in the town,
       On the railway, in the square,
       Came a beam of goodness down
       Doubling daylight everywhere:
       Peace now each for malice takes,
       Beauty for his sinful weeks,
       For the angel Hope aye makes
       Him an angel whom she leads.
       IX. NEW ENGLAND REFORMERS.
       A LECTURE READ BEFORE THE SOCIETY IN AMORY HALL, ON
       SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 1844.
       WHOEVER has had opportunity of acquaintance with
       society in New England during the last twenty-five
       years, with those middle and with those leading
       sections that may constitute any just representation
       of the character and aim of the community, will have
       been struck with the great activity of thought and
       experimenting. His attention must be commanded by
       the signs that the Church, or religious party, is
       falling from the Church nominal, and is appearing
       in temperance and non-resistance societies; in
       movements of abolitionists and of socialists; and
       in very significant assemblies called Sabbath and
       Bible Conventions; composed of ultraists, of seekers,
       of all the soul of the soldiery of dissent, and meeting
       to call in question the authority of the Sabbath, of
       the priesthood, and of the Church. In these movements
       nothing was more remarkable than the discontent they
       begot in the movers. The spirit of protest and of
       detachment drove the members of these Conventions to
       bear testimony against the Church, and immediately
       afterward, to declare their discontent with these
       Conventions, their independence of their colleagues,
       and their impatience of the methods whereby they were
       working. They defied each other, like a congress of
       kings, each of whom had a realm to rule, and a way of
       his own that made concert unprofitable. What a fertility
       of projects for the salvation of the world! One apostle
       thought all men should go to farming, and another that
       no man should buy or sell, that the use of money was the
       cardinal evil; another that the mischief was in our diet,
       that we eat and drink damnation. These made unleavened
       bread, and were foes to the death to fermentation. It was
       in vain urged by the housewife that God made yeast, as
       well as dough, and loves fermentation just as dearly as
       he loves vegetation; that fermentation develops the
       saccharine element in the grain, and makes it more
       palatable and more digestible. No; they wish the pure
       wheat, and will die but it shall not ferment. Stop, dear
       nature, these incessant advances of thine; let us scotch
       these ever-rolling wheels! Others attacked the system
       of agriculture, the use of animal manures in farming,
       and the tyranny of man over brute nature; these abuses
       polluted his food. The ox must be taken from the plough
       and the horse from the cart, the hundred acres of the
       farm must be spaded, and the man must walk, wherever
       boats and locomotives will not carry him. Even the insect
       world was to be defended,--that had been too long neglected,
       and a society for the protection of ground-worms, slugs,
       and mosquitos was to be incorporated without delay. With
       these appeared the adepts of homoeopathy, of hydropathy,
       of mesmerism, of phrenology, and their wonderful theories
       of the Christian miracles! Others assailed particular
       vocations, as that of the lawyer, that of the merchant,
       of the manufacturer, of the clergyman, of the scholar.
       Others attacked the institution of marriage as the fountain
       of social evils. Others devoted themselves to the worrying
       of churches and meetings for public worship; and the fertile
       forms of antinomianism among the elder puritans seemed to
       have their match in the plenty of the new harvest of reform.
       With this din of opinion and debate there was a
       keener scrutiny of institutions and domestic life
       than any we had known; there was sincere protesting
       against existing evils, and there were changes of
       employment dictated by conscience. No doubt there
       was plentiful vaporing, and cases of backsliding
       might occur. But in each of these movements emerged
       a good result, a tendency to the adoption of simpler
       methods, and an assertion of the sufficiency of the
       private man. Thus it was directly in the spirit and
       genius of the age, what happened in one instance
       when a church censured and threatened to excommunicate
       one of its members on account of the somewhat hostile
       part to the church which his conscience led him to
       take in the anti-slavery business; the threatened
       individual immediately excommunicated the church in a
       public and formal process. This has been several times
       repeated: it was excellent when it was done the first
       time, but of course loses all value when it is copied.
       Every project in the history of reform, no matter how
       violent and surprising, is good when it is the dictate
       of a man's genius and constitution, but very dull and
       suspicious when adopted from another. It is right and
       beautiful in any man to say, 'I will take this coat,
       or this book, or this measure of corn of yours,'--in
       whom we see the act to be original, and to flow from
       the whole spirit and faith of him; for then that taking
       will have a giving as free and divine; but we are very
       easily disposed to resist the same generosity of speech
       when we miss originality and truth to character in it.
       There was in all the practical activities of New
       England for the last quarter of a century, a gradual
       withdrawal of tender consciences from the social
       organizations. There is observable throughout, the
       contest between mechanical and spiritual methods, but
       with a steady tendency of the thoughtful and virtuous
       to a deeper belief and reliance on spiritual facts.
       In politics for example it is easy to see the progress
       of dissent. The country is full of rebellion; the
       country is full of kings. Hands off! let there be no
       control and no interference in the administration of
       the affairs of this kingdom of me. Hence the growth of
       the doctrine and of the party of Free Trade, and the
       willingness to try that experiment, in the face of what
       appear incontestable facts. I confess, the motto of
       the Globe newspaper is so attractive to me that I can
       seldom find much appetite to read what is below it in
       its columns: "The world is governed too much." So the
       country is frequently affording solitary examples of
       resistance to the government, solitary nullifiers, who
       throw themselves on their reserved rights; nay, who
       have reserved all their rights; who reply to the assessor
       and to the clerk of court that they do not know the
       State, and embarrass the courts of law by non-juring and
       the commander-in-chief of the militia by non-resistance.
       The same disposition to scrutiny and dissent appeared
       in civil, festive, neighborly, and domestic society.
       A restless, prying, conscientious criticism broke out
       in unexpected quarters. Who gave me the money with
       which I bought my coat? Why should professional labor
       and that of the counting-house be paid so disproportionately
       to the labor of the porter and woodsawyer? This whole
       business of Trade gives me to pause and think, as it
       constitutes false relations between men; inasmuch as I
       am prone to count myself relieved of any responsibility
       to behave well and nobly to that person whom I pay with
       money; whereas if I had not that commodity, I should be
       put on my good behavior in all companies, and man would
       be a benefactor to man, as being himself his only
       certificate that he had a right to those aids and services
       which each asked of the other. Am I not too protected a
       person? is there not a wide disparity between the lot of
       me and the lot of thee, my poor brother, my poor sister?
       Am I not defrauded of my best culture in the loss of
       those gymnastics which manual labor and the emergencies
       of poverty constitute? I find nothing healthful or exalting
       in the smooth conventions of society; I do not like the
       close air of saloons. I begin to suspect myself to be a
       prisoner, though treated with all this courtesy and luxury.
       I pay a destructive tax in my conformity.
       The same insatiable criticism may be traced in the
       efforts for the reform of Education. The popular
       education has been taxed with a want of truth and
       nature. It was complained that an education to things
       was not given. We are students of words: we are shut
       up in schools, and colleges, and recitation-rooms,
       for ten or fifteen years, and come out at last with
       a bag of wind, a memory of words, and do not know a
       thing. We cannot use our hands, or our legs, or our
       eyes, or our arms. We do not know an edible root in
       the woods, we cannot tell our course by the stars,
       nor the hour of the day by the sun. It is well if we
       can swim and skate. We are afraid of a horse, of a cow,
       of a dog, of a snake, of a spider. The Roman rule was
       to teach a boy nothing that he could not learn standing.
       The old English rule was, 'All summer in the field, and
       all winter in the study.' And it seems as if a man
       should learn to plant, or to fish, or to hunt, that he
       might secure his subsistence at all events, and not be
       painful to his friends and fellow-men. The lessons of
       science should be experimental also. The sight of the
       planet through a telescope is worth all the course on
       astronomy; the shock of the electric spark in the elbow,
       outvalues all the theories; the taste of the nitrous
       oxide, the firing of an artificial volcano, are better
       than volumes of chemistry.
       One of the traits of the new spirit is the inquisition
       it fixed on our scholastic devotion to the dead
       languages. The ancient languages, with great beauty of
       structure, contain wonderful remains of genius, which
       draw, and always will draw, certain likeminded men,--
       Greek men, and Roman men,--in all countries, to their
       study; but by a wonderful drowsiness of usage they had
       exacted the study of all men. Once (say two centuries
       ago), Latin and Greek had a strict relation to all the
       science and culture there was in Europe, and the
       Mathematics had a momentary importance at some era of
       activity in physical science. These things became
       stereotyped as education, as the manner of men is. But
       the Good Spirit never cared for the colleges, and though
       all men and boys were now drilled in Latin, Greek, and
       Mathematics, it had quite left these shells high and dry
       on the beach, and was now creating and feeding other
       matters at other ends of the world. But in a hundred
       high schools and colleges this warfare against common
       sense still goes on. Four, or six, or ten years, the
       pupil is parsing Greek and Latin, and as soon as he
       leaves the University, as it is ludicrously called, he
       shuts those books for the last time. Some thousands of
       young men are graduated at our colleges in this country
       every year, and the persons who, at forty years, still
       read Greek, can all be counted on your hand. I never met
       with ten. Four or five persons I have seen who read Plato.
       But is not this absurd, that the whole liberal talent
       of this country should be directed in its best years
       on studies which lead to nothing? What was the
       consequence? Some intelligent persons said or thought,
       'Is that Greek and Latin some spell to conjure with,
       and not words of reason? If the physician, the lawyer,
       the divine, never use it to come at their ends, I need
       never learn it to come at mine. Conjuring is gone out
       of fashion, and I will omit this conjugating, and go
       straight to affairs.' So they jumped the Greek and Latin,
       and read law, medicine, or sermons, without it. To the
       astonishment of all, the self-made men took even ground
       at once with the oldest of the regular graduates, and in
       a few months the most conservative circles of Boston and
       New York had quite forgotten who of their gownsmen was
       college-bred, and who was not.
       One tendency appears alike in the philosophical
       speculation and in the rudest democratical movements,
       through all the petulance and all the puerility, the
       wish, namely, to cast aside the superfluous and
       arrive at short methods; urged, as I suppose, by an
       intuition that the human spirit is equal to all
       emergencies, alone, and that man is more often injured
       than helped by the means he uses.
       I conceive this gradual casting off of material aids,
       and the indication of growing trust in the private
       self-supplied powers of the individual, to be the
       affirmative principle of the recent philosophy, and
       that it is feeling its own profound truth and is
       reaching forward at this very hour to the happiest
       conclusions. I readily concede that in this, as in
       every period of intellectual activity, there has been
       a noise of denial and protest; much was to be resisted,
       much was to be got rid of by those who were reared in
       the old, before they could begin to affirm and to
       construct. Many a reformer perishes in his removal of
       rubbish; and that makes the offensiveness of the class.
       They are partial; they are not equal to the work they
       pretend. They lose their way; in the assault on the
       kingdom of darkness they expend all their energy on
       some accidental evil, and lose their sanity and power
       of benefit. It is of little moment that one or two or
       twenty errors of our social system be corrected, but
       of much that the man be in his senses.
       The criticism and attack on institutions, which we
       have witnessed, has made one thing plain, that
       society gains nothing whilst a man, not himself
       renovated, attempts to renovate things around him:
       he has become tediously good in some particular but
       negligent or narrow in the rest; and hypocrisy and
       vanity are often the disgusting result.
       It is handsomer to remain in the establishment better
       than the establishment, and conduct that in the best
       manner, than to make a sally against evil by some
       single improvement, without supporting it by a total
       regeneration. Do not be so vain of your one objection.
       Do you think there is only one? Alas! my good friend,
       there is no part of society or of life better than
       any other part. All our things are right and wrong
       together. The wave of evil washes all our institutions
       alike. Do you complain of our Marriage? Our marriage is
       no worse than our education, our diet, our trade, our
       social customs. Do you complain of the laws of Property?
       It is a pedantry to give such importance to them. Can we
       not play the game of life with these counters, as well
       as with those? in the institution of property, as well
       as out of it? Let into it the new and renewing principle
       of love, and property will be universality. No one gives
       the impression of superiority to the institution, which
       he must give who will reform it. It makes no difference
       what you say, you must make me feel that you are aloof
       from it; by your natural and supernatural advantages do
       easily see to the end of it,--do see how man can do
       without it. Now all men are on one side. No man deserves
       to be heard against property. Only Love, only an Idea,
       is against property as we hold it.
       I cannot afford to be irritable and captious, nor
       to waste all my time in attacks. If I should go out
       of church whenever I hear a false sentiment I could
       never stay there five minutes. But why come out? the
       street is as false as the church, and when I get to
       my house, or to my manners, or to my speech, I have
       not got away from the lie. When we see an eager
       assailant of one of these wrongs, a special reformer,
       we feel like asking him, What right have you, sir, to
       your one virtue? Is virtue piecemeal? This is a jewel
       amidst the rags of a beggar.
       In another way the right will be vindicated. In
       the midst of abuses, in the heart of cities, in
       the aisles of false churches, alike in one place
       and in another,--wherever, namely, a just and
       heroic soul finds itself, there it will do what
       is next at hand, and by the new quality of character
       it shall put forth it shall abrogate that old
       condition, law or school in which it stands, before
       the law of its own mind.
       If partiality was one fault of the movement party,
       the other defect was their reliance on Association.
       Doubts such as those I have intimated drove many
       good persons to agitate the questions of social
       reform. But the revolt against the spirit of commerce,
       the spirit of aristocracy, and the inveterate abuses
       of cities, did not appear possible to individuals;
       and to do battle against numbers they armed themselves
       with numbers, and against concert they relied on new
       concert.
       Following or advancing beyond the ideas of St. Simon,
       of Fourier, and of Owen, three communities have
       already been formed in Massachusetts on kindred plans,
       and many more in the country at large. They aim to
       give every member a share in the manual labor, to give
       an equal reward to labor and to talent, and to unite a
       liberal culture with an education to labor. The scheme
       offers, by the economies of associated labor and expense,
       to make every member rich, on the same amount of property,
       that, in separate families, would leave every member poor.
       These new associations are composed of men and women of
       superior talents and sentiments; yet it may easily be
       questioned whether such a community will draw, except in
       its beginnings, the able and the good; whether those who
       have energy will not prefer their chance of superiority
       and power in the world, to the humble certainties of the
       association; whether such a retreat does not promise to
       become an asylum to those who have tried and failed,
       rather than a field to the strong; and whether the members
       will not necessarily be fractions of men, because each
       finds that he cannot enter it, without some compromise.
       Friendship and association are very fine things, and a
       grand phalanx of the best of the human race, banded for
       some catholic object; yes, excellent; but remember that
       no society can ever be so large as one man. He, in his
       friendship, in his natural and momentary associations,
       doubles or multiplies himself; but in the hour in which
       he mortgages himself to two or ten or twenty, he dwarfs
       himself below the stature of one.
       But the men of less faith could not thus believe,
       and to such, concert appears the sole specific of
       strength. I have failed, and you have failed, but
       perhaps together we shall not fail. Our housekeeping
       is not satisfactory to us, but perhaps a phalanx, a
       community, might be. Many of us have differed in
       opinion, and we could find no man who could make the
       truth plain, but possibly a college, or an ecclesiastical
       council might. I have not been able either to persuade
       my brother or to prevail on myself, to disuse the traffic
       or the potation of brandy, but perhaps a pledge of total
       abstinence might effectually restrain us. The candidate
       my party votes for is not to be trusted with a dollar,
       but he will be honest in the Senate, for we can bring
       public opinion to bear on him. Thus concert was the
       specific in all cases. But concert is neither better
       nor worse, neither more nor less potent than individual
       force. All the men in the world cannot make a statue
       walk and speak, cannot make a drop of blood, or a blade
       of grass, any more than one man can. But let there be
       one man, let there be truth in two men, in ten men, then
       is concert for the first time possible; because the force
       which moves the world is a new quality, and can never be
       furnished by adding whatever quantities of a different
       kind. What is the use of the concert of the false and
       the disunited? There can be no concert in two, where
       there is no concert in one. When the individual is not
       individual, but is dual; when his thoughts look one way
       and his actions another; when his faith is traversed by
       his habits; when his will, enlightened by reason, is
       warped by his sense; when with one hand he rows and with
       the other backs water, what concert can be?
       I do not wonder at the interest these projects
       inspire. The world is awaking to the idea of union,
       and these experiments show what it is thinking of.
       It is and will be magic. Men will live and communicate,
       and plough, and reap, and govern, as by added ethereal
       power, when once they are united; as in a celebrated
       experiment, by expiration and respiration exactly
       together, four persons lift a heavy man from the ground
       by the little finger only, and without sense of weight.
       But this union must be inward, and not one of covenants,
       and is to be reached by a reverse of the methods they
       use. The union is only perfect when all the uniters
       are isolated. It is the union of friends who live in
       different streets or towns. Each man, if he attempts
       to join himself to others, is on all sides cramped and
       diminished of his proportion; and the stricter the union
       the smaller and the more pitiful he is. But leave him
       alone, to recognize in every hour and place the secret
       soul; he will go up and down doing the works of a true
       member, and, to the astonishment of all, the work will
       be done with concert, though no man spoke. Government
       will be adamantine without any governor. The union must
       be ideal in actual individualism.
       I pass to the indication in some particulars of
       that faith in man, which the heart is preaching
       to us in these days, and which engages the more
       regard, from the consideration that the speculations
       of one generation are the history of the next
       following.
       In alluding just now to our system of education, I
       spoke of the deadness of its details. But it is open
       to graver criticism than the palsy of its members:
       it is a system of despair. The disease with which the
       human mind now labors is want of faith. Men do not
       believe in a power of education. We do not think we
       can speak to divine sentiments in man, and we do not
       try. We renounce all high aims. We believe that the
       defects of so many perverse and so many frivolous
       people who make up society, are organic, and society
       is a hospital of incurables. A man of good sense but
       of little faith, whose compassion seemed to lead him
       to church as often as he went there, said to me that
       "he liked to have concerts, and fairs, and churches,
       and other public amusements go on." I am afraid the
       remark is too honest, and comes from the same origin
       as the maxim of the tyrant, "If you would rule the
       world quietly, you must keep it amused." I notice too
       that the ground on which eminent public servants urge
       the claims of popular education is fear; 'This country
       is filling up with thousands and millions of voters,
       and you must educate them to keep them from our throats.'
       We do not believe that any education, any system of
       philosophy, any influence of genius, will ever give
       depth of insight to a superficial mind. Having settled
       ourselves into this infidelity, our skill is expended
       to procure alleviations, diversion, opiates. We adorn
       the victim with manual skill, his tongue with languages,
       his body with inoffensive and comely manners. So have we
       cunningly hid the tragedy of limitation and inner death
       we cannot avert. Is it strange that society should be
       devoured by a secret melancholy which breaks through all
       its smiles and all its gayety and games?
       But even one step farther our infidelity has gone.
       It appears that some doubt is felt by good and wise
       men whether really the happiness and probity of men
       is increased by the culture of the mind in those
       disciplines to which we give the name of education.
       Unhappily too the doubt comes from scholars, from
       persons who have tried these methods. In their
       experience the scholar was not raised by the sacred
       thoughts amongst which he dwelt, but used them to
       selfish ends. He was a profane person, and became a
       showman, turning his gifts to a marketable use, and
       not to his own sustenance and growth. It was found
       that the intellect could be independently developed,
       that is, in separation from the man, as any single
       organ can be invigorated, and the result was monstrous.
       A canine appetite for knowledge was generated, which
       must still be fed but was never satisfied, and this
       knowledge, not being directed on action, never took
       the character of substantial, humane truth, blessing
       those whom it entered. It gave the scholar certain
       powers of expression, the power of speech, the power
       of poetry, of literary art, but it did not bring him
       to peace or to beneficence.
       When the literary class betray a destitution of
       faith, it is not strange that society should be
       disheartened and sensualized by unbelief. What
       remedy? Life must be lived on a higher plane. We
       must go up to a higher platform, to which we are
       always invited to ascend; there, the whole aspect
       of things changes. I resist the skepticism of our
       education and of our educated men. I do not believe
       that the differences of opinion and character in
       men are organic. I do not recognize, beside the
       class of the good and the wise, a permanent class of
       skeptics, or a class of conservatives, or of malignants,
       or of materialists. I do not believe in two classes.
       You remember the story of the poor woman who importuned
       King Philip of Macedon to grant her justice, which
       Philip refused: the woman exclaimed, "I appeal:" the
       king, astonished, asked to whom she appealed: the woman
       replied, "From Philip drunk to Philip sober." The text
       will suit me very well. I believe not in two classes
       of men, but in man in two moods, in Philip drunk and
       Philip sober. I think, according to the good-hearted
       word of Plato, "Unwillingly the soul is deprived of
       truth." Iron conservative, miser, or thief, no man is
       but by a supposed necessity which he tolerates by
       shortness or torpidity of sight. The soul lets no man
       go without some visitations and holydays of a diviner
       presence. It would be easy to show, by a narrow scanning
       of any man's biography, that we are not so wedded to our
       paltry performances of every kind but that every man
       has at intervals the grace to scorn his performances,
       in comparing them with his belief of what he should do;
       --that he puts himself on the side of his enemies,
       listening gladly to what they say of him, and accusing
       himself of the same things.
       What is it men love in Genius, but its infinite
       hope, which degrades all it has done? Genius
       counts all its miracles poor and short. Its own
       idea it never executed. The Iliad, the Hamlet,
       the Doric column, the Roman arch, the Gothic minster,
       the German anthem, when they are ended, the master
       casts behind him. How sinks the song in the waves
       of melody which the universe pours over his soul!
       Before that gracious Infinite out of which he drew
       these few strokes, how mean they look, though the
       praises of the world attend them. From the triumphs
       of his art he turns with desire to this greater
       defeat. Let those admire who will. With silent joy
       he sees himself to be capable of a beauty that
       eclipses all which his hands have done; all which
       human hands have ever done.
       Well, we are all the children of genius, the
       children of virtue,--and feel their inspirations
       in our happier hours. Is not every man sometimes
       a radical in politics? Men are conservatives when
       they are least vigorous, or when they are most
       luxurious. They are conservatives after dinner,
       or before taking their rest; when they are sick,
       or aged: in the morning, or when their intellect
       or their conscience has been aroused; when they
       hear music, or when they read poetry, they are
       radicals. In the circle of the rankest tories that
       could be collected in England, Old or New, let a
       powerful and stimulating intellect, a man of great
       heart and mind, act on them, and very quickly these
       frozen conservators will yield to the friendly
       influence, these hopeless will begin to hope, these
       haters will begin to love, these immovable statues
       will begin to spin and revolve. I cannot help
       recalling the fine anecdote which Warton relates of
       Bishop Berkeley, when he was preparing to leave
       England with his plan of planting the gospel among
       the American savages. "Lord Bathurst told me that
       the members of the Scriblerus club being met at his
       house at dinner, they agreed to rally Berkeley, who
       was also his guest, on his scheme at Bermudas.
       Berkeley, having listened to the many lively things
       they had to say, begged to be heard in his turn, and
       displayed his plan with such an astonishing and
       animating force of eloquence and enthusiasm, that
       they were struck dumb, and, after some pause, rose
       up all together with earnestness, exclaiming, 'Let
       us set out with him immediately.'" Men in all ways
       are better than they seem. They like flattery for the
       moment, but they know the truth for their own. It is
       a foolish cowardice which keeps us from trusting them
       and speaking to them rude truth. They resent your
       honesty for an instant, they will thank you for it
       always. What is it we heartily wish of each other? Is
       it to be pleased and flattered? No, but to be convicted
       and exposed, to be shamed out of our nonsense of all
       kinds, and made men of, instead of ghosts and phantoms.
       We are weary of gliding ghostlike through the world,
       which is itself so slight and unreal. We crave a sense
       of reality, though it come in strokes of pain. I explain
       so,--by this manlike love of truth,--those excesses and
       errors into which souls of great vigor, but not equal
       insight, often fall. They feel the poverty at the bottom
       of all the seeming affluence of the world. They know
       the speed with which they come straight through the thin
       masquerade, and conceive a disgust at the indigence of
       nature: Rousseau, Mirabeau, Charles Fox, Napoleon, Byron,
       --and I could easily add names nearer home, of raging
       riders, who drive their steeds so hard, in the violence
       of living to forget its illusion: they would know the
       worst, and tread the floors of hell. The heroes of
       ancient and modern fame, Cimon, Themistocles, Alcibiades,
       Alexander, Caesar, have treated life and fortune as a
       game to be well and skilfully played, but the stake not
       to be so valued but that any time it could be held as a
       trifle light as air, and thrown up. Caesar, just before
       the battle of Pharsalia, discourses with the Egyptian
       priest concerning the fountains of the Nile, and offers
       to quit the army, the empire, and Cleopatra, if he will
       show him those mysterious sources.
       The same magnanimity shows itself in our social
       relations, in the preference, namely, which each
       man gives to the society of superiors over that
       of his equals. All that a man has will he give for
       right relations with his mates. All that he has
       will he give for an erect demeanor in every company
       and on each occasion. He aims at such things as his
       neighbors prize, and gives his days and nights, his
       talents and his heart, to strike a good stroke, to
       acquit himself in all men's sight as a man. The
       consideration of an eminent citizen, of a noted
       merchant, of a man of mark in his profession; a naval
       and military honor, a general's commission, a marshal's
       baton, a ducal coronet, the laurel of poets, and,
       anyhow procured, the acknowledgment of eminent merit,
       --have this lustre for each candidate that they enable
       him to walk erect and unashamed in the presence of some
       persons before whom he felt himself inferior. Having
       raised himself to this rank, having established his
       equality with class after class of those with whom
       he would live well, he still finds certain others
       before whom he cannot possess himself, because they
       have somewhat fairer, somewhat grander, somewhat purer,
       which extorts homage of him. Is his ambition pure? then
       will his laurels and his possessions seem worthless:
       instead of avoiding these men who make his fine gold
       dim, he will cast all behind him and seek their society
       only, woo and embrace this his humiliation and
       mortification, until he shall know why his eye sinks,
       his voice is husky, and his brilliant talents are
       paralyzed in this presence. He is sure that the soul
       which gives the lie to all things will tell none. His
       constitution will not mislead him. If it cannot carry
       itself as it ought, high and unmatchable in the presence
       of any man; if the secret oracles whose whisper makes
       the sweetness and dignity of his life do here withdraw
       and accompany him no longer,--it is time to undervalue
       what he has valued, to dispossess himself of what he has
       acquired, and with Caesar to take in his hand the army,
       the empire, and Cleopatra, and say, "All these will I
       relinquish, if you will show me the fountains of the
       Nile." Dear to us are those who love us; the swift
       moments we spend with them are a compensation for a great
       deal of misery; they enlarge our life;--but dearer are
       those who reject us as unworthy, for they add another
       life: they build a heaven before us whereof we had not
       dreamed, and thereby supply to us new powers out of the
       recesses of the spirit, and urge us to new and unattempted
       performances.
       As every man at heart wishes the best and not
       inferior society, wishes to be convicted of his
       error and to come to himself,--so he wishes that
       the same healing should not stop in his thought,
       but should penetrate his will or active power.
       The selfish man suffers more from his selfishness
       than he from whom that selfishness withholds some
       important benefit. What he most wishes is to be
       lifted to some higher platform, that he may see
       beyond his present fear the transalpine good, so
       that his fear, his coldness, his custom may be
       broken up like fragments of ice, melted and carried
       away in the great stream of good will. Do you ask
       my aid? I also wish to be a benefactor. I wish more
       to be a benefactor and servant than you wish to be
       served by me; and surely the greatest good fortune
       that could befall me is precisely to be so moved by
       you that I should say, 'Take me and all mine, and
       use me and mine freely to your ends'! for I could
       not say it otherwise than because a great enlargement
       had come to my heart and mind, which made me superior
       to my fortunes. Here we are paralyzed with fear; we
       hold on to our little properties, house and land,
       office and money, for the bread which they have in
       our experience yielded us, although we confess that
       our being does not flow through them. We desire to be
       made great; we desire to be touched with that fire
       which shall command this ice to stream, and make our
       existence a benefit. If therefore we start objections
       to your project, O friend of the slave, or friend of
       the poor, or of the race, understand well that it is
       because we wish to drive you to drive us into your
       measures. We wish to hear ourselves confuted. We are
       haunted with a belief that you have a secret which it
       would highliest advantage us to learn, and we would
       force you to impart it to us, though it should bring
       us to prison, or to worse extremity.
       Nothing shall warp me from the belief that every
       man is a lover of truth. There is no pure lie, no
       pure malignity in nature. The entertainment of the
       proposition of depravity is the last profligacy
       and profanation. There is no skepticism, no atheism
       but that. Could it be received into common belief,
       suicide would unpeople the planet. It has had a name
       to live in some dogmatic theology, but each man's
       innocence and his real liking of his neighbor have
       kept it a dead letter. I remember standing at the
       polls one day when the anger of the political contest
       gave a certain grimness to the faces of the independent
       electors, and a good man at my side, looking on the
       people, remarked, "I am satisfied that the largest
       part of these men, on either side, mean to vote right."
       I suppose considerate observers, looking at the masses
       of men in their blameless and in their equivocal actions,
       will assent, that in spite of selfishness and frivolity,
       the general purpose in the great number of persons is
       fidelity. The reason why any one refuses his assent to
       your opinion, or his aid to your benevolent design, is
       in you: he refuses to accept you as a bringer of truth,
       because, though you think you have it, he feels that
       you have it not. You have not given him the authentic
       sign.
       If it were worth while to run into details this
       general doctrine of the latent but ever soliciting
       Spirit, it would be easy to adduce illustration in
       particulars of a man's equality to the Church, of
       his equality to the State, and of his equality to
       every other man. It is yet in all men's memory that,
       a few years ago, the liberal churches complained
       that the Calvinistic church denied to them the name
       of Christian. I think the complaint was confession:
       a religious church would not complain. A religious
       man like Behmen, Fox, or Swedenborg is not irritated
       by wanting the sanction of the Church, but the Church
       feels the accusation of his presence and belief.
       It only needs that a just man should walk in our
       streets to make it appear how pitiful and inartificial
       a contrivance is our legislation. The man whose part
       is taken and who does not wait for society in anything,
       has a power which society cannot choose but feel. The
       familiar experiment called the hydrostatic paradox, in
       which a capillary column of water balances the ocean,
       is a symbol of the relation of one man to the whole
       family of men. The wise Dandamis, on hearing the lives
       of Socrates, Pythagoras and Diogenes read, "judged them
       to be great men every way, excepting, that they were
       too much subjected to the reverence of the laws, which
       to second and authorize, true virtue must abate very
       much of its original vigor."
       And as a man is equal to the Church and equal to
       the State, so he is equal to every other man. The
       disparities of power in men are superficial; and
       all frank and searching conversation, in which a
       man lays himself open to his brother, apprises each
       of their radical unity. When two persons sit and
       converse in a thoroughly good understanding, the
       remark is sure to be made, See how we have disputed
       about words! Let a clear, apprehensive mind, such
       as every man knows among his friends, converse with
       the most commanding poetic genius, I think it would
       appear that there was no inequality such as men
       fancy, between them; that a perfect understanding,
       a like receiving, a like perceiving, abolished
       differences; and the poet would confess that his
       creative imagination gave him no deep advantage,
       but only the superficial one that he could express
       himself and the other could not; that his advantage
       was a knack, which might impose on indolent men but
       could not impose on lovers of truth; for they know
       the tax of talent, or what a price of greatness the
       power of expression too often pays. I believe it is
       the conviction of the purest men, that the net amount
       of man and man does not much vary. Each is incomparably
       superior to his companion in some faculty. His want of
       skill in other directions has added to his fitness for
       his own work. Each seems to have some compensation
       yielded to him by his infirmity, and every hindrance
       operates as a concentration of his force.
       These and the like experiences intimate that man
       stands in strict connection with a higher fact never
       yet manifested. There is power over and behind us,
       and we are the channels of its communications. We
       seek to say thus and so, and over our head some
       spirit sits which contradicts what we say. We would
       persuade our fellow to this or that; another self
       within our eyes dissuades him. That which we keep
       back, this reveals. In vain we compose our faces and
       our words; it holds uncontrollable communication with
       the enemy, and he answers civilly to us, but believes
       the spirit. We exclaim, 'There's a traitor in the
       house!' but at last it appears that he is the true
       man, and I am the traitor. This open channel to the
       highest life is the first and last reality, so subtle,
       so quiet, yet so tenacious, that although I have never
       expressed the truth, and although I have never heard
       the expression of it from any other, I know that the
       whole truth is here for me. What if I cannot answer
       your questions? I am not pained that I cannot frame a
       reply to the question, What is the operation we call
       Providence? There lies the unspoken thing, present,
       omnipresent. Every time we converse we seek to
       translate it into speech, but whether we hit or whether
       we miss, we have the fact. Every discourse is an
       approximate answer: but it is of small consequence
       that we do not get it into verbs and nouns, whilst it
       abides for contemplation forever.
       If the auguries of the prophesying heart shall make
       themselves good in time, the man who shall be born,
       whose advent men and events prepare and foreshow,
       is one who shall enjoy his connection with a higher
       life, with the man within man; shall destroy distrust
       by his trust, shall use his native but forgotten
       methods, shall not take counsel of flesh and blood,
       but shall rely on the Law alive and beautiful which
       works over our heads and under our feet. Pitiless,
       it avails itself of our success when we obey it, and
       of our ruin when we contravene it. Men are all secret
       believers in it, else the word justice would have no
       meaning: they believe that the best is the true; that
       right is done at last; or chaos would come. It rewards
       actions after their nature, and not after the design
       of the agent. 'Work,' it saith to man, 'in every hour,
       paid or unpaid, see only that thou work, and thou canst
       not escape the reward: whether thy work be fine or
       coarse, planting corn or writing epics, so only it be
       honest work, done to thine own approbation, it shall
       earn a reward to the senses as well as to the thought:
       no matter how often defeated, you are born to victory.
       The reward of a thing well done, is to have done it.'
       As soon as a man is wonted to look beyond surfaces,
       and to see how this high will prevails without an
       exception or an interval, he settles himself into
       serenity. He can already rely on the laws of gravity,
       that every stone will fall where it is due; the good
       globe is faithful, and carries us securely through
       the celestial spaces, anxious or resigned, we need
       not interfere to help it on: and he will learn one
       day the mild lesson they teach, that our own orbit
       is all our task, and we need not assist the
       administration of the universe. Do not be so impatient
       to set the town right concerning the unfounded
       pretensions and the false reputation of certain men
       of standing. They are laboring harder to set the town
       right concerning themselves, and will certainly succeed.
       Suppress for a few days your criticism on the
       insufficiency of this or that teacher or experimenter,
       and he will have demonstrated his insufficiency to all
       men's eyes. In like manner, let a man fall into the
       divine circuits, and he is enlarged. Obedience to his
       genius is the only liberating influence. We wish to
       escape from subjection and a sense of inferiority, and
       we make self-denying ordinances, we drink water, we eat
       grass, we refuse the laws, we go to jail: it is all in
       vain; only by obedience to his genius, only by the
       freest activity in the way constitutional to him, does
       an angel seem to arise before a man and lead him by the
       hand out of all the wards of the prison.
       That which befits us, embosomed in beauty and wonder
       as we are, is cheerfulness and courage, and the endeavor
       to realize our aspirations. The life of man is the true
       romance, which when it is valiantly conducted will yield
       the imagination a higher joy than any fiction. All around
       us what powers are wrapped up under the coarse mattings
       of custom, and all wonder prevented. It is so wonderful
       to our neurologists that a man can see without his eyes,
       that it does not occur to them that it is just as
       wonderful that he should see with them; and that is ever
       the difference between the wise and the unwise: the
       latter wonders at what is unusual, the wise man wonders
       at the usual. Shall not the heart which has received so
       much, trust the Power by which it lives? May it not quit
       other leadings, and listen to the Soul that has guided
       it so gently and taught it so much, secure that the
       future will be worthy of the past?
        
       -THE END-
       Essays, Second Series, by Ralph Waldo Emerson _