Walter Pater, Marius the Epicurian (1885)
Chapter X 
				
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      Animula, vagula, blandula
 Hospes comesque corporis,
 Quae nunc abibis in loca?
 Pallidula, rigida, nudula.
 
 —The Emperor Hadrian to  his Soul
 Flavian  was no more. The little marble chest with its dust and tears lay cold among the  faded flowers. For most people the actual spectacle of death brings out into  greater reality, at least for the imagination, whatever confidence they may  entertain of the souls survival in another life. To Marius, greatly agitated  by that event, the earthly end of Flavian came like a final revelation of  nothing less than the souls extinction. Flavian had gone out as utterly as the  fire among those still beloved ashes. Even that wistful suspense of judgment expressed  by the dying Hadrian, regarding further stages of being still possible for the  soul in some dim journey hence, seemed wholly untenable, and, with it, almost  all that remained of the religion of his childhood. Future extinction seemed  just then to be what the unforced witness of his own nature pointed to. On the  other hand, there came a novel curiosity as to what the various schools of  ancient philosophy had had to say concerning that strange, fluttering creature;  and that curiosity impelled him to certain severe studies, in which his earlier  religious conscience seemed still to survive, as a principle of hieratic  scrupulousness or integrity of thought, regarding this new service to  intellectual light. At this time, by his poetic and inward  temper, he might have fallen a prey to the enervating mysticism, then in wait  for ardent souls in many a melodramatic revival of old religion or theosophy.  From all this, fascinating as it might actually be to one side of his  character, he was kept by a genuine virility there, effective in him, among  other results, as a hatred of what was theatrical, and the instinctive recognition  that in vigorous intelligence, after all, divinity was most likely to be found  a resident. With this was connected the feeling, increasing with his advance to  manhood, of a poetic beauty in mere clearness of thought, the actually  aesthetic charm of a cold austerity of mind; as if the kinship of that to the  clearness of physical light were something more than a figure of speech. Of all  those various religious fantasies, as so many forms of enthusiasm, he could  well appreciate the picturesque; that was made easy by his natural Epicureanism,  already prompting him to conceive of himself as but the passive spectator of  the world around him. But it was to the severer reasoning, of which such  matters as Epicurean theory are born, that, in effect, he now betook himself.  Instinctively suspicious of those mechanical arcana, those pretended secrets  unveiled of the professional mystic, which really bring great and little souls  to one level, for Marius the only possible dilemma lay between that old, ancestral  Roman religion, now become so incredible to him and the honest action of his  own untroubled, unassisted intelligence. Even the Arcana Celestia of  Platonism - what the sons of Plato had had to say regarding the essential  indifference of pure soul to its bodily house and merely occasional  dwelling-place - seemed to him while his heart was there in the urn with the  material ashes of Flavian, or still lingering in memory over his last agony,  wholly inhuman or morose, as tending to alleviate his resentment at natures  wrong. It was to the sentiment of the body, and the affections it defined - the  flesh, of whose force and colour that wandering Platonic soul was but so frail  a residue or abstract - he must cling. The various pathetic traits of the  beloved, suffering, perished body of Flavian, so deeply pondered, had made him  a materialist, but with something of the temper of a devotee. As a consequence it might have seemed at  first that his care for poetry had passed away, to be replaced by the  literature of thought. His much-pondered manuscript verses were laid aside; and  what happened now to one, who was certainly to be something of a poet from  first to last, looked at the moment like a change from poetry to prose. He came  of age about this time, his own master though with beardless face; and at eighteen,  an age at which, then as now, many youths of capacity, who fancied themselves  poets, secluded themselves from others chiefly in affectation and vague  dreaming, he secluded himself indeed from others, but in a severe intellectual  meditation, that salt of poetry, without which all the more serious charm is  lacking to the imaginative world. Still with something of the old religious  earnestness of his childhood, he set himself - Sich im Denken zu orientiren - to  determine his bearings, as by compass, in the world of thought - to get that  precise acquaintance with the creative intelligence itself, its structure and  capacities, its relation to other parts of himself and to other things, without  which, certainly, no poetry can be masterly. Like a young man rich in this  worlds goods coming of age, he must go into affairs, and ascertain his  outlook. There must be no disguises. An exact estimate of realities, as towards  himself, he must have - a delicately measured gradation of certainty in  things - from the distant, haunted horizon of mere surmise or imagination, to the  actual feeling of sorrow in his heart, as he reclined one morning, alone  instead of in pleasant company, to ponder the hard sayings of an imperfect old  Greek manuscript, unrolled beside him. His former gay companions, meeting him in  the streets of the old Italian town, and noting the graver lines coming into  the face of the sombre but enthusiastic student of intellectual structure, who  could hold his own so well in the society of accomplished older men, were half  afraid of him, though proud to have him of their company. Why this  reserve? - they asked, concerning the orderly, self-possessed youth, whose speech  and carriage seemed so carefully measured, who was surely no poet like the  rapt, dishevelled Lupus. Was he secretly in love, perhaps, whose toga was so  daintily folded, and who was always as fresh as the flowers he wore; or bent on  his own line of ambition: or even on riches? Marius, meantime, was reading freely, in  early morning for the most part, those writers chiefly who had made it their  business to know what might be thought concerning that strange, enigmatic,  personal essence, which had seemed to go out altogether, along with the funeral  fires. And the old Greek who more than any other was now giving form to his thoughts  was a very hard master. From Epicurus, from the thunder and lightning of  Lucretius - like thunder and lightning some distance off, one might recline to  enjoy, in a garden of roses - he had gone back to the writer who was in a certain  sense the teacher of both, Heraclitus of Ionia. His difficult book Concerning  Nature was even then rare, for people had long since satisfied themselves by  the quotation of certain brilliant, isolated, oracles only, out of what was at  best a taxing kind of lore. But the difficulty of the early Greek prose did but  spur the curiosity of Marius; the writer, the superior clearness of whose  intellectual view had so sequestered him from other men, who had had so little  joy of that superiority, being avowedly exacting as to the amount of devout  attention he required from the student. The many, he said, always thus  emphasising the difference between the many and the few, are like people heavy  with wine, led by children, knowing not whither they go; and yet, much  learning doth not make wise; and again, the ass, after all, would have his  thistles rather than fine gold. Heraclitus, indeed, had not under-rated the  difficulty for the many of the paradox with which his doctrine begins, and  the due reception of which must involve a denial of habitual impressions, as  the necessary first step in the way of truth. His philosophy had been developed  in conscious, outspoken opposition to the current mode of thought, as a matter  requiring some exceptional loyalty to pure reason and its dry light. Men are  subject to an illusion, he protests, regarding matters apparent to sense. What  the uncorrected sense gives was a false impression of permanence or fixity in  things, which have really changed their nature in the very moment in which we  see and touch them. And the radical flaw in the current mode of thinking would  lie herein: that, reflecting this false or uncorrected sensation, it attributes  to the phenomena of experience a durability which does not really belong to them.  Imaging forth from those fluid impressions a world of firmly out-lined objects,  it leads one to regard as a thing stark and dead what is in reality full of  animation, of vigour, of the fire of life - that eternal process of nature, of  which at a later time Goethe spoke as the Living Garment, whereby God is seen  of us, ever in weaving at the Loom of Time. And the appeal which the old Greek thinker  made was, in the first instance, from confused to unconfused sensation; with a  sort of prophetic seriousness, a great claim and assumption, such as we may understand,  if we anticipate in this preliminary scepticism the ulterior scope of his  speculation, according to which the universal movement of all natural things is  but one particular stage, or measure, of that ceaseless activity wherein the  divine reason consists. The one true being - that constant subject of all early  thought - it was his merit to have conceived, not as sterile and stagnant  inaction, but as a perpetual energy, from the restless stream of which, at  certain points, some elements detach themselves, and harden into non-entity and  death, corresponding, as outward objects, to mans inward condition of ignorance:  that is, to the slowness of his faculties. It is with this paradox of a subtle,  perpetual change in all visible things, that the high speculation of Heraclitus  begins. Hence the scorn he expresses for anything like a careless,  half-conscious, use-and-wont reception of our experience, which took so  strong a hold on mens memories! Hence those many precepts towards a strenuous  self-consciousness in all we think and do, that loyalty to cool and candid  reason, which makes strict attentiveness of mind a kind of religious duty and  service. The negative doctrine, then, that the  objects of our ordinary experience, fixed as they seem, are really in perpetual  change, had been, as originally conceived, but the preliminary step towards a  large positive system of almost religious philosophy. Then as now, the illuminated  philosophic mind might apprehend, in what seemed a mass of lifeless matter, the  movement of that universal life, in which things, and mens impressions of  them, were ever coming to be, alternately consumed and renewed. That  continual change, to be discovered by the attentive understanding where common  opinion found fixed objects, was but the indicator of a subtler but  all-pervading motion - the sleepless, ever-sustained, inexhaustible energy of the  divine reason itself, proceeding always by its own rhythmical logic, and  lending to all mind and matter, in turn, what life they had. In this perpetual  flux of things and of souls, there was, as Heraclitus conceived, a  continuance, if not of their material or spiritual elements, yet of orderly intelligible  relationships, like the harmony of musical notes, wrought out in and through  the series of their mutations - ordinances of the divine reason, maintained  throughout the changes of the phenomenal world; and this harmony in their  mutation and opposition, was, after all, a principle of sanity, of reality,  there. But it happened, that, of all this, the first, merely sceptical or  negative step, that easiest step on the threshold, had alone remained in  general memory; and the doctrine of motion seemed to those who had felt its  seduction to make all fixed knowledge impossible. The swift passage of things,  the still swifter passage of those modes of our conscious being which seemed to  reflect them, might indeed be the burning of the divine fire: but what was  ascertained was that they did pass away like a devouring flame, or like the  race of water in the mid-stream - too swiftly for any real knowledge of them to  be attainable. Heracliteanism had grown to be almost identical with the famous  doctrine of the sophist Protagoras, that the momentary, sensible apprehension  of the individual was the only standard of what is or is not, and each one the  measure of all things to himself. The impressive name of Heraclitus had become  but an authority for a philosophy of the despair of knowledge. And as it had been with his original  followers in Greece, so it happened now with the later Roman disciple. He, too,  paused at the apprehension of that constant motion of things - the drift of  flowers, of little or great souls, of ambitious systems, in the stream around  him, the first source, the ultimate issue, of which, in regions out of sight,  must count with him as but a dim problem. The bold mental flight of the old  Greek master from the fleeting, competing objects of experience to that one  universal life, in which the whole sphere of physical change might be reckoned  as but a single pulsation, remained by him as hypothesis only - the hypothesis he  actually preferred, as in itself most credible, however scantily realisable  even by the imagination - yet still as but one unverified hypothesis, among many others,  concerning the first principle of things. He might reserve it as a fine, high,  visionary consideration, very remote upon the intellectual ladder, just at the  point, indeed, where that ladder seemed to pass into the clouds, but for which  there was certainly no time left just now by his eager interest in the real  objects so close to him, on the lowlier earthy steps nearest the ground. And  those childish days of reverie, when he played at priests, played in many another  day-dream, working his way from the actual present, as far as he might, with a  delightful sense of escape in replacing the outer world of other people by an  inward world as himself really cared to have it, had made him a kind of  idealist. He was become aware of the possibility of a large dissidence  between an inward and somewhat exclusive world of vivid personal apprehension,  and the unimproved, unheightened reality of the life of those about him. As a  consequence, he was ready now to concede, somewhat more easily than others, the  first point of his new lesson, that the individual is to himself the measure of  all things, and to rely on the exclusive certainty to himself of his own  impressions. To move afterwards in that outer world of other people, as though  taking it at their estimate, would be possible henceforth only as a kind of  irony. And as with the Vicaire Savoyard, after reflecting on the variations of  philosophy, the first fruit he drew from that reflection was the lesson of a  limitation of his researches to what immediately interested him; to rest  peacefully in a profound ignorance as to all beside; to disquiet himself only concerning  those things which it was of import for him to know. At least he would  entertain no theory of conduct which did not allow its due weight to this  primary element of incertitude or negation, in the conditions of mans life.  Just here he joined company, retracing in his individual mental pilgrimage the  historic order of human thought, with another wayfarer on the journey, another  ancient Greek master, the founder of the Cyrenaic philosophy, whose weighty  traditional utterances (for he had left no writing) served in turn to give effective  outline to the contemplations of Marius. There was something in the doctrine  itself congruous with the place wherein it had its birth; and for a time Marius  lived much, mentally, in the brilliant Greek colony which had given a dubious  name to the philosophy of pleasure. It hung, for his fancy, between the  mountains and the sea, among richer than Italian gardens, on a certain breezy  table-land projecting from the African coast, some hundreds of miles southward from  Greece. There, in a delightful climate, with something of transalpine  temperance amid its luxury, and withal in an inward atmosphere of temperance  which did but further enhance the brilliancy of human life, the school of  Cyrene had maintained itself as almost one with the family of its founder;  certainly as nothing coarse or unclean, and under the influence of accomplished  women. Aristippus of Cyrene too had left off in  suspense of judgment as to what might really lie behind - flammantia moenia  mundi: the flaming ramparts of the world. Those strange, bold, sceptical  surmises, which had haunted the minds of the first Greek enquirers as merely  abstract doubt, which had been present to the mind of Heraclitus as one element  only in a system of abstract philosophy, became with Aristippus a very subtly  practical worldly-wisdom. The difference between him and those obscure earlier  thinkers is almost like that between an ancient thinker generally, and a modern  man of the world: it was the difference between the mystic in his cell, or the  prophet in the desert, and the expert, cosmopolitan, administrator of his dark  sayings, translating the abstract thoughts of the master into terms, first of  all, of sentiment. It has been sometimes seen, in the history of the human  mind, that when thus translated into terms of sentiment - of sentiment, as lying  already half-way towards practice - the abstract ideas of metaphysics for  the first time reveal their true significance. The metaphysical principle,  in itself, as it were, without hands or feet, becomes impressive, fascinating,  of effect, when translated into a precept as to how it were best to feel and  act; in other words, under its sentimental or ethical equivalent. The leading  idea of the great master of Cyrene, his theory that things are but shadows, and  that we, even as they, never continue in one stay, might indeed have taken  effect as a languid, enervating, consumptive nihilism, as a precept of  renunciation, which would touch and handle and busy itself with nothing. But  in the reception of metaphysical formulae, all depends, as regards their  actual and ulterior result, on the pre-existent qualities of that soil of human  nature into which they fall - the company they find already present there, on  their admission into the house of thought; there being at least so much truth  as this involves in the theological maxim, that the reception of this or that  speculative conclusion is really a matter of will. The persuasion that all is  vanity, with this happily constituted Greek, who had been a genuine disciple of  Socrates and reflected, presumably, something of his blitheness in the face of  the world, his happy way of taking all chances, generated neither frivolity nor  sourness, but induced, rather, an impression, just serious enough, of the call  upon mens attention of the crisis in which they find themselves. It became the  stimulus towards every kind of activity, and prompted a perpetual,  inextinguishable thirst after experience. With Marius, then, the influence of the  philosopher of pleasure depended on this, that in him an abstract doctrine,  originally somewhat acrid, had fallen upon a rich and genial nature, well  fitted to transform it into a theory of practice, of considerable stimulative power  towards a fair life. What Marius saw in him was the spectacle of one of the  happiest temperaments coming, so to speak, to an understanding with the most  depressing of theories; accepting the results of a metaphysical system which seemed to concentrate into itself all the weakening trains of thought in  earlier Greek speculation, and making the best of it; turning its hard, bare  truths, with wonderful tact, into precepts of grace, and delicate wisdom, and a  delicate sense of honour. Given the hardest terms, supposing our days are  indeed but a shadow, even so, we may well adorn and beautify, in scrupulous  self-respect, our souls, and whatever our souls touch upon - these wonderful  bodies, these material dwelling-places through which the shadows pass together  for a while, the very raiment we wear, our very pastimes and the intercourse of  society. The most discerning judges saw in him something like the graceful  humanities of the later Roman, and our modern culture, as it is termed;  while Horace recalled his sayings as expressing best his own consummate amenity  in the reception of life. In this way, for Marius, under the guidance  of that old master of decorous living, those eternal doubts as to the criteria  of truth reduced themselves to a scepticism almost drily practical, a  scepticism which developed the opposition between things as they are and our impressions  and thoughts concerning them - the possibility, if an outward world does really  exist, of some faultiness in our apprehension of it - the doctrine, in short, of  what is termed the subjectivity of knowledge. That is a consideration,  indeed, which lies as an element of weakness, like some admitted fault or flaw,  at the very foundation of every philosophical account of the universe; which  confronts all philosophies at their starting, but with which none have really  dealt conclusively, some perhaps not quite sincerely; which those who are not philosophers  dissipate by common, but unphilosophical, sense, or by religious faith. The  peculiar strength of Marius was, to have apprehended this weakness on the  threshold of human knowledge, in the whole range of its consequences. Our  knowledge is limited to what we feel, he reflected: we need no proof that we  feel. But can we be sure that things are at all like our feelings? Mere  peculiarities in the instruments of our cognition, like the little knots and  waves on the surface of a mirror, may distort the matter they seem but to  represent. Of other people we cannot truly know even the feelings, nor how far they  would indicate the same modifications, each one of a personality really unique,  in using the same terms as ourselves; that common experience, which is  sometimes proposed as a satisfactory basis of certainty, being after all only a  fixity of language. But our own impressions! - The light and heat of that blue  veil over our heads, the heavens spread out, perhaps not like a curtain over  anything! - How reassuring, after so long a debate about the rival criteria of  truth, to fall back upon direct sensation, to limit ones aspirations after knowledge  to that! In an age still materially so brilliant, so expert in the artistic  handling of material things, with sensible capacities still in undiminished  vigour, with the whole world of classic art and poetry outspread before it, and  where there was more than eye or ear could well take in - how natural the  determination to rely exclusively upon the phenomena of the senses, which  certainly never deceive us about themselves, about which alone we can never deceive  ourselves! And so the abstract apprehension that the  little point of this present moment alone really is, between a past which has  just ceased to be and a future which may never come, became practical with  Marius, under the form of a resolve, as far as possible, to exclude regret and  desire, and yield himself to the improvement of the present with an absolutely disengaged  mind. America is here and now - here, or nowhere: as Wilhelm Meister finds out  one day, just not too late, after so long looking vaguely across the ocean for  the opportunity of the development of his capacities. It was as if, recognising  in perpetual motion the law of nature, Marius identified his own way of life  cordially with it, throwing himself into the stream, so to speak. He too must  maintain a harmony with that soul of motion in things, by constantly renewed mobility  of character. Omnis Aristippum decuit color et status et  res. - Thus  Horace had summed up that perfect manner in the reception of life attained by  his old Cyrenaic master; and the first practical consequence of the metaphysic which lay behind that perfect manner, had been a strict limitation, almost the  renunciation, of metaphysical enquiry itself. Metaphysic - that  art, as it has so often proved, in the words of Michelet, de ségarer avec  méthode, of bewildering oneself methodically: - one must spend little time  upon that! In the school of Cyrene, great as was its mental incisiveness,  logical and physical speculation, theoretic interests generally, had been  valued only so far as they served to give a groundwork, an intellectual  justification, to that exclusive concern with practical ethics which was a note  of the Cyrenaic philosophy. How earnest and enthusiastic, how true to itself, under  how many varieties of character, had been the effort of the Greeks after  Theory - Theôria - that vision of a wholly reasonable world, which, according to  the greatest of them, literally makes man like God: how loyally they had still  persisted in the quest after that, in spite of how many disappointments! In the  Gospel of Saint John, perhaps, some of them might have found the kind of vision  they were seeking for; but not in doubtful disputations concerning being  and not being, knowledge and appearance. Mens minds, even young mens minds,  at that late day, might well seem oppressed by the weariness of systems which had  so far outrun positive knowledge; and in the mind of Marius, as in that old  school of Cyrene, this sense of ennui, combined with appetites so youthfully  vigorous, brought about reaction, a sort of suicide (instances of the like have  been seen since) by which a great metaphysical acumen was devoted to the  function of proving metaphysical speculation impossible, or useless.  Abstract theory was to be valued only just so far as it might serve to clear  the tablet of the mind from suppositions no more than half realisable, or  wholly visionary, leaving it in flawless evenness of surface to the impressions  of an experience, concrete and direct. To be absolutely virgin towards such  experience, by ridding ourselves of such abstractions as are but the ghosts of  bygone impressions - to be rid of the notions we have made for ourselves, and  that so often only misrepresent the experience of which they profess to be the representation - idola,  idols, false appearances, as Bacon calls them later - to neutralise the  distorting influence of metaphysical system by an all-accomplished metaphysic  skill: it is this bold, hard, sober recognition, under a very dry light,  of its own proper aim, in union with a habit of feeling which on the practical side  may perhaps open a wide doorway to human weakness, that gives to the Cyrenaic  doctrine, to reproductions of this doctrine in the time of Marius or in our  own, their gravity and importance. It was a school to which the young man might  come, eager for truth, expecting much from philosophy, in no ignoble curiosity,  aspiring after nothing less than an initiation. He would be sent back, sooner  or later, to experience, to the world of concrete impressions, to things as  they may be seen, heard, felt by him; but with a wonderful machinery of  observation, and free from the tyranny of mere theories. So, in intervals of repose, after the  agitation which followed the death of Flavian, the thoughts of Marius ran,  while he felt himself as if returned to the fine, clear, peaceful light of that  pleasant school of healthfully sensuous wisdom, in the brilliant old Greek  colony, on its fresh upland by the sea. Not pleasure, but a general  completeness of life, was the practical ideal to which this anti-metaphysical  metaphysic really pointed. And towards such a full or complete life, a life  of various yet select sensation, the most direct and effective auxiliary must  be, in a word, Insight. Liberty of soul, freedom from all partial and  misrepresentative doctrine which does but relieve one element in our experience  at the cost of another, freedom from all embarrassment alike of regret for the  past and of calculation on the future: this would be but preliminary to the  real business of education - insight, insight through culture, into all that the  present moment holds in trust for us, as we stand so briefly in its presence. From  that maxim of Life as the end of life, followed, as a practical consequence,  the desirableness of refining all the instruments of inward and outward  intuition, of developing all their capacities, of testing and exercising ones  self in them, till ones whole nature became one complex medium of reception,  towards the vision - the beatific vision, if we really cared to make it such - of  our actual experience in the world. Not the conveyance of an abstract body of truths  or principles, would be the aim of the right education of ones self, or of  another, but the conveyance of an art - an art in some degree peculiar to each  individual character; with the modifications, that is, due to its special  constitution, and the peculiar circumstances of its growth, inasmuch as no one  of us is like another, all in all. |