ENCLOSURE
"Mademoiselle de Maupin," pet.i.te edition, Charpentier, 2 vols.; vol. ii, page 12.
"I am a man of the Homeric ages;--the world in which I live is not mine, and I comprehend nothing of the social system by which I am surrounded.
Never did Christ come into the world for me; I am as pagan as Alcibiades or Phidias. Never have I been to Golgotha to gather pa.s.sion-flowers; and the deep river flowing from the side of the crucified, and making a crimson girdle about the world, has never bathed me with its waves."
Page 21: "Venus may be seen; she hides nothing; for modesty is created for the ugly alone; and is a modern invention, daughter of the Christian disdain of form and matter."
"O ancient worlds! all thou didst revere is now despised; thine idols are overthrown in dust; gaunt anchorites clad in tattered rags, gory martyrs with shoulders lacerated by the tigers of the circuses, lie heaped upon the pedestals of thy G.o.ds so comely and so charming;--the Christ has enveloped the world in his winding sheet. Beauty must blush for herself, must wear a shroud."
Pages 22, 23: "Virginity, thou bitter plant, born upon a soil blood-moistened, whose wan and sickly flower opes painfully within the damp shadows of the cloister, under cold l.u.s.tral rains;--rose without perfume, and bristling with thorns,--thou hast replaced for us those fair and joyous roses, besprinkled with nard and Falernian, worn by the dancing girls of Sybaris."
"The antique world knew thee not, O fruitless flower!--never wert thou entwined within their garlands, replete with intoxicating perfume;--in that vigorous and healthy life, thou wouldst have been disdainfully trampled under foot! Virginity, mysticism, melancholy,--three unknown words, three new maladies brought among us by the Christ. Pale spectres who deluge the world with icy tears and who," etc., etc.
TO REV. WAYLAND D. BALL
NEW ORLEANS, 1883.
SECRET AFFINITIES (A PANTHEISTIC MADRIGAL) "_Emaux et Camees--Enamels and Cameos_"
For three thousand years two blocks of marble in the pediment of an antique temple have juxtaposed their white dreams against the background of the Attic heaven.
Congealed in the same nacre, tears of those waves which weep for Venus,--two pearls deep-plunged in ocean"s gulf, have uttered secret words unto each other;--
Blooming in the cool Generalife, beneath the spray of the ever-weeping fountain, two roses in Boabdil"s time spake to each other with whisper of leaves;--
Upon the cupolas of Venice, two white doves, rosy-footed, perched one May-time evening on the nest where love makes itself eternal.
Marble, pearl, rose, and dove--all dissolve, all pa.s.s away;--the pearl melts, the marble falls, the rose fades, the bird takes flight.
Leaving each other, all atoms seek the deep Crucible to thicken that universal paste formed of the forms that are melted by G.o.d.
By slow metamorphoses, the white marble changes to white flesh, the rosy flowers into rosy lips,--remoulding themselves into many fair bodies.
Again do the white doves coo within the hearts of young lovers; and the rare pearls re-form into teeth for the jewel-casket of woman"s smile.
And hence those sympathies, imperiously sweet, whereby in all places souls are gently warmed to know each other for sisters.
Thus, docile to the summons of an aroma, a sunbeam, a colour, the atom flies to the atom as to the flower the bee.
Then dream-memories return of long reveries in white temple pediments, of reveries in the deeps of the sea,--of blossom talk beside the clear-watered fountain,--
Of kisses and quivering of wings upon the domes that are tipped with b.a.l.l.s of gold; and the faithful molecules seek one another and know the clinging of love once more.
Again love awakens from its slumber of oblivion;--vaguely the Past is re-born; the perfume of the flower inhales and knows itself again in the sweetness of the pink mouth.
In that mother-of-pearl which glimmers in a laugh, the pearl recognizes its own whiteness;--upon the smooth skin of a young girl the marble with emotion recognizes its own coolness.
The dove finds in a sweet voice the echo of its own plaint,--resistance becomes blunted, and the stranger becomes the lover.
And thou before whom I tremble and burn,--what ocean-billow, what temple-font, what rose-tree, what dome of old knew us together? What pearl or marble, what flower or dove?
L. HEARN.
DEAR BALL,--Hope you will like the above rough prose version--of course all the unison is gone, all the soul of it has exhaled like a perfume;--this is a faded flower, pressed between the leaves of a book,--not the exquisite blossom which grew from the heart of Theophile Gautier.
L. H.
TO REV. WAYLAND D. BALL
NEW ORLEANS, 1883.
DEAR BALL,--So far from your last being a "poor letter," as you call it, I derived uncommon pleasure therefrom; and you must not annoy yourself by writing me long letters when you have much more important matters to occupy yourself. To write a letter of twelve pages or more is the labour equivalent to the production of a column article for a newspaper; and it would be unreasonable to expect any correspondent to devote so much time and labour to letter-writing more than once in several months. I have always found the friends who write me short letters write me regularly, and all who write long letters become finally weary and cease corresponding altogether at last. Nevertheless a great deal may be said in a few words, and much pleasure extracted from a letter one page long.
I should much like to hear of your being called to a strong church, but I suppose, as you say, that your youth is for the time being a drawback.
But I certainly would not feel in the least annoyed upon that score. You have all your future before you in a very bright glow, and I do not believe that any one can expect to obtain real success before he is thirty-five or forty. You cannot even forge yourself a good literary style before thirty; and even then it will not be perfectly tempered for some years. But from what I have seen of your ability, I should antic.i.p.ate a more than common success for you, and I believe you will create yourself a very wide and strong weapon of speech. And your position is very enviable. There is no calling which allows of so much leisure for study and so many opportunities for self-cultivation. Just fancy the vast amount of reading you will be able to accomplish within five years, and the immense value of such literary absorption. I have the misfortune to be a journalist, and it is hard work to study at all, and attend to one"s diurnal duty. Another misfortune here is the want of a good library. You have in Boston one of the finest in the world, and I believe you will be apt to regret it if you leave. Speaking of study,--you know that science has broadened and deepened so enormously of late years, that no man can thoroughly master any one branch of any one science, without devoting his whole life thereunto. The scholars of the twentieth century will have to be specialists or nothing. In matters of literary study, pure and simple, a fixed purpose and plan must be adopted. I will tell you what mine is, for I am quite young too, comparatively speaking, and have my "future" before me, so to speak. I never read a book which does not powerfully impress the imagination; but whatever contains novel, curious, potent imagery I always read, no matter what the subject. When the soil of fancy is really well enriched with innumerable fallen leaves, the flowers of language grow spontaneously. There are four things especially which enrich fancy,--mythology, history, romance, poetry,--the last being really the crystallization of all human desire after the impossible, the diamonds created by prodigious pressure of suffering. Now there is very little really good poetry, so it is easy to choose. In history I think one should only seek the extraordinary, the monstrous, the terrible; in mythology the most fantastic and sensuous, just as in romance. But there is one more absolutely essential study in the formation of a strong style--science. No romance equals it. If one can store up in his brain the most extraordinary facts of astronomy, geology, ethnology, etc., they furnish him with a wonderful and startling variety of images, symbols, and ill.u.s.trations. With these studies I should think one could not help forging a good style at least--an impressive one certainly. I give myself five years more study; then I think I may be able to do something. But with your opportunities I could hope to do much better than I am doing now. Opportunity to study is supreme happiness; for colleges and universities only give us the keys with which to unlock libraries of knowledge hereafter. Isn"t it horrible to hold the keys in one"s hands and never have time to use them?
Very truly yours, L. HEARN.
Don"t write again until you have plenty of time;--I know you must be busy. But whenever you would like to hear anything about anything in my special line of study, let me have a line from you, as I might be able to be of some use in matters of reference.
TO REV. WAYLAND D. BALL
NEW ORLEANS, 1883.
MY DEAR BALL,--I suppose you are quite disgusted with my silence; but you would excuse it were you to see how busy I have been, especially since our managing editor has gone on a vacation of some months.
I was amused at your ideal description of me. As you supposed, I am swarthy--more than the picture indicates; but by no means interesting to look at, and the profile view conceals the loss of an eye. I am also very short, a small square-set fellow of about 140 pounds when in good health.
I read with extreme pleasure your essay, and while I do not hold the same views, I believe yours will do good. Furthermore, if you familiarize the public with Buddhism, you are bound to aid in bringing about the very state of things I hope for. Buddhism only needs to be known to make its influence felt in America. I don"t think that works like those of Sinnett, or Olcott"s curious "Buddhist Catechism,"
published by Estes & Lauriat, will do any good;--they are too metaphysical, representing a sort of neo-gnosticism which repels by its resemblance to Spiritualistic humbug. But the higher Buddhism,--that suggested by men like Emerson, John Weiss, etc.,--will yet have an apostle. We shall live, I think, to see some strange things.
I am sorry I cannot gratify you by my reply about your projected literary sketches. The policy of the paper has been to give the preference to lady writers on such subjects, with a few exceptions to which some literary reputation has been attached. You would have a much better chance with theosophic essays; but you would be greatly restricted as to s.p.a.ce. You did not write, it appears, to Page; and he is now at Saratoga, where he will remain about two months. Anyhow, I would personally advise you--if you think my advice worth anything--to devote your literary impulse altogether to religious subjects. By a certain cla.s.s of sermons and addresses you can achieve in a few years much more success than the slow uphill work of professional journalism or literature would bring you in a whole decade. With leisure and popularity you could then achieve such literary work as you could not think of attempting now. As for me, if I succeed in becoming independent of journalism in another ten years, I shall be luckier than men of much greater talent,--such as Bayard Taylor.
Believe me, as ever, yours, L. HEARN.
TO REV. WAYLAND D. BALL
NEW ORLEANS, June, 1883.
MY DEAR FRIEND,--You have been very kind indeed to give me so pleasant an introduction to your personality;--I already feel as if we were more intimate, as if I knew you better and liked you more. A photograph is generally a surprise;--in your case it was not;--you are very much as I fancied you were--only more so.
I read with pleasure your article. The introduction was especially powerful. I must now, however, tell you frankly what I think would be most to your interest. When I wrote before I had no definite idea as to the scope or plan of your essay, nor did I know the _Inter-Ocean_ desired it. Now I think it your duty to give the next article to that paper,--as the first is incomplete without it. It does not contain more than the parallel. However, the publication of your writing in the _Inter-Ocean_, even though unremunerative, will do you vastly more good than would the publication in our paper at a small price. The _Inter-Ocean_ circulation is very large; and you must be advertised.