



Produced by Eric Hutton





THE SOUL OF THE FAR EAST

By Percival Lowell


Contents

     Chapter 1. Individuality

     Chapter 2. Family

     Chapter 3. Adoption

     Chapter 4. Language

     Chapter 5. Nature and Art

     Chapter 6. Art

     Chapter 7. Religion

     Chapter 8. Imagination




Chapter 1. Individuality.

The boyish belief that on the other side of our globe all things are
of necessity upside down is startlingly brought back to the man when he
first sets foot at Yokohama. If his initial glance does not, to be sure,
disclose the natives in the every-day feat of standing calmly on their
heads, an attitude which his youthful imagination conceived to be a
necessary consequence of their geographical position, it does at least
reveal them looking at the world as if from the standpoint of that
eccentric posture. For they seem to him to see everything topsy-turvy.
Whether it be that their antipodal situation has affected their brains,
or whether it is the mind of the observer himself that has hitherto been
wrong in undertaking to rectify the inverted pictures presented by
his retina, the result, at all events, is undeniable. The world stands
reversed, and, taking for granted his own uprightness, the stranger
unhesitatingly imputes to them an obliquity of vision, a state of mind
outwardly typified by the cat-like obliqueness of their eyes.

If the inversion be not precisely of the kind he expected, it is none
the less striking, and impressibly more real. If personal experience has
definitely convinced him that the inhabitants of that under side of our
planet do not adhere to it head downwards, like flies on a ceiling,--his
early a priori deduction,--they still appear quite as antipodal,
mentally considered. Intellectually, at least, their attitude sets
gravity at defiance. For to the mind's eye their world is one huge,
comical antithesis of our own. What we regard intuitively in one way
from our standpoint, they as intuitively observe in a diametrically
opposite manner from theirs. To speak backwards, write backwards, read
backwards, is but the a b c of their contrariety. The inversion extends
deeper than mere modes of expression, down into the very matter of
thought. Ideas of ours which we deemed innate find in them no home,
while methods which strike us as preposterously unnatural appear to
be their birthright. From the standing of a wet umbrella on its handle
instead of its head to dry to the striking of a match away in place
of toward one, there seems to be no action of our daily lives, however
trivial, but finds with them its appropriate reaction--equal but
opposite. Indeed, to one anxious of conforming to the manners and
customs of the country, the only road to right lies in following
unswervingly that course which his inherited instincts assure him to be
wrong.

Yet these people are human beings; with all their eccentricities they
are men. Physically we cannot but be cognizant of the fact, nor mentally
but be conscious of it. Like us, indeed, and yet so unlike are they
that we seem, as we gaze at them, to be viewing our own humanity in
some mirth-provoking mirror of the mind,--a mirror that shows us our own
familiar thoughts, but all turned wrong side out. Humor holds the glass,
and we become the sport of our own reflections. But is it otherwise at
home? Do not our personal presentments mock each of us individually
our lives long? Who but is the daily dupe of his dressing-glass, and
complacently conceives himself to be a very different appearing person
from what he is, forgetting that his right side has become his left, and
vice versa? Yet who, when by chance he catches sight in like manner of
the face of a friend, can keep from smiling at the caricatures which the
mirror's left-for-right reversal makes of the asymmetry of that
friend's features,--caricatures all the more grotesque for being utterly
unsuspected by their innocent original? Perhaps, could we once see
ourselves as others see us, our surprise in the case of foreign peoples
might be less pronounced.

Regarding, then, the Far Oriental as a man, and not simply as
a phenomenon, we discover in his peculiar point of view a new
importance,--the possibility of using it stereoptically. For his
mind-photograph of the world can be placed side by side with ours, and
the two pictures combined will yield results beyond what either alone
could possibly have afforded. Thus harmonized, they will help us
to realize humanity. Indeed it is only by such a combination of two
different aspects that we ever perceive substance and distinguish
reality from illusion. What our two eyes make possible for material
objects, the earth's two hemispheres may enable us to do for mental
traits. Only the superficial never changes its expression; the
appearance of the solid varies with the standpoint of the observer.
In dreamland alone does everything seem plain, and there all is
unsubstantial.

To say that the Japanese are not a savage tribe is of course
unnecessary; to repeat the remark, anything but superfluous, on the
principle that what is a matter of common notoriety is very apt to
prove a matter about which uncommonly little is known. At present we
go halfway in recognition of these people by bestowing upon them a
demi-diploma of mental development called semi-civilization, neglecting,
however, to specify in what the fractional qualification consists.
If the suggestion of a second moiety, as of something directly
complementary to them, were not indirectly complimentary to ourselves,
the expression might pass; but, as it is, the self-praise is rather too
obvious to carry conviction. For Japan's claim to culture is not based
solely upon the exports with which she supplements our art, nor upon the
paper, china, and bric-a-brac with which she adorns our rooms; any more
than Western science is adequately represented in Japan by our popular
imports there of kerosene oil, matches, and beer. Only half civilized
the Far East presumably is, but it is so rather in an absolute than a
relative sense; in the sense of what might have been, not of what is. It
is so as compared, not with us, but with the eventual possibilities of
humanity. As yet, neither system, Western nor Eastern, is perfect enough
to serve in all things as standard for the other. The light of truth
has reached each hemisphere through the medium of its own mental
crystallization, and this has polarized it in opposite ways, so that now
the rays that are normal to the eyes of the one only produce darkness
to those of the other. For the Japanese civilization in the sense of not
being savagery is the equal of our own. It is not in the polish that the
real difference lies; it is in the substance polished. In politeness, in
delicacy, they have as a people no peers. Art has been their mistress,
though science has never been their master. Perhaps for this very reason
that art, not science, has been the Muse they courted, the result has
been all the more widespread. For culture there is not the attainment
of the few, but the common property of the people. If the peaks of
intellect rise less eminent, the plateau of general elevation stands
higher. But little need be said to prove the civilization of a land
where ordinary tea-house girls are models of refinement, and common
coolies, when not at work, play chess for pastime.

If Japanese ways look odd at first sight, they but look more odd on
closer acquaintance. In a land where, to allow one's understanding the
freer play of indoor life, one begins, not by taking off his hat, but by
removing his boots, he gets at the very threshold a hint that humanity
is to be approached the wrong end to. When, after thus entering a
house, he tries next to gain admittance to the mind of its occupant, the
suspicion becomes a certainty. He discovers that this people talk, so
to speak, backwards; that before he can hope to comprehend them, or
make himself understood in return, he must learn to present his thoughts
arranged in inverse order from the one in which they naturally suggest
themselves to his mind. His sentences must all be turned inside out. He
finds himself lost in a labyrinth of language. The same seems to be true
of the thoughts it embodies. The further he goes the more obscure the
whole process becomes, until, after long groping about for some means of
orienting himself, he lights at last upon the clue. This clue consists
in "the survival of the unfittest."

In the civilization of Japan we have presented to us a most interesting
case of partially arrested development; or, to speak esoterically,
we find ourselves placed face to face with a singular example of a
completed race-life. For though from our standpoint the evolution of
these people seems suddenly to have come to an end in mid-career,
looked at more intimately it shows all the signs of having fully run its
course. Development ceased, not because of outward obstruction, but from
purely intrinsic inability to go on. The intellectual machine was not
shattered; it simply ran down. To this fact the phenomenon owes its
peculiar interest. For we behold here in the case of man the same
spectacle that we see cosmically in the case of the moon, the spectacle
of a world that has died of old age. No weak spot in their social
organism destroyed them from within; no epidemic, in the shape of
foreign hordes, fell upon them from without. For in spite of the fact
that China offers the unique example of a country that has simply lived
to be conquered, mentally her masters have invariably become her pupils.
Having ousted her from her throne as ruler, they proceeded to sit at
her feet as disciples. Thus they have rather helped than hindered her
civilization.

Whatever portion of the Far East we examine we find its mental history
to be the same story with variations. However unlike China, Korea, and
Japan are in some respects, through the careers of all three we can
trace the same life-spirit. It is the career of the river Jordan rising
like any other stream from the springs among the mountains only to fall
after a brief existence into the Dead Sea. For their vital force
had spent itself more than a millennium ago. Already, then, their
civilization had in its deeper developments attained its stature, and
has simply been perfecting itself since. We may liken it to some stunted
tree, that, finding itself prevented from growth, bastes the more
luxuriantly to put forth flowers and fruit. For not the final but the
medial processes were skipped. In those superficial amenities with
which we more particularly link our idea of civilization, these peoples
continued to grow. Their refinement, if failing to reach our standard
in certain respects, surpasses ours considering the bare barbaric
basis upon which it rests. For it is as true of the Japanese as of
the proverbial Russian, though in a more scientific sense, that if you
scratch him you will find the ancestral Tartar. But it is no less true
that the descendants of this rude forefather have now taken on a polish
of which their own exquisite lacquer gives but a faint reflection. The
surface was perfected after the substance was formed. Our word finish,
with its double meaning, expresses both the process and the result.

There entered, to heighten the bizarre effect, a spirit common in minds
that lack originality--the spirit of imitation. Though consequent enough
upon a want of initiative, the results of this trait appear anything but
natural to people of a more progressive past. The proverbial collar and
pair of spurs look none the less odd to the stranger for being a mental
instead of a bodily habit. Something akin to such a case of unnatural
selection has there taken place. The orderly procedure of natural
evolution was disastrously supplemented by man. For the fact that in
the growth of their tree of knowledge the branches developed out of all
proportion to the trunk is due to a practice of culture-grafting.

From before the time when they began to leave records of their actions
the Japanese have been a nation of importers, not of merchandise, but of
ideas. They have invariably shown the most advanced free-trade spirit
in preferring to take somebody else's ready-made articles rather than
to try to produce any brand-new conceptions themselves. They continue
to follow the same line of life. A hearty appreciation of the things of
others is still one of their most winning traits. What they took they
grafted bodily upon their ancestral tree, which in consequence came to
present a most unnaturally diversified appearance. For though not unlike
other nations in wishing to borrow, if their zeal in the matter was
slightly excessive, they were peculiar in that they never assimilated
what they took. They simply inserted it upon the already existing
growth. There it remained, and throve, and blossomed, nourished by that
indigenous Japanese sap, taste. But like grafts generally, the foreign
boughs were not much modified by their new life-blood, nor was the tree
in its turn at all affected by them. Connected with it only as separable
parts of its structure, the cuttings might have been lopped off again
without influencing perceptibly the condition of the foster-parent stem.
The grafts in time grew to be great branches, but the trunk remained
through it all the trunk of a sapling. In other words, the nation grew
up to man's estate, keeping the mind of its childhood.

What is thus true of the Japanese is true likewise of the Koreans and of
the Chinese. The three peoples, indeed, form so many links in one long
chain of borrowing. China took from India, then Korea copied China, and
lastly Japan imitated Korea. In this simple manner they successively
became possessed of a civilization which originally was not the property
of any one of them. In the eagerness they all evinced in purloining
what was not theirs, and in the perfect content with which they then
proceeded to enjoy what they had taken, they remind us forcibly of
that happy-go-lucky class in the community which prefers to live on
questionable loans rather than work itself for a living. Like those same
individuals, whatever interest the Far Eastern people may succeed in
raising now, Nature will in the end make them pay dearly for their lack
of principal.

The Far Eastern civilization resembles, in fact, more a mechanical
mixture of social elements than a well differentiated chemical compound.
For in spite of the great variety of ingredients thrown into its
caldron of destiny, as no affinity existed between them, no combination
resulted. The power to fuse was wanting. Capability to evolve anything
is not one of the marked characteristics of the Far East. Indeed, the
tendency to spontaneous variation, Nature's mode of making experiments,
would seem there to have been an enterprising faculty that was exhausted
early. Sleepy, no doubt, from having got up betimes with the dawn, these
dwellers in the far lands of the morning began to look upon their day
as already well spent before they had reached its noon. They grew old
young, and have remained much the same age ever since. What they were
centuries ago, that at bottom they are to-day. Take away the European
influence of the last twenty years, and each man might almost be his
own great-grandfather. In race characteristics he is yet essentially the
same. The traits that distinguished these peoples in the past have been
gradually extinguishing them ever since. Of these traits, stagnating
influences upon their career, perhaps the most important is the great
quality of impersonality.

If we take, through the earth's temperate zone, a belt of country
whose northern and southern edges are determined by certain limiting
isotherms, not more than half the width of the zone apart, we shall find
that we have included in a relatively small extent of surface almost
all the nations of note in the world, past or present. Now if we examine
this belt, and compare the different parts of it with one another, we
shall be struck by a remarkable fact. The peoples inhabiting it grow
steadily more personal as we go west. So unmistakable is this gradation
of spirit, that one is tempted to ascribe it to cosmic rather than
to human causes. It is as marked as the change in color of the human
complexion observable along any meridian, which ranges from black at
the equator to blonde toward the pole. In like manner, the sense of
self grows more intense as we follow in the wake of the setting sun, and
fades steadily as we advance into the dawn. America, Europe, the Levant,
India, Japan, each is less personal than the one before. We stand at the
nearer end of the scale, the Far Orientals at the other. If with us the
I seems to be of the very essence of the soul, then the soul of the Far
East may be said to be Impersonality.

Curious as this characteristic is as a fact, it is even more interesting
as a factor. For what it betokens of these peoples in particular may
suggest much about man generally. It may mark a stride in theory, if a
standstill in practice. Possibly it may help us to some understanding
of ourselves. Not that it promises much aid to vexed metaphysical
questions, but as a study in sociology it may not prove so vain.

And for a thing which is always with us, its discussion may be said to
be peculiarly opportune just now. For it lies at the bottom of the most
pressing questions of the day. Of the two great problems that stare the
Western world in the face at the present moment, both turn to it for
solution. Agnosticism, the foreboding silence of those who think,
socialism, communism, and nihilism, the petulant cry of those who do
not, alike depend ultimately for the right to be upon the truth or the
falsity of the sense of self.

For if there be no such actual thing as individuality, if the feeling
we call by that name be naught but the transient illusion the Buddhists
would have us believe it, any faith founded upon it as basis vanishes as
does the picture in a revolving kaleidoscope,--less enduring even than
the flitting phantasmagoria of a dream. If the ego be but the passing
shadow of the material brain, at the disintegration of the gray matter
what will become of us? Shall we simply lapse into an indistinguishable
part of the vast universe that compasses us round? At the thought we
seem to stand straining our gaze, on the shore of the great sea of
knowledge, only to watch the fog roll in, and hide from our view even
those headlands of hope that, like beseeching hands, stretch out into
the deep.

So more materially. If individuality be a delusion of the mind, what
motive potent enough to excite endeavor in the breast of an ordinary
mortal remains? Philosophers, indeed, might still work for the
advancement of mankind, but mankind itself would not continue long to
labor energetically for what should profit only the common weal. Take
away the stimulus of individuality, and action is paralyzed at once.
For with most men the promptings of personal advantage only afford
sufficient incentive to effort. Destroy this force, then any
consideration due it lapses, and socialism is not only justified, it
is raised instantly into an axiom of life. The community, in that case,
becomes itself the unit, the indivisible atom of existence. Socialism,
then communism, then nihilism, follow in inevitable sequence. That even
the Far Oriental, with all his numbing impersonality, has not touched
this goal may at least suggest that individuality is a fact.

But first, what do we know about its existence ourselves?

Very early in the course of every thoughtful childhood an event takes
place, by the side of which, to the child himself, all other events sink
into insignificance. It is not one that is recognized and chronicled
by the world, for it is wholly unconnected with action. No one but the
child is aware of its occurrence, and he never speaks of it to others.
Yet to that child it marks an epoch. So intensely individual does it
seem that the boy is afraid to avow it, while in reality so universal
is it that probably no human being has escaped its influence. Though
subjective purely, it has more vividness than any external event;
and though strictly intrinsic to life, it is more startling than any
accident of fate or fortune. This experience of the boy's, at once so
singular and yet so general, is nothing less than the sudden revelation
to him one day of the fact of his own personality.

Somewhere about the time when sensation is giving place to sensitiveness
as the great self-educator, and the knowledge gained by the five bodily
senses is being fused into the wisdom of that mental one we call common
sense, the boy makes a discovery akin to the act of waking up. All at
once he becomes conscious of himself; and the consciousness has about
it a touch of the uncanny. Hitherto he has been aware only of matter;
he now first realizes mind. Unwarned, unprepared, he is suddenly ushered
before being, and stands awe-struck in the presence of--himself.

If the introduction to his own identity was startling, there is nothing
reassuring in the feeling that this strange acquaintanceship must last.
For continue it does. It becomes an unsought intimacy he cannot shake
off. Like to his own shadow he cannot escape it. To himself a man cannot
but be at home. For years this alter ego haunts him, for he imagines it
an idiosyncrasy of his own, a morbid peculiarity he dare not confide
to any one, for fear of being thought a fool. Not till long afterwards,
when he has learned to live as a matter of course with his ever-present
ghost, does he discover that others have had like familiars themselves.

Sometimes this dawn of consciousness is preceded by a long twilight of
soul-awakening; but sometimes, upon more sensitive and subtler natures,
the light breaks with all the suddenness of a sunrise at the equator,
revealing to the mind's eye an unsuspected world of self within. But in
whatever way we may awake to it, the sense of personality, when first
realized, appears already, like the fabled Goddess of Wisdom, full grown
in the brain. From the moment when we first remember ourselves we seem
to be as old as we ever seem to others afterwards to become. We grow,
indeed, in knowledge, in wisdom, in experience, as our years increase,
but deep down in our heart of hearts we are still essentially the same.
To be sure, people pay us more deference than they did, which suggests
a doubt at times whether we may not have changed; small boys of a
succeeding generation treat us with a respect that causes us inwardly to
smile, as we think how little we differ from them, if they but knew it.
For at bottom we are not conscious of change from that morning, long
ago, when first we realized ourselves. We feel just as young now as we
felt old then. We are but amused at the world's discrimination where we
can detect no difference.

Every human being has been thus "twice born": once as matter, once as
mind. Nor is this second birth the birthright only of mankind. All the
higher animals probably, possibly even the lower too, have experienced
some such realization of individual identity. However that may be,
certainly to all races of men has come this revelation; only the degree
in which they have felt its force has differed immensely. It is one
thing to the apathetic, fatalistic Turk, and quite another matter to an
energetic, nervous American. Facts, fancies, faiths, all show how wide
is the variance in feelings. With them no introspective [greek]cnzhi
seauton overexcites the consciousness of self. But with us; as with
those of old possessed of devils, it comes to startle and stays to
distress. Too apt is it to prove an ever-present, undesirable double.
Too often does it play the part of uninvited spectre at the feast,
whose presence no one save its unfortunate victim suspects. The haunting
horror of his own identity is to natures far less eccentric than Kenelm
Chillingly's only too common a curse. To this companionship, paradoxical
though it sound, is principally due the peculiar loneliness of
childhood. For nothing is so isolating as a persistent idea which one
dares not confide.

And yet,--stranger paradox still,--was there ever any one willing to
exchange his personality for another's? Who can imagine foregoing his
own self? Nay, do we not cling even to its outward appearance? Is there
a man so poor in all that man holds dear that he does not keenly resent
being accidentally mistaken for his neighbor? Surely there must be
something more than mirage in this deep-implanted, widespread instinct
of human race.

But however strong the conviction now of one's individuality, is there
aught to assure him of its continuance beyond the confines of its
present life? Will it awake on death's morrow and know itself, or
will it, like the body that gave it lodgment, disintegrate again into
indistinguishable spirit dust? Close upon the heels of the existing
consciousness of self treads the shadow-like doubt of its hereafter.
Will analogy help to answer the grewsome riddle of the Sphinx? Are the
laws we have learned to be true for matter true also for mind? Matter we
now know is indestructible; yet the form of it with which we once were
so fondly familiar vanishes never to return. Is a like fate to be the
lot of the soul? That mind should be capable of annihilation is as
inconceivable as that matter should cease to be. Surely the spirit we
feel existing round about us on every side now has been from ever, and
will be for ever to come. But that portion of it which we each know as
self, is it not like to a drop of rain seen in its falling through the
air? Indistinguishable the particle was in the cloud whence it came;
indistinguishable it will become again in the ocean whither it is bound.
Its personality is but its passing phase from a vast impersonal on the
one hand to an equally vast impersonal on the other. Thus seers preached
in the past; so modern science is hinting to-day. With us the idea seems
the bitter fruit of material philosophy; by them it was looked upon as
the fairest flower of their faith. What is dreaded now as the impious
suggestion of the godless four thousand years ago was reverenced as a
sacred tenet of religion.

Shorter even than his short threescore years and ten is that soul's life
of which man is directly cognizant. Bounded by two seemingly impersonal
states is the personal consciousness of which he is made aware: the one
the infantile existence that precedes his boyish discovery, the other
the gloom that grows with years,--two twilights that fringe the two
borders of his day. But with the Far Oriental, life is all twilight. For
in Japan and China both states are found together. There, side by side
with the present unconsciousness of the babe exists the belief in a
coming unconsciousness for the man. So inseparably blended are the two
that the known truth of the one seems, for that very bond, to carry
with it the credentials of the other. Can it be that the personal,
progressive West is wrong, and the impersonal, impassive East right?
Surely not. Is the other side of the world in advance of us in
mind-development, even as it precedes us in the time of day; or just as
our noon is its night, may it not be far in our rear? Is not its seeming
wisdom rather the precociousness of what is destined never to go far?

Brought suddenly upon such a civilization, after the blankness of a
long ocean voyage, one is reminded instinctively of the feelings of that
bewildered individual who, after a dinner at which he had eventually
ceased to be himself, was by way of pleasantry left out overnight in a
graveyard, on their way home, by his humorously inclined companions; and
who, on awaking alone, in a still dubious condition, looked around
him in surprise, rubbed his eyes two or three times to no purpose, and
finally muttered in a tone of awe-struck conviction, "Well, either I'm
the first to rise, or I'm a long way behind time!"

Whether their failure to follow the natural course of evolution results
in bringing them in at the death just the same or not, these people are
now, at any rate, stationary not very far from the point at which we
all set out. They are still in that childish state of development
before self-consciousness has spoiled the sweet simplicity of nature. An
impersonal race seems never to have fully grown up.

Partly for its own sake, partly for ours, this most distinctive feature
of the Far East, its marked impersonality, is well worthy particular
attention; for while it collaterally suggests pregnant thoughts about
ourselves, it directly underlies the deeper oddities of a civilization
which is the modern eighth wonder of the world. We shall see this as we
look at what these people are, at what they were, and at what they hope
to become; not historically, but psychologically, as one might perceive,
were he but wise enough, in an acorn, besides the nut itself, two oaks,
that one from which it fell, and that other which from it will rise.
These three states, which we may call its potential past, present, and
future, may be observed and studied in three special outgrowths of a
race's character: in its language, in its every-day thoughts, and in its
religion. For in the language of a people we find embalmed the spirit
of its past; in its every-day thoughts, be they of arts or sciences, is
wrapped up its present life; in its religion lie enfolded its dreamings
of a future. From out each of these three subjects in the Far East
impersonality stares us in the face. Upon this quality as a foundation
rests the Far Oriental character. It is individually rather than
nationally that I propose to scan it now. It is the action of a
particle in the wave of world-development I would watch, rather than
the propagation of the wave itself. Inferences about the movement of the
whole will follow of themselves a knowledge of the motion of its parts.

But before we attack the subject esoterically, let us look a moment at
the man as he appears in his relation to the community. Such a glance
will suggest the peculiar atmosphere of impersonality that pervades the
people.

However lacking in cleverness, in merit, or in imagination a man may
be, there are in our Western world, if his existence there be so much as
noticed at all, three occasions on which he appears in print. His birth,
his marriage, and his death are all duly chronicled in type, perhaps as
sufficiently typical of the general unimportance of his life. Mention of
one's birth, it is true, is an aristocratic privilege, confined to the
world of English society. In democratic America, no doubt because all
men there are supposed to be born free and equal, we ignore the first
event, and mention only the last two episodes, about which our national
astuteness asserts no such effacing equality.

Accepting our newspaper record as a fair enough summary of the biography
of an average man, let us look at these three momentous occasions in the
career of a Far Oriental.



Chapter 2. Family.

In the first place, then, the poor little Japanese baby is ushered into
this world in a sadly impersonal manner, for he is not even accorded the
distinction of a birthday. He is permitted instead only the much less
special honor of a birth-year. Not that he begins his separate existence
otherwise than is the custom of mortals generally, at a definite instant
of time, but that very little subsequent notice is ever taken of the
fact. On the contrary, from the moment he makes his appearance he is
spoken of as a year old, and this same age he continues to be considered
in most simple ease of calculation, till the beginning of the next
calendar year. When that epoch of general rejoicing arrives, he is
credited with another year himself. So is everybody else. New Year's day
is a common birthday for the community, a sort of impersonal anniversary
for his whole world. A like reckoning is followed in China and Korea.
Upon the disadvantages of being considered from one's birth up at least
one year and possibly two older than one really is, it lies beyond our
present purpose to expatiate. It is quite evident that woman has had no
voice in the framing of such a chronology. One would hardly imagine
that man had either, so astronomic is the system. A communistic age
is however but an unavoidable detail of the general scheme whose most
suggestive feature consists in the subordination of the actual birthday
of the individual to the fictitious birthday of the community. For it is
not so much the want of commemoration shown the subject as the character
of the commemoration which is significant. Some slight notice is indeed
paid to birthdays during early childhood, but even then their observance
is quite secondary in importance to that of the great impersonal
anniversaries of the third day of the third moon and the fifth day of
the fifth moon. These two occasions celebrated the coming of humanity
into the world with an impersonality worthy of the French revolutionary
calendar. The first of them is called the festival of girls, and
commemorates the birth of girls generally, the advent of the universal
feminine, as one may say. The second is a corresponding anniversary for
boys. Owing to its sex, the latter is the greater event of the two, and
in consequence of its most conspicuous feature is styled the festival of
fishes. The fishes are hollow paper images of the "tai" from four to six
feet in length, tied to the top of a long pole planted in the ground and
tipped with a gilded ball. Holes in the paper at the mouth and the
tail enable the wind to inflate the body so that it floats about
horizontally, swaying hither and thither, and tugging at the line after
the manner of a living thing. The fish are emblems of good luck, and are
set up in the courtyard of every house where a son has been born during
the year. On this auspicious day Tokio is suddenly transformed into
eighty square miles of aquarium.

For any more personal purpose New Year's day eclipses all particular
anniversaries. Then everybody congratulates everybody else upon
everything in general, and incidentally upon being alive. Such
substitution of an abstract for a concrete birthday, although
exceedingly convenient for others, must at least conduce to
self-forgetfulness on the part of its proper possessor, and tend
inevitably to merge the identity of the individual in that of the
community.

It fares hardly better with the Far Oriental in the matter of marriage.
Although he is, as we might think, the person most interested in the
result, he is permitted no say in the affair whatever. In fact, it
is not his affair at all, but his father's. His hand is simply made a
cat's-paw of. The matter is entirely a business transaction, entered
into by the parent and conducted through regular marriage brokers. In
it he plays only the part of a marionette. His revenge for being thus
bartered out of what might be the better half of his life, he takes
eventually on the next succeeding generation.

His death may be said to be the most important act of his whole life.
For then only can his personal existence be properly considered to
begin. By it he joins the great company of ancestors who are to these
people of almost more consequence than living folk, and of much more
individual distinction. Particularly is this the case in China and
Korea, but the same respect, though in a somewhat less rigid form,
is paid the dead in Japan. Then at last the individual receives that
recognition which was denied him in the flesh. In Japan a mortuary
tablet is set up to him in the house and duly worshipped; on the
continent the ancestors are given a dwelling of their own, and even
more devotedly reverenced. But in both places the cult is anything but
funereal. For the ancestral tombs are temples and pleasure pavilions at
the same time, consecrated not simply to rites and ceremonies, but to
family gatherings and general jollification. And the fortunate defunct
must feel, if he is still half as sentient as his dutiful descendants
suppose, that his earthly life, like other approved comedies, has ended
well.

Important, however, as these critical points in his career may be
reckoned by his relatives, they are scarcely calculated to prove equally
epochal to the man himself. In a community where next to no note is
ever taken of the anniversary of his birth, some doubt as to the special
significance of that red-letter day may not unnaturally creep into
his own mind. While in regard to his death, although it may be highly
flattering for him to know that he will certainly become somebody when
he shall have ceased, practically, to be anybody, such tardy recognition
is scarcely timely enough to be properly appreciated. Human nature is so
earth-tied, after all, that a post-mundane existence is very apt to seem
immaterial as well as be so.

With the old familiar landmarks of life obliterated in this wholesale
manner, it is to be doubted whether one of us, placed in the midst of
such a civilization, would know himself. He certainly would derive but
scanty satisfaction from the recognition if he did. Even Nirvana might
seem a happy limbo by comparison. With a communal, not to say a cosmic,
birthday, and a conventional wife, he might well deem his separate
existence the shadow of a shade and embrace Buddhism from mere force of
circumstances.

Further investigation would not shake his opinion. For a far-oriental
career is thoroughly in keeping with these, its typical turning-points.
From one end of its course to the other it is painfully impersonal.
In its regular routine as in its more salient junctures, life presents
itself to these races a totally different affair from what it seems to
us. The cause lies in what is taken to be the basis of socio-biology, if
one may so express it.

In the Far East the social unit, the ultimate molecule of existence, is
not the individual, but the family.

We occidentals think we value family. We even parade our pretensions so
prominently as sometimes to tread on other people's prejudices of a like
nature. Yet we scarcely seem to appreciate the inheritance. For with a
logic which does us questionable credit, we are proud of our ancestors
in direct proportion to their remoteness from ourselves, thus permitting
Democracy to revenge its insignificance by smiling at our self-imposed
satire. To esteem a man in inverse ratio to the amount of remarkable
blood he has inherited is, to say the least, bathetic. Others, again,
make themselves objectionable by preferring their immediate relatives
to all less connected companions, and cling to their cousins so closely
that affection often culminates in matrimony, nature's remonstrances
notwithstanding. But with all the pride or pleasure which we take in
the members of our particular clan, our satisfaction really springs from
viewing them on an autocentric theory of the social system. In our own
eyes we are the star about which, as in Joseph's dream, our relatives
revolve and upon which they help to shed an added lustre. Our Ptolemaic
theory of society is necessitated by our tenacity to the personal
standpoint. This fixed idea of ours causes all else seemingly to
rotate about it. Such an egoistic conception is quite foreign to
our longitudinal antipodes. However much appearances may agree, the
fundamental principles upon which family consideration is based are
widely different in the two hemispheres. For the far-eastern social
universe turns on a patricentric pivot.

Upon the conception of the family as the social and political unit
depends the whole constitution of China. The same theory somewhat
modified constitutes the life-principle of Korea, of Japan, and of their
less advanced cousins who fill the vast centre of the Asiatic continent.
From the emperor on his throne to the common coolie in his hovel it is
the idea of kinship that knits the entire body politic together. The
Empire is one great family; the family is a little empire.

The one developed out of the other. The patriarchal is, as is well
known, probably the oldest political system in the world. All nations
may be said to have experienced such a paternal government, but most
nations outgrew it.

Now the interesting fact about the yellow branch of the human race is,
not that they had so juvenile a constitution, but that they have it;
that it has persisted practically unchanged from prehistoric ages. It
is certainly surprising in this kaleidoscopic world whose pattern is
constantly changing as time merges one combination of its elements
into another, that on the other side of the globe this set should have
remained the same. Yet in spite of the lapse of years, in spite of
the altered conditions of existence, in spite of an immense advance in
civilization, such a primitive state of society has continued there to
the present day, in all its essentials what it was when as nomads the
race forefathers wandered peacefully or otherwise over the plains of
Central Asia. The principle helped them to expand; it has simply cramped
them ever since. For, instead of dissolving like other antiquated views,
it has become, what it was bound to become if it continued to last,
crystallized into an institution. It had practically reached this
condition when it received a theoretical, not to say a theological
recognition which gave it mundane immortality. A couple of millenniums
ago Confucius consecrated filial duty by making it the basis of the
Chinese moral code. His hand was the finishing touch of fossilification.
For since the sage set his seal upon the system no one has so much as
dreamt of changing it. The idea of confuting Confucius would be an
act of impiety such as no Chinaman could possibly commit. Not that
the inadmissibility of argument is due really to the authority of the
philosopher, but that it lies ingrained in the character of the people.
Indeed the genius of the one may be said to have consisted in divining
the genius of the other. Confucius formulated the prevailing practice,
and in so doing helped to make it perpetual. He gave expression to the
national feeling, and like expressions, generally his, served to stamp
the idea all the more indelibly upon the national consciousness.

In this manner the family from a natural relation grew into a highly
unnatural social anachronism. The loose ties of a roving life became
fetters of a fixed conventionality. Bonds originally of mutual advantage
hardened into restrictions by which the young were hopelessly tethered
to the old. Midway in its course the race undertook to turn round and
face backwards, as it journeyed on. Its subsequent advance could be
nothing but slow.

The head of a family is so now in something of a corporeal sense. From
him emanate all its actions; to him are responsible all its parts. Any
other member of it is as incapable of individual expression as is the
hand, or the foot, or the eye of man. Indeed, Confucian doctors of
divinity might appropriately administer psychically to the egoistic
the rebuke of the Western physician to the too self-analytic youth who,
finding that, after eating, his digestion failed to give him what he
considered its proper sensations, had come to consult the doctor as to
how it ought to feel. "Feel! young man," he was answered, "you ought
not to be aware that you have a digestion." So with them, a normally
constituted son knows not what it is to possess a spontaneity of his
own. Indeed, this very word "own," which so long ago in our own tongue
took to itself the symbol of possession, well exemplifies his dependent
state. China furnishes the most conspicuous instance of the want
of individual rights. A Chinese son cannot properly be said to own
anything. The title to the land he tills is vested absolutely in the
family, of which he is an undivided thirtieth, or what-not. Even the
administration of the property is not his, but resides in the family,
represented by its head. The outward symbols of ownership testify to the
fact. The bourns that mark the boundaries of the fields bear the names
of families, not of individuals. The family, as such, is the proprietor,
and its lands are cultivated and enjoyed in common by all the
constituents of the clan. In the tenure of its real estate, the Chinese
family much resembles the Russian Mir. But so far as his personal state
is concerned, the Chinese son outslaves the Slav. For he lives at home,
under the immediate control of the paternal will--in the most complete
of serfdoms, a filial one. Even existence becomes a communal affair.
From the family mansion, or set of mansions, in which all its members
dwell, to the family mausoleum, to which they will all eventually be
borne, a man makes his life journey in strict company with his kin.

A man's life is thus but an undivisible fraction of the family life. How
essentially so will appear from the following slight sketch of it.

To begin at the beginning, his birth is a very important event--for the
household, at which no one fails to rejoice except the new-comer. He
cries. The general joy, however, depends somewhat upon his sex. If the
baby chances to be a boy, everybody is immensely pleased; if a girl,
there is considerably less effusion shown. In the latter case the
more impulsive relatives are unmistakably sorry; the more philosophic
evidently hope for better luck next time. Both kinds make very pretty
speeches, which not even the speakers believe, for in the babe lottery
the family is considered to have drawn a blank. A delight so engendered
proves how little of the personal, even in prospective, attaches to its
object. The reason for the invidious distinction in the matter of sex
lies of course in an inordinate desire for the perpetuation of the
family line. The unfortunate infant is regarded merely in the light of
a possible progenitor. A boy is already potentially a father; whereas a
girl, if she marry at all, is bound to marry out of her own family into
another, and is relatively lost. The full force of the deprivation is,
however, to some degree tempered by the almost infinite possibilities of
adoption. Daughters are, therefore, not utterly unmitigable evils.

From the privacy of the domestic circle, the infant's entrance into
public life is performed pick-a-back. Strapped securely to the shoulders
of a slightly older sister, out he goes, consigned to the tender mercies
of a being who is scarcely more than a baby herself. The diminutiveness
of the nurse-perambulators is the most surprising part of the
performance. The tiniest of tots may be seen thus toddling round with
burdens half their own size. Like the dot upon the little i, the baby's
head seems a natural part of their childish ego.

An economy of the kind in the matter of nurses is highly suggestive.
That it should be practicable thus to entrust one infant to another
proves the precociousness of children. But this surprising maturity
of the young implies by a law too well known to need explanation, the
consequent immaturity of the race. That which has less to grow up
to, naturally grows up to its limit sooner. It may even be questioned
whether it does not do so with the more haste; on the same principle
that a runner who has less distance to travel not only accomplishes his
course quicker, but moves with relatively greater speed, or as a small
planet grows old not simply sooner, but comparatively faster than a
larger one. Jupiter is still in his fiery youth, while the moon is
senile in decrepid old age, and yet his separate existence began
long before hers. Either hypothesis will explain the abnormally
early development of the Chinese race, and its subsequent career of
inactivity. Meanwhile the youthful nurse, in blissful ignorance of
the evidence which her present precocity affords against her future
possibilities, pursues her sports with intermittent attention to her
charge, whose poor little head lolls about, now on one side and now
on the other, in a most distressingly loose manner, an uninterested
spectator of the proceedings.

As soon as the babe gets a trifle bigger he ceases to be ministered
to and begins his long course of ministering to others. His home life
consists of attentive subordination. The relation his obedience bears
to that of children elsewhere is paralleled perhaps sufficiently by
the comparative importance attached to precepts on the subject in the
respective moral codes. The commandment "honor thy father" forms a tithe
of the Mosaic law, while the same injunction constitutes at least one
half of the Confucian precepts. To the Chinese child all the parental
commands are not simply law to the letter, they are to be anticipated
in the spirit. To do what he is told is but the merest fraction of his
duty; theoretically his only thought is how to serve his sire. The pious
Aeneas escaping from Troy exemplifies his conduct when it comes to
a question of domestic precedence,--whose first care, it will be
remembered, was for his father, his next for his son, and his last for
his wife. He lost his wife, it may be noted in passing. Filial piety
is the greatest of Chinese virtues. Indeed, an undutiful son is
a monstrosity, a case of moral deformity. It could now hardly be
otherwise. For a father sums up in propria persona a whole pedigree of
patriarchs whose superimposed weight of authority is practically divine.
This condition of servitude is never outgrown by the individual, as it
has never been outgrown by the race.

Our boy now begins to go to school; to a day school, it need hardly be
specified, for a boarding school would be entirely out of keeping with
the family life. Here, he is given the "Trimetrical Classic" to start
on, that he may learn the characters by heart, picking up incidentally
what ideas he may. This book is followed by the "Century of Surnames," a
catalogue of all the clan names in China, studied like the last for the
sake of the characters, although the suggestion of the importance of the
family contained in it is probably not lost upon his youthful mind. Next
comes the "Thousand Character Classic," a wonderful epic as a feat of
skill, for of the thousand characters which it contains not a single
one is repeated, an absence of tautology not properly appreciated by the
enforced reader. Reminiscences of our own school days vividly depict the
consequent disgust, instead of admiration, of the boy. Three more books
succeed these first volumes, differing from one another in form, but
in substance singularly alike, treating, as they all do, of history
and ethics combined. For tales and morals are inseparably associated by
pious antiquity. Indeed, the past would seem to have lived with special
reference to the edification of the future. Chinamen were abnormally
virtuous in those golden days, barring the few unfortunates whom fate
needed as warning examples of depravity for succeeding ages. Except
for the fact that instruction as to a future life forms no part of
the curriculum, a far-eastern education may be said to consist of
Sunday-school every day in the week. For no occasion is lost by the
erudite authors, even in the most worldly portions of their work,
for preaching a slight homily on the subject in hand. The dictum of
Dionysius of Halicarnassus that "history is philosophy teaching by
example" would seem there to have become modified into "history is
filiosophy teaching by example." For in the instructive anecdotes every
other form of merit is depicted as second to that of being a dutiful
son. To the practice of that supreme virtue all other considerations are
sacrificed. The student's aim is thus kept single. At every turn of the
leaves, paragons of filial piety shame the youthful reader to the pitch
of emulation by the epitaphic records of their deeds. Portraits of the
past, possibly colored, present that estimable trait in so exalted
a type that to any less filial a people they would simply deter
competition. Yet the boy implicitly believes and no doubt resolves to
rival what he reads. A specimen or two will amply suggest the rest. In
one tale the hero is held up to the unqualified admiration of posterity
for having starved to death his son, in an extreme case of family
destitution, for the sake of providing food enough for his aged father.
In another he unhesitatingly divorces his wife for having dared to poke
fun, in the shape of bodkins, at some wooden effigies of his parents
which he had had set up in the house for daily devotional contemplation.
Finally another paragon actually sells himself in perpetuity as a slave
that he may thus procure the wherewithal to bury with due honor his
anything but worthy progenitor, who had first cheated his neighbors and
then squandered his ill-gotten gains in riotous living. Of these tales,
as of certain questionable novels in a slightly different line, the
eventual moral is considered quite competent to redeem the general
immorality of the plot.

Along such a curriculum the youthful Chinaman is made to run. A very
similar system prevails in Japan, the difference between the two
consisting in quantity rather than quality. The books in the two cases
are much the same, and the amount read differs surprisingly little when
we consider that in the one case it is his own classics the student is
reading, in the other the Chinaman's.

If he belong to the middle class, as soon as his schooling is over he is
set to learn his father's trade. To undertake to learn any trade but his
father's would strike the family as simply preposterous. Why should
he adopt another line of business? And, if he did, what other business
should he adopt? Is his father's occupation not already there, a part
of the existing order of things; and is he not the son of his father and
heir therefore of the paternal skill? Not that such inherited aptness is
recognized scientifically; it is simply taken for granted instinctively.
It is but a halfhearted intuition, however, for the possibility of an
inheritance from the mother's side is as out of the question as if her
severance from her own family had an ex post facto effect. As for
his individual predilection in the matter, nature has considerately
conformed to custom by giving him none. He becomes a cabinet-maker,
for instance, because his ancestors always have been cabinet-makers. He
inherits the family business as a necessary part of the family name. He
is born to his trade, not naturally selected because of his fitness for
it. But he usually is amply qualified for the position, for generations
of practice, if only on one side of the house, accumulate a vast deal
of technical skill. The result of this system of clan guilds in all
branches of industry is sufficiently noticeable. The almost infinite
superiority of Japanese artisans over their European fellow-craftsmen
is world-known. On the other hand the tendency of the occupation in the
abstract to swallow up the individual in the concrete is as evident to
theory as it is patent in practice. Eventually the man is lost in the
manner. The very names of trades express the fact. The Japanese word for
cabinet-maker, for example, means literally cutting-thing-house, and
is now applied as distinctively to the man as to his shop. Nominally as
well as practically the youthful Japanese artisan makes his introduction
to the world, much after the manner of the hero of Lecocq's comic opera,
the son of the house of Marasquin et Cie.

If instead of belonging to the lower middle class our typical youth be
born of bluer blood, or if he be filled with the same desires as if he
were so descended, he becomes a student. Having failed to discover in
the school-room the futility of his country's self-vaunted learning, he
proceeds to devote his life to its pursuit. With an application which
is eminently praiseworthy, even if its object be not, he sets to work to
steep himself in the classics till he can perceive no merit in anything
else. As might be suspected, he ends by discovering in the sayings
of the past more meaning than the simple past ever dreamed of putting
there. He becomes more Confucian than Confucius. Indeed, it is fortunate
for the reputation of the sage that he cannot return to earth, for he
might disagree to his detriment with his own commentators.

Such is the state of things in China and Korea. Learning, however,
is not dependent solely on individual interest for its wonderfully
flourishing condition in the Middle Kingdom, for the government abets
the practice to its utmost. It is itself the supreme sanction, for its
posts are the prizes of proficiency. Through the study of the classics
lies the only entrance to political power. To become a mandarin one must
have passed a series of competitive examinations on these very subjects,
and competition in this impersonal field is most keen. For while popular
enthusiasm for philosophy for philosophy's sake might, among any people,
eventually show symptoms of fatigue, it is not likely to flag where the
outcome of it is so substantial. Erudition carries there all earthly
emoluments in its train. For the man who can write the most scholastic
essay on the classics is forthwith permitted to amass much honor and
more wealth by wronging his less accomplished fellow-citizens. China
is a student's paradise where the possession of learning is instantly
convertible into unlimited pelf.

In Japan the study of the classics was never pursued professionally.
It was, however, prosecuted with much zeal en amateur. The Chinese
bureaucratic system has been wanting. For in spite of her students,
until within thirty years Japan slumbered still in the Knight-time of
the Middle Ages, and so long as a man carried about with him continually
two beautiful swords he felt it incumbent upon him to use them. The
happy days of knight-errantry have passed. These same cavaliers
of Samurai are now thankful to police the streets in spectacles
necessitated by the too diligent study of German text, and arrest chance
disturbers of the public peace for a miserably small salary per month.

Our youth has now reached the flowering season of life, that brief
May time when the whole world takes on the rose-tint, and when by all
dramatic laws he ought to fall in love. He does nothing of the kind.
Sad to say, he is a stranger to the feeling. Love, as we understand the
word, is a thing unknown to the Far East; fortunately, indeed, for the
possession there of the tender passion would be worse than useless. Its
indulgence would work no end of disturbance to the community at large,
beside entailing much misery upon its individual victim. Its exercise
would probably be classed with kleptomania and other like excesses of
purely personal consideration. The community could never permit the
practice, for it strikes at the very root of their whole social system.

The immense loss in happiness to these people in consequence of the
omission by the too parsimonious Fates of that thread, which, with us,
spins the whole of woman's web of life, and at least weaves the warp of
man's, is but incidental to the present subject; the effect of the loss
upon the individuality of the person himself is what concerns us now.

If there is one moment in a man's life when his interest for the world
at large pales before the engrossing character of his own emotions, it
is assuredly when that man first falls in love. Then, if never before,
the world within excludes the world without. For of all our human
passions none is so isolating as the tenderest. To shut that one other
being in, we must of necessity shut all the rest of mankind out; and we
do so with a reckless trust in our own self-sufficiency which has about
it a touch of the sublime. The other millions are as though they were
not, and we two are alone in the earth, which suddenly seems to have
grown unprecedentedly beautiful. Indeed, it only needs such judicious
depopulation to make of any spot an Eden. Perhaps the early Jewish
myth-makers had some such thought in mind when they wrote their idyl of
the cosmogony. The human traits are true to-day. Then at last our souls
throw aside their conventional wrappings to stand revealed as they
really are. Certain of comprehension, the thoughts we have never dared
breathe to any one before, find a tongue for her who seems fore-destined
to understand. The long-closed floodgates of feeling are thrown wide,
and our personality, pent up from the time of its inception for very
mistrust, sweeps forth in one uncontrollable rush. For then the most
reticent becomes confiding; the most self-contained expands. Then every
detail of our past lives assumes an importance which even we had not
divined. To her we tell them all,--our boyish beliefs, our youthful
fancies, the foolish with the fine, the witty with the wise, the little
with the great. Nothing then seems quite unworthy, as nothing seems
quite worthy enough. Flowers and weeds that we plucked upon our pathway,
we heap them in her lap, certain that even the poorest will not be
tossed aside. Small wonder that we bring as many as we may when she
bends her head so lovingly to each.

As our past rises in reminiscence with all its oldtime reality, no less
clearly does our future stand out to us in mirage. What we would be
seems as realizable as what we were. Seen by another beside ourselves,
our castles in the air take on something of the substance of
stereoscopic sight. Our airiest fancies seem solid facts for their
reality to her, and gilded by lovelight, they glitter and sparkle like
a true palace of the East. For once all is possible; nothing lies beyond
our reach. And as we talk, and she listens, we two seem to be floating
off into an empyrean of our own like the summer clouds above our heads,
as they sail dreamily on into the far-away depths of the unfathomable
sky.

It would be more than mortal not to believe in ourselves when another
believes so absolutely in us. Our most secret thoughts are no longer
things to be ashamed of, for she has sanctioned them. Whatever doubt may
have shadowed us as to our own imaginings disappears before the smile
of her appreciation. That her appreciation may be prejudiced is not a
possibility we think of then. She understands us, or seems to do so to
our own better understanding of ourselves. Happy the man who is thus
understood! Happy even he who imagines that he is, because of her eager
wish to comprehend; fortunate, indeed, if in this one respect he never
comes to see too clearly.

No such blissful infatuation falls to the lot of the Far Oriental.
He never is the dupe of his own desire, the willing victim of his
self-illusion. He is never tempted to reveal himself, and by thus
revealing, realize. No loving appreciation urges him on toward the
attainment of his own ideal. That incitement to be what he would seem to
be, to become what she deems becoming, he fails to feel. Custom has so
far fettered fancy that even the wish to communicate has vanished. He
has now nothing to tell; she needs no ear to hear. For she is not his
love; she is only his wife,--what is left of a romance when the romance
is left out. Worse still, she never was anything else. He has not so
much as a memory of her, for he did not marry her for love; he may not
love of his own accord, nor for the matter of that does he wish to do
so. If by some mischance he should so far forget to forget himself, it
were much better for him had he not done so, for the choice of a bride
is not his, nor of a bridegroom hers. Marriage to a Far Oriental is
the most important mercantile transaction of his whole life. It is,
therefore, far too weighty a matter to be entrusted to his youthful
indiscretion; for although the person herself is of lamentably little
account in the bargain, the character of her worldly circumstances is
most material to it. So she is contracted for with the same care one
would exercise in the choice of any staple business commodity. The
particular sample is not vital to the trade, but the grade of goods is.
She is selected much as the bride of the Vicar of Wakefield chose her
wedding-gown, only that the one was at least cut to suit, while the
other is not. It is certainly easier, if less fitting, to get a wife as
some people do clothes, not to their own order, but ready made; all the
more reason when the bargain is for one's son, not one's self. So the
Far East, which looks at the thing from a strictly paternal standpoint
and ignores such trifles as personal preferences, takes its boy to the
broker's and fits him out. That the object of such parental care does
not end by murdering his unfortunate spouse or making way with himself
suggests how dead already is that individuality which we deem to be of
the very essence of the thing.

Marriage is thus a species of investment contracted by the existing
family for the sake of the prospective one, the actual participants
being only lay figures in the affair. Sometimes the father decides the
matter himself; sometimes he or the relative who stands in loco parentis
calls for a plebiscit on the subject; for such an extension of the
suffrage has gradually crept even into patriarchal institutions. The
family then assemble, sit in solemn conclave on the question, and
decide it by vote. Of course the interested parties are not asked their
opinion, as it might be prejudiced. The result of the conference must
be highly gratifying. To have one's wife chosen for one by vote of one's
relatives cannot but be satisfactory--to the electors. The outcome of
this ballot, like that of universal suffrage elsewhere, is at the best
unobjectionable mediocrity. Somehow such a result does not seem quite
to fulfil one's ideal of a wife. It is true that the upper classes
of impersonal France practise this method of marital selection, their
conseils de famille furnishing in some sort a parallel. But, as is well
known, matrimony among these same upper classes is largely form devoid
of substance. It begins impressively with a dual ceremony, the civil
contract, which amounts to a contract of civility between the parties,
and a religious rite to render the same perpetual, and there it is too
apt to end.

So much for the immediate influence on the man; the eventual effect on
the race remains to be considered. Now, if the first result be anything,
the second must in the end be everything. For however trifling it be in
the individual instance, it goes on accumulating with each successive
generation, like compound interest. The choosing of a wife by family
suffrage is not simply an exponent of the impersonal state of things, it
is a power toward bringing such a state of things about. A hermit seldom
develops to his full possibilities, and the domestic variety is no
exception to the rule. A man who is linked to some one that toward him
remains a cipher lacks surroundings inciting to psychological growth,
nor is he more favorably circumstanced because all his ancestors have
been similarly circumscribed.

As if to make assurance doubly sure, natural selection here steps in
to further the process. To prove this with all the rigidity of
demonstration desirable is in the present state of erotics beyond our
power. Until our family trees give us something more than mere skeletons
of dead branches, we must perforce continue ignorant of the science
of grafts. For the nonce we must be content to generalize from our own
premises, only rising above them sufficiently to get a bird's-eye view
of our neighbor's estates. Such a survey has at least one advantage: the
whole field of view appears perfectly plain.

Surveying the subject, then, from this ego-altruistic position, we can
perceive why matrimony, as we practise it, should result in increasing
the personality of our race: for the reason namely that psychical
similarity determines the selection. At first sight, indeed, such
a natural affinity would seem to have little or nothing to do with
marriage. As far as outsiders are capable of judging, unlikes appear to
fancy one another quite as gratuitously as do likes. Connubial couples
are often anything but twin souls. Yet our own dual use of the word
"like" bears historic witness to the contrary. For in this expression
we have a record from early Gothic times that men liked others for being
like themselves. Since then, our feelings have not changed materially,
although our mode of showing them is slightly less intense. In those
simple days stranger and enemy were synonymous terms, and their
objects were received in a corresponding spirit. In our present refined
civilization we hurl epithets instead of spears, and content ourselves
with branding as heterodox the opinions of another which do not happen
to coincide with our own. The instinct of self-development naturally
begets this self-sided view. We insensibly find those persons congenial
whose ideas resemble ours, and gravitate to them, as leaves on a pond do
to one another, nearer and nearer till they touch. Is it likely, then,
that in the most important case of all the rule should suddenly cease
to hold? Is it to be presumed that even Socrates chose Xantippe for her
remarkable contrariety to himself?

Mere physical attraction is another matter. Corporeally considered, men
not infrequently fall in love with their opposites, the phenomenally
tall with the painfully short, the unnecessarily stout with the
distressingly slender. But even such inartistic juxtapositions are much
less common than we are apt at times to think. For it must never be
forgotten that the exceptional character of the phenomena renders them
conspicuous, the customary more consorted combinations failing to excite
attention.

Besides, there exists a reason for physical incongruity which does not
hold psychically. Nature sanctions the one while she discountenances the
other. Instead of the forethought she once bestowed upon the body, it
receives at her hands now but the scantiest attention. Its development
has ceased to be an object with her. For some time past almost all her
care has been devoted to the evolution of the soul. The consequence is
that physically man is much less specialized than many other animals.
In other words, he is bodily less advanced in the race for competitive
extermination. He belongs to an antiquated, inefficient type of mammal.
His organism is still of the jack-of-all-trades pattern, such as
prevailed generally in the more youthful stages of organic life--one not
specially suited to any particular pursuit. Were it not for his cerebral
convolutions he could not compete for an instant in the struggle for
existence, and even the monkey would reign in his stead. But brain
is more effective than biceps, and a being who can kill his opponent
farther off than he can see him evidently needs no great excellence of
body to survive his foe.

The field of competition has thus been transferred from matter to mind,
but the fight has lost none of its keenness in consequence. With the
same zeal with which advantageous anatomical variations were seized upon
and perpetuated, psychical ones are now grasped and rendered hereditary.
Now if opposites were to fancy and wed one another, such fortunate
improvements would soon be lost. They would be scattered over the
community at large even it they escaped entire neutralization. To
prevent so disastrous a result nature implants a desire for resemblance,
which desire man instinctively acts upon.

Complete compatibility of temperament is of course a thing not to be
expected nor indeed to be desired, since it would defeat its own end
by allowing no room for variation. A fairly broad basis of agreement,
however, exists even when least suspected. This common ground of content
consists of those qualities held to be most essential by the individuals
concerned, although not necessarily so appearing to other people.
Sometimes, indeed, these qualities are still in the larvae state of
desires. They are none the less potent upon the man's personality on
that account, for the wish is always father to its own fulfilment.

The want of conjugal resemblance not only works mediately on the
child, it works mutually on the parents; for companionship, as is well
recognized, tends to similarity. Now companionship is the last thing to
be looked for in a far-eastern couple. Where custom requires a wife to
follow dutifully in the wake of her husband, whenever the two go out
together, there is small opportunity for intercourse by the way, even
were there the slightest inclination to it, which there is not.
The appearance of the pair on an excursion is a walking satire on
sociability, for the comicality of the connection is quite unperceived
by the performers. In the privacy of the domestic circle the separation,
if less humorous, is no less complete. Each lives in a world of his own,
largely separate in fact in China and Korea, and none the less in fancy
in Japan. On the continent a friend of the husband would see little or
nothing of the wife, and even in Japan he would meet her much as we meet
an upper servant in a friend's house. Such a semi-attached relationship
does not conduce to much mutual understanding.

The remainder of our hero's uneventful existence calls for no particular
comment. As soon as he has children borne him he is raised ipso facto
from the position of a common soldier to that of a subordinate officer
in the family ranks. But his opportunities for the expression of
individuality are not one whit increased. He has simply advanced a peg
in a regular hierarchy of subjection. From being looked after himself
he proceeds to look after others. Such is the extent of the change.
Even should he chance to be the eldest son of the eldest son, and
thus eventually end by becoming the head of the family, he cannot
consistently consider himself. There is absolutely no place in his
social cosmos for so particular a thing as the ego.

With a certain grim humor suggestive of metaphysics, it may be said of
his whole life that it is nothing but a relative affair after all.



Chapter 3. Adoption.

But one may go a step farther in this matter of the family, and by so
doing fare still worse with respect to individuality. There are certain
customs in vogue among these peoples which would seem to indicate that
even so generic a thing as the family is too personal to serve them for
ultimate social atom, and that in fact it is only the idea of the family
that is really important, a case of abstraction of an abstract. These
suggestive customs are the far-eastern practices of adoption and
abdication.

Adoption, with us, is a kind of domestic luxury, akin to the keeping
of any other pets, such as lap-dogs and canaries. It is a species of
self-indulgence which those who can afford it give themselves when
fortune has proved unpropitious, an artificial method of counteracting
the inequalities of fate. That such is the plain unglamoured view of the
procedure is shown by the age at which the object is adopted. Usually
the future son or daughter enters the adoptive household as an infant,
intentionally so on the part of the would-be parents. His ignorance of
a previous relationship largely increases his relative value; for the
possibility of his making comparisons in his own mind between a former
state of existence and the present one unfavorable to the latter is
not pleasant for the adopters to contemplate. He is therefore acquired
young. The amusement derived from his company is thus seen to be
distinctly paramount to all other considerations. No one cares so
heartily to own a dog which has been the property of another; a fortiori
of a child. It is clearly, then, not as a necessity that the babe is
adopted. If such were the case, if like the ancient Romans all a man
wanted was the continuance of the family line, he would naturally wait
until the last practicable moment; for he would thus save both care and
expense. In the Far East adoption is quite a different affair. There
it is a genealogical necessity--like having a father or mother. It is,
indeed, of almost more importance. For the great desideratum to these
peoples is not ancestors but descendants. Pedigrees in the land of
the universal opposite are not matters of bequest but of posthumous
reversion. A man is not beholden to the past, he looks forward to the
future for inherited honors. No fame attaches to him for having had an
illustrious grandfather. On the contrary, it is the illustrious grandson
who reflects some of his own greatness back upon his grandfather. If
a man therefore fail to attain eminence himself, he always has another
chance in his descendants; for he will of necessity be ennobled through
the merits of those who succeed him. Such is the immemorial law of the
land. Fame is retroactive. This admirable system has only one objection:
it is posthumous in its effect. An ambitious man who unfortunately lacks
ability himself has to wait too long for vicarious recognition. The
objection is like that incident to the making of a country seat out of
a treeless plain by planting the same with saplings. About the time the
trees begin to be worth having the proprietary landscape-gardener dies
of old age. However, as custom permits a Far Oriental no ancestral
growth of timber, he is obliged to lay the seeds of his own family
trees. Natural offspring are on the whole easier to get, and more
satisfactory when got. Hence the haste with which these peoples rush
into matrimony. If in despite of his precipitation fate perversely
refuse to grant him children, he must endeavor to make good the omission
by artificial means. He proceeds to adopt somebody. True to instinct, he
chooses from preference a collateral relative. In some far-eastern lands
he must so restrict himself by law. In Korea, for instance, he can only
adopt an agnate and one of a lower generation than his own. But in
Japan his choice is not so limited. In so praiseworthy an act as the
perpetuation of his unimportant family line, it is deemed unwise in that
progressive land to hinder him from unconsciously bettering it by the
way. He is consequently permitted to adopt anybody. As people are by no
means averse to being adopted, the power to adopt whom he will gives him
more voice in the matter of his unnatural offspring than he ever had in
the selection of a more natural one.

The adopted changes his name, of course, to take that of the family he
enters. As he is very frequently grown up and extensively known at the
time the adoption takes place, his change of cognomen occasions at first
some slight confusion among his acquaintance. This would be no worse,
however, than the change with us from the maid to the matron, and
intercourse would soon proceed smoothly again if people would only rest
content with one such domestic migration. But they do not. The fatal
facility of the process tempts them to repeat it. The result is
bewildering: a people as nomadic now in the property of their persons as
their forefathers were in their real estate. A man adopts another to-day
to unadopt him to-morrow and replace him by somebody else the day after.
So profoundly unimportant to them is their social identity, that they
bandy it about with almost farcical freedom. Perhaps it is fitting
that there should be some slight preparation in this world for a future
transmigration of souls. Still one fails to conceive that the practice
can be devoid of disadvantages even to its beneficiaries. To foreigners
it proves disastrously perplexing. For if you chance upon a man whom you
have not met for some time, you can never be quite sure how to accost
him. If you begin, "Well met, Green, how goes it?" as likely as not he
replies, "Finely. But I am no longer Green; I have become Brown. I was
adopted last month by my maternal grandfather." You of course apologize
for your unfortunate mistake, carefully note his change of hue for a
future occasion, and behold, on meeting him the next time you find he
has turned Black. Such a chameleon-like cognomen is very unsettling to
your idea of his identity, and can hardly prove reassuring to his own.
The only persons who reap any benefit from the doubt are those, with us
unhappy, individuals who possess the futile faculty of remembering faces
without recalling their accompanying names.

Girls, as a rule, are not adopted, being valueless genealogically. A
niece or grandniece to whom one has taken a great fancy might of course
be adopted there as elsewhere, but it would be distinctly out of the
every-day run, as she could never be included in the household on strict
business principles.

The practice of adopting is not confined to childless couples. Others
may find themselves in quite as unfortunate a predicament. A man may
be the father of a large and thriving family and yet be as destitute
patriarchally as if he had not a child to his name. His offspring may
be of the wrong sex; they may all be girls. In this untoward event
the father has something more on his hands than merely a houseful of
daughters to dispose of. In addition to securing sons-in-law, he must,
unless he would have his ancestral line become extinct, provide
himself with a son. The simplest procedure in such a case is to combine
relationships in a single individual, and the most self-evident person
to select for the dual capacity is the husband of the eldest daughter.
This is the course pursued. Some worthy young man is secured as spouse
for the senior sister; he is at the same time formally taken in as a son
by the family whose cognomen he assumes, and eventually becomes the head
of the house. Strange to say, this vista of gradually unfolding honors
does not seem to prove inviting. Perhaps the new-comer objects to
marrying the whole family, a prejudice not without parallel elsewhere.
Certainly the opportunity is not appreciated. Indeed, to "go out as a
son-in-law," as the Japanese idiom hath it, is considered demeaning
to the matrimonial domestic. Like other household help he wears too
patently the badge of servitude. "If you have three koku of rice to your
name, don't do it," is the advice of the local proverb--a proverb whose
warning against marrying for money is the more suggestive for being
launched in a land where marrying for love is beyond the pale of
respectability. To barter one's name in this mercenary manner is looked
upon as derogatory to one's self-respect, although, as we have seen, to
part with it for any less direct remuneration is not attended with the
slightest loss of personal prestige. As practically the unfortunate had
none to lose in either event, it would seem to be a case of taking away
from a man that which he hath not. So contumacious a thing is custom.
It is indeed lucky that popular prejudice interposes some limit to this
fictitious method of acquiring children. A trifling predilection for the
real thing in sonships is absolutely vital, even to the continuance of
the artificial variety. For if one generation ever went in exclusively
for adoption, there would be no subsequent generation to adopt.

As it to give the finishing touch to so conventional a system of
society, a man can leave it under certain circumstances with even
greater ease than he entered it. He can become as good as dead without
the necessity of making way with himself. Theoretically, he can cease to
live while still practically existing; for it is always open to the head
of a family to abdicate.

The word abdicate has to our ears a certain regal sound. We
instinctively associate the act with a king. Even the more democratic
expression resign suggests at once an office of public or quasi public
character. To talk of abdicating one's private relationships sounds
absurd; one might as well talk of electing his parents, it would seem to
us. Such misunderstanding of far-eastern social possibilities comes from
our having indulged in digressions from our more simple nomadic habits.
If in imagination we will return to our ancestral muttons and the then
existing order of things, the idea will not strike us as so strange; for
in those early bucolic days every father was a king. Family economics
were the only political questions in existence then. The clan was the
unit. Domestic disputes were state disturbances, and clan-claims the
only kind of international quarrels. The patriarch was both father to
his people and king.

As time widened the family circle it eventually reached a point where
cohesion ceased to be possible. The centrifugal tendency could no
longer be controlled by the centripetal force. It split up into separate
bodies, each of them a family by itself. In their turn these again
divided, and so the process went on. This principle has worked
universally, the only difference in its action among different races
being the greater or less degree of the evolving motion. With us the
social system has been turning more and more rapidly with time. In the
Far East its force, instead of increasing, would seem to have decreased,
enabling the nebula of its original condition to keep together as a
single mass, so that to-day a whole nation, resembling a nebula indeed
in homogeneity, is swayed by a single patriarchal principle. Here, on
the contrary, so rapid has the motion become that even brethren find
themselves scattered to the four winds.

An Occidental father and an Oriental head of a family are no longer
really correlative terms. The latter more closely resembles a king
in his duties, responsibilities, and functions generally. Now, in the
Middle Ages in Europe, when a king grew tired of affairs of state, he
abdicated. So in the Far East, when the head of a family has had enough
of active life, he abdicates, and his eldest son reigns in his stead.

From that moment he ceases to belong to the body politic in any active
sense. Not that he is no longer a member of society nor unamenable to
its general laws, but that he has become a respectable declasse, as it
were. He has entered, so to speak, the social nirvana, a not unfitting
first step, as he regards it, toward entering the eventual nirvana
beyond. Such abdication now takes place without particular cause. After
a certain time of life, and long before a man grows old, it is the
fashion thus to make one's bow.



Chapter 4. Language.

A man's personal equation, as astronomers call the effect of his
individuality, is kin, for all its complexity, to those simple
algebraical problems which so puzzled us at school. To solve either we
must begin by knowing the values of the constants that enter into its
expression. Upon the a b c's of the one, as upon those of the other,
depend the possibilities of the individual x.

Now the constants in any man's equation are the qualities that he has
inherited from the past. What a man does follows from what he is, which
in turn is mostly dependent upon what his ancestors have been; and
of all the links in the long chain of mind-evolution, few are more
important and more suggestive than language. Actions may at the moment
speak louder than words, but methods of expression have as tell-tale a
tongue for bygone times as ways of doing things.

If it should ever fall to my lot to have to settle that exceedingly
vexed Eastern question,--not the emancipation of ancient Greece from the
bondage of the modern Turk, but the emancipation of the modern college
student from the bond of ancient Greek,--I should propose, as a solution
of the dilemma, the addition of a course in Japanese to the college list
of required studies. It might look, I admit, like begging the question
for the sake of giving its answer, but the answer, I think, would
justify itself.

It is from no desire to parade a fresh hobby-horse upon the university
curriculum that I offer the suggestion, but because I believe that a
study of the Japanese language would prove the most valuable of ponies
in the academic pursuit of philology. In the matter of literature,
indeed, we should not be adding very much to our existing store, but we
should gain an insight into the genesis of speech that would put us
at least one step nearer to being present at the beginnings of human
conversation. As it is now, our linguistic learning is with most of us
limited to a knowledge of Aryan tongues, and in consequence we not only
fall into the mistake of thinking our way the only way, which is bad
enough, but, what is far worse, by not perceiving the other possible
paths we quite fail to appreciate the advantages or disadvantages of
following our own. We are the blind votaries of a species of ancestral
language-worship, which, with all its erudition, tends to narrow our
linguistic scope. A study of Japanese would free us from the fetters of
any such family infatuation. The inviolable rules and regulations of our
mother-tongue would be found to be of relative application only. For we
should discover that speech is a much less categorical matter than
we had been led to suppose. We should actually come to doubt
the fundamental necessity of some of our most sacred grammatical
constructions; and even our reverenced Latin grammars would lose that
air of awful absoluteness which so impressed us in boyhood.

An encouraging estimate of a certain missionary puts the amount of
study needed by the Western student for the learning of Japanese as
sufficient, if expended nearer home, to equip him with any three modern
European languages. It is certainly true that a completely strange
vocabulary, an utter inversion of grammar, and an elaborate system of
honorifics combine to render its acquisition anything but easy. In its
fundamental principles, however, it is alluringly simple.

In the first place, the Japanese language is pleasingly destitute of
personal pronouns. Not only is the obnoxious "I" conspicuous only by
its absence; the objectionable antagonistic "you" is also entirely
suppressed, while the intrusive "he" is evidently too much of a third
person to be wanted. Such invidious distinctions of identity apparently
never thrust their presence upon the simple early Tartar minds. I,
you, and he, not being differences due to nature, demanded, to their
thinking, no recognition of man.

There is about this vagueness of expression a freedom not without its
charm. It is certainly delightful to be able to speak of yourself as if
you were somebody else, choosing mentally for the occasion any one
you may happen to fancy, or, it you prefer, the possibility of soaring
boldly forth into the realms of the unconditioned.

To us, at first sight, however, such a lack of specification appears
wofully incompatible with any intelligible transmission of ideas. So
communistic a want of discrimination between the meum and the tuum--to
say nothing of the claims of a possible third party--would seem to be
as fatal to the interchange of thoughts as it proves destructive to the
trafficking in commodities. Such, nevertheless, is not the result. On
the contrary, Japanese is as easy and as certain of comprehension as is
English. On ninety occasions out of a hundred, the context at once makes
clear the person meant.

In the very few really ambiguous cases, or those in which, for the sake
of emphasis, a pronoun is wanted, certain consecrated expressions are
introduced for the purpose. For eventually the more complex social
relations of increasing civilization compelled some sort of distant
recognition. Accordingly, compromises with objectionable personality
were effected by circumlocutions promoted to a pronoun's office,
becoming thus pro-pronouns, as it were. Very noncommittal expressions
they are, most of them, such as: "the augustness," meaning you; "that
honorable side," or "that corner," denoting some third person, the exact
term employed in any given instance scrupulously betokening the relative
respect in which the individual spoken of is held; while with a candor,
an indefiniteness, or a humility worthy so polite a people, the I is
known as "selfishness," or "a certain person," or "the clumsy one."

Pronominal adjectives are manufactured in the same way. "The stupid
father," "the awkward son," "the broken-down firm," are "mine." Were
they "yours," they would instantly become "the august, venerable
father," "the honorable son," "the exalted firm." [1]

Even these lame substitutes for pronouns are paraded as sparingly as
possible. To the Western student, who brings to the subject a brain
throbbing with personality, hunting in a Japanese sentence for personal
references is dishearteningly like "searching in the dark for a black
hat which is n't there;" for the brevet pronouns are commonly not on
duty. To employ them with the reckless prodigality that characterizes
our conversation would strike the Tartar mind like interspersing his
talk with unmeaning italics. He would regard such discourse much as we
do those effusive epistles of a certain type of young woman to her
most intimate girl friends, in which every other word is emphatically
underlined.

For the most part, the absolutely necessary personal references are
introduced by honorifics; that is, by honorary or humble expressions.
Such is a portion of the latter's duty. They do a great deal of
unnecessary work besides.

These honorifics are, taken as a whole, one of the most interesting
peculiarities of Japanese, as also of Korean, just as, taken in detail,
they are one of its most dangerous pitfalls. For silence is indeed
golden compared with the chagrin of discovering that a speech which you
had meant for a compliment was, in fact, an insult, or the vexation of
learning that you have been industriously treating your servant with the
deference due a superior,--two catastrophes sure to follow the attempts
of even the most cautious of beginners. The language is so thoroughly
imbued with the honorific spirit that the exposure of truth in all its
naked simplicity is highly improper. Every idea requires to be more or
less clothed in courtesy before it is presentable; and the garb demanded
by etiquette is complex beyond conception. To begin with, there are
certain preliminary particles which are simply honorific, serving no
other purpose whatsoever. In addition to these there are for every
action a small infinity of verbs, each sacred to a different degree
of respect. For instance, to our verb "to give" corresponds a complete
social scale of Japanese verbs, each conveying the idea a shade more
politely than its predecessor; only the very lowest meaning anything
so plebeian as simply "to give." Sets of laudatory or depreciatory
adjectives are employed in the same way. Lastly, the word for "is,"
which strictly means "exists," expresses this existence under three
different forms,--in a matter-of-fact, a flowing, or an inflated style;
the solid, liquid, and gaseous states of conversation, so to speak, to
suit the person addressed. But three forms being far too few for the
needs of so elaborate a politeness, these are supplemented by many
interpolated grades.

Terms of respect are applied not only to those mortals who are held in
estimation higher than their fellows, but to all men indiscriminately as
well. The grammatical attitude of the individual toward the speaker is
of as much importance as his social standing, I being beneath contempt,
and you above criticism.

Honorifics are used not only on all possible occasions for courtesy, but
at times, it would seem, upon impossible ones; for in some instances the
most subtle diagnosis fails to reveal in them a relevancy to anybody.
That the commonest objects should bear titles because of their
connection with some particular person is comprehensible, but what
excuse can be made for a phrase like the following, "It respectfully
does that the august seat exists," all of which simply means "is," and
may be applied to anything, being the common word--in Japanese it is all
one word now--for that apparently simple idea. It would seem a sad
waste of valuable material. The real reason why so much distinguished
consideration is shown the article in question lies in the fact that
it is treated as existing with reference to the person addressed, and
therefore becomes ipso facto august.

Here is a still subtler example. You are, we will suppose, at a
tea-house, and you wish for sugar. The following almost stereotyped
conversation is pretty sure to take place. I translate it literally,
simply prefacing that every tea-house girl, usually in the first
blush of youth, is generically addressed as "elder sister,"--another
honorific, at least so considered in Japan.

 You clap your hands.  (Enter tea-house maiden.)

 You.  Hai, elder sister, augustly exists there sugar?

 The T. H. M.  The honorable sugar, augustly is it?

 You.  So, augustly.

 The T. H. M. He (indescribable expression of assent).
 (Exit tea-house maiden to fetch the sugar.)

Now, the "augustlies" go almost without saying, but why is the sugar
honorable? Simply because it is eventually going to be offered to you.
But she would have spoken of it by precisely the same respectful title,
if she had been obliged to inform you that there was none, in which case
it never could have become yours. Such is politeness. We may note,
in passing, that all her remarks and all yours, barring your initial
question, meant absolutely nothing. She understood you perfectly from
the first, and you knew she did; but then, if all of us were to say only
what were necessary, the delightful art of conversation would soon be
nothing but a science.

The average Far Oriental, indeed, talks as much to no purpose as his
Western cousin, only in his chit-chat politeness replaces personalities.
With him, self is suppressed, and an ever-present regard for others is
substituted in its stead.

A lack of personality is, as we have seen, the occasion of this
courtesy; it is also its cause.

That politeness should be one of the most marked results of
impersonality may appear surprising, yet a slight examination will show
it to be a fact. Looked at a posteriori, we find that where the one
trait exists the other is most developed, while an absence of the second
seems to prevent the full growth of the first. This is true both in
general and in detail. Courtesy increases, as we travel eastward round
the world, coincidently with a decrease in the sense of self. Asia is
more courteous than Europe, Europe than America. Particular races show
the same concomitance of characteristics. France, the most impersonal
nation of Europe, is at the same time the most polite.

Considered a priori, the connection between the two is not far to seek.
Impersonality, by lessening the interest in one's self, induces one
to take an interest in others. Introspection tends to make of man a
solitary animal, the absence of it a social one. The more impersonal
the people, the more will the community supplant the individual in the
popular estimation. The type becomes the interesting thing to man, as
it always is to nature. Then, as the social desires develop, politeness,
being the means to their enjoyment, develops also.

A second omission in Japanese etymology is that of gender. That words
should be credited with sex is a verbal anthropomorphism that would seem
to a Japanese exquisitely grotesque, if so be that it did not strike him
as actually immodest. For the absence of gender is simply symptomatic
of a much more vital failing, a disregard of sex. Originally, as their
language bears witness, the Japanese showed a childish reluctance
to recognizing sex at all. Usually a single sexless term was held
sufficient for a given species, and did duty collectively for both
sexes. Only where a consideration of sex thrust itself upon them, beyond
the possibility of evasion, did they employ for the male and the female
distinctive expressions. The more intimate the relation of the object
to man, the more imperative the discriminating name. Hence human beings
possessed a fair number of such special appellatives; for a man is
a palpably different sort of person from his grandmother, and a
mother-in-law from a wife. But it is noteworthy that the artificial
affinities of society were as carefully differentiated as the
distinctions due to sex, while ancestral relationships were deemed more
important than either.

Animals, though treated individually most humanely, are vouchsafed but
scant recognition on the score of sex. With them, both sexes share one
common name, and commonly, indeed, this answers quite well enough. In
those few instances where sex enters into the question in a manner not
to be ignored, particles denoting "male" or "female" are prefixed to the
general term. How comparatively rare is the need of such specification
can be seen from the way in which, with us, in many species, the name of
one sex alone does duty indifferently for both. That of the male is the
one usually selected, as in the case of the dog or horse. If, however,
it be the female with which man has most to do, she is allowed to bestow
her name upon her male partner. Examples of the latter description occur
in the use of "cows" for "cattle," and "hens" for "fowls." A Japanese
can say only "fowl," defined, if absolutely necessary, as "he-fowl" or
"she-fowl."

Now such a slighting of one of the most potent springs of human action,
sex, with all that the idea involves, is not due to a pronounced
misogynism on the part of these people, but to a much more effective
neglect, a great underlying impersonality. Indifference to woman is
but included in a much more general indifference to mankind. The fact
becomes all the more evident when we descend from sex to gender. That
Father Ocean does not, in their verbal imagery, embrace Mother Earth,
with that subtle suggestion of humanity which in Aryan speech the gender
of the nouns hints without expressing, is not due to any lack of poesy
in the Far Oriental speaker, but to the essential impersonality of
his mind, embodied now in the very character of the words he uses. A
Japanese noun is a crystallized concept, handed down unchanged from
the childhood of the Japanese race. So primitive a conception does it
represent that it is neither a total nor a partial symbol, but rather
the outcome of a first vague generality. The word "man," for instance,
means to them not one man, still less mankind, but that indefinite
idea which struggles for embodiment in the utterance of the infant. It
represents not a person, but a thing, a material fact quite innocent
of gender. This early state of semi-consciousness the Japanese never
outgrew. The world continued to present itself to their minds as a
collection of things. Nor did their subsequent Chinese education change
their view. Buddhism simply infused all things with the one universal
spirit.

As to inanimate objects, the idea of supposing sex where there is not
even life is altogether too fanciful a notion for the Far Eastern mind.

Impersonality first fashioned the nouns, and then the nouns, by their
very impersonality, helped keep impersonal the thought and fettered
fancy. All those temptings to poesy which to the Aryan imagination lie
latent in the sex with which his forefathers humanized their words,
never stir the Tartar nor the Chinese soul. They feel the poetry
of nature as much as, indeed much more than, we; but it is a poetry
unassociated with man. And this, too, curiously enough, in spite of the
fact that to explain the cosmos the Chinamen invented, or perhaps only
adapted, a singularly sexual philosophy. For possibly, like some other
portions of their intellectual wealth, they stole it from India. The
Chinese conception of the origin of the world is based on the idea of
sex. According to their notions the earth was begotten. It is true
that with them the cosmos started in an abstract something, which
self-produced two great principles; but this pair once obtained, matters
proceeded after the analogy of mankind. The two principles at work were
themselves abstract enough to have satisfied the most unimpassioned of
philosophers. They were simply a positive essence and a negative one,
correlated to sunshine and shadow, but also correlated to male and
female forces. Through their mutual action were born the earth and the
air and the water; from these, in turn, was begotten man. The cosmical
modus operandi was not creative nor evolutionary, but sexual. The whole
scheme suggests an attempt to wed abstract philosophy with primitive
concrete mythology.

The same sexuality distinguishes the Japanese demonology. Here the
physical replaces the philosophical; instead of principles we find
allegorical personages, but they show just the same pleasing propensity
to appear in pairs.

This attributing of sexes to the cosmos is not in the least incompatible
with an uninterested disregard of sex where it really exists. It is
one thing to admit the fact as a general law of the universe, and quite
another to dwell upon it as an important factor in every-day affairs.

How slight is the Tartar tendency to personification can be seen from
a glance at these same Japanese gods. They are a combination of defunct
ancestors and deified natural phenomena. The evolving of the first half
required little imagination, for fate furnished the material ready made;
while in conjuring up the second moiety, the spirit-evokers showed even
less originality. Their results were neither winsome nor sublime. The
gods whom they created they invested with very ordinary humanity,
the usual endowment of aboriginal deity, together with the customary
superhuman strength. If these demigods differed from others of their
class, it was only in being more commonplace, and in not meddling much
with man. Even such personification of natural forces, simple enough
to be self-suggested, quickly disappeared. The various awe-compelling
phenomena soon ceased to have any connection with the anthropomorphic
noumena they had begotten. For instance, the sun-goddess, we are
informed, was one day lured out of a cavern, where she was sulking in
consequence of the provoking behavior of her younger brother, by her
curiosity at the sight of her own face in a mirror, ingeniously placed
before the entrance for the purpose. But no Japanese would dream now of
casting any such reflections, however flattering, upon the face of the
orb of day. The sun has become not only quite sexless to him, but
as devoid of personality as it is to any Western materialist. Lesser
deities suffered a like unsubstantial transformation. The thunder-god,
with his belt of drums, upon which he beats a devil's tattoo until he
is black in the face, is no longer even indirectly associated with the
storm. As for dryads and nymphs, the beautiful creatures never inhabited
Eastern Asia. Anthropoid foxes and raccoons, wholly lacking in those
engaging qualities that beget love, and through love remembrance, take
their place. Even Benten, the naturalized Venus, who, like her Hellenic
sister, is said to have risen from the sea, is a person quite incapable
of inspiring a reckless infatuation.

Utterly unlike was this pantheon to the pantheon of the Greeks, the
personifying tendency of whose Aryan mind was forever peopling nature
with half-human inhabitants. Under its quickening fancy the very clods
grew sentient. Dumb earth awoke at the call of its desire, and the
beings its own poesy had begotten made merry companionship for man. Then
a change crept over the face of things. Faith began to flicker, for want
of facts to feed its flame. Little by little the fires of devotion burnt
themselves out. At last great Pan died. The body of the old belief
was consumed. But though it perished, its ashes preserved its form, an
unsubstantial presentment of the past, to crumble in a twinkling at
the touch of science, but keeping yet to the poet's eye the lifelike
semblance of what once had been. The dead gods still live in our
language and our art. Even to-day the earth about us seems semiconscious
to the soul, for the memories they have left.

But with the Far Oriental the exorcising feeling was fear. He never fell
in love with his own mythological creations, and so he never embalmed
their memories. They were to him but explanations of facts, and had no
claims upon his fancy. His ideal world remained as utterly impersonal as
if it had never been born.

The same impersonality reappears in the matter of number. Grammatically,
number with them is unrecognized. There exist no such things as plural
forms. This singularity would be only too welcome to the foreign
student, were it not that in avoiding the frying-pan the Tartars fell
into the fire. For what they invented in place of a plural was quite
as difficult to memorize, and even more cumbrous to express. Instead
of inflecting the noun and then prefixing a number, they keep the noun
unchanged and add two numerals; thus at times actually employing more
words to express the objects than there are objects to express. One
of these numerals is a simple number; the other is what is known as an
auxiliary numeral, a word as singular in form as in function. Thus, for
instance, "two men" become amplified verbally into "man two individual,"
or, as the Chinaman puts it, in pidgin English, "two piecey man." For in
this respect Chinese resembles Japanese, though in very little else,
and pidgin English is nothing but the literal translation of the
Chinese idiom into Anglo-Saxon words. The necessity for such elaborate
qualification arises from the excessive simplicity of the Japanese
nouns. As we have seen, the noun is so indefinite a generality that
simply to multiply it by a number cannot possibly produce any definite
result. No exact counterpart of these nouns exists in English, but
some idea of the impossibility of the process may be got from our
word "cattle," which, prolific though it may prove in fact, remains
obstinately incapable of verbal multiplication. All Japanese nouns being
of this indefinite description, all require auxiliary numerals. But
as each one has its own appropriate numeral, about which a mistake is
unpardonable, it takes some little study merely to master the etiquette
of these handles to the names of things.

Nouns are not inflected, their cases being expressed by postpositions,
which, as the name implies, follow, in becoming Japanese inversion,
instead of preceding the word they affect. To make up, nevertheless, for
any lack of perplexity due to an absence of inflections, adjectives, en
revanche, are most elaborately conjugated. Their protean shapes are as
long as they are numerous, representing not only times, but conditions.
There are, for instance, the root form, the adverbial form, the
indefinite form, the attributive form, and the conclusive form, the two
last being conjugated through all the various voices, moods, and tenses,
to say nothing of all the potential forms. As one change is superposed
on another, the adjective ends by becoming three or four times its
original length. The fact is, the adjective is either adjective, adverb,
or verb, according to occasion. In the root form it also helps to make
nouns; so that it is even more generally useful than as a journalistic
epithet with us. As a verb, it does duty as predicate and copula
combined. For such an unnecessary part of speech as a real copula does
not exist in Japanese. In spite of the shock to the prejudices of the
old school of logicians, it must be confessed that the Tartars get on
very well without any such couplings to their trains of thought. But
then we should remember that in their sentences the cart is always put
before the horse, and so needs only to be pushed, not pulled along.

The want of a copula is another instance of the primitive character of
the tongue. It has its counterpart in our own baby-talk, where a quality
is predicated of a thing simply by placing the adjective in apposition
with the noun.

That the Japanese word which is commonly translated "is" is in no sense
a copula, but an ordinary intransitive verb, referring to a natural
state, and not to a logical condition, is evident in two ways. In
the first place, it is never used to predicate a quality directly. A
Japanese does not say, "The scenery is fine," but simply, "Scenery,
fine." Secondly, wherever this verb is indirectly employed in such a
manner, it is followed, not by an adjective, but by an adverb. Not "She
is beautiful," but "She exists beautifully," would be the Japanese way of
expressing his admiration. What looks at first, therefore, like a copula
turns out to be merely an impersonal intransitive verb.

A negative noun is, of course, an impossibility in any language, just
as a negative substantive, another name for the same thing, is a direct
contradiction in terms. No matter how negative the idea to be given, it
must be conveyed by a positive expression. Even a void is grammatically
quite full of meaning, although unhappily empty in fact. So much is
common to all tongues, but Japanese carries its positivism yet further.
Not only has it no negative nouns, it has not even any negative pronouns
nor pronominal adjectives,--those convenient keepers of places for
the absent. "None" and "nothing" are unknown words in its vocabulary,
because the ideas they represent are not founded on observed facts,
but upon metaphysical abstractions. Such terms are human-born, not
earth-begotten concepts, and so to the Far Oriental, who looks at things
from the point of view of nature, not of man, negation takes another
form. Usually it is introduced by the verbs, because the verbs, for the
most part, relate to human actions, and it is man, not nature, who is
responsible for the omission in question. After all, it does seem more
fitting to say, "I am ignorant of everything," than "I know nothing." It
is indeed you who are wanting, not the thing.

The question of verbs leads us to another matter bearing on the subject
of impersonality; namely, the arrangement of the words in a Japanese
sentence. The Tartar mode of grammatical construction is very nearly
the inverse of our own. The fundamental rule of Japanese syntax is, that
qualifying words precede the words they qualify; that is, an idea is
elaborately modified before it is so much as expressed. This practice
places the hearer at some awkward preliminary disadvantage, inasmuch as
the story is nearly over before he has any notion what it is all about;
but really it puts the speaker to much more trouble, for he is obliged
to fashion his whole sentence complete in his brain before he starts
to speak. This is largely in consequence of two omissions in Tartar
etymology. There are in Japanese no relative pronouns and no temporal
conjunctions; conjunctions, that is, for connecting consecutive events.
The want of these words precludes the admission of afterthoughts.
Postscripts in speech are impossible. The functions of relatives are
performed by position, explanatory or continuative clauses being made
to precede directly the word they affect. Ludicrous anachronisms, not
unlike those experienced by Alice in her looking-glass journey, are
occasioned by this practice. For example, "The merry monarch who ended
by falling a victim to profound melancholia" becomes "To profound
melancholia a victim by falling ended merry monarch," and
the sympathetic hearer weeps first and laughs afterward, when
chronologically he should be doing precisely the opposite.

A like inversion of the natural order of things results from the absence
of temporal conjunctions. In Japanese, though nouns can be added,
actions cannot; you can say "hat and coat," but not "dressed and came."
Conjunctions are used only for space, never for time. Objects that
exist together can be joined in speech, but it is not allowable thus
to connect consecutive events. "Having dressed, came" is the Japanese
idiom. To speak otherwise would be to violate the unities. For a
Japanese sentence is a single rounded whole, not a bunch of facts
loosely tied together. It is as much a unit in its composition as
a novel or a drama is with us. Such artistic periods, however, are
anything but convenient. In their nicely contrived involution they
strikingly resemble those curious nests of Chinese boxes, where
entire shells lie closely packed one within another,--a very marvel
of ingenious and perfectly unnecessary construction. One must be
antipodally comprehensive to entertain the idea; as it is, the idea
entertains us.

On the same general plan, the nouns precede the verbs in the sentence,
and are in every way the more important parts of speech. The consequence
is that in ordinary conversation the verbs come so late in the day that
they not infrequently get left out altogether. For the Japanese are much
given to docking their phrases, a custom the Germans might do well to
adopt. Now, nouns denote facts, while verbs express action, and action,
as considered in human speech, is mostly of human origin. In this
precedence accorded the impersonal element in language over the
personal, we observe again the comparative importance assigned the two.
In Japanese estimation, the first place belongs to nature, the second
only to man.

As if to mark beyond a doubt the insignificance of the part man plays
in their thought, sentences are usually subjectless. Although it is a
common practice to begin a phrase with the central word of the idea,
isolated from what follows by the emphasizing particle "wa" (which
means "as to," the French "quant a"), the word thus singled out for
distinction is far more likely to be the object of the sentence than
its subject. The habit is analogous to the use of our phrase "speaking
of,"--that is, simply an emphatic mode of introducing a fresh thought;
only that with them, the practice being the rule and not the exception,
no correspondingly abrupt effect is produced by it. Ousted thus from
the post of honor, the subject is not even permitted the second place.
Indeed, it usually fails to put in an appearance anywhere. You may
search through sentence after sentence without meeting with the
slightest suggestion of such a thing. When so unusual an anomaly as a
motive cause is directly adduced, it owes its mention, not to the fact
of being the subject, but because for other reasons it happens to be the
important word of the thought. The truth is, the Japanese conception of
events is only very vaguely subjective. An action is looked upon more
as happening than as being performed, as impersonally rather than
personally produced. The idea is due, however, to anything but
philosophic profundity. It springs from the most superficial of childish
conceptions. For the Japanese mind is quite the reverse of abstract. Its
consideration of things is concrete to a primitive degree. The language
reflects the fact. The few abstract ideas these people now possess are
not represented, for the most part, by pure Japanese, but by imported
Chinese expressions. The islanders got such general notions from their
foreign education, and they imported idea and word at the same time.

Summing up, as it were, in propria persona the impersonality of Japanese
speech, the word for "man," "hito," is identical with, and probably
originally the same word as "hito," the numeral "one;" a noun and a
numeral, from which Aryan languages have coined the only impersonal
pronoun they possess. On the one hand, we have the German "mann;" on
the other, the French "on". While as if to give the official seal to
the oneness of man with the universe, the word mono, thing, is applied,
without the faintest implication of insult, to men.

Such, then, is the mould into which, as children, these people learn
to cast their thought. What an influence it must exert upon their
subsequent views of life we have but to ask of our own memories to know.
With each one of us, if we are to advance beyond the steps of the last
generation, there comes a time when our growing ideas refuse any longer
to fit the childish grooves in which we were taught to let them run. How
great the wrench is when this supreme moment arrives we have all felt
too keenly ever to forget. We hesitate, we delay, to abandon the beliefs
which, dating from the dawn of our being, seem to us even as a part of
our very selves. From the religion of our mother to the birth of our
boyish first love, all our early associations send down roots so deep
that long after our minds have outgrown them our hearts refuse to give
them up. Even when reason conquers at last, sentiment still throbs at
the voids they necessarily have left.

In the Far East, this fondness for the old is further consecrated by
religion. The worship of ancestors sets its seal upon the traditions of
the past, to break which were impious as well as sad. The golden age,
that time when each man himself was young, has lingered on in the
lands where it is always morning, and where man has never passed to
his prosaic noon. Befitting the place is the mind we find there. As its
language so clearly shows, it still is in that early impersonal state
to which we all awake first before we become aware of that something we
later know so well as self.

Particularly potent with these people is their language, for a reason
that also lends it additional interest to us,--because it is their own.
Among the mass of foreign thought the Japanese imitativeness has caused
the nation to adopt, here is one thing which is indigenous. Half of the
present speech, it is true, is of Chinese importation, but conservatism
has kept the other half pure. From what it reveals we can see how each
man starts to-day with the same impersonal outlook upon life the race
had reached centuries ago, and which it has since kept unchanged. The
man's mind has done likewise.


[1] Professor Basil Hall Chamberlain: The Japanese Language.



Chapter 5. Nature and Art.

We have seen how impersonal is the form which Far Eastern thought
assumes when it crystallizes into words. Let us turn now to a
consideration of the thoughts themselves before they are thus
stereotyped for transmission to others, and scan them as they find
expression unconsciously in the man's doings, or seek it consciously in
his deeds.

To the Far Oriental there is one subject which so permeates and pervades
his whole being as to be to him, not so much a conscious matter of
thought as an unconscious mode of thinking. For it is a thing which
shapes all his thoughts instead of constituting the substance of one
particular set of them. That subject is art. To it he is born as to
a birthright. Artistic perception is with him an instinct to which he
intuitively conforms, and for which he inherits the skill of countless
generations. From the tips of his fingers to the tips of his toes, in
whose use he is surprisingly proficient, he is the artist all over.
Admirable, however, as is his manual dexterity, his mental altitude
is still more to be admired; for it is artistic to perfection. His
perception of beauty is as keen as his comprehension of the cosmos is
crude; for while with science he has not even a speaking acquaintance,
with art he is on terms of the most affectionate intimacy.

To the whole Far Eastern world science is a stranger. Such nescience is
patent even in matters seemingly scientific. For although the Chinese
civilization, even in the so-called modern inventions, was already old
while ours lay still in the cradle, it was to no scientific spirit that
its discoveries were due. Notwithstanding the fact that Cathay was the
happy possessor of gunpowder, movable type, and the compass before
such things were dreamt of in Europe, she owed them to no knowledge of
physics, chemistry, or mechanics. It was as arts, not as sciences, they
were invented. And it speaks volumes for her civilization that she burnt
her powder for fireworks, not for firearms. To the West alone belongs
the credit of manufacturing that article for the sake of killing people
instead of merely killing time.

The scientific is not the Far Oriental point of view. To wish to know
the reasons of things, that irrepressible yearning of the Western
spirit, is no characteristic of the Chinaman's mind, nor is it a Tartar
trait. Metaphysics, a species of speculation that has usually proved
peculiarly attractive to mankind, probably from its not requiring any
scientific capital whatever, would seem the most likely place to seek
it. But upon such matters he has expended no imagination of his own,
having quietly taken on trust from India what he now professes. As for
science proper, it has reached at his hands only the quasimorphologic
stage; that is, it consists of catalogues concocted according to the
ingenuity of the individual and resembles the real thing about as much
as a haphazard arrangement of human bones might be expected to resemble
a man. Not only is the spirit of the subject left out altogether,
but the mere outward semblance is misleading. For pseudo-scientific
collections of facts which never rise to be classifications of phenomena
forms to his idea the acme of erudition. His mathematics, for example,
consists of a set of empiric rules, of which no explanation is ever
vouchsafed the taught for the simple reason that it is quite unknown to
the teacher. It is not even easy to decide how much of what there is
is Jesuitical. Of more recent sciences he has still less notion,
particularly of the natural ones. Physics, chemistry, geology, and the
like are matters that have never entered his head. Even in studies more
immediately connected with obvious everyday life, such as language,
history, customs, it is truly remarkable how little he possesses the
power of generalization and inference. His elaborate lists of facts are
imposing typographically, but are not even formally important, while his
reasoning about them is as exquisite a bit of scientific satire as could
well be imagined.

But with the arts it is quite another matter. While you will search in
vain, in his civilization, for explanations of even the most simple
of nature's laws, you will meet at every turn with devices for the
beautifying of life, which may stand not unworthily beside the products
of nature's own skill. Whatever these people fashion, from the toy of
an hour to the triumphs of all time, is touched by a taste unknown
elsewhere. To stroll down the Broadway of Tokio of an evening is a
liberal education in everyday art. As you enter it there opens out in
front of you a fairy-like vista of illumination. Two long lines of gayly
lighted shops, stretching off into the distance, look out across two
equally endless rows of torch-lit booths, the decorous yellow gleam
of the one contrasting strangely with the demoniacal red flare of the
other. This perspective of pleasure fulfils its promise. As your feet
follow your eyes you find yourself in a veritable shoppers' paradise,
the galaxy of twinkle resolving into worlds of delight. Nor do you long
remain a mere spectator; for the shops open their arms to you. No
cold glass reveals their charms only to shut you off. Their wares lie
invitingly exposed to the public, seeming to you already half your own.
At the very first you come to you stop involuntarily, lost in admiration
over what you take to be bric-a-brac. It is only afterwards you learn
that the object of your ecstasy was the commonest of kitchen crockery.
Next door you halt again, this time in front of some leathern
pocket-books, stamped with designs in color to tempt you instantly to
empty your wallet for more new ones than you will ever have the means to
fill. If you do succeed in tearing yourself away purse-whole, it is
only to fall a victim to some painted fans of so exquisite a make and
decoration that escape short of possession is impossible. Opposed as
stubbornly as you may be to idle purchase at home, here you will find
yourself the prey of an acute case of shopping fever before you know it.
Nor will it be much consolation subsequently to discover that you have
squandered your patrimony upon the most ordinary articles of every-day
use. If in despair you turn for refuge to the booths, you will but
have delivered yourself into the embrace of still more irresistible
fascinations. For the nocturnal squatters are there for the express
purpose of catching the susceptible. The shops were modestly attractive
from their nature, but the booths deliberately make eyes at you, and
with telling effect. The very atmosphere is bewitching. The lurid
smurkiness of the torches lends an appropriate weirdness to the figure
of the uncouthly clad pedlar who, with the politeness of the arch-fiend
himself, displays to an eager group the fatal fascinations of some new
conceit. Here the latest thing in inventions, a gutta-percha rat, which,
for reasons best known to the vender, scampers about squeaking with a
mimicry to shame the original, holds an admiring crowd spellbound with
mingled trepidation and delight. There a native zoetrope, indefatigable
round of pleasure, whose top fashioned after the type of a turbine wheel
enables a candle at the centre ingeniously to supply both illumination
and motive power at the same time, affords to as many as can find room
on its circumference a peep at the composite antics of a consecutively
pictured monkey in the act of jumping a box. Beyond this "wheel of life"
lies spread out on a mat a most happy family of curios, the whole of
which you are quite prepared to purchase en bloc. While a little farther
on stands a flower show which seems to be coyly beckoning to you as the
blossoms nod their heads to an imperceptible breeze. So one attraction
fairly jostles its neighbor for recognition from the gay thousands that
like yourself stroll past in holiday delight. Chattering children in
brilliant colors, voluble women and talkative men in quieter but no less
picturesque costumes, stream on in kaleidoscopic continuity. And you,
carried along by the current, wander thus for miles with the tide of
pleasure-seekers, till, late at night, when at last you turn reluctantly
homeward, you feel as one does when wakened from some too delightful
dream.

Or instead of night, suppose it day and the place a temple. With those
who are entering you enter too through the outer gateway into the
courtyard. At the farther end rises a building the like of which for
richness of effect you have probably never beheld or even imagined. In
front of you a flight of white stone steps leads up to a terrace
whose parapet, also of stone, is diapered for half its height and open
latticework the rest. This piazza gives entrance to a building or set
of buildings whose every detail challenges the eye. Twelve pillars of
snow-white wood sheathed in part with bronze, arranged in four rows,
make, as it were, the bones of the structure. The space between the
centre columns lies open. The other triplets are webbed in the middle
and connected, on the sides and front, by grilles of wood and bronze
forming on the outside a couple of embrasures on either hand the
entrance in which stand the guardian Nio, two colossal demons, Gog
and Magog. Instead of capitals, a frieze bristling with Chinese lions
protects the top of the pillars. Above this in place of entablature
rises tier upon tier of decoration, each tier projecting beyond the one
beneath, and the topmost of all terminating in a balcony which encircles
the whole second story. The parapet of this balcony is one mass of
ornament, and its cornice another row of lions, brown instead of white.
The second story is no less crowded with carving. Twelve pillars make
its ribs, the spaces between being filled with elaborate woodwork, while
on top rest more friezes, more cornices, clustered with excrescences of
all colors and kinds, and guarded by lions innumerable. To begin to tell
the details of so multi-faceted a gem were artistically impossible. It
is a jewel of a thousand rays, yet whose beauties blend into one as the
prismatic tints combine to white. And then, after the first dazzle of
admiration, when the spirit of curiosity urges you to penetrate the
centre aisle, lo and behold it is but a gate! The dupe of unexpected
splendor, you have been paying court to the means of approach. It is
only a portal after all. For as you pass through, you catch a glimpse
of a building beyond more gorgeous still. Like in general to the first,
unlike it in detail, resembling it only as the mistress may the maid.
But who shall convince of charm by enumerating the features of a face!
From the tiles of its terrace to the encrusted gables that drape it as
with some rich bejewelled mantle falling about it in the most graceful
of folds, it is the very eastern princess of a building standing in the
majesty of her court to give you audience.

A pebbly path, a low flight of stone steps, a pause to leave your shoes
without the sill, and you tread in the twilight of reverence upon the
moss-like mats within. The richness of its outer ornament, so impressive
at first, is, you discover, but prelude to the lavish luxury of its
interior. Lacquer, bronze, pigments, deck its ceiling and its sides
in such profusion that it seems to you as if art had expanded, in the
congenial atmosphere, into a tropical luxuriance of decoration, and grew
here as naturally on temples as in the jungle creepers do on trees. Yet
all is but setting to what the place contains; objects of bigotry and
virtue that appeal to the artistic as much as to the religious instincts
of the devout. More sacred still are the things treasured in the sanctum
of the priests. There you will find gems of art for whose sake only
the most abnormal impersonality can prevent you from breaking the
tenth commandment. Of the value set upon them you can form a distant
approximation from the exceeding richness and the amazing number of the
silk cloths and lacquered boxes in which they are so religiously kept.
As you gaze thus, amid the soul-satisfying repose of the spot, at some
masterpiece from the brush of Motonobu, you find yourself wondering, in
a fanciful sort of way, whether Buddhist contemplation is not after all
only another name for the contemplation of the beautiful, since devotees
to the one are ex officio such votaries of the other.

Dissimilar as are these two glimpses of Japanese existence, in one point
the bustling street and the hushed temple are alike,--in the nameless
grace that beautifies both.

This spirit is even more remarkable for its all-pervasiveness than
for its inherent excellence. Both objectively and subjectively its
catholicity is remarkable. It imbues everything, and affects everybody.
So universally is it applied to the daily affairs of life that there may
be said to be no mechanical arts in Japan simply because all such
have been raised to the position of fine arts. The lowest artisan is
essentially an artist. Modern French nomenclature on the subject, in
spite of the satire to which the more prosaic Anglo-Saxon has subjected
it, is peculiarly applicable there. To call a Japanese cook, for
instance, an artist would be but the barest acknowledgment of fact, for
Japanese food is far more beautiful to look at than agreeable to eat;
while Tokio tailors are certainly masters of drapery, if they are
sublimely oblivious to the natural modelings of the male or female form.

On the other hand, art is sown, like the use of tobacco, broadcast among
the people. It is the birthright of the Far East, the talent it never
hides. Throughout the length and breadth of the land, and from the
highest prince to the humblest peasant, art reigns supreme.

Now such a prevalence of artistic feeling implies of itself
impersonality in the people. At first sight it might seem as if science
did the same, and that in this respect the one hemisphere offset the
other, and that consequently both should be equally impersonal. But in
the first place, our masses are not imbued with the scientific spirit,
as theirs are with artistic sensibility. Who would expect of a mason
an impersonal interest in the principles of the arch, or of a plumber
a non-financial devotion to hydraulics? Certainly one would be wrong in
crediting the masses in general or European waiters in particular with
much abstract love of mathematics, for example. In the second place,
there is an essential difference in the attitude of the two subjects
upon personality. Emotionally, science appeals to nobody, art to
everybody. Now the emotions constitute the larger part of that complex
bundle of ideas which we know as self. A thought which is not tinged to
some extent with feeling is not only not personal; properly speaking, it
is not even distinctively human, but cosmical. In its lofty superiority
to man, science is unpersonal rather than impersonal. Art, on the other
hand, is a familiar spirit. Through the windows of the senses she finds
her way into the very soul of man, and makes for herself a home there.
But it is to his humanity, not to his individuality, that she whispers,
for she speaks in that universal tongue which all can understand.

Examples are not wanting to substantiate theory. It is no mere
coincidence that the two most impersonal nations of Europe and Asia
respectively, the French and the Japanese, are at the same time the most
artistic. Even politeness, which, as we have seen, distinguishes both,
is itself but a form of art,--the social art of living agreeably with
one's fellows.

This impersonality comes out with all the more prominence when we pass
from the consideration of art in itself to the spirit which actuates
that art, and especially when we compare their spirit with our own.
The mainsprings of Far Eastern art may be said to be three: Nature,
Religion, and Humor. Incongruous collection that they are, all
three witness to the same trait. For the first typifies concrete
impersonality, the second abstract impersonality, while the province of
the last is to ridicule personality generally. Of the trio the first is
altogether the most important. Indeed, to a Far Oriental, so fundamental
a part of himself is his love of Nature that before we view its mirrored
image it will be well to look the emotion itself in the face. The Far
Oriental lives in a long day-dream of beauty. He muses rather than
reasons, and all musing, so the word itself confesses, springs from
the inspiration of a Muse. But this Muse appears not to him, as to the
Greeks, after the fashion of a woman, nor even more prosaically after
the likeness of a man. Unnatural though it seem to us, his inspiration
seeks no human symbol. His Muse is not kin to mankind. She is too
impersonal for any personification, for she is Nature.

That poet whose name carries with it a certain presumption of
infallibility has told us that "the proper study of mankind is man;" and
if material advancement in consequence be any criterion of the fitness
of a particular mental pursuit, events have assuredly justified the
saying. Indeed, the Levant has helped antithetically to preach the same
lesson, in showing us by its own fatal example that the improper
study of mankind is woman, and that they who but follow the fair will
inevitably degenerate.

The Far Oriental knows nothing of either study, and cares less. The
delight of self-exploration, or the possibly even greater delight of
losing one's self in trying to fathom femininity, is a sensation equally
foreign to his temperament. Neither the remarkable persistence of one's
own characteristics, not infrequently matter of deep regret to their
possessor, nor the charmingly unaccountable variability of the fairer
sex, at times quite as annoying, is a phenomenon sufficient to stir his
curiosity. Accepting, as he does, the existing state of things more as
a material fact than as a phase in a gradual process of development, he
regards humanity as but a small part of the great natural world, instead
of considering it the crowning glory of the whole. He recognizes man
merely as a fraction of the universe,--one might almost say as a vulgar
fraction of it, considering the low regard in which he is held,--and
accords him his proportionate share of attention, and no more.

In his thought, nature is not accessory to man. Worthy M. Perichon, of
prosaic, not to say philistinic fame, had, as we remember, his travels
immortalized in a painting where a colossal Perichon in front almost
completely eclipsed a tiny Mont Blanc behind. A Far Oriental
thinks poetry, which may possibly account for the fact that in his
mind-pictures the relative importance of man and mountain stands
reversed. "The matchless Fuji," first of motifs in his art, admits no
pilgrim as its peer.

Nor is it to woman that turn his thoughts. Mother Earth is fairer, in
his eyes, than are any of her daughters. To her is given the heart that
should be theirs. The Far Eastern love of Nature amounts almost to a
passion. To the study of her ever varying moods her Japanese admirer
brings an impersonal adoration that combines oddly the aestheticism of
a poet with the asceticism of a recluse. Not that he worships in secret,
however. His passion is too genuine either to find disguise or seek
display. With us, unfortunately, the love of Nature is apt to be
considered a mental extravagance peculiar to poets, excusable in exact
ratio to the ability to give it expression. For an ordinary mortal to
feel a fondness for Mother Earth is a kind of folly, to be carefully
concealed from his fellows. A sort of shamefacedness prevents him from
avowing it, as a boy at boarding-school hides his homesickness, or a lad
his love. He shrinks from appearing less pachydermatous than the rest.
Or else he flies to the other extreme, and affects the odd; pretends,
poses, parades, and at last succeeds half in duping himself, half in
deceiving other people. But with Far Orientals the case is different.
Their love has all the unostentatious assurance of what has received the
sanction of public opinion. Nor is it still at that doubtful, hesitating
stage when, by the instrumentality of a third, its soul-harmony can
suddenly be changed from the jubilant major key into the despairing
minor. No trace of sadness tinges his delight. He has long since passed
this melancholy phase of erotic misery, if so be that the course of his
true love did not always run smooth, and is now well on in matrimonial
bliss. The very look of the land is enough to betray the fact. In Japan
the landscape has an air of domesticity about it, patent even to the
most casual observer. Wherever the Japanese has come in contact with
the country he has made her unmistakably his own. He has touched her to
caress, not injure, and it seems as if Nature accepted his fondness as
a matter of course, and yielded him a wifely submission in return.
His garden is more human, even, than his house. Not only is everything
exquisitely in keeping with man, but natural features are actually
changed, plastic to the imprint of their lord and master's mind. Bushes,
shrubs, trees, forget to follow their original intent, and grow as he
wills them to; now expanding in wanton luxuriance, now contracting into
dwarf designs of their former selves, all to obey his caprice and please
his eye. Even stubborn rocks lose their wildness, and come to seem a
part of the almost sentient life around them. If the description of such
dutifulness seems fanciful, the thing itself surpasses all supposition.
Hedges and shrubbery, clipped into the most fantastic shapes, accept the
suggestion of the pruning-knife as if man's wishes were their own whims.
Manikin maples, Tom Thumb trees, a foot high and thirty years old, with
all the gnarls and knots and knuckles of their fellows of the forest,
grow in his parterres, their native vitality not a whit diminished. And
they are not regarded as monstrosities but only as the most natural of
artificialities; for they are a part of a horticultural whole. To walk
into a Japanese garden is like wandering of a sudden into one of those
strange worlds we see reflected in the polished surface of a concave
mirror, where all but the observer himself is transformed into a
fantastic miniature of the reality. In that quaint fairyland diminutive
rivers flow gracefully under tiny trees, past mole-hill mountains,
till they fall at last into lilliputian lakes, almost smothered for the
flowers that grow upon their banks; while in the extreme distance of a
couple of rods the cone of a Fuji ten feet high looks approvingly down
upon a scene which would be nationally incomplete without it.

But besides the delights of domesticity which the Japanese enjoys daily
in Nature's company, he has his acces de tendresse, too. When he feels
thus specially stirred, he invites a chosen few of his friends, equally
infatuated, and together they repair to some spot noted for its scenery.
It may be a waterfall, or some dreamy pond overhung by trees, or the
distant glimpse of a mountain peak framed in picture-wise between the
nearer hills; or, at their appropriate seasons, the blossoming of
the many tree flowers, which in eastern Asia are beautiful beyond
description. For he appreciates not only places, but times. One spot is
to be seen at sunrise, another by moonlight; one to be visited in the
spring-time, another in the fall. But wherever or whenever it be, a
tea-house, placed to command the best view of the sight, stands ready to
receive him. For nature's beauties are too well recognized to remain
the exclusive property of the first chance lover. People flock to view
nature as we do to see a play, and privacy is as impossible as it is
unsought. Indeed, the aversion to publicity is simply a result of the
sense of self, and therefore necessarily not a feature of so
impersonal a civilization. Aesthetic guidebooks are written for
the nature-enamoured, descriptive of these views which the Japanese
translator quaintly calls "Sceneries," and which visitors come not only
from near but from far to gaze upon. In front of the tea-house proper
are rows of summer pavilions, in one of which the party make themselves
at home, while gentle little tea-house girls toddle forth to serve them
the invariable preliminary tea and confections. Each man then produces
from up his sleeve, or from out his girdle, paper, ink, and brush, and
proceeds to compose a poem on the beauty of the spot and the feelings
it calls up, which he subsequently reads to his admiring companions.
Hot sake is next served, which is to them what beer is to a German or
absinthe to a blouse; and there they sit, sip, and poetize, passing
their couplets, as they do their cups, in honor to one another. At
last, after drinking in an hour or two of scenery and sake combined, the
symposium of poets breaks up.

Sometimes, instead of a company of friends, a man will take his family,
wife, babies, and all, on such an outing, but the details of his holiday
are much the same as before. For the scenery is still the centre of
attraction, and in the attendant creature comforts Far Eastern etiquette
permits an equal enjoyment to man, woman, and child.

This love of nature is quite irrespective of social condition. All
classes feel its force, and freely indulge the feeling. Poor as well as
rich, low as well as high, contrive to gratify their poetic instincts
for natural scenery. As for flowers, especially tree flowers, or
those of the larger plants, like the lotus or the iris, the Japanese
appreciation of their beauty is as phenomenal as is that beauty itself.
Those who can afford the luxury possess the shrubs in private; those who
cannot, feast their eyes on the public specimens. From a sprig in a vase
to a park planted on purpose, there is no part of them too small or
too great to be excluded from Far Oriental affection. And of the two
"drawing-rooms" of the Mikado held every year, in April and November,
both are garden-parties: the one given at the time and with the title of
"the cherry blossoms," and the other of "the chrysanthemum."

These same tree flowers deserve more than a passing notice, not simply
because of their amazing beauty, which would arrest attention anywhere,
but for the national attitude toward them. For no better example of the
Japanese passion for nature could well be cited. If the anniversaries
of people are slightingly treated in the land of the sunrise, the same
cannot be said of plants. The yearly birthdays of the vegetable world
are observed with more than botanic enthusiasm. The regard in which
they are held is truly emotional, and it not actually individual in
its object, at least personal to the species. Each kind of tree as its
season brings it into flower is made the occasion of a festival. For the
beauty of the blossoming receives the tribute of a national admiration.
From peers to populace mankind turns out to witness it. Nor are these
occasions few. Spring in the Far East is one long chain of flower fetes,
and as spring begins by the end of January and lasts till the middle of
June, opportunities for appreciating each in turn are not half spoiled
by a common contemporaneousness. People have not only occasion but time
to admire. Indeed, spring itself is suitably respected by being dated
conformably to fact. Far Orientals begin their year when Nature begins
hers, instead of starting anachronously as we do in the very middle of
the dead season, much as our colleges hold their commencements, on the
last in place at on the first day of the academic term. So previous
has the haste of Western civilization become. The result is that our
rejoicing partakes of the incongruity of humor. The new year exists only
in name. In the Far East, on the other band, the calendar is made to fit
the time. Men begin to reckon their year some three weeks later than the
Western world, just as the plum-tree opens its pink white petals, as it
were, in rosy reflection of the snow that lies yet upon the ground.
But the coldness of the weather does not in the least deter people from
thronging the spot in which the trees grow, where they spend hours in
admiration, and end by pinning appropriate poems on the twigs for later
comers to peruse. Fleeting as the flowers are in fact, they live forever
in fancy. For they constitute one of the commonest motifs of both
painting and poetry. A branch just breaking into bloom seen against the
sunrise sky, or a bough bending its blossoms to the bosom of a stream,
is subject enough for their greatest masters, who thus wed, as it
were, two arts in one,--the spirit of poesy with pictorial form. This
plum-tree is but a blossom. Precocious harbinger of a host of flowers,
its gay heralding over, it vanishes not to be recalled, for it bears no
edible fruit.

The next event in the series might fairly be called phenomenal. Early in
April takes place what is perhaps as superb a sight as anything in this
world, the blossoming of the cherry-trees. Indeed, it is not easy to do
the thing justice in description. If the plum invited admiration, the
cherry commands it; for to see the sakura in flower for the first time
is to experience a new sensation. Familiar as a man may be with cherry
blossoms at home, the sight there bursts upon him with the dazzling
effect of a revelation. Such is the profusion of flowers that the tree
seems to have turned into a living mass of rosy light. No leaves break
the brilliance. The snowy-pink petals drape the branches entirely, yet
so delicately, one deems it all a veil donned for the tree's nuptials
with the spring. For nothing could more completely personify the spirit
of the spring-time. You can almost fancy it some dryad decked for her
bridal, in maidenly day-dreaming too lovely to last. For like the plum
the cherry fails in its fruit to fulfil the promise of its flower.

It would be strange indeed if so much beauty received no recognition,
but it is even more strange that recognition should be so complete and
so universal as it is. Appreciation is not confined to the cultivated
few; it is shown quite as enthusiastically by the masses. The popularity
of the plants is all-embracing. The common people are as sensitive to
their beauty as are the upper classes. Private gratification, roseate
as it is, pales beside the public delight. Indeed, not content with what
revelation Nature makes of herself of her own accord, man has multiplied
her manifestations. Spots suitable to their growth have been peopled by
him with trees. Sometimes they stand in groups like star-clusters, as in
Oji, crowning a hill; sometimes, as at Mukojima, they line an avenue
for miles, dividing the blue river on the one hand from the blue-green
rice-fields on the other,--a floral milky way of light. But wherever the
trees may be, there at their flowering season are to be found throngs
of admirers. For in crowds people go out to see the sight, multitudes
streaming incessantly to and fro beneath their blossoms as the time of
day determines the turn of the human tide. To the Occidental stranger
such a gathering suggests some social loadstone; but none exists. In the
cherry-trees alone lies the attraction.

For one week out of the fifty-two the cherry-tree stands thus glorified,
a vision of beauty prolonged somewhat by the want of synchronousness
of the different kinds. Then the petals fall. What was a nuptial veil
becomes a winding-sheet, covering the sod as with winter's winding-sheet
of snow, destined itself to disappear, and the tree is nothing but a
common cherry-tree once more.

But flowers are by no means over because the cherry blossoms are past. A
brief space, and the same crowds that flocked to the cherry turn to the
wistaria. Gardens are devoted to the plants, and the populace greatly
given to the gardens. There they go to sit and gaze at the grape-like
clusters of pale purple flowers that hang more than a cubit long over
the wooden trellis, and grow daily down toward their own reflections in
the pond beneath, vying with one another in Narcissus-like endeavor.
And the people, as they sip their tea on the veranda opposite, behold a
doubled delight, the flower itself and its mirrored image stretching to
kiss.

After the wistaria comes the tree-peony, and then the iris, with its
trefoil flowers broader than a man may span, and at all colors under the
sky. To one who has seen the great Japanese fleur-de-lis, France looks
ludicrously infelicitous in her choice of emblem.

But the list grows too long, limited as it is only by its own annual
repetition. We have as yet reached but the first week in June; the
summer and autumn are still to come, the first bringing the lotus for
its crown, and the second the chrysanthemum. And lazily grand the lotus
is, itself the embodiment of the spirit of the drowsy August air, the
very essence of Buddha-like repose. The castle moats are its special
domain, which in this its flowering season it wrests wholly from their
more proper occupant--the water. A dense growth of leather-like leaves,
above which rise in majestic isolation the solitary flowers, encircles
the outer rampart, shutting the castle in as it might be the palace of
the Sleeping Beauty. In the delightful dreaminess that creeps over one
as he stands thus before some old daimyo's former abode in the heart of
Japan, he forgets all his metaphysical difficulties about Nirvana, for
he fancies he has found it, one long Lotus afternoon.

And then last, but in some sort first, since it has been taken for the
imperial insignia, comes the chrysanthemum. The symmetry of its shape
well fits it to symbolize the completeness of perfection which the
Mikado, the son of heaven, mundanely represents. It typifies, too, the
fullness of the year; for it marks, as it were, the golden wedding of
the spring, the reminiscence in November of the nuptials of the May. Its
own color, however, is not confined to gold. It may be of almost any
hue and within the general limits of a circle of any form. Now it is a
chariot wheel with petals for spokes; now a ball of fire with lambent
tongues of flame; while another kind seems the button of some natural
legion of honor, and still another a pin-wheel in Nature's own
day-fireworks.

Admired as a thing of beauty for its own sake, it is also used merely
as a material for artistic effects; for among the quaintest of such
conceits are the Japanese Jarley chrysanthemum works. Every November in
the florists' gardens that share the temple grounds at Asakusa may be
seen groups of historical and mythological figures composed entirely
of chrysanthemum flowers. These effigies are quite worthy of comparison
with their London cousins, being sufficiently life-like to terrify
children and startle anybody. To come suddenly, on turning a
corner, upon a colossal warrior, deterrently uncouth and frightfully
battle-clad, in the act of dispatching a fallen foe, is a sensation
not instantly dispelled by the fact that he is made of flowers. The
practice, at least, bears witness to an artistic ingenuity of no mean
merit, and to a horticulture ably carried on, if somewhat eccentrically
applied.

From the passing of the chrysanthemum dates the dead season. But it is
suitably short-lived. Sometimes as early as November, the plum-tree is
already blossoming again.

Even from so imperfectly gathered a garland it will be seen that the
Japanese do not lack for opportunities to admire, nor do they turn
coldly away from what they are given. Indeed, they may be said to live
in a chronic state of flower-fever; but in spite of the vast amount of
admiration which they bestow on plants, it is not so much the quantity
of that admiration as the quality of it which is remarkable. The intense
appreciation shown the subject by the Far Oriental is something whose
very character seems strange to us, and when in addition we consider
that it permeates the entire people from the commonest coolie to the
most aesthetic courtier, it becomes to our comprehension a state of
things little short of inexplicable. To call it artistic sensibility is
to use too limited a term, for it pervades the entire people; rather
is it a sixth sense of a natural, because national description; for the
trait differs from our corresponding feeling in degree, and especially
in universality enough to merit the distinction. Their care for tree
flowers is not confined to a cultivation, it is a cult. It approaches
to a sort of natural nature-worship, an adoration in which nothing is
personified. For the emotion aroused in the Far Oriental is just
as truly an emotion as it was to the Greek; but whereas the Greek
personified its object, the Japanese admires that object for what it is.
To think of the cherry-tree, for instance, as a woman, would be to his
mind a conception transcending even the limits of the ludicrous.



Chapter 6. Art.

That nature, not man, is their beau ideal, the source of inspiration
to them, is evident again on looking at their art. The same spirit that
makes of them such wonderful landscape gardeners and such wonder-full
landscape gazers shows itself unmistakably in their paintings.

The current impression that Japanese pictorial ambition, and consequent
skill, is confined to the representation of birds and flowers, though
entirely erroneous as it stands, has a grain of truth behind it. This
idea is due to the attitude of the foreign observers, and was in fact a
tribute to Japanese technique rather than an appreciation of Far Eastern
artistic feeling. The truth is, the foreigners brought to the subject
their own Western criteria of merit, and judged everything by these
standards. Such works naturally commended themselves most as had least
occasion to deviate from their canons. The simplest pictures, therefore,
were pronounced the best. Paintings of birds and flowers were thus
admitted to be fine, because their realism spoke for itself. Of the
exquisite poetic feeling of their landscape paintings the foreign
critics were not at first conscious, because it was not expressed in
terms with which they were familiar.

But first impressions, here as elsewhere, are valuable. One is very apt
to turn to them again from the reasoning of his second thoughts. Flora
and fauna are a conspicuous feature of Far Asiatic art, because they
enter as details of the subject-matter of the artist's thoughts and
day-dreams. These birds and flowers are his sujets de genre. Where we
should select a phase of human life for effective isolation, they choose
instead a bit of nature. A spray of grass or a twig of cherry-blossoms
is motif enough for them. To their thought its beauty is amply
suggestive. For to the Far Oriental all nature is sympathetically
sentient. His admiration, instead of being centred on man, embraces the
universe. His art reflects it.

Leaving out of consideration, for the moment, minor though still
important distinctions in tone, treatment, and technique, the great
fundamental difference between Western and Far Eastern art lies in its
attitude toward humanity.

With us, from the time of the Greeks to the present day, man has been
the cynosure of artistic eyes; with them he has never been vouchsafed
more than a casual, not to say a cursory glance, even woman failing
to rivet his attention. One of our own writers has said that, without
passing the bounds of due respect, a man is permitted two looks at
any woman he may meet, one to recognize, one to admire. A Japanese
ordinarily never dreams of taking but one,--if indeed he goes so far as
that,--the first. It is the omitting to take that second look that has
left him what he is. Not that Fortune has been unpropitious; only blind.
Fate has offered him opportunity enough; too much, perhaps. For in Japan
the exposure of the female form is without a parallel in latitude. Never
nude, it is frequently naked. The result artistically is much the same,
though the cause be different. For it is a fatal mistake to suppose the
Japanese an immodest people. According to their own standards, they are
exceedingly modest. No respectable Japanese woman would, for instance,
ever for a moment turn out her toes in walking. It is considered
immodest to do so. Their code is, however, not so whimsical as this bit
of etiquette might suggest. The intent is with them the touchstone of
propriety. In their eyes a state of nature is not a state of indecency.
Whatever exposure is required for convenience is right; whatever
unnecessary, wrong. Such an Eden-like condition of society would seem to
be the very spot for a something like the modern French school of art to
have developed in. And yet it is just that study of the nude which has
from immemorial antiquity been entirely neglected in the Far East. An
ancient Greek, to say nothing of a modern Parisian, would have shocked a
Japanese. Yet we are shocked by them. We are astounded at the sights we
see in their country villages, while they in their turn marvel at the
exhibitions they witness in our city theatres. At their watering-places
the two sexes bathe promiscuously together in all the simplicity
of nature; but for a Japanese woman to appear on the stage in any
character, however proper, would be deemed indecent. The difference
between the two hemispheres may be said to consist in an artless liberty
on the one hand, and artistic license on the other. Their unwritten code
of propriety on the subject seems to be, "You must see, but you may not
observe."

These people live more in accordance with their code of propriety
than we do with ours. All classes alike conform to it. The adjective
"respectable," used above as a distinction in speaking of woman, was in
reality superfluous, for all women there, as far as appearance goes, are
respectable. Even the most abandoned creature does not betray her status
by her behavior. The reason of this uniformity and its psychological
importance I shall discuss later.

This form of modesty, a sort of want of modesty of form, has no
connection whatever with sex. It applies with equal force to the
male figure, which is even more exposed than the female, and offers
anatomical suggestions invaluable alike to the artistic and medical
professions,--suggestions that are equally ignored by both. The coolies
are frequently possessed of physiques which would have delighted Michael
Angelo; and as for the phenomenal corpulency of the wrestlers, it would
have made of the place a very paradise for Rubens. In regard to the
doctors,--for to call them surgeons would be to give a name to what does
not exist,--a lack of scientific zeal has been the cause of their not
investigating what tempts too seductively, we should imagine, to be
ignored. Acupuncture, or the practice of sticking long pins into any
part of the patient's body that may happen to be paining him, pretty
much irrespective of anatomical position, is the nearest approach to
surgery of which they are guilty, and proclaims of itself the in corpore
vili character of the thing operated upon.

Nor does the painter owe anything to science. He represents humanity
simply as he sees it in its every-day costume; and it betokens the
highest powers of generalized observation that he produces the results
he does. In his drawings, man is shown, not as he might look in the
primitive, or privitive, simplicity of his ancestral Garden of Eden, but
as he does look in the ordinary wear and tear of his present garments.
Civilization has furnished him with clothes, and he prefers, when he has
his picture taken, to keep them on.

In dealing with man, the Far Oriental artist is emphatically a realist;
it is when he turns to nature that he becomes ideal. But by ideal is not
meant here conventional. That term of reproach is a misnomer, founded
upon a mistake. His idealism is simply the outcome of his love, which,
like all human love, transfigures its object. The Far Oriental has
plenty of this, which, if sometimes a delusion, seems also second
sight, but it is peculiarly impersonal. His color-blindness to the warm,
blood-red end of the spectrum of life in no wise affects his perception
of the colder beauty of the great blues and greens of nature. To their
poetry he is ever sensitive. His appreciation of them is something
phenomenal, and his power of presentation worthy his appreciation.

A Japanese painting is a poem rather than a picture. It portrays an
emotion called up by a scene, and not the scene itself in all its
elaborate complexity. It undertakes to give only so much of it as is
vital to that particular feeling, and intentionally omits all irrelevant
details. It is the expression caught from a glimpse of the soul of
nature by the soul of man; the mirror of a mood, passing, perhaps, in
fact, but perpetuated thus to fancy. Being an emotion, its intensity
is directly proportional to the singleness with which it possesses the
thoughts. The Far Oriental fully realizes the power of simplicity. This
principle is his fundamental canon of pictorial art. To understand his
paintings, it is from this standpoint they must be regarded; not as
soulless photographs of scenery, but as poetic presentations of the
spirit of the scenes. The very charter of painting depends upon its
not giving us charts. And if with us a long poem be a contradiction in
terms, a full picture is with them as self-condemnatory a production.
From the contemplation of such works of art as we call finished, one is
apt, after he has once appreciated Far Eastern taste, to rise with an
unpleasant feeling of satiety, as if he has eaten too much at the feast.

Their paintings, by comparison, we call sketches. Is not our would-be
slight unwittingly the reverse? Is not a sketch, after all, fuller of
meaning, to one who knows how to read it, than a finished affair, which
is very apt to end with itself, barren of fruit? Does not one's own
imagination elude one's power to portray it? Is it not forever flitting
will-o'-the-wisp-like ahead of us just beyond exact definition? For
the soul of art lies in what art can suggest, and nothing is half so
suggestive as the half expressed, not even a double entente. To hint
a great deal by displaying a little is more vital to effect than the
cleverest representation of the whole. The art of partially revealing
is more telling, even, than the ars celare artem. Who has not suspected
through a veil a fairer face than veil ever hid? Who has not been
delightedly duped by the semi-disclosures of a dress? The principle
is just as true in any one branch of art as it is of the attempted
developments by one of the suggestions of another. Yet who but has thus
felt its force? Who has not had a shock of day-dream desecration on
chancing upon an illustrated edition of some book whose story he had
lain to heart? Portraits of people, pictures of places, he does not
know, and yet which purport to be his! And I venture to believe that to
more than one of us the exquisite pathos of the Bride of Lammermoor is
gone when Lucia warbles her woes, be it never so entrancingly, to an
admiring house. It almost seems as if the garish publicity of using her
name for operatic title were a special intervention of the Muse, that we
might the less connect song with story,--two sensations that, like two
lights, destroy one another by mutual interference.

Against this preference shown the sketch it may be urged that to
appreciate such suggestions presupposes as much art in the public as in
the painter. But the ability to appreciate a thing when expressed is but
half that necessary to express it. Some understanding must exist in
the observer for any work to be intelligible. It is only a question of
degree. The greater the art-sense in the person addressed, the more had
better be left to it. Now in Japan the public is singularly artistic.
In fact, the artistic appreciation of the masses there is something
astonishing to us, accustomed to our immense intellectual differences
between man and man. Sketches are thus peculiarly fitting to such a
land.

Besides, there is a quiet modesty about the sketch which is itself
taking. To attempt the complete even in a fractional bit of the cosmos,
like a picture, has in it a difficulty akin to the logical one
of proving a universal negative. The possibilities of failure are
enormously increased, and failure is less forgiven for the assumption.
Art might perhaps not unwisely follow the example of science in such
matters where an exhaustive work, which takes the better part of a
lifetime to produce, is invariably entitled by its erudite author an
Elementary Treatise on the subject in hand.

To aid the effect due to simplicity of conception steps in the Far
Oriental's wonderful technique. His brush-strokes are very few in
number, but each one tells. They are laid on with a touch which is
little short of marvelous, and requires heredity to explain its skill.
For in his method there is no emending, no super-position, no change
possible. What he does is done once and for all. The force of it
grows on you as you gaze. Each stroke expresses surprisingly much, and
suggests more. Even omissions are made significant. In his painting it
is visibly true that objects can be rendered conspicuous by their very
absence. You are quite sure you see what on scrutiny you discover to
be only the illusion of inevitable inference. The Far Oriental artist
understands the power of suggestion well; for imagination always fills
in the picture better than the brush, however perfect be its skill.

Even the neglect of certain general principles which we consider vital
to effect, such as the absence of shadows and the lack of perspective,
proves not to be of the importance we imagine. We discover in these
paintings how immaterial, artistically, was Peter Schlimmel's sad loss,
and how perfectly possible it is to make bits of discontinuous distance
take the place effectively of continuous space.

Far Eastern pictures are epigrams rather than descriptions. They present
a bit of nature with the terseness of a maxim of La Rochefoucault, and
they delight as aphorisms do by their insight and the happy conciseness
of its expression. Few aphorisms are absolutely true, but then boldness
more than makes up for what they lack in verity. So complex a subject is
life that to state a truth with all its accompanying limitations is to
weaken it at once. Exceptions, while demonstrating the rule, do not tend
to emphasize it. And though the whole truth is essential to science,
such exhaustiveness is by no means a canon of art.

Parallels are not wanting at home. What they do with space in their
paintings do we not with time in the case of our comedies, those acted
pictures of life? Should we not refuse to tolerate a play that insisted
on furnishing us with a full perspective of its characters' past? And
yet of the two, it is far perferable, artistically, to be given too much
in sequence than too much at once. The Chinese, who put much less into
a painting than what we deem indispensable, delight in dramas that last
six weeks.

To give a concluding touch of life to my necessarily skeleton-like
generalities, memory pictures me a certain painting of Okio's which I
fell in love with at first sight. It is of a sunrise on the coast of
Japan. A long line of surf is seen tumbling in to you from out a bank
of mist, just piercing which shows the blood-red disk of the rising sun,
while over the narrow strip of breaking rollers three cranes are slowly
sailing north. And that is all you see. You do not see the shore; you do
not see the main; you are looking but at the border-land of that great
unknown, the heaving ocean still slumbering beneath its chilly coverlid
of mist, out of which come the breakers, and the sun, and the cranes.

So much for the more serious side of Japanese fancy; a look at the
lighter leads to the same conclusion.

Hand in hand with his keen poetic sensibility goes a vivid sense of
humor,--two traits that commonly, indeed, are found Maying together over
the meadows of imagination. For, as it might be put,

  "The heart that is soonest awake to the flowers
   Is also the first to be touched by the fun."

The Far Oriental well exemplifies this fact. His art, wherever fun is
possible, fairly bubbles over with laughter. From the oldest masters
down to Hokusai, it is constantly welling up in the drollest conceits.
It is of all descriptions, too. Now it lurks in merry ambush, like the
faint suggestion of a smile on an otherwise serious face, so subtile
that the observer is left wondering whether the artist could have meant
what seems more like one's own ingenious discovery; now it breaks out
into the broadest of grins, absurd juxtapositions of singularly happy
incongruities. For Hokusai's caricatures and Hendschel's sketches might
be twins. If there is a difference, it lies not so much in the artist's
work as in the greater generality of its appreciation. Humor flits
easily there at the sea-level of the multitude. For the Japanese
temperament is ever on the verge of a smile which breaks out with
catching naivete at the first provocation. The language abounds in puns
which are not suffered to lie idle, and even poetry often hinges on
certain consecrated plays on words. From the very constitution of the
people there is of course nothing selfish in the national enjoyment. A
man is quite as ready to laugh at his own expense as at his neighbor's,
a courtesy which his neighbor cordially returns.

Now the ludicrous is essentially human in its application. The principle
of the synthesis of contradictories, popularly known by the name of
humor, is necessarily limited in its field to man. For whether it have
to do wholly with actions, or partly with the words that express them,
whether it be presented in the shape of a pun or a pleasantry, it is in
incongruous contrasts that its virtue lies. It is the unexpected that
provokes the smile. Now no such incongruity exists in nature; man enjoys
a monopoly of the power of making himself ridiculous. So pleasant is
pleasantry that we do indeed cultivate it beyond its proper pale. But
it is only by personifying Nature, and gratuitously attributing to her
errors of which she is incapable, that we can make fun of her; as, for
instance, when we hold the weather up to ridicule by way of impotent
revenge. But satires upon the clown-like character of our climate,
which, after the lamest sort of a spring, somehow manages a capital
fall, would in the Far East be as out of keeping with fancy as with
fact. To a Japanese, who never personifies anything, such innocent irony
is unmeaning. Besides, it would be also untrue. For his May carries no
suggestion of unfulfilment in its name.

Those Far Eastern paintings which have to do with man fall for the
most part under one of two heads, the facetious and the historical. The
latter implies no particularly intimate concern for man in himself, for
the past has very little personality for the present. As for the former,
its attention is, if anything, derogatory to him, for we are always shy
of making fun of what we feel to be too closely a part of ourselves.
But impersonality has prevented the Far Oriental from having much amour
propre. He has no particular aversion to caricaturing himself. Few
Europeans, perhaps, would have cared to perpetrate a self-portrait
like one painted by the potter Kinsei, which was sold me one day as an
amusing tour de force by a facetious picture-dealer. It is a composite
picture of a new kind, a Japanese variety of type face. The great
potter, who was also apparently no mean painter, has combined three
aspects of himself in a single representation. At first sight the
portrait appears to be simply a full front view of a somewhat moon-faced
citizen; but as you continue to gaze, it suddenly dawns on you that
there are two other individuals, one on either side, hob-nobbing in
profile with the first, the lines of the features being ingeniously made
to do double duty; and when this aspect of the thing has once struck
you, you cannot look at the picture without seeing all three citizens
simultaneously. The result is doubtless more effective as a composition
than flattering as a likeness.

Far Eastern sculpture, by its secondary importance among Far Eastern
arts, witnesses again to the secondary importance assigned to man at our
mental antipodes. In this art, owing to its necessary limitations, the
representation of nature in its broader sense is impossible. For in the
first place, whatever the subject, it must be such as it is possible
to present in one continuous piece; disconnected adjuncts, as, for
instance, a flock of birds flying, which might be introduced with great
effect in painting, being here practically beyond the artist's reach.
Secondly, the material being of uniform appearance, as a rule, color,
or even shading, vital points in landscape portrayal, is out of the
question, unless the piece were subsequently painted, as in Grecian
sculptures, a custom which is not practised in China or Japan. Lastly,
another fact fatal to the representation of landscape is the size. The
reduced scale of the reproduction suggests falsity at once, a falsity
whose belittlement the mind can neither forget nor forgive. Plain
sculpture is therefore practically limited to statuary, either of men or
animals. The result is that in their art, where landscape counts for
so much, sculpture plays a very minor part. In what little there is,
Nature's place is taken by Buddha. For there are two classes of statues,
divided the one from the other by that step which separates the sublime
from the ridiculous, namely, the colossal and the diminutive. There is
no happy human mean. Of the first kind are the beautiful bronze
figures of the Buddha, like the Kamakura Buddha, fifty feet high and
ninety-seven feet round, in whose face all that is grand and noble lies
sleeping, the living representation of Nirvana; and of the second, those
odd little ornaments known as netsuke, comical carvings for the most
part, grotesque figures of men and monkeys, saints and sinners, gods and
devils. Appealing bits of ivory, bone, or wood they are, in which the
dumb animals are as speaking likenesses as their human fellows.

The other arts show the same motif in their decorations. Pottery and
lacquer alike witness the respective positions assigned to the serious
and the comic in Far Eastern feeling.

The Far Oriental makes fun of man and makes love to Nature; and it
almost seems as if Nature heard his silent prayer, and smiled upon him
in acceptance; as if the love-light lent her face the added beauty
that it lends the maid's. For nowhere in this world, probably, is
she lovelier than in Japan: a climate of long, happy means and short
extremes, months of spring and months of autumn, with but a few weeks
of winter in between; a land of flowers, where the lotus and the cherry,
the plum and wistaria, grow wantonly side by side; a land where
the bamboo embosoms the maple, where the pine at last has found its
palm-tree, and the tropic and the temperate zones forget their separate
identity in one long self-obliterating kiss.



Chapter 7. Religion.

In regard to their religion, nations, like individuals, seem singularly
averse to practising what they have preached. Whether it be that his
self-constructed idols prove to the maker too suggestive of his own
intellectual chisel to deceive him for long, or whether sacred soil,
like less hallowed ground, becomes after a time incapable of responding
to repeated sowings of the same seed, certain it is that in spiritual
matters most peoples have grown out of conceit with their own
conceptions. An individual may cling with a certain sentiment to the
religion of his mother, but nations have shown anything but a foolish
fondness for the sacred superstitions of their great-grandfathers. To
the charm of creation succeeds invariably the bitter-sweet after-taste
of criticism, and man would not be the progressive animal he is if he
long remained in love with his own productions.

What his future will be is too engrossing a subject, and one too deeply
shrouded in mystery, not to be constantly pictured anew. No wonder that
the consideration at that country toward which mankind is ever being
hastened should prove as absorbing to fancy as contemplated earthly
journeys proverbially are. Few people but have laid out skeleton tours
through its ideal regions, and perhaps, as in the mapping beforehand of
merely mundane travels, one element of attraction has always consisted
in the possible revision of one's routes.

Besides, there is a fascination about the foreign merely because it is
such. Distance lends enchantment to the views of others, and never
more so than when those views are religious visions. An enthusiast has
certainly a greater chance of being taken for a god among a people who
do not know him intimately as a man. So with his doctrines. The imported
is apt to seem more important than the home-made; as the far-off
bewitches more easily than the near. But just as castles in the air do
not commonly become the property of their builders, so mansions in the
skies almost as frequently have failed of direct inheritance. Rather
strikingly has this proved the case with what are to-day the two most
powerful religions of the world,--Buddhism and Christianity. Neither is
now the belief of its founder's people. What was Aryan-born has become
Turanian-bred, and what was Semitic by conception is at present Aryan by
adoption. The possibilities of another's hereafter look so much rosier
than the limitations of one's own present!

Few pastimes are more delightful than tossing pebbles into some still,
dark pool, and watching the ripples that rise responsive, as they run in
ever widening circles to the shore. Most of us have felt its fascination
second only to that of the dotted spiral of the skipping-stone, a
fascination not outgrown with years. There is something singularly
attractive in the subtle force that for a moment sways each particle
only to pass on to the next, a motion mysterious in its immateriality.
Some such pleasure must be theirs who have thrown their thoughts into
the hearts of men, and seen them spread in waves of feeling, whose
sphere time widens through the world. For like the mobile water is the
mind of man,--quick to catch emotions, quick to transmit them. Of all
waves of feeling, this is not the least true of religious ones, that,
starting from their birthplace, pass out to stir others, who have but
humanity in common with those who professed them first. Like the ripples
in the pool, they leave their initial converts to sink back again into
comparative quiescence, as they advance to throw into sudden tremors
hordes of outer barbarians. In both of the great religions in question
this wave propagation has been most marked, only the direction it
took differed. Christianity went westward; Buddhism travelled east.
Proselytes in Asia Minor, Greece, and Italy find counterparts in
Eastern India, Burmah, and Thibet. Eventually the taught surpassed their
teachers both in zeal and numbers. Jerusalem and Benares at last gave
place to Rome and Lassa as sacerdotal centres. Still the movement
journeyed on. Popes and Lhamas remained where their predecessors
had founded sees, but the tide of belief surged past them in its
irresistible advance. Farther yet from where each faith began are to
be found to-day the greater part of its adherents. The home that the
Western hemisphere seems to promise to the one, the extreme Orient
affords the other. As Roman Catholicism now looks to America for its
strength, so Buddhism to-day finds its worshippers chiefly in China and
Japan.

But though the Japanese may be said to be all Buddhists, Buddhist is by
no means all that they are. At the time of their adoption of the great
Indian faith, the Japanese were already in possession of a system of
superstition which has held its own to this day. In fact, as the state
religion of the land, it has just experienced a revival, a
regalvanizing of its old-time energy, at the hands of some of the native
archaeologists. Its sacred mirror, held up to Nature, has been burnished
anew. Formerly this body of belief was the national faith, the Mikado,
the direct descendant of the early gods, being its head on earth. His
reinstatement to temporal power formed a very fitting first step toward
reinvesting the cult with its former prestige; a curious instance,
indeed, of a religious revival due to archaeological, not to religious
zeal.

This cult is the mythological inheritance of the whole eastern seaboard
of Asia, from Siam to Kamtchatka. In Japan it is called Shintoism. The
word "Shinto" means literally "the way of the gods," and the letter
of its name is a true exponent of the spirit of the belief. For its
scriptures are rather an itinerary of the gods' lives than a guide to
that road by which man himself may attain to immortality. Thus with a
certain fitness pilgrimages are its most noticeable rites. One cannot
journey anywhere in the heart of Japan without meeting multitudes of
these pilgrims, with their neat white leggings and their mushroom-like
hats, nor rest at night at any inn that is not hung with countless
little banners of the pilgrim associations, of which they all are
members. Being a pilgrim there is equivalent to being a tourist here,
only that to the excitement of doing the country is added a sustaining
sense of the meritoriousness of the deed. Oftener than not the objective
point of the devout is the summit of some noted mountain. For peaks
are peculiarly sacred spots in the Shinto faith. The fact is perhaps an
expression of man's instinctive desire to rise, as if the bodily act
in some wise betokened the mental action. The shrine in so exalted
a position is of the simplest: a rude hut, with or without the only
distinctive emblems of the cult, a mirror typical of the god and the
pendent gohei, or zigzag strips of paper, permanent votive offerings
of man. As for the belief itself, it is but the deification of those
natural elements which aboriginal man instinctively wonders at or fears,
the sun, the moon, the thunder, the lightning, and the wind; all, in
short, that he sees, hears, and feels, yet cannot comprehend. He clothes
his terrors with forms which resemble the human, because he can conceive
of nothing else that could cause the unexpected. But the awful shapes he
conjures up have naught in common with himself. They are far too fearful
to be followed. Their way is the "highway of the gods," but no Jacob's
ladder for wayward man.

In this externality to the human lies the reason that Shintoism and
Buddhism can agree so well, and can both join with Confucianism in
helping to form that happy family of faith which is so singular a
feature of Far Eastern religious capability. It is not simply that the
two contrive to live peaceably together; they are actually both of them
implicitly believed by the same individual. Millions of Japanese
are good Buddhists and good Shintoists at the same time. That such a
combination should be possible is due to the essential difference in the
character of the two beliefs. The one is extrinsic, the other intrinsic,
in its relations to the human soul. Shintoism tells man but little about
himself and his hereafter; Buddhism, little but about himself and
what he may become. In examining Far Eastern religion, therefore, for
personality, or the reverse, we may dismiss Shintoism as having no
particular bearing upon the subject. The only effect it has is indirect
in furthering the natural propensity of these people to an adoration of
nature.

In Korea and in China, again, Confucianism is the great moral law, as by
reflection it is to a certain extent in Japan. But that in its turn
may be omitted in the present argument; inasmuch as Confucius taught
confessedly and designedly only a system of morals, and religiously
abstained from pronouncing any opinion whatever upon the character or
the career of the human soul.

Taouism, the third great religion of China, resembles Shintoism to this
extent, that it is a body of superstition, and not a form of philosophy.
It undertakes to provide nostrums for spiritual ills, but is dumb as to
the constitution of the soul for which it professes to prescribe.
Its pills are to be swallowed unquestioningly by the patient, and are
warranted to cure; and owing to the two great human frailties, fear
and credulity, its practice is very large. Possessing, however, no
philosophic diploma, it is without the pale of the present discussion.

The demon-worship of Korea is a mild form of the same thing with the
hierarchy left out, every man there being his own spiritual adviser.
An ordinary Korean is born with an innate belief in malevolent spirits,
whom he accordingly propitiates from time to time. One of nobler birth
propitiates only the spirits of his own ancestors.

We come, then, by a process of elimination to a consideration of
Buddhism, the great philosophic faith of the whole Far East.

Not uncommonly in the courtyard of a Japanese temple, in the solemn
half-light of the sombre firs, there stands a large stone basin, cut
from a single block, and filled to the brim with water. The trees, the
basin, and a few stone lanterns--so called from their form, and not
their function, for they have votive pebbles where we should look for
wicks--are the sole occupants of the place. Sheltered from the
wind, withdrawn from sound, and only piously approached by man, this
antechamber of the god seems the very abode of silence and rest. It
might be Nirvana itself, human entrance to an immortality like the god's
within, so peaceful, so pervasive is its calm; and in its midst is the
moss-covered monolith, holding in its embrace the little imprisoned pool
of water. So still is the spot and so clear the liquid that you know the
one only as the reflection of the other. Mirrored in its glassy surface
appears everything around it. As you peer in, far down you see a tiny
bit of sky, as deep as the blue is high above, across which slowly sail
the passing clouds; then nearer stand the trees, arching overhead, as if
bending to catch glimpses of themselves in that other world below; and
then, nearer yet--yourself.

Emblem of the spirit of man is this little pool to Far Oriental eyes.
Subtile as the soul is the incomprehensible water; so responsive to
light that it remains itself invisible; so clear that it seems illusion!
Though portrayer so perfect of forms about it, all we know of the thing
itself is that it is. Through none of the five senses do we perceive it.
Neither sight, nor hearing, nor taste, nor smell, nor touch can tell us
it exists; we feel it to be by the muscular sense alone, that blind and
dumb analogue for the body of what consciousness is for the soul. Only
when disturbed, troubled, does the water itself become visible, and then
it is but the surface that we see. So to the Far Oriental this still
little lake typifies the soul, the eventual purification of his own; a
something lost in reflection, self-effaced, only the alter ego of the
outer world.

For contemplation, not action, is the Far Oriental's ideal of life. The
repose of self-adjustment like that to which our whole solar system
is slowly tending as its death,--this to him appears, though from no
scientific deduction, the end of all existence. So he sits and ponders,
abstractly, vaguely, upon everything in general,--synonym, alas, to
man's finite mind, for nothing in particular,--till even the sense
of self seems to vanish, and through the mist-like portal of
unconsciousness he floats out into the vast indistinguishable sameness
of Nirvana's sea.

At first sight Buddhism is much more like Christianity than those of us
who stay at home and speculate upon it commonly appreciate. As a system
of philosophy it sounds exceedingly foreign, but it looks unexpectedly
familiar as a faith. Indeed, the one religion might well pass for the
counterfeit presentment of the other. The resemblance so struck the
early Catholic missionaries that they felt obliged to explain the
remarkable similarity between the two. With them ingenuous surprise
instantly begot ingenious sophistry. Externally, the likeness was so
exact that at first they could not bring themselves to believe that the
Buddhist ceremonials had not been filched bodily from the practices of
the true faith. Finding, however, that no known human agency had acted
in the matter, they bethought them of introducing, to account for
things, a deus ex machina in the shape of the devil. They were so
pleased with this solution of the difficulty that they imparted it
at once with much pride to the natives. You have indeed got, they
graciously if somewhat gratuitously informed them, the outward semblance
of the true faith, but you are in fact the miserable victims of an
impious fraud. Satan has stolen the insignia of divinity, and is now
masquerading before you as the deity; your god is really our devil,--a
recognition of antipodal inversion truly worthy the Jesuitical mind!

Perhaps it is not matter for great surprise that they converted but few
of their hearers. The suggestion was hardly so diplomatic as might have
been expected from so generally astute a body; for it could not make
much difference what the all-presiding deity was called, if his actions
were the same, since his motives were beyond human observation. Besides,
the bare idea of a foreign bogus was not very terrifying. The Chinese
possessed too many familiar devils of their own. But there was another
and a much deeper reason, which we shall come to later, why Christianity
made but little headway in the Far East.

But it is by no means in externals only that the two religions are
alike. If the first glance at them awakens that peculiar sensation which
most of us have felt at some time or other, a sense of having seen all
this before, further scrutiny reveals a deeper agreement than merely in
appearances.

In passing from the surface into the substance, it may be mentioned
incidentally that the codes of morality of the two are about on a level.
I say incidentally, for so far as its practice, certainly, is concerned,
it not its preaching, morality has no more intimate connection with
religion than it has with art or politics. If we doubt this, we have but
to examine the facts. Are the most religious peoples the most moral? It
needs no prolonged investigation to convince us that they are not. If
proof of the want of a bond were required, the matter of truth-telling
might be adduced in point. As this is a subject upon which a slight
misconception exists in the minds of some evangelically persuaded
persons, and because, what is more generally relevant, the presence of
this quality, honesty in word and deed, has more than almost any other
one characteristic helped to put us in the van of the world's advance
to-day, it may not unfittingly be cited here.

The argument in the case may be put thus. Have specially religious races
been proportionally truth-telling ones? If not, has there been any
other cause at work in the development of mankind tending to increase
veracity? The answer to the first question has all the simplicity of
a plain negative. No such pleasing concomitance of characteristics
is observable to-day, or has been presented in the past. Permitting,
however, the dead past to bury its shortcomings in oblivion, let us look
at the world as we find it. We observe, then, that the religious spirit
is quite as strong in Asia as it is in Europe; if anything, that at the
present time it is rather stronger. The average Brahman, Mahometan,
or Buddhist is quite as devout as the ordinary Roman Catholic or
Presbyterian. If he is somewhat less given to propagandism, he is not
a whit less regardful of his own salvation. Yet throughout the Orient
truth is a thing unknown, lies of courtesy being de rigueur and lies
of convenience de raison; while with us, fortunately, mendacity is
generally discredited. But we need not travel so far for proof. The same
is evident in less antipodal relations. Have the least religious nations
of Europe been any less truthful than the most bigoted? Was fanatic
Spain remarkable for veracity? Was Loyola a gentleman whose assertions
carried conviction other than to the stake? Were the eminently mundane
burghers whom he persecuted noted for a pious superiority to fact? Or,
to narrow the field still further, and scan the circle of one's own
acquaintance, are the most believing individuals among them worthy of
the most belief? Assuredly not.

We come, then, to the second point. Has there been any influence at work
to differentiate us in this respect from Far Orientals? There has. Two
separate causes, in fact, have conduced to the same result. The one is
the development of physical science; the other, the extension of trade.
The sole object of science being to discover truth, truth-telling is a
necessity of its existence. Professionally, scientists are obliged to be
truthful. Aliter of a Jesuit.

So long as science was of the closet, its influence upon mankind
generally was indirect and slight; but so soon as it proceeded to stalk
into the street and earn its own living, its veracious character began
to tell. When out of its theories sprang inventions and discoveries that
revolutionized every-day affairs and changed the very face of things,
society insensibly caught its spirit. Man awoke to the inestimable value
of exactness. From scientists proper, the spirit filtered down through
every stratum of education, till to-day the average man is born exact to
a degree which his forefathers never dreamed of becoming. To-day, as
a rule, the more intelligent the individual, the more truthful he is,
because the more innately exact in thought, and thence in word and
action. With us, to lie is a sign of a want of cleverness, not of an
excess of it.

The second cause, the extension of trade, has inculcated the same regard
for veracity through the pocket. For with the increase of business
transactions in both time and space, the telling of the truth has become
a financial necessity. Without it, trade would come to a standstill at
once. Our whole mercantile system, a modern piece of mechanism unknown
to the East till we imported it thither, turns on an implicit belief
in the word of one's neighbor. Our legal safeguards would snap like
red tape were the great bond of mutual trust once broken. Western
civilization has to be truthful, or perish.

And now for the spirits of the two beliefs.

The soul of any religion realizes in one respect the Brahman idea of the
individual soul of man, namely, that it exists much after the manner of
an onion, in many concentric envelopes. Man, they tell us, is composed
not of a single body simply, but of several layers of body, each shell
as it were respectively inclosing another. The outermost is the merely
material body, of which we are so directly cognizant. This encases a
second, more spiritual, but yet not wholly free from earthly affinities.
This contains another, still more refined; till finally, inside of all
is that immaterial something which they conceive to constitute the
soul. This eventual residuum exemplifies the Franciscan notion of pure
substance, for it is a thing delightfully devoid of any attributes
whatever.

We may, perhaps, not be aware of the existence of such an elaborate
set of encasings to our own heart of hearts, nor of a something so
very indefinite within, but the most casual glance at any religion will
reveal its truth as regards the soul of a belief. We recognize the fact
outwardly in the buildings erected to celebrate its worship. Not among
the Jews alone was the holy of holies kept veiled, to temper the divine
radiance to man's benighted understanding. Nor is the chancel-rail of
Christianity the sole survivor of the more exclusive barriers of olden
times, even in the Western world. In the Far East, where difficulty of
access is deemed indispensable to dignity, the material approaches
are still manifold and imposing. Court within court, building after
building, isolate the shrine itself from the profane familiarity of
the passers-by. But though the material encasings vary in number and
in exclusiveness, according to the temperament of the particular
race concerned, the mental envelopes exist, and must exist, in both
hemispheres alike, so long as society resembles the crust of the earth
on which it dwells,--a crust composed of strata that grow denser as one
descends. What is clear to those on top seems obscure to those below;
what are weighty arguments to the second have no force at all upon
the first. There must necessarily be grades of elevation in individual
beliefs, suited to the needs and cravings of each individual soul. A
creed that fills the shallow with satisfaction leaves but an aching
void in the deep. It is not of the slightest consequence how the belief
starts; differentiated it is bound to become. The higher minds alone
can rest content with abstract imaginings; the lower must have concrete
realities on which to pin their faith. With them, inevitably, ideals
degenerate into idols. In all religions this unavoidable debasement has
taken place. The Roman Catholic who prays to a wooden image of Christ
is not one whit less idolatrous than the Buddhist who worships a bronze
statue of Amida Butzu. All that the common people are capable of seeing
is the soul-envelope, for the soul itself they are unable to appreciate.
Spiritually they are undiscerning, because imaginatively they are blind.

Now the grosser soul-envelopes of the two great European and Asiatic
faiths, though differing in detail, are in general parallel in
structure. Each boasts its full complement of saints, whose congruent
catalogues are equally wearisome in length. Each tells its circle of
beads to help it keep count of similarly endless prayers. For in both,
in the popular estimation, quantity is more effective to salvation
than quality. In both the believer practically pictures his heaven for
himself, while in each his hell, with a vividness that does like credit
to its religious imagination, is painted for him by those of the cult
who are themselves confident of escaping it. Into the lap of each mother
church the pious believer drops his little votive offering with the same
affectionate zeal, and in Asia, as in Europe, the mites of the many make
the might of the mass.

But behind all this is the religion of the few,--of those to whom
sensuous forms cannot suffice to represent super-sensuous cravings;
whose god is something more than an anthropomorphic creation; to whom
worship means not the cramping of the body, but the expansion of the
soul.

The rays of the truth, like the rays of the sun, which universally seems
to have been man's first adoration, have two properties equally inherent
in their essence, warmth and light. And as for the life of all things
on this globe both attributes of sunshine are necessary, so to the
development of that something which constitutes the ego both qualities
of the truth are vital. We sometimes speak of character as if it were
a thing wholly apart from mind; but, in fact, the two things are so
interwoven that to perceive the right course is the strongest possible
of incentives to pursue it. In the end the two are one. Now, while
clearness of head is all-important, kindness of heart is none the less
so. The first, perhaps, is more needed in our communings with ourselves,
the second in our commerce with others. For, dark and dense bodies
that we are, we can radiate affection much more effectively than we can
reflect views.

That Christianity is a religion of love needs no mention; that Buddhism
is equally such is perhaps not so generally appreciated. But just as the
gospel of the disciple who loved and was loved the most begins its story
by telling us of the Light that came into the world, so none the less
surely could the Light of Asia but be also its warmth. Half of the
teachings of Buddhism are spent in inculcating charity. Not only to men
is man enjoined to show kindliness, but to all other animals as well.
The people practise what their scriptures preach. The effect indirectly
on the condition of the brutes is almost as marked as its more direct
effect on the character of mankind. In heart, at least, Buddhism and
Christianity are very close.

But here the two paths to a something beyond an earthly life diverge. Up
to this point the two religions are alike, but from this point on they
are so utterly unlike that the very similarity of all that went before
only suffices to make of the second the weird, life-counterfeiting
shadow of the first. As in a silhouette, externally the contours are all
there, but within is one vast blank. In relation to one's neighbor the
two beliefs are kin, but as regards one's self, as far apart as the West
is from the East. For here, at this idea of self, we are suddenly aware
of standing on the brink of a fathomless abyss, gazing giddily down into
that great gulf which divides Buddhism from Christianity. We cannot see
the bottom. It is a separation more profound than death; it seems to
necessitate annihilation. To cross it we must bury in its depths all we
know as ourselves.

Christianity is a personal religion; Buddhism, an impersonal one. In
this fundamental difference lies the world-wide opposition of the two
beliefs. Christianity tells us to purify ourselves that we may enjoy
countless aeons of that bettered self hereafter; Buddhism would have us
purify ourselves that we may lose all sense of self for evermore.

For all that it preaches the essential vileness of the natural man,
Christianity is a gospel of optimism. While it affirms that at present
you are bad, it also affirms that this depravity is no intrinsic part
of yourself. It unquestioningly asserts that it is something foreign
to your true being. It even believes that in a more or less spiritual
manner your very body will survive. It essentially clings to the ego.
What it inculcates is really present endeavor sanctioned by the prospect
of future bliss. It tacitly takes for granted the desirability
of personal existence, and promises the certainty of personal
immortality,--a terror to evildoers, and a sustaining sense of coming
unalloyed happiness to the good. Through and through its teachings runs
the feeling of the fullness of life, that desire which will not die,
that wish of the soul which beats its wings against its earthly casement
in its longing for expansion beyond the narrow confines of threescore
years and ten.

Buddhism, on the contrary, is the cri du coeur of pessimism. This life,
it says, is but a chain of sorrows. To multiply days is only to multiply
evil. These desires that urge us on are really cause of all our woe. We
think they are ourselves. We are mistaken. They are all illusion, and
we are victims of a mirage. This personality, this sense of self, is
a cruel deception and a snare. Realize once the true soul behind it,
devoid of attributes, therefore without this capacity for suffering, an
indivisible part of the great impersonal soul of nature: then, and
then only, will you have found happiness in the blissful quiescence of
Nirvana.

With a certain poetic fitness, misery and impersonality were both
present in the occasion that gave the belief birth. Many have turned
to the consolations of religion by reason of their own wretchedness;
Gautama sought its help touched by the woes of others whom, in his own
happy life journey, he chanced one day to come across. Shocked by the
sight of human disease, old age, and death, sad facts to which hitherto
he had been sedulously kept a stranger, he renounced the world that he
might find for it an escape from its ills. But bliss, as he conceived
it, lay not in wanting to be something he was not, but in actual want of
being. His quest for mankind was immunity from suffering, not the active
enjoyment of life. In this negative way of looking at happiness,
he acted in strict conformity with the spirit of his world. For the
doctrine of pessimism had already been preached. It underlay the whole
Brahman philosophy, and everybody believed it implicitly. Already the
East looked at this life as an evil, and had affirmed for the individual
spirit extinction to be happier than existence. The wish for an end
to the ego, the hope to be eventually nothing, Gautama accepted for a
truism as undeniably as the Brahmans did. What he pronounced false was
the Brahman prospectus of the way to reach this desirable impersonal
state. Their road, be said, could not possibly land the traveller where
it professed, since it began wrong, and ended nowhere. The way, he
asserted, is within a man. He has but to realize the truth, and from
that moment he will see his goal and the road that leads there. There
is no panacea for human ills, of external application. The Brahman
homoeopathic treatment of sin is folly. The slaughtering of men and
bulls cannot possibly bring life to the soul. To mortify the body for
the sins of the flesh is palpably futile, for in desire alone lies all
the ill. Quench the desire, and the deeds will die of inanition. Man
himself is sole cause of his own misery. Get rid, then, said the Buddha,
of these passions, these strivings for the sake of self, that hold the
true soul a prisoner. They have to do with things which we know are
transitory: how can they be immortal themselves? We recognize them as
subject to our will; they are, then, not the I.

As a man, he taught, becomes conscious that he himself is something
distinct from his body, so, if he reflect and ponder, he will come to
see that in like manner his appetites, ambitions, hopes, are really
extrinsic to the spirit proper. Neither heart nor head is truly the man,
for he is conscious of something that stands behind both. Behind desire,
behind even the will, lies the soul, the same for all men, one with the
soul of the universe. When he has once realized this eternal truth,
the man has entered Nirvana. For Nirvana is not an absorption of the
individual soul into the soul of all things, since the one has always
been a part of the other. Still less is it utter annihilation. It is
simply the recognition of the eternal oneness of the two, back through
an everlasting past on through an everlasting future.

Such is the belief which the Japanese adopted, and which they profess
to-day. Such to them is to be the dawn of death's to-morrow; a blessed
impersonal immortality, in which all sense of self, illusion that it
is, shall itself have ceased to be; a long dreamless sleep, a beatified
rest, which no awakening shall ever disturb.

Among such a people personal Christianity converts but few. They accept
our material civilization, but they reject our creeds. To preach a
prolongation of life appears to them like preaching an extension of
sorrow. At most, Christianity succeeds only in making them doubters of
what lies beyond this life. But though professing agnosticism while they
live, they turn, when the shadows of death's night come on, to the bosom
of that faith which teaches that, whatever may have been one's earthly
share of happiness, "'tis something better not to be."

Strange it seems at first that those who have looked so long to the
rising sun for inspiration should be they who live only in a sort of
lethargy of life, while those who for so many centuries have turned
their faces steadily to the fading glory of the sunset should be the
ones who have embodied the spirit of progress of the world. Perhaps the
light, by its very rising, checks the desire to pursue; in its setting
it lures one on to follow.

Though this religion of impersonality is not their child, it is their
choice. They embraced it with the rest that India taught them, centuries
ago. But though just as eager to learn of us now as of India then,
Christianity fails to commend itself. This is not due to the fact that
the Buddhist missionaries came by invitation, and ours do not. Nor is it
due to any want of personal character in these latter, but simply to an
excess of it in their doctrines.

For to-day the Far East is even more impersonal in its religion than are
those from whom that religion originally came. India has returned again
to its worship of Brahma, which, though impersonal enough, is less so
than is the gospel of Gautama. For it is passively instead of actively
impersonal.

Buddhism bears to Brahmanism something like the relation that
Protestantism does to Roman Catholicism. Both bishops and Brahmans
undertake to save all who shall blindly commit themselves to
professional guidance, while Buddhists and Protestants alike believe
that a man's salvation must be brought about by the action of the man
himself. The result is, that in the matter of individuality the two
reformed beliefs are further apart than those against which they
severally protested. For by the change the personal became more
personal, and the impersonal more impersonal than before. The
Protestant, from having tamely allowed himself to be led, began to take
a lively interest in his own self-improvement; while the Buddhist,
from a former apathetic acquiescence in the doctrine of the universally
illusive, set to work energetically towards self-extinction. Curious
labor for a mind, that of devoting all its strength to the thinking
itself out of existence! Not content with being born impersonal, a Far
Oriental is constantly striving to make himself more so.

We have seen, then, how in trying to understand these peoples we
are brought face to face with impersonality in each of those three
expressions of the human soul, speech, thought, yearning. We have looked
at them first from a social standpoint. We have seen how singularly
little regard is paid the individual from his birth to his death. How
he lives his life long the slave of patriarchal customs of so puerile
a tendency as to be practically impossible to a people really grown up.
How he practises a wholesale system of adoption sufficient of itself to
destroy any surviving regard for the ego his other relations might
have left. How in his daily life he gives the minimum of thought to
the bettering himself in any worldly sense, and the maximum of polite
consideration to his neighbor. How, in short, he acts toward himself as
much as possible as if he were another, and to that other as if he
were himself. Then, not content with standing stranger like upon the
threshold, we have sought to see the soul of their civilization in its
intrinsic manifestations. We have pushed our inquiry, as it were,
one step nearer its home. And the same trait that was apparent
sociologically has been exposed in this our antipodal phase of psychical
research. We have seen how impersonal is his language, the principal
medium of communication between one soul and another; how impersonal
are the communings of his soul with itself. How the man turns to
nature instead of to his fellowman in silent sympathy. And how, when he
speculates upon his coming castles in the air, his most roseate desire
is to be but an indistinguishable particle of the sunset clouds and
vanish invisible as they into the starry stillness of all-embracing
space.

Now what does this strange impersonality betoken? Why are these peoples
so different from us in this most fundamental of considerations to
any people, the consideration of themselves? The answer leads to some
interesting conclusions.



Chapter 8. Imagination.

If, as is the case with the moon, the earth, as she travelled round
her orbit turned always the same face inward, we might expect to find,
between the thoughts of that hemisphere which looked continually to the
sun, and those of the other peering eternally out at the stars,
some such difference as actually exists between ourselves and our
longitudinal antipodes. For our conception of the cosmos is of a
sunlit world throbbing with life, while their Nirvana finds not unfit
expression in the still, cold, fathomless awe of the midnight sky. That
we cannot thus directly account for the difference in local coloring
serves but to make that difference of more human interest. The
dissimilarity between the Western and the Far Eastern attitude of mind
has in it something beyond the effect of environment. For it points to
the importance of the part which the principle of individuality plays
in the great drama daily enacting before our eyes, and which we know as
evolution. It shows, as I shall hope to prove, that individuality bears
the same relation to the development of mind that the differentiation
of species does to the evolution of organic life: that the degree of
individualization of a people is the self-recorded measure of its place
in the great march of mind.

All life, whether organic or inorganic, consists, as we know, in
a change from a state of simple homogeneity to one of complex
heterogeneity. The process is apparently the same in a nebula or a
brachiopod, although much more intricate in the latter. The immediate
force which works this change, the life principle of things, is, in the
case of organic beings, a subtle something which we call spontaneous
variation. What this mysterious impulse may be is beyond our present
powers of recognition. As yet, the ultimates of all things lie hidden
in the womb of the vast unknown. But just as in the case of a man we can
tell what organs are vital, though we are ignorant what the vital spark
may be, so in our great cosmical laws we can say in what their power
resides, though we know not really what they are. Whether mind be but a
sublimated form of matter, or, what amounts to the same thing, matter
a menial kind of mind, or whether, which seems less likely, it be a
something incomparable with substance, of one thing we are sure, the
same laws of heredity govern both. In each a like chain of continuity
leads from the present to the dim past, a connecting clue which we can
follow backward in imagination. Now what spontaneous variation is to the
material organism, imagination, apparently, is to the mental one. Just
as spontaneous variation is constantly pushing the animal or the plant
to push out, as a vine its tendrils, in all directions, while natural
conditions are as constantly exercising over it a sort of unconscious
pruning power, so imagination is ever at work urging man's mind out and
on, while the sentiment of the community, commonly called common sense,
which simply means the point already reached by the average, is as
steadily tending to keep it at its own level. The environment helps, in
the one case as in the other, to the shaping of the development. Purely
physical in the first, it is both physical and psychical in the
second, the two reacting on each other. But in either case it is only a
constraining condition, not the divine impulse itself. Precisely, then,
as in the organism, this subtle spirit checked in one direction finds
a way to advance in another, and produces in consequence among an
originally similar set of bodies a gradual separation into species
which grow wider with time, so in brain evolution a like force for like
reasons tends inevitably to an ever-increasing individualization.

Now what evidence have we that this analogy holds? Let us look at the
facts, first as they present themselves subjectively.

The instinct of self-preservation, that guardian angel so persistent to
appear when needed, owes its summons to another instinct no less strong,
which we may call the instinct of individuality; for with the same
innate tenacity with which we severally cling to life do we hold to
the idea of our own identity. It is not for the philosophic desire of
preserving a very small fraction of humanity at large that we take such
pains to avoid destruction; it is that we insensibly regard death as
threatening to the continuance of the ego, in spite of the theories of
a future life which we have so elaborately developed. Indeed, the
psychical shrinking is really the quintessence of the physical fear. We
cleave to the abstract idea closer even than to its concrete embodiment.
Sooner would we forego this earthly existence than surrender that
something we know as self. For sufficient cause we can imagine courting
death; we cannot conceive of so much as exchanging our individuality for
another's, still less of abandoning it altogether; for gradually a man,
as he grows older, comes to regard his body as, after all, separable
from himself. It is the soul's covering, rendered indispensable by the
climatic conditions of our present existence, one without which we
could no longer continue to live here. To forego it does not necessarily
negative, so far as we yet know, the possibility of living elsewhere.
Some more congenial tropic may be the wandering spirit's fate. But to
part with the sense of self seems to be like taking an eternal farewell
of the soul. The Western mind shrinks before the bare idea of such a
thought.

The clinging to one's own identity, then, is now an instinct, whatever
it may originally have been. It is a something we inherited from our
ancestors and which we shall transmit more or less modified to our
descendants. How far back this consciousness has been felt passes
the possibilities of history to determine, since the recording of it
necessarily followed the fact. All we know is that its mention is coeval
with chronicle, and its origin lost in allegory. The Bible, one of the
oldest written records in the world, begins with a bit of mythology of
a very significant kind. When the Jews undertook to trace back their
family tree to an idyllic garden of Eden, they mentioned as growing
there beside the tree of life, another tree called the tree of
knowledge. Of what character this knowledge was is inferable from the
sudden self-consciousness that followed the partaking of it. So that if
we please we may attribute directly to Eve's indiscretion the many
evils of our morbid self-consciousness of the present day. But without
indulging in unchivalrous reflections we may draw certain morals from it
of both immediate and ultimate applicability.

To begin with, it is a most salutary warning to the introspective, and
in the second place it is a striking instance of a myth which is not
a sun myth; for it is essentially of human regard, an attempt on man's
part to explain that most peculiar attribute of his constitution,
the all-possessing sense of self. It looks certainly as if he was not
over-proud of his person that he should have deemed its recognition
occasion for the primal curse, and among early races the person is for
a good deal of the personality. What he lamented was not life but the
unavoidable exertion necessary to getting his daily bread, for the
question whether life were worth while was as futile then as now, and as
inconceivable really as 4-dimensional space.

We are then conscious of individuality as a force within ourselves. But
our knowledge by no means ends there; for we are aware of it in the case
of others as well.

About certain people there exists a subtle something which leaves its
impress indelibly upon the consciousness of all who come in contact
with them. This something is a power, but a power of so indefinable a
description that we beg definition by calling it simply the personality
of the man. It is not a matter of subsequent reasoning, but of direct
perception. We feel it. Sometimes it charms us; sometimes it repels. But
we can no more be oblivious to it than we can to the temperature of
the air. Its possessor has but to enter the room, and insensibly we are
conscious of a presence. It is as if we had suddenly been placed in the
field of a magnetic force.

On the other hand there are people who produce no effect upon us
whatever. They come and go with a like indifference. They are as
unimportant psychically as if they were any other portion of the
furniture. They never stir us. We might live with them for fifty years
and be hardly able to tell, for any influence upon ourselves, whether
they existed or not. They remind us of that neutral drab which certain
religious sects assume to show their own irrelevancy to the world. They
are often most estimable folk, but they are no more capable of inspiring
a strong emotion than the other kind are incapable of doing so. And we
say the difference is due to the personality or want of personality of
the man. Now, in what does this so-called personality consist? Not in
bodily presence simply, for men quite destitute of it possess the
force in question; not in character only, for we often disapprove of a
character whose attraction we are powerless to resist; not in intellect
alone, for men more rational fail of stirring us as these unconsciously
do. In what, then? In life itself; not that modicum of it, indeed, which
suffices simply to keep the machine moving, but in the life principle,
the power which causes psychical change; which makes the individual
something distinct from all other individuals, a being capable of
proving sufficient, if need be, unto himself; which shows itself, in
short, as individuality. This is not a mere restatement of the case, for
individuality is an objective fact capable of being treated by physical
science. And as we know much more at present about physical facts than
we do of psychological problems, we may be able to arrive the sooner at
solution.

Individuality, personality, and the sense of self are only three
different aspects of one and the same thing. They are so many various
views of the soul according as we regard it from an intrinsic, an
altruistic, or an egoistic standpoint. For by individuality is not meant
simply the isolation in a corporeal casing of a small portion of the
universal soul of mankind. So far as mind goes, this would not be
individuality at all, but the reverse. By individuality we mean that
bundle of ideas, thoughts, and daydreams which constitute our separate
identity, and by virtue of which we feel each one of us at home within
himself. Now man in his mind-development is bound to become more and
more distinct from his neighbor. We can hardly conceive a progress so
uniform as not to necessitate this. It would be contrary to all we
know of natural law, besides contradicting daily experience. For each
successive generation bears unmistakable testimony to the fact. Children
of the same parents are never exactly like either their parents or one
another, and they often differ amazingly from both. In such instances
they revert to type, as we say; but inasmuch as the race is steadily
advancing in development, such reversion must resemble that of an estate
which has been greatly improved since its previous possession. The
appearance of the quality is really the sprouting of a seed whose
original germ was in some sense coeval with the beginning of things.
This mind-seed takes root in some cases and not in others, according to
the soil it finds. And as certain traits develop and others do not,
one man turns out very differently from his neighbor. Such inevitable
distinction implies furthermore that the man shall be sensible of it.
Consciousness is the necessary attribute of mental action. Not only is
it the sole way we have of knowing mind; without it there would be no
mind to know. Not to be conscious of one's self is, mentally speaking,
not to be. This complex entity, this little cosmos of a world, the "I,"
has for its very law of existence self-consciousness, while personality
is the effect it produces upon the consciousness of others.

But we may push our inquiry a step further, and find in imagination
the cause of this strange force. For imagination, or the image-making
faculty, may in a certain sense be said to be the creator of the world
within. The separate senses furnish it with material, but to it alone is
due the building of our castles, on premises of fact or in the air. For
there is no impassable gulf between the two. Coleridge's distinction
that imagination drew possible pictures and fancy impossible ones, is
itself, except as a classification, an impossible distinction to draw;
for it is only the inconceivable that can never be. All else is purely a
matter of relation. We may instance dreams which are usually considered
to rank among the most fanciful creations of the mind. Who has not in
his dreams fallen repeatedly from giddy heights and invariably escaped
unhurt? If he had attempted the feat in his waking moments he would
assuredly have been dashed to pieces at the bottom. And so we say the
thing is impossible. But is it? Only under the relative conditions of
his mass and the earth's. If the world he happens to inhabit were not
its present size, but the size of one of the tinier asteroids, no such
disastrous results would follow a chance misstep. He could there walk
off precipices when too closely pursued by bears--if I remember rightly
the usual childish cause of the same--with perfect impunity. The
bear could do likewise, unfortunately. We should have arrived at our
conclusion even quicker had we decreased the size both of the man and
his world. He would not then have had to tumble actually so far, and
would therefore have arrived yet more gently at the foot. This turns
out, then, to be a mere question of size. Decrease the scale of the
picture, and the impossible becomes possible at once. All fancies are
not so easily reducible to actual facts as the one we have taken, but
all, perhaps, eventually may be explicable in the same general way.
At present we certainly cannot affirm that anything may not be thus
explained. For the actual is widening its field every day. Even in this
little world of our own we are daily discovering to be fact what we
should have thought fiction, like the sailor's mother the tale of
the flying fish. Beyond it our ken is widening still more. Gulliver's
travels may turn out truer than we think. Could we traverse the
inter-planetary ocean of ether, we might eventually find in Jupiter
the land of Lilliput or in Ceres some old-time country of the
Brobdignagians. For men constituted muscularly like ourselves would have
to be proportionately small in the big planet and big in the small
one. Still stranger things may exist around other suns. In those bright
particular stars--which the little girl thought pinholes in the dark
canopy of the sky to let the glory beyond shine through--we are finding
conditions of existence like yet unlike those we already know. To our
groping speculations of the night they almost seem, as we gaze on them
in their twinkling, to be winking us a sort of comprehension. Conditions
may exist there under which our wildest fancies may be commonplace
facts. There may be

   "Some Xanadu where Kublai can
    a stately pleasure dome decree,"

and carry out his conceptions to his own disillusionment, perhaps. For
if the embodiment of a fancy, however complete, left nothing further
to be wished, imagination would have no incentive to work. Coleridge's
distinction does very well to separate, empirically, certain kinds of
imaginative concepts from certain others; but it has no real foundation
in fact. Nor presumably did he mean it to have. But it serves, not
inaptly, as a text to point out an important scientific truth, namely,
that there are not two such qualities of the mind, but only one. For
otherwise we might have supposed the fact too evident to need mention.
Imagination is the single source of the new, the one mainspring of
psychical advance; reason, like a balance-wheel, only keeping the
action regular. For reason is but the touchstone of experience, our own,
inherited, or acquired from others. It compares what we imagine with
what we know, and gives us answer in terms of the here and the now,
which we call the actual. But the actual is really nothing but the
local. It does not mark the limits of the possible.

That imagination has been the moving spirit of the psychical world is
evident, whatever branch of human thought we are pleased to examine. We
are in the habit, in common parlance, of making a distinction between
the search after truth and the search after beauty, calling the
one science and the other art. Now while we are not slow to impute
imagination to art, we are by no means so ready to appreciate its
connection with science. Yet contrary, perhaps, to exogeric ideas on the
subject, it is science rather than art that demands imagination of her
votaries. Not that art may not involve the quality to a high degree, but
that a high degree of art is quite compatible with a very small amount
of imagination. On the one side we may instance painting. Now painting
begins its career in the humble capacity of copyist, a pretty poor
copyist at that. At first so slight was its skill that the rudest
symbols sufficed. "This is a man" was conventionally implied by a
few scratches bearing a very distant relationship to the real thing.
Gradually, owing to human vanity and a growing taste, pictures improved.
Combinations were tried, a bit from one place with a piece from another;
a sort of mosaic requiring but a slight amount of imagination. Not that
imagination of a higher order has not been called into play, although
even now pictures are often happy adaptations rather than creations
proper. Some masters have been imaginative; others, unfortunately for
themselves and still more for the public, have not. For that the art may
attain a high degree of excellence for itself and much distinction for
its professors, without calling in the aid of imagination, is evident
enough on this side of the globe, without travelling to the other.

Take, on the other hand, a branch of science which, to the average
layman, seems peculiarly unimaginative, the science of mathematics.
Yet at the risk of appearing to cast doubts upon the validity of its
conclusions, it might be called the most imaginative product of
human thought; for it is simply one vast imagination based upon a few
so-called axioms, which are nothing more nor less than the results of
experience. It is none the less imaginative because its discoveries
always accord subsequently with fact, since man was not aware of them
beforehand. Nor are its inevitable conclusions inevitable to any save
those possessed of the mathematician's prophetic sight. Once discovered,
it requires much less imagination to understand them. With the light
coming from in front, it is an easy matter to see what lies behind one.

So with other fabrics of human thought, imagination has been spinning
and weaving them all. From the most concrete of inventions to the most
abstract of conceptions the same force reveals itself upon examination;
for there is no gulf between what we call practical and what we consider
theoretical. Everything abstract is ultimately of practical use, and
even the most immediately utilitarian has an abstract principle at
its core. We are too prone to regard the present age of the world as
preeminently practical, much as a middle-aged man laments the witching
fancies of his boyhood. But, and there is more in the parallel than
analogy, if the man be truly imaginative he is none the less so at
forty-five than he was at twenty, if his imagination have taken on a
more critical form; for this latter half of the nineteenth century is
perhaps the most imaginative period the world's history has ever known.
While with one hand we are contriving means of transit for our ideas,
and even our very voices, compared to which Puck's girdle is anything
but talismanic, with the other we are stretching out to grasp the action
of mind on mind, pushing our way into the very realm of mind itself.

History tells the same story in detail; for the history of mankind,
imperfectly as we know it, discloses the fact that imagination, and not
the power of observation nor the kindred capability of perception, has
been the cause of soul-evolution.

The savage is but little of an imaginative being. We are tempted, at
times, to imagine him more so than he is, for his fanciful folk-lore.
The proof of which overestimation is that we find no difficulty in
imagining what he does, and even of imagining what he probably imagined,
and finding our suppositions verified by discovery. Yet his powers of
observation may be marvellously developed. The North American Indian
tracks his foe through the forest by signs unrecognizable to a white
man, and he reasons most astutely upon them, and still that very man
turns out to be a mere child when put before problems a trifle out of
his beaten path. And all because his forefathers had not the power to
imagine something beyond what they actually saw. The very essence of the
force of imagination lies in its ability to change a man's habitat for
him. Without it, man would forever have remained, not a mollusk, to be
sure, but an animal simply. A plant cannot change its place, an animal
cannot alter its conditions of existence except within very narrow
bounds; man is free in the sense nothing else in the world is.

What is true of individuals has been true of races. The most imaginative
races have proved the greatest factors in the world's advance.

Now after this look at our own side of the world, let us turn to the
other; for it is this very psychological fact that mental progression
implies an ever-increasing individualization, and that imagination is
the force at work in the process which Far Eastern civilization,
taken in connection with our own, reveals. In doing this, it explains
incidentally its own seeming anomalies, the most unaccountable of which,
apparently, is its existence.

We have seen how impressively impersonal the Far East is. Now if
individuality be the natural measure of the height of civilization which
a nation has reached, impersonality should betoken a relatively laggard
position in the race. We ought, therefore, to find among these people
certain other characteristics corroborative of a less advanced state of
development. In the first place, if imagination be the impulse of which
increase in individuality is the resulting motion, that quality should
be at a minimum there. The Far Orientals ought to be a particularly
unimaginative set of people. Such is precisely what they are. Their lack
of imagination is a well-recognized fact. All who have been brought in
contact with them have observed it, merchants as strikingly as students.
Indeed, the slightest intercourse with them could not fail to make
it evident. Their matter-of-fact way of looking at things is truly
distressing, coming as it does from so artistic a people. One notices
it all the more for the shock. To get a prosaic answer from a man whose
appearance and surroundings betoken better things is not calculated to
dull that answer's effect. Aston, in a pamphlet on the Altaic tongues,
cites an instance which is so much to the point that I venture to repeat
it here. He was a true Chinaman, he says, who, when his English master
asked him what he thought of

   "That orbed maiden
    With white fires laden
    Whom mortals call the moon,"

replied, "My thinkee all same lamp pidgin" (pidgin meaning thing in the
mongrel speech, Chinese in form and English in diction, which goes by
the name of pidgin English).

Their own tongues show the same prosaic character, picturesque as they
appear to us at first sight. That effect is due simply to the novelty
to us of their expressions. To talk of a pass as an "up-down" has a
refreshing turn to our unused ear, but it is a much more descriptive
than imaginative figure of speech. Nor is the phrase "the being (so)
is difficult," in place of "thank you," a surprisingly beautiful bit of
imagery, delightful as it sounds for a change. Our own tongue has, in
its daily vocabulary, far more suggestive expressions, only familiarity
has rendered us callous to their use. We employ at every instant words
which, could we but stop to think of them, would strike us as poetic
in the ideas they call up. As has been well said, they were once happy
thoughts of some bright particular genius bequeathed to posterity
without so much as an accompanying name, and which proved so popular
that they soon became but symbols themselves.

Their languages are paralleled by their whole life. A lack of any
fanciful ideas is one of the most salient traits of all Far Eastern
races, if indeed a sad dearth of anything can properly be spoken of as
salient. Indirectly their want of imagination betrays itself in their
every-day sayings and doings, and more directly in every branch of
thought. Originality is not their strong point. Their utter ignorance of
science shows this, and paradoxical as it may seem, their art, in
spite of its merit and its universality, does the same. That art and
imagination are necessarily bound together receives no very forcible
confirmation from a land where, nationally speaking, at any rate, the
first is easily first and the last easily last, as nations go. It is to
quite another quality that their artistic excellence must be ascribed.
That the Chinese and later the Japanese have accomplished results
at which the rest of the world will yet live to marvel, is due to
their--taste. But taste or delicacy of perception has absolutely nothing
to do with imagination. That certain of the senses of Far Orientals are
wonderfully keen, as also those parts of the brain that directly respond
to them, is beyond question; but such sensitiveness does not in the
least involve the less earth-tied portions of the intellect. A peculiar
responsiveness to natural beauty, a sort of mental agreement with its
earthly environment, is a marked feature of the Japanese mind.
But appreciation, however intimate, is a very different thing from
originality. The one is commonly the handmaid of the other, but the
other by no means always accompanies the one.

So much for the cause; now for the effect which we might expect to find
if our diagnosis be correct.

If the evolving force be less active in one race than in another, three
relative results should follow. In the first place, the race in question
will at any given moment be less advanced than its fellow; secondly, its
rate of progress will be less rapid; and lastly, its individual members
will all be nearer together, just as a stream, in falling from a cliff,
starts one compact mass, then gradually increasing in speed, divides
into drops, which, growing finer and finer and farther and farther
apart, descend at last as spray. All three of these consequences are
visible in the career of the Far Eastern peoples. The first result
scarcely needs to be proved to us, who are only too ready to believe it
without proof. It is, nevertheless, a fact. Viewed unprejudicedly, their
civilization is not so advanced a one as our own. Although they are
certainly our superiors in some very desirable particulars, their whole
scheme is distinctly more aboriginal fundamentally. It is more finished,
as far as it goes, but it does not go so far. Less rude, it is more
rudimentary. Indeed, as we have seen, its surface-perfection really
shows that nature has given less thought to its substance. One may say
of it that it is the adult form of a lower type of mind-specification.

The second effect is scarcely less patent. How slow their progress
has been, if for centuries now it can be called progress at all,
is world-known. Chinese conservatism has passed into a proverb. The
pendulum of pulsation in the Middle Kingdom long since came to a stop
at the medial point of rest. Centre of civilization, as they call
themselves, one would imagine that their mind-machinery had got caught
on their own dead centre, and now could not be made to move. Life, which
elsewhere is a condition of unstable equilibrium, there is of a fatally
stable kind. For the Chinaman's disinclination to progress is something
more than vis inertiae; it has become an ardent devotion to the status
quo. Jostled, he at once settles back to his previous condition again;
much as more materially, after a lifetime spent in California, at his
death his body is punctiliously embalmed and sent home across five
thousand miles of sea for burial. With the Japanese the condition of
affairs is somewhat different. Their tendency to stand still is of a
purely passive kind. It is a state of neutral equilibrium, stationary
of itself but perfectly responsive to an impulse from without. Left to
their own devices, they are conservative enough, but they instantly
copy a more advanced civilization the moment they get a chance. This
proclivity on their part is not out of keeping with our theory. On the
contrary, it is precisely what was to have been expected; for we see the
very same apparent contradiction in characters we are thrown with every
day. Imitation is the natural substitute for originality. The less
strong a man's personality the more prone is he to adopt the ideas of
others, on the same principle that a void more easily admits a foreign
body than does space that is already occupied; or as a blank piece of
paper takes a dye more brilliantly for not being already tinted itself.

The third result, the remarkable homogeneity of the people, is not,
perhaps, so universally appreciated, but it is equally evident on
inspection, and no less weighty in proof. Indeed, the Far Eastern
state of things is a kind of charade on the word; for humanity there
is singularly uniform. The distance between the extremes of
mind-development in Japan is much less than with us. This lack of
divergence exists not simply in certain lines of thought, but in
all those characteristics by which man is parted from the brutes. In
reasoning power, in artistic sensibility, in delicacy of perception, it
is the same story. If this were simply the impression at first sight,
no deductions could be drawn from it, for an impression of racial
similarity invariably marks the first stage of acquaintance of one
people by another. Even in outward appearance it is so. We find it
at first impossible to tell the Japanese apart; they find it equally
impossible to differentiate us. But the present resemblance is not a
matter of first impressions. The fact is patent historically. The men
whom Japan reveres are much less removed from the common herd than is
the case in any Western land. And this has been so from the earliest
times. Shakspeares and Newtons have never existed there. Japanese
humanity is not the soil to grow them. The comparative absence of genius
is fully paralleled by the want of its opposite. Not only are the paths
of preeminence untrodden; the purlieus of brutish ignorance are likewise
unfrequented. On neither side of the great medial line is the departure
of individuals far or frequent. All men there are more alike;--so much
alike, indeed, that the place would seem to offer a sort of forlorn hope
for disappointed socialists. Although religious missionaries have not
met with any marked success among the natives, this less deserving class
of enthusiastic disseminators of an all-possessing belief might do
well to attempt it. They would find there a very virgin field of a most
promisingly dead level. It is true, human opposition would undoubtedly
prevent their tilling it, but Nature, at least, would not present quite
such constitutional obstacles as she wisely does with us.

The individual's mind is, as it were, an isolated bit of the race mind.
The same set of traits will be found in each. Mental characteristics
there are a sort of common property, of which a certain undifferentiated
portion is indiscriminately allotted to every man at birth. One soul
resembles another so much, that in view of the patriarchal system
under which they all exist, there seems to the stranger a peculiar
appropriateness in so strong a family likeness of mind. An idea of how
little one man's brain differs from his neighbor's may be gathered from
the fact, that while a common coolie in Japan spends his spare time
in playing a chess twice as complicated as ours, the most advanced
philosopher is still on the blissfully ignorant side of the pons
asinorum.

We find, then, that in all three points the Far East fulfils what our
theory demanded.

There is one more consideration worthy of notice. We said that the
environment had not been the deus ex materia in the matter; but that the
soul itself possessed the germ of its own evolution. This fact does
not, however, preclude another, that the environment has helped in the
process. Change of scene is beneficial to others besides invalids.
How stimulating to growth a different habitat can prove, when at all
favorable, is perhaps sufficiently shown in the case of the marguerite,
which, as an emigrant called white-weed, has usurped our fields. The
same has been no less true of peoples. Now these Far Eastern peoples, in
comparison with our own forefathers, have travelled very little. A race
in its travels gains two things: first it acquires directly a great
deal from both places and peoples that it meets, and secondly it is
constantly put to its own resources in its struggle for existence,
and becomes more personal as the outcome of such strife. The changed
conditions, the hostile forces it finds, necessitate mental ingenuity
to adapt them and influence it unconsciously. To see how potent these
influences prove we have but to look at the two great branches of the
Aryan family, the one that for so long now has stayed at home, and the
one that went abroad. Destitute of stimulus from without, the Indo-Aryan
mind turned upon itself and consumed in dreamy metaphysics the
imagination which has made its cousins the leaders in the world's
progress to-day. The inevitable numbness of monotony crept over the
stay-at-homes. The deadly sameness of their surroundings produced its
unavoidable effect. The torpor of the East, like some paralyzing poison,
stole into their souls, and they fell into a drowsy slumber only to
dream in the land they had formerly wrested from its possessors. Their
birthright passed with their cousins into the West.

In the case of the Altaic races which we are considering, cause and
effect mutually strengthened each other. That they did not travel more
is due primarily to a lack of enterprise consequent upon a lack of
imagination, and then their want of travel told upon their imagination.
They were also unfortunate in their journeying. Their travels were
prematurely brought to an end by that vast geographical Nirvana the
Pacific Ocean, the great peaceful sea as they call it themselves. That
they would have journeyed further is shown by the way their dreams went
eastward still. They themselves could not for the preventing ocean, and
the lapping of its waters proved a nation's lullaby.

One thing, I think, then, our glance at Far Eastern civilization has
more than suggested. The soul, in its progress through the world, tends
inevitably to individualization. Yet the more we perceive of the cosmos
the more do we recognize an all-pervading unity in it. Its soul must
be one, not many. The divine power that made all things is not itself
multifold. How to reconcile the ever-increasing divergence with
an eventual similarity is a problem at present transcending our
generalizations. What we know would seem to be opposed to what we
must infer. But perception of how we shall merge the personal in the
universal, though at present hidden from sight, may sometime come to
us, and the seemingly irreconcilable will then turn out to involve no
contradiction at all. For this much is certain: grand as is the great
conception of Buddhism, majestic as is the idea of the stately rest it
would lead us to, the road here below is not one the life of the world
can follow. If earthly existence be an evil, then Buddhism will help us
ignore it; but if by an impulse we cannot explain we instinctively crave
activity of mind, then the great gospel of Gautama touches us not; for
to abandon self--egoism, that is, not selfishness is the true vacuum
which nature abhors. As for Far Orientals, they themselves furnish proof
against themselves. That impersonality is not man's earthly goal they
unwittingly bear witness; for they are not of those who will survive.
Artistic attractive people that they are, their civilization is like
their own tree flowers, beautiful blossoms destined never to bear fruit;
for whatever we may conceive the far future of another life to be, the
immediate effect of impersonality cannot but be annihilating. If these
people continue in their old course, their earthly career is closed.
Just as surely as morning passes into afternoon, so surely are these
races of the Far East, if unchanged, destined to disappear before the
advancing nations of the West. Vanish they will off the face of the
earth and leave our planet the eventual possession of the dwellers where
the day declines. Unless their newly imported ideas really take root, it
is from this whole world that Japanese and Koreans, as well as Chinese,
will inevitably be excluded. Their Nirvana is already being realized;
already it has wrapped Far Eastern Asia in its winding-sheet, the shroud
of those whose day was but a dawn, as if in prophetic keeping with the
names they gave their homes,--the Land of the Day's Beginning, and the
Land of the Morning Calm.





End of Project Gutenberg's The Soul of the Far East, by Percival Lowell

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