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CHAPTER II
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THE WORLD OF REALITY
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<p>The practical man may justly observe at this point that the
world of single vision is the only world he knows: that it appears to him to be
real, solid, and self-consistent: and that until the existence--at least, the
probability--of other planes of reality is made clear to him, all talk of
uniting with them is mere moonshine, which confirms his opinion of mysticism as
a game fit only for idle women and inferior poets. Plainly, then, it is the
first business of the missionary to create, if he can, some feeling of
dissatisfaction with the world within which the practical man has always lived
and acted; to suggest something of its fragmentary and subjective character. We
turn back therefore to a further examination of the truism--so obvious to those
who are philosophers, so exasperating to those who are not--that man dwells,
under normal conditions, in a world of imagination rather than a world of facts;
that the universe in which he lives and at which he looks is but a construction
which the mind has made from some few amongst the wealth of materials at its
disposal.</p>
<p>The relation of this universe to the world of fact is not unlike
the relation between a tapestry picture and the scene which it imitates. You,
practical man, are obliged to weave your image of the outer world upon the hard
warp of your own mentality; which perpetually imposes its own convention, and
checks the free representation of life. As a tapestry picture, however various
and full of meaning, is ultimately reducible to little squares; so the world of
common sense is ultimately reducible to a series of static elements conditioned
by the machinery of the brain. Subtle curves, swift movement, delicate
gradation, that machinery cannot represent. It leaves them out. From the
countless suggestions, the tangle of many-coloured wools which the real world
presents to you, you snatch one here and there. Of these you weave together
those which are the most useful, the most obvious, the most often repeated:
which make a tidy and coherent pattern when seen on the right side. Shut up with
this symbolic picture, you soon drop into the habit of behaving to it as though
it were not a representation but a thing. On it you fix your attention; with it
you "unite." Yet, did you look at the wrong side, at the many short ends, the
clumsy joins and patches, this simple philosophy might be disturbed. You would
be forced to acknowledge the conventional character of the picture you have made
so cleverly, the wholesale waste of material involved in the weaving of it: for
only a few amongst the wealth of impressions we receive are seized and
incorporated into our picture of the world. Further, it might occur to you that
a slight alteration in the rhythm of the senses would place at your disposal a
complete new range of material; opening your eyes and ears to sounds, colours,
and movements now inaudible and invisible, removing from your universe those
which you now regard as part of the established order of things. Even the
strands which you have made use of might have been combined in some other way;
with disastrous results to the "world of common sense," yet without any
diminution of their own reality.</p>
<p>Nor can you regard these strands themselves as ultimate. As the
most prudent of logicians might venture to deduce from a skein of wool the
probable existence of a sheep; so you, from the raw stuff of perception, may
venture to deduce a universe which transcends the reproductive powers of your
loom. Even the camera of the photographer, more apt at contemplation than the
mind of man, has shown us how limited are these powers in some directions, and
enlightened us as to a few of the cruder errors of the person who accepts its
products at face-value; or, as he would say, believes his own eyes. It has shown
us, for instance, that the galloping race-horse, with legs stretched out as we
are used to see it, is a mythical animal, probably founded on the mental image
of a running dog. No horse has ever galloped thus: but its real action is too
quick for us, and we explain it to ourselves as something resembling the more
deliberate dog-action which we have caught and registered as it passed. The
plain man's universe is full of race-horses which are really running dogs: of conventional waves, first seen in
pictures and then imagined upon the sea: of psychological situations taken from
books and applied to human life: of racial peculiarities generalised from
insufficient data, and then "discovered" in actuality: of theological diagrams
and scientific "laws," flung upon the background of eternity as the magic
lantern's image is reflected on the screen.</p>
<p>The coloured scene at which you look so trustfully owes, in
fact, much of its character to the activities of the seer: to that process of
thought--concept--cogitation, from which Keats prayed with so great an ardour to
escape, when he exclaimed in words which will seem to you, according to the
temper of your mind, either an invitation to the higher laziness or one of the
most profound aspirations of the soul, "O for a life of sensations rather than
thoughts!" He felt--as all the poets have felt with him--that another, lovelier
world, tinted with unimaginable wonders, alive with ultimate music, awaited
those who could free themselves from the fetters of the mind, lay down the
shuttle and the weaver's comb, and reach out beyond the conceptual image to
intuitive contact with the Thing.</p>
<p>There are certain happy accidents which have the power of
inducting man for a moment into this richer and more vital world. These stop, as
one old mystic said, the "wheel of his imagination," the dreadful energy of his
image-making power weaving up and transmuting the incoming messages of sense.
They snatch him from the loom and place him, in the naked simplicity of his
spirit, face to face with that Other than himself whence the materials of his
industry have come. In these hours human consciousness ascends from thought to
contemplation; becomes at least aware of the world in which the mystics dwell;
and perceives for an instant, as St. Augustine did, "the light that never
changes, above the eye of the soul, above the intelligence." This experience
might be called in essence "absolute sensation." It is a pure feeling-state; in
which the fragmentary contacts with Reality achieved through the senses are
merged in a wholeness of communion which feels and knows all at once, yet in a
way which the reason can never understand, that Totality of which fragments are
known by the lover, the musician, and the artist. If the doors of perception
were cleansed, said Blake, everything would appear to man as it is--Infinite.
But the doors of perception are hung with the cobwebs of thought; prejudice,
cowardice, sloth. Eternity is with us, inviting our contemplation perpetually,
but we are too frightened, lazy, and suspicious to respond: too arrogant to
still our thought, and let divine sensation have its way. It needs industry and
goodwill if we would make that transition: for the process involves a veritable
spring-cleaning of the soul, a turning-out and rearrangement of our mental
furniture, a wide opening of closed windows, that the notes of the wild birds
beyond our garden may come to us fully charged with wonder and freshness, and
drown with their music the noise of the gramaphone within. Those who do this,
discover that they have lived in a stuffy world, whilst their inheritance was a
world of morning-glory; where every tit-mouse is a celestial messenger, and
every thrusting bud is charged with the full significance of life.</p>
<p>There will be many who feel a certain scepticism as to the
possibility of the undertaking here suggested to them; a prudent unwillingness
to sacrifice their old comfortably upholstered universe, on the mere promise
that they will receive a new heaven and a new earth in exchange. These careful
ones may like to remind themselves that the vision of the world presented to us
by all the great artists and poets--those creatures whose very existence would
seem so strange to us, were we not accustomed to them--perpetually demonstrates
the many-graded character of human consciousness; the new worlds which await it,
once it frees itself from the tyranny of those labour-saving contrivances with
which it usually works. Leaving on one side the more subtle apprehensions which
we call "spiritual," even the pictures of the old Chinese draughtsmen and the
modern impressionists, of Watteau and of Turner, of Manet, Degas, and Cezanne;
the poems of Blake, Wordsworth, Shelley, Whitman--these, and countless others,
assure you that their creators have enjoyed direct communion, not with some
vague world of fancy, but with a visible natural order which you have never
known. These have seized and woven into their pictures strands which never
presented themselves to you; significant forms which elude you, tones and
relations to which you are blind, living facts for which your conventional world
provides no place. They prove by their works that Blake was right when he said
that "a fool sees not the same tree that a wise man sees"; and that
psychologists, insisting on the selective action of the mind, the fact that our
preconceptions govern the character of our universe, do but teach the most
demonstrable of truths. Did you take them seriously, as you should, their ardent
reports might well disgust you with the dull and narrow character of your own
consciousness.</p>
<p>What is it, then, which distinguishes the outlook of great poets
and artists from the arrogant subjectivism of common sense? Innocence and
humility distinguish it. These persons prejudge nothing, criticise nothing. To
some extent, their attitude to the universe is that of children: and because
this is so, they participate to that extent in the Heaven of Reality. According
to their measure, they have fulfilled Keats' aspiration, they do live a life in
which the emphasis lies on sensation rather than on thought: for the state which
he then struggled to describe was that ideal state of pure receptivity, of
perfect correspondence with the essence of things, of which all artists have a
share, and which a few great mystics appear to have possessed--not indeed in its
entirety, but to an extent which made them, as they say, "one with the Reality
of things." The greater the artist is, the wider and deeper is the range of this
pure sensation: the more sharply he is aware of the torrent of life and
loveliness, the rich profusion of possible beauties and shapes. He always wants
to press deeper and deeper, to let the span of his perception spread wider and
wider; till he unites with the whole of that Reality which he feels all about
him, and of which his own life is a part. He is always tending, in fact, to pass
over from the artistic to the mystical state. In artistic experience, then, in
the artist's perennial effort to actualise the ideal which Keats expressed, we
may find a point of departure for our exploration of the contemplative life.</p>
<p>What would it mean for a soul that truly captured it; this life
in which the emphasis should lie on the immediate percepts, the messages the
world pours in on us, instead of on the sophisticated universe into which our
clever brains transmute them? Plainly, it would mean the achievement of a new
universe, a new order of reality: escape from the terrible museum-like world of
daily life, where everything is classified and labelled, and all the graded
fluid facts which have no label are ignored. It would mean an innocence of eye
and innocence of ear impossible for us to conceive; the impassioned
contemplation of pure form, freed from all the meanings with which the mind has
draped and disguised it; the recapturing of the lost mysteries of touch and
fragrance, most wonderful amongst the avenues of sense. It would mean the
exchanging of the neat conceptual world our thoughts build up, fenced in by the
solid ramparts of the possible, for the inconceivable richness of that unwalled
world from which we have subtracted it. It would mean that we should receive
from every flower, not merely a beautiful image to which the label "flower" has
been affixed, but the full impact of its unimaginable beauty and wonder, the
direct sensation of life having communion with life: that the scents of ceasing
rain, the voice of trees, the deep softness of the kitten's fur, the acrid touch
of sorrel on the tongue, should be in themselves profound, complete, and simple
experiences, calling forth simplicity of response in our souls.</p>
<p>Thus understood, the life of pure sensation is the meat and
drink of poetry, and one of the most accessible avenues to that union with
Reality which the mystic declares to us as the very object of life. But the poet
must take that living stuff direct from the field and river, without
sophistication, without criticism, as the life of the soul is taken direct from
the altar; with an awe that admits not of analysis. He must not subject it to
the cooking, filtering process of the brain. It is because he knows how to elude
this dreadful sophistication of Reality, because his attitude to the universe is
governed by the supreme artistic virtues of humility and love, that poetry is
what it is: and I include in the sweep of poetic art the coloured poetry of the
painter, and the wordless poetry of the musician and the dancer too.</p>
<p>At this point the critical reader will certainly offer an
objection. "You have been inviting me," he will say, "to do nothing more or less
than trust my senses: and this too on the authority of those impracticable
dreamers the poets. Now it is notorious that our senses deceive us. Every one
knows that; and even your own remarks have already suggested it. How, then, can
a wholesale and uncritical acceptance of my sensations help me to unite with
Reality? Many of these sensations we share with the animals: in some, the
animals obviously surpass us. Will you suggest that my terrier, smelling his way
through an uncoordinated universe, is a better mystic than I?"</p>
<p>To this I reply, that the terrier's contacts with the world are
doubtless crude and imperfect; yet he has indeed preserved a directness of
apprehension which you have lost. He gets, and responds to, the real smell; not
a notion or a name. Certainly the senses, when taken at face-value, do deceive
us: yet the deception resides not so much in them, as in that conceptual world
which we insist on building up from their reports, and for which we make them
responsible. They deceive us less when we receive these reports uncooked and
unclassified, as simple and direct experiences. Then, behind the special and
imperfect stammerings which we call colour, sound, fragrance, and the rest, we
sometimes discern a <i>whole fact</i>--at once divinely simple and infinitely
various--from which these partial messages proceed; and which seeks as it were
to utter itself in them. And we feel, when this is so, that the fact thus
glimpsed is of an immense significance; imparting to that aspect of the world
which we are able to perceive all the significance, all the character which it
possesses. The more of the artist there is in us, the more intense that
significance, that character will seem: the more complete, too, will be our
conviction that our uneasiness, the vagueness of our reactions to things, would
be cured could we reach and unite with the fact, instead of our notion of it.
And it is just such an act of union, reached through the clarified channels of
sense and unadulterated by the content of thought, which the great artist or
poet achieves.</p>
<p>We seem in these words to have come far from the mystic, and
that contemplative consciousness wherewith he ascends to the contact of Truth.
As a matter of fact, we are merely considering that consciousness in its most
natural and accessible form: for contemplation is, on the one hand, the
essential activity of all artists; on the other, the art through which those who
choose to learn and practise it may share in some fragmentary degree, according
to their measure, the special experience of the mystic and the poet. By it they
may achieve that virginal outlook upon things, that celestial power of communion
with veritable life, which comes when that which we call "sensation" is freed
from the tyranny of that which we call "thought." The artist is no more and no
less than a contemplative who has learned to express himself, and who tells his
love in colour, speech, or sound: the mystic, upon one side of his nature, is an
artist of a special and exalted kind, who tries to express something of the
revelation he has received, mediates between Reality and the race. In the game
of give and take which goes on between the human consciousness and the external
world, both have learned to put the emphasis upon the message from without,
rather than on their own reaction to and rearrangement of it. Both have
exchanged the false imagination which draws the sensations and intuitions of the
self into its own narrow circle, and there distorts and transforms them, for the
true imagination which pours itself out, eager, adventurous, and self-giving,
towards the greater universe.</p>
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