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IV THE PAST OUR past stretches behind us in long
perspective. It
slumbers in the distance like a deserted city shrouded in mist. A few
peaks
mark its boundary, and soar predominant into the air; a few important
acts
stand out like towers, some with the light still upon them, others half
ruined,
and slowly decaying beneath the weight of oblivion. The trees are bare,
the
walls crumble, and shadow slowly steals over all. Everything seems to
be dead
there, and rigid, save only when memory, slowly decomposing, lights it
for an instant
with an illusory gleam. But apart from this animation, derived only
from our
expiring recollections, all would appear to be definitely motionless,
immutable
forever; divided from present and future by a river that shall not
again be
crossed. In reality it is alive; and, for many of
us, endowed
with a profounder, more ardent life than either present or future. In
reality
this dead city is often the hotbed of our existence: and in accordance
with the
spirit in which men return to it, shall some find all their wealth
there, and
others lose what they have. [2] Our conception of the past has much in
common with
our conception of love and happiness, destiny, justice, and most of the
vague
but therefore not less potent spiritual organisms that stand for the
mighty
forces we obey. Our ideas have been handed down to us ready-made by our
predecessors: and even when our second consciousness wakes, and, proud
in its
conviction that henceforth nothing shall be accepted blindly, proceeds
most
carefully to investigate these ideas, it will squander its time
questioning
those that loudly protest their right to be heard, and pay no heed to
the
others close by, that as yet, perhaps, have said nothing. Nor have we,
as a
rule, far to go to discover these others. They are in us, and of us:
they wait
for us to address them. They are not idle, notwithstanding their
silence. Amid
the noise and babble of the crowd, they are tranquilly directing a
portion of
our real life; and as they are nearer to truth than their
self-satisfied
sisters, they will often be far more simple, and far more beautiful
too. [3] Among the most stubborn of these
ready-made ideas are
those that preside over our conception of the past, and render it a
force as
imposing and rigid as destiny: a force that indeed becomes destiny
working
backwards, with its hand outstretched to the destiny that burrows
ahead, to
which it transmits the last link of our chains. The one thrusts us
back, the
other urges us forward, with a like irresistible violence. But the
violence of
the past is perhaps more terrible, and more alarming. One may
disbelieve in
destiny. It is a god whose onslaught many have never experienced. But
no one
would dream of denying the oppressiveness of the past. Sooner or later
its
effect must inevitably be felt. Those even who refuse to admit the
intangible
will credit the past, which their finger can touch, with all the
mystery, the
influence, the sovereign intervention, whereof they have stripped the
powers
that they have dethroned; thus rendering it the almost unique and
therefore
more dreadful god of their depopulated Olympus. The force of the past is indeed one of the
heaviest
that weigh upon men and incline them to sadness. And yet there is none
more
docile, more eager to follow the direction we could so readily give did
we but
know how best to avail ourselves of this docility. In reality, if we
think of
it, the past belongs to us quite as much as the present, and is far
more
malleable than the future. Like the past, and to a much greater extent
than the
future, its existence is all in our thoughts, and our hand controls it;
nor is
this only true of our material past, wherein there are ruins that we
perhaps
can restore; it is true also of the regions that are closed to our
tardy desire
for atonement; it is true, above all, of our moral past, and of what we
consider to be most irreparable there. “The past is past,” we say, and it is
false: the past
is always present. “We have to bear the burden of our past,” we sigh,
and it is
false; the past bears our burden; “Nothing can wipe out the past,” and
it is
false; the least effort of will sends present and future travelling
over the
past, to efface whatever we bid them efface; “The indestructible,
irreparable,
immutable past,” and that is no truer than the rest. In those who speak
thus it
is the present that is immutable, and knows not how to repair. “My past
is
wicked, it is sorrowful, empty,” we say again; “as I look back I can
see no
moment of beauty, of happiness or love; I see nothing but wretched
ruins . . .”
And that is false; for you see precisely what you yourself place there
at the
moment your eyes rest upon it. Our past depends entirely upon our
present, and is
constantly changing with it. Our past is contained in our memory: and
this
memory of ours, that feeds on our heart and brain, and is incessantly
swayed by
them, is the most variable thing in the world, the least independent,
the most
impressionable. Our chief concern with the past, that which truly
remains and
forms part of us, is not what we have done or the adventures that we
have met
with, but the moral reactions bygone events are producing within us at
this
very moment, the inward being they have helped to form; and these
reactions,
that give birth to our sovereign, intimate being, are wholly governed
by the
manner in which we regard past events, and vary as the moral substance
varies
that they encounter within us. But with every step in advance that our
feelings or
intellect take, a change will come in this moral substance; and then,
on the
instant, the most immutable facts, that seemed to be graven for ever on
the
stone and bronze of the past, will assume an entirely different aspect,
will
return to life and leap into movement, bringing us vaster and more
courageous
counsels, dragging memory aloft with them in their ascent; and what was
once a
mass of ruin, mouldering in the darkness, becomes a populous city
whereon the
sun shines again. We have an arbitrary fashion of
establishing a
certain number of events behind us. We relegate them to the horizon of
our
memory; and having set them there, we tell ourselves that they form
part of a
world in which the united efforts of all mankind could not wipe away a
tear or
cause a flower to lift its head. And yet, while admitting that these
events
have passed beyond our control, we still, with the most curious
inconsistency,
believe that they have full control over us. Whereas the truth is that
they can
only act upon us to the extent in which we have renounced our right to
act upon
them. The past asserts itself only in those whose moral growth has
ceased;
then, and not till then, does it become redoubtable. From that moment
we have
indeed the irreparable behind us, and the weight of what we have done
lies
heavy upon our shoulders. But so long as the life of our mind and
character
flows uninterruptedly on, so long will the past remain in suspense
above us;
and, as the glance may be that we send towards it, will it, complaisant
as the
clouds Hamlet showed to Polonius, adopt the shape of the hope or fear,
the
peace or disquiet, that we are perfecting within us. No sooner has our moral activity weakened
than
accomplished events rush forward and assail us; and woe to him who
opens the
door to them and permits them to take possession of his hearth! Each
one will
vie with the others in overwhelming him with the gifts best calculated
to
shatter his courage. It matters not whether our past has been happy and
noble,
or lugubrious and criminal, — there shall still be great danger in
allowing it
to enter, not as an invited guest, but like a parasite settling upon
us. The result
will be either sterile regret or impotent remorse; and remorse and
regrets of
this kind are equally disastrous. In order to draw from the past what
is
precious within it — and most of our wealth is there we must go to it
at the
hour when we are strongest, most conscious of mastery; enter its domain
and
there make choice of what we require, discarding the rest, and laying
our
command upon it never to cross our threshold without our order. Like
all things
that only can live at the cost of our spiritual strength, it will soon
learn to
obey. At first, perhaps, it will endeavour to resist. It will have
recourse to
artifice and prayer. It will try to tempt us, to cajole. It will drag
forward
frustrated hopes, and joys that are gone for ever, broken affections,
well-merited reproaches, expiring hatred, and love that is dead,
squandered
faith, and perished beauty: it will thrust before us all that once had
been the
marvellous essence of our ardour for life; it will point to the
beckoning
sorrows, decaying happiness, that now haunt the ruin. But we shall pass
by,
without turning our head; our hand shall scatter the crowd of memories,
even as
the sage Ulysses, in the Cimmerian night, with his sword prevented the
shades —
even that of his mother, whom it was not his mission to question — from
approaching the black blood that would for an instant have given them
life and
speech. We shall go straight to the joy, the regret or remorse, whose
counsel
we need; or to the act of injustice it behoves us scrupulously to
examine, in
order either to make reparation, if such still be possible, or that the
sight
of the wrong we did, whose victims have ceased to be, is required to
give us
the indispensable force that shall lift us above the injustice it still
lies in
us to commit. Yes, even though our past contain crimes
that now are
beyond the reach of our best endeavours, even then, if we consider the
circumstances of time and place, and the vast plane of each human
existence,
these crimes fade out of our life the moment we feel that no
temptation, no
power on earth, could ever induce us to commit the like again. The
world has
not forgiven — there is but little that the external sphere will forget
or
forgive — and their material effects will continue, for the laws of
cause and
effect are different from those which govern our consciousness. At the
tribunal
of our personal justice, however, — the only tribunal which has
decisive action
on our inaccessible life, as it is the only one whose decrees we cannot
evade,
whose concrete judgments stir us to our very marrow — the evil action
that we
regard from a loftier plane than that at which it was committed,
becomes an
action that no longer exists for us save in so far as it may serve in
the
future to render our fall more difficult; nor has it the right to lift
its head
again except at the moment when we incline once more towards the abyss
it
guards. Bitter, surely, must be the grief of him
in whose
past there are acts of injustice whereof every avenue now is closed,
who is no
longer able to seek out his victims, and raise them and comfort them.
To have
abused one’s strength in order to despoil some feeble creature who has
definitely succumbed beneath the blow, to have callously thrust
suffering upon
a loving heart, or merely misunderstood and passed by a touching
affection that
offered itself — these things must of necessity weigh heavily upon our
life,
and induce a sorrow within us that shall not readily be forgotten. But
it
depends on the actual point our consciousness has attained whether our
entire
moral destiny shall be depressed, or lifted, beneath this burden. Our
actions
rarely die; and many unjust deeds of ours will therefore inevitably
return to
life some day to claim their due and start legitimate reprisals. They
will find
our external life without defence; but before they can reach the inward
being
at the centre of that life they must first listen to the judgment we
have
already passed on ourselves; and in accordance with the nature of that
judgment
will the attitude be of these mysterious envoys, who have come from the
depths
where cause and effect are established in eternal equilibrium. If it
has indeed
been from the heights of our newly acquired consciousness that we have
questioned ourselves, and condemned, they will not be menacing
justiciaries
whom we shall suddenly see surging in from all sides, but benevolent
visitors,
friends we have almost expected; and they will draw near us in silence.
They
know in advance that the man before them is no longer the guilty
creature they
sought; and instead of pouring hatred, revolt, and despair into his
heart, or
punishments that degrade and kill, they come charged with ennobling,
consoling,
and purifying thought — a penance. [10] The things which differentiate the happy
and strong
from those who weep and will not be consoled, all derive from the one
same
principle of confidence and ardour; and thus it is that the manner in
which we
are able to recall what we have done or suffered is far more important
than our
actual sufferings or deeds. No past, viewed by itself, can seem happy;
and the
privileged of fate, who reflect on what remains of the happy years that
have
flown, have perhaps more reason for sorrow than the unfortunate ones
who brood
over the dregs of a life of wretchedness. Whatever was one day and has
now
ceased to be makes for sadness; above all, whatever was very happy and
very
beautiful. The object of our regrets — whether these revolve around
what has
been or might have been — is therefore more or less the same for all
men, and
their sorrow should be the same. It is not, however; in one case it
will reign
uninterruptedly, whereas in another it will only appear at very long
intervals.
It must therefore depend on things other than accomplished facts. It
depends on
the manner in which men will act on these facts. The conquerors in this
world —
those who waste no time setting up an imaginary irreparable and
immutable
athwart their horizon, those who seem to be born afresh every morning
in a
world that forever awakes anew to the future these know instinctively
that what
appears to exist no longer is still existing intact, that what appeared
to be
ended is only completing itself. They know that the years time has
taken from
them are still in travail; still, under their new master, obeying the
old. They
know that their past is forever in movement; that the yesterday which
was
despondent, decrepit and criminal will return full of joyousness,
innocence,
youth, in the track of tomorrow. They know that their image is not yet
stamped on
the days that are gone; that a decisive deed, or thought, will suffice
to break
down the whole edifice; that, however remote or vast the shadow may be
that
stretches behind them, they have only to put forth a gesture of
gladness or
hope for the shadow at once to copy this gesture, and, flashing it back
to the
remotest, tiniest ruins of early childhood even, to extract unexpected
treasure
from all this wreckage. They know that they have retrospective action
upon all
bygone deeds; and that the dead themselves will annul their verdicts in
order
to judge afresh a past that to-day has been transfigured and endowed
with new
life. They are fortunate who find this instinct
in the
folds of their cradle. But may the others not imitate it who have it
not; and
is not human wisdom charged to teach us how we may acquire the salutary
instincts that nature has withheld? [11] Let us not lull ourselves to sleep in our
past; and
if we find that it tends to spread like a vault over our life, instead
of
incessantly changing beneath our eye; if the present grow into the
habit of
visiting it, not like a good workman repairing thither to execute the
labours
imposed upon him by the commands of to-day, but as a too passive, too
credulous
pilgrim content idly to contemplate beautiful, motionless ruins — then
the more
glorious, the happier that our past may have been, with all the more
suspicion
should it be regarded by us. Nor should we yield to the instinct that
bids us
accord it profound respect if this respect induce the fear in us that
we may
disturb its nice equilibrium. Better the ordinary past, content with
its
befitting place in the shadow, than the sumptuous past which claims to
govern
what has travelled out of its reach. Better a mediocre, but living,
present,
which acts as though it were alone in the world, than a present which
proudly
expires in the chains of a marvellous long ago. A single step that we
take at
this hour towards an uncertain goal is far more important to us than
the
thousand leagues we covered in our march towards a dazzling triumph in
the days
that were. Our past had no other mission than to lift us to the moment
at which
we are, and there equip us with the needful experience and weapons, the
needful
thought and gladness. If, at this precise moment, it take from us and
divert to
itself one particle of our energy, then, however glorious it may have
been, it
still was useless, and had better never have been. If we allow it to
arrest a
gesture that we were about to make, then is our death beginning; and
the edifices
of the future will suddenly take the semblance of tombs. More dangerous still than the past of
happiness and
glory is the one inhabited by overpowering and too dearly cherished
phantoms.
Many an existence perishes in the coils of a fond recollection. And
yet, were
the dead to return to this earth, they would say, I fancy, with the
wisdom that
must be theirs who have seen what the ephemeral light still hides from
us: “Dry
your eyes. There comes to us no comfort from your tears; exhausting
you, they exhaust
us also. Detach yourself from us, banish us from your thoughts, until
such time
as you can think of us without strewing tears on the life we still live
in you.
We endure only in your recollection; but you err in believing that your
regrets
alone can touch us. It is the things you do that prove to us we are not
forgotten, and rejoice our manes; and this without your knowing it,
without any
necessity that you should turn towards us. Each time that our pale
image
saddens your ardour, we feel ourselves die anew, and it is a more
perceptible,
irrevocable death than was our other; bending too often over our tombs,
you rob
us of the life, the courage and love, that you imagine you restore. It is in you that we are, it is in all
your life that
our life resides; and as you become greater, even while forgetting us,
so do we
become greater too, and our shades draw the deep breath of prisoners
whose
prison door is flung open. “If there be anything new we have learned
in the
world where we are now, it is, first of all, that the good we did to
you when
we were, like yourselves, on the earth, does not balance the evil
wrought by a
memory which saps the force and the confidence of life.” [12] Above all, let us envy the past of no man.
Our own
past was created by ourselves, and for ourselves alone. No other could
have
suited us, no other could have taught us the truth that it alone can
teach, or
given the strength that it alone can give. And whether it be good or
bad,
sombre or radiant, it still remains a collection of unique masterpieces
the
value of which is known to none but ourselves; and no foreign
masterpiece could
equal the action we have accomplished, the kiss we received, the thing
of
beauty that moved us so deeply, the suffering we underwent, the anguish
that
held us enchained, the love that wreathed us in smiles or in tears. Our
past is
ourselves, what we are and shall be; and upon this unknown sphere there
moves
no creature, from the happiest down to the most unfortunate, who could
foretell
how great a loss would be his could he substitute the trace of another
for the
trace which he himself must leave in life. Our past is our secret,
promulgated
by the voice of years; it is the most mysterious image of our being,
over which
Time keeps watch. The image is not dead; a mere nothing degrades or
adorns it;
it can still grow bright or sombre, can still smile or weep, express
love or
hatred: and yet it remains recognisable for ever in the midst of the
myriad
images that surround it. It stands for what we once were, as our
aspirations
and hopes stand for what we shall be; and the two faces blend, that
they may
teach us what we are. Let us not envy the facts of the past, but
rather the
spiritual garment that the recollection of days long gone will weave
around the
sage. And though this garment be woven of joy or of sorrow, though it
be drawn
from the dearth of events or from their abundance, it shall still be
equally
precious; and those who may see it shining over a life shall not be
able to
tell whether its quickening jewels and stars were found amid the
grudging
cinders of a cabin or upon the steps of a palace. No past can be empty or squalid, no events
can be
wretched; the wretchedness lies in our manner of welcoming them. And if
it were
true that nothing had happened to you, that would be the most
remarkable
adventure that any man ever had met with; and no less remarkable would
be the
light it would shed upon you. In reality the facts, the opportunities
and
possibilities, the passions, that await and invite the majority of men,
are all
more or less the same. Some may. be more dazzling than others; their
attendant
circumstances may differ, but they differ far less than the inward
reactions
that follow; and the insignificant, incomplete event that falls on a
fertile heart
and brain will readily attain the moral proportions and grandeur of an
analogous incident which, on another plane, will convulse a whole
people. He who should see, spread out before him,
the past
lives of a multitude of men, could not easily decide which past he
himself
would wish to have lived, were he not able at the same time to witness
the
moral results of these dissimilar and unsymmetrical facts. He might not
impossibly make a fatal blunder; he might choose an existence
overflowing with
incomparable happiness and victory, that sparkle like wonderful jewels;
while
his glance might travel indifferently over a life that appeared to be
empty,
whereas it was truly steeped to the brim in serene emotions and lofty,
redeeming thoughts whereby, though the eye saw nothing, that life was
yet
rendered happy among all. For we are well aware that what destiny has
given and
what destiny holds in reserve can be revolutionised as utterly by
thought as by
great victory or great defeat. Thought is silent: it disturbs not a
pebble on
the illusory road we see; but at the crossway of the more actual road
that our
secret life follows will it tranquilly erect an indestructible pyramid;
and
thereupon, suddenly, every event, to the very phenomena of Earth and
Heaven,
will assume a new direction. In Siegfried’s life it is not the moment
when he
forges the prodigious sword that is most important, or when he kills
the dragon
and compels the gods from his path, or even the dazzling second when he
encounters love on the flaming mountain; but indeed the brief instant
wrested
from eternal decrees, the little childish gesture when one of his
hands, red
with the blood of his mysterious victim, having chanced to draw near
his lips,
his eyes and ears are suddenly opened: he understands the hidden
language of
all that surrounds him, detects the treachery of the dwarf who
represents the
powers of evil, and learns in a flash to do that which had to be done. |