<p>It is the imaginative quality of Christ’s own nature
that makes him this palpitating centre of romance. The
strange figures of poetic drama and ballad are made by the
imagination of others, but out of his own imagination entirely
did Jesus of Nazareth create himself. The cry of Isaiah had
really no more to do with his coming than the song of the
nightingale has to do with the rising of the moon—no more,
though perhaps no less. He was the denial as well as the
affirmation of prophecy. For every expectation that he
fulfilled there was another that he destroyed. ‘In
all beauty,’ says Bacon, ‘there is some strangeness
of proportion,’ and of those who are born of the
spirit—of those, that is to say, who like himself are
dynamic forces—Christ says that they are like the wind that
‘bloweth where it listeth, and no man can tell whence it
cometh and whither it goeth.’ That is why he is so
fascinating to artists. He has all the colour elements of
life: mystery, strangeness, pathos, suggestion, ecstasy,
love. He appeals to the temper of wonder, and creates that
mood in which alone he can be understood.</p>
<p>And to me it is a joy to remember that if he is ‘of
imagination all compact,’ the world itself is of the same
substance. I said in <i>Dorian Gray</i> that the great sins
of the world take place in the brain: but it is in the brain that
everything takes place. We know now that we do not see with
the eyes or hear with the ears. They are really channels
for the transmission, adequate or inadequate, of sense
impressions. It is in the brain that the poppy is red, that
the apple is odorous, that the skylark sings.</p>
<p>Of late I have been studying with diligence the four prose
poems about Christ. At Christmas I managed to get hold of a
Greek Testament, and every morning, after I had cleaned my cell
and polished my tins, I read a little of the Gospels, a dozen
verses taken by chance anywhere. It is a delightful way of
opening the day. Every one, even in a turbulent,
ill-disciplined life, should do the same. Endless
repetition, in and out of season, has spoiled for us the
freshness, the naïveté, the simple romantic charm of
the Gospels. We hear them read far too often and far too
badly, and all repetition is anti-spiritual. When one
returns to the Greek; it is like going into a garden of lilies
out of some, narrow and dark house.</p>
<p>And to me, the pleasure is doubled by the reflection that it
is extremely probable that we have the actual terms, the
<i>ipsissima verba</i>, used by Christ. It was always
supposed that Christ talked in Aramaic. Even Renan thought
so. But now we know that the Galilean peasants, like the
Irish peasants of our own day, were bilingual, and that Greek was
the ordinary language of intercourse all over Palestine, as
indeed all over the Eastern world. I never liked the idea
that we knew of Christ’s own words only through a
translation of a translation. It is a delight to me to
think that as far as his conversation was concerned, Charmides
might have listened to him, and Socrates reasoned with him, and
Plato understood him: that he really said εyω
ειμι ο
ποιμην ο
καλος, that when he thought of
the lilies of the field and how they neither toil nor spin, his
absolute expression was
καταyαθετε
τα κρίνα
του αγρου
τως
αυξανει ου
κοπιυ
ουδε
νηθει, and that his last word when he
cried out ‘my life has been completed, has reached its
fulfilment, has been perfected,’ was exactly as St. John
tells us it was:
τετέλεσται—no
more.</p>
<p>While in reading the Gospels—particularly that of St.
John himself, or whatever early Gnostic took his name and
mantle—I see the continual assertion of the imagination as
the basis of all spiritual and material life, I see also that to
Christ imagination was simply a form of love, and that to him
love was lord in the fullest meaning of the phrase. Some
six weeks ago I was allowed by the doctor to have white bread to
eat instead of the coarse black or brown bread of ordinary prison
fare. It is a great delicacy. It will sound strange
that dry bread could possibly be a delicacy to any one. To
me it is so much so that at the close of each meal I carefully
eat whatever crumbs may be left on my tin plate, or have fallen
on the rough towel that one uses as a cloth so as not to soil
one’s table; and I do so not from hunger—I get now
quite sufficient food—but simply in order that nothing
should be wasted of what is given to me. So one should look
on love.</p>
<p>Christ, like all fascinating personalities, had the power of
not merely saying beautiful things himself, but of making other
people say beautiful things to him; and I love the story St. Mark
tells us about the Greek woman, who, when as a trial of her faith
he said to her that he could not give her the bread of the
children of Israel, answered him that the little
dogs—(κυναρια,
‘little dogs’ it should be rendered)—who are
under the table eat of the crumbs that the children let
fall. Most people live for love and admiration. But
it is by love and admiration that we should live. If any
love is shown us we should recognise that we are quite unworthy
of it. Nobody is worthy to be loved. The fact that
God loves man shows us that in the divine order of ideal things
it is written that eternal love is to be given to what is
eternally unworthy. Or if that phrase seems to be a bitter
one to bear, let us say that every one is worthy of love, except
him who thinks that he is. Love is a sacrament that should
be taken kneeling, and <i>Domine, non sum dignus</i> should be on
the lips and in the hearts of those who receive it.</p>
<p>If ever I write again, in the sense of producing artistic
work, there are just two subjects on which and through which I
desire to express myself: one is ‘Christ as the precursor
of the romantic movement in life’: the other is ‘The
artistic life considered in its relation to conduct.’
The first is, of course, intensely fascinating, for I see in
Christ not merely the essentials of the supreme romantic type,
but all the accidents, the wilfulnesses even, of the romantic
temperament also. He was the first person who ever said to
people that they should live ‘flower-like
lives.’ He fixed the phrase. He took children
as the type of what people should try to become. He held
them up as examples to their elders, which I myself have always
thought the chief use of children, if what is perfect should have
a use. Dante describes the soul of a man as coming from the
hand of God ‘weeping and laughing like a little
child,’ and Christ also saw that the soul of each one
should be <i>a guisa di fanciulla che piangendo e ridendo
pargoleggia</i>. He felt that life was changeful, fluid,
active, and that to allow it to be stereotyped into any form was
death. He saw that people should not be too serious over
material, common interests: that to be unpractical was to be a
great thing: that one should not bother too much over
affairs. The birds didn’t, why should man? He
is charming when he says, ‘Take no thought for the morrow;
is not the soul more than meat? is not the body more than
raiment?’ A Greek might have used the latter
phrase. It is full of Greek feeling. But only Christ
could have said both, and so summed up life perfectly for us.</p>
<p>His morality is all sympathy, just what morality should
be. If the only thing that he ever said had been,
‘Her sins are forgiven her because she loved much,’
it would have been worth while dying to have said it. His
justice is all poetical justice, exactly what justice should
be. The beggar goes to heaven because he has been
unhappy. I cannot conceive a better reason for his being
sent there. The people who work for an hour in the vineyard
in the cool of the evening receive just as much reward as those
who have toiled there all day long in the hot sun. Why
shouldn’t they? Probably no one deserved
anything. Or perhaps they were a different kind of
people. Christ had no patience with the dull lifeless
mechanical systems that treat people as if they were things, and
so treat everybody alike: for him there were no laws: there were
exceptions merely, as if anybody, or anything, for that matter,
was like aught else in the world!</p>
<p>That which is the very keynote of romantic art was to him the
proper basis of natural life. He saw no other basis.
And when they brought him one, taken in the very act of sin and
showed him her sentence written in the law, and asked him what
was to be done, he wrote with his finger on the ground as though
he did not hear them, and finally, when they pressed him again,
looked up and said, ‘Let him of you who has never sinned be
the first to throw the stone at her.’ It was worth
while living to have said that.</p>
<p>Like all poetical natures he loved ignorant people. He
knew that in the soul of one who is ignorant there is always room
for a great idea. But he could not stand stupid people,
especially those who are made stupid by education: people who are
full of opinions not one of which they even understand, a
peculiarly modern type, summed up by Christ when he describes it
as the type of one who has the key of knowledge, cannot use it
himself, and does not allow other people to use it, though it may
be made to open the gate of God’s Kingdom. His chief
war was against the Philistines. That is the war every
child of light has to wage. Philistinism was the note of
the age and community in which he lived. In their heavy
inaccessibility to ideas, their dull respectability, their
tedious orthodoxy, their worship of vulgar success, their entire
preoccupation with the gross materialistic side of life, and
their ridiculous estimate of themselves and their importance, the
Jews of Jerusalem in Christ’s day were the exact
counterpart of the British Philistine of our own. Christ
mocked at the ‘whited sepulchre’ of respectability,
and fixed that phrase for ever. He treated worldly success
as a thing absolutely to be despised. He saw nothing in it
at all. He looked on wealth as an encumbrance to a
man. He would not hear of life being sacrificed to any
system of thought or morals. He pointed out that forms and
ceremonies were made for man, not man for forms and
ceremonies. He took sabbatarianism as a type of the things
that should be set at nought. The cold philanthropies, the
ostentatious public charities, the tedious formalisms so dear to
the middle-class mind, he exposed with utter and relentless
scorn. To us, what is termed orthodoxy is merely a facile
unintelligent acquiescence; but to them, and in their hands, it
was a terrible and paralysing tyranny. Christ swept it
aside. He showed that the spirit alone was of value.
He took a keen pleasure in pointing out to them that though they
were always reading the law and the prophets, they had not really
the smallest idea of what either of them meant. In
opposition to their tithing of each separate day into the fixed
routine of prescribed duties, as they tithe mint and rue, he
preached the enormous importance of living completely for the
moment.</p>
<p>Those whom he saved from their sins are saved simply for
beautiful moments in their lives. Mary Magdalen, when she
sees Christ, breaks the rich vase of alabaster that one of her
seven lovers had given her, and spills the odorous spices over
his tired dusty feet, and for that one moment’s sake sits
for ever with Ruth and Beatrice in the tresses of the snow-white
rose of Paradise. All that Christ says to us by the way of
a little warning is that every moment should be beautiful, that
the soul should always be ready for the coming of the bridegroom,
always waiting for the voice of the lover, Philistinism being
simply that side of man’s nature that is not illumined by
the imagination. He sees all the lovely influences of life
as modes of light: the imagination itself is the world of
light. The world is made by it, and yet the world cannot
understand it: that is because the imagination is simply a
manifestation of love, and it is love and the capacity for it
that distinguishes one human being from another.</p>
<p>But it is when he deals with a sinner that Christ is most
romantic, in the sense of most real. The world had always
loved the saint as being the nearest possible approach to the
perfection of God. Christ, through some divine instinct in
him, seems to have always loved the sinner as being the nearest
possible approach to the perfection of man. His primary
desire was not to reform people, any more than his primary desire
was to a relieve suffering. To turn an interesting thief
into a tedious honest man was not his aim. He would have
thought little of the Prisoners’ Aid Society and other
modern movements of the kind. The conversion of a publican
into a Pharisee would not have seemed to him a great
achievement. But in a manner not yet understood of the
world he regarded sin and suffering as being in themselves
beautiful holy things and modes of perfection.</p>
<p>It seems a very dangerous idea. It is—all great
ideas are dangerous. That it was Christ’s creed
admits of no doubt. That it is the true creed I don’t
doubt myself.</p>
<p>Of course the sinner must repent. But why? Simply
because otherwise he would be unable to realise what he had
done. The moment of repentance is the moment of
initiation. More than that: it is the means by which one
alters one’s past. The Greeks thought that
impossible. They often say in their Gnomic aphorisms,
‘Even the Gods cannot alter the past.’ Christ
showed that the commonest sinner could do it, that it was the one
thing he could do. Christ, had he been asked, would have
said—I feel quite certain about it—that the moment
the prodigal son fell on his knees and wept, he made his having
wasted his substance with harlots, his swine-herding and
hungering for the husks they ate, beautiful and holy moments in
his life. It is difficult for most people to grasp the
idea. I dare say one has to go to prison to understand
it. If so, it may be worth while going to prison.</p>
<p>There is something so unique about Christ. Of course
just as there are false dawns before the dawn itself, and winter
days so full of sudden sunlight that they will cheat the wise
crocus into squandering its gold before its time, and make some
foolish bird call to its mate to build on barren boughs, so there
were Christians before Christ. For that we should be
grateful. The unfortunate thing is that there have been
none since. I make one exception, St. Francis of
Assisi. But then God had given him at his birth the soul of
a poet, as he himself when quite young had in mystical marriage
taken poverty as his bride: and with the soul of a poet and the
body of a beggar he found the way to perfection not
difficult. He understood Christ, and so he became like
him. We do not require the Liber Conformitatum to teach us
that the life of St. Francis was the true <i>Imitatio
Christi</i>, a poem compared to which the book of that name is
merely prose.</p>
<p>Indeed, that is the charm about Christ, when all is said: he
is just like a work of art. He does not really teach one
anything, but by being brought into his presence one becomes
something. And everybody is predestined to his
presence. Once at least in his life each man walks with
Christ to Emmaus.</p>
<p>As regards the other subject, the Relation of the Artistic
Life to Conduct, it will no doubt seem strange to you that I
should select it. People point to Reading Gaol and say,
‘That is where the artistic life leads a man.’
Well, it might lead to worse places. The more mechanical
people to whom life is a shrewd speculation depending on a
careful calculation of ways and means, always know where they are
going, and go there. They start with the ideal desire of
being the parish beadle, and in whatever sphere they are placed
they succeed in being the parish beadle and no more. A man
whose desire is to be something separate from himself, to be a
member of Parliament, or a successful grocer, or a prominent
solicitor, or a judge, or something equally tedious, invariably
succeeds in being what he wants to be. That is his
punishment. Those who want a mask have to wear it.</p>
<p>But with the dynamic forces of life, and those in whom those
dynamic forces become incarnate, it is different. People
whose desire is solely for self-realisation never know where they
are going. They can’t know. In one sense of the
word it is of course necessary, as the Greek oracle said, to know
oneself: that is the first achievement of knowledge. But to
recognise that the soul of a man is unknowable, is the ultimate
achievement of wisdom. The final mystery is oneself.
When one has weighed the sun in the balance, and measured the
steps of the moon, and mapped out the seven heavens star by star,
there still remains oneself. Who can calculate the orbit of
his own soul? When the son went out to look for his
father’s asses, he did not know that a man of God was
waiting for him with the very chrism of coronation, and that his
own soul was already the soul of a king.</p>
<p>I hope to live long enough and to produce work of such a
character that I shall be able at the end of my days to say,
‘Yes! this is just where the artistic life leads a
man!’ Two of the most perfect lives I have come
across in my own experience are the lives of Verlaine and of
Prince Kropotkin: both of them men who have passed years in
prison: the first, the one Christian poet since Dante; the other,
a man with a soul of that beautiful white Christ which seems
coming out of Russia. And for the last seven or eight
months, in spite of a succession of great troubles reaching me
from the outside world almost without intermission, I have been
placed in direct contact with a new spirit working in this prison
through man and things, that has helped me beyond any possibility
of expression in words: so that while for the first year of my
imprisonment I did nothing else, and can remember doing nothing
else, but wring my hands in impotent despair, and say,
‘What an ending, what an appalling ending!’ now I try
to say to myself, and sometimes when I am not torturing myself do
really and sincerely say, ‘What a beginning, what a
wonderful beginning!’ It may really be so. It
may become so. If it does I shall owe much to this new
personality that has altered every man’s life in this
place.</p>
<p>You may realise it when I say that had I been released last
May, as I tried to be, I would have left this place loathing it
and every official in it with a bitterness of hatred that would
have poisoned my life. I have had a year longer of
imprisonment, but humanity has been in the prison along with us
all, and now when I go out I shall always remember great
kindnesses that I have received here from almost everybody, and
on the day of my release I shall give many thanks to many people,
and ask to be remembered by them in turn.</p>
<p>The prison style is absolutely and entirely wrong. I
would give anything to be able to alter it when I go out. I
intend to try. But there is nothing in the world so wrong
but that the spirit of humanity, which is the spirit of love, the
spirit of the Christ who is not in churches, may make it, if not
right, at least possible to be borne without too much bitterness
of heart.</p>
<p>I know also that much is waiting for me outside that is very
delightful, from what St. Francis of Assisi calls ‘my
brother the wind, and my sister the rain,’ lovely things
both of them, down to the shop-windows and sunsets of great
cities. If I made a list of all that still remains to me, I
don’t know where I should stop: for, indeed, God made the
world just as much for me as for any one else. Perhaps I
may go out with something that I had not got before. I need
not tell you that to me reformations in morals are as meaningless
and vulgar as Reformations in theology. But while to
propose to be a better man is a piece of unscientific cant, to
have become a deeper man is the privilege of those who have
suffered. And such I think I have become.</p>
<p>If after I am free a friend of mine gave a feast, and did not
invite me to it, I should not mind a bit. I can be
perfectly happy by myself. With freedom, flowers, books,
and the moon, who could not be perfectly happy? Besides,
feasts are not for me any more. I have given too many to
care about them. That side of life is over for me, very
fortunately, I dare say. But if after I am free a friend of
mine had a sorrow and refused to allow me to share it, I should
feel it most bitterly. If he shut the doors of the house of
mourning against me, I would come back again and again and beg to
be admitted, so that I might share in what I was entitled to
share in. If he thought me unworthy, unfit to weep with
him, I should feel it as the most poignant humiliation, as the
most terrible mode in which disgrace could be inflicted on
me. But that could not be. I have a right to share in
sorrow, and he who can look at the loveliness of the world and
share its sorrow, and realise something of the wonder of both, is
in immediate contact with divine things, and has got as near to
God’s secret as any one can get.</p>
<p>Perhaps there may come into my art also, no less than into my
life, a still deeper note, one of greater unity of passion, and
directness of impulse. Not width but intensity is the true
aim of modern art. We are no longer in art concerned with
the type. It is with the exception that we have to
do. I cannot put my sufferings into any form they took, I
need hardly say. Art only begins where Imitation ends, but
something must come into my work, of fuller memory of words
perhaps, of richer cadences, of more curious effects, of simpler
architectural order, of some aesthetic quality at any rate.</p>
<p>When Marsyas was ‘torn from the scabbard of his
limbs’—<i>della vagina della membre sue</i>, to use
one of Dante’s most terrible Tacitean phrases—he had
no more song, the Greek said. Apollo had been victor.
The lyre had vanquished the reed. But perhaps the Greeks
were mistaken. I hear in much modern Art the cry of
Marsyas. It is bitter in Baudelaire, sweet and plaintive in
Lamartine, mystic in Verlaine. It is in the deferred
resolutions of Chopin’s music. It is in the
discontent that haunts Burne-Jones’s women. Even
Matthew Arnold, whose song of Callicles tells of ‘the
triumph of the sweet persuasive lyre,’ and the
‘famous final victory,’ in such a clear note of
lyrical beauty, has not a little of it; in the troubled undertone
of doubt and distress that haunts his verses, neither Goethe nor
Wordsworth could help him, though he followed each in turn, and
when he seeks to mourn for <i>Thyrsis</i> or to sing of the
<i>Scholar Gipsy</i>, it is the reed that he has to take for the
rendering of his strain. But whether or not the Phrygian
Faun was silent, I cannot be. Expression is as necessary to
me as leaf and blossoms are to the black branches of the trees
that show themselves above the prison walls and are so restless
in the wind. Between my art and the world there is now a
wide gulf, but between art and myself there is none. I hope
at least that there is none.</p>
<p>To each of us different fates are meted out. My lot has
been one of public infamy, of long imprisonment, of misery, of
ruin, of disgrace, but I am not worthy of it—not yet, at
any rate. I remember that I used to say that I thought I
could bear a real tragedy if it came to me with purple pall and a
mask of noble sorrow, but that the dreadful thing about modernity
was that it put tragedy into the raiment of comedy, so that the
great realities seemed commonplace or grotesque or lacking in
style. It is quite true about modernity. It has
probably always been true about actual life. It is said
that all martyrdoms seemed mean to the looker on. The
nineteenth century is no exception to the rule.</p>
<p>Everything about my tragedy has been hideous, mean, repellent,
lacking in style; our very dress makes us grotesque. We are
the zanies of sorrow. We are clowns whose hearts are
broken. We are specially designed to appeal to the sense of
humour. On November 13th, 1895, I was brought down here
from London. From two o’clock till half-past two on
that day I had to stand on the centre platform of Clapham
Junction in convict dress, and handcuffed, for the world to look
at. I had been taken out of the hospital ward without a
moment’s notice being given to me. Of all possible
objects I was the most grotesque. When people saw me they
laughed. Each train as it came up swelled the
audience. Nothing could exceed their amusement. That
was, of course, before they knew who I was. As soon as they
had been informed they laughed still more. For half an hour
I stood there in the grey November rain surrounded by a jeering
mob.</p>
<p>For a year after that was done to me I wept every day at the
same hour and for the same space of time. That is not such
a tragic thing as possibly it sounds to you. To those who
are in prison tears are a part of every day’s
experience. A day in prison on which one does not weep is a
day on which one’s heart is hard, not a day on which
one’s heart is happy.</p>
<p>Well, now I am really beginning to feel more regret for the
people who laughed than for myself. Of course when they saw
me I was not on my pedestal, I was in the pillory. But it
is a very unimaginative nature that only cares for people on
their pedestals. A pedestal may be a very unreal
thing. A pillory is a terrific reality. They should
have known also how to interpret sorrow better. I have said
that behind sorrow there is always sorrow. It were wiser
still to say that behind sorrow there is always a soul. And
to mock at a soul in pain is a dreadful thing. In the
strangely simple economy of the world people only get what they
give, and to those who have not enough imagination to penetrate
the mere outward of things, and feel pity, what pity can be given
save that of scorn?</p>
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