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Speaking Of Spiritualism
by
“Life is but a dome of many-colored glass
That stains the white radiance of eternity.”
All truly great men are spiritualists–even mystics. A materialist may be a logician, a mathematician, in a limited way; but never an orator nor a poet. He is of the earth earthly; an intellectual Antaeus–the moment his feet leave the sodden clay he is strangled by the gods. For him there is no Fount of Castaly whose sweet waters make men mad. Parnassus is but an Egyptian pyramid to be scaled with ladders, and by the aid of guides who serve for salary. Fancy has no wings to waft him among the stars. He sees in the Bible only its errors, never its wild beauty. For him Villon was only a sot and Anacreon a libertine. In his cosmos there’s neither Garden of the God, nor Groves of Daphne. He can understand neither the platonic love of Petrarch nor the psychological ferocity of Rousseau.
“The Apostle of affliction, he who threw
Enchantment over passion, and from
Woe wrung overwhelming eloquence.”
For him all, all is clay–even the laughter of childhood is a cunning mechanism, and the Uranian Venus but a lump of animated earth. The flowers bring him messages only from the muck in which their roots are buried, the “concord of sweet sounds” is but a disturbance of the atmosphere. Such men do not live; they merely exist. They do not enjoy life; they do not even suffer its pangs. They know naught of that sweetness “for which Love is indebted to Sorrow.” God pity them.
* * *
The gang of mutton-heads whose duty it was to select twelve poets whose names should be commemorated in the new congressional library, excluded that of Tom Moore on the plea that he wasn’t much of a poet, and now the Irish-Americans are fairly seething with indignation. Take it easy; Tom Moore doesn’t need a memorial tablet. He will be read and honored centuries after the library building with its poet’s corner has perished of old age. He is the poet of the people, and has more readers than any ten of those honored by the committee.