without the strongest and most reprehensible conceit,
can I claim for my normal self a single attribute
or quality not possessed by an hypothetical average
human being? Yes, I am myself the Public; or
at all events all that my consciousness can ever know
of it for certain.” And he began to consider
deeply. For sitting there in cold blood, with
his nerves at rest, and his brain and senses normal,
the play he had written did seem to him to put an
unnecessary strain upon the faculties. “Ah!”
he thought, “in future I must take good care
never to write anything except in cold blood, with
my nerves well clothed, and my brain and senses quiet.
I ought only to write when I feel as normal as I do
now.” And for some minutes he remained
motionless, looking at his boots. Then there
crept into his mind an uncomfortable thought.
“But have I ever written anything without feeling
a little-abnormal, at the time? Have I ever even
felt inclined to write anything, until my emotions
had been unduly excited, my brain immoderately stirred,
my senses unusually quickened, or my spirit extravagantly
roused? Never! Alas, never! I am
then a miserable renegade, false to the whole purpose
of my being—nor do I see the slightest
hope of becoming a better man, a less unworthy artist!
For I literally cannot write without the stimulus
of some feeling exaggerated at the expense of other
feelings. What has been in the past will be
in the future: I shall never be taking up my pen
when I feel my comfortable and normal self never be
satisfying that self which is the Public!”
And he thought: “I am lost. For, to
satisfy that normal self, to give the Public what
it wants, is, I am told, and therefore must believe,
what all artists exist for. AEschylus in his
‘Choephorae’ and his ‘Prometheus’;
Sophocles in his ‘OEdipus Tyrannus’; Euripides
when he wrote ‘The Trojan Women,’ ’Medea,’—and
‘Hippolytus’; Shakespeare in his ‘Leer’;
Goethe in his ‘Faust’; Ibsen in his ‘Ghosts’
and his ‘Peer Gynt’; Tolstoy in ‘The
Powers of Darkness’; all—all in those
great works, must have satisfied their most comfortable
and normal selves; all—all must have given
to the average human being, to the Public, what it
wants; for to do that, we know, was the reason of
their existence, and who shall say those noble artists
were not true to it? That is surely unthinkable.
And yet—and yet—we are assured,
and, indeed, it is true, that there is no real Public
in this country for just those plays! Therefore
AEschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Shakespeare, Goethe,
Ibsen, Tolstoy, in their greatest works did not give
the Public what it wants, did not satisfy the average
human being, their more comfortable and normal selves,
and as artists were not true to the reason of their
existence. Therefore they were not artists, which
is unthinkable; therefore I have not yet found the
Public!”
And perceiving that in this impasse his last hope of discovery had foundered, the writer let his head fall on his chest.