I say in the popular conception, for literature is
wholly different from this, not only in its effect
upon individual lives, but upon the procession of lives
upon this earth; it is not only an integral part of
all of them, but, with its sister arts, it is the
one unceasing continuity in history. Literature
and art are not only the records and monuments made
by the successive races of men, not only the local
expressions of thought and emotion, but they are,
to change the figure, the streams that flow on, enduring,
amid the passing show of men, reviving, transforming,
ennobling the fleeting generations. Without this
continuity of thought and emotion, history would present
us only a succession of meaningless experiments.
The experiments fail, the experiments succeed—at
any rate, they end—and what remains for
transmission, for the sustenance of succeeding peoples?
Nothing but the thought and emotion evolved and expressed.
It is true that every era, each generation, seems
to have its peculiar work to do; it is to subdue the
intractable earth, to repel or to civilize the barbarians,
to settle society in order, to build cities, to amass
wealth in centres, to make deserts bloom, to construct
edifices such as were never made before, to bring
all men within speaking distance of each other—lucky
if they have anything to say when that is accomplished—to
extend the information of the few among the many, or
to multiply the means of easy and luxurious living.
Age after age the world labors for these things with
the busy absorption of a colony of ants in its castle
of sand. And we must confess that the process,
such, for instance, as that now going on here—this
onset of many peoples, which is transforming the continent
of America—is a spectacle to excite the
imagination in the highest degree. If there were
any poet capable of putting into an epic the spirit
of this achievement, what an epic would be his!
Can it be that there is anything of more consequence
in life than the great business in hand, which absorbs
the vitality and genius of this age? Surely, we
say, it is better to go by steam than to go afoot,
because we reach our destination sooner—getting
there quickly being a supreme object. It is well
to force the soil to yield a hundred-fold, to congregate
men in masses so that all their energies shall be
taxed to bring food to themselves, to stimulate industries,
drag coal and metal from the bowels of the earth,
cover its surface with rails for swift-running carriages,
to build ever larger palaces, warehouses, ships.
This gigantic achievement strikes the imagination.