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- INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
-
- CHAPTER 18.
-
- HIS FACULTIES OF ARTISTIC AND
- INTELLECTUAL EXPRESSION
-
- He who would rise to the full scope of Ingersoll's art, in its
- varied manifestations -- oratory, poetry, prose -- must be familiar
- with the elements of things. He must be of no school or cult --
- must possess that elemental depth, that aversion to the provincial,
- that view of the universal, which invariably marks the mind of
- genius. In unison with the great eternal pulse of the universe must
- be the rhythm of his heart and brain.
-
- But how are we to look upon the artistic side of Ingersoll?
- Shall he be viewed as an orator, as a poet, or as a rhetorician? I
- answer: As none of these, in particular; for he was far more than
- any or all of them: he was an idealist, -- one of the purest and
- sublimest that has lived. Back of every expression, -- poetic,
- oratorical, or philosophical, -- was the ideal. This he worshiped.
- In the realm of art, he saw with faultless eye. So absolute was his
- devotion to the ideal; so keen, and yet so profound, his sense of
- symmetry, proportion, harmony, that he clothed his thoughts in the
- noblest garb, shrinking from the inapposite, the inelegant, as
- surely as the magnet repels a scrap of lead. This made his art
- supreme.
-
- It is often remarked: "That man was a great sculptor," "That
- man was a great painter," when it should be said: "A great idealist
- chiseled that statue," "A great idealist painted that picture." Who
- can not chisel or paint? But how many who chisel or paint or write
- or speak do so at the command of the ideal?
-
- Every writer and every speaker unconsciously produces a
- perfect likeness of his physical and mental being -- of himself. It
- is called his style. Critics sometimes assert that the style of so-
- and-so is "artificial." In the ultimate sense, this is erroneous.
- Should a writer employ a borrowed style, it would not be his style,
- any more than an apple artificially attached to a twig of an
- orange-tree would be an orange. And no matter how successful he
- might be in deceiving others as to the genuineness of his style, he
- could never succeed in deceiving himself.
-
- We are here led to a most fitting comparison of two natural
- phenomena: the tree and its fruit -- the author and his style. The
- analogy is unmistakable. Neither literally nor figuratively do men
- gather grapes from thorns, nor figs from thistles. No one would
- have expected Daniel Webster -- the leonine head with brow
- overhanging cliff like the cavernous eyes and rugged lines below --
- to produce a Queen Mob. It required the slight figure, the girlish,
- sympathetic face, the intense blue eyes, the keen sensibilities.
- the rare ethereal vision, of Shelley.
-
- Ingersoll, too, put his personality into his lines. His style,
- therefore, is not susceptible to comparison -- it is utterly
- unique! Should one of his marvelous pages be found on the sands of
- the Sahara, its author would be instantly recognizable.
-
-
-
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-
- A vast majority of our race are substantially alike. They look
- alike, dress alike, act alike, think alike. Since they must
- inevitably, if unconsciously, infuse into their literary expression
- a part of their very selves, how can they but write alike? Indeed,
- not only is the latter what we are led, by reason and analogy, to
- expect: it is precisely what we establish by observation. Take the
- output in any branch of literature -- contemporary periodical
- verse, for example. As far as individuality is concerned, the
- greater part of the periodical verse of the last decade, or of the
- preceding, could have been written by a single person. Between the
- styles (if "styles" there be) of almost any two of the scores of
- authors actually represented, there is less difference than between
- the styles of the garments of any two of those authors, despite the
- proverbial pecuniary vicissitudes of literary fortune. Ingersoll
- himself described, all too faithfully, this class of artists when
- he said: --
-
- " * * * Most writers suppress individually. They wish to
- please the public. They flatter the stupid and pander to the
- prejudice of their readers. They write for the market, making books
- as other mechanics make shoes. They have no message, they bear no
- torch, they are simply the slaves of customers.
-
- "The books they manufacture are handles by 'the trade'; they
- are regarded as harmless. The pulpit does not object; the young
- person can read the monotonous pages without a blush -- or a
- thought.
-
- "On the title pages of these books you will find the imprint
- of the great publishers; on the rest of the pages, nothing. These
- books might be prescribed for insomnia."
-
- In striking contrast with the many writers just described
- stand the few who are the glory of literature not only, but of the
- human race, -- the men and the women of genius. And, strange to
- say, or rather, natural to say, the former have always made, and
- are still making, with perhaps equal frequency, in reference to the
- latter, two contradictory assertions. About half of the
- mediocrities assert, that individuals of genius are the same as
- others; and this is perfectly natural, because mediocrity can
- scarcely be expected fully to comprehend its own limitations. A
- prisoner can see only the inner side of the confining wall -- never
- the outer side nor the top. The other half of the mediocrities
- assert, that individuals of genius are absolutely different from
- others; and this, too, is perfect natural, for the same reason. The
- truth is, that the genius is the same as others in everything
- except that in which he is a genius; or, reversely, he differs from
- others in that only in which he is not a mediocrity.
-
- Without speculating as to the ultimate cause of the difference
- distinguishing him (the futility of so speculating, in the present
- state of scientific knowledge, having been pointed in Chapter I),
- we may yet briefly concern ourselves with the difference itself.
- The genius, then, has implicit confidence in himself; the
- mediocrity, confidence in others. The genius has learned little,
- and has little to learn: the mediocrity may have learned a great
- deal, but has a great deal to learn. The genius does not "suppress
- individuality": he expresses it. He does not "wish to please the
-
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-
- public," but himself, -- his ideal. He does not "flatter the
- stupid": he tries to arouse and enlighten them. He does not "pander
- to the prejudice" of his readers: he tries to destroy it. He does
- not "write for the market," but for posterity. He has a "message";
- he bears a "torch"; he is not a "slave," but free. His books,
- though they may be "handled by 'the trade,'" are not always
- "regarded as harmless": they are often regarded as dangerous. To
- them, "the pulpit" does "object"; because, while "the young person"
- can read them "without a blush," neither the young nor the old can
- read them without "a thought."
-
- So it was with Ingersoll and his works. And no one else in
- American literature, where the microcephalous deny him a place, has
- crowded more into a line. Many have occupied pages in expressing
- what he would have expressed in a paragraph.
-
- He wrote as a river runs. In the work of no other writer is to
- be found less evidence of effort. There is nothing to suggest the
- literary student, -- the "verbal varnisher and veneerer."
- Preeminently the word-wizard of his century, the whole of rhetoric
- was rejuvenated by his genius.
-
- But there is a particular quality of his style, which,
- although not yet recognized by the general reader, demands
- conspicuous attention, -- and, indeed, perhaps the most conspicuous
- attention, -- in a just estimate of him as a literary artist. I
- refer to rhythm. For it is undoubtedly true, as an observing and
- distinguished critic has said, that Ingersoll, like Socrates, was
- the first to perfect the prose rhythms of the language in which he
- sought expression. He possessed not only the imagination, but the
- ear, of the born poet. Believing that the poets themselves have
- demonstrated rhyme to be a hindrance, rather than a help, in
- expressing the sublimest thought and feeling; caring nothing for
- the greater part of that which passes as poetry; and often putting
- upon it the stamp of ridicule, he carried unconsciously into his
- lines the enchanting splendor, -- the resistless charm, -- of
- metered rhyme. It is this, more than any other single factor, which
- will one day compel impartial and unprejudiced critics to place him
- among the first, if not at the head, of the great masters of
- English prose.
-
- So naturally did his thoughts find harmonious expression, that
- scarcely a page of his finer productions fails to afford, here and
- there, material for exquisite blank verse.
-
- Thus "The Warp and Woof," only part of which (for spacial
- reasons) will be quoted, may be arranged so that the prevailing
- measure will be iambic pentameter: --
-
- "The rise and set of sun,
- The birth and death of day,
- The dawns of silver and the dusks of gold,
- The wonders of rain and snow,
- The shroud of winter and the many-colored robes of spring,
- The lonely moon with nightly loss or gain,
- The serpent lightning and thunder's voice,
- The tempest's fury and the breath of morn,
- The threat of storm and promise of the bow;
- Cathedral clouds with dome and spire," etc.
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- INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
-
- And elsewhere, in iambic rhythm rendered more conspicuous by
- prosodical division and capitalization, this charming picture of
- autumn: --
-
- "The withered banners of the corn are still,
- And gathered fields are growing strangely wan,
- White death, poetic death,
- With hands that color what they touch,
- Weaves in the autumn wood
- Its tapestries and gold."
-
- Speaking of the part that myths have played in the evolution
- of religious thought, he says, in perfect iambic rhythm: --
-
- "They thrilled the vines of Spring with tremulous desire; Made
- tawny Summer's billowed breast the throne and home of love; Filled
- Autumn's arms with sun-kissed grapes and gathered sheaves; And
- pictured Winter as a weak old king Who felt, like Lear upon his
- withered face, Cordelia's tears."
-
- The following rhapsodical tribute to Shelley is so strikingly
- like what Poe defined as "The Rhythmical Creation of Beauty," that,
- had it been written with ten syllables to the line, no more and no
- less, as it could have been, regardless alike of sense and rhythm,
- it would doubtless be called poetry: --
-
- "The light of morn beyond the purple hills -- - A palm that
- lifts its coronet of leaves above the desert's sands -- An isle of
- green in some far sea -- A spring that waits for lips of thirst --
- A strain of music heard within some palace wrought of dreams -- A
- cloud of gold above a setting sun -- A fragrance wafted from some
- unseen shore."
-
- Concerning Shakespeare's understanding of human nature, he
- expresses himself with a rhythm as wondrously beautiful as the
- molten undulations left by the sinking sun: --
-
- "He knew the thrills and ecstasies of love, The savage joys of
- hatred and revenge. He heard the hiss of envy's snakes And watched
- the eagles of ambition soar. There was no hope that did not put its
- star above his head -- No fear he had not felt -- No joy that had
- not shed its sunshine on his face."
-
- Again of Shakespeare: --
-
- "He walked the ways of mighty Rome,
- And saw great Caesar with his legions in the field.
- He stood with vast and motley throngs
- And watched the triumphs given to victorious men,
- Followed by uncrowned kings, the captured hosts, and all
- the spoils of ruthless war.
- He heard the shouts that shook the Coliseum's roofless walls,
- When from the reeling gladiator's hand the short sword fell,
- While from his bosom gushed the stream of wasted life."
-
- It will be observed, that, excepting a single line in the
- last, both of these Shakespearean quotations, like the one on
-
-
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-
- Shelley, could be arranged in perfectly regular blank verse, with
- five iambic feet (ten syllables) to the line. It will also he
- observed, that, should they be so arranged, their sense would be
- marred, and they would lose insouciance and rhythmic beauty. What
- would be left? And yet, had they been originally written thus, by
- some professional poet schooled to sacrifice substance to mere
- traditional literary form, they would have been classed as poetry.
- Indeed, that this is precisely what would have occurred, even had
- they possessed less of poetic quality than they do, there is ample
- evidence. As introductory of a fragment of it, I quote: --
-
- "The red man came -- the roaming hunter tribes, warlike and
- fierce, and the mound-builders vanished from the earth. The
- solitude of centuries untold has settled where they dwelt. The
- prairie wolf hunts in their meadows, and his fresh-dug den yawns by
- my path. The gopher mines the ground where stood their swarming
- cities."
-
- Surely the average reader, chancing upon this passage, would
- not suspect that he was being enriched beyond the potencies of good
- prose: and yet, no less a judge of literature than William Cullen
- Bryant evidently regarded it as poetry; for he wrote and published
- it as such, in blank verse of just ten syllables, under the title
- The Prairies, as follows: --
-
- "The red man came --
- The roaming hunter tribes, warlike and fierce,
- And the mound-builders vanished from the earth.
- The solitude of centuries untold
- Has settled where they dwelt. The prairie wolf
- Hunts in their meadows, and his fresh-dug den
- Yawns by my path. The gopher mines the ground
- Where stood their swarming cities."
-
- But let it be understood, that this passage is not quoted with
- the object of asserting that it is not poetry, nor with the
- purposive implication that the scores of productions in like form
- which might be quoted from other sources are not poetry. Rather is
- it quoted with the object of rendering the reader receptive to a
- question which I have had in mind for many years, and which I now
- ask, in simple justice: If that which, when transformed into prose,
- is indistinguishable from it may be retransformed into verse and
- legitimately called poetry, what term shall be applied to that
- which, although originally written as prose, contains imaginative,
- emotional, rhythmic, and tonal qualities unmistakably placing it
- above and beyond good prose? That is to ask, if the quotation from
- Bryant is poetry, what are the quotations from Ingersoll? If Bryant
- and others of his school were poets, what was Ingersoll? Let us be
- candid; let us be fair; let us be sensible.
-
- Form is one thing; substance, or quality, quite another. Form
- is not an alembic transmuting the baser mental metals into gold. It
- does not create -- it is created. It cannot change prose to poetry,
- nor poetry to prose. volumes of prose have been written as poetry;
- volumes of poetry, as prose.
-
-
-
-
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-
- The truth is, that, of all the elements of recognized poetic
- form, only one is absolutely indispensable to poetry-rhythm. There
- may be very great poetry without rhyme, and without perfect meter;
- but poetry without rhythm is not poetry: it is mere verse. It is a
- heart that does not beat -- a stream without cataracts -- a willow
- that does not wave -- a bird without wings -- a star that does not
- shine.
-
- This indispensable element of poetry, -- this indefinable
- something that haunts with enchanting spell the golden temple of
- enraptured song, -- is apparent in all of Ingersoll's finer work.
- Of course, it is rendered more so by the formal treatment which I
- have applied to particular selections; but, unlike that of a
- considerable portion of the professional poet's blank verse, it
- cannot be obscured by the prose form, in which Ingersoll usually
- cast his printed thoughts. Of this, there is no stronger nor more
- pleasing evidence than the following fragment of one of his
- controversial Papers: --
-
- "Life is a shadowy, strange, and winding road on which we
- travel for a little way -- a few short steps -- just from the
- cradle, with its lullaby of love, to the low and quiet wayside inn,
- where all at last must sleep, and where the only salutation is --
- Good night."
-
- In exercising the art of expression, Ingersoll kept to himself
- all that was back of the scene. He made no explanation -- offered
- no excuse. His presence was his prelude; his pen was his preface.
- He knew that a glance behind the canvas mars the effect of the
- greatest painting. Very few writers, and still fewer orators,
- appear to recognize this vital aesthetic truth. Hence most of them,
- by way of introduction, usually exhibit all of the defects that an
- imperfect mastery can reveal -- the crude ideas and rejected
- fragments -- the very interior of their mental workshops. It is
- like a glimpse of the kitchen from the banquet board.
-
- What would the tender and enthralling lines to "Chloris" be
- worth were they prefaced by Burns to imply, that, before writing
- them, he had carefully and conscientiously compared her with the
- other girls? Think of it!
-
- Most writers are affected with a sort of verbose diathesis.
- Having almost no imagination, they credit the reader with a like
- amount. They anticipate the very motions of his brain -- tell
- everything. Their lines are prison-bars between which fettered
- fancy catches only now and then a glimpse of field and sky. With
- such a style, Ingersoll had no patience. He despised detail, the
- mathematical, the provincial. In short, he was an idealist; and his
- style, like the rainbow, arched in iridescent wonder the
- intellectual sky. He knew that one mind can get from another no
- more than it is "capable of receiving," and that, between the
- words, there should always be room for the reader or hearer to use
- the brush and chisel. He knew that every mind, in spite of others,
- -- in spite of itself, -- takes its own peculiar view. He realized
- that the greatest work of art is, at most, only a sort of mental
- arbor where cling and run the vines of fancy, springing from the
- brain of whomsoever reads or sees. Most of these vines would be
-
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-
- dwarfed and flowerless, and not last half the season through; some
- might live, but would not thrive; others still, with exuberance
- interwoven, would tender to mating songsters the hospitality of
- countless leafy bowers, fling to summer dawns blossoms fit for
- Juliet's breast, while beneath the mellowing skies would hang, in
- clustered spheres and purple, the smiles and tears of April days,
- the amorous kisses of unnumbered suns.
-
- There is a particular circumstance which those who would form
- a just estimate of Ingersoll's expressional faculties should keep
- constantly in mind: he was, first of all, an orator. By dint of the
- orator's power and prestige did he lay claim upon contemporaries;
- and under the orator's almost fateful disadvantages must he lay
- claim upon posterity. The present has memories; the future will
- have type and tradition. The critic, the student, even the admirer,
- in the years to be will know and feel only so much of the
- expressional power of this great personality as can be conveyed by
- the illusive and inadequate medium of the insensate page. Gone, --
- fading in the mist of memory, -- the noble form; silent, -- echoing
- only in the hearts of a lessening few, -- the voice that soothed
- and silvered common speech, and glorified the un-remembering air;
- vanished the enthralling presence -- a presence that held in magic
- spell the spirit of the springtime dawn, -- the calm of fulfilled
- noon, -- the peacefulness of eventide, -- the tranquillity of
- midnight upon the starlit plain.
-
- So in Ingersoll the orator were blended, in matchless harmony,
- nature's rarest and noblest gifts. The circumstances under which
- the latter first became manifest, -- under which he discovered
- himself, -- are as interesting as they were anomalous.
-
- Robert Ingersoll was in his late teens when a presumably
- orthodox gentleman who had been selected to speak at a Sunday-
- school picnic, on the Fourth of July, near a small town in
- Illinois, was prevented by illness, at the veritable "eleventh
- hour," from keeping his engagement. Thereupon the good people who
- were charged with seeing that the programme was carried out in its
- original completeness, and who had heard something of young
- Ingersoll's oratorical inclinations, invited him to take the place
- of the delinquent one.
-
- The youthful substitute chose as his theme the patriots and
- heroes of the Revolution. Familiar, of course, with the great and
- noble services which Thomas Paine had rendered, not only to
- America, but to the whole world, before, during, and after that
- struggle, and resenting, with deepest indignation, the base
- ingratitude which had been his lot simply and solely because of his
- subsequent deistical and anti-christian writings, Ingersoll had
- previously made a resolution never to deliver a speech without
- mentioning the name of the "Author-Hero." The probability that
- those whom he was about to address were somewhat deficient in
- reliable data concerning the author of Common Sense, The Crisis,
- The Right of Man, etc. doubtless served to confirm, in Ingersoll's
- judgment, the wisdom of the resolution just mentioned. Anyway, the
- memory of Thomas Paine received at that Sunday-school picnic its
- rightful meed. This, of course, was met with resentment --
- resentment which the youthful speaker read unmistakably in the
-
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-
- faces and voices of his orthodox elders. But in the same faces and
- voices, he read something else -- evidence of kindled emotion; for,
- many times during his speech, -- made without preparation, -- his
- hearers were moved alternately to laughter and tears. In that
- laughter and those tears, -- in that April of his genius, -- Robert
- Ingersoll saw the many-colored bow of promise. For the first time,
- he realized that he held the magic key which, even through the
- cankerous rust of prejudice, could reach and unlock the secrets of
- the soul.
-
- Of the "rarest and noblest gifts," visible and invisible,
- which 'nature blended with matchless harmony in Ingersoll the
- orator,' I would here mention eyes, features, and physique; for
- these were by no means the least of the many factors which combined
- to constitute in him "that wonderful thing called presence."
-
- His eyes, then, were light-blue, changing, with varying moods,
- to gray, -- changing markedly; and his face was "the face that
- mirrored thoughts." Among the orators of the world, from Pericles
- to the present, there is no face like the face of Ingersoll. As you
- gaze upon it, you feel that nature has reached the summit -- that
- she can rise no higher, can do no more -- that she, at last, has
- done what she set out to do. This face is human! -- you feel that
- a great brain is in partnership with a great heart, and that the
- heart is senior partner. The lines of the former seem everywhere
- just subdued by the lines of the latter -- the lines of intellect
- to blend easily, gladly, with the lines of art. The forehead, the
- eyes, the nose, of the thinker are also those of the artist and
- philanthropist; the mouth and chin of the intellectual gladiator
- are also the mouth and chin of the poet, -- almost of the mother.
- As you gaze upon this face, you feel that mercy, at last, has found
- expression -- every unfortunate, a friend; that the moans of every
- martyr, -- the longings of every exile, -- the agonies of every
- victim of dungeon, rack, and chain, -- the burdens of every slave,
- -- the despair and wretchedness of every outcast, -- the cries of
- every unmothered babe, -- the sobs and yearnings of every abused or
- hungry child, -- were heard and felt by the unknown sculptor who
- traced the lines; -- that those lines express the rapturous
- realization of an eon-wished, but hitherto unpictured and
- unembodied, ideal. And you feel that, after all, man's melancholy
- martyrdom was not in vain; that the race has possibilities; that
- its future is radiant with hope. This face has the contour, the
- symmetry, the poise and balance, the confidence, the integrity, the
- frankness, the open honesty -- the naturalness -- of nature. In it
- are the joy of June and the serenity of September. And yet there is
- earnestness, determination, unmistakable. In fact, you look upon
- this face, and you feel that, were it just a trifle less serious,
- you should smile. You look a moment longer, and -- you smile! and
- are satisfied.
-
- ln height Ingersoll was six feet, minus half an inch; and, in
- his prime, he weighed from two hundred to two hundred and twenty
- pounds. This brief statement, in conjunction with the preceding
- text and illustrations, might, perhaps, suffice as a description of
- his physical appearance, were it not for the remarkable fact
- (repeatedly noted by intimate friends), that, when he stepped upon
- the platform before an audience, he seemed suddenly to become a
-
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-
- giant in stature, -- far ampler and taller than he actually was --
- seemed to rise on the spirit of the occasion, to the supreme
- command of everything in sight! The greater the occasion and the
- audience, the greater he seemed to become, and the higher he seemed
- to rise. He was peculiarly, preeminently, "the born orator" -- born
- anew with every inspiration. Of incomparable physique, -- the broad
- and massive shoulders supporting a perfectly molded head -- with
- the formidableness of an antique warrior, and yet the gentle mien
- of a child -- his was a presence to command the attention of the
- Olympian gods. The admirer of the majestic, the heroic, the classic
- in poise and bearing, -- of the Grecian ideal in breathing flesh,
- -- who never sat with an audience as Robert G. Ingersoll strode
- upon the stage and stood "foursquare to all the winds that blew,"
- has missed such an unforgettable impression as will not again be
- the proud and happy fortune of mankind.
-
- Oratory is the noblest stream that flows from the hidden
- spring of the ideal to the illimitable ocean of expression.
- Ingersoll was acquainted by nature with the course of that stream
- -- knew its every inch, from where it, dallying, sparkles like a
- silver thread among the rocks and hills of thought, to where its
- mighty current forces back the tides of error in the broad estuary
- of persuasion.
-
- Of course, as already mentioned, oratory cannot be put upon
- paper It cannot even be separated from the times and the scenes
- that produce it, nor from the effects that it in turn produces. As
- dead protoplasm is no longer protoplasm, so a printed oration is
- not an oration. The unprecedented occasion -- the opportunity
- previously sought in vain, but now within the orator's grasp; the
- vast assemblage waiting only for the magic voice that shall set
- vibrating in unison with each other, and with those of the orator,
- the secret chords of sympathy and emotion; the flashing eye, the
- poise, the gesture, and the thrilling pause -- language too
- eloquent for utterance -- these are as much a part of the oration
- as are its words.
-
- But while the latter alone are comparatively valueless in
- judging the orator as such, they do enable us to judge him as
- verbal artist and philosopher.
-
- To attempt a final selection from the gems that, for forty
- years, fell from the golden lips of Ingersoll, seems well nigh
- hopeless. To choose from most other geniuses, would be an easy
- task. Their average product contains enough of the commonplace to
- distinguish passages that are really grand. But Ingersoll left
- nothing commonplace. Great lines, -- thoughts that touch the
- universal, -- poems of subdue shade, -- are found on almost every
- page. Many sentences are music, as sweet as the Orphean lyre, and
- will hold their power to charm as long as genius knows its kith and
- kin. There was no thought, fancy, sentiment, emotion, or passion in
- the expression of which he was not supreme. He was the Phidias of
- verbal sculpture -- the Michelangelo of words. From the gallery of
- his mind, he selected symbols, figures, pictures, as easily, -- as
- naturally, -- as the sea tosses upon the sand a nameless gem.
-
-
-
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-
- So the question as to which is Ingersoll's oratorical
- masterpiece is preeminently, -- almost distinctively, -- one that
- does not permit of a confident answer. Yet, ask the average person
- to name that masterpiece, and he will mention the "Plumed Knight
- Speech" or A Tribute to Ebon C. Ingersoll or possibly, A Vision of
- War. Why I do not know. Probably it is because he has read one of
- them. For, though perfect of their kind, none of them, I judge, is
- better entitled to distinction than are several other productions
- of our orator.
-
- Take the "Soliloquy" at the grave of Napoleon -- only a few
- sentences, to be sure -- a few touches of the brush; and yet it is
- a complete and perfect picture of that marvelous life, from the
- insatiable ambition which would grasp and hold the world, to the
- Stygian midnight of despair and gloom which settled at St. Helena.
- There, "gazing out upon the sad and solemn sea" -- "the only woman
- that ever loved him pushed from his heart by the cold hand of
- ambition" -- stands the great Napoleon. And beside the "poor
- peasant," in "wooden shoes," but surrounded by loving wife and
- happy children, how small and wretched!
-
- Then there is "The Cemetery" -- "that vast cemetery called the
- past," wherein are "most of the religions of men," and "nearly all
- their gods," from India's mystic shrines to the divine fires of our
- Aztecs -- a view of comparative mythology and religion which is
- universal in its scope, and which is expressed with the charm of
- consummate art.
-
- And the Shakespearean lecture -- a vine of words that twines
- with subtle delicacy and grace around the mighty oak of
- Shakespeare's brain. I have often thought that there are two
- productions which should be in the hands of every student of
- English, -- Spencer's Philosophy of Style and Ingersoll's lecture
- on Shakespeare: the first, to show why certain words and
- expressions are used in preference to others; the last, how they
- are used. This lecture contains, in my judgment, the noblest
- metaphor in our language: --
-
- "Shakespeare was an intellectual ocean, whose waves touched all the
- shores of thought; within which were all the fate, ambition and
- revenge; upon which fell the gloom and darkness of despair and
- death and all the sunlight of content and love, and within which
- was the inverted sky lit with eternal stars -- an intellectual
- ocean -- towards which all rivers ran, and from which now the isles
- and continents of thought receive their dew and rain."
-
- Many other selections, taken here and there, are hardly less
- notable. How many have read the following? and yet what
- physiologist, psychologist, poet, or philosopher has left a truer
- description of the human brain? --
-
- "The dark continent of motive and desire has never been
- explored. In the brain, that wondrous world with one inhabitant,
- there are recesses dim and dark, treacherous sands and dangerous
- shores, where seeming sirens tempt and fade; streams that rise in
- unknown lands from hidden springs, strange seas with ebb and flow
- of tides, restless billows urged by storms of flame, profound and
-
-
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- INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
-
- awful depths hidden by mist of dreams, obscure and phantom realms
- where vague and fearful things are half revealed, jungles where
- passion's tigers crouch, and skies of cloud and blue where fancies
- fly with painted wings that dazzle and mislead; and the poor of
- this pictured world is led by old desires and ancient hates, and
- stained by crimes of many vanished years, and pushed by hands that
- long ago were dust, until he feels like some bewildered slave that
- Mockery has throned and crowned."
-
- Could the student of human nature -- could any one who has climbed
- unhelped, or in spite of opposition, the ladder of success --
- possibly fail to catch the golden thread that runs through this
- iambic epigram? --
-
- "Obstruction is but virtue's foil. From thwarted light leaps
- color's flame. The stream impedded has a song."
-
- Think of the spirit of liberty that breathes through this
- sentence: --
-
- "Let us go the broad way where science goes -- through the
- open fields, past the daisied slopes, where sunlight, lingering,
- seems to sleep and dream."
-
- His ability to find in the words of his very adversaries the
- weapons of attack, -- to capture the enemy's ordnance and use it
- against its owner, -- is well shown in describing "The Infidel": --
-
- "He knew that all the pomp and glitter had been purchased with
- liberty -- that priceless jewel of the soul. In looking at the
- cathedral he remembered the dungeon. The music of the organ was not
- loud enough to drown the clank of fitters. He could not forget that
- the taper had lighted the fagot. He knew that the cross adorned the
- hilt of the sword, and so where others worshiped, he wept."
-
- What other orator, standing at the grave of a friend, has
- uttered such praise as the following? -- hyperbole so perfect that
- it actually does not seem an exaggeration! --
-
- "Her heart was open as the gates of day. She shed kindness as
- the sun sheds light. If all her deeds were flowers, the air would
- be faint with perfume. If all her charities could change to
- melodies, a symphony would fill the sky."
-
- And could human speech be more tenderly pathetic than in the
- lines in behalf of the aged actors whom death has claimed? --
-
- "And then the silence falls on darkness.
-
- "Some loving hands should close their eyes; some loving lips
- should leave upon their pallid brows a kiss; some friends should
- lay the breathless forms away, and on the graves drop blossoms
- jeweled with the tears of love."
-
- It required three of the Rhodian artists to chisel the Laocoon
- group; but, in the Decoration Day Oration of 1882, Ingersoll alone
- chiseled an allegorical group, which, in perfection at least, is
- its companion-piece: --
-
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- INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
-
- "Pity pointed to the scarred and bleeding backs of slaves;
- Mercy heard the sobs of mothers reft of babes, and justice held
- aloft the scales, in which one drop of blood shed by a master's
- lash, outweighed a nation's gold."
-
- Having included the preceding, it would be very hard to omit
- the closing sentences of A Vision of War: --
-
- "Those heroes are dead. They died for liberty -- they died for
- us. They are at rest. They sleep in the land they made free, under
- the flag they rendered stainless, under the solemn pines, the sad
- hemlocks, the tearful willows, and the embracing vines. They sleep
- beneath the shadows od clouds, careless alike of sunshine or of
- storm, each in the windowless palace of Rest. Earth may run red
- with other wars -- they are at peace. In the midst of battle, in
- the roar of conflict, they found the serenity of death. I have one
- sentiment for soldiers living and dead: Cheers for the living;
- tears for the dead."
-
- What majesty! What harmony! What soulful perfection! -- "under
- the solemn pines, the sad hemlocks, the tearful willows, and the
- embracing vines"; and "in the windowless palace of Rest." One must
- indeed be faintly impressible to beauty, who should hope to do
- justice to the author of such words as these.
-
- Were he not necessarily aware of the sad depth to which the
- noxious roots of religious prejudice penetrate the mental soil of
- mediocrity, the justly appreciative reader of the selections here
- quoted or mentioned would, despairing, wonder at the comparatively
- meager praise elsewhere bestowed upon their author. And with a
- reviewer who should utterly ignore the source of so many matchless
- thoughts, such reader could have but little patience. Suppose that
- the spirit of an absolutely unprejudiced literary critic, visiting
- this earth from another sphere, should find in some "Library of the
- World's Best Literature" liberal selections from America's
- recognized literati, with no mention of Life, A Vision of War,
- Shakespeare, or any of the "tributes." What, in the reader's
- judgment, would be that angel's opinion of literary editors? Yet
- this is precisely what would be found. There are in our libraries
- to-day compilations containing no reference to Ingersoll, but
- including productions of scores of writers who are all but
- commonplace, and whose combined efforts could never have resulted
- in even one of his masterpieces.
-
- He shared with poets and philosophers the ability to express,
- with appositeness, lucidity, and beauty, the utmost in a line. He
- was gifted to an extraordinary degree with the phrasal and the
- epigrammatic faculties. Definitions, descriptions, comparisons,
- illustrations, generalizations, fell from his lips as fall the
- ripened fruits from autumn's laden boughs. Thus he referred to the
- bygone centuries as --
-
- "The withered leaves of time that strew the desert of the
- past."
-
- In the aurora borealis, he beheld --
-
-
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- INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
-
- "The morning of the North when the glittering lances pierce
- the shield of night."
-
- He was --
-
- "Touched and saddened by autumn, the grace and poetry of
- death."
-
- Where others saw merely the snowflakes blown singly or in
- flurries, he could see --
-
- "the infantry of the snows and the cavalry of the wild blast."
-
- Than this it would be difficult to find in English a more
- strikingly suggestive figure.
-
- With a delicacy rivaling Shelley's reference to the lids of
- the sleeping Ianthe, he described the breast of woman as --
-
- "Life's drifted font, blue-veined and fair, where perfect
- peace finds perfect form."
-
- Condemning alike the practices of the "insane ascetic" and the
- "fool of pleasure," he defined temperance as --
-
- "The golden path along the strip of virtue that lies between
- the deserts of extremes."
-
- The secret of his countless tributes to manhood, heroism, and
- genius is revealed in this line: --
-
- "Gratitude is the fairest flower that sheds its perfume in the
- heart."
-
- There was in Ingersoll the marvelous extravagance of Hugo --
- of Shakespeare. Referring to the hopefulness of a beautiful but
- helpless girl -- a paralytic -- whom he had visited, he said that
-
- "her brave and cheerful spirit over wreck and ruin of her body
- like morning on the desert."
-
- While the selections thus far quoted, -- particularly in the
- present chapter, -- are extraordinarily rich in epigrammatic
- quality, they are nevertheless inadequate in doing full justice to
- Ingersoll's genius in the latter regard.
-
- Our philosopher was not one of those individuals who sit down
- deliberately to write epigrams. Had he been such, he doubtless
- would not now be creditable with a greater number of really
- noteworthy sayings than any other American. Like Burns's poem's,
- Ingersoll's epigrams wrote themselves.
-
- In the one that follows, we are reminded, by the way, of the
- "ploughman poet's" partiality for common sense and real genius, in
- contradistinction to mere book-learning and acquired talent: --
-
- "For the most part, colleges are places where pebbles are
- polished and diamonds are dimmed."
-
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-
- INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
-
- In our next selection, we find cause to wonder at Ingersoll's
- intimate knowledge of things in which he never indulged: --
-
- "A brazen falsehood and a timid truth are the parents of
- compromise."
-
- And --
-
- "Apology is the prelude to retreat."
-
- In illustration of the truth that great cares and sorrows are
- rare with most of us, -- that trivialities make up the bulk of
- life's burdens, -- he said: --
-
- "The traveler is bothered more with dust than mountains."
-
- He observed that --
-
- "The road is short to anything we fear,"
-
- That --
-
- "Joy lives in the house beyond the one we reach,"
-
- And that --
-
- "Hope is the only bee that makes honey without flowers."
-
- Ingersoll uttered in the fewer, shortest words the profoundest
- philosophic truths, -- the wisest ethical precepts.
-
- Than the following sixteen syllables what pompous array of
- sentences and paragraphs could more truly express the conclusion of
- every candid man who has really thought? --
-
- "The golden bridge of life from gloom emerges and on shadow
- rests."
-
- He was the philosopher, not only of moral, but of mental
- honesty, -- of perfect intellectual veracity; and he observed that
-
- "Cunning plates fraud with the gold of honesty, and veneers
- vice with virtue."
-
- But that, nevertheless --
-
- "There is nothing shrewder in this world than intelligent
- honesty. Perfect candor is sword and shield."
-
- And he declared that --
-
- "Nobility is a question of character, not of birth.
-
- "Honor cannot be received as alms -- it must be earned.
-
- "It is the brow that makes the wreath of glory green."
-
- He was the philosopher of right: --
-
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- INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
-
- "Every man in the right is my brother."
-
- Although painfully aware that "innocence is not a perfect
- shield" against the aggressiveness of evil, he still asserted that
-
- "The gem of the brain is the innocence of the soul."
-
- He was the philosopher of human love -- a believer in its
- protecting and redeeming powers: --
-
- "Vice lives either before Love is born, or after Love is
- dead."
-
- In the following line, conscience comes to solace the victim
- of unmerited neglect: --
-
- "It is better to deserve without receiving than to receive
- without deserving."
-
- He was the philosopher of freedom: --
-
- "In the realm of Freedom, waste is husbandry. He who puts
- chains upon the body of another shackles his own soul."
-
- He was the philosopher of sympathy. He believed that no
- character could be so lofty that it would not be elevated by
- pitying even the very lowest: --
-
- "We rise by raising others -- and he who stoops above the
- fallen, stands erect."
-
- To those who would seek life's goal solely in the heights of
- fame, he said: --
-
- "Happiness dwells in the valleys with the shadows."
-
- He condenses the conclusions of modern physical science into
- these nine words: --
-
- "A grain of sand can defy all the gods."
-
- In the following line our language is enriched with a new
- definition: --
-
- "Wisdom is the science of happiness."
-
- To the morally short-sighted, he utters this warning: --
-
- "He loads the dice against himself, who scores a point against
- the right."
-
- Is there in progressive literature a more substantial line
- than the following? --
-
- "Fear is the dungeon of the mind."
-
- He declares that --
-
-
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-
- INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
-
- "Intellectual freedom is only the right to be honest."
-
- This is one of the subtlest and profoundest truths. A person
- who has not the right to express his honest thoughts has not the
- right to be honest.
-
- But in none of the preceding epigrams, perhaps, is there
- stronger proof of profound and subtle intellect than in the
- following fragment of an argument for the doctrine of necessity: --
-
- "To the extent that we have wants, we are not free. To the
- extent that we do not have wants, we do not act."
-
- And yet it has been said that the author of these lines was
- not a thinker!
-
- It is barely necessary to state, that, making due allowance,
- in many cases, for unavoidable incompleteness, the selections which
- have been included in this chapter, and in this work as a whole,
- are, in my judgment, fairly representative of the artistic and
- intellectual Ingersoll. Should they not seem fully to justify my
- estimate of him, I could only wish that they might at least awaken
- sufficient interest to prompt their unbiased comparison with an
- equal number of selections, of kindred nature, from some reformer,
- lawyer, patriot, philosopher, orator, and poet whose title to
- enduring fame is universally recognized.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- **** ****
-
- Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
-
- The Bank of Wisdom Inc. is a collection of the most thoughtful,
- scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
- suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
- Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
- nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
- religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
- the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
- that America can again become what its Founders intended --
-
- The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
-
- The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
- hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
- and information for today. If you have such books please contact
- us, we need to give them back to America.
-
- **** ****
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-
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