The man who does not believe in
magic is an ignoramus or a fool. Perhaps
he regards Nature as a machine; he himself may for aught I know be a machine,
but I am very sure that Nature is none. She, on the contrary, is a wizard, a
witch rather, and works always by incantations and spells.
Ask a lover what makes him the
slave of his mistress, the fond puppet of her whims and caprices; and he will
shake his head and vow that it must be because he has been bewitched. And that
his explanation is literally true, I have not the shadow of a doubt. Nature in
the person of some little piece of incarnate femininity has bewitched him — for
her own relentless if not inscrutable ends.
Ask the shades of Napoleon’s
devout followers what made them smile in their death-agony, feeling that the
price was a small one to pay for a glance or a word of commendation from the
man for whose greater glory they died.
- “He had a way with him,” they
will tell you; “you felt that he was not as other men.”
Dr. Bucke, the Canadian physician who in 1877 sought out the broken-down poet of democracy at Camden, relates how “he was almost amazed by the beauty and majesty of his person and the gracious air of purity that surrounded and permeated him.”
Dr. Bucke, the Canadian physician who in 1877 sought out the broken-down poet of democracy at Camden, relates how “he was almost amazed by the beauty and majesty of his person and the gracious air of purity that surrounded and permeated him.”
In the brief interview that
followed Walt Whitman said nothing memorable, nothing at any rate that Bucke
remembered, but “a sort of spiritual intoxication set in. . . . It seemed to me
at that time certain that he was either actually a god or in some sense clearly
and entirely preterhuman. Be all this as it may, it is certain that the hour
spent that day with the poet was the turning point of my life.”
Clearly here, too, there is magic
at work; the physician was, as with little sense of the significance of the
word we so often say, “enchanted” with or by the old gray bard; he beheld him
with englamoured eyes. And he became thenceforth his willing slave.
“Perhaps it is,” writes Frances
Forbes Robertson, “that from those whom the angel of success follows there emanates
some spring of life that flows into men’s hearts; how else can we account for
the hero-worship that has always attended the triumphant?”
You may object that Walt Whitman
was hardly a successful man. He would not have agreed with you, nor do I.
All men of genius believe in
magic, for all such men practice it in their works. Not formal magic, perhaps,
although many of them (Goethe, Leibnitz, Newton, among others) have dabbled in
that. Every great poem, picture, symphony or drama is an embodiment of
concentrated and rhythmic will, in virtue of which it exercises occult power
upon all who are in any sort of affinity with its creator.
Browning, no doubt, had in mind
this magical function of Art when he made Abt Vogler say of musical
improvisation:
Consider it well: each tone of our scale in itself is nought;
It is every here in the world— loud, soft, and all is said:
Give it to me to use. I mix it with two in my thought:
And there! Ye have heard and seen: consider and bow the head!
What do we mean when we speak of
the “charm” of such or such a lyric, that ineffable quality of metre or
phrasing wherein by magical power has been imprisoned in permanently active-form
the spiritual essence of a transient poetic mood?
It is no mere accident that has
applied to such qualities a title pregnant with occult associations and significance. It is not only poems that have “charm”; we all
know people of both sexes who attract others in a degree out of all proportion
to their formal beauty or ability.
This power is perhaps commoner
among women than among men. “Wherever they go,” says a modem writer, “some women
naturally raise the pulse of life to quicker beating, till the paths they trace
are marked by a vivider life, like the bright green circles where the fairies
tread.” A beautiful symbol, to convey a fine and penetrating thought!
Readers of Ibsen may recall how
his Master Builder attributes his phenomenal success in his profession to a
mysterious power of constraining unseen helpers to work on his behalf. One
would like to question a number of very fortunate people as to whether they had
any dim or clear consciousness of the possession of some such gift.
An objection that occurs to me is
that some fortunate individuals I have known have not been strong characters — rather
the reverse, easy-going, debonnaire. Perhaps there are two types of good luck,
in one of which the individual constrains the elementals to work for him, while
in the other they work for love.
Ibsen’s hero would be an example
of the former class; and his fate suggests that such individuals are apt to end
tragically: the elementals are proverbially treacherous and capricious, ever on
the alert for an opportunity of escape and revenge. Who does not remember the
eagerness of Ariel for the hour of his promised release?
Nature in her dealings with men
and women resembles those Indian jugglers who by some traditional art know how
to make folk see what they will them to see. For every age-period, she invests
with appropriate glamour those objects to which she desires to attract our
eager interest, so that we see them not as they actually are, but as she wishes
that they shall appear.
Things that might unduly distract
our attention or lead us astray from our destined path she conceals with a veil
of illusion, so that they do not exist for us until their time has come.
As the glamour fades from one set
of toys, it passes to another; as one veil of illusion lifts, it reveals
another beyond. On her favourite children she bestows a share of her own
wizardry, so that, as I have said, they practise informal magic in all their works
and ways.
These are the men of genius, the
mere utterance of whose names, when those who bore them have long vanished from
our midst, can thrill us with a sudden sense of mystery and power. These are
the lovely and beloved women, Helen of Troy, Cleopatra, Francesca da Rimini,
Mary Stuart, to think of whom is to be transported instantly from the dull earth
of commonplace actuality to the seventh heaven of romance.
Some day we shall understand these
things, be able to demonstrate the super-potency of the emanations of the eye
of genius, to estimate the passional quality and rank of a given temperament or
apply the principles of spectrum-analysis to the classification of souls.
There is a chemistry of human
affinities, a law determining the subtlest most occult manifestations of human
magnetism; the charm of a given personality upon another is theoretically
capable of exact statement in terms of a mathematical formula.
Meanwhile, I repeat: The man who
does not believe in magic is an ignoramus or a fool.
(Occult Review, June 1911, p.312-314)
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