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view; the ultra…optimistic form of the once…born philosophy



thinks we may treat evil by the method of ignoring。  Let a man



who; by fortunate health and circumstances; escapes the suffering



of any great amount of evil in his own person; also close his



eyes to it as it exists in the wider universe outside his private



experience; and he will be quit of it altogether; and can sail



through life happily on a healthy…minded basis。  But we saw in



our lectures on melancholy how precarious this attempt



necessarily is。  Moreover it is but for the individual; and



leaves the evil outside of him; unredeemed and unprovided for in



his philosophy。







No such attempt can be a GENERAL solution of the problem; and to



minds of sombre tinge; who naturally feel life as a tragic



mystery; such optimism is a shallow dodge or mean evasion。  It



accepts; in lieu of a real deliverance; what is a lucky personal



accident merely; a cranny to escape by。 It leaves the general



world unhelped and still in the clutch of Satan。  The real



deliverance; the twice…born folk insist; must be of universal



application。  Pain and wrong and death must be fairly met and



overcome in higher excitement; or else their sting remains



essentially unbroken。  If one has ever taken the fact of the



prevalence of tragic death in this world's history fairly into



his mindfreezing; drowning entombment alive; wild beasts; worse



men; and hideous diseaseshe can with difficulty; it seems to



me; continue his own career of worldly prosperity without



suspecting that he may all the while not be really inside the



game; that he may lack the great initiation。







Well; this is exactly what asceticism thinks; and it voluntarily



takes the initiation。  Life is neither farce nor genteel comedy;



it says; but something we must sit at in mourning garments;



hoping its bitter taste will purge us of our folly。 The wild and



the heroic are indeed such rooted parts of it that



healthy…mindedness pure and simple; with its sentimental



optimism; can hardly be regarded by any thinking man as a serious



solution。  Phrases of neatness; cosiness; and comfort can never



be an answer to the sphinx's riddle。







In these remarks I am leaning only upon mankind's common instinct



for reality; which in point of fact has always held the world to



be essentially a theatre for heroism。  In heroism; we feel;



life's supreme mystery is hidden。  We tolerate no one who has no



capacity whatever for it in any direction。  On the other hand; no



matter what a man's frailties otherwise may be; if he be willing



to risk death; and still more if he suffer it heroically; in the



service he has chosen; the fact consecrates him forever。 



Inferior to ourselves in this or that way; if yet we cling to



life; and he is able 〃to fling it away like a flower〃 as caring



nothing for it; we account him in the deepest way our born



superior。  Each of us in his own person feels that a high…hearted



indifference to life would expiate all his shortcomings。







The metaphysical mystery; thus recognized by common sense; that



he who feeds on death that feeds on men possesses life



supereminently and excellently; and meets best the secret demands



of the universe; is the truth of which asceticism has been the



faithful champion。  The folly of the cross; so inexplicable by



the intellect; has yet its indestructible vital meaning。







Representatively; then; and symbolically; and apart from the



vagaries into which the unenlightened intellect of former times



may have let it wander; asceticism must; I believe; be



acknowledged to go with the profounder way of handling the gift



of existence。  Naturalistic optimism is mere syllabub and



flattery and sponge…cake in comparison。 The practical course of



action for us; as religious men; would therefore; it seems to me;



not be simply to turn our backs upon the ascetic impulse; as most



of us to…day turn them; but rather to discover some outlet for it



of which the fruits in the way of privation and hardship might be



objectively useful。  The older monastic asceticism occupied



itself with pathetic futilities; or terminated in the mere



egotism of the individual; increasing his own perfection。'219' 



But is it not possible for us to discard most of these older



forms of mortification; and yet find saner channels for the



heroism which inspired them?







'219' 〃The vanities of all others may die out; but the vanity of



a saint as regards his sainthood is hard indeed to wear away。〃



Ramakrishna his Life and Sayings; 1899; p。 172。















Does not; for example; the worship of material luxury and wealth;



which constitutes so large a portion of the 〃spirit〃 of our age;



make somewhat for effeminacy and unmanliness?  Is not the



exclusively sympathetic and facetious way in which most children



are brought up to…dayso different from the education of a



hundred years ago; especially in evangelical circlesin danger;



in spite of its many advantages; of developing a certain



trashiness of fibre?  Are there not hereabouts some points of



application for a renovated and revised ascetic discipline?







Many of you would recognize such dangers; but would point to



athletics; militarism; and individual and national enterprise and



adventure as the remedies。  These contemporary ideals are quite



as remarkable for the energy with which they make for heroic



standards of life; as contemporary religion is remarkable for the



way in which it neglects them。'220'  War and adventure assuredly



keep all who engage in them from treating themselves too



tenderly。  They demand such incredible efforts; depth beyond



depth of exertion; both in degree and in duration; that the whole



scale of motivation alters。  Discomfort and annoyance; hunger and



wet; pain and cold; squalor and filth; cease to have any



deterrent operation whatever。  Death turns into a commonplace



matter; and its usual power to check our action vanishes。 With



the annulling of these customary inhibitions; ranges of new



energy are set free; and life seems cast upon a higher plane of



power。







'220' 〃When a church has to be run by oysters; ice…cream; and



fun;〃 I read in an American religious paper; 〃you may be sure



that it is running away from Christ。〃  Such; if one may judge



by appearances; is the present plight of many of our churches。















The beauty of war in this respect is that it is so congruous with



ordinary human nature。  Ancestral evolution has made us all



potential warriors; so the most insignificant individual; when



thrown into an army in the field; is weaned from whatever excess



of tenderness toward his precious person he may bring with him;



and may easily develop into a monster of insensibility。















But when we compare the military type of self…severity with that



of the ascetic saint; we find a world…wide difference in all



their spiritual concomitants。







〃'Live and let live;'〃 writes a clear…headed Austrian officer;



〃is no device for an army。  Contempt for one's own comrades; for



the troops of the enemy; and; above all; fierce contempt for



one's own person; are what war demands of every one。  Far better



is it for an army to be too savage; too cruel; too barbarous;



than to possess too much sentimentality and human reasonableness。







If the soldier is to be good for anything as a soldier; he must



be exactly the opposite of a reasoning and thinking man。  The



measure of goodness in him is his possible use in war。  War; and



even peace; require of the soldier absolutely peculiar standards



of morality。  The recruit brings with him common moral notions;



of which he must seek immediately to get rid。  For him victory;



success; must be EVERYTHING。  The most barbaric tendencies in men



come to life again in war; and for war's uses they are



incommensurably good。〃'221'







'221' C。 V。 B。 K。:  Friedens…und Kriegs…moral der Heere。  Quoted



by Hamon:  Psychologie du Militaire professional; 1895; p。 xli。















These words are of course literally true。  The immediate aim of



the soldier's life is; as Moltke said; destruction; and nothing



but destruction; and whatever constructions wars result in are



remote and non…military。  Consequently the soldier cannot



train himself to be too feelingless to all those usual sympathies



and respects; whether for persons or for things; that make for



conservation。  Y
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