First to sound, and ever sound, the cry with thee O soul,
The past! the past! the past!
While the world of gain and appearance and mirth goes on,
So soon what is over forgotten, and waves wash the imprints
off the sand,
Still there will come a time when nothing will be of more
interest than authentic reminiscences of the past;
While memories subtly play, the past is vivid as ever,
(I warn you that in a little while others will find their
past in you and your times.)
What is the present after all but a growth out of the past,
the legitimate birth of the past?
As a projectile form’d, impell’d, passing a certain line,
still keeps on,
So the present is utterly form’d, impell’d by the past.
Ages, precedents, have long been accumulating,
Each result and glory retracing itself and nestling close,
always obligated—
As some perennial tree out of its roots, the present on the
past,
The countless years drawing themselves onward and arrived at
these years,
Curious years each emerging from that which preceded it,
The many issuing cycles from their precedent minute.
People think an event
consists of itself alone—
But what event is there but involves a thousand elements
scarcely dreamed of?
No consummation exists without being from some long previous
consummation, and that from some other,
Without the farthest conceivable one coming a bit nearer the
beginning than any.
What growth or advent is there that does not date back,
back, until lost—perhaps its most tantalizing clues lost—in the receding
horizons of the infinite greatness of the past,
The dark unfathom’d retrospect—the teeming gulf—the sleepers
and the shadows!
I look inward upon myself, I look around upon our own times,
and how can I complain of the past?
Shall I denounce my own ancestry, the very ground under my
feet that has been so long building?
I do not condemn either the past or the present,
Of present and past, I do not blame them for doing what they
have done and are doing,
I know that they are and were what they could not but be.
No doubt it’s all just as well as it is;
It all came about according to what they describe as the
ordinances of God—
There’s no chance in it.
I assert that all past days were what they must have been,
And that they could no-how have been better than they were,
And that today is what it must be, and could no-how be
better.
Each of us is inevitable,
Slowly and surely we have passed on to this,
And slowly and surely we yet pass on.
It is as useless to quarrel with history as with the
weather—
But we can prepare for the weather and prepare for history.
The study of history offers claims to all men, which are
perhaps superior to the claims of any other study. I find I can write, master,
cope with affairs fifty years old better than with those occurring now—I get
more completely the sense of proportion.
The thing to have is the truth,
Not to be satisfied even with the spirit of truth, but to
demand the fact itself,
The divine unaided, uncircumlocuted, unmanipulated fact,
However bare, however it forbids;
Only in an adherence to this is the safety of history.
But my experience with life makes me afraid of the
historian. The historian, if not a liar himself, is largely at the mercy of
liars. By far the greatest part of the old statistics of history are only
approaches to the truth and are often discrepant and suspicious.
A good deal that gets written once is repeated and repeated,
Until the future comes to swear by it as gospel,
Passing traditions and exaggerations down from one
generation to another unquestioned;
After a while we begin to think even the lies must be true—
It is a lamentable twist in history.
To judge of history as if all could be expressed in one
person! I am very impatient of stories which imply the concentration of all
historical meanings in single eminent persons. All along in history all sorts
of stories have been fathered, mothered, in celebres. They are considered safer
when you have given them some individual to nestle in.
After a man disappears, the mists begin to gather,
Then fallacy of one degree or another,
Then utter myth, irresistibly mystifying everything.
I often reflect how very different every fellow must have
been from the fellow we come upon in the myths, with the surroundings, the
incidents, the push and pull of the concrete moment, all left out or wrongly
set forth.
It is hard to extract a man’s real self—any man—from such a
chaotic mass—from such historical debris.
Could a truthful history of anything, of any individual, be
told?
While I accept the records I think we know very little of
the actual.
The best and most important part of history cannot be told,
It eludes being examined or printed,
It is above even dates and reliable information—
The best poetry is the real history.
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