|
HAVE IMAGINATIONS BODY?
In the literature of science I read of marvellously delicate instruments
devised to make dear to the intellect the mode of operation of forces invisible
to the eye, how Alpha rays, Gamma rays, or the vibrations in metal or plant are
measured, and I sigh for some device to aid the intellect in solving difficult
problems of psychology. I ask myself how may I ascertain with a precision of
knowledge which would convince others whether the figures of vision, imagination
or dream are two or three dimensional. The figures cast on the screen in a
theatre are on the flat, but have all the illusion of motion, distance, shadow,
light and form. The figures of human memory I am content to accept as being in
two dimensions. They are imprinted by waves of light on the retina, and cast
upon some screen in the brain. But I am forced by my own experience
and that of others to believe that nature has a memory, and that it is accessible to us.
But this memory cannot be recorded as ours through bodily organs of sight or
hearing, nor can imagination make clear to me how any medium could exist in
nature which would reflect upon itself as a mirror reflects, or as human vision
reflects, an impression intelligible to us of what is passing. If there were
such a medium, acting as a mirror to nature or life, and retaining the
impression, it must be universal as the supposed ęther of the scientist; and
how could impressions on this medium intelligible to us be focussed as the
vibrations of light are through the needlepoint of the eye to record a single
view-point? In our visions of the memory of nature we see undistorted figures.
If we could imagine the whole body to be sensitive to light, as is that single
point in the brain on which the optic nerves converge, what kind of vision would
we have? The earth under foot, objects right, left, above and below, would all
clamour in various monstrous shapes for attention. The feet would see from one
angle, the hands from another, back and front would confuse us; so I cannot
imagine the recording power in nature as reflecting like a mirror,
and retaining and recording the impressions. But we have
another mode of memory in ourselves which might suggest the mode of memory in
nature, that by which our subjective life is recorded. Mood, thought, passion,
ecstasy, all are preserved for us, can be summoned up and re-created. How is
this memory maintained? Are we continuously casting off by way of emanation an
image of ourselves instant by instant, infinitesimally delicate but yet
complete? Is every motion of mind and body preserved so that a complete
facsimile, an effigy in three dimensions, exists of every moment in our being.
Is the memory of nature like that? Is it by a continuous emanation of itself it
preserves for itself its own history? Does this hypothesis lay too heavy a
burden on the substance of the universe as we know it? I do not like to use
arguments the validity of which I am not myself able to establish. But I might
recall that an eminent thinker in science, Balfour Stewart, supposed of the ęther
that there was a continual transference of energy to it from the visible
universe, and that this stored-up energy might form the basis of an immortal
memory for man and nature.
The conception did not lay too heavy a burden on matter as he imagined it.
But what is matter? Is it not pregnant every atom of it with the infinite? Even
in visible nature does not every minutest point of space reflect as a microcosm
the macrocosm of earth and heaven? This minute point of space occupied by my eye
as I stand on the mountain has poured into it endless vistas of manifolded
mountains, vales, woods, cities, glittering seas, clouds and an infinite
blueness. Wherever I move, whether by rays or waves of light, from the farthest
star to the nearest leaf with its complexity of vein and tint, there comes to
that pinpoint of space, the eye, a multitudinous vision. If every pin-point of
external space is dense yet not blind with immensity, what more miracle of
subtlety, of ethereal delicacy, could be affirmed of matter and be denied
because it strains belief? In that acorn which lies at my feet there is a tiny
cell which has in it a memory of the oak from the beginning of earth, and a
power coiled in it which can beget from itself the full majestic being of the
oak. From that tiny fountain by some miracle can spring another cell, and cell
after cell will be born, will go on dividing, begetting, building up from each other unnumbered myriads of
cells, all controlled by some mysterious power latent in the first, so that in
an hundred years they will, obeying the plan of the tiny architect, have built
up "the green-robed senators of mighty woods." There is nothing
incredible in the assumption that every cell in the body is wrapped about with
myriad memories. He who attributes least mystery to matter is furthest from
truth, and he nighest who conjectures the Absolute to be present in fullness of
being in the atom. If I am reproached for the supposition that the soul of earth
preserves memory of itself by casting off instant by instant enduring images of
its multitudinous life. I am only saying of nature in its fullness what visible
nature is doing in its own fashion without cessation. What problem of mind,
vision, imagination or dream do I solve by this hypothesis? I have been
perplexed as an artist by the obedience of the figures of imagination to
suggestion from myself. Let me illustrate my perplexity. I imagine a group of
white-robed Arabs standing on a sandy hillock and they seem of such a noble
dignity that I desire to paint them. With a restlessness akin to that which makes a
portrait-painter arrange and rearrange his sitter, until he gets the pose which
satisfies him, I say to myself, "I wish they would raise their arms above
their heads," and at the suggestion all the figures in my vision raise
their hands as if in salutation of the dawn. I see other figures in imagination
which attract me as compositions. There may be a figure sitting down and I think
it would compose better if it was turned in another direction, and that figure
will obey my suggestion, not always, but at times it will; and again and again
when I who paint almost entirely from what is called imagination, and who never
use models, watch a figure in my vision it will change its motions as I will it.
Now this is to me amazing. The invention and actual drawing of the intricate
pattern of light and shade involved by the lifting of the hands of my imaginary
Arabs would be considerable. My brain does not by any swift action foresee in
detail the pictorial consequences involved by the lifting of arms, but yet by a
single wish, a simple mental suggestion, the intricate changes are made in the
figures of imagination as they would be if real Arabs stood before me
and raised their hands at my call. If I ask
a crowd of people to whom I speak to change their position so that they may the
better hear me I am not astonished at the infinite complexity of the change I
bring about, because I realise that the will in each one has mastery over the
form by some miracle, and the message runs along nerve and muscle, and the
simple wish brings about the complex change. But how do I lay hold of the
figures in dream or imagination? By what miracle does the simple wish bring
about the complex changes? It may now be seen why I asked for some means by
which I might ascertain whether the forms in dream or imagination are two or
three dimensional. If they are on the flat, if they are human memories merely,
vibrations of stored-up sunlight fixed in some way in the brain as a photograph
is fixed, the alteration of these by a simple wish involves incredibilities. I
find Freud, referring to a dream he had, saying carelessly that it was made up
by a combination of memories, but yet the architecture of the dream seemed to be
coherent and not a patchwork. It had motion of its own. Wonderful. indeed, that
the wonder of what was written about so easily was not seen! How could we imagine even
the mightiest conscious artistic intelligence, with seership into all the
memories of a life, taking the vibrations which constituted this hand, and
adjusting them to the vibrations which made that other arm, or even taking the
vibrations which registered a complete figure and amending these so that the
figure moved with different gestures from the first gestures recorded as memory?
If such a picture was made up even from life-size images it would be a patchwork
and the patches would show everywhere. But the dream figure or the figure of
imagination will walk about with authentic motions and undistorted anatomies.
Does not the effort to imagine such recombinations even by the mightiest
conscious intellect involve incredibilities? At least it is so with the artist
who watches form with a critical eye. How much greater the incredibility if we
suppose there was no conscious artist, but that all this authentic imagery of
imagination or dream came together without an intelligence to guide it? But how
do we better matters if we assume that the figures in dream or imagination are
three dimensional, and that they have actual body and organisation
however ethereal, delicate or subtle? If they are
shadows or effigies emanated from living organisms, and are complete in their
phantasmal nature within and without it is possible to imagine life laying hold
of them. It is conceivable that the will may direct their motions even as at a
word of command soldiers will turn and march. That is why I suggest that the
memory of nature may be by way of emanation or shadow of life and form, and why
when we see such images they are not the monstrous complexities they would be if
they were reflections on some universal ęther spread everywhere taking colour
from everything at every possible angle and remaining two dimensional. The
hypothesis that everything in nature, every living being, is a continuous
fountain of phantasmal effigies of itself would explain the way in which ruins
build up their antique life to the eye of the seer, so that he sees the people
of a thousand years ago in their cities which are now desolate, and the
dark-skinned merchants unrolling their bales in the market, and this is why they
appear as some one has said, "thinking the thought and performing the
deed." If we have access to such memories, and if they have organism within as well as without, can we
not imagine will or desire of ours constraining them? Can we not imagine such
forms swept into the vortex of a dreaming soul swayed by the sea of passion in
which they exist and acting according to suggestion? And if we suppose that a
deeper being of ours has wider vision than the waking consciousness, and can use
the memories, not only of this plane of being, but of the forms peculiar to
mid-world and heaven-world, this might help to solve some of the perplexities
aroused in those who are intent and vigilant observers of their own dreams and
imaginations. Continually in my analysis of the figures I see I am forced to
follow them beyond the transitory life I know and to speculate upon the being of
the Ever Living. I think there is no half-way house between the spiritual and
the material where the intellect can dwell; and if we find we have our being in
a universal life we must alter our values, change all our ideas until they
depend upon and are in harmony with that sole cause of all that is.

|
|