ORIGINAL PREFACE TO “THE DOUBLE AXE”
Since my verses have occasionally been spoken of as im-
moral, anti-religious, (and lately even, a bitter blow, hu-
manist!)—-it occurs to me that section 45 of part II of
“The Double Axe” might be read as preface to this vol-
ume, It seems to express quite briefly the intentions im-
plicit in these poeme and previous ones. I take the trouble
of this note, not for the sake of the verses, but because it
seems to me that the attitude they suggest—the devalua-
tion of human-centered illusions, the turning outward
from man to what is boundlessly greater—is a next step
in human development; and an essential condition of free-
dom, and of spiritual (i.e. moral and vital) sanity; clearly
somewhat lacking in the present world.
e * *
The first part of “The Double Axe” was written
during the war, and finished a year before the war ended.
The earliest of the shorter poems were written before
America officially entered the war; but it had long been
evident that the war was coming, and that our govern-
ment was promoting it—not with threats, like the Ger-
mans, but with pressure and personal promises—and
would take part in it. Yet it was equally evident that
America’s intervention in the European war of 1914 had
been bad for America and really fatal for Europe; aa it
will be clear a few years from now that our intervention
in the war of 1989 has been even terribly worse in effect.
But this book is not mainly concerned with the war,
and perhaps it ought to be called “The Inhumanist”
171rather than “The Double Axe.” It presents, more explic-
itly than previous poems of mine, a new attitude, a new
manner of thought and feeling, which came to me at the
end of the war of 1914, and has since been tested in the
confusions of peace and a second world-war, and the hate-
ful approach of a third; and I believe it has truth and
value. It is based on a recognition of the astonishing
beauty of things, and on a rational acceptance of the fact
that mankind is neither central nor important in the uni-
verse; our viees and abilities are insignificant as our hap-
piness. We know this, of course, but it does not appear
that any previous one of the ten thousand religions and
philosophies has realized it. An infant feels himself to be
central and of primary importance; an adult knows
better; it seema time that the human race attained to an
adult habit of thought in this regard. The attitude is
neither misanthropic ner pessimist nor irreligious, though
two or three people have said so, and may again; but it
involves a certain detachment.
A man whose mental processes continually distort and
prevent each other, so that his energy is devoted to intro-
version and the civil wars of the mind, is an insane man,
and we pity him. But the human race is similarly insane.
More than half its energy, and at the present civilized
level nine-tenths of its energy, is devoted to self-interfer-
ence, self-frustration, self-incitement, self-tickling, self-
worship. The waste is enormous; we are able to commit
and endure it because we are so firmly established on the
planet; life is actually so easy, that it requires only a
slight fraction of our common energies. ‘The rest we dis-
charge onto each other—in conflict and charity, love,
jealousy, hatred, competition, government, vanity and
172cruelty, and that puerile passion the will to power—or
for amusement, Certainly human relationships are necea-
sary and desirable; but not to this extent. Thia is a kind
of collective onanism, pathetic and ridiculous, or at no-
blest a tragic incest, and so T have represented it.
But we have all this excess energy: what should we do
with it? We could take a walk, for instance, and admire
landscape: that is better than killing one’s brother in war
or trying to be superior to one’s neighbor in time of
peace. We could dig our gardens; the occupation that
seemed to Voltaire’s man, after he had surveyed the world,
least foolish, We could, according to cur abilities, give
ourselves to science and art, not to impress somebody, but
for love of the beauty that each discloses. We could even
be quiet occasionally.
Better than such discourse doth silence long,
Long barren silence square with my desire.
We must always be prepared to resist intrusion; we might
be quiet in the intervals.
Well: do I really believe that people will be content to
take a walk and admire the beauty of things? Certainly
pot, I am epeaking of a racial disease; it was in the mon-
key blood we derive from, and no doubt it is incurable;
but whoever will can minimize it in his own life, Thoreau’s
life was not a bad one; nor Lao-taze’s. The influential
thoughts and bocks were produced by men meditating
alone; and they were not produced in order to be influ-
ential, nor “te serve humanity,” nor for praise or pay,
but because the mind drove. The great work in science was
done by men working alone:——Copernicus, Leeuwenhoek,
Darwin; Newton and Einstein, in youth, when they did
173their work. The great theorists of atomic stracture worked
as individuals; only when their work was to be used for
mass inurder a tight aseociation became necessary.
To sum up the matter :—“Love one another” is a high
commandment, but it polarizes the mind; love on the sur-
face implies hate in the depth (Dante who hated well be-
cause he loved), as the history of Christendom bitterly
proves. “Love one another” ought to be balanced, at least,
by a colder saying—this too a counsel of perfection, ie. a
direction-giver, a guide though it cannot be a rule—
“Turn away from each other”—to that great presence of
which humanity is only a squirming particle. To persons
of Christian faith, if any should read this, ] would point
out that Jesus himself, intuitive master of psychology, in-
voked this balance. “Love your neighbor as yourself”—
that is, not excessively, if you are adult and normal—but
“God with all your heart, mind and soul.” Turn outward
from each other, so far as need and kindness permit, to
the vast life and inexhaustible beauty beyond humanity.
This is not a slight matter, but an essential condition of
freedom, and of moral and vital sanity.
It is understood that this attitude is particularly un-
acceptable at present, being opposed not only by tradi-
tion, but by all the currents of the time. We ate now com-
pletely trapped in the nets of envy, intrigue, corruption,
compulsion, eventual murder, that are eaJled interna-
tional politics. We have always been expansive, predatory
and missionary; and we love to lie to ourselves. We have
entered the period of civil struggles and emerging Caesar-
ism that binds republics with brittle iron; civilization
everywhere is in its age of decline and abnormal violence.
Men are going to be frightened and herded, increasingly,
174into lumps ard masses. A frightened man cannot think;
and the masa mind does not want truth:—only “dem-
ocratie” or “Aryan” or “Marxian” or other-colored
“truth” :——it wants its own voices. However, the truth will
not die; and persons who have lost everything, in the cul-
mination of these evils, and stand beyond hope and almost
beyond fear, may find it again.
But if in some future civilization the dreams of Utapia
should incredibly be reatized, and men were actually freed
from want and fear, then all the more they would need
this sanctuary, against the deadly emptiness and inaignif-
icance of their lives, at leisure fully appreciated. Man,
much more than baboon or wolf, is an animal formed for
conflict ; his life seems to him meaningless without it. Only
a clear shift of meaning and emphasis, from man to what
ie not man, nor a man-dreamed Gad, a projection of man,
can enable him in the long run to endure peace.
“But [ having told you"—to quote from the tag of an
old poem—have once again and beyond obligation “paid
my birth-dues.”
175