In an interview with the celebrated Hungarian
violinist, M. Remenyi, the Pall Mall Gazette reporter makes
the artist narrate some very interesting experiences in the Far
East. "I was the first European artist who ever played before
the Mikado of Japan," he said; and reverting to that which
has ever been a matter of deep regret for every lover of the artistic
and the picturesque, the violinist added:
On August 8th, 1886, I appeared before His Majesty a day memorable,
unfortunately, for the change of costume commanded by the Empress.
She herself, abandoning the exquisite beauty of the feminine Japanese
costume, appeared on that day for the first time and at my concert
in European costume, and it made my heart ache to see her. I could
have greeted her had I dared with a long wail of despair upon
my travelled violin. Six ladies accompanied her, they themselves
being clad in their native costume, and walking with infinite
grace and charm.
Alas, alas, but this is not all! The Mikado this hitherto sacred,
mysterious, invisible and unreachable personage:
The Mikado himself was in the uniform of a European general! At
that time the Court etiquette was so strict, my accompanist was
not permitted into His Majesty's drawing room, and this was told
me beforehand. I had a good remplacement, as my ambassador,
Count Zaluski, who had been a pupil of Liszt, was able himself
to accompany me. You will be astonished when I tell you that,
having chosen for the first piece in the programme my transcription
for the violin, of a C sharp minor polonaise by Chopin, a musical
piece of the most intrinsic value and poetic depths, the Emperor,
when I had finished, intimated to Count Ito, his first minister,
that I should play it again. The Japanese taste is good. I was
laden with presents of untold value, one item only being a gold-lacquer
box of the seventeenth century. I played in Hong Kong and outside
Canton, no European being allowed to live inside. There I
made an interesting excursion to the Portuguese possession of
Macao, visiting the cave where Camoëns wrote his Lusiad.
It was very interesting to see outside the Chinese town of
Macao a European Portuguese town which to this very day has remained
unchanged since the sixteenth century. In the midst of the exquisite
tropical vegetation of Java, and despite the terrific heat, I
gave sixty-two concerts in sixty-seven days, travelling all over
the island, inspecting its antiquities, the chief of which is
a most wonderful Buddhist temple, the Boro Budhur, or Many
Buddhas. This building contains six miles of figures, and is a
solid pile of stone, larger than the pyramids. They have, these
Javans, an extraordinarily sweet orchestra in the national Samelang
which consists of percussion instruments played by eighteen people;
but to hear this orchestra, with its most weird Oriental chorus
and ecstatic dances, one must have had the privilege of being
invited by the Sultan of Solo, "Sole Emperor of the World."
I have seen and heard nothing more dreamy and poetic than the
Serimpis danced by nine Royal Princesses.
Where are the Æsthetes of a few years ago? Or was this little
confederation of the lovers of art but one of the soap-bubbles
of our fin de siècle, rich in promise and suggestion
of many a possibility, but dead in works and act? Or, if there
are any true lovers of art yet left among them, why do they not
organize and send out missionaries the world over, to tell picturesque
Japan and other countries ready to fall victims that, to imitate
the will-o'-the-wisp of European culture and fascination, means
for a non-Christian land, the committing of suicide; that it means
sacrificing one's individuality for an empty show and shadow;
at best it is to exchange the original and the picturesque for
the vulgar and the hideous. Truly and indeed it is high time that
at last something should be done in this direction, and before
the deceitful civilization of the conceited nations of but yesterday
has irretrievably hypnotized the older races, and made them succumb
to its upas-tree wiles and supposed superiority. Otherwise, old
arts and artistic creations, everything original and unique will
very soon disappear. Already national dresses and time-honoured
customs, and everything beautiful, artistic, and worth preservation
is fast disappearing from view. At no distant day, alas, the best
relics of the past will perhaps be found only in museums in sorry,
solitary, and be-ticketed samples preserved under glass!
Such is the work and the unavoidable result of our modern civilization.
Skin-deep in reality in its visible effects, in the "blessings"
it is alleged to have given to the world, its roots are rotten
to the core. It is to its progress that selfishness and materialism,
the greatest curses of the nations, are due; and the latter will
most surely lead to the annihilation of art and of the appreciation
of the truly harmonious and beautiful. Hitherto, materialism has
only led to a universal tendency to unification on the material
plane and a corresponding diversity on that of thought and spirit.
It is this universal tendency, which by propelling humanity, through
its ambition and selfish greed, to an incessant chase after wealth
and the obtaining at any price of the supposed blessings
of this life, causes it to aspire or rather gravitate to one level,
the lowest of all the plane of empty appearance. Materialism
and indifference to all save the selfish realization of wealth
and power, and the over-feeding of national and personal vanity,
have gradually led nations and men to the almost entire oblivion
of spiritual ideals, of the love of nature, to the correct appreciation
of things. Like a hideous leprosy our Western civilization has
eaten its way through all the quarters of the globe and hardened
the human heart. "Soul-saving" is its deceitful, lying
pretext; greed for additional revenue through opium, rum, and
the inoculation of European vices the real aim. In the far East
it has infected with the spirit of imitation the higher classes
of the "pagans" save China, whose national conservatism
deserves our respect; and in Europe it has engrafted fashion save
the mark even on the dirty, starving proletariat itself! For
the last thirty years, as if some deceitful semblance of a reversion
to the ancestral type awarded to men by the Darwinian theory
in its moral added to its physical characteristics were contemplated
by an evil spirit tempting mankind, almost every race and nation
under the Sun in Asia has gone mad in its passion for aping
Europe. This, added to the frantic endeavor to destroy Nature
in every direction, and also every vestige of older civilizations far
superior to our own in arts, godliness, and the appreciation of
the grandiose and harmonious must result in such national calamities.
Therefore, do we find hitherto artistic and picturesque Japan
succumbing wholly to the temptation of justifying the "ape
theory" by simianizing its populations in order to
bring the country on a level with canting, greedy and artificial
Europe!
For certainly Europe is all this. It is canting and deceitful
from its diplomats down to its custodians of religion, from its
political down to its social laws, selfish, greedy and brutal
beyond expression in its grabbing characteristics. And yet there
are those who wonder at the gradual decadence of true art, as
if art could exist without imagination, fancy, and a just appreciation
of the beautiful in Nature, or without poetry and high religious,
hence, metaphysical aspirations! The galleries of paintings and
sculpture, we hear, become every year poorer in quality, if richer
in quantity. It is lamented that while there is a plethora of
ordinary productions, the greatest scarcity of remarkable pictures
and statuary prevails. Is this not most evidently due to the facts
that (a) the artists will very soon remain with no better models
than nature morte (or "still life") to inspire
themselves with; and (b) that the chief concern is not
the creation of artistic objects, but their speedy sale and profits?
Under such conditions, the fall of true art is only a natural
consequence.
Owing to the triumphant march and the invasion of civilization,
Nature, as well as man and ethics, is sacrificed, and is fast
becoming artificial. Climates are changing, and the face of the
whole world will soon be altered. Under the murderous hand of
the pioneers of civilization, the destruction of whole primeval
forests is leading to the drying up of rivers, and the opening
of the Canal of Suez has changed the climate of Egypt as that
of Panama will divert the course of the Gulf Stream. Almost tropical
countries are now becoming cold and rainy, and fertile lands threaten
to be soon transformed into sandy deserts. A few years more and
there will not remain within a radius of fifty miles around our
large cities one single rural spot inviolate-from vulgar speculation.
In scenery, the picturesque and the natural is daily replaced
by the grotesque and the artificial. Scarce a landscape in England
but the fair body of nature is desecrated by the advertisements
of "Pears' Soap" and "Beecham's Pills." The
pure air of the country is polluted with smoke, the smells of
greasy railway-engines, and the sickening odours of gin, whiskey,
and beer. And once that every natural spot in the surrounding
scenery is gone, and the eye of the painter finds but the artificial
and hideous products of modern speculation to rest upon, artistic
taste will have to follow suit and disappear along with them>
"No man ever did or ever will work well, but either from
actual sight or sight of faith," says Ruskin, speaking of
art. Thus, the first quarter of the coming century may witness
painters of landscapes, who have never seen an acre of land free
from human improvement; and painters of figures whose ideas of
female beauty of form will be based on the wasp-like pinched-in
waists of corseted, hollow-chested and consumptive society belles.
It is not from such models that a picture deserving of the
definition of Horace "a poem without words" is produced.
Artificially draped Parisiennes and London Cockneys sitting
for Italian contadini or Arab Bedouins can never replace
the genuine article; and both free Bedouins and genuine Italian
peasant girls are, thanks to "civilization," fast becoming
things of the past. Where shall artists find genuine models in
the coming century, when the hosts of the free Nomads of the Desert,
and perchance all the Negro tribes of Africa or what will remain
of them after their decimation by Christian cannons, and the rum
and opium of the Christian civilizer will have donned European
coats and top hats? And that this is precisely what awaits art
under the beneficial progress of modern civilization, is self-evident
to all.
Aye! let us boast of the blessings of civilization, by all means.
Let us brag of our sciences and the grand discoveries of the age,
its achievements in mechanical arts, its railroads, telephones
and electric batteries; but let us not forget, meanwhile, to purchase
at fabulous prices (almost as great as those given in our day
for a prize dog, or an old prima donna's song) the paintings and
statuary of uncivilized, barbarous antiquity and of the middle
ages: for such objects of art will be reproduced no more. Civilization
has tolled their eleventh hour. It has rung the death-knell of
the old arts, and the last decade of our century is summoning
the world to the funeral of all that was grand, genuine, and original
in the old civilizations. Would Raphael, O ye lovers of art, have
created one single of his many Madonnas, had he had, instead of
Fornarina and the once Juno-like women of the Trastevero of Rome
to inspire his genius, only the present-day models, or the niched
Virgins of the nooks and corners of modern Italy, in crinolines
and high-heeled boots? Or would Andrea del Sarto have produced
his famous "Venus and Cupid" from a modern East End
working girl one of the latest victims to fashion holding under
the shadow of a gigantic hat a la mousquetaire, feathered
like the scalp of an Indian chief, a dirty, scrofulous brat from
the slums? How could Titian have ever immortalized his golden-haired
patrician ladies of Venice, had he been compelled to move all
his life in the society of our actual "professional beauties,"
with their straw-colored, dyed capillaries that transform human
hair into the fur of a yellow Angora cat? May not one venture
to state with the utmost confidence that the world would never
have had the Athena Limnia of Phidias that ideal of beauty in
face and form had Aspasia, the Milesian, or the fair daughters
of Hellas, whether in the days of Pericles or in any other, disfigured
that "form" with stays and bustle, and coated that "face"
with white enamel, after the fashion of the varnished features
of the mummies of the dead Egyptians.
We see the same in architecture. Not even the genius of Michael
Angelo himself could have failed to receive its death-blow at
the first sight of the Eiffel Tower, or the Albert Hall, or more
horrible still, the Albert Memorial. Nor, for the matter of that,
could it have received any suggestive idea from the Colosseum
and the palace of the Cæsars, in their present whitewashed
and repaired state! Whither, then, shall we, in our
days of civilization, go to find the natural, or even simply the
picturesque? Is it still to Italy, to Switzerland or Spain? But
the Bay of Naples even if its waters be as blue and transparent
as on the day when the people of Cumæ selected its shores
for a colony, and its surrounding scenery as gloriously beautiful
as ever thanks to that spirit of mimicry which has infected sea
and land, has now lost its most artistic and most original features.
It is bereft of its lazy, dirty, but intensely picturesque figures
of old; of its lazzaroni and barcarolos, its fishermen
and country girls. Instead of the former's red or blue Phrygian
cap, and the latter's statuesque, half-nude figure and poetical
rags, we see nowadays but the caricatured specimens of modern
civilization and fashion. The gay tarantella resounds no
longer on the cool sands of the moonlit shore; it is replaced
by that libel on Terpsychore, the modern quadrille, in the gas-lit,
gin-smelling sailor's trattorias. Filth still pervades
the land, as of yore; but it is made the more apparent on the
threadbare city coat, the mangled chimney-pot hat and the once
fashionable, now cast-away European bonnet. Picked up in the hotel
gutters, they now grace the unkempt heads of the once picturesque
Neapolitans. The type of the latter has died out, and there is
nothing to distinguish the lazzaroni from the Venetian
gondoliere, the Calabrian brigand, or the London street-sweeper
and beggar. The still, sunlit waters of Canal Grande bear
no longer their gondolas, filled on festival days with gaily dressed
Venetians, with picturesque boatmen and girls. The black gondola
that glides silently under the heavy caned balconies of the old
patrician palazze, reminds one now more of a black floating coffin,
with a solemn-looking, dark-clothed undertaker paddling it on
towards the Styx, than of the gondola of thirty years ago. Venice
looks more gloomy now than during the days of Austrian slavery
from which it was rescued by Napoleon III. Once on shore, its
gondoliere is scarcely distinguishable from his "fare,"
the British M.P. on his holiday-tour in the old city of the Doges.
Such is the levelling hand of all-destroying civilization.
It is the same all over Europe. Look at Switzerland. Hardly a
decade ago, every Canton had its distinguishing national costume,
as clean and fresh as it was peculiar. Now the people are ashamed
to wear it. They want to be mistaken for foreign guests, to be
regarded as a civilized nation which follows suit even in fashion.
Cross over to Spain. Of all the relics of old, the smell of rancid
oil and garlic is alone left to remind one of the poetry of the
old days in the country of the Cid. The graceful mantilla has
almost disappeared; the proud hidalgo-beggar has taken himself
off from the street-corner; the nightly serenades of love-sick
Romeos are gone out of fashion; and the duenna contemplates going
in for woman's rights. The members of the "Social Purity"
Associations may say "thank God" to this and lay the
change at the door of Christian and moral reforms of civilization.
But has morality gained anything in Spain with the disappearance
of the nocturnal lovers and duennas? We have every right to say,
no. A Don Juan outside a house is less dangerous
than one inside. Social immorality is as rife as ever if
not more so, in Spain, and it must be so, indeed, when even "Harper's
Guide Book" quotes in its last edition as follows: "Morals
in all classes, especially in the higher, are in the most degraded
state. Veils, indeed, are thrown aside, and serenades are rare,
but gallantry and intrigue are as active as ever. The men think
little of their married obligations; the women . . . are willing
victims of unprincipled gallantry." (Spain, "Madrid,"
page 678.) In this, Spain is but on a par with all other countries
civilized or now civilizing, and is assuredly not worse than many
another country that could be named; but that which may be said
of it with truth is, that what it has lost in poetry through civilization,
it has gained in hypocrisy and loose morals. The Cortejo has
turned into the petit creve'; the castanets have become
silent, because, perhaps, the noise of the uncorked champagne
bottles affords more excitement to the rapidly civilizing nation;
and the Andalouse au teint bruni having taken to cosmetics
and face-enamel, "la Marquesa d' Almedi" may be said
to have been buried with Alfred de Musset.
The gods have indeed been propitious to the Alhambra. They have
permitted it to be burnt before its chaste Moresque beauty had
been finally desecrated, as are the rock-cut temples of India,
the Pyramids and other relics, by drunken orgies. This superb
relic of the Moors had already suffered, once before, by Christian
improvement. It is a tradition still told in Granada, and history
too, that the monks of Ferdinand and Isabella had made of Alhambra that
"palace of petrified flowers dyed with the hues of the wings
of angels" a filthy prison for thieves and murderers. Modern
speculators might have done worse; they might have polluted its
walls and pearl-inlaid ceilings, the lovely gilding and stucco,
the fairy-like arabesques, and the marble and gossamer-like carvings,
with commercial advertisements, after the Inquisitors had already
once before covered the building with whitewash and permitted
the prison-keepers to use Alhambra Halls for their donkeys and
cattle. Doubting but little that the fury of the Madrilenos
for imitating the French and English must have already, at
this stage of modern civilization, infected every province of
Spain, we may regard that lovely country as dead. A friend speaks,
as an eye-witness, of "cocktails" spilled near the marble
fountain of the Alhambra, over the blood-marks left by the hapless
Abancerages slain by Boabdil, and of a Parisian cancan pur
sang performed by working girls and soldiers of Granada, in
the Court of Lions!
But these are only trifling signs of the time and the spread of
culture among the middle and the lower classes. Wherever
the spirit of aping possesses the heart of the nation the poor
working classes there the elements of nationality disappear and
the country is on the eve of losing its individuality and all
things change for the worse. What is the use of talking so loudly
of "the benefits of Christian civilization,"
of its having softened public morals, refined national customs
and manners, etc., etc., when our modern civilization has achieved
quite the reverse! Civilization has depended, for ages, says Burke,
"upon two principles . . . the spirit of a gentleman and
the spirit of religion." And how many true gentlemen have
we left, when compared even with the days of half-barbarous knighthood?
Religion has become canting hypocrisy and the genuine religious
spirit is regarded now-a-days as insanity. Civilization, it is
averred, "has destroyed brigandage, established public security,
elevated morality and built railways which now honeycomb the face
of the globe." Indeed? Let us analyze seriously and impartially
all these "benefits" and we shall soon find that civilization
has done nothing of the kind. At best it has put a false nose
on every evil of the Past, adding hypocrisy and false pretence
to the natural ugliness of each. If it is true to say that it
has put down in some civilized centers of Europe near Rome, in
the Bois de Boulogne or on Hampstead Heath banditti and
highway-men, it is also as true that it has, thereby, destroyed
robbery only as a specialty, the latter having now become a common
occupation in every city great or small. The robber and cut-throat
has only exchanged his dress and appearance by donning the livery
of civilization the ugly modern attire. Instead of being robbed
under the vault of thick woods and the protection of darkness,
people are robbed now-a-days under the electric light of saloons
and the protection of trade-laws and police-regulations. As to
open day-light brigandage, the Mafia of New Orleans and
the Mala Vita of Sicily, with high officialdom, population,
police, and jury forced to play into the hands of regularly organized
bands of murderers, thieves, and tyrants1 in the full
glare of
European "culture," show how far our civilization has
succeeded in establishing public security, or Christian religion
in softening the hearts of men and the ways and customs of a barbarous
past. Modern Cyclopædias are very fond of expatiating upon
the decadence of Rome and its pagan horrors. But if the
latest editions of the Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography
were honest enough to make a parallel between those "monsters
of depravity" of ancient civilization, Messalina and Faustina,
Nero and Commodus, and modern European aristocracy, it might be
found that the latter could give odds to the former in social
hypocrisy, at any rate. Between "the shameless and beastly
debauchery" of an Emperor Commodus, and as beastly a depravity
of more than one "Honourable," high official representative
of the people, the only difference to be found is that while Commodus
was a member of all the sacerdotal colleges of Paganism, the modern
debauchee may be a high member of the Evangelical Christian Churches,
a distinguished and pious pupil of Moody and Sankey and what not.
It is not the Calchas of Homer, who was the type of the Calchas
in the Operette "La Belle Helene," but the modern sacerdotal
Pecksniff and his followers.
As to the blessings of railways and "the annihilation of
space and time," it is still an undecided question without
speaking of the misery and starvation the introduction of steam
engines and machinery in general has brought for years on those
who depend on their manual labour whether railways do not kill
more people in one month than the brigands of all Europe used
to murder in a whole year. The victims of railroads, moreover,
are killed under circumstances which surpass in horror anything
the cut-throats may have devised. One reads almost daily of railway
disasters in which people are "burned to death in the blazing
wreckage," "mangled and crushed out of recognition"
and killed by dozens and scores.2 This is a trifle
worse than the highwaymen of old Newgate.
Nor has crime been abated at all by the spread of civilization;
though owing to the progress of science in chemistry and physics,
it has become more secure from detection and more ghastly in its
realization than it ever has been. Speak of Christian civilization
having improved public morals; of Christianity being the only
religion which has established and recognized Universal Brotherhood!
Look at the brotherly feeling shown by American Christians to
the Red Indian and the Negro, whose citizenship is the
farce of the age. Witness the love of the Anglo-Indians for the
"mild Hindu," the Mussulman, and the Buddhist. See "how
these Christians love each other" in their incessant law
litigations, their libels against each other, the mutual hatred
of the Churches and of the sects. Modern civilization and Christianity
are oil and water they will never mix. Nations among which the
most horrible crimes are daily perpetrated; nations which rejoice
in Tropmanns and Jack the Rippers, in fiends like Mrs. Reeves
the trader in baby slaughter to the number of 300 victims as
is believed for the sake of filthy lucre; nations which not only
permit but encourage a Monaco with its hosts of suicides, that
patronize prize-fights, bull-fights, useless and cruel sport and
even indiscriminate vivisection such nations have no right to
boast of their civilization. Nations furthermore which from political
considerations, dare not put down slave-trade once for all,
and out of revenue-greed, hesitate to abolish opium and whiskey
trades, fattening on the untold misery and degradation of millions
of human beings, have no right to call themselves either Christian
or civilized. A civilization finally that leads only to the destruction
of every noble, artistic feeling in man, can only deserve the
epithet of barbarous. We, the modern-day Europeans, are Vandals
as great, if not greater than Atilla with his savage hordes.
Consummatum est. Such is the work of our modem Christian
civilization and its direct effects. The destroyer of art, the
Shylock, who, for every mite of gold it gives, demands and receives
in return a pound of human flesh, in the heart-blood, in the physical
and mental suffering of the masses, in the loss of everything
true and lovable can hardly pretend to deserve grateful or respectful
recognition. The unconsciously prophetic fin de siècle,
in short, is the long ago foreseen fin de cycle; when
according to Manjunâtha Sutra, "Justice will
have died, leaving as its successor blind Law, and as its Guru
and guide Selfishness; when wicked things and deeds will
have to be regarded as meritorious, and holy actions as madness."
Beliefs are dying out, divine life is mocked at; art and genius,
truth and justice are daily sacrificed to the insatiable mammon
of the age money grubbing. The artificial replaces everywhere
the real, the false substitutes the true. Not a sunny valley,
not a shadowy grove left immaculate on the bosom of mother nature.
And yet what marble fountain in fashionable square or city park,
what bronze lions or tumble-down dolphins with upturned tails
can compare with an old worm-eaten, moss-covered, weather-stained
country well, or a rural windmill in a green meadow! What Arc
de Triomphe can ever compare with the low arch of Grotto Azzurra,
at Capri, and what city park or Champs Elysées, rival Sorrento,
"the wild garden of the world," the birth-place of Tasso?
Ancient civilizations have never sacrificed Nature to speculation,
but holding it as divine, have honoured her natural beauties by
the erection of works of art, such as our modern electric civilization
could never produce even in dream. The sublime grandeur, the mournful
gloom and majesty of the ruined temples of Pæstum, that
stand for ages like so many sentries over the sepulchre of the
Past and the forlorn hope of the Future amid the mountain wilderness
of Sorrento, have inspired more men of genius than the new civilization
will ever produce. Give us the banditti who once infested
these ruins, rather than the railroads that cut through the old
Etruscan tombs; the first may take the purse and life of the few;
the second are undermining the lives of the millions by poisoning
with foul gases the sweet breath of the pure air. In ten years,
by century xxth, Southern France with its Nice and Cannes, and
even Engadine, may hope to rival the London atmosphere with its
fogs, thanks to the increase of population and changes of climate.
We hear that Speculation is preparing a new iniquity against Nature:
smoky, greasy, stench-breathing funiculaires (baby-railways)
are being contemplated for some world-renowned mountains. They
are preparing to creep like so many loathsome, fire-vomiting reptiles
over the immaculate body of the Jungfrau, and a railway-tunnel
is to pierce the heart of the snow-capped Virgin mountain, the
glory of Europe. And why not? Has not national speculation pulled
down the priceless remains of the grand Temple of Neptune at Rome,
to build over its colossal corpse and sculptured pillars the present
Custom House?
Are we so wrong then, in maintaining that modern civilization
with its Spirit of Speculation is the very Genius of Destruction;
and as such, what better words can be addressed to it than
this definition of Burke:
"A Spirit of innovation is generally the result of a selfish
temper and confined views. People will not look forward to posterity,
who never look backward to their ancestors."
Lucifer, May, 1891
H. P. Blavatsky
1 Read the "Cut Throat's Paradise" in the
Edinburgh Review for April, 1877, and the digest of it
in the Pall Mall Gazette of April 15th, 1891, "Murder
as a Profession," back to text
2 To take one instance. A Reuter's telegram from America,
where such accidents are almost of daily occurrence, gives the
following details of a wrecked train: "One of the cars which
was attached to a gravel train and which contained five Italian
workmen, was thrown forward into the center of the wreck, and
the whole mass caught fire. Two of the men were killed outright
and the remaining three were injured, pinioned in the wreckage.
As the flames reached them their cries and groans were heartrending.
Owing to the position of the car and the intense heat the rescuers
were unable to reach them, and were compelled to watch them slowly
burn to death. It is understood that all the victims leave families." back to text
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