Nature Mysticism by John Edward Mercer
page 27 of 231 (11%)
page 27 of 231 (11%)
|
knows it. How great the number and variety of the emotions and
intuitions that beauty can stir and foster will be seen in detail hereafter. But beauty is not the only agent in moulding and developing man's character. Nature, as will be shown, is a manifestation of immanent ideas which touch life at every point. Ugliness, for example, has its place as well as beauty, and will be dealt with in due course. So with ideas of life and death, of power and weakness, of hope and despondency--these and a thousand others, immanent in external phenomena, have stimulated the powerful imaginations of the infant race, and still maintain their magic to move the sensitive soul. The wonderful mythological systems of the past enshrine science, philosophy, and poetry-- and they were prompted by physical phenomena. The philosophy and poetry of the present are still largely dependent on the same phenomena. So it will be to the end. That the revelation of Reality is a partial one--that the highest summits are veiled in mists--this is freely granted. But the very fact constitutes in itself a special charm. If what we see is so wonderful, what must that be which is behind! CHAPTER V MYSTIC RECEPTIVITY The general character of the nature-mystic's main contention |
|