💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › voltairine-de-cleyre-the-dominant-idea.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 14:36:08. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

➡️ Next capture (2024-06-20)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Title: The Dominant Idea
Author: Voltairine de Cleyre
Date: 1910
Language: en
Topics: history
Source: Retrieved on March 24th, 2009 from http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/bright/cleyre/dominant.html
Notes: Mother Earth Publishing Association. 210 East 18th Street. New York. 1910.

Voltairine de Cleyre

The Dominant Idea

On everything that lives, if one looks searchingly, is limned the shadow

line of an idea — an idea, dead or living, sometimes stronger when dead,

with rigid, unswerving lines that mark the living embodiment with the

stern immobile cast of the non-living. Daily we move among these

unyielding shadows, less pierceable, more enduring than granite, with

the blackness of ages in them, dominating living, changing bodies, with

dead, unchanging souls. And we meet, also, living souls dominating dying

bodies — living ideas regnant over decay and death. Do not imagine that

I speak of human life alone. The stamp of persistent or of shifting Will

is visible in the grass-blade rooted in its clod of earth, as in the

gossamer web of being that floats and swims far over our heads in the

free world of air.

Regnant ideas, everywhere! Did you ever see a dead vine bloom? I have

seen it. Last summer I trained some morning-glory vines up over a

second-story balcony; and every day they blew and curled in the wind,

their white, purple-dashed faces winking at the sun, radiant with

climbing life. Higher every day the green heads crept, carrying their

train of spreading fans waving before the sun-seeking blossoms. Then all

at once some mischance happened, — some cut worm or some mischievous

child tore one vine off below, the finest and most ambitious one, of

course. In a few hours the leaves hung limp, the sappy stem wilted and

began to wither; in a day it was dead, — all but the top, which still

clung longingly to its support, with bright head lifted. I mourned a

little for the buds that could never open now, and tied that proud vine

whose work in the world was lost. But the next night there was a storm,

a heavy, driving storm, with beating rain and blinding lightning. I rose

to watch the flashes, and lo! the wonder of the world! In the blackness

of the mid-NIGHT, in the fury of wind and rain, the dead vine had

flowered. Five white, moon-faced blossoms blew gaily round the skeleton

vine, shining back triumphant at the red lightning. I gazed at them in

dumb wonder. Dear, dead vine, whose will had been so strong to bloom,

that in the hour of its sudden cut-off from the feeding earth, it sent

the last sap to its blossoms; and, not waiting for the morning, brought

them forth in storm and flash, as white night-glories, which should have

been the children of the sun.

In the daylight we all came to look at the wonder, marveling much, and

saying, “Surely these must be the last.” But every day for three days

the dead vine bloomed; and even a week after, when every leaf was dry

and brown, and so thin you could see through it, one last bud, dwarfed,

weak, a very baby of a blossom, but still white and delicate, with five

purple flecks, like those on the live vine beside it, opened and waved

at the stars, and waited for the early sun. Over death and decay the

Dominant Idea smiled: the vine was in the world to bloom, to bear white

trumpet blossoms dashed with purple; and it held its will beyond death.

Our modern teaching is, that ideas are but attendant phenomena, impotent

to determine the actions or relations of life, as the image in the glass

which should say to the body it reflects: “I shall shape thee.” In truth

we know that directly the body goes from before the mirror, the

transient image is nothingness; but the real body has its being to live,

and will live it, heedless of vanished phantoms of itself, in response

to the ever-shifting pressure of things without it.

It is thus that the so-called Materialist Conception of History, the

modern Socialists, and a positive majority of Anarchists would have us

look upon the world of ideas, — shifting, unreal reflections, having

naught to do in the determination of Man’s life, but so many mirror

appearances of certain material relations, wholly powerless to act upon

the course of material things. Mind to them is in itself a blank mirror,

though in fact never wholly blank, because always facing the reality of

the material and bound to reflect some shadow. To-day I am somebody,

to-morrow somebody else, if the scenes have shifted; my Ego is a

gibbering phantom, pirouetting in the glass, gesticulating,

transforming, hourly or momentarily, gleaming with the phosphor light of

a deceptive unreality, melting like the mist upon the hills. Rocks,

fields, woods, streams, houses, goods, flesh, blood, bone, sinew, —

these are realities, with definite parts to play, with essential

characters that abide under all changes; but my Ego does not abide; it

is manufactured afresh with every change of these.

I think this unqualified determinism of the material is a great and

lamentable error in our modern progressive movement; and while I believe

it was a wholesome antidote to the long-continued blunder of Middle Age

theology, viz., that Mind was an utterly irresponsible entity making

laws of its own after the manner of an Absolute Emperor, without logic,

sequence, or relation, ruler over matter, and its own supreme

determinant, not excepting God (who was himself the same sort of a mind

writ large) — while I do believe that the modern re-conception of

Materialism has done a wholesome thing in pricking the bubble of such

conceit and restoring man and his “soul” to its “place in nature,” I

nevertheless believe that to this also there is a limit; and that the

absolute sway of Matter is quite as mischievous an error as the

unrelated nature of Mind; even that in its direct action upon personal

conduct, it has the more ill effect of the two. For if the doctrine of

free-will has raised up fanatics and persecutors, who, assuming that men

may be good under all conditions if they merely wish to be so, have

sought to persuade other men’s wills with threats, fines, imprisonments,

torture, the spike, the wheel, the axe, the fagot, in order to make them

good and save them against their obdurate wills; if the doctrine of

Spiritualism, the soul supreme, has done this, the doctrine of

Materialistic Determinism has produced shifting, self-excusing,

worthless, parasitical characters, who are this now and that at some

other time, and anything and nothing upon principle. “My conditions have

made me so,” they cry, and there is no more to be said; poor

mirror-ghosts! how could they help it! To be sure, the influence of such

a character rarely reaches so far as that of the principled persecutor;

but for every one of the latter, there are a hundred of these easy,

doughy characters, who will fit any baking tin, to whom determinist

self-excusing appeals; so the balance of evil between the two doctrines

is about maintained.

What we need is a true appraisement of the power and rĂ´le of the Idea. I

do not think I am able to give such a true appraisement, I do not think

that any one — even much greater intellects than mine — will be able to

do it for a long time to come. But I am at least able to suggest it, to

show its necessity, to give a rude approximation of it.

And first, against the accepted formula of modern Materialism, “Men are

what circumstances make them,” I set the opposing declaration,

“Circumstances are what men make them”; and I contend that both these

things are true up to the point where the combating powers are

equalized, or one is overthrown. In other words, my conception of mind,

or character, is not that it is a powerless reflection of a momentary

condition of stuff and form, but an active modifying agent, reacting on

its environment and transforming circumstances, sometimes slightly,

sometimes greatly, sometimes, though not often, entirely.

All over the kingdom of life, I have said, one may see dominant ideas

working, if one but trains his eyes to look for them and recognize them.

In the human world there have been many dominant ideas. I cannot

conceive that ever, at any time, the struggle of the body before

dissolution can have been aught but agony. If the reasoning that

insecurity of conditions, the expectation of suffering, are

circumstances which make the soul of man uneasy, shrinking, timid, what

answer will you give to the challenge of old Ragnar Lodbrog, to that

triumphant death-song hurled out, not by one cast to his death in the

heat of battle, but under slow prison torture, bitten by serpents, and

yet singing: “The goddesses of death invite me away — now end I my song.

The hours of my life are run out. I shall smile when I die”? Nor can it

be said that this is an exceptional instance, not to be accounted for by

the usual operation of general law, for old King Lodbrog the Skalder did

only what his fathers did, and his sons and his friends and his enemies,

through long generations; they set the force of a dominant idea, the

idea of the super ascendant ego, against the force of torture and of

death, ending life as they wished to end it, with a smile on their lips.

But a few years ago, did we not read how the helpless Kaffirs,

victimized by the English for the contumacy of the Boers, having been

forced to dig the trenches wherein for pleasant sport they were to be

shot, were lined up on the edge, and seeing death facing them, began to

chant barbaric strains of triumph, smiling as they fell? Let us admit

that such exultant defiance was owing to ignorance, to primitive beliefs

in gods and hereafters; but let us admit also that it shows the power of

an idea dominant.

Everywhere in the shells of dead societies, as in the shells of the

sea-slime, we shall see the force of purposive action, of intent within

holding its purpose against obstacles without.

I think there is no one in the world who can look upon the steadfast,

far-staring face of an Egyptian carving, or read a description of

Egypt’s monuments, or gaze upon the mummied clay of its old dead men,

without feeling that the dominant idea of that people in that age was to

be enduring and to work enduring things, with the immobility of their

great still sky upon them and the stare of the desert in them. One must

feel that whatever other ideas animated them, and expressed themselves

in their lives, this was the dominant idea. That which was must remain,

no matter at what cost, even if it were to break the ever-lasting hills:

an idea which made the live humanity beneath it, born and nurtured in

the corns of caste, groan and writhe and gnaw its bandages, till in the

fullness of time it passed away: and still the granite mould of it

stares with empty eyes out across the world, the stern old memory of the

Thing-that-was.

I think no one can look upon the marbles wherein Greek genius wrought

the figuring of its soul without feeling an apprehension that the things

are going to leap and fly; that in a moment one is like to be set upon

by heroes with spears in their hands, by serpents that will coil around

him; to be trodden by horses that may trample and flee; to be smitten by

these gods that have as little of the idea of stone in them as a

dragon-fly, one instant poised upon a wind-swayed petal edge. I think no

one can look upon them without realizing at once that those figures came

out of the boil of life; they seem like rising bubbles about to float

into the air, but beneath them other bubbles rising, and others, and

others, — there will be no end of it. When one’s eyes are upon one

group, one feels that behind one, perhaps, a figure is tiptoeing to

seize the darts of the air and hurl them on one’s head; one must keep

whirling to face the miracle that appears about to be wrought — stone

leaping! And this though nearly every one is minus some of the glory the

old Greek wrought into it so long ago; even the broken stumps of arms

and legs live. And the dominant idea is Activity, and the beauty and

strength of it. Change, swift, ever-circling Change! The making of

things and the casting of them away, as children cast away their toys,

not interested that these shall endure, so that they themselves realize

incessant activity. Full of creative power what matter if the creature

perished. So there was an endless procession of changing shapes in their

schools, their philosophies their dramas, their poems, till at last it

wore itself to death. And the marvel passed away from the world. But

still their marbles live to show what manner of thoughts dominated them.

And if we wish to, know what master-thought ruled the lives of men when

the mediæval period had had time to ripen it, one has only at this day

to stray into some quaint, out-of-the-way English village, where a

strong old towered Church yet stands in the midst of little

straw-thatched cottages, like a brooding mother-hen surrounded by her

chickens. Everywhere the greatening of God and the lessening of Man: the

Church so looming, the home so little. The search for the spirit, for

the enduring thing (not the poor endurance of granite which in the ages

crumbles, but the eternal), the eternal, — and contempt for the body

which perishes, manifest in studied uncleanliness, in mortifications of

the flesh, as if the spirit should have spat its scorn upon it.

Such was the dominant idea of that middle age which has been too much

cursed by modernists. For the men who built the castles and the

cathedrals, were men of mighty works, though they made no books, and

though their souls spread crippled wings, because of their very

endeavors to soar too high. The spirit of voluntary subordination for

the accomplishment of a great work, which proclaimed the aspiration of

the common soul, — that was the spirit wrought into the cathedral

stones; and it is not wholly to be condemned.

In waking dream, when the shadow-shapes of world-ideas swim before the

vision, one sees the Middle-Age Soul an ill-contorted, half-formless

thing, with dragon wings and a great, dark, tense face, strained sunward

with blind eyes.

If now we look around us to see what idea dominates our own

civilization, I do not know that it is even as attractive as this

piteous monster of the old darkness. The relativity of things has

altered: Man has risen and God bas descended. The modern village has

better homes and less pretentious churches. Also, the conception of dirt

and disease as much-sought afflictions, the patient suffering of which

is a meet offering to win God’s pardon, has given place to the emphatic

promulgation of cleanliness. We have Public School nurses notifying

parents that “pediculosis capitis” is a very contagious and unpleasant

disease; we have cancer associations gathering up such cancers as have

attached themselves to impecunious persons, and carefully experimenting

with a view to cleaning them out of the human race; we have tuberculosis

societies attempting the Herculean labor of clearing the Aegean stables

of our modern factories of the deadly bacillus, and they have got as far

as spittoons with water in them in some factories; and others, and

others, and others, which while not yet overwhelmingly successful in

their avowed purposes are evidence sufficient that humanity no longer

seeks dirt as a means of grace. We laugh at those old superstitions and

talk much about exact experimental knowledge. We endeavor to galvanize

the Greek corpse, and pretend that we enjoy physical culture. We dabble

in many things; but the one great real idea of our age, not copied from

any other, not pretended, not raised to life by any conjuration, is the

Much Making of Things, — not the making of beautiful things, not the joy

of spending living energy in creative work; rather the shameless,

merciless driving and over-driving, wasting and draining of the last lit

of energy, only to produce heaps and heaps of things, — things ugly,

things harmful, things useless, and at the best largely unnecessary. To

what end are they produced? Mostly the producer does not know; still

less does he care. But he is possessed with the idea that he must do it,

every one is doing it, and every year the making of things goes on more

and faster; there are mountain ranges of things made and making, and

still men go about desperately seeking to increase the list of created

things, to start fresh heaps and to add to the existing heaps. And with

what agony of body, under what stress and strain of danger and fear of

danger, with what mutilations and maimings and lamings they struggle on,

dashing themselves out against these rocks of wealth! Verily, if the

vision of the Mediæval Soul is painful in its blind staring and pathetic

striving, grotesque in its senseless tortures, the Soul of the Modern is

most amazing with its restless, nervous eyes, ever searching the corners

of the universe, its restless, nervous hands ever reaching and grasping

for some useless toil.

And certainly the presence of things in abundance, things empty and

things vulgar and things absurd, as well as things convenient and

useful, has produced the desire for the possession of things, the

exaltation of the possession of things. Go through the business street

of any city, where the tilted edges of the strata of things are exposed

to gaze, and look at the faces of the people as they pass, — not at the

hungry and smitten ones who fringe the sidewalks and plain dolefully for

alms, but at the crowd, — and see what idea is written on their faces.

On those of the women, from the ladies of the horse-shows to the shop

girls out of the factory, there is a sickening vanity, a consciousness

of their clothes, as of some jackdaw in borrowed feathers. Look for the

pride and glory of the free, strong, beautiful body, lithe-moving and

powerful. You will not see it. You will see mincing steps, bodies tilted

to show the cut of a skirt, simpering, smirking faces, with eyes cast

about seeking admiration for the gigantic bow of ribbon in the

overdressed hair. In the caustic words of an acquaintance, to whom I

once said, as we walked, “Look at the amount of vanity on all these

women’s faces,” “No: look at the little bit of womanhood showing out of

all that vanity!”

And on the faces of the men, coarseness! Coarse desires for coarse

things, and lots of them: the stamp is set so unmistakably that “the

wayfarer though a fool need not err therein.” Even the frightful anxiety

and restlessness begotten of the creation of all this, is less

distasteful than the abominable expression of lust for the things

created.

Such is the dominant idea of the western world, at least in these our

days. You may see it wherever you look, impressed plainly on things and

on men; very like if you look in the glass, you will see it there. And

if some archaeologist of a long future shall some day unbury the bones

of our civilization, where ashes or flood shall have entombed it, he

will see this frightful idea stamped on the factory walls he shall

uncover, with their rows and rows of square light-holes, their tons upon

tons of toothed steel, grinning out of the skull of this our life; its

acres of silk and velvet, its square miles of tinsel and shoddy. No

glorious marbles of nymphs and fawns, whose dead images are yet so sweet

that one might wish to kiss them still; no majestic figures of winged

horses, with men’s faces and lions’ paws casting their colossal

symbolism in a mighty spell forward upon Time, as those old stone

chimeras of Babylon yet do; but meaningless iron giants, of wheels and

teeth, whose secret is forgotten, but whose business was to grind men

tip, and spit them out as housefuls of woven stuffs, bazaars of trash,

wherethrough other men might wade. The statues he shall find will bear

no trace of mythic dream or mystic symbol; they will be statues of

merchants and ironmasters and militia-men, in tailored coats and

pantaloons and proper hats and shoes.

But the dominant idea of the age and land does not necessarily mean the

dominant idea of any single life. I doubt not that in those long gone

days, far away by the banks of the still Nile, in the abiding shadow of

the pyramids, under the heavy burden of other men’s stolidity, there

went to and fro restless, active, rebel souls who hated all that the

ancient society stood for, and with burning hearts sought to overthrow

it.

I am sure that in the midst of all the agile Greek intellect created,

there were those who went about with downbent eyes, caring nothing for

it all, seeking some higher revelation, willing to abandon the joys of

life, so that they drew near to some distant, unknown perfection their

fellows knew not of. I am certain that in the dark ages, when most men

prayed and cowered, and beat and bruised themselves, and sought

afflictions, like that St. Teresa who still, “Let me suffer, or die,”

there were some, many, who looked on the world as a chance jest, who

despised or pitied their ignorant comrades, and tried to compel the

answers of the universe to their questionings, by the patient, quiet

searching which came to be Modern Science. I am sure there were hundreds

thousands of them, of whom we have never heard.

And now, to-day, though the Society about us is dominated by

Thing-Worship, and will stand so marked for all time, that is no reason

any single soul should be. Because the one thing seemingly worth doing

to my neighbor, to all my neighbors, is to pursue dollars, that is no

reason I should pursue dollars. Because my neighbors conceive they need

an inordinate heap of carpets, furniture, clocks, china, glass,

tapestries, mirrors, clothes, jewels and servants to care for them, and

detectives to, keep an eye on the servants, judges to try the thieves,

and politicians to appoint the judges, jails to punish the culprits, and

wardens to watch in the jails, and tax collectors to gather support for

the wardens, and fees for the tax collectors, and strong houses to hold

the fees, so that none but the guardians thereof can make off with them,

— and therefore, to keep this host of parasites, need other men to work

for them, and make the fees; because my neighbors want all this, is that

any reason I should devote myself to such abarren folly? and bow my neck

to serve to keep up the gaudy show?

Must we, because the Middle Age was dark and blind and brutal, throw

away the one good thing it wrought into the fibre of Man, that the

inside of a human being was worth more than the outside? that to

conceive a higher thing than oneself and live toward that is the only

way of living worthily? The goal strived for should, and must, be a very

different one from that which led the mediæval fanatics to despise the

body and belabor it with hourly crucifixions. But one can recognize the

claims and the importance of the body without therefore sacrificing

truth, honor, simplicity, and faith, to the vulgar gauds of

body-service, whose very decorations debase the thing they might be

supposed to exalt.

I have said before that the doctrine that men are nothing and

circumstances all, has been, and is, the bane of our modern social

reform movements.

Our youth, themselves animated by the spirit of the old teachers who

believed in the supremacy of ideas, even in the very hour of throwing

away that teaching, look with burning eyes to the social East, and

believe that wonders of revolution are soon to be accomplished. In their

enthusiasm they foreread the gospel of Circumstances to mean that very

soon the pressure of material development must break down the social

system — they give the rotten thing but a few years to last; and then,

they themselves shall witness the transformation, partake in its joys.

The few years pass away and nothing happens; enthusiasm cools. Behold

these same idealists then, successful business men, professionals,

property owners, money leaders, creeping into the social ranks they once

despised, pitifully, contemptibly, at the skirts of some impecunious

personage to whom they have lent money, or done some professional

service gratis; behold them lying, cheating, tricking, flattering,

buying and selling themselves for any frippery, any cheap little

pretense. The Dominant Social Idea has seized them, their lives are

swallowed up in it; and when you ask the reason why, they tell you that

Circumstances compelled them so to do. If you quote their lies to them,

they smile with calm complacency, assure you that when Circumstances

demand lies, lies are a great deal better than truth; that tricks are

sometimes more effective than honest dealing; that flattering and duping

do not matter, if the end to be attained is desirable; and that under

existing “Circumstances” life isn’t possible without all this; that it

is going to be possible whenever Circumstances have made truth-telling

easier than lying, but till then a man must look out for himself, by all

means. And so the cancer goes on rotting away the moral fibre, and the

man becomes a lump, a squash, a piece of slippery slime taking all

shapes and losing all shapes, according to what particular hole or

corner he wishes to glide into, — a disgusting embodiment of the moral

bankruptcy begotten by Thing-Worship.

Had he been dominated by a less material conception of life, had his

will not been rotted by the intellectual reasoning of it out of its

existence, by its acceptance of its own nothingness, the unselfish

aspirations of his earlier years would have grown and strengthened by

exercise and habit; and his protest against the time might have been

enduringly written, and to some purpose.

Will it be said that the Pilgrim fathers did not hew, out of the New

England ice and granite, the idea which gathered them together out of

their scattered and obscure English villages, and drove them in their

frail ships aver the Atlantic in midwinter, to cut their way against all

opposing forces? Were they not common men, subject to the operation of

common law? Will it be said that Circumstances aided them? When death,

disease, hunger, and cold had done their worst, not one of those

remaining was willing by an easy lie to return to material comfort and

the possibility of long days.

Had our modern social revolutionists the vigorous and undaunted

conception of their own powers that these had, our social movements

would not be such pitiful abortions, — core-rotten even before the

outward flecks appear.

“Give a labor leader a political job, and the system becomes all right,”

laugh our enemies; and they point mockingly to Terence Powderly acid his

like; and they quote John Burns, who as soon as he went into Parliament

declared: “The time of the agitator is past; the time of the legislator

has come.” “Let an Anarchist marry an heiress, and the country is safe,”

they sneer: — and they have the right to sneer. But would they have that

right, could they have it, if our lives were not in the first instance

dominated by more insistent desires than those we would fain have others

think we hold most dear?

It is the old story: “Aim at the stars, and you may hit the top of the

gatepost; but aim at the ground, and you will hit the ground.”

It is not to be supposed that any one will attain to the full

realization of what he purposes, even when those purposes do not involve

united action with others; he will fall short; he will in some measure

be overcome by contending or inert opposition. But something he will

attain, if he continues to aim high.

What, then, would I have? you ask. I would have men invest themselves

with the dignity of an aim higher than the chase for wealth; choose a

thing to do in life outside of the making of things, and keep it in

mind, — not for a day, nor a year, but for a life-time. And then keep

faith with themselves! Not be a light-o’-love, to-day professing this

and to-morrow that, and easily reading oneself out of both whenever it

becomes convenient; not advocating a thing to-day and to-morrow kissing

its enemies’ sleeve, with that weak, coward cry in the mouth,

“Circumstances make me.” Take a good look into yourself, and if you love

Things and the power and the plenitude of Things better than you love

your own dignity, human dignity, Oh, say so, say so! Say it to yourself,

and abide by it. But do not blow hot and cold in one breath. Do not try

to be a social reformer and a respected possessor of Things at the same

time. Do not preach the straight and narrow way while going joyously

upon the wide one. Preach the wide one, or do not preach at all; but do

not fool yourself by saying you would like to help usher in a free

society, but you cannot sacrifice an armchair for it. Say honestly, “I

love arm-chairs better than free men, and pursue them because I choose;

not because circumstances make me. I love hats, large, large hats, with

many feathers and great bows; and I would rather have those hats than

trouble myself about social dreams that will never be accomplished in my

day. The world worships hats, and I wish to worship with them.”

But if you choose the liberty and pride and strength of the single soul,

and the free fraternization of men, as the purpose which your life is to

make manifest then do not sell it for tinsel. Think that your soul is

strong and will hold its way; and slowly, through bitter struggle

perhaps the strength will grow. And the foregoing of possessions for

which others barter the last possibility of freedom will become easy.

At the end of life you may close your eyes saying: “I have not been

dominated by the Dominant Idea of my Age; I have chosen mine own

allegiance, and served it. I have proved by a lifetime that there is

that in man which saves him from the absolute tyranny of Circumstance,

which in the end conquers and remoulds Circumstance, the immortal fire

of Individual Will, which is the salvation of the Future.”

Let us have Men, Men who will say a word to their souls and keep it —

keep it not when it is easy, but keep it when it is hard — keep it when

the storm roars and there is a white-streaked sky and blue thunder

before, and one’s eyes are blinded and one’s ears deafened with the war

of opposing things; and keep it under the long leaden sky and the gray

dreariness that never lifts. Hold unto the last: that is what it means

to have a Dominant Idea, which Circumstance cannot break. And such men

make and unmake Circumstance.