Authors: Robert Crawford
The Relativism I cordially agree with, but nearly all of the subject matter I think we had already touched upon, at one time or another, in conversation. I hope that you will have reprints taken of it, in order that the doctrine may be promulgated. Such a doctrine can however, as it seems to me, be worked out, under different hands, with an infinite variety of detail. One can, I should think, be a relative idealist or a relative realist. What it seems to me to lend itself to most naturally, is a relative materialism â or at least this is the way in which my sympathies incline.
94
Wiener's âdoctrine' was that the human self was a âsystem of experiences internally relevant to one another'; âwe must experience in relation from the very beginning everything we ever know in relation'. According to this theory of âRelativism', âOur mind is continually stretching out tentacles to the past and the future: here we search for a memory forgotten, there for the verification of a prediction.' Truth was relative and relational, no knowledge either âself-sufficient' or âabsolutely certain'. Acknowledging the âinfinitely complex' nature of the universe, ârelativism insists that the supposed absolute rigidity of the definitions used in metaphysics is but a fiction, that no concept can mean what it does entirely independently of everything else'.
95
Restated in aesthetic-historical terms, such thinking would be crucial to Tom's idea (expressed several years later) of a tradition in which âNo poet, no artist of any kind, has his complete meaning alone. His significance, his appreciation is the appreciation of his relation to the dead poets and artists. You cannot value him alone.'
96
Wiener had argued that âThe relativist believes that everything, in so far as it is understood adequately, is understood in relation to other things.'
97
Tom would maintain that every creative artist, to be understood and evaluated, must be set âfor contrast and comparison, among the dead'. He went beyond Wiener in contending not just that present experience was conditioned by a network of relations with previous experience, but that in art the present can rearrange the network of the past:
The existing monuments form an ideal order among themselves, which is modified by the introduction of the new (the really new) work of art among them. The existing order is complete before the new work arrives; for order to persist after the supervention of novelty, the
whole
existing order must be, if ever so slightly, altered; and so the relations, proportions, values of each work of art toward the whole are readjusted; and this is conformity between the old and the new.
98
This way of thinking about ârelations' between artworks or poems was not simply derived from Wiener's âRelativism', but his was arguably the single most important philosophical paper Tom ever read. It helped him develop ideas about the fruitfulness of constantly changing systems of relations â ways of thinking that conditioned some of his sharpest critical insights, and also helped him find in poetry ways to maintain complex networks of mutually interpenetrating meanings. These he brought into place through allusion, echo and suggestion as well as more directly. Tom was incubating such insights before Christmas 1914, but Wiener's thinking spurred him on.
âNew knowledge we acquire must be internally
relevant
to our previous knowledge', argued Wiener: âthe steam-hammer of to-day is the lineal product of the first stone hammer used by primitive man'.
99
Tom sought a similarly panoramic perspective, coming to think about art as the product of âa mind which changes', but âwhich abandons nothing
en route
, which does not superannuate either Shakespeare, or Homer, or the rock drawing of the [stone-age] Magdalenian draughtsmen'.
100
Wiener had a sense of scientific progress; for art, though he used the word âdevelopment', Tom did not envisage straightforward âimprovement'. Both men's insights developed through relational thinking. Though they flowered by moving apart, their philosophical interests were strikingly contiguous. The young Wiener published on aesthetics and was fascinated by theories of reality and knowledge. His mention in his âRelativism' of âmysticism, and all philosophical views which claim to be supported by some brand of knowledge essentially different from the sort of knowledge we recognize ourselves to possess' signals that Wiener, like Tom, was interested in mystical experience. Wiener's slightly later sceptical but thoroughly engaged and anthropologically informed article on âEcstasy' reveals a familiarity with authors that Tom too had been reading, including William James on religious experience, Janet on hysteria, E. D. Starbuck on the psychology of religion and Underhill on mysticism.
101
In dialogue with Wiener, Tom explained he had written a thesis about âBradley's theory of judgment', but, unhappy with it, he planned to recast it. This would become his Harvard doctoral submission. Joachim's input was crucial, even if Tom (as he soon told J. H. Woods) found that his own âfatal disposition towards scepticism' led him constantly towards âcriticism' rather than âconstruction'. Tom wrestled with this tendency. However, he also made clear to Wiener that âI am quite ready to admit that the lesson of relativism is: to avoid philosophy and devote oneself to
real
art or
real
science.' Conscious that Wiener like himself had studied with Santayana, he added that âFor
me
, as for Santayana, philosophy is chiefly literary criticism and conversation about life.'
102
These comments hint that Tom realised Wiener's future lay in science and his own future lay in literary art. For all that he continued his philosophical studies, this was true.
Still interested in Buddhism (he attended a Buddhist Society meeting in February), Tom maintained a Unitarian aversion to creeds, intensified by his philosophical studies. âI have had for several years', he told Eleanor Hinkley, âa distrust of strong convictions in any theory or creed which can be formulated'. Then he added, âOne must have theories, but one need not believe in them!'
103
Back in Oxford after Christmas, he worked hard, auditing lectures by Professor J. A. Stewart on Plotinus, whom Wiener later characterised as âa mystic' and âthe last of the ancient thinkers to have added anything to the theory of aesthetics'.
104
Tom made it clear to Eric Dodds, the only other student willing to keep listening to the sixty-eight-year-old Stewart's unexcitingly delivered lectures, that he was âseriously interested in mystical experience'. In this tiny class Tom opened up to his sole classmate. Like Tom, the independent-minded young Irish Classicist Dodds had been in Germany the previous summer; he had also been to Serbia, working in an army hospital. Tom and Dodds enjoyed chatting. âWhat astonished me as I came to know him better', Dodds recalled, âwas the wide knowledge of contemporary European literature, poetry in particular, which he gradually revealed. Then one day he confessed shyly that he had written some poems himself.'
105
Dodds told Tom he too wrote verse. He belonged to a small undergraduate poetry-reading group, the Coterie, headquartered nearby in Beaumont Street. A few members, including E. H. W. Meyerstein, had already published books or pamphlets; others were about to do so. Though their poems' diction was often old-fashioned, nonetheless some of these people were enthusiasts for French Symbolist verse. Among them was a gangly, rather cynical, short-sighted twenty-one-year-old undergraduate from Balliol College, Aldous Huxley. Dodds invited Tom to come along. Becoming a regular member of the Coterie, characteristically he âsaid little, but that little was always pungent and to the point'. To these fellow students Tom read aloud âThe Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock'. âWe were startled', Dodds recalled, âand, yes, a little puzzled, but less puzzled than excited'.
106
Tom's circle of acquaintances was expanding in quite different directions. Ezra Pound had put him in touch with musician Arnold Dolmetsch and his wife Mabel, with whose family Tom âpassed one of the most delightful afternoons I have ever spent'. Being in a family pleased him. Aged between three and eight, the four children danced for their visitor. Always good with youngsters, he was âwild to see them again'.
107
Also through Pound, he was in contact with Wyndham Lewis. Six years Lewis's junior, Tom met this sometimes pugnacious painter and novelist in a tiny âtriangular sitting-room' â âthe only room in the Pound flat where there was any daylight'. Decades later, and after he had painted Tom's portrait, Lewis recalled their first encounter:
As I entered the room I discovered an agreeable stranger parked up one of the sides of the triangle. He softly growled at me, and we shook hands. American. A graceful neck I noted, with what elsewhere I have described as âa Giaconda smile.' Though not feminine â besides being physically large his personality visibly moved within the male pale â there
were
dimples in the warm dark skin; undoubtedly he used his eyes a little like a Leonardo. He was a very attractive fellow then; a sort of looks unusual this side of the Atlantic. I liked him, though I may say not at all connecting him with texts Ezra had shown me about some fictional character dreadfully troubled with old age, in which the lines (for it had been verse) âI am growing old, I am growing old, I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled' â a feature, apparently, of the humiliations reserved for the superannuated â I was unable to make head or tail of.
108
Not long afterwards, and making a rather different impression, Tom sent Lewis his poem âThe Triumph of Bullshit'.
109
Ostensibly addressed to âLadies, who find my attentions ridiculous', Tom's bullshitting included the refrain âFor Christ's sake stick it up your ass'. The disconcerted Lewis also received what he called âBallad for Big Louise' â presumably a version of the 1911 âBallade pour la grosse Lulu'.
110
Eager to be a twenty-six-year-old
enfant terrible
, Tom thought these suitably scandalous for
Blast
; the Vorticist editor, Lewis, however, turned them down, maintaining (he told Pound) that while they were âexcellent bits of scholarly ribaldry', he would âstick to my naïf determination to have no “Words ending in -Uck, -Unt and -Ugger”'. Pound tried to cajole him â âI dare say Eliot will consent to leaving blanks for the offending words' â but Lewis would not be cajoled.
111
He did, though, take âPreludes' and âRhapsody on a Windy Night' for
Blast
number 2.
Bolovian Tom told Pound he found Lewis's response disappointingly âpuritanical'.
112
By around springtime in his Merton College tutorials Tom was attempting to outline what he called âan idealism
à rebours
' â his phrasing suggests a coupling of the reclusively donnish Bradley with the scandalous French Symbolist Catholic J. K. Huysmans, author of
à Rebours
.
113
During mid-March the Oxford student spent several days in Cambridge, where his friends Wiener and Russell were of use to him. He brandished Wiener's term ârelativism' when he gave a paper on âThe Relativity of the Moral Judgment' to the Moral Science Club in Russell's impressive Trinity College rooms. Visiting just a few days after Russell had hosted D. H. Lawrence, on 12 March Tom âattempted to compromise between an absolute idealist position and a relativist view'.
114
He was invited also to the Heretics, âthe leading literary society' whose âmost
brilliant
' members â whom perhaps he associated with Wiener â put him in mind of the intense but scattered âclever Jew undergraduate mind at Harvard'. Snooty about âserious, industrious, narrow and plebeian' Cambridge students, Tom sat up till 1 a.m. with âBertie' Russell, and visited George Santayana âwho was in Cambridge too'.
115
Tom claimed to argue âAs a relativist (to use my friend Dr Wiener's word)'; but in the typescript of this paper designed for oral delivery, he scored out the words âmy friend', making the youthful Dr Wiener sound more impersonally authoritative.
116
For a piece of abstract argument, his Cambridge talk was rich in biblical language, jokiness (âthe more tough-minded philosopher sometimes presents the aspect of an elderly German mathematician learning to dance') and phrases such as âthe hysterically minded' which reflect his reading in Janet and other psychologists.
117
Such literary flourish, well judged to impress and amuse at Trinity, was just the sort of thing Joachim disparaged. Tom's use of it hints at how his poetic and philosophical selves, though often aligned, might also war with one another. Writing about ethics, he discussed âthe origin and development of the moral ideas'.
118
On Saturday 27 February, preparing for this paper, he had borrowed from Merton's library
The Origin and Development of the Moral Ideas
by Edward Westermarck.
119
Tom's Cambridge discussion drew on Westermarck. Its treatment of â“desires” or “satisfactions”', âcompulsions' and âneeds' may relate to topics covered in Joachim's lectures, which dealt around 27 February with â
normal
human bodily appetites' and even âdiseased or abnormal bodily appetites' in the context of the topic of pleasure in Book VII of Aristotle's
Ethics.
120
But Tom had, too, a sense of appetites outside the classroom. However mocking he had been in an untitled Jane-Austen-cum-Dickensian playlet which he had written and sent to Eleanor Hinkley on 27 January, its sense of what one speaker calls âthe impetuosity of my blood' was a reaction to the news that Tom's earnest, churchy younger cousin Fred had become engaged. Still virginal, and acutely conscious of his own desire, Tom wrote around April 1915 an untitled poem, âThe Death of a Saint Narcissus', later retitled âThe Death of Saint Narcissus'. Its speaker walks âbetween the sea and the high cliffs', then âover the meadows', then âin city streets', always intensely aware of his sexuality. The poem features masturbatory imagery: