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the soul of the far east-第25部分

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able inference。  The Far Oriental artist understands the power of suggestion well; for imagination always fills in the picture better than the brush; however perfect be its skill。

Even the neglect of certain general principles which we consider vital to effect; such as the absence of shadows and the lack of perspective; proves not to be of the importance we imagine。 We discover in these paintings how immaterial; artistically; was Peter Schlimmel's sad loss; and how perfectly possible it is to make bits of discontinuous distance take the place effectively of continuous space。

Far Eastern pictures are epigrams rather than descriptions。 They present a bit of nature with the terseness of a maxim of La Rochefoucault; and they delight as aphorisms do by their insight and the happy conciseness of its expression。  Few aphorisms are absolutely true; but then boldness more than makes up for what they lack in verity。  So complex a subject is life that to state a truth with all its accompanying limitations is to weaken it at once。 Exceptions; while demonstrating the rule; do not tend to emphasize it。 And though the whole truth is essential to science; such exhaustiveness is by no means a canon of art。

Parallels are not wanting at home。  What they do with space in their paintings do we not with time in the case of our comedies; those acted pictures of life?  Should we not refuse to tolerate a play that insisted on furnishing us with a full perspective of its characters' past?  And yet of the two; it is far perferable; artistically; to be given too much in sequence than too much at once。 The Chinese; who put much less into a painting than what we deem indispensable; delight in dramas that last six weeks。

To give a concluding touch of life to my necessarily skeleton…like generalities; memory pictures me a certain painting of Okio's which I fell in love with at first sight。  It is of a sunrise on the coast of Japan。  A long line of surf is seen tumbling in to you from out a bank of mist; just piercing which shows the blood…red disk of the rising sun; while over the narrow strip of breaking rollers three cranes are slowly sailing north。  And that is all you see。  You do not see the shore; you do not see the main; you are looking but at the border…land of that great unknown; the heaving ocean still slumbering beneath its chilly coverlid of mist; out of which come the breakers; and the sun; and the cranes。

So much for the more serious side of Japanese fancy; a look at the lighter leads to the same conclusion。

Hand in hand with his keen poetic sensibility goes a vivid sense of humor;two traits that commonly; indeed; are found Maying together over the meadows of imagination。  For; as it might be put;

  〃The heart that is soonest awake to the flowers    Is also the first to be touched by the fun。〃

The Far Oriental well exemplifies this fact。  His art; wherever fun is possible; fairly bubbles over with laughter。  From the oldest masters down to Hokusai; it is constantly welling up in the drollest conceits。  It is of all descriptions; too。  Now it lurks in merry ambush; like the faint suggestion of a smile on an otherwise serious face; so subtile that the observer is left wondering whether the artist could have meant what seems more like one's own ingenious discovery; now it breaks out into the broadest of grins; absurd juxtapositions of singularly happy incongruities。  For Hokusai's caricatures and Hendschel's sketches might be twins。  If there is a difference; it lies not so much in the artist's work as in the greater generality of its appreciation。  Humor flits easily there at the sea…level of the multitude。  For the Japanese temperament is ever on the verge of a smile which breaks out with catching naivete at the first provocation。  The language abounds in puns which are not suffered to lie idle; and even poetry often hinges on certain consecrated plays on words。  From the very constitution of the people there is of course nothing selfish in the national enjoyment。  A man is quite as ready to laugh at his own expense as at his neighbor's; a courtesy which his neighbor cordially returns。

Now the ludicrous is essentially human in its application。 The principle of the synthesis of contradictories; popularly known by the name of humor; is necessarily limited in its field to man。  For whether it have to do wholly with actions; or partly with the words that express them; whether it be presented in the shape of a pun or a pleasantry; it is in incongruous contrasts that its virtue lies。 It is the unexpected that provokes the smile。  Now no such incongruity exists in nature; man enjoys a monopoly of the power of making himself ridiculous。  So pleasant is pleasantry that we do indeed cultivate it beyond its proper pale。  But it is only by personifying Nature; and gratuitously attributing to her errors of which she is incapable; that we can make fun of her; as; for instance; when we hold the weather up to ridicule by way of impotent revenge。  But satires upon the clown…like character of our climate; which; after the lamest sort of a spring; somehow manages a capital fall; would in the Far East be as out of keeping with fancy as with fact。  To a Japanese; who never personifies anything; such innocent irony is unmeaning。  Besides; it would be also untrue。  For his May carries no suggestion of unfulfilment in its name。

Those Far Eastern paintings which have to do with man fall for the most part under one of two heads; the facetious and the historical。 The latter implies no particularly intimate concern for man in himself; for the past has very little personality for the present。 As for the former; its attention is; if anything; derogatory to him; for we are always shy of making fun of what we feel to be too closely a part of ourselves。  But impersonality has prevented the Far Oriental from having much amour propre。  He has no particular aversion to caricaturing himself。  Few Europeans; perhaps; would have cared to perpetrate a self…portrait like one painted by the potter Kinsei; which was sold me one day as an amusing tour de force by a facetious picture…dealer。  It is a composite picture of a new kind; a Japanese variety of type face。  The great potter; who was also apparently no mean painter; has combined three aspects of himself in a single representation。  At first sight the portrait appears to be simply a full front view of a somewhat moon…faced citizen; but as you continue to gaze; it suddenly dawns on you that there are two other individuals; one on either side; hob…nobbing in profile with the first; the lines of the features being ingeniously made to do double duty; and when this aspect of the thing has once struck you; you cannot look at the picture without seeing all three citizens simultaneously。  The result is doubtless more effective as a composition than flattering as a likeness。

Far Eastern sculpture; by its secondary importance among Far Eastern arts; witnesses again to the secondary importance assigned to man at our mental antipodes。  In this art; owing to its necessary limitations; the representation of nature in its broader sense is impossible。  For in the first place; whatever the subject; it must be such as it 
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