3095
ON TRANSIENCE
Not long ago I went on a summer walk through a smiling countryside in the
company of a taciturn friend and of a young but already famous poet. The poet
admired the beauty of the scene around us but felt no joy in it. He was disturbed by
the thought that all this beauty was fated to extinction, that it would vanish
when winter came, like all human beauty and all the beauty and splendour that
men have created or may create. All that he would otherwise have loved and
admired seemed to him to be shorn of its worth by the transience which was its doom.
The proneness to decay of all that is beautiful and perfect can, as we
know, give rise to two different impulses in the mind. The one leads to the aching
despondency felt by the young poet, while the other leads to rebellion against
the fact asserted. No! it is impossible that all this loveliness of Nature and
Art, of the world of our sensations and of the world outside, will really fade
away into nothing. It would be too senseless and too presumptuous to believe
it. Somehow or other this loveliness must be able to persist and to escape all
the powers of destruction.
But this demand for immortality is a product of our wishes too unmistakable
to lay claim to reality: what is painful may none the less be true. I could not
see my way to dispute the transience of all things, nor could I insist upon an
exception in favour of what is beautiful and perfect. But I did dispute the
pessimistic poet’s view that the transience of what is beautiful involves any
loss in its worth.
On the contrary, an increase! Transience value is scarcity value in time.
Limitation in the possibility of an enjoyment raises the value of the enjoyment.
It was incomprehensible, I declared, that the thought of the transience of
beauty should interfere with our joy in it. As regards the beauty of Nature, each
time it is destroyed by winter it comes again next year, so that in relation to
the length of our lives it can in fact be regarded as eternal. The beauty of
the human form and face vanish for ever in the course of our own lives, but
their evanescence only lends them a fresh charm. A flower that blossoms only for a
single night does not seem to us on that account less lovely. Nor can I
understand any better why the beauty and perfection of a work of art or of an
intellectual achievement should lose its worth because of its temporal limitation. A
time may indeed come when the pictures and statues which we admire to-day will
crumble to dust, or a race of men may follow us who no longer understand the
works of our poets and thinkers, or a geological epoch may even arrive when all
animate life upon the earth ceases; but since the value of all this beauty and
perfection is determined only by its significance for our own emotional lives, it
has no need to survive us and is therefore independent of absolute duration.