Preaching The

"Gospel Of Beauty" Essay, Research Paper


Vachel Lindsay’s peripatetic lifestyle was driven in part by financial need: from 1914


onwards, public recitation of his poetry was Lindsay’s most consistent means of income,


and a necessary one after the deaths of his parents (in 1918 and 1922) and particularly


after he married and had children (1925-26). That lifestyle was driven just as much,


however, by Lindsay’s artistic vision: the belief that the artist must preach the


"gospel of beauty" to the masses and that this gospel, embraced by the people,


might transform society. Among other sources, Lindsay’s gospel was inspired by mystical


visions that he experienced first in 1904 and which recurred throughout his life, by the


social gospel of the Campbellite Christian sect in which he was raised, and by Lindsay’s


talents as a graphic artist as well as a writer. The gospel, and Lindsay’s style of


preaching it, had various manifestations throughout his career. In his first attempts to


sell, or give away, his pamphlets, Lindsay’s gospel represents itself at its most


idealistic. At other times, as in "The Child-Heart in the Mountains" and


"Celestial Flowers of Glacial Park," the gospel is simultaneously mystical and


grounded in experience, in Lindsay’s trips to the Rocky Mountains and especially the newly


formed Glacier National Park, Montana. In "The Virginians Are Coming Again" the


vision becomes apocalyptic. The following excerpts relating to "the gospel of


beauty" are drawn primarily from Lindsay’s own letters and journals, and biographies


of the poet.


From Lindsay’s letter to E.S. Ames, a coreligionist in the Campbellite


sect, New York, May 18, 1904; Letters of Vachel Lindsay, ed. Marc Ch?netier, 4:


My ancestors were all men of action, statesmen, rulers of men. It is hard for me to


respect my army, for it is an assembly of ornamental shadows and dreams, when I thought to


have commanded men. And my sermons I must preach only to myself, to exhort myself to be


true to my art and writing. . . .


My ideal for my religious life is that of a religious tramp, a wanderer from Church to


Church, following the leading of "The Gleam," seeking new impressions and vivid


insights into the religious life of all men. I have had many of these in the past, yet


left few on record. The most I can hope for my verse is that it will some day become the


record of my best impressions in the Churches. I shall not force it, I can scarcely


promise. I merely hope. When you see signs of it in my writing, I ask your


congratulations, though it may be a while before they are due.


Account of Lindsay’s first visions, in the summer of 1904; Elizabeth


Ruggles, The West-Going Heart: A Life of Vachel Lindsay, 90:


Lindsay stayed on at home after the wedding [of his sister] and during the summer he


began to have some curious experiences. He called them "visions." He never lost


his head over these visions or tried to explain them as other than the projections of a


strongly visual imagination, but it should be understood that–like William Blake–he


actually saw them.


"It is plausible, I think," he wrote afterward, "that for one who had so


long co-ordinated drawings and poems for drawings, his religious experiences should paint


themselves before him in the air. Being taught by that admiarable practical but


unimaginative master William M. Chase never to draw a thing till I saw it on the blank


paper before me, it was only the terrrible power and blaze of the pictures that came that


made them unusual."


The first time, which was at night, he beheld with his bodily eyes, so clearly that he


could have painted them, the prophets of the Old Testament pass in gorgeous garb through


his bedroom. The second time, by day, he saw the prophets march gravely before the tall


elm tree in the front yard.


He believed his visions were not infallible but to be interepreted however he chose;


they were a part of his artistic captial. Yet they had been sent, like all strong


convictions. It was late, late at night in the awed aftermath of the first of them that he


wrote his mystical poem A Prayer in the Jungles of Heaven.


Lindsay’s first attempt to sell, and then give away his poems, in New


York City; Rica Brenner, Poets of Our Time, 116-17:


Possibly Vachel Lindsay at last felt he should earn his own living. At all events, he


now embarked on a quixotic adventure, that of selling copies of his own poems. From door


to door up and down the West Side of New York he went, trying to peddle his verses for a


few cents apiece. He thought of himself as an ancient troubadour making his way through


the world by his songs. With a good deal of humor he describes his adventures in his


diary.


"Well, I tried a sleepy big shock headed baker first. I tired to give the poem to


him. He considered the thing for some time as I explained it, but finally handed it back


saying he had no use for it. I thought there was a touch of class pride and the resentment


of my alms and irritated independence in his manner. So the next place I said to the


proprietor, ‘I will sell you this for two cents.’ At once I saw the thing take. My


customer smiled, and said, ‘Newspapers cost only one cent, with lots more reading matter


than this.’ But he took two cents from his till all right. I said, ‘You can see me the


author; that is why I charge the other cent, and I made that myself.’ He said, ‘It looks


like it,’ and laughed, and we parted, I promising to come again sometime or another."


Candy stores, Chinese laundries–"I must land a Chinaman yet"–delicatessens,


drug stores, fish markets, all were entered. For several nights he repeated his


performances. The result was an enriching of his experiences and a strengthening of his


conviction that "the people like poetry as well as the scholars, or better," but


no very great improvement in his finances.


Lindsay’s War Bulletins were written and self-published in 1909


after he returned to Springfield from New York City; "War Bulletin Number One"


appears below, as reprinted in Dennis Camp, ed., The Collected Prose of Vachel Lindsay,


vol. 1, 85:


I have spent a great part of my few years fighting a soul battle for absolute liberty,


for freedom from obligation, ease of conscience; independence from commercialism. I think


I am farther from slavery than most men. But I have not complete freedom of speech. In my


daily round of work I find myself taking counsel to please the stupid, the bigoted, the


conservative, the impatient, the cheap. A good part of the time I can please these people,


having a great deal in common with them.–but–


The things that go into the War Bulletin please me only. To the Devil with you,


average reader. To Gehenna with your stupidity, your bigotry, your conservatism, your


cheapness and your impatience!


In each new Bulletin the war shall go faster and further. War! War! War!


"The Gospel of Beauty" was a one-page tract carried with


Lindsay, and handed out in exchange for room and board, during his tramp from Springfield


to New Mexico in the summer of 1912; as printed in Adventures While Preaching the


Gospel of Beauty:


THE GOSPEL OF BEAUTY


Being the new "creed of a beggar" by that vain and foolish mendicant Nicholas


Vachel Lindsay, printed for his personal friends in his home village–Springfield,


Illinois. It is his intention to carry this gospel across the country beginning June,


1912, returning in due time.


I


I come to you penniless and afoot, to bring a message. I am starting a


new religious idea. The idea does not say "no" to any creed that you have heard.


. . . After this, let the denomination to which you now belong be called in your heart


"the church of beauty" or "the church of the open sky." . . . The


church of beauty has two sides: the love of beauty and the love of God.


II


THE NEW LOCALISM


The things most worth while are one’s own hearth and neighborhood. We should make our


own home and neighborhood the most democratic, the most beautiful and the holiest in the


world. The children now growing up should become devout gardeners or architects or park


architects or teachers of dancing in the Greek spirit or musicians or novelists or poets


or story-tellers or craftsmen or wood-carvers or dramatists or actors or singers. They


should find their talent and nurse it industriously. They should believe in every possible


application to art-theory of the thoughts of the Declaration of Independence and Lincoln’s


Gettysburg Address. They should, if led by the spirit, wander over the whole nation in


search of the secret of democratic beauty with their hearts at the same time filled to


overflowing with the righteousness of God. Then they should come back to their own hearth


and neighborhood and gather a little circle of their own sort of workers about them and


strive to make the neighborhood and home more beautiful and democratic and holy with their


special art. . . . They should labor in their little circle expecting neither reward nor


honors. . . . In their darkest hours they should be made strong by the vision of a


completely beautiful neighborhood and the passion for a completely democra

tic art. Their


reason for living should be that joy in beauty which no wounds can take away, and that joy


in the love of God which no crucifixion can end.


On his 1912 walk Lindsay was most impressed by Kansas; Adventures


While Preaching the Gospel of Beauty focuses on his experiences in that state,


represented in the following two excerpts–the first a philosophic and political


appreciation, the second a sensual and symbolic one:


Kansas, the Ideal American Community! Kansas, nearer than any other to the kind of a


land our fathers took for granted! Kansas, practically free from cities and industrialism,


the real last refuge of the constitution, since it maintains the type of agricultural


civilization the constitution had in mind! Kansas, State of tremendous crops and hardy,


devout, natural men! Kansas of the historic Santa F? Trail and the classic village of


Emporia and the immortal editor of Emporia! Kansas, laid out in roads a mile apart,


criss-crossing to make a great checker-board, roads that go on and on past endless rich


farms and big farm-houses, though there is not a village or railroad for miles! Kansas,


the land of the real country gentlemen, Americans who work the soil and own the soil they


work; State where the shabby tenant-dwelling scarce appears as yet! Kansas of the


Chautauqua and the college-student and the devout school-teacher! The dry State, the


automobile State, the insurgent State! Kansas, that is ruled by the cross-roads church,


and the church type of civilization! The Newest New England! State of more promise of


permanent spiritual glory than Massachusetts in her brilliant youth!


* * * *


JUNE 14, 1912. I have crossed the mystic border. I have left Earth. I have entered


Wonderland. Though I am still east of the geographical centre of the United States, in


every spiritual sense I am in the West. This morning I passed the stone mile-post that


marks the beginning of Kansas.


I went over the border and encountered–what do you think? Wild strawberries! Lo, where


the farmer had cut the weeds between the row and the fence, the gentle fruits revealed


themselves, growing in the shadow between the still-standing weeds. They shine out in a


red line that stretches on and on, and a man has to resolve to stop eating several times.


Just as he thinks he has conquered the desire the line gets dazzlingly red again.


The berries grow at the end of a slender stalk, clustered six in a bunch. One gathers


them in bouquets, as it were, and eats off the fruit like taffy off a stick.


Regarding Lindsay’s affection for Glacier National Park, and his faith


in wild American places as a source of visionary inspiration; Ann Massa, Vachel


Lindsay: Fieldworker for the American Dream, 179:


He had tramped with Stephen Graham in Glacier National Park, Montana, in 1921; he


honeymooned there . . . . From 1923 to 1928 he lived in Spokane, Washington, primarily to


be near the park, which was of particular significance to him because of the ease with


which he and Graham had crossed the border into Canada and the Waterton Lakes Park in


1922. "We crossed a Canadian American line almost obliterated. Every line should be


like that." The experience seemed to him an anticipation of the day when a fraternal


international community could dispense with physical and emotional barriers.


Lindsay relied on national parks–particularly Glacier Park–as a personal panacea. On


July 16, 1931 (he committed suicide on December 5) he was still saying "All I need is


a change and a rest, a new sight of the park." His own experience and pleasure and


refereshment in national parks led him to think of them as an antidote for national ills:


"only the deserts and mountains of America can crack the business hardened skulls of


the East," he brooded in Glacier Park in 1922. The Parks represented the Western


essence of the United States as opposed to a Europeanized, disparate America: "If in


America one does not have the West-going heart, the thousand little nations that are the


coutnries of Europe pull one away from our great National Parks."


Edgar Lee Masters, Vachel Lindsay: A Poet in America, 326-27:


We must refer to "The Virginians Are Coming Again," to be found in the


volume, Every Soul Is a Circus. He inserted a long preface in this volume,


recapitulating his art theories, his theories of the dancing of poetry, and the reciting


of poetry. . . .


"The Virginians Are Coming Again" ranks with the best that Lindsay did, not


so much in virtue of its harmonics, its artistry, as for its purposes, its vision. It was


written, Lindsay noted, as a summary to The Litany of Washington Street; but it


is much more than that. It prays for the downfall of the economic r?gime which came into


power through the Civil War, and which that war of intention both in origin and


prosecution put into power. It longs for Robert E. Lee to gallop again to the sea in a


fury of men [sic; Masters seems, improbably, to conflate Lee and Sherman here]. It means


that all of Lindsay’s heart at last was south of Mason and Dixon’s line, and that his


attachment to Lincoln was sentimental, and a survival of the Santa Claus mythology of


boyhood.


Marc Ch?netier, "Lindsay’s American Mythocracy," 49, 50:


Readers of Lindsay will find that the state of Virginia bears directly upon the Middle


West, for he finds in the one something that can be made greater by the other. On the tabula


rasa of the Midwest, Lindsay wants to build with incense and splendor, come through


time and space from the magnificent days of pre-colonial and colonial America. "The


Midwesterner is in line with our simple democratic traditions and gets his education from


the four seasons and the book of God and the open sky," he writes. The Midwest is


thereby protected against the commercial and political evils that have destroyed tradition


on the East Coast. . . . On the as yet unspoiled land on which he was born, Lindsay wants


to restore the grandeur of the land whence his forefathers came:


"Virginia"–that is, an idea of the old South, of the agrarian South–as opposed


to a merchant, then industrial, North. . . .


In 1928, with Hoover in the offing, and thus Babbit on his way back to the White House,


Lindsay publishes "The Virginians Are Coming Again," a poem the importance of


which, both in terms of themes and in terms of technical worth, has been consistently


underrated. He deplores his not being able to have a number of his Litany essays


[from The Litany of Washington Street] taken into consideration by politicians,


but is sure his poems counts enough for a coincidence of dates to matter: "My new


poem appears in the American Mercury on the day the Democratic Convention opens


in Houston, Texas. That poem is not rhetoric. I mean every line of it."


From letter by Lindsay to Margaret Conklin, his literary agent; Letters


of Vachel Lindsay, ed. Marc Ch?netier, 453:


Charleston, South Carolina


March 20, 1931


* * * *


The ideals of my life, on the Platform or off, are summarized in the "Building of


Springfield" Poem. I am at the top of my strength and powers to further those ideals.


My audiences increase to mobs, tyranical, ignorant mobs. Last night I gave them my best in


reciting, all from the Selected Poems, that is all my principal poems but The Congo and


Booth, the most forceful ideas I have added in comment, and many new and old poems. I sat


down having recited two hours, my best–8:30 to 10:30 P.M. Then the chairman, by


the Politest methods (not horrible bullying as in Asheville) started them mobbing


me for "The Congo" before I left the hall and I recited it politely resolving to


beat them yet. The Courtesy here is perfect and I have had a good time. But I am not going


to die like Edwin Markham, reciting in the provinces One poem written as a boy. I


wrote The Congo in 1913 and was through reciting it FOREVER, by 1920. And here they not


only ignore it as a Christian Missionary message–welcome it only as a stunt–liking only


the first section and enduring the rest), but I am the agonized prisoner of my 34th


year, no matter if I am 51. I want to say do and be the things a real artist of 51


would do. I am simply bursting with new ideas, new plans pour into my brain


every morning for songs, new creative force comes to me and I am the prisoner of a stunt


with all creative force thwarted . . . .


They accept the Congo and Booth about which I am hectored beyond all human endurance,


only as STUNTS and curiousities. I know they would not cross the street to help a nigger


of The Salvation Army as a result of this dress-suit heckling. . . . Please read


the Building of Springfield and swear by Heaven that henceforth you will build my


publicity round it.


Allen Ginsberg, Kaddish 44:


TO LINDSAY


Vachel, the stars are out


dusk has fallen on the Colorado road


a car crawls slowly across the plain


in the dim light the radio blares its jazz


the heartbroken salesman lights another cigarette


In another city 27 years ago


I see your shadow on the wall


you’re sitting in your suspenders on the bed


the shadow hand lifts up a Lysol bottle to your head


your shade falls over on the floor

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