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The
Art of Personality
By Doug Talley
In a letter to
Benjamin Bailey dated November 22,
1817, the poet John Keats wrote:
I am certain of
nothing but of the holiness of the
Heart’s affections and the truth of
Imagination — What the imagination
seizes as Beauty must be truth — whether
it existed before or not — for I have
the same Idea of all our Passions
as of Love they are all in their sublime,
creative of essential Beauty… (John
Keats, Selected Poetry,
Paul de Man, editor, New American
Library, 1966, p. 326).
On the subject
of Imagination, several years ago
I noted in my journal a moment of
morning play for my youngest daughter
while I was preparing for work:
This morning as I was shaving, my three-year-old daughter came
into the bathroom to play. She carried
a small handful of purple grapes into
the bathtub and pretended they were
swimming together in the empty tub.
After a few moments, she sensed the
grapes were in grave danger, so she
stood up suddenly and took off her
pink pajamas, scooped up the grapes,
and carried them in her cupped hands
to the shower in order to save them
— another disaster barely averted
in her young world of constant, great
moment! It strikes me now that what
we frequently refer to as innocence
in children is simply a pure and uninhibited
imagination at play. And if adults
have lost their innocence, does it
mean that one of the casualties of
this loss is a loss also of imagination?
In this life I
am convinced we do not need revelation
so much to discover what is in heaven,
but rather to discover what is in
our hearts. Poetry, like the scriptures,
can serve as just the necessary seer
stone to test what is in our heart
and nature. Pulsing at the center
of good poetry is a lively imagination
and as we examine such poetry, I believe
we are drawn closer to that imagination
which rests in our own heart of hearts,
or which may be buried there and in
dire need of resurrection. The examination
of poetry is worth the effort, because
the expression of imagination through
art is, in effect, a statement of
Identity. We come to understand more
intimately individual personality
— our own unique identities — as we
understand imagination.
Keats
wrote another letter to his brother
in March 1819 where he meditated on
the development of individual identity.
According to his thesis, it is only
by experience of the heart that an
intelligence develops into a soul
with identity and thereby becomes
fulfilled:
Call the world
if you please “The vale of Soul-making.”
Then you will find out the use of
the world (I am speaking now in the
highest terms for human nature, admitting
it to be immortal, which I will here
take for granted for the purpose of
showing a thought which has struck
me concerning it) I say “Soul-making,” Soul as distinguished from an Intelligence
— there may be intelligences or sparks
of the divinity in millions — but
they are not Souls till they acquire
identities, till each one is personally
itself. Intelligences are atoms of
perception — they know and they see
and they are pure, in short they are
God — how then are Souls to be made?
How then are these sparks which are
God to have identity given them —
so as ever to possess a bliss peculiar
to each one’s individual existence?
How, but by the medium of a world
like this? This point I sincerely
wish to consider because I think it
a grander system of salvation than
the Christian religion — or rather
it is a system of Spirit-creation
— this is effected by three grand
materials acting the one upon the
other for a series of years — These
three Materials are the Intelligence,
the human heart (as distinguished
from intelligence or Mind), and the
World or Elemental space suited for
the proper action of Mind and Heart
on each other for the purpose of forming
the Soul or Intelligence destined
to possess the sense of Identity.
I can scarcely express what I but
dimly perceive — and yet I think I
perceive it — that you may judge the
more clearly I will put it in the
most homely form possible — I will
call the World a School instituted
for the purpose of teaching little
children to read — I will call the
human heart the horn Book used in
that school — and I will call the
Child able to read, the Soul made
from that school and hornbook. Do
you not see how necessary a World
of Pains and troubles is to school
an Intelligence and make it a soul?
A Place where the heart must feel
and suffer in a thousand diverse ways!
Not merely is the Heart a Hornbook,
it is the Mind’s Bible, it is the
Mind’s experience, it is the teat
from which the Mind or intelligence
sucks its identity — As various as
the Lives of Men are — so various
become the souls, and thus does God
make individual beings, Souls, Identical
Souls of the sparks of his own essence
— this appears to me a faint sketch
of a system of Salvation which does
not affront our reason and humanity
— I am convinced that many difficulties
which Christians labor under would
vanish before it... If what I have
said should not be plain enough, as
I fear it may not be, I will put you
in the place where I began in this
series of thought — I mean, I began
by seeing how man was formed by circumstances
— and what are circumstances but touchstones
of his heart? And what are touchstones
but provings of his heart? And what
are provings of his heart but fortifiers
or alterers of his nature? And what
is his altered nature but his Soul?
— And what was his Soul before it
came into the world and had these
provings and alterations and perfectionings?
— An intelligence without Identity
— and how is this Identity to be made?
Through the medium of the Heart? And
how is the heart to become this Medium
but in a world of Circumstances? (Id., pp. 343-344.)
The doctrine of
evolving primordial intelligence Keats
seemed to grasp intuitively. He thought
that many “difficulties which Christians
labor under would vanish” before the
concept. It does seem a marvelous
explanation of a distinctly Mormon
doctrine whereby God organized intelligences
into spirits and then sent them to
earth for experience to develop god-like
capacities, as Abraham had seen in
vision when God had shown to him “the
intelligences that were organized
before the world was”. Abraham had
seen that at the center of the Creation
was a plan for going down where there
was space and taking materials to
“make an earth whereon these may dwell”
(that is, the intelligences) and to
“prove them herewith.” Cf., Abraham 3:22-25.
Keats wrote this
letter and was thinking through this
concept at about the same time that
he wrote his great, imaginative odes
in May 1819. There is much to be explored
here, and it falls in agreeably with
the view that the full development
of individual personality is absolutely
critical to any notion of eternal
life. And the only way to fully develop
individual personality is to learn
from someone who has himself already
aspired and achieved. When Jesus defined
eternal life for humanity and said
it was “to know thee, the only true
God,” implicit in that statement was
the principle that we could only know
ourselves and our potential as sons
and daughters of God by thoroughly
knowing the parent and the older brother
who marked the way. The story of Jesus
is the story of how a child comes
to the Father and is made divine —
a fully realized Identity.
Central to Identity
and the notion of personality is the
expression of it in some form of art.
The expression of personality through
art has the potential to continue
into the eternities. I once read somewhere
that Brigham Young had said that in
hell there is no music. He could have
been referring to the Revelation of
John, 18:21-23 — Thus with violence shall that great
city of Babylon be thrown down, and
shall be found no more at all. And
the voice of harpers, and musicians,
and of pipers, and trumpeters, shall
be heard no more at all in thee: and
no craftsman, of whatsoever craft
he be, shall be found any more in
thee; and the sound of a millstone
shall be heard no more at all in thee;
and the light of a candle shall shine
no more at all in thee...
Contrast this with
what is said of Zion in Psalms 87:
The Lord loveth
the gates of Zion more than all the
dwellings of Jacob.
Glorious things
are spoken of thee, O city of God…
The Lord shall
count, when he writeth up the people,
that this man was born there. Selah.
As well as the
singers as the players on instruments
shall be there: all my springs are
in thee.
The chains of hell
bind personality — they are the gradual
extinguishment of personality through
the abandonment of, and isolation
from, all good, including the goodness
and beauty of art. Heaven, on the
other hand, resounds with personality
and art. As Keats wrote on another
occasion:
The excellence
of every Art is its intensity, capable
of making all disagreeables evaporate,
from their being in close relationship
with Beauty & Truth (Id., p. 328).
That sounds like
another definition of heaven. Those
few years ago when my young daughter
in pure imagination saved her purple
grapes from tragedy, she was simply
refreshing her sense of heaven, by
exercising her creative ability to
make “all disagreeables evaporate”
— an early lesson in the art of personality
that hopefully will carry through
to the eternities.
© 2005 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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| About
the Editor: |
| 
Doug Talley
graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from
Bowling Green State University in 1976. Upon graduation he spent
the summer in the Grand Tetons looking for God, which led him on
a hitch-hiking spree to Salt Lake City. He joined the Church and
thereafter served in the Italy, Rome Mission from 1978 to 1980.
After his mission he enrolled in the University of Akron School
of Law. He graduated in 1984 and has "fiddled at the law"
ever since, currently as the CEO of Millennial Assurance Services,
Inc. He has published one book of poetry, The Angel Voice of
Irony, a sonnet sequence about his conversion. A second book
of poetry, April in October, is planned for publication in
2003. His poems have appeared in The American Scholar, Midwest
Poetry Review, Piedmont Literary Review, Hellas,
and other journals. He and his wife and seven children live in Akron,
Ohio, where he has served in every ward calling from scoutmaster
to bishop.
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