Page:Selected letters of Mendelssohn 1894.djvu/120

106 one considers all the actual, useful, beneficent things they may accomplish. And then, just because the man of honour has the hardest task in dealing with a public which is more concerned about appearances than realities, therefore one cannot suffer the needs of the moment to guide or perturb one’s conscience, but above all external considerations must always maintain in one’s heart a something that can raise and sustain it. This tells very directly for my view, for that higher impulse is the best thing in every calling, and it is common to all—shared equally by yours and mine and every other. After all, what is the beauty you find in a quartette or a symphony that I have worked into shape? Surely it is nothing but the piece of myself that I have put into it, given voice to in that fashion. You do the same in your defence of a pickpocket or a claim for damages, or whatever it may be that makes you exert yourself, just in the same measure that any man can do it, and that is the great point of concern. If only what is within a man can get issue and declare itself, and if this inward part of him can become more and more worthy of declaration, that is all; the rest is indifferent. With many thanks for news of all your doings.