Produced by Ruth Hart ruthhart@twilightoracle.com
[Note: I have made the following spelling changes:
Prologue: "methed" to "method";
Chapter 2: "renders imposssible" to "renders impossible"; "which man possessses" to "which man possesses";
"absolute unqestionable" to "absolute unquestionable"; "loathesomeness" to "loathsomeness";
Chapter 3: "alllowed to distort" to "allowed to distort";
Chapter 4: "itelf in its precise" to "itself in its precise";
Chapter 5: "do very considerably" to "do vary considerably";
Chapter 6: "its own permonition" to "its own premonition";
"arbitrement" to "arbitrament"; "subtratum" to "substratum"; "gooodeness" to "goodness";
Chapter 7: "flicherings" to "filcherings"; "Perapity" to "Peripety";
Chapter 8: "penerated" to "penetrated";
Chapter 9: "the anthropomorphic expresssion" to "the anthropomorphic expression"; "convuluted" to "convoluted";
Chapter 10: "a vast hierachy" to "a vast hierarchy";
Chapter 11: "to be too anthromorphic" to "to be too anthropomorphic"; "strictly strictly speaking" to "strictly speaking";
Chapter 13: "working in isolaton" to "working in isolation"; "If to this the astronomer answer"
to "If to this the astronomer answers"; "difficult to decribe" to "difficult to describe";
"the asethetic sense" to "the aesthetic sense"; "no attentuation" to "no attenuation";
"the Complex Vision represents" to "the complex vision represents";
Conclusion: "is eternaly divided" to "is eternally divided"; "rest of the imortals" to "rest of the immortals";
"elimination of the objectice mystery" to "elimination of the objective mystery".
The word "over-soul" is mostly spelled with a hyphen, so I added a hyphen to all instances of this word.
The word "outflowing" is mostly spelled without a hyphen, so I deleted the hyphens from all instances of this word.
All other spelling remains the same.]
THE COMPLEX VISION
BY
JOHN COWPER POWYS
NEW YORK
DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY
1920
DEDICATED
TO
LITTLETON ALFRED
PROLOGUE
What I am anxious to attempt in this anticipatory summary of the contents of this book is a simple estimate of its final conclusions, in such a form as shall eliminate all technical terms and reduce the matter to a plain statement, intelligible as far as such a thing can be made intelligible, to the apprehension of such persons as have not had the luck, or the ill-luck, of a plunge into the ocean of metaphysic.
A large portion of the book deals with what might be called our instrument of research; in other words, with the problem of what particular powers of insight the human mind must use, if its vision of reality is to be of any deeper or more permanent value than the "passing on the wing," so to speak, of individual fancies and speculations.
This instrument of research I find to be the use, by the human person, of all the various energies of personality concentrated into one point; and the resultant spectacle of things or reality of things, which this concentrated vision makes clear, I call the original revelation of the complex vision of man.