Whatever
I have to say of Herzl, the unforgettable, I have tried to put into
the several portraits which I have made of the physical man. I know
that my attempts have fallen short, for our leader was a man of super-human
beauty. And I confess freely that it was this divine gift of beauty
which left the deepest and most enduring impress on my mind. The towering
figure, informed by a marvelous harmoniousness which poured itself
into all his movements, represented an ideal type. But I cannot believe
that such amazing beauty was purely physical. The princes before whom
Herzl appeared paid him involuntary homage, for they knew instinctively
that here was an uncrowned King. If there is such a thing a kingliness
of mien and bearing, Herzl possessed it - and in a higher degree I
think, than Wilhelm II, or Edward VII, or Alphonso of Spain. The indescribable
nobility of bearing, which was accompanied by that gentle condescension
which is the mark of princes, cast a spell over those who came within
range of his voice. Until this day I am genuinely sorry for those
who have not known him personally.
The
forces which had made him supremely beautiful had also woven into
the texture of his being a conscious regard for all beauty. He had
the artist's sensitiveness to appearance, and aesthetic consideration
played a foremost role in all his preparations.
Before
the opening of a Congress the members of the Actions Committee were
literally passed in review. Herzl insisted that in the matter of dress
too they should express their sense of the dignity of the occasion.
And the entrance of the leaders into the hall was timed perfectly,
so that the maximum of effect might be produced. Yet it would be wrong
to attribute this extreme care to a demagogic instinct; it was the
detailed expression of a high regard for appearances. The platform
manner of Herzl was at the opposite pole from that of the demagogue.
He was no popular orator; every sentence was carefully balanced; there
was a rhythm in the thought as well as in the word. The audience was
made to feel that not shallow enthusiasm moved him, but rigid logic,
inexorable energy and an unshakable will to action based on sincerest
conviction. Such elements, again, could express themselves only in
the simplest and most exact - and therefore the most convincing phrases
and words.
The
years passed over that proud, unbending head; cares and disappointments,
the strains of an intolerably heavy responsibility, the pain of hoe
deferred and deferred again left on his face deep and expressive lines.
But time, which entrenched itself on his face, had no power over his
eyes. The face had become the face of a man of sorrows: his eyes had
become the eyes of a seer.