<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0056" id="link2H_4_0056"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ROSE-WATER RELIGION. * </h2>
<p>* April, 1894.<br/></p>
<p>Most of our readers will recollect the controversy that was carried on,
more than twelve months ago, in the columns of the <i>Daily Chronicle</i>.
Mr. Robert Buchanan had published his new poem, "The Wandering Jew," in
which Jesus Christ was depicted as a forlorn vagrant, sick of the evil and
infamy wrought in his name, and for which he was historically though not
intentionally responsible. This poem was reviewed by Mr. Richard Le
Gallienne, a younger poet, who is also a professional critic in the <i>Star</i>,
where his weekly <i>causerie</i> on books and their writers is printed
over the signature of "Logroller." Mr. Le Gallienne took Mr. Buchanan to
task for his hostility to "the Christianity of Christ," the nature of
which was not defined nor even made intelligible. Mr. Buchanan replied
with his usual impetuosity, declining to have anything to do with
Christianity except in the way of opposition, and laughing at the
sentimental dilution which his young friend was attempting to pass off as
the original, unadulterated article. Mr. Le Gallienne retorted with
youthful self-confidence that Mr. Buchanan did not understand
Christianity. Other writers then joined in the fray, and the result was
the famous "Is Christianity Played Out?" discussion in the <i>Chronicle</i>.
It was kept going for a week or two, until parliament met and Jesus Christ
had to make way for William Ewart Gladstone.</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne hinted that he was preparing a kind of manifesto on the
subject of Christianity. The world was to be informed at length as to the
"essential" nature of that religion. Divines and Freethinkers had alike
misunderstood and misrepresented it. After a lapse of nearly two thousand
years the "straight tip," if we may so express it, was to come from
"Logroller." He would soon speak and set the weary world at rest with the
triumphant proclamation of the real, imperishable religion of Jesus
Christ. Presently it was announced, in judicious puffs, that the manifesto
was growing under Mr. Le Gallienne's hands. It would take the form of a
book, to be entitled <i>The Religion of a Literary Man</i>. The title had
little relation to the Galilean carpenter or his fishing disciples. Nor
was it in any sense happy. It smacked too much of the "shop." Sir Thomas
Browne, it is true, wrote a "Religio Medici," and gave a physician's view
of religion; but he was a man of rare genius as well as quaintness, and
allowance was to be made for his idiosyncrasy. Besides, there is a certain
speciality in a doctor's way of looking at religion, if he compares his
knowledge with his faith. But what is the speciality of a literary man on
this particular subject? Other trades and professions might as well follow
suit, and give us "The Religion of a Porkbutcher," or "The Faith of a
Farmer," or "The Creed of a Constable." Even the "Belief of a Barman" is
not beyond the scope of a rational probability.</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne's long-promised evangel "burst upon the town" a month
ago. The "Religio Scriptoris"—which a puzzler at Latin might render
as "The Religion of a Scribbler"—made a dainty appearance. The
title-page was in two colors, with a pretty arabesque border. The type
throughout was neatly leaded, with a column for summaries in the old
fashion, and a wide margin of imitation hand-made paper. The book was
pretty, like the writing, and opposite the title-page was a pretty verse:—</p>
<p>'The old gods pass'—the cry goes round,<br/>
'Lo! how their temples strew the ground';<br/>
Nor mark we where, on new-fledged wings,<br/>
Faith, like the phoenix, soars and sings.<br/></p>
<p>Yes, it is <i>all</i> pretty. There is an air of dilettanteism about the
whole production. It will probably be grateful to the sentimentalists who,
despite their scepticism, still cling to the name of Christian; but we
imagine it will rather irritate than satisfy other readers of more
strenuous and scrupulous intelligence.</p>
<p>The book is dedicated to "A. E. Fletcher, Esq.," editor of the <i>Daily
Chronicle</i>, who may well be proud (not of this dedication, but) of the
high position to which he has raised that organ of Radical principles. Mr.
Le Gallienne refers to the old controversy in the <i>Chronicle</i> as
"raising an important question—to me the most important of questions—as
to whether Christianity was really so obsolete to-day as its opponents
glibly assume." "I could not stand by," he continues, "and see the sublime
figure of Christ vulgarised to make an Adelphi holiday." For this reason,
he modestly says, he "ventured to play David to Mr. Buchanan's
Philistine." Mr. Fletcher allowed him a battlefield and "thence sprung [he
means <i>sprang</i>] the following pages." Thus much for the origin of the
work, and now for its character. "I have condensed in its pages," the
writer says, "much religious experience, and long and ardent thought on
spiritual matters." No doubt he believes this statement, but is it true?
Is not the writer too young to have had "much experience"? and where are
the traces of the "long and ardent thought"? Mr. Le Gallienne might reply
that his thought <i>has</i> been long and ardent, whatever the value of
the result; but, in that case, he is not cut out for a thinker; and,
indeed, he seems aware of the fact, for he often prints "thinker" in
inverted commas to show his disdain of the article. His "one cure" for
"modern doubt" is to "think less and feel more," and some may be tempted
to remark that he has certainly followed the first part of the
prescription.</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne is a long time in coming to "the sublime figure of
Christ." He has a considerable ground to cover before he undertakes the
cleaning and painting of the old idol. First of all, he has to establish
his native superiority over the common herd. He divides the world into
"natural spiritualists and materialists." The first have a Spiritual Sense
(capitals, please), while the second have not; and "it is obvious that the
large majority of mankind belong to the latter class." Mr. Le Gallienne,
of course, belongs to the former. He is a member of Nature's (or God's)
aristocracy. It is for them that he writes, although on his own
supposition the task is superfluous. The common herd of materialists are
warned against wasting their time in reading him—which also is
somewhat superfluous. The fault of materialists—or rather their
misfortune, for they are born that way—is that they are such
sticklers for facts, and have "no conception of aught they cannot touch
and handle, eat, or see through a microscope." Not, indeed, that Mr. Le
Gallienne objects to eating, for instance; he speaks of it with wet lips,
and looks down upon the Vegetarian as a person whose "spiritual insight"
is not "mercifully intermittent," especially at meal times. But barring
meal times, and other fleshly occasions when the spiritualists join the
materialists, the former habitually see facts as "transitory symbols" of
"transfiguring mysteries," so that the whole world (and perhaps the moon)
is "palpitating with occult significance."</p>
<p>For instance. A materialist eats rook-pie, and cares for nothing else but
a sound digestion. The spiritualist also eats rook-pie, but after the
repast he will sentimentalise over dead rooks, without losing his belief
in an all-merciful Providence. He will assure you, indeed, and try to
convince you, that the shooting of rooks and the pulling off their heads
to prevent the rook-pie from tasting bitter, is simply one of the
"terrible and beautiful mysteries" which make the world so interesting—especially
to gentlemen of comprehensive natures, who combine a taste for rook-pie
with a taste for optimistic theology.</p>
<p>When we come to test Mr. Le Gallienne's conception of mystery, we find it
to be nothing but muddle. The whole mystery of life, he says, may be found
in a curve: as thus, Why isn't it straight?</p>
<p>"Color in itself is a mystery, and are there not trance-like moments when
suddenly we ask ourselves, why a <i>colored</i> world, why a <i>blue</i>
sky, and <i>green</i> grass, why not <i>vice versa</i>, or why any color
at all?"</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne is evidently prepared to stand aghast at the fact that
twice two make four. Why <i>always</i> four? Why not three to-day and
seven to-morrow? Yea, and echo answers, Why?</p>
<p>Here is another illustration of "mystery"—</p>
<p>"Science can tell us that oxygen and hydrogen will unite under certain
conditions to produce water, but it cannot tell us why they do so; the
mystery of their affinity is as dark as ever."</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne has a whole chapter on the Relative Spirit, yet his "long
and ardent thought" does not enable him to see that he is himself a slave
of metaphysics. All this "mystery" is nothing but the "meat-roasting power
of the meat-jack." He question of <i>why</i> oxygen and hydrogen form
water is a prompting of anthropomorphism. Intellectually, it is simply
childish. It could only be put by one who has <i>not</i> grasped the great
doctrine of the Relativity of Knowledge. Man can no more get beyond his
own knowledge—which is and ever must be finite—than he can get
outside himself, or run away from his own shadow.</p>
<p>"The sacred mystery of motherhood," of which Mr. Le Gallienne speaks, is a
pretty expression. It may pass in the realm of poetry, with the
"everlasting hills" and the "eternal sea," which are but transient
phenomena in the infinite existence of the universe. The "mystery" of
human motherhood is no greater than the "mystery" of any other form of
reproduction, while its "sacredness" depends on circumstances; the term,
in short, being a compendium of a great variety of personal and social
feelings, which may or may not be present in any particular case. What
becomes of the "sacred mystery of motherhood" when a poor servant girl
brings her child into the world unaided, and casts it into the Thames?
What becomes of it when violation takes the place of seduction, and a
woman bears a child to a man she loathes and hates?</p>
<p>"Mystery," like other words we inherit from the theological and
metaphysical stages, is only fit for use in poetry; it is out of place in
science or philosophy; and we advise Mr. Le Gallienne to get a
comprehension of this truth before he takes fresh excursions in the "realm
of long and ardent thought." The subjective ideas of poetry cease to be
admirable and stimulating when they are projected into the external world,
and become our masters instead of our servants.</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne follows the beaten track of theology in talking about
"mysteries," which are only subterfuges to cover the retreat of a
nonplussed debater, or a warren for the fugitive game of the hounds of
reason. He also follows the beaten track in arguing—or rather
assuming—that the elect spiritualists have a "sense" which is
lacking in the reprobate materialists. There is nothing like a good
lumping assumption for begging the question at issue. It settles the
discussion before it opens, and saves a world of trouble. But even an
assumption may be looked in the face; nay, it is best looked in the face
when you suspect it of being an imposture.</p>
<p>According to Mr. Le Gallienne, the religious sense—or, as he also
writes it, the SPIRITUAL SENSE, with capital letters—is not after
all a special faculty, but a special compound, or interaction, of common
faculties. He does, indeed, treat these common faculties as "tribautaries"
of the Spiritual Sense; but it is very evident that the tributaries make
the stream, which is merely a name without them. First, there is the Sense
of Wonder, which is nothing but the positive side of ignorance; second,
the Sense of Beauty, which "is not necessarily a religious sense," but may
be pressed into its service; third, the Sense of Pity, which really
originates, as we conceive, in parental affection, and has even been
noticed in rats as well as in religionists; fourth, the Sense of Humor,
which is a peculiarly "candid" friend of religion, so that Mr. Le
Gallienne is obliged to give its devotees an impressive warning against
running into Ill-nature and Sacrilege; fifth, the Sense of Gratitude,
which in religion, so far as we can see, appears to consist in a lively
sense of favors to come, through the medium of prayer, to which
thanksgiving is only a judicious preliminary, like the compliments and
flatteries that are addressed to an oriental despot by his humble but
calculating petitioners.</p>
<p>Now all these senses are perfectly natural. Every one of them is found in
the lower animals as well as in man. How then can there be anything
supernatural, supersensible, or "spiritual,", in their combination? Is it
not evident that Religion works, like everything else, upon common
materials? Chiefly, indeed, upon the unchastened imagination of credulous
ignorance. We may prove this from Mr. Le Gallienne's own testimony.</p>
<p>"Are there not impressions borne in upon the soul of man as he stands a
spectator of the universe which religion alone attempts to formulate?
Certain impressions are expressed by the sciences and the arts. 'How
wonderful!'—exclaims man, and that is the dawn of science; 'How
beautiful!'—and that is the dawn of art. But there is a still
higher, a more solemn, impression borne in upon him, and, falling upon his
knees, he cries, 'How holy!' That is the dawn of religion."</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne does not see that this is all imagination. "The heavens
declare the glory of God," exclaims the Psalmist. On the other hand, a
great French Atheist exclaimed, "The heavens declare the glory of
Copernicus, Kepler, and Newton."</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne does not see, either, that man did not exclaim, "How
holy!" when he first fell upon his knees. His feeling was rather, "How
terrible!" The sense of holiness is a social product—a high
sublimation of morality. Man had to possess it himself, and see it highly
exemplified in picked specimens of his kind, before he bestowed it upon
his gods. Deities do not anticipate, they follow, the course of human
evolution.</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne is an Optimist. He is young and prosperous, and, judging
from his poetry, happily married. He is therefore satisfied that all is
for the best—if properly understood; just as when an alderman has
dined, all the world is happy.</p>
<p>There are such people, however, as Pessimists, and Mr. Le Gallienne hates
them. Schopenhauer, for instance, he rails at as a "small philosopher."
whose ideas were only the "formulation of his own special disease, the
expression of his own ineffably petty and uncomfortable disposition." At
which one can only stare, as at a mannikin attacking a colossus. Spinoza
too can be treated jauntily if he does not fall into line with Mr. Le
Gallienne. George Meredith is treated with abundant respect, but he is
wronged by being enrolled as a facile optimist, and "the strongest of the
apostles of faith." He is certainly nothing of the kind, in Mr. Le
Gallienne's sense of the words. He has faith in reason and humanity, but
this is a very different thing from faith in the idols—even the
greatest idol—of the Pantheon.</p>
<p>"There is too much pain in the world," said Charles Darwin, who knew what
he was talking about, and always expressed himself with moderation. In the
moral world, pain becomes evil; and the problem of evil has ever been the
crux of Theism. It cannot be solved on Theistic grounds, and accordingly
it has to be explained away. Pain, we are told, is the great agent in our
development; in the ethical sphere, it is the "purifying fire," which
purges the gold in us from its dross. All of which sounds very pretty in a
lecture, and looks very pretty in a book; but is apt to excite disgust
when a man is suffering from incurable cancer, or utter destitution in the
midst of plenty; or when a mother stands over the corpse of her child,
mangled in some terrible accident, or burnt to a cinder in a fatal fire.</p>
<p>Certainly, pain subserves a partial purpose. It is sometimes a warning,
though the warning is often too late. But its function is immensely
overrated by Mr. Le Gallienne and other religionists. It is all very well
to talk about the "crucible," but half the people who go into it are
reduced to ashes. Mr. Le Gallienne will not accept Spinoza's view that
"pain is an unmistakable evil; joy the vitalising, fructifying power." But
the great mystic, William Blake, said the same thing in, "Joys impregnate,
sorrows bring forth." George Meredith has expressed the same view in
saying that "Adversity tests, it does not nourish us." Even the struggle
for existence does not add any strength to the survivors. It sometimes
cripples them. By eliminating the unfit—that is, the weak—it
raises the average capacity. But what a method for Infinite Wisdom and
Infinite Goodness! There was more sense, and less cruelty, in the ancient
method of infanticide.</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne seems to feel that his theory of pain is too fantastic,
so he falls back on "mystery." "We can form no possible conception," he
says, "of the processes of God." Why then does he talk about them so
consumedly? Ignorance is a good reason for silence, but none for
garrulity.</p>
<p>We must be "humble," says Mr. Le Gallienne, and recognise that we only
exist "to the praise and glory of God." We are his servants and soldiers,
and the pay is life!—"Had he willed it, this glorious gift had never
been ours. We might have still slept on unsentient, unorganised, in the
trodden dust." Very likely; but who could lose what he never possessed? It
is a small misfortune that can never be realised.</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne leaps the final difficulty by exclaiming that "Man has no
rights in regard to God." He shakes hands with St. Paul, who asserts the
potter's power over the clay. Yes, but man is not clay. He lives and
feels. He has rights, even against God. The parent is responsible for his
child, the creator for his creature. The opposite doctrine is fit for
cowards and slaves. It comes down to us from the old days, when fathers
had the power of life and death over their children; it dies out as we
learn that the first claim is the child's, and the first duty the
parent's.</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne's god is the old celestial despot of theology in a new
costume. On the question of a future life, however, we are pleased to find
a vein of heterodoxy and common sense. Mr. Le Gallienne asks, with respect
to the "hereafter," whether we "really care about it so much as we
imagine." We talk about meeting our old friends in heaven, for instance,
but do we not "meet them again already on earth—in the new ones"! It
is said that if fine, cultivated personalities do not survive death, they
are wasted, and have existed in vain. Mr. Le Gallienne's reply to this
objection is clear, sufficient, and well expressed:—</p>
<p>"But how so? Have they not been in full operation for a lifetime? 'Tis a
pity truly that the old fiddle should be broken at last; but then for how
many years has it not been discoursing most excellent music? We naturally
lament when an old piece of china is some sure day dashed to pieces; but
then for how long a time has it been delighting and refining those, maybe
long dead, who have looked upon it.—If there were no possibility of
more such fiddles, more such china, their loss would be an infinitely more
serious matter; but on this the sad-glad old Persian admonishes us:—</p>
<p>.... fear not lest Existence, closing your<br/>
Account and mine, should know the like no more;<br/>
The Eternal Saki from the bowl has pour'd<br/>
Millions of Bubbles like us, and shall pour.<br/></p>
<p>Nature ruthlessly tears up her replicas age after age, but she is slow to
destroy the plates. Her lovely forms are all safely housed in her memory,
and beauty and goodness sleep secure in her heart, in spite of all the
arrows of death."</p>
<p>Without saving what they are, or which of them he considers at all
convincing, Mr. Le Gallienne observes that the arguments as to a future
life are "probably stronger on the side of belief"—which is rather a
curious expression. But, whichever theory be true, it "does not really
much matter." Very likely. But how does this fit in with the teaching of
Christ? If he and his apostles did not believe in the "hereafter," what <i>did</i>
they believe in? "Great is your reward in heaven," and similar sentences,
lose all meaning without the doctrine of a future life, about which the
early Christians were intensely enthusiastic. It was not in <i>this</i>
world, as Gibbon remarks, that they wished to be happy or useful.</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne argues that Christ taught in parables. He promised
heaven, and threatened hell, but he spoke in a Pickwickian sense. However
he used such phrases, it is "certain" that the evangelists "have distorted
their importance out of all proportion to the rest of his teaching." By
"certain" we are not to assume that Mr. Le Gallienne has access to occult
sources of information. We are only to infer that he deals with the
gospels arbitrarily; accepting them, or rejecting them, as they accord or
disagree with his preconceptions. Indeed, this is what "essential
Christianity" must always be. What each picker and chooser likes is
"essential." What he does not like is unessential, if not a positive
misrepresentation.</p>
<p>Short and easy is Mr. Le Gallienne's criterion for deciding when Christ is
literal and when parabolical. "It is only Christ's moral precepts that are
to be taken literally"—"all the rest is parable." What a pity it is
that the Prophet of Nazareth did not give us a clear hint to this effect!
The theory is one of admirable simplicity. Yet, for all that demure look
of his, Mr. Le Gallienne is not so admirably simple as to work it out in
practice. Accepting the moral precepts of Christ literally, a Christian
should hate his father and mother, take no thought tor the morrow, live in
poverty to obtain the kingdom of heaven, and turn his left cheek to
everyone who takes the liberty of striking him on the right. Mr. Le
Gallienne does not ask us to do these things; he does not say he performs
them himself, He would probably say, if pressed, that allowance should be
made for oriental ways of speaking. But, in that case, what becomes of the
"literal" method of reading the "moral precepts" of Christ?</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne, who despises "thinkers," is all at sea in his chapter on
Essential Christianity. He does not know his own mind. He declares that
Christ "combined" in his own person and teaching "the intense spirituality
of the Hebrew, the impassioned self-annihilation of the Hindoo, the joyous
naturalism of the Greek." Yet he also remarks that there is something
beautiful in "such presences as Pan, Aphrodite, and Apollo," which we do
not find in Christianity; though he is careful to add that there is not
"actually any strife between them and the sadder figure of the Galilean."
"All the gods of all the creeds," he says, "supplement or corroborate each
other." Perhaps so; but what becomes of that "masterful synthesis," in
which Christ gathered up the "joyous naturalism of the Greek," no less
than other ancient characteristics? It is well to have a good memory (at
least) when you are setting the world to rights.</p>
<p>Christianity has been historically a failure. Mr. Le Gallienne more than
admits the fact; he emphasises it, and tries to explain it. In the first
place, he says the priests have been too many for Christ; they got hold of
Christianity, and turned it into the channel of their interests. In the
next place, the world was not ready for "essential" Christianity; an
argument in flat contradiction to the doctrine of "preparation," which has
placed so important a part in Christian apologetics ever since the time of
Eusebius. In the third place, "essential" Christianity is an idealism, and
"a throng of idealists is an impossibility." The horde of earthly-minded
people have simply trodden upon the precious pearls of Christ's teaching.
It is not true that the world has tried the Gospel of Christ and found it
wanting; the world has never tried it at all, and "in this nineteenth
century of the so-called Christian era, it has yet to begin."</p>
<p>Supposing all this to be true, what does it prove? On the theory that
Christ was God, or sent by God, it proves either that Providence
interfered too soon, or that it is incapable of making any real impression
upon the stubborn inhabitants of this planet; either alternative being a
reflection on the wisdom or the power of the deity. On the theory that
Christ was only a man, it proves that he taught an impossible gospel.
After all these centuries it is still contested and still to be explained.
Would it not, after all, be better to put aside this source of confusion
and quarreling, and to rely upon reason and the common sentiments of
humanity? Mr. Le Gallienne admits that in some respects "such a book as
Whitman's <i>Leaves of Grass</i> is more helpful than <i>The New Testament</i>—for
it includes more." Why then all this chatter about Christ? Can we ever be
united on a question of personality? Is it not absurd, and worse than
absurd, to thrust this object of contention into the arena where the
forces of light should be fighting, like one man, the strong and
disciplined forces of darkness?</p>
<p>All this talk about "the sublime figure of Christ" is a reminiscence of
his faded deity. We do not indulge in heated discussions as to the
personality of any other <i>man</i>. We speak of other "sublime" figures,
but the expression is one of individual reverence. We do not say that
those who do not share our opinion of Buddha, Socrates, Mohammed, Bruno,
Cromwell, Danton, or even Plato or Shakespeare, are grovelling
materialists and candidates for perdition. No, the chatter about Christ is
only explicable on the ground that he was, and still is by millions,
worshipped as a god. The glamor of the deity lingers round the form of the
man.</p>
<p>It is impossible for persons of any logical trenchancy to remain in this
stage. Francis Newman gave up orthodox Christianity, and also the
equivocations of Unitarianism, but he clung to "the moral perfection of
Christ." In the course of time, however, the scales fell from his eyes. He
had been blinded by a false sentiment. Letting his mind play freely upon
the "sublime figure" of the Prophet of Nazareth, he at length perceived
that it had its defects. No mortal is endowed with perfection. Such
monsters do not exist. Indeed, the teaching of Christ is as defective as
his personality, Its perfection and sufficiency can only be maintained by
those who never mean to incur the perils of reducing it to practice. Who
really tries to carry out the Christianity of Christ? Only one man in
Europe that we know of, and his name is Count Tolstoi; but he is saved
from the worst consequences of his "idealism" by the more practical wisdom
of his wife, who will not see him, any more than herself and her children,
reduced to godly beggary.</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne seems to us to belong to the sentimentalists, though we
hope he will grow out of their category. He appears to dread accurate
thinking, and to imagine that knowledge destroys the charm of nature.
"Which," he asks, "comes nearest to the truth about love—poor
Lombroso's talk about pistil and stamen, or one of Shakespeare's sonnets?"
The root, he says, is no explanation of the flower.</p>
<p>This may be fine, but it is fine nonsense. Lombroso and Shakespeare are
both right. The physician does not contradict the poet. And if the root is
no explanation of the flower, what will happen if you are careless about
the root and the soil in which it is planted? Does a gardener act in that
way? Is it not the horticulture of Fleet-street sentimentalists?</p>
<p>Mr. Le Gallienne is great on what he calls the "root" fallacy. Wishing to
keep the "irreligious instinct" in mystery, or at least obscurity, he
objects to anthropological "explanations." He cannot tolerate talk about
ancestor-worship, and other such "rude beginnings of religion," although
it comes from the lips of his intellectual superiors, such as Tylor,
Lubbock, and Spencer. Even if they are right, he falls back upon his old
exclamation, "What does it matter?" If the flower began as a root, he
says, that is no argument against "the reality of the flower." But this is
a shifting of ground. The reality of the flower, the reality of the
"religious instinct," is not in dispute. The question is, What is its
explanation? No one denies that man idealises and reveres. The question
is, How did he come to let these faculties play upon ghosts and gods? And
the explanation is to be found in his past. It cannot possibly be found in
his present, unless we take him as a savage, in which case he is an
embodiment of the past of our own ancestors, from whom we derive every
vestige of what we call our "religion."</p>
<p>Man's nature, like his destiny, is involved in his origin. However he may
be developed, he will never be more than "the paragon of animals." And it
is the recognition of this unchangeable truth which makes all the
difference between the evolutionist, who labors for rational progress, and
the sentimentalist, who fritters away his energies in cherishing the
delusions of faith.</p>
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