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<h1> A DISH OF ORTS </h1>
<h2> By George Macdonald </h2>
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<h2> PREFACE. </h2>
<p>Since printing throughout the title <i>Orts</i>, a doubt has arisen in my
mind as to its fitting the nature of the volume. It could hardly, however,
be imagined that I associate the idea of <i>worthlessness</i> with the
work contained in it. No one would insult his readers by offering them
what he counted valueless scraps, and telling them they were such. These
papers, those two even which were caught in the net of the ready-writer
from extempore utterance, whatever their merits in themselves; are the
results of by no means trifling labour. So much a man <i>ought</i> to be
able to say for his work. And hence I might defend, if not quite justify
my title—for they are but fragmentary presentments of larger
meditation. My friends at least will accept them as such, whether they
like their collective title or not.</p>
<p>The title of the last is not quite suitable. It is that of the religious
newspaper which reported the sermon. I noted the fact too late for
correction. It ought to be <i>True Greatness</i>.</p>
<p>The paper on <i>The Fantastic Imagination</i> had its origin in the
repeated request of readers for an explanation of things in certain
shorter stories I had written. It forms the preface to an American edition
of my so-called Fairy Tales.</p>
<p>GEORGE MACDONALD.</p>
<p>EDENBRIDGE, KENT. <i>August 5, 1893.</i></p>
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<p><b>CONTENTS</b></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> THE IMAGINATION: ITS FUNCTIONS AND ITS CULTURE.</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> A SKETCH OF INDIVIDUAL DEVELOPMENT. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> ST. GEORGE’S DAY, 1564. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> THE ART OF SHAKSPERE, AS REVEALED BY HIMSELF.</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> THE ELDER HAMLET. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> ON POLISH. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> BROWNING’S “CHRISTMAS EVE” </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> ESSAYS ON SOME OF THE FORMS OF LITERATURE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> THE HISTORY AND HEROES OF MEDICINE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> WORDSWORTH’S POETRY </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012"> SHELLEY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013"> A SERMON. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0014"> TRUE CHRISTIAN MINISTERING. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0015"> THE FANTASTIC IMAGINATION </SPAN></p>
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<h2> THE IMAGINATION: ITS FUNCTIONS AND ITS CULTURE. </h2>
<p>[Footnote: 1867.]</p>
<p>There are in whose notion education would seem to consist in the
production of a certain repose through the development of this and that
faculty, and the depression, if not eradication, of this and that other
faculty. But if mere repose were the end in view, an unsparing depression
of all the faculties would be the surest means of approaching it, provided
always the animal instincts could be depressed likewise, or, better still,
kept in a state of constant repletion. Happily, however, for the human
race, it possesses in the passion of hunger even, a more immediate saviour
than in the wisest selection and treatment of its faculties. For repose is
not the end of education; its end is a noble unrest, an ever renewed
awaking from the dead, a ceaseless questioning of the past for the
interpretation of the future, an urging on of the motions of life, which
had better far be accelerated into fever, than retarded into lethargy.</p>
<p>By those who consider a balanced repose the end of culture, the
imagination must necessarily be regarded as the one faculty before all
others to be suppressed. “Are there not facts?” say they. “Why forsake
them for fancies? Is there not that which, may be <i>known</i>? Why
forsake it for inventions? What God hath made, into that let man inquire.”</p>
<p>We answer: To inquire into what God has made is the main function of the
imagination. It is aroused by facts, is nourished by facts; seeks for
higher and yet higher laws in those facts; but refuses to regard science
as the sole interpreter of nature, or the laws of science as the only
region of discovery.</p>
<p>We must begin with a definition of the word <i>imagination</i>, or rather
some description of the faculty to which we give the name.</p>
<p>The word itself means an <i>imaging</i> or a making of likenesses. The
imagination is that faculty which gives form to thought—not
necessarily uttered form, but form capable of being uttered in shape or in
sound, or in any mode upon which the senses can lay hold. It is,
therefore, that faculty in man which is likest to the prime operation of
the power of God, and has, therefore, been called the <i>creative</i>
faculty, and its exercise <i>creation</i>. <i>Poet</i> means <i>maker</i>.
We must not forget, however, that between creator and poet lies the one
unpassable gulf which distinguishes—far be it from us to say <i>divides</i>—all
that is God’s from all that is man’s; a gulf teeming with infinite
revelations, but a gulf over which no man can pass to find out God,
although God needs not to pass over it to find man; the gulf between that
which calls, and that which is thus called into being; between that which
makes in its own image and that which is made in that image. It is better
to keep the word <i>creation</i> for that calling out of nothing which is
the imagination of God; except it be as an occasional symbolic expression,
whose daring is fully recognized, of the likeness of man’s work to the
work of his maker. The necessary unlikeness between the creator and the
created holds within it the equally necessary likeness of the thing made
to him who makes it, and so of the work of the made to the work of the
maker. When therefore, refusing to employ the word <i>creation</i> of the
work of man, we yet use the word <i>imagination</i> of the work of God, we
cannot be said to dare at all. It is only to give the name of man’s
faculty to that power after which and by which it was fashioned. The
imagination of man is made in the image of the imagination of God.
Everything of man must have been of God first; and it will help much
towards our understanding of the imagination and its functions in man if
we first succeed in regarding aright the imagination of God, in which the
imagination of man lives and moves and has its being.</p>
<p>As to <i>what</i> thought is in the mind of God ere it takes form, or what
the form is to him ere he utters it; in a word, what the consciousness of
God is in either case, all we can say is, that our consciousness in the
resembling conditions must, afar off, resemble his. But when we come to
consider the acts embodying the Divine thought (if indeed thought and act
be not with him one and the same), then we enter a region of large
difference. We discover at once, for instance, that where a man would make
a machine, or a picture, or a book, God makes the man that makes the book,
or the picture, or the machine. Would God give us a drama? He makes a
Shakespere. Or would he construct a drama more immediately his own? He
begins with the building of the stage itself, and that stage is a world—a
universe of worlds. He makes the actors, and they do not act,—they
<i>are</i> their part. He utters them into the visible to work out their
life—his drama. When he would have an epic, he sends a thinking hero
into his drama, and the epic is the soliloquy of his Hamlet. Instead of
writing his lyrics, he sets his birds and his maidens a-singing. All the
processes of the ages are God’s science; all the flow of history is his
poetry. His sculpture is not in marble, but in living and speech-giving
forms, which pass away, not to yield place to those that come after, but
to be perfected in a nobler studio. What he has done remains, although it
vanishes; and he never either forgets what he has once done, or does it
even once again. As the thoughts move in the mind of a man, so move the
worlds of men and women in the mind of God, and make no confusion there,
for there they had their birth, the offspring of his imagination. Man is
but a thought of God.</p>
<p>If we now consider the so-called creative faculty in man, we shall find
that in no <i>primary</i> sense is this faculty creative. Indeed, a man is
rather <i>being thought</i> than <i>thinking</i>, when a new thought
arises in his mind. He knew it not till he found it there, therefore he
could not even have sent for it. He did not create it, else how could it
be the surprise that it was when it arose? He may, indeed, in rare
instances foresee that something is coming, and make ready the place for
its birth; but that is the utmost relation of consciousness and will he
can bear to the dawning idea. Leaving this aside, however, and turning to
the <i>embodiment</i> or revelation of thought, we shall find that a man
no more <i>creates</i> the forms by which he would reveal his thoughts,
than he creates those thoughts themselves.</p>
<p>For what are the forms by means of which a man may reveal his thoughts?
Are they not those of nature? But although he is created in the closest
sympathy with these forms, yet even these forms are not born in his mind.
What springs there is the perception that this or that form is already an
expression of this or that phase of thought or of feeling. For the world
around him is an outward figuration of the condition of his mind; an
inexhaustible storehouse of forms whence he may choose exponents—the
crystal pitchers that shall protect his thought and not need to be broken
that the light may break forth. The meanings are in those forms already,
else they could be no garment of unveiling. God has made the world that it
should thus serve his creature, developing in the service that imagination
whose necessity it meets. The man has but to light the lamp within the
form: his imagination is the light, it is not the form. Straightway the
shining thought makes the form visible, and becomes itself visible through
the form. [Footnote: We would not be understood to say that the man works
consciously even in this. Oftentimes, if not always, the vision arises in
the mind, thought and form together.]</p>
<p>In illustration of what we mean, take a passage from the poet Shelley.</p>
<p>In his poem <i>Adonais</i>, written upon the death of Keats, representing
death as the revealer of secrets, he says:—</p>
<p>“The one remains; the many change and pass;<br/>
Heaven’s light for ever shines; earth’s shadows fly;<br/>
Life, like a dome of many coloured glass,<br/>
Stains the white radiance of eternity,<br/>
Until death tramples it to fragments.”<br/></p>
<p>This is a new embodiment, certainly, whence he who gains not, for the
moment at least, a loftier feeling of death, must be dull either of heart
or of understanding. But has Shelley created this figure, or only put
together its parts according to the harmony of truths already embodied in
each of the parts? For first he takes the inventions of his fellow-men, in
glass, in colour, in dome: with these he represents life as finite though
elevated, and as an analysis although a lovely one. Next he presents
eternity as the dome of the sky above this dome of coloured glass—the
sky having ever been regarded as the true symbol of eternity. This portion
of the figure he enriches by the attribution of whiteness, or unity and
radiance. And last, he shows us Death as the destroying revealer, walking
aloft through, the upper region, treading out this life-bubble of colours,
that the man may look beyond it and behold the true, the uncoloured, the
all-coloured.</p>
<p>But although the human imagination has no choice but to make use of the
forms already prepared for it, its operation is the same as that of the
divine inasmuch as it does put thought into form. And if it be to man what
creation is to God, we must expect to find it operative in every sphere of
human activity. Such is, indeed, the fact, and that to a far greater
extent than is commonly supposed.</p>
<p>The sovereignty of the imagination, for instance, over the region of
poetry will hardly, in the present day at least, be questioned; but not
every one is prepared to be told that the imagination has had nearly as
much to do with the making of our language as with “Macbeth” or the
“Paradise Lost.” The half of our language is the work of the imagination.</p>
<p>For how shall two agree together what name they shall give to a thought or
a feeling. How shall the one show the other that which is invisible? True,
he can unveil the mind’s construction in the face—that living
eternally changeful symbol which God has hung in front of the unseen
spirit—but that without words reaches only to the expression of
present feeling. To attempt to employ it alone for the conveyance of the
intellectual or the historical would constantly mislead; while the
expression of feeling itself would be misinterpreted, especially with
regard to cause and object: the dumb show would be worse than dumb.</p>
<p>But let a man become aware of some new movement within him. Loneliness
comes with it, for he would share his mind with his friend, and he cannot;
he is shut up in speechlessness. Thus</p>
<p>He <i>may</i> live a man forbid<br/>
Weary seven nights nine times nine,<br/></p>
<p>or the first moment of his perplexity may be that of his release. Gazing
about him in pain, he suddenly beholds the material form of his immaterial
condition. There stands his thought! God thought it before him, and put
its picture there ready for him when he wanted it. Or, to express the
thing more prosaically, the man cannot look around him long without
perceiving some form, aspect, or movement of nature, some relation between
its forms, or between such and himself which resembles the state or motion
within him. This he seizes as the symbol, as the garment or body of his
invisible thought, presents it to his friend, and his friend understands
him. Every word so employed with a new meaning is henceforth, in its new
character, born of the spirit and not of the flesh, born of the
imagination and not of the understanding, and is henceforth submitted to
new laws of growth and modification.</p>
<p>“Thinkest thou,” says Carlyle in “Past and Present,” “there were no poets
till Dan Chaucer? No heart burning with a thought which it could not hold,
and had no word for; and needed to shape and coin a word for—what
thou callest a metaphor, trope, or the like? For every word we have there
was such a man and poet. The coldest word was once a glowing new metaphor
and bold questionable originality. Thy very ATTENTION, does it not mean an
<i>attentio</i>, a STRETCHING-TO? Fancy that act of the mind, which all
were conscious of, which none had yet named,—when this new poet
first felt bound and driven to name it. His questionable originality and
new glowing metaphor was found adoptable, intelligible, and remains our
name for it to this day.”</p>
<p>All words, then, belonging to the inner world of the mind, are of the
imagination, are originally poetic words. The better, however, any such
word is fitted for the needs of humanity, the sooner it loses its poetic
aspect by commonness of use. It ceases to be heard as a symbol, and
appears only as a sign. Thus thousands of words which were originally
poetic words owing their existence to the imagination, lose their
vitality, and harden into mummies of prose. Not merely in literature does
poetry come first, and prose afterwards, but poetry is the source of all
the language that belongs to the inner world, whether it be of passion or
of metaphysics, of psychology or of aspiration. No poetry comes by the
elevation of prose; but the half of prose comes by the “massing into the
common clay” of thousands of winged words, whence, like the lovely shells
of by-gone ages, one is occasionally disinterred by some lover of speech,
and held up to the light to show the play of colour in its manifold
laminations.</p>
<p>For the world is—allow us the homely figure—the human being
turned inside out. All that moves in the mind is symbolized in Nature. Or,
to use another more philosophical, and certainly not less poetic figure,
the world is a sensuous analysis of humanity, and hence an inexhaustible
wardrobe for the clothing of human thought. Take any word expressive of
emotion—take the word <i>emotion</i> itself—and you will find
that its primary meaning is of the outer world. In the swaying of the
woods, in the unrest of the “wavy plain,” the imagination saw the picture
of a well-known condition of the human mind; and hence the word <i>emotion</i>.
[Footnote: This passage contains only a repetition of what is far better
said in the preceding extract from Carlyle, but it was written before we
had read (if reviewers may be allowed to confess such ignorance) the book
from which that extract is taken.]</p>
<p>But while the imagination of man has thus the divine function of putting
thought into form, it has a duty altogether human, which is paramount to
that function—the duty, namely, which springs from his immediate
relation to the Father, that of following and finding out the divine
imagination in whose image it was made. To do this, the man must watch its
signs, its manifestations. He must contemplate what the Hebrew poets call
the works of His hands.</p>
<p>“But to follow those is the province of the intellect, not of the
imagination.”—We will leave out of the question at present that
poetic interpretation of the works of Nature with which the intellect has
almost nothing, and the imagination almost everything, to do. It is
unnecessary to insist that the higher being of a flower even is dependent
for its reception upon the human imagination; that science may pull the
snowdrop to shreds, but cannot find out the idea of suffering hope and
pale confident submission, for the sake of which that darling of the
spring looks out of heaven, namely, God’s heart, upon us his wiser and
more sinful children; for if there be any truth in this region of things
acknowledged at all, it will be at the same time acknowledged that that
region belongs to the imagination. We confine ourselves to that
questioning of the works of God which is called the province of science.</p>
<p>“Shall, then, the human intellect,” we ask, “come into readier contact
with the divine imagination than that human imagination?” The work of the
Higher must be discovered by the search of the Lower in degree which is
yet similar in kind. Let us not be supposed to exclude the intellect from
a share in every highest office. Man is not divided when the
manifestations of his life are distinguished. The intellect “is all in
every part.” There were no imagination without intellect, however much it
may appear that intellect can exist without imagination. What we mean to
insist upon is, that in finding out the works of God, the Intellect must
labour, workman-like, under the direction of the architect, Imagination.
Herein, too, we proceed in the hope to show how much more than is commonly
supposed the imagination has to do with human endeavour; how large a share
it has in the work that is done under the sun.</p>
<p>“But how can the imagination have anything to do with science? That
region, at least, is governed by fixed laws.”</p>
<p>“True,” we answer. “But how much do we know of these laws? How much of
science already belongs to the region of the ascertained—in other
words, has been conquered by the intellect? We will not now dispute, your
vindication of the <i>ascertained</i> from the intrusion of the
imagination; but we do claim for it all the undiscovered, all the
unexplored.” “Ah, well! There it can do little harm. There let it run riot
if you will.” “No,” we reply. “Licence is not what we claim when we assert
the duty of the imagination to be that of following and finding out the
work that God maketh. Her part is to understand God ere she attempts to
utter man. Where is the room for being fanciful or riotous here? It is
only the ill-bred, that is, the uncultivated imagination that will amuse
itself where it ought to worship and work.”</p>
<p>“But the facts of Nature are to be discovered only by observation and
experiment.” True. But how does the man of science come to think of his
experiments? Does observation reach to the non-present, the possible, the
yet unconceived? Even if it showed you the experiments which <i>ought</i>
to be made, will observation reveal to you the experiments which <i>might</i>
be made? And who can tell of which kind is the one that carries in its
bosom the secret of the law you seek? We yield you your facts. The laws we
claim for the prophetic imagination. “He hath set the world <i>in</i>
man’s heart,” not in his understanding. And the heart must open the door
to the understanding. It is the far-seeing imagination which beholds what
might be a form of things, and says to the intellect: “Try whether that
may not be the form of these things;” which beholds or invents <i>a</i>
harmonious relation of parts and operations, and sends the intellect to
find out whether that be not <i>the</i> harmonious relation of them—that
is, the law of the phenomenon it contemplates. Nay, the poetic relations
themselves in the phenomenon may suggest to the imagination the law that
rules its scientific life. Yea, more than this: we dare to claim for the
true, childlike, humble imagination, such an inward oneness with the laws
of the universe that it possesses in itself an insight into the very
nature of things.</p>
<p>Lord Bacon tells us that a prudent question is the half of knowledge.
Whence comes this prudent question? we repeat. And we answer, From the
imagination. It is the imagination that suggests in what direction to make
the new inquiry—which, should it cast no immediate light on the
answer sought, can yet hardly fail to be a step towards final discovery.
Every experiment has its origin in hypothesis; without the scaffolding of
hypothesis, the house of science could never arise. And the construction
of any hypothesis whatever is the work of the imagination. The man who
cannot invent will never discover. The imagination often gets a glimpse of
the law itself long before it is or can be <i>ascertained</i> to be a law.
[Footnote: This paper was already written when, happening to mention the
present subject to a mathematical friend, a lecturer at one of the
universities, he gave us a corroborative instance. He had lately <i>guessed</i>
that a certain algebraic process could be shortened exceedingly if the
method which his imagination suggested should prove to be a true one—that
is, an algebraic law. He put it to the test of experiment—committed
the verification, that is, into the hands of his intellect—and found
the method true. It has since been accepted by the Royal Society.</p>
<p>Noteworthy illustration we have lately found in the record of the
experiences of an Edinburgh detective, an Irishman of the name of McLevy.
That the service of the imagination in the solution of the problems
peculiar to his calling is well known to him, we could adduce many proofs.
He recognizes its function in the construction of the theory which shall
unite this and that hint into an organic whole, and he expressly sets
forth the need of a theory before facts can be serviceable:—</p>
<p>“I would wait for my ‘idea’.... I never did any good without mine....
Chance never smiled on me unless I poked her some way; so that my
‘notion,’ after all, has been in the getting of it my own work only
perfected by a higher hand.”</p>
<p>“On leaving the shop I went direct to Prince’s Street,—of course
with an idea in my mind; and somehow I have always been contented with one
idea when I could not get another; and the advantage of sticking by one
is, that the other don’t jostle it and turn you about in a circle when you
should go in a straight line.” (Footnote: Since quoting the above I have
learned that the book referred to is unworthy of confidence. But let it
stand as illustration where it cannot be proof.)]</p>
<p>The region belonging to the pure intellect is straitened: the imagination
labours to extend its territories, to give it room. She sweeps across the
borders, searching out new lands into which she may guide her plodding
brother. The imagination is the light which redeems from the darkness for
the eyes of the understanding. Novalis says, “The imagination is the stuff
of the intellect”—affords, that is, the material upon which the
intellect works. And Bacon, in his “Advancement of Learning,” fully
recognizes this its office, corresponding to the foresight of God in this,
that it beholds afar off. And he says: “Imagination is much akin to
miracle-working faith.” [Footnote: We are sorry we cannot verify this
quotation, for which we are indebted to Mr. Oldbuck the Antiquary, in the
novel of that ilk. There is, however, little room for doubt that it is
sufficiently correct.]</p>
<p>In the scientific region of her duty of which we speak, the Imagination
cannot have her perfect work; this belongs to another and higher sphere
than that of intellectual truth—that, namely, of full-globed
humanity, operating in which she gives birth to poetry—truth in
beauty. But her function in the complete sphere of our nature, will, at
the same time, influence her more limited operation in the sections that
belong to science. Coleridge says that no one but a poet will make any
further <i>great</i> discoveries in mathematics; and Bacon says that
“wonder,” that faculty of the mind especially attendant on the child-like
imagination, “is the seed of knowledge.” The influence of the poetic upon
the scientific imagination is, for instance, especially present in the
construction of an invisible whole from the hints afforded by a visible
part; where the needs of the part, its uselessness, its broken relations,
are the only guides to a multiplex harmony, completeness, and end, which
is the whole. From a little bone, worn with ages of death, older than the
man can think, his scientific imagination dashed with the poetic, calls up
the form, size, habits, periods, belonging to an animal never beheld by
human eyes, even to the mingling contrasts of scales and wings, of
feathers and hair. Through the combined lenses of science and imagination,
we look back into ancient times, so dreadful in their incompleteness, that
it may well have been the task of seraphic faith, as well as of cherubic
imagination, to behold in the wallowing monstrosities of the
terror-teeming earth, the prospective, quiet, age-long labour of God
preparing the world with all its humble, graceful service for his unborn
Man. The imagination of the poet, on the other hand, dashed with the
imagination of the man of science, revealed to Goethe the prophecy of the
flower in the leaf. No other than an artistic imagination, however,
fulfilled of science, could have attained to the discovery of the fact
that the leaf is the imperfect flower.</p>
<p>When we turn to history, however, we find probably the greatest operative
sphere of the intellectuo-constructive imagination. To discover its laws;
the cycles in which events return, with the reasons of their return,
recognizing them notwithstanding metamorphosis; to perceive the vital
motions of this spiritual body of mankind; to learn from its facts the
rule of God; to construct from a succession of broken indications a whole
accordant with human nature; to approach a scheme of the forces at work,
the passions overwhelming or upheaving, the aspirations securely
upraising, the selfishnesses debasing and crumbling, with the vital
interworking of the whole; to illuminate all from the analogy with
individual life, and from the predominant phases of individual character
which are taken as the mind of the people—this is the province of
the imagination. Without her influence no process of recording events can
develop into a history. As truly might that be called the description of a
volcano which occupied itself with a delineation of the shapes assumed by
the smoke expelled from the mountain’s burning bosom. What history becomes
under the full sway of the imagination may be seen in the “History of the
French Revolution,” by Thomas Carlyle, at once a true picture, a
philosophical revelation, a noble poem.</p>
<p>There is a wonderful passage about <i>Time</i> in Shakespere’s “Rape of
Lucrece,” which shows how he understood history. The passage is really
about history, and not about time; for time itself does nothing—not
even “blot old books and alter their contents.” It is the forces at work
in time that produce all the changes; and they are history. We quote for
the sake of one line chiefly, but the whole stanza is pertinent.</p>
<p>“Time’s glory is to calm contending kings,<br/>
To unmask falsehood, and bring truth to light,<br/>
To stamp the seal of time in aged things,<br/>
To wake the morn and sentinel the night,<br/>
<i>To wrong the wronger till he render right;</i><br/>
To ruinate proud buildings with thy hours,<br/>
And smear with dust their glittering golden towers.”<br/></p>
<p><i>To wrong the wronger till he render right.</i> Here is a historical
cycle worthy of the imagination of Shakespere, yea, worthy of the creative
imagination of our God—the God who made the Shakespere with the
imagination, as well as evolved the history from the laws which that
imagination followed and found out.</p>
<p>In full instance we would refer our readers to Shakespere’s historical
plays; and, as a side-illustration, to the fact that he repeatedly
represents his greatest characters, when at the point of death, as
relieving their overcharged minds by prophecy. Such prophecy is the result
of the light of imagination, cleared of all distorting dimness by the
vanishing of earthly hopes and desires, cast upon the facts of experience.
Such prophecy is the perfect working of the historical imagination.</p>
<p>In the interpretation of individual life, the same principles hold; and
nowhere can the imagination be more healthily and rewardingly occupied
than in endeavouring to construct the life of an individual out of the
fragments which are all that can reach us of the history of even the
noblest of our race. How this will apply to the reading of the gospel
story we leave to the earnest thought of our readers.</p>
<p>We now pass to one more sphere in which the student imagination works in
glad freedom—the sphere which is understood to belong more
immediately to the poet.</p>
<p>We have already said that the forms of Nature (by which word <i>forms</i>
we mean any of those conditions of Nature which affect the senses of man)
are so many approximate representations of the mental conditions of
humanity. The outward, commonly called the material, is <i>informed</i>
by, or has form in virtue of, the inward or immaterial—in a word,
the thought. The forms of Nature are the representations of human thought
in virtue of their being the embodiment of God’s thought. As such,
therefore, they can be read and used to any depth, shallow or profound.
Men of all ages and all developments have discovered in them the means of
expression; and the men of ages to come, before us in every path along
which we are now striving, must likewise find such means in those forms,
unfolding with their unfolding necessities. The man, then, who, in harmony
with nature, attempts the discovery of more of her meanings, is just
searching out the things of God. The deepest of these are far too simple
for us to understand as yet. But let our imagination interpretive reveal
to us one severed significance of one of her parts, and such is the
harmony of the whole, that all the realm of Nature is open to us
henceforth—not without labour—and in time. Upon the man who
can understand the human meaning of the snowdrop, of the primrose, or of
the daisy, the life of the earth blossoming into the cosmical flower of a
perfect moment will one day seize, possessing him with its prophetic hope,
arousing his conscience with the vision of the “rest that remaineth,” and
stirring up the aspiration to enter into that rest:</p>
<p>“Thine is the tranquil hour, purpureal Eve!<br/>
But long as godlike wish, or hope divine,<br/>
Informs my spirit, ne’er can I believe<br/>
That this magnificence is wholly thine!<br/>
—From worlds not quickened by the sun<br/>
A portion of the gift is won;<br/>
An intermingling of Heaven’s pomp is spread<br/>
On ground which British shepherds tread!”<br/></p>
<p>Even the careless curve of a frozen cloud across the blue will calm some
troubled thoughts, may slay some selfish thoughts. And what shall be said
of such gorgeous shows as the scarlet poppies in the green corn, the
likest we have to those lilies of the field which spoke to the Saviour
himself of the care of God, and rejoiced His eyes with the glory of their
God-devised array? From such visions as these the imagination reaps the
best fruits of the earth, for the sake of which all the science involved
in its construction, is the inferior, yet willing and beautiful support.</p>
<p>From what we have now advanced, will it not then appear that, on the
whole, the name given by our Norman ancestors is more fitting for the man
who moves in these regions than the name given by the Greeks? Is not the
<i>Poet</i>, the <i>Maker</i>, a less suitable name for him than the <i>Trouvère</i>,
the <i>Finder</i>? At least, must not the faculty that finds precede the
faculty that utters?</p>
<p>But is there nothing to be said of the function of the imagination from
the Greek side of the question? Does it possess no creative faculty? Has
it no originating power?</p>
<p>Certainly it would be a poor description of the Imagination which omitted
the one element especially present to the mind that invented the word <i>Poet</i>.—It
can present us with new thought-forms—new, that is, as revelations
of thought. It has created none of the material that goes to make these
forms. Nor does it work upon raw material. But it takes forms already
existing, and gathers them about a thought so much higher than they, that
it can group and subordinate and harmonize them into a whole which shall
represent, unveil that thought. [Footnote: Just so Spenser describes the
process of the embodiment of a human soul in his Platonic “Hymn in Honour
of Beauty.”</p>
<p>“She frames her house in which she will be placed<br/>
Fit for herself....<br/>
And the gross matter by a sovereign might<br/>
Tempers so trim....<br/>
For of the soul the body form doth take;<br/>
For soul is form, and doth the body make.”]<br/></p>
<p>The nature of this process we will illustrate by an examination of the
well-known <i>Bugle Song</i> in Tennyson’s “Princess.”</p>
<p>First of all, there is the new music of the song, which does not even
remind one of the music of any other. The rhythm, rhyme, melody, harmony
are all an embodiment in sound, as distinguished from word, of what can be
so embodied—the <i>feeling</i> of the poem, which goes before, and
prepares the way for the following thought—tunes the heart into a
receptive harmony. Then comes the new arrangement of thought and figure
whereby the meaning contained is presented as it never was before. We give
a sort of paraphrastical synopsis of the poem, which, partly in virtue of
its disagreeableness, will enable the lovers of the song to return to it
with an increase of pleasure.</p>
<p>The glory of midsummer mid-day upon mountain, lake, and ruin. Give nature
a voice for her gladness. Blow, bugle.</p>
<p>Nature answers with dying echoes, sinking in the midst of her splendour
into a sad silence.</p>
<p>Not so with human nature. The echoes of the word of truth gather volume
and richness from every soul that re-echoes it to brother and sister
souls.</p>
<p>With poets the <i>fashion</i> has been to contrast the stability and
rejuvenescence of nature with the evanescence and unreturning decay of
humanity:—</p>
<p>“Yet soon reviving plants and flowers, anew shall deck the plain;<br/>
The woods shall hear the voice of Spring, and flourish green again.<br/>
But man forsakes this earthly scene, ah! never to return:<br/>
Shall any following Spring revive the ashes of the urn?”<br/></p>
<p>But our poet vindicates the eternal in humanity:—</p>
<p>“O Love, they die in yon rich sky,<br/>
They faint on hill or field or river:<br/>
Our echoes roll from soul to soul,<br/>
And grow for ever and for ever.<br/>
Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoes flying;<br/>
And answer, echoes, answer, Dying, dying, dying.”<br/></p>
<p>Is not this a new form to the thought—a form which makes us feel the
truth of it afresh? And every new embodiment of a known truth must be a
new and wider revelation. No man is capable of seeing for himself the
whole of any truth: he needs it echoed back to him from every soul in the
universe; and still its centre is hid in the Father of Lights. In so far,
then, as either form or thought is new, we may grant the use of the word
Creation, modified according to our previous definitions.</p>
<p>This operation of the imagination in choosing, gathering, and vitally
combining the material of a new revelation, may be well illustrated from a
certain employment of the poetic faculty in which our greatest poets have
delighted. Perceiving truth half hidden and half revealed in the slow
speech and stammering tongue of men who have gone before them, they have
taken up the unfinished form and completed it; they have, as it were,
rescued the soul of meaning from its prison of uninformed crudity, where
it sat like the Prince in the “Arabian Nights,” half man, half marble;
they have set it free in its own form, in a shape, namely, which it could
“through every part impress.” Shakespere’s keen eye suggested many such a
rescue from the tomb—of a tale drearily told—a tale which no
one now would read save for the glorified form in which he has re-embodied
its true contents. And from Tennyson we can produce one specimen small
enough for our use, which, a mere chip from the great marble re-embodying
the old legend of Arthur’s death, may, like the hand of Achilles holding
his spear in the crowded picture,</p>
<p>“Stand for the whole to be imagined.”<br/></p>
<p>In the “History of Prince Arthur,” when Sir Bedivere returns after hiding
Excalibur the first time, the king asks him what he has seen, and he
answers—</p>
<p>“Sir, I saw nothing but waves and wind.”<br/></p>
<p>The second time, to the same question, he answers—</p>
<p>“Sir, I saw nothing but the water<SPAN href="#linknote-1" name="linknoteref-1"<br/> id="linknoteref-1">1</SPAN> wap, and the waves wan.”<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-1" id="linknote-1">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
1 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-1">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The word <i>wap</i> is
plain enough; the word <i>wan</i> we cannot satisfy ourselves about. Had
it been used with regard to the water, it might have been worth remarking
that <i>wan</i>, meaning dark, gloomy, turbid, is a common adjective to a
river in the old Scotch ballad. And it might be an adjective here; but
that is not likely, seeing it is conjoined with the verb <i>wap</i>. The
Anglo-Saxon <i>wanian</i>, to decrease, might be the root-word, perhaps,
(in the sense of <i>to ebb</i>,) if this water had been the sea and not a
lake. But possibly the meaning is, “I heard the water <i>whoop</i> or <i>wail
aloud</i>” (from <i>Wópan</i>); and “the waves <i>whine</i> or <i>bewail</i>”
(from <i>Wánian</i> to lament). But even then the two verbs would seem to
predicate of transposed subjects.]</p>
<p>This answer Tennyson has expanded into the well-known lines—</p>
<p>“I heard the ripple washing in the reeds,<br/>
And the wild water lapping on the crag;”<br/></p>
<p>slightly varied, for the other occasion, into—</p>
<p>“I heard the water lapping on the crag,<br/>
And the long ripple washing in the reeds.”<br/></p>
<p>But, as to this matter of <i>creation</i>, is there, after all, I ask yet,
any genuine sense in which a man may be said to create his own
thought-forms? Allowing that a new combination of forms already existing
might be called creation, is the man, after all, the author of this new
combination? Did he, with his will and his knowledge, proceed wittingly,
consciously, to construct a form which should embody his thought? Or did
this form arise within him without will or effort of his—vivid if
not clear—certain if not outlined? Ruskin (and better authority we
do not know) will assert the latter, and we think he is right: though
perhaps he would insist more upon the absolute perfection of the vision
than we are quite prepared to do. Such embodiments are not the result of
the man’s intention, or of the operation of his conscious nature. His
feeling is that they are given to him; that from the vast unknown, where
time and space are not, they suddenly appear in luminous writing upon the
wall of his consciousness. Can it be correct, then, to say that he created
them? Nothing less so, as it seems to us. But can we not say that they are
the creation of the unconscious portion of his nature? Yes, provided we
can understand that that which is the individual, the man, can know, and
not know that it knows, can create and yet be ignorant that virtue has
gone out of it. From that unknown region we grant they come, but not by
its own blind working. Nor, even were it so, could any amount of such
production, where no will was concerned, be dignified with the name of
creation. But God sits in that chamber of our being in which the candle of
our consciousness goes out in darkness, and sends forth from thence
wonderful gifts into the light of that understanding which is His candle.
Our hope lies in no most perfect mechanism even of the spirit, but in the
wisdom wherein we live and move and have our being. Thence we hope for
endless forms of beauty informed of truth. If the dark portion of our own
being were the origin of our imaginations, we might well fear the
apparition of such monsters as would be generated in the sickness of a
decay which could never feel—only declare—a slow return
towards primeval chaos. But the Maker is our Light.</p>
<p>One word more, ere we turn to consider the culture of this noblest
faculty, which we might well call the creative, did we not see a something
in God for which we would humbly keep our mighty word:—the fact that
there is always more in a work of art—which is the highest human
result of the embodying imagination—than the producer himself
perceived while he produced it, seems to us a strong reason for
attributing to it a larger origin than the man alone—for saying at
the last, that the inspiration of the Almighty shaped its ends.</p>
<p>We return now to the class which, from the first, we supposed hostile to
the imagination and its functions generally. Those belonging to it will
now say: “It was to no imagination such as you have been setting forth
that we were opposed, but to those wild fancies and vague reveries in
which young people indulge, to the damage and loss of the real in the
world around them.”</p>
<p>“And,” we insist, “you would rectify the matter by smothering the young
monster at once—because he has wings, and, young to their use,
flutters them about in a way discomposing to your nerves, and destructive
to those notions of propriety of which this creature—you stop not to
inquire whether angel or pterodactyle—has not yet learned even the
existence. Or, if it is only the creature’s vagaries of which you
disapprove, why speak of them as <i>the</i> exercise of the imagination?
As well speak of religion as the mother of cruelty because religion has
given more occasion of cruelty, as of all dishonesty and devilry, than any
other object of human interest. Are we not to worship, because our
forefathers burned and stabbed for religion? It is more religion we want.
It is more imagination we need. Be assured that these are but the first
vital motions of that whose results, at least in the region of science,
you are more than willing to accept.” That evil may spring from the
imagination, as from everything except the perfect love of God, cannot be
denied. But infinitely worse evils would be the result of its absence.
Selfishness, avarice, sensuality, cruelty, would flourish tenfold; and the
power of Satan would be well established ere some children had begun to
choose. Those who would quell the apparently lawless tossing of the
spirit, called the youthful imagination, would suppress all that is to
grow out of it. They fear the enthusiasm they never felt; and instead of
cherishing this divine thing, instead of giving it room and air for
healthful growth, they would crush and confine it—with but one
result of their victorious endeavours—imposthume, fever, and
corruption. And the disastrous consequences would soon appear in the
intellect likewise which they worship. Kill that whence spring the crude
fancies and wild day-dreams of the young, and you will never lead them
beyond dull facts—dull because their relations to each other, and
the one life that works in them all, must remain undiscovered. Whoever
would have his children avoid this arid region will do well to allow no
teacher to approach them—not even of mathematics—who has no
imagination.</p>
<p>“But although good results may appear in a few from the indulgence of the
imagination, how will it be with the many?”</p>
<p>We answer that the antidote to indulgence is development, not restraint,
and that such is the duty of the wise servant of Him who made the
imagination.</p>
<p>“But will most girls, for instance, rise to those useful uses of the
imagination? Are they not more likely to exercise it in building castles
in the air to the neglect of houses on the earth? And as the world affords
such poor scope for the ideal, will not this habit breed vain desires and
vain regrets? Is it not better, therefore, to keep to that which is known,
and leave the rest?”</p>
<p>“Is the world so poor?” we ask in return. The less reason, then, to be<br/>
satisfied with it; the more reason to rise above it, into the region of<br/>
the true, of the eternal, of things as God thinks them. This outward<br/>
world is but a passing vision of the persistent true. We shall not live<br/>
in it always. We are dwellers in a divine universe where no desires are<br/>
in vain, if only they be large enough. Not even in this world do all<br/>
disappointments breed only vain regrets. [Footnote:<br/>
“We will grieve not, rather find<br/>
Strength in what remains behind;<br/>
In the primal sympathy<br/>
Which, having been, must ever be;<br/>
In the soothing thoughts that spring<br/>
Out of human suffering;<br/>
In the faith that looks through death,<br/>
In years that bring the philosophic mind.”]<br/></p>
<p>And as to keeping to that which is known and leaving the rest—how
many affairs of this world are so well-defined, so capable of being
clearly understood, as not to leave large spaces of uncertainty, whose
very correlate faculty is the imagination? Indeed it must, in most things,
work after some fashion, filling the gaps after some possible plan, before
action can even begin. In very truth, a wise imagination, which is the
presence of the spirit of God, is the best guide that man or woman can
have; for it is not the things we see the most clearly that influence us
the most powerfully; undefined, yet vivid visions of something beyond,
something which eye has not seen nor ear heard, have far more influence
than any logical sequences whereby the same things may be demonstrated to
the intellect. It is the nature of the thing, not the clearness of its
outline, that determines its operation. We live by faith, and not by
sight. Put the question to our mathematicians—only be sure the
question reaches them—whether they would part with the well-defined
perfection of their diagrams, or the dim, strange, possibly
half-obliterated characters woven in the web of their being; their
science, in short, or their poetry; their certainties, or their hopes;
their consciousness of knowledge, or their vague sense of that which
cannot be known absolutely: will they hold by their craft or by their
inspirations, by their intellects or their imaginations? If they say the
former in each alternative, I shall yet doubt whether the objects of the
choice are actually before them, and with equal presentation.</p>
<p>What can be known must be known severely; but is there, therefore, no
faculty for those infinite lands of uncertainty lying all about the sphere
hollowed out of the dark by the glimmering lamp of our knowledge? Are they
not the natural property of the imagination? there, <i>for</i> it, that it
may have room to grow? there, that the man may learn to imagine greatly
like God who made him, himself discovering their mysteries, in virtue of
his following and worshipping imagination?</p>
<p>All that has been said, then, tends to enforce the culture of the
imagination. But the strongest argument of all remains behind. For, if the
whole power of pedantry should rise against her, the imagination will yet
work; and if not for good, then for evil; if not for truth, then for
falsehood; if not for life, then for death; the evil alternative becoming
the more likely from the unnatural treatment she has experienced from
those who ought to have fostered her. The power that might have gone forth
in conceiving the noblest forms of action, in realizing the lives of the
true-hearted, the self-forgetting, will go forth in building airy castles
of vain ambition, of boundless riches, of unearned admiration. The
imagination that might be devising how to make home blessed or to help the
poor neighbour, will be absorbed in the invention of the new dress, or
worse, in devising the means of procuring it. For, if she be not occupied
with the beautiful, she will be occupied by the pleasant; that which goes
not out to worship, will remain at home to be sensual. Cultivate the mere
intellect as you may, it will never reduce the passions: the imagination,
seeking the ideal in everything, will elevate them to their true and noble
service. Seek not that your sons and your daughters should not see
visions, should not dream dreams; seek that they should see true visions,
that they should dream noble dreams. Such out-going of the imagination is
one with aspiration, and will do more to elevate above what is low and
vile than all possible inculcations of morality. Nor can religion herself
ever rise up into her own calm home, her crystal shrine, when one of her
wings, one of the twain with which she flies, is thus broken or paralyzed.</p>
<p>“The universe is infinitely wide,<br/>
And conquering Reason, if self-glorified,<br/>
Can nowhere move uncrossed by some new wall<br/>
Or gulf of mystery, which thou alone,<br/>
Imaginative Faith! canst overleap,<br/>
In progress towards the fount of love.”<br/></p>
<p>The danger that lies in the repression of the imagination may be well
illustrated from the play of “Macbeth.” The imagination of the hero (in
him a powerful faculty), representing how the deed would appear to others,
and so representing its true nature to himself, was his great impediment
on the path to crime. Nor would he have succeeded in reaching it, had he
not gone to his wife for help—sought refuge from his troublesome
imagination with her. She, possessing far less of the faculty, and having
dealt more destructively with what she had, took his hand, and led him to
the deed. From her imagination, again, she for her part takes refuge in
unbelief and denial, declaring to herself and her husband that there is no
reality in its representations; that there is no reality in anything
beyond the present effect it produces on the mind upon which it operates;
that intellect and courage are equal to any, even an evil emergency; and
that no harm will come to those who can rule themselves according to their
own will. Still, however, finding her imagination, and yet more that of
her husband, troublesome, she effects a marvellous combination of
materialism and idealism, and asserts that things are not, cannot be, and
shall not be more or other than people choose to think them. She says,—</p>
<p>“These deeds must not be thought<br/>
After these ways; so, it will make us mad.”<br/>
<br/>
“The sleeping and the dead<br/>
Are but as pictures.”<br/></p>
<p>But she had over-estimated the power of her will, and under-estimated that
of her imagination. Her will was the one thing in her that was bad,
without root or support in the universe, while her imagination was the
voice of God himself out of her own unknown being. The choice of no man or
woman can long determine how or what he or she shall think of things. Lady
Macbeth’s imagination would not be repressed beyond its appointed period—a
time determined by laws of her being over which she had no control. It
arose, at length, as from the dead, overshadowing her with all the
blackness of her crime. The woman who drank strong drink that she might
murder, dared not sleep without a light by her bed; rose and walked in the
night, a sleepless spirit in a sleeping body, rubbing the spotted hand of
her dreams, which, often as water had cleared it of the deed, yet smelt so
in her sleeping nostrils, that all the perfumes of Arabia would not
sweeten it. Thus her long down-trodden imagination rose and took
vengeance, even through those senses which she had thought to subordinate
to her wicked will.</p>
<p>But all this is of the imagination itself, and fitter, therefore, for
illustration than for argument. Let us come to facts.—Dr. Pritchard,
lately executed for murder, had no lack of that invention, which is, as it
were, the intellect of the imagination—its lowest form. One of the
clergymen who, at his own request, attended the prisoner, went through
indescribable horrors in the vain endeavour to induce the man simply to
cease from lying: one invention after another followed the most earnest
asseverations of truth. The effect produced upon us by this clergyman’s
report of his experience was a moral dismay, such as we had never felt
with regard to human being, and drew from us the exclamation, “The man
could have had no imagination.” The reply was, “None whatever.” Never
seeking true or high things, caring only for appearances, and, therefore,
for inventions, he had left his imagination all undeveloped, and when it
represented his own inner condition to him, had repressed it until it was
nearly destroyed, and what remained of it was set on fire of hell.
[Footnote: One of the best weekly papers in London, evidently as much in
ignorance of the man as of the facts of the case, spoke of Dr. MacLeod as
having been engaged in “white-washing the murderer for heaven.” So far is
this from a true representation, that Dr. MacLeod actually refused to pray
with him, telling him that if there was a hell to go to, he must go to
it.]</p>
<p>Man is “the roof and crown of things.” He is the world, and more.
Therefore the chief scope of his imagination, next to God who made him,
will he the world in relation to his own life therein. Will he do better
or worse in it if this imagination, touched to fine issues and having free
scope, present him with noble pictures of relationship and duty, of
possible elevation of character and attainable justice of behaviour, of
friendship and of love; and, above all, of all these in that life to
understand which as a whole, must ever be the loftiest aspiration of this
noblest power of humanity? Will a woman lead a more or a less troubled
life that the sights and sounds of nature break through the crust of
gathering anxiety, and remind her of the peace of the lilies and the
well-being of the birds of the air? Or will life be less interesting to
her, that the lives of her neighbours, instead of passing like shadows
upon a wall, assume a consistent wholeness, forming themselves into
stories and phases of life? Will she not hereby love more and talk less?
Or will she be more unlikely to make a good match——? But here
we arrest ourselves in bewilderment over the word <i>good</i>, and seek to
re-arrange our thoughts. If what mothers mean by a <i>good</i> match, is
the alliance of a man of position and means—or let them throw
intellect, manners, and personal advantages into the same scale—if
this be all, then we grant the daughter of cultivated imagination may not
be manageable, will probably be obstinate. “We hope she will be obstinate
enough. [Footnote: Let women who feel the wrongs of their kind teach women
to be high-minded in their relation to men, and they will do more for the
social elevation of women, and the establishment of their rights, whatever
those rights may be, than by any amount of intellectual development or
assertion of equality. Nor, if they are other than mere partisans, will
they refuse the attempt because in its success men will, after all, be
equal, if not greater gainers, if only thereby they should be “feelingly
persuaded” what they are.] But will the girl be less likely to marry a <i>gentleman</i>,
in the grand old meaning of the sixteenth century? when it was no
irreverence to call our Lord</p>
<p>“The first true gentleman that ever breathed;”<br/></p>
<p>or in that of the fourteenth?—when Chaucer teaching “whom is worthy
to be called gentill,” writes thus:—</p>
<p>“The first stocke was full of rightwisnes,<br/>
Trewe of his worde, sober, pitous and free,<br/>
Clene of his goste, and loved besinesse,<br/>
Against the vice of slouth in honeste;<br/>
And but his heire love vertue as did he,<br/>
He is not gentill though he rich seme,<br/>
All weare he miter, crowne, or diademe.”<br/></p>
<p>Will she be less likely to marry one who honours women, and for their
sakes, as well as his own, honours himself? Or to speak from what many
would regard as the mother’s side of the question—will the girl be
more likely, because of such a culture of her imagination, to refuse the
wise, true-hearted, generous rich man, and fall in love with the talking,
verse-making fool, <i>because</i> he is poor, as if that were a virtue for
which he had striven? The highest imagination and the lowliest common
sense are always on one side.</p>
<p>For the end of imagination is <i>harmony</i>. A right imagination, being
the reflex of the creation, will fall in with the divine order of things
as the highest form of its own operation; “will tune its instrument here
at the door” to the divine harmonies within; will be content alone with
growth towards the divine idea, which includes all that is beautiful in
the imperfect imaginations of men; will know that every deviation from
that growth is downward; and will therefore send the man forth from its
loftiest representations to do the commonest duty of the most wearisome
calling in a hearty and hopeful spirit. This is the work of the right
imagination; and towards this work every imagination, in proportion to the
rightness that is in it, will tend. The reveries even of the wise man will
make him stronger for his work; his dreaming as well as his thinking will
render him sorry for past failure, and hopeful of future success.</p>
<p>To come now to the culture of the imagination. Its development is one of
the main ends of the divine education of life with all its efforts and
experiences. Therefore the first and essential means for its culture must
be an ordering of our life towards harmony with its ideal in the mind of
God. As he that is willing to do the will of the Father, shall know of the
doctrine, so, we doubt not, he that will do the will of THE POET, shall
behold the Beautiful. For all is God’s; and the man who is growing into
harmony with His will, is growing into harmony with himself; all the
hidden glories of his being are coming out into the light of humble
consciousness; so that at the last he shall be a pure microcosm,
faithfully reflecting, after his manner, the mighty macrocosm. We believe,
therefore, that nothing will do so much for the intellect or the
imagination as <i>being good</i>—we do not mean after any formula or
any creed, but simply after the faith of Him who did the will of his
Father in heaven.</p>
<p>But if we speak of direct means for the culture of the imagination, the
whole is comprised in two words—food and exercise. If you want
strong arms, take animal food, and row. Feed your imagination with food
convenient for it, and exercise it, not in the contortions of the acrobat,
but in the movements of the gymnast. And first for the food.</p>
<p>Goethe has told us that the way to develop the aesthetic faculty is to
have constantly before our eyes, that is, in the room we most frequent,
some work of the best attainable art. This will teach us to refuse the
evil and choose the good. It will plant itself in our minds and become our
counsellor. Involuntarily, unconsciously, we shall compare with its
perfection everything that comes before us for judgment. Now, although no
better advice could be given, it involves one danger, that of narrowness.
And not easily, in dread of this danger, would one change his tutor, and
so procure variety of instruction. But in the culture of the imagination,
books, although not the only, are the readiest means of supplying the food
convenient for it, and a hundred books may be had where even one work of
art of the right sort is unattainable, seeing such must be of some size as
well as of thorough excellence. And in variety alone is safety from the
danger of the convenient food becoming the inconvenient model.</p>
<p>Let us suppose, then, that one who himself justly estimates the
imagination is anxious to develop its operation in his child. No doubt the
best beginning, especially if the child be young, is an acquaintance with
nature, in which let him be encouraged to observe vital phenomena, to put
things together, to speculate from what he sees to what he does not see.
But let earnest care be taken that upon no matter shall he go on talking
foolishly. Let him be as fanciful as he may, but let him not, even in his
fancy, sin against fancy’s sense; for fancy has its laws as certainly as
the most ordinary business of life. When he is silly, let him know it and
be ashamed.</p>
<p>But where this association with nature is but occasionally possible,
recourse must be had to literature. In books, we not only have store of
all results of the imagination, but in them, as in her workshop, we may
behold her embodying before our very eyes, in music of speech, in wonder
of words, till her work, like a golden dish set with shining jewels, and
adorned by the hands of the cunning workmen, stands finished before us. In
this kind, then, the best must be set before the learner, that he may eat
and not be satisfied; for the finest products of the imagination are of
the best nourishment for the beginnings of that imagination. And the mind
of the teacher must mediate between the work of art and the mind of the
pupil, bringing them together in the vital contact of intelligence;
directing the observation to the lines of expression, the points of force;
and helping the mind to repose upon the whole, so that no separable
beauties shall lead to a neglect of the scope—that is the shape or
form complete. And ever he must seek to <i>show</i> excellence rather than
talk about it, giving the thing itself, that it may grow into the mind,
and not a eulogy of his own upon the thing; isolating the point worthy of
remark rather than making many remarks upon the point.</p>
<p>Especially must he endeavour to show the spiritual scaffolding or skeleton
of any work of art; those main ideas upon which the shape is constructed,
and around which the rest group as ministering dependencies.</p>
<p>But he will not, therefore, pass over that intellectual structure without
which the other could not be manifested. He will not forget the builder
while he admires the architect. While he dwells with delight on the
relation of the peculiar arch to the meaning of the whole cathedral, he
will not think it needless to explain the principles on which it is
constructed, or even how those principles are carried out in actual
process. Neither yet will the tracery of its windows, the foliage of its
crockets, or the fretting of its mouldings be forgotten. Every beauty will
have its word, only all beauties will be subordinated to the final beauty—that
is, the unity of the whole.</p>
<p>Thus doing, he shall perform the true office of friendship. He will
introduce his pupil into the society which he himself prizes most,
surrounding him with the genial presence of the high-minded, that this
good company may work its own kind in him who frequents it.</p>
<p>But he will likewise seek to turn him aside from such company, whether of
books or of men, as might tend to lower his reverence, his choice, or his
standard. He will, therefore, discourage indiscriminate reading, and that
worse than waste which consists in skimming the books of a circulating
library. He knows that if a book is worth reading at all, it is worth
reading well; and that, if it is not worth reading, it is only to the most
accomplished reader that it <i>can</i> be worth skimming. He will seek to
make him discern, not merely between the good and the evil, but between
the good and the not so good. And this not for the sake of sharpening the
intellect, still less of generating that self-satisfaction which is the
closest attendant upon criticism, but for the sake of choosing the best
path and the best companions upon it. A spirit of criticism for the sake
of distinguishing only, or, far worse, for the sake of having one’s
opinion ready upon demand, is not merely repulsive to all true thinkers,
but is, in itself, destructive of all thinking. A spirit of criticism for
the sake of the truth—a spirit that does not start from its chamber
at every noise, but waits till its presence is desired—cannot,
indeed, garnish the house, but can sweep it clean. Were there enough of
such wise criticism, there would be ten times the study of the best
writers of the past, and perhaps one-tenth of the admiration for the
ephemeral productions of the day. A gathered mountain of misplaced
worships would be swept into the sea by the study of one good book; and
while what was good in an inferior book would still be admired, the
relative position of the book would be altered and its influence lessened.</p>
<p>Speaking of true learning, Lord Bacon says: “It taketh away vain
admiration of anything, <i>which is the root of all weakness</i>.”</p>
<p>The right teacher would have his pupil easy to please, but ill to satisfy;
ready to enjoy, unready to embrace; keen to discover beauty, slow to say,
“Here I will dwell.”</p>
<p>But he will not confine his instructions to the region of art. He will
encourage him to read history with an eye eager for the dawning figure of
the past. He will especially show him that a great part of the Bible is
only thus to be understood; and that the constant and consistent way of
God, to be discovered in it, is in fact the key to all history.</p>
<p>In the history of individuals, as well, he will try to show him how to put
sign and token together, constructing not indeed a whole, but a probable
suggestion of the whole.</p>
<p>And, again, while showing him the reflex of nature in the poets, he will
not be satisfied without sending him to Nature herself; urging him in
country rambles to keep open eyes for the sweet fashionings and blendings
of her operation around him; and in city walks to watch the “human face
divine.”</p>
<p>Once more: he will point out to him the essential difference between
reverie and thought; between dreaming and imagining. He will teach him not
to mistake fancy, either in himself or in others for imagination, and to
beware of hunting after resemblances that carry with them no
interpretation.</p>
<p>Such training is not solely fitted for the possible development of
artistic faculty. Few, in this world, will ever be able to utter what they
feel. Fewer still will be able to utter it in forms of their own. Nor is
it necessary that there should be many such. But it is necessary that all
should feel. It is necessary that all should understand and imagine the
good; that all should begin, at least, to follow and find out God.</p>
<p>“The glory of God is to conceal a thing, but the glory of the king is to
find it out,” says Solomon. “As if,” remarks Bacon on the passage,
“according to the innocent play of children, the Divine Majesty took
delight to hide his works, to the end to have them found out; and as if
kings could not obtain a greater honour than to be God’s playfellows in
that game.”</p>
<p>One more quotation from the book of Ecclesiastes, setting forth both the
necessity we are under to imagine, and the comfort that our imagining
cannot outstrip God’s making.</p>
<p>“I have seen the travail which God hath given to the sons of men to be
exercised in it. He hath made everything beautiful in his time; also he
hath set the world in their heart, so that no man can find out the work
that God maketh from the beginning to the end.”</p>
<p>Thus to be playfellows with God in this game, the little ones may gather
their daisies and follow their painted moths; the child of the kingdom may
pore upon the lilies of the field, and gather faith as the birds of the
air their food from the leafless hawthorn, ruddy with the stores God has
laid up for them; and the man of science</p>
<p>“May sit and rightly spell<br/>
Of every star that heaven doth shew,<br/>
And every herb that sips the dew;<br/>
Till old experience do attain<br/>
To something like prophetic strain.”<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> A SKETCH OF INDIVIDUAL DEVELOPMENT. </h2>
<p>[Footnote: 1880.]</p>
<p>“I wish I had thought to watch when God was making me!” said a child once
to his mother. “Only,” he added, “I was not made till I was finished, so I
couldn’t.” We cannot recall whence we came, nor tell how we began to be.
We know approximately how far back we can remember, but have no idea how
far back we may not have forgotten. Certainly we knew once much that we
have forgotten now. My own earliest definable memory is of a great funeral
of one of the Dukes of Gordon, when I was between two and three years of
age. Surely my first knowledge was not of death. I must have known much
and many things before, although that seems my earliest memory. As in what
we foolishly call maturity, so in the dawn of consciousness, both before
and after it has begun to be buttressed with <i>self</i>-consciousness,
each succeeding consciousness dims—often obliterates—that
which went before, and with regard to our past as well as our future,
imagination and faith must step into the place vacated of knowledge. We
are aware, and we know that we are aware, but when or how we began to be
aware, is wrapt in a mist that deepens on the one side into deepest night,
and on the other brightens into the full assurance of existence. Looking
back we can but dream, looking forward we lose ourselves in speculation;
but we may both speculate and dream, for all speculation is not false, and
all dreaming is not of the unreal. What may we fairly imagine as to the
inward condition of the child before the first moment of which his memory
affords him testimony?</p>
<p>It is one, I venture to say, of absolute, though, no doubt, largely
negative faith. Neither memory of pain that is past, nor apprehension of
pain to come, once arises to give him the smallest concern. In some way,
doubtless very vague, for his being itself is a border-land of awful
mystery, he is aware of being surrounded, enfolded with an atmosphere of
love; the sky over him is his mother’s face; the earth that nourishes him
is his mother’s bosom. The source, the sustentation, the defence of his
being, the endless mediation betwixt his needs and the things that supply
them, are all one. There is no type so near the highest idea of relation
to a God, as that of the child to his mother. Her face is God, her bosom
Nature, her arms are Providence—all love—one love—to him
an undivided bliss.</p>
<p>The region beyond him he regards from this vantage-ground of unquestioned
security. There things may come and go, rise and vanish—he neither
desires nor bemoans them. Change may grow swift, its swiftness grow
fierce, and pass into storm: to him storm is calm; his haven is secure;
his rest cannot be broken: he is accountable for nothing, knows no
responsibility. Conscience is not yet awake, and there is no conflict. His
waking is full of sleep, yet his very being is enough for him.</p>
<p>But all the time his mother lives in the hope of his growth. In the
present babe, her heart broods over the coming boy—the unknown
marvel closed in the visible germ. Let mothers lament as they will over
the change from childhood to maturity, which of them would not grow weary
of nursing for ever a child in whom no live law of growth kept unfolding
an infinite change! The child knows nothing of growth—desires none—but
grows. Within him is the force of a power he can no more resist than the
peach can refuse to swell and grow ruddy in the sun. By slow,
inappreciable, indivisible accretion and outfolding, he is lifted,
floated, drifted on towards the face of the awful mirror in which he must
encounter his first foe—must front himself.</p>
<p>By degrees he has learned that the world is around, and not within him—that
he is apart, and that is apart; from consciousness he passes to
self-consciousness. This is a second birth, for now a higher life begins.
When a man not only lives, but knows that he lives, then first the
possibility of a real life commences. By <i>real life</i>, I mean life
which has a share in its own existence.</p>
<p>For now, towards the world around him—the world that is not his
mother, and, actively at least, neither loves him nor ministers to him,
reveal themselves certain relations, initiated by fancies, desires,
preferences, that arise within himself—reasonable or not matters
little:—founded in reason, they can in no case be <i>devoid</i> of
reason. Every object concerned in these relations presents itself to the
man as lovely, desirable, good, or ugly, hateful, bad; and through these
relations, obscure and imperfect, and to a being weighted with a strong
faculty for mistake, begins to be revealed the existence and force of
Being other and higher than his own, recognized as <i>Will</i>, and first
of all in its opposition to his desires. Thereupon begins the strife
without which there never was, and, I presume, never can be, any growth,
any progress; and the first result is what I may call the third birth of
the human being.</p>
<p>The first opposing glance of the mother wakes in the child not only
answering opposition, which is as the rudimentary sac of his own coming
will, but a new something, to which for long he needs no name, so natural
does it seem, so entirely a portion of his being, even when most he
refuses to listen to and obey it. This new something—we call it <i>Conscience</i>—sides
with his mother, and causes its presence and judgment to be felt not only
before but after the event, so that he soon comes to know that it is well
with him or ill with him as he obeys or disobeys it. And now he not only
knows, not only knows that he knows, but knows he knows that he knows—knows
that he is self-conscious—that he has a conscience. With the first
sense of resistance to it, the power above him has drawn nearer, and the
deepest within him has declared itself on the side of the highest without
him. At one and the same moment, the heaven of his childhood has, as it
were, receded and come nigher. He has run from under it, but it claims
him. It is farther, yet closer—immeasurably closer: he feels on his
being the grasp and hold of his mother’s. Through the higher individuality
he becomes aware of his own. Through the assertion of his mother’s will,
his own begins to awake. He becomes conscious of himself as capable of
action—of doing or of not doing; his responsibility has begun.</p>
<p>He slips from her lap; he travels from chair to chair; he puts his circle
round the room; he dares to cross the threshold; he braves the precipice
of the stair; he takes the greatest step that, according to George
Herbert, is possible to man—that out of doors, changing the house
for the universe; he runs from flower to flower in the garden; crosses the
road; wanders, is lost, is found again. His powers expand, his activity
increases; he goes to school, and meets other boys like himself; new
objects of strife are discovered, new elements of strife developed; new
desires are born, fresh impulses urge. The old heaven, the face and will
of his mother, recede farther and farther; a world of men, which he
foolishly thinks a nobler as it is a larger world, draws him, claims him.
More or less he yields. The example and influence of such as seem to him
more than his mother like himself, grow strong upon him. His conscience
speaks louder. And here, even at this early point in his history, what I
might call his fourth birth <i>may</i> begin to take place: I mean the
birth in him of the Will—the real Will—not the pseudo-will,
which is the mere Desire, swayed of impulse, selfishness, or one of many a
miserable motive. When the man, listening to his conscience, wills and
does the right, irrespective of inclination as of consequence, then is the
man free, the universe open before him. He is born from above. To him
conscience needs never speak aloud, needs never speak twice; to him her
voice never grows less powerful, for he never neglects what she commands.
And when he becomes aware that he can will his will, that God has given
him a share in essential life, in the causation of his own being, then is
he a man indeed. I say, even here this birth may begin; but with most it
takes years not a few to complete it. For, the power of the mother having
waned, the power of the neighbour is waxing. If the boy be of common clay,
that is, of clay willing to accept dishonour, this power of the neighbour
over him will increase and increase, till individuality shall have
vanished from him, and what his friends, what society, what the trade or
the profession say, will be to him the rule of life. With such, however, I
have to do no more than with the deaf dead, who sleep too deep for words
to reach them.</p>
<p>My typical child of man is not of such. He is capable not of being
influenced merely, but of influencing—and first of all of
influencing himself; of taking a share in his own making; of determining
actively, not by mere passivity, what he shall be and become; for he never
ceases to pay at least a little heed, however poor and intermittent, to
the voice of his conscience, and to-day he pays more heed than he did
yesterday.</p>
<p>Long ere now the joy of space, of room, has laid hold upon him—the
more powerfully if he inhabit a wild and broken region. The human animal
delights in motion and change, motions of his members even violent, and
swiftest changes of place. It is as if he would lay hold of the infinite
by ceaseless abandonment and choice of a never-abiding stand-point, as if
he would lay hold of strength by the consciousness of the strength he has.
He is full of unrest. He must know what lies on the farther shore of every
river, see how the world looks from every hill: <i>What is behind? What is
beyond?</i> is his constant cry. To learn, to gather into himself, is his
longing. Nor do many years pass thus, it may be not many months, ere the
world begins to come alive around him. He begins to feel that the stars
are strange, that the moon is sad, that the sunrise is mighty. He begins
to see in them all the something men call beauty. He will lie on the sunny
bank and gaze into the blue heaven till his soul seems to float abroad and
mingle with the infinite made visible, with the boundless condensed into
colour and shape. The rush of the water through the still twilight, under
the faint gleam of the exhausted west, makes in his ears a melody he is
almost aware he cannot understand. Dissatisfied with his emotions he
desires a deeper waking, longs for a greater beauty, is troubled with the
stirring in his bosom of an unknown ideal of Nature. Nor is it an ideal of
Nature alone that is forming within him. A far more precious thing, a
human ideal namely, is in his soul, gathering to itself shape and
consistency. The wind that at night fills him with sadness—he cannot
tell why, in the daytime haunts him like a wild consciousness of strength
which has neither difficulty nor danger enough to spend itself upon. He
would be a champion of the weak, a friend to the great; for both he would
fight—a merciless foe to every oppressor of his kind. He would be
rich that he might help, strong that he might rescue, brave—that he
counts himself already, for he has not proved his own weakness. In the
first encounter he fails, and the bitter cup of shame and confusion of
face, wholesome and saving, is handed him from the well of life. He is not
yet capable of understanding that one such as he, filled with the glory
and not the duty of victory, could not but fail, and therefore ought to
fail; but his dismay and chagrin are soothed by the forgetfulness the days
and nights bring, gently wiping out the sins that are past, that the young
life may have a fresh chance, as we say, and begin again unburdened by the
weight of a too much present failure.</p>
<p>And now, probably at school, or in the first months of his college-life, a
new phase of experience begins. He has wandered over the border of what is
commonly called science, and the marvel of facts multitudinous, strung
upon the golden threads of law, has laid hold upon him. His intellect is
seized and possessed by a new spirit. For a time knowledge is pride; the
mere consciousness of knowing is the reward of its labour; the ever
recurring, ever passing contact of mind with a new fact is a joy full of
excitement, and promises an endless delight. But ever the thing that is
known sinks into insignificance, save as a step of the endless stair on
which he is climbing—whither he knows not; the unknown draws him;
the new fact touches his mind, flames up in the contact, and drops dark, a
mere fact, on the heap below. Even the grandeur of law as law, so far from
adding fresh consciousness to his life, causes it no small suffering and
loss. For at the entrance of Science, nobly and gracefully as she bears
herself, young Poetry shrinks back startled, dismayed. Poetry is true as
Science, and Science is holy as Poetry; but young Poetry is timid and
Science is fearless, and bears with her a colder atmosphere than the other
has yet learned to brave. It is not that Madam Science shows any
antagonism to Lady Poetry; but the atmosphere and plane on which alone
they can meet as friends who understand each other, is the mind and heart
of the sage, not of the boy. The youth gazes on the face of Science, cold,
clear, beautiful; then, turning, looks for his friend—but, alas!
Poetry has fled. With a great pang at the heart he rushes abroad to find
her, but descries only the rainbow glimmer of her skirt on the far
horizon. At night, in his dreams, she returns, but never for a season may
he look on her face of loveliness. What, alas! have evaporation, caloric,
atmosphere, refraction, the prism, and the second planet of our system, to
do with “sad Hesper o’er the buried sun?” From quantitative analysis how
shall he turn again to “the rime of the ancient mariner,” and “the moving
moon” that “went up the sky, and nowhere did abide”? From his window he
gazes across the sands to the mightily troubled ocean: “What is the storm
to me any more!” he cries; “it is but the clashing of countless
water-drops!” He finds relief in the discovery that, the moment you place
man in the midst of it, the clashing of water-drops becomes a storm,
terrible to heart and brain: human thought and feeling, hope, fear, love,
sacrifice, make the motions of nature alive with mystery and the shadows
of destiny. The relief, however, is but partial, and may be but temporary;
for what if this mingling of man and Nature in the mind of man be but the
casting of a coloured shadow over her cold indifference? What if she means
nothing—never was meant to mean anything! What if in truth “we
receive but what we give, and in our life alone doth Nature live!” What if
the language of metaphysics as well as of poetry be drawn, not from Nature
at all, but from human fancy concerning her!</p>
<p>At length, from the unknown, whence himself he came, appears an angel to
deliver him from this horror—this stony look—ah, God! of
soulless law. The woman is on her way whose part it is to meet him with a
life other than his own, at once the complement of his, and the visible
presentment of that in it which is beyond his own understanding. The
enchantment of what we specially call <i>love</i> is upon him—a
deceiving glamour, say some, showing what is not, an opening of the eyes,
say others, revealing that of which a man had not been aware: men will
still be divided into those who believe that the horses of fire and the
chariots of fire are ever present at their need of them, and those who
class the prophet and the drunkard in the same category as the fools of
their own fancies. But what this love is, he who thinks he knows least
understands. Let foolish maidens and vulgar youths simper and jest over it
as they please, it is one of the most potent mysteries of the living God.
The man who can love a woman and remain a lover of his wretched self, is
fit only to be cast out with the broken potsherds of the city, as one in
whom the very salt has lost its savour. With this love in his heart, a man
puts on at least the vision robes of the seer, if not the singing robes of
the poet. Be he the paltriest human animal that ever breathed, for the
time, and in his degree, he rises above himself. His nature so far
clarifies itself, that here and there a truth of the great world will
penetrate, sorely dimmed, through the fog-laden, self-shadowed atmosphere
of his microcosm. For the time, I repeat, he is not a lover only, but
something of a friend, with a reflex touch of his own far-off childhood.
To the youth of my history, in the light of his love—a light that
passes outward from the eyes of the lover—the world grows alive
again, yea radiant as an infinite face. He sees the flowers as he saw them
in boyhood, recovering from an illness of all the winter, only they have a
yet deeper glow, a yet fresher delight, a yet more unspeakable soul. He
becomes pitiful over them, and not willingly breaks their stems, to hurt
the life he more than half believes they share with him. He cannot think
anything created only for him, any more than only for itself. Nature is no
longer a mere contention of forces, whose heaven and whose hell in one is
the dull peace of an equilibrium; but a struggle, through splendour of
colour, graciousness of form, and evasive vitality of motion and sound,
after an utterance hard to find, and never found but marred by the
imperfection of the small and weak that would embody and set forth the
great and mighty. The waving of the tree-tops is the billowy movement of a
hidden delight. The sun lifts his head with intent to be glorious. No day
lasts too long, no night comes too soon: the twilight is woven of shadowy
arms that draw the loving to the bosom of the Night. In the woman, the
infinite after which he thirsts is given him for his own.</p>
<p>Man’s occupation with himself turns his eyes from the great life beyond
his threshold: when love awakes, he forgets himself for a time, and many a
glimpse of strange truth finds its way through his windows, blocked no
longer by the shadow of himself. He may now catch even a glimpse of the
possibilities of his own being—may dimly perceive for a moment the
image after which he was made. But alas! too soon, self, radiant of
darkness, awakes; every window becomes opaque with shadow, and the man is
again a prisoner. For it is not the highest word alone that the cares of
this world, the deceitfulness of riches, and the lust of other things
entering in, choke, and render unfruitful. Waking from the divine vision,
if that can be called waking which is indeed dying into the common day,
the common man regards it straightway as a foolish dream; the wise man
believes in it still, holds fast by the memory of the vanished glory, and
looks to have it one day again a present portion of the light of his life.
He knows that, because of the imperfection and dulness and weakness of his
nature, after every vision follow the inclosing clouds, with the threat of
an ever during dark; knows that, even if the vision could tarry, it were
not well, for the sake of that which must yet be done with him, yet be
made of him, that it should tarry. But the youth whose history I am
following is not like the former, nor as yet like the latter.</p>
<p>From whatever cause, then, whether of fault, of natural law, or of
supernal will, the flush that seemed to promise the dawn of an eternal
day, shrinks and fades, though, with him, like the lagging skirt of the
sunset in the northern west, it does not vanish, but travels on, a
withered pilgrim, all the night, at the long last to rise the aureole of
the eternal Aurora. And now new paths entice him—or old paths
opening fresh horizons. With stronger thews and keener nerves he turns
again to the visible around him. The changelessness amid change, the law
amid seeming disorder, the unity amid units, draws him again. He begins to
descry the indwelling poetry of science. The untiring forces at work in
measurable yet inconceivable spaces of time and room, fill his soul with
an awe that threatens to uncreate him with a sense of littleness; while,
on the other side, the grandeur of their operations fills him with such an
informing glory, the mere presence of the mighty facts, that he no more
thinks of himself, but in humility is great, and knows it not. Rapt
spectator, seer entranced under the magic wand of Science, he beholds the
billions of billions of miles of incandescent vapour begin a slow, scarce
perceptible revolution, gradually grow swift, and gather an awful speed.
He sees the vapour, as it whirls, condensing through slow eternities to a
plastic fluidity. He notes ring after ring part from the circumference of
the mass, break, rush together into a globe, and the glowing ball keep on
through space with the speed of its parent bulk. It cools and still cools
and condenses, but still fiercely glows. Presently—after tens of
thousands of years is the creative <i>presently</i>—arises fierce
contention betwixt the glowing heart and its accompanying atmosphere. The
latter invades the former with antagonistic element. He listens in his
soul, and hears the rush of ever descending torrent rains, with the
continuous roaring shock of their evanishment in vapour—to turn
again to water in the higher regions, and again rush to the attack upon
the citadel of fire. He beholds the slow victory of the water at last, and
the great globe, now glooming in a cloak of darkness, covered with a
wildly boiling sea—not boiling by figure of speech, under contending
forces of wind and tide, but boiling high as the hills to come, with
veritable heat. He sees the rise of the wrinkles we call hills and
mountains, and from their sides the avalanches of water to the lower
levels. He sees race after race of living things appear, as the earth
becomes, for each new and higher kind, a passing home; and he watches the
succession of terrible convulsions dividing kind from kind, until at
length the kind he calls his own arrives. Endless are the visions of
material grandeur unfathomable, awaked in his soul by the bare facts of
external existence.</p>
<p>But soon comes a change. So far as he can see or learn, all the motion,
all the seeming dance, is but a rush for death, a panic flight into the
moveless silence. The summer wind, the tropic tornado, the softest tide,
the fiercest storm, are alike the tumultuous conflict of forces, rushing,
and fighting as they rush, into the arms of eternal negation. On and on
they hurry—down and down, to a cold stirless solidity, where wind
blows not, water flows not, where the seas are not merely tideless and
beat no shores, but frozen cleave with frozen roots to their gulfy basin.
All things are on the steep-sloping path to final evanishment, uncreation,
non-existence. He is filled with horror—not so much of the dreary
end, as at the weary hopelessness of the path thitherward. Then a dim
light breaks upon him, and with it a faint hope revives, for he seems to
see in all the forms of life, innumerably varied, a spirit rushing upward
from death—a something in escape from the terror of the downward
cataract, of the rest that knows not peace. “Is it not,” he asks, “the
soaring of the silver dove of life from its potsherd-bed—the
heavenward flight of some higher and incorruptible thing? Is not vitality,
revealed in growth, itself an unending resurrection?”</p>
<p>The vision also of the oneness of the universe, ever reappearing through
the vapours of question, helps to keep hope alive in him. To find, for
instance, the law of the relation of the arrangements of the leaves on
differing plants, correspond to the law of the relative distances of the
planets in approach to their central sun, wakes in him that hope of a
central Will, which alone can justify one ecstatic throb at any seeming
loveliness of the universe. For without the hope of such a centre, delight
is unreason—a mockery not such as the skeleton at the Egyptian
feast, but such rather as a crowned corpse at a feast of skeletons. Life
without the higher glory of the unspeakable, the atmosphere of a God, is
not life, is not worth living. He would rather cease to be, than walk the
dull level of the commonplace—than live the unideal of men in whose
company he can take no pleasure—men who are as of a lower race, whom
he fain would lift, who will not rise, but for whom as for himself he
would cherish the hope they do their best to kill. Those who seem to him
great, recognize the unseen—believe the roots of science to be
therein hid—regard the bringing forth into sight of the things that
are invisible as the end of all Art and every art—judge the true
leader of men to be him who leads them closer to the essential facts of
their being. Alas for his love and his hope, alas for himself, if the
visible should exist for its own sake only!—if the face of a flower
means nothing—appeals to no region beyond the scope of the science
that would unveil its growth. He cannot believe that its structure exists
for the sake of its laws; that would be to build for the sake of its
joints a scaffold where no house was to stand. Those who put their faith
in Science are trying to live in the scaffold of the house invisible.</p>
<p>He finds harbour and comfort at times in the written poetry of his
fellows. He delights in analyzing and grasping the thought that informs
the utterance. For a moment, the fine figure, the delicate phrase, make
him jubilant and strong; but the jubilation and the strength soon pass,
for it is not any of the <i>forms</i>, even of the thought-forms of truth
that can give rest to his soul.</p>
<p>History attracts him little, for he is not able to discover by its records
the operation of principles yielding hope for his race. Such there may be,
but he does not find them. What hope for the rising wave that knows in its
rise only its doom to sink, and at length be dashed on the low shore of
annihilation?</p>
<p>But the time would fail me to follow the doubling of the soul coursed by
the hounds of Death, or to set down the forms innumerable in which the
golden Haemony springs in its path,</p>
<p>Of sovran use<br/>
‘Gainst all enchantments, mildew blast, or damp.<br/></p>
<p>And now the shadows are beginning to lengthen towards the night, which,
whether there be a following morn or no, is the night, and spreads out the
wings of darkness. And still as it approaches the more aware grows the man
of a want that differs from any feeling I have already sought to describe—a
sense of insecurity, in no wise the same as the doubt of life beyond the
grave—a need more profound even than that which cries for a living
Nature. And now he plainly knows, that, all his life, like a conscious
duty unfulfilled, this sense has haunted his path, ever and anon
descending and clinging, a cold mist, about his heart. What if this lack
was indeed the root of every other anxiety! Now freshly revived, this
sense of not having, of something, he knows not what, for lack of which
his being is in pain at its own incompleteness, never leaves him more. And
with it the terror has returned and grows, lest there should be no Unseen
Power, as his fathers believed, and his mother taught him, filling all
things and <i>meaning</i> all things,—no Power with whom, in his
last extremity, awaits him a final refuge. With the quickening doubt falls
a tenfold blight on the world of poetry, both that in Nature and that in
books. Far worse than that early chill which the assertions of science
concerning what it knows, cast upon his inexperienced soul, is now the
shivering death which its pretended denials concerning what it knows not,
send through all his vital frame. The soul departs from the face of
beauty, when the eye begins to doubt if there be any soul behind it; and
now the man feels like one I knew, affected with a strange disease, who
saw in the living face always the face of a corpse. What can the world be
to him who lives for thought, if there be no supreme and perfect Thought,—none
but such poor struggles after thought as he finds in himself? Take the
eternal thought from the heart of things, no longer can any beauty be
real, no more can shape, motion, aspect of nature have significance in
itself, or sympathy with human soul. At best and most the beauty he
thought he saw was but the projected perfection of his own being, and from
himself as the crown and summit of things, the soul of the man shrinks
with horror: it is the more imperfect being who knows the least his
incompleteness, and for whom, seeing so little beyond himself, it is
easiest to imagine himself the heart and apex of things, and rejoice in
the fancy. The killing power of a godless science returns upon him with
tenfold force. The ocean-tempest is once more a mere clashing of
innumerable water-drops; the green and amber sadness of the evening sky is
a mockery of sorrow; his own soul and its sadness is a mockery of himself.
There is nothing in the sadness, nothing in the mockery. To tell him as
comfort, that in his own thought lives the meaning if nowhere else, is
mockery worst of all; for if there be no truth in them, if these things be
no embodiment, to make them serve as such is to put a candle in a
death’s-head to light the dying through the place of tombs. To his former
foolish fancy a primrose might preach a childlike trust; the untoiling
lilies might from their field cast seeds of a higher growth into his
troubled heart; now they are no better than the colour the painter leaves
behind him on the doorpost of his workshop, when, the day’s labour over,
he wipes his brush on it ere he depart for the night. The look in the eyes
of his dog, happy in that he is short-lived, is one of infinite sadness.
All graciousness must henceforth be a sorrow: it has to go with the
sunsets. That a thing must cease takes from it the joy of even an aeonian
endurance—for its <i>kind</i> is mortal; it belongs to the nature of
things that cannot live. The sorrow is not so much that it shall perish as
that it could not live—that it is not in its nature a real, that is,
an eternal thing. His children are shadows—their life a dance, a
sickness, a corruption. The very element of unselfishness, which, however
feeble and beclouded it may be, yet exists in all love, in giving life its
only dignity adds to its sorrow. Nowhere at the root of things is love—it
is only a something that came after, some sort of fungous excrescence in
the hearts of men grown helplessly superior to their origin. Law, nothing
but cold, impassive, material law, is the root of things—lifeless
happily, so not knowing itself, else were it a demon instead of a creative
nothing. Endeavour is paralyzed in him. “Work for posterity,” says he of
the skyless philosophy; answers the man, “How can I work without hope?
Little heart have I to labour, where labour is so little help. What can I
do for my children that would render their life less hopeless than my own!
Give me all you would secure for them, and my life would be to me but the
worse mockery. The true end of labour would be, to lessen the number
doomed to breathe the breath of this despair.”</p>
<p>Straightway he developes another and a deeper mood. He turns and regards
himself. Suspicion or sudden insight has directed the look. And there, in
himself, he discovers such imperfection, such wrong, such shame, such
weakness, as cause him to cry out, “It were well I should cease! Why
should I mourn after life? Where were the good of prolonging it in a being
like me? ‘What should such fellows as I do crawling between heaven and
earth!’” Such insights, when they come, the seers do their best, in
general, to obscure; suspicion of themselves they regard as a monster, and
would stifle. They resent the waking of such doubt. Any attempt at the
raising in them of their buried best they regard as an offence against
intercourse. A man takes his social life in his hand who dares it. Few
therefore understand the judgment of Hamlet upon himself; the common
reader is so incapable of imagining he could mean it of his own general
character as a man, that he attributes the utterance to shame for the
postponement of a vengeance, which indeed he must have been such as his
critic to be capable of performing upon no better proof than he had yet
had. When the man whose unfolding I would now represent, regards even his
dearest love, he finds it such a poor, selfish, low-lived thing, that in
his heart he shames himself before his children and his friends. How
little labour, how little watching, how little pain has he endured for
their sakes! He reads of great things in this kind, but in himself he does
not find them. How often has he not been wrongfully displeased—wrathful
with the innocent! How often has he not hurt a heart more tender than his
own! Has he ever once been faithful to the height of his ideal? Is his
life on the whole a thing to regard with complacency, or to be troubled
exceedingly concerning? Beyond him rise and spread infinite seeming
possibilities—height beyond height, glory beyond glory, each rooted
in and rising from his conscious being, but alas! where is any hope of
ascending them? These hills of peace, “in a season of calm weather,” seem
to surround and infold him, as a land in which he could dwell at ease and
at home: surely among them lies the place of his birth!—while
against their purity and grandeur the being of his consciousness shows
miserable—dark, weak, and undefined—a shadow that would fain
be substance—a dream that would gladly be born into the light of
reality. But alas if the whole thing be only in himself—if the
vision be a dream of nothing, a revelation of lies, the outcome of that
which, helplessly existent, is yet not created, therefore cannot create—if
not the whole thing only be a dream of the impotent, but the impotent be
himself but a dream—a dream of his own—a self-dreamed dream—with
no master of dreams to whom to cry! Where then the cherished hope of one
day atoning for his wrongs to those who loved him!—they are nowhere—vanished
for ever, upmingled and dissolved in the primeval darkness! If truth be
but the hollow of a sphere, ah, never shall he cast himself before them,
to tell them that now at last, after long years of revealing separation,
he knows himself and them, and that now the love of them is a part of his
very being—to implore their forgiveness on the ground that he hates,
despises, contemns, and scorns the self that showed them less than
absolute love and devotion! Never thus shall he lay his being bare to
their eyes of love! They do not even rest, for they do not and will not
know it. There is no voice nor hearing in them, and how can there be in
him any heart to live! The one comfort left him is, that, unable to follow
them, he shall yet die and cease, and fare as they—go also
nowhither!</p>
<p>To a man under the dismay of existence dissociated from power, unrooted
in, unshadowed by a creating Will, who is Love, the Father of Man—to
him who knows not being and God together, the idea of death—a death
that knows no reviving, must be, and ought to be the blessedest thought
left him. “O land of shadows!” well may such a one cry! “land where the
shadows love to ecstatic self-loss, yet forget, and love no more! land of
sorrows and despairs, that sink the soul into a deeper Tophet than death
has ever sounded! broken kaleidoscope! shaken camera! promiser, speaking
truth to the ear, but lying to the sense! land where the heart of my
friend is sorrowful as my heart—the more sorrowful that I have been
but a poor and far-off friend! land where sin is strong and righteousness
faint! where love dreams mightily and walks abroad so feeble! land where
the face of my father is dust, and the hand of my mother will never more
caress! where my children will spend a few years of like trouble to mine,
and then drop from the dream into the no-dream! gladly, O land of
sickliest shadows—gladly, that is, with what power of gladness is in
me, I take my leave of thee! Welcome the cold, pain-soothing embrace of
immortal Death! Hideous are his looks, but I love him better than Life: he
is true, and will not deceive us. Nay, he only is our saviour, setting us
free from the tyranny of the false that ought to be true, and sets us
longing in vain.”</p>
<p>But through all the man’s doubts, fears, and perplexities, a certain
whisper, say rather, an uncertain rumour, a vague legendary murmur, has
been at the same time about, rather than in, his ears—never ceasing
to haunt his air, although hitherto he has hardly heeded it. He knows it
has come down the ages, and that some in every age have been more or less
influenced by a varied acceptance of it. Upon those, however, with whom he
has chiefly associated, it has made no impression beyond that of a
remarkable legend. It is the story of a man, represented as at least
greater, stronger, and better than any other man. With the hero of this
tale he has had a constantly recurring, though altogether undefined
suspicion that he has something to do. It is strongest, though not even
then strong, at such times when he is most aware of evil and imperfection
in himself. Betwixt the two, the idea of this man and his knowledge of
himself, seems to lie, dim-shadowy, some imperative duty. He knows that
the whole matter concerning the man is commemorated in many of the oldest
institutions of his country, but up to this time he has shrunk from the
demands which, by a kind of spiritual insight, he foresaw would follow,
were he once to admit certain things to be true. He has, however, known
some and read of more who by their faith in the man conquered all anxiety,
doubt, and fear, lived pure, and died in gladsome hope. On the other hand,
it seems to him that the faith which was once easy has now become almost
an impossibility. And what is it he is called upon to believe? One says
one thing, another another. Much that is asserted is simply unworthy of
belief, and the foundation of the whole has in his eyes something of the
look of a cunningly devised fable. Even should it be true, it cannot help
him, he thinks, for it does not even touch the things that make his woe:
the God the tale presents is not the being whose very existence can alone
be his cure.</p>
<p>But he meets one who says to him, “Have you then come to your time of
life, and not yet ceased to accept hearsay as ground of action—for
there is action in abstaining as well as in doing? Suppose the man in
question to have taken all possible pains to be understood, does it follow
of necessity that he is now or ever was fairly represented by the bulk of
his followers? With such a moral distance between him and them, is it
possible?”</p>
<p>“But the whole thing has from first to last a strange aspect!” our thinker
replies.</p>
<p>“As to the <i>last</i> that is not yet come. And as to its <i>aspect</i>,
its reality must be such as human eye could never convey to reading heart.
Every human idea of it <i>must</i> be more or less wrong. And yet perhaps
the truer the aspect the stranger it would be. But is it not just with
ordinary things you are dissatisfied? And should not therefore the very
strangeness of these to you little better than rumours incline you to
examine the object of them? Will you assert that nothing strange can have
to do with human affairs? Much that was once scarce credible is now so
ordinary that men have grown stupid to the wonder inherent in it. Nothing
around you serves your need: try what is at least of another class of
phenomena. What if the things rumoured belong to a <i>more</i> natural
order than these, lie nearer the roots of your dissatisfied existence, and
look strange only because you have hitherto been living in the outer
court, not in the <i>penetralia</i> of life? The rumour has been vital
enough to float down the ages, emerging from every storm: why not see for
yourself what may be in it? So powerful an influence on human history,
surely there will be found in it signs by which to determine whether the
man understood himself and his message, or owed his apparent greatness to
the deluded worship of his followers! That he has always had foolish
followers none will deny, and none but a fool would judge any leader from
such a fact. Wisdom as well as folly will serve a fool’s purpose; he turns
all into folly. I say nothing now of my own conclusions, because what you
imagine my opinions are as hateful to me as to you disagreeable and
foolish.”</p>
<p>So says the friend; the man hears, takes up the old story, and says to
himself, “Let me see then what I can see!”</p>
<p>I will not follow him through the many shadows and slow dawns by which at
length he arrives at this much: A man claiming to be the Son of God says
he has come to be the light of men; says, “Come to me, and I will give you
rest;” says, “Follow me, and you shall find my Father; to know him is the
one thing you cannot do without, for it is eternal life.” He has learned
from the reported words of the man, and from the man himself as in the
tale presented, that the bliss of his conscious being is his Father; that
his one delight is to do the will of that Father—the only thing in
his eyes worthy of being done, or worth having done; that he would make
men blessed with his own blessedness; that the cry of creation, the cry of
humanity shall be answered into the deepest soul of desire; that less than
the divine mode of existence, the godlike way of being, can satisfy no
man, that is, make him content with his consciousness; that not this world
only, but the whole universe is the inheritance of those who consent to be
the children of their Father in heaven, who put forth the power of their
will to be of the same sort as he; that to as many as receive him he gives
power to become the sons of God; that they shall be partakers of the
divine nature, of the divine joy, of the divine power—shall have
whatever they desire, shall know no fear, shall love perfectly, and shall
never die; that these things are beyond the grasp of the knowing ones of
the world, and to them the message will be a scorn; but that the time will
come when its truth shall be apparent, to some in confusion of face, to
others in joy unspeakable; only that we must beware of judging, for many
that are first shall be last, and there are last that shall be first.</p>
<p>To find himself in such conscious as well as vital relation with the
source of his being, with a Will by which his own will exists, with a
Consciousness by and through which he is conscious, would indeed be the
end of all the man’s ills! nor can he imagine any other, not to say better
way, in which his sorrows could be met, understood and annihilated. For
the ills that oppress him are both within him and without, and over each
kind he is powerless. If the message were but a true one! If indeed this
man knew what he talked of! But if there should be help for man from
anywhere beyond him, some <i>one</i> might know it first, and may not this
be the one? And if the message be so great, so perfect as this man
asserts, then only a perfect, an eternal man, at home in the bosom of the
Father, could know, or bring, or tell it. According to the tale, it had
been from the first the intent of the Father to reveal himself to man as
man, for without the knowledge of the Father after man’s own modes of
being, he could not grow to real manhood. The grander the whole idea, the
more likely is it to be what it claims to be! and if not high as the
heavens above the earth, beyond us yet within our reach, it is not for us,
it cannot be true. Fact or not, the existence of a God such as Christ, a
God who is a good man infinitely, is the only idea containing hope enough
for man! If such a God has come to be known, marvel must surround the
first news at least of the revelation of him. Because of its marvel, shall
men find it in reason to turn from the gracious rumour of what, if it be
true, must be the event of all events? And could marvel be lovelier than
the marvel reported? But the humble men of heart alone can believe in the
high—they alone can perceive, they alone can embrace grandeur.
Humility is essential greatness, the inside of grandeur.</p>
<p>Something of such truths the man glimmeringly sees. But in his mind awake,
thereupon, endless doubts and questions. What if the whole idea of his
mission was a deception born of the very goodness of the man? What if the
whole matter was the invention of men pretending themselves the followers
of such a man? What if it was a little truth greatly exaggerated? Only, be
it what it may, less than its full idea would not be enough for the wants
and sorrows that weaken and weigh him down!</p>
<p>He passes through many a thorny thicket of inquiry; gathers evidence upon
evidence; reasons upon the goodness of the men who wrote: they might be
deceived, but they dared not invent; holds with himself a thousand
arguments, historical, psychical, metaphysical—which for their
setting-forth would require volumes; hears many an opposing, many a
scoffing word from men “who surely know, else would they speak?” and finds
himself much where he was before. But at least he is haunting the possible
borders of discovery, while those who turn their backs upon the idea are
divided from him by a great gulf—it may be of moral difference. To
him there is still a grand auroral hope about the idea, and it still draws
him; the others, taking the thing from merest report of opinion, look
anywhere but thitherward. He who would not trust his best friend to set
forth his views of life, accepts the random judgements of unknown others
for a sufficing disposal of what the highest of the race have regarded as
a veritable revelation from the Father of men. He sees in it therefore
nothing but folly; for what he takes for the thing nowhere meets his
nature. Our searcher at least holds open the door for the hearing of what
voice may come to him from the region invisible: if there be truth there,
he is where it will find him.</p>
<p>As he continues to read and reflect, the perception gradually grows clear
in him, that, if there be truth in the matter, he must, first of all, and
beyond all things else, give his best heed to the reported words of the
man himself—to what he says, not what is said about him, valuable as
that may afterwards prove to be. And he finds that concerning these words
of his, the man says, or at least plainly implies, that only the obedient,
childlike soul can understand them. It follows that the judgement of no
man who does not obey can be received concerning them or the speaker of
them—that, for instance, a man who hates his enemy, who tells lies,
who thinks to serve God and Mammon, whether he call himself a Christian or
no, has not the right of an opinion concerning the Master or his words—at
least in the eyes of the Master, however it may be in his own. This is in
the very nature of things: obedience alone places a man in the position in
which he can see so as to judge that which is above him. In respect of
great truths investigation goes for little, speculation for nothing; if a
man would know them, he must obey them. Their nature is such that the only
door into them is obedience. And the truth-seeker perceives—which
allows him no loophole of escape from life—that what things the Son
of Man requires of him, are either such as his conscience backs for just,
or such as seem too great, too high for any man. But if there be help for
him, it must be a help that recognizes the highest in him, and urges him
to its use. Help cannot come to one made in the image of God, save in the
obedient effort of what life and power are in him, for God is action. In
such effort alone is it possible for need to encounter help. It is the
upstretched that meets the downstretched hand. He alone who obeys can with
confidence pray—to him alone does an answer seem a thing that may
come. And should anything spoken by the Son of Man seem to the seeker
unreasonable, he feels in the rest such a majesty of duty as compels him
to judge with regard to the other, that he has not yet perceived its true
nature, or its true relation to life.</p>
<p>And now comes the crisis: if here the man sets himself honestly to do the
thing the Son of Man tells him, he so, and so first, sets out positively
upon the path which, if there be truth in these things, will conduct him
to a knowledge of the whole matter; not until then is he a disciple. If
the message be a true one, the condition of the knowledge of its truth is
not only reasonable but an unavoidable necessity. If there be help for
him, how otherways should it draw nigh? He has to be assured of the
highest truth of his being: there can be no other assurance than that to
be gained thus, and thus alone; for not only by obedience does a man come
into such contact with truth as to know what it is, and in regard to truth
knowledge and belief are one. That things which cannot appear save to the
eye capable of seeing them, that things which cannot be recognized save by
the mind of a certain development, should be examined by eye incapable,
and pronounced upon by mind undeveloped, is absurd. The deliverance the
message offers is a change such that the man shall <i>be</i> the rightness
of which he talked: while his soul is not a hungered, athirst, aglow, a
groaning after righteousness—that is, longing to be himself honest
and upright, it is an absurdity that he should judge concerning the way to
this rightness, seeing that, while he walks not in it, he is and shall be
a dishonest man: he knows not whither it leads and how can he know the
way! What he <i>can</i> judge of is, his duty at a given moment—and
that not in the abstract, but as something to be by him <i>done</i>,
neither more, nor less, nor other than <i>done</i>. Thus judging and
doing, he makes the only possible step nearer to righteousness and
righteous judgement; doing otherwise, he becomes the more unrighteous, the
more blind. For the man who knows not God, whether he believes there is a
God or not, there can be, I repeat, no judgement of things pertaining to
God. To our supposed searcher, then, the crowning word of the Son of Man
is this, “If any man is willing to do the will of the Father, he shall
know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or whether I speak of myself.”</p>
<p>Having thus accompanied my type to the borders of liberty, my task for the
present is over. The rest let him who reads prove for himself. Obedience
alone can convince. To convince without obedience I would take no bootless
labour; it would be but a gain for hell. If any man call these things
foolishness, his judgement is to me insignificant. If any man say he is
open to conviction, I answer him he can have none but on the condition, by
the means of obedience. If a man say, “The thing is not interesting to
me,” I ask him, “Are you following your conscience? By that, and not by
the interest you take or do not take in a thing, shall you be judged. Nor
will anything be said to you, or of you, in that day, whatever <i>that day</i>
mean, of which your conscience will not echo every syllable.”</p>
<p>Oneness with God is the sole truth of humanity. Life parted from its
causative life would be no life; it would at best be but a barrack of
corruption, an outpost of annihilation. In proportion as the union is
incomplete, the derived life is imperfect. And no man can be one with
neighbour, child, dearest, except as he is one with his origin; and he
fails of his perfection so long as there is one being in the universe he
could not love.</p>
<p>Of all men he is bound to hold his face like a flint in witness of this
truth who owes everything that makes for eternal good, to the belief that
at the heart of things and causing them to be, at the centre of monad, of
world, of protoplastic mass, of loving dog, and of man most cruel, is an
absolute, perfect love; and that in the man Christ Jesus this love is with
us men to take us home. To nothing else do I for one owe any grasp upon
life. In this I see the setting right of all things. To the man who
believes in the Son of God, poetry returns in a mighty wave; history
unrolls itself in harmony; science shows crowned with its own aureole of
holiness. There is no enlivener of the imagination, no enabler of the
judgment, no strengthener of the intellect, to compare with the belief in
a live Ideal, at the heart of all personality, as of every law. If there
be no such live Ideal, then a falsehood can do more for the race than the
facts of its being; then an unreality is needful for the development of
the man in all that is real, in all that is in the highest sense true;
then falsehood is greater than fact, and an idol necessary for lack of a
God. They who deny cannot, in the nature of things, know what they deny.
When one sees a chaos begin to put on the shape of an ordered world, he
will hardly be persuaded it is by the power of a foolish notion bred in a
diseased fancy.</p>
<p>Let the man then who would rise to the height of his being, be persuaded
to test the Truth by the deed—the highest and only test that can be
applied to the loftiest of all assertions. To every man I say, “Do the
truth you know, and you shall learn the truth you need to know.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ST. GEORGE’S DAY, 1564. </h2>
<p>[Footnote: 1864.]</p>
<p>All England knows that this year (1864) is the three hundredth since
Shakspere was born. The strong probability is likewise that this month of
April is that in which he first saw the earthly light. On the twenty-sixth
of April he was baptized. Whether he was born on the twenty-third, to
which effect there may once have been a tradition, we do not know; but
though there is nothing to corroborate that statement, there are two facts
which would incline us to believe it if we could: the one that he <i>died</i>
on the twenty-third of April, thus, as it were, completing a cycle; and
the other that the twenty-third of April is St. George’s Day. If there is
no harm in indulging in a little fanciful sentiment about such a grand
fact, we should say that certainly it was <i>St. George for merry England</i>
when Shakspere was born. But had St. George been the best saint in the
calendar—which we have little enough ground for supposing he was—it
would better suit our subject to say that the Highest was thinking of his
England when he sent Shakspere into it, to be a strength, a wonder, and a
gladness to the nations of his earth.</p>
<p>But if we write thus about Shakspere, influenced only by the fashion of
the day, we shall be much in the condition of those <i>fashionable</i>
architects who with their vain praises built the tombs of the prophets,
while they had no regard to the lessons they taught. We hope to be able to
show that we have good grounds for our rejoicing in the birth of that
child whom after-years placed highest on the rocky steep of Art, up which
so many of those who combine feeling and thought are always striving.</p>
<p>First, however, let us look at some of the more powerful of the influences
into the midst of which he was born. For a child is born into the womb of
the time, which indeed enclosed and fed him before he was born. Not the
least subtle and potent of those influences which tend to the education of
the child (in the true sense of the word <i>education</i>) are those which
are brought to bear upon him <i>through</i> the mind, heart, judgement of
his parents. We mean that those powers which have operated strongly upon
them, have a certain concentrated operation, both antenatal and
psychological, as well as educational and spiritual, upon the child. Now
Shakspere was born in the sixth year of Queen Elizabeth. He was the eldest
son, but the third child. His father and mother must have been married not
later than the year 1557, two years after Cranmer was burned at the stake,
one of the two hundred who thus perished in that time of pain, resulting
in the firm establishment of a reformation which, like all other changes
for the better, could not be verified and secured without some form or
other of the <i>trial by fire</i>. Events such as then took place in every
part of the country could not fail to make a strong impression upon all
thinking people, especially as it was not those of high position only who
were thus called upon to bear witness to their beliefs. John Shakspere and
Mary Arden were in all likelihood themselves of the Protestant party; and
although, as far as we know, they were never in any especial danger of
being denounced, the whole of the circumstances must have tended to
produce in them individually, what seems to have been characteristic of
the age in which they lived, earnestness. In times such as those, people
are compelled to think.</p>
<p>And here an interesting question occurs: Was it in part to his mother that
Shakspere was indebted for that profound knowledge of the Bible which is
so evident in his writings? A good many copies of the Scriptures must have
been by this time, in one translation or another, scattered over the
country. [Footnote: And it seems to us probable that this diffusion of the
Bible, did more to rouse the slumbering literary power of England, than
any influences of foreign literature whatever.] No doubt the word was
precious in those days, and hard to buy; but there might have been a copy,
notwithstanding, in the house of John Shakspere, and it is possible that
it was from his mother’s lips that the boy first heard the Scripture
tales. We have called his acquaintance with Scripture <i>profound</i>, and
one peculiar way in which it manifests itself will bear out the assertion;
for frequently it is the very spirit and essential aroma of the passage
that he reproduces, without making any use of the words themselves. There
are passages in his writings which we could not have understood but for
some acquaintance with the New Testament. We will produce a few specimens
of the kind we mean, confining ourselves to one play, “Macbeth.”</p>
<p>Just mentioning the phrase, “temple-haunting martlet” (act i. scene 6), as
including in it a reference to the verse, “Yea, the sparrow hath found an
house, and the swallow a nest for herself, where she may lay her young,
even thine altars, O Lord of hosts,” we pass to the following passage, for
which we do not believe there is any explanation but that suggested to us
by the passage of Scripture to be cited.</p>
<p>Macbeth, on his way to murder Duncan, says,—</p>
<p>“Thou sure and firm-set earth,<br/>
Hear not my steps, which way they walk, for fear<br/>
Thy very stones prate of my whereabout,<br/>
And take the present horror from the time<br/>
Which now suits with it.”<br/></p>
<p>What is meant by the last two lines? It seems to us to be just another
form of the words, “For there is nothing covered, that shall not be
revealed; neither hid, that shall not be known. Therefore whatsoever ye
have spoken in darkness shall be heard in the light; and that which ye
have spoken in the ear in closets shall be proclaimed upon the
house-tops.” Of course we do not mean that Macbeth is represented as
having this passage in his mind, but that Shakspere had the feeling of it
when he wrote thus. What Macbeth means is, “Earth, do not hear me in the
dark, which is suitable to the present horror, lest the very stones prate
about it in the daylight, which is not suitable to such things; thus
taking ‘the present horror <i>from</i> the time which now suits with it.’”</p>
<p>Again, in the only piece of humour in the play—if that should be
called humour which, taken in its relation to the consciousness of the
principal characters, is as terrible as anything in the piece—the
porter ends off his fantastic soliloquy, in which he personates the porter
of hell-gate, with the words, “But this place is too cold for hell: I’ll
devil-porter it no further. I had thought to have let in some of all
professions, that go the primrose way to the everlasting bonfire.” Now
what else had the writer in his mind but the verse from the Sermon on the
Mount, “For wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to
destruction, and many there be which go in thereat”?</p>
<p>It may be objected that such passages as these, being of the most commonly
quoted, imply no profound acquaintance with Scripture, such as we have
said Shakspere possessed. But no amount of knowledge of the <i>words</i>
of the Bible would be sufficient to justify the use of the word <i>profound</i>.
What is remarkable in the employment of these passages, is not merely that
they are so present to his mind that they come up for use in the most
exciting moments of composition, but that he embodies the spirit of them
in such a new form as reveals to minds saturated and deadened with the <i>sound</i>
of the words, the very visual image and spiritual meaning involved in
them. “<i>The primrose way!</i>” And to what?</p>
<p>We will confine ourselves to one passage more:—</p>
<p>“Macbeth<br/>
Is ripe for shaking, and the powers above<br/>
Put on their instruments.”<br/></p>
<p>In the end of the 14th chapter of the Revelation we have the words,
“Thrust in thy sickle, and reap: for the time is come for thee to reap;
for the harvest of the earth is ripe.” We suspect that Shakspere wrote,
ripe <i>to</i> shaking.</p>
<p>The instances to which we have confined ourselves do not by any means
belong to the most evident kind of proof that might be adduced of
Shakspere’s acquaintance with Scripture. The subject, in its ordinary
aspect, has been elsewhere treated with far more fulness than our design
would permit us to indulge in, even if it had not been done already. Our
object has been to bring forward a few passages which seem to us to
breathe the very spirit of individual passages in sacred writ, without
direct use of the words themselves; and, of course, in such a case we can
only appeal to the (no doubt) very various degrees of conviction which
they may rouse in the minds of our readers.</p>
<p>But there is one singular correspondence in another <i>almost</i> literal
quotation from the Gospel, which is to us wonderfully interesting. We are
told that the words “eye of a needle,” in the passage about a rich man
entering the kingdom of heaven, mean the small side entrance in a city
gate. Now, in “Richard II,” act v. scene 5, <i>Richard</i> quotes the
passage thus:—</p>
<p>“It is as hard to come as for a camel<br/>
To thread the postern of a needle’s eye;”<br/></p>
<p>showing that either the imagination of Shakspere suggested the real
explanation, or he had taken pains to acquaint himself with the
significance of the simile. We can hardly say that the correspondence
might be <i>merely</i> fortuitous; because, at the least, Shakspere looked
for and found a suitable figure to associate with the words <i>eye of a
needle</i>, and so fell upon the real explanation; except, indeed, he had
no particular significance in using the word that meant a <i>little</i>
gate, instead of a word meaning any kind of entrance, which, with him,
seems unlikely.</p>
<p>We have not by any means proven that Shakspere’s acquaintance with the
Scriptures had an early date in his history; but certainly the Bible must
have had a great influence upon him who was the highest representative
mind of the time, its influence on the general development of the nation
being unquestionable. This, therefore, seeing the Bible itself was just
dawning full upon the country while Shakspere was becoming capable of
understanding it, seems the suitable sequence in which to take notice of
that influence, and of some of those passages in his works which testify
to it.</p>
<p>But, besides <i>the</i> Bible, every nation has <i>a</i> Bible, or at
least <i>an</i> Old Testament, in its own history; and that Shakspere paid
especial attention to this, is no matter of conjecture. We suspect his
mode of writing historical plays is more after the fashion of the Bible
histories than that of most writers of history. Indeed, the development
and consequences of character and conduct are clear to those that read his
histories with open eyes. Now, in his childhood Shakspere may have had
some special incentive to the study of history springing out of the fact
that his mother’s grandfather had been “groom of the chamber to Henry
VII.,” while there is sufficient testimony that a further removed ancestor
of his father, as well, had stood high in the favour of the same monarch.
Therefore the history of the troublous times of the preceding century,
which were brought to a close by the usurpation of Henry VII., would
naturally be a subject of talk in the quiet household, where books and
amusements such as now occupy our boys, were scarce or wanting altogether.
The proximity of such a past of strife and commotion, crowded with
eventful change, must have formed a background full of the material of
excitement to an age which lived in the midst of a peculiarly exciting
history of its own.</p>
<p>Perhaps the chief intellectual characteristic of the age of Elizabeth was
<i>activity</i>; this activity accounting even for much that is
objectionable in its literature. Now this activity must have been growing
in the people throughout the fifteenth century; the wars of the Roses,
although they stifled literature, so that it had, as it were, to be born
again in the beginning of the following century, being, after all, but as
the “eager strife” of the shadow-leaves above the “genuine life” of the
grass,—</p>
<p>“And the mute repose<br/>
Of sweetly breathing flowers.”<br/></p>
<p>But when peace had fallen on the land, it would seem as if the impulse to
action springing from strife still operated, as the waves will go on
raving upon the shore after the wind has ceased, and found one outlet,
amongst others, in literature, and peculiarly in dramatic literature.
Peace, rendered yet more intense by the cessation of the cries of the
tormentors, and the groans of the noble army of suffering martyrs, made,
as it were, a kind of vacuum; and into that vacuum burst up the
torrent-springs of a thousand souls—the thoughts that were no longer
repressed—in the history of the past and the Utopian speculation on
the future; in noble theology, capable statesmanship, and science at once
brilliant and profound; in the voyage of discovery, and the change of the
swan-like merchantman into a very fire-drake of war for the defence of the
threatened shores; in the first brave speech of the Puritan in Elizabeth’s
Parliament, the first murmurs of the voice of liberty, soon to thunder
throughout the land; in the naturalizing of foreign genius by translation,
and the invention, or at least adoption, of a new and transcendent rhythm;
in the song, in the epic, in the drama.</p>
<p>So much for the general. Let us now, following the course of his life,
recall, in a few sentences, some of the chief events which must have
impressed the all-open mind of Shakspere in the earlier portion of his
history.</p>
<p>Perhaps it would not be going back too far to begin with the Massacre of
Paris, which took place when he was eight years old. It caused so much
horror in England, that it is not absurd to suppose that some black rays
from the deed of darkness may have fallen on the mind of such a child as
Shakspere.</p>
<p>In strong contrast with the foregoing is the next event to which we shall
refer.</p>
<p>When he was eleven years old, Leicester gave the Queen that magnificent
reception at Kenilworth which is so well known from its memorials in our
literature. It has been suggested as probable, with quite enough of
likelihood to justify a conjecture, that Shakspere may have been present
at the dramatic representations then so gorgeously accumulated before her
Majesty. If such was the fact, it is easy to imagine what an influence the
shows must have had on the mind of the young dramatic genius, at a time
when, happily, the critical faculty is not by any means so fully awake as
are the receptive and exultant faculties, and when what the nature chiefly
needs is excitement to growth, without which all pruning, the most
artistic, is useless, as having nothing to operate upon.</p>
<p>When he was fifteen years old, Sir Thomas North’s translation of Plutarch
(through the French) was first published. Any reader who has compared one
of Shakspere’s Roman plays with the corresponding life in Plutarch, will
not be surprised that we should mention this as one of those events which
must have been of paramount influence upon Shakspere. It is not likely
that he became acquainted with the large folio with its medallion
portraits first placed singly, and then repeated side by side for
comparison, as soon as it made its appearance, but as we cannot tell when
he began to read it, it seems as well to place it in the order its
publication would assign to it. Besides, it evidently took such a hold of
the man, that it is most probable his acquaintance with it began at a very
early period of his history. Indeed, it seems to us to have been one of
the most powerful aids to the development of that perception and
discrimination of character with which he was gifted to such a remarkable
degree. Nor would it be any derogation from the originality of his genius
to say, that in a very pregnant sense he must have been a disciple of
Plutarch. In those plays founded on Plutarch’s stories he picked out every
dramatic point, and occasionally employed the very phrases of North’s
nervous, graphic, and characteristic English. He seems to have felt that
it was an honour to his work to embody in it the words of Plutarch
himself, as he knew them first. From him he seems especially to have
learned how to bring out the points of a character, by putting one man
over against another, and remarking wherein they resembled each other and
wherein they differed; after which fashion, in other plays as well as
those, he partly arranged his dramatic characters.</p>
<p>Not long after he went to London, when he was twenty-two, the death of Sir
Philip Sidney at the age of thirty-two, must have had its unavoidable
influence on him, seeing all Europe was in mourning for the death of its
model, almost ideal man. In England the general mourning, both in the
court and the city, which lasted for months, is supposed by Dr. Zouch to
have been the first instance of the kind; that is, for the death of a
private person. Renowned over the civilized world for everything for which
a man could be renowned, his literary fame must have had a considerable
share in the impression his death would make on such a man as Shakspere.
For although none of his works were published till after his death, the
first within a few months of that event, his fame as a writer was widely
spread in private, and report of the same could hardly fail to reach one
who, although he had probably no friends of rank as yet, kept such keen
open ears for all that was going on around him. But whether or not he had
heard of the literary greatness of Sir Philip before his death, the
“Arcadia,” which was first published four years after his death (1590),
and which in eight years had reached the third edition—with another
still in Scotland the following year—must have been full of interest
to Shakspere. This book is very different indeed from the ordinary
impression of it which most minds have received through the confident
incapacity of the critics of last century. Few books have been published
more fruitful in the results and causes of thought, more sparkling with
fancy, more evidently the outcome of rich and noble habit, than this
“Arcadia” of Philip Sidney. That Shakspere read it, is sufficiently
evident from the fact that from it he has taken the secondary but still
important plots in two of his plays.</p>
<p>Although we are anticipating, it is better to mention here another book,
published in the same year, namely, 1590, when Shakspere was
six-and-twenty: the first three books of Spenser’s “Faery Queen.” Of its
reception and character it is needless here to say anything further than,
of the latter, that nowadays the depths of its teaching, heartily prized
as that was by no less a man than Milton, are seldom explored. But it
would be a labour of months to set out the known and imagined sources of
the knowledge and spiritual pabulum of the man who laid every mental
region so under contribution, that he has been claimed by almost every
profession as having been at one time or another a student of its peculiar
science, so marvellously in him was the power of assimilation combined
with that of reproduction.</p>
<p>To go back a little: in 1587, when he was three-and-twenty, Mary Queen of
Scots was executed. In the following year came that mighty victory of
England, and her allies the winds and the waters, over the towering pride
of the Spanish Armada. Out from the coasts, like the birds from their
cliffs to defend their young, flew the little navy, many of the vessels
only able to carry a few guns; and fighting, fire-ships and tempest left
this island,—</p>
<p>“This precious stone set in the silver sea,”<br/></p>
<p>still a “blessed plot,” with an accumulated obligation to liberty which
can only be paid by helping others to be free; and when she utterly
forgets which, her doom is sealed, as surely as that of the old empires
which passed away in their self-indulgence and wickedness.</p>
<p>When Shakspere was about thirty-two, Sir Walter Raleigh published his
glowing account of Guiana, which instantly provided the English mind with
an earthly paradise or fairy-land. Raleigh himself seems to have been too
full of his own reports for us to be able to suppose that he either
invented or disbelieved them; especially when he represents the heavenly
country to which, in expectation of his execution, he is looking forward,
after the fashion of those regions of the wonderful West:—</p>
<p>“Then the blessed Paths wee’l travel,<br/>
Strow’d with Rubies thick as gravel;<br/>
Sealings of Diamonds, Saphire floors,<br/>
High walls of Coral, and Pearly Bowers.”<br/></p>
<p>Such were some of the influences which widened the region of thought, and
excited the productive power, in the minds of the time. After this period
there were fewer of such in Shakspere’s life; and if there had been more
of them they would have been of less import as to their operation on a
mind more fully formed and more capable of choosing its own influences.
Let us now give a backward glance at the history of the art which
Shakspere chose as the means of easing his own mind of that wealth which,
like the gold and the silver, has a moth and rust of its own, except it be
kept in use by being sent out for the good of our neighbours.</p>
<p>It was a mighty gain for the language and the people when, in the middle
of the fourteenth century, by permission of the Pope, the miracle-plays,
most probably hitherto represented in Norman-French, as Mr. Collier
supposes, began to be represented in English. Most likely there had been
dramatic representations of a sort from the very earliest period of the
nation’s history; for, to begin with the lowest form, at what time would
there not, for the delight of listeners, have been the imitation of animal
sounds, such as the drama of the conversation between an attacking poodle
and a fiercely repellent puss? Through innumerable gradations of childhood
would the art grow before it attained the first formal embodiment in such
plays as those, so-called, of miracles, consisting just of Scripture
stories, both canonical and apocryphal, dramatized after the rudest
fashion. Regarded from the height which the art had reached two hundred
and fifty years after, “how dwarfed a growth of cold and night” do these
miracle-plays show themselves! But at a time when there was no printing,
little preaching, and Latin prayers, we cannot help thinking that,
grotesque and ill-imagined as they are, they must have been of unspeakable
value for the instruction of a people whose spiritual digestion was not of
a sort to be injured by the presence of a quite abnormal quantity of husk
and saw-dust in their food. And occasionally we find verses of true poetic
feeling, such as the following, in “The Fall of Man:”—</p>
<p><i>Deus.</i> Adam, that with myn handys I made,<br/>
Where art thou now? What hast thou wrought?<br/>
<br/>
<i>Adam.</i> A! lord, for synne oure floures do ffade,<br/>
I here thi voys, but I se the nought;<br/></p>
<p>implying that the separation between God and man, although it had
destroyed the beatific vision, was not yet so complete as to make the
creature deaf to the voice of his Maker. Nor are the words of Eve, with
which she begs her husband, in her shame and remorse, to strangle her, odd
and quaint as they are, without an almost overpowering pathos:—</p>
<p>“Now stomble we on stalk and ston;<br/>
My wyt awey is fro me gon:<br/>
Wrythe on to my necke bon<br/>
With, hardnesse of thin honde.”<br/></p>
<p>To this Adam commences his reply with the verses,—</p>
<p>“Wyff, thi wytt is not wurthe a rosche.<br/>
Leve woman, turn thi thought.”<br/></p>
<p>And this portion of the general representation ends with these verses,
spoken by Eve:—</p>
<p>“Alas! that ever we wrought this synne.<br/>
Oure bodely sustenauns for to wynne,<br/>
Ye must delve and I xal spynne,<br/>
In care to ledyn oure lyff.”<br/></p>
<p>In connexion with these plays, one of the contemplations most interesting
to us is, the contrast between them and the places in which they were
occasionally represented. For though the scaffolds on which they were
shown were usually erected in market-places or churchyards, sometimes they
rose in the great churches, and the plays were represented with the aid of
ecclesiastics. Here, then, we have the rude beginnings of the dramatic
art, in which the devil is the unfortunate buffoon, giving occasion to the
most exuberant laughter of the people—here is this rude boyhood, if
we may so say, of the one art, roofed in with the perfection of another,
of architecture; a perfection which now we can only imitate at our best:
below, the clumsy contrivance and the vulgar jest; above, the solemn
heaven of uplifted arches, their mysterious glooms ringing with the
delight of the multitude: the play of children enclosed in the heart of
prayer aspiring in stone. But it was not by any means all laughter; and so
much, nearer than architecture is the drama to the ordinary human heart,
that we cannot help thinking these grotesque representations did far more
to arouse the inward life and conscience of the people than all the glory
into which the out-working spirit of the monks had compelled the stubborn
stone to bourgeon and blossom.</p>
<p>But although, no doubt, there was some kind of growth going on in the
drama even during the dreary fifteenth century, we must not suppose that
it was by any regular and steady progression that it arrived at the
grandeur of the Elizabethan perfection. It was rather as if a dry, knotty,
uncouth, but vigorous plant suddenly opened out its inward life in a
flower of surpassing splendour and loveliness. When the representation of
real historical persons in the miracle-plays gave way before the
introduction of unreal allegorical personages, and the miracle-play was
almost driven from the stage by the “play of morals” as it was called,
there was certainly no great advance made in dramatic representation. The
chief advantage gained was room for more variety; while in some important
respects these plays fell off from the merits of the preceding kind.
Indeed, any attempt to teach morals allegorically must lack that vivifying
fire of faith working in the poorest representations of a history which
the people heartily believed and loved. Nor when we come to examine the
favourite amusement of later royalty, do we find that the interludes
brought forward in the pauses of the banquets of Henry VIII. have a claim
to any refinement upon those old miracle-plays. They have gained in
facility and wit; they have lost in poetry. They have lost pathos too, and
have gathered grossness. In the comedies which soon appear, there is far
more of fun than of art; and although the historical play had existed for
some time, and the streams of learning from the inns of court had flowed
in to swell that of the drama, it is not before the appearance of
Shakspere that we find any <i>whole</i> of artistic or poetic value. And
this brings us to another branch of the subject, of which it seems to us
that the importance has never been duly acknowledged. We refer to the use,
if not invention, of <i>blank verse</i> in England, and its application to
the purposes of the drama. It seems to us that in any contemplation of
Shakspere and his times, the consideration of these points ought not to be
omitted.</p>
<p>We have in the present day one grand master of blank verse, the Poet
Laureate. But where would he have been if Milton had not gone before him;
or if the verse amidst which he works like an informing spirit had not
existed at all? No doubt he might have invented it himself; but how
different would the result have been from the verse which he will now
leave behind him to lie side by side for comparison with that of the
master of the epic! All thanks then to Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey! who,
if, dying on the scaffold at the early age of thirty, he has left no
poetry in itself of much value, yet so wrote that he refined the poetic
usages of the language, and, above all, was the first who ever made blank
verse in English. He used it in translating the second and fourth books of
Virgil’s “Aeneid.” This translation he probably wrote not long before his
execution, which took place in 1547, seventeen years before the birth of
Shakspere. There are passages of excellence in the work, and very rarely
does a verse quite fail. But, as might be expected, it is somewhat stiff,
and, as it were, stunted in sound; partly from the fact that the lines are
too much divided, where <i>distinction</i> would have been sufficient. It
would have been strange, indeed, if he had at once made a free use of a
rhythm which every boy-poet now thinks he can do what he pleases with, but
of which only a few ever learn the real scope and capabilities. Besides,
the difficulty was increased by the fact that the nearest approach to it
in measure was the heroic couplet, so well known in our language, although
scarce one who has used it has come up to the variousness of its modelling
in the hands of Chaucer, with whose writings Surrey was of course
familiar. But various as is its melody in Chaucer, the fact of there being
always an anticipation of the perfecting of a rhyme at the end of the
couplet would make one accustomed to heroic verse ready to introduce a
rhythmical fall and kind of close at the end of every blank verse in
trying to write that measure for the first time. Still, as we say, there
is good verse in Surrey’s translation. Take the following lines for a
specimen, in which the fault just mentioned is scarcely perceptible.
Mercury is the subject of them.</p>
<p>“His golden wings he knits, which him transport,<br/>
With a light wind above the earth and seas;<br/>
And then with him his wand he took, whereby<br/>
He calls from hell pale ghosts.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>“By power whereof he drives the winds away,<br/>
And passeth eke amid the troubled clouds,<br/>
Till in his flight he ‘gan descry the top<br/>
And the steep flanks of rocky Atlas’ hill<br/>
That with his crown sustains the welkin up;<br/>
Whose head, forgrown with pine, circled alway<br/>
With misty clouds, is beaten with wind and storm;<br/>
His shoulders spread with snow; and from his chin<br/>
The springs descend; his beard frozen with ice.<br/>
Here Mercury with equal shining wings<br/>
First touched.”<br/></p>
<p>In all comparative criticism justice demands that he who began any mode
should not be compared with those who follow only on the ground of
absolute merit in the productions themselves; for while he may be inferior
in regard to quality, he stands on a height, as the inventor, to which
they, as imitators, can never ascend, although they may climb other and
loftier heights, through the example he has set them. It is doubtful,
however, whether Surrey himself invented this verse, or only followed the
lead of some poet of Italy or Spain; in both which countries it is said
that blank verse had been used before Surrey wrote English in that
measure.</p>
<p>Here then we have the low beginnings of blank verse. It was nearly a
hundred and twenty years before Milton took it up, and, while it served
him well, glorified it; nor are we aware of any poem of worth written in
that measure between. Here, of course, we speak of the epic form of the
verse, which, as being uttered <i>ore rotundo</i>, is necessarily of
considerable difference from the form it assumes in the drama.</p>
<p>Let us now glance for a moment at the forms of composition in use for
dramatic purposes before blank verse came into favour with play-writers.
The nature of the verse employed in the miracle-plays will be sufficiently
seen from the short specimens already given. These plays were made up of
carefully measured and varied lines, with correct and superabundant
rhymes, and no marked lack of melody or rhythm. But as far as we have made
acquaintance with the moral and other rhymed plays which followed, there
was a great falling off in these respects. They are in great measure
composed of long, irregular lines, with a kind of rhythmical progress
rather than rhythm in them. They are exceedingly difficult to read
musically, at least to one of our day. Here are a few verses of the sort,
from the dramatic poem, rather than drama, called somewhat improperly “The
Moral Play of God’s Promises,” by John Bale, who died the year before
Shakspere was born. It is the first in Dodsley’s collection. The verses
have some poetic merit. The rhythm will be allowed to be difficult at
least. The verses are arranged in stanzas, of which we give two. In most
plays the verses are arranged in rhyming couplets only.</p>
<p><i>Pater Coelestis.</i><br/>
<br/>
I have with fearcenesse mankynde oft tymes corrected,<br/>
And agayne, I have allured hym by swete promes.<br/>
I have sent sore plages, when he hath me neglected,<br/>
And then by and by, most comfortable swetnes.<br/>
To wynne hym to grace, bothe mercye and ryghteousnes<br/>
I have exercysed, yet wyll he not amende.<br/>
Shall I now lose hym, or shall I him defende?<br/>
<br/>
In hys most myschefe, most hygh grace will I sende,<br/>
To overcome hym by favoure, if it may be.<br/>
With hys abusyons no longar wyll I contende,<br/>
But now accomplysh my first wyll and decre.<br/>
My worde beynge flesh, from hens shall set hym fre,<br/>
Hym teachynge a waye of perfyght ryhteousnesse,<br/>
That he shall not nede to perysh in hys weaknesse.<br/></p>
<p>To our ears, at least, the older miracle-plays were greatly superior. It
is interesting to find, however, in this apparently popular mode of
“building the rhyme”—certainly not the <i>lofty</i> rhyme, for no
such crumbling foundation could carry any height of superstructure—the
elements of the most popular rhythm of the present day; a rhythm admitting
of any number of syllables in the line, from four up to twelve, or even
more, and demanding only that there shall be not more than four accented
syllables in the line. A song written with any spirit in this measure has,
other things <i>not</i> being quite equal, yet almost a certainty of
becoming more popular than one written in any other measure. Most of Barry
Cornwall’s and Mrs. Heman’s songs are written in it. Scott’s “Lay of the
Last Minstrel,” Coleridge’s “Christabel,” Byron’s “Siege of Corinth,”
Shelley’s “Sensitive Plant,” are examples of the rhythm. Spenser is the
first who has made good use of it. One of the months in the “Shepherd’s
Calendar” is composed in it. We quote a few lines from this poem, to show
at once the kind we mean:—</p>
<p>“No marvel, Thenot, if thou can bear<br/>
Cheerfully the winter’s wrathful cheer;<br/>
For age and winter accord full nigh;<br/>
This chill, that cold; this crooked, that wry;<br/>
And as the lowering weather looks down,<br/>
So seemest thou like Good Friday to frown:<br/>
But my flowering youth is foe to frost;<br/>
My ship unwont in storms to be tost.”<br/></p>
<p>We can trace it slightly in Sir Thomas Wyatt, and we think in others who
preceded Spenser. There is no sign of it in Chaucer. But we judge it to be
the essential rhythm of Anglo-Saxon poetry, which will quite harmonize
with, if it cannot explain, the fact of its being the most popular measure
still. Shakspere makes a little use of it in one, if not in more, of his
plays, though it there partakes of the irregular character of that of the
older plays which he is imitating. But we suspect the clowns of the
authorship of some of the rhymes, “speaking more than was set down for
them,” evidently no uncommon offence.</p>
<p>Prose was likewise in use for the drama at an early period.</p>
<p>But we must now regard the application of blank verse to the use of the
drama. And in this part of our subject we owe most to the investigations
of Mr. Collier, than whom no one has done more to merit our gratitude for
such aids. It is universally acknowledged that “Ferrex and Porrex” was the
first drama in blank verse. But it was never represented on the public
stage. It was the joint production of Thomas Sackville, afterwards Lord
Buckhurst and Earl of Dorset, and Thomas Norton, both gentlemen of the
Inner Temple, by the members of which it was played before the Queen at
Whitehall in 1561, three years before Shakspere was born. As to its
merits, the impression left by it upon our minds is such that, although
the verse is decent, and in some respects irreproachable, we think the
time spent in reading it must be all but lost to any but those who must
verify to themselves their literary profession; a profession which, like
all other professions, involves a good deal of disagreeable duty. We spare
our readers all quotation, there being no occasion to show what blank
verse of the commonest description is. But we beg to be allowed to state
that this drama by no means represents the poetic powers of Thomas
Sackville. For although we cannot agree with Hallam’s general criticism,
either for or against Sackville, and although we admire Spenser, we hope,
as much as that writer could have admired him, we yet venture to say that
not only may some of Sackville’s personifications “fairly be compared with
some of the most poetical passages in Spenser,” but that there is in this
kind in Sackville a strength and simplicity of representation which
surpasses that of Spenser in passages in which the latter probably
imitated the former. We refer to the allegorical personages in Sackville’s
“Induction to the Mirrour of Magistrates,” and in Spenser’s description of
the “House of Pride.”</p>
<p>Mr. Collier judges that the play in blank verse first represented on the
public stage was the “Tamburlaine” of Christopher Marlowe, and that it was
acted before 1587, at which date Shakspere would be twenty-three. This was
followed by other and better plays by the same author. Although we cannot
say much for the dramatic art of Marlowe, he has far surpassed every one
that went before him in dramatic <i>poetry</i>. The passages that might
worthily be quoted from Marlowe’s writings for the sake of their poetry
are innumerable, notwithstanding that there are many others which occupy a
border land between poetry and bombast, and are such that it is to us
impossible to say to which class they rather belong. Of course it is easy
for a critic to gain the credit of common-sense at the same time that he
saves himself the trouble of doing what he too frequently shows himself
incapable of doing to any good purpose—we mean <i>thinking</i>—by
classing all such passages together as bombastical nonsense; but even in
the matter of poetry and bombast, a wise reader will recognize that
extremes so entirely meet, without being in the least identical, that they
are capable of a sort of chemico-literary admixture, if not of
combination. Goethe himself need not have been ashamed to have written one
or two of the scenes in Marlowe’s “Faust;” not that we mean to imply that
they in the least resemble Goethe’s handiwork. His verse is, for dramatic
purposes, far inferior to Shakspere’s; but it was a great matter for
Shakspere that Marlowe preceded him, and helped to prepare to his hand the
tools and fashions he needed. The provision of blank verse for Shakspere’s
use seems to us worthy of being called providential, even in a system in
which we cannot believe that there is any chance. For as the stage itself
is elevated a few feet above the ordinary level, because it is the scene
of a <i>representation</i>, just so the speech of the drama, dealing not
with unreal but with ideal persons, the fool being a worthy fool, and the
villain a worthy villain, needs to be elevated some tones above that of
ordinary life, which is generally flavoured with so much of the <i>commonplace</i>.
Now the commonplace has no place at all in the drama of Shakspere, which
fact at once elevates it above the tone of ordinary life. And so the mode
of the speech must be elevated as well; therefore from prose into blank
verse. If we go beyond this, we cease to be natural for the stage as well
as life; and the result is that kind of composition well enough known in
Shakspere’s time, which he ridicules in the recitations of the player in
“Hamlet,” about <i>Priam</i> and <i>Hecuba</i>. We could show the very
passages of the play-writer Nash which Shakspere imitates in these. To use
another figure, Shakspere, in the same play, instructs the players “to
hold, as ‘twere, the mirror up to nature.” Now every one must have felt
that somehow there is a difference between the appearance of any object or
group of objects immediately presented to the eye, and the appearance of
the same object or objects in a mirror. Nature herself is not the same in
the mirror held up to her. Everything changes sides in this
representation; and the room which is an ordinary, well-known, homely
room, gains something of the strange and poetic when regarded in the
mirror over the fire. Now for this representation, for this
mirror-reflection on the stage, blank verse is just the suitable glass to
receive the silvering of the genius-mind behind it.</p>
<p>But if Shakspere had had to sit down and make his tools first, and then
quarry his stone and fell his timber for the building of his house,
instead of finding everything ready to his hand for dressing his stone
already hewn, for sawing and carving the timber already in logs and planks
beside him, no doubt his house would have been built; but can we with any
reason suppose that it would have proved such “a lordly pleasure-house”?
Not even Shakspere could do without his poor little brothers who preceded
him, and, like the goblins and gnomes of the drama, got everything out of
the bowels of the dark earth, ready for the master, whom it would have
been a shame to see working in the gloom and the dust instead of in the
open eye of the day. Nor is anything so helpful to the true development of
power as the possibility of free action for as much of the power as is
already operative. This room for free action was provided by blank verse.</p>
<p>Yet when Shakspere came first upon the scene of dramatic labour, he had to
serve his private apprenticeship, to which the apprenticeship of the age
in the drama, had led up. He had to act first of all. Driven to London and
the drama by an irresistible impulse, when the choice of some profession
was necessary to make him independent of his father, seeing he was
himself, though very young, a married man, the first form in which the
impulse to the drama would naturally show itself in him would be the
desire to act; for the outside relations would first operate. As to the
degree of merit he possessed as an actor we have but scanty means of
judging; for afterwards, in his own plays, he never took the best
characters, having written them for his friend Richard Burbage. Possibly
the dramatic impulse was sufficiently appeased by the writing of the play,
and he desired no further satisfaction from personal representation;
although the amount of study spent upon the higher department of the art
might have been more than sufficient to render him unrivalled as well in
the presentation of his own conceptions. But the dramatic spring, having
once broken the upper surface, would scoop out a deeper and deeper well
for itself to play in, and the actor would soon begin to work upon the
parts he had himself to study for presentation. It being found that he
greatly bettered his own parts, those of others would be submitted to him,
and at length whole plays committed to his revision, of which kind there
may be several in the collection of his works. If the feather-end of his
pen is just traceable in “Titus Andronicus,” the point of it is much more
evident, and to as good purpose as Beaumont or Fletcher could have used
his to, at the best, in “Pericles, Prince of Tyre.” Nor would it be long
before he would submit one of his own plays for approbation; and then the
whole of his dramatic career lies open before him, with every possible
advantage for perfecting the work, for the undertaking of which he was
better qualified by nature than probably any other man whosoever; for he
knew everything about acting, practically—about the play-house and
its capabilities, about stage necessities, about the personal endowments
and individual qualifications of each of the company—so that, when
he was writing a play, he could distribute the parts before they even
appeared upon paper, and write for each actor with the very living form of
the ideal person present “in his mind’s eye,” and often to his bodily
sight; so that the actual came in aid of the ideal, as it always does if
the ideal be genuine, and the loftiest conceptions proved the truest to
visible nature.</p>
<p>This close relation of Shakspere to the actual leads us to a general and
remarkable fact, which again will lead us back to Shakspere. All the great
writers of Queen Elizabeth’s time were men of affairs; they were not
literary men merely, in the general acceptation of the word at present.
Hooker was a hard-working, sheep-keeping, cradle-rocking pastor of a
country parish. Bacon’s legal duties were innumerable before he became
Lord Keeper and Lord Chancellor. Raleigh was soldier, sailor, adventurer,
courtier, politician, discoverer: indeed, it is to his imprisonment that
we are indebted for much the most ambitious of his literary undertakings,
“The History of the World,” a work which for simple majesty of subject and
style is hardly to be surpassed in prose. Sidney, at the age of
three-and-twenty, received the highest praise for the management of a
secret embassy to the Emperor of Germany; took the deepest and most active
interest in the political affairs of his country; would have sailed with
Sir Francis Drake for South American discovery; and might probably have
been king of poor Poland, if the queen had not been too selfish or wise to
spare him. The whole of his literary productions was the work of his spare
hours. Spenser himself, who was, except Shakspere, the most purely a
literary man of them all, was at one time Secretary to the Lord Deputy of
Ireland, and, later in life, Sheriff of Cork. Nor is the remark true only
of the writers of Elizabeth’s period, or of the country of England.</p>
<p>It seems to us one of the greatest advantages that can befall a poet, to
be drawn out of his study, and still more out of the chamber of imagery in
his own thoughts, to behold and speculate upon the embodiment of Divine
thoughts and purposes in men and their affairs around him. Now Shakspere
had no public appointment, but he reaped all the advantage which such
could have given him, and more, from the perfection of his dramatic
position. It was not with making plays alone that he had to do; but,
himself an actor, himself in a great measure the owner of more than one
theatre, with a little realm far more difficult to rule than many a
kingdom—a company, namely, of actors—although possibly less
difficult from the fact that they were only men and boys; with the
pecuniary affairs of the management likewise under his supervision—he
must have found, in the relations and necessities of his own profession,
not merely enough of the actual to keep him real in his representations,
but almost sufficient opportunity for his one great study, that of
mankind, independently of social and friendly relations, which in his case
were of the widest and deepest.</p>
<p>But Shakspere had not business relations merely: he was a man of business.
There is a common blunder manifested, both in theory on the one side, and
in practice on the other, which the life of Shakspere sets full in the
light. The theory is, that genius is a sort of abnormal development of the
imagination, to the detriment and loss of the practical powers, and that a
genius is therefore a kind of incapable, incompetent being, as far as
worldly matters are concerned. The most complete refutation of this notion
lies in the fact that the greatest genius the world has known was a
successful man in common affairs. While his genius grew in strength,
fervour, and executive power, his worldly condition rose as well; he
became a man of importance in the eyes of his townspeople, by whom he
would not have been honoured if he had not made money; and he purchased
landed property in his native place with the results of his management of
his theatres.</p>
<p>The practical blunder lies in the notion cherished occasionally by young
people ambitious of literary distinction, that in the pursuit of such
things they must be content with the poverty to which the world dooms its
greatest men; accepting their very poverty as an additional proof of their
own genius. If this means that the poet is not to make money his object,
it means well: no man should. But if it means either that the world is
unkind, or that the poet is not to “gather up the fragments, that nothing
be lost,” it means ill. Shakspere did not make haste to be rich. He
neither blamed, courted, nor neglected the world: he was friendly with it.
He <i>could</i> not have pinched and scraped; but neither did he waste or
neglect his worldly substance, which is God’s gift too. Many immense
fortunes have been made, not by absolute dishonesty, but in ways to which
a man of genius ought to be yet more ashamed than another to condescend;
but it does not therefore follow that if a man of genius will do honest
work he will not make a fair livelihood by it, which for all good results
of intellect and heart is better than a great fortune. But then Shakspere
began with doing what he could. He did not consent to starve until the
world should recognize his genius, or grumble against the blindness of the
nation in not seeing what it was impossible it should see before it was
fairly set forth. He began at once to supply something which the world
wanted; for it wants many an honest thing. He went on the stage and acted,
and so gained power to reveal the genius which he possessed; and the
world, in its possible measure, was not slow to recognize it. Many a young
fellow who has entered life with the one ambition of being a poet, has
failed because he did not perceive that it is better to be a man than to
be a poet, that it is his first duty to get an honest living by doing some
honest work that he can do, and for which there is a demand, although it
may not be the most pleasant employment. Time would have shown whether he
was meant to be a poet or not; and if he had been no poet he would have
been no beggar; and if he had turned out a poet, it would have been partly
in virtue of that experience of life and truth, gained in his case in the
struggle for bread, without which, gained somehow, a man may be a sweet
dreamer, but can be no strong maker, no poet. In a word, here is <i>the</i>
Englishman of genius, beginning life with nothing, and dying, not rich,
but easy and honoured; and this by doing what no one else could do,
writing dramas in which the outward grandeur or beauty is but an exponent
of the inward worth; hiding pearls for the wise even within the jewelled
play of the variegated bubbles of fancy, which he blew while he wrought,
for the innocent delight of his thoughtless brothers and sisters. Wherever
the rainbow of Shakspere’s genius stands, there lies, indeed, at the foot
of its glorious arch, a golden key, which will open the secret doors of
truth, and admit the humble seeker into the presence of Wisdom, who,
having cried in the streets in vain, sits at home and waits for him who
will come to find her. And Shakspere had cakes and ale, although he was
virtuous.</p>
<p>But what do we know about the character of Shakspere? How can we tell the
inner life of a man who has uttered himself in dramas, in which of course
it is impossible that he should ever speak in his own person? No doubt he
may speak his own sentiments through the mouths of many of his persons;
but how are we to know in what cases he does so?—At least we may
assert, as a self-evident negative, that a passage treating of a wide
question put into the mouth of a person despised and rebuked by the best
characters in the play, is not likely to contain any cautiously formed and
cherished opinion of the dramatist. At first sight this may seem almost a
truism; but we have only to remind our readers that one of the passages
oftenest quoted with admiration, and indeed separately printed and
illuminated, is “The Seven Ages of Man,” a passage full of inhuman
contempt for humanity and unbelief in its destiny, in which not one of the
seven ages is allowed to pass over its poor sad stage without a sneer; and
that this passage is given by Shakspere to the <i>blasé</i> sensualist <i>Jaques</i>
in “As You Like it,” a man who, the good and wise <i>Duke</i> says, has
been as vile as it is possible for man to be, so vile that it would be an
additional sin in him to rebuke sin; a man who never was capable of seeing
what is good in any man, and hates men’s vices <i>because</i> he hates
themselves, seeing in them only the reflex of his own disgust. Shakspere
knew better than to say that all the world is a stage, and all the men and
women merely players. He had been a player himself, but only on the stage:
<i>Jaques</i> had been a player where he ought to have been a true man.
The whole of his account of human life is contradicted and exposed at once
by the entrance, the very moment when he has finished his wicked
burlesque, of <i>Orlando</i>, the young master, carrying <i>Adam</i>, the
old servant, upon his back. The song that immediately follows, sings true:
“Most friendship is feigning, most loving mere folly.” But between the <i>all</i>
of <i>Jaques</i> and the <i>most</i> of the song, there is just the
difference between earth and hell.—Of course, both from a literary
and dramatic point of view, “The Seven Ages” is perfect.</p>
<p>Now let us make one positive statement to balance the other: that wherever
we find, in the mouth of a noble character, not stock sentiments of stage
virtue, but appreciation of a truth which it needs deep thought and
experience united with love of truth, to discover or verify for one’s
self, especially if the truth be of a sort which most men will fail not
merely to recognize as a truth, but to understand at all, because the
understanding of it depends on the foregoing spiritual perception—then
we think we may receive the passage as an expression of the inner soul of
the writer. He must have seen it before he could have said it; and to see
such a truth is to love it; or rather, love of truth in the general must
have preceded and enabled to the discovery of it. Such a passage is the
speech of the <i>Duke</i>, opening the second act of the play just
referred to, “As You Like it.” The lesson it contains is, that the
well-being of a man cannot be secured except he partakes of the ills of
life, “the penalty of Adam.” And it seems to us strange that the excellent
editors of the Cambridge edition, now in the course of publication—a
great boon to all students of Shakspere—should not have perceived
that the original reading, that of the folios, is the right one,—</p>
<p>“Here feel we <i>not</i> the penalty of Adam?”<br/></p>
<p>which, with the point of interrogation supplied, furnishes the true
meaning of the whole passage; namely, that the penalty of Adam is just
what makes the “wood more free from peril than the envious court,”
teaching each “not to think of himself more highly than he ought to
think.”</p>
<p>But Shakspere, although everywhere felt, is nowhere seen in his plays. He
is too true an artist to show his own face from behind the play of life
with which he fills his stage. What we can find of him there we must find
by regarding the whole, and allowing the spiritual essence of the whole to
find its way to our brain, and thence to our heart. The student of
Shakspere becomes imbued with the idea of his character. It exhales from
his writings. And when we have found the main drift of any play—the
grand rounding of the whole—then by that we may interpret individual
passages. It is alone in their relation to the whole that we can do them
full justice, and in their relation to the whole that we discover the mind
of the master.</p>
<p>But we have another source of more direct enlightenment as to Shakspere
himself. We only say more <i>direct</i>, not more certain or extended
enlightenment. We have one collection of poems in which he speaks in his
own person and of himself. Of course we refer to his sonnets. Though these
occupy, with their presentation of himself, such a small relative space,
they yet admirably round and complete, to our eyes, the circle of his
individuality. In them and the plays the common saying—one of the
truest—that extremes meet, is verified. No man is complete in whom
there are no extremes, or in whom those extremes do not meet. Now the very
individuality of Shakspere, judged by his dramas alone, has been declared
nonexistent; while in the sonnets he manifests some of the deepest phases
of a healthy self-consciousness. We do not intend to enter into the still
unsettled question as to whether these sonnets were addressed to a man or
a woman. We have scarcely a doubt left on the question ourselves, as will
be seen from the argument we found on our conviction. We cannot say we
feel much interest in the other question, <i>If a man, what man?</i> A few
placed at the end, arranged as they have come down to us, are beyond doubt
addressed to a woman. But the difference in tone between these and the
others we think very remarkable. Possibly at the time they were written—most
of them early in his life, as it appears to us, although they were not
published till the year 1609, when he was forty-five years of age, Meres
referring to them in the year 1598, eleven years before, as known “among
his private friends”—he had not known such women as he knew
afterwards, and hence the true devotion of his soul is given to a friend
of his own sex. Gervinus, whose lectures on Shakspere, profound and lofty
to a degree unattempted by any other interpreter, we are glad to find have
been done into a suitable English translation, under the superintendence
of the author himself—Gervinus says somewhere in them that, as
Shakspere lived and wrote, his ideal of womanhood grew nobler and purer.
Certainly the woman to whom the last few of these sonnets are addressed
was neither noble nor pure. We think, in this matter at least, they record
one of his early experiences.</p>
<p>We shall briefly indicate what we find in these sonnets about the man
himself, and shall commence with what is least pleasing and of least
value.</p>
<p>We must confess, then, that, probably soon after he came first to London,
he, then a married man, had an intrigue with a married woman, of which
there are indications that he was afterwards deeply ashamed. One little
incident seems curiously traceable: that he had given her a set of tablets
which his friend had given him; and the sonnet in which he excuses himself
to his friend for having done so, seems to us the only piece of special
pleading, and therefore ungenuine expression, in the whole. This friend,
to whom the rest of the sonnets are addressed, made the acquaintance of
this woman, and both were false to Shakspere. Even Shakspere could not
keep the love of a worthless woman. So much the better for him; but it is
a sad story at best. Yet even in this environment of evil we see the
nobility of the man, and his real self. The sonnets in which he mourns his
friend’s falsehood, forgives him, and even finds excuses for him, that he
may not lose his own love of him, are, to our minds, amongst the most
beautiful, as they are the most profound. Of these are the 33rd and 34th.
Nor does he stop here, but proceeds in the following, the 35th, to comfort
his friend in his grief for his offence, even accusing himself of offence
in having made more excuse for his fault than the fault needed! But to
leave this part of his history, which, as far as we know, stands alone,
and yet cannot with truth be passed by, any more than the story of the
crime of David, though in this case there is no comparison to be made
between the two further than the primary fact, let us look at the one
reality which, from a spiritual point of view, independently of the
literary beauties of these poems, causes them to stand all but alone in
literature. We mean what has been unavoidably touched upon already, the
devotion of his friendship. We have said this makes the poems stand <i>all
but alone</i>; for we ought to be better able to understand these poems of
Shakspere, from the fact that in our day has appeared the only other poem
which is like these, and which casts back a light upon them.</p>
<p>“Yet turn thee to the doubtful shore,<br/>
Where thy first form was made a man:<br/>
I loved thee, spirit, and love; nor can<br/>
The soul of Shakspeare love thee more.”<br/></p>
<p>So sings the Poet of our day, in the loftiest of his poems—“In
Memoriam”—addressing the spirit of his vanished friend. In the midst
of his song arises the thought of <i>the Poet</i> of all time, who loved
his friend too, and would have lost him in a way far worse than death, had
not his love been too strong even for that death, alone ghastly, which
threatened to cut the golden chain that bound them, and part them by the
gulf impassable. Tennyson’s friend had never wronged him; and to the
divineness of Shakspere’s love is added that of forgiveness. Such love as
this between man and man is rare, and therefore to the mind which is in
itself no way rare, incredible, because unintelligible. But though all the
commonest things are very divine, yet divine individuality is and will be
a rare thing at any given period on the earth. Faith, in its ideal sense,
will always be hard to find on the earth. But perhaps this kind of
affection between man and man may, as Coleridge indicates in his “Table
Talk,” have been more common in the reigns of Elizabeth and James than it
is now. There is a certain dread of the demonstrative in the present day,
which may, perhaps, be carried into regions where it is out of place, and
hinder the development of a devotion which must be real, and grand, and
divine, if one man such as Shakspere or Tennyson has ever felt it. If one
has felt it, humanity may claim it. And surely He who is <i>the</i> Son of
man has verified the claim. We believe there are indeed few of us who know
what <i>to love our neighbour as ourselves</i> means; but when we find a
man here and there in the course of centuries who does, we may take this
man as the prophet of coming good for his race, his prophecy being
himself.</p>
<p>But next to the interest of knowing that a man could love so well, comes
the association of this fact with his art. He who could look abroad upon
men, and understand them all—who stood, as it were, in the wide-open
gates of his palace, and admitted with welcome every one who came in sight—had
in the inner places of that palace one chamber in which he met his friend,
and in which his whole soul went forth to understand the soul of his
friend. The man to whom nothing in humanity was common or unclean; in whom
the most remarkable of his artistic morals is fair-play; who fills our
hearts with a saintly love for <i>Cordelia</i> and an admiration of <i>Sir
John Falstaff</i> the lost gentleman, mournful even in the height of our
laughter; who could make an <i>Autolycus</i> and a <i>Macbeth</i> both
human, and an <i>Ariel</i> and a <i>Puck</i> neither human—this is
the man who loved best. And we believe that this depth of capacity for
loving lay at the root of all his knowledge of men and women, and all his
dramatic pre-eminence. The heart is more intelligent than the intellect.
Well says the poet Matthew Raydon, who has hardly left anything behind him
but the lamentation over Sir Philip Sidney in which the lines occur,—</p>
<p>“He that hath love and judgment too<br/>
Sees more than any other do.”<br/></p>
<p>Simply, we believe that this, not this only, but this more than any other
endowment, made Shakspere the artist he was, in providing him all the
material of humanity to work upon, and keeping him to the true spirit of
its use. Love looking forth upon strife, understood it all. Love is the
true revealer of secrets, because it makes one with the object regarded.</p>
<p>“But,” say some impatient readers, “when shall we have done with
Shakspere? There is no end to this writing about him.” It will be a bad
day for England when we have done with Shakspere; for that will imply,
along with the loss of him, that we are no longer capable of understanding
him. Should that time ever come, Heaven grant the generation which does
not understand him at least the grace to keep its pens off him, which will
by no means follow as a necessary consequence of the non-intelligence! But
the writing about Shakspere which has been hitherto so plentiful must do
good just in proportion as it directs attention to him and gives aid to
the understanding of him. And while the utterances of to-day pass away,
the children of to-morrow are born, and require a new utterance for their
fresh need from those who, having gone before, have already tasted life
and Shakspere, and can give some little help to further progress than
their own, by telling the following generation what they have found.
Suppose that this cry had been raised last century, after good Dr. Johnson
had ceased to produce to the eyes of men the facts about his own
incapacity which he presumed to be criticisms of Shakspere, where would
our aids be now to the understanding of the dramatist? Our own conviction
is, when we reflect with how much labour we have deepened our knowledge of
him, and thereby found in him <i>the best</i>—for the best lies not
on the surface for the careless reader—our own conviction is, that
not half has been done that ought to be done to help young people at least
to understand the master mind of their country. Few among them can ever
give the attention or work to it that we have given; but much may be done
with judicious aid. And a profound knowledge of their greatest writer
would do more than almost anything else to bind together as Englishmen, in
a true and unselfish way, the hearts of the coming generations; for his
works are our country in a convex magic mirror.</p>
<p>When a man finds that every time he reads a book not only does some
obscurity melt away, but deeper depths, which he had not before seen, dawn
upon him, he is not likely to think that the time for ceasing to write
about the book has come. And certainly in Shakspere, as in all true
artistic work, as in nature herself, the depths are not to be revealed
utterly; while every new generation needs a new aid towards discovering
itself and its own thoughts in these forms of the past. And of all that
read about Shakspere there are few whom more than one or two utterances
have reached. The speech or the writing must go forth to find the soil for
the growth of its kernel of truth. We shall, therefore, with the full
consciousness that perhaps more has been already said and written about
Shakspere than about any other writer, yet venture to add to the mass by a
few general remarks.</p>
<p>And first we would remind our readers of the marvel of the combination in
Shakspere of such a high degree of two faculties, one of which is
generally altogether inferior to the other: the faculties of reception and
production. Rarely do we find that great receptive power, brought into
operation either by reading or by observation, is combined with
originality of thought. Some hungers are quite satisfied by taking in what
others have thought and felt and done. By the assimilation of this food
many minds grow and prosper; but other minds feed far more upon what rises
from their own depths; in the answers they are compelled to provide to the
questions that come unsought; in the theories they cannot help
constructing for the inclusion in one whole of the various facts around
them, which seem at first sight to strive with each other like the atoms
of a chaos; in the examination of those impulses of hidden origin which at
one time indicate a height of being far above the thinker’s present
condition, at another a gulf of evil into which he may possibly fall. But
in Shakspere the two powers of beholding and originating meet like the
rejoining halves of a sphere. A man who thinks his own thoughts much, will
often walk through London streets and see nothing. In the man who observes
only, every passing object mirrors itself in its prominent peculiarities,
having a kind of harmony with all the rest, but arouses no magician from
the inner chamber to charm and chain its image to his purpose. In
Shakspere, on the contrary, every outer form of humanity and nature spoke
to that ever-moving, self-vindicating—we had almost said, and in a
sense it would be true, self-generating—humanity within him. The
sound of any action without him, struck in him just the chord which, in
motion in him, would have produced a similar action. When anything was
done, he felt as if he were doing it—perception and origination
conjoining in one consciousness.</p>
<p>But to this gift was united the gift of utterance, or representation. Many
a man both receives and generates who, somehow, cannot represent. Nothing
is more disappointing sometimes than our first experience of the artistic
attempts of a man who has roused our expectations by a social display of
familiarity with, and command over, the subjects of conversation. Have we
not sometimes found that when such a one sought to give vital or artistic
form to these thoughts, so that they might not be born and die in the same
moment upon his lips, but might <i>exist</i>, a poor, weak, faded <i>simulacrum</i>
alone was the result? Now Shakspere was a great talker, who enraptured the
listeners, and was himself so rapt in his speech that he could scarcely
come to a close; but when he was alone with his art, then and then only
did he rise to the height of his great argument, and all the talk was but
as the fallen mortar and stony chips lying about the walls of the great
temple of his drama.</p>
<p>But, along with all this wealth of artistic speech, an artistic virtue of
an opposite nature becomes remarkable: his reticence. How often might he
not say fine things, particularly poetic things, when he does not, because
it would not suit the character or the time! How many delicate points are
there not in his plays which we only discover after many readings, because
he will not put a single tone of success into the flow of natural
utterance, to draw our attention to the triumph of the author, and jar
with the all-important reality of his production! Wherever an author
obtrudes his own self-importance, an unreality is the consequence, of a
nature similar to that which we feel in the old moral plays, when
historical and allegorical personages, such as <i>Julius Caesar</i> and <i>Charity</i>,
for instance, are introduced at the same time on the same stage, acting in
the same story. Shakspere never points to any stroke of his own wit or
art. We may find it or not: there it is, and no matter if no one see it!</p>
<p>Much has been disputed about the degree of consciousness of his own art
possessed by Shakspere: whether he did it by a grand yet blind impulse, or
whether he knew what he wanted to do, and knowingly used the means to
arrive at that end. Now we cannot here enter upon the question; but we
would recommend any of our readers who are interested in it not to attempt
to make up their minds upon it before considering a passage in another of
his poems, which may throw some light on the subject for them. It is the
description of a painting, contained in “The Rape of Lucrece,” towards the
end of the poem. Its very minuteness involves the expression of
principles, and reveals that, in relation to an art not his own, he could
hold principles of execution, and indicate perfection of finish, which, to
say the least, must proceed from a general capacity for art, and therefore
might find an equally conscious operation in his own peculiar province of
it. For our own part, we think that his results are a perfect combination
of the results of consciousness and unconsciousness; consciousness where
the arrangements of the play, outside the region of inspiration, required
the care of the wakeful intellect; unconsciousness where the subject
itself bore him aloft on the wings of its own creative delight.</p>
<p>There is another manifestation of his power which will astonish those who
consider it. It is this: that, while he was able to go down to the simple
and grand realities of human nature, which are all tragic; and while,
therefore, he must rejoice most in such contemplations of human nature as
find fit outlet in a “Hamlet,” a “Lear,” a “Timon,” or an “Othello,” the
tragedies of Doubt, Ingratitude, and Love, he can yet, when he chooses,
float on the very surface of human nature, as in “Love’s Labour’s Lost,”
“The Merry Wives of Windsor,” “The Comedy of Errors,” “The Taming of the
Shrew;” or he can descend half way as it were, and there remain suspended
in the characters and feelings of ordinary nice people, who, interesting
enough to meet in society, have neither received that development, nor are
placed in those circumstances, which admit of the highest and simplest
poetic treatment. In these he will bring out the ordinary noble or the
ordinary vicious. Of this nature are most of his comedies, in which he
gives an ideal representation of common social life, and steers perfectly
clear of what in such relations and surroundings would be <i>heroics</i>.
Look how steadily he keeps the noble-minded youth <i>Orlando</i> in this
middle region; and look how the best comes out at last in the wayward and
<i>recalcitrant</i> and <i>bizarre</i>, but honest and true natures of <i>Beatrice</i>
and <i>Benedick</i>; and this without any untruth to the nature of comedy,
although the circumstances border on the tragic. When he wants to give the
deeper affairs of the heart, he throws the whole at once out of the social
circle with its multiform restraints. As in “Hamlet” the stage on which
the whole is acted is really the heart of <i>Hamlet</i>, so he makes his
visible stage as it were, slope off into the misty infinite, with a grey,
starless heaven overhead, and Hades open beneath his feet. Hence young
people brought up in the country understand the tragedies far sooner than
they can comprehend the comedies. It needs acquaintance with society and
social ways to clear up the latter.</p>
<p>The remarks we have made on “Hamlet” by way of illustration, lead us to
point out how Shakspere prepares, in some of his plays, a stage suitable
for all the representation. In “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” the place which
gives tone to the whole is a midnight wood in the first flush and youthful
delight of summer. In “As You Like it” it is a daylight wood in spring,
full of morning freshness, with a cold wind now and then blowing through
the half-clothed boughs. In “The Tempest” it is a solitary island, circled
by the mysterious sea-horizon, over which what may come who can tell?—a
place where the magician may work his will, and have all nature at the
beck of his superior knowledge.</p>
<p>The only writer who would have had a chance of rivalling Shakspere in his
own walk, if he had been born in the same period of English history, is
Chaucer. He has the same gift of individualizing the general, and
idealizing the portrait. But the best of the dramatic writers of
Shakspere’s time, in their desire of dramatic individualization, forget
the modifying multiformity belonging to individual humanity. In their
anxiety to present a <i>character</i>, they take, as it were, a human
mould, label it with a certain peculiarity, and then fill in speeches and
forms according to the label. Thus the indications of character, of
peculiarity, so predominate, the whole is so much of one colour, that the
result resembles one of those allegorical personifications in which, as
much as possible, everything human is eliminated except what belongs to
the peculiarity, the personification. How different is it with Shakspere’s
representations! He knows that no human being ever was like that. He makes
his most peculiar characters speak very much like other people; and it is
only over the whole that their peculiarities manifest themselves with
indubitable plainness. The one apparent exception is <i>Jaques</i>, in “As
You Like it.” But there we must remember that Shakspere is representing a
man who so chooses to represent himself. He is a man <i>in his humour</i>,
or his own peculiar and chosen affectation. <i>Jaques</i> is the writer of
his own part; for with him “all the world’s a stage, and all the men and
women,” himself first, “merely players.” We have his own presentation of
himself, not, first of all, as he is, but as he chooses to be taken. Of
course his real self does come out in it, for no man can seem altogether
other than he is; and besides, the <i>Duke</i>, who sees quite through
him, rebukes him in the manner already referred to; but it is his
affectation that gives him the unnatural peculiarity of his modes and
speeches. He wishes them to be such.</p>
<p>There is, then, for every one of Shakspere’s characters the firm ground of
humanity, upon which the weeds, as well as the flowers, glorious or
fantastic, as the case may be, show themselves. His more heroic persons
are the most profoundly human. Nor are his villains unhuman, although
inhuman enough. Compared with Marlowe’s Jew, <i>Shylock</i> is a terrible
<i>man</i> beside a dreary <i>monster</i>, and, as far as logic and the <i>lex
talionis</i> go, has the best of the argument. It is the strength of human
nature itself that makes crime strong. Wickedness could have no power of
itself: it lives by the perverted powers of good. And so great is
Shakspere’s sympathy with <i>Shylock</i> even, in the hard and unjust doom
that overtakes him, that he dismisses him with some of the spare
sympathies of the more tender-hearted of his spectators. Nowhere is the
justice of genius more plain than in Shakspere’s utter freedom from
party-spirit, even with regard to his own creations. Each character shall
set itself forth from its own point of view, and only in the choice and
scope of the whole shall the judgment of the poet be beheld. He never
allows his opinion to come out to the damaging of the individual’s own
self-presentation. He knows well that for the worst something can be said,
and that a feeling of justice and his own right will be strong in the mind
of a man who is yet swayed by perfect selfishness. Therefore the false man
is not discoverable in his speech, not merely because the villain will
talk as like a true man as he may, but because seldom is the villainy
clear to the villain’s own mind. It is impossible for us to determine
whether, in their fierce bandying of the lie, <i>Bolingbroke</i> or <i>Norfolk</i>
spoke the truth. Doubtless each believed the other to be the villain that
he called him. And Shakspere has no desire or need to act the historian in
the decision of that question. He leaves his reader in full sympathy with
the perplexity of <i>Richard</i>; as puzzled, in fact, as if he had been
present at the interrupted combat.</p>
<p>If every writer could write up to his own best, we should have far less to
marvel at in Shakspere. It is in great measure the wealth of Shakspere’s
suggestions, giving him abundance of the best to choose from, that lifts
him so high above those who, having felt the inspiration of a good idea,
are forced to go on writing, constructing, carpentering, with dreary
handicraft, before the exhausted faculty has recovered sufficiently to
generate another. And then comes in the unerring choice of the best of
those suggestions. Yet if any one wishes to see what variety of the same
kind of thoughts he could produce, let him examine the treatment of the
same business in different plays; as, for instance, the way in which
instigation to a crime is managed in “Macbeth,” where <i>Macbeth</i>
tempts the two murderers to kill <i>Banquo</i>; in “King John,” when <i>the
King</i> tempts <i>Hubert</i> to kill <i>Arthur</i>; in “The Tempest,”
when <i>Antonio</i> tempts <i>Sebastian</i> to kill <i>Alonzo</i>; in “As
You Like it,” when <i>Oliver</i> instigates <i>Charles</i> to kill <i>Orlando</i>;
and in “Hamlet,” where <i>Claudius</i> urges <i>Laertes</i> to the murder
of <i>Hamlet</i>.</p>
<p>He shows no anxiety about being original. When a man is full of his work
he forgets himself. In his desire to produce a good play he lays hold upon
any material that offers itself. He will even take a bad play and make a
good one of it. One of the most remarkable discoveries to the student of
Shakspere is the hide-bound poverty of some of the stories, which,
informed by his life-power; become forms of strength, richness, and grace.
He does what the <i>Spirit</i> in “Comus” says the music he heard might
do,—</p>
<p>“create a soul<br/>
Under the ribs of death;”<br/></p>
<p>and then death is straightway “clothed upon.” And nowhere is the refining
operation of his genius more evident than in the purification of these
stories. Characters and incidents which would have been honey and nuts to
Beaumont and Fletcher are, notwithstanding their dramatic recommendations,
entirely remodelled by him. The fair <i>Ophelia</i> is, in the old tale, a
common woman, and <i>Hamlet’s</i> mistress; while the policy of the <i>Lady
of Belmont</i>, who in the old story occupies the place for which he
invented the lovely <i>Portia</i>, upon which policy the whole story
turns, is such that it is as unfit to set forth in our pages as it was
unfit for Shakspere’s purposes of art. His noble art refuses to work upon
base matter. He sees at once the capabilities of a tale, but he will not
use it except he may do with it what he pleases.</p>
<p>If we might here offer some assistance to the young student who wants to
help himself, we would suggest that to follow, in a measure, Plutarch’s
fashion of comparison, will be the most helpful guide to the understanding
of the poet. Let the reader take any two characters, and putting them side
by side, look first for differences, and then for resemblances between
them, with the causes of each; or let him make a wider attempt, and
setting two plays one over against the other, compare or contrast them,
and see what will be the result. Let him, for instance, take the two
characters <i>Hamlet</i> and <i>Brutus</i>, and compare their beginnings
and endings, the resemblances in their characters, the differences in
their conduct, the likeness and unlikeness of what was required of them,
the circumstances in which action was demanded of each, the helps or
hindrances each had to the working out of the problem of his life, the way
in which each encounters the supernatural, or any other question that may
suggest itself in reading either of the plays, ending off with the main
lesson taught in each; and he will be astonished to find, if he has not
already discovered it, what a rich mine of intellectual and spiritual
wealth is laid open to his delighted eyes. Perhaps not the least valuable
end to be so gained is, that the young Englishman, who wants to be
delivered from any temptation to think himself the centre around which the
universe revolves, will be aided in his endeavours after honourable
humility by looking up to the man who towers, like Saul, head and
shoulders above his brethren, and seeing that he is humble, may learn to
leave it to the pismire to be angry, to the earwig to be conceited, and to
the spider to insist on his own importance.</p>
<p>But to return to the main course of our observations. The dramas of
Shakspere are so natural, that this, the greatest praise that can be given
them, is the ground of one of the difficulties felt by the young student
in estimating them. The very simplicity of Shakspere’s art seems to throw
him out of any known groove of judgment. When he hears one say, “<i>Look
at this, and admire</i>,” he feels inclined to rejoin, “Why, he only says
in the simplest way what the thing must have been. It is as plain as
daylight.” Yes, to the reader; and because Shakspere wrote it. But there
were a thousand wrong ways of doing it: Shakspere took the one right way.
It is he who has made it plain in art, whatever it was before in nature;
and most likely the very simplicity of it in nature was scarcely observed
before he saw it and represented it. And is it not the glory of art to
attain this simplicity? for simplicity is the end of all things—all
manners, all morals, all religion. To say that the thing could not have
been done otherwise, is just to say that you forget the art in beholding
its object, that you forget the mirror because you see nature reflected in
the mirror. Any one can see the moon in Lord Rosse’s telescope; but who
made the reflector? And let the student try to express anything in prose
or in verse, in painting or in modelling, just as it is. No man knows till
he has made many attempts, how hard to reach is this simplicity of art.
And the greater the success, the fewer are the signs of the labour
expended. Simplicity is art’s perfection.</p>
<p>But so natural are all his plays, and the great tragedies to which we
would now refer in particular, amongst the rest, that it may appear to
some, at first sight, that Shakspere could not have constructed them after
any moral plan, could have had no lesson of his own to teach in them,
seeing they bear no marks of individual intent, in that they depart
nowhere from, nature, the construction of the play itself going straight
on like a history. The directness of his plays springs in part from the
fact that it is humanity and not circumstance that Shakspere respects.
Circumstance he uses only for the setting forth of humanity; and for the
plot of circumstance, so much in favour with Ben Jonson, and others of his
contemporaries, he cares nothing. As to their looking too natural to have
any design in them, we are not of those who believe that it is unlike
nature to have a design and a result. If the proof of a high aim is to be
what the critics used to call <i>poetic justice</i>, a kind of justice
that one would gladly find more of in grocers’ and linen-drapers’ shops,
but can as well spare from a poem, then we must say that he has not always
a high end: the wicked man is not tortured, nor is the good man smothered
in bank-notes and rose-leaves. Even when he shows the outward ruin and
death that comes upon Macbeth at last, it is only as an unavoidable little
consequence, following in the wake of the mighty vengeance of nature, even
of God, that Macbeth cannot say <i>Amen</i>; that Macbeth can sleep no
more; that Macbeth is “cabined cribbed, confined, bound in to saucy doubts
and fears;” that his very brain is a charnel-house, whence arise the
ghosts of his own murders, till he envies the very dead the rest to which
his hand has sent them. That immediate and eternal vengeance upon crime,
and that inner reward of well-doing, never fail in nature or in Shakspere,
appear as such a matter of course that they hardly look like design either
in nature or in the mirror which he holds up to her. The secret is that,
in the ideal, habit and design are one.</p>
<p>Most authors seem anxious to round off and finish everything in full
sight. Most of Shakspere’s tragedies compel our thoughts to follow their
<i>persons</i> across the bourn. They need, as Jean Paul says, a piece of
the next world painted in to complete the picture, And this is surely
nature: but it need not therefore be no design. What could be done with
Hamlet, but send him into a region where he has some chance of finding his
difficulties solved; where he will know that his reverence for God, which
was the sole stay left him in the flood of human worthlessness, has not
been in vain; that the skies are not “a foul and pestilent congregation of
vapours;” that there are noble women, though his mother was false and
Ophelia weak; and that there are noble men, although his uncle and Laertes
were villains and his old companions traitors? If Hamlet is not to die,
the whole of the play must perish under the accusation that the hero of it
is left at last with only a superadded misery, a fresh demand for action,
namely, to rule a worthless people, as they seem to him, when action has
for him become impossible; that he has to live on, forsaken even of death,
which will not come though the cup of misery is at the brim.</p>
<p>But a high end may be gained in this world, and the vision into the world
beyond so justified, as in King Lear. The passionate, impulsive,
unreasoning old king certainly must have given his wicked daughters
occasion enough of making the charges to which their avarice urged them.
He had learned very little by his life of kingship. He was but a boy with
grey hair. He had had no inner experiences. And so all the development of
manhood and age has to be crowded into the few remaining weeks of his
life. His own folly and blindness supply the occasion. And before the few
weeks are gone, he has passed through all the stages of a fever of
indignation and wrath, ending in a madness from which love redeems him; he
has learned that a king is nothing if the man is nothing; that a king
ought to care for those who cannot help themselves; that love has not its
origin or grounds in favours flowing from royal resource and munificence,
and yet that love is the one thing worth living for, which gained, it is
time to die. And now that he has the experience that life can give, has
become a child in simplicity of heart and judgment, he cannot lose his
daughter again; who, likewise, has learned the one thing she needed, as
far as her father was concerned, a little more excusing tenderness. In the
same play it cannot be by chance that at its commencement Gloucester
speaks with the utmost carelessness and <i>off-hand</i> wit about the
parentage of his natural son Edmund, but finds at last that this son is
his ruin.</p>
<p>Edgar, the true son, says to Edmund, after having righteously dealt him
his death-wound,—</p>
<p>“The gods are just, and of our pleasant vices<br/>
Make instruments to scourge us:<br/>
The dark and vicious place where thee he got<br/>
Cost him his eyes.”<br/></p>
<p>To which the dying and convicted villain replies,—</p>
<p>“Thou hast spoken right; ‘tis true:<br/>
The wheel is come full circle; I am here.”<br/></p>
<p>Could anything be put more plainly than the moral lesson in this?</p>
<p>It would be easy to produce examples of fine design from his comedies as
well; as for instance, from “Much Ado about Nothing:” the two who are made
to fall in love with each other, by being each severally assured of
possessing the love of the other, Beatrice and Benedick, are shown
beforehand to have a strong inclination towards each other, manifested in
their continual squabbling after a good-humoured fashion; but not all this
is sufficient to make them heartily in love, until they find out the
nobility of each other’s character in their behaviour about the
calumniated Hero; and the author takes care they shall not be married
without a previous acquaintance with the trick that has been played upon
them. Indeed we think the remark, that Shakspere never leaves any of his
characters the same at the end of a play as he took them up at the
beginning, will be found to be true. They are better or worse, wiser or
more irretrievably foolish. The historical plays would illustrate the
remark as well as any.</p>
<p>But of all the terrible plays we are inclined to think “Timon” the most
terrible, and to doubt whether justice has been done to the finish and
completeness of it. At the same time we are inclined to think that it was
printed (first in the first folio, 1623, seven years after Shakspere’s
death) from a copy, corrected by the author, but not <i>written fair</i>,
and containing consequent mistakes. The same account might belong to
others of the plays, but more evidently perhaps belongs to the “Timon.”
The idea of making the generous spendthrift, whose old idolaters had
forsaken him because the idol had no more to give, into the high-priest of
the Temple of Mammon, dispensing the gold which he hated and despised,
that it might be a curse to the race which he had learned to hate and
despise as well; and the way in which Shakspere discloses the depths of
Timon’s wound, by bringing him into comparison with one who hates men by
profession and humour—are as powerful as anything to be found even
in Shakspere.</p>
<p>We are very willing to believe that “Julius Caesar” was one of his latest
plays; for certainly it is the play in which he has represented a hero in
the high and true sense. <i>Brutus</i> is this hero, of course; a hero
because he will do what he sees to be right, independently of personal
feeling or personal advantage. Nor does his attempt fail from any
overweening or blindness, in himself. Had he known that the various papers
thrown in his way, were the concoctions of <i>Cassius</i>, he would not
have made the mistake of supposing that the Romans longed for freedom, and
therefore would be ready to defend it. As it was, he attempted to liberate
a people which did not feel its slavery. He failed for others, but not for
himself; for his truth was such that everybody was true to him. Unlike
Jaques with his seven acts of the burlesque of human life, Brutus says at
the last,—</p>
<p>“Countrymen,<br/>
My heart doth joy, that yet, in all my life,<br/>
I found no man but he was true to me.”<br/></p>
<p>Of course all this is in Plutarch. But it is easy to see with what relish
Shakspere takes it up, setting forth all the aids in himself and in others
which Brutus had to being a hero, and thus making the representation as
credible as possible.</p>
<p>We must heartily confess that no amount of genius alone will make a man a
good man; that genius only shows the right way—drives no man to walk
in it. But there is surely some moral scent in us to let us know whether a
man only cares for good from an artistic point of view, or whether he
admires and loves good. This admiration and love cannot be <i>prominently</i>
set forth by any dramatist true to his art; but it must come out over the
whole. His predilections must show themselves in the scope of his artistic
life, in the things and subjects he chooses, and the way in which he
represents them. Notwithstanding Uncle Toby and Maria, who will venture to
say that Sterne was noble or virtuous, when he looks over the whole that
he has written? But in Shakspere there is no suspicion of a cloven foot.
Everywhere he is on the side of virtue and of truth. Many small arguments,
with great cumulative force, might be adduced to this effect.</p>
<p>For ourselves we cannot easily believe that the calmness of his art could
be so unvarying except he exercised it with a good conscience; that he
could have kept looking out upon the world around him with the untroubled
regard necessary for seeing all things as they are, except there had been
peace in his house at home; that he could have known all men as he did,
and failed to know himself. We can understand the co-existence of any
degree of partial or excited genius with evil ways, but we cannot
understand the existence of such calm and universal genius, wrought out in
his works, except in association with all that is noblest in human nature.
Nor is it other than on the side of the argument for his rectitude that he
never forces rectitude upon the attention of others. The strong impression
left upon our minds is, that however Shakspere may have strayed in the
early portion of his life in London, he was not only an upright and noble
man for the main part, but a repentant man, and a man whose life was
influenced by the truths of Christianity.</p>
<p>Much is now said about a memorial to Shakspere. The best and only true
memorial is no doubt that described in Milton’s poem on this very subject:
the living and ever-changing monument of human admiration, expressed in
the faces and forms of those absorbed in the reading of his works. But if
the external monument might be such as to foster the constant reproduction
of the inward monument of love and admiration, then, indeed, it might be
well to raise one; and with this object in view let us venture to propose
one mode which we think would favour the attainment of it.</p>
<p>Let a Gothic hall of the fourteenth century be built; such a hall as would
be more in the imagination of Shakspere than any of the architecture of
his own time. Let all the copies that can be procured of every early
edition of his works, singly or collectively, be stored in this hall. Let
a copy of every other edition ever printed be procured and deposited. Let
every book or treatise that can be found, good, bad, or indifferent,
written about Shakspere or any of his works, be likewise collected for the
Shakspere library. Let a special place be allotted to the shameless
corruptions of his plays that have been produced as improvements upon
them, some of which, to the disgrace of England, still partially occupy
the stage instead of what Shakspere wrote. Let one department contain
every work of whatever sort that tends to direct elucidation of his
meaning, chiefly those of the dramatic writers who preceded him and
closely followed him. Let the windows be filled with stained glass,
representing the popular sports of his own time and the times of his
English histories. Let a small museum be attached, containing all
procurable antiquities that are referred to in his plays, along with first
editions, if possible, of the best books that came out in his time, and
were probably read by him. Let the whole thus as much as possible
represent his time. Let a marble statue in the midst do the best that
English art can accomplish for the representation of the vanished man; and
let copies, if not the originals, of the several portraits be safely
shrined for the occasional beholding of the multitude. Let the perpetuity
of care necessary for this monument be secured by endowment; and let it be
for the use of the public, by means of a reading-room fitted for the
comfort of all who choose to avail themselves of these facilities for a
true acquaintance with our greatest artist. Let there likewise be a simple
and moderately-sized theatre attached, not for regular, but occasional
use; to be employed for the representation of Shakspere’s plays <i>only</i>,
and allowed free of expense for amateur or other representations of them
for charitable purposes. But within a certain cycle of years—if,
indeed, it would be too much to expect that out of the London play-goers a
sufficient number would be found to justify the representation of all the
plays of Shakspere once in the season—let the whole of Shakspere’s
plays be acted in the best manner possible to the managers for the time
being.</p>
<p>The very existence of such a theatre would be a noble protest of the
highest kind against the sort of play, chiefly translated and adapted from
the French, which infests our boards, the low tone of which, even where it
is not decidedly immoral, does more harm than any amount of the rough,
honest plain-spokenness of Shakspere, as judged by our more fastidious, if
not always purer manners. The representation of such plays forms the real
ground of objection to theatre-going. We believe that other objections,
which may be equally urged against large assemblies of any sort, are not
really grounded upon such an amount of objectionable fact as good people
often suppose. At all events it is not against the drama itself, but its
concomitants, its avoidable concomitants, that such objections are, or
ought to be, felt and directed. The dramatic impulse, as well as all other
impulses of our nature, are from the Maker.</p>
<p>A monument like this would help to change a blind enthusiasm and a <i>dilettante</i>-talk
into knowledge, reverence, and study; and surely this would be the true
way to honour the memory of the man who appeals to posterity by no mighty
deeds of worldly prowess, but has left behind him food for heart, brain,
and conscience, on which the generations will feed till the end of time.
It would be the one true and natural mode of perpetuating his fame in
kind; helping him to do more of that for which he was born, and because of
which we humbly desire to do him honour, as the years flow farther away
from the time when, at the age of fifty-two, he left the world a richer
legacy of the results of intellectual labour than any other labourer in
literature has ever done. It would be to raise a monument to his mind more
than to his person.</p>
<p>But to honour Shakspere in the best way we must not gaze upon some grand
memorial of his fame, we must not talk largely of his wonderful doings, we
must not even behold the representation of his works on the stage,
invaluable aid as that is to the right understanding of what he has
written; but we must, by close, silent, patient study, enter into an
understanding with the spirit of the departed poet-sage, and thus let his
own words be the necromantic spell that raises the dead, and brings us
into communion with that man who knew what was in men more than any other
mere man ever did. Well was it for Shakspere that he was humble; else on
what a desolate pinnacle of companionless solitude must he have stood!
Where was he to find his peers? To most thoughtful minds it is a terrible
fancy to suppose that there were no greater human being than themselves.
From the terror of such a <i>truth</i> Shakspere’s love for men preserved
him. He did not think about himself so much as he thought about them. Had
he been a self-student alone, or chiefly, could he ever have written those
dramas? We close with the repetition of this truth: that the love of our
kind is the one key to the knowledge of humanity and of ourselves. And
have we not sacred authority for concluding that he who loves his brother
is the more able and the more likely to love Him who made him and his
brother also, and then told them that love is the fulfilling of the law?</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE ART OF SHAKSPERE, AS REVEALED BY HIMSELF. </h2>
<p>[Footnote: 1863.]</p>
<p>Who taught you this?<br/>
I learn’d it out of women’s faces.<br/></p>
<p><i>Winter’s Tale</i>, Act ii. scene 1.</p>
<p>One occasionally hears the remark, that the commentators upon Shakspere
find far more in Shakspere than Shakspere ever intended to express. Taking
this assertion as it stands, it may be freely granted, not only of
Shakspere, but of every writer of genius. But if it be intended by it,
that nothing can <i>exist</i> in any work of art beyond what the writer
was conscious of while in the act of producing it, so much of its scope is
false.</p>
<p>No artist can have such a claim to the high title of <i>creator</i>, as
that he invents for himself the forms, by means of which he produces his
new result; and all the forms of man and nature which he modifies and
combines to make a new region in his world of art, have their own original
life and meaning. The laws likewise of their various combinations are
natural laws, harmonious with each other. While, therefore, the artist
employs many or few of their original aspects for his immediate purpose,
he does not and cannot thereby deprive them of the many more which are
essential to their vitality, and the vitality likewise of his presentation
of them, although they form only the background from which his peculiar
use of them stands out. The objects presented must therefore fall, to the
eye of the observant reader, into many different combinations and
harmonies of operation and result, which are indubitably there, whether
the writer saw them or not. These latent combinations and relations will
be numerous and true, in proportion to the scope and the truth of the
representation; and the greater the number of meanings, harmonious with
each other, which any work of art presents, the greater claim it has to be
considered a work of genius. It must, therefore, be granted, and that
joyfully, that there may be meanings in Shakspere’s writings which
Shakspere himself did not see, and to which therefore his art, as art,
does not point.</p>
<p>But the probability, notwithstanding, must surely be allowed as well,
that, in great artists, the amount of conscious art will bear some
proportion to the amount of unconscious truth: the visible volcanic light
will bear a true relation to the hidden fire of the globe; so that it will
not seem likely that, in such a writer as Shakspere, we should find many
indications of present and operative <i>art</i>, of which he was himself
unaware. Some truths may be revealed through him, which he himself knew
only potentially; but it is not likely that marks of work, bearing upon
the results of the play, should be fortuitous, or that the work thus
indicated should be unconscious work. A stroke of the mallet may be more
effective than the sculptor had hoped; but it was intended. In the drama
it is easier to discover individual marks of the chisel, than in the
marble whence all signs of such are removed: in the drama the lines
themselves fall into the general finish, without necessary obliteration as
lines: Still, the reader cannot help being fearful, lest, not as regards
truth only, but as regards art as well, he be sometimes clothing the idol
of his intellect with the weavings of his fancy. My conviction is, that it
is the very consummateness of Shakspere’s art, that exposes his work to
the doubt that springs from loving anxiety for his honour; the dramatist,
like the sculptor, avoiding every avoidable hint of the process, in order
to render the result a vital whole. But, fortunately, we are not left to
argue entirely from probabilities. He has himself given us a peep into his
studio—let me call it <i>workshop</i>, as more comprehensive.</p>
<p>It is not, of course, in the shape of <i>literary</i> criticism, that we
should expect to meet such a revelation; for to use art even consciously,
and to regard it as an object of contemplation, or to theorize about it,
are two very different mental operations. The productive and critical
faculties are rarely found in equal combination; and even where they are,
they cannot operate equally in regard to the same object. There is a
perfect satisfaction in producing, which does not demand a re-presentation
to the critical faculty. In other words, the criticism which a great
writer brings to bear upon his own work, is from within, regarding it upon
the hidden side, namely, in relation to his own idea; whereas criticism,
commonly understood, has reference to the side turned to the public gaze.
Neither could we expect one so prolific as Shakspere to find time for the
criticism of the works of other men, except in such moments of relaxation
as those in which the friends at the Mermaid Tavern sat silent beneath the
flow of his wisdom and humour, or made the street ring with the overflow
of their own enjoyment.</p>
<p>But if the artist proceed to speculate upon the nature or productions of
another art than his own, we may then expect the principles upon which he
operates in his own, to take outward and visible form—a form
modified by the difference of the art to which he now applies them. In one
of Shakspere’s poems, we have the description of an imagined production of
a sister-art—that of Painting—a description so brilliant that
the light reflected from the poet-picture illumines the art of the Poet
himself, revealing the principles which he held with regard to
representative art generally, and suggesting many thoughts with regard to
detail and harmony, finish, pregnancy, and scope. This description is
found in “The Rape of Lucrece.” Apology will hardly be necessary for
making a long quotation, seeing that, besides the convenience it will
afford of easy reference to the ground of my argument, one of the greatest
helps which even the artist can give to us, is to isolate peculiar
beauties, and so compel us to perceive them.</p>
<p>Lucrece has sent a messenger to beg the immediate presence of her husband.
Awaiting his return, and worn out with weeping, she looks about for some
variation of her misery.</p>
<p>1.<br/>
<br/>
At last she calls to mind where hangs a piece<br/>
Of skilful painting, made for Priam’s Troy;<br/>
Before the which is drawn the power of Greece,<br/>
For Helen’s rape the city to destroy,<br/>
Threatening cloud-kissing Ilion with annoy;<br/>
Which the conceited painter drew so proud,<br/>
As heaven, it seemed, to kiss the turrets, bowed.<br/>
<br/>
2.<br/>
<br/>
A thousand lamentable objects there,<br/>
In scorn of Nature, Art gave lifeless life:<br/>
Many a dry drop seemed a weeping tear,<br/>
Shed for the slaughtered husband by the wife;<br/>
The red blood reeked, to show the painter’s strife.<br/>
And dying eyes gleamed forth their ashy lights,<br/>
Like dying coals burnt out in tedious nights.<br/>
<br/>
3.<br/>
<br/>
There might you see the labouring pioneer<br/>
Begrimed with sweat, and smeared all with dust;<br/>
And, from the towers of Troy there would appear<br/>
The very eyes of men through loopholes thrust,<br/>
Gazing upon the Greeks with little lust:<br/>
Such sweet observance in this work was had,<br/>
That one might see those far-off eyes look sad.<br/>
<br/>
4.<br/>
<br/>
In great commanders, grace and majesty<br/>
You might behold, triumphing in their faces;<br/>
In youth, quick bearing and dexterity;<br/>
And here and there the painter interlaces<br/>
Pale cowards, marching on with trembling paces,<br/>
Which heartless peasants did so well resemble,<br/>
That one would swear he saw them quake and tremble.<br/>
<br/>
5.<br/>
<br/>
In Ajax and Ulysses, O what art<br/>
Of physiognomy might one behold!<br/>
The face of either ciphered either’s heart;<br/>
Their face their manners most expressly told:<br/>
In Ajax’ eyes blunt rage and rigour rolled;<br/>
But the mild glance that sly Ulysses lent<br/>
Showed deep regard, and smiling government.<br/>
<br/>
6.<br/>
<br/>
There pleading might you see grave Nestor stand,<br/>
As ‘twere encouraging the Greeks to fight;<br/>
Making such sober action with his hand,<br/>
That it beguiled attention, charmed the sight;<br/>
In speech, it seemed his beard, all silver-white,<br/>
Wagged up and down, and from his lips did fly<br/>
Thin winding breath, which purled up to the sky.<br/>
<br/>
7.<br/>
<br/>
About him were a press of gaping faces,<br/>
Which seemed to swallow up his sound advice;<br/>
All jointly listening, but with several graces,<br/>
As if some mermaid did their ears entice;<br/>
Some high, some low, the painter was so nice.<br/>
The scalps of many, almost hid behind,<br/>
To jump up higher seemed, to mock the mind.<br/>
<br/>
8.<br/>
<br/>
Here one man’s hand leaned on another’s head,<br/>
His nose being shadowed by his neighbour’s ear;<br/>
Here one, being thronged, bears back, all bollen and red;<br/>
Another, smothered, seems to pelt and swear;<br/>
And in their rage such signs of rage they bear,<br/>
As, but for loss of Nestor’s golden words,<br/>
It seemed they would debate with angry swords.<br/>
<br/>
9.<br/>
<br/>
For much imaginary work was there;<br/>
Conceit deceitful, so compact, so kind,<br/>
That for Achilles’ image stood his spear,<br/>
Griped in an armed hand; himself behind<br/>
Was left unseen, save to the eye of mind:<br/>
A hand, a foot, a face, a leg, a head,<br/>
Stood for the whole to be imagined.<br/>
<br/>
10.<br/>
<br/>
And, from the walls of strong-besieged Troy,<br/>
When their brave hope, bold Hector, marched to field,<br/>
Stood many Trojan mothers, sharing joy<br/>
To see their youthful sons bright weapons wield,<br/>
And to their hope they such odd action yield;<br/>
That through their light joy seemed to appear,<br/>
Like bright things stained, a kind of heavy fear.<br/>
<br/>
11.<br/>
<br/>
And from the strond of Dardan, where they fought,<br/>
To Simois’ reedy banks, the red blood ran;<br/>
Whose waves to imitate the battle sought,<br/>
With swelling ridges; and their ranks began<br/>
To break upon the galled shore, and then<br/>
Retire again, till, meeting greater ranks,<br/>
They join, and shoot their foam at Simois’ banks.<br/></p>
<p>The oftener I read these verses, amongst the very earliest compositions of
Shakspere, I am the more impressed with the carefulness with which he
represents the <i>work</i> of the picture—“shows the strife of the
painter.” The most natural thought to follow in sequence is: How like his
own art!</p>
<p>The scope and variety of the whole picture, in which mass is effected by
the accumulation of individuality; in which, on the one hand, Troy stands
as the impersonation of the aim and object of the whole; and on the other,
the Simois flows in foaming rivalry of the strife of men,—the
pictorial form of that sympathy of nature with human effort and passion,
which he so often introduces in his plays,—is like nothing else so
much as one of the works of his own art. But to take a portion as a more
condensed representation of his art in combining all varieties into one
harmonious whole: his genius is like the oratory of Nestor as described by
its effects in the seventh and eighth stanzas. Every variety of attitude
and countenance and action is harmonized by the influence which is at once
the occasion of debate, and the charm which restrains by the fear of its
own loss: the eloquence and the listening form the one bond of the unruly
mass. So the dramatic genius that harmonizes his play, is visible only in
its effects; so ethereal in its own essence that it refuses to be
submitted to the analysis of the ruder intellect, it is like the words of
Nestor, for which in the picture there stands but “thin winding breath
which purled up to the sky.” Take, for an instance of this, the
reconciling power by which, in the mysterious midnight of the summer-wood,
he brings together in one harmony the graceful passions of childish elves,
and the fierce passions of men and women, with the ludicrous reflection of
those passions in the little convex mirror of the artisan’s drama; while
the mischievous Puck revels in things that fall out preposterously, and
the Elf-Queen is in love with ass-headed Bottom, from the hollows of whose
long hairy ears—strange bouquet-holders—bloom and breathe the
musk-roses, the characteristic odour-founts of the play; and the
philosophy of the unbelieving Theseus, with the candour of Hippolyta,
lifts the whole into relation with the realities of human life. Or take,
as another instance, the pretended madman Edgar, the court-fool, and the
rugged old king going grandly mad, sheltered in one hut, and lapped in the
roar of a thunderstorm.</p>
<p>My object, then, in respect to this poem, is to produce, from many
instances, a few examples of the metamorphosis of such excellences as he
describes in the picture, into the corresponding forms of the drama; in
the hope that it will not then be necessary to urge the probability that
the presence of those artistic virtues in his own practice, upon which he
expatiates in his representation of another man’s art, were accompanied by
the corresponding consciousness—that, namely, of the artist as
differing from that of the critic, its objects being regarded from the
concave side of the hammered relief. If this probability be granted, I
would, from it, advance to a higher and far more important conclusion—how
unlikely it is that if the writer was conscious of such fitnesses, he
should be unconscious of those grand embodiments of truth, which are
indubitably present in his plays, whether he knew it or not. This portion
of my argument will be strengthened by an instance to show that Shakspere
was himself quite at home in the contemplation of such truths.</p>
<p>Let me adduce, then, some of those corresponding embodiments in words
instead of in forms; in which colours yield to tones, lines to phrases. I
will begin with the lowest kind, in which the art has to do with matters
so small, that it is difficult to believe that <i>unconscious</i> art
could have any relation to them. They can hardly have proceeded directly
from the great inspiration of the whole. Their very minuteness is an
argument for their presence to the poet’s consciousness; while belonging,
as they do, only to the <i>construction</i> of the play, no such
independent existence can be accorded to them, as to <i>truths</i>, which,
being in themselves realities, <i>are</i> there, whether Shakspere saw
them or not. If he did not intend them, the most that can be said for them
is, that such is the naturalness of Shakspere’s representations, that
there is room in his plays, as in life, for those wonderful coincidences
which are reducible to no law.</p>
<p>Perhaps every one of the examples I adduce will be found open to dispute.
This is a kind in which direct proof can have no share; nor should I have
dared thus to combine them in argument, but for the ninth stanza of those
quoted above, to which I beg my readers to revert. Its <i>imaginary work</i>
means—work hinted at, and then left to the imagination of the
reader. Of course, in dramatic representation, such work must exist on a
great scale; but the minute particularization of the “conceit deceitful”
in the rest of the stanza, will surely justify us in thinking it possible
that Shakspere intended many, if not all, of the <i>little</i> fitnesses
which a careful reader discovers in his plays. That such are not oftener
discovered comes from this: that, like life itself, he so blends into
vital beauty, that there are no salient points. To use a homely simile: he
is not like the barn-door fowl, that always runs out cackling when she has
laid an egg; and often when she has not. In the tone of an ordinary drama,
you may know when something is coming; and the tone itself declares—<i>I
have done it</i>. But Shakspere will not spoil his art to show his art. It
is there, and does its part: that is enough. If you can discover it, good
and well; if not, pass on, and take what you can find. He can afford not
to be fathomed for every little pearl that lies at the bottom of his
ocean. If I succeed in showing that such art may exist where it is not
readily discovered, this may give some additional probability to its
existence in places where it is harder to isolate and define.</p>
<p>To produce a few instances, then:</p>
<p>In “Much Ado about Nothing,” seeing the very nature of the play is
expressed in its name, is it not likely that Shakspere named the two
constables, Dogberry (<i>a poisonous berry</i>) and Verjuice (<i>the juice
of crab-apples</i>); those names having absolutely nothing to do with the
stupid innocuousness of their characters, and so corresponding to their
way of turning things upside down, and saying the very opposite of what
they mean?</p>
<p>In the same play we find Margaret objecting to her mistress’s wearing a
certain rebato (<i>a large plaited ruff</i>), on the morning of her
wedding: may not this be intended to relate to the fact that Margaret had
dressed in her mistress’s clothes the night before? She might have rumpled
or soiled it, and so feared discovery.</p>
<p>In “King Henry IV.,” Part I., we find, in the last scene, that the Prince
kills Hotspur. This is not recorded in history: the conqueror of Percy is
unknown. Had it been a fact, history would certainly have recorded it; and
the silence of history in regard to a deed of such mark, is equivalent to
its contradiction. But Shakspere requires, for his play’s sake, to
identify the slayer of Hotspur with his rival the Prince. Yet Shakspere
will not contradict history, even in its silence. What is he to do? He
will account for history <i>not knowing</i> the fact.—Falstaff
claiming the honour, the Prince says to him:</p>
<p>“For my part, if a lie may do thee grace,<br/>
I’ll gild it with the happiest terms I have;”<br/></p>
<p>revealing thus the magnificence of his own character, in his readiness,
for the sake of his friend, to part with his chief renown. But the
Historic Muse could not believe that fat Jack Falstaff had killed Hotspur,
and therefore she would not record the claim.</p>
<p>In the second part of the same play, act i. scene 2, we find Falstaff
toweringly indignant with Mr. Dombledon, the silk mercer, that he will
stand upon security with a gentleman for a short cloak and slops of satin.
In the first scene of the second act, the hostess mentions that Sir John
is going to dine with Master Smooth, the silkman. Foiled with Mr.
Dombledon, he has already made himself so agreeable to Master Smooth, that
he is “indited to dinner” with him. This is, by the bye, as to the action
of the play; but as to the character of Sir John, is it not</p>
<p>“Conceit deceitful, so compact, so kind”—<i>kinned—natural</i>?<br/></p>
<p>The <i>conceit deceitful</i> in the painting, is the imagination that
means more than its says. So the words of the speakers in the play, stand
for more than the speakers mean. They are <i>Shakspere’s</i> in their
relation to his whole. To Achilles, his spear is but his spear: to the
painter and his company, the spear of Achilles stands for Achilles
himself.</p>
<p>Coleridge remarks upon <i>James Gurney</i>, in “King John:” “How
individual and comical he is with the four words allowed to his dramatic
life!” These words are those with which he answers the Bastard’s request
to leave the room. He has been lingering with all the inquisitiveness and
privilege of an old servant; when Faulconbridge says: “James Gurney, wilt
thou give us leave a while?” with strained politeness. With marked
condescension to the request of the second son, whom he has known and
served from infancy, James Gurney replies: “Good leave, good Philip;”
giving occasion to Faulconbridge to show his ambition, and scorn of his
present standing, in the contempt with which he treats even the Christian
name he is so soon to exchange with his surname for <i>Sir Richard</i> and
<i>Plantagenet; Philip</i> being the name for a sparrow in those days,
when ladies made pets of them. Surely in these words of the serving-man,
we have an outcome of the same art by which</p>
<p>“A hand, a foot, a face, a leg, a head,<br/>
Stood for the whole to be imagined.”<br/></p>
<p>In the “Winter’s Tale,” act iv. scene 3, Perdita, dressed with unwonted
gaiety at the festival of the sheep-shearing, is astonished at finding
herself talking in full strains of poetic verse. She says, half-ashamed:</p>
<p>“Methinks I play as I have seen them do<br/>
In Whitsun pastorals: sure, this robe of mine<br/>
Does change my disposition!”<br/></p>
<p>She does not mean this seriously. But the robe has more to do with it than
she thinks. Her passion for Florizel is the warmth that sets the springs
of her thoughts free, and they flow with the grace belonging to a
princess-nature; but it is the robe that opens the door of her speech,
and, by elevating her consciousness of herself, betrays her into what is
only natural to her, but seems to her, on reflection, inconsistent with
her low birth and poor education. This instance, however, involves far
higher elements than any of the examples I have given before, and
naturally leads to a much more important class of illustrations.</p>
<p>In “Macbeth,” act ii. scene 4, why is the old man, who has nothing to do
with the conduct of the play, introduced?—That, in conversation with
Rosse, he may, as an old man, bear testimony to the exceptionally terrific
nature of that storm, which, we find—from the words of Banquo:</p>
<p>“There’s husbandry in heaven:<br/>
Their candles are all out,”—<br/></p>
<p>had begun to gather, before supper was over in the castle. This storm is
the sympathetic horror of Nature at the breaking open of the Lord’s
anointed temple—horror in which the animal creation partakes, for
the horses of Duncan, “the minions of their race,” and therefore the most
sensitive of their sensitive race, tear each other to pieces in the
wildness of their horror. Consider along with this a foregoing portion of
the second scene in the same act. Macbeth, having joined his wife after
the murder, says:</p>
<p>“Who lies i’ the second chamber?<br/>
<br/>
“<i>Lady M.</i> Donalbain.<br/></p>
<hr />
<p> </p>
<p>“There are two lodged together.”<br/></p>
<p>These two, Macbeth says, woke each other—the one laughing, the other
crying <i>murder</i>. Then they said their prayers and went to sleep
again.—I used to think that the natural companion of Donalbain would
be Malcolm, his brother; and that the two brothers woke in horror from the
proximity of their father’s murderer who was just passing the door. A
friend objected to this, that, had they been together, Malcolm, being the
elder, would have been mentioned rather than Donalbain. Accept this
objection, and we find a yet more delicate significance: the <i>presence</i>
operated differently on the two, one bursting out in a laugh, the other
crying <i>murder</i>; but both were in terror when they awoke, and dared
not sleep till they had said their prayers. His sons, his horses, the
elements themselves, are shaken by one unconscious sympathy with the
murdered king.</p>
<p>Associate with this the end of the third scene of the fourth act of
“Julius Caesar;” where we find that the attendants of Brutus all cry out
in their sleep, as the ghost of Caesar leaves their master’s tent. This
outcry is not given in Plutarch.</p>
<p>To return to “Macbeth:” Why is the doctor of medicine introduced in the
scene at the English court? He has nothing to do with the progress of the
play itself, any more than the old man already alluded to.—He is
introduced for a precisely similar reason.—As a doctor, he is the
best testimony that could be adduced to the fact, that the English King
Edward the Confessor, is a fountain of health to his people, gifted for
his goodness with the sacred privilege of curing <i>The King’s Evil</i>,
by the touch of his holy hands. The English King himself is thus
introduced, for the sake of contrast with the Scotch King, who is a raging
bear amongst his subjects.</p>
<p>In the “Winter’s Tale,” to which he gives the name because of the
altogether extraordinary character of the occurrences (referring to it in
the play itself, in the words: “<i>a sad tale’s best for winter: I have
one of sprites and goblins</i>”) Antigonus has a remarkable dream or
vision, in which Hermione appears to him, and commands the exposure of her
child in a place to all appearance the most unsuitable and dangerous.
Convinced of the reality of the vision, Antigonus obeys; and the whole
marvellous result depends upon this obedience. Therefore the vision must
be intended for a genuine one. But how could it be such, if Hermione was
not dead, as, from her appearance to him, Antigonus firmly believed she
was? I should feel this to be an objection to the art of the play, but for
the following answer:—At the time she appeared to him, she was still
lying in that deathlike swoon, into which she fell when the news of the
loss of her son reached her as she stood before the judgment-seat of her
husband, at a time when she ought not to have been out of her chamber.</p>
<p>Note likewise, in the first scene of the second act of the same play, the
changefulness of Hermione’s mood with regard to her boy, as indicative of
her condition at the time. If we do not regard this fact, we shall think
the words introduced only for the sake of filling up the business of the
play.</p>
<p>In “Twelfth Night,” both ladies make the first advances in love. Is it not
worthy of notice that one of them has lost her brother, and that the other
believes she has lost hers? In this respect, they may be placed with
Phoebe, in “As You Like It,” who, having suddenly lost her love by the
discovery that its object was a woman, immediately and heartily accepts
the devotion of her rejected lover, Silvius. Along with these may be
classed Romeo, who, rejected and, as he believes, inconsolable, falls in
love with Juliet the moment he sees her. That his love for Rosaline,
however, was but a kind of <i>calf-love</i> compared with his love for
Juliet, may be found indicated in the differing tones of his speech under
the differing conditions. Compare what he says in his conversation with
Benvolio, in the first scene of the first act, with any of his many
speeches afterwards, and, while <i>conceit</i> will be found prominent
enough in both, the one will be found to be ruled by the fancy, the other
by the imagination.</p>
<p>In this same play, there is another similar point which I should like to
notice. In Arthur Brook’s story, from which Shakspere took his, there is
no mention of any communication from Lady Capulet to Juliet of their
intention of marrying her to Count Paris. Why does Shakspere insert this?—to
explain her falling in love with Romeo so suddenly. Her mother has set her
mind moving in that direction. She has never seen Paris. She is looking
about her, wondering which may be he, and whether she shall be able to
like him, when she meets the love-filled eyes of Romeo fixed upon her, and
is at once overcome. What a significant speech is that given to Paulina in
the “Winter’s Tale,” act v. scene 1: “How? Not women?” Paulina is a
thorough partisan, siding with women against men, and strengthened in this
by the treatment her mistress has received from her husband. One has just
said to her, that, if Perdita would begin a sect, she might “make
proselytes of who she bid but follow.” “How? Not women?” Paulina rejoins.
Having received assurance that “women will love her,” she has no more to
say.</p>
<p>I had the following explanation of a line in “Twelfth Night” from a
stranger I met in an old book-shop:—Malvolio, having built his
castle in the air, proceeds to inhabit it. Describing his own behaviour in
a supposed case, he says (act ii. scene 5): “I frown the while; and
perchance, wind up my watch, or play with my some rich jewel”—A dash
ought to come after <i>my</i>. Malvolio was about to say <i>chain</i>; but
remembering that his chain was the badge of his office of steward, and
therefore of his servitude, he alters the word to “<i>some rich jewel</i>”
uttered with pretended carelessness.</p>
<p>In “Hamlet,” act iii. scene 1, did not Shakspere intend the passionate
soliloquy of Ophelia—a soliloquy which no maiden knowing that she
was overheard would have uttered,—coupled with the words of her
father:</p>
<p>“How now, Ophelia?<br/>
You need not tell us what lord Hamlet said,<br/>
We heard it all;”—<br/></p>
<p>to indicate that, weak as Ophelia was, she was not false enough to be
accomplice in any plot for betraying Hamlet to her father and the King?
They had remained behind the arras, and had not gone out as she must have
supposed.</p>
<p>Next, let me request my reader to refer once more to the poem; and having
considered the physiognomy of Ajax and Ulysses, as described in the fifth
stanza, to turn then to the play of “Troilus and Cressida,” and there
contemplate that description as metamorphosed into the higher form of
revelation in speech. Then, if he will associate the general principles in
that stanza with the third, especially the last two lines, I will apply
this to the character of Lady Macbeth.</p>
<p>Of course, Shakspere does not mean that one regarding that portion of the
picture alone, could see the eyes looking sad; but that the <i>sweet
observance</i> of the whole so roused the imagination that it supplied
what distance had concealed, keeping the far-off likewise in sweet
observance with the whole: the rest pointed that way.—In a manner
something like this are we conducted to a right understanding of the
character of Lady Macbeth. First put together these her utterances:</p>
<p>“You do unbend your noble strength, to think<br/>
So brainsickly of things.”<br/>
<br/>
“Get some water,<br/>
And wash this filthy witness from your hands.”<br/>
<br/>
“The sleeping and the dead<br/>
Are but as pictures.”<br/>
<br/>
“A little water clears us of this deed.”<br/>
<br/>
“When all’s done,<br/>
You look but on a stool.”<br/>
<br/>
“You lack the season of all natures, sleep.”—<br/></p>
<p>Had these passages stood in the play unmodified by others, we might have
judged from them that Shakspere intended to represent Lady Macbeth as an
utter materialist, believing in nothing beyond the immediate
communications of the senses. But when we find them associated with such
passages as these—</p>
<p>“Memory, the warder of the brain,<br/>
Shall be a fume, and the receipt of reason<br/>
A limbeck only;”<br/>
<br/>
“Had he not resembled<br/>
My father as he slept, I had done’t;<br/>
<br/>
“These deeds must not be thought<br/>
After these ways; so, it will make us mad;”—<br/></p>
<p>then we find that our former theory will not do, for here are deeper and
broader foundations to build upon. We discover that Lady Macbeth was an
unbeliever <i>morally</i>, and so found it necessary to keep down all
imagination, which is the upheaving of that inward world whose very being
she would have annihilated. Yet out of this world arose at last the
phantom of her slain self, and possessing her sleeping frame, sent it out
to wander in the night, and rub its distressed and blood-stained hands in
vain. For, as in this same “Rape of Lucrece,”</p>
<p>“the soul’s fair temple is defaced;<br/>
To whose weak ruins muster troops of cares,<br/>
To ask the spotted princess how she fares.”<br/></p>
<p>But when so many lines of delineation meet, and run into, and correct one
another, assuming such a natural and vital form, that there is no <i>making
of a point</i> anywhere; and the woman is shown after no theory, but
according to the natural laws of human declension, we feel that the only
way to account for the perfection of the representation is to say that,
given a shadow, Shakspere had the power to place himself so, that that
shadow became his own—was the correct representation as shadow, of
his form coming between it and the sunlight. And this is the highest
dramatic gift that a man can possess. But we feel at the same time, that
this is, in the main, not so much art as inspiration. There would be, in
all probability, a great mingling of conscious art with the inspiration;
but the lines of the former being lost in the general glow of the latter,
we may be left where we were as to any certainty about the artistic
consciousness of Shakspere. I will now therefore attempt to give a few
plainer instances of such <i>sweet observance</i> in his own work as he
would have admired in a painting.</p>
<p>First, then, I would request my reader to think how comparatively seldom
Shakspere uses poetry in his plays. The whole play is a poem in the
highest sense; but truth forbids him to make it the rule for his
characters to speak poetically. Their speech is poetic in relation to the
whole and the end, not in relation to the speaker, or in the immediate
utterance. And even although their speech is immediately poetic, in this
sense, that every character is idealized; yet it is idealized <i>after its
kind</i>; and poetry certainly would not be the ideal speech of most of
the characters. This granted, let us look at the exceptions: we shall find
that such passages not only glow with poetic loveliness and fervour, but
are very jewels of <i>sweet observance</i>, whose setting allows them
their force as lawful, and their prominence as natural. I will mention a
few of such.</p>
<p>In “Julius Caesar,” act i. scene 3, we are inclined to think the way <i>Casca</i>
speaks, quite inconsistent with the “sour fashion” which <i>Cassius</i>
very justly attributes to him; till we remember that he is speaking in the
midst of an almost supernatural thunder-storm: the hidden electricity of
the man’s nature comes out in poetic forms and words, in response to the
wild outburst of the overcharged heavens and earth.</p>
<p>Shakspere invariably makes the dying speak poetically, and generally
prophetically, recognizing the identity of the poetic and prophetic moods,
in their highest development, and the justice that gives them the same
name. Even <i>Sir John</i>, poor ruined gentleman, <i>babbles of green
fields</i>. Every one knows that the passage is disputed: I believe that
if this be not the restoration of the original reading, Shakspere himself
would justify it, and wish that he had so written it.</p>
<p><i>Romeo</i> and <i>Juliet</i> talk poetry as a matter of course.</p>
<p>In “King John,” act v. scenes 4 and 5, see how differently the dying <i>Melun</i>
and the living and victorious <i>Lewis</i> regard the same sunset:</p>
<p><i>Melun</i>.<br/>
<br/>
. . . . . this night, whose black contagious breath<br/>
Already smokes about the burning crest<br/>
Of the old, feeble, and day-wearied sun.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Lewis</i>.<br/>
<br/>
The sun in heaven, methought, was loath to set;<br/>
But stayed, and made the western welkin blush,<br/>
When the English measured backward their own ground.<br/></p>
<p>The exquisite duet between <i>Lorenzo</i> and <i>Jessica</i>, in the
opening of the fifth act of “The Merchant of Venice,” finds for its
subject the circumstances that produce the mood—the lovely night and
the crescent moon—which first make them talk poetry, then call for
music, and next speculate upon its nature.</p>
<p>Let us turn now to some instances of sweet observance in other kinds.</p>
<p>There is observance, more true than sweet, in the character of <i>Jacques</i>,
in “As You Like It:” the fault-finder in age was the fault-doer in youth
and manhood. <i>Jacques</i> patronizing the fool, is one of the rarest
shows of self-ignorance.</p>
<p>In the same play, when <i>Rosalind</i> hears that <i>Orlando</i> is in the
wood, she cries out, “Alas the day! what shall I do with my doublet and
hose?” And when <i>Orlando</i> asks her, “Where dwell you, pretty youth?”
she answers, tripping in her rôle, “Here in the skirts of the forest, like
fringe upon a petticoat.”</p>
<p>In the second part of “King Henry IV.,” act iv. scene 3, <i>Falstaff</i>
says of <i>Prince John</i>: “Good faith, this same young sober-blooded boy
doth not love me; nor a man cannot make him laugh;—but that’s no
marvel: he drinks no wine.” This is the <i>Prince John</i> who betrays the
insurgents afterwards by the falsest of quibbles, and gains his revenge
through their good faith.</p>
<p>In “King Henry IV,” act i. scene 2, <i>Poins</i> does not say <i>Falstaff</i>
is a coward like the other two; but only—“If he fight longer than he
sees reason, I’ll forswear arms.” Associate this with <i>Falstaff’s</i>
soliloquy about <i>honour</i> in the same play, act v. scene 1, and the
true character of his courage or cowardice—for it may bear either
name—comes out.</p>
<p>Is there not conscious art in representing the hospitable face of the
castle of <i>Macbeth</i>, bearing on it a homely welcome in the multitude
of the nests of <i>the temple-haunting martlet</i> (Psalm lxxxiv. 3), just
as <i>Lady Macbeth</i>, the fiend-soul of the house, steps from the door,
like the speech of the building, with her falsely smiled welcome? Is there
not <i>observance</i> in it?</p>
<p>But the production of such instances might be endless, as the work of
Shakspere is infinite. I confine myself to two more, taken from “The
Merchant of Venice.”</p>
<p>Shakspere requires a character capable of the magnificent devotion of
friendship which the old story attributes to <i>Antonio</i>. He therefore
introduces us to a man sober even to sadness, thoughtful even to
melancholy. The first words of the play unveil this characteristic. He
holds “the world but as the world,”—</p>
<p>“A stage where every man must play a part,<br/>
And mine a sad one.”<br/></p>
<p>The cause of this sadness we are left to conjecture. <i>Antonio</i>
himself professes not to know. But such a disposition, even if it be not
occasioned by any definite event or object, will generally associate
itself with one; and when <i>Antonio</i> is accused of being in love, he
repels the accusation with only a sad “Fie! fie!” This, and his whole
character, seem to me to point to an old but ever cherished grief.</p>
<p>Into the original story upon which this play is founded, Shakspere has,
among other variations, introduced the story of <i>Jessica</i> and <i>Lorenzo</i>,
apparently altogether of his own invention. What was his object in doing
so? Surely there were characters and interests enough already!—It
seems to me that Shakspere doubted whether the Jew would have actually
proceeded to carry out his fell design against <i>Antonio</i>, upon the
original ground of his hatred, without the further incitement to revenge
afforded by another passion, second only to his love of gold—his
affection for his daughter; for in the Jew having reference to his own
property, it had risen to a passion. Shakspere therefore invents her, that
he may send a dog of a Christian to steal her, and, yet worse, to tempt
her to steal her father’s stones and ducats. I suspect Shakspere sends the
old villain off the stage at the last with more of the pity of the
audience than any of the other dramatists of the time would have ventured
to rouse, had they been capable of doing so. I suspect he is the only
human Jew of the English drama up to that time.</p>
<p>I have now arrived at the last and most important stage of my argument. It
is this: If Shakspere was so well aware of the artistic relations of the
parts of his drama, is it likely that the grand meanings involved in the
whole were unperceived by him, and conveyed to us without any intention on
his part—had their origin only in the fact that he dealt with human
nature so truly, that his representations must involve whatever lessons
human life itself involves?</p>
<p>Is there no intention, for instance, in placing <i>Prospero</i>, who
forsook the duties of his dukedom for the study of magic, in a desert
island, with just three subjects; one, a monster below humanity; the
second, a creature etherealized beyond it; and the third a complete
embodiment of human perfection? Is it not that he may learn how to rule,
and, having learned, return, by the aid of his magic wisely directed, to
the home and duties from which exclusive devotion to that magic had driven
him?</p>
<p>In “Julius Caesar,” the death of <i>Brutus</i>, while following as the
consequence of his murder of <i>Caesar</i>, is yet as much distinguished
in character from that death, as the character of <i>Brutus</i> is
different from that of <i>Caesar</i>. <i>Caesar’s</i> last words were <i>Et
tu Brute? Brutus</i>, when resolved to lay violent hands on himself, takes
leave of his friends with these words:</p>
<p>“Countrymen,<br/>
My heart doth joy, that yet, in all my life,<br/>
I found no man, but he was true to me.”<br/></p>
<p>Here Shakspere did not invent. He found both speeches in Plutarch. But how
unerring his choice!</p>
<p>Is the final catastrophe in “Hamlet” such, because Shakspere could do no
better?—It is: he could do no better than the best. Where but in the
regions beyond could such questionings as <i>Hamlet’s</i> be put to rest?
It would have been a fine thing indeed for the most nobly perplexed of
thinkers to be left—his love in the grave; the memory of his father
a torment, of his mother a blot; with innocent blood on his innocent
hands, and but half understood by his best friend—to ascend in
desolate dreariness the contemptible height of the degraded throne, and
shine the first in a drunken court!</p>
<p>Before bringing forward my last instance, I will direct the attention of
my readers to a passage, in another play, in which the lesson of the play
I am about to speak of, is <i>directly</i> taught: the first speech in the
second act of “As You Like It,” might be made a text for the exposition of
the whole play of “King Lear.”</p>
<p>The banished duke is seeking to bring his courtiers to regard their exile
as a part of their moral training. I am aware that I point the passage
differently, while I revert to the old text.</p>
<p>“Are not these woods<br/>
More free from peril than the envious court?<br/>
Here feel we not the penalty of Adam—<br/>
The season’s difference, as the icy fang,<br/>
And churlish chiding of the winter’s wind?<br/>
Which, when it bites and blows upon my body,<br/>
Even till I shrink with cold, I smile and say—<br/>
This is no flattery; these are counsellors<br/>
That feelingly persuade me what I am.<br/>
Sweet are the uses of adversity.”<br/></p>
<p>The line <i>Here feel we not the penalty of Adam?</i> has given rise to
much perplexity. The expounders of Shakspere do not believe he can mean
that the uses of adversity are really sweet. But the duke sees that <i>the
penalty</i> of Adam is what makes the <i>woods more free from peril than
the envious court;</i> that this penalty is in fact the best blessing, for
it <i>feelingly persuades</i> man <i>what</i> he is; and to know what we
are, to have no false judgments of ourselves, he considers so sweet, that
to be thus taught, the <i>churlish chiding of the winter’s wind</i> is
well endured.</p>
<p>Now let us turn to <i>Lear</i>. We find in him an old man with a large
heart, hungry for love, and yet not knowing what love is; an old man as
ignorant as a child in all matters of high import; with a temper so
unsubdued, and therefore so unkingly, that he storms because his dinner is
not ready by the clock of his hunger; a child, in short, in everything but
his grey hairs and wrinkled face, but his failing, instead of growing,
strength. If a life end so, let the success of that life be otherwise what
it may, it is a wretched and unworthy end. But let <i>Lear</i> be blown by
the winds and beaten by the rains of heaven, till he pities “poor naked
wretches;” till he feels that he has “ta’en too little care of” such; till
pomp no longer conceals from him what “a poor, bare, forked animal” he is;
and the old king has risen higher in the real social scale—the scale
of that country to which he is bound—far higher than he stood while
he still held his kingdom undivided to his thankless daughters. Then let
him learn at last that “love is the only good in the world;” let him find
his <i>Cordelia</i>, and plot with her how they will in their dungeon <i>singing
like birds i’ the cage</i>, and, dwelling in the secret place of peace,
look abroad on the world like <i>God’s spies</i>; and then let the
generous great old heart swell till it breaks at last—not with rage
and hate and vengeance, but with love; and all is well: it is time the man
should go to overtake his daughter; henceforth to dwell with her in the
home of the true, the eternal, the unchangeable. All his suffering came
from his own fault; but from the suffering has sprung another crop, not of
evil but of good; the seeds of which had lain unfruitful in the soil, but
were brought within the blessed influences of the air of heaven by the
sharp tortures of the ploughshare of ill.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE ELDER HAMLET. </h2>
<p>[Footnote: 1875]</p>
<p>‘Tis bitter cold,<br/>
And I am sick at heart.<br/></p>
<p>The ghost in “Hamlet” is as faithfully treated as any character in the
play. Next to Hamlet himself, he is to me the most interesting person of
the drama. The rumour of his appearance is wrapped in the larger rumour of
war. Loud preparations for uncertain attack fill the ears of “the subject
of the land.” The state is troubled. The new king has hardly compassed his
election before his marriage with his brother’s widow swathes the court in
the dust-cloud of shame, which the merriment of its forced revelry can do
little to dispel. A feeling is in the moral air to which the words of
Francisco, the only words of significance he utters, give the key: “‘Tis
bitter cold, and I am sick at heart.” Into the frosty air, the pallid
moonlight, the drunken shouts of Claudius and his court, the bellowing of
the cannon from the rampart for the enlargement of the insane clamour that
it may beat the drum of its own disgrace at the portals of heaven, glides
the silent prisoner of hell, no longer a king of the day walking about his
halls, “the observed of all observers,” but a thrall of the night,
wandering between the bell and the cock, like a jailer on each side of
him. A poet tells the tale of the king who lost his garments and ceased to
be a king: here is the king who has lost his body, and in the eyes of his
court has ceased to be a man. Is the cold of the earth’s night pleasant to
him after the purging fire? What crimes had the honest ghost committed in
his days of nature? He calls them foul crimes! Could such be his? Only who
can tell how a ghost, with his doubled experience, may think of this thing
or that? The ghost and the fire may between them distinctly recognize that
as a foul crime which the man and the court regarded as a weakness at
worst, and indeed in a king laudable.</p>
<p>Alas, poor ghost! Around the house he flits, shifting and shadowy, over
the ground he once paced in ringing armour—armed still, but his very
armour a shadow! It cannot keep out the arrow of the cock’s cry, and the
heart that pierces is no shadow. Where now is the loaded axe with which,
in angry dispute, he smote the ice at his feet that cracked to the blow?
Where is the arm that heaved the axe? Wasting in the marble maw of the
sepulchre, and the arm he carries now—I know not what it can do, but
it cannot slay his murderer. For that he seeks his son’s. Doubtless his
new ethereal form has its capacities and privileges. It can shift its garb
at will; can appear in mail or night-gown, unaided of armourer or tailor;
can pass through Hades-gates or chamber-door with equal ease; can work in
the ground like mole or pioneer, and let its voice be heard from the
cellarage. But there is one to whom it cannot appear, one whom the ghost
can see, but to whom he cannot show himself. She has built a doorless,
windowless wall between them, and sees the husband of her youth no more.
Outside her heart—that is the night in which he wanders, while the
palace-windows are flaring, and the low wind throbs to the wassail shouts:
within, his murderer sits by the wife of his bosom, and in the orchard the
spilt poison is yet gnawing at the roots of the daisies.</p>
<p>Twice has the ghost grown out of the night upon the eyes of the sentinels.
With solemn march, slow and stately, three times each night, has he walked
by them; they, jellied with fear, have uttered no challenge. They seek
Horatio, who the third night speaks to him as a scholar can. To the first
challenge he makes no answer, but stalks away; to the second,</p>
<p>It lifted up its head, and did address<br/>
Itself to motion, like as it would speak;<br/></p>
<p>but the gaoler cock calls him, and the kingly shape</p>
<p>started like a guilty thing<br/>
Upon a fearful summons;<br/></p>
<p>and then</p>
<p>shrunk in haste away,<br/>
And vanished from our sight.<br/></p>
<p>Ah, that summons! at which majesty welks and shrivels, the king and
soldier starts and cowers, and, armour and all, withers from the air!</p>
<p>But why has he not spoken before? why not now ere the cock could claim
him? He cannot trust the men. His court has forsaken his memory—crowds
with as eager discontent about the mildewed ear as ever about his
wholesome brother, and how should he trust mere sentinels? There is but
one who will heed his tale. A word to any other would but defeat his
intent. Out of the multitude of courtiers and subjects, in all the land of
Denmark, there is but one whom he can trust—his student-son. Him he
has not yet found—the condition of a ghost involving strange
difficulties.</p>
<p>Or did the horror of the men at the sight of him wound and repel him? Does
the sense of regal dignity, not yet exhausted for all the fasting in
fires, unite with that of grievous humiliation to make him shun their
speech?</p>
<p>But Horatio—why does the ghost not answer him ere the time of the
cock is come? Does he fold the cloak of indignation around him because his
son’s friend has addressed him as an intruder on the night, an usurper of
the form that is his own? The companions of the speaker take note that he
is offended and stalks away.</p>
<p>Much has the kingly ghost to endure in his attempt to re-open relations
with the world he has left: when he has overcome his wrath and returns,
that moment Horatio again insults him, calling him an illusion. But this
time he will bear it, and opens his mouth to speak. It is too late; the
cock is awake, and he must go. Then alas for the buried majesty of
Denmark! with upheaved halberts they strike at the shadow, and would stop
it if they might—usage so grossly unfitting that they are instantly
ashamed of it themselves, recognizing the offence in the majesty of the
offended. But he is already gone. The proud, angry king has found himself
but a thing of nothing to his body-guard—for he has lost the body
which was their guard. Still, not even yet has he learned how little it
lies in the power of an honest ghost to gain credit for himself or his
tale! His very privileges are against him.</p>
<p>All this time his son is consuming his heart in the knowledge of a mother
capable of so soon and so utterly forgetting such a husband, and in pity
and sorrow for the dead father who has had such a wife. He is thirty years
of age, an obedient, honourable son—a man of thought, of faith, of
aspiration. Him now the ghost seeks, his heart burning like a coal with
the sense of unendurable wrong. He is seeking the one drop that can fall
cooling on that heart—the sympathy, the answering rage and grief of
his boy. But when at length he finds him, the generous, loving father has
to see that son tremble like an aspen-leaf in his doubtful presence. He
has exposed himself to the shame of eyes and the indignities of dullness,
that he may pour the pent torrent of his wrongs into his ears, but his
disfranchisement from the flesh tells against him even with his son: the
young Hamlet is doubtful of the identity of the apparition with his
father. After all the burning words of the phantom, the spirit he has seen
may yet be a devil; the devil has power to assume a pleasing shape, and is
perhaps taking advantage of his melancholy to damn him.</p>
<p>Armed in the complete steel of a suit well known to the eyes of the
sentinels, visionary none the less, with useless truncheon in hand,
resuming the memory of old martial habits, but with quiet countenance,
more in sorrow than in anger, troubled—not now with the thought of
the hell-day to which he must sleepless return, but with that unceasing
ache at the heart, which ever, as often as he is released into the cooling
air of the upper world, draws him back to the region of his wrongs—where
having fallen asleep in his orchard, in sacred security and old custom,
suddenly, by cruel assault, he was flung into Hades, where horror upon
horror awaited him—worst horror of all, the knowledge of his wife!—armed
he comes, in shadowy armour but how real sorrow! Still it is not pity he
seeks from his son: he needs it not—he can endure. There is no
weakness in the ghost. It is but to the imperfect human sense that he is
shadowy. To himself he knows his doom his deliverance; that the hell in
which he finds himself shall endure but until it has burnt up the hell he
has found within him—until the evil he was and is capable of shall
have dropped from him into the lake of fire; he nerves himself to bear.
And the cry of revenge that comes from the sorrowful lips is the cry of a
king and a Dane rather than of a wronged man. It is for public justice and
not individual vengeance he calls. He cannot endure that the royal bed of
Denmark should be a couch for luxury and damned incest. To stay this he
would bring the murderer to justice. There is a worse wrong, for which he
seeks no revenge: it involves his wife; and there comes in love, and love
knows no amends but amendment, seeks only the repentance tenfold more
needful to the wronger than the wronged. It is not alone the father’s care
for the human nature of his son that warns him to take no measures against
his mother; it is the husband’s tenderness also for her who once lay in
his bosom. The murdered brother, the dethroned king, the dishonoured
husband, the tormented sinner, is yet a gentle ghost. Has suffering
already begun to make him, like Prometheus, wise?</p>
<p>But to measure the gentleness, the forgiveness, the tenderness of the
ghost, we must well understand his wrongs. The murder is plain; but there
is that which went before and is worse, yet is not so plain to every eye
that reads the story. There is that without which the murder had never
been, and which, therefore, is a cause of all the wrong. For listen to
what the ghost reveals when at length he has withdrawn his son that he may
speak with him alone, and Hamlet has forestalled the disclosure of the
murderer:</p>
<p>“Ay, that incestuous, that adulterate beast,<br/>
With witchcraft of his wit, with traitorous gifts,<br/>
(O wicked wit and gifts that have the power<br/>
So to seduce!) won to his shameful lust<br/>
The will of my most seeming virtuous queen:<br/>
Oh, Hamlet, what a falling off was there!<br/>
From me, whose love was of that dignity<br/>
That it went hand in hand even with the vow<br/>
I made to her in marriage, and to decline<br/>
Upon a wretch, whose natural gifts were poor<br/>
To those of mine!<br/>
But virtue—as it never will be moved<br/>
Though lewdness court it in a shape of heaven,<br/>
So lust, though to a radiant angel linked,<br/>
Will sate itself in a celestial bed,<br/>
And prey on garbage.”<br/></p>
<p>Reading this passage, can any one doubt that the ghost charges his late
wife with adultery, as the root of all his woes? It is true that, obedient
to the ghost’s injunctions, as well as his own filial instincts, Hamlet
accuses his mother of no more than was patent to all the world; but unless
we suppose the ghost misinformed or mistaken, we must accept this charge.
And had Gertrude not yielded to the witchcraft of Claudius’ wit, Claudius
would never have murdered Hamlet. Through her his life was dishonoured,
and his death violent and premature: unhuzled, disappointed, unaneled, he
woke to the air—not of his orchard-blossoms, but of a prison-house,
the lightest word of whose terrors would freeze the blood of the listener.
What few men can say, he could—that his love to his wife had kept
even step with the vow he made to her in marriage; and his son says of him—</p>
<p>“so loving to my mother<br/>
That he might not beteem the winds of heaven<br/>
Visit her face too roughly;”<br/></p>
<p>and this was her return! Yet is it thus he charges his son concerning her:</p>
<p>“But howsoever thou pursu’st this act,<br/>
Taint not thy mind, nor let thy soul contrive<br/>
Against thy mother aught; leave her to heaven,<br/>
And to those thorns that in her bosom lodge,<br/>
To prick and sting her.”<br/></p>
<p>And may we not suppose it to be for her sake in part that the ghost
insists, with fourfold repetition, upon a sword-sworn oath to silence from
Horatio and Marcellus?</p>
<p>Only once again does he show himself—not now in armour upon the
walls, but in his gown and in his wife’s closet.</p>
<p>Ever since his first appearance, that is, all the time filling the
interval between the first and second acts, we may presume him to have
haunted the palace unseen, waiting what his son would do. But the task has
been more difficult than either had supposed. The ambassadors have gone to
Norway and returned; but Hamlet has done nothing. Probably he has had no
opportunity; certainly he has had no clear vision of duty. But now all
through the second and third acts, together occupying, it must be
remembered, only one day, something seems imminent. The play has been
acted, and Hamlet has gained some assurance, yet the one chance presented
of killing the king—at his prayers—he has refused. He is now
in his mother’s closet, whose eyes he has turned into her very soul.
There, and then, the ghost once more appears—come, he says, to whet
his son’s almost blunted purpose. But, as I have said, he does not know
all the disadvantages of one who, having forsaken the world, has yet
business therein to which he would persuade; he does not know how hard it
is for a man to give credence to a ghost; how thoroughly he is justified
in delay, and the demand for more perfect proof. He does not know what
good reasons his son has had for uncertainty, or how much natural and
righteous doubt has had to do with what he takes for the blunting of his
purpose. Neither does he know how much more tender his son’s conscience is
than his own, or how necessary it is to him to be sure before he acts. As
little perhaps does he understand how hateful to Hamlet is the task laid
upon him—the killing of one wretched villain in the midst of a
corrupt and contemptible court, one of a world of whose women his mother
may be the type!</p>
<p>Whatever the main object of the ghost’s appearance, he has spoken but a
few words concerning the matter between him and Hamlet, when he turns
abruptly from it to plead with his son for his wife. The ghost sees and
mistakes the terror of her looks; imagines that, either from some feeling
of his presence, or from the power of Hamlet’s words, her conscience is
thoroughly roused, and that her vision, her conception of the facts, is
now more than she can bear. She and her fighting soul are at odds. She is
a kingdom divided against itself. He fears the consequences. He would not
have her go mad. He would not have her die yet. Even while ready to start
at the summons of that hell to which she has sold him, he forgets his
vengeance on her seducer in his desire to comfort her. He dares not, if he
could, manifest himself to her: what word of consolation could she hear
from his lips? Is not the thought of him her one despair? He turns to his
son for help: he cannot console his wife; his son must take his place.
Alas! even now he thinks better of her than she deserves; for it is only
the fancy of her son’s madness that is terrifying her: he gazes on the
apparition of which she sees nothing, and from his looks she anticipates
an ungovernable outbreak.</p>
<p>“But look; amazement on thy mother sits!<br/>
Oh; step between her and her fighting soul<br/>
Conceit in weakest bodies strongest works.<br/>
Speak to her, Hamlet.”<br/></p>
<p>The call to his son to soothe his wicked mother is the ghost’s last
utterance. For a few moments, sadly regardful of the two, he stands—while
his son seeks in vain to reveal to his mother the presence of his father—a
few moments of piteous action, all but ruining the remnant of his son’s
sorely-harassed self-possession—his whole concern his wife’s
distress, and neither his own doom nor his son’s duty; then, as if lost in
despair at the impassable gulf betwixt them, revealed by her utter
incapacity for even the imagination of his proximity, he turns away, and
steals out at the portal. Or perhaps he has heard the black cock crow, and
is wanted beneath: his turn has come.</p>
<p>Will the fires ever cleanse <i>her</i>? Will his love ever lift him above
the pain of its loss? Will eternity ever be bliss, ever be endurable to
poor <i>King Hamlet?</i></p>
<p>Alas! even the memory of the poor ghost is insulted. Night after night on
the stage his effigy appears—cadaverous, sepulchral—no longer
as Shakspere must have represented him, aerial, shadowy, gracious, the
thin corporeal husk of an eternal—shall I say ineffaceable?—sorrow!
It is no hollow monotone that can rightly upbear such words as his, but a
sound mingled of distance and wind in the pine-tops, of agony and love, of
horror and hope and loss and judgment—a voice of endless and
sweetest inflection, yet with a shuddering echo in it as from the caves of
memory, on whose walls, are written the eternal blazon that must not be to
ears of flesh and blood. The spirit that can assume form at will must
surely be able to bend that form to completest and most delicate
expression, and the part of the ghost in the play offers work worthy of
the highest artist. The would-be actor takes from it vitality and motion,
endowing it instead with the rigidity of death, as if the soul had resumed
its cast-off garment, the stiffened and mouldy corpse—whose frozen
deadness it could ill model to the utterance of its lively will!</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ON POLISH. </h2>
<p>[Footnote: 1865]</p>
<p>By Polish I mean a certain well-known and immediately recognizable
condition of surface. But I must request my reader to consider well what
this condition really is. For the definition of it appears to us to be,
that condition of surface which allows the inner structure of the material
to manifest itself. Polish is, as it were, a translucent skin, in which
the life of the inorganic comes to the surface, as in the animal skin the
animal life. Once clothed in this, the inner glories of the marble rock,
of the jasper, of the porphyry, leave the darkness behind, and glow into
the day. From the heart of the agate the mossy landscape comes dreaming
out. From the depth of the green chrysolite looks up the eye of its gold.
The “goings on of life” hidden for ages under the rough bark of the
patient forest-trees, are brought to light; the rings of lovely shadow
which the creature went on making in the dark, as the oyster its opaline
laminations, and its tree-pearls of beautiful knots, where a beneficent
disease has broken the geometrical perfection of its structure, gloom out
in their infinite variousness.</p>
<p>Nor are the revelations of polish confined to things having variety in
their internal construction; they operate equally in things of homogeneous
structure. It is the polished ebony or jet which gives the true blank, the
material darkness. It is the polished steel that shines keen and
remorseless and cold, like that human justice whose symbol it is. And in
the polished diamond the distinctive purity is most evident; while from
it, I presume, will the light absorbed from the sun gleam forth on the
dark most plentifully.</p>
<p>But the mere fact that the end of polish is revelation, can hardly be
worth setting forth except for some ulterior object, some further
revelation in the fact itself.—I wish to show that in the symbolic
use of the word the same truth is involved, or, if not involved, at least
suggested. But let me first make another remark on the preceding
definition of the word.</p>
<p>There is no denying that the first notion suggested by the word polish is
that of smoothness, which will indeed be the sole idea associated with it
before we begin to contemplate the matter. But when we consider what
things are chosen to be “clothed upon” with this smoothness, then we find
that the smoothness is scarcely desired for its own sake, and remember
besides that in many materials and situations it is elaborately avoided.
We find that here it is sought because of its faculty of enabling other
things to show themselves—to come to the surface.</p>
<p>I proceed then to examine how far my pregnant interpretation of the word
will apply to its figurative use in two cases—<i>Polish of Style</i>,
and <i>Polish of Manners</i>. The two might be treated together, seeing
that <i>Style</i> may be called the manners of intellectual utterance, and
<i>Manners</i> the style of social utterance; but it is more convenient to
treat them separately.</p>
<p>I will begin with the Polish of Style.</p>
<p>It will be seen at once that if the notion of polish be limited to that of
smoothness, there can be little to say on the matter, and nothing worthy
of being said. For mere smoothness is no more a desirable quality in a
style than it is in a country or a countenance; and its pursuit will
result at length in the gain of the monotonous and the loss of the
melodious and harmonious. But it is only upon worthless material that
polish can be <i>mere</i> smoothness; and where the material is not
valuable, polish can be nothing but smoothness. No amount of polish in a
style can render the production of value, except there be in it embodied
thought thereby revealed; and the labour of the polish is lost. Let us
then take the fuller meaning of polish, and see how it will apply to
style.</p>
<p>If it applies, then Polish of Style will imply the approximately complete
revelation of the thought. It will be the removal of everything that can
interfere between the thought of the speaker and the mind of the hearer.
True polish in marble or in speech reveals inlying realities, and, in the
latter at least, mere smoothness, either of sound or of meaning, is not
worthy of the name. The most polished style will be that which most
immediately and most truly flashes the meaning embodied in the utterance
upon the mind of the listener or reader.</p>
<p>“Will you then,” I imagine a reader objecting, “admit of no ornament in
style?”</p>
<p>“Assuredly,” I answer, “I would admit of no ornament whatever.”</p>
<p>But let me explain what I mean by ornament. I mean anything stuck in or
on, like a spangle, because it is pretty in itself, although it reveals
nothing. Not one such ornament can belong to a polished style. It is
paint, not polish. And if this is not what my questioner means by <i>ornament</i>,
my answer must then be read according to the differences in his definition
of the word. What I have said has not the least application to the natural
forms of beauty which thought assumes in speech. Between such beauty and
such ornament there lies the same difference as between the overflow of
life in the hair, and the dressing of that loveliest of utterances in
grease and gold.</p>
<p>For, when I say that polish is the removal of everything that comes
between thought and thinking, it must not be supposed that in my idea
thought is only of the intellect, and therefore that all forms but bare
intellectual forms are of the nature of ornament. As well might one say
that the only essential portion of the human form is the bones. And every
human thought is in a sense a human being, has as necessarily its muscles
of motion, its skin of beauty, its blood of feeling, as its skeleton of
logic. For complete utterance, music itself in its right proportions,
sometimes clear and strong, as in rhymed harmonies, sometimes veiled and
dim, as in the prose compositions of the masters of speech, is as
necessary as correctness of logic, and common sense in construction. I
should have said <i>conveyance</i> rather than utterance; for there may be
utterance such as to relieve the mind of the speaker with more or less of
fancied communication, while the conveyance of thought may be little or
none; as in the speaking with tongues of the infant Church, to which the
lovely babblement of our children has probably more than a figurative
resemblance, relieving their own minds, but, the interpreter not yet at
his post, neither instructing nor misleading any one. But as the object of
grown-up speech must in the main be the conveyance of thought, and not the
mere utterance, everything in the style of that speech which interposes
between the mental eyes and the thought embodied in the speech, must be
polished away, that the indwelling life may manifest itself.</p>
<p>What, then (for now we must come to the practical), is the kind of thing
to be polished away in order that the hidden may be revealed?</p>
<p>All words that can be dismissed without loss; for all such more or less
obscure the meaning upon which they gather. The first step towards the
polishing of most styles is to strike out—polish off—the
useless words and phrases. It is wonderful with how many fewer words most
things could be said that are said; while the degree of certainty and
rapidity with which an idea is conveyed would generally be found to be in
an inverse ratio to the number of words employed.</p>
<p>All ornaments so called—the nose and lip jewels of style—the
tattooing of the speech; all similes that, although true, give no
additional insight into the meaning; everything that is only pretty and
not beautiful; all mere sparkle as of jewels that lose their own beauty by
being set in the grandeur of statues or the dignity of monumental stone,
must be ruthlessly polished away.</p>
<p>All utterances which, however they may add to the amount of thought,
distract the mind, and confuse its observation of the main idea, the
essence or life of the book or paper, must be diligently refused. In the
manuscript of <i>Comus</i> there exists, cancelled but legible, a passage
of which I have the best authority for saying that it would have made the
poetic fame of any writer. But the grand old self-denier struck it out of
the opening speech because that would be more polished without it—because
the <i>Attendant Spirit</i> would say more immediately and exclusively,
and therefore more completely, what he had to say, without it.—All
this applies much more widely and deeply in the region of art; but I am at
present dealing with the surface of style, not with the round of result.</p>
<p>I have one instance at hand, however, belonging to this region, than which
I could scarcely produce a more apt illustration of my thesis. One of the
greatest of living painters, walking with a friend through the late
Exhibition of Art-Treasures at Manchester, came upon Albert Dürer’s <i>Melancholia</i>.
After looking at it for a moment, he told his friend that now for the
first time he understood it, and proceeded to set forth what he saw in it.
It was a very early impression, and the delicacy of the lines was so much
the greater. He had never seen such a perfect impression before, and had
never perceived the intent and scope of the engraving. The mere removal of
accidental thickness and furriness in the lines of the drawing enabled him
to see into the meaning of that wonderful production. The polish brought
it to the surface. Or, what amounts to the same thing for my argument, the
dulling of the surface had concealed it even from his experienced eyes.</p>
<p>In fine, and more generally, all cause whatever of obscurity must be
polished away. There may lie in the matter itself a darkness of colour and
texture which no amount of polishing can render clear or even vivid; the
thoughts themselves may be hard to think, and difficulty must not be
confounded with obscurity. The former belongs to the thoughts themselves;
the latter to the mode of their embodiment. All cause of obscurity in this
must, I say, be removed. Such may lie even in the region of grammar, or in
the mere arrangement of a sentence. And while, as I have said, no ornament
is to be allowed, so all roughnesses, which irritate the mental ear, and
so far incapacitate it for receiving a true impression of the meaning from
the words, must be carefully reduced. For the true music of a sentence,
belonging as it does to the essence of the thought itself, is the herald
which goes before to prepare the mind for the following thought, calming
the surface of the intellect to a mirror-like reflection of the image
about to fall upon it. But syllables that hang heavy on the tongue and
grate harsh upon the ear are the trumpet of discord rousing to unconscious
opposition and conscious rejection.</p>
<p>And now the consideration of the Polish of Manners will lead us to some
yet more important reflections. Here again I must admit that the ordinary
use of the phrase is analogous to that of the preceding; but its relations
lead us deep into realities. For as diamond alone can polish diamond, so
men alone can polish men; and hence it is that it was first by living in a
city ([Greek: polis], <i>polis</i>) that men—</p>
<p>“rubbed each other’s angles down,”<br/></p>
<p>and became <i>polished</i>. And while a certain amount of ease with regard
to ourselves and of consideration with regard to others is everywhere
necessary to a man’s passing as a gentleman—all unevenness of
behaviour resulting either from shyness or self-consciousness (in the
shape of awkwardness), or from overweening or selfishness (in the shape of
rudeness), having to be polished away—true human polish must go
further than this. Its respects are not confined to the manners of the
ball-room or the dinner-table, of the club or the exchange, but wherever a
man may rejoice with them that rejoice or weep with them that weep, he
must remain one and the same, as polished to the tiller of the soil as to
the leader of the fashion.</p>
<p>But how will the figure of material polish aid us any further? How can it
be said that Polish of Manners is a revelation of that which is within, a
calling up to the surface of the hidden loveliness of the material? For do
we not know that courtesy may cover contempt; that smiles themselves may
hide hate; that one who will place you at his right hand when in want of
your inferior aid, may scarce acknowledge your presence when his necessity
has gone by? And how then can polished manners be a revelation of what is
within? Are they not the result of putting on rather than of taking off?
Are they not paint and varnish rather than polish?</p>
<p>I must yield the answer to each of these questions; protesting, however,
that with such polish I have nothing to do; for these manners are
confessedly false. But even where least able to mislead, they are, with
corresponding courtesy, accepted as outward signs of an inward grace.
Hence even such, by the nature of their falsehood, support my position.
For in what forms are the colours of the paint laid upon the surface of
the material? Is it not in as near imitations of the real right human
feelings about oneself and others as the necessarily imperfect knowledge
of such an artist can produce? He will not encounter the labour of
polishing, for he does not believe in the divine depths of his own nature:
he paints, and calls the varnish polish.</p>
<p>“But why talk of polish with reference to such a character, seeing that no
amount of polishing can bring to the surface what is not there? No
polishing of sandstone will reveal the mottling of marble. For it is
sandstone, crumbling and gritty—not noble in any way.”</p>
<p>Is it so then? Can such be the real nature of the man? And can polish
reach nothing deeper in him than such? May not this selfishness be
polished away, revealing true colour and harmony beneath? Was not the man
made in the image of God? Or, if you say that man lost that image, did not
a new process of creation begin from the point of that loss, a process of
re-creation in him in whom all shall be made alive, which, although so far
from being completed yet, can never be checked? If we cut away deep enough
at the rough block of our nature, shall we not arrive at some likeness of
that true man who, the apostle says, dwells in us—the hope of glory?
He informs us—that is, forms us from within.</p>
<p>Dr. Donne (who knew less than any other writer in the English language
what Polish of Style means) recognizes this divine polishing to the full.
He says in a poem called “The Cross:”—</p>
<p>As perchance carvers do not faces make,<br/>
But that away, which hid them there, do take,<br/>
Let Crosses so take what hid Christ in thee,<br/>
And be his Image, or not his, but He.<br/></p>
<p>This is no doubt a higher figure than that of <i>polish</i>, but it is of
the same kind, revealing the same truth. It recognizes the fact that the
divine nature lies at the root of the human nature, and that the polish
which lets that spiritual nature shine out in the simplicity of heavenly
childhood, is the true Polish of Manners of which all merely social
refinements are a poor imitation.—Whence Coleridge says that nothing
but religion can make a man a gentleman.—And when these harmonies of
our nature come to the surface, we shall be indeed “lively stones,” fit
for building into the great temple of the universe, and echoing the music
of creation. Dr. Donne recognizes, besides, the notable fact that <i>crosses</i>
or afflictions are the polishing powers by means of which the beautiful
realities of human nature are brought to the surface. One can tell at once
by the peculiar loveliness of certain persons that they have suffered.</p>
<p>But, to look for a moment less profoundly into the matter, have we not
known those whose best never could get to the surface just from the lack
of polish?—persons who, if they could only reveal the kindness of
their nature, would make men believe in human nature, but in whom some
roughness of awkwardness or of shyness prevents the true self from
appearing? Even the dread of seeming to claim a good deed or to patronize
a fellow-man will sometimes spoil the last touch of tenderness which would
have been the final polish of the act of giving, and would have revealed
infinite depths of human devotion. For let the truth out, and it will be
seen to be true.</p>
<p>Simplicity is the end of all Polish, as of all Art, Culture, Morals,
Religion, and Life. The Lord our God is one Lord, and we and our brothers
and sisters are one Humanity, one Body of the Head.</p>
<p>Now to the practical: what are we to do for the polish of our manners?</p>
<p>Just what I have said we must do for the polish of our style. Take off; do
not put on. Polish away this rudeness, that awkwardness. Correct
everything self-assertive, which includes nine tenths of all vulgarity.
Imitate no one’s behaviour; that is to paint. Do not think about yourself;
that is to varnish. Put what is wrong right, and what is in you will show
itself in harmonious behaviour.</p>
<p>But no one can go far in this track without discovering that true polish
reaches much deeper; that the outward exists but for the sake of the
inward; and that the manners, as they depend on the morals, must be
forgotten in the morals of which they are but the revelation. Look at the
high-shouldered, ungainly child in the corner: his mother tells him to go
to his book, and he wants to go to his play. Regard the swollen lips, the
skin tightened over the nose, the distortion of his shape, the angularity
of his whole appearance. Yet he is not an awkward child by nature. Look at
him again the moment after he has given in and kissed his mother. His
shoulders have dropped to their place; his limbs are free from the fetters
that bound them; his motions are graceful, and the one blends harmoniously
with the other. He is no longer thinking of himself. He has given up his
own way. The true childhood comes to the surface, and you see what the boy
is meant to be always. Look at the jerkiness of the conceited man. Look at
the quiet <i>fluency</i> of motion in the modest man. Look how anger
itself which forgets self, which is unhating and righteous, will elevate
the carriage and ennoble the movements.</p>
<p>But how far can the same rule of <i>omission</i> or <i>rejection</i> be
applied with safety to this deeper character—the manners of the
spirit?</p>
<p>It seems to me that in morals too the main thing is to avoid doing wrong;
for then the active spirit of life in us will drive us on to the right.
But on such a momentous question I would not be dogmatic. Only as far as
regards the feelings I would say: it is of no use to try to make ourselves
feel thus or thus. Let us fight with our wrong feelings; let us polish
away the rough ugly distortions of feeling. Then the real and the good
will come of themselves. Or rather, to keep to my figure, they will then
show themselves of themselves as the natural home-produce, the indwelling
facts of our deepest—that is, our divine nature.</p>
<p>Here I find that I am sinking through my subject into another and deeper—a
truth, namely, which should, however, be the foundation of all our
building, the background of all our representations: that Life is at work
in us—the sacred Spirit of God travailing in us. That Spirit has
gained one end of his labour—at which he can begin to do yet more
for us—when he has brought us to beg for the help which he has been
giving us all the time.</p>
<p>I have been regarding infinite things through the medium of one limited
figure, knowing that figures with all their suggestions and relations
could not reveal them utterly. But so far as they go, these thoughts
raised by the word Polish and its figurative uses appear to me to be most
true.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> BROWNING’S “CHRISTMAS EVE” </h2>
<p>[Footnote: 1853.]</p>
<p>Goethe says:—</p>
<p>“Poems are painted window panes.<br/>
If one looks from the square into the church,<br/>
Dusk and dimness are his gains—<br/>
Sir Philistine is left in the lurch!<br/>
The sight, so seen, may well enrage him,<br/>
Nor anything henceforth assuage him.<br/>
<br/>
“But come just inside what conceals;<br/>
Cross the holy threshold quite—<br/>
All at once ‘tis rainbow-bright,<br/>
Device and story flash to light,<br/>
A gracious splendour truth reveals.<br/>
This to God’s children is full measure,<br/>
It edifies and gives you pleasure!”<br/></p>
<p>This is true concerning every form in which truth is embodied, whether it
be sight or sound, geometric diagram or scientific formula.
Unintelligible, it may be dismal enough, regarded from the outside;
prismatic in its revelation of truth from within. Such is the world
itself, as beheld by the speculative eye; a thing of disorder, obscurity,
and sadness: only the child-like heart, to which the door into the divine
idea is thrown open, can understand somewhat the secret of the Almighty.
In human things it is particularly true of art, in which the fundamental
idea seems to be the revelation of the true through the beautiful. But of
all the arts it is most applicable to poetry; for the others have more
that is beautiful on the outside; can give pleasure to the senses by the
form of the marble, the hues of the painting, or the sweet sounds of the
music, although the heart may never perceive the meaning that lies within.
But poetry, except its rhythmic melody, and its scattered gleams of
material imagery, for which few care that love it not for its own sake,
has no attraction on the outside to entice the passer to enter and partake
of its truth. It is inwards that its colours shine, within that its forms
move, and the sound of its holy organ cannot be heard from without.</p>
<p>Now, if one has been able to reach the heart of a poem, answering to
Goethe’s parabolic description; or even to discover a loop-hole, through
which, from an opposite point, the glories of its stained windows are
visible; it is well that he should seek to make others partakers in his
pleasure and profit. Some who might not find out for themselves, would yet
be evermore grateful to him who led them to the point of vision. Surely if
a man would help his fellow-men, he can do so far more effectually by
exhibiting truth than exposing error, by unveiling beauty than by a
critical dissection of deformity. From the very nature of the things it
must be so. Let the true and good destroy their opposites. It is only by
the good and beautiful that the evil and ugly are known. It is the light
that makes manifest.</p>
<p>The poem “Christmas Eve,” by Robert Browning, with the accompanying poem
“Easter Day,” seems not to have attracted much notice from the readers of
poetry, although highly prized by a few. This is, perhaps, to be
attributed, in a great measure, to what many would call a considerable
degree of obscurity. But obscurity is the appearance which to a first
glance may be presented either by profundity or carelessness of thought.
To some, obscurity itself is attractive, from the hope that worthiness is
the cause of it. To apply a test similar to that by which Pascal tries the
Koran and the Scriptures: what is the character of those portions, the
meaning of which is plain? Are they wise or foolish? If the former, the
presumption is that the obscurity of other parts is caused not by opacity,
but profundity. But some will object, notwithstanding, that a writer ought
to make himself plain to his readers; nay, that if he has a clear idea
himself, he must be able to express that idea clearly. But for communion
of thought, two minds, not one, are necessary. The fault may lie in him
that receives or in him that gives, or it may be in neither. For how can
the result of much thought, the idea which for mouths has been shaping
itself in the mind of one man, be at once received by another mind to
which it comes a stranger and unexpected? The reader has no right to
complain of so caused obscurity. Nor is that form of expression, which is
most easily understood at first sight, necessarily the best. It will not,
therefore, continue to move; nor will it gather force and influence with
more intimate acquaintance. Here Goethe’s little parable, as he calls it,
is peculiarly applicable. But, indeed, if after all a writer is obscure,
the man who has spent most labour in seeking to enter into his thoughts,
will be the least likely to complain of his obscurity; and they who have
the least difficulty in understanding a writer, are frequently those who
understand him the least.</p>
<p>To those to whom the religion of Christ has been the law of liberty; who
by that door have entered into the universe of God, and have begun to feel
a growing delight in all the manifestations of God, it is cause of much
joy to find that, whatever may be the position taken by men of science, or
by those in whom the intellect predominates, with regard to the Christian
religion, men of genius, at least, in virtue of what is child-like in
their nature, are, in the present time, plainly manifesting deep devotion
to Christ. There are exceptions, certainly; but even in those, there are
symptoms of feelings which, one can hardly help thinking, tend towards
him, and will one day flame forth in conscious worship. A mind that
recognizes any of the multitudinous meanings of the revelation of God, in
the world of sounds, and forms, and colours, cannot be blind to the higher
manifestation of God in common humanity; nor to him in whom is hid the key
to the whole, the First-born of the creation of God, in whose heart lies,
as yet but partially developed, the kingdom of heaven, which is the
redemption of the earth. The mind that delights in that which is lofty and
great, which feels there is something higher than self, will undoubtedly
be drawn towards Christ; and they, who at first looked on him as a great
prophet, came at length to perceive that he was the radiation of the
Father’s glory, the likeness of his unseen being.</p>
<p>A description of the poem may, perhaps, both induce to the reading of it,
and contribute to its easier comprehension while being perused. On a
stormy Christmas Eve, the poet, or rather the seer (for the whole must be
regarded as a poetic vision), is compelled to take refuge in the “lath and
plaster entry” of a little chapel, belonging to a congregation of
Calvinistic Methodists, who are at the time assembling for worship.
Wonderful in its reality is the description of various of the flock that
pass him as they enter the chapel, from</p>
<p>“the many-tattered<br/>
Little old-faced, peaking sister-turned-mother<br/>
Of the sickly babe she tried to smother<br/>
Somehow up, with its spotted face,<br/>
From the cold, on her breast, the one warm place:”<br/></p>
<p>to the “shoemaker’s lad;” whom he follows, determined not to endure the
inquisition of their looks any longer, into the chapel. The humour of the
whole scene within is excellent. The stifling closeness, both of the
atmosphere and of the sermon, the wonderful content of the audience, the
“old fat woman,” who</p>
<p>“purred with pleasure,<br/>
And thumb round thumb went twirling faster,<br/>
While she, to his periods keeping measure,<br/>
Maternally devoured the pastor;”<br/></p>
<p>are represented by a few rapid touches that bring certain points of the
reality almost unpleasantly near. At length, unable to endure it longer,
he rushes out into the air. Objection may, probably, be made to the
mingling of the humorous, even the ridiculous, with the serious; at least,
in a work of art like this, where they must be brought into such close
proximity. But are not these things as closely connected in the world as
they can be in any representation of it? Surely there are few who have
never had occasion to attempt to reconcile the thought of the two in their
own minds. Nor can there be anything human that is not, in some connexion
or other, admissible into art. The widest idea of art must comprehend all
things. A work of this kind must, like God’s world, in which he sends rain
on the just and on the unjust, be taken as a whole and in regard to its
design. The requisition is, that everything introduced have a relation to
the adjacent parts and to the whole suitable to the design. Here the thing
is real, is true, is human; a thing to be thought about. It has its place
amongst other phenomena, with which, however apparently incongruous, it is
yet vitally connected within.</p>
<p>A coolness and delight visit us, on turning over the page and commencing
to read the description of sky, and moon, and clouds, which greet him
outside the chapel. It is as a vision of the vision-bearing world itself,
in one of its fine, though not, at first, one of its rarest moods. And
here a short digression to notice like feelings in unlike dresses, one
thought differently expressed will, perhaps, be pardoned. The moon is
prevented from shining out by the “blocks” of cloud “built up in the
west:”—</p>
<p>“And the empty other half of the sky<br/>
Seemed in its silence as if it knew<br/>
What, any moment, might look through<br/>
A chance-gap in that fortress massy.”<br/></p>
<p>Old Henry Vaughan says of the “Dawning:”—</p>
<p>“The whole Creation shakes off night,<br/>
And for thy shadow looks the Light;<br/>
Stars now vanish without number,<br/>
Sleepie Planets set and slumber,<br/>
The pursie Clouds disband and scatter,<br/>
<i>All expect some sudden matter</i>.”<br/></p>
<p>Calmness settles down on his mind. He walks on, thinking of the scene he
had left, and the sermon he had heard. In the latter he sees the good and
the bad intimately mingled; and is convinced that the chief benefit
derived from it is a reproducing of former impressions. The thought
crosses him, in how many places and how many different forms the same
thing takes place, “a convincing” of the “convinced;” and he rejoices in
the contrast which his church presents to these; for in the church of
Nature his love to God, assurance of God’s love to him, and confidence in
the design of God regarding him, commenced. While exulting in God and the
knowledge of Him to be attained hereafter, he is favoured with a sight of
a glorious moon-rainbow, which elevates his worship to ecstasy. During
which—</p>
<p>“All at once I looked up with terror—<br/>
He was there.<br/>
He himself with His human air,<br/>
On the narrow pathway, just before:<br/>
I saw the back of Him, no more—<br/>
He had left the chapel, then, as I.<br/>
I forgot all about the sky.<br/>
No face: only the sight<br/>
Of a sweepy garment, vast and white,<br/>
With a hem that I could recognize.<br/>
I felt terror, no surprise:<br/>
My mind filled with the cataract,<br/>
At one bound, of the mighty fact.<br/>
I remembered, He did say<br/>
Doubtless, that, to this world’s end,<br/>
Where two or three should meet and pray,<br/>
He would be in the midst, their friend:<br/>
Certainly He was there with them.<br/>
And my pulses leaped for joy<br/>
Of the golden thought without alloy,<br/>
That I saw His very vesture’s hem.<br/>
Then rushed the blood back, cold and clear,<br/>
With a fresh enhancing shiver of fear.”<br/></p>
<p>Praying for forgiveness wherein he has sinned, and prostrate in adoration
before the form of Christ, he is “caught up in the whirl and drift” of his
vesture, and carried along with him over the earth.</p>
<p>Stopping at length at the entrance of St. Peter’s in Rome, he remains
outside, while the form disappears within. He is able, however, to see all
that goes on, in the crowded, hushed interior. It is high mass. He has
been carried at once from the little chapel to the opposite aesthetic
pole. From the entry, where—</p>
<p>“The flame of the single tallow candle<br/>
In the cracked square lanthorn I stood under<br/>
Shot its blue lip at me,”<br/></p>
<p>to—<br/>
“This miraculous dome of God—<br/>
This colonnade<br/>
With arms wide open to embrace<br/>
The entry of the human race<br/>
To the breast of.... what is it, yon building,<br/>
Ablaze in front, all paint and gilding,<br/>
With marble for brick, and stones of price<br/>
For garniture of the edifice?”<br/></p>
<p>to “those fountains”—</p>
<p>“Growing up eternally<br/>
Each to a musical water-tree,<br/>
Whose blossoms drop, a glittering boon,<br/>
Before my eyes, in the light of the moon,<br/>
To the granite lavers underneath;”<br/></p>
<p>from the singing of the chapel to the organ self-restrained, that “holds
his breath and grovels latent,” while expecting the elevation of the Host.
Christ is within; he is left without. Reflecting on the matter, he thinks
his Lord would not require him to go in, though he himself entered,
because there was a way to reach him there. By-and-by, however, his heart
awakes and declares that Love goes beyond error with them, and if the
Intellect be kept down, yet Love is the oppressor; so next time he
resolves to enter and praise along with them. The passage commencing, “Oh,
love of those first Christian days!” describing Love’s victory over
Intellect, is very fine.</p>
<p>Again he is caught up and carried along as before. This time halt is made
at the door of a college in a German town, in which the class-room of one
of the professors is open for lecture this Christmas Eve. It is,
intellectually considered, the opposite pole to both the Methodist chapel
and the Roman Basilica. The poet enters, fearful of losing the society of
“any that call themselves his friends.” He describes the assembled
company, and the entrance of “the hawk-nosed, high-cheek-boned professor,”
of part of whose Christmas Eve’s discourse he proceeds to give the
substance. The professor takes it for granted that “plainly no such life
was liveable,” and goes on to inquire what explanation of the phenomena of
the life of Christ it were best to adopt. Not that it mattered much, “so
the idea be left the same.” Taking the popular story, for convenience
sake, and separating all extraneous matter from it, he found that Christ
was simply a good man, with an honest, true heart; whose disciples thought
him divine; and whose doctrine, though quite mistaken by those who
received and published it, “had yet a meaning quite as respectable.” Here
the poet takes advantage of a pause to leave him; reflecting that though
the air may be poisoned by the sects, yet here “the critic leaves no air
to poison.” His meditations and arguments following, are among the most
valuable passages in the book. The professor, notwithstanding the idea of
Christ has by him been exhausted of all that is peculiar to it, yet
recommends him to the veneration and worship of his hearers, “rather than
all who went before him, and all who ever followed after.” But why? says
the poet. For his intellect,</p>
<p>“Which tells me simply what was told<br/>
(If mere morality, bereft<br/>
Of the God in Christ, be all that’s left)<br/>
Elsewhere by voices manifold?”<br/></p>
<p>with which must be combined the fact that this intellect of his did not
save him from making the “important stumble,” of saying that he and God
were one. “But his followers misunderstood him,” says the objector.
Perhaps so; but “the stumbling-block, his speech, who laid it?” Well then,
is it on the score of his goodness that he should rule his race?</p>
<p>“You pledge<br/>
Your fealty to such rule? What, all—<br/>
From Heavenly John and Attic Paul,<br/>
And that brave weather-battered Peter,<br/>
Whose stout faith only stood completer<br/>
For buffets, sinning to be pardoned,<br/>
As the more his hands hauled nets, they hardened—<br/>
All, down to you, the man of men,<br/>
Professing here at Göttingen,<br/>
Compose Christ’s flock! So, you and I<br/>
Are sheep of a good man! And why?”<br/></p>
<p>Did Christ <i>invent</i> goodness? or did he only demonstrate that of
which the common conscience was judge?</p>
<p>“I would decree<br/>
Worship for such mere demonstration<br/>
And simple work of nomenclature,<br/>
Only the day I praised, not Nature,<br/>
But Harvey, for the circulation.”<br/></p>
<p>The worst man, says the poet, <i>knows</i> more than the best man <i>does</i>.
God in Christ appeared to men to help them to <i>do</i>, to awaken the
life within them.</p>
<p>“Morality to the uttermost,<br/>
Supreme in Christ as we all confess,<br/>
Why need <i>we</i> prove would avail no jot<br/>
To make Him God, if God he were not?<br/>
What is the point where Himself lays stress?<br/>
Does the precept run, ‘Believe in good,<br/>
In justice, truth, now understood<br/>
For the first time?’—or, ‘Believe in ME,<br/>
Who lived and died, yet essentially<br/>
Am Lord of life’? Whoever can take<br/>
The same to his heart, and for mere love’s sake<br/>
Conceive of the love,—that man obtains<br/>
A new truth; no conviction gains<br/>
Of an old one only, made intense<br/>
By a fresh appeal to his faded sense.”<br/></p>
<p>In this lies the most direct practical argument with regard to what is
commonly called the Divinity of Christ. Here is a man whom those that
magnify him the least confess to be a good man, the best of men. He <i>says</i>,
“I and the Father are one.” Will an earnest heart, knowing this, be likely
to draw back, or will it draw nearer to behold the great sight? Will not
such a heart feel: “A good man like this would not have said so, were it
not so. In all probability the great truth of God lies behind this veil.”
The reality of Christ’s nature is not to be proved by argument. He must be
beheld. The manifestation of Him must “gravitate inwards” on the soul. It
is by looking that one can know. As a mathematical theorem is to be proved
only by the demonstration of that theorem itself, not by talking <i>about</i>
it; so Christ must prove himself to the human soul through being beheld.
The only proof of Christ’s divinity is his humanity. Because his humanity
is not comprehended, his divinity is doubted; and while the former is
uncomprehended, an assent to the latter is of little avail. For a man to
theorize theologically in any form, while he has not so apprehended
Christ, or to neglect the gazing on him for the attempt to substantiate to
himself any form of belief respecting him, is to bring on himself, in a
matter of divine import, such errors as the expounders of nature in old
time brought on themselves, when they speculated on what a thing must be,
instead of observing what it was; this <i>must be</i> having for its
foundation not self-evident truth, but notions whose chief strength lay in
their preconception. There are thoughts and feelings that cannot be called
up in the mind by any power of will or force of imagination; which, being
spiritual, must arise in the soul when in its highest spiritual condition;
when the mind, indeed, like a smooth lake, reflects only heavenly images.
A steadfast regarding of Him will produce this calm, and His will be the
heavenly form reflected from the mental depth.</p>
<p>But to return to the poem. The fact that Christ remains inside, leads the
poet to reflect, in the spirit of Him who found all the good in men he
could, neglecting no point of contact which presented itself, whether
there was anything at this lecture with which he could sympathize; and he
finds that the heart of the professor does something to rescue him from
the error of his brain. In his brain, even, “if Love’s dead there, it has
left a ghost.” For when the natural deduction from his argument would be
that our faith</p>
<p>“Be swept forthwith to its natural dust-hole,—<br/>
He bids us, when we least expect it,<br/>
Take back our faith—if it be not just whole,<br/>
Yet a pearl indeed, as his tests affect it,<br/>
Which fact pays the damage done rewardingly,<br/>
So, prize we our dust and ashes accordingly!”<br/></p>
<p>Love as well as learning being necessary to the understanding of the New
Testament, it is to the poet matter of regret that “loveless learning”
should leave its proper work, and make such havoc in that which belongs
not to it. But while he sits “talking with his mind,” his mood begins to
degenerate from sympathy with that which is good to indifference towards
all forms, and he feels inclined to rest quietly in the enjoyment of his
own religious confidence, and trouble himself in no wise about the faith
of his neighbours; for doubtless all are partakers of the central light,
though variously refracted by the varied translucency of the mental
prism....</p>
<p>“‘Twas the horrible storm began afresh!<br/>
The black night caught me in his mesh,<br/>
Whirled me up, and flung me prone!<br/>
I was left on the college-step alone.<br/>
I looked, and far there, ever fleeting<br/>
Far, far away, the receding gesture,<br/>
And looming of the lessening vesture,<br/>
Swept forward from my stupid hand,<br/>
While I watched my foolish heart expand<br/>
In the lazy glow of benevolence<br/>
O’er the various modes of man’s belief.<br/>
I sprang up with fear’s vehemence.<br/>
—Needs must there be one way, our chief<br/>
Best way of worship: let me strive<br/>
To find it, and when found, contrive<br/>
My fellows also take their share.<br/>
This constitutes my earthly care:<br/>
God’s is above it and distinct!”<br/></p>
<p>The symbolism in the former part of this extract is grand. As soon as he
ceases to look practically on the phenomena with which he is surrounded,
he is enveloped in storm and darkness, and sees only in the far distance
the disappearing skirt of his Lord’s garment. God’s care is over all, he
goes on to say; I must do <i>my part</i>. If I look speculatively on the
world, there is nothing but dimness and mystery. If I look practically on
it,</p>
<p>“No mere mote’s-breadth, but teems immense<br/>
With witnessings of Providence.”<br/></p>
<p>And whether the world which I seek to help censures or praises me—that
is nothing to me. My life—how is it with me?</p>
<p>“Soul of mine, hadst thou caught and held<br/>
By the hem of the vesture....<br/>
And I caught<br/>
At the flying robe, and, unrepelled,<br/>
Was lapped again in its folds full-fraught<br/>
With warmth and wonder and delight,<br/>
God’s mercy being infinite.<br/>
And scarce had the words escaped my tongue,<br/>
When, at a passionate bound, I sprung<br/>
Out of the wandering world of rain,<br/>
Into the little chapel again.”<br/></p>
<p>Had he dreamed? how then could he report of the sermon and the preacher?
of which and of whom he proceeds to give a very external account. But
correcting himself—</p>
<p>“Ha! Is God mocked, as He asks?<br/>
Shall I take on me to change his tasks,<br/>
And dare, despatched to a river-head<br/>
For a simple draught of the element,<br/>
Neglect the thing for which He sent,<br/>
And return with another thing instead!<br/>
Saying .... ‘Because the water found<br/>
Welling up from underground,<br/>
Is mingled with the taints of earth,<br/>
While Thou, I know, dost laugh at dearth,<br/>
And couldest, at a word, convulse<br/>
The world with the leap of its river-pulse,—<br/>
Therefore I turned from the oozings muddy,<br/>
And bring thee a chalice I found, instead.<br/>
See the brave veins in the breccia ruddy!<br/>
One would suppose that the marble bled.<br/>
What matters the water? A hope I have nursed,<br/>
That the waterless cup will quench my thirst.’<br/>
—Better have knelt at the poorest stream<br/>
That trickles in pain from the straitest rift!<br/>
For the less or the more is all God’s gift,<br/>
Who blocks up or breaks wide the granite seam.<br/>
And here, is there water or not, to drink?”<br/></p>
<p>He comes to the conclusion, that the best for him is that mode of worship
which partakes the least of human forms, and brings him nearest to the
spiritual; and, while expressing good wishes for the Pope and the
professor—</p>
<p>“Meantime, in the still recurring fear<br/>
Lest myself, at unawares, be found,<br/>
While attacking the choice of my neighbours round,<br/>
Without my own made—I choose here!”<br/></p>
<p>He therefore joins heartily in the hymn which is sung by the congregation
of the little chapel at the close of their worship. And this concludes the
poem.</p>
<p>What is the central point from which this poem can be regarded? It does
not seem to be very hard to find. Novalis has said: “Die Philosophie ist
eigentlich Heimweh, ein Trieb überall zu Hause zu sein.” (Philosophy is
really home-sickness, an impulse to be at home everywhere.) The life of a
man here, if life it be, and not the vain image of what might be a life,
is a continual attempt to find his place, his centre of recipiency, and
active agency. He wants to know where he is, and where he ought to be and
can be; for, rightly considered, the position a man ought to occupy is the
only one he truly <i>can</i> occupy. It is a climbing and striving to
reach that point of vision where the multiplex crossings and apparent
intertwistings of the lines of fact and feeling and duty shall manifest
themselves as a regular and symmetrical design. A contradiction, or a
thing unrelated, is foreign and painful to him, even as the rocky particle
in the gelatinous substance of the oyster; and, like the latter, he can
only rid himself of it by encasing it in the pearl-like enclosure of
faith; believing that hidden there lies the necessity for a higher theory
of the universe than has yet been generated in his soul. The quest for
this home-centre, in the man who has faith, is calm and ceaseless; in the
man whose faith is weak, it is stormy and intermittent. Unhappy is that
man, of necessity, whose perceptions are keener than his faith is strong.
Everywhere Nature herself is putting strange questions to him; the human
world is full of dismay and confusion; his own conscience is bewildered by
contradictory appearances; all which may well happen to the man whose eye
is not yet single, whose heart is not yet pure. He is not at home; his
soul is astray amid people of a strange speech and a stammering tongue.
But the faithful man is led onward; in the stillness that his confidence
produces arise the bright images of truth; and visions of God, which are
only beheld in solitary places, are granted to his soul.</p>
<p>“O struggling with the darkness all the night,<br/>
And visited all night by troops of stars!”<br/></p>
<p>What is true of the whole, is true of its parts. In all the relations of
life, in all the parts of the great whole of existence, the true man is
ever seeking his home. This poem seems to show us such a quest. “Here I am
in the midst of many who belong to the same family. They differ in
education, in habits, in forms of thought; but they are called by the same
name. What position with regard to them am I to assume? I am a Christian;
how am I to live in relation to Christians?” Such seems to be something
like the poet’s thought. What central position can he gain, which, while
it answers best the necessities of his own soul with regard to God, will
enable him to feel himself connected with the whole Christian world, and
to sympathize with all; so that he may not be alone, but one of the whole.
Certainly the position necessary for both requirements is one and the
same. He that is isolated from his brethren, loses one of the greatest
helps to draw near to God. Now, in this time, which is so peculiarly
transitional, this is a question of no little import for all who, while
they gladly forsake old, or rather <i>modern</i>, theories, for what is to
them a more full development of Christianity as well as a return to the
fountain-head, yet seek to be saved from the danger of losing sympathy
with those who are content with what they are compelled to abandon. Seeing
much in the common modes of thought and belief that is inconsistent with
Christianity, and even opposed to it, they yet cannot but see likewise in
many of them a power of spiritual good; which, though not dependent on the
peculiar mode, is yet enveloped, if not embodied, in that mode.</p>
<p>“Ask, else, these ruins of humanity,<br/>
This flesh worn out to rags and tatters,<br/>
This soul at struggle with insanity,<br/>
Who thence take comfort, can I doubt,<br/>
Which an empire gained, were a loss without.”<br/></p>
<p>The love of God is the soul of Christianity. Christ is the body of that
truth. The love of God is the creating and redeeming, the forming and
satisfying power of the universe. The love of God is that which kills evil
and glorifies goodness. It is the safety of the great whole. It is the
home-atmosphere of all life. Well does the poet of the “Christmas Eve”
say:—</p>
<p>“The loving worm within its clod,<br/>
Were diviner than a loveless God<br/>
Amid his worlds, I will dare to say.”<br/></p>
<p>Surely then, inasmuch as man is made in the image of God nothing less than
a love in the image of God’s love, all-embracing, quietly excusing,
heartily commending, can constitute the blessedness of man; a love not
insensible to that which is foreign to it, but overcoming it with good.
Where man loves in his kind, even as God loves in His kind, then man is
saved, then he has reached the unseen and eternal. But if, besides the
necessity to love that lies in a man, there be likewise in the man whom he
ought to love something in common with him, then the law of love has
increased force. If that point of sympathy lies at the centre of the being
of each, and if these centres are brought into contact, then the circles
of their being will be, if not coincident, yet concentric. We must wait
patiently for the completion of God’s great harmony, and meantime love
everywhere and as we can.</p>
<p>But the great lesson which this poem teaches, and which is taught more
directly in the “Easter Day” (forming part of the same volume), is that
the business of a man’s life is to be a Christian. A man has to do with
God first; in Him only can he find the unity and harmony he seeks. To be
one with Him is to be at the centre of things. If one acknowledges that
God has revealed himself in Christ; that God has recognized man as his
family, by appearing among them in their form; surely that very
acknowledgment carries with it the admission that man’s chief concern is
with this revelation. What does God say and mean, teach and manifest,
herein? If this world is God’s making, and he is present in all nature; if
he rules all things and is present in all history; if the soul of man is
in his image, with all its circles of thought and multiplicity of forms;
and if for man it be not enough to be rooted in God, but he must likewise
lay hold on God; then surely no question, in whatever direction, can be
truly answered, save by him who stands at the side of Christ. The doings
of God cannot be understood, save by him who has the mind of Christ, which
is the mind of God. All things must be strange to one who sympathizes not
with the thought of the Maker, who understands not the design of the
Artist. Where is he to begin? What light has he by which to classify? How
will he bring order out of this apparent confusion, when the order is
higher than his thought; when the confusion to him is <i>caused</i> by the
order’s being greater than he can comprehend? Because he stands outside
and not within, he sees an entangled maze of forces, where there is in
truth an intertwining dance of harmony. There is for no one any solution
of the world’s mystery, or of any part of its mystery, except he be able
to say with our poet:—</p>
<p>“I have looked to Thee from the beginning,<br/>
Straight up to Thee through all the world,<br/>
Which, like an idle scroll, lay furled<br/>
To nothingness on either side:<br/>
And since the time Thou wast descried,<br/>
Spite of the weak heart, so have I<br/>
Lived ever, and so fain would die,<br/>
Living and dying, Thee before!”<br/></p>
<p>Christianity is not the ornament, or even complement, of life; it is its
necessity; it is life itself glorified into God’s ideal.</p>
<p>Dr. Chalmers, from considering the minuteness of the directions given to
Moses for the making of the tabernacle, was led to think that he himself
was wrong in attending too little to the “<i>petite morale</i>” of dress.
Will this be excuse enough for occupying a few sentences with the rhyming
of this poem? Certainly the rhymes of a poem form no small part of its
artistic existence. Probably there is a deeper meaning in this part of the
poetic art than has yet been made clear to poet’s mind. In this poem the
rhymes have their share in its humorous charm. The writer’s power of using
double and triple rhymes is remarkable, and the effect is often pleasing,
even where they are used in the more solemn parts of the poem. Take the
lines:—</p>
<p>“No! love which, on earth, amid all the shows of it,<br/>
Has ever been seen the sole good of life in it,<br/>
The love, ever growing there, spite of the strife in it,<br/>
Shall arise, made perfect, from death’s repose of it.”<br/></p>
<p>A poem is a thing not for the understanding or heart only, but likewise
for the ear; or, rather, for the understanding and heart through the ear.
The best poem is best set forth when best read. If, then, there be rhymes
which, when read aloud, do, by their composition of words, prevent the
understanding from laying hold on the separate words, while the ear lays
hold on the rhymes, the perfection of the art must here be lost sight of,
notwithstanding the completeness which the rhyming manifests on close
examination. For instance, in “<i>equipt yours,” “Scriptures;”
“Manchester,” “haunches stir</i>;” or “<i>affirm any,” “Germany</i>;”
where two words rhyme with one word. But there are very few of them that
are objectionable on account of this difficulty and necessity of rapid
analysis.</p>
<p>One of the most wonderful things in the poem is, that so much of argument
is expressed in a species of verse, which one might be inclined, at first
sight, to think the least fitted for embodying it. But, in fact, the same
amount of argument in any other kind of verse would, in all likelihood,
have been intolerably dull as a work of art. Here the verse is full of
life and vigour, flagging never. Where, in several parts, the exact
meaning is difficult to reach, this results chiefly from the dramatic
rapidity and condensation of the thoughts. The argumentative power is
indeed wonderful; the arguments themselves powerful in their simplicity,
and embodied in words of admirable force. The poem is full of pathos and
humour; full of beauty and grandeur, earnestness and truth.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ESSAYS ON SOME OF THE FORMS OF LITERATURE </h2>
<p>[Footnote: “Essays on some of the Forms of Literature.” By T.T. Lynch,
Author of “Theophilus Trinal.” Longmans.]</p>
<p>Schoppe, the satiric chorus of Jean Paul’s romance of Titan, makes his
appearance at a certain masked ball, carrying in front of him a glass
case, in which the ball is remasked, repeated, and again reflected in a
mirror behind, by a set of puppets, ludicrously aping the apery of the
courtiers, whose whole life and outward manifestation was but a body-mask
mechanically moved with the semblance of real life and action. The court
simulates reality. The masks are a multiform mockery at their own
unreality, and as such are regarded by Schoppe, who takes them off with
the utmost ridicule in his masked puppet-show, which, with its reflection
in the mirror, is again indefinitely multiplied in the many-sided
reflector of Schoppe’s, or of Richter’s, or of the reader’s own
imagination. The successive retreating and beholding in this scene is
suggested to the reviewer by the fact that the last of these essays by Mr.
Lynch is devoted in part to reviews. So that the reviews review books,—Mr.
Lynch reviews the reviews, and the present Reviewer finds himself
(somewhat presumptuously, it may be) attempting to review Mr. Lynch. In
this, however, his office must be very different from that of Schoppe (for
there is a deeper and more real correspondence between the position of the
showman and the reviewer than that outward resemblance which first caused
the one to suggest the other). The latter’s office, in the present
instance, was, by mockery, to destroy the false, the very involution of
the satire adding to the strength of the ridicule. His glass case was
simply a review uttered by shapes and wires instead of words and
handwriting. And the work of the true critic must sometimes be to condemn,
and, as far as his strength can reach, utterly to destroy the false,—scorching
and withering its seeming beauty, till it is reduced to its essence and
original groundwork of dust and ashes. It is only, however, when it wears
the form of beauty which is the garment of truth, and so, like the
Erl-maidens, has power to bewitch, that it is worth the notice and attack
of the critic. Many forms of error, perhaps most, are better left alone to
die of their own weakness, for the galvanic battery of criticism only
helps to perpetuate their ghastly life. The highest work of the critic,
however, must surely be to direct attention to the true, in whatever form
it may have found utterance. But on this let us hear Mr. Lynch himself in
the last of these four lectures which were delivered by him at the Royal
Institution, Manchester, and are now before us in the form of a book:—</p>
<p>“The kritikos, the discerner, if he is ever saying to us, This is not
gold; and never, This is; is either very humbly useful, or very perverse,
or very unfortunate. This is not gold, he says. Thank you, we reply, we
perceived as much. And this is not, he adds. True, we answer, but we see
gold grains glittering out of its rude, dark mass. Well, at least, this is
not, he proceeds. Perverse man! we retort, are you seeking what is not
gold? We are inquiring for what is, and unfortunate indeed are we if, born
into a world of Nature, and of Spirit once so rich, we are born but to
find that it has spent or has lost all its wealth. Unhappy man would he
be, who, walking his garden, should scent only the earthy savour of leaves
dead or dying, never perceiving, and that afar off, the heavenly odour of
roses fresh to-day from the Maker’s hands. The discerning by spiritual
aroma may lead to discernment by the eye, and to that careful scrutiny,
and thence greater knowledge, of which the eye is instrument and
minister.”</p>
<p>And again:—</p>
<p>“The critic criticized, if dealt with in the worst fashion of his own
class, must be pronounced a mere monster, ‘seeking whom he may devour;’
and, therefore, to be hunted and slain as speedily as possible, and
stuffed for the museum, where he may be regarded with due horror, but in
safety. But if dealt with after the best fashion of his class, a very
honourable and beneficent office is assigned him, and he is warned only—though
zealously—against its perversions. A judicial chair in the kingdom
of human thought, filled by a man of true integrity, comprehensiveness,
and delicacy of spirit, is a seat of terror and praise, whose powers are
at once most fostering to whatever is good, most repressive of whatever is
evil.... The critic, in his office of censurer, has need so much to
controvert, expose, and punish, because of the abundance of literary
faults; and as there is a right and a wrong side in warfare, so there will
be in criticism. And as when soldiers are numerous, there will be not a
few who are only tolerable, if even that, so of critics. But then the
critic is more than the censurer; and in his higher and happier aspect
appears before us and serves us, as the discoverer, the vindicator, and
the eulogist of excellence.”</p>
<p>But resisting the temptation to quote further from Mr. Lynch’s book on
this matter of Criticism, which seemed the natural point of contact by
which the Reviewer could lay hold on the book, he would pass on with the
remark that his duty in the present instance is of the nobler and better
sort—nobler and better, that is, with regard to the object, for duty
in the man remains ever the same—namely, the exposition of
excellence, and not of its opposite. Mr. Lynch is a man of true insight
and large heart, who has already done good in the world, and will do more;
although, possibly, he belongs rather to the last class of writers
described by himself, in the extract I am about to give from this same
essay, than to any of the preceding:—</p>
<p>“Some of the best books are written avowedly, or with evident
consciousness of the fact, for the select public that is constituted by
minds of the deeper class, or minds the more advanced of their time. Such
books may have but a restricted circulation and limited esteem in their
own day, and may afterwards extend both their fame and the circle of their
readers. Others of the best books, written with a pathos and a power that
may be universally felt, appeal at once to the common humanity of the
world, and get a response marvellously strong and immediate. An ordinary
human eye and heart, whose glances are true, whose pulses healthy, will
fit us to say of much that we read—This is good, that is poor. But
only the educated eye and the experienced heart will fit us to judge of
what relates to matters veiled from ordinary observation, and belonging to
the profounder region of human thought and emotion. Powers, however, that
the few only possess, may be required to paint what everybody can see, so
that everybody shall say, How beautiful! how like! And powers adequate to
do this in the finest manner will be often adequate to do much more—may
produce, indeed, books or pictures, whose singular merit only the few
shall perceive, and the many for awhile deny, and books or pictures which,
while they give an immediate and pure pleasure to the common eye, shall
give a far fuller and finer pleasure to that eye that is the organ of a
deeper and more cultivated soul. There are, too, men of <i>peculiar</i>
powers, rare and fine, who can never hope to please the large public, at
least of their own age, but whose writings are a heart’s ease and heart’s
joy to the select few, and serve such as a cup of heavenly comfort for the
earth’s journey, and a lamp of heavenly light for the shadows of the way.”</p>
<p>One other extract from the general remarks on Books in this essay, and we
will turn to another:—</p>
<p>“In all our estimation of the various qualities of books, if it be true
that our reading assists our life, it is true also that our life assists
our reading. If we let our spirit talk to us in undistracted moments—if
we commune with friendly, serious Nature, face to face, often—if we
pursue honourable aims in a steady progress—if we learn how a man’s
best work falls below his thought, yet how still his failure prompts a
tenderer love of his thought—if we live in sincere, frank relations
with some few friends, joying in their joy, hearing the tale and sharing
the pain of their grief, and in frequent interchange of honest, household
sensibility—if we look about us on character, marking distinctly
what we can see, and feeling the prompting of a hundred questions
concerning what is out of our ken:—if we live thus, we shall be good
readers and critics of books, and improving ones.”</p>
<p>The second and third of these essays are on Biography and Fiction
respectively and principally; treating, however, of collateral subjects as
well. Deep is the relation between the life shadowed forth in a biography,
and the life in a man’s brain which he shadows forth in a fiction—when
that fiction is of the highest order, and written in love, is beheld even
by the writer himself with reverence. Delightful, surely, it must be; yes,
awful too, to read to-day the embodiment of a man’s noblest thought, to
follow the hero of his creation through his temptations, contests, and
victories, in a world which likewise is—</p>
<p>“All made out of the carver’s brain;”<br/></p>
<p>and to-morrow to read the biography of this same writer. What of his own
ideal has he realized? Where can the life-fountain be detected within him
which found issue to the world’s light and air, in this ideal self? Shall
God’s fiction, which is man’s reality, fall short of man’s fiction? Shall
a man be less than what he can conceive and utter? Surely it will not,
cannot end thus. If a man live at all in harmony with the great laws of
being—if he will permit the working out of God’s idea in him, he
must one day arrive at something greater than what now he can project and
behold. Yet, in biography, we do not so often find traces of those
struggles depicted in the loftier fiction. One reason may be that the
contest is often entirely within, and so a man may have won his spiritual
freedom without any outward token directly significant of the victory;
except, if he be an artist, such expression as it finds in fiction,
whether the fiction be in marble, or in sweet harmonies, or in ink. Nor
can we determine the true significance of any living act; for being
ourselves within the compass of the life-mystery, we cannot hold it at
arm’s length from us and look at its lines of configuration. Nor of a life
can we in any measure determine the success by what we behold of it. It is
to us at best but a truncated spire, whose want of completion may be the
greater because of the breadth of its base, and its slow taper, indicating
the lofty height to which it is intended to aspire. The idea of our own
life is more than we can embrace. It is not ours, but God’s, and fades
away into the infinite. Our comprehension is finite; we ourselves
infinite. We can only trust in God and do the truth; then, and then only,
is our life safe, and sure both of continuance and development.</p>
<p>But the reviewer perhaps too often merely steals his author’s text and
writes upon it; or, like a man who lies in bed thinking about a dream till
its folds enwrap him and he sinks into the midst of its visions, he
forgets his position of beholding, and passes from observation into
spontaneous utterance. What says our author about “biography,
autobiography, and history?” This lecture has pleased the reviewer most of
the four. Reading it in a lonely place, under a tree, with wide fields and
slopes around, it produced on his mind the two effects which perhaps Mr.
Lynch would most wish it should produce—namely, first, a longing to
lead a more true and noble life; and, secondly, a desire to read more
biography. Nor can he but hope that it must produce the same effect on
every earnest reader, on every one whose own biography would not be
altogether a blank in what regards the individual will and spiritual aim.</p>
<p>“In meditative hours, when we blend despair of ourself with complaint of
the world, the biography of a man successful in this great business of
living is as the visit of an angel sent to strengthen us. Give the soldier
his sword, the farmer his plough, the carpenter his hammer and nails, the
manufacturer his machines, the merchant his stores, and the scholar his
books; these are but implements; the man is more than his work or tools.
How far has he fulfilled the law of his being, and attained its desire? Is
his life a whole; the days as threads and as touches; the life, the
well-woven garment, the well-painted picture? Which of two sacrifices has
he offered—the one so acceptable to the powers of dark worlds, the
other so acceptable to powers of bright ones—that of soul to body,
or that of body to soul? Has he slain what was holiest in him to obtain
gifts from Fashion or Mammon? Or has he, in days so arduous, so assiduous,
that they are like a noble army of martyrs, made burnt-offering of what
was secondary, throwing into the flames the salt of true moral energy and
the incense of cordial affections? We want the work to show us by its
parts, its mass, its form, the qualities of the man, and to see that the
man is perfected through his work as well as the work finished by his
effort.”</p>
<p>Perhaps the highest moral height which a man can reach, and at the same
time the most difficult of attainment, is the willingness to be <i>nothing</i>
relatively, so that he attain that positive excellence which the original
conditions of his being render not merely possible, but imperative. It is
nothing to a man to be greater or less than another—to be esteemed
or otherwise by the public or private world in which he moves. Does he, or
does he not, behold, and love, and live, the unchangeable, the essential,
the divine? This he can only do according as God hath made him. He can
behold and understand God in the least degree, as well as in the greatest,
only by the godlike within him; and he that loves thus the good and great,
has no room, no thought, no necessity for comparison and difference. The
truth satisfies him. He lives in its absoluteness. God makes the glow-worm
as well as the star; the light in both is divine. If mine be an earth-star
to gladden the wayside, I must cultivate humbly and rejoicingly its green
earth-glow, and not seek to blanch it to the whiteness of the stars that
lie in the fields of blue. For to deny God in my own being is to cease to
behold him in any. God and man can meet only by the man’s becoming that
which God meant him to be. Then he enters into the house of life, which is
greater than the house of fame. It is better to be a child in a green
field than a knight of many orders in a state ceremonial.</p>
<p>“One biography may help conjecture or satisfy reason concerning the story
of a thousand unrecorded lives. And how few even of the deserving among
the multitude can deserve, as ‘dear sons of memory,’ to be shrined in the
public heart. Few of us die unwept, but most of us unwritten. We shall
find a grave—less certainly a tombstone—and with much less
likelihood a biographer. Those ‘bright particular’ stars that at evening
look towards us from afar, yet still are individual in the distance, are
at clearest times but about a thousand; but the milky lustre that runs
through mid heaven is composed of a million million lights, which are not
the less separate because seen undistinguishably. Absorbed, not lost, in
the multitude of the unrecorded, our private dear ones make part in this
mild, blissful shining of the ‘general assembly,’ the great congregation
of the skies. Thus the past is aglow with the unwritten, the nameless. The
leaders, sons of fame, conspicuous in lustre, eminent in place; these are
the few, whose great individuality burns with distinct, starry light
through the dark of ages. Such stars, without the starry way, would not
teach us the vastness of heaven; and the ‘way,’ without these, were not
sufficient to gladden and glorify the night with pomp of Hierarchical
Ascents of Domination.”</p>
<p>There are many passages in this essay with which the reviewer would be
glad to enrich his notice of the book, but limitation of space, and
perhaps justice to the essay itself, which ought to be read in its own
completeness, forbid. Mr. Lynch looks to the heart of the matter, and
makes one put the question—“Would not a biography written by Mr.
Lynch himself be a valuable addition to this kind of literature?” His
would not be an interesting account of outward events and relationships
and progress, nor even a succession of revelations of inward conditions,
but we should expect to find ourselves elevated by him to a point of view
from which the life of the man would assume an artistic individuality, as
it were an isolation of existence; for the supposed author could not
choose for his regard any biography for which this would be impossible; or
in which the reticulated nerves of purpose did not combine the whole, with
more or less of success, into a true and remarkable unity. One passage
more from this essay,—</p>
<p>“Biography, then, makes life known to us as more wealthy in character, and
much more remarkable in its every-day stories, than we had deemed it.
Another good it does us is this. It introduces us to some of our most
agreeable and stimulative friendships. People may be more beneficially
intimate with one they never saw than even with a neighbour or brother.
Many a solitary, puzzled, incommunicative person, has found society
provided, his riddle read, and his heart’s secret, that longed and strove
for utterance, outspoken for him in a biography. And both a love purer
than any yet entertained may be originated, and a pure but ungratified
love already existing, find an object, by the visit of a biography. In
actual life you see your friend to-day, and will see him again to-morrow
or next year; but in the dear book, you have your friend and all his
experiences at once and ever. He is with you wholly, and may be with you
at any time. He lives for you, and has already died for you, to give
finish to the meaning, fulness, and sanctity, to the comfort of his days.
He is mysteriously above as well as before you, by this fact, that he has
died. Thus your intimate is your superior, your solace, but your support,
too, and an example of the victory to which he calls you. His end, or her
end, is our own in view, and the flagging spirit revives. We see the goal,
and gird our loins anew for the race. Or, speaking of things minor, there
is fresh prospect of the game, there is companionship in the hunt, and
spirit for the winning. Such biography, too, is a mirror in which we see
ourselves; and we see that we may trim or adorn, or that the plain signs
of our deficient health or ill-ruled temper may set us to look for, and to
use the means of improvement. But such a mirror is as a water one; in
which first you may see your face, and which then becomes for you a bath
to wash away the stains you see, and to offer its pure, cool stream as a
restorative and cosmetic for your wrinkles and pallors. And what a
pleasure there will be sometimes as we peruse a biography, in finding
another who is so like ourself—saying the same things, feeling the
same dreads, and shames, and flutterings; hampered and harassed much as
poor self is. Then, the escapes of such a friend give us hope of
deliverance for ourself; and his better, or if not better, yet rewarded,
patience, freshens our eye and sinews, and puts a staff into our hand. And
certain seals of impossibility that we had put on this stone, and on that,
beneath which our hopes lay buried, are by this biography, as by a
visiting angel, effectually broken, and our hopes arise again. Our view of
life becomes more complete because we see the whole of his, or of hers. We
view life, too, in a more composed, tender way. Wavering faith, in its
chosen determining principles, is confirmed. In quiet comparison of
ourselves with one of our own class, or one who has made the mark for
which we are striving, we are shamed to have done no better, and stirred
to attempt former things again, or fresh ones in a stronger and more
patient spirit.”</p>
<p>It is, indeed, well with him who has found a friend whose spirit touches
his own and illuminates it.</p>
<p>“I missed him when the sun began to bend;<br/>
I found him not when I had lost his rim;<br/>
With many tears I went in search of him,<br/>
Climbing high mountains which did still ascend,<br/>
And gave me echoes when I called my friend;<br/>
Through cities vast and charnel-houses grim,<br/>
And high cathedrals where the light was dim;<br/>
Through books, and arts, and works without an end—<br/>
But found him not, the friend whom I had lost.<br/>
And yet I found him, as I found the lark,<br/>
A sound in fields I heard but could not mark;<br/>
I found him nearest when I missed him most,<br/>
I found him in my heart, a life in frost,<br/>
A light I knew not till my soul was dark.”<br/></p>
<p>Next to possessing a true, wise, and victorious friend seated by your
fireside, it is blessed to have the spirit of such a friend embodied—for
spirit can assume any embodiment—on your bookshelves. But in the
latter case the friendship is all on one side. For full friendship your
friend must love you, and know that you love him. Surely these biographies
are not merely spiritual links connecting us in the truest manner with
past times and vanished minds, and thus producing strong half friendships.
Are they not likewise links connecting us with a future, wherein these
souls shall dawn upon ours, rising again from the death of the past into
the life of our knowledge and love? Are not these biographies letters of
introduction, forwarded, but not yet followed by him whom they introduce,
for whose step we listen, and whose voice we long to hear; and whom we
shall yet meet somewhere in the Infinite? Shall I not one day, “somewhere,
somehow,” clasp the large hand of Novalis, and, gazing on his face,
compare his features with those of Saint John?</p>
<p>The essay on light literature must be left to the spontaneous appreciation
of those who are already acquainted with this book, or who may be induced,
by the representations here made, to become acquainted with it. Before
proceeding to notice the first essay in the little volume, namely, that on
Poetry, its subject suggests the fact of the publication of a second
edition of the Memorials of Theophilus Trinal, by the same author, a
portion of which consists of interspersed poems. These are of true poetic
worth; and although in some cases wanting in rhythmic melody, yet in most
of these cases they possess a wild and peculiar rhythm of their own. The
reviewer knows of some whose hearts this book has made glad, and doubtless
there are many such.</p>
<p>The essay on Poetry is itself poetic throughout in its expression. And how
else shall Poetry be described than by Poetry? What form shall embrace and
define the highest? Must it not be self-descriptive as self-existent? For
what man is to this planet, what the eye is to man himself, Poetry is to
Literature. Yet one can hardly help wishing that the poetic forms in this
Essay were fewer and less minute, and the whole a little more scientific;
though it is a question how far we have a right to ask for this. As you
open it, however, the pages seem absolutely to sparkle, as if strewn with
diamond sparks. It is no dull, metallic, surface lustre, but a shining
from within, as well as from the superficies. Still one cannot deny that
fancy is too prominent in Mr. Lynch’s writings. It is true that his Fancy
is the fairy attendant on his Imagination, which latter uses the former
for her own higher ends; and that there is little or no <i>mere</i> fancy
to be found in his books; for if you look below the surface-form you find
a truth. But it were to be desired that the Truth clothed herself always
in the living forms of Imagination, and thus walked forth amongst her
worshippers, looking on them from living eyes, rather than that she should
show herself through the windows of fancy. Sometimes there may be an
offence against taste, as in page 20; sometimes an image may be expanded
too much, and sometimes the very exuberance of imaginative fancy (if the
combination be correct) may lead to an association of images that suggests
incongruity. Still the essay is abundantly beautiful and true. The
poetical quotations are not isolated, or exposed to view as specimens, but
are worked into the web of the prose like the flowers in the damask, and
do their part in the evolution of the continuous thought.</p>
<p>“If poetry, as light from the heart of God, is for our heart, that we may
brighten and distinguish individual things; if it is to transfigure for us
the round, dusk world as by an inner radiance; if it is to present human
life and history as Rembrandt pictures, in which darkness serves and
glorifies light; if, like light, formless in its essence, all things
shapen towards the perfection of their forms under its influence; if,
entering as through crevices in single beams, it makes dimmest places
cheerful and sacred with its golden touch: then must the heart of the Poet
in which this true light shineth be as a hospice on the mountain pathways
of the world, and his verse must be the lamp seen from far that burns to
tell us where bread and shelter, drink, fire, and companionship, may be
found; and he himself should have the mountaineer’s hardiness and
resolution. From the heart as source, to the heart in influence, Poetry
comes. The inward, the upward, and the onward, whether we speak of an
individual or a nation, may not be separated in our consideration. Deep
and sacred imaginative meditations are needed for the true earthward as
well as for the heavenward progress of men and peoples. And Poetry,
whether old or new, streaming from the heart moved by the powerful spirit
of love, has influence on the heart public and individual, and thence on
the manners, laws, and institutions of nations. If Poesy visit the length
and breadth of a country after years unfruitfully dull, coming like a
showery fertilizing wind after drought, the corners and the valley-hidings
are visited too, and these perhaps she now visits first, as these
sometimes she has visited only. For miles and for miles, the public corn,
the bread of the nation’s life, is bettered; and in our own endeared spot,
the roses, delight of our individual eye and sense, yield us more
prosperingly their colour and their fragrance. For the universal sunshine
which brightens a thousand cities, beautifies ten thousand homesteads, and
rejoices ten times ten thousand hearts. And as rains in the mid season
renew for awhile the faded greenness of spring; and trees in fervent
summers, when their foliage has deepened or fully fixed its hue, bedeck
themselves through the fervency with bright midsummer shoots; so, by
Poetry are the youthful hues of the soul renewed, and truths that have
long stood full-foliaged in our minds, are by its fine influences
empowered to put forth fresh shoots. Thus age, which is a necessity for
the body, may be warded off as a disease from the soul, and we may be like
the old man in Chaucer, who had nothing hoary about him but his hairs—</p>
<p>“‘Though I be hoor I fare as doth a tree<br/>
That blosmeth er the fruit ywoxen be,<br/>
The blosmy tree n’ is neither drie ne ded:<br/>
I feel me nowhere hoor, but on my head.<br/>
Min herte and all my limmes ben as grene<br/>
As laurel through the yere is for to sene.’”<br/></p>
<p>Hear our author again as to the calling of the poet:—</p>
<p>“To unite earthly love and celestial—‘true to the kindred points of
heaven and home;’ to reconcile time and eternity; to draw presage of joy’s
victory from the delight of the secret honey dropping from the clefts of
rocky sorrow; <i>to harmonize our instinctive longings for the definite
and the infinite, in the ideal Perfect</i>; to read creation as a human
book of the heart, both plain and mystical, and divinely written: such is
the office fulfilled by best-loved poets. Their ladder of celestial ascent
must be fixed on its base, earth, if its top is to securely rest on
heaven.”</p>
<p>Beautifully, too, does he describe the birth of Poetry; though one may
doubt its correctness, at least if attributed to the highest kind of
poetry.</p>
<p>“When words of felt truth were first spoken by the first pair, in love of
their garden, their God, and one another, and these words were with joyful
surprise felt to be in their form and glow answerable to the happy thought
uttered; then Poetry sprang. And when the first Father and first Mother,
settling their soul upon its thought, found that thought brighten; and
when from it, as thus they mused, like branchlets from a branch, or
flowerets from their bud, other thoughts came, ranging themselves by the
exerted, yet painlessly exerted, power of the soul, in an order felt to be
beautiful, and of a sound pleasant in utterance to ear and soul; being
withal, through the sweetness of their impression on the heart, fixed for
memory’s frequentest recurrence; then was the world’s first poem composed,
and in the joyful flutter of a heart that had thus become a maker, the
maker of a ‘thing of beauty,’ like in beauty even unto God’s heaven, and
trees, and flowers, the secret of Poesy shone tremulously forth.”</p>
<p>Whether this be so or not, the highest poetic feeling of which we are now
conscious springs not from the beholding of perfected beauty, but from the
mute sympathy which the creation with all its children manifests with us
in the groaning and travailing which looketh for the sonship. Because of
our need and aspiration, the snowdrop gives birth in our hearts to a
loftier spiritual and poetic feeling, than the rose most complete in form,
colour, and odour. The rose is of Paradise—the snowdrop is of the
striving, hoping, longing Earth. Perhaps our highest poetry is the
expression of our aspirations in the sympathetic forms of visible nature.
Nor is this merely a longing for a restored Paradise; for even in the
ordinary history of men, no man or woman that has fallen can be restored
to the position formerly occupied. Such must rise to a yet higher place,
whence they can behold their former standing far beneath their feet. They
must be restored by attaining something better than they ever possessed
before, or not at all. If the law be a weariness, we must escape it by
being filled with the spirit, for not otherwise can we fulfil the law than
by being above the law. There is for us no escape, save as the Poet
counsels us:—</p>
<p>“Is thy strait horizon dreary?<br/>
Is thy foolish fancy chill?<br/>
Change the feet that have grown weary,<br/>
For the wings that never will.<br/>
Burst the flesh and live the spirit;<br/>
Haunt the beautiful and far;<br/>
Thou hast all things to inherit,<br/>
And a soul for every star.”<br/></p>
<p>But the Reviewer must hasten to take leave, though unwillingly, of this
pleasing, earnest, and profitable book. Perhaps it could be wished that
the writer helped his readers a little more into the channel of his
thought; made it easier for them to see the direction in which he is
leading them; called out to them, “Come up hither,” before he said, “I
will show you a thing.” But the Reviewer says this with deference; and
takes his leave with the hope that Mr. Lynch will be listened to for two
good reasons: first, that he speaks the truth; last, that he has already
suffered for the Truth’s sake.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> THE HISTORY AND HEROES OF MEDICINE. </h2>
<p>[Footnote: By J. Rutherfurd Russell, M.D.]</p>
<p>In this volume, Dr. Russell has not merely aimed at the production of a
book that might be serviceable to the Faculty, by which the history of its
own art is not at all sufficiently studied, but has aspired to the far
more difficult success of writing a history of medicine which shall be
readable to all who care for true history—that history, namely, in
which not merely growth and change are represented, but the secret
supplies and influences as well, which minister to the one and occasion
the other. If the difficulty has been greater (although with his evidently
wide sympathies and keen insight into humanity we doubt if it has), the
success is the more honourable; for a success it certainly is. The
partially biographical plan on which he has constructed his work has no
doubt aided in the accomplishment of this purpose; for it is much easier
to present the subject in its human relations, when its history is given
in connexion with the lives of those who were most immediately associated
with it. But it would be a great mistake to conclude from this, that it is
the less a history of the art itself; for no art or science has life in
itself, apart from the minds which foresee, discover, and verify it.
Whatever point in its progress it may have reached, it will there remain
until a new man appears, whose new questions shall illicit new replies
from nature—replies which are the essential food of the science, by
which it lives, grows, and makes itself a history.</p>
<p>Nor must our readers suppose that because the book is readable, it is
therefore slight, either in material or construction. Much reading and
research have provided the material, while real thought and argument have
superintended the construction. Nor is it by any means without the
adornment that a poetic temperament and a keen sense of humour can supply.</p>
<p>Naturally, the central life in the book is that of Lord Bacon, the man who
brought out of his treasures things both new and old. Up to him the story
gradually leads from the prehistoric times of Aesculapius, the pathway
first becoming plainly visible in the life and labours of Hippocrates. His
fine intellect and powers of acute observation afforded the material
necessary for the making of a true physician. The Greek mind, partly,
perhaps, from its artistic tendencies, seems to have been peculiarly
impatient of incomplete forms, and therefore, to have much preferred the
construction of a theory from the most shadowy material, to the patient
experiment and investigation necessary for the procuring of the real
substance; and Hippocrates, not knowing how to advance to a theory by
rational experiment, and too honest to invent one, assumes the traditional
theories, founded on the vaguest and most obtrusive generalizations. Those
which his experience taught him to reject, were adopted and maintained by
Galen and all who followed him for centuries, the chief instance of
progress being only the substitution by the Arabians of some of the milder
medicines now in use, for the terrible and often fatal drugs employed by
the Greek and Roman physicians. The fanciful classification of diseases
into four kinds—hot, cold, moist and dry, with the corresponding
arbitrary classification of remedies to be administered by contraries,
continued to be the only recognized theory of medicine for many centuries
after the Christian era.</p>
<p>But Lord Bacon, amongst other branches of knowledge which he considers
ill-followed, makes especial mention of medicine, which he would submit to
the same rules of observation and experiment laid down by him for the
advancement of learning in general. With regard to it, as with regard to
the discovery of all the higher laws of nature, he considers “that men
have made too untimely a departure, and too remote a recess from
particulars.” Men have hurried to conclusions, and then argued from them
as from facts. Therefore let us have no traditional theories, and make
none for ourselves but such as are revealed in the form of laws to the
patient investigator, who has “straightened and held fast Proteus, that he
might be compelled to change his shapes,” and so reveal his nature. Hence
one of the aspects in which Lord Bacon was compelled to appear was that of
a destroyer of what preceded. In this he resembled Cardan and Paracelsus
who went before him, and who like him pulled down, but could not, like
him, build up. He resembled them, however, in the possession of another
element of character, namely, that poetic imagination which looks abroad
into the regions of possibilities, and foresees or invents. But in the
case of the charlatan, the vaguest suggestions of his mind in its
favourite mood, is adopted as a theory all but proved, if not as a direct
revelation to the favoured individual; while the true thinker seeks but an
hypothesis corresponding in some measure to facts already discovered, in
order that he may have the suggestion of new experiments and
investigations in the course of his attempts to verify or disprove the
hypothesis. Lord Bacon considered hypothesis invaluable in the discovery
of truth, but he only used it as a board upon which to write his questions
to nature; or, to use another figure, hypothesis with him is as the next
stepping-stone in the swollen river, which he supposes to be here or
there, and so feels for with his staff. But it must be proved before it be
regarded as a law, and greatly corroborated before it be even adopted as a
theory. Cardan and Paracelsus were destroyers and mystics only; they
destroyed on the earth that they might build in the air: Lord Bacon united
both characters in the philosopher. He looked abroad into the regions of
the unknown, whence all knowledge comes; he called wonder the seed of
knowledge; but he would build nowhere but on the earth—on the firm
land of ascertained truth. That which kept him right was his practical
humanity. It was for the sake of delivering men from the ills of life, by
discovering the laws of the elements amidst which that life must be led,
that he laboured and thought. This object kept him true, made him able to
discover the very laws of discovery; brought him so far into <i>rapport</i>
with the heart of nature herself, that, like a physical prophet, his
seeing could outspeed his knowing, and behold a law—dimly, it is
true, but yet behold it—long before his intellect, which had to
build bridges and find straw to make the bricks, could dare to affirm its
approach to the same conclusion. Truth to humanity made him true to fact;
and truth to fact made him true in theory.</p>
<p>It was in this spirit of devotion to his kind that he said, “Therefore
here is the deficience which I find, that physicians have not ... set down
and delivered over certain experimental medicines for the cure of
particular diseases.”</p>
<p>Dr. Russell’s true insight into the relation of Lord Bacon to the medical
as well as to all science, has suggested the above remarks. What our
author chiefly desires is, that the same principles which made medicine
what it is, should be allowed to carry it yet further, and make it what it
ought to be, and must become. As he goes on to show, through succeeding
lives and theories, that just in proportion as these principles have been
followed—the principles of careful observation, hypothesis, and
experiment—have men made discoveries that have been helpful to their
fellow-men; while, on the other hand, the most elaborate theories of the
most popular physicians, which have owed their birth to premature
generalization and invention, have passed away, like the crackling of
thorns under a pot. Belonging to the latter class of men, we have Stahl,
Hoffman, Boerhaave, Cullen, and Brown; while to the former belong Harvey,
Sydenham, Jenner, and Hahnemann.</p>
<p>After the last name, there is no need to say that our author is a
homoeopath. Whatever may be our private opinion of the system, justice
requires that we should say at least that books such as these are quite as
open to refutation as to ridicule; for it is only a good argument that is
worth refuting by a better. But we fear there are few books on this
subject that treat of it with the calmness and fairness which would
incline an honest homoeopath to put them into the hands of one of the
opposite party as an exposition of his opinions. There is no excitement in
these pages. They are the work of a man of liberal education, of
refinement, and of truthfulness, with power to understand, and facility to
express; one of whose main objects is to vindicate for homoeopathy, on the
most rightful of all grounds—those on which alone science can stand—on
the ground, that is, of laws discovered by observation and experiment—the
place not only of a fact in the history of medicine, but the right to be
considered as one of the greatest advances towards the establishment of a
science of curing. Certainly if he and the rest of its advocates should
fail utterly in this, the heresy will yet have established for itself a
memorial in history, as one of the most powerful illusions that have ever
deceived both priests and people. But the chief advantage which the system
will derive from Dr. Russell’s book will spring, it seems to us, from his
attempt—a successful one it must be confessed—to prove <i>that
homoeopathy is a development, and not a mere reaction</i>; that it has its
roots far down in the history of science. The first mention of it in the
book, however, is made for the purpose of disavowing the claim, advanced
by many homoeopathists, to Hippocrates as one of their order. Not to
mention the curious story about Galen and the patient ill from an overdose
of theriacum, who was cured by another dose of the same substance, nor the
ridicule of the doctrine of contraries by Paracelsus and Van Helmont, nor
the fact that the <i>contraries</i> of Boerhaave, by his own explanation,
merely signify whatever substances prove their contrariety to the disease
by curing it—to pass by these, we find one of the main objects of
homoeopathy, the discovery of specifics, insisted upon by Lord Bacon in
his words already quoted. Not that homoeopaths, while they depend upon
specifics, believe that there is any such thing as a specific for a
disease—a disease being as various as the individuality of the human
beings whom it may attack; but that an approximate specific may be found
for every well-defined stage in every individual disease; a disease having
its process of change, development, and decline, like a vegetable or
animal life. Besides an equally strong desire for specifics, and a
determined opposition to compound medicines, Boyle, who was born the year
of Bacon’s death, and inherited the mantle of the great philosopher,
manifests a strong belief in the power of the infinitesimal dose. Neither
Bacon nor Boyle, however, were medical men by profession. But Sydenham
followed them, according to Dr. Russell, in their tendency towards
specifics. It is almost needless to mention Jenner’s victory over the
small-pox as, in the eyes of the homoeopaths, a grand step in the
development of their system. It gives Dr. Russell an opportunity of
showing in a strong instance that the best discoveries for delivering
mankind from those ills even of which they are most sensible have been
received with derision, with more than bare unbelief. This is one of his
objects in the book, and while it is no proof whatever of the truth of
homoepathy, it shows at least that the opposition manifested to it is no
proof of its falsehood. This is enough; for it seeks to be tried on its
own merits; and its foes are bound to accord it this when it is advocated
in such an honest and dignified manner as in the book before us.</p>
<p>The need of man, in physics as well as in higher things, is the guide to
truth. With evils of any sort we need no further acquaintance than may be
gained in the endeavour to combat them. The discovery of what will cure
diseases seems the only natural mode of rising by generalization to the
discovery of the laws of cure and the nature of disease.</p>
<p>Those portions of the volume which discuss the influence of Christianity
on the healing art, likewise those relating to the different feelings with
which at different times in different countries physicians have been
regarded, are especially interesting.</p>
<p>The only portion of the book we should be inclined to find fault with, as
to the quality of the thought expended upon it, is the dissertation in the
second chapter on the [Greek: psuchae] and [Greek: pneuma]. We doubt
likewise whether the author gives the Archaeus of Van Helmont quite fair
play; but these are questions so purely theoretical that they scarcely
admit of discussion here. We rise from the perusal of the book, whatever
may be our feelings with regard to the truth or falsehood of the system it
advocates, with increased respect for the profession of medicine, with
enlarged hope for its future, and with a strong feeling of the nobility
conferred by the art upon every one of its practitioners who is aware of
the dignity of his calling.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> WORDSWORTH’S POETRY </h2>
<p>[Footnote: Delivered extempore at Manchester.]</p>
<p>The history of the poetry of Wordsworth is a true reflex of the man
himself. The life of Wordsworth was not outwardly eventful, but his inner
life was full of conflict, discovery, and progress. His outward life seems
to have been so ordered by Providence as to favour the development of the
poetic life within. Educated in the country, and spending most of his life
in the society of nature, he was not subjected to those violent external
changes which have been the lot of some poets. Perfectly fitted as he was
to cope with the world, and to fight his way to any desired position, he
chose to retire from it, and in solitude to work out what appeared to him
to be the true destiny of his life.</p>
<p>The very element in which the mind of Wordsworth lived and moved was a
Christian pantheism. Allow me to explain the word. The poets of the Old
Testament speak of everything as being the work of God’s hand:—We
are the “work of his hand;” “The world was made by him.” But in the New
Testament there is a higher form used to express the relation in which we
stand to him—“We are his offspring;” not the work of his hand, but
the children that came forth from his heart. Our own poet Goldsmith, with
the high instinct of genius, speaks of God as having “loved us into
being.” Now I think this is not only true with regard to man, but true
likewise with regard to the world in which we live. This world is not
merely a thing which God hath made, subjecting it to laws; but it is an
expression of the thought, the feeling, the heart of God himself. And so
it must be; because, if man be the child of God, would he not feel to be
out of his element if he lived in a world which came, not from the heart
of God, but only from his hand? This Christian pantheism, this belief that
God is in everything, and showing himself in everything, has been much
brought to the light by the poets of the past generation, and has its
influence still, I hope, upon the poets of the present. We are not
satisfied that the world should be a proof and varying indication of the
intellect of God. That was how Paley viewed it. He taught us to believe
there is a God from the mechanism of the world. But, allowing all the
argument to be quite correct, what does it prove? A mechanical God, and
nothing more.</p>
<p>Let us go further; and, looking at beauty, believe that God is the first
of artists; that he has put beauty into nature, knowing how it will affect
us, and intending that it should so affect us; that he has embodied his
own grand thoughts thus that we might see them and be glad. Then, let us
go further still, and believe that whatever we feel in the highest moments
of truth shining through beauty, whatever comes to our souls as a power of
life, is meant to be seen and felt by us, and to be regarded not as the
work of his hand, but as the flowing forth of his heart, the flowing forth
of his love of us, making us blessed in the union of his heart and ours.</p>
<p>Now, Wordsworth is the high priest of nature thus regarded. He saw God
present everywhere; not always immediately, in his own form, it is true;
but whether he looked upon the awful mountain-peak, sky-encompassed with
loveliness, or upon the face of a little child, which is as it were eyes
in the face of nature—in all things he felt the solemn presence of
the Divine Spirit. By Keats this presence was recognized only as the
spirit of beauty; to Wordsworth, God, as the Spirit of Truth, was
manifested through the forms of the external world.</p>
<p>I have said that the life of Wordsworth was so ordered as to bring this
out of him, in the forms of <i>his</i> art, to the ears of men. In
childhood even his conscience was partly developed through the influences
of nature upon him. He thus retrospectively describes this special
influence of nature:—</p>
<p>One summer evening (led by her) I found<br/>
A little boat, tied to a willow tree,<br/>
Within a rocky cave, its usual home.<br/>
Straight I unloosed her chain, and stepping in,<br/>
Pushed from the shore. It was an act of stealth,<br/>
And troubled pleasure, nor without the voice<br/>
Of mountain echoes did my boat move on,<br/>
Leaving behind her still, on either side,<br/>
Small circles glittering idly in the moon,<br/>
Until they melted all into one track<br/>
Of sparkling light. But now, like one who rows<br/>
Proud of his skill, to reach a chosen point<br/>
With an unswerving line, I fixed my view<br/>
Upon the summit of a craggy ridge,<br/>
The horizon’s utmost boundary; far above<br/>
Was nothing but the stars and the grey sky.<br/>
She was an elfin pinnace; lustily<br/>
I dipped my oars into the silent lake,<br/>
And, as I rose upon the stroke, my boat<br/>
Went heaving through the water like a swan;<br/>
When, from behind that craggy steep, till then<br/>
The horizon’s bound, a huge peak, black and huge,<br/>
As if with voluntary power instinct,<br/>
Upreared its head. I struck and struck again,<br/>
And, growing still in stature, the grim shape<br/>
Towered up between me and the stars, and still<br/>
For so it seemed, with purpose of its own,<br/>
And measured motion like a living thing,<br/>
Strode after me. With trembling oars I turned,<br/>
And through the silent water stole my way<br/>
Back to the covert of the willow tree;<br/>
There in her mooring place I left my bark,<br/>
And through the meadows homeward went, in grave<br/>
And serious mood; but after I had seen<br/>
That spectacle, for many days, my brain<br/>
Worked with a dim and undetermined sense<br/>
Of unknown modes of being; o’er my thoughts<br/>
There hung a darkness, call it solitude,<br/>
Or blank desertion. No familiar shapes<br/>
Remained, no pleasant images of trees,<br/>
Of sea, or sky, no colours of green fields;<br/>
But huge and mighty forms, that do not live<br/>
Like living men, moved slowly through the mind<br/>
By day, and were a trouble to my dreams.<br/></p>
<p>Here we see that a fresh impulse was given to his life even in boyhood, by
the influence of nature. If we have had any similar experience, we shall
be able to enter into this feeling of Wordsworth’s; if not, the tale will
be almost incredible.</p>
<p>One passage more I would refer to, as showing what Wordsworth felt with
regard to nature, in his youth; and the growth that took place in him in
consequence. Nature laid up in the storehouse of his mind and heart her
most beautiful and grand forms, whence they might be brought, afterwards,
to be put to the highest human service. I quote only a few lines from that
poem, deservedly a favourite with all the lovers of Wordsworth, “Lines
written above Tintern Abbey:”—</p>
<p>I cannot paint<br/>
What then I was. The sounding cataract<br/>
Haunted me like a passion; the tall rock,<br/>
The mountain, and the deep and gloomy wood,<br/>
Their colours and their forms, were then to me<br/>
An appetite; a feeling and a love,<br/>
That had no need of a remoter charm<br/>
By thought supplied, nor any interest<br/>
Unborrowed from the eye.—That time is past,<br/>
And all its aching joys are now no more,<br/>
And all its dizzy raptures. Not for this<br/>
Faint I, nor mourn nor murmur; other gifts<br/>
Have followed; for such loss, I would believe,<br/>
Abundant recompense. For I have learned<br/>
To look on nature, not as in the hour<br/>
Of thoughtless youth; but hearing oftentimes<br/>
The still, sad music of humanity,<br/>
Nor harsh, nor grating, though of ample power<br/>
To chasten and subdue. And I have felt<br/>
A presence that disturbs me with the joy<br/>
Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime<br/>
Of something far more deeply interfused,<br/>
Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,<br/>
And the round ocean, and the living air<br/>
And the blue sky, and in the mind of man;<br/>
A motion and a spirit, that impels<br/>
All thinking things, all objects of all thought,<br/>
And rolls through all things.<br/></p>
<p>In this little passage you see the growth of the influence of nature on
the mind of the poet. You observe, too, that nature passes into poetry;
that form is sublimed into speech. You see the result of the conjunction
of the mind of man, and the mind of God manifested in His works; spirit
coming to know the speech of spirit. The outflowing of spirit in nature is
received by the poet, and he utters again, in his form, what God has
already uttered in His. Wordsworth wished to give to man what he found in
nature. It was to him a power of good, a world of teaching, a strength of
life. He knew that nature was not his, and that his enjoyment of nature
was given to him that he might give it to man. It was the birthright of
man.</p>
<p>But what did Wordsworth find in nature? To begin with the lowest; he found
amusement in nature. Right amusement is a part of teaching; it is the
childish form of teaching, and if we can get this in nature, we get
something that lies near the root of good. In proof that Wordsworth found
this, I refer to a poem which you probably know well, “The Daisy.” The
poet sits playing with the flower, and listening to the suggestions that
come to him of odd resemblances that this flower bears to other things. He
likens the daisy to—</p>
<p>A little cyclops, with one eye<br/>
Staring to threaten and defy,<br/>
That thought comes next—and instantly<br/>
The freak is over,<br/>
The shape will vanish—and behold<br/>
A silver shield with boss of gold,<br/>
That spreads itself, some faëry bold<br/>
In fight to cover!<br/></p>
<p>Look at the last stanza, too, and you will see how close amusement may lie
to deep and earnest thought:—</p>
<p>Bright <i>Flower</i>! for by that name at last<br/>
When all my reveries are past,<br/>
I call thee, and to that cleave fast,<br/>
Sweet silent creature!<br/>
That breath’st with me in sun and air,<br/>
Do thou, as thou art wont, repair<br/>
My heart with gladness, and a share<br/>
Of thy meek nature!<br/></p>
<p>But Wordsworth found also joy in nature, which is a better thing than
amusement, and consequently easier to be found. We can often have joy
where we can have no amusement,—</p>
<p>I wandered lonely as a cloud<br/>
That floats on high o’er vales and hills<br/>
When all at once I saw a crowd,<br/>
A host, of golden daffodils;<br/>
Beside the lake, beneath the trees,<br/>
Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>The waves beside them danced; but they<br/>
Out-did the sparkling waves in glee:<br/>
A poet could not but be gay,<br/>
In such a jocund company:<br/>
I gazed—and gazed—but little thought<br/>
What Health the show to me had brought.<br/>
<br/>
“For oft, when on my couch I lie<br/>
In vacant or in pensive mood,<br/>
They flash upon that inward eye<br/>
Which is the bliss of solitude;<br/>
And then my heart with pleasure fills,<br/>
And dances with the daffodils.”<br/></p>
<p>This is the joy of the eye, as far as that can be separated from the joy
of the whole nature; for his whole nature rejoiced in the joy of the eye;
but it was simply joy; there was no further teaching, no attempt to go
through this beauty and find the truth below it. We are not always to be
in that hungry, restless condition, even after truth itself. If we keep
our minds quiet and ready to receive truth, and <i>sometimes</i> are
hungry for it, that is enough.</p>
<p>Going a step higher, you will find that he sometimes <i>draws</i> a lesson
from nature, seeming almost to force a meaning from her. I do not object
to this, if he does not make too much of it as <i>existing</i> in nature.
It is rather finding a meaning in nature that he brought to it. The
meaning exists, if not <i>there</i>. For illustration I refer to another
poem. Observe that Wordsworth found the lesson because he looked for it,
and <i>would</i> find it.</p>
<p>This Lawn, a carpet all alive<br/>
With shadows flung from leaves—to strive<br/>
In dance, amid a press<br/>
Of sunshine, an apt emblem yields<br/>
Of Worldlings revelling in the fields<br/>
Of strenuous idleness.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Yet, spite of all this eager strife,<br/>
This ceaseless play, the genuine life<br/>
That serves the steadfast hours,<br/>
Is in the grass beneath, that grows<br/>
Unheeded, and the mute repose<br/>
Of sweetly-breathing flowers.<br/></p>
<p>Whether he forced this lesson from nature, or not, it is a good lesson,
teaching a great many things with regard to life and work.</p>
<p>Again, nature sometimes flashes a lesson on his mind; <i>gives</i> it to
him—and when nature gives, we cannot but receive. As in this sonnet
composed during a storm,—</p>
<p>One who was suffering tumult in his soul<br/>
Yet failed to seek the sure relief of prayer,<br/>
Went forth; his course surrendering to the care<br/>
Of the fierce wind, while mid-day lightnings prowl<br/>
Insiduously, untimely thunders growl;<br/>
While trees, dim-seen, in frenzied numbers tear<br/>
The lingering remnant of their yellow hair,<br/>
And shivering wolves, surprised with darkness, howl<br/>
As if the sun were not. He raised his eye<br/>
Soul-smitten; for, that instant, did appear<br/>
Large space (mid dreadful clouds) of purest sky,<br/>
An azure disc—shield of Tranquillity;<br/>
Invisible, unlooked-for, minister<br/>
Of providential goodness ever nigh!<br/></p>
<p>Observe that he was not looking for this; he had not thought of praying;
he was in such distress that it had benumbed the out-goings of his spirit
towards the source whence alone sure comfort comes. He went out into the
storm; and the uproar in the outer world was in harmony with the tumult
within his soul. Suddenly a clear space in the sky makes him feel—he
has no time to think about it—that there is a shield of tranquillity
spread over him. For was it not as it were an opening up into that region
where there are no storms; the regions of peace, because the regions of
love, and truth, and purity,—the home of God himself?</p>
<p>There is yet a higher and more sustained influence exercised by nature,
and that takes effect when she puts a man into that mood or condition in
which thoughts come of themselves. That is perhaps the best thing that can
be done for us, the best at least that nature can do. It is certainly
higher than mere intellectual teaching. That nature did this for
Wordsworth is very clear; and it is easily intelligible. If the world
proceeded from the imagination of God, and man proceeded from the love of
God, it is easy to believe that that which proceeded from the imagination
of God should rouse the best thoughts in the mind of a being who proceeded
from the love of God. This I think is the relation between man and the
world. As an instance of what I mean, I refer to one of Wordsworth’s
finest poems, which he classes under the head of “Evening Voluntaries.” It
was composed upon an evening of extraordinary splendour and beauty:—</p>
<p>“Had this effulgence disappeared<br/>
With flying haste, I might have sent,<br/>
Among the speechless clouds, a look<br/>
Of blank astonishment;<br/>
But ‘tis endued with power to stay,<br/>
And sanctify one closing day,<br/>
That frail Mortality may see—<br/>
What is?—ah no, but what <i>can</i>, be!<br/>
Time was when field and watery cove<br/>
With modulated echoes rang,<br/>
While choirs of fervent Angels sang<br/>
Their vespers in the grove;<br/>
Or, crowning, star-like, each some sovereign height,<br/>
Warbled, for heaven above and earth below,<br/>
Strains suitable to both. Such holy rite,<br/>
Methinks, if audibly repeated now<br/>
From hill or valley, could not move<br/>
Sublimer transport, purer love,<br/>
Than doth this silent spectacle—the gleam—<br/>
The shadow—and the peace supreme!<br/>
<br/>
“No sound is uttered,—but a deep<br/>
And solemn harmony pervades<br/>
The hollow vale from steep to steep,<br/>
And penetrates the glades.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>“Wings at my shoulders seem to play;<br/>
But, rooted here, I stand and gaze<br/>
On those bright steps that heaven-ward raise<br/>
Their practicable way.<br/>
Come forth, ye drooping old men, look abroad,<br/>
And see to what fair countries ye are bound!<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>“Dread Power! whom peace and calmness serve<br/>
No less than Nature’s threatening voice,<br/>
From THEE, if I would swerve,<br/>
Oh, let Thy grace remind me of the light<br/>
Full early lost, and fruitlessly deplored;<br/>
Which, at this moment, on my waking sight<br/>
Appears to shine, by miracle restored;<br/>
My soul, though yet confined to earth,<br/>
Rejoices in a second birth!”<br/></p>
<p>Picture the scene for yourselves; and observe how it moves in him the
sense of responsibility, and the prayer, that if he has in any matter
wandered from the right road, if he has forgotten the simplicity of
childhood in the toil of life, he may, from this time, remember the vow
that he now records—from this time to press on towards the things
that are unseen, but which are manifested through the things that are
seen. I refer you likewise to the poem “Resolution and Independence,”
commonly called “The Leech Gatherer;” also to that grandest ode that has
ever been written, the “Ode on Immortality.” You will find there, whatever
you may think of his theory, in the latter, sufficient proof that nature
was to him a divine teaching power. Do not suppose that I mean that man
can do without more teaching than nature’s, or that a man with only
nature’s teaching would have seen these things in nature. No, the soul
must be tuned to such things. Wordsworth could not have found such things,
had he not known something that was more definite and helpful to him; but
this known, then nature was full of teaching. When we understand the Word
of God, then we understand the works of God; when we know the nature of an
artist, we know his pictures; when we have known and talked with the poet,
we understand his poetry far better. To the man of God, all nature will be
but changeful reflections of the face of God.</p>
<p>Loving man as Wordsworth did, he was most anxious to give him this
teaching. How was he to do it? By poetry. Nature put into the crucible of
a loving heart becomes poetry. We cannot explain poetry scientifically;
because poetry is something beyond science. The poet may be man of
science, and the man of science may be a poet; but poetry includes
science, and the man who will advance science most, is the man who, other
qualifications being equal, has most of the poetic faculty in him.
Wordsworth defines poetry to be “the impassioned expression which is on
the face of science.” Science has to do with the construction of things.
The casting of the granite ribs of the mighty earth, and all the thousand
operations that result in the manifestations on its surface, this is the
domain of science. But when there come the grass-bearing meadows, the
heaven-reared hills, the great streams that go ever downward, the bubbling
fountains that ever arise, the wind that wanders amongst the leaves, and
the odours that are wafted upon its wings; when we have colour, and shape,
and sound, then we have the material with which poetry has to do. Science
has to do with the underwork. For what does this great central world
exist, with its hidden winds and waters, its upheavings and its
downsinkings, its strong frame of rock, and its heart of fire? What do
they all exist for? Not for themselves surely, but for the sake of this
out-spreading world of beauty, that floats up, as it were, to the surface
of the shapeless region of force. Science has to do with the one, and
poetry with the other: poetry is “the impassioned expression that is on
the face of science.” To illustrate it still further. You are walking in
the woods, and you find the first primrose of the year. You feel almost as
if you had found a child. You know in yourself that you have found a new
beauty and a new joy, though you have seen it a thousand times before. It
is a primrose. A little flower that looks at me, thinks itself into my
heart, and gives me a pleasure distinct in itself, and which I feel as if
I could not do without. The impassioned expression on the face of this
little outspread flower is its childhood; it means trust, consciousness of
protection, faith, and hope. Science, in the person of the botanist, comes
after you, and pulls it to pieces to see its construction, and delights
the intellect; but the science itself is dead, and kills what it touches.
The flower exists not for it, but for the expression on its face, which is
its poetry,—that expression which you feel to mean a living thing;
that expression which makes you feel that this flower is, as it were, just
growing out of the heart of God. The intellect itself is but the
scaffolding for the uprearing of the spiritual nature.</p>
<p>It will make all this yet plainer, if you can suppose a human form to be
created without a soul in it. Divine science <i>has</i> put it together,
but only for the sake of the outshining soul that shall cause it to live,
and move, and have a being of its own in God. When you see the face
lighted up with soul, when you recognize in it thought and feeling, joy
and love, then you know that here is the end for which it was made. Thus
you see the relation that poetry has to science; and you find that, to
speak in an apparent paradox, the surface is the deepest after all; for,
through the surface, for the sake of which all this building went on, we
have, as it were, a window into the depths of truth. There is not a form
that lives in the world, but is a window cloven through the blank darkness
of nothingness, to let us look into the heart, and feeling, and nature of
God. So the surface of things is the best and the deepest, provided it is
not mere surface, but the impassioned expression, for the sake of which
the science of God has thought and laboured.</p>
<p>Satisfied that this was the nature of poetry, and wanting to convey this
to the minds of his fellow-men, “What vehicle,” Wordsworth may be supposed
to have asked himself, “shall I use? How shall I decide what form of words
to employ? Where am I to find the right language for speaking such great
things to men?” He saw that the poetry of the eighteenth century (he was
born in 1770) was not like nature at all, but was an artificial thing,
with no more originality in it than there would be in a picture a hundred
times copied, the copyists never reverting to the original. You cannot
look into this eighteenth century poetry, excepting, of course, a great
proportion of the poetry of Cowper and Thompson, without being struck with
the sort of agreement that nothing should be said naturally. A certain set
form and mode was employed for saying things that ought never to have been
said twice in the same way. Wordsworth resolved to go back to the root of
the thing, to the natural simplicity of speech; he would have none of
these stereotyped forms of expression. “Where shall I find,” said he, “the
language that will be simple and powerful?” And he came to the conclusion
that the language of the common people was the only language suitable for
his purpose. Your experience of the everyday language of the common people
may be that it is not poetical. True, but not even a poet can speak
poetically in his stupid moments. Wordsworth’s idea was to take the
language of the common people in their uncommon moods, in their high and,
consequently, simple moods, when their minds are influenced by grief,
hope, reverence, worship, love; for then he believed he could get just the
language suitable for the poet. As far as that language will go, I think
he was right, if I may venture to give an opinion in support of
Wordsworth. Of course, there will occur necessities to the poet which
would not be comprehended in the language of a man whose thoughts had
never moved in the same directions, but the kind of language will be the
right thing, and I have heard such amongst the common people myself—language
which they did not know to be poetic, but which fell upon my ear and heart
as profoundly poetic both in its feeling and its form.</p>
<p>In attempting to carry out this theory, I am not prepared to say that
Wordsworth never transgressed his own self-imposed laws. But he adhered to
his theory to the last. A friend of the poet’s told me that Wordsworth had
to him expressed his belief that he would be remembered longest, not by
his sonnets, as his friend thought, but by his lyrical ballads, those for
which he had been reviled and laughed at; the most by critics who could
not understand him, and who were unworthy to read what he had written. As
a proof of this let me read to you three verses, composing a poem that was
especially marked for derision:—</p>
<p>She dwelt among the untrodden ways,<br/>
Beside the springs of Dove;<br/>
A maid whom there were none to praise,<br/>
And very few to love.<br/>
<br/>
A violet by a mossy stone.<br/>
Half hidden from the eye;<br/>
Fair as a star, when only one<br/>
Is shining in the sky.<br/>
<br/>
She lived unknown, and few could know<br/>
When Lucy ceased to be;<br/>
But she is in her grave, and Oh!<br/>
The difference to me.<br/></p>
<p>The last line was especially chosen as the object of ridicule; but I think
with most of us the feeling will be, that its very simplicity of
expression is overflowing in suggestion, it throws us back upon our own
experience; for, instead of trying to utter what he felt, he says in those
simple and common words, “You who have known anything of the kind, will
know what the difference to me is, and only you can know.” “My intention
and desire,” he says in one of his essays, “are that the interest of the
poem shall owe nothing to the circumstances; but that the circumstances
shall be made interesting by the thing itself.” In most novels, for
instance, the attempt is made to interest us in worthless, commonplace
people, whom, if we had our choice, we would far rather not meet at all,
by surrounding them with peculiar and extraordinary circumstances; but
this is a low source of interest. Wordsworth was determined to owe nothing
to such an adventitious cause. For illustration allow me to read that
well-known little ballad, “The Reverie of Poor Susan,” and you will see
how entirely it bears out what he lays down as his theory. The scene is in
London:—</p>
<p>At the corner of Wood-street, when daylight appears,<br/>
Hangs a Thrush that sings loud, it has sung for three years;<br/>
Poor Susan has passed by the spot, and has heard,<br/>
In the silence of morning, the song of the Bird.<br/>
<br/>
‘Tis a note of enchantment: what ails her? She sees<br/>
A mountain ascending, a vision of trees;<br/>
Bright volumes of vapour through Lothbury glide,<br/>
And a river flows on through the vale of Cheapside.<br/>
<br/>
Green pastures she views in the midst of the dale,<br/>
Down which she so often has tripped with her pail;<br/>
And a single small cottage, a nest like a dove’s,<br/>
The one only dwelling on earth that she loves.<br/>
<br/>
She looks, and her heart is in heaven: but they fade,<br/>
The mist and the river, the hill and the shade:<br/>
The stream will not flow, and the hill will not rise,<br/>
And the colours have all passed away from her eyes!<br/></p>
<p>Is any of the interest here owing to the circumstances? Is it not a very
common incident? But has he not treated it so that it is not <i>commonplace</i>
in the least? We recognize in this girl just the feelings we discover in
ourselves, and acknowledge almost with tears her sisterhood to us all.</p>
<p>I have tried to make you feel something of what Wordsworth attempts to do,
but I have not given you the best of his poems. Allow me to finish by
reading the closing portion of the <i>Prelude</i>, the poem that was
published after his death. It is addressed to Coleridge:—</p>
<p>Oh! yet a few short years of useful life,<br/>
And all will be complete, thy race be run,<br/>
Thy monument of glory will be raised;<br/>
Then, though (too weak to head the ways of truth)<br/>
This age fall back to old idolatry,<br/>
Though men return to servitude as fast<br/>
As the tide ebbs, to ignominy and shame<br/>
By nations sink together, we shall still<br/>
Find solace—knowing what we have learnt to know—<br/>
Rich in true happiness, if allowed to be<br/>
Faithful alike in forwarding a day<br/>
Of firmer trust, joint labourers in the work<br/>
(Should Providence such grace to us vouchsafe)<br/>
Of their deliverance, surely yet to come.<br/>
Prophets of Nature, we to them will speak<br/>
A lasting inspiration, sanctified<br/>
By reason, blest by faith: what we have loved,<br/>
Others will love, and we will teach them how;<br/>
Instruct them how the mind of man becomes<br/>
A thousand times more beautiful than the earth<br/>
On which he dwells, above this frame of things<br/>
(Which, ‘mid all revolution in the hopes<br/>
And fears of men, doth still remain unchanged)<br/>
In beauty exalted, as it is itself<br/>
Of quality and fabric more divine.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SHELLEY. </h2>
<p>Whatever opinion may be held with regard to the relative position occupied
by Shelley as a poet, it will be granted by most of those who have studied
his writings, that they are of such an individual and original kind, that
he can neither be hidden in the shade, nor lost in the brightness, of any
other poet. No idea of his works could be conveyed by instituting a
comparison, for he does not sufficiently resemble any other among English
writers to make such a comparison possible.</p>
<p>Percy Bysshe Shelley was born at Field Place, near Horsham, in the county
of Sussex, on the 4th of August, 1792. He was the son of Timothy Shelley,
Esq., and grandson of Sir Bysshe Shelley, the first baronet. His ancestors
had long been large landed proprietors in Sussex.</p>
<p>As a child his habits were noticeable. He was especially fond of rambling
by moonlight, of inventing wonderful tales, of occupying himself with
strange, and sometimes dangerous, amusements. At the age of thirteen he
went to Eton. In this little world, that determined opposition to whatever
appeared to him an invasion of human rights and liberty, which was
afterwards the animating principle of most of his writings, was first
roused in the mind of Shelley. Were we not aware of far keener distress
which he afterwards endured from yet greater injustice, we might suppose
that the sufferings he had to bear from placing himself in opposition to
the custom of the school, by refusing to fag, had made him morbidly
sensitive on the point of liberty. At a time, however, when freedom of
speech, as indicating freedom of thought, was especially obnoxious to
established authorities; when no allowance could be made on the score of
youth, still less on that of individual peculiarity, Shelley became a
student at Oxford. He was then eighteen. Devoted to metaphysical
speculation, and especially fond of logical discussion, he, in his first
year, printed and distributed among the authorities and members of his
college a pamphlet, if that can be called a pamphlet which consisted only
of two pages, in which he opposed the usual arguments for the existence of
a Deity; arguments which, perhaps, the most ardent believers have equally
considered inconclusive. Whether Shelley wrote this pamphlet as an
embodiment of his own opinions, or merely as a logical confutation of
certain arguments, the mode of procedure adopted with him was certainly
not one which necessarily resulted from the position of those to whose
care the education of his opinions was entrusted. Without waiting to be
assured that he was the author, and satisfying themselves with his refusal
to answer when questioned as to the authorship, they handed him his
sentence of expulsion, which had been already drawn up in due form.</p>
<p>About this time Shelley wrote, or commenced writing, <i>Queen Mab</i>, a
poem which he never published, although he distributed copies among his
friends. In after years he had such a low opinion of it in every respect,
that he regretted having printed it at all; and when an edition of it was
published without his consent, he applied to the Court of Chancery for an
injunction to suppress it.</p>
<p>Shelley’s opinions in politics and theology, which he appears to have been
far more anxious to maintain than was consistent with the peace of the
household, were peculiarly obnoxious to his father, a man as different
from his son as it is possible to conceive; and his expulsion from Oxford
was soon followed by exile from his home. He went to London, where,
through his sisters, who were at school in the neighbourhood, he made the
acquaintence of Harriet West brook, whom he eloped with and married, when
he was nineteen and she sixteen years of age. It seems doubtful whether
the attachment between them was more than the result of the reception
accorded by the enthusiasm of the girl to the enthusiasm of the youth,
manifesting itself in wild talk about human rights, and equally wild plans
for their recovery and security. However this may be, the result was
unfortunate. They wandered about England, Scotland, and Ireland, with
frequent and sudden change of residence, for rather more than two years.
During this time Shelley gained the friendship of some of the most eminent
men of the age, of whom the one who exercised the most influence upon his
character and future history was William Godwin, whose instructions and
expostulations tended to reduce to solidity and form the vague and
extravagant opinions and projects of the youthful reformer. Shortly after
the commencement of the third year of their married life, an estrangement
of feeling, which had been gradually widening between them, resulted in
the final separation of the poet and his wife. We are not informed as to
the causes of this estrangement, further than that it seems to have been
owing, in a considerable degree, to the influence of an elder sister of
Mrs. Shelley, who domineered over her, and whose presence became at last
absolutely hateful to Shelley. His wife returned to her father’s house;
where, apparently about three years after, she committed suicide. There
seems to have been no immediate connection between this act and any
conduct of Shelley. One of his biographers informs us, that while they
were living happily together, suicide was with Mrs. Shelley a favourite
subject of speculation and conversation.</p>
<p>Shortly after his first wife’s death, Shelley married the daughter of
William Godwin. He had lived with her almost from the date of the
separation, during which time they had twice visited Switzerland. In the
following year (1817), it was decreed in Chancery that Shelley was not a
proper person to take charge of his two children by his first wife, who
had lived with her till her death. The bill was filed in Chancery by their
grandfather, Mr. Westbrook. The effects of this proceeding upon Shelley
may be easily imagined. Perhaps he never recovered from them, for they
were not of a nature to pass away. During this year he resided at Marlow,
and wrote <i>The Revolt of Islam</i>, besides portions of other poems; and
the next year he left England, not to return. The state of his health, for
he had appeared to be in a consumption for some time, and the fear lest
his son, by his second wife, should be taken from him, combined to induce
him to take refuge in Italy from both impending evils. At Lucca he began
his <i>Prometheus</i>, and wrote <i>Julian and Maddalo</i>. He moved from
place to place in Italy, as he had done in his own country. Their two
children dying, they were for a time left childless; but the loss of these
grieved Shelley less than that of his eldest two, who were taken from him
by the hand of man. In 1819, Shelley finished his <i>Prometheus Unbound</i>,
writing the greater part at Rome, and completing it at Florence. In this
year also he wrote his tragedy, <i>The Cenci</i>, which attracted more
attention during his lifetime than any other of his works. The <i>Ode to a
Skylark</i> was written at Leghorn in the spring of 1820; and in August of
the same year, the <i>Witch of Atlas</i> was written, near Pisa. In the
following year Shelley and Byron met at Pisa. They were a good deal
together; but their friendship, although real, does not appear to have
been of a very profound nature; for though unlikeness be one of the
necessary elements of friendship, there are kinds of unlikeness which will
not harmonize. During all this time, he was not only maligned by unknown
enemies, and abused by anonymous writers, but attempts of other kinds are
said to have been made to render his life as uncomfortable as possible.
There are grounds, however, for doubting whether Shelley was not subject
to a kind of monomania upon this and similar points. In 1821, he wrote his
<i>Adonais</i>, a monody on the death of Keats. Part of this poem had its
origin in the mistaken notion, that the illness and death of Keats were
caused by a brutal criticism of his <i>Endymion</i>, which appeared in the
<i>Quarterly Review</i>. The last verse of the <i>Adonais</i> seems almost
prophetic of his own end. Passionately fond of boating, he and a friend of
his, Mr. Williams, united in constructing a boat of a peculiar build, a
very fast sailer, but difficult to manage. On the 8th of July, 1822,
Shelley and his friend Williams sailed from Leghorn for Lerici, on the Bay
of Spezia, near which lay his home for the time. A sudden squall came on,
and their boat disappeared. The bodies of the two friends were cast on
shore; and, according to quarantine regulations, were burned to ashes.
Lord Byron, Leigh Hunt, and Mr. Trelawney were present when the body of
Shelley was burned; so that his ashes were saved, and buried in the
Protestant burial-ground at Rome, near the grave of Keats, whose body had
been laid there in the spring of the preceding year. <i>Cor Cordium</i>
were the words inscribed by his widow on the tomb of the poet.</p>
<p>The character of Shelley has been sadly maligned. Whatever faults he may
have committed against society, they were not the result of sensuality.
One of his biographers, who was his companion at Oxford, and who does not
seem inclined to do him <i>more</i> than justice, asserts that while there
his conduct was immaculate. The whole picture he gives of the youth, makes
it easy to believe this. To discuss the moral question involved in one
part of his history would be out of place here; but even on the
supposition that a man’s conduct is altogether inexcusable in individual
instances, there is the more need that nothing but the truth should be
said concerning that, and other portions thereof. And whatever society may
have thought itself justified in making subject of reprobation, it must be
remembered that Shelley was under less obligation to society than most
men. Yet his heart seemed full of love to his kind; and the distress which
the oppression of others caused him, was the source of much of that wild
denunciation which exposed him to the contempt and hatred of those who
were rendered uncomfortable by his unsparing and indiscriminate anathemas.
In private, he was beloved by all who knew him; a steady, generous,
self-denying friend, not only to those who moved in his own circle, but to
all who were brought within the reach of any aid he could bestow. To the
poor he was a true and laborious benefactor. That man must have been good
to whom the heart of his widow returns with such earnest devotion and
thankfulness in the recollection of the past, and such fond hope for the
future, as are manifested by Mrs. Shelley in those extracts from her
private journal given us by Lady Shelley.</p>
<p>As regards his religious opinions, one of the thoughts which most strongly
suggest themselves is,—how ill he must have been instructed in the
principles of Christianity! He says himself in a letter to Godwin, “I have
known no tutor or adviser (<i>not excepting my father</i>) from whose
lessons and suggestions I have not recoiled with disgust.” So far is he
from being an opponent of Christianity properly so called, that one can
hardly help feeling what a Christian he would have been, could he but have
seen Christianity in any other way than through the traditional and
practical misrepresentations of it which surrounded him. All his attacks
on Christianity are, in reality, directed against evils to which the true
doctrines of Christianity are more opposed than those of Shelley could
possibly be. How far he was excusable in giving the name of Christianity
to what he might have seen to be only a miserable perversion of it, is
another question, and one which hardly admits of discussion here. It was
in the <i>name</i> of Christianity, however, that the worst injuries of
which he had to complain were inflicted upon him. Coming out of the
cathedral at Pisa one day, [Footnote: From <i>Shelley Memorials</i>,
edited by Lady Shelley, which the writer of this paper has principally
followed in regard to the external facts of Shelley’s history.] Shelley
warmly assented to a remark of Leigh Hunt, “that a divine religion might
be found out, if charity were really made the principle of it instead of
faith.” Surely the founders of Christianity, even when they magnified
faith, intended thereby a spiritual condition, of which the central
principle is coincident with charity. Shelley’s own feelings towards
others, as judged from his poetry, seem to be tinctured with the very
essence of Christianity. [Footnote: His <i>Essay on Christianity</i> is
full of noble views, some of which are held at the present day by some of
the most earnest believers. At what time of his life it was written we are
not informed; but it seems such as would insure his acceptance with any
company of intelligent and devout Unitarians.] He did not, at one time at
least, believe that we could know the source of our being; and seemed to
take it as a self-evident truth, that the Creator could not be like the
creature. But it is unjust to fix upon any utterance of opinion, and
regard it as the religion of a man who died in his thirtieth year, and
whose habits of thinking were such, that his opinions must have been in a
state of constant change. Coleridge says in a letter: “His (Shelley’s)
discussions, tending towards atheism of a certain sort, would not have
scared <i>me;</i> for <i>me</i> it would have been a semitransparent
larva, soon to be sloughed, and through which I should have seen the true
<i>image</i>—the final metamorphosis. Besides, I have ever thought
that sort of atheism the next best religion to Christianity; nor does the
better faith I have learned from Paul and John interfere with the cordial
reverence I feel for Benedict Spinoza.”</p>
<p>Shelley’s favourite study was metaphysics. The more impulse there is in
any direction, the more education and experience are necessary to balance
that impulse: one cannot help thinking that Shelley’s <i>taste</i> for
exercises of this kind was developed more rapidly than the corresponding
<i>power</i>. His favourite physical studies were chemistry and
electricity. With these he occupied himself from his childhood;
apparently, however, with more delight in the experiments themselves, than
interest in the general conclusions to be arrived at by means of them. In
the embodiment of his metaphysical ideas in poetry, the influence of these
studies seems to show itself; for he uses forms which appeal more to the
outer senses than to the inward eye; and his similes belong to the realm
of the fancy, rather than the imagination: they lack <i>vital</i>
resemblance. Logic had considerable attractions for him. To geometry and
mathematics he was quite indifferent. One of his biographers states that
“he was neglectful of flowers,” because he had no interest in botany; but
one who derived such full delight from the contemplation of their external
forms, could hardly be expected to feel very strongly the impulse to
dissect them. He derived exceeding pleasure from Greek literature,
especially from the works of Plato.</p>
<p>Several little peculiarities in Shelley’s tastes are worth mentioning,
because, although in themselves insignificant, they seem to correspond
with the nature of his poetry. Perhaps the most prominent of these was his
passion for boat-sailing. He could not pass any piece of water without
launching upon it a number of boats, constructed from what paper he could
find in his pockets. The fly-leaves of the books he was in the way of
carrying with him, for he was constantly reading, often went to this end.
He would watch the fate of these boats with the utmost interest, till they
sank or reached the opposite side. He was just as fond of real boating,
and that frequently of a dangerous kind; but it is characteristic of him,
that all the boats he describes in his poems are of a fairy, fantastic
sort, barely related to the boats which battle with earthly winds and
waves. Pistol-shooting was also a favourite amusement. Fireworks, too,
gave him great delight. Some of his habits were likewise peculiar. He was
remarkably abstemious, preferring bread and raisins to anything else in
the way of eating, and very seldom drinking anything stronger than water.
Honey was a favourite luxury with him. While at college, his biographer
Hogg says he was in the habit, during the evening, of going to sleep on
the rug, close to a blazing fire, heat seeming never to have other than a
beneficial effect upon him. After sleeping some hours, he would awake
perfectly restored, and continue actively occupied till far into the
morning. His whole movements are represented as rapid, hurried, and
uncertain. He would appear and disappear suddenly and unexpectedly; forget
appointments; burst into wild laughter, heedless of his situation,
whenever anything struck him as peculiarly ludicrous. His changes of
residence were most numerous, and frequently made with so much haste that
whole little libraries were left behind, and often lost. He was very fond
of children, and used to make humorous efforts to induce them to disclose
to him the still-remembered secrets of their pre-existence. He seemed to
have a peculiar attraction towards mystery, and was ready to believe in a
hidden secret, where no one else would have thought of one. His room,
while he was at college, was in a state of indescribable confusion. Not
only were all sorts of personal necessaries mingled with books and
philosophical instruments, but things belonging to one department of
service were not unfrequently pressed into the slavery of another. He
dressed well but carelessly. In person he was tall, slender, and stooping;
awkward in gait, but in manners a thorough gentleman. His complexion was
delicate; his head, face, and features, remarkably small; the last not
very regular, but in expression, both intellectual and moral, wonderfully
beautiful. His eyes were deep blue, “of a wild, strange beauty;” his
forehead high and white; his hair dark brown, curling, long, and bushy.
His appearance in later life is described as singularly combining the
appearances of premature age and prolonged youth.</p>
<p>The only art in which his taste appears to have been developed was poetry.
Even in his poetry, taken as a whole, the artistic element is not
generally very manifest. His earliest verses (none of which are included
in his collected works) can hardly be said to be good in any sense. He
seems in these to have chosen poetry as a fitting material for the
embodiment of his ardent, hopeful, indignant thoughts and feelings, but,
provided he can say what he wants to say, does not seem to care much about
<i>how</i> he says it. Indeed, there is too much of this throughout his
works; for if the <i>utterance</i>, instead of the <i>conveyance</i> of
thought, were the object pursued in art, of course not merely imperfection
of language, but absolute external unintelligibility, would be admissible.
But his art constantly increases with his sense of its necessity; so that
the <i>Cenci</i>, which is the last work of any pretension that he wrote,
is decidedly the most artistic of all. There are beautiful passages in <i>Queen
Mab</i>, but it is the work of a boy-poet; and as it was all but
repudiated by himself, it is not necessary to remark further upon it. <i>The
Revolt of Islam</i> is a poem of twelve cantos, in the Spenserian stanza;
but in all respects except the arrangement of lines and rimes, his stanza,
in common with all other imitations of the Spenserian, has little or
nothing of the spirit or individuality of the original. The poem is
dedicated to the cause of freedom, and records the efforts, successes,
defeats, and final triumphant death of two inspired champions of liberty—a
youth and maiden. The adventures are marvellous, not intended to be within
the bounds of probability, scarcely of possibility. There are very noble
sentiments and fine passages throughout the poem. Now and then there is
grandeur. But the absence of art is too evident in the fact that the
meaning is often obscure; an obscurity not unfrequently occasioned by the
difficulty of the stanza, which is the most difficult mode of composition
in English, except the rigid sonnet. The words and forms he employs to
express thought seem sometimes mechanical devices for that purpose, rather
than an utterance which suggested itself naturally to a mind where the
thought was vitally present. The words are more a <i>clothing</i> for the
thought than an <i>embodiment</i> of it. They do not lie near enough to
the thing which is intended to be represented by them. It is, however, but
just to remark, that some of the obscurity is owing to the fact, that,
even with Mrs. Shelley’s superintendence, the works have not yet been
satisfactorily edited, or at least not conducted through the press with
sufficient care. [Footnote: This statement is no longer true.]</p>
<p><i>The Cenci</i> is a very powerful tragedy, but unfitted for public
representation by the horrible nature of the historical facts upon which
it is founded. In the execution of it, however, Shelley has kept very much
nearer to nature than in any other of his works. He has rigidly adhered to
his perception of artistic propriety in respect to the dramatic utterance.
It may be doubted whether there is sufficient difference between the modes
of speech of the different actors in the tragedy, but it is quite possible
to individualize speech far too minutely for probable nature; and in this
respect, at least, Shelley has not erred. Perhaps the action of the whole
is a little hurried, and a central moment of awful repose and fearful
anticipation might add to the force of the tragedy. The scenes also might,
perhaps, have been constructed so as to suggest more of evolution; but the
central point of horror is most powerfully and delicately handled. You see
a possible spiritual horror yet behind, more frightful than all that has
gone before. The whole drama, indeed, is constructed around, not a
prominent point, but a dim, infinitely-withdrawn, underground perspective
of dismay and agony. Perhaps it detracts a little from our interest in the
Lady Beatrice, that after all she should wish to live, and should seek to
preserve her life by a denial of her crime. She, however, evidently
justifies the denial to herself on the ground that, the deed being
absolutely right, although regarded as most criminal by her judges, the
only way to get true justice is to deny the fact, which, there being no
guilt, she might consider as only a verbal lie. Her very purity of
conscience enables her to utter this with the most absolute innocence of
look, and word, and tone. This is probably a historical fact, and Shelley
had to make the best of it. In the drama there is great tenderness, as
well as terror; but for a full effect, one feels it desirable to be
brought better acquainted with the individuals than the drama, from its
want of graduation, permits. Shelley, however, was only six-and-twenty
when he wrote it. He must have been attracted to the subject by its
embodying the concentration of tyranny, lawlessness, and brutality in old
Cenci, as opposed to, and exercised upon, an ideal loveliness and
nobleness in the person of Beatrice.</p>
<p>But of all Shelley’s works, the <i>Prometheus Unbound</i> is that which
combines the greatest amount of individual power and peculiarity. There is
an airy grandeur about it, reminding one of the vast masses of cloud
scattered about in broken, yet magnificently suggestive forms, all over
the summer sky, after a thunderstorm. The fundamental ideas are grand; the
superstructure, in many parts, so ethereal, that one hardly knows whether
he is gazing on towers of solid masonry rendered dim and unsubstantial by
intervening vapour, or upon the golden turrets of cloudland, themselves
born of the mist which surrounds them with a halo of glory. The beings of
Greek, mythology are idealized and etherealized by the new souls which he
puts into them, making them think his thoughts and say his words. In
reading this, as in reading most of his poetry, we feel that, unable to
cope with the evils and wrongs of the world as it and they are, he
constructs a new universe, wherein he may rule according to his will; and
a good will in the main it is—good always in intent, good generally
in form and utterance. Of the wrongs which Shelley endured from the
collision and resulting conflict between his lawless goodness and the
lawful wickedness of those in authority, this is one of the greatest,—that
during the right period of pupillage, he was driven from the place of
learning, cast on his own mental resources long before those resources
were sufficient for his support, and irritated against the purest
embodiment of good by the harsh treatment he received under its name. If
that reverence which was far from wanting to his nature, had been but
presented, in the person of some guide to his spiritual being, with an
object worthy of its homage and trust, it is probable that the yet free
and noble result of Shelley’s individuality would have been presented to
the world in a form which, while it attracted still only the few, would
not have repelled the many; at least, not by such things as were merely
accidental in their association with his earnest desires and efforts for
the well-being of humanity.</p>
<p>That which chiefly distinguishes Shelley from other writers is the
unequalled exuberance of his fancy. The reader, say for instance of that
fantastically brilliant poem, <i>The Witch of Atlas</i>, the work of three
days, is overwhelmed in a storm, as it were, of rainbow snow-flakes and
many-coloured lightnings, accompanied ever by “a low melodious thunder.”
The evidences of pure imagination in his writings are unfrequent as
compared with those of fancy: there are not half the instances of the
direct embodiment of idea in form, that there are of the presentation of
strange resemblances between external things.</p>
<p>One of the finest short specimens of Shelley’s peculiar mode is his <i>Ode
to the West Wind</i>, full of mysterious melody of thought and sound. But
of all his poems, the most popular, and deservedly so, is the <i>Skylark</i>.
Perhaps the <i>Cloud</i> may contest it with the <i>Skylark</i> in regard
to popular favour; but the <i>Cloud</i>, although full of beautiful words
and fantastic cloud-like images, is, after all, principally a work of the
fancy; while the <i>Skylark</i>, though even in it fancy predominates over
imagination in the visual images, forms, as a whole, a lovely, true,
individual work of art; a <i>lyric</i> not unworthy of the <i>lark</i>,
which Mason apostrophizes as “sweet feathered lyric.” The strain of
sadness which pervades it is only enough to make the song of the lark
human.</p>
<p>In <i>The Sensitive Plant</i>, a poem full of the peculiarities of his
genius, tending through a wilderness of fanciful beauties to a thicket of
mystical speculation, one curious idiosyncrasy is more prominent than in
any other—curious, as belonging to the poet of beauty and
loveliness: it is the tendency to be fascinated by what is ugly and
revolting, so that he cannot withdraw his thoughts from it till he has
described it in language, powerful, it is true, and poetic, when
considered as to its fitness for the desired end, but, in force of these
very excellences in the means, nearly as revolting as the objects
themselves. Associated with this is the tendency to discover strangely
unpleasant likenesses between things; which likenesses he is not content
with seeing, but seems compelled, perhaps in order to get rid of them
himself, to force upon the observation of his reader. But the admirer of
Shelley is not pleased to find that one or two passages of this nature
have been omitted in some editions of his works.</p>
<p>Few men have been more misunderstood or misrepresented than Shelley.
Doubtless this has in part been his own fault, as Coleridge implies when
he writes to this effect of him: that his horror of hypocrisy made him
speak in such a wild way, that Southey (who was so much a man of forms and
proprieties) was quite misled, not merely in his estimate of his worth,
but in his judgment of his character. But setting aside this consideration
altogether, and regarding him merely as a poet, Shelley has written verse
which will last as long as English literature lasts; valuable not only
from its excellence, but from the peculiarity of its excellence. To say
nothing of his noble aims and hopes, Shelley will always be admired for
his sweet melodies, lovely pictures, and wild prophetic imaginings. His
indignant remonstrances, intermingled with grand imprecations, burst in
thunder from a heart overcharged with the love of his kind, and roused to
a keener sense of all oppression by the wrongs which sought to overwhelm
himself. But as he recedes further in time, and men are able to see more
truly the proportions of the man, they will judge, that without having
gained the rank of a great reformer, Shelley had in him that element of
wide sympathy and lofty hope for his kind which is essential both to the
<i>birth</i> and the subsequent <i>making</i> of the greatest of poets.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> A SERMON. </h2>
<p>[Footnote: Read in the Unitarian chapel, Essex-street, London, 1879.]</p>
<p>PHILIPPIANS iii. 15, 16.—Let us therefore, as many as be perfect, be
thus minded; and if in anything ye be otherwise minded, God shall reveal
even this unto you. Nevertheless, whereto we have already attained, let us
walk by that same.</p>
<p>This is the reading of the oldest manuscripts. The rest of the verse is
pretty clearly a not overwise marginal gloss that has crept into the text.</p>
<p>In its origin, opinion is the intellectual body, taken for utterance and
presentation by something necessarily larger than any intellect can afford
stuff sufficient for the embodiment of. To the man himself, therefore, in
whose mind it arose, an opinion will always represent and recall the
spirit whose form it is,—so long, at least, as the man remains true
to his better self. Hence, a man’s opinion may be for him invaluable, the
needle of his moral compass, always pointing to the truth whence it
issued, and whose form it is. Nor is the man’s opinion of the less value
to him that it may change. Nay, to be of true value, it must have in it
not only the possibility, but the necessity of change: it must change in
every man who is alive with that life which, in the New Testament, is
alone treated as life at all. For, if a man’s opinion be in no process of
change whatever, it must be dead, valueless, hurtful Opinion is the
offspring of that which is itself born to grow; which, being imperfect,
must grow or die. Where opinion is growing, its imperfections, however
many and serious, will do but little hurt; where it is not growing, these
imperfections will further the decay and corruption which must already
have laid hold of the very heart of the man. But it is plain in the
world’s history that what, at some given stage of the same, was the
embodiment in intellectual form of the highest and deepest of which it was
then spiritually capable, has often and speedily become the source of the
most frightful outrages upon humanity. How is this? Because it has passed
from the mind in which it grew into another in which it did not grow, and
has of necessity altered its nature. Itself sprung from that which was
deepest in the man, it casts seeds which take root only in the
intellectual understanding of his neighbour; and these, springing up,
produce flowers indeed which look much the same to the eye, but fruit
which is poison and bitterness,—worst of it all, the false and
arrogant notion that it is duty to force the opinion upon the acceptance
of others. But it is because such men themselves hold with so poor a grasp
the truth underlying their forms that they are, in their self-sufficiency,
so ambitious of propagating the forms, making of themselves the worst
enemies of the truth of which they fancy themselves the champions. How
truly, in the case of all genuine teachers of men, shall a man’s foes be
they of his own household! For of all the destroyers of the truth which
any man has preached, none have done it so effectually or so grievously as
his own followers. So many of them have received but the forms, and know
nothing of the truth which gave him those forms! They lay hold but of the
non-essential, the specially perishing in those forms; and these aspects,
doubly false and misleading in their crumbling disjunction, they proceed
to force upon the attention and reception of men, calling that the truth
which is at best but the draggled and useless fringe of its earth-made
garment. Opinions so held belong to the theology of hell,—not
necessarily altogether false in form, but false utterly in heart and
spirit. The opinion then that is hurtful is not that which is formed in
the depths, and from the honest necessities of a man’s own nature, but
that which he has taken up at second hand, the study of which has pleased
his intellect; has perhaps subdued fears and mollified distresses which
ought rather to have grown and increased until they had driven the man to
the true physician; has puffed him up with a sense of superiority as false
as foolish, and placed in his hand a club with which to subjugate his
neighbour to his spiritual dictation. The true man even, who aims at the
perpetuation of his opinion, is rather obstructing than aiding the course
of that truth for the love of which he holds his opinion; for truth is a
living thing, opinion is a dead thing, and transmitted opinion a deadening
thing.</p>
<p>Let us look at St. Paul’s feeling in this regard. And, in order that we
may deprive it of none of its force, let us note first the nature of the
truth which he had just been presenting to his disciples, when he follows
it with the words of my text:—</p>
<p>But what things were gain to me, those I counted loss for Christ.</p>
<p>Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the
knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I have suffered the loss of
all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win Christ,</p>
<p>And be found in him, not having mine own righteousness, which is of the
law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness
which is of God by faith:</p>
<p>That I may know him, and the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship
of his sufferings, being made conformable unto his death;</p>
<p>If by any means I might attain unto the resurrection of the dead.</p>
<p>Not as though I had already attained, either were already perfect: but I
follow after, if that I may apprehend that for which also I am apprehended
of Christ Jesus.</p>
<p>Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing I do,
forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those
things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high
calling of God in Christ Jesus.</p>
<p>St. Paul, then, had been declaring to the Philippians the idea upon which,
so far as it lay with him, his life was constructed, the thing for which
he lived, to which the whole conscious effort of his being was directed,—namely,
to be in his very nature one with Christ, to become righteous as he is
righteous; to die into his death, so that he should no more hold the
slightest personal relation to evil, but be alive in every fibre to all
that is pure, lovely, loving, beautiful, perfect. He had been telling them
that he spent himself in continuous effort to lay hold upon that for the
sake of which Christ had laid hold on him. This he declares the sole thing
worth living for: the hope of this, the hope of becoming one with the
living God, is that which keeps a glorious consciousness awake in him,
amidst all the unrest of a being not yet at harmony with itself, and a
laborious and persecuted life. It cannot therefore be any shadow of
indifference to the truth to which he has borne this witness, that causes
him to add, “If in anything ye be otherwise minded.” It is to him even the
test of perfection, whether they be thus minded or not; for, although a
moment before, he has declared himself short of the desired perfection, he
now says, “Let as many of us as are perfect be thus minded.” There is here
no room for that unprofitable thing, bare logic: we must look through the
shifting rainbow of his words,—rather, we must gather all their
tints together, then turn our backs upon the rainbow, that we may see the
glorious light which is the soul of it. St. Paul is not that which he
would be, which he must be; but he, and all they who with him believe that
the perfection of Christ is the sole worthy effort of a man’s life, are in
the region, though not yet at the centre, of perfection. They are, even
now, not indeed grasping, but in the grasp of, that perfection. He tells
them this is the one thing to mind, the one thing to go on desiring and
labouring for, with all the earnestness of a God-born existence; but, if
any one be at all otherwise minded,—that is, of a different opinion,—what
then? That it is of little or no consequence? No, verily; but of such
endless consequence that God will himself unveil to them the truth of the
matter. This is Paul’s faith, not his opinion. Faith is that by which a
man lives inwardly, and orders his way outwardly. Faith is the root,
belief the tree, and opinion the foliage that falls and is renewed with
the seasons. Opinion is, at best, even the opinion of a true man, but the
cloak of his belief, which he may indeed cast to his neighbour, but not
with the truth inside it: that remains in his own bosom, the oneness
between him and his God. St. Paul knows well—who better?—that
by no argument, the best that logic itself can afford, can a man be set
right with the truth; that the spiritual perception which comes of
hungering contact with the living truth—a perception which is in
itself a being born again—can alone be the mediator between a man
and the truth. He knows that, even if he could pass his opinion over
bodily into the understanding of his neighbour, there would be little or
nothing gained thereby, for the man’s spiritual condition would be just
what it was before. God must reveal, or nothing is known. And this,
through thousands of difficulties occasioned by the man himself, God is
ever and always doing his mighty best to effect.</p>
<p>See the grandeur of redeeming liberality in the Apostle. In his heart of
hearts he knows that salvation consists in nothing else than being one
with Christ; that the only life of every man is hid with Christ in God,
and to be found by no search anywhere else. He believes that for this
cause was he born into the world,—that he should give himself, heart
and soul, body and spirit, to him who came into the world that he might
bear witness to the truth. He believes that for the sake of this, and
nothing less,—anything more there cannot be,—was the world,
with its endless glories, created. Nay, more than all, he believes that
for this did the Lord, in whose cross, type and triumph of his
self-abnegation, he glories, come into the world, and live and die there.
And yet, and yet, he says, and says plainly, that a man thinking
differently from all this or at least, quite unprepared to make this
whole-hearted profession of faith, is yet his brother in Christ, in whom
the knowledge of Christ that he has will work and work, the new leaven
casting out the old leaven until he, too, in the revelation of the Father,
shall come to the perfect stature of the fulness of Christ. Meantime,
Paul, the Apostle, must show due reverence to the halting and dull
disciple. He must and will make no demand upon him on the grounds of what
he, Paul, believes. He is where he is, and God is his teacher. To his own
Master,—that is, Paul’s Master, and not Paul,—he stands. He
leaves him to the company of his Master. “Leaves him?” No: that he does
not; that he will never do, any more than God will leave him. Still and
ever will he hold him and help him. But how help him, if he is not to
press upon him his own larger and deeper and wiser insights? The answer is
ready: he will press, not his opinion, not even the man’s opinion, but the
man’s own faith upon him. “O brother, beloved of the Father, walk in the
light,—in the light, that is, which is thine, not which is mine; in
the light which is given to thee, not to me: thou canst not walk by my
light, I cannot walk by thine: how should either walk except by the light
which is in him? O brother, what thou seest, that do; and what thou seest
not, that thou shalt see: God himself, the Father of Lights, will show it
to you.” This, this is the condition of all growth,—that whereto we
have attained, we mind that same; for such, following the manuscripts, at
least the oldest, seems to me the Apostle’s meaning. Obedience is the one
condition of progress, and he entreats them to obey. If a man will but
work that which is in him, will but make the power of God his own, then is
it well with him for evermore. Like his Master, Paul urges to action, to
the highest operation, therefore to the highest condition of humanity. As
Christ was the Son of his Father because he did the will of the Father, so
the Apostle would have them the sons of the Father by doing the will of
the Father. Whereto ye have attained, walk by <i>that</i>.</p>
<p>But there is more involved in this utterance than the words themselves
will expressly carry. Next to his love to the Father and the Elder
Brother, the passion of Paul’s life—I cannot call it less—is
love to all his brothers and sisters. Everything human is dear to him: he
can part with none of it. Division, separation, the breaking of the body
of Christ, is that which he cannot endure. The body of his flesh had once
been broken, that a grander body might be prepared for him: was it for
that body itself to tear itself asunder? With the whole energy of his
great heart, Paul clung to unity. He could clasp together with might and
main the body of his Master—the body that Master loved because it
was a spiritual body, with the life of his Father in it. And he knew well
that only by walking in the truth to which they had attained, could they
ever draw near to each other. Whereto we have attained, let us walk by
that.</p>
<p>My honoured friends, if we are not practical, we are nothing. Now, the one
main fault in the Christian Church is separation, repulsion, recoil
between the component particles of the Lord’s body. I will not, I do not
care to inquire who is more to blame than another in the evil fact. I only
care to insist that it is the duty of every individual man to be innocent
of the same. One main cause, perhaps I should say <i>the one</i> cause of
this deathly condition, is that whereto we had, we did not, whereto we
have attained, we do not walk by that. Ah, friend! do not now think of thy
neighbour. Do not applaud my opinion as just from what thou hast seen
around thee, but answer it from thy own being, thy own behaviour. Dost
thou ever feel thus toward thy neighbour,—“Yes, of course, every man
is my brother; but how can I be a brother to him so long as he thinks me
wrong in what I believe, and so long as I think he wrongs in his opinions
the dignity of the truth?” What, I return, has the man no hand to grasp,
no eyes into which yours may gaze far deeper than your vaunted intellect
can follow? Is there not, I ask, anything in him to love? Who asks you to
be of one opinion? It is the Lord who asks you to be of one heart. Does
the Lord love the man? Can the Lord love, where there is nothing to love?
Are you wiser than he, inasmuch as you perceive impossibility where he has
failed to discover it? Or will you say, “Let the Lord love where he
pleases: I will love where I please”? or say, and imagine you yield,
“Well, I suppose I must, and therefore I will,—but with certain
reservations, politely quiet in my own heart”? Or wilt thou say none of
all these things, but do them all, one after the other, in the secret
chambers of thy proud spirit? If you delight to condemn, you are a
wounder, a divider of the oneness of Christ. If you pride yourself on your
loftier vision, and are haughty to your neighbour, you are yourself a
division and have reason to ask: “Am I a particle of the body at all?” The
Master will deal with thee upon the score. Let it humble thee to know that
thy dearest opinion, the one thou dost worship as if it, and not God, were
thy Saviour, this very opinion thou art doomed to change, for it cannot
possibly be right, if it work in thee for death and not for life.</p>
<p>Friends, you have done me the honour and the kindness to ask me to speak
to you. I will speak plainly. I come before you neither hiding anything of
my belief, nor foolishly imagining I can transfer my opinions into your
bosoms. If there is one rôle I hate, it is that of the proselytizer. But
shall I not come to you as a brother to brethren? Shall I not use the
privilege of your invitation and of the place in which I stand, nay, must
I not myself be obedient to the heavenly vision, in urging you with all
the power of my persuasion to set yourselves afresh to <i>walk</i>
according to that to which you have attained. So doing, whatever yet there
is to learn, you shall learn it. Thus doing, and thus only, can you draw
nigh to the centre truth; thus doing, and thus only, shall we draw nigh to
each other, and become brothers and sisters in Christ, caring for each
other’s honour and righteousness and true well-being. It is to them that
keep his commandments that he and his Father will come to take up their
abode with them. Whether you or I have the larger share of the truth in
that which we hold, of this I am sure, that it is to them that keep his
commandments that it shall be given to eat of the Tree of Life. I believe
that Jesus is the eternal son of the eternal Father; that in him the ideal
humanity sat enthroned from all eternity; that as he is the divine man, so
is he the human God; that there was no taking of our nature upon himself,
but the showing of himself as he really was, and that from evermore: these
things, friends, I believe, though never would I be guilty of what in me
would be the irreverence of opening my mouth in dispute upon them. Not for
a moment would I endeavour by argument to convince another of this, my
opinion. If it be true, it is God’s work to show it, for logic cannot. But
the more, and not the less, do I believe that he, who is no respecter of
persons, will, least of all, respect the person of him who thinks to
please him by respecting his person, calling him, “Lord, Lord,” and not
doing the things that he tells him. Even if I be right, friend, and thou
wrong, to thee who doest his commandments more faithfully than I, will the
more abundant entrance be administered. God grant that, when thou art
admitted first, I may not be cast out, but admitted to learn of thee that
it is truth in the inward parts that he requireth, and they that have that
truth, and they alone, shall ever know wisdom. Bear with me, friends, for
I love and honour you. I seek but to stir up your hearts, as I would daily
stir up my own, to be true to that which is deepest in us,—the voice
and the will of the Father of our spirits.</p>
<p>Friends, I have not said we are not to utter our opinions. I have only
said we are not to make those opinions the point of a fresh start, the
foundation of a new building, the groundwork of anything. They are not to
occupy us in our dealings with our brethren. Opinion is often the very
death of love. Love aright, and you will come to think aright; and those
who think aright must think the same. In the meantime, it matters nothing.
The thing that does matter is, that whereto we have attained, by that we
should walk. But, while we are not to insist upon our opinions, which is
only one way of insisting upon ourselves, however we may cloak the fact
from ourselves in the vain imagination of thereby spreading the truth, we
are bound by loftiest duty to spread the truth; for that is the saving of
men. Do you ask, How spread it, if we are not to talk about it? Friends, I
never said, Do not talk about the truth, although I insist upon a better
and the only indispensable way: let your light shine. What I said before,
and say again, is, Do not talk about the lantern that holds the lamp, but
make haste, uncover the light, and let it shine. Let your light so shine
before men that they may see your good works,—I incline to the
Vatican reading of <i>good things</i>,—and glorify your Father who
is in heaven. It is not, Let your good works shine, but, Let your light
shine. Let it be the genuine love of your hearts, taking form in true
deeds; not the doing of good deeds to prove that your opinions are right.
If ye are thus true, your very talk about the truth will be a good work, a
shining of the light that is in you. A true smile is a good work, and may
do much to reveal the Father who is in heaven; but the smile that is put
on for the sake of looking right, or even for the sake of being right,
will hardly reveal him, not being like him. Men say that you are cold: if
you fear it may be so, do not think to make yourselves warm by putting on
the cloak of this or that fresh opinion; draw nearer to the central heat,
the living humanity of the Son of Man, that ye may have life in
yourselves, so heat in yourselves, so light in yourselves; understand him,
obey him, then your light will shine, and your warmth will warm. There is
an infection, as in evil, so in good. The better we are, the more will men
glorify God. If we trim our lamps so that we have light in our house, that
light will shine through our windows, and give light to those that are not
in the house. But remember, love of the light alone can trim the lamp. Had
Love trimmed Psyche’s lamp, it had never dropped the scalding oil that
scared him from her.</p>
<p>The man who holds his opinion the most honestly ought to see the most
plainly that his opinion must change. It is impossible a man should hold
anything aright. How shall the created embrace the self-existent Creator?
That Creator, and he alone, is <i>the truth</i>: how, then, shall a man
embrace the truth? But to him who will live it,—to him, that is, who
walks by that to which he has attained,—the truth will reach down a
thousand true hands for his to grasp. We would not wish to enclose that
which we can do more than enclose,—live in, namely, as our home,
inherit, exult in,—the presence of the infinitely higher and better,
the heart of the living one. And, if we know that God himself is our
inheritance, why should we tremble even with hatred at the suggestion that
we may, that we must, change our opinions? If we held them aright, we
should know that nothing in them that is good can ever be lost; for that
is the true, whatever in them may be the false. It is only as they help us
toward God, that our opinions are worth a straw; and every necessary
change in them must be to more truth, to greater uplifting power. Lord,
change me as thou wilt, only do not send me away. That in my opinions for
which I really hold them, if I be a true man, will never pass away; that
which my evils and imperfections have, in the process of embodying it,
associated with the truth, must, thank God, perish and fall. My opinions,
as my life, as my love, I leave in the hands of him who is my being. I
commend my spirit to him of whom it came. Why, then, that dislike to the
very idea of such change, that dread of having to accept the thing offered
by those whom we count our opponents, which is such a stumbling-block in
the way in which we have to walk, such an obstruction to our yet
inevitable growth? It may be objected that no man will hold his opinions
with the needful earnestness, who can entertain the idea of having to
change them. But the very objection speaks powerfully against such an
overvaluing of opinion. For what is it but to say that, in order to be
wise, a man must consent to be a fool. Whatever must be, a man must be
able to look in the face. It is because we cleave to our opinions rather
than to the living God, because self and pride interest themselves for
their own vile sakes with that which belongs only to the truth, that we
become such fools of logic and temper that we lie in the prison-houses of
our own fancies, ideas, and experiences, shut the doors and windows
against the entrance of the free spirit, and will not inherit the love of
the Father.</p>
<p>Yet, for the help and comfort of even such a refuser as this, I would say:
Nothing which you reject can be such as it seems to you. For a thing is
either true or untrue: if it be untrue, it looks, so far like itself that
you reject it, and with it we have nothing more to do; but, if it be true,
the very fact that you reject it shows that to you it has not appeared
true,—has not appeared itself. The truth can never be even beheld
but by the man who accepts it: the thing, therefore, which you reject, is
not that which it seems to you, but a thing good, and altogether
beautiful, altogether fit for your gladsome embrace,—a thing from
which you would not turn away, did you see it as it is, but rush to it, as
Dante says, like the wild beast to his den,—so eager for the refuge
of home. No honest man holds a truth for the sake of that because of which
another honest man rejects it: how it may be with the dishonest, I have no
confidence in my judgment, and hope I am not bound to understand.</p>
<p>Let us then, my friends, beware lest our opinions come between us and our
God, between us and our neighbour, between us and our better selves. Let
us be jealous that the human shall not obscure the divine. For we are not
<i>mere</i> human: we, too, are divine; and there is no such obliterator
of the divine as the human that acts undivinely. The one security against
our opinions is to walk according to the truth which they contain.</p>
<p>And if men seem to us unreasonable, opposers of that which to us is
plainly true, let us remember that we are not here to convince men, but to
let our light shine. Knowledge is not necessarily light; and it is light,
not knowledge, that we have to diffuse. The best thing we can do,
infinitely the best, indeed the only thing, that men may receive the
truth, is to be ourselves true. Beyond all doing of good is the being
good; for he that is good not only does good things, but all that he does
is good. Above all, let us be humble before the God of truth, faithfully
desiring of him that truth in the inward parts which alone can enable us
to walk according to that which we have attained. May the God of peace
give you his peace; may the love of Christ constrain you; may the gift of
the Holy Spirit be yours. Amen.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> TRUE CHRISTIAN MINISTERING. </h2>
<p>[Footnote: A spoken sermon.]</p>
<p>MATT. xx. 25—28—But Jesus called them unto him and said, Ye
know that the princes of the Gentiles exercise dominion over them, and
they that are great exercise authority upon them. But it should not be so
among you: but whosoever will be great among you, let him be your
minister; and whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant:
even as the Son of Man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister,
and to give his life a ransom for many.</p>
<p>How little this is believed! People think, if they think about it at all,
that this is very well in the church, but, as things go in the world, it
won’t do. At least, their actions imply this, for every man is struggling
to get above the other. Every man would make his neighbour his footstool
that he may climb upon him to some throne of glory which he has in his own
mind. There is a continual jostling, and crowding, and buzzing, and
striving to get promotion. Of course there are known and noble exceptions;
but still, there it is. And yet we call ourselves “Christians,” and we are
Christians, all of us, thus far, that the truth is within reach of us all,
that it has come nigh to us, talking to us at our door, and even speaking
in our hearts, and yet this is the way in which we go on! The Lord said,
“It shall not be so among you.” Did he mean only his twelve disciples?
This was all that he had to say to them, but—thanks be to him!—he
says the same to every one of us now. “It shall not be so among you: that
is not the way in my kingdom.” The people of the world—the people
who live in the world—will always think it best to get up, to have
less and less of service to do, more and more of service done to them. The
notion of rank in the world is like a pyramid; the higher you go up, the
fewer are there who have to serve those above them, and who are served
more than those underneath them. All who are under serve those who are
above, until you come to the apex, and there stands some one who has to do
no service, but whom all the others have to serve. Something like that is
the notion of position—of social standing and rank. And if it be so
in an intellectual way even—to say nothing of mere bodily service—if
any man works to a position that others shall all look up to him and that
he may have to look up to nobody, he has just put himself precisely into
the same condition as the people of whom our Lord speaks—as those
who exercise dominion and authority, and really he thinks it a fine thing
to be served.</p>
<p>But it is not so in the kingdom of heaven. The figure there is entirely
reversed. As you may see a pyramid reflected in the water, just so, in a
reversed way altogether, is the thing to be found in the kingdom of God.
It is in this way: the Son of Man lies at the inverted apex of the
pyramid; he upholds, and serves, and ministers unto all, and they who
would be high in his kingdom must go near to him at the bottom, to uphold
and minister to all that they may or can uphold and minister unto. There
is no other law of precedence, no other law of rank and position in God’s
kingdom. And mind, that is <i>the</i> kingdom. The other kingdom passes
away—it is a transitory, ephemeral, passing, bad thing, and away it
must go. It is only there on sufferance, because in the mind of God even
that which is bad ministers to that which is good; and when the new
kingdom is built the old kingdom shall pass away.</p>
<p>But the man who seeks this rank of which I have spoken, must be honest to
follow it. It will not do to say, “I want to be great, and therefore I
will serve.” A man will not get at it so. He may begin so, but he will
soon find that that will not do. He must seek it for the truth’s sake, for
the love of his fellows, for the worship of God, for the delight in what
is good. In the kingdom of heaven people do not think whether I am
promoted, or whether you are promoted. They are so absorbed in the delight
and glory of the goodness that is round about them, that they learn not to
think much about themselves. It is the bad that is in us that makes us
think about ourselves. It is necessary for us, because there is bad in us,
to think about ourselves, but as we go on we think less and less about
ourselves, until at last we are possessed with the spirit of the truth,
the spirit of the kingdom, and live in gladness and in peace. We are
prouder of our brothers and sisters than of ourselves; we delight to look
at them. God looks at us, and makes us what he pleases, and this is what
we must come to; there is no escape from it.</p>
<p>But the Lord says, that “the Son of Man came not to be ministered unto.”
Was he not ministered unto then? Ah! he was ministered unto as never man
was, but he did not come for that. Even now we bring to him the
burnt-offerings of our very spirits, but he did not come for that. It was
to help us that he came. We are told, likewise, that he is the express
image of the Father. Then what he does, the Father must do; and he says
himself, when he is accused of breaking the Sabbath by doing work on it,
“My Father worketh hitherto, and I work.” Then this must be God’s way too,
or else it could not have been Jesus’s way. It is God’s way. Oh! do not
think that God made us with his hands, and then turned us out to find out
our own way. Do not think of him as being always over our heads, merely
throwing over us a wide-spread benevolence. You can imagine the tenderness
of a mother’s heart who takes her child even from its beloved nurse to
soothe and to minister to it, and that is like God; that is God. His hand
is not only over us, but recollect what David said—“His hand was
upon me.” I wish we were all as good Christians as David was. “Wherever I
go,” he said, “God is there—beneath me, before me, his hand is upon
me; if I go to sleep he is there; when I go down to the dead he is there.”
Everywhere is God. The earth underneath us is his hand upholding us.
[Footnote: The waters are in the hollow of it.] Every spring-fountain of
gladness about us is his making and his delight. He tends us and cares for
us; he is close to us, breathing into our nostrils the breath of life, and
breathing into our spirit this thought and that thought to make us look up
and recognize the love and the care around us. What a poor thing for the
little baby would it be if it were to be constantly tended thus tenderly
and preciously by its mother, but if it were never to open its eyes to
look up and see her mother’s face bending over it. A poor thing all its
tending would be without that. It is for that that the other exists; it is
by that that the other comes. To recognize and know this loving-kindness,
and to stand up in it strong and glad; this is the ministration of God
unto us. Do you ever think “I could worship God if he was so-and-so?” Do
you imagine that God is not as good, as perfect, as absolutely all-in-all
as your thoughts can imagine? Aye, you cannot come up to it; do what you
will you never will come up to it. Use all the symbols that we have in
nature, in human relations, in the family—all our symbols of grace
and tenderness, and loving-kindness between man and man, and between man
and woman, and between woman and woman, but you can never come up to the
thought of what God’s ministration is. When our Lord came he just let us
see how his Father was doing this always, he “came to give his life a
ransom for many.” It was in giving his life a ransom for us that he died;
that was the consummation and crown of it all, but it was his life that he
gave for us—his whole being, his whole strength, his whole energy—not
alone his days of trouble and of toil, but deeper than that, he gave his
whole being for us; yea, he even went down to death for us.</p>
<p>But how are we to learn this ministration? I will tell you where it
begins. The most of us are forced to work; if you do not see that the
commonest things in life belong to the Christian scheme, the plan of God,
you have got to learn it. I say this is at the beginning. Most of us have
to work, and infinitely better is that for us than if we were not forced
to work, but not a very fine thing unless it goes to something farther. We
are forced to work; and what is our work? It is doing something for other
people always. It is doing; it is ministration in some shape or other. All
kind of work is a serving, but it may not be always Christian service. No.
Some of us only work for our wages; we must have them. We starve, and
deserve to starve, if we do not work to get them. But we must go a little
beyond that; yes, a very great way beyond that. There is no honest work
that one man does for another which he may not do as unto the Lord and not
unto men; in which he cannot do right as he ought to do right. Thus, I say
that the man who sees the commonest thing in the world, recognizing it as
part of the divine order of things, the law by which the world goes, being
the intention of God that one man should be serviceable and useful to
another—the man, I say, who does a thing well because of this, and
who tries to do it better, is doing God service.</p>
<p>We talk of “divine service.” It is a miserable name for a great thing. It
is not service, properly speaking, at all. When a boy comes to his father
and says, “May I do so and so for you?” or, rather, comes and breaks out
in some way, showing his love to his father—says, “May I come and
sit beside you? May I have some of your books? May I come and be quiet a
little in your room?” what would you think of that boy if he went and
said, “I have been doing my father a service.” So with praying to and
thanking God, do you call that serving God? If it is not serving
yourselves it is worth nothing; if it is not the best condition you can
find yourselves in, you have to learn what it is yet. Not so; the work you
have to do to-morrow in the counting-house, in the shop, or wherever you
may be, is that by which you are to serve God. Do it with a high regard,
and then there is nothing mean in it; but there is everything mean in it
if you are pretending to please people when you only look for your wages.
It is mean then; but if you have regard to doing a thing nobly, greatly,
and truly, because it is the work that God has given you to do, then you
are doing the divine service.</p>
<p>Of course, this goes a great deal farther. We have endless opportunities
of showing ourselves neighbours to the man who comes near us. That is the
divine service; that is the reality of serving God. The others ought to be
your reward, if “reward” is a word that can be used in such a relation at
all. Go home and speak to God; nay, hold your tongue, and quietly go to
him in the secret recesses of your own heart, and know that God is there.
Say, “God has given me this work to do, and I am doing it;” and that is
your joy, that is your refuge, that is your going to heaven. It is not
service. The words “divine service,” as they are used, always move me to
something of indignation. It is perfect paganism; it is looking to please
God by gathering together your services,—something that is supposed
to be service to him. He is serving us for ever, and our Lord says, “If I
have washed your feet, so you ought to wash one another’s feet.” This will
be the way in which to minister for some.</p>
<p>But still, when we are beginning to learn this, some of us are looking
about us in a blind kind of way, thinking, “I wish I could serve God; I do
not know what to do! How is it to be begun? What is it at the root of it?
What shall I find out to do? Where is there something to do?”</p>
<p>Now, first of all, service is obedience, or it is nothing. This is what I
would gladly impress upon you; upon every young man who has come to the
point to be able to receive it. There is a tendency in us to think that
there is something degrading in obedience, something degrading in service.
According to the social judgment there is; according to the judgment of
the earth there is. Not so according to the judgment of heaven, for God
would only have us do the very thing he is doing himself. You may see the
tendency of this nowadays. There is scarcely a young man who will speak of
his “master.” He feels as if there is something that hurts his dignity in
doing so. He does just what so many theologians have done about God, who,
instead of taking what our Lord has given us, talk about God as “the
Governor of the Universe.” So a young man talks about his master as “the
governor;” nay, he even talks of his own father in that way, and then you
come in another region altogether, and a worse one. I take these things as
symptoms, mind. I know habits may be picked up, when they get common,
without any great corresponding feeling; but a wrong habit tends always to
a wrong feeling, and if a man cannot learn to honour his father, so as to
be able to call him “father,” I think one or the other of them is greatly
to blame, whether the father or the son I cannot say. I know there are
such parents that to tell their children that God is their “Father” is no
help to them, but the contrary. I heard of a lady just the other day to
whom, in trying to comfort her, some one said, “Remember God is your
Father.” “Do not mention the name ‘father’ to me,” she said. Ah! that kind
of fault does not lie in God, but in those who, not being like him, cannot
use the names aright which belong to him.</p>
<p>But now, as to this service, this obedience. Our Lord came to give his
life a ransom for the many, and to minister unto all in obedience to his
Father’s will. We call him equal with God—at least, most of us here,
I suppose, do; of course we do not pretend to explain; we know that God is
greater than he, because he said so; but somehow, we can worship him with
our God, and we need not try to distinguish more than is necessary about
it. But do you think that he was less divine than the Father when he was
obedient? Observe his obedience to the will of his Father. He was not the
ruler there. He did not give the commands; he obeyed them. And yet we say
He is God! Ah, that is no difficulty to me. Obedience is as divine in its
essence as command; nay, it may be more divine in the human being far; it
cannot be more divine in God, but obedience is far more divine in its
essence with regard to humanity than command is. It is not the ruling
being who is most like God; it is the man who ministers to his fellow, who
is like God; and the man who will just sternly and rigidly do what his
master tells him—be that master what he may—who is likest
Christ in that one particular matter. Obedience is the grandest thing in
the world to begin with. Yes, and we shall end with it too. I do not think
the time will ever come when we shall not have something to do, because we
are told to do it without knowing why. Those parents act most foolishly
who wish to explain everything to their children—most foolishly. No;
teach your child to obey, and you give him the most precious lesson that
can be given to a child. Let him come to that before you have had him
long, to do what he is told, and you have given him the plainest, first,
and best lesson that you can give him. If he never goes to school at all
he had better have that lesson than all the schooling in the world. Hence,
when some people are accustomed to glorify this age of ours as being so
much better in everything than those which went before, I look back to the
times of chivalry, which we regard now, almost, as a thing to laugh at, or
a merry thing to make jokes about; but I find that the one essential of
chivalry was obedience. It is recognized in our army still, but in those
times it was carried much farther. When a boy was seven years old he was
sent into another family, and put with another boy there to do what? To
wait with him upon the master and the mistress of the house, and to be
taught, as well, what few things they knew in those times in the way of
intellectual cultivation. But he also learned stern, strict obedience,
such as it was impossible for him to forget. Then, when he had been there
seven years, hard at work, standing behind the chair, and ministering, he
was advanced a step; and what was that step? He was made an esquire. He
had his armour given him; he had to watch his armour in the chapel all
night, laying it on the altar in silent devotion to God. I do not say that
all these things were carried out afterwards, but this was the idea of
them. He was an esquire, and what was the duty of an esquire? More
service; more important service. He still had to attend to his master, the
knight. He had to watch him; he had to groom his horse for him; he had to
see that his horse was sound; he had to clean his armour for him; to see
that every bolt, every rivet, every strap, every buckle was sound, for the
life of his master was in his hands. The master, having to fight, must not
be troubled with these things, and therefore the squire had to attend to
them. Then seven years after that a more solemn ceremony is gone through,
and the squire is made a knight; but is he free of service then? No; he
makes a solemn oath to help everybody who needs help, especially women and
children, and so he rides out into the world to do the work of a true man.
There was a grand and essential idea of Christianity in that—no
doubt wonderfully broken and shattered, but not more so than the Christian
church has been; wonderfully broken and shattered, but still the essence
of obedience; and I say it is recognized in our army still, and in every
army; and where it is lost it is a terrible loss, and an army is worth
nothing without it. You remember that terrible story from the East, that
fearful death-charge, one of the grandest things in our history, although
one of the most blundering:—</p>
<p>“Theirs not to make reply,<br/>
Theirs not to reason why,<br/>
Theirs but to do and die;<br/>
Into the valley of death<br/>
Rode the Six Hundred.”<br/></p>
<p>So with the Christian man; whatever meets him, obedience is the thing. If
he is told by his conscience, which is the candle of God within him, that
he must do a thing, why he must do it. He may tremble from head to foot at
having to do it, but he will tremble more if he turns his back. You
recollect how our old poet Spenser shows us the Knight of the Red Cross,
who is the knight of holiness, ill in body, diseased in mind, without any
of his armour on, attacked by a fearful giant. What does he do? Run away?
No, he has but time to catch up his sword, and, trembling in every limb,
he goes on to meet the giant; and that is the thing that every Christian
man must do. I cannot put it too strongly; it is impossible. There is no
escape from it. If death itself lies before us, and we know it, there is
nothing to be said; it is all to be done, and then there is no loss;
everything else is all lost unto God. Look at our Lord. He gave his life
to do the will of his Father, and on he went and did it. Do you think it
was easy for him—easier for him than it would have been for us? Ah!
the greater the man the more delicate and tender his nature, and the more
he shrinks from the opposition even of his fellowmen, because he loves
them. It was a terrible thing for Christ. Even now and then, even in the
little touches that come to us in the scanty story (though enough) this
breaks out. “We are told by John that at the Last Supper He was troubled
in spirit, and testified.” And then how he tries to comfort himself as
soon as Judas has gone out to do the thing which was to finish his great
work: “Now is the Son of Man glorified, and God is glorified in him. If
God be glorified in him, God shall also glorify him in himself.” Then he
adds,—just gathering up his strength,—“I shall straightway
glorify him.” This was said to his disciples, but I seem to see in it that
some of it was said for himself. This is the grand obedience! Oh, friends,
this is a hard lesson to learn. We find every day that it is a hard thing
to teach. We are continually grumbling because we cannot get the people
about us, our servants, our tradespeople, or whoever they may be, to do
just what we tell them. It makes half the misery in the world because they
will have something of their own in it against what they are told. But are
we not always doing the same thing? and ought we not to learn something of
forgiveness for them, and very much from the fact that we are just in the
same position? We only recognize in part that we are put here in this
world precisely to learn to be obedient. He who is our Lord and our God
went on being obedient all the time, and was obedient always; and I say it
is as divine for us to obey as it is for God to rule. As I have said
already, God is ministering the whole time. Now, do you want to know how
to minister? Begin by obeying. Obey every one who has a right to command
you; but above all, look to what our Lord has said, and find out what he
wants you to do out of what he left behind, and try whether obedience to
that will not give a consciousness of use, of ministering, of being a part
of the grand scheme and way of God in this world. In fact, take your place
in it as a vital portion of the divine kingdom, or—to use a better
figure than that—a vital portion of the Godhead. Try it, and see
whether obedience is not salvation; whether service is not dignity;
whether you will not feel in yourselves that you have begun to be cleansed
from your plague when you begin to say, “I will seek no more to be above
my fellows, but I will seek to minister to them, doing my work in God’s
name for them.”</p>
<p>“Who sweeps a room as for Thy law,<br/>
Makes that and the action fine.”<br/></p>
<p>Both the room and the action are good when done for God’s sake. That is
dear old George Herbert’s way of saying the same truth, for every man has
his own way of saying it. The gift of the Spirit of God to make you think
as God thinks, feel as God feels, judge as God judges, is just the one
thing that is promised. I do not know anything else that is promised
positively but that, and who dares pray for anything else with perfect
confidence? God will not give us what we pray for except it be good for
us, but that is one thing that we must have or perish. Therefore, let us
pray for that, and with the name of God dwelling in us—if this is
not true, the whole world is a heap of ruins—let us go forth and do
this service of God in ministering to our fellows, and so helping him in
his work of upholding, and glorifying and saving all.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> THE FANTASTIC IMAGINATION </h2>
<p>That we have in English no word corresponding to the German <i>Mährchen</i>,
drives us to use the word <i>Fairytale</i>, regardless of the fact that
the tale may have nothing to do with any sort of fairy. The old use of the
word <i>Fairy</i>, by Spenser at least, might, however, well be adduced,
were justification or excuse necessary where <i>need must</i>.</p>
<p>Were I asked, what is a fairytale? I should reply, <i>Read Undine: that is
a fairytale; then read this and that as well, and you will see what is a
fairytale</i>. Were I further begged to describe the <i>fairytale</i>, or
define what it is, I would make answer, that I should as soon think of
describing the abstract human face, or stating what must go to constitute
a human being. A fairytale is just a fairytale, as a face is just a face;
and of all fairytales I know, I think <i>Undine</i> the most beautiful.</p>
<p>Many a man, however, who would not attempt to define <i>a man</i>, might
venture to say something as to what a man ought to be: even so much I will
not in this place venture with regard to the fairytale, for my long past
work in that kind might but poorly instance or illustrate my now more
matured judgment. I will but say some things helpful to the reading, in
right-minded fashion, of such fairytales as I would wish to write, or care
to read.</p>
<p>Some thinkers would feel sorely hampered if at liberty to use no forms but
such as existed in nature, or to invent nothing save in accordance with
the laws of the world of the senses; but it must not therefore be imagined
that they desire escape from the region of law. Nothing lawless can show
the least reason why it should exist, or could at best have more than an
appearance of life.</p>
<p>The natural world has its laws, and no man must interfere with them in the
way of presentment any more than in the way of use; but they themselves
may suggest laws of other kinds, and man may, if he pleases, invent a
little world of his own, with its own laws; for there is that in him which
delights in calling up new forms—which is the nearest, perhaps, he
can come to creation. When such forms are new embodiments of old truths,
we call them products of the Imagination; when they are mere inventions,
however lovely, I should call them the work of the Fancy: in either case,
Law has been diligently at work.</p>
<p>His world once invented, the highest law that comes next into play is,
that there shall be harmony between the laws by which the new world has
begun to exist; and in the process of his creation, the inventor must hold
by those laws. The moment he forgets one of them, he makes the story, by
its own postulates, incredible. To be able to live a moment in an imagined
world, we must see the laws of its existence obeyed. Those broken, we fall
out of it. The imagination in us, whose exercise is essential to the most
temporary submission to the imagination of another, immediately, with the
disappearance, of Law, ceases to act. Suppose the gracious creatures of
some childlike region of Fairyland talking either cockney or Gascon! Would
not the tale, however lovelily begun, sink at once to the level of the
Burlesque—of all forms of literature the least worthy? A man’s
inventions may be stupid or clever, but if he do not hold by the laws of
them, or if he make one law jar with another, he contradicts himself as an
inventor, he is no artist. He does not rightly consort his instruments, or
he tunes them in different keys. The mind of man is the product of live
Law; it thinks by law, it dwells in the midst of law, it gathers from law
its growth; with law, therefore, can it alone work to any result.
Inharmonious, unconsorting ideas will come to a man, but if he try to use
one of such, his work will grow dull, and he will drop it from mere lack
of interest. Law is the soil in which alone beauty will grow; beauty is
the only stuff in which Truth can be clothed; and you may, if you will,
call Imagination the tailor that cuts her garments to fit her, and Fancy
his journeyman that puts the pieces of them together, or perhaps at most
embroiders their button-holes. Obeying law, the maker works like his
creator; not obeying law, he is such a fool as heaps a pile of stones and
calls it a church.</p>
<p>In the moral world it is different: there a man may clothe in new forms,
and for this employ his imagination freely, but he must invent nothing. He
may not, for any purpose, turn its laws upside down. He must not meddle
with the relations of live souls. The laws of the spirit of man must hold,
alike in this world and in any world he may invent. It were no offence to
suppose a world in which everything repelled instead of attracted the
things around it; it would be wicked to write a tale representing a man it
called good as always doing bad things, or a man it called bad as always
doing good things: the notion itself is absolutely lawless. In physical
things a man may invent; in moral things he must obey—and take their
laws with him into his invented world as well.</p>
<p>“You write as if a fairytale were a thing of importance: must it have a
meaning?”</p>
<p>It cannot help having some meaning; if it have proportion and harmony it
has vitality, and vitality is truth. The beauty may be plainer in it than
the truth, but without the truth the beauty could not be, and the
fairytale would give no delight. Everyone, however, who feels the story,
will read its meaning after his own nature and development: one man will
read one meaning in it, another will read another.</p>
<p>“If so, how am I to assure myself that I am not reading my own meaning
into it, but yours out of it?”</p>
<p>Why should you be so assured? It may be better that you should read your
meaning into it. That may be a higher operation of your intellect than the
mere reading of mine out of it: your meaning may be superior to mine.</p>
<p>“Suppose my child ask me what the fairytale means, what am I to say?”</p>
<p>If you do not know what it means, what is easier than to say so? If you do
see a meaning in it, there it is for you to give him. A genuine work of
art must mean many things; the truer its art, the more things it will
mean. If my drawing, on the other hand, is so far from being a work of art
that it needs THIS IS A HORSE written under it, what can it matter that
neither you nor your child should know what it means? It is there not so
much to convey a meaning as to wake a meaning. If it do not even wake an
interest, throw it aside. A meaning may be there, but it is not for you.
If, again, you do not know a horse when you see it, the name written under
it will not serve you much. At all events, the business of the painter is
not to teach zoology.</p>
<p>But indeed your children are not likely to trouble you about the meaning.
They find what they are capable of finding, and more would be too much.
For my part, I do not write for children, but for the childlike, whether
of five, or fifty, or seventy-five.</p>
<p>A fairytale is not an allegory. There may be allegory in it, but it is not
an allegory. He must be an artist indeed who can, in any mode, produce a
strict allegory that is not a weariness to the spirit. An allegory must be
Mastery or Moorditch.</p>
<p>A fairytale, like a butterfly or a bee, helps itself on all sides, sips at
every wholesome flower, and spoils not one. The true fairytale is, to my
mind, very like the sonata. We all know that a sonata means something; and
where there is the faculty of talking with suitable vagueness, and
choosing metaphor sufficiently loose, mind may approach mind, in the
interpretation of a sonata, with the result of a more or less contenting
consciousness of sympathy. But if two or three men sat down to write each
what the sonata meant to him, what approximation to definite idea would be
the result? Little enough—and that little more than needful. We
should find it had roused related, if not identical, feelings, but
probably not one common thought. Has the sonata therefore failed? Had it
undertaken to convey, or ought it to be expected to impart anything
defined, anything notionally recognizable?</p>
<p>“But words are not music; words at least are meant and fitted to carry a
precise meaning!”</p>
<p>It is very seldom indeed that they carry the exact meaning of any user of
them! And if they can be so used as to convey definite meaning, it does
not follow that they ought never to carry anything else. Words are live
things that may be variously employed to various ends. They can convey a
scientific fact, or throw a shadow of her child’s dream on the heart of a
mother. They are things to put together like the pieces of a dissected
map, or to arrange like the notes on a stave. Is the music in them to go
for nothing? It can hardly help the definiteness of a meaning: is it
therefore to be disregarded? They have length, and breadth, and outline:
have they nothing to do with depth? Have they only to describe, never to
impress? Has nothing any claim to their use but the definite? The cause of
a child’s tears may be altogether undefinable: has the mother therefore no
antidote for his vague misery? That may be strong in colour which has no
evident outline. A fairytale, a sonata, a gathering storm, a limitless
night, seizes you and sweeps you away: do you begin at once to wrestle
with it and ask whence its power over you, whither it is carrying you? The
law of each is in the mind of its composer; that law makes one man feel
this way, another man feel that way. To one the sonata is a world of odour
and beauty, to another of soothing only and sweetness. To one, the cloudy
rendezvous is a wild dance, with a terror at its heart; to another, a
majestic march of heavenly hosts, with Truth in their centre pointing
their course, but as yet restraining her voice. The greatest forces lie in
the region of the uncomprehended.</p>
<p>I will go farther.—The best thing you can do for your fellow, next
to rousing his conscience, is—not to give him things to think about,
but to wake things up that are in him; or say, to make him think things
for himself. The best Nature does for us is to work in us such moods in
which thoughts of high import arise. Does any aspect of Nature wake but
one thought? Does she ever suggest only one definite thing? Does she make
any two men in the same place at the same moment think the same thing? Is
she therefore a failure, because she is not definite? Is it nothing that
she rouses the something deeper than the understanding—the power
that underlies thoughts? Does she not set feeling, and so thinking at
work? Would it be better that she did this after one fashion and not after
many fashions? Nature is mood-engendering, thought-provoking: such ought
the sonata, such ought the fairytale to be.</p>
<p>“But a man may then imagine in your work what he pleases, what you never
meant!”</p>
<p>Not what he pleases, but what he can. If he be not a true man, he will
draw evil out of the best; we need not mind how he treats any work of art!
If he be a true man, he will imagine true things; what matter whether I
meant them or not? They are there none the less that I cannot claim
putting them there! One difference between God’s work and man’s is, that,
while God’s work cannot mean more than he meant, man’s must mean more than
he meant. For in everything that God has made, there is layer upon layer
of ascending significance; also he expresses the same thought in higher
and higher kinds of that thought: it is God’s things, his embodied
thoughts, which alone a man has to use, modified and adapted to his own
purposes, for the expression of his thoughts; therefore he cannot help his
words and figures falling into such combinations in the mind of another as
he had himself not foreseen, so many are the thoughts allied to every
other thought, so many are the relations involved in every figure, so many
the facts hinted in every symbol. A man may well himself discover truth in
what he wrote; for he was dealing all the time with things that came from
thoughts beyond his own.</p>
<p>“But surely you would explain your idea to one who asked you?”</p>
<p>I say again, if I cannot draw a horse, I will not write THIS IS A HORSE
under what I foolishly meant for one. Any key to a work of imagination
would be nearly, if not quite, as absurd. The tale is there, not to hide,
but to show: if it show nothing at your window, do not open your door to
it; leave it out in the cold. To ask me to explain, is to say, “Roses!
Boil them, or we won’t have them!” My tales may not be roses, but I will
not boil them.</p>
<p>So long as I think my dog can bark, I will not sit up to bark for him.</p>
<p>If a writer’s aim be logical conviction, he must spare no logical pains,
not merely to be understood, but to escape being misunderstood; where his
object is to move by suggestion, to cause to imagine, then let him assail
the soul of his reader as the wind assails an aeolian harp. If there be
music in my reader, I would gladly wake it. Let fairytale of mine go for a
firefly that now flashes, now is dark, but may flash again. Caught in a
hand which does not love its kind, it will turn to an insignificant, ugly
thing, that can neither flash nor fly.</p>
<p>The best way with music, I imagine, is not to bring the forces of our
intellect to bear upon it, but to be still and let it work on that part of
us for whose sake it exists. We spoil countless precious things by
intellectual greed. He who will be a man, and will not be a child, must—he
cannot help himself—become a little man, that is, a dwarf. He will,
however, need no consolation, for he is sure to think himself a very large
creature indeed.</p>
<p>If any strain of my “broken music” make a child’s eyes flash, or his
mother’s grow for a moment dim, my labour will not have been in vain.</p>
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