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when they shall see Him face to face whose eyes are as a flame of fire, will as little bargain to pray pleasantly now, as they will think of doing so then."

a present object for your heart and imagin tion. That is surely the most potent of a influences! nothing can come up to it. To at Oxford Emerson was but a voice speaking 5 from three thousand miles away. But so w he spoke, that from that time forth Boston Bay and Concord were names invested t my ear with a sentiment akin to that which invests for me the names of Oxford and Weimar; and snatches of Emerson's stra fixed themselves in my mind as imperishab as any of the eloquent words which I ha been just now quoting. "Then dies the ma in you; then once more perish the buds of s poetry, and science, as they have died alrea in a thousand thousand men." "What Ph: has thought, he may think; what a saint b felt, he may feel; what at any time has be fallen any man, he can understand." "Tr thyself! every heart vibrates to that iron strin Accept the place the Divine Providence h found for you, the society of your contempe aries, the connexion of events. Great m have always done so, and confided themselv

Somewhere or other I have spoken of those "last enchantments of the Middle Age" which Oxford sheds around us, and here they were! But there were other voices sounding in our ear besides Newman's. There was the puissant voice of Carlyle; so sorely strained, 10 over-used, and misused since, but then fresh, comparatively sound, and reaching our hearts with true, pathetic eloquence. Who can forget the emotion of receiving in its first freshness such a sentence as that sentence of Carlyle 15 upon Edward Irving, then just dead: "Scotland sent him forth a herculean man; our mad Babylon wore and wasted him with all her engines,—and it took her twelve years!" A greater voice still,-the greatest voice of that 20 century, came to us in those youthful years through Carlyle: the voice of Goethe. To this day, such is the force of youthful associations,-I read the Wilhelm Meister with more pleasure in Carlyle's translation than in the 25 childlike to the genius of their age; betrayi original. The large, liberal view of human life in Wilhelm Meister, how novel it was to the Englishman in those days! and it was salutary, too, and educative for him, doubtless, as well as novel. But what moved us most in Wilhelm 30 Meister was that which, after all, will always move the young most,-the poetry, the eloquence. Never, surely, was Carlyle's prose so beautiful and pure as in the rendering of the Youth's dirge over Mignon!-"Well is our 35 treasure now laid up, the fair image of the past. Here sleeps it in the marble, undecaying; in your hearts, also, it lives, it works. Travel, travel, back into life! Take along with you this holy earnestness, for earnestness alone 40 makes life eternity." Here we had the voice of the great Goethe;—not the stiff, and hindered, and frigid, and factitious Goethe who speaks to us too often from those sixty volumes of his, but of the great Goethe, and the true 45

one.

And besides those voices, there came to us in that old Oxford time a voice also from this side of the Atlantic,-a clear and pure voice, which for my ear, at any rate, brought a strain 50 as new, and moving, and unforgettable, as the strain of Newman, or Carlyle, or Goethe. Mr. Lowell has well described the apparition of Emerson to your young generation here, in that distant time of which I am speaking, and 55 of his workings upon them. He was your Newman, your man of soul and genius visible to you in the flesh, speaking to your bodily ears, ⚫ V. p. 745.

their perception that the Eternal was stirri at their heart, working through their ha predominating in all their being. And we now men, and must accept in the highes spirit the same transcendent destiny; and pinched in a corner, not cowards fleeing fore a revolution, but redeemers and bet factors, pious aspirants to be noble clay plast under the Almighty effort, let us advance advance on chaos and the dark!" These lo sentences of Emerson, and a hundred oth of like strain, I have never lost out of memory; I never can lose them.

WORDSWORTH

(From Essays in Criticism, Second Series 1888)

Long ago, in speaking of Homer, I said th. the noble and profound application of to life' is the most essential part of poetic gre ness. I said that a great poet receives his d tinctive character of superiority from application, under the conditions immuts fixed by the laws of poetic beauty and port truth, from his application, I say, to his su ject, whatever it may be, of the ideas

"On man, on nature, and on human life,” which he has acquired for himself. The quoted is Wordsworth's own; and his periority arises from his powerful use; in best pieces, his powerful application to

L

ubject, of ideas "on man, on nature, and on human life."

Voltaire with his signal. acuteness, most ruly remarked that "no nation has treated n poetry moral ideas with more energy and depth than the English nation." And he adds: There, it seems to me, is the great merit of he English poets." Voltaire does not mean, -y "treating in poetry moral ideas," the

makes hardly any difference, because human life itself is in so preponderating a degree moral.

It is important, therefore, to hold fast to 5 this: that poetry is at bottom a criticism of life; that the greatness of a poet lies in his powerful and beautiful application of ideas to life, to the question: How to live. Morals are often treated in a narrow and false fashion;

omposing moral and didactic poems;-that 10 they are bound up with systems of thought

rings us but a very little way in poetry. He Deans just the same thing as was meant when spoke above "of the noble and profound aplication of ideas to life;" and he means the

and belief which have had their day; they are fallen into the hands of pedants and professional dealers; they grow tiresome to some of us. We find attraction, at times, even in a

pplication of these ideas under the conditions 15 poetry of revolt against them; in a poetry which

might take for its motto Omar Khayyam's words: "Let us make up in the tavern for the time which we have wasted in the mosque." Or we find attractions in a poetry indifferent

xed for us by the laws of poetic beauty and oetic truth. If it is said to call these ideas oral ideas is to introduce a strong and inrious limitation, I answer that it is to do othing of the kind, because moral ideas are 20 to them; in a poetry where the contents may

eally so main a part of human life. The queson, how to live, is itself a moral idea; and it is he question which most interests every man, ad with which, in some way or other, he is

be what they will, but where the form is studied and exquisite. We delude ourselves in either case; and the best cure for our delusion is to let our minds rest upon that great and inex

erpetually occupied. A large sense is of course 25 haustible word life, until we learn to enter into

o be given to the term moral. Whatever bears pon the question, "how to live," comes under

Nor love thy life, nor hate; but, what thou liv'st,

ive well; how long or short, permit to heaven."

30

n those fine lines Milton utters, as every one
- once perceives, a moral idea. Yes, but so
o, when Keats consoles the forward-bending 35
-ver on the Grecian Urn, the lover arrested
nd presented in immortal relief by the sculp-
or's hand before he can kiss, with the line,
'For ever wilt thou love, and she be fair"-
e utters a moral idea. When Shakespeare
ys, that

"We are such stuff

As dreams are made of, and our little life
Is rounded with a sleep,"

e utters a moral idea.

its meaning. A poetry of revolt against moral ideas is a poetry of revolt against life; of indifference towards moral ideas is a poetry of indifference towards life.

Epictetus had a happy figure for things like the play of the senses, or literary form and finish, or argumentative ingenuity, in comparison with "the best and master thing" for us, as he called it, the concern, how to live. Some people were afraid of them, he said, or they disliked and undervalued them. Such people were wrong; they were unthankful or cowardly. But the things might also be over-prized, and treated as final when they are not. They bear 40 to life the relation which inns bear to home. "As if a man, journeying home, and finding a nice inn on the road, and liking it, were to stay for ever at the inn! Man, thou hast forgotten thine object; thy journey was not to this, but 45 through this. 'But this inn is taking.' And how many other inns, too, are taking, and how many fields and meadows! but as places of passage merely. You have an object, which is this: to get home, to do your duty to your family, friends, and fellow-countrymen, to attain inward freedom, serenity, happiness, contentment. Style takes your fancy, arguing takes your fancy, and you forget your home and want to make your abode with them and to stay with them, on the plea that they are taking. Who denies that they are taking? but as places of passage, as inns. And when I say this, you suppose me to be attacking the care for style, the care for argument. I am

Voltaire was right in thinking that the eneretic and profound treatment of moral ideas, this large sense, is what distinguishes the 50 nglish poetry. He sincerely meant praise, ot dispraise or hint of limitation; and they -r who suppose that poetic limitation is a ecessary consequence of the fact, the fact eing granted as Voltaire states it. If what 55 istinguishes the greatest poets is their poweral and profound application of ideas to life, hich surely no good critic will deny, then to refix to the term ideas here the term moral

not; I attack the resting in them, the not looking to the end which is beyond them."

Now, when we come across a poet like Théophile Gautier, we have a poet who has taken up his abode at an inn, and never got farther. There may be inducements to this or to that one of us, at this or that moment, to find delight in him, to cleave to him, we only stay ourselves in his inn along with him. And when

that his poetry is informed by ideas which "fal spontaneously into a scientific system of thought." But we must be on our guard against the Wordsworthians, if we want to 5 secure for Wordsworth his due rank as a poet. The Wordsworthians are apt to praise him for the wrong things, and to lay far too much stress upon what they call his philosophy. His poetry is the reality, his philosophy,—so far.

we come across a poet like Wordsworth, who 10 at least, as it may put on the form and hahit sings

"Of truth, of grandeur, beauty, love and hope,
And melancholy fear subdued by faith,
Of blessed consolations in distress,

Of moral strength and intellectual power,
Of joy in widest commonalty spread”—

of "a scientific system of thought," and the more that it puts them on,-is the illusion Perhaps we shall one day learn to make this proposition general, and to say: Poetry is the 15 reality, philosophy the illusion. But in Wordsworth's case, at any rate, we cannot do him justice until we dismiss his formal philosophy. The Excursion abounds with philosophy, and therefore the Excursion is to the Words

ested lover of poetry,—a satisfactory work. "Duty exists," says Wordsworth, in the Excur sion; and then he proceeds thus

Then we have a poet intent on "the best and master thing," and who prosecutes his journey home. We say, for brevity's sake, that he deals 20 worthian what it can never be to the disinterwith life, because he deals with that in which life really consists. This is what Voltaire means to praise in the English poets,-this dealing with what is really life. But always it is the mark of the greatest poets that they 25 deal with it; and to say that the English poets are remarkable for dealing with it, is only another way of saying, what is true, that in poetry, the English genius has especially shown its power.

"Immutably survive,

For our support, the measures and the forms,
Which an abstract Intelligence supplies,
Whose Kingdom is, where time and space are
not."

30 And the Wordsworthian is delighted, and thinks that here is a sweet union of philosophy and poetry. But the disinterested lover & poetry will feel that the lines carry us realy not a step farther than the proposition which they would interpret; that they are a tisser of elevated but abstract verbiage, alien to the very nature of poetry.

Wordsworth deals with it, and his greatness lies in his dealing with it so powerfully. I have named a number of celebrated poets above all of whom he, in my opinion, deserves to be placed. He is to be placed above poets like 35 Voltaire, Dryden, Pope, Lessing, Schiller, because these famous personages with a thousand gifts and merits, never, or scarcely ever, attain the distinctive accent and utterance of the high and genuine poets

Or let us come direct to the centre of Words worth's philosophy, as "an ethical system, s 40 distinctive and capable of systematical expostion as Bishop Butler's❞—

"Quiqui pii vates et Phoebo digna locuti,"1 at all. Burns, Keats, Heine, not to speak of others in our list, have this accent;-who can doubt it? And at the same time they have 45 treasures of humour, felicity, passion, for which in Wordsworth we shall look in vain. Where, then, is Wordsworth's superiority? It is here; he deals with more of life than they do; he deals with life, as a whole, more power- 50 fully.

"... One adequate support
For the calamities of mortal life
Exists, one only; an assured belief
That the procession of our fate, howe'er
Sad or disturbed, is ordered by a Being
Of infinite benevolence and power;
Whose everlasting purposes embrace
All accidents, converting them to good.

That is doctrine such as we hear in chur
too, religious and philosophic doctrine; as
the attached Wordsworthian loves passage
of such doctrine, and brings them forward is

No Wordsworthian will doubt this. Nay, the fervent Wordsworthian will add, as Mr. Leslie Stephen does, that Wordsworth's poetry is precious because his philosophy is sound; 55 proof of his poet's excellence. But hower? that his "ethical system is as distinctive and capable of exposition as Bishop Butler's;"

"All the holy poet-prophets, who spoke things worthy of Apollo."

true the doctrine may be, it has, as here pr sented, none of the characters of poetic truth the kind of truth which we require from 4. poet, and in which Wordsworth is really strong

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of a "scientific system of thought" in Wordsworth's poetry. The poetry will never be seen aright while they thus exhibit it. The cause of its greatness is simple, and may be told 5 quite simply. Wordsworth's poetry is great because of the extraordinary power with which Wordsworth feels the joy offered to us in nature, the joy offered to us in the simple primary affections and duties; and because of the ex

Even the "intimations" of the famous Ode, those corner-stones of the supposed philosophic system of Wordsworth,-the idea of the high instincts and affections coming out in childhood, testifying of a divine home recently left, and fading away as our life proceeds,this idea, of undeniable beauty as a play of fancy, has itself not the character of poetic truth of the best kind; it has no real solidity. The instinct of delight in Nature and her 10 traordinary power with which, in case after case, beauty had no doubt extraordinary strength he shows us this joy, and renders it so as to in Wordsworth himself as a child. But to say make us share it. that universally this instinct is mighty in childhood, and tends to die away afterwards, is to say what is extremely doubtful. In many 15 people, perhaps with the majority of educated persons, the love of nature is nearly imperceptible at ten years old, but strong and operative at thirty. In general we may say of these high instincts of early childhood, the base of 20 the alleged systematic philosophy of Wordsworth, what Thucydides says of the earliest achievements of the Greek race: "It is impossible to speak with certainty of what is so remote; but from all that we can really investi- 25 fathers who inhabited this great and ancient gate, I should say that they were no very great things."

Thomas Henry Hurley

1825-1895

ON THE ADVISABLENESS OF IMPROV-
ING NATURAL KNOWLEDGE

(From Lay Sermons, Addresses, and Reviews,
1870)

This time two hundred years ago1 in the beginning of January, 1666-those of our fore

city, took breath between the shocks of two fearful calamities: one not quite past, although its fury had abated; the other to come.

Finally, the "scientific system of thought" in Wordsworth gives us at last such poetry as this, which the devout Wordsworthian accepts: "O for the coming of that glorious time When prizing knowledge as her noblest wealth And best protection, this Imperial Realm, While she exacts allegiance, shall admit An obligation, on her part, to teach Them who are born to serve her and obey; Binding herself by statute to secure, For all the children whom her soil maintains, The rudiments of letters, and inform The mind with moral and religious truth." Wordsworth calls Voltaire dull, and surely the production of these un Voltarian lines must have been imposed on him as a judgment! One can hear them being quoted at a Social Science Congress; one can call up the whole scene. A 45 nunciations and mad prayers of fanatics; and

Within a few yards of the very spot2 on 30 which we are assembled, so the tradition runs, that painful and deadly malady, the plague, appeared in the latter months of 1664; and, though no new visitor, smote the people of England and especially of her capital, with a 35 violence unknown before, in the course of the following year. The hand of a master has pictured what happened in those dismal months; and in the truest of fictions, "The History of the Plague Year," Defoe shows death, with 40 every accompaniment of pain and terror, stalking through the narrow streets of old London, and changing their busy hum into a silence broken only by the wailing of the mourners of fifty thousand dead; by the woful de

great room in one of our dismal provincial towns; dusty air and jaded afternoon daylight; benches full of men with bald heads and women

in spectacles; an orator lifting up his face from

by the madder yells of despairing profligates.

But, about this time in 1666, the death-rate had sunk to nearly its ordinary amount; a case of plague occurred only here and there, and

a manuscript written within and without to 50 the richer citizens who had flown from the

declaim these lines of Wordsworth; and in the soul of any poor child of nature who may have wandered in thither, an unutterable sense of lamentation, and mourning, and woe!

"But turn we," as Wordsworth says, "from 55 these bold, bad men," the haunters of Social Science Congresses. And let us be on our guard, too, against the exhibitors and extollers V. p. 478, supra.

pest had returned to their dwellings. The remnant of the people began to toil at the accustomed round of duty, or of pleasure; and the stream of city life bid fair to flow back along its old bed, with renewed and uninterrupted vigour.

1 Huxley's Address was delivered in 1866.

2 St. Martin's Borough Hall and Public Library, near Trafalgar Square, London.

3 V. p. 316, supra.

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knowledge." The ends they proposed to st cannot be stated more clearly than in words of one of the founders of the organi tion:

"Our business was (precluding matters theology and state affairs) to discourse consider of philosophical enquiries, and s as related thereunto:-as Physic, Anato Geometry, Astronomy, Navigation, Stata,

Our forefathers had their own ways of accounting for each of these calamities. They 10 Magneticks, Chymicks, Mechanicks, and N.

ural Experiments; with the state of th studies and their cultivation at home abroad. We then discoursed of the circulati of the blood, the valves in the veins, the val

submitted to the plague in humility and in penitence, for they believed it to be the judgment of God. But, towards the fire they were furiously indignant, interpreting it as the effect of the malice of man,-as the work of the 15 lacter, the lymphatic vessels, the Copernic Republicans, or of the Papists, according as their prepossessions ran in favour of loyalty or Puritanism.

hypothesis, the nature of comets and
stars, the satellites of Jupiter, the oval sh
(as it then appeared) of Saturn, the spots C
the sun and its turning on its own axis

It would, I fancy, have fared but ill with one who, standing where I now stand, in what was 20 inequalities and selenography of the mos, then a thickly peopled and fashionable part of London, should have broached to our ancestors the doctrine which I now propound to you-that all their hypotheses were alike wrong; that the plague was no more, in their 25 sense, Divine judgment, than the fire was the work of any political, or of any religious, sect; but that they were themselves the authors of both plague and fire, and that they must look to themselves to prevent the recurrence of 30 calamities, to all appearance so peculiarly beyond the reach of human control-so evidently the result of the wrath of God, or of the craft and subtlety of an enemy.

And one may picture to oneself how har- 35 moniously the holy cursing of the Puritan of that day would have chimed in with the unholy cursing and the crackling wit of the Rochesters and Sedleys, and with the revilings of the political fanatics, if my imaginary plain dealer 40 had gone on to say that, if the return of such misfortunes were ever rendered impossible, it would not be in virtue of the victory of the faith of Laud, or of that of Milton; and, as little, by the triumph of republicanism, as by 45 that of monarchy. But that the one thing needful for the compassing this end was, that the people of England should second the efforts of an insignificant corporation, the establishment of which, a few years before the epoch 50 of the great plague and the great fire, had been as little noticed, as they were conspicuous.

Some twenty years before the outbreak of the plague a few calm and thoughtful students

the several phases of Venus and Mercury. improvement of telescopes and grinding glasses for that purpose, the weight of air, possibility or impossibility of vacuities nature's abhorrence thereof, the Torrice experiment in quicksilver, the descent heavy bodies and the degree of accelera therein, with divers other things of like natur some of which were then new discoveries, others not so generally known and embra{ as now they are; with other things apperts ing to what hath been called the New Ph ophy, which, from the times of Galileo! Florence, and Sir Francis Bacon (Lord Verus in England, hath been much cultivated Italy, France, Germany, and other par abroad, as well as with us in England.”

The learned Dr. Wallis, writing in 18 narrates, in these words, what happened b a century before, or about 1645. The ciates met at Oxford, in the rooms of Dr. W kins, who was destined to become a bist and subsequently coming together in Lond they attracted the notice of the king. Ad is a strange evidence of the taste for knowle which the most obviously worthless of Stuarts shared with his father and grandfath that Charles the Second was not content ! saying witty things about his philosoph but did wise things with regard to them. F he not only bestowed upon them such atte: tion as he could spare from his poodles his mistresses, but, being in his usual state impecuniosity, begged for them of the D

banded themselves together for the purpose, 55 of Ormond; and, that step being with

as they phrased it, of "improving natural

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The study of the physical condition of the moon 7 Torricelli, an Italian, discoverer of the princip the barometer in 1643.

The greatest of Newton's predecessors in the fead mathematics (1616-1703).

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